antenna with his bare toes, retrieving his portable from beneath the seat. Using the ball of his foot, he depressed the call button.
When the comm center responded, Tim leaned over, talking loudly at the pinned radio. 'This is Tim Rackley. Will you call my wife at home and ask her to come outside?'
Chapter 58
The front rooms of the Kagan house, mood-lit for a somberness uncharacteristic of the dearly deceased, were scattered with a gathering of soberly dressed people. A few familiar faces, the inner circle able to be summoned at a day's notice to pay tribute to the dispatched CEO. The curtains were drawn. A spread of fine cheeses on a velvet-draped table. Same caterer, same staff relentlessly clearing and replenishing, different pattern of china. The sparse mourners stood around awkwardly, as if unsure of what they were supposed to do. Dean and Dolan were conspicuously absent, leaving the mourners to fend for themselves or to offer condolences in shifts to Jane Bernard, who circled endlessly like a bride greeting out-of-towners while her daughter, buried in the corner amid a swarm of dark suits, played the part of the grief-stricken fiancee. All signs of yesterday evening's assault had vanished. No scattered glass, no jagged hole in the window, no blood spatter.
Tim and Bear had been screened by guards at checkpoints at the gate, the walk, and the door, but once inside they moved unimpeded. During the command-post debriefing, Tim's headache had dissipated, forgotten, but it returned with a vengeance after he'd had some quiet on the ride over. Bear had returned the file box to an irate Martinez that morning, keeping the second dub that they'd fortunately made the night before. Tim had reached Pete on the drive over, extracting a promise that he'd analyze the security footage from The Ivy within twenty-four hours.
Received stonily by Jane Bernard, Tim and Bear turned the corner, arriving at Dean's study, where a team of suited extras toiled, parked on every available chair and counter. The fax machine whirred, cell phones hummed, laptop keyboards clacked. Tim caught the gist from six angles-final preparations for tomorrow's investor presentation. Never before had he seen so thin a veil between grief and industry. Dolan alone sat still, occupying a club chair, his legs drawn up beside him.
The activity paused at Tim and Bear's entrance.
Bear cleared his throat and announced, grandly, 'We've retrieved a tape of you threatening Tess Jameson.'
From behind his wooden slab desk, Dean said, 'A moment, please, gentlemen.' The think-tank suits assembled their paperwork and shuffled out. Looking wan and nauseated, Dolan remained. The door clicked shut, and Dean's eyebrows lifted.
Bear raised Dray's microcassette player from his breast pocket and punched a button. Dean's voice issued forth. Dean listened to himself impassively. As the recorded conversation progressed, Dolan shook his head faintly at intervals in what seemed like private self-reprimand.
The tape ended, and Dean said, 'I do not need to remind you that it's illegal to record someone without their consent in the state of California.'
'Speaking of illegal,' Tim said, 'it seems like you had a pretty strong motive to keep an eye on Tess.'
'She was one of a thousand problems we deal with on a daily basis. Nothing more.'
'I don't know. A high-profile rape trial, lurid stories of a pregnancy, a lawsuit threatening.'
'Not 'threatening.' We'd reached an agreement.'
'Oh? Then why'd you pull Sam from the Xedral trial?'
'I'm afraid you're mistaken there, Deputy.' Dean shoved back from his desk, the chair casters squeaking on the floor. 'She elected to drop her son from the study, not vice versa.'
Dolan emerged from his groggy state, his attention pulling to his father.
'Sure,' Bear said. 'She's gonna remove her son from the one clinical trial that might save his life?'
'Odd, I know,' Dean said. 'We questioned it ourselves. But I think we can dispense with the notion that all Ms. Jameson's actions were rational. I have it here in her hand.' Without lowering his gaze, he slid open his top desk drawer, removed two sheets of paper, and extended them to Tim.
Dolan pushed down on the chair's arms, almost rising to his feet.
Bear laughed once, in disbelief. Confounded, Tim stepped forward and took the papers. At once he recognized the lavender-tinted stationery and Tess's distinctive handwriting. The second paper was a faxed version of the same letter.
4th June To the Vector Biogenics Department of Human Trials: After some deliberation, I have decided to remove my son, Samuel Jameson (Samuel Hardy in earlier paperwork), from the Xedral Phase I and II combined study. Sam's doctor believes that he has at least a few months, and we're hopeful we should be able to secure an O-type liver for transplant in that time. We've elected to pursue this less uncertain course. With much thanks for your consideration, Tess Jameson
Dean said, 'Apparently she thought it was a choice between a guess and an outright crapshoot.'
Wordlessly, Tim handed the letter to Bear, but Dolan snatched it away and read it while Bear occupied himself with the fax copy.
'The agreement requires written notice if a prospective subject decides to drop out,' Dean said, 'and written notice we received.'
'She wrote that under duress,' Bear said.
'A handwritten letter? A full page?' Dean shook his head, as if saddened to see Bear clutching at straws. 'Send it to your handwriting analysts. They can tell when one has written at gunpoint, if I am to trust my le Carre.'
The letter was dated four days before Tess's murder. The day before she'd called Melissa Yueh for an appointment. Maybe she'd discovered something in the three-day interim between firing her lawyer and yanking Sam from the study. Something to do with what she'd seen on Chase's BlackBerry. But they couldn't explore that possibility unless Pete worked magic with the digital enhancement.
Bear was still forging through denial. 'The trial starts what? Monday?'
Still regarding the letter, Dolan nodded faintly.
'She fought to get Sam into that study. He was dying, on a clock. She's gonna opt for a liver transplant-that they were way down the list for-when they were just two months away from starting gene therapy?' Bear shook his head, aggravated, it seemed, at all of them, Tess included. 'I don't buy it. Unless you escalated your threats. Unless you scared her so much she decided to stay away from you.'
'At the cost of her son's life?' Dean chuckled. 'I assure you-not a woman of that constitution. It was a big decision. She got cold feet. We see it all the time.'
'Right,' Tim said. 'Hysterical, emotional Tess Jameson.'
Dean shrugged. 'Out of character, perhaps, but consider the stakes. An experimental protocol, a young life on the line. These are not matters to be taken lightly. And bear in mind, once a patient begins gene therapy, he is removed from the organ-donor list.'
'It does explain a lot. What it doesn't explain is how a few days ago you maintained no recollection of this woman.'
'I never maintained anything of the sort. I fear you're mistaking me for my younger son.'
Dolan's hand was trembling; he'd creased the letter. 'How could you not tell me? That it was her choice?'
'I couldn't see how the manner in which this woman opted for euthanasia for her son was relevant to your work,' Dean said.
'It would have mattered to me.'
Dean leveled his hard, dark eyes at Dolan. Dolan's shoulders lowered, and then he eased back into the club chair.
Bear said, 'Tess had better judgment than that.'
'Yes.' Dean sighed. 'But she wasn't well. She committed suicide within the week. Depression is a serious illness'-deadpan-'that must be medicated.'