Katrina Stone: The Death Row Complex Part 6
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There was a divorce, which revealed nothing unusual. Joint custody was granted; there was no alimony and little child support. The ex-husband, a Navy Corpsman, was not well to do either.
But there was also another thick section of the legal file. There was a lengthy criminal trial involving a man named Lawrence Naden.
In 2007, Lawrence Naden was captured in a Baja California crack house, a rush of heroin flooding his bloodstream as the federales closed in. Hours later, Naden was in jail.
That morning, fifteen miles across the border, an answering machine clicked mechanically after the fourth ring of the telephone. "h.e.l.lo, you've reached the Stone residence," a woman's voice said. "Please leave a message after the beep."
"h.e.l.lo Mrs. Stone," the caller began. "This is Detective Martinez of the SDPD. I have some good news for you. Lawrence Naden was caught this morning in Ensenada. He is being extradited from Mexico and sent to the San Quentin State Correctional Facility. He will be tried here in the United States."
The caller paused briefly and then continued. "While I'm sure it is little consolation, you can probably be confident that Naden will be convicted and will never be able to terrorize another family again. The case against him is very strong. Please call me if you have any questions. You have my card. I will keep you informed of the details as they develop... "
As the last sentences rang through the empty living room, the front door opened and a woman raced to the phone. A small child followed her into the house. Except for her hair-short and blond, rather than long and auburn-the woman resembled a slightly older version of Katrina Stone almost eerily. She hastily picked up the receiver. "h.e.l.lo?"
The woman was answered by the dial tone.
"s.h.i.+t," she said under her breath.
"You're not 'apposed to say that," said the small child at her side.
The woman smiled softly. "I know, sorry kiddo. Listen, Lexi, why don't you go play in your room for a few minutes. I need to talk to your mommy. I'll come in and play with you when we're done though." She leaned over to kiss the girl's forehead.
Alexis trotted off to her room as she was told.
After she heard the bedroom door close, Kathy played back the message on the machine. She began to cry softly while it was playing. When the message was over, she pressed the "erase" b.u.t.ton and went into the bathroom to collect herself.
Afterward, she walked to the master bedroom and softly knocked. There was no response. She partially opened the door and poked her head in. Then she opened it all the way and entered the room.
Katrina was lying on the bed, facing the opposite wall. She didn't turn over.
Kathy sat down on the bed and began to gently rub her sister's lower back. "Trina," she said quietly, "the police called. They caught him."
There was no response.
The older woman sat in silence for a few moments, continuing to rub Katrina's back. "Trina," she said again, "I need to talk to you. Please look at me."
Katrina still did not roll over.
"You're my only sister, and you know I love you and I'd do anything I can for you. But I have to go home soon. I'm going to lose my job." She paused for several moments before adding, "And Tom is seeking full custody."
Katrina finally rolled over and looked at her sister. "What?"
She had lost a noticeable amount of weight over the last two months, and her face looked pale and sallow.
"Look, I know he's a b.a.s.t.a.r.d and doesn't even deserve the right... " Kathy stopped as her voice began to catch. Then she cleared her throat and continued authoritatively, "You have to go to court. You have to be able to prove you can take care of yourself. He's marrying that home-wrecking wh.o.r.e, which-believe it or not-will demonstrate parental stability to the court. I know, it's backward, unfair, and basically ridiculous, but that's how it is."
She was interrupted by the distant ring of the living room phone.
Annoyed, Kathy grabbed the receiver of the phone on the nightstand next to her. Its ringer had been turned off since that night two months ago. "h.e.l.lo!" she said angrily. "Tom? No, Tom doesn't live here anymore. He left his beautiful, intelligent wife to go boink a bottle-blond piece of trailer trash with an unbelievably fat a.s.s! So if you're trying to reach him, I'm afraid you're going to have to dial 1-800-HUGE-a.s.s. Thank you very much and have a nice day!" She slammed the phone down.
Katrina only gaped at her sister.
"Sorry," Kathy said, and shrugged.
Through her tears, Katrina smiled slightly and shook her head. But the smile quickly faded. She closed her eyes and moaned. "G.o.d, what am I going to do?"
Kathy cleared her throat. "First, you're going to get custody and child support, because you need both to survive. Then you're going to pick yourself up and move on. Look sweetie, I know it's hard to hear this. But I'm your sister, and I'm telling you that you need to get it together, quick, or you're going to lose everything you have left." Kathy swallowed at the brutality of her own words and rubbed the smeared makeup from her lower eyelid.
Katrina took a deep breath and let it out slowly. She reached down and switched on the ringer of the nightstand phone. She then picked up the receiver and dialed a number.
"Shenanigan's," the voice on the other end said.
"Shawna?"
"Katrina?! Yeah it's me! Oh G.o.d, how are you, hun? We've been watching the news... it's just awful... we're all pulling for you down here at the bar... oh, G.o.d, I just can't believe it... you know, is there anything I can do? G.o.d!"
Katrina sighed. She still wasn't used to these conversations and never knew what to say. "I'm... uh... you know... look, Shawna, do I still have a job? 'Cause I need one, bad."
"Matt's not here right now, but trust me, he'll be happy to have you back. The regulars keep asking where the smart chick is. I'll tell him to give you a call ASAP."
"Thanks, Shawna," Katrina said and hung up the phone. She looked at Kathy and shrugged. "Well, if I can't handle the pressures of fighting infectious diseases, or afford to do it, for that matter, I guess I can always tend bar for a living. How's that for parental stability?"
5:35 P.M. PDT.
Sean McMullan jumped when the door connecting his hotel room to his partner's was flung open.
Gilman barged in and threw his copy of the file onto McMullan's bed. "I knew it!" Gilman spat.
"Shhh, I'm reading," McMullan said, panting from the start he had just been given.
"Well let me save you the trouble, McMullan! Stone got a faculty appointment as soon as she graduated, which James Johnson said is practically impossible nowadays, remember? So she's unusually smart, but young and inexperienced. I gather that there are a lot of people who are jealous of her success. I'm sure she has a lot of enemies. Sure."
He paused for a breath and then puffed it out harshly. "Nonetheless, there's one enemy that stands out in my mind as being maybe the one she might possibly have the biggest problem with. Lawrence Naden. Picked up in '07 in Ensenada. And sent to San Quentin."
Katrina polished off the last three swallows of her second pint of beer and turned the conversation back to her meeting with the FBI. "If any of you are uncomfortable with this work, I want you to speak up," she said.
Todd and Josh exchanged a look that said they were both overwhelmed.
"I'm serious," she continued. "I don't want to go forward with this without your full support, nor do I want to force you into something you aren't comfortable with just because I'm your boss." She paused while the waitress collected their empty gla.s.ses. "That being said," she said then, "I have to add... I think that if you choose not to partic.i.p.ate in this, you will be blowing the chance of a lifetime. Very few people make a contribution of this magnitude in graduate school. So please consider that in making your decisions.
"As your advisor and friend, I highly recommend proceeding with this in the best interest of your careers. We can really make a major impact with this work, and your careers would be set for the rest of your lives."
She paused and looked at each of them. "If you think you're tired of working like donkeys and barely sc.r.a.ping by, you'd better believe that I'm even more so. And this could be our break."
5:39 P.M. PDT.
Jason Fischer s.h.i.+fted his position on the hard plastic emergency room chair, trying to find a position comfortable enough for sleep. His efforts were useless. His head was throbbing, and the thin flannel s.h.i.+rt he had on over his T-s.h.i.+rt was not offering any protection from the violent chill currently seizing him. Jason pulled the s.h.i.+rt more tightly around his torso.
A few minutes later, wracked with fever, he removed the flannel s.h.i.+rt altogether and used it to wipe a fresh outpouring of perspiration from his face. Not really caring if anyone was looking, he reached down and readjusted his boxers through his blue jeans to allow his throbbing genitalia a bit more s.p.a.ce. Someone needs to teach that chick the "no teeth" rule, he thought.
Paranoia was slowly forcing its way in, and Jason struggled to mentally relive every step of the safety procedures. He had done the decontamination thoroughly. He always did. The ethanol. The gloves. The booties. The biohazardous waste. He had touched nothing on the way out of BSL-3. He was clean when he entered the clean room.
But the fever was clouding his thoughts.
It only took one spore. And he had been in a terrible rush.
The news had been excellent-the inhibitor worked wonders. But for use against anthrax infection in humans, it was not even close.
After what seemed like hours longer, his name was finally called.
Jason stood, painfully and slowly, and shuffled through the doors behind the nurse.
"I see you've been here twice in the last year," the emergency room doctor commented with a slight slur as he examined Jason's chart.
Jason, in turn, examined the doctor, who looked about his own age. "Yeah, that was different," he said. "Those other times were for broken bones and cuts and stuff that I got during gigs with my band. I'd be rich if I could get paid for time spent in your waiting room. This place is a colossal pain in the a.s.s. I've been here for an hour and a half this time. "
"Only an hour and a half?" the doctor remarked. "We must be having a slow night. Now, what are your symptoms?"
Jason finally placed the reason for the slur in the doctor's speech. The young man's tongue had recently been pierced.
"Fever, chills, muscle aches, and the worst f.u.c.king headache I've ever had. I'm exhausted, run-down, and my lymph nodes are swollen. And so is my d.i.c.k, by the way, but I think that's someone else's fault."
The doctor raised an eyebrow without looking up from his clipboard. He finished his notes and then placed the clipboard onto a tray next to the gurney Jason was sitting on. He reached forward with both hands and felt the glands beneath his patient's jaw. "You're right, they're swollen pretty badly. Let's see the other." He motioned for Jason to drop his pants.
Jason stood up to oblige, gritting his teeth while the doctor performed the examination.
"Well," the doctor said, "other than a few teeth marks that are probably causing the pain you've got there, everything looks pretty normal. I'd venture to suggest you probably have the flu. There is a nasty one going around this fall."
"I'd have said so, too," Jason said, "except that I work with live anthrax."
The doctor took a step backward. "I see." He flipped through Jason's medical record. "I a.s.sume you've been vaccinated... oh, yes, there it is. When was the last time you were working with the live bug?"
"Last night, about nine forty-five."
"And before that?"
"Before that it had been a few weeks."
To Jason's surprise, the doctor now laughed heartily. "Well then, of course you have the flu! As an anthrax researcher, you should know there is no way you'd be this symptomatic in twenty-four hours, and if you were exposed weeks ago you would certainly have already known it before now! You can't have anthrax. The incubation period doesn't match."
5:45 P.M. PDT.
Roger Gilman looked as if he had been slapped. He sank miserably into one of the chairs of Sean McMullan's hotel room. "Life?" he groaned. "Naden got life? Not death? How can that be?"
An annoyed McMullan pointed to a page of the Homeland Security file in his hand. "It's right here, dumb s.h.i.+t. You were so excited about bustin' Katrina Stone that you didn't read far enough.
"Lawrence Naden had to be extradited from Mexico, and the Mexican government wouldn't release him if the death penalty was on the table. He's serving life without the possibility of parole. He never would have been in any of the death row wings at San Quentin. On top of that, he was transferred to a prison in Texas in 2010.
"So instead of going off half-c.o.c.ked again, maybe you oughta double check that he's still there. You can also make yourself happy by confirming that he's not on the list of dead inmates at San Quentin. My guess is he's alive and well and singing Deep in the Heart of Texas."
"I saw the sparks between you and her."
McMullan looked up from his paperwork. "What are you talking about? There's nothing between me and her."
His partner wordlessly pursed his lips. He paused for a second, but then prodded, "You sure?"
"Of course I'm sure!" McMullan laughed. "You think I wouldn't know? Come on, you must not know me very well. I wouldn't jeopardize an a.s.signment like that. Period. I've met the woman once, and you were there."
"That doesn't change the fact that there's something there, whether you realize it yet or not. I hope it doesn't interfere with your ability to do a thorough investigation."
McMullan changed the subject. "What exactly is your problem with her? I mean, you're obviously a bit old school when it comes to science, but you also seem like a reasonable guy for the most part. So I don't get it... It's like you're hoping she's the bad guy."
After a long pause, Gilman said, "Frankly? I think for an attractive, allegedly brilliant, thirty-four-year-old doctor, she seemed a little bit interested in my scabby old battle-scarred partner-no offense. And I wonder if there's a motive behind it.
"And I trust James Johnson for the same reason that I trust G.o.d and tradition, because both are tried and true. And I think Guofu Wong is way too eager about the technology and way too trusting of his fellow researchers to be objective.
"And, most of all, I can't get past the coincidence of Stone's preliminary data being so closely aligned with the Death Row strain of anthrax. I can't believe it is really a coincidence."
OCTOBER 17, 2015.
Katrina Stone: The Death Row Complex Part 6
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Katrina Stone: The Death Row Complex Part 6 summary
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