Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) š
- Author: James Ross
Book online Ā«Coldwater Revenge James Ross (best fantasy books to read TXT) šĀ». Author James Ross
By the end of Day Eight, eight thousand people are symptomatic and over two thousand have died.āā
The man behind the podium looked up. There was no conversation, no rustling of papers, no movement or stirring of any kind. He flipped a final page in his notebook.
āāSix Months Later,ā he read, āthe stadium is abandoned. Businesses in the surrounding neighborhood have left. Commercial and tourist travel to the city has all but disappeared. Of the fifty thousand people in and around the stadium on the afternoon of the attack, ten thousand became symptomatic and twenty-five hundred diedā¦ Economic losses as a result of the attack are estimated to be in the billions.āā
He closed his notebook and addressed a silent room. āThe Inglesby scenario Iāve just read is based on a single attack from a single vehicle. Multiple simultaneous attacks at different locations and serial attacks over time are not only possible, they are to be expected. We donāt know if a weaponized version of abrin is as effective as the toxins and spores we know more about, like anthraxāwhether itās half as effective or one hundred times as effective. Assuming that it is effectiveāand judging from slide two and three, some people seem ready to put it out there for a testāthe purpose of this gathering is to identify intervention points in the revised Inglesby Scenario where timely and coordinated efforts of the agencies represented in this room might minimize fatalities or achieve other positive results.ā
Johnsen turned off the television. āWe can skip the rest. There arenāt enough medical supplies and personnel to cover all of the possible sites ahead of time and the federal government isnāt going to warn and protect one city and not another. Frankly, we just have to make sure that a catastrophe like the one you just heard doesnāt happen.ā
Tom looked at the three strained faces. āI get it. But why am I here?ā
The bearded man, who Johnsen had identified as from the National Bioforensic Analysis Center, answered. āWe have a tape of this fellow Hassad coming over the Champlain Bridge last night. He used the name Aza and a green card to go with it. He hasnāt been spotted going back. Our Canadian friends tell us that he hasnāt left from any of their airports and we know that he hasnāt left from any of ours. So our best guess is that heās still hanging around. We assume for a reason. Something to protect. Something to finish. Maybe both.ā
The man sitting on the bed with his back against the wall interrupted. He was the one Johnsen had identified as BARDA, and he looked like an ex-boxer whose only defeat had been to acne. āWe had that guy you say you didnāt killāHellerāunder observation for over a year, hoping that heād lead us up the food chain. Our Canadian friends had the other end covered. But their guy got dead last night.ā He read from a blue spiral notebook. āBonnefesse. The last they had from him is that this Hassad passed something to Heller just a week agoāa couple of trunks of something, not the usual collection of bottles and baggies.ā
Tom tried not to react to the information about the gay sex shop owner. He spread his bandaged hands, palms up, but did not repeat his question.
āA Miss Susan Pearce will be out on bail by tomorrow. Thereās no evidence against her that weāre willing to share at this point and itās better if she thinks there isnāt any. What we want, is for you to stay close to her and let us know if and when this Dr. Hassad shows up.ā
āYou must have twenty guys at her house already,ā Tom protested.
āOn the outside,ā Johnsen agreed. āBut weāre told that you may be able to getā¦ closer?ā
They donāt miss much. Stillā¦ Susan might have accidentally poisoned her brother or even looked the other way while Frankie Heller took Billy on a one way boat ride. But Tom couldnāt believe she was involved in mass murder. āLook,ā he said. āI donāt think that thereās a recent connection between Miss Pearce and whatever this guyās name is now. With the brother, yes. But not her.ā
The little man on the hardback chair took a folder from his briefcase and handed it to Tom. āNeuroGene is a Nevada corporation. It takes a bit of work to pierce the corporate veil out there. But you can see from the top document that the corporation is majority owned by a Canadian holding company. A few months ago, the same company purchased a small island on Coldwater Lake. A local real estate firm handled the transfer, using a general power of attorney. Thereās a Federal Express receipt there for the closing documents, signed by an S. Pearce.ā
Tom looked at the signature. Small, neat, precise. Like her. It was genuine. He pressed the back of a bandaged knuckle into his eye socket. His head ached. His hands throbbed. The wounds on his scalp and knees felt like piecrust. How long had it been since he slept?
āThere is definitely a recent connection,ā said Johnsen.
āBut isnāt it dangerous for her if Hassad shows up? Assuming he killed Frankie Heller and Bonnefesse. If youāre right about a recent connection and heās already dusting his trail, then heāll go after her too, right? Even if she just thought she was helping an old friend with a real estate transaction?ā
No one in the room took up the suggestion.
āYouāre using her as bait,ā he pressed. āDoes she know that?ā
āShe might, if sheād talk to us,ā said Johnsen. āBut sheās lawyer-ed up alreadyāwhich as far as Iām concerned speaks for itself.ā
āYou could tell her,ā said the nameless man sitting on the edge of the bed. āHelp us, and we might consider helping you with some
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