Three Jack McClure Missions Box Set (44 page)

BOOK: Three Jack McClure Missions Box Set
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“Alli, it’s time to go,” Nina said gently.

Sam opened the door, stepped out into the wan January sunshine. Alli could hear him whispering into his mike, listening intently to security updates. When Sam nodded, Nina urged her charge forward, and Alli emerged from the plush cocoon of the limo into the seething crowd of politicians, foreign dignitaries, celebrities, the talking heads of worldwide media outlets, religious leaders, including Reverend Taske, head of the Renaissance Mission Congress, her father’s special guest, military personnel in full-dress uniforms, Secret Service details crisscrossing the area with the concentration of marines landing in enemy territory.

Alli took all this in as if she were watching a film. Ever since she’d heard the first bars of Arcade Fire’s “Neon Bible,” she’d felt as if she were back in her dream with Ronnie Kray whispering in her ear. She felt detached and at the same time marvelously clearheaded. She had one mission to accomplish; everything else fell away as if off a steep cliff, vanishing from view. Her life was simple; all that was required of her was to remove the vial she somehow knew was basted into the lining of
her coat and, at the proper moment, open it. What could be simpler? Her mind hummed along on the track Kray had set for it, using a combination of persuasion, fear, and a drug cocktail that included an efficacious dose of the horned viper’s venom to metabolize the chemicals out of her system so quickly, it would be undetectable.

She was nearing her parents now. Her mother kissed her; her father smiled through her. The fanfare was playing, the Speaker of the House was preparing to take the podium for the Call to Order. Among the columns of the Capitol building hung three huge American flags. Above them, the dome glittered in sunlight.

Jack, snaking his way through the crowd, used his credentials at various Secret Service checkpoints. Approaching the dais was like negotiating the nine circles of hell—the closer he got, the slower his progress. The last bars of the fanfare faded, and the Speaker of the House took the podium for the Call to Order. Jack passed the final checkpoint and was admitted to the short flight of folding stairs up to the dais. He saw Reverend Taske, Secretary Paull, the National Security Advisor, the outgoing president. He looked past them for Alli, saw her between her mother and her father. She had a kind of faraway look on her face he’d seen a number of times before, and now all the tiny bits of strange behavior that he had observed, that had taken up residence in his brain, fell into place: her behavior when he’d taken her to see Chris Armitage, her dream. And afterwards:
Nothing feels right,
she’d said to him.
I’m afraid…. Please help me.
What had Brady done to her? Had he hypnotized her, drugged her? Perhaps both. In any event, he’d turned her into a time bomb. The fuse had been lit, and now, as he saw her reach into the lining of her coat, he made a beeline for her.

He saw Sam, who turned at the movement Jack made across the dais. Sam’s eyes met Jack’s, and he smiled until he saw Jack pointing. The vial was out, Alli’s hand was curled around it. Sam saw it at the same moment Jack did. With a practiced move so smooth as to be virtually undetectable,
he wrested the vial out of her hand, put his free arm around her, held her firmly against his chest.

And that was it, Jack thought, as he moved at a more leisurely pace toward them. Ian Brady’s legacy had turned to ashes. Whatever substance he’d instructed Alli to release remained safely in its vial. The Speaker of the House finished the Call to Order, and the Reverend Dr. Fred Grimes began his fervent invocation and benediction.

“Let us pray. Blessed are you, O Lord, our God. Yours, O God, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the majesty and the splendor; for everything in heaven and earth is yours. Yours, O Lord, is the kingdom; you are exalted as head over all.”

A stir began behind him. He turned in time to see Hugh Garner and three of his minions mounting the dais, heading directly for him. Clearly, Brady’s body had been found. No doubt the pig-eyed manager of Brady’s apartment complex had ID’d Jack.

“Wealth and honor come from you; you are the ruler of all things. In your hands are strength and power to exalt and to give strength to all.”

Jack, zigzagging farther into the crowd on the dais, kept his eye out for Nina. She’d give him some help, provide cover for him while he slipped away. She should have been on the other side of Alli. There was still part of the last Rubik’s Cube missing.

“As President Lincoln once said, ‘We have grown in numbers, wealth, and power as no other nation has ever grown. But we have forgotten God. It behooves us, then, to humble ourselves before the offended power, to confess our national sins, and to pray for clemency and forgiveness.’”

At last, he caught a glimpse of Nina, moved toward her. She was standing on the other side of Edward Carson. He risked a glance behind him. Garner, in a classic pincer move, had ordered his two agents to the other side of the dais in order to intercept Jack while he closed from behind.

“O Lord, as we come together on this historic and solemn occasion to inaugurate once again a president and vice president, teach us afresh that power, wisdom, and salvation come only from your hand.”

As Brady himself would understand better than most, what Jack needed now was a bit of misdirection. He tried to get Nina’s attention, but her gaze seemed fixed on Edward Carson. Beneath the reverend’s words, he could hear the commotion closing in behind him as Garner pushed through the dignitaries packing the dais. The missing piece of the last Rubik’s Cube was this: Why had it been so easy to stop Alli? No one’s lasting legacy—let alone Ian Brady’s—would hinge on the actions of a coerced twenty-year-old.

Then, in his head, he heard Emma’s voice as clearly as if she’d been alive and standing beside him.
He said that he already had his Myra Hindley.
That was
before
Brady had abducted Alli. So if he wasn’t grooming Emma to be Myra Hindley and she wasn’t to be Alli, who was his accomplice, whom would he trust to carry out his legacy after his death?

“We pray, oh Lord, for President-elect Edward Harrison Carson and Vice President-elect Richard Thomas Baer, to whom you have entrusted the leadership of this nation at this moment in history. We pray that you will help them bring our country together, so that we may rise above partisan politics and seek the larger vision of your will for our nation.”

Jack felt Garner’s grip on his shoulder, trying to turn him around. He saw Nina leaning in toward the president-elect. But her mouth was closed, her jaw set. She reached into an inner pocket of her coat, and at that moment Jack knew. The last piece of the Rubik’s Cube fell into place. The real Ian Brady had used a woman younger than he for his accomplice, but not so young as his victims, not so young as to be unreliable. Someone just like Nina Miller.

Jack drew his Glock, fired one shot into Nina’s heart. He saw her mouth open in shock, saw her body spin around; then Garner slammed
him to the floor of the dais. Someone kicked the Glock away; Garner struck him a blow to the back of his head.

“Use them to bring reconciliation among the races and healing to political wounds, that we may truly become ‘one nation under God,’” the Reverend Dr. Fred Grimes intoned just before the screaming began and all hell broke loose.

49

“Sometimes we all need luck in addition to skill,” Secretary Dennis Paull said. “And you, Jack, had both today.”

Jack was sitting in a small cubicle inside the offices of Homeland Security. Across the table from him were Secretary Paull and Edward Carson, the new President of the United States. It was eight hours after the incident. Since then, Jack had been under arrest, in isolation, just as Brady had predicted.

“That was quite a heroic thing you did today, Jack.” Carson waved Paull’s protest to silence. “You saved not only my life but the lives of hundreds of people, all vital to the running of this country. That was a vial of anthrax Nina Miller was about to open.”

Jack moved his head from side to side with some difficulty. His body still throbbed and ached from the beating Hugh Garner and his cohorts had delivered in the aftermath of the shooting. “And the vial Alli was carrying?”

“Confectioner’s sugar,” Paull said. “Thank God.”

Personally, Jack didn’t believe God had anything to do with it, but this was neither the time nor the place to say it. “Is she all right?”

“In light of what’s happened, she’s being evaluated more carefully this time,” the president said.

Paull opened a slim file. “The doctors found a small bit of matter encrusted in the fold behind one ear.”

“So Brady did drug her.”

Paull nodded. “So far, the lab has identified Sodium Pentothal and curare. There’s another, more complex substance the techs are still trying to analyze, but they figure it must be something that caused her to metabolize the other substances with unusual rapidity.”

“Jack,” Carson said, “do you know how he got to Nina Miller?”

“No, but I can make an educated guess,” Jack said. “Nina was traumatized early in life. Her brother molested her.”

“We know all about that,” Paull cut in. “It’s in her file. Her psychological profile was perfectly normal.”

“Profiles, like Alli’s medical exam, can be faulty,” Jack pointed out. “Even more so with psych tests. Nina couldn’t bear the fact that her brother was a successful married man.”

“Wait a minute.” Paull held up a hand. “Nina’s brother was killed twelve years ago in a drive-by in Richmond, Virginia. One shot through the head.”

“Why would she lie to me about that?” Jack’s synapses began firing again. “Did the cops ever find out who the killer was?”

Paull shook his head. “Apart from the bullet, there was no evidence—no motivation either. They gave up, said it was a case of mistaken identity.”

“What if it wasn’t?” Jack said. “What if Nina met Brady twelve years ago? What if he proposed a plan: He murders her brother, and in return, she becomes his accomplice.”

Paull began to sweat at the thought of the terrible mistakes he’d made professionally and personally.

“Brady was like a chess master—he planned his moves far ahead of time,” Jack continued. “The night he went out the window, he told
me he’d killed his parents. At the time, I thought he was simply goading me, but now I can see a pattern. He felt he was justified in killing his parents, for whatever reason. Taking a look at Nina’s file gave him his opportunity. My guess is he sought her out. Nina felt that there was a privilege in loneliness. She said it made her feel alive, introduced her to herself. People like her are split off from themselves. They’ll pass even the most stringent psychological testing because at the moment, they believe what they say.”

Paull winced. He could feel Nina’s sweat-slicked body moving against him, her breath in his ear, her deep groans. He felt quite faint.

Jack shifted to rid himself of a stab of pain. “In the course of my investigation, I met a young woman, tough and smart—in many ways a younger version of Nina. Brady got to her. She was a nihilist just like him. I’m betting he found the darkness in Nina and pried her open. He was a master at mentoring.”

In his mind’s eye, Paull saw an image of himself walking into the bookshop where he’d ordered
Summer Rain,
Nina’s favorite novel. The dealer insisted he examine it before he bought it. It chronicled the struggle of an immigrant family, rootless and uneducated, marginalized by an indifferent society. He’d thought nothing of it then, but in light of what had happened since, he agreed with Jack. Nina’s love of the book was a reflection of her inner darkness. Why hadn’t he recognized it? But of course he knew. He’d blinded himself to the signs because her detachment, her rootlessness, her lack of desire for commitment or a family made her the perfect mistress.

“Good God.” President Carson ran a hand through his hair. “This entire episode is monstrous.” He turned his telegenic eyes on Paull. “My Administration will have zero tolerance for psychopathic agents, Dennis. You and your brethren are going to have to devise an entirely different yardstick to measure your candidates.” He stood. “Excuse me, I’m going to deliver the same message to the new director of national security.”

He leaned over the table, gave Jack’s hand a hearty shake. “Thank you, Jack. From the bottom of my heart.”

After he’d gone, Jack and Paull sat across from each other in an uncomfortable silence.

Jack leaned forward. “I’m only going to say this once: For the record, despite his best efforts, I didn’t kill him, he killed himself.”

“I believe you.” Paull’s voice was weary. “What went wrong, Jack?”

Jack rubbed the back of his head. “Brady—or whatever his name is—was no good to you anymore, sir. All he wanted was to impose a lasting legacy. He wanted to make a statement of the greatest magnitude. I imagine you’ll agree that obliterating virtually the entire U.S. government at a time when the reins of power were being exchanged, when the country was most vulnerable, more than qualifies.”

“Are you saying he was making a political statement?”

“I doubt it. Brady had moved beyond such considerations. He despised humankind, hated what he felt civilization had done to the world. He felt we were heading toward a dead end.”

“You have my personal thanks.” Secretary Paull stared at Jack for a long time. At length, he cleared his throat. “On another note, you’ll be pleased to know that there’s no sign of the organization known as E-Two. Frankly, I suspect it never existed. The former Administration required a domestic bogeyman to go after its main objective—the missionary secularists. Maybe E-Two was fabricated by the former National Security Advisor.”

“Or maybe Brady came up with the idea,” Jack said. “After all, misdirection was his forte, and those FASR defectors had to go somewhere.”

“A bogus revolutionary cell? Could be.” The secretary shrugged. “Either way, I’ve ordered the members of the First American Secular Revivalists released and reinstated. And, by the way, I protected them while they were in custody. No one interrogated them or harmed them in any way.”

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