So lying wouldn’t serve him at this point — Ventura didn’t trust Wu as far as he could fly by flapping his arms, and Wu knew it. And if Wu hadn’t sent a team, then who were those men?
Had he just shot a couple of real federal marshals?
“Dr. Morrison is okay, isn’t he?” Wu asked. “No problems with our little transaction? We were quite impressed with the test. We are ready to get down to brass tacks.”
“He’s fine. Here he is.” Ventura waved at Morrison, who was listening to his half of the conversation. He held his thumb over the transmitter mike. “Wu. He’s ready to deal. And don’t get bent with him — he didn’t send his people after you. Those were legitimate feds.”
Morrison’s eyes went wide. “It couldn’t be—”
“You screwed up, Doctor. They figured it out, somehow, and now we have a whole new set of problems.”
He handed Morrison the phone and headset. He had to make a couple of calls on his own to verify this, but if it turned out to be what he was now sure it was, he had some serious thinking to do. Very serious thinking.
Alex had gone off to see the director, and Toni took the opportunity to go to the gym. It wasn’t as big as the rooms in the main FBI compound, but she didn’t need much space. And early as it was, she was the only person there.
Nobody had gotten around to cleaning out her locker — there was still a pair of sweats and a sports bra folded neatly there, along with her Discipline martial arts shoes, and, by chance, the clothes were still clean, though a little stale. She shook everything out and dressed, then padded into the gym. She could have worked out in her street clothes, she made a point of doing that every so often, but since she didn’t have any clean ones to change into afterward, that would have to wait for another time. If you couldn’t do it in your ordinary wear, it didn’t matter how terrific a move was; if you couldn’t use it when you needed it, it was pointless for self-defense. In a streetfight, you wouldn’t have time to take off your shoes, get dressed in your gi, nor ten minutes to stretch and warm up. Sweats and limbering exercises saved wear and tear on your clothes, muscles, and joints in the long run, that was why you did them, but they were luxuries, not necessities—
“Toni?”
She looked up and saw Jay. “Hey, Jay.”
“Boss around?”
“He had to go see the Dragon Lady.”
“Okay, I’ll call him.” He was in a hurry. He turned and started to leave.
“What’s up, Jay?”
He paused. “You knew they found John Howard shot in the woods across the road from the HAARP compound?”
“Yeah.”
“He was choppered to a hospital in Anchorage, and it looks like he’s gonna be okay.”
“Thank God.”
“Yeah. He was supposed to be on vacation with his family. How’d he get to Alaska?”
Toni shook her head. Here was another problem for Alex, one he didn’t need.
He needed her. But she couldn’t go back to work for him. She couldn’t.
Madam Director Allison was royally pissed. In her shoes, Michaels might have felt the same way, but he wasn’t in her shoes, he was in his, and they were getting real damp from nervous sweat.
“And you felt you couldn’t pass this along to me? I had to find it out from some other agency?”
He sat in the chair in front of her desk and nodded. “I didn’t see the need. Four federal marshals went to pick up one desk-jockey scientist. I met the man. He could hardly stand up without losing his balance. He had no history of violence, no record of having purchased weapons. I asked John to go along to keep us in the loop. It was a milk run.”
“Yes, a run that turned into the milkman taking a bullet in the pelvis under the edge of his vest, and your meek scientist disappearing, not even to mention the head of your military arm taking a round.” She looked at the flatscreen on her desk. “According to the guards at this HAARP place, Morrison wasn’t alone. He was accompanied by a Dr. Dick Grayson. His identity turns out to be bogus.”
Despite the situation, Michaels smiled.
“Something funny about that I’m missing, Commander?”
“Dick Grayson is the secret identity of Batman’s side-kick, Robin.”
“Yes, well, ‘Robin’ is likely the man who plugged the marshal, along with John Howard, on his way out of town. The rest of the arrest team managed to gather themselves enough to pick up the trail. Morrison and his gun-toting friend took a small cart through the woods, cut a hole in the fence, and were presumably picked up by accomplices. The marshals found an armed dead man next to the hole in the fence, shot in the heart. No ID on the man.
“There were signs that a car had left the road and plowed into the fence fifty yards away. The marshals called in the state police, and a few minutes ago a shot-up Ford Explorer was found at an old airstrip. There were three bullet holes in the windshield, five more holes in the back loading gate and bumper, and another dead man in the front seat. No identification on him, either. Probably Howard’s work.”
“Huh,” Michaels said.
“Oh, you can do better than that, Commander. You are supposed to be playing with computers. You are supposed to be finding and busting pirate ships in the Gulf peddling Viagra and steroids and diet pills over the internet without prescriptions, or hunting down teenaged hackers who post porno in church web pages. You went outside your authority, and I don’t know what it is you stepped into, but whatever it is, it is on your shoes and it is your responsibility now. I want to know just what the hell is going on—”
His virgil, which he had forgotten to turn off, bleated the opening notes from the old rock and roll song, “Bad to the Bone.”
Dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dump!
The director frowned.
“Sorry,” he said. He reached for the virgil to shut it off, but saw Jay’s face on the tiny screen. If Gridley knew he was here, he wouldn’t have bothered him if it wasn’t important. “Jay?”
“Looks like John Howard is gonna make it, Boss.”
“Thank God!”
“Already sent a few prayers in His direction.”
“I appreciate the call, Jay,” Michaels said. He discommed, then looked at the director. “Howard is going to pull through.”
“That’s good news, at least. Why don’t you see if you can’t add to it?”
26
When John Howard awoke, the first face he saw belonged to Sergeant Julio Fernandez. With consciousness came the awareness that he was in a bed, in a hospital room, and that his right side and belly hurt like hell. He also had a headache, his mouth was dry, and his arm had an IV tube running into it. His last memory was of passing out in the woods, and of all the hoopla before that — he knew what had happened. He had been shot.
“He’s awake,” Fernandez said.
“How bad?” Howard asked.
“John!” That was Nadine.
He turned his head slightly — that was a good sign, he could do that. “Hey, babe. Julio?”
“You’re shy a loop of small intestine, but you won’t have to poop into a bag for the rest of your life or anything. Won’t even have a bullet scar in the front, they took that out when they went in to fix your plumbing, but you will have one in the back — round went right through, didn’t hit anything else worth mentioning. Missed a kidney by a cun — uh, by a hair.”