He crossed the lab. How was he going to get the bodies out? Harvey knew from firsthand experience how heavy deadweight could be. He would have to place the corpses in a plastic bag. Then he would instruct the nurses that he would take care of Michael for this evening on his own and that no one was to enter the third floor under any condition. That would give him the opportunity to drag the bodies to the elevator, head down to the basement, get them out through the tunnel George had used, and put them in the trunk of his car.
Then what?
He was not sure. Tie weights to their legs and dump them in the river. Wasn’t that what they always did in the movies? He would have to be careful. Wear gloves. Clean the lab from top to bottom. Wouldn’t want the police to find a few strands of long blond hair in the refrigeration room, now, would we?
He reached the door of the refrigeration room and leaned his ear against it. Cold. Well, what did he expect? And why did he put his ear against the door in the first place? What had he expected to hear through the thick door?
Idiot.
Stop putting it of, Harv. Stop stalling. Sara has to die. She’ll never keep silent. Think of all the young men dying every day. Think of the thousands, maybe millions, you can save from an awful death. Look toward your goal.
A world with no AIDS.
Harvey nodded to himself. He reached down and unlocked the padlock. Then he opened the door and pointed the gun at Sara.
TWO floors below, Cassandra smiled at the security guard as she headed into the clinic. She tried to put a little bounce in her steps, tried to make her smile bigger, but it would not hold. In her right hand, she had a bag of Chinese takeout. Spare ribs, moo shu pork, General Tso’s chicken (Chinese generals cook?), and beef with broccoli, all packaged in those little white boxes Chinese restaurants use. The bottom of the bag no doubt had about 850 packets of duck sauce, soy sauce, and that mustard hot enough to remove paint. Then there were the usual fortune cookies and, for some reason that always escaped her, they always gave you an orange for dessert.
Cassandra strolled down the hall toward Harvey’s office. She had not seen him very much in the past few days and missed him terribly. Probably he had not been sleeping or eating properly. Between Michael’s mysterious kidnapping, the Gay Slasher, and now her father’s Washington conspiracy—it was enough to make any man begin to unravel.
So Cassandra had decided another little surprise was in order. At the end of the hallway, she knocked on Harvey’s door. “Hello?”
No response.
“Harv?”
Still no response.
She peeked in the doorway and saw that the room was empty. Maybe the receptionist would know where he went. She went back down the hall to the receptionist’s desk. Cassandra smiled, and the receptionist smiled back, putting up one finger to signal her to wait.
“I’m sorry,” the receptionist said into the phone, “but I can’t locate Sara Lowell. She may have already left. Yes, Mrs. Riker, I know you said it’s an emergency, but . . . Yes, I understand the importance. Would you like me to page Dr. Riker? No? Okay, okay, I won’t. Calm down.”
Cassandra leaned over. “A call for Sara?”
The receptionist put her hand over the mouthpiece. “It’s Jennifer Riker, Dr. Riker’s ex. She keeps ranting about an emergency.”
“I’ll talk to her.”
Cassandra took the phone. “Hello?”
Jennifer’s voice came fast. “Who is this?”
“Cassandra Lowell, Jennifer. I’m Sara’s sister. We met a few years back at a party—”
“I remember,” Jennifer interrupted. “Where’s Sara?”
“I don’t know. I just got here myself.”
“Find her, Cassandra. She’s in grave danger.”
Cassandra held the phone close to her ear. “What are you talking about?”
“I’m talking about the letter,” Jennifer explained.
“What letter?”
“The letter Bruce wrote.”
SERGEANT Willie Monticelli veered right and exited off the Henry Hudson Parkway at One Hundred Seventy-eighth Street. He sped down Fort Washington Avenue, passed Hood Park, and turned left at One Hundred Sixty-seventh Street. He made a hard right on Broadway, accelerated past the main hospital building and Babies Hospital, and took a sharp left.
Ten seconds later the squad car arrived at the Sidney Pavilion entrance. Willie pulled the car up on the sidewalk, braking with a horrid screech, inches before hitting the cement stairs at the entrance. Max was out of the car before it came to a complete stop, Willie not far behind. The two sprinted up the stairs, badges out. The security guards, spotting the police IDs, stepped back to avoid being the victims of a two-man stampede.
“Any other police arrive yet?” Max asked without breaking stride.
“None,” the guard yelled back.
Max continued to run, busting through doors like an Old West gunslinger in a saloon. He reached the reception desk.
“Where’s Sara Lowell?” he asked.
The receptionist looked up quizzically. “And who might you be?”
Max tossed his badge on her desk. “Lieutenant Bernstein, NYPD. Where is Sara Lowell?”
“She is a very popular young lady today.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means, Lieutenant, that you are not the first person in a rush to speak to her.”
“Who else?”
“Jennifer Riker just called looking for Ms. Lowell. She said it was very urgent.”
“Dr. Riker’s wife?”
“Ex-wife,” the receptionist corrected. “Anyhow, I couldn’t find Ms. Lowell anywhere, so Mrs. Riker spoke to her sister instead.”
“Cassandra? Where is she?”
The receptionist shrugged. “I couldn’t tell you for sure. She spoke to Mrs. Riker, turned all white and funny, and then ran off without a word. Didn’t even have the courtesy to hang up the phone.”
“Where did she go?”
“She got in the elevator and went up. It stopped at the third floor.”
Max turned toward the elevator. “Willie?”
The sergeant stood at the elevator, holding the door open. “One step ahead of you, Twitch.”
“Then let’s move.”
HARVEY cradled the gun close to him as he swung open the door slowly.
He had considered the possibility that Sara Lowell might launch some sort of futile attack when he first opened the door. But when he looked in the cold room, he knew that he had worried needlessly.