Dead Sleep (48 page)

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Authors: Greg Iles

BOOK: Dead Sleep
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“Who's the negotiator?” Dr. Lenz asks, appearing suddenly.
“Ed Davis,” John replies. “He's good.”
“This isn't a normal situation,” Lenz says, directing his words to Baxter. “This isn't a distraught husband or a suicidal cop. This is a probable serial murderer. You know—”
“I know what you want, Arthur,” Baxter says brusquely. “We'll discuss it with the SWAT commander.”
“Talk to Bowles,” says Lenz. “It's his call.”
Baxter starts running toward a large building on the north edge of the quad that I now recognize as the Woldenberg Art Center. John and I follow, with Lenz puffing after us. I should have recognized the building from the air, with its three massive skylights over the gallery where Roger Wheaton's room-sized painting awaits its first public showing. From this angle, the building appears as two three-story brick boxes separated by a one-story section fronted with arches. If I remember correctly, the classic boxes house classrooms, studios, and offices, while the long section houses the art gallery. Gaines must be inside one of the two end sections.
The closer we get to the building, the harder it is to see. Massive spreading oaks line the road in front of it, obscuring most of the windows. Beneath one of the oaks, a knot of men in black body armor with “FBI” stenciled in yellow crouch around what looks like a map. John reaches them first, and immediately begins talking to one of the men on the ground. Baxter takes out his cell phone and dials a number, and Dr. Lenz hovers beside him. I edge in to listen to the SWAT leader briefing John. He's a tall man in his thirties with a black mus tache, and a patch on his flak vest reads “Burnette.”
“Gaines is still on the third floor,” says Burnette. “He's keeping his gun to the hostage's head when we can see him, but most of the time, our view is obscured by venetian blinds. There's no high ground for snipers, so we're going to put a man up in the Huey and have the pilot hold a hover. That's not a good solution, but until we get some scaffolding out here, it's the only way to get a bead on that office. We also have two men on the roof with rappelling gear. They can drop and crash the window, but that's not my call. We've rescued about forty students and faculty so far, but there may be twenty or so still on the floor with Gaines, some in small private studios. He's barricaded the main access door. Those kids could be completely ignorant of the danger or completely under Gaines's control.”
“Have you established contact with Gaines?” John asks.
“A secretary just gave Ed the number of the office. He‘s talking now.”
As Burnette points across the lane, a man dressed in civilian clothes pockets a cell phone and runs toward us.
“He wants one of our helicopters to take him to the airport,” says the negotiator. “He wants a plane waiting there to take him to Mexico. I tried opening a dialogue, but he hung up. The guy sounds like a hard case. Streetwise, prison-tempered. This could take a while.”
Baxter steps up to Burnette and says, “SAC Bowles just designated Doctor Lenz the hostage negotiator for this event. He also put me in tactical command on the ground. I've got no problem if you want to verify that.”
The SWAT leader shakes his head. “It's fine with me. You're from Quantico, right?”
“That's right.”
Ed the negotiator looks like he wants to argue, but suddenly someone yells,
“There he is!”
Three floors above us, wedged in front of some venetian blinds, stands Roger Wheaton. His long face is pressed flat against the windowpane, and there's a large pistol pressed against his ear.
“Goddamn it,” John mutters. “I told him to get out.”
“He's trying to be a hero,” says Lenz. “Just like he did in Vietnam.”
“Dial that office and give me your phone,” Lenz tells the negotiator. Then he looks at Burnette. “Tell your snipers to stand down.”
“Do it,” says Baxter.
As the former negotiator makes his call, SWAT leader Burnette says, “Mr. Baxter, my sniper can shoot that pistol out of Gaines's hand. He can do it from here. I've seen him do it twice under pressure.”
Baxter shakes his head. “That's not an option yet. We don't know how many weapons Gaines has up there.”
“Yes, hello?” says Lenz. “Leon? . . . This is Dr. Arthur Lenz. . . . I was at your house the other day. . . . Yes. I'm here because I know you need to talk to someone who's not bound by the normal rules. . . . That's right. Some cases fall outside the lines, and this is one of them.”
When I look back up at the window, Wheaton is gone.
Lenz lowers his voice. “A helicopter isn't out of the question, Leon. But everything has a price. You know that. That's the way the world works. . . . You may
seem
to hold all the cards. But you're assuming you know what our priorities are. There are twelve families who care a lot more about you getting a lethal injection than they do about a dying artist whose life you might shorten by a few months.”
Ed the negotiator looks like he wants to snatch his phone from Lenz's grasp, but Baxter holds up a restraining hand.
“Leon,” Lenz says irritably. “Listen to me. You—”
A dull pop slowly registers in my brain.
“Gunshot!”
yells a SWAT agent.
Burnette's radio crackles. “Rooftop. We heard a gunshot. Please advise, over.”
“Do nothing,” says Baxter.
“Hold position,” says Burnette. “But stay ready.”
“Put a sniper up in the Huey,” orders Baxter. “Get a thermal imaging scope up there with him. We need to see through those blinds.”
As Burnette runs to the next oak tree, a woman screams from the direction of the art center. Then the front door of the studio wing crashes open and a dozen students pour through it like people running from a fire. Behind them, running with an awkward lope, is a tall man wearing white gloves.
“It's Wheaton!” I yell, starting toward him.
As SWAT agents race forward to help the students, John hobbles past me and takes Wheaton by the arm. The artist's mouth and nose are covered with blood.
“Are you all right?” John asks. “Were you hit?”
“No,” Wheaton coughs. “We struggled, and Leon hit me with the gun. He could have shot me, but he didn't. I didn't think he would. That's why I tried it.”
“We heard a gunshot,” John says in a taut voice. “Was anyone hit?”
“His gun went off during our struggle, but he didn't shoot anybody.”
“Is he alone up there now?”
Wheaton shakes his head. “He had two female students barricaded in an adjacent office. There's a sofa against the door. I knew I couldn't save them, but I thought I might be able to clear some of the grad students' studios on my way out.” Wheaton suddenly recognizes me. “Oh—hello.”
“I'm glad you're all right,” I tell him.
“We'll get you an ambulance,” says John, leading the artist back toward the command post. “But we need to know everything you can tell us.”
“That's Sarah! Oh, my God!”
The sound of screaming college girls is more piercing than a siren. Looking up at the window, I see a petite brunette pressed to the pane, the gun barrel huge beside her head.
“Get those students out of here!” Baxter yells to the SWAT agents.
John sits Wheaton down beneath an oak tree, and an agent wearing rubber gloves begins wiping blood from the artist's face. Baxter, the SWAT leader, and I cluster around them.
“Did you see any other weapons besides the pistol?” John asks.
Wheaton takes the gauze pad from the agent and wipes the blood from his own lips. “No. But he has a bag with him.”
“A bag.” John looks back at me. “I didn't see a bag in his cart at the Wal-Mart.”
“Under the magazine, maybe?”
A heavy beating sound ricochets off the face of the art center. The Huey on the quad is climbing into a hover fifty yards from the window behind which Gaines holds his hostage. Instant execution will soon be an option.
John raises his voice above the rotor noise. “Has Gaines said anything to you to indicate he's guilty of the abductions?”
“No.” Wheaton's long gray hair flies as he shakes his head.
“Has he mentioned Thalia Laveau?”
“He claims he knows nothing about her. He says you're framing him. He said, ‘Those assholes need a patsy, and I'm it.' He wanted cash. He has a painting I gave him as a gift, but he wants to get the most he can for that.”
“Did he know you called the FBI?”
“Probably.” Wheaton's gloved hands are shaking, but I sense that he's more frustrated than afraid. “But I had to go back up there. If I tried to get everyone out, he'd have heard me, and he might have panicked and done something crazy. Leon acts like he's in control, but deep down he's very unstable. The safest thing was to offer myself as a hostage.”
“That took guts,” John says, but the artist just shakes his head.
“Leon doesn't want to shoot anybody, Agent Kaiser. He's scared to death. If you give him a way out of this, he'll take it.”
John looks skeptical. “Mr. Wheaton, sometime last night or this morning, Leon beat his girlfriend into a coma. Then he gagged her and left her for dead.”
A look of sadness comes over the artist's face. “Good God. I met that girl.” The sadness is quickly replaced by a look of concern. “That's still no reason to shoot him. He's backed into a corner. Offer him a way out, then arrest him later.”
“I don't know about that,” I say. “But Gaines may be the only person in the world who knows where Thalia Laveau is, or my sister and the rest of them.”
John looks over his shoulder at Lenz, who is angrily punching numbers into the commandeered cell phone. “Any luck?”
“He's not answering.”
A look of puzzlement crosses John's face; then he pulls his cell phone from his jacket. He must have felt rather than heard it ringing.
“Hello?” he yells, cupping his free hand around the earpiece. “Thanks. I'll call you when we know more.”
He puts the phone back in his pocket and turns to Baxter. “Linda Knapp regained consciousness at the hospital. She said she threatened to tell the truth about Gaines's alibis, and he went crazy. She has no idea where he went on any of the snatch nights.”
“Could someone help me stand up, please?” Wheaton asks. “I may have to be sick.”
Baxter pulls the artist to his feet. True to his word, Wheaton doubles over and vomits on the grass.
“I'm sorry,” he apologizes, wiping his mouth on his sleeve.
“There's an ambulance on the way,” says Baxter.
“I'm fine,” says Wheaton. “Really. But I don't think I want to see what's going to happen next.”
John grimaces and pulls out his cell phone again.
“What is it? . . . What? . . . Put out a citywide APB. Hell, statewide. And keep me posted.”
“What is it?” asks Baxter.
“Surveillance just lost Frank Smith.”
“What?”
“He went into the antiques show down at the convention center and disappeared.”
“Shit! What's going on, John?”
“I don't know. But we better get on top of it fast.” He looks at Wheaton. “We'll have someone drive you home.”
“I'm just going to walk a bit, clear my head.”
Dr. Lenz appears and taps Baxter's arm. “Gaines told me that if we don't land one of our helicopters on the roof of the art center in five minutes, he'll kill that girl and drop her out the window. He says he's got another one up there.”
John looks at Wheaton. “You said there were two girls, didn't you?”
Wheaton nods, then wobbles on his feet.
“I've got him,” I tell John. “
Please
just remember that Gaines may be the only one who knows what we need to know.”
John squeezes my arm, then leans down to me and says: “Stay in plain sight.”
As I lead Wheaton away, John addresses a group of black-clad men who remember their SWAT teammate Wendy Travis much too fondly to be objective in this situation.
“We may be looking at explosive entry,” he says. “I want every one of you to . . .”
I turn and catch up to Wheaton, who is walking aimlessly along the grass, parallel to the lane that runs in front of the Woldenberg Center.
“Leon really left that girl for dead?” he asks.
“I thought she was dead till I felt her pulse.”
He stops and looks back toward the art studio wing. “They're not going to listen to us. They're going to kill him.”
“They're not as gung ho as you think.”
“Maybe not Kaiser. That's why I called him. But the rest . . . I saw it in Vietnam. You put enough guns and soldiers into a situation like this, somebody's going to fire.”
“I hope not. But we said our piece. Let's find somewhere for you to sit down.”
The sound of a bullhorn reverberates across the quad, and Dr. Lenz begins addressing Gaines through the window glass.
“I guess he quit answering the phone,” I murmur.
“I don't want to see this,” Wheaton says. “I'm going to go home.”
“You're in no shape to drive. I'll get a cop to drive you.”
“I'm really fine. But my keys are in the gallery with my bag, and I don't think that cop is going to let me get them.”
He points to the low section of the building, where an FBI agent stands beneath the entrance arch. Wheaton's keys are far from Leon Gaines. This is the backwater of the hostage scene.

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