“None whatsoever. Our search began from the beach and moved inland to AIA, so we hit that area a few hours into the search.”
“I’m told that since these photos were released, you’ve had a forensic crew working at the site. Any new evidence yet?”
“Nothing I can report at this time,” he said.
“But you’re working on it?”
“We are,” he said.
“Thank you, sheriff ,” Carol said, and I muted the sound.
To Callie, I said, “I gave her a lethal injection. There’s no way she could have survived.”
“What did you use?”
“Botulinum toxin.”
Callie laughed. “Maybe she’s been pumped so full of Botox she’s become immune!”
“Maybe Victor had someone pick her up after we drove off , someone who gave her a dose of Heptavalent.”
“Is that some sort of anti-venom?”
“It’s an antitoxin, but yeah, it works the same way. Botulinum paralyzes the respiratory muscles, but its effects can be reversed with Heptavalent. It’s not a perfect science, and it takes weeks or even months.”
“Thanks, doctor,” Callie said sarcastically. Then she added, “You think Victor’s behind this satellite thing?”
“Has to be.”
“But why take that chance? You think he just wanted to watch the hit go down?”
“Maybe. He doesn’t have much of a life, so maybe that’s how he gets his kicks. It’s also possible he tapped into the satellite so his people could find her.”
“But he knew where she’d be. He even marked the path for us.”
“Yeah, but this was our first job for him. Suppose he wanted her alive? He couldn’t be certain we’d do it exactly the way he told us to. Also, what if someone had a flat on the side of the road near the trail? Or what if someone was camping out in the area and would have seen us make the turn? A dozen things could have gone wrong that would have caused us to kill her somewhere else. If he wanted her alive, he’d want to know exactly where she was.”
“So you think he had Monica kidnapped.”
“I do.”
“Why didn’t he just ask us to kidnap her?”
“Maybe he wanted her for himself and didn’t want us to know.”
“So the midget captures the trophy wife of the doctor who saved his life.”
“It’s just a theory.”
“Why would he want to punish her?” Callie asked.
“There’s probably a lot to the story about Victor and the doctor. A lot we don’t know.”
“Think we ought to have a chat with Victor?”
“Eventually, but I want to put Lou on it first.”
“Research his connection to Baxter?”
“Right. Lou finds the connection, he’ll have Victor’s real name. Then we fast-forward his life, learn his abilities, figure out his motivations.”
“And his friends,” Callie said. “Any guy who can hijack a topsecret spy satellite…”
“Yeah,” I said. “This is no circus midget.”
Suddenly, the television had my full attention. I turned up the sound. “Are you watching this?”
She was.
CNN news anchor Carol Teagess was showing a close up of Monica Childers from one of the satellite photos. “This just in,” she said. “FBI offcials working in conjunction with Homeland Security have released the following image taken from one of the spy satellite digital photographs.” The TV screen displayed the new close up on the left, and a recent photograph of Monica on the right.
“It’s official,” she said. “The lady who was abducted at Amelia Island on Valentine’s Day has been positively identified as Monica Childers, wife of the nationally prominent surgeon Dr. Baxter Childers.”
Carol touched her ear piece and paused. “We take you now to the FBI field office in Jacksonville, Florida, where I’m told that FBI Spokesperson Courtney Armbrister is ready to begin her live press conference. Sources familiar with the story expect her to give further updates and reveal the kidnappers’ identities.”
On the phone, Callie said, “Darwin’s gonna shit!”
“Ya think?”
The TV screen showed a bunch of people milling around a large room at the FBI’s Jacksonville field office. It was clear the press conference would be delayed a few minutes, so Carol began a voice-over dialog to keep the viewers from switching channels to watch Hee Haw reruns.
Callie used the time to ask, “What were you saying earlier? About getting a tattoo on my ass?”
“I found an adorable one on the lower hip of your new body double.”
“You found a hooker who looks like me?”
“I resent the implication,” I said. “In any event, she’s close enough facially, and our people can do the rest.”
“A tattoo,” she said.
“And you’re also going to need a small red birthmark on your scalp.”
“No pubic piercings?” she said with great annoyance.
“I wish,” I said. I took a few seconds to conjure a mental image of Callie naked, but she was so far out of my league I couldn’t even fantasize it. “I’ll send you digitals when I get back to HQ,” I said.
Body doubles are disposable people we use to cover our tracks, or, in extreme circumstances, to fake our deaths if our covers get blown. We put a lot of time and effort into these people, monitoring and protecting them, often for years at a time, until something happens that requires us to place them into service.
Of course, our body doubles are totally clueless about their participation in our reindeer games of national security. If they knew about it, most civilians would disapprove of the practice, just as most disapproved of the army’s plan for wide-scale use of the ADS weapon. However, from my side of the fence, collateral damage is a fact of war, and civilian sacrifice a necessary evil. When managed judiciously, body doubles can buy us time to eliminate paper trails or change our appearance so we can get back to the business of killing terrorists.
Callie asked if Jenine was prettier than her—just the sort of crap you’d expect from a gorgeous woman. “Don’t be ridiculous,” I said. “Remember, she doesn’t have to look exactly like you. She only needs to be the same age, shape, and height. The fact that she’s beautiful, with high cheekbones, is a plus. The tattoo and birthmark are small and easy to replicate.”
“What sort of butter��y is it?” she asked. “Is it stupid looking? A tattoo is a permanent fixture, Donovan. It sounds creepy.”
“Think of it as a shrine to Jenine’s memory,” I said. “And try to show some respect, will you? She’s putting her life on the line for you.”
“Not knowingly,” Callie said. “Not willingly.”
“A technicality,” I said.
“If we ever terminate her,” Callie said, “I’m going to be stuck with a tattoo and birthmark that my next body double won’t have.”
I let that comment hang in the air unanswered, and soon we were back to exchanging theories about the Monica hit. I wasn’t ready to completely dismiss the terrorist angle, so Callie asked if it were possible Sal Bonadello was involved with terrorists. After all, he’s the one who gave Victor my cell phone number. I told her Sal was many things, all unsavory, but a terrorist sympathizer, no. I told Callie to keep watching the news and let me know if anything interesting developed.
“This isn’t interesting enough for you?” she asked.
CHAPTER 24
I was about to turn off the TV and take a shower when I got sidetracked by Courtney Armbrister’s live update on CNN.
FBI Special Agent Courtney Armbrister was a media dream. Playing to full advantage her shoulder-length auburn hair, perpetually pouting lips, and killer body, she managed to appear beguiling despite the seriousness of the occasion. Courtney sported the obligatory dark suit favored by the bureau, though hers was obviously tailored. Her jacket framed a white blouse that appeared more silk than cotton. Her eyes glared fiercely into the camera, and when she spoke, it was with such conviction you knew she had to be telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.