Several people had gone by. There had also been the unmistakable sound of wheels rolling over the metal floor. Less than a minute later a second set of wheels passed his door. This went on for a quarter hour, with another cart each minute.
The only time he heard any conversation was when the last cart passed by.
“… of there. I don’t want to leave anything for …”
The voice trailed off, and was replaced by just under sixty seconds of silence before Quinn could hear the footsteps returning. It was the same pattern that had occurred every time. The cart would go by, and, soon after, footsteps would return on their own.
But this time after the steps receded, no new cart wheeled past. Quinn waited several more moments, then opened the door just enough so that he could listen unimpeded.
There were voices off to the left. Distant and indecipherable. He also thought he heard another cart. He waited to see if it might be headed in his direction, but it never grew closer. He opened the door wide enough to slip through, then stepped out into the corridor and looked to the left toward the noise. The majority of the facility was in that direction. Whatever Tucker’s people were up to was going on in that area. Quinn was sure of it.
It took him less than a second to make his decision. Right first. See what they were doing with the carts. Maybe it would help explain what was going on. If not, he would have only lost a few minutes tops.
He headed down the corridor. There were three doors between where he’d been hiding and the elevators. The first was another empty room like the one he’d been in. The second was the same again.
But the third was different. Even though it was dark, Quinn could tell it was larger than the other two. He sensed depth. He stepped inside and closed the door behind him. He then pulled out his flashlight and turned it on.
He started to move the light across the room, but he didn’t get far before he froze.
In the beam were two of the carts and part of a third. Not carts. Gurneys, like in a hospital, complete with an attached IV stand, plastic bag full of liquid, and a tube leading down to the distinctive form of a human being under a sheet.
He started to move the light again, scanning the room. More gurneys, each with its own lump on top. He could see now there were straps holding each of the bodies in place. He counted seventeen total.
He took a deep breath, then approached the nearest one.
A head stuck out from under the sheet, lying on a pillow. A mop of brown hair hung down over the face. By its length Quinn guessed the person was female. He glanced at the sheet and watched it move up and down several times.
But there was something about the person that seemed off. He moved the light from one to another of the nearby gurneys. They all looked similar. The bodies under the sheets were small, taking up little more than half a bed’s length.
Children.
He played the light through the rest of the room.
The same.
The same.
The same.
On each gurney, the sleeping form of a child.
“Oh, God,” he said under his breath.
He knew it shouldn’t have been that much of a surprise. He was looking for the girl who had been with Marion Dupuis, after all. But this was not what he’d expected. Not a room full of kids strapped to hospital beds.
He closed his eyes for a moment and brought up the picture of Iris he’d seen on the passports Marion had left in Montreal. Then he began moving from bed to bed looking for the girl. But he didn’t get too far before he noticed an even more disturbing pattern.
None were the regular kids he’d see playing in the park, or clinging to their mothers at the sight of a stranger. These children were different. “Special,” Quinn’s mother would have called them. “Gifts from God.”
Three of the first five children he looked at had the unmistakable facial features of Down syndrome. He knew the look, had seen it himself as a kid in the face of his cousin. She was the “gift from God” his aunt had been given. Sarah. So sweet, so trusting. A bad heart had taken her life when she was just eleven. Quinn hadn’t thought about her in years, and was surprised by the level of sadness he felt at the memory.
Though the other two children did not look like they had Down’s, it was obvious they had some other genetic affliction. Quinn continued through the room, going bed to bed. More disabled children. They all must be, he realized.
What the hell was going on?
A mix of anger and horror and compassion welled in his chest. It was all he could do to keep his feelings from taking over. He needed to remain objective and alert. He needed to figure—
A noise to his right stopped him.
It was only a few feet away. A moan, soft but pleading.
Quinn turned toward it, his light sweeping over the nearby beds.
The moan again.