LAIRD
BARRON
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ON THE THIRD
MORNING I noticed that somebody had disabled the truck. All four tires were
flattened and the engine was smashed. Nice work. I had gone
outside the cabin to catch the sunrise and piss on some bushes. It was cold;
the air tasted like metal. Deep, dark forest at our backs with a few notches
for stars. A rutted track wound across a marshy field into more wilderness.
Silent except for the muffled bum of the diesel generator behind the wood
shed. "Well,
here we go," I said. I fired up a Lucky Strike and congratulated my
pessimistic nature. The Reds had found our happy little retreat in the woods.
Or possibly, one of my boys was a mole. That would put a pretty bow on
things. The men were
already spooked -- Davis swore he had heard chuckling and whispering behind
the steel door after curfew. He also heard one of the doctors gibbering in a
foreign tongue. Nonsense, of course. Nonetheless, the troops were edgy, and
now this. "Garland?
You there?" Hatcher called from the porch in a low voice. He made a
tall, thin silhouette. "Over
here." I waited for him to join me by the truck. Hatcher was my
immediate subordinate and the only member of the detail I'd personally worked
with. He was tough, competent, and a decade my junior -- which made him twice
as old as the other men. If somebody here was a Red I hoped to God it wasn't
him. "Guess
we're hoofing it," he commented after a quick survey of the damage. I passed him
a cigarette. We smoked in contemplative silence. Eventually I said, "Who
took last watch?" "Richards.
He didn't report any activity." "Yeah."
I stared into the forest and wondered if the enemy was lurking. What would be
their next move, and how might I counter? A chill tightened the muscles in
the small of my back, reminded me of how things had gone wrong during '53 in
the steamy hills of Cuba. It had been six years, and in this business a man
didn't necessarily improve with age. I said, "How did they find us,
Hatch?" "Strauss
may have a leak. The Reds are conducting similar programs. Information from
here would carry a hefty price tag behind the Curtain...." Suddenly this
little field trip didn't seem like a babysitting detail anymore. Project
TALLHAT was a Company job, but black ops. Dr. Herman Strauss had picked the
team in secret and briefed us at his own home. Now here we were in the wilds
of West Virginia standing watch over two of his personal staff while they
conducted unspecified research on a senile crone. Doctors Porter and Riley
called the shots. There was to be no communication with the outside world
until they had gathered sufficient data. Upon return to Langley, Strauss
would handle the debriefing. Absolutely no one else inside the Company was to
be involved. This wasn't
my kind of operation, but I had seen the paperwork and recognized Strauss's
authority. Why me? I suspected it was because Strauss had known me since the
first big War. He also knew I was past it, ready for pasture. Maybe this was
his way to make me feel important one last time. Gazing at the ruined truck
and all it portended, I started thinking maybe good old Herman had picked me
because I was expendable. I stubbed out
my cigarette and made some quick decisions. "When it gets light, we
sweep the area. You take Robey and Neil and arc south; I'll go north with Dox
and Richards. Davis will guard the cabin. We'll establish a quarter-mile
perimeter; search for tracks." Hatcher nodded.
He didn't state the obvious flaw -- what if Davis was playing for the other
team? He gestured at the forest. "How about an emergency extraction?
We're twenty miles from the nearest traveled road. We could make it in a few
hours. I saw some farms; one will have a phone --" "Hatch,
they destroyed the vehicle for a reason. Obviously they want us to walk. Who
knows what nasty surprise is waiting down that road? For now we stay here,
fortify. If worse comes to worst, we break and scatter. Maybe one of us will
make it to HQ." "How do
we handle Porter and Riley?" "This
has become a security issue. Let's see what we find; then I'll break the news
to the good doctors." My
involvement in Operation TALLHAT was innocent -- if you can ever say that
about Company business. I was lounging on an out-of-season New York beach
when the telegram arrived. Strauss sent a car from Virginia. An itinerary;
spending money. The works. I was intrigued; it had been several years since
the last time I spoke with Herman. Director Strauss
said he needed my coolness under pressure when we sat down to a four-star
dinner at his legendary farmhouse in Langley. Said he needed an older man, a
man with poise. Yeah, he poured it on all right. Oh, the best
had said it too -- Put his feet to the fife; he doesn't flinch. Garland, he's
one cool sonofabitch. Yes indeed, they had said it -- thirty years ago.
Before the horn rims got welded to my corrugated face and before the
arthritis bent my fingers. Before my left ear went dead and my teeth fell out.
Before the San Andreas Fault took root in my hands and gave them tremors. It
was difficult to maintain deadly aloofness when I had to get up and drain my
bladder every hour on the hour. Some war hero. Some Company legend. "Look,
Roger, I don't care about Cuba. It's ancient history, pal." Sitting
across the table from Strauss at his farmhouse with a couple whiskey sours in
my belly it had been too easy to believe my colossal blunders were forgiven.
That the encroaching specter of age was an illusion fabricated by jealous
detractors, of which great men have plenty. I had been a
great man, once. Veteran of not one, but two World Wars. Decorated, lauded,
feared. Strauss, earnest, blue-eyed Strauss, convinced me some greatness
lingered. He leaned close and said, "Roger, have you ever heard of
MKULTRA?" And I forgot
about Cuba. THE MEN
DRESSED in hunting jackets to ward the chill, loaded shotguns for possible
unfriendly contact, and scouted the environs until noon. Fruitless; the only
tracks belonged to deer and rabbits. Most of the leaves had fallen in carpets
of red and brown. It drizzled. Black branches dripped. The birds had nothing
to say. I observed
Dox and Richards. Dox lumbered in plodding engineer boots, broad Slavic face
blankly concentrated on the task I had given him. He was built like a
tractor; too simple to work for the Company except as an enforcer, much less
be a Russian saboteur. I liked him. Richards was blond and smooth, an Ivy
League talent with precisely enough cynicism and latent sadism to please the
forward-thinking elements who sought to reshape the Company in the wake of
President Eisenhower's imminent departure. Richards I didn't trust or like. There was a
major housecleaning in the works. Men of Richards's caliber were preparing to
sweep fossils such as myself into the dustbin of history. It was
perfectly logical after a morbid fashion. The trouble had started at the top
with good old Ike suffering a stroke. Public reassurances to the contrary,
the commander in chief was reduced to a shell of his former power. Those
closest saw the cracks in the foundation and moved to protect his already
tottering image. Company loyalists closed ranks, covering up evidence of the
President's diminished faculties, his strange preoccupation with drawing caricatures
of Dick Nixon. They stood by at his public appearances, ready to swoop in if
he did anything too embarrassing. Not a happy allocation of human resources
in the view of the younger members of the intelligence community. That kind of
duty didn't appeal to the Richardses of the world. They preferred to cut
their losses and get back to slicing throats and cracking codes. Tangible
objectives that would further the dominance of U.S. intelligence. We kept
walking and not finding anything until the cabin dwindled to a blot. The
place had been built at the turn of the century; Strauss bought it for a
song, I gathered. The isolation suited his nefarious plots. Clouds covered
the treetops, yet I recalled mention of a mountain not far off. A low, shaggy
hump called Badger Hill. There would be collapsed mines and the moldered
bones of abandoned camps, rusted hulks of machinery along the track. Dense
woods. A world of brambles and deadfalls. No one came out this way anymore.
Hadn't in years. We
rendezvoused with Hatchet's party at the cabin. They hadn't discovered any
clues either. Our clothes were soaked, our moods somber, although traces of
excitement flickered among the young Turks -- attack dogs sniffing for a
fight. None of them
had been in a war. I'd checked. College instead of Korea for the lot. Even
Dox had been spared by virtue of flat feet. They hadn't seen Soissons in
1915, Normandy in 1945, nor the jungles of Cuba in 1953. They hadn't seen the
things I had seen. Their fear was the small kind, borne of uncertainty rather
than dread. They stroked their shotguns and grinned with dumb innocence. When the rest
had been dispatched for posts around the cabin I broke for the latrine to
empty my bowels. Close race. I sweated and trembled and required some minutes
to compose myself. My knees were on fire, so I broke out a tin of bootleg
DMSO and rubbed them, tasting the garlic of it on my tongue. I wiped beads of
moisture from my glasses, swallowed a glycerin tablet, and felt as near to
one hundred percent as I would ever be. Ten minutes
later I summoned Dr. Porter for a conference on the back porch. It rained
harder, shielding our words from Nell who stood post near an oak. Porter was
lizard-bald except for a copper circlet that trailed wires into his breast
pocket. His white coat bore stains and smudges. His fingers were blue-tinged
with chalk dust. He stank of antiseptic. We were not friends. He treated the
detail as a collection of thugs best endured for the sake of his great
scientific exploration. I relayed the
situation, which did not impress him much. "This is why Strauss wanted
your services. Deal with the problem," he said. "Yes,
Doctor. I am in the process of doing that. However, I felt you might wish to
know your research will become compromised if this activity escalates. We may
need to extract.' "Whatever
you think best, Captain Garland." He smiled a dry smile. "You'll
inform me when the moment arrives?" "Certainly." "Then
I'll continue my work, if you're finished." The way he lingered on the
last syllable left no doubt that I was. I persisted,
perhaps from spite. "Makes me curious about what you fellows are up to.
How's the experiment progressing? Getting anywhere?" "Captain
Garland, you shouldn't be asking me these questions." Porter's humorless
smile was more reptilian than ever. "Probably
not. Unfortunately, since recon proved inconclusive I don't know who wrecked
our transport or what they plan next. More information regarding the project
would be helpful." "Surely
Dr. Strauss told you everything he deemed prudent." "Times
change." "TALLHAT
is classified. You're purely a security blanket. You possess no special
clearance." I sighed and
lighted a cigarette. "I know some things. MKULTRA is an umbrella term
for the Company's mind control experiments. You psych boys are playing with
all kinds of neat stuff -- LSD, hypnosis, photokinetics. Hell, we talked
about using this crap against Batista. Maybe we did." "Indeed.
Castro was amazingly effective, wasn't he?" Porter's eyes glittered.
"So what's your problem, Captain?" "The
problem is the KGB has pretty much the same programs. And better ones from
the scuttlebutt I pick up at Langley." "Oh, you
of all people should beware rumors. Loose lips had you buried in Cuba with
the rest of your operatives. Yet here you are." I understood
Porter's game. He hoped to gig me with the kind of talk most folks were
polite enough to whisper behind my back, make me lose control. I wasn't
biting. "The way I figure it, the Reds don't need TALLHAT...unless you're
cooking up something special. Something they're afraid of. Something they're
aware of, at least tangentially, but lack full intelligence. And in that
case, why pussyfoot around? They've got two convenient options-- storm in and
seize the data or wipe the place off the map." Porter just
kept smirking. "I am certain the Russians would kill to derail our
project, However, don't you think it would be more efficacious for them to
use subtlety? Implant a spy to gather pertinent details, steal documents.
Kidnap a member of the research team and interrogate him; extort information
from him with a scandal. Hiding in the woods and slicing tires seems a
foolish waste of surprise." I didn't like
hearing him echo the bad thoughts I'd had while lingering in the outhouse.
"Exactly, Doctor. The situation is even worse than I thought. We are
being stalked by an unknown quantity." "Stalked?
How melodramatic. An isolated incident doesn't prove the hypothesis. Take
more precautions if it makes you happy. And I'm confident you are quite
happy; awfully boring to be a watchdog with nothing to bark at." It was too
much. That steely portion of my liver gained an edge, demanded satisfaction.
I took off the gloves. "I want to see the woman." "Whatever
for?" Porter's complacent smirk vanished. His thin mouth drew down with
suspicion. "Because
I do." "Impossible!" "Hardly.
I command six heavily armed men. Any of them would be tickled to kick down
the door and give me a tour of your facilities." It came out much
harsher than I intended. My nerves were frayed and his superior demeanor had
touched a darker kernel of my soul. "Dr. Porter, I read your file. That
was my condition for accepting this assignment; Strauss agreed to give me
dossiers on everyone. You and Riley slipped through the cracks after Caltech.
I guess the school wasn't too pleased with some of your research or where you
dug up the financing. Then that incident with the kids off campus. The ones
who thought they were testing diet pills. You gave them, what was it? Oh yes
-- peyote! Pretty strange behavior for a pair of physicists, eh? It follows
that Unorthodox Applications of Medicine and Technology would snap you up
after the private sector turned its back. So excuse my paranoia." "Ah, you
do know a few things. But not the nature of TALLHAT? Odd." "We
shall rectify that momentarily." Porter
shrugged. "As you wish, Mr. Garland. I shall include your threats in my
report." For some
reason his acquiescence didn't really satisfy me. True, I had turned on the
charm that earned me the title "Jolly Roger," yet he had caved far
too easily. Damn it! Porter
escorted me inside. Hatcher saw the look on my face and started to rise from
his chair by the window. I shook my head and he sank, fixing Porter with a
dangerous glare. The lab was
sealed off by a thick steel door, like the kind they use on trains. Spartan,
each wail padded as if a rubber room in an asylum. It reeked of chemicals.
The windows were blocked with black plastic. Illumination seeped from a
phosphorescent bar on the table. Two cots. Shelves, cabinets, a couple of
boxy machines with needles and tickertape spools. Between these machines an
easel with indecipherable scrawls done in ink. I recognized some as calculus
symbols. To the left, a poster bed, and on the bed a thickly wrapped figure
propped by pillows. A mummy. Dr. Riley
drifted in, obstructing my view of the subject -- an aquamarine phantom, eyes
and mouth pools of shadow. As with Porter, a copper circlet winked on his
brow. "Afternoon, Captain Garland. Pull up a rock." His accent was
Midwestern nasal. He even wore cowboy boots under his grimy lab coat. "Captain
Garland wants to view the subject," Porter said. "Fair
enough!" Riley seemed pleased. He rubbed his hands, a pair of disembodied
starfish in the weirding glow. "Don't/ret, Porter. There's no harm in
satisfying the captain's curiosity." With that, the lanky man stepped
aside. Approaching
the figure on the bed, I was overcome with an abrupt sensation of vertigo. My
hackles bunched. The light played tricks upon my senses, lending a fishbowl
distortion to the old Woman's sallow visage. They had secured her in a
straitjacket; her head lolled drunkenly, dead eyes frozen, tongue drooling
from slack lips. She was shaved bald, white stubble of a Christmas goose. My belly
quaked. "Where did you find her?" I whispered, as if she might hear
me. "What's
the matter?" Dr. Riley asked. "Where did you find her,
goddamnit!" The crone's
head swiveled on that too-long neck and her milky gaze fastened upon my
voice. And she grinned, toothless. Horrible. HATCHER KEPT
some scotch in the pantry. Dr. Riley poured -- I didn't trust my own hands
yet. He lighted cigarettes. We sat at the living room table, alone in the
cabin but for Porter and Subject X behind the metal door. Porter was so
disgusted by my reaction he refused to speak with me. Hatcher had assembled
the men in the yard; he was giving some sort of pep talk. Ever the soldier. I
wished I'd had him in Cuba. It rained and
a stiff breeze rattled the eaves. "Who is
she to you.*" Riley asked. His expression was shrewd. I sucked my
cigarette to the filter in a single drag, exhaled and gulped scotch. Held out
my glass for another three fingers' worth. "You're too young to remember
the first big war." "I was a
baby." Riley handed me another cigarette without being asked. "Yeah? I
was twenty-eight when the Germans marched into France. Graduated Rogers and
Williams with full honors, was commissioned into the Army as an officer. They
stuck me right into intelligence, sent me straight to the front." I
chuckled bitterly. "This happened before Uncle Sam decided to make an
'official' presence. Know what I did? I helped organize the resistance,
translated messages French intelligence intercepted. Mostly I ran from the
advance. Spent a lot of time hiding out on farms when I was lucky, field
ditches when I wasn't. "There
was this one family, I stayed with them for nine days in June. It rained,
just like this. A large family -- six adults, ten or eleven kids. I bunked in
the wine cellar and it flooded. You'd see these huge bloody rats paddling if
you clicked the torch. Long nine days." If I closed my eyes I knew I
would be there again in the dark, among the chittering rats. Listening for
armor on the muddy road, the tramp of boots. "So what
happened?" Riley watched me. He probably guessed where this was headed. "The
family matriarch lived in a room with her son and daughter-in-law. The old
dame was blind and deaf; she'd lost her wits. They bandaged her hands so she couldn't
scratch herself. She sucked broth out of this gnawed wooden bowl they kept
just for her. Jesus Mary, I still hear her slobbering over that bowl. She
used to lick her bowl and stare at me with those dead eyes." "Subject
X bears no relation to her, I assure you." "I don't
suppose she does. I looked at her more closely and saw I was mistaken. But
for those few seconds. ... Riley, something's going on. Something much bigger
than Strauss indicated. Level with me. What are you people searching
for?" "Captain,
you realize my position. I've been sworn to silence. Strauss will cut off my
balls if I talk to you about TALLHAT. Or we could all simply disappear." "It's
that important." "It
is." Riley's face became gentle. "I'm sorry. Dr. Strauss promised
us ten days. One week from tomorrow we pack up our equipment and head back to
civilization. Surely we can hold out." The doctor
reached across to refill my glass; I clamped his wrist. They said I was past
it, but he couldn't break my grip. I said, "AU right, boy. We'll play it
your way for a while. If the shit gets any thicker, though, I'm pulling the
plug on this operation. You got me, son?" He didn't say
anything. Then he jerked free and disappeared behind the metal door. He
returned with a plain brown folder, threw it on the table. His smile was
almost triumphant. "Read these. It won't tell you everything. Still,
it's plenty to chew on. Don't show Porter, okay? He walked away without
meeting my eye. Dull wet
afternoon wore into dirty evening. We got a pleasant fire going in the
potbellied stove and dried our clothes. Roby had been a short order cook in
college, so he fried hamburgers for dinner. After, Hatcher and the boys
started a poker game and listened to the radio. The weather forecast called
for more of the same, if not worse. Perfect
conditions for an attack. I lay on my bunk-reading Riley's file. I got a
doozy of a migraine. Eventually I gave up and filled in my evening log entry.
The gears were turning. I wondered
about those copper circlets the doctors wore. Fifty-plus years of active
service and I'd never seen anything quite like them. They reminded me of
rumors surrounding the German experiments in Auschwitz. Mengele had been fond
of bizarre contraptions. Maybe we'd read his mail and adopted some ideas. Who is
Subject X? I wrote this in the margin of my log. I thought back on what
scraps Strauss fed me. I hadn't asked enough questions, that was for damned
sure. You didn't quiz a man like Strauss. He was one of the Grand Old Men of
the Company. He got what he wanted, when he wanted it. He'd been everywhere,
had something on everyone. When he snapped his fingers, things happened.
People that crossed him became scarce. Strauss was
my last supporter. Of course I let him lead me by the nose. For me, the gold
watch was a death certificate. Looking like a meatier brother of Herr
Mengele, Strauss had confided the precise amount to hook me. "Ten days
in the country. I've set up shop at my cabin near Badger Hill. A couple of my
best men are on to some promising research. Important research -" "Are we
talking about psychotropics? I've seen what can happen. I won't be around
that again." "No, no.
We've moved past that. This is different. They will be monitoring a subject
for naturally occurring brain activity. Abnormal activity, yes, but not
induced by us." "These
doctors of yours, they're just recording results?" "Exactly." "Why all
the trouble, Herman? You've got the facilities right here. Why send us to a
shack in the middle of Timbuktu?" "Ike is
on his way out the door. Best friend a covert ops man ever had, too. The
Powers Soon to Be will put an end to MKULTRA. Christ, the office is shredding
documents around the clock. I've been given word to suspend all operations by
the end of next month. Next month!" "Nobody
else knows about TALLHAT?" "And
nobody can -- not unless we make a breakthrough. I wish I could come along,
conduct the tests myself -- " "Not
smart. People would talk if you dropped off the radar. What does this woman
do that's so bloody important?" "She's a
remote viewer. A clairvoyant. She draws pictures, the researchers
extrapolate." "Whatever
you're looking for --" "It's
momentous. So you see, Roger] I need you. I don't trust anyone else." "Who is
the subject? "Her
name is Virginia," I rolled over and regarded the metal door. She was in
there, staring holes through steel. "Hey,
Cap! You want in? I'm getting my ass kicked over here!" Hatcher puffed
on a Havana cigar and shook his head while Davis raked in another pot. There
followed a chorus of crude imprecations for me to climb down and take my
medicine. I feigned
good humor. "Not tonight, fellows. I didn't get my nap. You know how it
is with us old folks." They laughed.
I shivered until sleep came. My dreams were bad. I spent most
of the fourth day perusing Riley's file. It made things about as clear as
mud. All in all a cryptic collection of papers -- just what I needed right
then; more spooky errata. Numerous
mimeographed letters and library documents comprised the file. The bulk of
them were memos from Strauss to Porter. Additionally, some detailed medical
examinations of Subject X. I didn't follow the jargon except to note that the
terms "unclassified" and "of unknown origin" reappeared
often. They made interesting copy, although they explained nothing to my
layman's eyes. Likewise the
library papers seemed arcane. One such entry from A Colonial History of
Carolina and Her Settlements went thusly: The Lost
Roanoke Colony vanished from the Raleigh Township on Roanoke Island between
1588 and 1589. Governor White returned from England after considerable delays
to find the town abandoned. Except for untended cookfires that burned down a
couple houses, there was no evidence of struggle, though Spaniards and
natives had subsequently plundered the settlement. No bodies or bones were
discovered. The sole clue as to the colonists' fate lay in a strange sequence
of letters carved into a palisade -- Croatoan. The word CRO had been
similarly carved into a nearby tree. White surmised this indicated a flight
to the Croatoan Island, called Hatteras by natives. Hurricanes prevented a
search until the next colonization attempt two years later. Subsequent
investigation yielded no answers, although scholars suggest local tribes
assimilated the English settlers. No physical evidence exists to support this
theory. It remains a mystery of some magnitude.... Tons more
like that. It begged the question of why Strauss, brilliant, cruel-minded
Strauss, would waste a molecular biologist, a physicist, a bona fide psychic,
and significant monetary resources on moldy folklore. I hadn't a
notion and this worried me mightily. That night I
dreamt of mayhem. First I was at the gray farmhouse in Soissons, eating
dinner with a nervous family. My French was inadequate. Fortunately one of
the women knew English and we were able to converse. A loud slurping began to
drown out conversation about German spies. At the head of the table sat
Virginia sipping horn a broken skull. She winked. A baby cried. Then it was
Cuba and the debacle of advising Castro's guerillas for an important raid. My
intelligence network had failed to account for a piece of government armor.
The guerillas were shelled to bits by Batista's garrison and young Castro
barely escaped with his life. Five of my finest men were ground up in the
general slaughter. Two were captured and tortured. They died without talking.
Lucky for me. I heard them
screaming inside a small cabin in the forest, but I couldn't find the door.
Someone had written CROATOAN on the wall. I bumped into
Hatcher, hanging upside down from a tree branch. He wore an I LIKE IKE
button. "Help me, Cap," he said. A baby
squalled. Virginia sat in a rocking chair on the porch, soothing the infant. The
crane's eyes were holes in dough. She drew a nail across her throat. I sat up in
bed, throttling a shriek. I hadn't uttered a cry since being shot in World
War I. It was pitchy in the cabin. People were fumbling around in the dark. Hatcher
shined a flashlight my direction. "The generator's tits up."
Nearby, the doctors were already bitching and cursing their misfortune. We never did
find out if it was sabotaged or not. The fifth day
was uneventful. On the sixth
morning my unhappy world raveled. Things were
hopping right out of the gate. Dr. Riley joined Hatcher and me for breakfast.
A powerful stench accompanied him. His expression was unbalanced, his angular
face white and shiny. He grabbed a plate of cold pancakes, began wolfing
them. Lanky hair fell into his eyes. He grunted like a pig. Hatcher eased
his own chair back. I spoke softly to Riley, "Hey now, Doc. Roby can
whip up more. No rush." Riley looked
at me sidelong. He croaked, "She made us take them off." I opened my
mouth. His circlet was gone. A pale stripe of untanned flesh. "Riley,
what are you talking about?" Even as I spoke, Hatcher stood quietly,
drew his pistol, and glided for the lab. "Stupid
old bastards." Riley gobbled pancakes, chunks dropping from his lips. He
giggled until tears squirted, rubbed the dimple in his forehead. "Those
were shields, Pops. They produced a frequency that kept her from...doing
things to us," He stopped eating again, cast sharp glances around the
room. "Where are your little soldiers?" "On
patrol." "Ha, ha.
Better call them back, Pops." "Why do
you say that?" "You'd
just better." Hatcher
returned, grim. "Porter has taken Subject X." I put on my
glasses. I drew my revolver. "Dr. Riley, Mr. Hatcher is going to secure
you. It's for your own safety. I must warn you, give him any static and I'll
burn you down." "That's
right, Jolly Roger! You're an ace at blowing people away! What's the number
up to, Captain? Since the first Big One? And we're counting children,
okay?" Riley barked like a lunatic coyote until Hatcher cracked him on
the temple with the butt of his gun. The doctor flopped, twitching. I uncapped my
glycerin and ate two. Hatcher was
all business. He talked in his clipped manner while he handcuffed Riley to a
center beam post. "Looks like he broke out through the window. No signs
of struggle." "Documents?" "Seems
like everything's intact. Porter's clothes are on his cot. Found her
straitjacket too." Porter left
his clothes? I liked this less and less. Rain
splattered the dark windows. "Let's gather everybody. Assemble a hunting
party." I foresaw a disaster; it would be difficult to follow tracks in
the storm. Porter might have allies. Best case scenario had him and the
subject long gone, swooped up by welcoming Commie arms and out of my sorry
life forever. Instinct whispered that I was whistling Dixie if I fell for
that scenario. Now you're screwed, blued, and tattooed, chum! chortled my
inner voice. Hatcher
grasped my shoulder. "Cap, you call it, we haul it. I can tell you, the
boys are aching for a scrap. It won't hurt anybody's feelings to hunt the
traitor to ground." "Agreed.
We'll split into two-man teams, comb the area. Take Porter alive if possible.
I want to know who he's playing for." "Sounds
good. Someone has to cover the cabin." He meant I
should be the one to stay hack. They had to move fast. I was the old man, the
weak link; I'd slow everybody down, maybe get a team member killed. I mustered
what grace I possessed. "I'll do it. Come on; we better get
moving." We called the men together and laid it on the table. Everybody
appeared shocked that Porter had been able to pull off such a brazen escape. I drew a
quick plan and sent them trotting into the wind-blasted dawn. Hatcher wasn't
eager to leave me alone, hut there weren't sufficient bodies to spare. He
promised to report back inside of three hours one way or the other. And they were
gone. I locked the
doors, pulled the shutters, peeking through the slats as it lightened into
morning. Riley began
laughing again. Deeper this time, from his skinny chest. The rank odor oozing
from him would have gagged a goat. "How about a cigarette, Cap?"
His mouth squirmed. His face had slipped from white to gray. He appeared to
have been bled. The symptoms were routine. "They'll
find your comrade," I said. A cigarette sounded like a fine idea, so I
lighted one for myself and smoked it. I kept an eye on him and one on the
yard. "Yeah, they'll nail him sooner or later. And when they do. ...
"I let it dangle. "God,
Cap! The news is true. You are so washed up! They say you were sharp back in
the day. Strauss didn't even break a sweat, keeping you in the dark, did he?
Think about it -- why do you suppose I gave you the files, huh? Because it
didn't matter one tin shit. He told me to give you anything you asked for.
Said it would make things more interesting." "Tell me
the news, Riley." "Can't
you guess the joke? Our sweet Virginia ain't what she seems, no sir." "What is
she, then?" "She's a
weapon, Cap. A nasty, nasty weapon. Strauss is ready to bet the farm this
little filly can win the Cold War for Team U.S.A. But first we had to test
her, see." He banged his greasy head against the post and laughed
wildly. "Our hats were supposed to protect us from getting
brain-buggered. Strauss went through hell -- and a heap of volunteers -- to
configure them properly. They should've worked...I don't know why they
stopped functioning correctly. Bum luck. Doesn't matter." "Where
did Porter take her?" "Porter
didn't take Virginia. She took him. She'll be back for you." "Is
Subject X really a clairvoyant? My lips were dry. Too many blocks were
clicking into place at once. "She's
clairvoyant. She's a lot of things. But Strauss tricked you -- we aren't here
to test her ability to locate needles in haystacks. You'd die puking if you
saw. ..." "Is
there anyone else? Does Porter have allies waiting?" "Porter?
Porter's meat. It's her you better worry about." "Fine.
Does she have allies? "No. She
doesn't need help." Riley drifted. "Should've seen the faces on
those poor people. Strauss keeps some photographs in a safe. Big stack. Big.
It took so long to get the hats right. He hired some hardcases to clean up
the mess. Jesus, Cap. I never would've believed there were worse characters
than you." "Strauss
is careful," I said. "It must have taken years," "About
fifteen or so. Even the hardcases could only deal with so many corpses. And
the farm; well, it's rather high profile. These three Company guys handled
disposals. Three that I met, anyway. These fellows started getting nervous,
started ac ting hinky. Strauss made her get rid of them. This was no piece of
cake. Those sonsofbitches wanted to live, let me tell you." He grew
quiet and swallowed. "She managed, but it was awful, and Strauss decided
she required field testing. She required more 'live' targets, is how he put
it. Porter and me knew he meant Company men. Black ops guys nobody would
miss. Men who were trained like the Reds and the Jetties are trained. Real
killers." "Men
like me and my team," I said. "Gold
star!" He cackled, drumming the heels of his Stetsons against the
planks. His hilarity coarsened into shrieks. Muscles stood in knots on his
arms and neck. "Oh God! She rode us all night -- oh Christ!" He
became unintelligible. The post creaked with the strain of his thrashing. I found the
experience completely unnerving. Better to stare through the watery pane
where trees took shape as light fell upon their shoulders. My bladder hurt;
too fearful to step outside, I found a coffee can and relieved myself, My
hands shook and I spilled a bit. The man's
spasms peaked and he calmed by degrees. I waited until he seemed lucid, said,
"Let me help you, Riley. Tell me what Porter -- what she -- did. Are you
poisoned?" There was a bad thought. Say Porter had slipped a touch of
the pox into our water supply...I ceased that line of conjecture. Pronto. "She
rode us, Cap. Aren't you listening to ME?" He screeched the last,
frothing. "I want to die now." His chin drooped and he mumbled
incoherently. I let him be.
How now, brown cow? I had been so content sitting on that Coney Island beach
watching seagulls rip at detritus and waiting for time to expire. The whole
situation had taken on an element of black comedy. Betrayed by that devil
Strauss? Sure, he was Machiavelli with a hard-on. I'd seen him put the screws
to better men than me. I'd helped him do the deed. Yeah, I was a tube, no
doubt. Problem was, I still had not the first idea what had been done to us
exactly. Riley was terrified of Virginia. Fair enough, she scared me too. I
believed him when he said she could do things -- she was possibly a savant,
like the idiot math geniuses we locked in labs and sweated atom-smashing
secrets from. The way her face had changed when I first saw her convinced me
of this. She's a
weapon, a nasty, nasty weapon. I didn't know what that meant. I didn't care
much, either. Something bad had happened to Riley. Whether Virginia had done
it, whether Porter had done it, or if the goddamned KGB was cooking his brain
with EM pulses, we were in the soup. How to escape the pot was my new
priority. I settled in
with my shotgun to wait. And plan. Nobody
returned from the morning expedition. Around 1700
hours I decided that I was screwed. The operation was compromised, its
principal subject missing. The detail assigned to guard the principal was
also missing and likely dead or captured. What to do? I
did what we intelligence professionals always did at moments like this. I
started a fire in the stove and began burning documents. In forty-five
minutes all paper records of Operation TALLHAT were coals. This included my
personal log. Dr. Riley observed this without comment. He lapsed into
semi-consciousness before I finished. Unfortunately
I decided to check him for wounds. Don't know
what possessed me. I was sort of like a kid poking a dead animal with a
stick. I was compelled. Cautiously I lifted his shirt and found three holes
in his back -- one in the nape of his neck, two at the base of his spine.
Each was the diameter of a walnut and oozed dark blood. They stank of rotten
flesh, of gangrene. She rode us
all night, Cap! Thank God for
decades of military discipline -- the machinery took over. If a soldier could
regard the charred corpses of infant flame-thrower victims and maintain his
sanity, a soldier could stomach a few lousy holes in a man's spine. I
detached myself from this gruesome spectacle and the realization that this
was the single most monumental balls-up of my career. What a way to go out! I determined
to make a break for the main road. A twenty-mile hike; more, since I dared
not use the main track, but certainly within my range. At that point, I was
certain I could sprint the distance if necessary. Yeah, best idea I'd had so
far. "Cap,
Help me." Hatcher's voice muffled by rain against the roof. I limped to
the window. The light had deteriorated. I made him out, standing a few yards
away between some trees. His arms were spread as if in greeting -- then I saw
the rope. "Cap!
Help me!" His face was alabaster, glowing in the dusk. I began a
shout, but was interrupted by an ominous thump of displaced weight behind me.
My heart sank. "Yes,
Cap. Help him," Virginia crooned. I turned and
beheld her. Her naked skull scraped the ceiling. A wizened child, grinning
and drooling. She towered because she sat upon Dox's broad back, her yellow
nails digging at his ears. His expression was flaccid as he bore down on me. The shotgun
jumped in my hands and made its terrible racket. Then Dox's fingers closed
over my throat and night fell. I DID NOT
DREAM of Cuba or the failed attack on Batista's garrison. Nor did I dream of
walking through the black winter of Dresden surrounded by swirling flakes of
ash. I didn't dream of Soissons with its muddy ditches and rats. I dreamt of
people marching single file across a field. Some dressed quaintly; others had
forgotten their shoes. Many had forgotten to dress at all. Their faces were
blank as snow. They stumbled. At least a hundred men, women and children.
Marching without speaking. A great hole opened in the ground before them. It
stank of carrion. One by one the people came to this hole, swayed, and
toppled into the cavity. Nobody screamed. I woke to see
the cabin wall flickering in lamplight. Blurry, for my glasses were lost. Something
was wrong with my legs; they were paralyzed. I suspected my back was broken.
At least there was no pain. The numbness
seemed to encompass my senses as well -- the fear was still present, but
submerged and muzzled. Glacial calm stole over me. "Dr. Riley
was misled. Herman never intended this solely as a test." Virginia's
voice quavered from somewhere close behind my shoulder. Her shadow
loomed on the wall. A wobbly silhouette that flowed unwholesomely.
Floorboards squeaked as she shifted. The thought of rolling over brought
sweat to my cheeks, so I lay there and watched her shadow in morbid
fascination. "It was
also an offering. Mother is pleased. He will be rewarded with a pretty." "My
men," I said. It was difficult to talk, my throat was rusty and bruised. "With
Mother. Except the brute. You killed him. Mother won't take meat unless it's
alive. Shame on you, Roger." She chuckled evilly. The sound withdrew
slightly, and her shadow shrank. "Oh, your back isn't broken. You'll
feel your legs presently. I didn't want you running off before we had a
chance to talk." I envisioned
a line of men, Hatcher in the lead, marching through the woods and up a
mountain. It rained heavily and they staggered in the mud. No one said
anything. Automatons winding down. Ahead yawned a gap in a rocky slope. A
dank cave mouth. One by one they went swallowed. ... There came a
new sound that disrupted my unpleasant daydream -- sobbing. It was Riley;
smothered as by a gag. I could tell from its frantic nature that Virginia
crouched near him. She said to me, "I came back for you, Roger. As for
this one, I thought he had provided to his limit...yet he squirms with vigor.
Ah, the resilience of life!" "Who are
you?" I asked as several portions of her shadow elongated from the central
axis, dipped as questing tendrils. Then, a dim, wet susurration. I thought of
pitcher plants grown monstrous and shut my eyes tight. Riley's
noises became shrill. "Don't
be afraid, Roger," Virginia rasped, a bit short of breath. "Mother
wants to meet you. Such a vital existence you have pursued! Not often does
She entertain provender as seasoned as yourself. If you're lucky, the others
will have sated her. She will birth you as a new man. A man in Her image.
You'll get old, yes. Being old is a wonderful thing, though. The older you
become, the more things you taste. The more you taste, the more pleasure you
experience. There is so much pleasure to be had." "Bullshit!
If it were such a keen deal, Herman would be cashing in! Not me!" "Well,
Herman is overly cautious. He has reservations about the process. I'll go
back and work on him some more." "Who are
you? Who is your mother?" I said it too loudly, hoping to obscure the
commotion Riley was making. The squelching. I babbled, "How did
Strauss find you? Jesus!" "You
read the files -- I asked the doctors. If you read the files you know where I
was born and who I am. You know who Mother is -- a colonist wrote Her name on
the palisade, didn't he? A name given by white explorers to certain natives
who worshipped Her. Idiots! The English are possibly the stupidest people
that ever lived." She tittered. "I was the first Christian birth in
the New World. I was special. The rest were meat. Poor mama, poor daddy. Poor
everyone else. Mother is quite simple, actually. She has basic needs...She
birthed me anew, made me better than crude flesh, and now I help her conduct
the grand old game. She sent me to find Herman. Herman helps her. I think you
could help her too." "Where
is your mother? Is she here? "Near.
She moves around. We lived on the water for a while. The mountain is nicer,
the shafts go so deep. She hates the light. All of Her kind are like that.
The miners used to come and She talked with them. No more miners." I wanted to
say something anything to block Riley's clotted screams. Shortly, his noises
ceased. Tears seeped from my clenched eyelids. "D-did the copper
circlets ever really work? Or was that part of the joke?" I didn't care
about the answer. Virginia was
delighted. "Excellent! Well, they did. That's why I arranged to meet
Strauss, to attach myself. He is a clever one! His little devices worked to
interfere until we got here, so close to Mother's influence. I am merely a
conduit of Her majestic power. She is unimaginable!" "You
mentioned a game...." Virginia
said, "Do you suppose men invented chess? I promise you, there are
contests far livelier. I have been to the universities of the world,
watching. You have visited the battlefields of the world, watching. Don't you
think the time is coming?" "For what?" "When
mankind will manage to blacken the sky with bombs and cool the Earth so that
Mother and Her brothers, Her sisters, and children may emerge once more! Is
there any other purpose? Oh, what splendid revelries there shall be on that
day!" What could I
answer with? Virginia
didn't mind. She said, "The dinosaurs couldn't do it in a hundred
million years. Nor the sharks in their oceans given ten times that. The
monkeys showed promise, but never realized their potential. Humans are the
best pawns so far -- the ones with a passion for fire and mystery. With
subtle guidance they -- you -- can return this world to the paradise it was
when the ice was thick and the sun dim. We need men like Adolph, and Herman,
and their sweet sensibilities. Men who would bring the winter darkness so
they might caper around bonfires. Men like you, dear Roger. Men like
you." Virginia ended on a cackle. Hiroshima
bloomed upon my mind's canvas and I nearly cried aloud. And Auschwitz, and
Verdun, and all the rest. Yes, the day was coming. "You've got the wrong
man," I said in my bravest tone. "You don't know the first thing.
I'm a bloody patriot." "Mother
appreciates that, dear Roger. Be good and don't move. I'll return in a
moment. Must fetch you a coat. It's raining." Virginia's shadow slipped
into the lab. There followed the clatter of upturned objects and breaking
glass. Her brothers,
Her sisters, and children. Pawns. Provender. My gorge tasted bitter. Herman
helping creatures such as this bring about hell on Earth. For what? Power?
The promise of immortality? Virginia's blasphemous longevity should've cured
him of that desire. Oh, Herman,
you foo1! On its heels arrived the notion that perhaps I would change my mind
alter a conversation with Mother. That one day soon I might sit across the
table from Strauss and break bread in celebration of a new dawn. I wept as I
pulled my buck knife free, snicked the catch. Would that I possessed the
courage to slit my own wrists! I attempted to do just that, but lacked the
conviction to carry through. Seventy years of self-aggrandizement had robbed
me of any will to self-destruction. So, I began
to carve a message into the planks instead. A warning. Although what could
one say about events this bizarre? This hideous? I shook with crazed laughter
and nearly broke the blade with my furious hacking. I got as far
as CRO before Virginia came and rode me into the woods to meet her mother. |