Triggers

Free Triggers by Robert J. Sawyer Page B

Book: Triggers by Robert J. Sawyer Read Free Book Online
Authors: Robert J. Sawyer
background noise of Janis Falconi’s memories continued unabated, and there didn’t seem to be anything he could do to shut them out.
    SUSAN Dawson had to sit down. She’d known Gordon Danbury for years. He’d been a military sharpshooter in Afghanistan, and, upon his return to the States, had decided to try his luck with the Secret Service. That meant taking the ten-week Criminal Investigator Training Program at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Georgia, followed by the seventeen-week Special Agent Training Course at the James J. Rowley Training Center, just outside DC.
    Susan had first met Danbury at Rowley; active agents spent two weeks every two months there honing their skills. He’d seemed like a nice enough guy although he didn’t drink. Still, he was buff with a great face. Or, she supposed, he’d
had
a great face; apparently, he’d landed on it when he fell in the elevator shaft, which was why it took so long for anyone to recognize him.
    She looked over at Agent Michaelis; he’d known Danbury, too. He was shaking his head slowly back and forth as if he couldn’t believe the news.
    President Jerrison was lying flat on his back, tubes going into his arm from drip bags, a small oxygen feed tucked into his nostrils. “Danbury,” Jerrison said. “I don’t think I knew him.”
    “You wouldn’t normally have run into him, sir,” Susan said. “He was one of the sharpshooters deployed on the roof of the White House.”
    “The bomb,” Jerrison said.
    Susan nodded. “Yes, it seems likely he was the one who planted it.He’d have had easy access to the White House roof—although how he got a large metallic device through security to get up there, I don’t know.” She listened to her earpiece again, then: “Anyway, they’re sending investigators to his house; see what they can find.”
    They were all silent for a time, until Agent Michaelis spoke. “This is crazy.”
    Susan thought he was referring to Danbury. “Yeah. You think you know a guy…”
    “Not that,” said Michaelis, “although that’s crazy, too. I mean this memory stuff.”
    “Are you experiencing any outside memories?” Susan asked.
    “Me?” said Michaelis. “No.”
    “Professor Singh’s memories are coming more easily for me all the time,” Susan said. “His phone number, his employment history. I even think, if I thought about it hard enough, that I could speak a little Punjabi—not to mention some bad Canadian French.” She paused. “Why would the president and I have been affected and not you? We were all pretty close together. You were just outside the O.R., right?”
    “Yeah,” said Michaelis.
    “Did you leave that area at any point?”
    “No. Well, no, except to go the washroom. In fact, that’s where I was when the lights went out.”
    “And you stayed there through the blackout?”
    “Sure. It didn’t last long.”
    “No, it didn’t,” said Susan. “I’m no scientist, but—”
    “The blackout?” said the president.
    “Um, yes, sir. There was an EMP when the bomb went off at the White House—same as what happened in Chicago and Philadelphia.” She turned to Michaelis. “How far was the washroom from the O.R.?”
    “Halfway down the corridor. Maybe fifty feet.”
    “Did anybody take your place outside the operating-room door?”
    “No. I signaled Dougherty, who was on my right, and Rosenbaum, on my left, that I was going off station for a moment; they had line of sight to each other, so…”
    Susan nodded, then: “Singh’s lab was more or less above the operating room. So the effect probably was limited in radius—and you’d stepped outside it at the crucial moment.”
    Singh came into the room, accompanied, coincidentally, by Agent Dougherty, whom Michaelis had just mentioned.
    “Well,
that’s
interesting,” Susan said to Singh. “I can even access your most recent memories, including new ones since the power surge.”
    “Really?” said Singh.
    “Yes. I know

Similar Books

Crooked House

Agatha Christie

Witch Silver

Anne Forbes

Her Shameful Secret

Susanna Carr

The Paper Bag Christmas

Kevin Alan Milne

Reckless Passion

Stephanie James

Maiden Flight

Harry Haskell

Strange Trouble

Laken Cane