The Delta Chain (39 page)

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Authors: Iain Edward Henn

Tags: #conspiracy of silence, #unexplained, #drownings, #conspiracy thriller, #forensic, #thriller terror fear killer murder shadows serial killer hidden deadly blood murderer threat, #murder mysteries, #Conspiracy, #thriller fiction mystery suspense, #thriller adventure, #Forensic Science, #Thriller, #thriller suspense

BOOK: The Delta Chain
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Whilst the DataStorming program conducted thousands of the virtual experiments each week, Stephen Hunter and his assistants conducted dozens of

actual

experiments, using the lab mice and the stored rodent blood.

It was, thought Donnelly, a brilliant combination of lab work and computer power, driving the scientific vision of an inventive mind. And he, Donnelly, had been the

general

who

d ensured the entire operation had been able to run so smoothly for so long. An essential cog in the wheel, he deserved to be respected more than Collosimo, or a dumb thug like Erickson.

Leaving Westmeyer

s office, as Hunter arrived, a fuming Donnelly went straight down to the sub-level. Before the end of the day it would all be gone; reassembled later in a different place with different operatives surrounding Westmeyer, for the final phase.

But there was still time now, before the “relocation”, to conclude the final experiment and record the data.

Donnelly had kept his own private stash of discs containing the Delta Chain data. It was his insurance policy should he ever be cut out of the loop. He knew there

d always been a chance of that with Asquith and his Nexus buddies, despite their long association. To them, everyone was expendable, including Westmeyer, but especially the rest of them. If he were pushed aside, if Asquith wouldn

t reconsider, then Donnelly would sell the data to the highest bidder.

He instructed the sub-level team to proceed as fast as possible.

He thought back over the years of meticulous planning, at the intricacy that kept the whole process so secret. The lab teams upstairs knew only what was essential to their own tasks. All staff working with Hunter had been given differing briefs and worked on selected portions of the experiments. They understood there were various end results of medical significance being sought.

In fact there was only one, and it wasn

t medical.

Joe Casey, young, brash, wild-eyed and wild haired, had been recruited by Donnelly to run the sub-level. In a previous existence he

d been arrested several times for petty crimes, and for cruelty to animals. He

d run with a rough crowd in a tough section of Manhattan. But Casey wasn

t a street kid or a junkie. He was a uni student, majoring in computer science. A whizz. He was exactly the kind of contradictory personality type that Donnelly sought for the sub-level.

Casey derived a quiet, sadistic satisfaction from conducting and recording the experiments.

An observer.

The progress had exceeded all expectations, with only the computer virus causing delays in recent months.

Ultimately, the secretive result created for Nexus would filter through to the broader military and commercial worlds, the approval processes fabricated, the history of the project manipulated.

While Westmeyer and Hunter would eventually achieve fame in scientific circles for their breakthrough, Donnelly wanted recognition for his brilliant military style tactics, used not for armies but for scientists, used not for warfare but for scientific advancement.

For in the labs and chambers on this hidden level, the most successful results from Hunter

s

live

experiments with mice were being repeated

only not with mice.

With humans.

 

Kate entered Hunter

s lab. She wanted to ask him what he

d heard about the deaths the previous night. And she

d decided it was time to confront him about his relationship with Rhonda Lagan. Two of his assistants were glued to computer screens at the far end of the spacious area. Stephen himself wasn

t in the lab or the adjoining office.

Kate looked at the glass cages containing the mice. They darted about their prisons, up and down straw covered scaffolding, some of them furiously running around tiny treadmills. She considered for a moment the fact these tiny, unaware creatures were just the latest in…many hundreds of millions, probably, that had helped the advancement of medicine through the centuries. She knew that Stephen

s work involved the genetic engineering of “super” blood cells with disease fighting capabilities. Or at least, that

s what she

d been led to believe.

Further along in the lab were canisters and tubes housing litres of blood and beyond those, containers of water. Although she

d been in here before, she

d never looked in any detail at the equipment. The water intrigued her. She moved forward. On a metal slab beside the miniature water tank were the bodies of several mice. They were soaked. It looked to Kate as though they

d drowned.

Drowned?

She felt a shift inside her, like a gear clicking into place.

She called to the assistants.

Where

s Stephen?

They both looked up. One of them replied:

Went up to see Dr. Westmeyer.

‘Thanks.

She loitered for a few moments more. So many questions…she reminded herself not to let anger or anxiety expose her real feelings. Her position as a consultant here gave her the advantage of being able to move around freely.

Don

t look like you

re snooping, don

t arouse suspicion
.

She would look in on Hunter again later. Her next stop was James Reardon

s office. Although she knew Adam and Brian Markham had left James

office only minutes before, James wasn

t in there now.

Kate

s earlier question to Betty had been about A.B.C.S.

history with the Westmeyer Institute. She

d learned that Reardon first consulted to the Institute five years earlier, long before Kate joined the company, and during Westmeyer

s Florida days. That was when Reardon began to develop DataStorming. Perhaps it was this connection with an Australian company that gave Westmeyer the idea of moving his operation downunder.

Kate now knew that the croc hunters had previously been in Florida.

She decided it was a curious twist of irony that James had organised the Landscan III for her, ultimately leading police back to the Institute for which he consulted.

To the same place beset by the computer “bug” and where Rhonda Lagan had uncovered the discrepancy with the building plans

How much was chance and how much was something else?

How much did Stephen know?

Kate sat down at the terminal James had been using.

Stephen had been having an affair with Melanie Cail. She was hungry for sensational news to showcase her skills to the city editors. How did any of that fit? Kate seated herself at the computer and called up the data from James

investigations into tracing the virus. Her fingers flew over the keyboard, retracing the same steps. Was she just filling in time or was she subconsciously searching for something?

Moments later the numbers appeared on the screen and a suspicion that had been building in her mind was fully realised…and answered.

 

The van carrying Erickson and Tannen turned onto the narrow, stony road that led to the rear of the Institute. In the back lay Daniel, still unconscious. Neither of the men had taken any notice of the taxi that had joined the coastal road several blocks back, and which had since diverted onto the front entry road to the Institute. Sitting in the back seat of that taxi, Jean Farrow leaned forward for a better view.

When her cab had first picked her up, the driver had been apologetic about his need to make a stop on the way. He

d explained that his wife was chronically ill and had asked him to pick up a refill of her medication and drop it off at home for her. He

d already had the prescription filled, he said to Jean, and would she mind if he just popped in briefly to make sure everything was all right?

Jean had replied that of course she didn

t mind at all. Waiting in the taxi in the suburban street, she

d idly noticed a boy being placed into the back of a van, and thought he seemed a little…odd.

Now she observed with greater interest this same van, as it turned further along on the highway, on to the track that led to the rear of the Institute.

 

As Tannen opened the fence that shielded the rear dock, Erickson scanned the area. Once they were certain there was no one in the vicinity, Erickson punched digits on his cell phone, calling the men stationed on the inside. A minute later the doors to the dock slid open.

Tannen drove the van down the sloping entry road into the hangar like sub-level below.

 

The girl should have fought them, struggled with them, sunk her teeth into their arms

but what was the point? She

d done all that many times before to no avail. They simply held her harder, bruised her, struck her. She was no match for the men

s strength.

Today she went with them meekly. They pushed her forward through the narrow, winding corridor.

They wanted her to struggle once

it

began. She understood that now. They wanted to see how long she could survive and the longer, apparently, the better. This excited them for some reason. But she wasn

t going to give them what they wanted this time. She wasn

t going to hold out for as long as possible, fighting to live.

She

d lost the will. She was simply going to allow herself to be taken out of this world as soon as possible.

 

Hank Mendelsohn had a good relationship with the editor who succeeded him on the Chicago Tribune. It was at least six months, however, since he

d spoken to Mark Dole.

‘Mark, Hank Mendelsohn. I

m calling from a big coastal town called Northern Rocks, near the city of Brisbane in Queensland, Australia.

‘How about that? Good place for a vacation?

‘Actually, I

m following a story.

Dole laughed.

Hank, you

ve been retired for…what? Two years or more?

‘Tell me about it. Listen, Mark, you know I

ve done the occasional freelance article…

‘Yeah.

‘Apart from that, you haven

t heard from me.

‘What are you getting at, Hank?

‘You know I wouldn

t waste your time unless it was something serious.

‘Go on…

‘There

s a major international news story about to break here. Several drowning victims, all unidentifiable. A croc hunting gang, operating in the Outback now, but they were in Florida a couple of years back. The whole thing

s tied in with a pre-eminent American research scientist, William Westmeyer-

‘You

ve got my attention. You want to cover this with our backing?

‘Yes. I

ll need a back-up reporter and a couple of news photographers, sourced locally, no time to fly anyone over. I

ve already got the co-operation of a local paper. They

ll supply a desk, phone and computer. And you should contact the subsidiaries

those TV bozos will want in on this as well.

‘Did I remind you you

re retired,

Dole said with another laugh.

‘Funny. Actually, I didn

t go looking for this. It kind of…fell into my lap. Frankly, I could do with a lot less excitement.

‘You know what I think, Hank?

‘What?

‘I think you

re absolutely loving it. Consider the back-up organised.

 

Adam knew that sometimes, during traumatic moments, people were surprised by extra strength and courage, found within. Then, in the midst of it all, fear could strike, peeling away the layer of strength as though it had never been there, making you wonder what in God

s name you thought you were doing.

That was the feeling that struck him as the elevator door slid away at the sub-level. His heart palpitating, his breath suddenly shorter, Adam marvelled at the inner reserves he

d mustered over the past few days, and the sense of purpose with which he

d entered the elevator just two floors above.

Now he felt naked, exposed, in real danger.

He steeled himself, knowing it was too late to turn back. He had to see this through. Instinctively, needing reassurance, he felt for the smooth steel of the holstered gun beneath his jacket. Standard issue but in fact, rarely ever used.

He stepped into the corridor outside the lift. Here, he looked on walls of roughly hewn stone, a floor of sturdy tiles. To the left there was an opening into a wider area. To the right the corridor followed a narrow bend. There were doorways further along.

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