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Undeniable




  Copyright © 2017 by The Kilkenny Group, LLC

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, website, or broadcast.

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  e-book ISBN 978-1-62157-690-7

  Published in the United States by

  Regnery Fiction

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  DISCLAIMER

  This is a work of fiction, peopled by and involving foreign and domestic companies, institutions, organizations, and activities—private, public, and government—that are products of the author’s imagination. Where actual names appear, they are used fictitiously and do not necessarily depict their actual conduct or purpose.

  To Kathy

  Best of wives and best of women

  CONTENTS

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Ninteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chapter Fifty-Eight

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Chapter Sixty

  Chapter Sixty-One

  Chapter Sixty-Two

  Chapter Sixty-Three

  Chapter Sixty-Four

  Chapter Sixty-Five

  Chapter Sixty-Six

  Chapter Sixty-Seven

  Chapter Sixty-Eight

  Chapter Sixty-Nine

  Chapter Seventy

  Chapter Seventy-One

  Chapter Seventy-Two

  Chapter Seventy-Three

  Chapter Seventy-Four

  Chapter Seventy-Five

  Chapter Seventy-Six

  Acknowledgments

  ONE

  NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK

  SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6; 11:25 PM

  DIE BABY KILLERS

  The graffiti was crude and unimaginative. The words were scrawled across a ten-foot section of the corridor wall in tall letters the color of blood. Drips ran down from the thick spots where the vandal activist started and stopped his strokes. The scent of aerosolized acrylic lingered in the air.

  Security guard Burt Dobbin pressed a finger to one of the spots—the paint felt tacky. He wiped the residue on the wall and pressed the send button on the microphone clipped to the epaulet of his uniform.

  “Charlie, you copy?”

  “Yeah,” a voice crackled back.

  “I’m on six, main corridor near the conference room. Some nut job musta got in and spray painted a nastygram on the wall.”

  “How the—? Hold on, I’m toggling the cameras.”

  Dobbin could hear Charlie Sparks breathing over the walkie-talkie. “Perimeter looks clear. Same with the stairwells.”

  “I take it this death threat wasn’t here during your rounds an hour ago.”

  “Hell no.”

  “Well, call it in to Central, double-check the doors, and get up here. We need to do a room-by-room sweep.”

  Ten minutes later, Dobbin’s partner on the night shift scaled the stairs to the top floor of the six-story commercial loft in the heart of Manhattan’s Tribeca District. The nineteenth-century warehouse building had fallen on hard times, and then found new life with a renovation that transformed it into the national headquarters of Heartland Family Planning.

  As he closed the stair door behind him, Sparks swiped a card key through the jamb reader to set the door into alarm mode. The illuminated display changed from green to red. He then joined his partner by the defaced wall.

  “Damn,” Sparks hissed through his teeth.

  “We set?” Dobbin asked.

  “Main floor perimeter is locked down. The elevators are parked on one, and if they pop a stair door without a card key, we’ll hear about it.”

  “Good. Let’s start with the conference room and work our way around.”

  Sparks nodded. The pair drew their side arms and moved into position on the strike side of the door to the floor’s large conference room. Sparks swiped his card key to unlock the door. On Dobbin’s signal, Sparks grabbed the lever handle and opened the door. Sensors inside the room detected the sudden motion and the lights suspended over the conference table flickered on.

  They entered and visually swept the room, their eyes tracking in concert with the barrels of their Sig Sauer P250s. Both signaled a thumbs-up, confirming that the room was clear. Sparks locked the door as they exited, and the pair moved on to the next room.

  The sixth floor housed the administrative offices of Heartland Family Planning, a nationwide network of clinics and counseling facilities offering a full range of women’s reproductive health services. No patients or clients visited the Tribeca facility. This building contained only the back-office legal and administrative functions associated with the specialty healthcare provider.

  The guards searched counterclockwise around the floor, checking the offices belonging to Heartland’s senior staff and finding nothing amiss. Halfway through their circuit, Dobbin led the way through the open office area that served as the antechamber to the chief executive officer’s inner sanctum. Finding no one hiding under the desks, the security gua
rds proceeded to an imposing wood door.

  Sparks again cleared the electronic lock, opened the door, and followed Dobbin in. As the senior man, Dobbin believed in leading by example, especially with a new guard like Sparks, who had only spent a few weeks on the job. He took two steps into the room, then felt his partner move into position behind him.

  The city glistened through the arched windows of the large office. And as the lights came on, Dobbin saw a can of spray paint on top of the CEO’s glass and steel desk. He took a step toward the desk, quietly thankful for its open frame construction that offered no place of concealment. The office smelled of fresh acrylic, and a single word clung wetly to the glass desktop: MURDERER.

  “Our perp must still be in the suite,” Dobbin said, just above a whisper.

  Then everything went black for Dobbin.

  Sparks watched his partner collapse onto the carpeted floor, the unconscious man’s awkward descent ended with a muffled thud and the clatter of his dislodged sidearm. A satisfied smile curled in the corners of his mouth—his time playing the role of Charlie Sparks was over, and Byron Palmer’s real work could now begin.

  The device in his hand bore a passing resemblance to a Taser, though its technological innards were considerably more sophisticated. A fan of Star Trek from his youth, Palmer called his invention a disrupter, because it did exactly that to the low-voltage current that powers the human body. It was much like flipping a switch and, depending on the intensity, the effect could be temporary or permanent.

  Palmer left his former partner where he fell and sat behind the CEO’s desk. During his rounds over the previous weeks, he had loaded select computers with keystroke traps, collecting legitimate user names and passwords. Bit by bit, he fashioned a temporary identity with unfettered access to the wealth of information stored in Heartland’s data center. He slipped a flash drive into the USB port, and the programs it contained came to life. A window opened on the CEO’s flat screen monitor, displaying the status of Palmer’s data-mining effort. Satisfied that all was performing as planned, he left the office whistling the dwarf’s work song from Disney’s Snow White.

  In addition to scouring Heartland’s electronic archives, the programs Palmer unleashed tapped the building’s security network, bypassing live camera feeds with prerecorded imagery. He made his way through the building to the loading dock. Just outside the service door, he found the pair of homeless men he had befriended over the past few weeks.

  “Look, it’s Charlie,” one said warmly, his face expectant like a dog’s upon the return of his master.

  Both men staggered to their feet, hopeful for another few dollars to carry them through the coming day.

  “Hey fellas, real cold out tonight. Wanna step inside and warm up a bit?”

  “C-can we?” one asked, surprised by the offer.

  “Sure. I’ll kick on the dock heaters.”

  Palmer led the two men through the open door. Once inside, he quickly stunned both with the disrupter. He then stripped the men and dressed the one closest to his height and build in an identical guard uniform. The other wino he clad in activist chic—used jeans, a hooded sweatshirt and a careworn army field jacket. Palmer stuffed the threadbare, grimy rags he had peeled from the men into a large black trash bag that he set beside the loading dock door. He loaded the two men on a dolly along with a pair of backpacks and checked his watch—right on schedule.

  Once on the sixth floor, Palmer set the stage. He laid the fake guard on the floor outside the CEO’s office door, where Palmer had stood when he incapacitated Dobbin. He dragged the faux activist into the office, setting him against a credenza between two of the arched windows, and placed both backpacks on top of the desk. From one, he removed a pair of jeans and other layers appropriate for this time of year in the city. He quickly changed clothes and stuffed his uniform into the empty backpack.

  Palmer waited for the computer to chime, then he withdrew the flash drive, and tucked it into his pocket. He saw the fading remnants of the programs erase themselves and knew that all traces of their actions would disappear from the internal network. Satisfied, he reached into the second backpack and activated a timer. As it counted down, he slung the backpack containing his uniform over his shoulder and departed.

  Down on the main floor, Palmer picked up the black trash bag and slipped out the back door into the alley. He followed a meandering course away from the building and dumped the trash bag in a pile of refuse awaiting the 5:00 a.m. garbage collection. He heard a low dull rumble as he neared the subway station, and then saw a bright flash as flames leaped skyward from the top floor of the Heartland building.

  TWO

  SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7; 9:15 AM

  Patrick Hunley stepped out of a government sedan and felt the unseasonable chill in several of his aging joints. He donned a navy blue FBI ball cap and a matching windbreaker over his winter coat, thankful for the extra layer of protection against the biting wind. The cold front gripping New York made the city feel like the North Pole in comparison to the moderate weather he had left in the nation’s capital.

  He had caught the first flight out of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport as soon as the incident was flagged as an activist-related bombing. As a consulting special agent, Hunley often lent his long-tenured expertise to local FBI teams for what promised to be high-profile investigations. Hunley eschewed the limelight such cases brought, which made his arrival less of a threat to younger agents hungry to make their mark in the bureau, just as he successfully avoided promotion into the rarified air of FBI management. He was a veteran field agent with a thick file of commendations whose sole interest lay in solving difficult cases.

  Hunley made his way up the stairs to the sixth floor of the Heartland’s Tribeca headquarters. The power to the building was still out and the blast had rendered the elevators unsafe. A quick response from the city fire fighters protected the adjacent structures and contained the blaze to the upper two floors of the building. The entire building was a crime scene and, for the foreseeable future, its only occupants would be investigators and forensic technicians.

  Exiting the stairwell, Hunley stepped around a dripping mass of charred debris. The thin metal ceiling grid had failed in the intense heat of the blaze, scattering blackened ceiling tiles on the floor. Some of the thousands of gallons of water used to extinguish the fire had reduced the rigid squares of mineral fiber into pulpy residue. Water was still finding its way out of every nook and cranny in the roof above.

  “Watch your step,” an FDNY fire marshal advised.

  “You guys made a bit of a mess up here,” Hunley replied.

  “We just wanted you feds to feel at home.”

  “What are we looking at?”

  “A botched Rudolph,” the fire marshal replied.

  Hunley nodded. Terrorist Eric Robert Rudolph earned his place on the FBI’s most wanted list for a series of bombings in the late 1990s that included two murderous attacks on abortion clinics.

  The fire marshal led Hunley to a section of corridor wall that a photographer was documenting.

  “Die Baby Killers,” Hunley read, the scrawl barely visible through the soot. “Subtle as a brick.”

  “Kind of oxymoronic coming from someone claiming to be prolife.”

  “I don’t know about the oxy part, but moronic sounds about right. Extremists always feel the ends justify the means. Where’s ground zero?”

  “Over here.”

  They continued down the hallway to what had once been the CEO’s office suite. The doors to the office were torn from their frame by the blast. Two waterproof tarps covered a pair of forms near the door; a third lay several feet away. Hunley crouched down and lifted the edge of the tarp covering the nearest figure. The burnt corpse barely looked human.

  “We found three bodies in here.”

  “NYPD got anything?” Hunley asked.

  “Yeah. Just before the blast, the night guards reported finding evidence of a break-in during t
heir rounds and were checking the building for intruders.”

  “Looks like they found one.”

  “From what’s left of their clothing, these two were the guards and the one over there was our bomber.”

  Hunley glanced under the tarp at the body of the likely bomber and winced. “I hope this guy has a wallet. Otherwise, all the medical examiner will have to make an identification is DNA. Any thoughts on the explosive?”

  “Moderate blast with high flammability—too small to bring the building down, but it set a big fire fast. No sign of shrapnel, so I think a big burn was the objective. We’ll know more about the type of explosive once the residue tests are complete.”

  Standing near the presumed bomber’s body, Hunley tried to envision the final moments before the blast.

  “Our bomber somehow gets into the building, leaves his calling card on the wall out there, and then works his way inside, all before being detected,” Hunley said. “Places in this business usually have pretty robust security, so how’d he get past it? Odd.”

  “What do you think?”

  “Hitting a place like this is like going after the HMO that pays for abortions—it’s too indirect.” Hunley stood and looked out the shattered windows. “This is an office building—paperwork goes to die here, not babies. Symbolically, this is a poor target, but then again, we don’t know what this guy was after. How soon before the lab techs can take over the building?”

  “This afternoon.”

  “I appreciate the sneak preview.”

  Hunley retreated from the blast area and returned to the temporary command center outside. Fire equipment and police cars blocked the street and alley around the building. With the fire extinguished, the scene was transitioning from fire to police control.

  “You a cop?” a homeless man shouted from the far side of a police barricade.

  Hunley glanced over at the man, who was dressed in layers of ragged clothing to fight off the cold. He stood clutching the handlebar of a rusty shopping cart that overflowed with the sum total of his earthly possessions.

  “Depends. You know something about this fire?”

  “Nope, but two of my buddies are missin’.”