Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
she pointed it at Dmitri’s temple. “Stop!
Let him go.
He can’t hurt
us now!”
Dmitri gave no sign he heard. He continued to strangle
Olenkov, while Olenkov’s chest heaved.
“Dammit,
stop,
Dmitri! The sheriff’s department will arrest
him. You’ll be able to fly to Moscow. You can be with Nina!”
At Nina’s name, Dmitri went rigid. His curses turned to mutters. Still, his hands remained locked around the assassin’s neck,
and his knees crushed the man’s chest. Olenkov’s eyes were
closed, but his raw rasps told her he was alive. The awful sound
of approaching death filled her mind. Her husband, her mother
and many of her colleagues had died violently. She wondered
how she managed to survive. Maybe she was the one in the
nightmare.
She clasped her wound and worked to strip the anger and pain
from her voice. “You and Nina have a real chance. I’d give a lot
to have the chance you have.”
At last, Dmitri’s shoulders relaxed. As he stood and walked
away from the unconscious Olenkov, his upper lip rose with distaste. He did not look at Olenkov.
Sickened by Olenkov, disgusted by her misjudgment, she
turned away from Olenkov, too.
In the distance, sirens screeched. Dmitri lifted his chin, listening as they drew near. “When Nina was born, I was in hiding. My wife’s parents raised her. She is twenty-three now.” He
paused. “My fault. I wanted to know about her so bad that I finally wrote her last year. That is probably how he traced me.”
Liz’s breath caught in her throat. “So Nina is—?”
“My daughter.” Dmitri smiled a brilliant smile. “Thank you.”
He headed for the door and opened it. Behind him, the night
sky that had seemed so drab now shone like ebony. The oncedistant stars sparkled brightly.
Gingerly, he touched his wound. “Not bad. How are you?”
“I’ll live. Olenkov told me Nina was your wife.”
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His hand fell from his shoulder. Pain torqued his flat features.
“Her name was Natalia. Olenkov terminated her.”
“How horrible. I’m sorry.” So Olenkov had lied about that, too.
“Are you sure my father didn’t do it?”
He shook his head. “As soon as the Carnivore found us,
Olenkov scrubbed my wife. That pissed off the Carnivore. He
said he was hired for wet jobs on criminals—not dissidents. So
when the bastard tried to scrub me, too, the Carnivore shot
him.”
Liz stared. Her father had saved Dmitri? She felt a strange kind
of awe. She had always accepted the government’s version of the
Carnivore’s career as an assassin. But then, he had never said anything to make her think otherwise. What else had she missed?
“He sneaked me out of the Soviet Union,” Dmitri continued.
“We almost got caught twice. We walked three days across terrible ice and snow into Finland.” He swallowed and looked away.
“They say he was a killer, but he was very good to me.”
As if it were yesterday, pieces of her childhood returned. Liz
remembered holding her father’s hand as they laughed and he
led her in a race across the Embankment. Their long conversations as they sat cozily alone to drink tea. The gentle way he
brushed away her hair to kiss her cheek. She might have been
wrong about him. What else had she missed? For her, the hunt
had just begun.
In 1982, Michael Palmer, then a practicing E.R. physician on
Cape Cod, exploded on the literary scene with his first
thriller,
The Sisterhood
, which made the
New York Times
bestseller list and was translated into thirty-three languages.
Since then, he has written nine more thrillers of medical suspense. Palmer attended Wesleyan University with Robin
Cook, and the two of them performed their residencies at
Boston’s Massachusetts General Hospital at the same time.
Later, Michael Crichton’s work and Cook’s success with
Coma
inspired Palmer to write and, between the three writers, the genre of medical suspense became firmly established.
Palmer sees the thriller as distinct from classic detective
stories. Two of his favorites are William Goldman’s
Marathon
Man
and James Grady’s
Six Days of the Condor
. In Palmer’s
thrillers, his protagonists are drawn into the story because of
something they do professionally. They are not detectives and
are not out to solve mysteries. Rather, their goals are simply
to be the best physicians they can be. They’re usually pulled
into the story against their wills and eventually must defeat
the forces impinging on their lives, or be destroyed in the
process. Of course, along the way, a catharsis occurs, but what
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also distinguishes Palmer’s work is a frightening aspect that
leaves readers wondering if such a thing could actually happen to them.
Palmer has never before collaborated with another writer
on a project, but
Disfigured
is coauthored with Daniel James
Palmer, the middle of his three sons. Daniel is a professional
songwriter, musician and software manager.
Disfigured
was actually Daniel’s brainchild. And although Maura, the protagonist, is not a physician, the theme is medical, and like most
of Michael Palmer’s main characters, she’s drawn unwillingly
into the story.
We have your son. The picture enclosed is not a fake, this
is not a hoax, and we cannot be bought. If you want to see
your son alive again you will read this letter carefully and
follow our instructions precisely.
At 4:00 p.m., on June 23, you have face-lift surgery scheduled on your patient, Audra Meadows, of 144 Glenn Cherry
Lane, Bel-Air. During the procedure, you will inject 5cc of
isopropyl alcohol around the facial nerve on both sides of
her face. The resulting paralysis of her facial muscles must
be complete and irreversible. If you fail, if she can lift even
the corner of her mouth, you will never see your son again.
A copy of this note and photo has been placed on David’s
bed for your wife to find. Do not alert the authorities or anyone else. Choose to do so and you have sealed David’s fate.
Dr. George Hill, the plastic surgeon to the stars, slumped down
onto the cool marble of his foyer, his heart pounding. Just minutes before, the persistent ringing of the doorbell had awoken
him. The manila envelope was propped against the front door.
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Hill pushed himself up and studied the photo of his son.
David’s hair was shorter than when he saw him last. Was it two
months ago? Certainly no more than three. His eyes, always
bright and intelligent, were blindfolded. He was sitting on a
metal folding chair holding a sign that read:
June 22
2:00 a.m.
2:00 a.m.
—just three hours ago. Shakily, Hill made it to the
phone in his entertainment center and called his office manager.
“Hi, it’s me,” he said.
“Gee, even without checking my caller ID I guessed right,”
Joyce Baker replied. “I suppose 5:00 a.m. gave it away.”
Odd hours and interruptions during her limited personal time
were her curse for running George Hill’s medical practice for fifteen years. He was at the top of the heap of plastic surgeons in
southern California, if not the country, and he was determined
to remain there.
“Have you given anyone in our office access to the new appointment scheduling program?”
“No,” she replied. “I’m the only one with a log-on password.”
“Has anyone asked you about any client’s appointment? Anyone at all?”
“Absolutely not,” Joyce said. “What’s this all about? Which
client?”
“Oh, it’s nothing,” he said. “Mrs. G. is scheduled to have some
more work done Sunday night at the surgical center, that’s all.”
“I know that. I scheduled her.”
“Well, she thinks a reporter knows about it.”
“Goodness. I really don’t see how that’s—”
“Listen, Joyce, don’t worry about it. I’ll see you later.”
This had to be an inside job, he was thinking, someone in the
office or the surgicenter. The nature of his patient’s procedures,
let alone the precise time they were to be done, were more closely
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guarded secrets than the formula for Coke. Although she was not
an A-list celebrity, Audra was still special to him—his Mona
Lisa, his Sistine Chapel. Unlike with his other celebrity triumphs,
he hadn’t once leaked to the press that he was the artist behind
her remarkable, enduring beauty.
He paced about his Malibu mansion for a time before working up the nerve to call Maura. As his ex-wife, she, above all,
would understand the moral dilemma in which he had been
placed, and as David’s mother, she had the right to share in the
decision that could have her son dead in less than two days.
Maura Hill pounded along Overland Avenue, pushing harder
with each step.
A few more minutes, baby,
she gasped.
A few more
minutes
. After years of all work and no exercise, she had begun
running, then running long distances. Now she was hoping not
only to run the L.A. marathon, but also to qualify for a number.
However, her dream might have to wait. David’s grades and his
attitude had been slipping at school lately—too much MTV and
guitar, his teachers had said, to say nothing of the hormonal
chaos of being fourteen. To that list Maura could add: not enough
father. She knew David’s potential, and was hoping that she
might show him by example how hard work and perseverance
could pay off. Next year, maybe. Right now he needed a supportive, present parent.
Maura ran along the paved walkway to the three-bedroom cape
where she and David lived. The house was quiet. As usual, her
kid would take some major prodding to get up for school, but
he would have to get up now if he wanted a ride. She had an early
faculty meeting at Caltech where she taught computer science.
The ringing phone startled her. George’s number came up on
the caller ID. “Bastard,” she instinctively muttered to herself. She
had come to accept the fact that, after he discovered his remarkable talent for plastic surgery, he became totally selfabsorbed and a lousy, philandering husband, but having him
honestly believe that dinner or a ball game every couple of
months equaled being a good father was too much.
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“Hello, George,” she said coolly.
Maura listened intently and blanched as Hill spoke. Still holding the phone, she sprinted down the hallway toward David’s
room.
It’s not possible,
she thought. She had kissed David goodnight before she went to bed. He couldn’t possibly be gone. She
opened the door to David’s room and gasped. The unmade bed
was empty, and his window wide-open. The curtains fluttered
like ghosts in the early-morning light.
“Who is she?” Maura shouted, bursting into her ex-husband’s
elegant Beverly Hills office.
Hill, who was slouched on a chair in his waiting room, drinking whiskey out of a tumbler, barely lifted his head.
“Her name is Audra Meadows,” he said, finishing the whiskey
and pouring another. “She’s been a patient of mine for years.
David’s only been gone for a few hours, Maura. Shouldn’t we call
the police?”
“You read the note.”
“Then what should we do?”
“First of all,
we
should stop drinking ourselves into oblivion
so our brains can at least function with some clarity. I want to
see that woman’s file.”
“But doctors are sworn—”
“Jesus Christ, George! Give me her file or I swear I’ll trash this
office until I find it. This is our son!”
Hill retrieved Meadows’s record from his fireproof vault and
handed it over. Maura’s eyes widened as she looked through
twelve years of surgical notes and photos—the usual Hollywood
tucks and augments on her body, plus eight or nine procedures
on her face. Even prior to the first of those, Audra Meadows was
a strikingly beautiful woman. Her naturally high cheekbones
were what others craved. Her almond eyes were a deep green,
exotic and alluring. She was, quite simply, a version of perfection. And yet with each subsequent procedure, imperceptible unless the photos were viewed in sequence, Hill had preserved and
even improved upon her vibrant, ageless visage.
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“Why on earth was she a client?” Maura asked.
“Like many of my patients, Audra sees in herself imperfections
others don’t.”
Maura grimaced. Such vanity.
“So, who would want to hurt this Audra person so badly that
they’d be willing to kill my son—I’m sorry, I mean
our
son?”
George shrugged.
“Somebody envious of her looks?”
“Or of your skill. Perhaps they’re trying to ruin you.”
“I’ve thought about that. This is a competitive business—
especially in this town.”
Maura’s eyes narrowed.
“George, if it comes to saving our son, you are going to do
what they’re asking, aren’t you? You will do the injection.”
Her ex hesitated.
“That procedure will paralyze her facial muscles forever,” he
said. “Even if I do it there’s no guarantee they’ll let David live.”
“But we have no choice!” Maura screamed. “Can’t you do it