Part 5 (1/2)
When Meyer arrived, Swimmer frisked him, declared him clean, and then winked at me and said, ”I was looking for your hat.”
”Was it all that obvious?” I asked.
”Don't worry about it,” Weightlifter said. ”It's good procedure. Simple and useful. Keep it. Because it doesn't work with us doesn't mean it isn't any good. But, Dr. Meyer, I'm curious.”
”Just Meyer, please.”
”Fine. What if he'd asked you to bring his hat?”
”There are several ways he could have asked me to bring it. Each one is an option. If he felt the two of us could handle things, I would have been ready when I came through the door, and so would he.”
”Nice. Very nice,” Swimmer said.
”You seem to know a h.e.l.l of a lot,” I said. Weightlifter shrugged and sat on the edge of a bed, and motioned Meyer over to a wing chair by the sliding doors. ”Not as much as we tried to find out. I'll give you credit. You have some very solid friends around that marina, McGee. We didn't have much time to work on it. We put a lot of people on it. We pulled your military record. We put some tourists into that Bahia Mar Marina. We had somebody at Timber Bay. We sent somebody to Petaluma. We know-or at least we feel able to a.s.sume-that you are not wanted anywhere, that your ident.i.ty is correct, that you are not into the c.o.ke or gra.s.s trade, and that you are not political.”
”Who is we?” Meyer asked.
”We won't go into that. Just as I told Mr. McGee, we won't go into names either. And we won't show identification. And if you check the register later, it won't do you a bit of good. And, I'll be frank with you, the names and the connections wouldn't mean much to you. We are going to ask questions. Lots of them. This might take a long time. But we start with evidence of good faith.”
Swimmer went to the closet and came back with a nine-by-twelve manila envelope and handed it to Weightlifter.
”Before I show you these,” Weightlifter said, ”I must explain how we happened to luck out. Dr. Tower reported the symptoms to the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. They have had standing orders for over a year to report any case which has those same symptoms to a certain branch of the Federal Government. An expert in forensic medicine flew down to Atlanta from New York, starting about an hour after word came to Was.h.i.+ngton. When it became obvious to Dr. Tower that Mrs. Howard was going to die, he phoned Atlanta. The expert came down here in time to partic.i.p.ate in the autopsy. He found what we had instructed him to look for. Take a look at these prints.”
I had been watching him covertly. He was left handed. He wore a sport s.h.i.+rt that hung outside his trousers, and once when he moved I had identified the bulge on his right side, halfway between the belly b.u.t.ton and the point of the hip bone.
He handed me the print, and when he turned to take the other one over to Meyer, I let mine slip to the floor, moved quickly behind him, locked his left arm, and reached around and under with the right hand and yanked the belly holster out, gun, belt clip, and all, and then slammed him into Swimmer, who was heading for the closet. They went into a lamp table and snapped a couple of slender legs as they brought it down.
By then I had the short-barreled revolver properly in hand, and Meyer was standing beside me. ”Slow and easy.” I said, and they did indeed move slowly as they separated themselves from each other and from the pieces of lamp and table. There was nothing pleasant about their faces, but nothing ugly either. No sign of strain or worry. A watchful competence, like a very good boxer waiting for the opening.
I have to go on instinct. Sometimes it has betrayed me. Never fatally, fortunately. Most of the time it works for me.
I said, ”We'll play it your way, gentlemen. I didn't want you to go away with the impression we're a pair of clowns. It is a matter of pride with me. Let's say our relations.h.i.+p has reached a new level. First names would help.”
I tossed the gun onto the nearest bed and extended my hand to Weightlifter. As he took it and I pulled him to his feet, he said, ”Max. He's Jake.”
Jake got up and c.o.c.ked his head as he stared at me. ”Maybe if I hadn't read off the name of that walkie-talkie?”
”Maybe. I don't know.”
Max slid the revolver into the holster after checking it over, and clipped the holster to his pants and smoothed the sport s.h.i.+rt down over the bulge. He looked thoughtful. ”McGee, you may be half again as big as I expected, and you are certainly twice as quick as anybody your size I've ever seen, but it was still a h.e.l.l of a risk. It was a stupid risk. You miss the gun and maybe I kill you as I am falling. From instinct. From training. From too long doing what I do.”
”He wanted to make an impression on you,” Meyer said.
Jake said, ”There are some folks we work with and work for who would never let us forget how we got taken.”
”And never understand it,” Max said.
”But they weren't here to watch,” I said.
I saw the tension going out of him, little by little. Jake had a bad bruise on his s.h.i.+n. It was swelling and turning blue. I had torn a fingernail s.n.a.t.c.hing the revolver.
Finally Max grinned at me and said, ”Now I understand a little bit more about some of the things I found out about you. Now they make more sense. But it was still stupid.”
Meyer made an odd sound. He looked up from the print he was holding. He looked questioningly at Max and said, ”Markov?”
”Yes. And you better tell me how you know about that!”
Seven.
MEYER LOOKED at Max, his expression puzzled. ”But why wouldn't I know about it? It had a lot of publicity.”
”But how would you make the connection from these photographs?”
Still puzzled, Meyer said, ”The details made an impression on me.” He looked toward the ceiling, frowned, closed his eyes, and said, ”A sphere of platinum and iridium-I forget the percentages of each in the alloy. One fifteenth of an inch in diameter, with two tiny holes drilled into it at right angles to each other, with traces of an unknown substance in the holes.”
”But you glanced at these photos and made the connection.”
Meyer straightened and glared at him. ”If you are pretending to be professional, act like a professional. If I had any trace of guilty knowledge, would I have revealed it? The people who do have guilty knowledge are certainly too professional to reveal it.”
I interrupted, saying, ”Let me explain something. Meyer has a fantastic memory. I don't know what the h.e.l.l either of you are talking about. What I've got here is a picture of what looks like a lumpy silver bowling ball with the holes drilled badly.”
”The scale, Travis,” Meyer said. ”Look at the scale.”
Yes, it was very small. Maybe not quite as small as the head of a pin, but almost.
”That item,” said Max, ”is a twin to the one removed from the right thigh of a Bulgarian defector in London named Georgi Markov after he died-with the symptoms of high fever, sharp drop in blood pressure, and renal failure. That was quite some time ago.”
”Somebody jabbed him with an umbrella,” Meyer said.
”Yes. That one. This is a photograph of an identical object removed from the right side of the back of the neck of Mrs. Howard. The traces of the poison found inside those holes are being a.n.a.lyzed. They did not get a complete a.n.a.lysis of the poison in the Markov case, or in the Kostov attempt which happened a month before Markov was killed. The pellet hit Kostov in the back in a Paris subway. We can a.s.sume a better delivery system was devised to take care of Markov. Kostov recovered.”
I sat heavily and stared at the picture of the dull silver ball. Somebody had stuck that thing into the back of the neck of my woman and killed her. I had been trying not to accept the fact that such a thing could happen, and had happened.
”I'm burning up. I feel terrible, Trav. Terrible.” Her face had become gaunt so quickly. Fever had eaten her up, eaten the quickness and happiness, eaten the brightness.
The reason for doing that to her seemed beyond any comprehension. But somebody did it. And from this moment on, the only satisfying purpose in life would be to find out exactly, precisely, specifically who.
I came back from a long way off and heard the last part of Meyer's question. ”-many more since the Markov case?”
”Cla.s.sified information.”
”Who does such a thing?” I demanded.
Jake took the answer to that one. ”We could say that we have reason to believe the poison itself, a complex chemical structure, was developed by Kamera, a section of Department V of the KGB. We have reason to believe they have been working for many years on poisons which, after injection, break down into substances normally found in the human body. They killed Vladimir Tkachenko back in 1967 in London when, we think, he tried to defect. Method of delivery unknown. Poison unknown.”
”It's like you're speaking a foreign language. This is Fort Lauderd.a.m.ndale. This is the palmtree Christmas coming, with Sanny Claus in shorts, and the tourists swarming. What has all this Russian stuff got to do with Gretel and me?”