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Conspiracies Read online
    Praise for Legacies
   "With Wilson at the helm, [Repairman Jack] towers above other such characters and similar plot lines.... Wilson has a knack for keeping the plot going at an even pace, with just the right amount of action and intrigue mixed in. Suspense fans won't be disappointed by this stellar literary effort from Wilson. Whether it is horror or suspense, the author knows how to keep the reader engrossed until the final page!"
   —Shelf Life
   "Repairman Jack is a strong man whose moments of compassion don't seem forced, an enigma without being annoyingly mysterious. Confronted with a baffling puzzle, Jack relies on a combination of skill and luck to solve the mystery with a minimum of violence. Wilson's many fans will enjoy this second Repairman Jack story and no doubt hope the author doesn't wait quite so long before writing a third one."
   —Booklist
   "Urban mercenary Repairman Jack is back after a long hiatus. . . . Jack still thrills with cliff-hanger escapes and ingenious snares for the blundering bad guys."
   —Publishers Weekly
   ALSO BY F. PAUL WILSON
   REPAIRMAN JACK NOVELS:
   The Tomb
   Legacies
   Conspiracies
   All the Rage
   Hosts
   The Haunted Air
   Healer
   Wheels Within Wheels
   An Enemy of the State
   Black Wind
   Soft & Others
   Dydeetown World
   The Tery
   Sibs
   The Select
   Implant
   Deep as the Marrow
   Mirage (with Matthew J. Costello)
   Nightkill (with Steven Spruill)
   Masque (with Matthew J. Costello)
   The Barrens & Others
   The Christmas Thingy
   Sims*
   Artifact (with Matthew J. Costello and Janet Berliner and Kevin J. Anderson)*
   THE ADVERSARY CYCLE:
   The Keep
   The Tomb
   The Touch
   Reborn
   Reprisal
   Nightworld
   As EDITOR:
   Freak Show
   Diagnosis: Terminal
   *forthcoming
   NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book."
   This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author's imagination or arc used fictitiously.
   CONSPIRACIES
   Copyright © 2000 by F. Paul Wilson
   All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
   Edited by David G. Hartwell
   A Tor Book
   Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010
   www.tor.com www.repairmanjack.com
   Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
   ISBN: 0-812-56699-8
   First edition: February 2000
   First mass market edition: October 2000
   Printed in the United States of America
   098765432
   for
   Ethan Paul Bateman (E-Man!)
   Special thanks to
   Tom Valesky (again) and
   Gerald Molnar for their marksmen's eyes for weapons errors.
   TUESDAY
   1
   Jack looked around the front room of his apartment and figured he was either going to have to move to a bigger place, or stop buying stuff. He had nowhere to put his new Daddy Warbucks lamp.
   Well, not new exactly. It had been made sometime in the 1940s, but it was in great shape. The base was a glazed plaster cast of Daddy from the waist up, his hand gripping a lapel of his tuxedo, a tiny rhinestone in place of his diamond stick pin. He was grinning, and his pupilless eyes showed not the slightest trace of concern about the lamp stem and socket shell emerging from his bald pate.
   Jack had found it in a Soho nostalgia shop, and talked the owner down to eighty-five dollars for it. He would have paid twice that. The apartment didn't need another lamp, but Jack needed this one. Warbucks was such a stand-up guy. No way Jack could pass it up. No bulb or lampshade, but that was easily remedied. Problem was, where to put it?
   He did a slow turn. His home was the third floor of a brownstone in the West Eighties, and smelled of old wood. Not surprising since the place was crammed with Victorian golden oak furniture. The walls and shelves were cluttered with memorabilia and tchotchkes from the thirties and forties. Everything in sight except for the computer monitor existed before he was born. Even the Cartoon Network—he could see the large-screen TV in the extra bedroom—was playing a toon from the thirties with a big-eyed owlet crooning how he loved "to sing-a, about the moon-a anna June-a anna spring-a ... " And here in the front room, not a single empty horizontal surface left ...
   Except for the computer monitor.
   Jack placed the Daddy Warbucks lamp on top of the monitor, which sat atop Jack's antique oak rolltop desk. The processor sat on the floor in the kneehole, and the keyboard hid under the rolltop. The monitor didn't look comfortable perched up there, but then, the computer didn't really fit anywhere in the room—a plastic iceberg adrift in a sea of wavy-grained oak.
   But you couldn't be in business these days without one. Jack didn't understand all that much about computers, but he loved the anonymity they afforded in communications.
   He hadn't checked his email since this morning, so he lit up the monitor and rolled up the tambour top to reveal his keyboard. He logged on through one of his ISPs—Jack had multiple accounts under various names with a number of Internet service providers, and maintained a Web site through one of them. Everything he'd read said that people were increasingly looking to the Internet to solve all sorts of problems, so Jack figured he might as well make himself available to folks searching there for his kind of solution.
   Half a dozen emails from the Web site waited, but only one seemed worth answering, and that barely:
   Jack—
   I need your help. It's about my wife. Please call me or email me back, but—please—get back to me.
   It was signed "Lewis Ehler" and he'd left two numbers, one in Brooklyn, the other on Long Island.
   It's about my wife ... not some guy who wanted to know if she was cheating, he hoped. Marital problems weren't in Jack's line.
   He had another job just starting up, but that promised to be mostly night work. Which meant his days would be free.
   He wrote down the numbers, then headed out to make the call.
   2
   Jack walked east toward Central Park, looking for a phone he hadn't used recently, while the little toon owl's song echoed in his head.
   I love to sing-a, about the moon-a anna June-a anna spring-a
   Spring had sprung and NYC was lurching out of hibernation. The air smelled fresh and clean, bright flowers peeked from window boxes on the upper floors of the brownstone regiments, and tiny leaf buds bedizened the branches of the widely spaced trees set in the sidewalks. The late morning sun sat high and bright, keeping Jack comfortable in a work shirt and jeans. Winter coats were gone, leaving short skirts and long legs on display again. A good day to be alive and heterosexual.
   Not that the women paid much attention to him. They barely seemed to notice the guy with the so-so build, average-length brown hair, and mild brown eyes. Which was just fine with Jack. He'd be disappointed if they did, considering the effort he put into being a walking trompe l'oeil.
   Jack cultivated anti-presence. The anonymous look took effort—not too trendy, not too retro. He kept an
 eye on what the average guy on the street was wearing. Jeans and flannel shirts never went out of style, even here on the Upper West Side; neither did sneakers and work boots—real work boots. Twill work pants were another safe bet—never stylish, but they never attracted attention either.
   He found a pay phone on Central Park West. The apartment buildings stopped dead here, as if sliced off with a knife for dozens of blocks in either direction to leave room for the park across the street. Through the still-naked trees he could see the Lake, a blue lozenge in the greening grass. No boats on it yet, but it wouldn't be long.
   He tapped in the access number on his prepaid calling card. He loved these things. As anonymous as cash and a hell of a lot lighter than the pocketful of change he used to have to carry.
   Everybody seemed so frightened of the potential threat new electronics posed to security. And maybe it was a genuine peril for citizens. But from Jack's perspective, electronics offered an anonymity bonanza. He used to keep an answering machine in an empty office on Tenth Avenue, but a few months ago he unplugged it and had all calls to that number forwarded to a voice-mail service.
   Email, voice mail, calling cards ... he could almost hear Louis Armstrong singing, "What a wonderful world."
   Jack punched in the Brooklyn number Ehler had left. He found himself talking to the Keystone Paper Cylinder Company and asked to speak to Lewis Ehler.
   "Whom shall I say is calling?" said the receptionist.
   "Just tell him it's Jack, calling about his email."
   Ehler came on right away. He spoke in a wheezy, high-pitched voice accelerating steadily in an urgent whisper.
   "Thank you so much for calling. I've been half out of my mind not knowing what to do. I mean, since Mel's been gone I've—"
   "Whoa, whoa," Jack said. "Gone? Your wife's missing?"
   "Yes! Three days now and—"
   "Wait. Stop right there. We can save me time and you a lot of breath: I don't do missing wives."
   His voice rose in pitch and volume. "But you must!"
   "That's a police thing. They've got the manpower and resources to do missing persons a lot better than I ever will."
   "No-no! She said no police! Absolutely no police."
   "She told you? When did she tell you?"
   "Just last night. I ... I heard from her last night."
   "Then she's not really missing."
   "She is. Please believe me, she is. And she told me to call you, only you. 'Repairman Jack is the only one who will understand' is what she said."
   "Yeah? How does she know about me?"
   "I don't know. I'd never heard of you until Mel told me."
   "Mel?"
   "Melanie."
   "Okay, but if Melanie can call you, why can't she tell you where she is?"
   "It's very complicated—too complicated to get into over the phone. Can't we just meet? It'll be so much easier to explain this in person."
   Jack thought about that. He stared at the hulking mass of the Museum of Natural History a few blocks away and watched a yellow caravan of school buses pull into the parking lot. This gig sounded a little wacky. Hell, it sounded way wacky. A missing wife who calls and tells her husband don't go to the police, call Repairman Jack instead. Kidnapped, maybe? But then ...
   "No ransom demand?"
   "No. I doubt whoever's behind Mel's disappearance is interested in money."
   "Everybody's interested in money."
   "Not in this case. If we could just meet ... "
   Wackier and wackier, but Jack had nothing doing the rest of the day ... and Ehler had said no cops involved——
   "Okay. Let's meet."
   Ehler's relief flooded through the receiver. "Oh, thank you, thank you—"
   "But I'm not going to Brooklyn."
   "Anywhere you say, just as long as it's soon."
   Julio's was close. Jack gave Ehler the address and told him to be there in an hour. After Ehler hung up, Jack pressed the # key and an electronic voice told him how much credit he had left on his calling card.
   God, he loved these things.
   He hung up and walked away from the park, thinking about what Ehler's wife had said.
   Repairman Jack is the only one who will understand ...
   Really.
   3
   Jack sat at his table near Julio's rear door. He was halfway through his second Rolling Rock when Lewis Ehler showed up. Jack tagged him as soon as he saw the gangly, brown-suited frame step through the door. Julio's crowd didn't wear suits, except for occasional adventuresome yupsters looking for something different, and yuppie suits were never wrinkled like this guy's.
   Julio spotted him too, and ducked out from behind the bar. Julio had a brief conversation with the guy, acted real friendly, standing close, clapping him on the back in welcome. Finally satisfied the stranger wasn't carrying, Julio pointed Jack's way.
   Jack watched Ehler stumble toward him—the darkness at the rear here took some adjusting to after stepping in from daylight—but he seemed to be having extra trouble because of a pronounced limp.
   Jack waved. "Over here."
   Ehler veered his way but remained standing when he reached the table. He looked fortyish, starvation lean, with a big jutting nose and a droopy lower lip. Close up, Jack saw that the brown suit was shiny and worn as well as wrinkled. He noticed how the sole of his right shoe was built up two inches. That explained the limp.
   "You're him?" Ehler said in that high-pitched voice from the phone. His prominent Adam's apple bounced with each word. "Repairman Jack?"
   "Just Jack'll do," Jack said, offering his hand.
   "Lew." His shake was squishy and moist. "You don't look like what I expected."
   Jack used to ask the next question, the obvious one, but had stopped long ago after hearing the same answer time after time: they always expected a glowering Charles Bronson type, someone bigger, meaner, tougher-looking than this ordinary Joe before them who could step up to the bar in front and virtually vanish into the regulars hanging there.
   Jack took the You-don't-look-like-what-I-expected remark as a compliment.
   "Want a beer?" he asked.
   Lew shook his head. "I don't drink much."
   "Coffee, then?"
   "I'm too nervous for coffee." He rubbed his palms on the front of his jacket, then pulled out a chair and folded his Ichabod Crane body into it. "Maybe decaf."
   Jack waved to Julio and mimed pouring a coffee pot.
   "I thought we'd meet in a more private place," Lew said.
   "This is private." Jack glanced at the empty booths and tables around them. The faint murmur of conversation drifted over from the bar area on the far side of the six-foot divider topped with dead plants. "Long as we don't shout."
   Julio came strutting around the partition carrying a coffee pot and a white mug. His short, forty-year-old frame was grotesquely muscled under his tight, sleeveless shirt. He was freshly shaven, his mustache trimmed to a line, drafting-pencil thin, his wavy hair slicked back. This was the closest Jack had got to him this afternoon, and he coughed as he caught a whiff of a new cologne, more cloying than usual.
   "God, Julio. What is that?"
   "Like it?" he said as he filled Lew's mug. "It's brand-new. Called Midnight."
   "Maybe that's the only time you're supposed to wear it."
   He grinned. "Naw. Chicks love it, man."
   Only if they've spent the day in a chicken coop, Jack thought but kept it to himself.
   "Say," Lew said, pointing to all the dead vegetation around the room, "did you ever think of watering your plants?"
   "Wha' for?" Julio said. "They're all dead."
   Lew's eyes widened. "Oh. Right. Of course." He looked at the mug Julio was pouring. "Is that decaf? I only drink decaf."
   "Don't serve that shit," Julio said tersely as he turned and strutted back to the bar.
   "I can see why the place is half deserted," Lew said, glancing at Julio's retreating form. "That fellow is downright rude."
   
"It doesn't come naturally to him. He's been practicing lately."
   "Yeah? Well somebody ought to see that the owner gets wise to him."
   "He is the owner."
   "Really?" Lew leaned over the table and spoke in a low voice. "Is there some religious significance to all these dead plants?"
   "Nah. It's just that Julio isn't happy with the caliber of his clientele lately."
   "Well he's not going to raise it with these dead plants."
   "No. You don't understand. He wants to lower it. The yuppies have discovered this place and they've started showing up here. He's been trying to get rid of them. This has always been a working man's bar and eatery.
   The Beamer crowd is scaring off the old regulars. Julio and his help are rude as hell to them but they just lap it up. They like being insulted. He let all the window plants die, and the yups think it's great. It's driving the poor guy nuts."
   Lew seemed to be only half listening. He stood and stared toward the grimy front window for a few seconds, then sat again.
   "Looking for someone?"
   "I think I was followed here," Lew said, looking uncomfortable. "I know that sounds crazy but—"
   "Who'd want to follow you?"
   "I don't know. It might have something to do with Melanie."
   "Your wife? Why would—?"
   "I wish I knew." Lew suddenly became fidgety. "I'm not so sure about this anymore."
   "It's okay. You can change your mind. No hard feelings." A certain small percentage of customers who got this far developed cold feet when the moment came to tell Jack exactly what they wanted him to fix for them. "But don't back out because you're being followed."
   "I'm not even sure I am." He sighed. "The thing is, I don't know why I'm here, or what I'm supposed to do. I'm so upset I can't think straight."
   "Easy, Lew," Jack said. "This is just a conversation."
   "Okay, fine. But who are you? Why did my wife say to call you and only you? I don't understand any of this."
   Jack had to feel sorry for the guy. Lewis Ehler was no doubt a one-hundred-percent solid, taxpaying citizen; he had a problem and felt he should be dealing with one of the institutions his sweat-procured taxes paid for, instead of this stranger in a bar. This wasn't the way his world was supposed to be.
   

 Crisscross
Crisscross Ground Zero
Ground Zero Short Stories
Short Stories The Select
The Select Codename
Codename Bloodline
Bloodline A Soft Barren Aftershock
A Soft Barren Aftershock The Tomb
The Tomb The Complete LaNague
The Complete LaNague The Tery
The Tery Dark City
Dark City Deep as the Marrow
Deep as the Marrow The Fifth Harmonic
The Fifth Harmonic Conspiracies
Conspiracies Fear City
Fear City Wheels Within Wheels
Wheels Within Wheels Wayward Pines
Wayward Pines The Portero Method
The Portero Method All the Rage
All the Rage Infernal
Infernal The Barrens & Others
The Barrens & Others The Keep
The Keep Quick Fixes: Tales of Repairman Jack
Quick Fixes: Tales of Repairman Jack Virgin
Virgin Hosts
Hosts Dydeetown World
Dydeetown World Midnight Mass
Midnight Mass Black Wind
Black Wind The Christmas Thingy
The Christmas Thingy The Last Rakosh
The Last Rakosh The Last Christmas: A Repairman Jack Novel
The Last Christmas: A Repairman Jack Novel SIMS
SIMS Thy Brother's Keeper
Thy Brother's Keeper Panacea
Panacea The Touch
The Touch Scenes from the Secret History
Scenes from the Secret History Scenes From the Secret History (The Secret History of the World)
Scenes From the Secret History (The Secret History of the World) Implant
Implant The Dark at the End
The Dark at the End Fatal Error
Fatal Error Wardenclyffe
Wardenclyffe Sibs
Sibs The God Gene
The God Gene The Void Protocol
The Void Protocol Artifact
Artifact The Compendium of Srem
The Compendium of Srem Legacies
Legacies Reprisal
Reprisal Jack: Secret Vengeance
Jack: Secret Vengeance Aftershock & Others: 19 Oddities
Aftershock & Others: 19 Oddities By the Sword
By the Sword Interlude at Duane's (Thriller: Stories to Keep You Up All Night)
Interlude at Duane's (Thriller: Stories to Keep You Up All Night) Fatal Error rj-13
Fatal Error rj-13 Crisscross rj-8
Crisscross rj-8 Codename: Chandler: Fix (Kindle Worlds Novella)
Codename: Chandler: Fix (Kindle Worlds Novella) Dydeetown World lf-4
Dydeetown World lf-4 Signalz
Signalz Codename_Chandler_Fix
Codename_Chandler_Fix The Dark at the End (Repairman Jack)
The Dark at the End (Repairman Jack) The Complete Adversary Cycle: The Keep, the Tomb, the Touch, Reborn, Reprisal, Nightworld (Adversary Cycle/Repairman Jack)
The Complete Adversary Cycle: The Keep, the Tomb, the Touch, Reborn, Reprisal, Nightworld (Adversary Cycle/Repairman Jack) Repairman Jack 03 - Conspiracies
Repairman Jack 03 - Conspiracies Ground Zero rj-13
Ground Zero rj-13 Repairman Jack 02 - Legacies
Repairman Jack 02 - Legacies The Dark at the End rj-15
The Dark at the End rj-15![Repairman Jack [02]-Legacies Read online](http://i1.bookreadfree.com/i/03/21/repairman_jack_02-legacies_preview.jpg) Repairman Jack [02]-Legacies
Repairman Jack [02]-Legacies Double Threat
Double Threat The Tery lf-5
The Tery lf-5 The God Gene: A Novel
The God Gene: A Novel Wayward Pines: The Widow Lindley (Kindle Worlds Novella)
Wayward Pines: The Widow Lindley (Kindle Worlds Novella) Reborn ac-4
Reborn ac-4 Reprisal ac-5
Reprisal ac-5 New Title 1
New Title 1 Healer lf-3
Healer lf-3 An Enemy of the State lf-1
An Enemy of the State lf-1 Interlude at Duane's
Interlude at Duane's By the Sword rj-12
By the Sword rj-12 Hardbingers rj-10
Hardbingers rj-10 Wheels Within Wheels lf-2
Wheels Within Wheels lf-2 Jack: Secret Circles
Jack: Secret Circles Nightworld ac-6
Nightworld ac-6 Quick Fixes - tales of Repairman Jack
Quick Fixes - tales of Repairman Jack Secret Circles yrj-2
Secret Circles yrj-2 Jack: Secret Histories
Jack: Secret Histories Haunted Air rj-6
Haunted Air rj-6 An Enemy of the State - a novel of the LaNague Federation (The LaNague Federation Series)
An Enemy of the State - a novel of the LaNague Federation (The LaNague Federation Series) Repairman Jack 05 - Hosts
Repairman Jack 05 - Hosts Cold City (Repairman Jack - the Early Years Trilogy)
Cold City (Repairman Jack - the Early Years Trilogy) The Peabody-Ozymandias Traveling Circus & Oddity Emporium
The Peabody-Ozymandias Traveling Circus & Oddity Emporium Uncommon Assassins
Uncommon Assassins Adversary Cycle 01 - The Keep
Adversary Cycle 01 - The Keep Repairman Jack 06 - The Haunted Air
Repairman Jack 06 - The Haunted Air Bloodline rj-11
Bloodline rj-11 Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set
Ultimate Supernatural Horror Box Set The Keep ac-1
The Keep ac-1 Repairman Jack 04 - All the Rage
Repairman Jack 04 - All the Rage Aftershock & Others
Aftershock & Others All the Rage rj-4
All the Rage rj-4 Nightworld (Adversary Cycle/Repairman Jack)
Nightworld (Adversary Cycle/Repairman Jack) Conspircaies rj-3
Conspircaies rj-3 Hosts rj-5
Hosts rj-5 Infernal rj-9
Infernal rj-9 The God Gene: A Novel (The ICE Sequence)
The God Gene: A Novel (The ICE Sequence) Secret Histories yrj-1
Secret Histories yrj-1