Venom
By Joan Brady
2.5/5
()
About this ebook
Physicist Helen Freyl owns a colony of bees with unique venom. When her lover dies, she accepts a job offer from a giant pharmaceutical company who are close to finding a cure for radiation poisoning. But when the mysteriously sudden death of a colleague is followed by another, Helen begins to doubt her employers' motives and realises that her own life is in danger, too.
Venom brings David and Helen together as they fight for their lives against a backdrop of industrial espionage, corporate greed and human tragedy.
Joan Brady
Joan Brady is a freelance writer, a registered nurse, and a former lifeguard. She lives in California and is the author of several books, including God on a Harley.
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Reviews for Venom
8 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This novel had a good premise - greedy corporation doing dodgy science and little family business holds overlooked patent - corporate espionage & skulduggery ensues.It's downfall however is that it made it not only overly complicated with a field of characters throughout three countries, but also overly unrealistic.I tried hard to like it but it turned in to quite the chore to read and one of the few books I've read that's hard NOT to put down.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5FYI - I wasn't thinking when I sent my request to Simon and Shuster to review the latest Jennifer Estep novel Venom, and totally forgot to put the authors name in the request. That is why I got a copy of this particular book to review. This is not my type of book, so I just want you readers to know that before I do the review. Anybody willing to come to Humber College or pay for shipping, this book is yours.The Good Stuff * Author builds up a convincing back story and keeps you guessing on what is going on * Intelligent thriller with a timely topic * The grandma is a feisty one * You should probably read Bleedout first, as to understand some of the motivations of the charactersThe Not so Good Stuff * I really didn't like most of the characters * Way too many characters and backgrounds, very hard to keep straight * Story took a long time to get your attention, I honestly had a hard time trying not to put the book down, because I was lost. Quite a few times I was just going to put this down as DNF, but I am a stubborn oneFavorite Quotes/Passages"And the more he thought about it, the more it seemed to him that Christ was an ill-tempered white man.""It's employee joke that the letters NSA stand for "No Such Agency" and "Never Say Anything."What I Learned * Always to put the author's name in when requesting books for review * Pharmaceutical companies are evil * How to create an explosion -- read the first chapter and you will understandWho should/shouldn't read * Fans of Intrigue and mystery and industrial espionage * I think John Grisham lovers would enjoy * Not for those looking for a light read, you need to pay attention with this one (Hence why my Mommy brain had such a hard time)2.5/5 Dewey's -- Please remember that this is based on MY enjoyment of the book and nothing against the author or their talent-- this is not my type of book so that affects the review -- if you see this Joan, nothing personal : )I received this from Simon and Shuster in return for an honest review -- sorry guys, just didn't love this one
Book preview
Venom - Joan Brady
PART 1
1
SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS
‘David?’
‘Yes.’
‘You know who this is?’
‘Yes.’
‘You’re alone?’
‘Yes.’
‘Get out. Now.’
There was a slight pause. David looked into the living room. The pale cotton curtains were closed across the patio doors; a light wind billowed them out towards him. ‘How many guys are there?’
‘One.’
‘Who?’
‘He’s a professional, David.’
‘Size? Build?’
‘For God’s sake, what does it matter? Just get out. Right now.’
David Marion snapped his mobile shut. When it had rung, he’d been in the kitchen of his house, folding sheets with the military precision that comes from years as a convicted man in a prison laundry. His cupboards showed the same influence: a couple of cans each of peaches, Heinz spaghetti, baked beans, spam, an aerosol of Reddi-wip. He shook out a pillowcase, tossed this whole store into it – except for the Reddi-wip – carried it to the entrance hall, set it beside the door and went back to the living room.
It was the end of March, an unexpectedly warm night in the Midwest; people had windows open all along the close where he lived. He shut the patio doors behind his curtains. Then he turned on the TV, lit a cigarette and sat down to wait.
But David was hardly a man at ease watching a TV quiz; he still had the Reddi-wip clutched in his hand when he heard a gentle knock. He balanced his cigarette on the edge of the ashtray and went into the entrance hall.
‘What do you want?’ he said irritably through the front door.
‘I’m really sorry to disturb you’ – the voice was frightened, wavery, old – ‘but I saw your light. My wife—’
‘I’m busy.’
‘I got to get her to emergency. You got to help me.’
‘Call an ambulance.’
‘Oh, come on, mister. Please help us. Please.’
David sighed, more irritably than before. ‘Give me a minute.’ He turned the key in the lock and leaned against the door while he slid back the bolt. The abrupt pressure from the other side was all he needed to know. He yanked the door open.
Any type of aerosol – even whipped cream – is a substitute for mace. Before the guy on the other side of the door recovered his balance enough to aim the gun in his hand, the Reddi-wip blinded him. He dropped the weapon. David kicked it off to one side, grabbed the pillowcase of canned food that he’d set there half an hour before and swung hard. The man staggered, sank to his knees. Blood spurted from his nose. David swung again and kept on swinging until the pillowcase ripped apart and cans of spam and peaches rolled away across the floor. They clattered against the far wall.
He stood a moment, breathing hard, covered in blood, furious, outraged, affronted.
The guy lay spreadeagled on his floor. The face was too much of a mess to give away much, but the springy hair and the young body suggested early twenties, a big kid, almost as tall as David himself, with one of those iron-pumped prison bodies like his. A stretch inside should have taught him better than to try such a stupid trick.
David left the body where it was, and went to the garage for paint thinner and a box of Mexican Miracle-Gro for Lawns. He dumped both into a bowl with a jar of Vaseline, kneaded them into a dough and wrapped it in Saran wrap. Candles came next. He cut the wax away from a dozen of them, tied the wicks into a long string, warmed them in the oven while he ground the heads of half a box of matches, then rolled the wicks in the residue. Packing the rest of the match heads into the spring from a ballpoint pen was a delicate job; it took several toothpicks and forty minutes. He placed the entire assembly – string, spring and dough – near his front door.
There wasn’t more than a couple of hours of darkness left when he emptied the kid’s pockets, got out of his own blood-spattered clothes, showered, dressed. He checked over the living room, bedroom, kitchen the way tourists check out a motel where they’ve spent the night, except that he was checking it out in reverse: vital things such as car keys and house keys had to be left behind. His luggage was a plastic supermarket bag; he tossed a couple of spare tools into it along with the contractor’s gun and pocket contents.
Then he took out his lighter, lit the string of candle wicks and left, shutting the front door behind him.
He hadn’t found any keys on the man, but he knew the cars of this respectable neighbourhood, and a battered Volkswagen didn’t belong here. The kid had been so sure of himself that the keys were still in the ignition. David slid into the driver’s seat and started the engine; he’d reached George Washington Boulevard when the thunderclap of the explosion hit. He braked, as any ordinary driver would, and twisted around to watch the flames, white in the centre, red at the tips, licking up into the night.
Vaseline and Mexican fertilisers make as good a bomb as any terrorist might hope for. Lights in houses nearby flicked on, a few here, a few there. A second and third blast came almost together, throwing out streaks of red that scarred the sky and boiled up to join forces with an already fierce fire. A wail of sirens began in the distance, only to be drowned in further explosions.
Where David’s house once stood, an inferno billowed and soared.
2
DUBICZEWO, MOGILEV REGION, BELARUS
The vehicle pulled into the village of Dubiczewo every six months. It looked like a bus without windows and bore the words:
image2Most of the locals were illiterate, and three years ago they’d been suspicious of this wheeled chunk of modernity. Now they all knew the words meant ‘Mobile Medical Clinic’. The twin vehicle that pulled in after it said, ‘Mobile Test Laboratory’; it was full of eerie-looking machinery that glowed and made clapping noises, but these days the villagers climbed the metal steps into it without a qualm. They stood in front of the chest X-ray as nonchalantly as any Westerner. They were happy to lie down in the scintillation detector that recorded the radiation in their bodies.
Consultations began at once. There were no appointments; the locals and people from outlying areas arranged a general schedule among themselves. At the front of the clinic under a wide awning, a group of the healthy waited for a check-over and the collection of blood and urine samples that would precede their visit to the test lab. At the rear, in a canvas enclosure warmed by a wood-burning stove, the ailing, the injured and the frightened waited for advice from a paramedic who would decide whether they were to see one of the nurses or the doctor.
The team included one of two doctors, Dr Tatiana or Dr Zukim, a giggly, untidy man who expected a bribe. Dr Tatiana’s arrival was always cause for celebration.
She was a dumpling of a woman with cheeks so round that when she smiled, her glasses rose too high atop them for her to focus her eyes on her patient. She had only the thinnest covering of hair on her head; like most of the people who attended the clinic, she was still battling the effects of the Chernobyl meltdown nearly a quarter of a century ago. That was why the mobile clinic had come to exist: to care for Chernobyl’s modern victims.
To this day nobody knows precisely how much fallout the nuclear plant released – except that it was huge. Conservative estimates put it at more than 150 Hiroshima bombs and literally millions of times more than the Three Mile Island meltdown, the worst civilian nuclear accident in US history. Parts of Mogilev had been as heavily contaminated as the exclusion zone around the power plant itself even though the region was 200 kilometres away. The official explanation was an unhappy conjunction of wind and rain. What the gossips said was that, right after the accident, Soviet chemical troops saw a black cloud travelling towards Moscow; they shot at it and turned it towards Mogilev instead.
Dr Tatiana was sceptical. Like most Belarusians, she dismissed official explanations of anything and everything no matter how convincing they sounded, but she didn’t know enough about chemical troops to judge. On the other hand, what difference did it make how Chernobyl contaminated the region? Her problem was dealing with the human cost here and now.
She didn’t have to examine the teenage boy who lay across his mother’s lap. Symptoms that might puzzle an American doctor were painfully familiar to her. But she was punctilious in her record-keeping. Funds for clinics like this depended on careful documentation. She noted each of her observations in the file open in front of her. Undressed, the boy was ashen, covered in bruises, severely emaciated; he weighed less than the sacks of potatoes his mother gathered from the fields. The largest things on his body were his kneecaps.
‘You are fourteen now, Boris?’ Dr Tatiana asked. She spoke in Belarusian.
‘He was not like this six months ago,’ his mother said. Her eyes were terrified. ‘He wants to play ice hockey. Now he screams when I touch him.’
Dr Tatiana took Boris’s hands. ‘Did you play much last winter?’ He shook his head wearily. ‘I could never even stand up on skates,’ she went on.
The boy smiled. ‘I began really good.’
‘At the beginning of the season?’
He nodded.
‘What position do you play?’ she said.
‘Centre.’ There was pride in his voice. His team was most likely a raggle-taggle of kids with home-carved hockey sticks and a potato for a puck, but ice hockey players are heroes in Belarus.
‘Next winter you’ll play better than ever,’ she said, helping him gently off her examining table.
‘I’ll need to run a few tests,’ she went on to his mother. ‘Be of good cheer, Mrs Gres. There is a great deal we can do to make Boris more comfortable, and we hear about new approaches almost every day.’
And yet she shook her head as she watched the woman carry her son out the door of the consultation room. She knew she hadn’t fooled the mother, but the young can so easily blind themselves to the obvious. She completed her notes with the words, ‘Diagnosis: Acute Myeloid Leukaemia.’
The boy’s only hope was the rare miracle of spontaneous remission. In the West, it would be different; there’d be extensive chemotherapy, bone marrow transplants, a good shot at recovery. The money wasn’t available here. Treatment in Boris’s case could consist only of palliative measures: painkillers, antibiotics and a recently introduced cocktail of antioxidants and vitamins that seemed to give a boost.
She marked him down for everything, but she would not be surprised to hear that he’d died within the week. These cases could go very fast.
It looked so peaceful here. A tractor spreading fertiliser crawled slug-like along the distant horizon – big yellow cab, tank-like wheels – a pleasant pastoral scene. And yet Dr Tatiana wasn’t sure how much longer she could bear this work. There was no end in sight, not even a let-up. Three radioactive isotopes remained active in Belarusian soil – caesium-137, strontium-90, plutonium-239 – and continued to produce the poisons that cause such fearful damage to human tissue and human genes. Forecasts showed that the levels of radiation in Belarus weren’t falling as the years passed; they were slowly but steadily rising as subsoil waters carried the isotopes farther and wider.
No doctor could be surprised that general health in the region was getting worse too. What so upset Dr Tatiana was the number of children who were as sick as Boris. The incidence of childhood leukaemia had remained fairly steady for almost two decades. And then, a few years ago, she’d noticed an abrupt increase. This was so puzzling and disturbing a development that the Ministry of Health issued a paper about it. Official policy blamed it on a spate of unusual reactions to common infection.
Dr Tatiana only sighed at the silliness of such an idea. On the other hand, if something like that didn’t explain it, what did?
3
CATON, ALABAMA
Joshua Brewster’s family had been dirt poor for generations when he found a special swarm of bees and started farming them; he was only a kid then, and it’s not as though he turned the Brewsters into millionaires. They lived in Wal-Mart overalls and a clapboard house with linoleum floors. They huddled around an ancient wood-burning stove for warmth in winter, while outside, hand-built hives huddled together all year around like dollhouses for the Birmingham homeless.
Joshua swore his honey had healing properties, but all beekeepers make the same claim, and Joshua’s was so bitter that only a few health-food nuts would bother with it. The venom fared better. Years ago, he’d developed a special process for milking the bees; his hives produced more than most, and he supplied some eminent acupuncturists up north. Variations in its chemistry made it an interesting exercise for undergraduates, so university labs bought from him too. Recently there’d been an increase in demand – enough so that his youngest daughter could take up the scholarship that the University of Alabama had offered her. Other than that, the farm’s turnover didn’t put meat on the table every day of the week.
He didn’t even own the farm. Helen Freyl did.
The Freyls were rich people from Springfield, Illinois, 400 miles north of here; they’d owned huge chunks of the town since Lincoln’s time. Helen’s title to this farm had begun as a joke of a Christmas present when she was a little girl of eight. She’d reached under the tree, grabbed the shiniest package, ripped off the ribbons and found a mahogany box with a key in a brass lock. Inside were papers that said she was now the owner of a real, live business. Then came a short treatise about the thousands of new animal species that are named every year, then an embossed certificate with gold writing that said these bees were among them. There used to be Apis cerana, Apis dorsata, Apis florae and Apis mellifera.
Now Apis helena had been added to the list.
Helen had let out a howl of disappointment. What does an eight-year-old care about having a species named just for her?
The gift had been her grandmother’s, and to this day her grandmother took Helen’s responsibility to the farm far more seriously than Helen did. Every year she sent Helen to check Joshua’s accounts even though the Freyls retained expensive tax lawyers back home. Accounts and tax returns bored Helen. All business did. Her grandmother had tried again and again to kindle some interest; checking Joshua’s accounts was one attempt in a long series. Not that it was an arduous job: all Helen had to do was gather up the paperwork to turn over to the lawyers.
But she loved the smell of smoke and honey that hung over the farm, and this time Joshua’s sister Lillian had come along. Lillian had been housekeeper to the Freyls since Helen was born, and Helen couldn’t imagine life without her. Lillian was her solace, her comfort, her sanctuary in the world. It was Lillian who’d cleaned her scraped knees when she’d fallen off her bike, and it was Lillian who’d held her tight when she’d wakened screaming from night horrors all those years ago. To this day, Springfield gossips whispered that Helen was unstable. ‘Don’t you pay ’em no mind, sugar,’ Lillian said. ‘You’s just highly strung. That’s a good thing. You gonna do something special with your life. They ain’t gonna do nothing.’
Helen was twenty-nine years old, smart, well educated, pretty as well as rich. She’d inherited fine bones and a porcelain delicacy from her grandmother. She had her father’s green eyes and her mother’s dark hair. But her parents were dead. Both deaths had been sudden, brutal, unnecessary, and despite Lillian’s faith in her, Helen woke every morning in despair and wandered through the day aimless, adrift, depressed. She envied the bees. They didn’t have to live like that. Their lives had purpose and meaning, a suicide-bomber’s commitment to a community.
The morning after Helen arrived at Joshua’s farm, he handed her a letter on his way out to his round of the hives. She read it, shook her head and gave it to Lillian to read.
‘Miss Helen, if’n I was you I wouldn’t bother answering this,’ Lillian said, handing it back to her. ‘But it ain’t my business. It’s your’n – and Joshua’s.’
‘Who the hell do they think are they are?’ Helen said.
‘They’s lawyers. It says so.’
‘Lawyers don’t do this kind of thing on their own. They’re acting for somebody.’ Helen glanced over the letter again. ‘I guess they could’ve come when you guys weren’t here – had a look around.’
Lillian shook her head. ‘The bees woulda told Joshua.’
Joshua said the bees told him what to do and when to do it. Helen half-believed him and half didn’t; he had an amused look in his eye most of the time and an impish smile to go with it. One year she’d persuaded him to let her invest in a computer-controlled venom collector, infrared cameras, ultra-modern hive design. Bees don’t hibernate; they have to cluster together to keep warm. Even so, lots of them die, and more died that year than ever before. Joshua said they didn’t like computers spying on them. Back came the ramshackle wood hives and the collector he’d designed and rigged himself.
The bees stopped dying.
He’d refused money from Helen after that. She’d tried to get him to let her improve the house for him and his family. He said he liked his house the way it was. A neighbour’s land had come up for sale. She’d offered to buy it for him. He’d said he couldn’t manage an acre more than he already had. She’d happily have put up money to subsidize his youngest daughter at the university, but he wouldn’t have that either. If his daughter went at all, he’d pay for it himself. Period. No discussion. And so both the farm and his family remained at subsistence level.
And yet the letter in Helen’s hands – it was addressed to Dr Helen Freyl, President, Caton Bees & Venom – was an offer of $5 million for the property and its livestock.
4
SPRINGFIELD TO DC
All Springfield’s tough kids knew the chasm off Route 378, a deep, narrow V-shape of stone with a smatter of trees and shrubs clinging to it: perfect for playing chicken. David drove the battered Volkswagen to the edge, got out, pushed it over. A moment of silence, a short series of crashes and a newcomer joined the corpses of chicken cars going generations back.
From Route 378, the neon lights of the town make an extravaganza of pinks and greens, stars and scintillations: McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, Exxon – and off to one side, what might have been a neighbourhood bonfire that had got out of control. David walked backwards until the view disappeared behind a rise of ground, then turned and jogged to the interstate.
The highway was busy even now, even before dawn broke. A flickering neon sign on his side of the road read:
BENNY & JANE’S
Full comfort for the whole family!
UNBELIEVABLE RATES!
$39.25 for Mom and Dad, and ...
the kids are free!
The place was asleep, the parking lot only half full. He scanned the cars. He liked cars. He’d restored his old Chevrolet Impala, done all the work himself, stripping it right down to the chassis and rebuilding the engine into the high-powered beauty it was intended to be. And yet the car he chose was a cheap, underpowered 1993 Toyota, parked beside the unit farthest away from the office.
He took a pick out of his plastic bag and inserted it in the Toyota’s front door lock. Old cars are easier than new ones. Foreign cars are easier than American. The locks on most Japanese models have five pins, and the pick bounces up and down according to their resistance; guys like David can feel the pattern inside. The ignition was much the same job, and he knew that when he’d picked it a couple of times, he’d be able to start the engine almost as fast as if he had the keys. He was pleased with his choice. Papa Toyota kept the inside as neat as the outside. He’d even filled the gas tank. David eased the car out of the parking lot and onto Interstate 72.
After all, he could hardly rent a car, could he? He was a dead man – blown to bits in his own house – and by evening his face was likely to be plastered across newspapers all over the state.
Crime statistics say that if you drive along one of these highways, you pass a car that’s hot almost every minute. So many get stolen that police records stop at state borders. Besides, there’s not a cop anywhere who’s going to do more than file a report for a patron of a beat-up joint like Benny & Jane’s Motel. This is to say that about the time the Toyota’s owners woke up in Illinois to find their car gone, David was crossing into Indiana in a vehicle that for practical purposes belonged to him.
He stopped outside Columbus, Ohio, for food, gas and a road atlas, then spent a couple of hours off a side road in southern Pennsylvania trying – and failing – to get some sleep. It was past midnight when he began the final leg of his journey. He’d been to DC only once before, but he’d arrived by plane, been picked up at the airport, had no sense of the baffling complexity that awaited a driver unfamiliar with the area. How can anybody negotiate the tangle of cloverleaves and flyovers – gummed up with roadworks even at night – that siphon traffic off to the south side of the Potomac? Had he doubled back this way only once? Or was it twice? About an hour before dawn, he hit the George Washington Memorial Parkway, a route lined with Americana – Arlington National Cemetery, Lady Bird’s park, Lyndon’s grove, even the Pentagon off to one side – but he was too weary to notice more than traffic in either direction. A pale, misty daylight was beginning to show itself when he saw the long wall he’d driven all this way to reach.
Security installations were the profession David had taken up after leaving prison; he was good at it. He’d designed and built systems for businesses from Rockford in the north of Illinois to Harrisburg in the south. He knew the system that guarded this Mount Vernon property too. He’d studied the plans, been thinking about them ever since his drive began, and he’d found the loophole he was looking for. There was serious money on display in the mansion beyond the wall, all of it eminently saleable. The sheer amount of it gave his anticipation a queasy edge.
5
WASHINGTON DC
Justice Samuel Clark woke up on the outskirts of America’s capital city with thoughts of breakfast coffee. He loved the morning even when his wife was at home. Without her? Pure bliss. He stretched in his silk pyjamas – soft mattress beneath him, canopy of four poster billowing above him, view of the Potomac River through the bank of windows beyond his feet – and luxuriated his way out of bed to his marble bathroom, showered, shaved, dressed and studied his reflection in the mirror.
Whenever the media wanted to feature a Supreme Court judge, Samuel was the one they came to. He was famous for his civil rights decisions and for writing a book on prisons that had energised reform groups all over America, but that wasn’t it. What pleased the people from the press – and Samuel himself – was that he looked like George Washington. He had the same square jaw, the same long nose, the same white hair brushed away from his face. His jowls radiated probity as Washington’s had, and the sonority of his voice matched them; his photogenic house, down the road from Washington’s Mount Vernon, added yet another touch. The staircase he descended swept outward at its base as the smell of freshly brewed coffee reached him. The solarium where he breakfasted was off the dining room, a glass-domed structure where a blue plumbago bloomed all year around.
He made his way there, opened the glass French doors – and froze in amazement.
‘David Marion!’ he cried. ‘How in the name of God did you get in here? You damn near scared me to death. I thought you said this place was impregnable.’
David sat on the far side of a terracotta table, a cup of coffee half drunk in front of him, the Washington Post open in his hands. ‘You lock it, I’ll break it.’
‘Suppose you lock it.’
‘Even easier.’
‘You still sound like Hugh, you know that?’
Hugh Freyl had been Helen’s father, educated in England and never able to rid himself of English consonants. He’d taught David for the Illinois Literacy in Prisons Program and put an alien edge into his pupil’s voice. He’d also introduced David to the eminent judge, his old roommate from Harvard Law School.
‘What a pleasure to see you in such fine fettle,’ Samuel went on, watching David take a cigarette from a pack, light it, draw on it. ‘You should stop smoking. You do know that, don’t you?’
‘Leave me alone.’
David was mid-thirties, black hair, black eyes, tall; he’d left South Hams State Prison a couple of years back with an extension degree from the University of Chicago that had only intensified an explosive anger at the whole universe. This is not the kind of man a person like Samuel knows, much less feels in debt to. But Samuel felt very much in debt. Without Clark on Prisons, he probably wouldn’t be sitting on the Supreme Court, and without David’s inside information, the book would have been indistinguishable from hundreds of other heavy tomes published every year in the legal field.
The United States has the largest prison population in the world, larger even than China. It’s a fact that Samuel had railed against in print many times; it’s the reason why he decided to write his famous book even though he’d had no first-hand experience. Eight years ago, at Hugh Freyl’s suggestion, he’d started up a correspondence with David. Only then did he begin to understand his own outrage at the statistic.
At the age of fifteen David had killed his foster father and foster brother. He’d shown no remorse and refused to explain why he’d done it. If he’d been a year older he’d have been strapped in a chair and injected with a lethal dose of potassium chloride. Instead they gave him a life sentence.
Samuel had expected stumbling self-justification from the letters. There was none. He’d expected claims of innocence. There wasn’t any of that either. The letters switched back and forth from a ferocious intensity to absolute indifference, no middle ground, no compromise, no sense of rest. They let him glimpse day-to-day life in a brutal dictatorship, where gangs warred with each other, position in the hierarchy determined everything and a single stray glance could end in attack, rape, sexual servitude, death or all of these. Samuel was intrigued and impressed. He was eager to meet a man who wrote like this.
Hugh arranged the visit for him. On the day before it, the warden tried to put him off. He said it wasn’t a good time.
Samuel insisted.
He knew South Hams State Prison from the outside. It was old. The walls were thirty feet high, topped with spirals of razor wire, interrupted by guard towers. Security was tight – CCTV, armed guards, a body search – and it wasn’t until Samuel was past it that the noise hit him. Metal doors clanged. Metal staircases resounded. Men shouted, screamed, cried, sang, snored. Radios blared. The smells were rank: sweat, vomit, urine, garbage.
Samuel hadn’t expected guards to lead him to the hospital ward, but that’s what they did: a dishevelled bunker of a room with high, barred windows and half a dozen beds, four of them occupied.
‘This is David Marion?’ he said, staring down at a Quasimodo of a man chained to a bed.
‘Yep,’ said one of the guards.
Most of the man’s face was purple, one eye swollen shut, the other a bare squint, the cheek sagging, mouth dragged down towards the chin, drooling at the corner. Head and chest were swathed in dirty bandages. This is what murderers look like in children’s nightmares; the injuries and distortion were so extensive that Samuel couldn’t connect this convict’s face with the mugshots he’d seen of David.
‘Are you sure this is the man?’ he asked.
‘The warden done told you it wasn’t a good time.’
‘What happened to him?’
‘We figure he tripped and hurt hisself.’
‘I see,’ Samuel said grimly. ‘You may go.’
The guard ruminated a moment. ‘You sure about that, Judge? He ain’t exactly what you’d call friendly.’
‘He’s chained to the bed, sir. What harm can he do me?’
When the guards left, Samuel went to the sink, filled a plastic cup with water, brought it back.
‘Thirsty?’ he said, reaching over the bed with the cup.
The cup flew out of his hand and his wrist was pinned to the bed itself before he even registered the rattle-clank of the chains. He found himself only inches from that disfigured, swollen face.
‘Get out.’ The voice was very hoarse and very weak, but Samuel knew at once from the fury in it that this was the person he’d corresponded with.
‘What did they do to you, my friend?’
‘Get out!’
Samuel had heard that the first rule of survival in South Hams was ‘never let them see you bleed’. He did as he was told. He didn’t go back either, fearing that his glimpse of David vulnerable would interrupt the flow of information. For several months it did. But he persisted, knowing also that contact with the outside world was so highly prized that the correspondence would build up again.
When the letters did start a second time, the revelations went on for months. The book that resulted came out with the dedication:
For David, who knows
‘How long have you been sitting here in my solarium, reading my newspaper and drinking my coffee?’ he said to David.
‘An hour maybe.’
‘You haven’t smoked in all that time?’ Samuel was wondering why he hadn’t smelled cigarettes along with his coffee at the bottom of his stairs; he hated the smell, and he knew David knew it.
‘I wanted to surprise you.’
‘Well, you sure as hell succeeded in that. How’d you get past Josie? You didn’t hurt her, did you?’ There was worry in Samuel’s voice. Josie was the maid in black and white formal dress who waited on him in the mornings. He was fond of her; she made him laugh.
There was a slight softening of the planes of David’s face. ‘I think she kind of likes me.’
‘Not that it matters for now’ – Samuel took a sip of coffee – ‘but just disappearing into the night isn’t going to fool anybody for long.’
‘People don’t leave home without their keys and stuff.’
‘Come on, David, I do it when I put out the cat.’
‘You don’t have a cat.’
‘What about when the contractor shows up. He’s not going to—’ Samuel broke off. ‘Christ, what have you done now? Promise me that person is still in one piece.’
David sighed irritably. ‘I need papers.’
‘That doesn’t answer my question.’
‘I need papers,’ David repeated.
‘Oh, you do, do you? What kind of papers?’
‘Birth certificate. Passport. Credit cards. Driving licence.’
Samuel nodded. ‘Yes. Yes, I can see that. I assume you have, er, friends who can arrange that kind of thing for you.’
‘I want legal papers. The real thing.’
‘That’s quite a bit more difficult, isn’t it?’
‘Not for you.’
‘Very funny.’
‘Where’s the joke?’
Samuel wasn’t often taken off guard. He hated those contemptuous laughs that academics use to make opponents feel foolish, and yet he heard himself doing it. ‘You’re out of your wits, David. I suggested you come see me sometime. For some idiotic reason I enjoy your company, but I have no intention of supplying a felon with documents.’
David shrugged. ‘I taped the call.’
‘Don’t even try to play games with me.’
David took his mobile out of his pocket, set it on the table, flipped a switch.
‘David?’ Millions of Americans knew the weight and authority of that voice.
‘Yes.’
‘You’re alone?’
‘Yes.’
Samuel felt a sudden constriction across his chest. For months, he’d sensed a multiple bypass on the horizon. ‘Shut it off, damn you,’ he said. ‘David, are you actually trying to blackmail me? For an act of kindness and concern? Is this how you repay me?’
‘Might sound kind of funny, don’t you think? The great jurist warning an ex-con about a hit man?’
Samuel drummed his fingers on the table and stared out through the many-paned glass walls of the solarium, across the landscaped gardens of his mansion to the river where the mist was lifting off the water. ‘David, I’m a judge. I don’t do things like that.’
‘Sure you do.’
‘What do you want them for? You planning to leave the country?’
‘I don’t know. I might. Why not?’
‘You must be out of your mind. Jesus Christ, what makes you think I could do such a thing even if I wanted to?’
David shrugged again. ‘Not hard to figure. A guy who knows a hit like that is going down has better connections than I’m ever going to have.’
Samuel loved women. He truly did. He’d had many affairs, and he’d never been attracted to a man before. But David? There was something about the way the man moved. Samuel had sensed it at that first meeting in the prison hospital. The grip on his wrist had provoked what he’d told himself later was a visceral pity for a suffering fellow being. When David had got out and come to see him, he’d insisted to himself that he felt no more than an oddly oriented paternal concern; his only child had died in a hit-and-run when she was just twenty-five. Both assumptions had a good element of reality to them, but looking at David now, he knew they weren’t its driving force.
Samuel was famous for his ability to plot a strategy in unfamiliar territory even when his position was weak. He got out of his chair. He paced the room, stopped to stare through the glass as he had before, then turned to David with a quizzical smile.
‘So what’s in it for me?’
David eyed the judge up and down, stretched his legs beneath the table, lit another cigarette from