Part 5 (1/2)
”No, Tony. Ursula is modest. You're a prude.”
”I am not, and to prove you wrong, I'll not only get naked for your ceremony tonight, I'll stand naked on the front porch and howl like a wolf at the moon when we're done. How's that for prudish?”
She hatched a wicked grin. Her eyes caught mine and reeled me in. I think the thought of me howling naked at the moon excited her just a little. ”That will not be necessary,” she said, and winked flirtatiously. ”Not tonight, anyway.”
She held me with her gaze until I pried myself loose and turned for the door. I called out over my shoulder. ”Coming Carlos?”
”Right behind you,” he answered, his footsteps confirming it.
We walked out to the car without saying a word. I knew he wanted to talk about what just happened, but he knew better than to start up with it. The silence held until we turned into the parking garage at the justice center. That is when I said to him, ”Listen.”
He shut the car off and turned to me, his expression stalled in a quizzical twist. ”Yeah?”
”About this thing tonight.” I shook my finger at him. ”You cannot tell Spinelli. You hear me?”
”What?” The way his jaw dropped, you would have thought I had just ripped the mustache from his face. ”Tony, don't you want to see the look on his face when we tell him Ursula is gonna get naked in front of you?”
”No. Of course not. Why would you want to do that to Dominic? You know how vulnerable he is.”
”I know. That is just it. He'll squirm like a fish.”
”Exactly. I thought you liked Spinelli.”
”I do.”
”Then why make him squirm? Do you think he would do that to you?”
His expression melted into something of a frown. ”No, not for the fun of it.”
”All right then. Don't do it to him.”
He pursed his lips and made a tic sound through his teeth. ”Okay, fine. I won't tell him, but I want all the details tomorrow morning. Deal?”
”Deal,” I said, though I thought I might regret that promise later.
FOUR.
Spinelli's enthusiasm to see us faded quickly after noticing Carlos' cat that ate the cannery grin. I tried kick-starting the conversation, inquiring about Howard Snow the minute we settled in around my desk.
”Where is he?” I said, hoping to derail his suspicions. ”You got him downstairs?”
He pitched a glance my way before refocusing his attention on Carlos and his s.h.i.+t-eating grin. ”Who?”
”Snow. Where is he? In holding?”
He pointed at Carlos. ”You're hiding something.”
”Me?” Carlos' grin widened to a full-fledged smile. ”I ain't hiding anything.”
”Dominic. Snow. Do we have him or not?”
”Huh?” He came back to me, this time long enough to give me a straight answer. ”No. We missed him. The black and white reported his car in the driveway, but no one home. He could be at the hospital, though.”
”Why, is he hurt?”
Spinelli's attention drifted once more to Carlos, who had taken the seat across the desk from me. ”No. His wife is in the hospital.” He shook his head. ”Cancer I think.” He said to Carlos, ”You know something. What is it?”
Carlos threw me a look, begging me to let him off the hook. I shot him down with a stone-faced glare. ”You got them heading over to the hospital now?”
”Who?” said Carlos.
”Dominic,” I said. ”I'm asking Dominic.”
Dominic replied, ”Who?”
”The black and white. Jesus. Will you forget about Carlos and come back to earth?”
He snapped to attention, turned on his heels and pulled the bend out of his tie. ”Sorry. No, I don't have the unit going to the hospital.”
”Why not?”
”Because his car is still in the driveway.”
”Then why did you say he could be at the hospital?”
Spinelli offered up a dull shrug. ”I don't know. I was just saying. His wife is in the hospital. If he's not home, maybe that's where he went.”
I shook my head. ”Forget it. Carlos and I will ride out to his house and try to make contact. Tell me what you found out about Biocrynetix Laboratories.”
”Ahh, something interesting there.” He pulled a small notepad from his back pocket and flipped past the first few pages. ”Biocrynetix Laboratories is a privately funded co-op specializing in radical R&D for large pharmaceuticals and governmental contractors.”
”What does that mean, radical R&D?”
”It means they invest in projects deemed too experimental, risky or radical for traditional pharmaceutical companies to take on; projects that hold slim hope for breakthroughs, but yield immense profits with successes.”
”I see. Traditional pharmaceuticals are publically owned and such endeavors make Wall Street investors too skittish.”
”Exactly, but here's the interesting thing.” He turned to Carlos. ”You told me Biocrynetix Laboratories was working on a super sweetener?”
”That's right. Ferguson told us it was four-thousand times sweeter than corn syrup.”
”See, that's the thing. An industrial strength food sweetener is agricultural. It is not the sort of thing Biocrynetix Laboratories typically researches.”
”Maybe they are thinking about going public,” I said. ”If that's the case, they have to think about getting away from the radical R&D stuff and going mainstream. A breakthrough in a super sweet food additive would surely add a feather in their cap and boost their IPO.”
Carlos added, ”Ferguson did say he didn't want the publicity. That is exactly the sort of thing that would jeopardize an initial public offering.”