“Tell him you want no one else in the building until we come down,” Sean said. He knew such a command would be ignored as the afternoon progressed, but he thought he might as well try.
Dr. Mason did as he was told. He passed the large key ring to Sean as soon as Sanchez had given it to him. The guard eyed them strangely as they went through the turnstile. Big-breasted blondes wearing black bikinis and feathered high heels weren’t exactly regulars at the Forbes research building.
“Your brother was right,” Dr. Mason said after Sean closed and locked the entrance doors beyond the turnstile. “This is a serious felony. You’ll go to prison. You’re not going to get away with this.”
“I told you, I don’t intend to get away with it,” Sean said.
Sean locked the stairwell doors. On the second floor he closed and locked the fire doors leading to the bridge to the hospital. Once they got to the fifth floor he locked off the elevator, then summoned the second car. When it arrived, he locked that off as well.
Ushering the Masons into his lab, Sean waved to Janet. She was inside the glass-enclosed office reading the charts. She came out and looked quizzically at the Masons. Sean hastily introduced them, then sent the Masons into the glass-enclosed office, telling them to stay put. He closed the door behind them.
“What are they doing here?” Janet asked with concern. “And what’s Mrs. Mason doing in a swimsuit? It looks like she’s been crying.”
“She’s a bit hysterical,” Sean explained. “There wasn’t time for her to change. I brought them here to keep others from disturbing me. Besides, as soon as I do what I’m planning on doing, Dr. Mason is the first person I want to tell.”
“Did you force them to come here?” Janet asked. Even after everything else Sean had resorted to, this had to be past the limit.
“They would have preferred to listen to the rest of
“Did you use that gun you’re carrying?” Janet asked. She didn’t want to hear the answer.
“I had to show it to them,” Sean admitted.
“Heaven help us,” Janet exclaimed, looking up toward the ceiling and shaking her head.
Sean got out some fresh glassware including a large Erlenmeyer flask. He pushed away some of the debris near the sink to make space.
Janet reached out and grasped Sean’s arm. “This whole thing has gone too far,” she said. “You’ve kidnapped the Masons! Do you understand that?”
“Of course,” Sean said. “What do you think, I’m crazy?”
“Don’t make me answer that,” Janet said.
“Did anybody come by while I was gone?” Sean asked.
“Yes,” Janet said. “Robert Harris came like you thought he might.”
“And?” Sean asked, looking up from his work.
“I told him what you told me to say,” Janet replied. “He wanted to know if you’d gone back to the residence. I said I didn’t know. I think he went there to look for you.”
“Perfect,” Sean said. “He’s the one I’m the most afraid of. He’s too gung ho. Everything has to be in place by the time he returns.” Sean went back to work.
Janet didn’t know what to do. She watched Sean for a few minutes as he mixed reagents in the large Erlenmeyer flask, creating a colorless, oily liquid.
“What exactly are you doing?” she asked.
“I’m making a large batch of nitroglycerin,” he said. “Plus an ice bath for it to sit in and cool.”
“You’re joking,” Janet said with fresh concern. It was hard to keep up with Sean.
“You’re right,” Sean said, lowering his voice. “It’s show time. This is really for the benefit of Dr. Mason and his beautiful bride. As a doctor, he knows just enough chemistry to make this believable.”
“Sean, you’re acting bizarre,” Janet said.
“I am a bit manic,” Sean agreed. “By the way, what did you think of those charts?”
“I guess you were right,” Janet said. “Not all the charts had reference to economic status, but those that did indicated that the patients were CEOs or family members of CEOs.”
“All part of the Fortune 500, I’d guess,” Sean said. “What does that make you think?”
“I’m too exhausted to draw conclusions,” Janet said. “But I suppose it’s a strange coincidence.”
Sean laughed. “What do you think the statistical probability would be of that happening by chance?”
“I don’t know enough about statistics to answer that,” Janet said.
Sean held up the flask and swirled the contained solution. “This looks good enough to pass,” he said. “Let’s hope old Doc Mason remembers enough of his inorganic chemistry to be impressed.”
Janet watched Sean carry the flask into the glass enclosure. She wondered if he was losing touch with reality. Granted, he’d been driven to increasingly desperate acts, but abducting the Masons at gunpoint was a mind-numbing quantum leap. The legal consequences of such an act had to be severe. Janet didn’t know much law, but she knew she was implicated to an extent. She doubted Sean’s proposed coercion theory would spare her. She only wished she knew what to do.