Read the Devil's Workshop (1999) Online

Authors: Stephen Cannell

the Devil's Workshop (1999) (28 page)

BOOK: the Devil's Workshop (1999)
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"He was riding trains," Buddy said. "How do you look for yourself doing that?"

"I hoboed with him. We rode the SP line all across Texas. We had long talks about what he wanted. To tell you the truth, Mr. Brazil, he was lonely and confused, and didn't think anybody loved him. He was looking for a father, and I told him he should give you another chance. I took his ring after he died."

"You mean you stole his ring," Buddy snapped, angry that this stranger had asserted himself into his nonexistent relationship with Mike.

"No sir," Cris said. "I just gave it back a minute ago, but if I hadn't saved it for you, some railroad brakeman would have it now."

Mike was lonely, he didn't think anybody loved himLik
e f
ather, like son. "You said you wanted to ask some questions. What do you need to know?" Buddy asked the blond woman.

"Was your son Jewish?"

Buddy first looked annoyed, then amused. Then he had no expression at all, as he leaned his elbows on the bar, and went for some Jack Nicholson cool. "How the hell is that any of your business, lady?" he said slowly, immediately regretting the remark because it made him sound like he was hiding something. He seemed to be having trouble staying in character. The Buddy Brazil outlaw thing he'd perfected over the years was suddenly wavering badly.

"I assume the doctors at the morgue explained the unusual conditions surrounding your son's death," Wendell said. "I'm sure they explained their suspicions about the reason somebody stole Mike's body."

Buddy nodded. Dr. Welsh had said to him that they feared his son had been infected by some rare bio-weapon that had gotten loose, and that somebody, maybe even a foreign government, had stolen Mike's body to get a sample of it. He'd been sworn to secrecy. They didn't want that on the news.

"I think that the weapon he was exposed to might have been designed to only attack people of Jewish origin," Stacy said. "So far, in almost every case we have confirmed, the victim was Jewish. Troy Lee Williams, who died from an illegal test of the weapon, was adopted. His natural parents were Jewish. Dr. Saunders, the retired dentist; your friend Dr. Iverson; the man who crashed his helicopter at Vanishing Lake, Captain Abrams--all Jewish. Only Sylvester Swift, an African-American who was transferred up there, wasn't Jewish. That still puzzles me. I've been giving a lot of thought to the fact that this is a protein bio-weapon. I've been reading up on it, and Wendell and I think it may b
e p
ossible for a protein to genetically target an ethnic-specific section of a genome."

"Do what?" Buddy asked.

"If Dr. DeMille had attempted to use the protein markers that are in all human blood, I think it's very possible to target specific genetic groups. Blacks, for instance, are the only group to get sickle-cell anemia. Only Ashkenazi Jews get Tay-Sachs disease. This is because each genetic group has its own unique DNA, with its own specific protein markers. Prions could be engineered to attack only one set of genetic DNA markers. When you think abou
t i
t, it makes both scientific and tactical military senseIf w
e w
ere at war with the Arabs, or the Chinese, it would be devastatingly efficient to infect only that genetic enemy."

Buddy was starting to panic. "Is this shit contagious?" he shrieked, losing his Nicholson drawl.

"It can be passed, but it needs to be transmitted by ingestion, direct blood transfer, or mosquito bites. It's not a virus, so it's not very contagious. I wouldn't be too concerned," she said.

Now Buddy was wondering if he'd touched Iverson after he'd blown half his head off. Shit! Had he stood in the blood with bare feet? He barely remembered any of it. He'd been in emotional shock for an hour after the shooting.

"Was Mike Jewish?" Stacy asked again.

"Yes," Buddy stammered. "My name is ... it used to be Peter Olenchuck."

"Polish?" she asked.

Buddy winced. "Yeah, it's fucking Polish. What about it?" he snapped, and again immediately regretted it, because she looked startled and hurt.

"Look, Miss ... what was it... ?"

"Richardson. And it's Mrs.," she said.

Now Buddy winced inwardly. She was married.

It was news to Cris as well.

"Mrs. Richardson," Buddy continued, "I'm very sorry. It'
s b
een a while since I killed anyone. I guess I'm a little outta practice." At last, a good delivery. He had put just the right amount of tired distress into the reading.

"I understand," she said. "And Michael's mother, was she Jewish?"

"With a name like Tova?" Buddy smiled ruefully. "Tova was one of the great Eastern European Jewish Princesses. She was Tova Rosen, and before you think we're all running around Hollywood changing our names to deny our heritage, this is a billboard society we're in out here. Olenchuck. I didn't want to go around town dragging that Polish piano behind me."

"It's okay," she said softly.

Again he felt stupid. He'd overreacted. He was all over the road.

"Mr. Brazil, I think you should get your blood checked immediately. It's just a precaution, to be on the safe side. Not that I think you have anything to worry about."

Then the chocolate bread thing was back in his mouth, tinny and gross. He wanted to turn and spit into his bar sink, but he restrained himself.

"And just what are you people going to do?" he asked.

"We've decided to go back to Vanishing Lake," Cris Cunningham said. "We want to find out what really happened up there. Stacy thinks we should look at the prison. See if we can find anything they missed when they pulled out. Wendell is going to stay here and work on the science in case we turn up something."

"Vanishing Lake? Where the big fire was?" he said, remembering it from the news.

"It's where your son was infected," Stacy said.

"Isn't that dangerous, going up there?" Buddy asked. "If there's been a bio-weapon outbreak?"

"The government says that all infestation has been contained. They've even reopened the highways," Stacy said.

"I hope they're right," Buddy said. Then, apropos of nothing, he added, "Will your husband be going?" Buddy smiled, tryin
g f
or some of the old Brazil bullshit, but missing by a mile. Without even looking in the bar mirror, he knew that his smile was lecherous. He had never felt more awkward.

"My husband is dead," she finally said softly. "He was murdered by the people at Fort Detrick, Maryland. They said he committed suicide, but they murdered him because he found out what they were doing."

So Maximilian Richardson was her husband, Cris thought, and he was murdered because he stumbled onto this.

"They killed Mr. Cunningham's four-year-old daughter, with U
. S
. Government-manufactured pyridostigmine, part of a chemical weapons cocktail used by Iraq in the Gulf War, and brought home inside some of our soldiers," Stacy went on. "And now they've killed your only son. We're not going to quit till we prove they were all murdered."

Buddy Brazil suddenly felt a range of new, different emotions sweeping over him. In his car on the way to the morgue he had wanted to cry, or have some reaction to Mike's passing, but he couldn't. Then in his dream, when Mike was falling, he knew he had lost something very important, and had cried in his sleep, although that had just been a slice of his subconscious. Now he felt guilt, overwhelming Jewish guilt, and burning, unreasoning anger.

He also knew he couldn't live with himself as a coward. He would rather die than carry that around with him. His self-loathing was swamped by his cowardice. He had denied Michael at birth, and accepted him only at DNA gunpoint. Now he felt crushed by Mike's loss.

"There's a hospital a mile from here. Let's go get my blood checked," he said softly. "And then if you want, I'll go with you. We can use my private jet."

It was the first sentence he had uttered since they arrived that felt right. The taste of stale bread was no longer in his mouth.

Chapter
26

RETURN TO VANISHING LAKE

It's a good thing I've got bank credit," Buddy Brazil muttered to himself, as he threw the Writers Guild credit arbitration finding aside. "If I had to depend on screen credit, I'd go broke." He'd put in for "written by" after doing a pencil revision on the last draft of a western he was producing called Trail of Tears, but the Arbitration Committee at the Writers Guild had denied it. He flipped the rest of the mail he'd brought with him onto the tray table and looked out the window of his Gulfstream III.

They were still climbing, just leaving the flight pattern at Van Nuys Airport, and he could see the San Gabriel Mountains falling away under the left wing. It was a typical smoggy L
. A
. day, and everything looked tiny and brown down there; a miniature town through a number six light filter. He turned away from the window. The tall man with the stitched-up head and the quarterback's name was sitting on the plush sofa. He was looking at the expensive seat controls in the Gulfstream, like an indigent trying to pick the right dinner fork at a five-star restaurant. Buddy loved the magnificent jet. The burlwood was varnished and glistening; there were three video screens, a full bar and galley, and a gorgeous uniformed stewardess named Carmen DeLuca, who was one of Heidi's ex
-
hookers. Carmen had hit the lockup for her third prostitution bust last May and had decided to retire from high-roller sport fucking. He'd given her a job on his new G-III, which he had just painted black, with the word "Outlaw" scripted on the tail.

Buddy got up and moved forward as Stacy Richardson came out of the forward bathroom and joined Cris Cunningham on the sofa. Even in his cowboy boots, Buddy could stand up in the plane without ducking his head. The Gulfstream had a six-foot-high cabin, so Cris Cunningham was too tall to accomplish that feat. It pissed Buddy off.

"Let me show you something," Buddy said. He took a gold key from his pocket and unlocked a cabinet forward of the galley, pulling out a Colt Python with a Tasco dot scope affixed to its three-inch barrel. He flipped the sight on and spun the pistol like a gunfighter in a bad western.

"Jesus, take it easy," Cris said. "Is it loaded?"

"Fucking A," Buddy said, still waving the gun around, sighting the dot on several things in the cabin. "This is an O
. E. G
. That stands for--"

"Occluded Eye Gunsight," Cris said. "Kick the thing open and drop the loads out, will you?" He was looking at the gun like a man who had been on the serious end of more than one firearm.

"Don't be alarmed, Cris. I know what I'm doing." Buddy was on familiar ground. He would often wave loaded guns around to scare the shit out of someone and establish his alpha-male superiority.

"If you knew what you were doing, Buddy, you wouldn't be handling a loaded gun like that," Cris said, feeling a familiar knot in his stomach.

"I can understand why you're a little nervous," Buddy said, holding the gun carelessly pointed at Cris, "but I'm a certified sharpshooter... an expert. You're in no immediate danger," and he pulled the hammer back.

Cris moved as fast as he could. He came up off the sofa, grabbed Buddy's wrist, and twisted it to the left, immediately pulling his finger off the trigger. Cris simultaneously pivoted in the jet's cabin, turning inside of Buddy's outstretched right arm, yanking it upward, and miraculously coming away with Buddy's Colt Python. It was a move he'd learned in Special Forces Recon. He used to be able to do it so fast you almost couldn't see it. Now, with his reflexes shot, the move felt clumsy and dangerous. If Buddy had been for real, or had known what he was doing, Cris would have been dead. He snapped the sight off, then kicked the round wheel open, dumping all six magnum loads in his hand.

"Full Metal Jackets," Cris said softly. "What're you hunting with these, rhinos?" He dropped the six FMJs into his pocket, then handed the empty revolver back to Buddy. Cris's legs were shaking. He was amazed that a combat move he'd once been so good at he could now only perform at half speed. What am I doing? he thought. I don't belong here. I'm going to get us all killed.

"Jesus Christ, how'd you do that? One second I had the fucking gun, next you did." Buddy was impressed by any macho feat that he couldn't duplicate. So, while Cris was cursing his sad performance, Buddy was putting him a few notches higher on the alpha
-
male testosterone chart.

"Cris was a Delta Ranger. He won the Silver Star," Stacy said.

Buddy looked over at her. "That's not hard to believe. I never saw anything on two feet move so fast," Buddy gushed, notching Cris up even higher. "Let me show you something else." Buddy returned to the unlocked cabinet and pulled out another loaded pistol. It was a customized Beretta. He handled this one more carefully as he showed it to Cris.

Stacy thought they looked like little boys comparing toys.

"Know what this is?" Buddy asked.

"A nine-by-nineteen NATO Beretta selective-fire 93^," Cris said. "You got the stock?"

"Sure do." Buddy grinned. "You really know your guns." He reached in and pulled out a hand-carved wood stock that could be attached to the piece, turning it into a nine-millimeter carbine.

BOOK: the Devil's Workshop (1999)
13.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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