Page 24 of Fire and Ice (Buchanan-Renard 7)
âI understand. I know what you have to do. After Thanksgiving then. You go to sleep now, and donât worry so much. Things have a way of working out.â
She pretended to believe him.
WORK BECAME HER SALVATION. She buried herself in it, writing for hours on end. She managed to block out all thoughts of Jack ⦠until she got into bed. Sheâd close her eyes, and he was right there. âGet out of my dreams,â she whispered.
What was he doing? Where was he now? Had he taken time off and found the warm beach he wanted? Or was he back at work?
Had he handed off the Inook investigation, or was he still involved? She hadnât heard anything for days. Surely they were still looking for answers. Had they found a motive behind the men who tried to kill Jack and her? Alpha Project ⦠four scientists ⦠William Harrington. She fell asleep trying to connect the dots.
NOW THAT THE FUROR OVER THE YOUTUBE INCIDENT HAD died down, Jack was able to get back to work. His star had faded because there were two new online superstars for the world to watch. Both were gorgeous Hollywood A-list movie icons, and they were caught duking it out at a high-powered producer's swank wedding reception, the guy having had the bad taste to dump one sexpot to marry the other. What made the video so popular was the X-rated language and the footage of the scantily clad actress punching her way through the crowd to get to the blushing bride. The acid-tongued starlet throwing the first punch ended up sprawled across the ten-thousand-dollar wedding cake. This disaster movie was a huge hit.
In the meantime, Jack found himself reassigned to a fraud case, but since the investigation labeled âInookâ was ongoing, he went to Pittman and argued that he would be far more effective working on the information coming in from Alaska. His argument was valid, and Pittman was swayed.
âI know you, Agent MacAlister. Youâre going to work this case with or without my permission. Isnât that right? Never mind, donât answer. Okay, youâre back in. Iâll make the call and let everyone know youâre the agent in charge. Finish this soon. I donât like my agents getting shot at.â
All the boxes of information that had been gathered from the scientistsâ facility in Alaska had been shipped to Chicago. Anchorage didnât have the manpower, and since the first crime had been committed in Chicago, the case was theirs. Agents had already pored over every scrap of paper in every box and had viewed the disks. Wolves. Hours and days and months of video about wolves. There was only one thing unusual about the recordings: they stopped before the final year. Had those last months been recorded? If so, where were the disks?
Jack watched the footage, fast-forwarding through scenes with no activity. Sophie had been right. They did eat, sleep, kill, eat, sleep, kill.
He was going through a spiral notebook when two assistants came in, rolling a cart with more boxes.
âWhere are those from?â Jack asked.
âThe TNI Foundation archives. The research from past years that the doctors had compiled.â
So far everything the FBI had examined had proven to be mundane scientific research, but they were leaving no stone unturned. Jack kept going back to what Carter had said to Sophie before Ricky got to him: You kept pecking away. What was he afraid she would find? What the hell was he hiding?
Agents had talked to the two remaining scientists several times, but they were unable to shed any light on Carterâs motives. Jack familiarized himself with the files on each of the four doctors and wasnât satisfied with what he found. Somebody at TNI had to know something about Carterâs secret.
Jack decided that it was time he talked to them face-to-face. He would start with Dr. Marcus Lemming in Chicago. He stopped by the doctorâs office unannounced and was told by the secretary that Dr. Lemming had gone to North Dakota for a seminar. The other scientist, Dr. Kirk Halpern, lived just outside of Minneapolis. Jack grabbed a morning flight and was knocking on Halpernâs door early that afternoon.
The scientist showed him into his cluttered living room. A slight man with hunched shoulders and an old manâs demeanor, his file indicated he was forty-five years old. His obvious fatigue made him look older.
âCould I get you something to drink, Agent?â Dr. Halpern offered. He moved some newspapers off a chair and motioned for Jack to sit. âMy wife used to keep me organized. She died six years ago.â He glanced around the room. âIâm afraid Iâve let things go.â
âHow did your wife handle your long trips to Alaska?â Jack asked.
His face lit up. âShe went with me. She loved my work and helped. It was after she passed that I joined Eric and Marcus and Brandon at Inookâ
âTell me about them, Doctor.â Jack stood and removed his topcoat. Noticing Halpern staring at his gun, Jack draped the coat on the back of the chair and took his seat again.
âPlease call me Kirk. I canât tell you anything I havenât already told the other agents.â
âI would appreciate it if you would go over it again,â Jack urged.
âThere isnât much to tell.â He moved a needlepoint pillow from the chair and sat down. âIâll begin with our team leader, Brandon ⦠Dr. Brandon Finch. He was very organized. He even made charts so that we wouldnât waste time. Brandon got on our nerves after awhile. Things had to be just so. He was obsessive about everything from how we prepared our food to when we went to bed. It was irritating. I got along with him all right, but occasionally we bickered. After a while, the isolation and the weather gets to you.
âI felt just terrible when he died. None of us knew about his heart condition. He was overweight, but not too out of shape. He kept up with us in the field.â
âHow did the other doctors get along with him?â
âThey put up with him, just like I did. Every now and then theyâd get into it with him, but there werenât any hard feelings after they let off steam.â
âWhat about Eric Carter?â
âYoung, eager, intense. He and Marcus became close friends right away since they were the same age. They worked together well and shared similar interestsâat the beginning anyway. Eric began to stay by himself more. The longer we were there, the more their friendship was strained. One afternoon while Eric was examining some blood samples heâd taken, Marcus took Brandon and me aside and told us he was worried about Eric. He asked us if weâd noticed any changes. Indeed, we had. Eric had become so withdrawn, he wouldnât let any of us look at his notes until he had them organized. Most of it was gibberish to us anyway. Marcus said he couldnât read his scribbles.â
âYou didnât have any idea what he was hiding?â
âNo, I didnât. The agents told me that before he died, he said something to Miss Rose about a test subject. He was concerned about something she was looking for. I have no idea what he meant.â
Jack was about to move on to Marcus Lemming when he thought of another question to ask. âWhich of you did the recording?â
âAt first we all took our turns with the camera, but the last couple of years, Eric insisted on taking it over.â
âSo there were videos from the last year?â
âOf course. Eric watched them over and over and over. It drove the rest of us crazy. We finally moved the player into the small room so we could shut the door. Hour after hour heâd watch. He loved Ricky. But then, all of us did. He was a splendid alpha male. I only wish I could have observed him to the end. Donât imagine heâll be around long. Arctic wolves donât have long life spans, you know. I had to leave that phase of the study because the last couple of years Brandon wanted me to go with him to track the pups from Rickyâs second pack. I guess you could say we were creating a family tree of sorts. I will admit we learned a great deal, but we didnât get to film the new packs as much as we would have liked. Eric hogged the good audio and video equipment. He had thirty disk files marked. At night, heâd watch with the sound muted. He didnât want to hear, just to watch. One through thirtyâwhen he finished the last one, heâd start all over again. Marcus thought Eric was having a breakdown of so
me sort. He wanted him to go home for a while, see a medical doctor. We would have sent him home, but we were going to close up soon anyway, so we put up with his odd behavior awhile longer. I believed that, once Eric got back to the city, heâd snap out of it.â
Jack wanted to go back to the videos. âYou said one through thirty disks. Are you sure of that number?â
âOh, yes, Iâm sure.â
âIâve found only twenty-three disks.â
Kirk sat back. âWhat happened to the other seven?â
âYou tell me.â
He scratched his chin. âI donât know. Eric must have done something with them. Maybe he shipped them home. Did you check?â He smiled as he continued. âOf course you did.â
Jack moved to the last scientist: Marcus Lemming.
âLike I told you, he was close to Eric until Eric started acting strange. Marcus was dedicated to the study and the pack, and by the time we finished, he was closer to me than Eric. In the evening, while Eric watched his videos, Marcus and I played Scrabble and cards.
âWeâve talked a few times since we left Inook. Marcus is thinking about moving back to North Dakota to be near family. This study burned him out.â
Jack spent another hour talking to Kirk. He was putting on his coat and heading toward the door when he stopped to ask, âYou never called your study the Alpha Project?â
âIâve been asked that question about a hundred times now. I told the agents no, and I told Miss Rose no. We didnât call it the Alpha.â
âYou spoke to Sophie?â
âYes, she called yesterday. She said sheâd like to come see me. We spent a long time on the phone. She asked about the Alpha Project, but then somehow we started talking about my wife. It felt good to reminisce. Iâm afraid I got carried away, but Miss Rose seemed genuinely interested.â
That was his Sophie. She could get anyone to tell her his life story. But then, she wasnât really his Sophie, was she? Jack thought about her a lot. He missed her.
She was on his mind as he flew back to Chicago. She was still âpecking away,â as Eric had accused. She wasnât going to let it go, which gave him an uneasy feeling. Jack needed to call her and tell her to stop. He needed to talk to her, convince her to back off. He needed to see her again.
âGOBBLE, GOBBLE, GOBBLE.â
Sophie watched the protesters picketing in front of the grocery story with a mixture of disbelief and shock. Mr. Bitterman had given her the assignment, and this one was going in her I-hate-this-job notebook. It might even make the top five.
Seven protesters holding placards marched back and forth at the store entrance. Three were dressed up as turkeys.
Sophie crossed the parking lot. Bracing herself, she tapped on the shoulder of the woman at the end of the line. âExcuse me. Could you tell me who the head turkey is? Iâd like to find out what youâre protesting.â
A gentleman with a round face framed in feathers and an orange wattle hanging from his chin stepped forward.
âThatâs me. I put this together,â he announced with great seriousness.
âIâm writing an article for the Illinois Chronicle, sir. May I ask you some questions about your protest?â
âOf course. We want to draw attention to this horror.â
âWhat horror would that be?â Sophie asked.
âThe heartless cruelty to turkeys.â
âItâs barbaric is what it is,â a woman shouted over her placard. âThe assassins raise them just to kill and eat them. Itâs murder!â
âYou donât want grocery stores to sell Thanksgiving turkeys?â Sophie asked calmly.
A thin older woman with thick glasses stepped forward. âThatâs right, and weâre going to stay here until the killing stops.â
Each of the protesters had something to add, and they made extra sure that Sophie spelled their names correctly. When she couldnât think of another absurd question to ask, she thanked them for the interview and turned to walk away. Behind her, the small but vocal group chanted, âSave the turkeys! Save the turkeys!â
Holding up her phone, Sophie took some pictures. Cordie and Regan would never believe her unless she showed them the proof.
She took her time walking back to the office. Pedestrians were rushing about all bundled up in their heavy coats with their collars over their ears and their wool hats pulled down. Sophie hadnât noticed the cold and was surprised when she looked up at the First Commerce Bank building and saw the temperature in big red letters below the time: twenty-eight degrees. Considering where sheâd been, this was balmy weather.
What was she going to write about the turkey people? She couldnât call them crazy, and the article needed to be upbeat and cheerful because thatâs what people wanted to read. Okay, sheâd make them cheerful turkey people.
Oh God, how had she come to this? Turkey protesters and the heartbreak of static clingâthatâs what she was writing about these days.
Enough with the whining, she told herself. She would write the story without balking because that was her job, but as soon as it was finished she thought she just might run out into traffic and hope she got run over by a very large bus.
Gary was in her cubicle again. He was getting so bold, he didnât even pretend to be looking for something.
Sophie didnât pretend to be gracious. âGet out.â She wanted to push him, but knowing Gary, heâd probably sue her for assault. âThis is my space, not yours.â
âJust looking around,â he said sullenly.
She didnât ask what he was looking for. Heâd told her once that she always got the good storiesâhe obviously hadnât heard about the turkey peopleâand he wanted to see if he could snatch one for himself. After she looked around to make sure he hadnât stolen anything, she sat down at her computer, typed in her password, and started writing her article. It took her twenty minutes from start to finish. She attached a note asking Mr. Bitterman not to run her photo with the story.
She looked at the stack of assignments she needed to catch up on. What next? she thought. Sitting back in her chair, she took a deep breath. Her old notepad was sitting on top of her desk. She picked it up and thumbed through the pages, thinking yet again about her interview with Harrington. She knew she was missing something, and it was driving her crazy. Having read her notes at least twenty times already, she went over them again.
Selected to join an exclusive club. Was that the Alpha Project? Heâd called it a club and had compared it to an Olympic trial. Heâd bragged to her that he had taken a battery of tests to qualify.
âJust look at me.â Thatâs what heâd said. A superman club? Sheâd made that note a question. âJust look at me.â
She needed to talk to Kirk Halpern again, so she made the call.
Kirk was happy to hear from her.
âI really hate to bother you,â she began, âbut I was wondering about the wolves you studied.â
âIâd be happy to tell you anything you want to know,â he offered.
âWere these particular animals unusually vigorous or strong?â she asked.
âI wouldnât say they were unusual,â he answered. âThey were what we expected for that particular subspecies.â
âDid you notice any tremendous improvement in their condition while you observed them?â
âActually I didnât get to observe the same animals throughout the study. Dr. Finch and I branched off to another group the last couple of years. Eric and Marcus continued with the initial alpha male. He, of course, was the strongest of the pack. As you might know, we called him Ricky. He was mature when we first began our observations, so the likelihood of his growing stronger was remote. We couldnât tell the exact age, but we estimated him to be older based on the wear and tear on the teeth. The life span of the arctic wolf is only about seven years. It was amazing, actually, that Ricky was still alive at the end of the study.â
âHow much of your observation was recorded on video?â
âDr. Carter was diligent
with his recordings, though Iâve just learned that the later ones are missing. An FBI agent, Jack MacAlister, was just here asking about that very thing.â
âWhen did he leave?â she asked.
âAbout fifteen minutes ago.â
âThank you so much, Kirk,â she said. âYouâve been very helpful.â
âCall me anytime.â
Sophie put the phone down and tapped her pencil on her chin as she thought. How was she going to get to those videos? Everything that had been in the Inook facility was evidence in an ongoing investigation, and it would be heavily guarded.
She was going to have to get tricky. Kirk unknowingly had helped her by mentioning that Agent MacAlister had just left. Assuming Jack would get on the first available flight back to Chicago, she had to hurry. Timing was important.
She called Alec, and without explaining why, asked him if he would meet her in the lobby of the FBI building. Since he was already at the office, he agreed.
She smiled sweetly and kissed his check when she saw him.
âJack told me I should watch some of the videos of the wolves,â she said. She shrugged and sighed. âI know it will be boring, but he did ask, and I promised I would. Could you get them for me?â
Alec smiled back. He had known Sophie long enough to recognize when he should be suspicious. âThis isnât Blockbuster. You canât just check them out.â
âYes, youâre right. How about I watch them here? That wouldnât be a problem, would it?â
âMaybe I should check with Jack,â he said.
âGood idea. Is he here? Heâll tell you he wanted my help.â
âNo, he isnât here.â
âDo you want to call him?â she asked, hoping to heaven that he was in the air.
âI doubt I can reach him. I guess I could arrange for you to watch the disks.â
Five minutes later, armed with a visitorâs badge clipped to her blouse, she followed Alec down a corridor to a sparsely furnished room. A technician came in carrying a DVD player, hooked it up, and then asked which of the disks she wanted to watch.