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Authors: Glen Robins

BOOK: Off Kilter
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“No, sir. It looks like someone was here. The bed has been slept in, and the shower has been used. Someone was here but not anymore. There is no luggage, no personal items left behind.”

Another series of expletives. “Then get me camera footage from the lobby. We’ve got to find this man. He’s an international criminal, and now he’s loose in your country. Find him.”

Twenty minutes later, as he poured over the video footage from the hotel lobby, Nic continued to curse and fume. He clearly saw, from a different angle, Collin Cook’s performance with the security guards and his checking into the hotel. He watched him cross the lobby to the bank of elevators after the front desk staff excitedly flapped over him, practically kissing his feet. Nic fast-forwarded through hours of video. There was constant activity until midnight, then it slowed considerably. The crowds dispersed and disappeared at eight times normal speed. From about twelve thirty on, the lobby was mostly empty, save the occasional couple holding hands as they strolled through or small groups moving at a leisurely pace from the entrance to the elevators. Nothing interesting until the time stamp in the lower corner showed 3:23 a.m. That’s when he saw a lone man, wearing a dark sweatshirt with the hood pulled down to hide his face, walk purposefully through the lobby, head down the whole way. The man had a small backpack on one shoulder and a computer bag on the other. The same pieces of luggage Collin Cook had when he checked in at 7:47 p.m.

Nic slammed his palms on his desk and clinched his jaw so tightly he almost broke a filling. “How in the bloody hell does he do it? Every bloody time.”

 

Too restless to sleep, Collin had gotten up and paced the floor of his suite for another twenty minutes, trying desperately to reach Lukas. When he didn’t answer and didn’t respond to texts, Collin gave up and followed his own best instincts. He packed, dressed, and exited the building as quickly and quietly as he could. He turned north out of the front doors and worked his way through the deserted city streets in search of a taxi. When he finally found one in front of a downtown night club, he asked the cab driver to take him to the Best Western on the other side of town. He knew there would be budget-minded American tourists there.

Perhaps he was being silly, paranoid even. But he couldn’t shake the nagging sense that he had drawn too much attention to himself. He didn’t like that feeling and feared a repeat of what happened in Panama City. Sure, he had spent five hundred dollars for a few hours of luxury, and he hated wasting money, but it would be worth it to feel safe and completely anonymous somewhere else.

At least he had enjoyed the view while he could.

 

*              *              *              *

 

San Diego, CA

May 20

 

The clock on the display monitor in her late model BMW showed 9:41 p.m. Emily had stayed late, again, working on her presentation and trying to manage two, simultaneous, interdependent experiments, the results of which could add that much more punch to her performance. This was the fourth day in a row she had put in fourteen plus hours, and she needed to find another gear, something other than work, to take her mind away.

After backing out of her reserved parking stall at the Scripps Research facility, Emily decided to use her ten minute commute productively. It was time to call Sarah Cook. With the BioMed Conference looming and the burden of her first-ever professional presentation weighing heavily on her mind, Emily had neglected to keep in touch with Sarah for over a week. This conversation would be different than most because this time she actually had something significant to report.

Sarah was so happy to hear from Emily and thanked her for the good news. It sounded like Collin was interested in rebuilding the friendship, they both agreed, and this gave them hope. Sarah was pleased that Collin had picked up his communication with her as well, although he purposely avoided telling her anything substantive about his doings.

Emily gently turned the conversation toward Sarah and her health by asking how she was feeling.

“I’m on my third dose of chemo, and as I’m sure you know, it gets harder and harder. I’m exhausted for several days after a treatment, and then just as my energy begins to come back, it’s time for another dose. It just wipes me out,” Sarah explained.

Emily did her best to empathize, but rather than responding emotionally, the scientist in her started asking questions that Sarah didn’t know how to answer.  When her queries yielded little information of value to Emily, she asked, “Will you do me a favor and have your doctor contact me? If you’re OK with it, I would like to take a look at your lab results and just see what is going on.”

“Of course that would be all right. I’ll call him tomorrow.”

Emily approached her building and explained that she might lose cell service in the basement garage, so they signed off with a promise to stay in touch. Sarah wished her luck on her presentation and assured her that she would be the star of the show.

What Emily failed to notice as she talked and drove was a blue sedan mirroring her every move several hundred yards behind her. As she slowed to turn into her parking garage, the blue sedan kept going and parked under a large tree in front of her high rise condominium.

 

In her top floor condo, Emily dressed in nothing but a well-worn, cotton Padres shirt. She stood in front of the picture window in her living room, clutching a steaming, oversized mug of potato soup, looking out over the mighty Pacific, wondering where her friend was and what he was doing. It was eleven o’clock, and she had just signed off her computer after another long conversation with Collin. It was enjoyable but exhausting.

She stood to stretch her legs and think while she ate.

The full moon shone on the glassy surface of the ocean in bumpy streaks that stretched toward her. The muffled roar of the surf below brought a sense of calm that drowned the encroaching loneliness. As she thought about Collin, she felt at once empty and grateful. Grateful for so many memories that still made her smile. Grateful that he let her back in his life at a time when she was most desperate for friendship. Grateful that now she had a chance to return the favor and be his friend when he needed one most. Empty because of his decided absence.

While she was pleased that Collin continued the dialogue and shared his experiences, albeit with the most indistinct descriptions imaginable, she wanted more. Maybe it was because he was a guy and didn’t communicate in the language of emotion. Maybe he was masking something. She didn’t know, nor could she. Not with his frustratingly vague, bare bones style. She wanted to know, really know, where he was and what he was doing and how he was feeling. She wanted so badly to talk to him, to see him, and, if he would let her, to hug and comfort him.

At the same time, she worried about Sarah and her health. She was sworn not to breathe a word of it to Collin, or anyone else for that matter, but she ached for the ailing mother who longed to see her son.

Chapter Sixteen

 

May 21

Lima, Peru

 

He found an empty seat by a window halfway toward the back of the bus and listened to the chatter. Excited voices with thick mid-western accents went on and on about what a thrill it was to actually be on their way to Machu Pichu, the famed Incan site high in the Andes Mountains. It seemed that no one on board the sleek, new Prevost tour coach could believe that this was happening, that they were about to see the ancient and mysterious city in the clouds.

Collin’s hair was now short and black, hidden by a baseball cap. Dark sunglasses covered his eyes; headphone wires dangled from his ears. His beard was gone, as was his British accent. Based on the conversations of the groups huddled around the tables closest to his at the hotel breakfast room, he had decided to sign up that morning for the same five-day tour as the other hotel guests. He changed his persona to be a high school teacher from suburban Chicago, who had saved up to visit the sites he had only seen in books. It would be a convincing story anyone could believe.

He was able to purchase one of the last tickets, according to the gal at the agency two doors down from the Best Western, but he counted at least five empty rows.

Most of the people clumped together in groups of four to eight, but there were a few couples on their own, too. As far as Collin could tell, he was the only solo traveler on the bus. But no one seemed bothered by that fact.

Following Lukas’s advice, Collin was blending in with the tourists.

During the daytime, he took dozens of photos and listened to Eduardo, the tour guide, and asked searching questions, trying to learn all he could about the mysterious ruins he explored with the group. At night, he updated his photo journal and communicated electronically with his friends and family back home, always careful not to divulge too much.

Whatever assignment Lukas was on, it must have been important and all-consuming. Collin received very little in terms of communication from him, most of it rather superficial in nature. But there was no real need. Except for the scene in Lima, Collin was keeping a low profile, just as Lukas had instructed.

In his conversations with Emily, he learned how stressed she was about her presentation but also about a new direction she was taking her experiments. She had three days to send in her slideshow but wanted to include the latest data. She fretted about getting it all done in time. She told him about a lovely patient who was going through chemotherapy. Emily had become acutely interested in that patient’s case. Her goal now was to find a way to personalize a treatment based on that patient’s exact needs. Targeted gene therapy, she called it. Other cancer labs did it as a matter of routine, but Scripps had always been more removed from the actual treatment, more esoteric. She hoped to get permission soon so that she could help this patient. It was clear to Collin that she was passionate in her resolve to make a difference for this woman. “You’re amazing Emily,” he had said in his most recent message to her. “You really care about saving lives, don’t you? Even if it’s just one at a time.”

Her response was, “Of course, I do. Everyone matters. Everyone has something to offer, so why not do my best to save them?”

By the end of his five-day tour with this group, Collin was at ease. The experience had far exceeded his expectations. The feelings of awe and wonder could only be expressed in his journal to Amy, not with any of his friends or family. During this time he had become part of the group—more than just another face in a crowd. Folks were kind and hospitable, but no one pried into his business, and he was comforted by that. He didn’t try to avoid contact or conversation, but he didn’t readily engage in it, either. The group accepted him as a studious school teacher on a quest to learn.

At noon the fifth day, the tour came to an end. Most of his new friends loaded onto a chartered bus bound for the airport. Collin waved good-bye and headed for the express bus terminal, where he caught a bus that would take him through the majestic and stunning Andes to Puno, Peru, a popular tourist attraction on the shore of Lake Titicaca, close to the southeastern border shared by Bolivia. At the recommendation of several travel blogs, he headed to the Qelqatani Hotel and settled in for a quiet evening. It was comfortable, clean, and had wireless Internet.

He spent his first night there searching transportation options through South America. He imagined himself taking another month or so to wind his way through Bolivia, Chile, Brazil, and Paraguay, eventually ending up in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Things felt safer in South America. Calmer. Slower. Less threatening. The people were unassuming and generous. They let him be, paid him no mind, never intruding nor interfering. It was all so new and different than what he had expected from South America. It was an adventure. An eye-opening adventure. He was soaking it up.

Collin toured Puno the next day, enthralled with its natural beauty, taking pictures for his photo journal. As he moved among the people, seeing sights and learning history, Collin practiced his South American Spanish. He asked touristy kinds of questions, ordered food, and discussed current events—all in an effort to improve his accent and become familiar with the place. A shopkeeper recommended a visit to an island called Isla del Sol, which lay at the southern end of vast Lake Titicaca. The lake was enormous, like a tranquil ocean twelve thousand feet above sea level. Rugged snow-covered peaks rimmed the lake and valley, providing a formidable boundary of protection, which attracted the early inhabitants.

Collin wanted to learn more about this “Island of the Sun,” where legend taught that the Incan god of the sun rose from Lake Titicaca to claim his kingdom. Late in the day, as he strolled down to the docks, a boat full of tourists had just returned from Isla Del Sol and began to filter into town, chattering about the amazing ruins and the spectacular views. Collin found a kiosk and picked up a brochure.

As he read the brochure, he wandered back toward the tourist section of town and his hotel, planning in his head to visit the island the next morning. The sun was perched just above the peaks to the west, casting an orange beam of dancing light across the glassy surface of the lake and causing his shadow to stretch out long and skinny in front of him. His stomach was growling, reminding him of the neglect it had endured since mid-morning. Night was coming on, and a chill wind blew off the lake. He ducked in a taco joint popular with the tourists to grab a quick bite before returning to his room. There he could blend in with fellow Americans. The front of the restaurant was open, allowing him good visibility, and a back door through the kitchen was a possible escape route. Yes, he decided, it would be OK to eat out tonight. He would spend some time among other humans instead of holed up in his tiny room.

He pulled his iPhone out and checked for notifications as he waited for a table to be made ready. No text messages, a few new e-mails, and a notification on Facebook from Emily, responding to his earlier message. He read it, trying to decipher his feelings about the attention she was paying to him. Smiling to himself, he reread her message, oblivious to anything else.

The small taco bar had an upbeat atmosphere. Young people, mostly American and European tourists, filled the place with noise, laughter, and activity. It felt good to relax and absorb the youthful energy, even though he kept to himself at a small table in the corner.

He enjoyed the atmosphere late into the evening, chatting via Facebook with Emily on his phone, cocooned by the crowd, lost in the online conversation. All day, thoughts of her popped into his head at random times, no matter how many other interesting things he tried to stuff in it. The pictures, the conversations, and the feelings they produced kept rolling through his head, churning up embers of a long forgotten fire. Why couldn’t he stop thinking about her?

A memory from his brief stay in the hospital percolated to the top of his stream of thoughts.

Collin’s eyes flitted left, then right, before they finally opened. The left one wouldn’t open all the way. It was swollen and painful. Everything was blurry at first, and nothing was familiar. Too much white and a strange antiseptic smell. Panic set in, but his body didn’t respond to his impulse to jump out of bed. Was he glued down? Breathing heavily, he fought to focus his vision and figure out where he was. He could just make out an image to his right, hovering attentively over him. It hurt to turn his head, like his brain was sloshing to the side and slamming into the wall of his skull. He closed his eyes again and tried to swallow, but there was nothing to swallow. His mouth was as dry as a desert, and his lips throbbed with a dull ache.

The figure next to him was holding his right hand and saying something softly. He could feel the squeezing and hear the sweet voice, but the words didn’t register. His arms felt as heavy as lead and disconnected. The voice grew more insistent, beckoning him onward. It was as if he was being urged to climb a ladder with a heavy pack on his back. Everything went dark momentarily.

Through the din he could hear the voice more clearly now, calling his name and pleading for him to look at her. Yes, he could tell now that it was female. It must be Amy. Thank Heaven she’s okay. Must’ve been a terrible dream. Gravity had a firm grip on his whole body, pushing his limbs and torso into the bed and holding his eyelids down, but he battled until his eyelids held their ground. The image of a woman gradually came into focus. High cheek bones, steel gray eyes, sandy hair pulled back in a pony tail. It wasn’t Amy after all. It was Emily. Confusion swarmed his mind as he blinked several times in disbelief.

“It’s okay, Collin. I’m right here. Talk to me.”

He couldn’t form words, but his mouth moved and emitted a guttural sound. His tongue licked his lips, which felt like sandpaper, in a vain attempt to moisten them. He felt another squeeze of his hand and fingers under his chin, stroking his cheek. It brought a nice sensation, making him realize he wasn’t dead.

“Your eyes are open. That’s good. Let me take a look,” Emily inspected his forehead, eyes, and jaw. “You’re going to be all right,” she said in measured words.

That was reassuring, but why was she here, and where was Amy? These thoughts floated by and he tried to grab them and make use of them, but his efforts fell short. He forced out the only word he could form: “What . . .”

Emily’s overly sweetened and excited voice showed Collin how awkward she felt as she rattled off a chain of non-stop thoughts. “What happened? Well, you know, that’s a bit difficult to say right now. I’m hoping you can tell me, since no one else will. I mean, I’ve been here—what?—four hours now, and no one will tell me anything. I’m more than frustrated. In fact, I’m getting angry because I feel like I don’t know what to do or what to say. Know what I mean? It kinda sucks. Anyway, I’m talking too much again, I know. Nervous habit. Now, do you remember what happened?”

Collin was dizzy from her barrage of words, but he could not let go of the one question on his mind. Another word, forced and dry, “Where . . .”

“Where are you? You’re in Petaluma Valley Hospital. It appears that you fell and hit your head. I guess the police found you in your living room. Of course, they won’t tell me anything more. In fact, I had to pry just to get that much out of them. But the doctors say you’re going to be fine. Just a concussion and some stitches. Thirteen to be exact. I got that much out of them.”

“Amy?”

Emily paused. Her eyes narrowed as she watched his face. When she spoke, her voice was gentle and soft and much slower. “I wish I knew, Collin. No one has told me anything.” She drew in a breath, then changed course. “You need to rest, Collin. I should go.”

“No. Stay.” He felt lost, but he knew she would figure things out and help him understand what was going on. Plus, he did not want to be alone in this foggy- headed condition. Everything felt so heavy, so thick. He closed his eyes, wanting to forget what he thought he already knew.

That was the last time he saw Emily.

 

He left the taqueria around nine o’clock and made his way through Puno’s open air market en route to his hotel. It was dark and cold and his sweatshirt did little to keep him warm, so he pulled the hood over his head and walked briskly through the rows of vendors huddled around small fires burning in metal buckets near their stands. As he approached the Qelqatani Hotel there was an unusual amount of commotion on the street. Loud noises, yelling, screaming, crying. People were running toward the sounds, others ran away. Despite the commotion, he continued walking toward the still unfolding scene on the lakefront avenue, directly toward the fray. His instincts told him to stay in the shadows, observe from a distance. His gait changed, becoming catlike. But the noise and confusion continued to draw him in as curiosity cast its magnetic spell.

From behind the line of people that pressed their way forward for a better look, Collin listened to the yelling. He picked up on some of the chatter between the young people nearest him and came to understand that the federal authorities were aggressively questioning several shopkeepers and workers from the hotel about an American. The police were accusing this American of something that he couldn’t understand, saying he had done something that sounded awful. He didn’t know those words. The federales wanted information. That much he understood. They used intimidation and threats in front of the gathered crowd to instill fear and inspire cooperation, thus underscoring the importance of their mission.

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