The Cassandra Sanction (30 page)

Read The Cassandra Sanction Online

Authors: Scott Mariani

BOOK: The Cassandra Sanction
7.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘This was July sixth,’ Ben said. He was counting off the days. There were only ten of them to go before Catalina’s car dropped into the Baltic Sea.

She nodded. ‘But the bug people said they didn’t have anyone available until the eighth. Talk about German efficiency. The same day, I contacted Mike McCauley at his newspaper offices.’

‘Posing as Carmen Hernandez again,’ Raul
said.

‘I suppose he told you about our meeting three days later in Munich?’

‘He told us everything.’

‘It was a long time to wait. I kicked my heels the whole of the seventh in my hotel room. Then, late morning on the eighth, I was just about to set off to meet the bug people at my apartment when I got the call from Jim Lockhart, telling me …’ Her words trailed off and she took another
quick sip of whisky.

‘Telling you that your mutual colleague, Dougal Sinclair, and his entire expedition team had just been killed in Greenland,’ Ben said.

Catalina looked at him. ‘You know a lot.’

‘All except what this is about,’ he replied.

‘Does Mike McCauley have no idea?’ she asked.

‘If he does, he’s the best liar I’ve ever come across.’

‘I could have revealed everything
to him that day in Munich, but I chose not to. By then I was beginning to understand what was going on. I knew we were in danger.’

‘Then the next day, Lockhart was killed,’ Ben said.

‘And when I tried to call Steve Ellis, he wouldn’t answer his phone. First I thought the worst had happened to him, then I saw the message on his website and realised that he’d run. That’s when I knew I was
going to have to do the same. They were hunting us down one by one. My only hope of cheating them was to disappear. So I started making my plans, working them out down to the finest detail. I had to be extremely careful, to make it work and not to get caught in the process. The first thing I did was leave my Porsche hidden in an underground car park, where nobody would find it.’

‘Next you
went to your doctor,’ Ben said. ‘You told him the old feelings of depression were coming back, and that you needed medication.’

Catalina cocked an eyebrow at him. ‘You do know a lot, mystery man. That’s right. I put on quite a show for him, too. So many tears, he was almost weeping too. How could he resist filling out a nice prescription for the damsel in distress? Then I sneaked back to my
apartment. That was the scariest part. I was terrified one of them would be there waiting to murder me. But nobody was. I slipped inside and planted the drugs, where I knew they would be found by the police. Of course, first I flushed a lot of pills down the toilet, to make it look as if I’d been taking them like there was no tomorrow, literally. What better way to lend credence to my suicide?’

‘I can’t believe you could plan it like this,’ Raul said. ‘It was so cold, so detached.’

‘I’m a scientist,’ Catalina replied. ‘Cold and detached is what I do. But don’t think this was easy for me. While I was trying so hard to be methodical, at the same time it ripped my heart out, knowing the step I was about to take. Next, I knew I was going to need money. But for my scheme to work, I
couldn’t afford to leave a glaring clue like a large bank withdrawal just days before my death. There had to be another way to raise some cash.’

‘That’s the easy part,’ Keller cut in, grinning.

‘Not for me, not in that moment,’ she said, firing him a look. ‘Coming to you for help wasn’t part of my plan then. So,’ she resumed, ‘while I was in the apartment I gathered my most valuable pieces
of jewellery. The following day, I slipped out of the hotel for the last time and took a very roundabout route to this pawnshop I remembered passing, where I got what pathetic sum of money that nasty little man would give me for my beautiful things. I couldn’t even afford to pay the hotel bill. From the pawnshop, I took another roundabout route in more buses and taxis back to where my car was
hidden, and drove away from Munich without anyone seeing me. Four days later, I was standing on the edge of a cliff on Rügen Island, watching the car fall into the sea with me supposedly inside it. And then I was alone. More alone than I’d ever been in my life before.’

‘You didn’t have to be,’ Raul said. ‘You could have come to me. Instead you went to him.’ He pointed again at Keller.

‘In case you hadn’t noticed,’ Keller said, ‘I have the manpower and the resources to keep her safe.’

Raul glared at him. ‘I’m her brother. Nobody would protect her like her own family. Not even you.’

‘Oh, Raul,’ Catalina said. ‘You know I wanted to. But how could I bring danger to you? Austin’s right. His men are all experienced security personnel.’

Ben could see Raul was getting angry.
The last thing anyone needed was Keller laid out flat on the floor from one of the Spaniard’s formidable punches. Keller, least of all. Putting a hand on Raul’s shoulder he said, ‘Go easy. She panicked, nothing more. Don’t take it personally.’

Catalina threw up her hands. ‘It’s true, I admit it. Everything had happened so fast, I hadn’t had time to even begin to imagine what it would feel
like afterwards. It didn’t hit me until I was walking away from the cliff. Suddenly here I was, except I wasn’t me any more. I was completely cut off from everything I’d been, everything I had, everyone I knew. Heartbroken and frightened, a fugitive, having to hide my face from the world. I spent my first night in a cheap hotel, worrying whether anyone would recognise me through my disguise. I was
even afraid to eat a proper meal, because I kept thinking about how long my money was going to have to last. I didn’t sleep for a second that night, even though I was exhausted. I kept working all those questions over and over in my head. Would these people fall for my ploy? Had I missed anything? Had I made any mistakes, left any evidence? The tiniest error, and they might see right through it,
and all this would have been for nothing. If they came after me, they’d catch me even more easily than before. I couldn’t hide out in expensive hotels any longer. I didn’t even have a car. I was still alive, but—’

‘But you were beginning to regret your actions,’ Ben said. ‘You’ve been regretting them ever since.’

Catalina eyed Ben curiously, as if wondering how he could see inside her
thoughts. ‘Yes, I admit that too,’ she answered after a beat. ‘I rushed into it all too fast. I was too busy planning the details to see the bigger picture. In retrospect, it could have been a mistake.’

‘No, babe, you did the right thing,’ Keller said.

Ben saw the irritated flash in her eye at being called ‘babe’, and wondered about the relationship between the two. He considered Keller
for a moment. The Canadian didn’t seem like a bad guy. He was obviously highly protective of her. Then again, all this was working out nicely for him.

Ben turned to Keller and said, ‘So – these expert security guys of yours. You had them watching McCauley’s place in London in case the bad guys would turn up there, didn’t you? He was the bait.’

Keller was about to reply, but Catalina did
it for him. ‘I didn’t mean it to be that way. It was Austin’s idea. He convinced me that it was the only sure way to tell if Grant’s people believed I was dead or not. If they hadn’t fallen for the deception, then sooner or later they’d come for him.’

Ben smiled. ‘Then what, you’d have let them kill the guy?’

‘My men are better than to let that happen,’ Keller said.

‘Don’t count on
it,’ Ben replied.

‘The idea was to try and gather some kind of incriminating evidence to use against Grant,’ Catalina said. ‘It was the only way to prove for certain he was involved, and why.’

‘Flimsy,’ Ben said. ‘For a start, it’s unlikely that hired hitters would even know who was paying them. Did you see that work in some third-rate movie you produced, Keller?’

‘You have any better
ideas?’ Keller demanded.

‘In the event, it turned out differently,’ Catalina said. ‘When they saw two men turn up at McCauley’s place they photographed you on your way in, and emailed the images to us here. I couldn’t believe it was Raul, searching for me and putting himself in danger. I had to do something to get you away from there.’

Raul gave Keller a dark grin. ‘You’re lucky you’re
not having to recruit another bunch of goons right now.’ He pointed at Ben. ‘This guy here, he could have taken them out, just like—’

‘All right,’ Ben interrupted him, then turned to Catalina, who was watching him with the same intense curiosity as before. ‘So here we are in protective custody on Austin’s cosy island retreat. Safe as houses. And you still haven’t told us what this is all about,
but I can guess.’

‘Then guess,’ she said.

‘I think you already have a pretty clear idea why this Maxwell Grant is involved,’ Ben said.

Catalina smiled. ‘So do you, by the sound of it.’

‘Two astronomers, one a solar physicist and one an astroglaciologist, ganged up with a climatologist and an Antarctic oceanography expert. Just a little rag-tag team of maverick scientists, apparently
under fire from one of the richest and most powerful players in the environmentalist lobby. That’s what you’re suggesting, if I’m not mistaken.’

‘You don’t have to be a genius to figure it out, do you? Did I forget to mention that Grant is also the founder and chairman of ISACC, the International Society for Action on Climate Change, which attracts gigantic funding from governments all over
the world?’

‘The four of you must have stirred things up quite a bit.’

‘That would be an understatement,’ she said. ‘When you consider what’s at stake. Our future. The fate of our planet. Not to say the multi-billion-dollar industry run and promoted by the likes of Maxwell Grant. And the biggest scientific fraud of all time.’

Chapter Forty-Four

‘Hold on a minute,’ Raul burst out after a stunned pause, staring at Catalina as if he’d never seen her before. ‘
That’s
what this over? Green politics? The environment? Seriously? You’re
climate change deniers
?’

Again, Ben remembered the poster on Raul’s wall back in Frigiliana. The polar bear cub stranded on the melting ice floe. He was looking at his sister as if
she’d just finished bludgeoning it to death, the bloody club still in her hand.

‘Don’t call me that,’ Catalina replied. ‘It’s the most idiotic and meaningless term. To deny the existence of climate change would be like denying basic principles of physics. Like denying Kepler’s laws of planetary motion, or general relativity.’

Raul flung up his arms. ‘Okay. I’m confused. What, then?’

‘I’m saying, of course climate change exists,’ Catalina explained. ‘It always has; the climate has always changed. But I’m also saying that climate change, contrary to everything you’ve probably ever heard in the media, from politicians and even from scientists, categorically has nothing whatsoever to do with carbon emissions or any other kind of human involvement. And as for this global warming
we’re forever hearing about …’ Catalina rolled her eyes. ‘If you believe that, Raul, then I have a few thousand acres on the moon that I could sell you. The fact, which even government agencies like NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have tacitly had to admit, is that there
is
no global warming. The Earth’s climate hasn’t warmed up for nearly twenty years. Even if it
had, we’re not the least bit responsible. You’ve been sold a lie, brother.’

‘Catalina, are you crazy? Everybody knows this stuff. It’s settled science.’

She shrugged. ‘So they say. And like lots of people, I passively accepted it for a long time. While I got on with the business of helping advance our knowledge of helioseismology, I trusted my fellow scientists in their own specialised
disciplines to get on with their bit. If the climatologists said we were getting warmer, then okay, we were getting warmer. If they said it was because we were pumping too much greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, fine. I accepted that too. Until, one day, I opened my eyes.’

‘Thanks to Herschel?’ Ben said.

A little smile tugged at the corner of her lips. ‘Wow, maybe you
are
a genius. That’s
right, thanks to Herschel. Before I got the job on the TV series, he was just a name to me, one of a long, long list of historical astronomers. Discoverer of Uranus and its moons, along with moons of Saturn. The first to realise the existence of infrared radiation, and a lot more besides. As well as being rather a good classical composer. A very clever man. But I had no idea at the time how much
he would influence me. That was my epiphany. Everything snowballed from that moment onwards.’

‘Maybe not such a good thing, as it turned out,’ Ben said.

Catalina shook her head fiercely. ‘Knowledge is always worthwhile. Always. No matter what.’

‘Even if it gets you killed?’

‘But humans are destroying the world,’ Raul said. ‘Who can deny that? Look at the pollution. The rivers,
the oceans. Look at the deforestation. The heavy industry. Oil. Mining. Tearing fossil fuels out of the ground. Wrecking our environment everywhere you turn.’

‘It’s true,’ Catalina replied. ‘In so many ways, humans are extremely bad news for this planet. You don’t have to persuade me of that. In fact, I’d consider myself just as much of an ecologist as anyone. Somewhere down the line, our
species fell completely out of tune with nature. From prehistory to modern times we’ve gone from being just another animal species, to being the single greatest biological scourge of the Earth. We proliferate, we consume, we pollute, we destroy. No other living creature fouls its own environment in this reckless, insane way.’

‘So what’s the argument?’ Raul said.

‘The argument is one that
people should actually be very thankful for,’ Catalina told him. ‘Because, for all our malignant destructiveness, human beings are simply too small and insignificant to be able to wreak the kind of fundamental planet-altering harm that could bring about a lasting and catastrophic effect on Earth’s climate. The belief that our species is capable of wielding power on that scale is like some kind
of Freudian God complex, a delusion of grandeur. It’s like when they talk seriously about terraforming Mars for the human race to colonise, as if our technology gave us the divine means to wave our wand at another planet and create some kind of new Genesis.’

Other books

Just for Fins by Tera Lynn Childs
Himiko: Warrior by CB Conwy
032 High Marks for Malice by Carolyn Keene
Sound of the Trumpet by Grace Livingston Hill
Hot Mess by Julie Kraut
Sarah's Secret by Catherine George
Dead of Night by Randy Wayne White