Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 20, 21

Laurie smiled. ‘It’s charming. I’m happy. There’s not a bug in my room.

That had been my main worry.’

The proprietors, Esteban’s brother-in-law, Florenico, and his wife,

Celestina, had prepared a huge feast. The main course was a local fish

served with a turniplike plant called ‘malanga.’ For dessert there was a

type of pudding along with exotic fruit. An ample supply of ice-cold

Cameroonean beer helped wash it all down.

The combination of plentiful food and beer took a toll on the exhausted

travelers. It wasn’t long before all of them were fighting drooping

eyelids. With some effort, they dragged themselves upstairs to their

separate rooms, full of plans to rise early and head south in the

morning.

Bertram climbed the stairs to Siegfried’s office. He was exhausted. It

was almost eight-thirty at night, and he’d been up since five-thirty

that morning to accompany the animal handlers out to Isla Francesca to

help get the mass retrieval under way. They’d worked all day and only

returned to the animal center an hour earlier.

Aurielo had long since gone home, so Bertram walked directly into the

manager’s office. Siegfried was by the window facing the square with a

glass in his hand. He was staring over at the hospital. The only light

in the room was from the candle in the skull, just as it had been three

nights before. Its flame flickered from the action of the overhead fan,

sending shadows dancing across the stuffed animal trophies.

‘Make yourself a drink,’ Siegfried said, without turning around. He knew

it was Bertram, since they’d talked on the phone a half an hour earlier

and made plans to meet.

Bertram was more of a wine drinker than an imbiber of hard alcohol, but

under the circumstances he poured himself a double scotch. He sipped the

fiery fluid as he joined Siegfried at the window. The lights of the

hospital lab complex glowed warmly in the moist tropical night.

‘Did you know Taylor Cabot was coming?’ Bertram asked.

‘I hadn’t the faintest idea,’ Siegfried said.

‘What did you do with him?’ Bertram asked.

Siegfried gestured toward the hospital. ‘He’s at the Inn. I had the

chief surgeon move out of what we call the presidential suite. Of

course, he was none too happy. You know how these egotistical doctors

are. But what was I supposed to do? It’s not like I’m running a hotel

here.’

‘Do you know why Cabot came?’ Bertram asked.

‘Raymond said that he came specifically to evaluate the bonobo program,’

Siegfried said.

‘I was afraid of that,’ Bertram said.

‘It’s just our luck,’ Siegfried complained. ‘The program has been

running like a Swiss clock for years on end, and just when we have a

problem, he shows up.’

‘What did you do with Raymond?’ Bertram asked.

‘He’s over there, too,’ Siegfried said. ‘He’s a pain in the ass. He

wanted to be away from Cabot, but where was I supposed to put him: in my

house? No thank you!’

‘Has he asked about Kevin Marshall?’ Bertram asked.

‘Of course,’ Siegfried said. ‘As soon as he got me aside, it was his

first question.’

‘What did you say?’

‘I told the truth,’ Siegfried said. ‘I told him Kevin had gone off with

the reproductive technologist and the intensive care nurse and that I

had no idea where he was.’

‘What was his reaction?’

‘He got red in the face,’ Siegfried said. ‘He wanted to know if Kevin

had gone to the island. I told him that we didn’t think so. Then he

ordered me to find him. Can you imagine? I don’t take orders from

Raymond Lyons.’

‘So Kevin and the women have not reappeared?’ Bertram asked.

‘No, and not a word,’ Siegfried said.

‘Have you made any effort to find them?’ Bertram asked.

‘I sent Cameron over to Acalayong to check out those cheap hotels along

the waterfront, but he didn’t have any luck. I’m thinking they might

have gone over to Cocobeach in Gabon. That’s what makes the most sense,

but why they didn’t tell anyone is beyond me.’

‘What a God-awful mess,’ Bertram commented.

‘How did you do on the island?’ Siegfried asked.

‘We did well, considering how fast we had to put the operation

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