Выбрать главу

"Your firm protects the rich and powerful. It makes sense that various intelligence agencies would keep tabs on your company's activities."

Again, Cavanaugh began to lose focus on reality. He didn't know what to think, what to depend on. Then he looked at Jamie, whose beautiful yet worried gaze was directed toward him, and he knew very definitely what to depend on.

"To hell with it." Cavanaugh raised Kline from the floor and pulled out the Emerson knife.

"What are you doing?" Kline flinched.

"John's going to phone the Justice Department and have your companions picked up for a heart-to-heart chat about unfriendly foreign governments."

Kline stared at the knife. "But what's going to happen to me?"

"We're going sight-seeing."

"What?"

"A quiet drive in the countryside."

"With you?" Kline looked pleadingly toward Rutherford. "Can't you see this guy's crazy? He'll take me out to the woods. God knows what he'll do to me there. No one'll ever find my body."

Rutherford studied Cavanaugh. "Can I talk to you a minute?"

"Keep your pistol aimed at Kline," Cavanaugh told Jamie. He followed Rutherford into the bedroom.

19

Rutherford closed the bedroom door. "Are you serious?"

"I need him to show me Prescott's lab. Maybe something there will tell me where Prescott went. It's the only direction I can think to go."

"Can't let you," Rutherford said. "Kline's an FBI prisoner now."

"I haven't heard you read him his rights."

"You will in about thirty seconds," Rutherford said.

"How about in a couple of hours?"

"What are you trying to-"

"Once Kline's officially in FBI custody and the Bureau puts him in a government facility, the pressure's off him. He won't feel threatened. He won't tell you anything more."

"Kidnapping a federal agent can put him in prison for life," Rutherford said. "He'll tell us anything we want to know in exchange for a plea bargain."

"But plea bargains take time," Cavanaugh said. "Meanwhile, Prescott's trail gets colder. I need everything Kline knows now."

"Can't," Rutherford repeated. "If the Bureau found out I let a prisoner go, I'd lose my job."

"You won't be letting him go," Cavanaugh said.

"Then why are we having this conversation?"

"I'm taking him."

"What?"

"Wait two hours, then phone the Bureau. Tell them there was another prisoner but that I took him before the situation was under control. Tell them we went to Prescott's lab. Send a team out there. By then, I'll have learned everything I need from Kline."

"You are crazy."

"Let's just say things are happening inside me I need to stop."

"I don't understand."

Cavanaugh held up his shaking hand. "Prescott gave me a dose of the fear hormone Kline talked about."

Rutherford didn't say anything for a moment. "God."

"Kline said there was a neutralizer. Prescott has it. I need it." Cavanaugh opened the door and went into the living room, where Kline looked apprehensive. "Let's go."

"No," Rutherford said.

Cavanaugh thumbed open the Emerson knife, freed Kline from the chair, tied his wrists in front of him, and draped Kline's leather jacket over his hands. "We'll use the stairs and go out through the emergency exit. Jennifer, get the car. Meet us in back."

"I can't let you do this," Rutherford said.

"Two hours, John."

"Don't make me stop you."

"What are you going to do? Shoot me?"

Rutherford stared at him.

PART FIVE. Threat Escalation

1

While Jamie drove, Kline sat next to her. Cavanaugh was in the back, his pistol under a newspaper on his lap, ready to shoot through the rear of Kline's seat if Kline did anything to justify it.

A hundred miles west of Washington, the Virginia countryside was lush and hilly, with fewer towns and more fields and wooded areas as they went along. Occasional farmhouses, stone fences, and ponds were visible along the tree-lined two-lane road. The prevailing impression, though, was of large estates and horses grazing.

At four in the afternoon, there was little traffic. As Jamie guided the Taurus into a hollow, up a slight rise, and into another hollow, Cavanaugh asked Kline, "How far?"

"Another five minutes."

"You're certain the two men you left here to watch for me have gone?"

"You heard me phone and tell them to leave. You made it clear: You'll shoot me if you catch even a glimpse of them. I assure you, they've gone. I gave them no warning."

Jamie drove past a sign that read bailey's ridge. "Where's the town? I don't see any buildings."

"It's not a town," Kline said.

"Then what is it?"

"A site where a Civil War battle occurred."

Past the sign, a plaque showed a map and an historical note. Jamie stopped next to it.

The map was in bas-relief, dramatizing the contour of the wooded hills in the area. Arrows indicated where Union and Confederate soldiers had fought one another in a battle that had destroyed most of a farm owned by an Irish immigrant, Samuel Bailey, killing his wife and daughter. The battle had concluded when Bailey put on a fallen Union soldier's jacket, grabbed a rifle, and led a company of Northerners across a ridge above his farm, outflanking their opponents. Bailey went on to receive a field commission as a captain and to fight in numerous other battles, eventually dying from diphtheria, never again seeing his farm and the graves of his wife and daughter.

"Well, that's enough to ruin my day," Cavanaugh said.

"Mine already was ruined," Kline said. His wrists remained tied together beneath his leather jacket. "Two hollows from here, there's a lane on the right."

Jamie drove on, went up an incline, and descended into the first hollow.

"Take this lane," Cavanaugh told Jamie.

"No, that's not the one," Kline said. "I told you two hollows."

"I know what you told me," Cavanaugh said, "but we're trying this one."

Jamie pulled off the road. Flanked by dense bushes and trees, two shadowy weed-choked ruts in the dirt were blocked by a wooden gate, the white paint of which had faded to the color of dirty chalk. What attracted Cavanaugh's attention was that the weeds in the lane looked crushed, as if a vehicle had recently gone over them.

"I don't see a lock," Jamie said. After a cautious glance around, she got out of the car and unhooked a rusted chain from the gate, swinging it open. She drove through, stopped, and took another wary glance around before she returned to the gate and shut it behind her.

"It's so flimsy," Jamie said, getting back into the car, "if we have to when we come back, we can always ram through it."

"Park where the undergrowth conceals us from the road. We'll walk," Cavanaugh said.

After warning Kline to be quiet, Cavanaugh made him lead the way up a potholed lane that twisted through trees and bushes. He had his pistol out, following Kline at a careful distance.

Overhead branches shut out the sun. Then the branches opened, and the steep rise brought them to knee-high grass in a clearing where old weather-grayed picnic benches looked down on a valley half a mile wide. The area down there was completely devoted to pasture, no shade trees anywhere, which was odd if the pasture was intended for horses, Cavanaugh thought, but not odd if the trees had been leveled to create an unobstructed line of fire and to remove places in which an intruder might be able to hide.