Read Craig Kreident #1: Virtual Destruction Online

Authors: Doug Beason Kevin J Anderson

Craig Kreident #1: Virtual Destruction (36 page)

“Fred worked on this for years, and my entire family life was wrapped up in promoting it.
 
My son went into a seminary, even after I encouraged him to study engineering, his first love.
 
Millions of people’s lives have been turned around because of Fred’s outreach program.
 
Just
think
what could have happened if word had gotten out—that the Coalition director’s wife was fucking Hal Michaelson.”

She paused.
 
“I was offered a job back at DOE headquarters after the on-site inspection work, and exchanging classified memos with Hal seemed to be the only way to keep the affair quiet.”

Diana Unteling looked up sharply when Craig didn’t say anything.
 
“I don’t expect you to condone what I’ve done, Mr. Kreident, but the very least you can do is to keep it out of the papers.”

“I’m not a press agent, Mrs. Unteling,” Craig said.
 
“I don’t write news releases.
 
Maybe if you tell me why you were present in Dr. Michaelson’s lab the night after his body was found.
 
We have the CAIN booth records—that and the threatening message you left on his answering machine.”

She looked defeated.
 
“I was looking for these memos!
 
I thought I could destroy them before they were discovered.
 
I didn’t think at first that he might have kept classified material at home.
 
When I found them missing from his repository, I thought you had already confiscated them.

“But when you came to talk to me, I knew you were lying.
 
You didn’t have them.
 
You didn’t have any idea what the memos contained, or your attitude would have been entirely different.
 
Then I thought I knew where Hal might have kept them, and it would be only a matter of time before you did go through his house with a fine-toothed comb.”
 
She shrugged.
 
“I needed to find them first.”

She stood, ignoring the documents now and brushing aside any pretense of innocence.
 
“But no, the killer wasn’t me, Mr. Kreident.
 
I wanted Hal to live. . .even if only so I could cut off his balls.”

Craig told Goldfarb to start gathering the classified documents and photos together.
 
“I’ll need to get a
 
statement from you, Mrs. Unteling.
 
And fingerprints as well.”

Unteling set her mouth, but her shoulders sagged.
 
“My fingerprints are already on file with my security clearance, Mr. Kreident.
 
But I suppose this statement will affect my confirmation hearing.”

“We’ll have to give the Senate committee everything in your records.
 
Now if you’ll come with me, I need to take you to our Oakland office.”

As they left the old farmhouse, Jackson stepped from the blue Ford Taurus, having driven up after Goldfarb’s call.
 
They held the back door open for her.
 
As she ducked to get in the car, she stared at Craig, then disappeared inside.
 
Jackson slammed the door.

 

 

 

CHAPTER 38

 

Thursday

 

Valley Memorial Hospital

Livermore, California

 

Late in the evening, as the doctors and nurses and orderlies rushed around him, Duane Hopkins felt small and invisible.
 
He wasn’t part of their concern, but he didn’t need to be.

Stevie was the one they should be paying attention to.

He had not seen his son since they had whisked him back into the examination rooms.
 
Duane sat quietly in the blue plastic chair of the emergency room waiting area, looking at his knees.
 
Empty sounds buzzed in his head.
 
He wished one of the doctors would tell him something about his boy, but he didn’t want to be a bother.

The old Zenith TV in the corner of the waiting room droned at low volume, broadcasting the Home Shopping Channel.
 
The picture showed products while the announcers discussed their amazing virtues.
 
Duane Hopkins would never be able to afford such things, but he enjoyed watching anyway . . . at any time other than now.

A quiet moan of concern and fear built in Duane’s throat.
 
The clerks at the admitting desk seemed incredibly busy, though this late in the evening nothing else seemed to be happening in the emergency room.
 
No one else sat in the hard plastic chairs, waiting with him.
 
Waiting.

Stevie’s day nurse and the woman from the Coalition for Family Values had been so concerned about the boy’s unrelenting cough that they had finally convinced Duane to take him to see a doctor on Monday.
 
The physician had diagnosed Stevie’s problem as pneumonia and had given Duane some antibiotics and a strong decongestant—but Stevie seemed too weak to fight off the cough.
 
Duane had given him the medicine and waited, expecting it to cure Stevie like magic.
 
But it hadn’t.
 
Stevie just got worse.
 
The boy made bubbling, gargling sounds as he breathed.

Finally, now on Thursday night, Duane had been getting ready to go to bed when he heard Stevie choking, making loud panicked noises in his room.
 
Duane had rushed in to find the boy blue in the face, convulsing and unable to breathe.

Duane had smacked him on the back, shaken his scarecrow body, until the boy coughed free a throatful of phlegm.
 
Duane had bundled Stevie up in his worn maroon bathrobe and
   
carried him out to the car.
 
In terror, he cradled the boy’s jerky assortment of mismatched and uncooperative arms and legs, buckling him into the seatbelt.

During the drive Stevie’s eyes had looked bleary and distant, not bright and filled with the unconditional love Duane was accustomed to seeing there.
 
This was pain and unreasoning fright, as well as a question in his eyes, wondering why his father couldn’t make things right as he had always done before.

“I’m sorry Stevie,” Duane had whispered and rushed to the hospital emergency room as fast as he could.

#

The doctor’s expression was grim, his voice clucking with disapproval.
 
He wore gold wire-rimmed glasses long out of style and had a shiny pink-bald pate surrounded by a rim of mussed light brown hair.
 
“Your boy’s lungs are filled with fluid, Mr. Hopkins.
 
How could you have waited so long to bring him in here?
 
This is serious.”

The doctor called a nurse and the two of them had hustled Stevie toward the swinging doors, taking the boy away from him.
 
Duane stood up to accompany them, but the doctor motioned him back into the waiting room.

“You just give the admitting clerk all the information she needs.
 
We’ll take care of things here.”
 
Without another word, the gruff doctor rushed Stevie back behind gray doors that flopped back and forth on their hinges.

Duane caught a glimpse of Stevie’s head bouncing to one side, his eyes rolling toward the ceiling as if he was trying to get a glimpse of his father before these strange people took him away.

Seated on an uncomfortable stool at the front desk, Duane answered endless questions from the admitting clerk.
 
He was distracted, confused as to why they would want so much information when all they needed to do was take care of Stevie.

Duane looked at the forms in front of him.
 
He had no idea where the boy’s mother was.
 
He couldn’t remember her social security number.
 
Rhonda hadn’t sent so much as a Christmas card in seven years.
 
He didn’t remember his insurance card number, either, though luckily he had it tucked among all sorts of other debris in his wallet, next to his membership card in the National Geographic Society and another card for the Coalition for Family Values.

He sat in front of the Home Shopping Channel, and he waited.
 
He felt very alone.
 
He didn’t know what he would do if anything happened to Stevie.
 
The boy was his entire life.
 
His heart was inextricably connected with his son.

Stevie could not live without him:
 
Duane protected him, cared for him, loved him when no one else in the world even noticed his existence.
 
Stevie, on the other hand, gave Duane something to live
for
, someone to love when Rhonda had left him and when the bullies at the Plutonium Facility made his job a daily hell.

Red-eyed, he continued to watch the assortment of jewelry and kitchen appliances.
 
An hour passed, and still he heard nothing from the doctor, though occasionally he saw a flurry of activity in the back examination rooms.

Duane stood up, felt his knees crack, and he shuffled over toward the admitting clerk’s desk.
 
He moved tentatively, shy—but before the woman noticed him, she
 
stood up with a manila folder and strode purposefully back behind the counters with the file tucked between her elbow and her side.

Duane hesitated, then realized that he didn’t have the nerve to pester the doctors after all.
 
They would come out when they had some information for him.
 
He tried calling Gary Lesserec, who had wanted all that information about Stevie and his condition, so maybe he could help.
 
But no one was home.
 
Reluctantly, Duane went back to his chair.

After a few minutes he looked at his watch again.
 
He pulled out his wallet, removing the card from the Coalition for Family Values.
 
He was distraught.
 
He needed to talk to someone, but he had no friends, no one he could open up his heart to.

The Coalition people had always been helpful and understanding.
 
He rubbed the card between his thumb and forefinger to straighten the damp wrinkles pressed into it during its years of being buried in his wallet.
 
He went to the pay phone by the wall of the waiting room and dialed the number.
 
He squinted at the small printed words:
Any time of the day or night, we're there for you with our hopes and prayers.

He thought he recognized the voice of the woman on the phone, and he wondered how many people worked for the Livermore office of the Coalition.

The group had expanded greatly over the last five years, joining other local organizations and becoming a nationally recognized religious community-service organization; but it was always the same people who brought meals and printed literature to Duane’s home.
 
He kept the pamphlets, though he never found time to read them.
 
He didn’t go to church either, because it was too difficult to keep Stevie quiet for an hour, so Duane did his duty by watching televised services on Sunday mornings.

As soon as he identified himself to the woman on the phone, her manner changed abruptly.
 
Duane wondered for a dizzy instant if they’d somehow had a premonition about Stevie’s poor health—but then the Coalition woman spoke rapidly.

“Mr. Hopkins!
 
We’ve been trying to call you this evening.
 
I don’t know how it managed to slip our minds because we know you work at the Lawrence Livermore Lab, in the Plutonium Building?
 
Well, we wanted to let you know that we’re bringing a tour through in the morning just as we did with the Virtual Reality chamber. You recall that?”

Duane wanted to interrupt, wanted to say something, but her words came so quickly they washed over him like an ocean wave.
 
“We wondered if we might stop and say hello, see you hard at work.
 
The children will be very interested in watching just what goes on at our local scientific lab.
 
We wondered if—“

Finally, with a broken sob, Duane cut her off.
 
“I’m at the hospital,” he said.
 
“Stevie’s sick.
 
He’s in the emergency room.
 
I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

The raw plea in his voice kept the woman silent for a full five seconds.
 
“Oh, Mr. Hopkins, I’m so sorry,” she finally said.
 
“When did you take him to the hospital?
 
Is there anything we can do?”

 
When she asked the question, Duane suddenly realized that he didn’t know
what
he wanted.
 
He wanted someone to make Stevie better, to take care of his problems—but he knew that would never happen.

“I don’t—“ and then his throat clogged, constricting a sob.
 
Just telling someone about Stevie’s condition suddenly made it more real to him, more terrifying.
 
And he knew he couldn’t face it.

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