Gregg Hurwitz - Last shot

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The bathroom window was cracked. He clung to the lattice beside it, his body starting to shake from exertion. Supporting himself by two tenuous toeholds and one aching arm, he slid the pane open. He pulled himself through and slipped out into the hall. Timing his dodges through the halls so as to miss the patrolling security guards, he eased out one of the service entrances. Chase's G-Wagen was parked outside the garages where he'd last left it.

Dolan flew through the remote-operated rear gate, offering a middle finger to the surprised security guard.

Chapter 75

Freed fussed at a contraption that looked like something out of a science-fiction movie; finally it clanked and spit out a dribble of espresso.

"Okay," Tim said, "walk us through the rationale."

Freed worked the knobs of the machine. "To my thinking, Lentidra's a contingency plan. No, a Plan B. They didn't back-burner it-it's ready to go. It's a holdback, a hostage drug for when the whistle blows or the pressure comes or whatever. If no nosy parent or probing journalist sniffs out its true effectiveness, it languishes in the vault. But if the heat of inquiry rises or a competitor puts a model in the pipeline that competes with Xedral, Vector has Lentidra poised to roll out. They claim they fixed it and unveil it as the new and improved lifesaver. The report indicates as much-they'll release it when it's in their financial interest to do so. That way they maximize profits on both products."

"So this isn't about undisclosed risks," Bear said. "It's not Xedral that's the problem."

"Right. It's not like Xedral kills anyone. It just doesn't save them as well. They would've died anyway. It's about Xedral's numbers versus Lentidra's. Get a jury of American dipshits to understand that bookkeeping wrinkle."

"So why would Tess drop Sam from the Xedral trial?" Bear asked. "I mean, unless she had Lentidra in hand?"

"If it was your kid, would you want him to have an eighty-six percent chance of living-or ninety-five?"

"But it's not like she knew she could get him Lentidra in any kind of time frame," Tim said. "For all she knew, Xedral was her only bet. Her decision doesn't make sense."

Freed shrugged. "I don't have an answer for you." He filled four petite mugs, double shots all the way around. One he carried back to the bedroom, Bear almost falling over to see through the opened door.

When Freed returned, Tim gestured at the report pages, still spread across the table like a feast. "This was enough to get Tess killed?"

"This in combination with her testimony, Sam's face on the news, former company mascot, all that stuff. It would've been enough to put a major crimp in the Kagan boys' plans on the eve of an IPO."

Tim finally popped the million-dollar question: "Is there anything here we can take to the U.S. Attorney's?"

"If you want to get laughed at. To prosecute Big Pharma, you need not just a smoking gun but footage of the gun being fired."

"If we got that footage, would the prosecution go federal or state?"

Freed wrinkled his mouth thoughtfully. "A big multinational corporation like this, I'd say the AUSA would probably team up with the SEC and hook it federal, like with Enron. Could be a career maker for someone. Plus, Vector was started with seed money Dolan acquired from NIH-not much, but if a nickel comes out of that pot, it carries with it a whole legal rubric of terms and conditions available for violation. If they buried a more effective drug that could've saved tens of thousands of lives, they're tangled up in all sorts of illegalities." He sipped his espresso. "But without hard data backing your case, all you have are contingency scenarios"-he gestured with his cup to the table-"and companies run those all the time. Dean Kagan's army of attorneys-and lobbyists-will have this respun before the AUSA returns our call."

"So where would the hard data be?"

"Well, you said Dean Kagan had a paper shredder working overtime at the house. Let's assume he followed similar protocol at the office and threw all key printed evidence in the circular file. What remains-for future corporate number crunching-are probably digital files hidden behind ten firewalls. But you know what a bitch it is getting warrants for corporate computers and getting to those computers before they've been processed in-house. Plus, our probable cause is wobbly. All we have are Tess's murder and a disquieting document, strung together by a lot of talk."

Tim's Nextel rang, clattering across the table. He caught it before it fell off the edge. "Rackley."

Thomas said, "I'm at the hospital switchboard, waiting to put through a call to Sam's room from a Dr. Norrath. None of the docs called for a referral from this guy."

Tim half smiled at the name, lifted from one of Sam's video games. "Put it through and patch us in."

Tim clicked the speakerphone button, set the Nextel on the table, and pressed a finger to his lips. Bear and Freed waited excitedly through two rings. A nurse picked up.

Walker's voice said, "Dr. Norrath for Sam Jameson."

A rustle as the phone was handed off.

Sam sounded hoarse and tired. "Yeah?"

"This is Dr. Norrath calling. Do you understand?"

A hesitation. "Yeah, I understand."

"How are you doing?"

Sam coughed a few times, then said, "If I'm a saint, doesn't that mean I get to go somewhere after this?"

"A saint?"

"Mom said I was a saint. She woke me up this one night. A few days before she died. She asked me, just for pretend like, if I could get a new liver but that meant that tons of other kids who are sick like me couldn't get better?" Sam took a few seconds to catch his breath. "Would I want it anyways? I told her I wouldn't feel so hot about that. So no. She said I was a saint. She cried and everything. Mom did. So I knew she meant it. She said she wouldn't be able to do it either and she hoped I'd know it wasn't because she didn't love me more than anything in the world." More labored breathing. "So what's that get me? Being a saint?"

"I wouldn't know about that," Walker said, "but don't worry. I'll make it right. I'll make it right for you."

In a quiet, hopeful voice, Sam said, "Promise?"

The pause stretched out to maybe ten seconds. Walker said, "Promise," and hung up.

Tim, Bear, and Freed remained silent, poleaxed by what they'd just heard, processing the implications.

Tess and Sam had walked away from a life guarantee, close at hand but questionably obtained, and they'd done it to bust Lentidra out of Big Pharma captivity. Dean's words returned as an echo in Tim's head: bear in mind, once a patient begins gene therapy, he is removed from the organ-donor list. Tess had to drop Sam from the trial to position him for the liver when she'd thought she could go through with it. But clearly, even with the Xedral trial no longer an option, the implications of saving her son's life had sat too heavy with her. Tim wondered if he'd be able to live with himself, choosing Ty's well-being, even if that meant tens of thousands of other children would die. Maybe more. He wondered if he could live with that knowledge. He wondered if he could live with Tyler's growing up under the weight of a secret that would crush him were it ever revealed.

Thomas came back on the line and told them to hold while he and Frisk sourced the call's origin. His voice jarred them back into the present.

"The kid's circling the drain," Freed said. "How's Walker think he's gonna make it right?"

"Just comforting him, maybe," Bear said.

"Not his style." Tim worked the inside of his cheek between molars.

Call-waiting beeped. Tim clicked over, catching Dray on the tail end of a vicious yawn.

When she recovered, she said, "I went out to a three-mile radius from the airport parking lot. There was only one car stolen that night. A red 2004 Honda Accord, registered to Brehanda De LaSalle, license number three-Nora-Charles-Sam-six-eight-four."

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