The Adamas Blueprint (3 page)

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Authors: Boyd Morrison

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Lobec needed to know more. After emptying the other two smoke detectors, he headed for Ward’s office. The next item on the agenda was to look for anything regarding N. Kevin Hamilton. Unless they found him quickly, whatever was in the message might find its way to the MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

19

police. He couldn’t let that happen. In more ways than one, their involvement would be disastrous for Lobec.

* * *

Reggae blasted from the stereo of the stifling, overcrowded house. Kevin opened the window he’d been looking out of, leaving the screen to repel the late summer mosquitoes.

It was 8:00 and Nigel Hudson was throwing his traditional beginning-of-the-semester party.

Before coming over, Kevin had returned to his apartment, showered again, and put on khaki Bermuda shorts, a white V-neck pullover, and a pair of beat-up Bass Rangeleys with no socks.

Someone tapped his shoulder from behind.

“Is she coming?” said Nigel, handing a beer to Kevin.

“I can tell you’ve been drinking,” Kevin said. “Your accent’s back.”

Nigel, an immigrant from Jamaica who’d been a US resident for 15 years, was meticulously stylish and probably the most gregarious person at South Texas. He was also one of the few friends from his undergraduate years at Texas A&M that Kevin kept in touch with.

Nigel shot him a bemused look. “Don’t change the subject. You’ve been looking out the window ever since you got here.”

“You mean Erica?” Kevin shrugged and looked around at Nigel’s business school friends, most of whom he didn’t know.. “She’s still got two weeks left on her ER rotation. You know how busy med students are.”

“But she did say she was coming.”

“She said she’d
try
to come. It wasn’t like I asked her out on a date.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

20

“Why didn’t you? From what I can tell, there’s not a single thing wrong with her. What’s the problem?”

“There is no problem. We eat lunch together in the hospital cafeteria. Sometimes we study together at the library.”

“Nothing else?”

“We went to a picnic a few weeks ago, but we were with a bunch of other people. We’re just friends.”

“You, my friend, are a terrible liar.”

“It’s the truth,” Kevin protested a little too vehemently.

“Okay,” said Nigel, with a definite air of skepticism. “So why do I hear that she’s been over to your place three times already?”

“Who told you that?”

“You’re not the only person I know that works in the hospital.”

Kevin knew when he was caught. “Those visits were purely platonic.” That
was
the truth, unfortunately. “She makes a good stir-fry.”

“Sure,” Nigel said, drawing the word out. “What’s her pager number?”

“I’m not going to page her just to see if she’s coming to a party.”

“So you do have it.”

Kevin had it memorized. “So what?”

Nigel threw his hands up in defeat. “I was just making a suggestion. Do you want something to eat? There are chips in the kitchen.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

21

“No thanks. I stopped at McDonald’s on the way over. Besides, all you ever have is those

‘light’ chips.”

“Some of us don’t have time to go to the gym five days a week like you. I wish...”

Something over Kevin’s shoulder caught Nigel’s eye, stopping him in mid-sentence. Kevin turned to catch a glimpse through the window of someone approaching the door outside.

“Take a look at who’s coming in,” Nigel said.

Kevin’s breath caught slightly in spite of himself.

But as he saw the door open, he let his breath out in disappointment.

A voluptuous blonde, maybe five feet tall and shoehorned into a low-cut black leather dress, walked over to Nigel, hugged him tightly, and gave him a peck on the cheek.

“How are you, Nigel,” she said with exaggerated flair. “I haven’t seen you in hours.” She turned to Kevin and smiled up at him. “And who is your friend here?”

“Kevin,” Nigel said, “this is Heather.”

They shook hands. She had a surprisingly firm grip for someone her size, but then Kevin realized that a limp handshake wouldn’t get a business school graduate very far.

Nigel said something about getting her a drink and walked away, leaving Kevin and Heather alone.

Heather said something which Kevin couldn’t hear over the music. He said, “Excuse me?”

and bent down to put his ear closer to her mouth. Her spicy perfume and the tequila on her breath engulfed his nose. The combination almost overpowered his senses, and he had to swallow a cough.

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

22

The cut of her dress wasn’t sleazy, but it left little to the imagination. He turned his head so he wouldn’t give the impression that he was staring into her cleavage.

“I said you’re cute,” she repeated, raising her voice. “You’re not in the business school, are you? I would have noticed you before.”

Normally, Kevin’s stomach would be fluttering by now from the compliment, but tonight it was oddly silent.

“I’m getting my Ph.D. in chemistry. Nigel was my roommate last year.”

“Nigel’s great, isn’t he? I’m taking a class with him. He helps me a lot with my homework.”

I’ll bet he does
, thought Kevin.

“Did you go to South Texas for your undergrad, too?” she asked, putting her hand on Kevin’s arm to balance herself.

“No. A&M.” He held up his class ring, the words Texas A&M encircling the border. South Texas and A&M were huge rivals. “Some people don’t speak to me when they find out.”

She tilted her head and one end of her mouth turned up. “I won’t hold it against you."

“So, when do you graduate?” he said.

“I just started last semester. There’s no way to advance at the bank I work for unless you have an MBA, so I thought night school--”

“Heather!” A brunette ran up to Heather and began talking to her, looking at Kevin several times, but he couldn’t hear them over the stereo. He breathed a sigh of relief and was about to excuse himself when Heather spoke.

“This is Darcy. We were going to Cody’s and wondered if you wanted to join us. Do you like jazz?”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

23

Kevin loved jazz. One of his favorite local bands was playing at Cody’s.

“It’s not really my thing.” He looked down at his shorts. “Besides, I’m not dressed for it.”

“Sure you are. I think you look great.”

“Maybe some other time.”

“Well, if you ever want to go, you can reach me at this number.” She produced a card from her purse. “It was nice to meet you. Hope to see you again.” She put the card in his hand. Her finger trailed down his arm as she moved away.

Kevin let out a sigh as he watched the two leave the apartment, then walked into the kitchen.

He crumpled the card without reading it and threw it in the wastebasket.

Nigel was standing by the keg. He spotted Kevin and came over.

“Where’s Heather?” he said. “I thought you two were hitting it off.”

“I guess I wasn’t her type.”

“Wasn’t her type? She was hanging all over you like drapes on a curtain rod.”

“What can I say? She had to go.”

Nigel frowned. “I thought you and Erica were just friends.”

“We are.”

“Really.”

“Yes,” Kevin said, then gulped his beer. He handed the empty cup to Nigel. “Now shut up and pour me another one.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

24

CHAPTER 3

“That son of a bitch!” Clayton Tarnwell stabbed a finger down on the limousine’s intercom button. “Get Senders on the phone now.” His deep voice boomed, revealing just a hint of Texas twang. David Lobec, who was sitting across from Tarnwell, didn’t flinch.

Tarnwell’s personal secretary was in the front seat, hidden by the opaque glass partition. “Sir, Senders is still in Yosemite camping with his family. He’ll be out of pocket until tomorrow night.”

Tarnwell looked outside in time to see a sign saying “Welcome to Houston” whiz by. It was 7:00 on a Saturday morning and traffic out of the airport was light. “Didn’t he take his satellite phone with him?”

“It’s in his office.”

Christ, he thought, I’ve got some morons working for me. First, the problem with Stein, now this. “When does ZurBank open?”

“Two thirty Monday morning, Houston time.”

“Then call that idiot’s house and leave a message that if he isn’t in my office by two thirty Monday morning, he can kiss his ass good-bye.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

25

“Yes, sir. Will you be needing the Gulfstream Tuesday as planned?”

“No. Cancel the trip to Wyoming. Murphy can take care of that. But I’ve got to be back in DC Thursday for the meeting with the National Mining Institute. Tell them we fly out Wednesday night, 8 o’clock. And get another pilot. I almost lost a filling on that landing.”

He released the button and looked back at Lobec. “That’s all Ward said? Nothing about the money?”

Tarnwell had called ahead to have Lobec meet him when he arrived to provide him an update of the situation with Ward. He had too much to do to waste the 45 minute drive to his office. As the owner and CEO of Tarnwell Mining and Chemical, he spent a substantial amount of his time in Washington conferring with his lobbyists on the latest legislation that might affect TMC and, more importantly, its growth and profits. He had made most of his money taking advantage of loopholes in US mining laws, buying land from the government at ridiculously low prices and then stripping every last precious mineral from it, leaving the residue to be disposed of at taxpayer expense.

Lately, he had diversified into the chemical industry, relying on his mining interests to provide the raw material. And the only way to make the most of his investments was to ensure that his presence was felt on Capitol Hill. Usually, he took Lobec with him to Washington for special operations which he didn’t want to be directly associated with, but he had stayed behind to take care of Ward.

Ward was a special case. Probably once in a lifetime.

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

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Lobec shook his head. “He died before I could get anything further from him. It must have been a heart attack. The wound was in the shoulder, not nearly severe enough to cause immediate death.”

“And you’re sure he didn’t have the account number hidden somewhere in the house?”

“We took several hours to search it. There was a safe, but nothing was in it besides some insurance documents and jewelry. The computer also looked fruitless, but I copied all of the files and gave them to Mitch Hornung to see if anything is there.”

Tarnwell nodded. Hornung was his resident computer genius and hacker. If anything was there, Mitch would find it.

“We were quite thorough,” Lobec continued, “but it’s very possible that something as small as a piece of paper with a number on it could have been overlooked.”

“What about his university office? On the computer there, maybe?” Tarnwell opened the coffee maker, poured himself a cup, and offered one to Lobec.

Lobec shook his head. “No, thank you. I checked the campus office, the lab, and the office computer after we were finished with his house. I could see nothing about Adamas or the Swiss account. Of course, Hornung has those files as well, so we won’t be certain until later today. I believe, however, that Ward must have memorized the account information.”

“Damn! I told Senders this was going to happen. That dumbshit is going to work twenty-four hours a day until he gets my money back.”

“I was under the impression that the money could not be transferred without our knowledge.”

Tarnwell threw his hands up. “That’s what
I
thought! That moron!”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

27

Milton Senders, Tarnwell’s chief financial officer, had been responsible for transferring the $10 million to an account he set up for Ward in Switzerland. Tarnwell had no intention of letting Ward keep the money, but Ward was no dummy, so Tarnwell needed to make the transaction look legitimate to get Ward to give him the notebook. Senders assured Tarnwell that the risk of losing the money was minimal. Because they knew the banker and Tarnwell was one of his biggest depositors, they could simply let Ward withdraw small amounts to maintain the illusion that Ward had control of the money, giving up maybe a few thousand for the sake of appearances.

Large transactions had to be approved by Tarnwell, and Ward hadn’t made any. But last night they found that the account was virtually empty. Ward somehow slipped $10 million past Senders’ security measures.

“We don’t even know how he did it,” Tarnwell said. “It’s almost as if he had help.” Then his huge frame suddenly went rigid, and he narrowed his eyes at Lobec. “David, you have told me everything, haven’t you? I mean, I can trust you. I know I can. But I just want to hear it from you.”

Lobec looked him in the eye. “Mr. Tarnwell, I owe you my life. What more can I say?”

“You’re damn right you owe me. If it weren’t for me, you’d still be rotting in La Mesa.”

Tarnwell smiled to himself when he saw Lobec’s mouth twitch at the mention of the Mexican prison that had been Lobec’s home for two years. The only reason Tarnwell had gotten him out was because he’d needed a good security man, one who wasn’t afraid to get his hands dirty.

Through some contacts he’d heard Lobec was the best mercenary money could buy. The situation was also attractive to Tarnwell because he knew where to find Lobec’s brother. He rarely let Lobec forget that.

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

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“You are very generous, Mr. Tarnwell. I would never betray that generosity.”

“That’s what I like to hear. You’re the best man I’ve got, David. I think you know that.

You’ve certainly lived up to your reputation. You know how to get things done, and I appreciate that.” Tarnwell leaned forward and lowered his voice. “But if I ever so much as have an inkling that you’re not being straight with me, you’ll be on the next truck to Guadalajara. Then I’ll have someone pay a visit to California.” He smiled. “Your brother’s insurance business is still in Encino, isn’t it? I hope it’s going well. It’s hard to support a wife and five kids these days.”

Lobec narrowed his eyes. “I understand.”

“Good,” Tarnwell said. “Now, tell me about how you took care of the house. Everything went as planned, I assume?”

“It should look like the fire started with a smoldering cigarette. I extinguished the stove’s pilot light and left the gas slightly on. As I understand from the initial police reports, the entire house was consumed. The bodies were so charred the police haven’t even positively identified them yet.”

“Do you think it’ll be enough to cover Ward’s gunshot wound?”

“Definitely for the next week. Fortunately, the county coroner’s office is swamped with bodies from the Baytown gas leak. Ward’s autopsy won’t even begin until that’s finished. With the bodies burned so badly, they may never know what really happened.”

“It doesn’t matter anyway. They have no way to link me with him. And at least we have the notebook.”

“Right before his scuffle with Bern, Ward did mention something about a videotape,” Lobec said. “He also said that you don’t really have the notebook.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

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Tarnwell waved his hand. “He was bluffing. I would in his situation. Don’t worry about it.

The lab should have Adamas up and running any time now. And the lawyers started the patent ball rolling yesterday.” A smile spread across Tarnwell’s face, and a set of perfect teeth showed through. “Despite Senders’ fuck up, I’m in a pretty good mood.” Tarnwell leaned his head back and closed his eyes, stretching his long legs onto the seat next to Lobec.

Lobec cleared his throat. “There is one detail that remains.”

Except for his mouth, Tarnwell didn’t move. “Then take care of it.”

“I will. But I thought you should know. It seems that Ward sent an electronic mail message before we arrived.”

Tarnwell’s head jerked up. “What?”

“We know he didn’t phone anybody. And he had virtually no time to see anyone between the time Stein’s murder was reported and the time he got home. But we never considered electronic mail. It was the only way he could have contacted anyone without our knowledge.”

“Do you know who it went to?”

“It was sent to an N. Kevin Hamilton.”

“Who is he?”

“We found a number of references to him in Ward’s files. He’s in his third-year of graduate school at South Texas University. He worked with Ward until last May. Of course, Bern and I searched his apartment as soon as we were finished with Ward.” Lobec passed a picture to Tarnwell. “This is from his apartment. He won’t miss it.”

MORRISON/THE ADAMAS BLUEPRINT

30

It showed a smiling man in his twenties with thick brown hair. He was wearing a Texas A&M

T-shirt and jeans and was standing next to a tall brunette with long tan legs extending from a pair of white shorts.

“Who’s the model?” Tarnwell said, handing the photo back.

“We don’t know yet, but we’re looking into it. Her first name is Erica. He had several photos like it in his bathroom mirror, and one of them had their names written on the back.”

“Do you think Ward sent him the Swiss account information?”

“No, I believe that information died with him. Ward was scared, but I don’t think he was planning on relinquishing the money. Most likely, he was sending a message about the process or something incriminating toward you. Possibly both, but we can’t be sure. Hornung hasn’t been able to locate the correct file yet.”

“It doesn’t sound like you’ve talked to this Hamilton yet.”

“He wasn’t there when we arrived last night, which is why we are trying to find this girl. He could be at her place. Bern is watching his apartment and we have a tap under way. I will join him after we reach your office. Do you have any specific instructions?”

“Find out what Hamilton knows. I mean anything. And videotape the interrogation for me. I can’t be there, but I want to see it. Then get rid of him.”

“It is possible that Hamilton knows nothing,” Lobec said.

Tarnwell took a sip of coffee and leaned his head back again. “Nobody ever said life was fair.”

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