The Cassandra Compact - By Robert Ludlum Page 0,108
him, handing him something, and leaving. Could it have been a last-minute transfer? It had to be.
If what Reed had received was in fact smallpox, Megan thought, then it would have remained stable until the shuttle was in orbit and Reed could store it in the biofreezer.
The Spacelab! Suddenly she remembered the message that had come in to the flight deck. Minutes later, Reed had changed the experiments' schedule, bumping her and taking the first slot for himself. He had explained it away so smoothly that no one, not even she, had questioned him.
Not even when you had seen the NASA log number for that message. Reed's number. And you asked yourself how he could possibly have sent that message to himself...
Megan shook her head. The questions had been there, but she had ignored them. Instead, she had accepted the events as coincidence, had chosen to believe in the integrity of the man who had brought her to the stars.
The question of why Reed would be party to such a barbaric act plagued her. Even after she'd gone over everything she knew about him, no answer was forthcoming. There was something in him, about him, that she hadn't seen. No one had.
Earlier, Megan had clung to the frail hope that Reed would return. A part of her could not believe that he would kill her in cold blood. But as the hours passed and she listened to his communication with mission control, she came to accept that as far as he was concerned, she was already dead.
Megan stared hard at the wiring panel. Because she was able to eavesdrop on the conversations with mission control, she knew how Harry Landon intended to bring down the shuttle and, more important, how long that would take. She still had time to figure out how to escape. Once she did, she would head straight for the auxiliary communications unit in the lower bay.
But if the wiring continued to foil her and time began to run out, she had one final option. Choosing to exercise it meant that the door would open--- no doubt about that. But there was no guarantee that she would survive the aftermath.
Smith staggered to his feet, ripped off his jacket, and tore at the Velcro straps of his Kevlar Second Chance bulletproof vest. It was rated to stop anything up to a 9mm slug. But even though it had absorbed Drake's .22s easily, Smith still felt as though he'd been kicked in the chest by a mule.
Getting into his car, he activated the global positioning system built into the dash. Instantly a glowing blue dot appeared on the small screen that showed a map of Fairfax County.
Smith reached for the phone.
"Klein here."
"It's me, sir." Smith said.
"Jon! Are you all right? I received reports of an explosion."
"That was my doing."
"Where are you?"
"Just outside the plant. The target's moving--- by the looks of it, on foot. Whoever you sent, sir, did the job. They got here just in time to spook Drake."
"What about Drake? Did he take the bait?"
Smith glanced at the pulsing blue dot. "Yes, sir. He's on the move.
It took Sergeant Patrick Drake five minutes to cover the one-mile hiking path through the woods between the power plant and the deserted recreational area where he'd parked his vehicle.
Alert for any sign of a tail, Drake drove to the outskirts of Alexandria. Pulling into the lot of a Howard Johnson motor lodge, he parked in front of the last unit in the row. Drake opened the door to find General Richardson and Anthony Price inside.
"Mission report, Sergeant?" Richardson asked.
"The target was neutralized, sir," Drake replied smartly. "Two hits, center mass."
"You're sure?" Price demanded.
"What do you want, Tony?" Richardson snapped. "Smith's head on a platter?" He turned to Drake. "At ease, Sergeant. You did well."
"Thank you, sir."
Price gestured at the backpack that Drake had brought with him. "What's that?"
Drake dropped the pack on one of the beds. "Something Smith left behind."
Undoing the straps, he laid out the contents: two spare ammunition clips, a road map, a cell phone, a microcassette recorder, and a small, round object that got Price's attention.
"What's that?"
"A flash grenade, sir," Drake said, pretending not to notice Price's shocked expression. "It's okay, sir. The pin is secure."
"Give us some privacy, soldier," Price said.
As Drake went into the bathroom, Price grabbed Richardson's arm. "Enough of this soldier-boy shit, Frank. Neither one of us needed to be here. Drake could have called in the results."