Other Eyes

Other Eyes

by Barbara D'Amato
Other Eyes

Other Eyes

by Barbara D'Amato

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Overview

Blue Eriksen is a famous forensic archaeologist based at Northwestern University. She and her team are traveling the globe, testing mummies to research the use of hallucinogens in the development of ancient religions. Armed with evidence from ancient peoples, Blue has become convinced that psilocybin--a hallucinogen derived from mushrooms--can prevent or cure drug addiction. She hopes to develop testing and treatment centers.

Leeuwarden Associates is the cover name for a deeply secret international organization that facilitates the production, delivery, and sale of illegal drugs worldwide, much as OPEC facilitates the sale of oil. Leeuwarden considers Blue a long-term threat and sends Felix Hacker--one of their enforcers--to kill her. Blue has no idea she's being stalked and prepares for a dig high in the Peruvian mountains...



At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429991551
Publisher: Tor Publishing Group
Publication date: 01/18/2011
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
File size: 825 KB

About the Author

Winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award winner, BARBARA D'AMATO is the past president of Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime International, winner of the Carl Sandburg Award for Excellence in Fiction and other major awards for crime fiction.


Winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award winner, Barbara D'Amato is the past president of Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime International, winner of the Carl Sandburg Award for Excellence in Fiction and other major awards for crime fiction. She is the author of Foolproof and Other Eyes.

Read an Excerpt

Other Eyes


By Barbara D'Amato

Tom Doherty Associates

Copyright © 2010 Barbara D'Amato
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-9155-1


CHAPTER 1

NOON

MAY 29

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS


Interstate 90 rises in Seattle, less than ten blocks from Puget Sound, skirts the Seahawks Stadium, and heads east. It ends in Boston, throwing a tail across Boston Harbor to Logan International Airport. Between Seattle and Boston, it snakes across three thousand and eighty-eight miles, the width of the continent. When it passes through Chicago, it makes a shallow sidestep around the base of Lake Michigan.

In Chicago, Interstate 90 fattens to eight lanes, ten in some places, and frequent heavy-traffic entrances and exits are needed. The speed limit is fifty-five, which few people heed. Three hundred and twenty thousand cars go through The Loop on I-90 every day.

Just north of The Loop, the road is eight lanes wide with a median of metal posts supporting wide metal guardrails. The right-of-way is fenced with chain-link wire.

The baby had found one of the many breaks in the chain-link fence. Attracted by the activity of the cars going past, he pushed through the gap. He was a vigorous little boy who had loved model cars even before he was able to sit up and play with them, and now, at the age of eleven months, had his own fleet of plastic cars and trucks. These real ones were even more exciting.

He wore a small pair of waist-hung jeans, which didn't stay up very well, since he had no waist. The top of his diaper bulged out on the left side. In the back, the jeans had slipped halfway down his rump. Now he sat up on chubby haunches to watch the cars.

It was just past noon, late May, and quite warm. The grass near the fence had been mowed recently and was comfortable to settle down on. A duo of early white butterflies danced over the baby. However, he thought the cars ahead of him were more interesting than the butterflies. He got back up on hands and knees and trundled toward the highway. His chubby starfish hands made soft plops on the concrete as he crossed the shoulder into the traffic lane.

An eighteen-wheeler roared by, trailing a slipstream of dust and detritus.

The baby sat back, alarmed, then decided that the big truck, as big as a house from his vantage point, was thrilling, not scary. He giggled and chortled as the dust and papers from the roadside danced in the diminishing slipstream.

The baby patted his hands together. Two or three other cars passed. There was a gap, and then a yellow bus went by. The baby laughed again.

The high sun struck a new section of the metal median divider in the middle of the highway, four lanes away from the baby. He cocked his head at the sudden brightness. Then he smiled toothlessly. The bright strip beckoned.

With great decisiveness, the baby started crawling across the highway to the median, right hand–left knee, left hand–right knee, his little jeans riding farther down as he turtled forward.


* * *

Brad Oliver had slipped out of New Trier High School after lunch period, even though he was supposed to finish out the day. He thought hanging around just for gym and then study hall was a stupid idea. Brad had wanted his friend Jay to cut with him, but Jay was such a goody-goody he was staying to the end of the school day. Being fair to Jay, Brad admitted that since Jay had European History last hour, his absence would be noted more than Brad's would.

These last two days were stupid, anyway, in his opinion, with exams Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Why not have a whole week of reading period?

However, Brad's absence would be noticed. He didn't fool himself about that.

Brad figured if he could get to Wrigley Field before 1:00 P.M. he could get in line for bleacher seat tickets to the Cubs. Otherwise, there wasn't a chance. Used to be easy, but not since the Cubs went so far last year.

Some things were more important than school.

Jay was going to take the El down to Wrigleyville, but he'd better not get there too late to meet Brad outside. Plus, Jay was bringing Aaron, a senior who was eighteen and could buy beer. Brad would be eighteen next week, but that wasn't good enough if they got carded. They had it all worked out. Aaron buys a large beer. Jay and Brad buy small Cokes, and they spread the wealth.

His parents were way too strict. A little beer never hurt anybody.

Brad got onto Interstate 94 at the Willow Road interchange. It was about twenty miles from New Trier in Winnetka, north of Chicago, to Wrigley Field. I-94 merged into Interstate 90 a few miles north of downtown. His old Chevy wasn't running as well as he'd like. He pictured the oil as being the consistency and color of hot fudge by now; he really needed to change it this weekend. The brakes had gotten funny lately, too. The pedal went yay far down before hitting pay dirt. The air conditioner hadn't worked in a year. Brad had all the windows open. He complained about the air conditioner to his friends, but the truth was he loved driving fast with the air rushing in.

But the old tub, which had belonged to his mother, still had a fair amount of go, Brad was pleased to see. He kicked it up to sixty-five in the fifty-five zone. The cop father of a friend of his often said, "We'll give you five and you can take five," which meant they didn't get pissy about ten miles over.

And he'd better push it, he thought, passing a Volvo determined to drive fifty in the middle lane. Arrive at Wrigley after people started lining up and no more cheap seats.


* * *

The baby padded determinedly across the rightmost lane of Interstate 90. A Toyota with a Wisconsin license plate sped past in the second lane. The driver briefly had a sense of something pinkish in the road, but it wasn't in his lane, and by the time he was aware of its existence he was past it, without knowing what it was.

As the baby started into the second lane, his jeans worked their way fully off his hips. As he achieved the middle of lane two, the pants slid the rest of the way down and he crawled out of them, padding along now on dusty hands and clean knees.

Unaware of leaving the jeans behind, the baby crossed the second lane to the third.

A carpenter in an S10 pickup, with two hundred one-by-sixes in the back intended for a hardwood floor, was doing seventy in the farthest left lane. He saw the baby one lane over and was so shocked that he swerved when he didn't need to.

A woman driving a Jeep Cherokee in the third lane saw the pickup swerve, saw the baby in her lane, grabbed for her cell phone to call 911 at the same time as she swerved sharply right to avoid him and braked. The driver of a semi, following her, noticed both cars swerve and, without seeing the baby, stood on his brakes.

Farther back, in the second lane, a taxi coming in from O'Hare with a passenger noticed there was trouble ahead and started evasive action, slowing and pulling right from lane two. A terrified driver of a panel truck behind him braked frantically.

The shriek of brakes startled the baby. He was not quite frightened yet, but his single-minded advance toward the shiny median divider had been interrupted, his train of thought broken. He paused and sat down on the white line dividing the third and fourth lanes. His face contracted into furrows of worry.

Brad was behind the panel truck and following too closely. He braked hard, but seeing the cars ahead of him swerving right, stayed in lane. He saw the pickup hit the Cherokee on its right rear. The Cherokee spun out of control sideways, rolling across the two lanes on the right as the pickup sideswiped the metal median dividers and crashed into a guardrail around a median light stanchion, coming to an abrupt halt, while the lumber in its back kept going, shooting across the roadway ahead.

Brad saw the panel truck crank to the right, where it was hit by the taxi. The truck tumbled end over end into the lumber.

At that instant, Brad saw the baby.

The infant was sitting up on the white line, puzzled.

There was just a glimpse of the baby before Brad slammed on his brakes. The pedal went way down, then grabbed. Brad swung the wheel of his car, slewing the old Chevy onto the right shoulder. It hit the ditch and rolled onto its side. Brad shoved himself through the open driver's side window, which was now a sun roof.

He popped out like a cork and sprinted fifty yards back up the roadway, sure he would see a mangled child.

The baby still sat on the white line. A small yellow school bus had just missed him. Its driver had his mouth open as if screaming and the bus fishtailed as it tried to stop before hitting the Jeep Cherokee. A semi and two other cars were bearing down on the baby.

Brad scooped up the baby like a football player snagging a fumble, vaulted to the median and tumbled onto it, cracking his shoulder hard. Crawling over the metal barrier, holding the baby under his arm, he crouched on the far side, just out of the lanes where the northbound traffic was speeding past.

He huddled there as several more vehicles plunged into the back of the wrecks, as one ran into the ditch and struck his car, as northbound traffic began to slow down and gape at the pileup.

A quarter of a mile back in the southbound lanes was a gondola truck carrying tons of ledge stone from a quarry in Montana to a site in Oak Park where a Frank Lloyd Wright look-alike house was being built. The driver was doing seventy.

As Brad held him, the baby screamed, the first time he had showed fear. Brad cuddled the infant into his shoulder.

At seventy, the truck full of stone covered the quarter-mile in just over ten seconds. The driver saw the pileup and hit his brakes, putting his full body weight onto his foot, but it was too late. Laying rubber, the screeching juggernaut plowed into the mass of cars and trucks, corrugating metal and pancaking flesh.

Brad leaned against the median divider, holding the baby close. They were both crying.

CHAPTER 2

"What. A. Mess." Detective Horace T. Pollard of the Chicago Police Department repeated the words a second time, trying to utter them like Tommy Lee Jones in The Fugitive. Great movie. Magnificent actor. Horace came pretty close, but Hollywood wasn't going to be knocking on his door any time soon.

The "T" in his name stood for Thomas, and he liked to be called Tommy.

There were seven ambulances on the scene. An eighth one had just departed with a body. Living or dead, Pollard wasn't sure. That wasn't his job, thank God. Tommy Pollard approached the accident scene, pausing only for the breath he usually took in situations like these to distance himself enough from the carnage to get the job done.

The Illinois State Police, not the Chicago PD, patrolled the interstates. This was their I-90 patrol route N-3, if he wasn't mistaken, from here to Addison or some such thing.

He glanced around for the honcho and picked a rangy trooper who was giving orders to three men. One of the younger men looked green. The other two were clearly shocked and trying not to show it. The trooper in charge showed no such queasiness. He seemed to Tommy Pollard like the kind of guy who wished he could wear mirrored sunglasses and above-the-calf leather boots.

The tangle of cars and trucks steamed and hissed. One young woman in uniform was foaming down the sizzling metal, and a hazmat guy sprinkled fire-retardant, an absorbent sawdust material, over the gasoline spills. A pair of firefighters in turnout coats stood near a fire engine, watching the progress of the cleanup, alert for explosions.

The fastest-moving people were the paramedics. But just beyond the second ambulance Tommy saw a body stretched out on a gurney with no one in attendance. He knew what that meant.

"Lassiter," Tommy said, reading the rangy trooper's nametag. "I'm Pollard."

"Yes?" His radio squawked "One-oh-five" but he ignored it. "You're the CPD detective?"

"Yup. What do you have here?"

"Four dead. One about-to-be-dead. Eleven injured. And I think maybe three-four buried in there." He gestured with his chin to the fuming pileup. His whole manner said he was too busy to spend much time with Pollard. "But that's not your problem."

"For which I'm grateful."

"That's your problem."

Tommy looked where Lassiter pointed, this time a pistol-gesture with his hand.

"That kid?"

"That kid. And that baby."

CHAPTER 3

Detective Horace "Tommy" Pollard said, "All right, son. Where did you get the baby?"

Brad raised his head, which had been bent over, his cheek resting on the wispy hair of the baby, and Pollard could see the teenager had been crying. The baby, on the other hand, gurgled delightedly, pulling on the kid's left ear.

"What's your name, son?"

"Brad Oliver."

"So where did you get the baby?"

"Right over there, sir," Brad said, pointing to the center of the southbound traffic lanes.

Pollard realized he should have extracted more details of the accident from Trooper Lassiter. He had let his distress for the dead, dying, and injured throw him off his usual methodical course. Even as he thought it, over in the tangle of cars somebody screamed.

"Help me out here, Brad. What exactly happened?"

Brad told Pollard what he knew. He had seen the panel truck brake and the Cherokee swerve. "I think then the panel truck hit the taxi. But that's when — I think that was when I saw the little guy right in the road. Then — um. There was this truck heading right for him! So I kind of drove into the ditch and jumped out."

He'd heard the other cars caroming into each other. But he'd been so focused on the baby and then his broken-field run to grab the child that he had missed most of the actual pileup.

"But the truck missed him," Pollard said.

"Yeah, well, but a whole lot of traffic was screaming down at us —"

"So you never saw this kid before today?"

"No. He was just in the road. Sitting right on the white line in the middle of the road."

"Why aren't you in school?"

"Well, see I was going to the Cubs game —"

"Maybe I don't need to know that. Yet. That your car?" Pollard pointed to the old Chevy in the ditch.

"Yeah. Jeez! My dad's gonna kill me."

When Brad spoke in a worried tone, the baby snuffled and started to pucker up his face.

"Aw, come on, little guy. It's okay," Brad said, jiggling the child up and down. The baby quieted.

Pollard was puzzled and worried. Babies didn't just wander onto roads alone. And if Brad's story was true, the baby hadn't come out of one of the wrecked cars. Pollard studied the lanes of the expressway, his eyes finally noticing a tiny pair of jeans over in the middle of lane two. If the jeans belonged to the baby, that tended to corroborate Brad's story.

"Let's put you and junior here in my car for a minute," he said. Brad looked at him in some concern. "It'll be safer. You can't sit here in the median all day."

"Okay."

Two more ambulances, driving on the grass shoulder, slid into place near the upended pickup. An ambulance that had arrived earlier pulled slowly away from the scene, lights and siren going, edging around Brad's vehicle. As Brad and Pollard reached the unmarked squad car, the baby said, "Bo, bo," reaching out for the pretty ambulance lights.

Brad said, "Bo, bo."

Pollard put the two in his car, walked far enough away that Brad wouldn't hear, and called Henry Corden at Area Three.

Pollard told Corden where he was and asked, "We got a missing baby?" Pollard's partner, Corden, had broken his foot last week. He had not been chasing an evildoer, but stepping off the curb in front of a pizza shop with the pizza obscuring his view of the ground, and he was now relegated to office work. Corden said, "Yo, Tommy. Gonna be cooler tomorrow."

"Yeah, that's nice, but do we?"

"Have a missing baby? No. It's been a real quiet day. Grass fire near where you are. Started by a fire in a trash can, but they've struck it now. That's about all the excitement."

"Well, I've got a baby."

"Where?"

"Picked him up on I-90. At the pileup."

"Yeah?"

"The baby may have caused it. He was jaywalking. Jaycrawling. Sorry. I shouldn't go in for dark humor. But seriously, babies don't just go missing. Check, will ya?"

"Sure. But how'd he get there?"

"Crawled. On hands and knees. Must have, because they're dirty little hands and knees. There's no indication of where he came from. But after all, how far can a baby crawl?"

"Beats me. You'd think somebody would have seen him crawling along. Let alone somebody should've missed him. But I think there woulda been an all-call if there's word out."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Other Eyes by Barbara D'Amato. Copyright © 2010 Barbara D'Amato. Excerpted by permission of Tom Doherty Associates.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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