Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ
- Author: James Ross
Book online «Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) đ». Author James Ross
Tom was tempted to suggest the scientistâs wife, but checked himself.
âMossad!â the professor hissed. âNo doubt with the connivance of your government.â
âYour pal must have been working on something pretty exciting,â said Tom.
âWeâll never know.â Hassad stepped from behind his desk, allowing his palm to trail over a small paper parcel that had been partly covered by a stack of files on the edge of the desk. Tom noted the row of brightly colored stamps as the package disappeared into the pocket of the professorâs jacket.
âAnd now comes some provincial American policeman who blithely demands that I betray the identities and research of similarly vulnerable colleagues. No doubt heâll threaten me if I donât comply. No thank you, Mr. Morgan. I will not.â
Tomâs reply was precise and his voice modulated. âAnd if thereâs a connection between your dead colleague and the man whose photo I just showed you?â
Hassad dismissed the suggestion with an impatient wave of his hand. âYouâre fishing.â He moved toward the door. âNow if you will excuse me, Mr. Morgan, I must prepare a lecture.â It was a dismissal.
âOne last question, then. Humor me.â
Hassad sighed. âIf I must.â
âWhen were you last in the United States?â
Hassad hesitated. His answer, when it came, was a curt and peevish, âThis morning.â
âFor what purpose?â
âA personal matter.â
Tom counted silently to ten, then twenty.
âTo see my dentist,â Hassad spat.
CHAPTER 19
Tom grabbed a handful of departmental brochures on his way out of the building, and then strolled over to lâParc Lafontaine hoping to bring order to the jumbled impressions of the morning: an address for a company named Ulabs that turned out to be grocery store with no customers; its owner, a university professor named Hassad, who did nothing when a surprise visitor claiming to be the NeuroGene owner turned out to be an impostor, and who claimed not to recognize Billy Pearceâs photo, but appeared to know that the man in it was dead.
The normal response of a healthy mind, Tom knew, is to provide an answer to a direct question. It may be a lie, or even nonsense, but a clear direct question will almost always prompt an answer. He had resuscitated many a dying deposition by repeatedly triggering that mental reflex, when someone less persistent would have dropped a handful of dirt and called it a day.
Who is Hassad?
Someone who knew Billy Pearce, but doesnât want to admit it. Who sends stuff to a tiny Coldwater biotechnology company, but doesnât want to say what. Who spent enough time in England to pick up an accent, but at an age too advanced to get it pitch-perfect.
What about the package he palmed?
Incoming, not outgoing. Those werenât Canadian stamps.
And what about Father Gaussâ not so subtle hint: âIt may be that I know quite a bit about Billy Pearce that our Sheriff doesnât. But thereâs little I can tellâŠ?â Gauss wasnât going to violate a confidence. But if he had information that could help solve a murder, didnât another ethical obligation came into play?
Questions continued to pop into Tomâs head almost at random. What could Billy have been carrying that might have got him killed? How can anyone characterize a Wall Street deal maker as low energy? What happens to my high-powered career if I donât get back to New York soon to save it?
Lost in thought, Tom almost missed the familiar profile moving fast along the sidewalk beside the park. Throwing bills at a push cart vendor selling college logo-ed sportswear, Tom grabbed a UQAM cap and broke into a jog to catch up. If Hassad looked around, maybe his tail would appear as just another fish in the school, so to speak.
Striding briskly through the spider web of streets and alleys east of the park, the quarry never paused or looked back. Minutes of twists and turns later, he entered the same grocery store that Tom had visited earlier. Sounds of a whacking great argument poured from the store. Then the disputants came onto the street, with the grocer who claimed not to know a Professor Hassad screaming loud and long at him before abruptly breaking off and dashing down an alley. Hassad took off in the opposite direction. Tom followed.
South across lârue RĂȘne-Levesque and down a series of unmarked streets that ancient memory told Tom were near the outskirts of Chinatown. Turns and more turns, then a brief glimpse of Hassad disappearing into a storefront mosque. Tom sensed that he was back in the neighborhood of the grocery store, but he couldnât be sure. Rabbits run in circles, Tommy, when they sense the hunter. The idlers outside the mosque stared at the man wearing a studentâs sports cap. One of them glared and then disappeared inside. Tom stuffed the cap in his pocket, but the idlers continued to stare. He backed away and looked for a street sign that would identify the location of the rabbit hole. Joe would want to know.
* * *
The rental car remained unbooted where Tom had left it. The philosophy tome on the front seat was undisturbed as well, though Tom had forgotten to lock the passenger side door. Father Gaussâ parting gift might fall into the category of âread later when you feel like itâ, and have nothing to do with the current dramas of their respective lives. But instinct and experience told Tom that was unlikely. He took the priestâs letter from the book and reread it, thinking it might help. It didnât. But then he noticed the digits scrawled on the back. He reached into his pocket for the paper with the numbers heâd copied in the internet cafĂ© earlier that morning. The seven digit sequences all began with the same three-digits.
Father Gauss was in Montreal.
Tom switched on his cell phone for the first time in days and dialed the number scribbled on the back of Gaussâ letter. A woman answered.
âCouvent de San Gabriel.â
âPĂšre Gauss, sâil vous plait,â he
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