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"What'll you do if I don't open the door?" Marion asked.
"Is Westwood coming back?"
Marion wasn't sure. But he didn't want to admit that. "Yes," he said.
"I'll slip my cell-phone number under the door so you can call me. Then I'll find a place to wait and when he shows up he can verify me. But I'm hoping you don't make me do that. This is kind of a busy time for me. I'm in the middle of a murder investigation."
The guy sounded sounded genuine enough. He knew Westwood and he knew the exact conversation they'd had on the phone. This guy Rollins had the right name, and he didn't seem very anxious. There was no pressure to be let in. He struck Marion as extremely professional. genuine enough. He knew Westwood and he knew the exact conversation they'd had on the phone. This guy Rollins had the right name, and he didn't seem very anxious. There was no pressure to be let in. He struck Marion as extremely professional.
Wondering how the h.e.l.l he'd allowed himself to get into this situation, Ed Marion reached for the doork.n.o.b and turned it. With his other hand, he simultaneously unlocked the door and pulled it open.
Standing before him was a dark-haired man, a little over six feet tall. Not heavy but muscular. Powerful-looking upper body. He had the aura of an athlete, someone who was very confident of his physical capabilities. Marion glanced down at the photo ID, looked back up at the man. It was a match.
"May I come in?" the FBI agent said.
Marion nodded and stepped farther inside the room. Agent Rollins followed, closing the door behind him. Marion sat down on the corner of the bed. Rollins remained standing by the black Formica desk against the wall opposite the bathroom. There was a phone on it and an oval mirror on the wall over it. Other than the curtains and the loud, matching bedspread, the mirror was the only attempt at decoration in the room.
"Nice place," Agent Rollins said.
"Where are you going to take me?"
"Nowhere yet. This looks like an excellent place for a chat."
"We have to get certain guidelines out of the way first. I need to know exactly what you're willing to do for me."
"What would you like me to do?" Rollins asked.
"I'm going to need immunity from any prosecution. And I'm going to need guaranteed safety for me and my family."
"You'd better have a lot of information for that kind of deal."
"Where do you want to start?" Ed Marion said.
Rollins pulled the one chair out from under the desk and sat facing Marion. "How much did you tell Westwood?" he asked.
"I didn't tell him anything. I said I'd only talk to you guys."
"Why?"
"He didn't exactly make me feel safe. He seemed like a small-timer. He doesn't know the kind of people who are involved."
"He does now. You told him about Newberg and Kransten."
Marion felt his hands go clammy. "I didn't tell him. The names slipped out. I thought he was working for them."
"You told him about Aphrodite."
"He doesn't know what it means."
"Do you?"
"I know some of it. I've pieced together other parts. n.o.body knows everything except Douglas Kransten."
"And Louise Marshall."
"You already know about all this?" Marion asked.
"Like you, we know about some of it."
"How? You've been investigating them?"
Rollins nodded.
"Why?"
"How about if you tell me what you you know, then I'll decide if there's anything for me to tell you." know, then I'll decide if there's anything for me to tell you."
"You don't have a cigarette, do you?"
"I don't smoke."
"No, neither do I. I've been pretty tense waiting for you to show up. I don't know why I asked for a cigarette. I haven't eaten. And I could really use a drink. That cop, Westwood, he scared the s.h.i.+t out of me, if you want to know the truth. I thought he was going to kill me."
"Why don't you just relax for a little while and tell me what you know. After you talk, you can eat and drink all you want." When Marion nodded, Rollins said, "You work at Ellis, right? Tell me your job, exactly. Are you a researcher?"
"I have a medical and research background. Stanford. But these guys, the people Kransten has working for him, I was never in their league. These are n.o.bel-level minds. So now I'm a manager."
"What needs to be managed?"
"We do medical research," Ed Marion said. "And we specialize in three different areas. When you're talking about this level of brilliance, there's an extraordinary amount of compet.i.tion. And greed. Someone's got to allocate the funds, make decisions about various directions and priorities. That's what I do, up to a certain level. After that, it's in the hands of my superiors."
"What are the priorities now?"
"We're biotech. We're all about genetic engineering. Kransten's been enough of a visionary to move to the forefront in three different areas. He's been there for years. We're the market leader in stem-cell research derived from human embryos. There's only one other U.S. company that's even really functional at the moment. There's no funding for it."
"But you don't have that problem."
"No, of course not. Since the president restricted use to cells that have already been extracted, we're in the driver's seat. We're private. We don't have to worry about those kinds of restrictions."
"And what's the emphasis in this area?"
"The same as everyone else. Stem cells are just a tool. The more we learn about basic biology, the more likely it is that we can take these stem cells, reproduce the steps inside them, and make them behave in a specific way. It's extraordinarily complicated, but the embryo does it naturally. If we can learn how the embryo does it, we can duplicate the process to make something similar to what the body loses when it has certain diseases. Ultimately, the goal is to develop and market treatments for cancer and degenerative diseases."
"You said it's a tool. A tool for whom?"
"For KranMar." He scratched harshly at his chest, as if the conversation was making him itch. "There's nothing illegal about this. It's why I can't understand all the precautions and secrecy. KranMar's the third largest pharmaceutical company in the world. Of course they're going to be developing products for profit. There's nothing wrong with their research program."
"Give me the two other areas you prioritize."
"Recombinant DNA technology ..."
"Try to give it to me in English, please."
"Essentially, that's reaching inside the body and directly fiddling with gene patterns, with DNA sequences."
"And the goal?"
"You figure out how to change DNA, you can actually alter the species."
"You mean, like make people stronger or handsomer or ... whiter?"
"Agent Rollins, I don't think any of us are in this for those kinds of neo-n.a.z.i purposes. Even if those things were possible, we're talking about altering diseases. Potentially even eliminating some of them. It goes hand in hand with the stem-cell research."
"And the third?"
Marion hesitated, then he said, "Human growth hormones."
"Growth as in make things bigger?"
Ed Marion laughed. "No. Growth hormones affect the aging process."
"Keep going."
"I feel a little strange talking about this. We're in a very odd area here and I only know bits and pieces. The other two areas, that's hard science. I wasn't kidding when I said that there are several people working for us who could easily win the n.o.bel Prize. Growth hormones ...well, it's different. Some people inside Ellis, the other two divisions really, think it's crackpot science. Kransten thinks it's the key to the future."
"What do you think?"
"I think it's both. There's a certain logic to the experimentation and I know enough never to bet against Kransten. The growth-hormone people maintain that the key to aging lies in the pituitary gland. The theory is that once we're over twenty, the gland begins to slow down, providing decreasing levels of HGH. Human growth hormones. By around age sixty-five, most of us are producing little or none. It's this decline that leads to most of the symptoms that we a.s.sociate with aging- wrinkled skin, expanding waistlines, less energy and vitality. ..."
"So you're developing artificial hormones?"
"They've been developed for years. It's how menopause is treated, for one example. And a lot of companies aren't just producing growth hormones, they're also producing something that helps the body distribute distribute them. It combats the somatostatin." them. It combats the somatostatin."
"You've lost me again."
"The pituitary gland doesn't just produce less HGH as we get older. It produces something called somatostatin. It's a substance that inhibits the gland from distributing even the reduced levels of HGH that are produced."
"Where does the crackpot stuff come in?"
"Basically, what's out on the market is a lot of cosmetic bulls.h.i.+t. All you have to do is go on the Internet and look at all the anti-aging sites. They're all selling miracle pills that keep you young. Selling growth hormones is probably already a billion-dollar business."
"But they don't work?"
"Marginally at best. They all claim that they'll improve your cardiac condition and lower blood pressure and rejuvenate your kidneys and get rid of wrinkles. It's more marketing than medicine."
"That's supposed to be illegal."
"It's not drugs. So it's not regulated. The FDA allows them."
"And why is KranMar so gung ho on growth hormones?"
"Because most companies have only been turned on to this in the last decade or so. KranMar's been researching it for thirty years." Ed Marion sighed. "And because most companies really do consider it cosmetic, no matter what they're saying. They'll be happy if it gets rid of a few wrinkles. But KranMar's had some extraordinary results with various experiments."
"Like Bill Miller?"
"Yes. Like Bill Miller."
"And how many others?"
"I don't know exactly. I only know about my group." When Rollins waved for him to continue, Marion said, "I have nine of them, all in the Northeast. Well, eight now that Miller died. They've all lived to be over a hundred. One of them's a hundred and sixteen years old."
"How many other groups are there?"
"I don't know. I think they're regional, so I'd guess five or six others. Maybe a few more than that. We're isolated from each other. For all I know, my group's the only one that's worked."
"Do you know why KranMar is keeping this so secret?"
"No. That's what I can't understand. I'd think they'd be trumpeting this all over the world. I told him that once-no, I asked about it once-in a meeting with Kransten."
"And what was his response?"
"He said that my job was to do as I was told and that if I asked so much as one more question, I would be replaced. I understood the word 'replaced' to mean a lot more than just being fired."
"And why do you think he's so afraid of making this public?"
"I don't know."
"But you've thought about it."
"Yes," Marion said. "I've thought about it a lot. If there are people who've been treated who have lived to be over a hundred, there must be other people who have ... not not lived to be over a hundred." lived to be over a hundred."
"They've killed people?"
"They've experimented."
"And people have died."
"I can only go by the odds. And the nature of experimentation of this sort."
"Where's Kransten, Ed?"
"I haven't seen him in months. It's strange. He's dropped out of sight. A lot of the more serious research, particularly in stem cells and growth hormones, is done over in Europe. I know he's got a large number of holdings over there and he spends a lot of time there. But, even for him, he's been relatively invisible."
"How about Helen Roag?"
"What about her?"
"Where is she?"