She should have grabbed some clothes when she had made her escape, only…
Visions battered her brain, driving her to her knees.
So much blood.
On the floor and walls.
All over her hands.
All over Dr. Wells.
She wrapped her arms around herself and rocked back and forth for a moment as she forced away the disturbing memories and marshaled her thoughts.
She would have to find some clothes once she went…
Where am I going
? she asked herself, standing and examining the bloodstains on her body.
The realization rushed through her, surprising her with its clarity and bringing immense joy.
I’m going home
.
T
he whole thing stank, and not even the possibility of becoming a rich man could make the smell go away.
Mick refused to think about why after two days he still had not cashed the check tucked into his wallet. A job was a job, he told himself, and this assignment was paying way better than most. He had opted for this way of life years earlier because of the money, needing to help his family. A fire had nearly destroyed the restaurant which had been their livelihood since their arrival from Mexico over twenty years ago. The money the insurance company had provided as a settlement had not been enough to repair the damage, and without his assistance it would have been impossible to reopen the restaurant and allow his siblings to finish their schooling.
But they don’t need your help anymore
, the voice in his head challenged, urging him that there were other jobs he could do. Jobs that were not as risky and where he could use his skills to help and not hurt.
The way he might have to hurt Caterina Shaw if he couldn’t control her.
Images of the destruction wrought on Edwards’s dead partner came to mind, warning him about what Caterina
had supposedly done. But apprehension suffused him as he stared at the nervous young woman seated across from him, Caterina’s best friend.
“I appreciate you taking the time to speak with me, Ms. Rogers,” he said in an attempt to alleviate the woman’s obvious distress.
“At the door you said you were hired by—”
“Wardwell Biotech,” he said, providing her with the name of Edwards’s and Wells’s company, much as he had when she had been shutting the door in his face. It had been his warning about her friend being hurt and his big booted foot in the door which had gained him access to the tony Rittenhouse Square townhouse.
She nodded, but continued to wring her hands over and over as she said, “I was so worried when Cat told me about the treatment, only…”
“She would have died without it.”
After a precise nod of her head, Ms. Rogers finally stilled the motion of her hands, splaying her fingers against the legs of her tailored navy blue slacks. “Cat knew she might die even with the treatment, but she had to have her music back.”
Mick recalled the video he had watched the day before and which had been taken months before Caterina had signed onto Dr. Edwards’s little science experiment. Anyone viewing the performance would have been hard pressed to realize that the vibrant young woman creating such wondrous music was terminally ill.
Caterina’s legs had been wrapped around the cello as she fingered the strings and her bow stroked the profoundly rich tones from the instrument. Every movement
seduced yet more from the musical piece, imbuing each note with emotion and passion.
The music had clearly been her life.
With a curt nod, Mick reached into the pocket of his leather jacket and removed a small pad and pen. Flipping through his notes, he continued with his questioning.
“I’ve spoken to a number of Caterina’s acquaintances in the past two days. Everyone says she was pleasant and caring. Dedicated to friends, family, and career. Would you say it was in that order?”
A confused look danced across Elizabeth Rogers’s flawless features. “Meaning?”
“Which was more important to Caterina? Her career or her family or—”
“Cat didn’t have any family. She lost her mother when she was six, although there were some distant cousins in Mexico. She and her father were estranged. He never really approved of her chosen profession. He died when Cat was in college.”
“So her father never knew about her success?”
“No, not that it mattered to Cat. She wasn’t about being a celebrity.”
Caterina had come across as humble, even possibly shy in the interviews Mick had seen. But he wondered how it must feel to be one of the world’s premier cellists and perform for kings, presidents, and other dignitaries and have no one with whom to share that success.
“What about men?” he said. Caterina had been elegant. Refined. Passionate. Physically beautiful.
Elizabeth shook her head and her blond ponytail swished back and forth. “Cat was too involved with her friends and career. In that order,” she clarified. “There
was an occasional man every now and then, but nothing significant. Especially not in the last several years, thanks to the cancer.”
He nodded, imagining that the illness might have made relationships difficult.
Had that made her resentful? Had the loss of her parents angered her? he wondered as he flipped the pages in his notepad.
It would take a lot of rage to cold-bloodedly rip a man apart and pith him the way one might a mouse before vivisection.
“Did that bother her? Was she upset—”
Elizabeth’s rough laugh stopped him. “Upset? On the contrary. Cat never let it get to her. With each setback, she found a way to continue. When she went blind, she learned to play the pieces by ear.”
He sensed something behind her words. Disapproval? “You were her best friend.”
“I
am
Cat’s best friend,” she immediately clarified.
Mick leaned back in the delicate wing chair and it creaked under the weight of his body. Considering the other woman as she nervously fingered the thick gold chain at her neck, he said, “You’re angry. Jealousy, maybe? She was first chair and yet she relied on you—”
Elizabeth’s voice escalated with each word. “To help her prepare her pieces after she went blind? While playing second fiddle, literally.”
He shrugged, prompting her to rise elegantly from the sofa, her hands clasped tightly before her. “Cat and I are best friends. I’d do anything for her and she would do anything for me.”
He rose from the chair as well, understanding that
she was done with his questioning, but he pressed on. “Including giving her a place to hide?”
“I don’t believe what they said about Cat on the news,” she answered, reaching for the thick gold chain again with a trembling hand.
“Your friend is the main suspect in a gruesome murder, Elizabeth. These treatments—”
“Wouldn’t change Cat. This is all a lie,” she said and walked out of the parlor and down the short hall to the door of her townhouse, clearly intending him to follow.
At the door, he paused and handed her his business card. She wouldn’t take it, so he leaned over and left it on a carved mahogany table near the entrance. “In case you have something else to tell me,” he said and walked out.
The door slammed shut behind him, the sound like a gunshot in the quiet of the night.
A block away lay Rittenhouse Square. It would be nearly empty at this time of night. A good place to think.
Mick shoved his hands in his pockets and walked down 18th Street to Walnut, crossed over, and at the corner strolled down the diagonal path to the center of the square. He stopped to listen to the sounds of the fountain, assembling his thoughts, and then sauntered to a bench located close to a streetlight.
He sat and considered what he had learned about Caterina Shaw. Worried because he had let all that he had discovered about Caterina’s background influence him, something he rarely did. Usually all that information just amounted to raw data used to track his target. Determine its strengths and weaknesses. Prepare for the capture or kill.
During the course of his brief investigations, it had become difficult to be so clinical about Caterina Shaw.
He could kid himself and say that he didn’t know why, but it would be a lie. He knew precisely why.
His search had revealed Caterina’s painful past as well as her tragic present. Neither had kept her from what she had wanted to do.
He admired courage and perseverance. Traits he had relied on more than once to keep himself safe. To keep safe the men in the Army Ranger unit he had once commanded.
Although he didn’t know Caterina in the real sense of the word, Mick had gotten to know more about her than was good for him if he wanted to complete his assignment. He forced himself to remember that whatever she had been before, she was now a dangerous murderer.
Or at least that’s what Edwards wanted him to believe.
He was having trouble buying into that, but then the last entry on her medical history played through his brain for what had to be the hundredth time since his meeting with Edwards.
Patient has recently developed uncontrollable seizures leading to episodes of rage combined with full expression of the implanted gene sequence
.
Mick’s early life hadn’t allowed for extensive schooling, but he had more than made up for that during his time as an Army Ranger. He had devoured whatever manuals the Army had tossed at him, in addition to finally not only obtaining his college degree but also his EMT certification.
The medical information in Caterina’s file was therefore clear. Coupled with the information he had gathered on the good doctors Edwards and Wells, he once again tried to imagine the real-life results that could occur based upon the last statement in her medical history.
Uncontrollable seizures… episodes of rage… full expression…; he repeated these phrases to himself before turning to the notes he had made from her medical history and his own research.
Apparently, Edwards and Wells had been able to identify beneficial gene sequences in nearly half a dozen creatures. Using modern cloning techniques, they had isolated those sequences and replicated them in sufficient quantities to be able to combine them with viral carriers.
Although the idea of intentionally letting a live virus loose in someone’s body made him nervous, apparently it was common practice to use simple viruses, such as the ones that caused colds, to become transport mechanisms. Once those carriers were injected into the subject, the natural viral process took over, replicating and insinuating the DNA into the subject’s genes.
As Mick reviewed his scribbling by the light of the streetlamp, he realized that Edwards and Wells also appeared to have found a way not only to target where the recombination occurred, but to control the replication process and the expression of the implanted gene sequence.
Or at least they’d
thought
they had learned to control the replication and expression.
The seizures from which Caterina had supposedly been suffering, together with the aberrant activity caused by the gene, clearly meant their control wasn’t all it was cracked up to be.
If
that entry in her medical history was even true. The entry could be the start of groundwork for framing Caterina for Wells’s murder.
He put aside his pad and leaned back against the stone balustrade which surrounded the center of the square and
formed a backrest of sorts for the nearby cement bench. He laced his fingers behind his head while he imagined what kinds of behavior the foreign genes might cause, as well as how desperate someone might need to be to try such a risky procedure.
Once again it occurred to him that he would have rather chosen to blow out his brains, but…
He surged forward and pulled out Caterina’s photo from his jacket pocket. Ran the pads of his fingers across the glossy surface, intrigued not only by her beauty, but also by her tenacity.
Such strength.
Passion.
Intelligence.
Hard traits to resist, he thought, and recalled the check he had folded and slipped into his wallet.
Quite a bounty.
Enough to make him set for a couple of years. Maybe even allow him to leave this rather treacherous and troublesome life for a more rational one.
Possibly even an honorable one, with simpler demands and easier decisions to make.
He risked another glimpse at Caterina’s photo. It was a damn shame that the sole decision he would have to make about her was whether to take her in dead or alive.
As soon as it was dark again, Caterina moved from the safety of the Pine Barrens and slipped through an unlocked door into one of the buildings along the edges of Camden.
Inside she kept close to the outside wall, plastering
herself to its rough cinder block. When she heard a sound, she paused and held her breath.
Someone coming her way. The footsteps soft, regular as a metronome as the person approached.
A night watchman?
A flashlight beam swung back and forth, back and forth in a determined arc. Swept across the unlocked door and then in her direction. For one heart-pounding moment, the light tracked across her midsection, but then moved on.