The Atlantis Gene (The Origin Mystery 1)
Page 17“If you need to use it, you pull the slide back. That chambers a round. When you’re empty, you click here, the clip slides out. You put another one in and press this button, the slide returns and chambers the first round from the new clip. But if that door is breached, there’s something you have to do before you use the gun.”
“Wipe the computers?”
“Exactly. And burn this folder as well as the letter.” David pointed to a small metal waste basket and handed him a small butane torch from the gun box.
“What else is in the box?” Josh thought he knew, but he asked anyway.
The Jakarta Station Chief paused for a second, then reached into the box and took out a small capsule.
“Do I swallow it?”
“No. If the time comes, you bite into it. The cyanide works pretty quick, maybe three or four seconds.” David handed Josh the capsule. “Keep it with you. I hope you won’t need it. This is a very hard room to get into.”
David put the gun back in the box and returned it to the corner of the room. “Let me know as soon as you have something.” He turned and walked toward the door.
Josh stood and said, “What are you going to do?”
“Buy us some time.”
CHAPTER 15
Interrogation Room C
West Jakarta Police Detention Center
Kate looked up as the interrogation room door opened, revealing a fat, sweaty man. He carried a folder in one hand and extended his other hand to her. “Dr. Warner, I am Police Chief Eddi Kusnadi. I ho—”
“I’ve been waiting here for hours. Your men have interrogated me about useless details of my study and threatened to imprison me. I want to know what you’re doing to find those kidnapped children.”
“Doctor, you don’t understand the situation here. We are a small department.”
“Then call the national police. Or—”
“The national police have problems of their own, Doctor, and they don’t include finding retarded children.”
“Don’t call them retarded.”
“They’re not retarded?” He flipped the file open. “Our notes say your clinic is testing a new drug for retarded—”
“They’re not retarded. Their brains work differently than other peoples. Just like my metabolism works differently than yours.”
The corpulent chief looked down at his body, as if trying to find his metabolism to examine and compare it with Kate’s.
“You either begin searching for those children or release me so I can.”
“We can’t release you,” Kusnadi said.
“Why not?”
“That’s absurd—”
“I know, Doctor, I know, trust me. But what would you have me do? I can’t tell my investigators who is and is not a suspect. That would be improper. I have, however, convinced them to keep you in this holding cell. They insisted I move you to the common holding area — those are co-ed and, I’m afraid, not well-monitored.” He paused a moment, then opened the file again. “But I think I can at least delay that for a while. In the mean time, I have some questions of my own. Our records say you bought a condo here in Jakarta, paid cash, the equivalent of 700 thousand US Dollars.” He looked up at her and when she said nothing, he continued. “Our bank contact says you keep a checking account with an average balance of 300 thousand, US equivalent, dollars. That account receives periodic transfers from a bank in the Cayman Islands.”
“My bank balance has nothing to do with this.”
“I’m sure it doesn’t. But you can see how it looks to my investigators. How did you get so much money, if I may ask?”
“I inherited it.”
The chief raised his eyebrows and seemed to brighten. “Ah, from your grandparents?”
“No, from my father. Look, we’re wasting time here.”
“What did he do?”
“Who?”
“Your father.”
“Banking, or, he was an investor. I don’t know, I was very young.”
“I see.” The chief nodded. “I believe we can help each other, Doctor. We can convince my investigators that you are not involved in the kidnapping and give my department the resources it desperately needs to find these re-, these… helpless children.”
“I believe you, Dr. Warner. But as I say, my investigators, they look at the evidence, and, they know what a jury will think, and between me and you, Dr. Warner, I think maybe, a little bit, they dislike foreigners, maybe especially Americans. I believe the only way to really ensure your safety and to get what we both want is to find these children. That will clear your name.”
“So what the are you waiting for?”
“As I said before, Dr. Warner, we are a small department. Finding these children… I would need more resources, people outside my department. But, I am sorry to say, an investigation like this would cost a lot, probably 2 million dollars. Ah, US Dollars. But if I call in some favors, I think we can do it for 1.5 million. But time is of the essence, my dear Doctor, the children could be anywhere by now. I can only hope they are still alive.”
“1.5 million dollars.”
The chief nodded.
“You’ll have it. But you release me first.”
“I would like nothing more, Doctor, believe me. But promises made by suspects in interrogation rooms.” He lifted his hands.
“Fine, get me a phone and the details of your— the bank account. And get me a car.”
“Right away, Doctor.” He smiled, stood, and left.
He left Kate in the interrogation room alone. She sat at the table again, put a knee up in the chair, and ran her hand through her blond hair. The woman in the mirror wall looked nothing like the hopeful scientist who had moved to Jakarta four years ago.
The chief shut the door to the interrogation room. 1.5 million! He could retire. His whole family could retire. 1.5 million… Could he have gotten more, maybe 2, or 2.5? 3 Million? She could have more. Much more. She agreed to 1.5 instantly. Maybe he could go back and say he’d have to hire more people. It will cost 4 million. He would have taken $250,000; he had expected to get less. He stood in front of the interrogation room and pondered what to do.
He wouldn’t go back immediately. He could soften her up even more. A few hours in the drunk tank, with the cameras off. He’d have to be careful, he didn’t want her running to the US Embassy afterward, but if he was careful, he could make some real money today.