Caddrick had enough sense, at least, to shut up. He sat breathing hard for long moments. Ronisha Azzan sat back in her chair, looking abruptly tired and grey around the lips and nostrils. Kit sympathized. He felt grey all over. Ronisha shoved herself to her feet and poured out three stiff scotch-and-sodas. Caddrick’s hand was shaking as he lifted his drink, nearly sloshing it down his expensive suit jacket. Kit drained his own glass at one gulp. “Thanks, Ronnie. God, I needed that. So . . . What we’re trying to determine now is our best chance of tracing Benny Catlin in London. Dr. Paula Booker is probably the best bet we’ve got for identifying Jenna, since she’s the surgeon who gave Jenna a new face.”
“I want to see this doctor,” Caddrick growled. “I want to know how my little girl was when she came through this station, who was holding her prisoner, why the surgeon didn’t report any of this—”
“Dr. Booker didn’t report it for the simple reason there was nothing to report. Your daughter came in voluntarily, alone, claiming to be a grad student. Paula gave her a set of false whiskers, surgically implanted. The very next day, Paula left for her own vacation down time. You’re damned lucky, Senator, to have any witness at all. When we caught up to Dr. Booker, trying to trace Armstrong and his prisoners, she and her guide had been bushwhacked by a gang of local bandits. If we hadn’t come along, Paula might well have been murdered in cold blood.”
Caddrick glared at him, his mouth tightened into a thin white line. “Live witnesses won’t do any good if Jenna’s already dead in London! For your information, Carson, my daughter was nearly killed her first night there. Twice! Then she disappeared, leaving two dead men behind her. And now you tell me you’ve got two more men murdered in cold blood down the Denver Gate? Not to mention a known international terrorist who escapes with three hostages—and you don’t even bother to follow? My God, mister, of all the careless, irresponsible—”