take care of his medical expenses if he came to work for her. And ten years later, he lay, still twisted, on a cold slab.

Did Gavino ever stand a chance? In such a cosseted world, he had no chance to fight what he had been born into. The night the compound was stormed, Ren had watched him from her hiding place in the woods. He was seven years old and his mother had hidden him in the undergrowth so she could be free to leave with ‘the man who wasn’t there’. Gavino had turned to Ren, his eyes wide, reaching out a shaking hand, the tiny little fingers moving like he was playing the piano. Oh, God. I want to save you so bad. Ren had put her finger to her lips and slowly shook her head.

There are too many victims of too many decisions: bring a baby boy into your screwed-up world, lose your business for your meth-addicted daughter, turn your back on your alcoholic son. Domenica Val Pando, Gavino Val Pando; Charlie Barger, Shannon Barger; Diane Wilson, Mark Allen Wilson …

Ren’s meeting with Warwick and Monahan was like a wound re-opened, a vivid flashback of that final night. And the fire that raged. Ren had seen men in flames that night, fleeing from all the buildings screaming: the same men she used to see shuffling around the compound, blistered and blackened and scarred; all victims of Domenica Val Pando’s whims.

Ren was hit with a sudden and violent nausea. She lost the sense of what foot should hit what pedal. Her mind was telling her to brake, to stop everything from moving. But the stronger part had her slam her foot on the accelerator and speed toward Breckenridge.

I always knew there was a bigger picture.

Bob Gage was waiting in reception for her when she arrived in. She didn’t stop, just kept moving toward his office. All she managed on the way was:

‘Please tell me Mike is not here.’

‘No … his little boy’s ill,’ said Bob.

‘Oh, no,’ said Ren. ‘Will he be OK?’

‘I think so.’

‘What happened to him?’

‘Oh, he’s the little guy with the health problems. He had some kind of asthma attack last night, Mike brought him to Charlie Barger, but he wasn’t home, so they had to go to the hospital. He’s OK now, though.’

‘I’m afraid Charlie Barger won’t be home any time soon,’ said Ren.

‘What? Why?’

‘Charlie Barger was working for Domenica Val Pando. And I’m betting, with the attention Gavino brought down on the operation, Charlie Barger no longer is. Because I’m guessing Domenica Val Pando took care of him and his daughter, Shannon.’

‘What?’ said Bob.

Ren nodded. ‘There is always a bigger picture with Domenica Val Pando. Robberies are not just robberies, drugs are not just drugs, even people are not just people to her. I realized yesterday when I was shouting at my bosses that I knew, from … previous research, that Val Pando was moving into chem-bio weapons. And the night her compound was destroyed, the lab work was destroyed and the scientists she had hired were either killed or scared enough to disappear.

‘Since she’s been gone, 9/11 happened and the market for chem-bio weapons has shot up – nationally and internationally. And she’s logically going for where the money is. And where she can sit back and watch all the chaos.’

Bob was staring at her.

‘Charlie Barger wasn’t making beer, Bob. He was using the brewery to make hydrogen sulfide. The day we found Mark Wilson’s body in the grounds of the brewery, there was a terrible smell in the air like rotten eggs – that’s what H2S smells like. We taped off a reasonable-sized crime scene around the body, but the building was a ways away, so we didn’t formally search it. I had a look around, though, and I saw a pallet of nitrogen tanks.

‘Anyway, I called Colin Grabien on my way over here to go through Charlie Barger’s financial records. I heard what was going out of his account – and I’m thinking, OK, a pallet of nitrogen tanks, the guy is brewing beer, you need nitrogen for that. Then I hear, hold on – another pallet. And another. And another. And soon we realize that Charlie Barger has bought four pallets, each with twenty tanks.’

Bob stayed silent.

‘OK,’ said Ren, ‘no one needs that much nitrogen for brewing. But he could have been draining the nitrogen out and replacing it with H2S, and there it is – ready to be shipped all over the place with a nice shiny nitrogen label.

‘Even our shitty friend, Erubiel Diaz, was involved. The manure in his truck was being delivered to the brewery. The bacteria that create H2S are put in a vat – the same kind you brew beer in – manure is added and, when the bacteria feed off it, they release H2S.’

‘I’m sorry to stop you, Ren, but I’m not getting the H2S thing,’ said Bob.

‘H2S is a gas that kills instantly. And it’s odorless. In small concentrations, you’ll get the smell of rotten eggs, but even then it’s probably too late, especially in a non-ventilated space. For most people, their first breath of H2S is their last.

‘All you would need is for a guy to slap on an HVAC uniform, get a couple of tanks labeled nitrogen through a hotel lobby, into a bank, into wherever, and they’re good to go. You can direct it through vents into whatever room you want it to go into. It is an instant – mass – killer.

‘It is one of the scariest chem-bio weapons out there. It could be rolled out all over the country for a simultaneous attack on cities – whatever Domenica Val Pando or the people she is supplying feel like doing with it.’

‘And Charlie Barger is the guy manufacturing it?’

‘This is Domenica Val Pando. She went for the best. She researched him and he came up fairly high on the list of people she could use. Because he would also know how to bio-engineer the bacteria to make it all even more powerful.

‘Charlie Barger was a desperate man, Bob. She found his strengths – he is a world-renowned bio-chemist – and she exploited his weakness: his financial problems. His father was this huge success whose shadow he has always stood in. Charlie Barger comes back to Breckenridge after a successful career all around the world. And here he is, four hundred and fifty thousand dollars in debt. But a month ago he was five hundred thousand in debt.’ She shrugged.

‘Jesus,’ said Bob.

‘I know,’ said Ren. ‘And we didn’t know at the time, but when we found Mark Wilson’s body in the grounds, we put a stop to the whole operation by swarming around the brewery. We’ll never know, but I’d say Charlie Barger roped Wilson in to working there – he knew he had no money and was in debt. Those vats need to be monitored all the time – it’s a delicate process. And maybe Mark Wilson was supposed to be there that afternoon instead of getting shitfaced at the Filly.

‘I think it was back in action as recently as two weeks ago, until Gavino Val Pando decides to go flash some stolen cash at the chicks in the Filly. He was blessed with his father’s brains. Augusto Val Pando operated on a primal level: eat, fight, fuck. I guess the potential for fucking is what fucked Gavino.’

‘What about the brewery?’ said Bob.

‘A HazMat team is on the way,’ said Ren. ‘I don’t think Barger got as far as Domenica Val Pando would have liked in the manufacturing, but we can’t risk it. As far as the press are concerned, we’re shutting down a meth lab. And with Shannon Barger’s tragic history, no one’s going to question that.’

‘Jesus Christ,’ said Bob.

‘I know,’ said Ren. ‘Anyway, the team will be in touch with you any minute now. They’ll be the ones to go to Barger’s house too. So all you need to do is sit tight. And prepare to tell Casey Bonaventure some nice lies.’ She stood up.

‘Thanks, Ren.’

‘My pleasure.’

Ren got into the Jeep and clung to the steering wheel, her head bowed. Get your shit together. She pulled out of the parking lot, did a tour of the roundabout and drove to Frisco under a dusky sky.

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