Duane thought of his own work in the Plutonium Facility, how Ronald and his friends always picked on him. Long ago another bully had exposed him to the radiation which Duane knew was the source of Stevie’s problems.
Nobody noticed Stevie or Duane’s plight or any part of their lives. Why did some people grab all the glory, while others lived their lives as invisible people quietly hurting for year after year? It made no sense to him. He couldn’t comprehend it. He sighed and stared at the TV as the story continued about the death of Hal Michaelson.
In the back room Stevie coughed again, louder this time.
CHAPTER 24
“You could have met me at the VR building, you know, “ Paige Mitchell said, entering the badge office among the morning crowds. “You have access to the entire lab.”
Craig Kreident looked up from his second cup of coffee to see her. He had arrived early, as was his habit. He squinted, and the morning light filtered around Paige from the large badge office windows, giving her a soft, angelic appearance. Except for her stunningly bright outfit the color of sliced strawberries.
Craig’s eyes widened. Paige’s shoes, skirt, and jacket matched in stunning red, contrasted with a smart white blouse and au natural hose. She had tucked her blond hair back in a neat French braid that crowned the outfit perfectly.
Craig struggled to his feet from the deep cushioned couch, trying to keep the coffee from spilling as he extended a hand to her, but some of the black liquid slopped over the side of the styrofoam cup.
“Ouch.” He shifted the cup to his left hand and sucked the side of his finger.
Arms folded, Paige watched him with an amused smile. “See? If we had met in the T Program lobby, you wouldn’t have burned yourself.”
“And missed this great badge office coffee? It’s been simmering to perfection for a few hours, I’m sure.” Craig wiped his hands with a small white napkin, then tossed the coffee away without drinking any more.
She raised her eyebrows. “A joke from the FBI man? Very good — you’re starting to sound like an insider.”
Shifting to her curt business voice, she handed him a long printout that listed document titles. “This is Dr. Michaelson’s inventory of classified papers, everything the document custodians recorded. I wouldn’t bet money that Michaelson himself kept track of his work, but his administrative assistant, Tansy Beaumont, is like an old Attila the Hun in sensible shoes and a drab print dress. She wouldn’t have let him slack off.” She gestured to the door. “Let’s go — we’ve got an exciting morning looking at numbered memo after numbered memo.”
Craig stuffed the sheaf of papers into his leather briefcase, then snapped it closed. “Last night I watched the news and read the papers. Gave me a chance to read up on our friend Michaelson. He’s had quite an… interesting and varied career.”
Paige looked at him as they walked across the parking lot. “That’s an understatement.”
She directed him to a small forest-green MG sportscar. He glanced at her and smiled. “Nice. What happened to the government van?”
“No need to impress you anymore,” said Paige. “It’s either this or one of the clunky Lab bikes.”
Seeing that it wouldn’t fit on the floor between his legs, he swung his briefcase into the small area behind the passenger seat. He dug out his Visitor’s badge as Paige spun out of the badge office parking lot and approached the gate. “They provide bicycles here?”
“About two thousand of them scattered all over the site. This is a big place. It cuts down on traffic and pollution. You’ll also see a bunch of the little white Cushman carts.”
Paige drove past the fences after the guard touched their badges. “Don’t the bikes get stolen?” Craig asked.
She pointed to a bald and bearded man ahead of them, hunched over the handlebars and madly pedaling away. “Take a look at that bike.”
Craig turned to watch as they zoomed past the bike. Paige’s MG sounded like an overactive lawnmower. “Let’s see, a wobbly reflector, thick tires, rusty basket…” He turned back to Paige. “Looks like the kind I had as a kid.”
“Bingo. How many people would sneak past all this security just to steal a clunker like that?” She brushed back a few wisps of stray blond hair that the wind had whipped in front of her face.
“Can’t argue with that logic,” Craig said.
Paige’s car permit from the Director’s Office allowed her to drive the MG into the restricted area normally reserved for government vehicles. When they walked up to T Program’s main entrance, he saw that the yellow tape had been torn down and lay in a wadded ball in one of the bushes.
“Where’s the, uh, PSO? I thought you were going to have this place guarded.”
Paige looked embarrassed and smiled wanly at him. “Well, we had a little problem.”
Craig stopped, avoiding her gaze to dampen his own reaction. He felt a gradually sinking feeling in his gut. What kind of red-tape muckup had they run into? “Don’t make excuses, Paige. Just tell me what happened.”
She shrugged. “Security has to go by the book. They agreed to keep an eye on the building, random spot checks, but they wouldn’t station a guard here all night.”
He made a disgusted sound. “Didn’t you explain that this is a Federal investigation site? Good lord, they’ve got a possible murder on their hands and they can’t be bothered to enforce a little security?”
“We have plenty of security, Craig. We routinely keep stacks of highly classified material and enough plutonium to make a bunch of atomic bombs. Trust us to keep a crime scene intact, kay-o? We’ve been handling nuclear design information for decades.”
Still upset, Craig stood next to her, trying to maintain a neutral expression. “But any of the T Program people have access. They could have come in last night—”
She smiled. “Then we’ve got them. Anybody using their badge for access gets recorded. We’ll run a computer check for a list of everyone who entered the CAIN booth here and the times they came in.”
Craig slowly nodded. She had a point, and her comments placed things in perspective for him — in a way, this was like conducting an investigation in another country. “I’m sorry. I apologize.”
“No offense taken,” said Paige. “Well, not much.” She entered the T Program lobby and Craig took his turn in the CAIN booth, following her through.
Inside the trailer complex the programmers and electronics engineers worked intensely, shouting to each other and conversing in a mid-level drone that seemed amplified by the labyrinth of cubicles.
Just inside the main doors of the administrative offices Michaelson’s secretary — administrative assistant, Craig corrected himself — waited for them.
“Tansy,” Paige said, “this is Mr. Kreident, FBI agent in charge of the investigation into Dr. Michaelson’s death.”
Craig shook hands. Tansy Beaumont was a wisened, no-nonsense, dark-complected woman who looked like a gypsy grandmother. Her black eyes bored into him from a leathery face, and he saw an unyielding dynamo of personality, a dragon lady who could match wills with someone like Hal Michaelson.
“Dr. Michaelson was a good boss, Mr. Kreident,” Tansy said. “If somebody did this to him on purpose, I want you to find out who it was. Understand?”
Craig nodded. “First step will be to check over the contents of his document safe. How long will it take you to open it?”
“Thirty seconds,” she said with flat confidence. “Dr. Michaelson never remembered his own combo and had me do it for him all the time.”