"No, we're going to find a lawyer."
"And put our fate in the hands of the judicial system?"
"It's better than what we've managed on our own. We're innocent, and we just need to find the right people to believe us."
"We can't prove a negative."
"Their job isn't to prove Quentin and his people are guilty. It's to make a case that we're innocent. And they have no evidence that links us to explosives."
"For thirteen years we've fled prosecution, stolen property, forged credentials, and violated every mail-fraud law on the books."
"They can't execute us for that."
"No, but they could give us life in prison. Wouldn't that be the ultimate irony?"
"If you don't do this I will."
He looked out into the black and thought about it. "It could mean a witness protection program-new names, new locale, new identities."
"What else is new? But at least we won't jump at every cop car."
"That's if we could make a case."
"We have no other choice. He's not growing up undercover."
She was right: Brett needed his parents, but more than that he needed the semblance of a normal life.
"And what about the stuff?"
She looked at him in dismay. "I don't care about it. Take what you need and dump the rest."
"I meant the scientific benefits."
"There are no scientific benefits!"
He said nothing.
"We have to get out of here," she said. "Even if nobody noticed, I'd go nuts cooped up like this."
"For a few days till things cool down. Then we move out and find some good lawyers."
"And what do we do for a place to stay?"
"There's always Aunt Jenny's, after all."
30
"I don't know how he died. I've never seen anything like it before. It was like hypertrophic melanoma accelerated a hundred times."
"In English," Eric Brown said.
"Skin cancer gone wild." Ben Friedman was Madison's chief medical examiner. "There was squamous cell carcinoma all over his body and tumors in his stomach and intestines. It was like he exploded in cancer."
"The guard said his head didn't look human, that it was twice the size and covered with growths."
Friedman shook his head in total bafflement. "I don't get it either," he said. "My best guess is a speeded-up form of Werner's syndrome."
"What's that?"
"A chromosomal defect that causes people to age abnormally fast and die before they reach forty. Except this guy appeared to have aged literally overnight."
"You're saying that's impossible."
"I'm saying that whatever happened to him has to my knowledge never occurred before. Besides the wildfire cancer, his body was riddled with diseases associated with advanced aging-arteriosclerosis, malignant neoplasms, osteoporosis, cataracts, liver and kidney morbidity. If I didn't know better, I'd say the man was in his ninth or tenth decade of life."
Brown had laid out the fingerprint matches of Wally Olafsson taken when he was booked the other day and after he died. "It's the same man, birthdate February 13, 1943."
"That's the impossible part," Friedman continued. "Because that would mean that in a matter of hours his body experienced a total and cataclysmic decline. Just how beats the hell out of me."
"What about one of those cell-eating bacteria?"
"Negative. Besides, no known bacteria is that virulent."
"How about some unknown bacteria?"
"Bacteria doesn't work that way." He glanced at a photo of the dead man's head. "This guy died from some monstrous genetic catastrophe."
Ben Friedman's bewilderment sent a cold spike through Brown. He was an unflappable professional who in three decades had seen every grisly form of human death. He was a man who was beyond shock. And now he was at a total loss.
But medical anomalies were not Brown's charge. "Any evidence he had been in contact with Glover?"
"We questioned his colleagues, ex-wife, and girlfriend. Nobody ever heard of Roger Glover," Zazzaro said.
According to the Glovers' neighbors, they were nice normal people. They had a son, Brett, a terrific kid. They owned a flower shop. Nothing unusual. No known relatives. And no friend named Wally Olafsson.
"And they disappeared into thin air."
But the fact that Glover had led them down an alley to a getaway car was a well-thought out emergency plan. The bastard was clever, Brown thought.
"I don't know how Olafsson died or if it has anything to do with Roger Glover," Zazzaro said, "but the son-of-a-bitch knew we were after him. He knew we had connected him to Eastern 219. Why else the chase? You don't set up an elaborate escape just to shake tailgaters."
"I want a cross-reference to anything connecting Glover, Bacon, Olafsson, the wife and kids," Brown said. "Keywords, names of places, people, birthdates, anything."
Zazzaro nodded. "We checked the house. Looked like they left at a moment's notice. Closets were full of clothes. Toothbrushes still in the rack in the bathroom. Books in the kid's backpack. Empty suitcases in the cellar. He must have spotted the tail and called his wife."
That was Brown's guess too. The Pierson baseball coach had said she appeared anxious to pull the kid out of the game. Something about her husband at the hospital. They checked and, of course, no area hospitals had a listing for either a Roger Glover or Christopher Bacon. "Anything connecting them to the Bacons?"
"Not yet, but we're still going through letters, old bills, stuff like that. But we found this." From an evidence bag Zazzaro held up a pouch. "Hair coloring-blond for the wife, black for him. What's interesting is, the small jar is theatrical makeup paint. White. For his beard and sideburns."
"Why make himself look older? With a thirteen-year warrant on my head, I'd go the other way, like the wife."
"You'd think," Zazzaro said. "What also doesn't make sense is that the black hair dye and white paint were stored in a box on the back shelf of his closet, but the Clairol was on a shelf in the bath. Like he was hiding the fact he colored his hair."
"Women can spot these things in the dark."
"I mean from the kid."
"It doesn't make sense," Zazzaro said.
According to files, Christopher Bacon was fifty-six years old. And in his shop Glover told Zazzaro that he was born in 1962 which would make him thirty-eight. Why, wondered Brown, would a fifty-six-year-old man posing as a thirty-eight-year-old need aging makeup? Mike was right: None of it made sense.
"How old does the wife claim she is?" Brown asked.
"Thirty-eight."
Brown checked the shots he had taken of her at the Town Day Race. She could pass for thirty-eight, although in a couple closeups she looked older. He slid one to Friedman. "How old would you say she is?"
The phone rang and Zazzaro took it while the others talked.
Friedman studied the photo for a moment. "Mid-forties."
"How about thirty-eight?"
"Possibly, though time's not been generous with her." He studied the other photos. With a pencil he pointed things out. "Look at her neck here. The skin shows creases and folds of an older woman. I'm not saying she is, but it's one giveaway. That's why women with facelifts wear scarves. You can stretch a seventy-year old face like Saran Wrap, but it'll be sitting on two inches of chicken skin."