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Authors: Rebecca Cantrell

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Chapter 48

November 30, 9:45 a.m.

Times Square, New York

 

Dr. Dubois struggled out of the cab into the crush of humanity and honking horns that was Times Square. Billboards shouted for his attention, ads for musicals he’d never want to see, and junk food he shouldn’t consume. He stuck the crutches under his armpits and hobbled toward the hotel.

He was scheduled to meet Agent Marks at the Marrio
tt Marquis hotel at 10 o’clock. He could still fix this. Tesla had the serum, and he had some information about it, but he was contained underground. Saddiq might already have killed him. If not, there was a good chance that he’d been caught by the police. The doctor had heard the gunshots as the train had started to move again. They were after Tesla. They would get him.

If not, he needed to get to his meeting right away. He intended to record it and use the recording as insurance should the CIA try to cut ties with him. Since the 500 series debacle, they had distanced themselves from him, but they knew that they had enough on the line to fill the tunnels with agents looking for Tesla. They’d back him up, especially if he had a little insurance.

The noise level in the square dropped, and several people turned to look at the Jumbotron. It looked dark among all the glittering lights. He stopped to catch his breath, straightened his glasses, and looked up at the giant screen.

A familiar face looked down on him. His crutch slipped, and he almost fell. Pain rippled up from his leg. He caught his balance and looked back up at the screen.

Joe Tesla’s image stared down at him, large as a building. His lips moved as if he were speaking, but there was no audio, of course.

Subtitles appeared against his shirt.

The doctor read them. They told how Joe Tesla was trapped underground in New York City, how he had uncovered evidence of a terrible series of experiments. The image changed to show the doctor’s briefcase, one of the yellow biohazard stickers standing out brightly.

He staggered back, crutch dropping to the ground unheeded as he read his own name.

Around him people had stopped moving. They stared at the Jumbotron. A man with a red hat held up his phone to film it. They knew. Everyone knew.

Tesla was giving Dr. Dubois all the blame. But he hadn’t done it alone.

A hand cupped his elbow and steadied him. “Dr. Dubois?”

Agent Marks looked down on him.

“I...yes. Let’s get off the street,” said the doctor.

Marks’s phone beeped, and he pulled it out of his pants pocket.

The doctor gripped his remaining crutch.

A flicker of surprise passed across the agent’s face.

“What?” The doctor fought to keep panic from his voice. “What?”

“Nothing at all.” Marks handed him his dropped crutch. “Let’s get inside. We have a lot to talk about.”

The doctor’s galloping heart slowed. They would be able to find a solution.

Marks draped an arm across his shoulders. Something stung the doctor on the side of his neck.

His heart convulsed inside him, and he fell to the dirty asphalt.

“This man is having a heart attack!” called Marks. “Someone call 911.”

He’d never survive the wait for the ambulance. Pain radiated out from his chest, down his arm, but it wasn’t from a heart attack. He tried to reach the spot where Marks must have injected him, but his arm wouldn’t move.

Darkness crowded around the edges of his vision.

The last thing he saw was Tesla’s earnest face, with the doctor’s name printed beneath it. His own damning name.

 

Chapter 49

December 15, 6:42 p.m.

Gallo House

 

Joe climbed up an old-fashioned stepladder to place an antique star ornament atop his Christmas tree. He’d discovered a box of Victorian decorations in the attic and brought them out. Hand-blown glass balls, cut-tin shapes, and heavy lead tinsel glittered from every branch. The homey smell of pine filled the room. He bet it looked very much as it had for the first Gallo Christmas. He placed the star atop the tree awkwardly with his left hand. His right arm was healing nicely, but he didn’t trust it to hold the fragile glass.

The fireplace crackled cheerily. He’d cleared off the mantel and covered it with pine boughs and holly. Two stockings hung there. A red one with Joe stitched on it and a larger, yellow one, emblazoned with Edison.

“Does this star look straight?” Joe asked Vivian. She was across the room, eying the tree.

“Mostly.”

Joe climbed down and scrutinized the angle himself. Crooked.

A warm nose nudged the back of his knee. Joe grabbed a doggie treat off the corner of the mantel. Edison cocked his head, looking festive in a Santa Claus hat. It had been given to him by the residents of the Carrie Wilbur Home for Adults with Special Needs. After taking over Erol Saddiq’s bills, Joe had set up an animal therapy program at the home. Andres would be taking Edison there weekly.

The hat slipped to the side when Edison tilted his head and brushed it against his inverted plastic collar. He was healing without complication and was already outrunning Joe during their morning tunnel jogs. Joe was healing more slowly. His ankle had become infected and took two courses of antibiotics to start healing.

“He loves it!” said a breathless voice from one of the wingback chairs. It was Celeste, on Skype, beaming at the dog. Even though she would deny it, her hair looked perfect.

“Of course he does,” said a deep voice with an Eastern European accent. “He is a dog.”

Andres balanced a bowl of popcorn on his knee. He had plugged his iPad into Joe’s speaker system and Estonian Christmas carols played softly in the background. At least Joe thought that they were Christmas carols—they could have been lullabies or funeral marches, for all he knew.

Andres had insisted that they create garlands of popcorn and cranberries. Joe had tried until he’d poked himself under the thumbnail with a needle for the third time. Vivian claimed she hadn’t heard that much swearing since she’d left the Army.

Joe’s cell phone blared
Jingle Bells
, and he hurried to silence it, but not before Celeste gave him a mocking look for having a holiday ring tone.

He’d barely answered before the man on the other end launched into a complicated question.

“Hang on.” Joe glanced around the room. “I have to take this, but it won’t take long. It’s work.”

Taking the stairs two at a time, he went to his upstairs office to get his laptop. He’d gone back to work the last time that Pellucid had asked him. It felt good to be using his brain again, solving problems, setting up systems to catch bad guys.

Making a difference.

It didn’t take him long to answer the programmer’s questions, but he hesitated for a moment, thinking back to a conversation he’d had with Vivian when she’d first arrived at the party. He hadn’t seen her since the night that she’d knocked out the agents and held the elevator for him.

He’d put a mug of warm mulled wine in her hand and taken a sip of his own.

“Why didn’t you release the encrypted page?” she’d asked. “The one that you said linked the doctor to the CIA? They got off scot-free.”

“I know,” Joe said. “And I would have released it, damn the consequences, except for one thing.”

Her voice sounded skeptical. “What was that?”

“The encrypted page was blank.”

Her eyes widened. “It was a bluff?”

“It kept them from shooting us when the elevator got to the top floor,” he said. “And it’s still keeping them cautious.”

She’d grinned and clinked her cup against his. “Well played, sir.”

Joe smiled, remembering, and turned to return to the party, but before he could go back downstairs, his phone rang again.

“I’m sorry to disturb you so late.” Joe recognized the voice. Dr. Samuels.

His heart skipped a beat. “Yes?”

“The test results are in.”

“And?” Joe asked.

“We’ve definitely established that you do not have toxoplasmosis.”

Joe could tell that more news was coming. “That’s good.”

“Some of the results seem to indicate that you might have been dosed with certain experimental substances that may have triggered your agoraphobia.”

“You mean, someone did this to me on purpose?”

“We don’t know.”

When Joe ended the connection a minute later, he stood in his darkened office, staring at the drapery covering a window that opened to nowhere.

Who would poison him?

He had to know.

 

THE END

 

Acknowledgments

Putting down Joe Tesla’s adventures took a lot of help. Thanks goes first to my wonderful writing group who, as always, helped make the story shine: Kathryn Wadsworth, Judith Heath, David Deardorff, Karen Hollinger, and Ben Haggard. You guys are so talented at writing and editing. I’m proud to know you.

Thanks also to my writer friends, who provided advice and sanity checks—Andrew Peterson, James Rollins, Sean Black, Kelli Stanley, and CJ Lyons. Writing can be a lonely journey, and I’m grateful for the way stations you guys provide.

The book would not be what it is without the care of my agents, Mary Alice Kier and Anna Cottle, and my copy editor, Joyce Lamb; plus a shout-out to Kit Foster for the great cover. I received advice about the workings of the subway itself from Joseph Brennan. I’m sure I’ve managed to sneak some errors in despite his help, but that’s not his fault.

And last, and most important of all, thank you to my husband and son for being kind, supportive, and thoughtful while I slipped away to my underground world. I’ll be topside again for a while, but then I have this idea…

About the Author

Thank you for reading “The World Beneath.” I hope that you enjoyed the story!

I’m REBECCA CANTRELL, the award-winning and
New York Times
bestselling thriller author of this book. My other novels include the Order of Sanguines series, starting with
The Blood Gospel
and the award-winning Hannah Vogel mystery series, starting with
A Trace of Smoke
. My husband, son, and I just left Hawaii's sunny shores for adventures in Berlin, Germany.

If you’d like to find out more about my novels, visit my web site at
http://www.rebeccacantrell.com/
I have them all listed there, in order, plus some extra content about researching them and the worlds in which they take place. To purchase them for your Kindle, please go to the next page.

If you’d like to receive advance notice of my upcoming books, please sign up for my newsletter at www.rebeccacantrell.com. I put it out a few times a year, and I promise never to sell or trade your name.

Or, if you want to see what I’m up to day to day, you can find me on
Facebook
and
Twitter
.

Also by Rebecca Cantrell

Mystery/thrillers in the award-winning Hannah Vogel mystery series set in 1930s Berlin:

A Trace of Smoke

A Night of Long Knives

A Game of Lies

A City of Broken Glass

On the Train
(short story)

 

Gothic thrillers in the Order of the Sanguines series (written with James Rollins) set in ancient and modern day times and following the adventures of an order of vampire priests.

The Blood Gospel

Innocent Blood

City of Screams

Blood Brothers

 

Young adult novels in the
iMonster series (written as Bekka Black).

iDrakula

iFrankenstein

 

Happy reading!

Copyright Information

The author and has provided this e-book to you without Digital Rights Management (DRM) software applied so that you can enjoy reading it on your personal devices. This e-book is for your personal use only. You may not print or post this e-book, or make this e-book publicly available in any way. You may not copy, reproduce, or upload this e-book, other than to read it on one of your personal devices.

 

This book is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any similarity to real person, alive or dead, is completely coincidental.

 

THE WORLD BENEATH

 

Copyright © 2013 by Rebecca Cantrell

 

Cover Design by Kit Foster www.kitfosterdesign.com

 

All rights reserved.

 

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