Текст книги "Fever Dream"
Автор книги: Lincoln Child
Соавторы: Douglas Preston
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Текущая страница: 14 (всего у книги 24 страниц)
Ventura just shook his head.
"Now D'Agosta's girlfriend is down here. A girlfriend who just happens to be the youngest homicide captain in the NYPD."
"So?"
Esterhazy took the pipe from his mouth and spoke coldly. "Mike, you have no idea–and I mean noidea–how dangerous this man Pendergast is. I know him well. I needed to act immediately. Unfortunately, I failed to kill him on the first attempt. Which will make the second all that much more difficult. You do understand, don't you, that it's either him or us?"
"How much could he possibly know?"
"He's found the Black Frame, he knows about Audubon's illness, and somehow he knows about the Doane family."
A sharp intake of breath. "You're shitting me. How muchabout the Doane family?"
"Hard to say. He was in Sunflower. He visited the house. He's tenacious and clever. You can assume he knows–or will know–everything."
"Son of a bitch. How in the world did they find out?"
"No idea. Not only is Pendergast a brilliant investigator, but this time around he's motivated– uniquelymotivated."
Ventura shook his head.
"And I've little doubt he's busy filling the ear of this homicide captain with his suspicions, just as he did with that partner of his, D'Agosta. I'm afraid it's only a matter of time before they pay our mutual friend a visit."
A pause. "You think this investigation's official?"
"It doesn't seem so. I think they're working ex cathedra. I doubt others are involved."
Ventura thought for a moment before speaking again. "So now we finish the job."
"Exactly. Take out Pendergast and that captain. Do it now. Kill them all."
"The cop you hit, D'Agosta–are you sure he's dead?"
"I think so. He took a .308 round in the back." Judson frowned. "If he doesn't die of his own accord, we'll have to extend a helping hand. Leave that to me."
Ventura nodded. "I'll keep the rest in line."
"You do that. Need any help? Money?"
"Money's the last of our worries. You know that." And Ventura walked away across the field, toward the pink sky of evening, until his dark silhouette disappeared into the pines at the far end.
Judson Esterhazy spent the next fifteen minutes leaning against the fire tower, smoking his pipe and thinking. Finally he reamed it out and knocked the dottle onto the iron strut. Then he stuck the pipe back into his pocket, took one last look at the light dying away in the west, then turned and made his way down the trail toward the road on the other side of the hill.
46
Baton Rouge
EXACTLY HOW MUCH TIME HAD PASSED–FIVE hours or fifty–Laura Hayward wasn't sure. The slow succession of minutes blended with a strange fugue of loudspeaker announcements, rapid hushed voices, the bleating of instrumentation. At times, Pendergast was at her side. Other times she would find him gone. At first she willed the time to pass as quickly as possible. Then–as the wait grew longer–she only wanted time to slow down. Because the longer Vincent D'Agosta lay on that surgical table, she knew, the more his chances of survival dwindled.
Then–quite abruptly–the surgeon was standing before them. His scrub blues were creased and wrinkled, and his face looked pale and drawn. Behind him stood Father Bell.
At the sight of the priest, Hayward's heart gave a dreadful lurch. She had known this moment would come. And yet–now that it was here–she did not think that she could bear it. Oh, no. Oh, no, no, no... She felt Pendergast take her hand.
The surgeon cleared his throat. "I've come to let you know the operation was successful. We closed forty-five minutes ago and we've been monitoring closely since. The signs are promising."
"I'll take you to see him now," said Father Bell.
"Only for a moment," the surgeon added. "He's barely conscious and very weak."
For a moment, Hayward sat motionless, stunned, trying to take it in. Pendergast was speaking but she couldn't understand the words. Then she felt herself being raised–the FBI agent on one side, the priest on the other–and she was walking down the corridor. They turned left, then right, past closed doors and halls full of stretchers and empty wheelchairs. Through an open doorway they came to a small area enclosed by movable privacy screens. A nurse pulled one of the screens away and there was Vinnie. A dozen machines were attached to him, and his eyes were closed. Tubes snaked beneath the sheets: one containing plasma, another saline. Despite D'Agosta's hefty build, he looked fragile, papery almost.
She caught her breath. As she did so, his eyes fluttered open; closed; then opened again. He looked up at them silently in turn, his eyes at last looking into hers.
As Hayward stared down at him, she felt the last vestiges of her self-control–that commanding presence of mind she so prided herself on–crumble and fall away. Hot tears coursed down her cheeks.
"Oh, Vinnie," she sobbed.
D'Agosta's own eyes filled. And then he slowly closed them.
Pendergast put a steadying arm around her, and for a moment she turned her face to the fabric of his shirt, yielding to the emotion, letting sobs rack her frame. Only now–when she saw Vinnie alive–did she realize just how close she had come to losing him.
"I'm afraid you'll need to leave now," the surgeon said in a low voice.
She straightened up, dried her eyes, and took a long, shuddering, cleansing breath.
"He's not out of the woods yet. As it is, his heart has been severely damaged by the trauma. He's going to need an aortic valve replacement at the earliest opportunity."
Hayward nodded. She detached herself from Pendergast's arm, took one more look down at D'Agosta, then turned away.
"Laura," she heard him croak.
She glanced back. He was still lying there on the bed, eyes closed. Had it been her imagination?
Then he moved faintly and his eyes fluttered open again. His jaw worked but no sound came.
She stepped forward and bent over the bed.
"Make my work here count," he said in a voice that was barely a whisper.
47
Penumbra Plantation
AFIRE HAD BEEN KINDLED IN THE GREAT fireplace of the library, and Hayward watched the old manservant, Maurice, serving after-dinner coffee. He threaded his way between the furniture, an ancient figure with a curiously blank expression on his lined face. She noticed that he had been careful not to stare at the bruise on Pendergast's jaw. Perhaps, Hayward mused, over the years the old fellow had grown used to seeing his employer a little dinged up.
The mansion and grounds were exactly as she pictured they would be: ancient oaks draped with Spanish moss, white columned portico, faded antebellum furnishings. There was even an old family ghost, the ancient manservant had assured her, who haunted the nearby swamps–another predictable cliche. The only surprise, in fact, was Penumbra's general state of external disrepair. This was a little odd–Pendergast, she assumed, had plenty of money. She put these musings aside, telling herself she was completely uninterested in Pendergast and his family.
Before leaving the hospital the night before, Pendergast had asked her–in some detail–about her visit with Constance Greene. Following that, he offered her lodging at Penumbra. Hayward had refused, opting instead to stay at a hotel near the medical center. But another visit to D'Agosta the following morning had served to underline what the surgeon told her: his recovery would be slow and long. She could take time off from the job–that wasn't a problem, she'd accrued too much vacation time as it was–but the idea of cooling her heels in a depressing hotel room for days on end was unendurable. Especially because, at Pendergast's insistence, Vinnie was going to be moved to a secure location just as soon as medically possible, and–for the sake of security–she would be forbidden to visit. That morning, in a brief interlude of consciousness, Vinnie had once again implored her to pick up the case where he'd left off–to help see it through to the bitter end.
And so, when Pendergast sent his car round to pick her up after lunch, she'd checked out of the hotel and accepted his invitation to stay at Penumbra. She hadn't agreed to help, but she'd decided to hear the details. Some of it she knew already from Vinnie's phone calls. It had sounded like a typical Pendergast investigation, all hunches and blind alleys and conflicting evidence, strung together by highly questionable police work.
But back at Penumbra, as Pendergast had explained the case–starting at dinner, and then continuing over coffee–Hayward realized that the bizarre story had an internal logic. Pendergast explained his late wife's obsession with Audubon; how they had traced her interest in the Carolina Parakeet, the Black Frame, the lost parrot, and the strange fate of the Doane family. He read her passages from the Doane girl's diary: a chilling descent into madness. He described their encounter with Blast, another seeker of the Black Frame, himself recently murdered–as had been Helen Pendergast's former employer at Doctors With Wings, Morris Blackletter. And finally, he explained the series of deductions and discoveries that led to the unearthing of the Black Frame itself.
When Pendergast at last fell silent, Hayward leaned back in her chair, sipping her coffee, running over the bizarre information in her mind, looking for threads, logical connections, and finding precious little. A great deal more work would be necessary to fill in the blanks.
She glanced over at the painting known as the Black Frame. It was lit indirectly by the firelight, but she could nevertheless make out details: the woman on the bed, the stark room, the cold white nakedness of her body. Disturbing, to put it mildly.
She looked back at Pendergast, now attired in his signature black suit. "So you believe your wife was interested in Audubon's illness. An illness that somehow transformed him into a creative genius."
"Through some unknown neurological effect, yes. To someone with her interests, this would have been a very valuable pharmacological discovery."
"And all she wanted with the painting was confirmation for this theory."
Pendergast nodded. "That painting is the link between Audubon's early, indifferent work and his later brilliance. It's proof of the transition he underwent. But that doesn't quite get to the central mystery in this case: the birds."
Hayward frowned. "The birds?"
"The Carolina Parakeets. The Doane parrot."
Hayward herself had been puzzling over the connection to Audubon's illness, to no avail. "And?"
Pendergast sipped his coffee. "I believe we're dealing with a strain of avian flu."
"Avian flu? You mean, bird flu?"
"That, I believe, is the disease that laid Audubon low, that nearly killed him, and that was responsible for his creative flowering. His symptoms–high fever, headache, delirium, cough–are all consistent with flu. A flu he no doubt caught dissecting a Carolina Parakeet."
"Slow down. How do you know all this?"
In reply, Pendergast reached for a worn, leather-bound book. "This is the diary of my great-great-grandfather Boethius Pendergast. He befriended Audubon during the painter's younger days." Opening the journal to a page marked with a silken strand, he found the passage he was looking for and began to read aloud: Aug. 21st. J. J. A. spent the evening with us again. He had amused himself throughout the afternoon in the dissection of two Carolina Parakeets–a curiously colored but otherwise unremarkable species. He then stuffed and mounted them on bits of cypress wood. We dined well and afterward took a turn around the park. He took leave of us around half past ten. Next week he plans to make a journey upriver, where he professes to have business prospects.
Pendergast closed the journal. "Audubon never made that journey upriver. Because within a week he developed the symptoms that would eventually land him in the Meuse St. Claire sanatorium."
Hayward nodded at the journal. "You think your wife saw that passage?"
"I'm sure of it. Why else would she have stolen those specimens of Carolina Parakeet–the very ones Audubon dissected? She wanted to test them for avian flu." He paused. "And do morethan simply test them. She hoped to extract from them a live sample of virus. Vincent told me all that remained of the parrots my wife stole were a few feathers. I'll head over to Oakley Plantation in the morning, retrieve those remaining feathers–carefully–and have them tested to confirm my suspicions."
"But all that still doesn't explain how those parakeets are linked to the Doane family."
"It's quite simple. The Doanes were sickened by the same disease that struck Audubon."
"What makes you say that?"
"There are simply too many similarities, Captain, for anything else to make sense. The sudden flowering of creative brilliance. Followed by mental dissolution. Too many similarities–and Helen knew it. That'swhy she went to get the bird from them."
"But when she took the bird, the family was still healthy. They didn't have the flu."
"One of the diaries in the Doane house records–in passing–the family coming down with the flu shortly after the bird arrived."
"Oh, my God."
"And then, rather quickly, they manifested signs of creative brilliance." He paused again. "Helen went there to get the bird away from the Doanes–I'm sure of that. To keep it from spreading the disease further, perhaps. And to test it, of course, to confirm her suspicions. Note what Karen Doane wrote in her diary about the day Helen took the bird. She wore leather gloves, and she stuffed the bird and its cage into a garbage bag. Why? Initially, I assumed the bag was simply for concealment. But it was to keep herself and her car from contamination."
"And the leather gloves?"
"Worn no doubt to conceal a pair of medical gloves beneath. Helen was trying to remove a viral vector from the human population. No doubt the bird, cage, and bag were all incinerated–after she'd taken the necessary samples, of course."
"Incinerated?"Hayward repeated.
"Standard procedure. Any samples taken would also have been ultimately incinerated."
"Why? If the Doane family was infected, they could just spread it to others. Burning the bird would be like shutting the barn door after the horse has escaped."
"Not quite. You see, avian flus jump easily from bird to human, but they have great difficulty passing from human to human. The neighbors would be safe. Of course, for the Doane family it was too late." Pendergast took a last sip of coffee, then put the cup aside. "But this still leaves us with a central mystery: where did the Doanes' parrot escape from? And, even more importantly, howdid it become a carrier?"
Despite her skepticism, Hayward felt herself intrigued. "Perhaps you're wrong. Maybe the virus lay dormant all this time. The parrot caught it naturally."
"Unlikely. Recall the parrot had been banded. No: the viral genome would have been painstakingly sequenced and rebuilt in a laboratory–using viral material from the stolen Carolina Parakeets. And then live birds were inoculated with it."
"So the bird escaped from a lab."
"Precisely."Pendergast stood up. "The biggest question of all remains: what does this have to do with Helen's murder and the recent killings and attacks on us–if anything?"
"Isn't there another question you're forgetting?" Hayward asked.
Pendergast looked at her.
"You say Helen stole the parrots Audubon studied–the ones that supposedly sickened him. Helen also visited the Doane family and stole their parrot–because, as you also say, she knew it was infected. By inference, Helen is the common thread that binds the two events. So aren't you curious what role shemight have had in the sequencing and inoculation?"
Pendergast turned away, but not before a look of pain lanced across his face. Hayward almost regretted asking the question.
A long pause settled over the library. At last, Pendergast turned toward her again. "We must pick up where Vincent and I left off."
" 'We'?"
"You're going to grant Vincent's request, I assume. I need a competent partner. And as I recall, you're from this region originally. You'll do well, I assure you."
His assumptions, his patronizing attitude, were irritating in the extreme. She knew all too well of Pendergast's unorthodox investigative techniques, his breezy neglect for rules and procedures, his skirtings of the law. She would find that annoying, if not intolerable. It might even damage her career. She returned his steady gaze. If it weren't for this man, Vinnie wouldn't be in a hospital right now, critically wounded, in need of a new heart valve.
At the same time... Vinnie had asked her. Twice.
She realized she had already made the decision.
"All right. I'll help you see this thing through. For Vinnie's sake, not yours. But–" She hesitated. "I've got one condition. And it's non-negotiable."
"Of course, Captain."
"When–if–we find the person responsible for your wife's death, you must promise me notto kill him."
Pendergast went very still. "You realize this is the cold-blooded murderer of my wife we're discussing."
"I don't believe in vigilante justice. Too many of your perps end up dead before they even reach a courtroom. This time, we're going to let justice take its course."
There was a pause. "What you are asking–is difficult."
"It's the price of the dance," Hayward said simply.
Pendergast held her gaze for a long moment. And then–almost imperceptibly–he nodded.
48
IN THE DIM GARAGE, A MAN CROUCHED BEHIND a vehicle draped in a white canvas shroud. The time was seven in the evening, and the sun had set. The air smelled of car wax, motor oil, and mold. Sliding a 9mm Beretta semi-automatic pistol out of his belt, the man eased open the magazine, checked again that it was full. After snugging the gun back into his waistband, he opened and closed his hands three times, alternately stretching and clenching the fingers. The target would be arriving at any moment. The sweat crept down the nape of the man's neck and a tendon began to jump in his thigh, but he was unaware of either distraction, so concentrated was he on what was to come.
Frank Hudson had been scouting the grounds of Penumbra Plantation for the past two days, learning the movements and habits of the place. He had been surprised at how lax the security was: a single dotty, half-blind servant opening the house in the morning and shutting it up again at night on a schedule so regular you could set your watch by it. The entrance gates were left closed but unlocked during the day, and they were apparently unwatched. A diligent search had turned up no sign of security cameras, alarm systems, motion sensors, or infrared beams. The decrepit old plantation was so far off the beaten track that Hudson had little to fear from regular police patrols. There were few people at the plantation house besides the target and the servant: only a rather attractive woman with a great figure he'd seen a few times.
Hudson's target, the man named Pendergast, was the only irregularity in the timeless cycle of Penumbra Plantation. He came and went at the most unpredictable hours. But Hudson had observed long enough to see the beginning of a small pattern in his comings and goings, and it centered on wine. When the shuffling old servant began preparing dinner and uncorked a bottle of wine, Pendergast would be home no later than seven thirty in the evening to partake. If the servant did not uncork wine, it meant Pendergast would not be dining at home and would arrive much later in the evening, if at all.
This evening an uncorked bottle of wine stood on the sideboard, clearly visible through the dining room windows.
Hudson checked his watch. He rehearsed in his mind how it would go, what he would do. And then he froze: outside, he heard the sound of wheels crunching on gravel. This was it. Hudson waited, his breathing shallow. The car came to a halt outside the garage, the engine idling. A car door opened, followed by the sound of feet. The garage doors swung open, first one, then the other–they were not automatic–and the footsteps went back to the car. The engine revved slightly. The nose of the Rolls eased into the garage, the lights momentarily filling the space, blinding him. A moment later the lights went out, the engine died, and the garage was dark again.
He blinked, waiting for his eyes to readjust. His hand closed on the pistol grips and he eased the weapon from his belt, carefully thumbing off the safety.
He waited for the sound of the opening door, for his target to turn on the lights in the garage, but nothing happened. Pendergast seemed to be waiting in the car. What for? Feeling his heart accelerate in his chest, Hudson tried to control his breathing, maintain his lucidity. He knew he was well hidden, having adjusted the shroud on the vehicle so that it reached all the way to the ground, ensuring that even his feet were invisible.
Perhaps Pendergast was on his cell phone, finishing up a call. Or he was taking a rare opportunity to sit quietly, as people sometimes did, before getting out of the vehicle.
With infinite caution, Hudson raised his head ever so slightly to peer over the edge of the shroud; the dim form of the Rolls rested quietly in the dark, the only sound the ticking of the cooling engine. It was impossible to see inside the smoked windows.
He waited.
"Lose a button?" came a voice from right behind him.
With a grunt of surprise Hudson leapt up, his hand jerking instinctively, the gun going off with a loud crash in the enclosed space. As he tried to pivot he felt the gun wrenched from his hand and a wiry arm wrap around his neck. His body was spun around, then shoved up hard against the sheeted vehicle.
"In the great game of human life," the voice said, "one begins by being a dupe and ends up by being a rogue."
Hudson struggled ineffectually.
"Where are you, my friend, on that happy spectrum?"
"I don't know what the hell you're talking about," Hudson finally managed to gasp out.
"If you get a grip on yourself, I'll release you. Now: relax."
Hudson stopped fighting. As he did so, he felt the pressure release, his limbs freed. He turned to find himself face-to-face with his target, Pendergast: a tall man in black with a face and hair so pale they seemed to glow in the darkness, like a specter. He had Hudson's own Beretta in hand, pointed at him. "I'm sorry, we haven't been introduced. My name is Pendergast."
"Fuck you."
"I've always found that a curious expression when used pejoratively." Pendergast looked him up and down, then slid the gun into the waist of his own suit. "Shall we continue this conversation in the house?"
The man stared at him.
"Please." Pendergast gestured for him to walk toward the side door ahead of him. After a moment, Hudson complied. There might be a way to retrieve something out of this, after all.
He passed through the open garage door, Pendergast following, crossed the graveled drive, and mounted the steps to the shabby mansion. The servant held open the door.
"Is the gentleman to come in?" he asked, in a voice that made it clear he hoped not.
"Only for a few minutes, Maurice. We'll have a glass of sherry in the east parlor."
Pendergast gestured the man down the central hall and into a small sitting room. A fire was burning in the grate.
"Sit down."
Hudson gingerly took a seat on an old leather sofa. Pendergast seated himself opposite, checked his watch. "I have just a few minutes. Now once again: your name, please?"
Hudson struggled to collect himself, to adapt to this sudden and unexpected reversal. He could still pull this off. "Forget the name. I'm a private investigator, and I worked for Blast. That's all you need to know–and I'll bet it's more than enough."
Pendergast looked him up and down again.
"I know you have the painting," Hudson went on. "The Black Frame. And I know you killed Blast."
"How very clever of you."
"Blast owed me a lot of money. All I'm doing is collecting what's due. You pay me and I forget all I know about Blast's death. You understand?"
"I see. You're here on a sort of improvised blackmail scheme." The man's pale face broke into a ghastly grin, exposing white, even teeth.
"Just collecting what's owed me. And helping you out at the same time–if you get my meaning."
"Mr. Blast had poor judgment in personnel matters."
Uncertain what was meant by that, Hudson watched as Pendergast took the Beretta out of his black suit, checked the magazine, slapped it back in, and pointed the gun at him. At the same time, the servant arrived with a silver tray with two little glasses full of brown liquid, which he placed down, one after the other.
"Maurice, the sherry won't be necessary after all. I'm going to take this gentleman out into the swamp, shoot him in the back of the head with his own gun, and let the alligators dispose of the evidence. I'll be back in time for dinner."
"As you wish, sir," said the servant, taking up the drinks he had just set out.
"Don't bullshit me," said Hudson, feeling an uncomfortable twinge. Maybe he'd overplayed his hand.
Pendergast didn't seem to hear him. He rose, pointed the gun. "Let's go."
"Don't be a fool, you'll never get away with it. My people are expecting me. They know where I am."
"Your people?" The ghastly smile returned. "Come now, we both know you're strictly freelance and that you've told no one where you went tonight. To the swamp!"
"Wait." Hudson felt a sudden surge of panic. "You're making a mistake."
"Do you think that–having killed one man already–I wouldn't be eager to kill another who has learned about the crime and now wishes to extort money? On your feet!"
Hudson jumped up. "Listen to me, please. Forget about the money. I was just trying to explain."
"No explanations necessary. You haven't even told me your name, for which I thank you. It always gives me a twinge to remember the names of those I've killed."
"It's Hudson," he said quickly. "Frank Hudson. Please don't do this."
Pendergast pushed the barrel of the gun into his side and spun him toward the door with a hard shove. Like a zombie, Hudson stumbled out into the hall, through the front door, and onto the porch. The night rose before him, black and damp, filled with the croaking of frogs and the trilling of insects.
"No. God, no." Hudson knew now he'd made a terrible miscalculation.
"Keep moving, if you please."
Hudson felt his knees buckling and he sank down on the floorboards. "Please." The tears coursed down his face.
"I'll do it right here, then." Hudson felt the cold barrel of the gun touch the nape of his neck. "Maurice will just have to clean up."
"Don't do it," Hudson moaned. He heard Pendergast cock the Beretta.
"Why shouldn't I do it?"
"When I'm missing, the cops will find my car. It's close enough that they'll come knocking around here."
"I'll move your car."
"You'll leave your DNA in it, you can't avoid it."
"Maurice will move it. Besides, I can deal with a few cops."
"They'll search the swamp."
"As I said, the alligators will dispose of your corpse."
"If you think that, you don't know much about corpses. They have a way of turning up days, weeks later. Even in swamps."
"Not in myswamp, with myalligators."
"Alligators can't make human bones disappear–they go right through the gut, come out unchanged."
"Your knowledge of biology is impressive."
"Listen to me. The cops will find out I worked for Blast, connect Blast to you and me to you. I bought gas with a credit card just down the road. Believe me, they'll be all over this place."
"How will they connect me to Blast?"
"They will, you can count on it!" Hudson went on with true fervor. "I know the whole story, Blast told me. He told me about your visit. Right after you left, Blast ordered a rollup of his fur operation. He wasn't taking any chances, he was on the phone a minute after you left his place."
"What about the Black Frame? Was that you who chased us?"
"Yes, it was. Blast egged you on about the Black Frame. He wanted you to find it, figured you might be just smart enough to succeed where he'd failed. You impressed him. But the cops are going to know all about this if they don't already, all that bullshit you pulled at the Donette Hole. Believe me, if I disappear they'll be all over this place with hound dogs."
"They'll never connect me to Blast."
"Of course they will! Blast told me you accused him of killing your wife. You're up to your neck in the investigation already!"
"Did Blast kill my wife?"
"He said he didn't, had nothing to do with it."
"And you believed him?"
Hudson was talking as fast as he could, his heart racing painfully in his chest. "Blast was no saint, but he wasn't a killer. He was a weasel, a con man, a manipulator. He didn't have the guts to kill someone."
"Unlike you. Hiding in my garage with a gun."
"No, no! This wasn't a hit, I was only looking to make a deal. I'm just a PI trying to make a living. You've gotto believe me!" His voice cracked in panic.
"Must I?" Pendergast slid the gun away. "You may get up, Mr. Hudson."
He rose to his feet. His face was wet with tears and he was shaking all over, but he didn't care. He was overwhelmed with hope.
"You're slightly more intelligent than I had assumed. Instead of killing you, shall we go back inside, enjoy that sherry, and discuss the terms of your employment?"
Hudson sat in the sofa next to the hot fire, sweating all over. He felt drained, exhausted, and yet alive, tingling, as if he'd been born again and was walking the earth as a new man.
Pendergast sat back in his chair with a strange half smile. "Now, Mr. Hudson, if you're going to work for me, you've got to tell me everything. About Blast, about your assignment."
Hudson was only too grateful to talk. "Blast called me after you visited him. You really scared him, with your talk of illegal furs. He said he was putting his whole operation on ice, indefinitely. He also said you were on the track of the painting, the Black Frame, and he wanted me to follow you around so that if you found it, I could get it away from you."
Pendergast nodded over tented fingers.
"As I said, he hoped you'd lead him to the Black Frame. I followed you, I saw that business you pulled at Pappy's. I gave chase but you got away."