This book is for Eva C. Whitley, so loving
a completist that she not only has all my writings, but she married me, too.
A WAR OF SHADOWS
An Ace Science Fiction Book / published by arrangement
with
Baronet Publishing Company
PRINTING HISTORY
Ace edition / 1979
Second printing / November 1984
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1979 by Jack L. Chalker
Copyright © 1979 by The Conde Nast Publications Inc.
Cover art by Royo
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part,
by mimeograph or any other means, without permission.
For information address: Baronet Publishing Company,
509 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022.
ISBN: 0-441-87196-8
Ace Science Fiction Books are published by The Berkley
Publishing Group,
200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ONE
The shadow of death passed
through Cornwall, Nebraska, but it was such a nice day that nobody noticed.
The sign off Interstate 80
simply read "Cornwall, next left," and left it at that. If you took
it you were immediately taken onto a smaller and rougher road that looked as if
it had last been maintained in the days of the Coolidge administration.
Avoiding the potholes and hoping that your own vehicle wasn't too wide to pass
the one coming toward you, you finally passed a small steak house and bar and
were told by a smaller sign that you were in Cornwall, Nebraska, Town of the
Pioneers, population 1160, together with the news that not only did they have
Lions and Rotary, but when they met as well.
The town itself was little
more than a main street composed of a few shops and stores, an old church, the
inevitable prairie museum, and a motel which had never seen better days, as
much maintained by pride as by business.
There wasn't very much
business in Cornwall; like thousands of others throughout the great plains
states the town existed as a center for the farmers to get supplies and feed,
and to order whatever else they needed from the local Montgomery Ward's or Sears
catalog store.
It was stifling hot on this
mid-July afternoon. The ancestors of these people had settled in inhospitable
Nebraska because they had lost hope of Oregon; trapped with all their worldly
possessions, they had made the land here work—but they had never tamed it.
Three blocks down a side
street, a woman gave a terrified shriek and ran from her front door out onto
the sidewalk, down toward the stores as fast as she could. Rounding the corner,
she ran into the small five-and-ten and screamed at a man checking stock on one
of the shelves.
"Harry! Come quick! There's somethin' wrong
with the baby!" She was almost hysterical.
He ran to her quickly,
concern on his face. "Just hold on and calm down!" he said.
"What's the matter?"
"It's Jennie!" she
gasped, out of breath. "She just lies there! Won't move, won't stir,
nothin'!"
He thought frantically.
"All right, now, you get Jeb Ferman—he's got some lifesavin' trainin'. Did
you call the doctor?"
She nodded. "But he'll
be fifteen, twenty minutes coming from Snyder! Harry—please come!"
He kissed her, told her to
get Ferman and join him at the house. Jeb had once been a medic in the Army,
and was head of the local volunteer fire department.
In a few minutes, they were
all at the house.
It wasn't that the child was
quiet; in many circumstances parents would consider that a blessing. Nor was
she asleep—her eyes were open, and seemed to follow Jeb Ferman's finger.
She just didn't move
otherwise. No twitching, no turning, not even of the head. Nothing. It was as
if the tiny girl, no more than ten weeks old, was totally paralyzed.
Jeb shook his head in
confusion. "I just don't understand this at all," he muttered.
By the time the doctor
arrived from two towns over, Jennie was no better, and her eyes seemed glazed.
While they all clustered
around as the man checked everything he could, the concerned mother suddenly
felt dizzy and swooned almost into her husband's arms. They got her onto the
sofa.
"It's just been too much
for me today," she said weakly. "I'll be all right in a minute. I've
just got this damned dizziness." Her head went back against a small
embroidered pillow. "God! My head is killing me!"
The doctor was concerned.
"I'll give her a mild sedative," he told her husband. "As for
Jennie—well, I think I'd better get her into a hospital as quickly as possible.
It's probably nothing, but at this age almost anything could happen. I'd rather
take no chances."
Harry, feeling frantic and
helpless now with two sick family members on his hands, could only nod. He was
beginning to feel pretty rotten himself.
It would take a good forty
minutes to get an ambulance, and the patient was very small, so the doctor
opted for a police car. He and the father got in the back, carefully cradling
the young and still motionless infant, and the car roared off, a deputy at the
wheel, siren blaring and lights flashing.
Not far out of town the car
started weaving a little, and the deputy cursed himself. "Sorry,
folks,"—he yelled back apologetically. "I don't know what happened.
Just felt sorta dizzy-like."
He got them to the hospital,
pulling up to the emergency entrance with an abandon reserved for police, and
stepped out.
And fell over onto the
concrete.
The doctor jumped out to
examine him, and a curious intern, seeing the collapse, rushed to help.
"Hey! Harry! Get Jennie
inside!" the doctor snapped. "I got to take care of Eddie,
here!"
The intern took immediate
charge, and the two men turned the deputy over and looked at him. There were
few scrapes and bruises from the fall, and he was breathing hard and sweating
profusely.
"I'll get a
stretcher," the intern said. He turned and looked back at the police car,
seeing Harry still sitting in it, holding the baby.
"Harry!" he yelled.
"I told you to get Jennie inside!"
There was no reply, no sign
that he had been heard at all. The doctor jumped up swiftly and leaned back
into the car.
Harry sat there stiff as a
board, only his panicked eyes betraying the fact that he was alive.
The doctor ran inside the
emergency room entrance.
"We got us some kind of
nasty disease!" he snapped. "Be careful! Isolation for all of them,
full quarantine for the staff. Admit me, too—I'll assist from inside, since
I've been in contact with them. And get another ambulance over to Cornwall fast!
I think we got a young woman there with the same thing!"
Tom Scott and Gordon Martin
had driven ambulances over half the roads of Nebraska in the six years since
they'd started, and were hardened, prepared for almost anything—but never for
driving into Cornwall that late July afternoon.
There were bodies all over. A
couple of cars had crashed, but that was only part of it. People lay all over
the place, in odd positions. Inside the cafe, hamburgers were frying to a crisp
while customers sat motionless in the booths; the cook, fallen onto the grill
still clutching a spatula, was frying too. Down at the service station a stream
of gasoline trickled into the street as an attendant, leaning against a car as
unmoving as the driver behind the wheel, continued to pump gas into a tank that
had obviously been full a long time.
"Jesus God!" Scott
reached for the radio. "This is Unit Six to dispatch," he said,
trying to sound calm and businesslike.
"Dispatch, go ahead
Six." A woman's cool, professional tones came back at him.
"We—I—I don't know how
to tell you. Get everybody you can over to Cornwall, full protective gear,
epidemic precautions. Everybody in this whole damned town's paralyzed or
dead!"
"Say again?" The
tone was not disbelieving; it was the sound of someone who was sure she'd misunderstood.
"I said the whole town's
frozen stiff, damn it!" he almost screamed, feeling the fear rise within
him. "We got some kind of disease or poison gas or something here—and I'm
right in the middle of it!"
Within minutes four doctors
were airlifted to Cornwall by State Police helicopters; troopers blocked the
entrances and exits to the town except for emergency vehicles. It was a totally
unprecedented thing, and there were no contingency plans for it, but they
acted swiftly and effectively, as competent professionals. Nearby National
Guard vehicles were pressed into service as well, and a frantic hospital tried
to figure out where and how to deal with the huge number of patients. It was a
150-bed hospital; they already had forty-six patients. Appeals went out to
hospitals and doctors as far away as Lincoln, and the CAP was asked to provide
additional airlift capability.
The state Health Department
was notified almost immediately. Again, there was initial shock and disbelief,
but they moved. The Governor mobilized appropriate Guard trucks and
facilities, not just to aid in handling the patients but also to cordon off the
entire area around the town.
Less than fifteen minutes
after the network newsmen had it, a report went in to the National Disease
Control Center in Fairfax County, Virginia, just outside Washington. Field
representatives were dispatched from Omaha and the University of Nebraska
within the hour.
In a small but comfortable
apartment in the city of Fairfax, a phone rang.
Dr. Sandra O'Connell had just
walked in and hadn't even had time to take off her shoes when the ringing
began. She picked up the phone.
"Sandra O'Connell,"
she said into it.
"Dr. O'Connell? This is
Mack Rotovich. We got another one, Red Code, same pattern."
Oh, my God! she said to herself. "Where?"
"Small town in western Nebraska, Cornwall I think it is."
"Symptoms?"
"Catatonia, looks
like," Rotovich informed her. "'Things are still more than a little
sketchy. It just broke a few hours ago."
She dreaded the next question
the most. "How many?" she asked.
"Six hundred forty or so
to this point," Rotovich told her. "Maybe more now. Hard to say. Got
a few elsewhere, seemed to hit about the same time, and there's a lot of people
out in the fields yet. We're sending the Guard in on a roundup."
She nodded to herself.
"Have you sent the Action Team in?"
"Of course. That's the
first thing I did. Blood and tissue samples should be coming within the next
two, three hours. Want to be down here when they come in?"
She was tired; bone-weary,
her father used to call it. It had been a long day and a long week and she
needed sleep so bad she could taste it.
"I'll be down in an hour,"
she said resignedly and hung up the phone. She stood there for half a minute,
trying to collect herself, then picked the phone up again. Carefully, she
punched out a full twenty-two digits on the pushbuttons, including the * and #
twice. There was an almost unbelievably long series of clicks and relays, then
an electronic buzz which was immediately answered.
"This is Dr. O'Connell,
NDCC," she said into the phone. "We have another Red Town. An Action
Team is en route. Please notify the President."
TWO
Mary Eastwicke had thought
that being press officer for the National Disease Control Center would be a
fairly nice, easy job. Nobody was very interested in NDCC, most of the time,
except for an occasional science reporter doing a Sunday feature, and the pay
was top bracket for civil service. But now, as the trim, tiny businesslike
woman walked into the small briefing room bulging with reporters, IN lights and
cameras, and into the heat generated by it all, she wondered why she hadn't
quit long ago. With the air of someone about to enter a bullring for the first
time, she stepped up to the cluster of micro-phones.
"First, I'll read a
complete statement for you," she said in a. smooth, accentless
soprano. "After, I will take your questions." She paused a moment, apparently
arranging her papers but actually giving them time to get ready for the
official stuff that would grace the news within the hour.
"At approximately 3:10
this afternoon, Eastern Daylight Time, the town of Cornwall, Nebraska, first
began showing symptoms of an as-yet unknown agent, said agent causing most of.
the town to come down with varying degrees of paralysis. The symptoms showed
first in the young, then quickly spread to upper age groups. We have been as
yet unable to fully question any victims, but there appears from hospital and
doctor records of the past few weeks to have been no forewarning of any sort,
although the malady struck every victim within a period of under three
hours." She paused to let the print journalists catch up and check their
little shoulder recorders, then continued.
"So far there are
fourteen confirmed fatalities—seven infants, two persons in vehicles which
crashed, and the others elderly. Another forty-six are considered in critical
condition. Federal, state, and local authorities are currently on the scene,
and NDCC is at this moment running tests on samples from several victims, as
well as two bodies of the dead. At the moment this is all we know. I'll take
questions."
There was a sudden tumult,
and she waited patiently for the mob scene to calm down.
"Please raise your
hands," she said professionally when she thought she could be heard over
the din. "I'll call on you." That settled them, and she pointed to a
well-known network science editor.
"Have there been any
signs of this affliction spreading to other localities?" he asked in his
famous cool manner. "We have some reports of it hitting in other areas."
"So far we have had a
number of cases outside the area," she said. "Twenty-six, to be
exact. All but three are known to have been in Cornwall within the last few
days. Except for four people in a truck stop on I-80 and two truckers in West
Virginia who passed through there three days ago, no other victims. And, no,
we can find no sign of any spreading of the affliction by these people to
others with whom they've come in contact, except perhaps at the truck stop."
Another question. Did the
disease affect animals in the town, and did it spare any people?
"Yes to both," she
said. "That is, many people seem to have had such a mild case there
appears to be no question that they'll recover with no serious effects. As to
the animals, some pigs were affected, but not cows, horses, chickens, or other
animals. Some dogs seem to exhibit slight signs, but there are no totally
paralyzed ones that we've found."
"Is there any connection
yet between this disease and those that struck Boland, California, Hartley,
North Dakota, and Berwick, Maine, in the past few weeks?" That was the Post
man.
She shrugged. "Of
course, they are all small towns, and in each case the mystery ailment struck
suddenly and with no prior warning. However, the symptoms were far different in
those other cases, even from each other. If you remember, Boland's population
went blind, Hartley's became severely palsied, and Berwick ..." She let it
hang and they didn't pursue it. Everyone in Berwick, to one degree or another,
had become rather severely mentally retarded.
"It's almost like
somebody's trying to kill off small-town America," a reporter muttered.
Then he asked, "All of these maladies are related to attacks on various
centers of the brain and central nervous system, aren't they? Isn't that a connection?"
She nodded. "It's the
only connection, really. We are still running a series of tests on the earlier
victims, you know. Our teams are working around the clock on it. If, in fact,
it's a disease of the central nervous system and/or brain, though, how is it
transmitted? There is no apparent link between the afflicted areas. And why
hasn't it shown up elsewhere? Unless someone else is prepared to answer those
questions, we must assume we are dealing with different diseases here."
"Or a new kind of disease,"
a voice said loudly.
It went on for quite a while,
with even the crazies having their turn. Any flying saucers reported near these
places? No. Is the Army back into biological warfare experimentation? No, not
the military. Somebody who'd just seen The Andromeda Strain on the Late
Show asked about meteors, space probes, and the like, but again the answer was
no, none that had been found.
They left with lots of scare
headlines and nasty suppositions, but nothing more. Page one again, to scare
the hell out of the population, but the truth was that nobody really knew what
was going on.
Mary Eastwicke made her way
wearily back to her office feeling as if she'd worked ten hours in the last
seventy minutes. Several staffers were looking over papers, telexes, and the
like. She sank into her chair.
"I need a drink,"
she said. "Anything new?"
A young assistant shook his
head. "Nothing more. The toll's 864 now, with eighty-six deaths. In a
couple hundred cases they'd be better off dead, though. A hundred percent paralyzed.
Stiff, too. You can bend 'em in any position and they'll stay that way. Most of
the rest are nasty partials. That town was wiped out as surely as if you
dropped a bomb on it."
Mary sighed, and decided she
was going to get that drink no matter what. It was going to be a long night; no
going home for them or anyone else this time.
She prayed that the folks
upstairs would come up with something solid on this one. She thought of that
comment from that reporter to the effect that it was as if somebody was wiping
out the small towns of America.
She wondered how the tests
were going.
Dr. Mark Spiegelman was about
fifty, and usually looked forty, but by 5:00 A.M. looked seventy instead. He
sank wearily down in Sandra O'Connell's office and gulped his thirty-sixth cup
of strong black coffee as she read the reports and looked at the photos.
"Did you ever dream of a
nice little VA hospital job someplace?" he asked her. "You know, the
kind where they give you some patients with known ailments and ask you to do
your best to help them? I do. Lord! I'd settle for a nice bubonic plague
someplace. But this!"
She nodded. "Same sort
of thing as the others. These motor areas of the brain were burned, actually
burned! It's as if some nice, normal cells just suddenly decided to
stop producing the nice normal acids they need and suddenly devoted their time
to producing sulfuric acid or something. How's it possible, Mark? How's it
possible for just a few cells in a particularly critical spot, all in a group,
to suddenly produce a destructive series of chemicals for a period, do their
damage, then let the surviving ones return to normal? Even cancer, once it
starts, keeps doing what it's doing. This was triggered only in a few
centers of the brain, critical centers, within a couple of hours in just about
everybody in that town, then stopped. How is that possible, Mark?"
He shrugged wearily.
"You tell me. You know LSD, though?" She nodded, wondering what he
was getting at. "It's a catalyst. Does just about nothing itself. You take
it, it goes through the brain, trips a few wrong switches, then leaves, either
in body waste or skin secretion. It's almost out of the system by the time you
get the full effects."
She frowned. "You think
we're dealing with something like that here? A catalytic agent?"
He nodded. "It's the
oddballs that give it away. Remember in every case we had not only the town
zapped, but also a number of people in other places who'd merely been in that
town? Well, the magic number is three days, and maybe with a little more work
we can pin it down to certain hours within those three days. At least we have a
couple of people who were in Berwick in the early morning and left and didn't
come down with their disease, and we have a few more from Boland who were in town
three days earlier, getting there late in the day, and didn't get it, either. I
bet we find those truck drivers who were in Cornwall were there within certain
hours."
"I'll go along with the
catalytic agent," she said, "but how does that explain those truck
stop people? If we're dealing with a chemical, whether natural or artificial,
how'd those others far from the town catch it?"
Again Mark shrugged. "If
any of them pull through, and we can establish any sort of communication with
them, maybe we'll find out they sipped some of the driver's coffee or
something. Back in the late sixties—before your time, I know—the young crazies
who thought LSD was the greatest thing since sliced bread often dumped it
secretly in cafe coffee urns and the like."
Sandra smiled slightly at the
flattering "before your time" remark, and wished it were so.
"So what do we
have?" she asked rhetorically. "We have a catalytic agent that is
somehow administered to an entire population within a few-hour period, sends
a signal somehow to the brain to have certain vital cells malfunction for a
short period three days later, after it's too long gone for us to trace. A nice
chemical agent, but show me a coffee urn, anything, that a whole town
uses!" She had a sudden thought. "You checked the municipal water
supplies?"
He nodded. "We checked everything,
and we'll do it again. A lot more chemicals than there should be in some
cases, but nothing unusual, and certainly nothing to cause this. No, it has to
come from something they all touched or consumed. I'm positive of it."
She slammed the stack of
papers down hard on her desk. "Then why haven't we found it, damn
it!" she snapped angrily. "If it's a chemical it's common to all the
towns, and it should still be there!"
"They're taking
everything apart piece by piece and brick by brick," he said wearily.
"If it's there, we'll find it. But I won't, at least not tonight—er, this
morning. I, my dear, am going to go down the hall, enter my office, stretch out
on that couch of mine, and if ten more towns go under I will not awaken until
at least noon." He got up slowly, with a groan, and stopped at the door.
"Care to join me?" he asked with a leer.
She smiled weakly. "Some
pair we'd be." She chuckled. "Asleep in ten seconds."
Mark returned the smile.
"Shame on you for such dirty thoughts," he said, and walked out. She
didn't see or hear him go.
Dr. Sandra O'Connell was
sound asleep in her big padded chair.
THREE
The alarm clock woke them. He
reached out, fumbled for the stud that would silence it, and finally
succeeded. He opened his eyes, still holding the clock, and brought it in front
of him so he could see it.
He stared at it in wonder,
trying to figure out why. He held the clock for the longest time, looking at it
curiously, as if it were some strange new thing. He felt confused, adrift,
wrong somehow.
He looked around the room,
and it didn't help. Nothing was familiar, nothing looked like some-thing he'd
seen or known before. He felt a shifting next to him, and for the first time he
was aware that he was not alone in the bed.
She was still asleep. She was
middle-aged, a bit dumpy, with a few touches of gray, in an aquamarine-blue
nightgown.
Who the hell was she?
He strained, tried to
remember, and could not. He was a blank, a total blank—it was as if he'd just
been born.
He got out of bed slowly,
carefully, so as not to wake the woman. He felt odd, giddy, light-headed, but
with a dull ache that started in his head and spread throughout his body.
He walked dully out into the
hall, an unfamiliar hall still masked in shadow, and looked up and down. He
tried one room, then another, before finally finding the bathroom. He had to
go, he knew that much.
He walked in, searched for
and finally found the light switch, and turned it on.
He almost jumped. A man's
face stared at him, and he started to address it, to apologize or whatever,
when he realized suddenly that it was his reflection.
His? Someone he'd never seen
before?
He stared at it until he just
had to go, and did. After, he didn't flush for fear of disturbing the quiet and
that woman in the bedroom.
He switched out the light and
stood there in the semi-darkness, wondering what to do next. Get dressed and
get out of here, he decided. That first of all.
He crept back into the
bedroom, but stepped on a loose floorboard, and the woman awoke with a start,
sat up, and stared at him, an expression not unlike that on the face in the
mirror's on her own features.
"Who—who are you?"
she asked timidly, a bit fearfully.
He shook his head. "I
don't know," he said helplessly. "Who are you?"
Her mouth was open, and she
shook her head slowly from side to side. "I don't know," she said
wonderingly. "I can't remember."
The sound gonged at her from
beyond her subconscious, beating in, like a lot of little hammers. It seemed to
be demanding entrance. She struggled against it, but it kept on, insistent, and
slowly turned from a series of poundings into an insistent ringing.
Dr. Sandra O'Connell awoke.
Like a contortionist, she was twisted and bent in the chair, and she'd
obviously slept hard for quite some time. Her right arm and upper calf were
both asleep, and she could hardly move them. She tried shifting, and pain shot
through her.
Cursing, using sheer
willpower, she managed to get both feet on the floor and somehow grab the
ringing telephone, bringing the receiver to her.
"Hello?" she
answered groggily, still half asleep. There was no reply, and it took a few
seconds before she realized she had the thing upside down. Turning it right,
eyes still only half-open, brain only partially there, she tried again.
"Dr. O'Connell,"
she mumbled.
"Sandy? This is
Mark." It was the voice of Dr. Spiegelman. "Better wake up in a
hurry. Another town's been hit."
This brought her mentally
awake immediately, although the rest of her body didn't seem to want to
cooperate.
"What? So soon?
Where?"
"Little town on the
Eastern Shore, not seventy miles from here," he told her. "We're
getting a team up from here and Dietrick now. Want to come along?"
Her mind raced. "Give me
a moment," she pleaded. "My god! How are you getting there?"
"Choppers. One's here
now. Two more due any minute. Get yourself together, grab your kit, and get up
to the roof. I'll bring you some coffee in the helicopter."
"I'll be right
there," she said, wondering if she could really do it.
She managed to get up, almost
falling on the tingling leg, but worked it out as best she could. The wall
clock in the outer office said 9:10; the light coming in from the windows said
it was in the morning.
Four hours, she thought, resigned. At least I got
four hours' worth of sleep.
Four out of forty.
It would have to do.
She knew she looked a mess,
but whatever repairs could be made in the helicopter would be all that would be
done. She got her purse, reached inside for some keys, and unlocked the right
double drawer of her desk, removing a doctor's bag. Her smaller purse fitted
into it on clips, and she hoisted the whole thing and put the strap over her
shoulder.
She was almost to the hall
before she realized that she was going barefoot. With the carelessness of
someone in a hurry she knocked over a couple of things getting back, unlocking,
getting in, getting the shoes, and leaving again. She put them on while waiting
for the elevator, which seemed to take forever to come.
Speigelman was waiting for
her on the roof, along with a number of technicians, lab men, and some other
department heads. A "hit" this close to home was irresistible to them.
She had little time to get
any details before the second helicopter swung into view and came over the
roof, blowing dirt, dust, hair and everything else around it as it settled
gently onto the large painted cross.
They lost no time in piling
in; it was a large craft, but it already carried a number of people from
Dietrick and a lot of technical gear. She scrunched into a hard seat next to
her fellow NDCC doctor and had barely fastened the seat belt when they were
off.
It was tremendously noisy,
and she strained to be heard over the whomp! whomp! whomp! of the
over-head rotors and the whine of the twin jets to either side.
"What have we got?"
she screamed at Spiegelman.
He shook his head.
"McKay, little town on the Chesapeake Bay in Talbot County. Just about everybody
seems to have woke up this morning with total amnesia."
She frowned. "How big's
the town?" she yelled.
"Twenty-three
hundred," he told her. "Pretty much like the others. First reports
said it wasn't a hundred percent, either, as usual. Bet we find out most of the
exceptions weren't in town during some period about three days ago."
"You think it's the same
thing, then?"
He nodded. "Remember our
talk last night? A catalyst that struck a particular and very limited part of
the brain, creating an odd sort of stroke. You know most total amnesia victims
have some kind of clotting cutting them off."
She nodded. It wasn't her
specialty, and she had been more administrator than doctor anyway these past
few years, but she'd heard of rare cases. It made sense. It matched with the
others.
Which meant it didn't match
at all.
The agent, whatever it was,
was pretty consistent, though. She wouldn't take Spiegelman up on his bet. But
what sort of agent could appear in such widely separated communities, rear its
ugly head for only a brief period, then vanish without a trace?
Suburban Washington vanished
quickly beneath them, replaced by the sandy soil and dense forests of southern
Maryland, a place curiously little changed from its earliest beginnings,
geographically or culturally.
As she checked herself out in
a mirror and tried to become as presentable as possible they crossed the
ancient Patuxent River and the fossil-strewn cliffs of Calvert with its
incongruous nuclear reactors and LNG docks stuck somehow in the middle of
wilderness, and out over the broad, blue bay.
Within twenty minutes they
were angling for a landing. The town was a pretty one, almost a picture-book
type. The families here were old and deep-rooted, mostly involved in the
shellfish trade as their ancestors had been for centuries; the town was neat,
almost manicured, with a strong eighteenth century look to it.
But now there were
helicopters landing, and swarms of vehicles on the ground, while Maryland State
Police on land and sea blocked access to the curious.
They touched down with a
slight jar, then quickly unloaded personnel and gear.
"Joe Bede got here ahead
of everybody and he's coordinating," Mark Spiegelman told her, their ears
just starting to readjust to the lack of steady noise.
Sandra nodded approval.
"Joe's a good man. But how did he get here ahead of us?"
Spiegelman chuckled. "He
was on vacation, on that boat of his, just up at St. Michaels The call came
over for any and all doctors, he smelled what it was, and got somebody to drive
him down. I'd say he was here inside of thirty minutes from the first
reports."
That was good, she thought. A
trained NDCC doctor on the scene almost from the start. In a way she almost
pitied poor Joe; he was not only going to lose the rest of his vacation, but
stood the awful chance of being debriefed almost to death in the next few days.
They had the people out in
the town square; somebody had set up folding chairs procured from various
restaurants, the church basement, and who knew where else? It was a shock to
see them; they just sort of sat there, seemingly at a loss to do or say
anything. But their expressions weren't blank; there was tremendous fear and
tension there, so thick you could smell it.
Several men and women had set
up tables and were interviewing the townspeople one by one. After the
interviews, they were taken gently off by troopers to waiting busses. A few
would be flown out to Bethesda and Walter Reed; the rest would be placed
temporarily in every local hospital from Norfolk to Wilmington, and probably a
lot more, too.
Dr. Joseph Bede, in a
tremendously loud sport shirt, jeans, and sunglasses, a three-days' growth of
beard on his face, hardly looked like the supervising doctor in a medical
crisis. He looked up, saw her, and waved.
She went over to him.
"Hello, Joe," was all she could say.
"Sandy," he said.
"Hey! Get a chair. This isn't gonna be too pleasant, but you should be in
on this.
"At least no one died
this time," she tried.
He frowned, paused, sat back
a moment and sighed. "Well, depends on how you look at it. You'll see what
I mean in a minute." He turned back around, nodding to a nervous-looking
State Police corporal. "Next one," he ordered softly.
The next one was a
middle-aged woman, over-weight, face lined and weathered. She stood there,
looking nervous and bewildered.
A young man in casual dress
leaned over toward Joe Bede. "Holly Troon," he said. "Lived here
most of her life. That's her old man, Harry, second row, third one in over
there. Part-time cashier, drug store. Three kids—we took 'em on the first
bus."
"Education?" Bede
asked.
The young man shrugged.
"High school. Nothin' odd, nothin' special, neither."
Bede nodded, then turned back
to the woman. "Please have a seat," he urged in his most calm,
soothing manner. She sat, looking at him expectantly.
"I'm Dr. Bede," he
told her. "What do you remember about yourself?"
She didn't say a word, just
shook her head slowly from side to side.
"Tell me the first thing
you do remember," he prodded, gentle as ever.
"I—I woke up," she
stammered. "And—well, I didn't know where I was. I still don't
know. And then this old man came into the room, and we kind of stared at each
other."
The kindly interrogator
nodded sympathetically. "And this man—you had never seen him before,
either?"
She shook her head. "I
can't remember anything at all. Nothing." She looked at him, almost pleadingly.
"Why can't I remember? Why can't any of there remember?" She
gestured at the waiting townspeople, her voice rising slowly and quivering as
if bordering on hysteria. He calmed her with that charismatic gentleness he had
been born with.
"Take it easy," he said.
"You—all of you—caught a disease. It has this effect—loss of memory. We're
working on it."
She clutched at the straw.
"You mean you can cure me?"
He put on the number
twenty-three smile, the one reserved for terminal patients.
"All of your memory's still
up there. It's just that the rest of you can't get to it right now. That's what
we'll be working on. Like a telephone that's out of order because a wire is
broken. Fix the wire and you can use it again."
It seemed to make her feel
better, and she relaxed.
"Now, tell me," he
continued. "When you saw this strange man you weren't afraid of him? I
mean, a woman sees a strange man ..."
That brought back a little of
it. "You just don't understand," she said, shaking a little.
"When I woke up I didn't even know I was a woman."
His eyebrows went up.
"You thought you were a man?"
"No," she said in
frustration. "I wasn't anything. Then he said, `Who are you?’ and I
asked him the same thing, and we found neither of us knew. And then we found
this closet mirror and looked at ourselves and neither of us recognized
ourselves." She half-pointed to herself. "I never saw this woman in
my life before. You understand that?" The hysteria was rising again.
"Just take it
easy," he told her. "Now, I don't think we'll pester you any more. We
want to get you to a hospital, where they can start to find out how to bring
you back."
The corporal took her arm,
genuine pity in his face, and she went meekly with him to the bus.
All around the square the
same scene was being repeated, with slight variations. Spiegelman was already
handling some.
Joe Bede sighed and turned to
Sandra O'Connell. "See what I mean?"
She did. "My god! And
they're all like this?"
He nodded. "There are
some gradations, of course. Most are total. Some are so far beyond total they
can't even remember what a telephone is," he told her. "Even some
basic skills have disappeared or diminished. Even the ones with some vague concept
of identity can't remember their pasts." He turned, looked at the still
considerable numbers of people waiting patiently on the chairs. "Notice
something else?"
She thought a minute.
"The docility," she asked as much as said.
He nodded. "You can lead
'em anyplace. Not a one of 'em in a rage, or yelling and screaming, or
resisting. Almost like sheep. Even if they get close to hysteria, like that
poor woman, they are easily diverted. Worst they do, men or women, old or
young, is cry softly and hopelessly. And suggestion! Just on a hunch I asked a
woman who was still wearing a nightgown and nothing else to disrobe for me, and
damned if she didn't do it, right here in front of everybody!"
Sandra shivered and decided
to slightly change the subject. She looked quizzically over at the young man
who had provided the identification. Bede got her meaning and both her intents.
"Jim Shoup, this is Dr.
Sandra O'Connell, the coordinator for the National Disease Control Center
Action Teams," he said. "Jim's from Hartley, about ten kilometers
down the point here, closer to the main drag. He knows almost everybody."
Shoup nodded. He appeared to
be in his middle twenties, lean and athletic.
"Anybody in Hartley come
down with this?" she asked both of them.
Shoup nodded. "A dozen
or so. So far," he added worriedly.
"I wouldn't worry,"
she reassured him. "This thing only strikes once, it seems, like
lightning. If you didn't get it within an hour or two of everybody else, odds
are you won't."
He scratched his chin
nervously. "Well, I hope you're right. This is really givin' me the
creeps."
"If I could wake up
twenty-four, tanned, and muscular I'd surrender every damned memory I
got," Bede mumbled, and it relaxed the other two. It was almost a miracle
that he'd been the first here; he was the best field man NDCC had.
The light, warm wind shifted
slightly, and Bede's pipe smoke blew toward Sandra. She coughed and he tried to
shield it. As luck always had it, no matter where he put it the smoke aimed at
her.
"I'll put the damned
thing out," he said apologetically, and knocked it against his foot.
The odor didn't quite vanish,
but seemed to reveal another tobacco smell, fouler by far than his pipe.
"That's all right,"
she said. "I've got to go check on the other groups, make sure all the
spaces are reserved, and get the labs set up again." She stood up. The
odor persisted. "Lord! This—agent—whatever it is, it gets increasingly
bizarre, doesn't it?"
"Increasingly closer to
perfection," said a sharp, Brooklynesque male voice just behind her.
She turned in surprise and
saw a man standing there with a monstrous black cigar in his mouth. He was
slightly shorter than she, about 175 centimeters or so, with a pitted, blotched
complexion and a nose at least four times too large for his face. Although he
was neatly dressed in suit and tie, the clothing hung wrongly on him, and
looked like it had been worn by someone completely different for a week before
he got it. He was mostly bald, with incongrously long shocks of gray-white hair
on the sides and back.
He looks like a mad
scientist from an old and bad movie, she thought.
"What do you mean,
`increasingly closer to perfection?' " she asked him irritably. "And
who the hell are you, anyway?"
He smiled, and in back of the
cigar she could see that his obviously false teeth were stained and yellow. He
reached into his coat pocket, pulled out a little leather case, and flipped it
open. It contained a picture of him on an ID card that managed the impossible
task of making him look worse than he did, and a very fancy embossed metal
emblem above it.
"Chief Inspector Jacob
Edelman, Federal Bureau of Investigation," he said.
She thought to herself that,
if people like this were Chief Inspectors, no wonder the crime rate was through
the roof. Aloud, she said, "And what did you mean by that remark?"
"Just think it over, Doctor,"
he said. "Suppose you invented something—a disease, a chemical, who knows
what?—that could in theory wipe out everybody's memory on a massive
scale and make them obedient sheep. Now, the brain's a pretty complicated
place, and you can only do so much on animals, so you start guessing. You hit
the wrong centers the first few times out. Then you get lucky—you hit a nice
reaction that does exactly what you wanted it to, maybe more. Pick small towns,
the easier to observe effects, rate of spread, and the like. I think they hit
it early on. Here."
She was appalled. It was a
nightmarish vision beyond her comprehension.
"No one would do such a
thing," she protested. "What you are suggesting is monstrous. Do you
have any proof of this wild idea?"
He shrugged. "Only
logic, Doctor, for now. Logic and a few other things." He looked around.
"That's about all I can say about it for now, but we'll be seeing each
other again, in, ah, quieter surroundings."
Not if I can help it, she told herself. The man gave her the
creeps. "Just what department are you Chief Inspector of?" she asked,
starting to turn away and attend to her business.
"Counterespionage,"
he replied matter-of-factly, and walked off, humming a bit to himself.
"It's mighty public to
be going on with that shit," Joe Bede said. "Hell, there'll be scare
stories all over the evening papers tonight."
She stared after the strange
little man. "I think he already knows that much," she muttered.
"I think he said that because he really likes scaring people to death."
But as she tended to her own
duties, made up organization charts, dispatched teams to the hospitals,
recommended NDCC Dietrick lab teams, and all the other ten million things she
had to do, she couldn't get those two visions from her mind.
The blank zombies being
processed, and the strange little man with the ability to construct a nightmare
so casually.
FOUR
The air was fresh and clear;
the night sky over the eastern California mountains was ablaze with stars, and
the night chill quieted the insects so that only the sound of gently rolling
wind through the mountains could be heard.
Five men sat atop a ledge
looking down into a culvert well off the main road. A small cabin was there,
looking toylike and so natural that it was almost invisible but for a glow
coming from a window. In reality it was a fairly good-sized cabin of tough hardwood,
a mountain retreat that predated the National Forest in which it sat and which
could be rented for up to two weeks by arrangement with the Forest Service. A
thin trail of white smoke issuing forth from the small pipe chimney was the
only sign, other than the flickering lantern glow in the window, that the place
was inhabited at all.
One of the men shifted
slightly. "Sure glad this is on federal land," he said casually.
"No hassle over jurisdiction."
One of the others nodded and
checked a shotgun. "Give 'em about five more minutes," he told the
others offhandedly. "They been going to sleep pretty early lately. Better
if they're in bed."
The first man, a large fellow
dressed in typical hiker fashion, picked up a walkie-talkie.
"Mountain Man to Tourister,"
he said softly. "Tourister bye," came the response.
"Five minutes," he
informed the unseen others on the opposite side of the culvert. "Check
with the blockers for position." He looked at his watch, touching a little
stud so it lit up the time. "I have 2250 hours. Shall we say at 2300
exactly?"
"Good enough," said
the other team leader. "I'm getting pneumonia sitting here anyway."
"Line of duty," the
other cracked. "A week in the hospital on Uncle." He turned serious
again. "Okay, count off if you're in position. Tourister."
"One," said the
other team leader.
"Blocker?"
"Two." A different
voice.
"Salamander?"
"Go—I mean, three,"
came a third voice. "Bulldozer?"
"Four." A dry, deep
voice that sounded more bored than tense.
"It is now 2254,"
said Mountain Man. "Check and sync. On my signal, go, 2300."
They waited. The others in
the Mountain Man team shifted into position, checking out sniperscopes, tear
gas launchers, and the like. The cabin seemed blissfully unaware of all this
activity, which suited them just fine.
They waited, peering
anxiously at the target. Nobody spoke as the time crept onward to their zero
hour.
Mountain Man stared at his
watch, waiting for the numerals to change. Suddenly, they did, and tension
reached the breaking point.
"Okay, hit 'em with
One!" he snapped into the walkie-talkie.
Suddenly a mild, almost
unnoticeable rumble far off increased in intensity, the sound of an engine
echoing through the mountains as if a horde of giant super-trucks were coming
their way.
Tremendous floodlights came
on, centered on the cabin, turning night into day for fifty meters in all
directions.
A small device atop a rifle
in a Mountain Man team member's hands suddenly issued a loud, echoing report,
and a large object was hurled down into the culvert, landing near the cabin.
Mountain Man lifted the
walkie-talkie. The device near the cabin was a miniaturized receiver-amplifier.
"You in the cabin,"
his voice came back to them from below, hollow, gigantic, almost supernatural
in tone. "This is the Federal Bureau of Investigation. You are surrounded.
You have thirty seconds to throw out your weapons or we will gas the cabin.
There is no escape, and gas may well set the cabin on fire. Throw out your
weapons and file out of the cabin—now!"
The light in the cabin window
went out, although it was almost impossible to tell it because of the
brightness of the strobe lights.
From the window came the
sudden sounds of automatic weapons fire, spraying the area around the receiver
with a withering fire.
"Looks like a Thompson
for sure," one of the agents said. "Want to burn them?"
Mountain Man shook his head.
"Naw, let's do a little demo work first. Those logs are too thick to hurt
anybody." He turned to a different channel on the walkie-talkie.
"Salamander? Give 'em a
steady stream. Don't aim for the window or door, but pour it on. Thirty
seconds. Then Blocker, give a Two directly in the window. Okay? Go!"
The rise to their right
erupted in smoke and noise. The cabin was struck by an enormous, deadly hail of
bullets at the rate of thirty per second, and wood flew in chips as it
continued.
At the thirty second mark a
sound like a mortar being launched went off not once but three times, whomp!
whomp! whomp!
Computer-guided shells flew
directly into the window one after the other and exploded with a flash of
light.
"One's coming out from
under the cabin at the back!" came a cry over the walkie-talkie.
"Must have a trap-door exit!"
"I'm on 'em,"
Salamander assured the other, and fired.
No attempt was made to hit
the figure, but a wall of bullets drove the person back under the cabin.
Tremendous clouds of smoke,
along with a lot of yelling and screaming, showed that the shells had all gone
off. The gas, a special product, made those who breathed it dizzy, off-balance,
and so sick that they would do nothing but start retching, while the gas itself
burned inside their lungs like fiery pepper and made their eyes almost useless.
The front door opened
suddenly and a figure ran out, shooting a submachine gun in a random pattern.
The person was in a lot more control than he or she had a right to be.
Mountain Man sighed.
"Okay, Salamander, burn the bastard," he said into the radio.
Immediately there was a line
of fire that sliced through the runner's legs, felling the fugitive in
mid-stride.
It was a woman, they saw. She
lay there, bleeding, in the full glare of the spotlights, and still she was
firing, raising the submachine gun this time, aiming for the lights.
Salamander fired again, and
she twitched violently and was still, even in death gripping the sub-machine
gun which continued to fire its load, now harmlessly into the hillside, until
its clip was exhausted.
"Whew," Blocker said over the radio. "Man!
They're nuts!"
Mountain Man nodded, more to
himself than to anyone else. He switched back to the receiver channel, and it
was still operating. The cabin, they all saw, was almost engulfed in smoke, not
only the yellow-white smoke of the gas, but with a darker color, thicker and
grittier, mixed in. The scent of burning wood came to them.
"You in there!" his
voice bellowed. "There's no escape! You can't even take any of us with
you! Come on out! Come out or we'll just wait for you to fry.
Now other figures emerged,
two from the front door, three more from under the house, all running in
different directions and spraying fire with semi-automatic weapons at the
lights and hilltops.
Salamander and Blocker didn't
wait for the order. Small fixed machine guns with tiny minicomputers attached
locked on to each target in turn and practically cut the runners' legs off with
intensive fire.
"Bulldozer! Four and
plenty quick!" screamed Mountain Man into the radio.
More engine sounds, and now
streams of chemical propelled at great force rained down on the cabin. The
ground around the cabin became a quagmire of chemicals and foam, engulfing the
wounded fugitives as well.
Two of the people on the
ground seemed to realize this, and tried crawling through the foam toward the
darkness beyond the spotlights.
With a roar a large truck-like
vehicle on tank treads went over the side of the culvert. A device like a
cannon on a huge turret turned under the guidance of an operator and a stream
of water washed the area for many meters in front of the cabin, dissolving the
foam.
Most of the fugitives were
still moaning and writhing, no harm to anyone. Tiny figures quickly moved down
into the culvert to get to them and retrieve their deadly weapons.
One had crawled almost all
the way out of the lighted area under cover of the foam, but as he saw the
leading edge of the darkness he also saw two feet in military-type boots,
looked up, and stared into the face of a young man in military-style camouflage
fatigues, looking at him sternly and holding a .44 magnum aimed at his head.
"James Foley, you are
under arrest," the man with the pistol said needlessly. "You have the
right to remain silent, and the right to an attorney before any questioning. If
you cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed without charge. Do you understand
that?"
"You go to hell, you
fascist son of a bitch!" the wounded man spat, and then collapsed, eyes
open and starting to glaze. Salamander cautiously approached him, gave him a
soft kick, then turned him over with his foot.
The man, still bleeding from
no less than a dozen wounds, was quite dead.
Now Bulldozer's special team
went in. They were dressed in self-contained pressure suits, complete with air
supply, and looked much like invaders from outer space. They approached the
cabin warily, with shotguns at the ready. After probing gingerly, the lead man
entered the cabin.
"God! What a mess!"
came his voice over the radio. "Cabin's clean, though. Holy shit! You
ought to see the arsenal here! If they'd stacked it near the window this thing
woulda gone off so big they'd have felt it in Sacramento!"
"And what the hell are these?"
another, higher and thinner voice asked. "Oxygen? Scuba gear?"
Medics gave knockout shots to
the survivors, and they were quickly placed on stretchers and carried up the
hillside to waiting ambulances.
"Don't touch them!"
Mountain Man cautioned.
"One of 'em's been
turned on," said the suited man who'd discovered the tanks. "Nothin'
comin' out, though. Hah! One of the gas shells exploded too near it. Busted the
valve."
This worried the team leader.
"Think anything escaped?"
"Naw, I doubt it,"
came the reply. "But only because of blind luck. I'd say whatever's in
this was supposed to do us in or something."
"Well, let them
lay," cautioned the leader. "Treat 'em like they were fused bombs.
We'll let the tech boys handle it."
Inspector Harry Carillo,
alias Mountain Man, walked down to the dead man near Salamander. Unlike the
others, he wore the regulation coat and tie, and his nicely polished shoes and
business suit were quickly splattered with mud. He didn't seem to notice.
He went over to the body and
looked at the dead man's face. "Well, it was Foley," he said
more to himself than to the younger man. "I'll be damned. I'da made good
book he was still in Cuba."
The man in fatigues shrugged.
"He sure would've been better off there," he said dryly.
Within two hours of the
attack the cabin had been thoroughly searched and photographed from every
angle, and the large amounts of explosives and ammunition had been carted away.
A little before four in the morning a helicopter arrived with vacuum chambers
for the mysterious cylinders, which were treated with a good deal of respect
and handled only by pressure-suited technicians.
Inspector Carillo looked over
the tagged and numbered set of more commonplace things removed from the cabin
and set up on makeshift tables outside until they could be individually
processed. He noticed a map, burned around the edges, and fished it out,
opening it carefully.
It was a Pacific States
highway map from a Utah truck stop. Two towns on the map had been circled in
black crayon, and he stared hard to see which ones they were. The first was
Evans, Oregon, in print so small it was nearly obscured by the crayon itself.
The other made him stop short.
Boland, California.
Suddenly the tension was back
full. Those blue cylinders, he thought suddenly. Foley—and Boland. He grabbed
for the radio.
"Mountain Man to Street
Sweeper," he called anxiously.
"Go, Harry,"
came a woman's crisp voice.
"Those blue cylinders.
Don't take them to the west lab. I want you to ship them to NDCC labs, Fort
Dietrick, Maryland, special courier. And get me a patch on the mobile to
District HQ."
The woman sounded puzzled,
but said, "All right. What's this about?"
"Just do it!" he
snapped, and made his way quickly back up top.
By the time he reached the
communications van they had the patch in. He grabbed the phone.
"Mark! I want you to put
me through to Chief Inspector Edelman in Washington right away," he said
crisply. "Yeah, I know it's past seven there, so try his office first,
then his home. This is important! And Mark—I want a full medical team and decontam
unit here as quickly as possible. I want everyone in on this operation isolated
as if they had the Black Plague. Notify the local held office of NDCC to handle
the medical."
There was lots of confusion
and consternation on the other end.
"Just do it!" he snapped. "And ring me when you have
Edelman. Put it on the satellite scrambler!"
He put down the phone, and
realized he was shaking violently.
Boland, California, he
thought. My god! And Foley, too.
James Foley, alias Rupert,
specialist in international terror, the man who'd once blown up six school
busses in the Middle East, who'd poisoned a New York state water system, and
those were only for starters.
Just the kind of fellow to
blind an entire town for the hell of it, he thought. Just exactly the kind ...
The telephone in the mobile van gave an electronic buzz, and Carillo picked it
up.
"Harry?"
came a familiar voice from long ago. "What the hell is all this
about?"
"You know about
Operation Wilderness," the inspector began. "I'm still on the
scene."
"Yeah, just got the
report in on the telex. Nice job it looks like. So?"
"Jake, one of 'em's
James Foley, and there's a map with Boland, California, circled on it."
Edelman was suddenly excited.
"So that's it! God! You don't know how long I've been waiting for this!
This is the break, Harry! The link! Did you find out how they did it?"
Carillo sighed. "Well,
in the cabin, along with the expected stuff, were six blue gas cylinders, look
like scuba tanks with a fire extinguisher cap stuck on. I had them sent to NDCC
at Dietrick. And—Jake?"
"Yeah?"
"One of 'em was turned
on, Jake. We don't know if any of it escaped."
There was silence on the
other end for a moment. Then Edelman said, "You've taken all the precautions?"
"Done," said the
field man. "We're all going into quarantine. As soon as the lab stuff,
which is also going under seal, is sorted out we'll burn the cabin to the
ground."
Edelman was silent again,
uncertain of just what to say. He knew the other man was scared, and he
understood it. He'd be having the screaming fits himself if their situations
were reversed. Finally he said, "Well, look. We'll work on those things
here as soon as we get them. In the meantime, we need blood samples,
everything. I hope you haven't got any problems, Harry—and I mean that
sincerely but if you have, you'll be the first people we know of within the three-day
limit. If the active agent's there, we've got a good crack at isolating it and
getting it. It can mean a cure, Harry—or even a preventative!"
Harry Carillo nodded
silently, but he had a numbed, detached feeling inside him. Three days. The
terror starting now. Three long days ...
"All right, Jake,"
he managed. "Remember—we're depending on your side."
"Good luck, Harry—and
good job," Edelman said softly, and terminated the conversation.
Harry Carillo sat there for a
long time with the dead phone in his hands, feeling the first effects of the
disease called terror.
FIVE
"C'm'on, you little
bastard, come to papa," Mark Spiegelman said insistently. "Come on,
you can do it, yes you can."
The object of the
conversation was well away from him, inside a special sealed chamber, and
within a gel on a small platform within that chamber. The serologist was
watching a CRT screen over 130 centimeters across diagonally, with perfect
resolution, the computer-generated picture of what was happening in the gel at
that time as seen by the hypersensitive electron microscope.
The creature on the screen
was not very thrilling to look at; it was three-quarters of a micron in width
and just a little over one micron in length, surrounded by cilia. It was close
to a small protein globule, and it almost seemed to be stalking it. The
globule, in turn, was obviously attracted to the tiny bacterium, and the two
seemed to be in some sort of slow-motion ballet.
Suddenly they touched, and the
bacterium absorbed the protein globule.
Dr. Mark Spiegelman smiled in
satisfaction, mumbled something about the course of true love, and continued to
watch.
Tiny enzymes within the
bacterium moved with unusual swiftness, surrounding the antigen and doing something
to it.
Spiegelman's mouth dropped.
In the course of the next
three minutes, the globule was completely broken down, so much so that it was
impossible to tell that it had ever been there.
"Well I'll be
damned," the serologist said. He turned to check that the videotape
recorder was still running, although hesitant to take his eyes off the creature
on the screen.
He grabbed a dictation
recorder, punched the record button, and said, "Samples from the Operation
Wilderness subjects should be examined for any rapidly reproducing strains of
what might appear to be Escherichia coli in the bloodstream, stomach, or
intestinal tract, characterized by the formation of antigens in pulses, a large
number appearing then disappearing, in constant progression."
He switched off, plugged the
dictation module back into the panel, punched transmit, and settled
back.
There were two bacteria on
the screen now. He looked at his watch, then turned in his swivel chair to a
computer console and asked for a time on the reproductive cycle.
Six minutes forty-six seconds
to complete division.
Seven minutes, give or take,
he thought wonderingly. About four times faster than the fast-breeding
bacteria.
Roughly eight doublings in
geometric progression per hour.
He pulled out his pocket
calculator, put in a "2." Okay, that was seven minutes. At fourteen
minutes there'd be four, at twenty-one minutes sixteen, at twenty-eight minutes
256, at thirty-five minutes 65,536. He swore. This was getting hairy and he
wasn't even close to the end. At forty-two minutes you had—god!—4,294,967,296!
At forty-nine minutes his calculator overloaded and refused to compute any
further.
And if the thing defended
itself as he'd seen, there'd be little loss. Some, of course, but not very
much.
Inside of a day your
bloodstream should be crawling with the things, too thick to miss.
He returned to the computer
terminal, requesting a comparison of the Wilderness Organism with the
microbiology reports from the autopsies and blood samples of prior victims.
None.
Were there abnormal numbers
of Escherichia coli in the bodies of the victims? he asked the computer,
thinking that they might have been passed over as the common variety often, in
fact invariably, found there.
No unusual counts of that or
any other bacillus.
He frowned. Why? There was
the villain, all right, sitting there fat, dumb and happy on the giant CRT
screen, in living color just like home television. He didn't know a lot about
it yet, but he knew for certain that that creature had caused at least the
blindness at Boland, and maybe the other ailments as well. Why it acted where
it did, and how it did its little tricks there, was still a mystery, but
nothing a lot more hard lab work wouldn't solve.
But it mutiplied faster than
any known bacteria or anything else. Okay, he accepted that. But that should
make it a thousand times more conspicuous.
Why wasn't the damned thing
in the bodies of the previous victims?
He typed in more instructions
to the computer. They would step up the magnification to impossible limits and
do a molecule-by-molecule analysis of the damned thing.
President of the United
States Jefferson Lee Wainwright looked appropriately grim.
It had been said of him that
he was the absolutely perfect presidential candidate; had someone the means and
methods of production to create the perfect robotic politician, the result
would have been Wainwright. The strong, rugged, Olympian look, the perfectly
coiffured light brown hair, the warm, sympathetic blue eyes and patented smile,
the sonorous voice—all perfect. His rise to power had been meteoric; Governor
of Texas at thirty, senator at thirty-five, President at forty. A liberal on
domestic issues, a staunch conservative on foreign policy, he had something for
everyone except the radical fringes of the political spectrum.
"My fellow
Americans," he began, radiating charisma, "I speak to you tonight on
a matter of grave national emergency. The people of the United States are under
attack from a foreign agency."
He paused for effect, letting
the words sink in.
"Everyone is aware of
the mysterious and tragic diseases which have struck a number of towns across
the United States," he continued. "From the beginning, all agencies
of government were placed on a priority basis to discover the cause of these
baffling ailments. All agencies. This morning, at approximately 7:00
A.M.. Eastern Time, the break came. The Federal Bureau of Investigation
conducted a raid on a cabin in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California where
several wanted terrorists of international repute were reported to be. Those
terrorists, which included some of the wickedest and most insidious minds
possible in the human race, were indeed there. All were either killed or
captured. They resisted with such fanaticism, though, that it is possible none
will survive the results of their resistance."
Again the pause, the slight
shift.
"Inside their
cabin," he went on, "were found mysterious containers and some papers
indicating their familiarity with at least one of the towns stricken by the
mysterious disease. The contents of these containers, now under analysis by the
National Disease Control Center of the Department of Health and Welfare,
contain bacteria—a germ, if you will—that all of our scientists are convinced
is responsible. The conclusions are obvious. Someone, some foreign power, is
using germ warfare against us."
He sat back, aware of the
stir, even the panic that he'd just caused. But his timing was perfect.
"Now, there is no
cause for panic. So far
they have limited their vicious attacks, and we received a lucky break in the
raid. We're on to them now. Your morning newspapers will be printing
photographs of the known terrorists connected to the ones in the raid this
morning; your local newspeople will be on immediately following this broadcast
to give you methods and procedures, and to show you what to look for. All law
enforcement personnel are receiving even more intensive training. More, it
is a bacteria, like the germs that cause most human ailments. Shortly we
will have the information we need to produce some sort of serum, or antitoxin,
for your protection, and this will be distributed freely to every human being
in the United States. H&W Secretary Meekins is even now mapping out the
tremendous job of making certain you are protected and quickly."
He paused yet again, then
flashed his confident look for assurance.
"In addition, I have
this evening created a Special Presidential Task Force to coordinate the battle
against these agents of terror. We will strike at them. We will catch the
terrorists and give them what they deserve. We will have a means of combating
their dirty germs. And we will find the source of this terror and neutralize
it. We will win."
A last pause, and then he turned
and looked out beyond the camera. "I'll take your questions now."
There was instant pandemonium
as the members of the press clamored for attention. "Mr. Ackroyd,"
the President said, and the others quieted for a moment.
"Mr. President,"
came a voice familiar to millions, "are you planning any additional
measures to make sure these agents don't strike again?"
He nodded. "I will ask
the Congress tomorrow morning to declare a state of national emergency,"
he told them. "We must have extraordinary enforcement measures, you
understand. But I feel certain that the public and Congress will understand and
allow some additional latitude in their own interests."
It went on and on. Somebody
in Conference Room A at Fort Dietrick, near Frederick, Maryland, got up and
switched him off.
"Why do I feel like you
just committed sacrilege?", quipped an elderly woman, Georgianne Meekins,
Secretary of Health and Welfare.
General John Wood Davis, who
had turned the TV off, grinned wickedly. As Chariman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff he didn't worry much about how others saw him.
He resumed his seat and
looked around. "Who's missing?" he asked.
At that moment a door opened
and a small figure walked in. The military guards closed the door softly behind
him.
Dr. Sandra O'Connell looked
up in surprise. He was well dressed this time, clean-shaven and distinguished,
but he still had that foul cigar and he was still ugly as sin.
Jake Edelman smiled, nodded
to her, and took a chair.
Davis nodded in satisfaction
and began.
"As you all know, this
task force has a nearly impossible task before it," he began. "We
are under attack, yes—but by whom? The Russians? The Chinese? Who?" He
looked at a distinguished appearing gray-haired man two seats down, and
everyone else followed his gaze.
"The CIA has pulled out
all the stops on this one, but nothing," the Director of Central
Intelligence told them. "Russians? No, I don't think so. True, some of the
radicals in the Wilderness Raid came from Cuba, but they were definitely not
trained and equipped there, and our people inside the Cuban government are
positive that the Cubans know no more about this than we do. They've been
falling all over themselves reassuring us on that point. There's nothing to
contradict them so far. It's true the Russians and Chinese have germ warfare
programs—don't we all, really, despite the treaties?—but we have them pretty
well covered. Nothing like this, no tests, no top people unaccounted for or on
super projects. And the way their governments are reacting makes us feel that
they are either as scared as we are or are putting on the best act in
history."
General Davis frowned.
"But the blue cylinders—they are of Bulgarian manufacture, are they
not?"
The DCI nodded. "Yes,
they are. They are used for the storage of freon and other specialized industrial
chemicals. But it's a dead end there. All of these cylinders were part of a
foreign aid deal with Chad, and were filled with agricultural chemicals when
they left. The shipment was bound for Lagos, Nigeria, and it got as far as the
harbor. There it vanished."
Davis' raised eyebrows asked
the question.
"Lagos harbor's been
notorious for thirty years for piracy," the DCI explained. "It's
never been properly enlarged, and ships sometimes sit stacked up for days or
even weeks waiting their turns to unload. Sometimes men come in small boats,
over-power the crew—or use bribes or threats—and steal various things off the
ships. In this case, they stole the blue cylinders."
"How many?" Jake
Edelman's dry nasal voice cut in.
The CIA man looked uneasy.
"Nine hundred sixty," he said.
That stirred all of them.
"And how many do you
figure have been used so far?" Sandra O'Connell asked, not caring who answered.
"There were a dozen of
them in the cabin," Edelman told them. "Five were empty, so we can infer
that Boland took five. The other target was not yet hit, I don't think—we've
had the watch on them longer than three days. So figure five and a spare per
town hit. What have they hit? Five, six towns? Figure over nine hundred left
at least, assuming they all have the germs in them."
That upset them, even the
unflappable General Davis. He looked at Sandra O'Connell. "Doctor, what
about your end?"
She considered what to say.
"Dr. Spiegelman and his team have been working non-stop on this. We don't
know all the answers yet, particularly not how it works and why it isn't in the
body, blood, or tissues by the time its effects appear. All I can tell you is
what we do know."
"Go on," Davis
urged.
"First of all, it's not
a natural organism. It's related to a common bacteria, yes, an organism inside
all of our intestinal tracts at least right now. It's a parasite but it causes
little damage, and may even aid in the digestion of some foods. Because it was
common, familiar, easily isolated, and easy to grow in cultures, it was one of
the primary organisms used in early recombinant DNA research."
Several of them looked
surprised. "I thought all that was discontinued after the Cambridge and
Limitov disasters," someone said.
She nodded. "True. It's
dynamite with an unstable fuse. Anything done in that department runs the
danger of creating an artificial mutant strain that could cause a horrible
plague. Both here and in the Soviet Union such things occurred more than a decade
ago, and that ended any real research into the subject except in computer
models."
"But the technology
exists," Edelman said. "It could be done by anyone who knew
how."
"That's true," she
admitted. "But nobody would do it without tremendous safeguards. Even a
fanatical group wouldn't run the risk of self-contamination. Bacteria do not
recognize rank or social position. You'd need a lab setup that cost tens of
millions of dollars at the very least, and a scientific team capable of
handling the risks as well."
"So you're saying,"
Davis put in, "that no place short of a government or perhaps a major
university lab could do it?"
She nodded agreement.
"Yes, and even the university lab would be government supported. They're
the only ones with the money."
"Just what's involved in
this recombinant DNA thing?" Jake Edelman wanted to know. "I'm no
biologist." He felt a little better when he saw a number of other heads
nod almost imperceptibly. They didn't know, either—they just didn't have
the guts to admit that they didn't.
She sighed. "I'll do the
best I can. A short course in molecular biology is a tough order, though. Let's
start by saying that we're all made up of trillions of living cells. All
organisms are made up of one or more of these cells. And, in a given organism,
like a human being, all the cells are from the division of a single cell. You
started off the product of one sperm with half a set of genes that penetrated
an egg with the other half, creating a single, primal cell. That single cell
duplicated in your mother's womb over and over again. As it did, the cells
changed.
"As far back as the
1940s," she continued, "it was found that the culprit was an odd
double-spiraled compound called deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA for short. The
stuff is made up of four chemicals, and these are strung together in long
chains inside each cell, the chains—the order of the chemicals—telling the
specific cell its place, order, and function in the developing organism. It
becomes a hair cell, or a tooth cell, or a nail or part of the lung. Back in
1961 Dr. Marshall Nirenberg of the National Institutes of Health, of which
NDCC and this center are components, showed how it worked. You string together
a series of DNA molecules, use a dash of protein as a period, and drop the
thing into a soup of RNA, a compound related to DNA, and amino acids, the
building blocks of all life. The DNA gives the orders, the RNA takes them, goes
to work on the amino acids, and builds a protein molecule to specifications.
All of the instructions necessary to build and maintain you were in the DNA of
that original cell created by the union of sperm and egg."
He nodded. "I understand
that. I read about the cloning experiments at Harvard. But what's this recombinant
stuff?"
Sandra O'Connell sighed.
"Well, once we knew how to read the code, the next step was to write it.
Original experiments used Escherichia coli, a one-celled animal. DNA
from one was chopped up as was DNA from another. The chopped DNA was placed in
an amino acid solution, and the DNA chains from different bacteria combined and
built new organisms with differing characteristics. Pretty soon scientists
isolated DNA molecules with specific instructions and were able to insert those
in place of the originals."
"A build-it-yourself
bacteria," Edelman said dryly. "A living erector set."
She chuckled. "I guess
you can say that. But the lab conditions had to be rigidly controlled. The
organism takes well to man, and the lab strain, being artificially grown in
sterile conditions, was particularly susceptible to mutation—to having its DNA
changed by outside forces, like cosmic rays and other radiation always
present. There was always the danger of producing a carcinogenic organism—a
germ, in other words, that would be a new and deadly disease."
"And that happened in
two separate sets of experiments," General Davis put in. "Just a few
little bacteria, ever so tiny, got through imperfections in the labs both here
and in the USSR. Maybe it happened a lot of other times, but these two were
lulus, and they happened within a year of each other—the result of, I guess,
too much research on the stuff when no initial disasters happened. Somebody got
careless, and nineteen thousand died in Cambridge and Boston, and almost as
many in Limitov. That scared hell out of the people and leaders of all the
governments. There was a quick conference, the Treaty of Basel was signed, and
that was it. No more active recombinant DNA experiments without the consent of
all the signatories."
"But somebody's done it
anyway," Jake Edelman pointed out.
Sandra O'Connell nodded.
"Yes, somebody has. And I would guess that it would have to be in a lab
totally isolated and perhaps deeply buried. Served by a closed staff that
contained no leaks, not to the scientific community, not to anyone."
"Such an installation
would have to be a major one, staffed by major people," the intelligence
director pointed out. "I don't see how something on that scale could be
set up without leaks. We might not know what they were doing, but we'd
know they were doing something, and be able to infer what it was by the
installation and personnel, particularly matching what we now know about this
stuff to the intelligence involved. So far—nothing."
Jake Edelman shifted
uneasily. "Now, Bart, that'd be true if it were, say, Russia or China or
one of their satellites, maybe even France or one of the other powers. But
suppose it was, say, the Central African Empire or maybe Paraguay? If Bhutan
had the Bomb but didn't test it, would you really know it until they did?"
The CIA man shrugged. "I
don't know, Jake. But if it were a third world country not on our questionable
list, why pick on us? Besides, they'd still have to have their own nationals
highly trained in molecular biology, which means here or in one of the major
powers. We've already run those through. A few minor question marks, yes, but
nobody unaccounted for that I would invest millions in."
"Which brings us back to
Go," General Davis pointed out. "Now, what do we do about it?"
"Well, here's what we do
know," Edelman responded. "First, someone, unknown, is manufacturing
a disease and, using international terrorists, anarchists, and overage radicals
looking for a cause, is testing it out on small towns in the United States. Its
incubation period is three days, after which it damages or burns out some area
of the brain, then totally vanishes without a trace. In all probability there
are over nine hundred additional cannisters of the stuff ready and waiting for
us."
"And it's a stable
organism," Sandra pointed out. "If, as seems to be the case, those
radicals you got yesterday hit Boland, they didn't go blind! That means
that they were immunized. An antitoxin for the bacteria exists."
That gave them hope. "So
what can we do about it all?" Davis asked. The question was rhetorical;
procedures already were being formulated. "We assume the CIA is doing all
it can. The Coast Guard and Border Patrol is at maximum, with the full
cooperation of Canada and Mexico. NDCC and NIH are on the problem."
"Let's be truthful and
realistic," Honner, the President's man, put in. "First, there is no
way in hell to seal the borders of the United States. We leak like a sieve and
there's no way we can close all those leaks for a few people here and a few
more there. Even the Iron Curtain leaks like mad, and we have nothing
approaching it. And for every known possible agent of whoever's doing
this there are three dozen we don't know about. Inspector Edelman, just how
many of the Operation Wilderness terrorists were known to the Bureau?"
"Three," came the
glum response.
Honner nodded. "See what
I mean? Three out of —what? Eight? And as for the disease itself—well, suppose
we do find a cure or an immunizing agent? They have only to vary the
next batch slightly and we're back to square one again. That's fine as long as
we're in small towns, but suppose it's New York or Washington or Los Angeles
next? It's obviously highly contagious." He didn't need to go on. It was
already in their minds.
"So what do you propose
to do about it?" General Davis asked him.
Honner shifted uneasily.
"The only defense is preventive medicine within our means," he said.
Their eyebrows rose.
"Which means?" Davis prompted.
"Contingency Plan
AOX7647-3," Honner said flatly.
The rest of them looked
puzzled, but Davis appeared shocked. "What the hell? How do you even know
about ..." He let it trail off.
Honner shrugged. "The
President is Commander in Chief. That sort of thing, just its existence, has
been rumored for years. We decided to find out, and we did. Presidents can do
that sort of thing, you know."
"I'm confused,"
Sandra O'Connell put in. "What the hell is this contingency plan,
anyway?"
Davis thought it over, then
shook his head. "I don't think we ought to," he told Honner.
"That's a little too drastic even for—"
"For what?" Honner
exploded, cutting him off. "We are under attack and we have to defend
ourselves! It may be the only way!"
"Congress will never buy
it," Davis objected.
"Oh, yes they
will," Honner said. "The people will demand it when this goes on and
on and we're obviously powerless to protect them. They will demand it!"
"You may as well spill
it," Jake Edelman told them. "If you can't trust the people in this
room, who can you trust? Besides, it looks like Honner and his
boss—who's also our boss—already has it in the works."
General Davis sighed.
"You tell them, Honner," he said, defeated.
"Contingency Plan
AOX7647-3," the presidential aide explained, "is the
latest incarnation of a series of plans that's been drawn up regularly since
the Second World War, at least. It is a plan to declare martial law throughout
the entire country."
Most of them gasped. Jake
Edelman just nodded. "I thought as much. I can't see you getting away with
it, though. It's unconstitutional as hell. The Supreme Court at the very least
will throw it out."
Honner shook his head.
"During World War II the Supreme Court allowed the internment of all
Japanese-Americans, even American-born, and the confiscation of all their
property. As far back as Lincoln, this very state of Maryland was placed under
military occupation even though it didn't secede. There were wholesale mass
arrests without trial, curfews under which violators would be shot, and so
forth. For every man Lincoln pardoned a hundred were jailed for up to five years
without charge, trial, or anything else. And the people backed him up! It was
the only way. The President and the National Security Council hardly
want mass jailings, let alone murders, but we do feel that such a military
administration for the limited term of the emergency would be accepted, even
welcomed by the people, who are already close to panic. And, unlike Lincoln or
the camps, this would not be done without Congress accepting it. What they do
can be undone."
Jake Edelman shook his head
sadly. "It's not that easy to undo," he replied. "It's a cure
worse than the disease."
Honner looked a little
exasperated at the FBI man. "Can you suggest a better way? Our entire
country can be overrun, our military crippled, by these people before we even
know who they are. You know it's the only way."
Edelman nodded sadly. "I
know that, in a blind crisis, people will trade their freedom for security every
time," he admitted. "That's why the Germans accepted Hitler and the
Italians turned to Mussolini."
Honner jumped to his feet,
enraged. "Are you saying President Wainwright is another Hitler?" he
shouted, enraged.
"Of course not,"
the FBI man said tiredly. "He just ain't no Abe Lincoln, either."
Dr. Mark Spiegelman came back
with his hundredth cup of coffee and sat again in front of the CRT screen. He
glanced at it idly, then turned, did a double-take, and stared again.
The colony of Wilderness
Organisms had changed. The great mass on the slide plate wasn't growing any
more.
It was dissolving. The
bacteria were slowly breaking apart.
Quickly he was at the
computer console, typing away, coffee forgotten. "Of course! Of course!
Why didn't I see it before?" he muttered to himself.
The view changed, shifted, as
the computer sampled, looking for what Spiegelman told it to find.
And it found it, almost at
the limits of its magnification range.
It was a pattern, like an
irregular honeycomb, an alien, odd shape that was growing, rapidly now,
at-tacking the very core of the bacteria cells.
"Sure!" he
breathed. "Super-bacteria, super-bacteriophage!"
SIX
Dr. Sandra O'Connell made her
way through the double security maze to the experimental lab section of Fort
Dietrick. The routine military security was almost equivalent to that of an
atomic missile launch site—television monitors all over, locked and sealed
doors three or more centimeters thick with pressurized compartments, each with
its own air supply. Guards and electronic safeguards, too; sets of keys that
could be used only from the inside, with ID photos, fingerprints, and
retinal patterns checked every step.
The special new security was
just as severe. Complete change to sterile clothing, shower which included
chemicals designed to kill any forms of micro-organisms, and much more.
The place hadn't always been
a part of the National Institutes of Health. At one time the U.S. Army had
been here alone, playing deadly games of chemical and biological warfare,
trying to create organisms such as the one someone else had now created. For
years its nearly perfect medical security system had been superficially in
effect. Only since the Wilderness Organism had arrived had the military
returned.
Still, it was here that
mysterious organisms were brought, it was here where cancers were probed with the
best staff and best equipment to find the keys to switching them off, it was
here where microbiology was practiced to the limits of technology and international
treaty.
Through the last checkpoint,
Sandra followed the sterile wall of pale yellow to the double doors marked Serology
Control Center and went in.
Mark Spiegelman turned in his
swivel chair and brightened as he saw who it was. He had been alone in here for
thirty-four straight hours, after only a few hours sleep before, and he looked
like hell. Somewhere in far-off Arlington, Virginia, he had a wife and two kids
he hoped understood.
"You look awful,"
she said. "You can't go on driving yourself like this. You start making
mistakes. There's eleven other people working on this down here—I'm going to
call Ed Turner and tell him he's on in here."
He started to protest, but
she was frankly saying what he wanted to hear, and her taking it out of his
hands removed the guilt.
"You're the boss,"
he said tiredly.
"Before you go, tell me
what you got," she insisted. "Ed will have your data upstairs, but I
don't want to have to go through everything again with him."
He sighed, leaned back, and
dared to relax. "Well, first of all, it's one of the finest little nasty
pieces of engineering I've ever seen. An incredible organism—or set of
organisms," he added.
Her eyebrows shot up.
"Set of organisms?"
He nodded. "Yep. Two of
them. That's what threw me. One does the dirty work and the other murders the
bum."
She was excited. "You
know how it vanishes!"
He nodded again. "Yeah,
a neat trick, too. Anybody can design a bug. The basis of this little bastard,
at least its long ago ancestry, was almost certainly Escherichia coli, the
bacteria used in the earliest recombinant DNA experiments—including Cambridge and
Limitov." He turned, punched up a picture on the CRT. "There it is—or
was."
She stared at the thing, a
pretty common-looking organism considering its effect. "Doesn't really
look like E coli, though," she said.
"Oh, it isn't—not any
more," he told her. "It's something new, unique. Damned well designed
and built. Lots of little tricks. Denise Murray will probably be able to tell
you what it does in the system—my guess is it's a borer. Gets inhaled into the
lungs, bores into the capillaries there and thence into the blood stream. You
probably could get it a million ways. Inside of twelve hours there's enough of
them in there to make a colony visible without a microscope. What it does in
its swim through the brain I couldn't guess, but somehow it must recognize a
particular place and secrete some nasty little enzymes that produce that
catalyst I was talking about a couple days ago."
She frowned. "But if
it's a standard-sized bacteria, why didn't we find antibodies in the
victims?"
"Oh, it does a neat
trick, it does," he said. "You know as well as anybody that an
antibody is a reaction to a foreign agent, not really a disease-killer. That
little baby on the screen has a number of antigens and they do, in fact,
stimulate the production of a globulin protein in the human system. There are
nine antigens in the bacteria, and nine different antibodies. They should react
with each other to do nasty things to each other. Only they don't.
When the antibody approaches
the Wilderness Organism, it's absorbed into the bacterium—which then does a
neat trick not in the biology catalogs. It slightly changes the composition of
its own complementary antigen—and pretty damned quickly, too, as if it sampled
the threat, then decided on a counter-move. It's not all that tough, though.
There are three basic changes it can make, so it's usually one step ahead of
the body's ability to manufacture the proper antibodies. It's just getting into
full steam on antibody one when WO, here, adds a dash of this or that from a
small amino acid reserve and changes the antigen composition. You remember your
basic biology."
She nodded. "An antibody
is the exact complement of an antigen. It can't react to any other. It's
helpless."
"Exactly!" he said.
"So our little WO-soldier here can escape the enemy by changing its
uniform. But, additionally, it does something even nastier—it eats antibodies."
She shook her head in
disbelief. "All of them? Digested?"
"More or less," he
said. "It has the ability to break down the antibody into its component amino
acids and store them. What's an antibody but a protein globule anyway? And the
engineer behind this had the advantage of knowing exactly what three antibodies
he'd be facing. So the antibodies invade, the WO-soldier changes its spots,
then attacks and breaks down the antibodies. Anything it can't use it expels as
waste."
She considered this.
"But such a parasitic organism with those defenses would be impossible to
stop. It'd finally grow into colonies so large it would cause strokes, block
flows all over, kill the host—and very quickly if it reproduces as fast as you
say."
"True, but look at
this." He punched up a different picture.
"It's a virus of some
kind," she said, waiting for more information.
"Not just a virus, a
second engineered organism," he responded. "It, my dear, is inside
every lousy little WO-soldier. Our parasite's got a parasite—a bacteriophage.
Jillions of them in the world of the microbe, but not like this one. It just
rides along, fat, dumb, and happy, eating some excess from the bacteria but
nothing harmful, and growing at precisely the same rate as the bacterium—for
the first twenty-six hours. Then it goes wild, starts growing like mad, eating
our poor kamakaze WO-soldier from the in-side out. Its appetite is enormous and
insatiable. Its little clock is perfectly timed; no matter if the WO-soldier is
an original or a latest generation a few minutes old, twenty-six hours after
the first penetration of the host they start getting eaten alive. It's
fast—damned fast. By the thirty-sixth hour there isn't a trace of the invading
army. All broken down into a mess, and passed out in the usual manner. Without
anything left to eat—and bacteriophages are absolutely matched to one type of
bacteria and no others whatsoever—the colonies break apart, crumbling like so
many old cookies, and are themselves treated as waste by the body. By our
seventy-two-hour trigger mark, there wouldn't be a trace of either organism in
the body we could discover. Some leftovers, maybe, but never could they be found
or shown to be unusual unless we were looking specifically for them."
She was silent. Finally she
asked, "Mark? Is it within our current technology to build something like
this?"
He shrugged. "I guess
so. The bacteriophage would be the toughest. Give me Fort Dietrick, about
twenty or thirty million dollars, and a staff of a dozen really good medical
technicians, and I think I could do it in half a year or so."
Sandra shivered slightly,
even in the controlled atmosphere of the labs. "Now I see why they had
all those conventions against this sort of thing. Edelman—that funny little
ugly FBI man—said upstairs that it was an erector set for scientists."
"At least that,"
Mark said grimly. "And somebody's really made a nasty toy here. Or toys.
There's one other thing."
She looked up at him.
"What?"
"The empty cylinders
contained, of course, some of the Boland strain. Apparently it's kept in a nice
mixture of freon and other gases which make it totally dormant until exposed to
air. Some of the stuff would be left, naturally."
"Naturally," she
agreed. "So?"
"It's different, Sandy.
It had the same ancestors, but that's all. It's not the same bug at all."
She stared at him. "So
much for the universal vaccine, then," she said flatly.
He smiled. "What can be
engineered can be destroyed," he assured her. "At least we got the
start. Now, as for me, I think a good eight hours and I'll lick it. You get
some sleep, too. You're as dead as I am."
She smiled weakly.
"Okay, we'll both go. You going home?"
"No, I'll go beddy-bye
upstairs in the clinic. You?"
She sighed. "I'm going
to try and make it. I need clothes, a shower, and sleep. They know where to
find me if they need me. I'm only the paper-pusher here."
"No you're not," he
said kindly. "You're the glue."
Her sleep was deep and
dreamless, the best sleep, the kind her body and mind craved. In her own
apartment, in her own bed, a comforting sleep that, deep down, she knew might
be her only chance for many days.
As it always did, the
telephone's constant ringing brought her out of it. She sought to ignore it,
even as it drew her consciousness to the surface.
She awoke as if drugged, and
reached for the phone. As she did her eyes fell on the little electric clock
next to it.
It said 4:12 P.M.
My god! she thought. I've slept almost thirteen
hours!
She picked up the insistent
phone. "O'Connell," she managed, her mouth full of mush.
"Sandy? This is
Mark," came a familiar voice. "I figured you'd still be out. Good
girl. Now get over to the labs here as soon as you can."
She tried to shake the sleep
from her. "What's happening?"
"I—I can't tell you
right now," he said hesitantly. "Something nasty. Something I
stumbled on by accident. Just—well, get over here quick as you can, okay? I'll
be in my cubbyhole."
She was puzzled, but said,
"All right, Mark," and hung up.
* * *
It's funny how when you
oversleep you feel like you've never slept at all, she thought for the tenth time since starting out. The
trip was a quick one, under an hour if you had the traffic with you, and she
pulled into a space assigned to NIH bigwigs and hurried inside. Mark's tone on
the phone worried her.. Something nasty, he'd said. Something I
stumbled on by accident.
Of course most business
couldn't be done by phone anyway—security and all that. But his tone—he'd been
upset, terribly upset, and fear tinged in his voice.
What would cause fear in the
medical Rock of Gibraltar?
There were the usual
procedures to go through. Nine guards, twenty-six TV cameras—maybe more, they
never told you everything—four airlocks and the whole sterilization mess.
Finally in her medical whites
she walked again down that familiar yellow-painted corridor to those double
doors and pushed them open.
Nobody was there. The
computer was on, the whole lab was activated, there was even a sample on the
electron microscope. A pad lay on the floor as if hastily dropped, and she
picked it up. It held a lengthy serological series in Mark's handwriting. He
had been trying to find the key, the organisms from which the two Wilderness
Organisms had been bred.
She was curious, but not
concerned. He went out for more coffee, probably, she told herself. She
settled down to wait for him, passing the time until his return by going over
his notes. They were in a typical doctor's scrawl, and highly disorganized,
and outside her specialty at that, but she roughly followed what he was doing.
Having isolated from the
protein "punctuation mark" the first signal in the DNA message of the
Wilderness Organism, he and the computer were trying to duplicate it using
computer models.
Dr. Denise Ferman, a petite
little black woman who was a crack expert at toxicology, stuck her head in the
door.
"Oh, hi, Sandy!"
she said. "Where's Mark?" "In the canteen, most likely,"
Sandra replied. Ferman shook her head. "No, I just came from there. He
must be up top—I'm pretty sure he's not in A-complex."
That worried Sandra. She
reached over, pressed an intercom stud and three numbers on its face.
"Security," said a voice in her ear.
"This is Dr.
O'Connell," she said. "Is Dr. Mark Spiegelman in A-complex or did he
come out?"
"Let me check,"
said the voice. There were a few seconds of dead air, then the voice returned.
"Dr. Spiegelman logged into A-complex at 12:15, cleared security and
decontam at 12:45, and has not yet emerged."
"All right, thank
you," she said, hanging up. "He's got to be here someplace," she
said to Denise Ferman. "Security says he is."
The toxicologist looked
puzzled. "Let's go see," she suggested.
There were eight one-person
control centers in A-complex, four multi-person labs, and a small automated
canteen. They checked them all.
Nobody had seen or heard
Spiegelman in hours. "This is impossible," Ferman insisted. "You
can't disappear out of a place like this. He has to have gone up,
no matter what security says."
She didn't know why, but she
was suddenly feeling nervous and a little scared. "I'm going back
up," she told the scientist. "You let me know if he somehow turns up
here."
Ferman nodded, and Sandra
O'Connell began the long procedure back out. Something smelled—and smelled bad.
First that strange phone call, then this. At each step in the chain she
questioned the human attendants. None had seen Dr. Spiegelman leave, and his
initial passes were still there. Once out, she called down to Denise Ferman
once more.
"Still nothing,"
the toxicologist told her. "He isn't here."
She went to security and made
a scene. They, too, assured her that it was impossible for him not to be
down there, but when they checked with the others they agreed to go down and
take a look. A huge black sergeant and four very efficient-looking squad
members went down, through the same procedure, checks, and watches that made it
impossible for anyone to just vanish.
The security team was very
efficient without being intrusive. They searched the obvious places, then the
less than obvious, then the impossible places as well.
Over an hour after they went
in, the intercom at the security central desk crackled. "We found
him," came the sergeant's voice.
She could hardly restrain
herself. "Oh, thank god! Where was he?"
The sergeant hesitated.
"Inside a vacuum chamber in Con 3. Somebody knocked him out, dragged him
in there, and pumped all the air out."
SEVEN
The great airliner rose
slowly and majestically like a giant silver bird, looking too impossibly huge
and bulky ever to become airborne. But its nose went up, and suddenly, painfully,
it started to climb.
Suzy laughed and rubbed
her hands. It would pass almost directly over their position in the woods just
beyond the end of the runway. With George and Alicia holding the mortar steady,
Suzy held the shell just over the mouth of the round, squat mortar until the
plane was almost on top of them, then dropped it in the hole and fell back.
There was a whump, a swirl of smoke, and some-thing
shot upward, catching the great plane amidships. There was a tremendous
explosion, and the huge silver bird started to collapse, almost to fall apart
in a ball of flame.
He swore he could hear the
screams of the dying passengers, 386 ordinary men, women, and children burning,
falling to their deaths. He was only superficially aware of Suzy and the others
dancing and cheering as the plane came down. He was up there, screaming with
the dying innocents, no longer sure as to why they were dying.
Someone was grabbing him,
poking him. "Come on, Joe! Wake up!" a deep, throaty voice urged.
He awoke with a cry stifled
in mid-utterance as he realized where he was and that it had been a dream once
again.
Doug Courtland looked at him
in concern. "You oughta see a shrink or somethin' about this, man,"
he told the other. "My lord! This is the third time this month!"
He sighed and wiped the
perspiration from his face. "I'll be okay, Doug, thanks," he assured
the other. "Just a nightmare. Nothing more."
Courtland looked uncertain,
but finally nodded, shrugged, and walked back to his own bed.
He sat up, holding his head
in his hands, trying to stop the shaking, to get a grip on himself.
A nightmare, yes. Just a
dream. A bad dream. Only once, almost ten years ago, it'd been real.
There was a Hell, he told
himself, and he was in it. He got up, went into the bathroom, closed the door
and switched on the light. He steadied himself on the sink and looked into the
mirror.
It was a strong face on a
strong body; a Caucasian complexion but strong Negroid features and a bush of
thick, wiry hair now tinged prematurely with gray. The face was lined, etched
in with experiences he could not forget; his brown eyes looked old, empty,
hollow.
When would it let him alone,
this past that haunted him? What did it want? What sort of penance would sponge
away the guilt?
Look what's happened to
you, Sam Cornish, he
thought bitterly. Ten years older than your age of thirty-four and growing
older at twice the clip every night. A hundred years in Hell already served—how
many more to go?
How young and bright and
starry-eyed Sam Cornish was when he was alive, he thought. Black power and the
Revolution and all that. Black power! He snorted in derision. Too white
for the Blacks, too black for the whites, but just right for the Revolution.
Read Marx and Mao and protest march and all that shit.
But to most of his
contemporaries that was passe, lip service. Hedonism replaced the Revolution
before he'd gotten there. Blow pot, disco dance, go all night in bed with Suzy,
blue jeans and bennies ...
Suzy. There she was again.
The Revolution would sweep away decadence. Come the Revolution and all would be
perfect. Society was rotten, capitalism was poison, they'd drugged the world
into submission. They had to be awakened.
He'd believed it, all of it.
He'd drunk it in like an alcoholic in a liquor store.
Seven or eight committed
"patriots," a tight little cell. Hit a bank here, a bank there for
money. It was easy. Just pass a note. Pick small banks, never be ambitious.
George with his chemicals. Steal some weapons here, some explosives there. Even
that damned mortar from a National Guard unit in summer camp. Easy. Fun.
Some notes to the papers, a
fancy name, the Synergistic Commune Action Brigade, some bombs in harmless
places. Everybody so sure of the Revolution nobody even stopped for a moment
to ask what the Revolution was, who would run it, and other things like that.
It was "us" against "them," kiddies playing revolutionaries
against the fascists.
Until that plane. Three
hundred eighty-six dead innocent people, and the SCAB celebrated a great
victory.
Somehow, deep down, he'd
kidded himself.
Somehow he'd rationalized,
told himself that the Revolution was real, the Revolution would come,
that what he was doing was building a better world.
Three hundred eighty-six dead
people. And they danced and laughed in their joy.
Three hundred eighty-six dead
people.
Building a better world for
who? And what sort of world?
There'd been 387 casualties
in that plane crash, the extra one being Sam Cornish.
He'd run and run and still it
pursued him. Here, at Sky Forest, he'd stopped physically, and in the
strong-man work of the commune and its unquestioning ways he'd
worked it off, put it away from him, become Joe Conway, tapped maple trees in
these beautiful Vermont mountains, cut cordwood, built buildings and dug post
holes for fences, and he'd dropped out.
Except now, except in the
night, when the ghost of Sam Cornish still haunted him. Dope didn't work, pills
didn't work, nothing worked.
He was checking out the site
they'd picked for a new stable for the horses, farther away from the main
buildings, deciding how much wood would be needed, how construction would have
to proceed, when the man came out of the trees toward him. He turned and looked
at the stranger curiously; unknowns were rare up here, and this fellow seemed
particularly out of place in suit and tie and tailored overcoat.
He waited, wondering, for the
newcomer to reach him.
The man stopped a little away
from where he stood and looked him over. "Hello, Mr. Cornish," he
said in a soft southern accent that was as out of place here as the man
himself.
Sam Cornish froze, ice
shooting through him. He'd been here so many years that he no longer feared
capture or exposure, never even thought of it any more—and here it was.
"Joe Conway's the
name," he responded nervously.
The man smiled. "Don't
worry, Mr. Cornish. I'm not here to arrest you. We could have done that years
ago."
Something twisted within him;
he wasn't certain whether to attack or run, so he stood where he was.
"What do you mean by that?" he asked.
"Mr. Cornish, we deal in
the public safety. We try and remove threats to it. If they cease to be
threats, well, there's a lot of other folks still menacing the public who need
attention. Some of your old buddies, for example, got to Cuba. They sat there
on their fannies in shacks cutting sugar cane and singing revolutionary songs
in Spanish. Well and good. Let them stay in their own self-imposed prison. It's
cheaper. You came here. We traced you here inside of a few months, and let you
be first because we hoped that some of your lovable friends would join you.
After a while it was pretty clear that you had had second thoughts about the
revolution, and were in your own version of a Cuban sugar cane field. We picked
up Granger, as you probably know. He told us you tried to stop the plane
attack, and left when they carried it out. So we left you here. Cheaper and
convenient. Of course, we keep an eye on you and hundreds of others like you
just in case, or in case some of your more dangerous friends decide to renew
old friendships, but that's all."
His emotions were in turmoil,
jumbled and confused. Somehow what the man said made sense, but it was, in its
own way, more depressing than being a hounded fugitive.
"So why tell me this
now?" he asked. "Or are you finally getting around to the
leftovers?"
The other man shrugged.
"I told you I wasn't here to arrest you. I want to make a proposition to
you. If you say no, well, then, that's that. Business as usual. Stick to this
commune and this lifestyle and you'll never see us again."
This was more confusing than
before. "What sort of a proposition?" he asked
suspiciously, not trusting anything the man was saying.
"You're pretty cut off
here," the man noted. "Do you know about the Wilderness
Organism?"
He nodded slowly. "We
get the papers. Lots of talk about it, naturally. There are a lot of small
towns in Vermont."
"And you've heard that
the thing is a laboratory-created disease? That someone is planting it?"
"I heard," he said,
not sure where this was leading.
"Suppose I said that we
just shot Jim Foley trying to plant the disease?" the man continued.
Cornish's mouth dropped.
"Foley!" Suddenly his mind raced. "Any other—" ,
"No, no Suzanne Martine
yet," the man replied, guessing his question. "Wouldn't be surprised,
though."
He relaxed a bit, strangely
relieved but unable to figure out why.
"Mr. Cornish, I'd like
you to come down to the village with me," the man told him. "I want
to show you a couple of movies, that's all. At the end I'll explain all this,
and you can say no, no thanks, and walk out of there and back here. No hassles,
no conditions, no blackmail. Will you do it for me? Just to humor me?"
The old suspicions were back.
"You're not just looking for an easy arrest, are you?"
The man sighed. "Mr.
Cornish, I wouldn't have to trick you and you know it. Come on. I promise
nothing else will happen."
He gave in, his curiosity
overcoming his massive doubts. "Why not?" he said, resigned.
They used the back of the
sheriffs office, which was cleared. An FBI badge and a call from the governor
did wonders.
The films were a horror
story. Hundreds and hundreds of ordinary people, men, women, children, all in
some way horribly stricken. The blind, the feeble-minded, the palsied and the
paralyzed, and those haunted faces of those who'd lost their pasts.
And then the big show, a tape
of Operation Wilderness itself.
"It was dumb luck we
caught them," the agent, who never had given his name, told him.
"Sheriff of a ski town not far from the cabin was an ex-Bureau man who'd
been on your case. Foley came into town for supplies, and he made him, even
after all these years, even with the beard and dyed hair. He'd worked sixteen
solid weeks on the plane sabotage case, and our artists had portrayed you all
in every way we could think of to disguise you. The pictures were just burned
into his brain. So he followed Foley back to the cabin, got a make on two
others through the Bureau telex, caught sight of a sub-machine gun, and we set
it up."
He watched the whole
operation from start to finish, saw the bodies, the dead face of Foley. He'd
have recognized him anywhere, like the man said. There was a sense of
satisfaction in seeing that lifeless form; Foley had dreamed up the airplane
job, Foley had planned it.
And now the blue cylinders,
and some tape-to-film of the Wilderness Organism itself.
"There's no question
that the perpetrators are former radicals, fugitives from dozens of places over
the past few years. They've been stagnating, waiting for a cause, a
charge to action again, and this is providing it," the FBI man explained.
Sam Cornish felt violently
ill. All those faces, all those innocent people. The agent seemed to
understand.
"You can't run away from
that plane crash, Mr. Cornish," he said as gently as he could. "And
they're doing it again. You've tried to run and it's no good, it's inside
you."
"What's the bottom line
on all this?" Cornish asked brusquely. "Get to the point."
"They're your old
people, Mr. Cornish," the agent explained. "They know you and you
know them. They're recruiting. The word's out. You probably heard
it yourself."
Yes he had, he thought. Not
what for, just that they wanted old pros for a new and massive operation.
"We want your help in
making sure there are no more crippled and hollow innocents," the man continued.
"We can't seal the borders. We can try, but any good pro can get in and
out. We'll catch some now, of course, now that we know what we're dealing
with, and who. But not all. Not most. Their toll is already in the thousands,
all innocent men, women, and children. Not even soldiers or cops or big-shot
capitalist leaders. Just random mass-mutilation. We need you, Mr. Cornish. We
need you to help us save those people."
He was sick, disgusted, and
not a little scared. "What would you have me do?"
"Put the word out you
want to get active again. Let them recruit you. Get in with them, join them.
Find out who's behind this if you can, and what the object is. Find out where
this terror will strike next. Get the information to us if you can. We want you
to save lives, Mr. Cornish. Nothing less."
He shook his head. "I—I
can't," he protested. "Damn it! I just can't!"
The agent looked at him
squarely, a grim expression on his face. "There are still over nine hundred
cylinders unused. Nine hundred."
He thought of the faces he'd
seen, the small children and babies cheated, cheated of life not merely by
senseless violence but by Jim Foley.
"They'll never accept
me," he protested. "I ran out on them. Left them, deserted them. I
wouldn't even help in the plane thing. I just couldn't do it."
The agent smiled. "We'll
take care of some of that. Don't worry so much. Remember only one
thing—remember that, in a worst-case situation, it'll be you there with a blue
cylinder, or helping others with them. It'll be the plane thing all over
again."
He nodded glumly. "I
been thinking of that. I guess it's what I'm scaredest of." He stared at
the FBI man with haunted eyes. "I could have stopped them, you know. I
could have stopped them but I didn't."
The other man returned the
nod. "That's why we nicked you," he said softly.
EIGHT
"In thirty-one years in
law enforcement," Jacob Edelman muttered, "I have never once had to
solve a murder."
Sandra O'Connell looked at
him in wonder. She still hadn't gotten over Spiegelman's death, but she was as
much angry as sad. She wanted whoever had done this caught. "Isn't that
what policemen do?" she asked.
He smiled a crooked smile
under his enormous nose. "Policemen, yes. But the FBI is not a police
force, not in the sense of your local police or something like Scotland Yard.
Our powers, and the crimes we investigate, are strictly limited by law to those
local powers could not handle. Murder isn't usually one of them, except in a
case like this."
"Connected to espionage,
you mean," she guessed.
He shook his head. "No,
that just complicates it. Crime on a government reservation, it's called.
Mostly to do with stuff on military posts and Indian reservations. But this
one's my baby all the same—and what a way to begin at my age. The ultimate
locked room."
She frowned and looked
puzzled. This strange little man was impossible to understand. "Locked
room?"
He nodded. "It's clear
you don't read murder mysteries. I do. A lot of 'em. Takes my mind off the
job." He shifted, punched a dictation-style cassette in a small player
built into the security desk. "Like this one. There's no way anyone could
have gotten into A-complex. No way to get out, either." He punched play.
There was a ringing sound
from the speaker which seemed to last a very long time, then a click and she
heard her own voice say, "O'Connell."
"Sandy? This is
Mark," Spiegelman's voice responded. "I figured you'd
still be out. Good girl. Now get over to the labs here as soon as you
can."
"What's happening?"
"I—I can't tell you
right now. Something nasty. Something I stumbled on by accident. Just—well, get
over here quick as you can, okay? I'll be in my cubbyhole."
"All right, Mark."
Click. Click.
Edelman looked at her
sheepishly. "You think with the Wilderness Organism we weren't going to
tap the phones? Don't worry, it's legal. National security warrant, government
phones and all that." He sat back in the chair, lost in thought. Suddenly
he shot forward in his chair with a suddenness that startled her.
"Question one: why
couldn't he tell you over the phone?"
She thought about it. "I
don't know, really—unless it was something to do with the Wilderness Organism.
He wouldn't compromise it. I suppose he knew the phones would be tapped. I
suppose I did, too, except it just didn't occur to me."
He nodded approvingly.
"So we assume he knew the phones were tapped. The question then becomes,
what was he afraid to have listened to? If he started to compromise anything
we'd have broken the connection and knocked quickly on your door. He could
only call a few people on that phone, anyway. So, either what he had to say was
in the really classified range, or he didn't want to say anything because
he didn't know who might be listening."
She considered it. It seemed
absurd. "But that would mean a—a spy or something, right there in
A-complex! That's ridiculous. There isn't anyone there without the highest of
security clearances, and they've worked for NIH and NDCC for years. All top
professionals!"
Jake Edelman sighed.
"Many years ago, in England, a fellow named Kim Philby became the head of
the British version of the CIA. Good family, all the right schools and
connections, top clearance. Except that he was a Russian—not merely an agent,
but a Russian! And he was caught only by accident."
"You're not seriously
suggesting . . ." she began, but couldn't bring herself to say it.
Edelman keyed the digital
memory on the recorder. Again Spiegelman's voice came out of thin air.
"I—I can't tell you
right now. Something nasty. Something I stumbled on by accident."
"Something nasty,"
Edelman repeated. "Something he stumbled onto by accident. Except for some
sleep up here, he's been a prisoner down there since the Wilderness Organism
came in. He seemed normal when he went back down, and he didn't call you until
after four in the afternoon, right?"
She nodded. "Four-twelve
exactly. I remember it because I noticed the clock and thought how much I'd
overslept."
Edelman was thinking again.
"He confided in you. You were more than his boss, right? A good
friend?"
She nodded numbly, and tears
started to well back up into her eyes. "A very good friend," she
managed, voice breaking. She took a handkerchief out of her bag and wiped her
eyes. He waited for her to get herself back together.
"Okay, there were
fourteen people down there. Just fourteen. One of them killed him, and did it
between about 4:15 and 5:00 P.M. Almost certainly shortly after his call to
you. Possibly they heard the tap, but I doubt it. Maybe he went to the canteen
and looked upset. Somebody picked up on it and followed him. Maybe somebody was
outside and heard the conversation. We don't know. What we do know is
that he needed to talk to you. There were fourteen colleagues down there he
knew well and a security force at the call of a fingertip, yet he doesn't call
in the marines, he doesn't go to the others, he calls you. It's his first
impulse. I think we can assume that whatever he discovered he discovered between
four o'clock and his call. First the discovery, then the call. Give him maybe
an extra fifteen minutes to decide." He looked at her. "I need you to
go over the tapes of everything he was doing for the hour before his death. And
particularly what he might have gone back to immediately after his
call."
She shook her head.
"It's not my specialty," she protested. "Some of the other team
members are far more qualified."
He smiled mirthlessly.
"But one of 'em's the one who did it. No, they're out. Look, you're a
doctor, aren't you?"
"Yes, but—"
"Well, I'm an
investigator. I don't specialize in murder. As I said, this is my first—and I
hope my last—murder case. But I'm doing my best because, with the help of
special Bureau teams, I'm closest to the case. Can't you do the same?"
She considered it. "I'll
try. I might need some help on the hard parts, though."
He looked at her. "What
kind of a doctor were—are—you, anyway?" he asked, genuinely curious. She
smiled wanly. "A psychiatrist."
Jake Edelman looked up at the
ceiling with a sort of resigned yet questioning expression. It faded as that
dull look crept back. She now understood that it meant his mind was working
hard.
He came out of it suddenly
again, turned, and asked, "He did most of his work alone, didn't he?"
"With a massive
computer, part of the whole NIH, setup," she replied. "You
don't need more than one man for this—although Ed Turner was the alternate
serologist who did some of the work, and they served as a check on each
other."
Edelman scratched his massive
nose. "Doc, what would you do if, somehow, you discovered that one of your
close friends and colleagues was a Russian spy? You're all alone in a lab, you
and the computer. What would you do?"
She considered it. "Call
security, I guess," she said. "Unless it was somebody so close I just
couldn't believe it."
"He believed it all
right," the little man said. "Something nasty, he said. Pretty
definite. But how would he find it out, alone in the lab there? Nobody was
gumming up the works; a spy could just read all the data from a computer
terminal. Nothing in or out, though, so he better have a phenomenal memory."
He paused. "You see? Nothing to catch a spy in the act, is there? So let's
say he didn't. And let's say it wasn't a person at all, at least not one down
there. Where else could he have stumbled onto something nasty?"
She thought about it.
"The computer," she suggested, a slight chill going through her.
Edelman nodded. "The
computer. Something in the computer, something he stumbled on by accident.
What? Evidence of spying? Tampering? What? I'd say the odds were a thousand to
one he didn't suspect anybody in A-complex. If he did he'd have called security
or at least gotten the hell out of there. And there we also have just how the
killer knew he was on to something." He put his hand up and rested his
chin in it on the desk. "Sure! Anybody in A-complex could get the
transmissions he was getting. Common line. Somebody suspected he was on to
something, watched his work, and when he discovered something he shouldn't
they killed him." He leaned back suddenly and struck his left hand with his
right fist. "It fits!"
Sandra O'Connell was
fascinated in spite of herself. And impressed. Behind that ugly face was an
amazing if highly neurotic mind.
"The work between
three-thirty and the cutoff, Doctor," he told her. "That's the key.
Somehow we've got to find out his `something nasty.' It's there. I know it. I
can feel it." The expression was serious but the eyes glowed with
excitement. "You find it for me."
* * *
As she sat, not deep in
A-complex but at a specially constructed terminal inside NDCC, reviewing the
complex symbols and biochemical models, sometimes with the help of others from
serologists to top biochemists, going over and over those complex and cryptic
mathematical models that must mean something, something dark and sinister, the
world was changing outside her guarded doors.
Three more towns were hit, in
Louisiana, Michigan, and New Mexico. One town went stark staring psychotic.
Another completely lost the sense of touch. In a third all of the male citizens
simply seemed to drop dead, while the women were singularly unaffected.
The country panicked.
Congress, which panics only when the voters panic, magnified the call. There
were demands that something be done, some sort of protection. There were riots
in places. Towns barricaded themselves and shot at strangers. One jokester
painted some tanks blue and left them in another town's trash bin. A mob,
discovering the hoax, tore the man limb from limb.
People started packing,
deciding to move from their little, safe towns into the untouched cities. Everyone
was upset at this, since it was tending to crowd the already overcrowded
metropolises, and this would make it all the easier to wipe out a major city.
City folk, too, feared their
own small-town kin. Relatives were barred, hotels closed down, lest the
newcomers be coming with the Wilderness Organism inside them.
President Wainwright bowed to
the demands to act. He revealed an Army plan to secure the U.S., but warned
that it meant the total surrender of civil liberties until the answer could be
found.
The people demanded it.
Congress grasped at it like a drowning man. General Davis didn't like it, but
there it was, just as Honner had promised. The people demanded the loss of
their freedoms.
There was resistance, of
course, but not too much after it started. People who refused to go along were
sometimes lynched by their increasingly paranoid neighbors.
Large numbers of troops on
foreign soil were recalled, despite the protests of some conservatives that
this might be just what the whole thing was about, weakening America abroad so
that the Russians and Chinese could move from their generations-long
stalemate.
But the Russians and the
Chinese wouldn't move, and didn't. They were much too nervous themselves, not
so much about the Wilderness Organism as about the fear that a totally panicked
and paranoid America would seek someone logical to blame.
Fleets put to sea, and
missile bases were raised to full war alert.
And still the string of
mathematics made no more than ordinary procedural sense. Going back to the
start of the work on DNA molecule matching, it still proceeded in a perfectly
sound, normal, scientific manner. Nothing out of the ordinary.
She tried again and again and
again as the United States went slowly mad from sheer frustration at the lack
of an enemy to hit back.
NINE
He'd put out the word, of
course, but he never expected anything to come of it. That's what made the
whole thing, the final agreement to help ferret out the perpetrators of the
Wilderness Organism, so easy.
If these people were really
the old-line radicals, the last person they'd trust on something like this
would be Sam Cornish, the man who'd refused to take part in the airplane
blowup, the man who'd run out on his "brothers and sisters" and hid
out in a Vermont commune for years, plagued by terrible dreams.
It was a compromise his
conscience could accept. Say "yes" and do what they wanted, knowing
nothing would happen.
About four days after the FBI
man had approached him, he received a message at the commune. It came to his
cover name, by mailgram, and was very simple.
If you are seriously
interested in alternate employment, we will be interviewing applicants from
your region in Boston on April 4. It gave an address in that city not really so far away, a time, and was
signed The Woodbine Laboratories, Ltd.
He just stood there staring
at the thing for several minutes. He knew what it was, who it had to be from,
what it had to be about.
Well, here it is, Sam, he said to himself not once but over and
over again. He was sweating although it wasn't a warm day, and shaking
slightly.
He walked out in his beloved
woods and stared at the mountains for the rest of the afternoon. He wanted to
think it out, but he couldn't seem to think at all. He felt drained, empty
somehow, a dreamless sleepwalker.
He'd have to go, he knew.
Deep down, he'd given his word—and the pictures of those stricken innocents in
the towns would join those screamers in the airplane if he did not try. He knew
it, knew also that the damned all-knowing smugly self-confident Federal Bureau
of Investigation had known as well, known even before he would admit it to
himself.
He was sick, upset, shaking,
and felt more alone yet more of a pawn to others' desires than ever in his
whole life. He didn't like it, didn't like it at all.
But he would go, damn their
eyes.
Curiously, that last night at
the commune he didn't dream at all.
Boston had changed radically
since the Cambridge Disaster had swept the metropolitan area as the Black
Plague had swept London centuries earlier, striking down more than eighty
percent of the area's population. It was no longer a huge port, business and
commercial center—people were still reluctant to return, despite the
vaccines—but it retained its old character, its odd mixture of old and new
buildings, and some commerce was returning, for it was still the most
convenient harbor for the New England region.
And many people, those who
never thought of the Death any more, actually preferred it as it was—a rustic
city center of about 50,000 people, uncrowded, uncluttered, many of the old
neighborhoods burned to the ground during the panic now replaced with trees and
grass, giving it almost a garden air in the April sunlight.
He had a little time, and
briefly toured some of the historic structures from the nation's founding that
had survived everything thrown at them. It was almost as if he were trying to
kindle inside himself some sort of feeling that would make the coming ordeal a
matter of belief rather than blackmail.
He could sympathize with
those early revolutionaries. Sam Adams, the fiery rabble-rouser who'd moved
mobs to stone the British. His nasty yet principled cousin, John, who took
time out from figuring how to overthrow the British to defend the soldiers
accused of shooting citizens in the Boston Massacre—and won.
Somehow those two men meant
something, he thought. Sam—he stirred the crowds to mob violence in that very
Boston Massacre, yet Sam wasn't there to get shot, nor had he ever had any
clear idea of what the revolution was about. Sam, his cousin once remarked,
just loved overthrowing governments.
Who were Sam Adams'
inheritors? Robespierre, the aristocratic lawyer who executed tens of thousands
in the French Revolution including his own best friends, yet could not rule or
control the revolution he wrought. Another man better suited to overthrowing
than governing.
Karl Marx, the studious
scholar and social scientist, who labored for a proletariat against the
intelligentsia when he himself was one of the latter, and who left his wife and
eleven children in the slums of London to talk of the coming revolution with
international intelligentsia at the British Museum. Friedrich Engels, a
millionaire who always lived like one and never even helped out his friend Marx
with the rent. Lenin, the upper middle class student who'd never done a day's
real labor in his life. Mao the librarian, and Stalin the former monk.
What a collection. Was any
great popular revolutionary a member of the masses, the proletariat for
whom he claimed to labor? Could any of them swing an axe and build a stable in
the Vermont forests?
And yet they all got to where
they were through the blood of those masses. Sam Adams wasn't at the Boston
Massacre he precipitated, but the blood of honest working people was. Crispus Attucks
fell, shot dead, a mulatto sailor between ships, the first of them.
Is this, really, what
revolutionaries are like? Sam
Cornish wondered. Didn't Joseph Conrad write derisively that the
revolutionaries who want to smash their way to universal happiness will simply
add to the sum total of human misery?
But, he told himself, if all this is true,
then everything else is a lie. Man's dreams were but a ghastly Midas Touch,
turning everything they reached to instant putrefaction.
"We hold these truths to
be self-evident, that all men are created equal," Jefferson, the
aristocratic slave owner wrote.
Why did the beautiful spring
day seem so dark and ugly now? Why did the bright green grasses springing from
early rains and warmer, longer days seem suddenly like evil things, grasping
and clawing their way to the surface? Why did the charming old buildings now
seem so shabby and sinister?
He walked across the ancient
Boston Common, pausing in the center of it to see the great, black sculptural
arches of the artist Sean Spacher, with the eerie gargoyle-like creatures at
the base and the eternal flame framed by the ugly yet majestic curving beams.
He paused to read the plaque.
Erected by the People of
the United States as a continuing memorial to man's folly, as a remembrance
for those lost who were so dear and as a commitment that they shall be the last
to die in such a manner.
Almost a million people, dead
of a simple bacteria created just across the Charles River by eager scientists
when one tiny little bacterium escaped somehow to the outside world.
... A commitment that they
shall be the last to die in such a manner.
California ... North Dakota
... Maine . . . Nebraska . . . Maryland .. .
Carried there not by a
mistake, but by Sam Adams' grandchildren, none of whom had ever worked, and
none of whom that he could ever remember had a clear idea of what the
revolution was all about.
Whatever happened to Sam
Adams after the Americans won that revolution, anyway? Or Thomas Paine? Or
Patrick Henry?
That's right. Paine left here
and went to France to do it all again.
He glanced at his watch and
quickened his pace. This wasn't the time to be thinking such thoughts—or was
it?
The building, a middle-aged
office building with some character to its architecture, looked innocent
enough. He walked in and checked the directory. A good deal of the building was
vacant, that was obvious. Not a real business center around here.
Woodbine Laboratories was
easy to spot. It was one of only eleven tenants.
He took the elevator to the
ninth floor and stepped out. It was an oddly empty and deserted place, yet it
had the smell of new paint. Most of the doors were closed and dark; but there
was one with a light on that said Woodbine Laboratories Ltd. on the
door, and he hesitated a second, considering knocking, then reached for the
handle.
Inside was a small,
comfortable office with a large switchboard staffed by four middle-aged women.
It was the last thing he expected. He looked around, trying to spot any other
offices or branching corridors, but this seemed to be it. And none of them
were paying the slightest attention to him.
He stood there a moment,
feeling lost and foolish, then harrumphed a few times. Finally one of
the women finished a conversation, wrote something down on a pad, and looked up
at him with a smile.
"Yes?" she inquired
pleasantly.
"I—ah, I'm a job
applicant. I got a telegram to come here at 3:00 P.M.sharp."
She looked puzzled.
"That can't be right. We sure don't need anybody here and there's nobody
higher-up around, ever. We're just the mail drop."
He was certain she wasn't
talking about revolutionaries. "Mail drop?"
She nodded. "Sure. We
take orders for mail-order beauty creams, hand lotions, and the like. You know.
You must have seen the TV ads. `Call thisnumber now to have your Magic Creme
rushed C.O.D. to your door.' "
He was feeling a little numb
and thoroughly confused. "That's what Woodbine Laboratories makes? Beauty
creams?" was all he could say.
She nodded again. "Far
as I know. Of course, I've never seen them. They're actually out in California.
We just call in the orders at the end of each shift."
He turned. "I must have
the wrong place," he muttered, and touched the knob to leave.
"Wait a minute!"
the woman said. "Hey! Mary! You know anything about somebody interviewing
for jobs today?"
He sighed and turned. A
matronly-looking woman turned from her switchboard and eyed him, nodding
slightly to herself, a slight smile on her face.
"Mr. Cornish?" she
asked pleasantly.
He felt suddenly tight again.
"Yes," he responded.
"The hiring isn't done
here." She scribbled something on her order pad, tore it off, and he
walked over and took it from her. "Go over there and I think you'll find
who you really want."
He stared at her, and for a
second he thought he should know her, but the feeling vanished. He smiled back
at her, thanked her, and left.
They were damned clever,
though, he had to admit to himself as he rode back to street level and walked
outside. A hell of a way to see if it's the right man without any problems. A
hell of an information front! God! You could even pass code messages in the
phoned-in orders through your own toll-free number! Who could tell?
The new address wasn't in
Boston at all, but in West Newton. He debated for a moment how to get there,
then hailed a cab. There were a lot of cabs and few private vehicles in Boston
these days.
The cabbie was a surly sort
who didn't talk much and looked like a balding fugitive from a bad jungle
movie. They sped quickly out of the city.
Finally they pulled up at an
apartment house on the outskirts of West Newton. Sam looked at the scribbled
memo. "This isn't the address," he told the driver.
"Yes it is, Mr.
Cornish," the cabbie replied in an accent that sounded slightly Spanish.
He had to laugh. All the
angles. "Tell me, what would have happened if a real cabbie had beaten you
to me?" he asked.
The man shrugged. "I am
a real cabbie, for the record," he replied. "In any case, you'd have
gone to the other address and someone would have directed you here."
He laughed again and started
to get out. Suddenly he heard the man yell. "Hey, man! I said I was a real
cabbie!" He pointed to the meter.
Sam paid him, wondering what
would have happened if he hadn't, and walked into the apartment.
It was an old, smelly, musty
place built a good thirty years before and not well maintained since housing
got cheap in the Boston area. It was very quiet, too. Not a sound behind any of
the doors, and no names on the doors or mailboxes. He wondered where he should
go.
A door opened down the hall
and a woman's head leaned out. "Down here!" she called pleasantly. He
shrugged and walked to her.
There were two other people
inside, a man and a woman in addition to the woman at the door. All looked to
be in their thirties or forties.
And, again, they all looked
somehow familiar.
"Sit down, Sam,"
the woman who'd called him said, and gestured to a chair. He sat, and she took
a seat on a sofa opposite him, the other two sitting on either side of her.
"You don't remember me,
do you, Sam?" said the woman.
He shook his head. "You
look vaguely familiar, I have to admit, but ..."
She smiled wistfully.
"We've all grown older, Sam. You, too. Your body sure as hell is in good
shape, but your face! Man! Like all the others! Reminds me that we're all
getting old."
He relaxed, remembering her
now. Take off twenty pounds around those hips and smooth out that pitted face,
put a reddish-brown pageboy wig on her thin and frazzled black hair, and you
had her.
"Hello, Maureen,"
he said.
She brightened. "So you do
remember! Wow!" Suddenly her manner and tone softened. "I guess
we're all getting old."
He remembered her, all right.
One of the original old college crowd. The sex groupie type, he recalled. Slept
around bisexually with all and sundry. She wasn't so attractive any more.
He managed a chuckle. "But
not too old, right? Back in harness after all this time."
She was suddenly all
businesslike. "Why do you want to get back, Sam?"
He thought about it. He'd
thought about it all day, the answer to that question.
"I was dead, Maureen. I
just had a breakdown, couldn't take it any more. I needed out, a rest. But
walking out—well, it kind of killed me. Once up there in the commune I just
couldn't bring myself to leave. I guess it was like a return to the womb, few
responsibilities, no cares. I'd been living tense, expecting to be dead at any
moment, for years. Then I was safe, secure—I don't know how to explain
it."
"But why come out now,
Sam?" she pressed. "Why leave the cocoon at all?"
He sighed. "I was a
zombie. Oh, I didn't admit it to myself, no, but I was. Up there I was safe, insulated—but
without purpose. I just existed, Maureen. I reached that point a couple
of years ago, but I had no place else to go. All of you were underground or in
jail or dead, and I was still wanted by the feds. I kinda put myself in prison
up there—I couldn't get out when I wanted to."
Maureen turned to the others
one at a time, then asked the man, "Well? What do you think?"
The man shrugged. "Why
not? I don't think he'll gum up anything, and at least we know he's safe."
Maureen turned to the other
woman, who just shrugged and nodded. She then looked straight at Sam.
"Okay, I guess that's it. Welcome to the club."
He smiled and started to say
something, but suddenly he felt a series of tiny pricks in his arm. He whirled
around, surprised, and saw two other men, both huge and muscular, grinning at
him. One had a needle-gun in his hand.
He started to say something,
started to protest, panic rising within him, but, the whole world
was suddenly spinning and he blacked out.
TEN
"You look beat,"
Jake Edelman said sympathetically.
Sandra O'Connell smiled
appreciatively. "I am a little tired. I've been going over that
stuff for days now—and nothing. There's just nothing there!"
Jake Edelman lit a cigar,
inhaled, and blew out a stream of blue-gray smoke so dense it almost choked
her. He looked thoughtful.
"I really wish you
wouldn't do that," she protested.
He shrugged. "Sorry
about that. My office, my social conventions. No place left to enjoy things any
more. No this, no that, everything's banned. The whole damned world is bad for
you and mad at you at one and the same time." He reached over to the
window, flipped a control, and a fan started dragging the smoke behind him.
"Better?" he asked.
She nodded. "Thanks. But
I've come to report bad news. There simply is nothing in Mark's last work to
show that he stumbled onto anything odd or unusual. It's just good science, so
good that I've had to consult with a few dozen other people just to follow it.
The man was a genius. Not just in his field. In any branch of medical lab
work." Her expression grew sad. "What a terrible loss it was."
Edelman nodded
sympathetically. "I know. I broke it to his wife and kids. Toughest damned
thing I ever did. Back with the Navy I once lost two young boys in a carrier
accident and had to do the same thing, but this was worse. Murdered in the most
secure place I know of outside of Fort Knox, in a particularly nasty way, by
person or persons yet unknown."
She looked at him, trying to
figure him out. "You saw Sarah? Why? Surely there were
dozens—"
He cut her off, holding up a
large, vein-etched hand and reaching over for some pictures. He handed them to
her.
A pleasant-looking if fat
little woman. Other pictures—one a small boy on a horse, another a little girl
playing with a dog. In back of them were adult pictures.
"They got their mother's
nose, thank the good Lord," he said, and took the pictures back and
replaced them in their proper position on the desk. "The boy's now a man—a
dentist in Cleveland, three kids of his own. The girl's a pretty damned good
lawyer, just got married herself to a rabbi in Philadelphia." He paused
for a moment. "I been in law enforcement since the Navy. Most of it's
boring stuff, routine work, but there's always that chance. More with me. I
live with it fine—hardly ever think about it. But I think about them all
the time—they all had to live with that fear all their lives. Nadine—that's my
wife—got ulcers while I was working the New York labor front. Every day she
never knew when she kissed me good-bye if somebody'd drive up that afternoon
and say that somebody got me. Not much chance, but it was always there."
He looked back at her, straight into her eyes. "That answer your question?"
She smiled and nodded.
"So what's a pretty
doctor girl like you doing in a place like this?" he continued, shifting
subjects. "Unmarried, too. Not even living with anybody. That's not
natural."
It seemed like an accusation.
"I just never had the time," she said. "Long ago I had to make a
choice, and up until a few days ago I was convinced I'd made the right one. But
it wouldn't be fair to drag anybody else into a life like mine."
He shrugged. "Then you
should make time. It isn't too late. You know what one of your co-workers said
about you?" He shifted some papers, brought up a typed form. "He said
you were trying hard to prove something you proved ten years ago. I wonder what
he meant by that?" The tone was such that it left no doubt he had no questions
at all as to its meaning.
The question disturbed her,
as well as giving her a chance to change subjects. "That form—you've been
interviewing people about me?"
He grinned sheepishly.
"Sure. You and everybody else down there before the body was found. Woman,
I know more about all you people than you know yourselves!"
"And you still don't
know who killed Mark," she said in a flat tone of voice.
He softened. "No, I
don't. Well, I have some ideas, but I don't want to air them yet. This is going
to be one hell of a hot potato. One of the worst in history. I have to be
absolutely certain."
She was interested.
"What have you found out? What is all this about?" she pressed.
He chuckled and held up both
hands as if to fend her off.
"Take it easy!" he
protested. "I said nothing certain yet." His tone grew more serious.
"But when the time comes, you'll know, I promise you."
That didn't satisfy her, but
she had the feeling it was all she was going to get.
"You look as tired as I
do," she said.
He nodded. "I worry a
lot. My ulcers have ulcers. I worry about how a bunch of overage radicals suddenly
get ahold of an engineering marvel and decide to try it on small towns. I worry
about how so many strangers can lug big blue cannisters through small towns
without being noticed. What can their cover be? Exterminators?" He paused
a moment, then continued. "I worry about lots of good men, women, and
children getting crippled for life. I worry about how a damned fine scientist
can get murdered under the best security we can muster." Again he paused,
then said, much more softly, "I worry about my country going quickly from
a free one to a military dictatorship—so very quickly! I wonder how it'll get
out from under."
She looked at him curiously.
"That's an odd remark. You know why it's happening. It's only a temporary
thing. Nobody can hold this country under control forever. Such things can't
happen here."
He smiled humorlessly.
"Such faith! Well, God Bless America, it can happen here and it is
happening here. Just look out that window and see it happen."
She involuntarily glanced
over at the large window to the left and behind his desk.
Pennsylvania Avenue looked
almost deserted; there was a soldier on practically every street corner, and
one or two were talking to civilians. An Army truck was going up the street,
except for some busses the only vehicle there.
"But—" she started,
but couldn't think of any-thing to say.
Jake Edelman nodded grimly.
"So you put the Army, all the troops, reservists, guardsmen, all of 'em,
everyplace. Federalize all the cops, make 'em a zillion times more powerful and
important. Clamp down censorship on radio, TV, everything. Slap taps randomly
on everybody's phones, but cut off long distance service. Ban the sale of gas
and oil. Nobody moves except to work and back on makeshift bus routes."
Again the characteristic pause. "We're arresting tens of thousands of
people. Anybody who ever said a kind word about anything the government don't
like. They're already building big camps for 'em out west."
Her jaw dropped. "I
didn't—"
"And you wouldn't,"
he cut her off. "When they control the news nobody knows what's going
on."
"I'd think this would
make your job and life a lot easier," she pointed out. "After all,
isn't crime 'way down?"
He nodded. "Oh, yeah.
It's practically nil, until the Army boys invent a new one. Safe to walk the
streets of Washington at midnight—who'da ever thought that was possible?
Unless an overeager soldier just shoots you for violating curfew," he
added. "Look, when I joined this Bureau it was in the middle of a big
scandal. The FBI was violating everybody's rights. Nasty old FBI. But they were
wrong."
She shook her head.
"What do you mean?"
"A bureau's not a
creature. It's just stone and paperwork. Like all man's creations, it's as
good or as bad as the people who run it and make it up. If they're bad,
you can make all the rules in the world and nothin's accomplished. If they're
good, you needn't fear them at all. Hell, there was a time when marijuana was
illegal in this country. There was a time when alcohol was illegal. All
it did was increase the consumption rate a thousand percent on both products. A
law's only as good as the people who enforce it. That's what's so insidious
about that, out there—the potential, anyway. In the wrong hands this won't go
away—but the people actually begged for it, just like Honner said they would.
And Congress did go along. And the courts are letting it happen. It's a
horror. What kind of people will tell my grandchildren what to think?"
"You're being too
melodramatic," she said. "As you say, it's the people. As that Mr.
Honner said, what Congress can do it can undo."
"If it gets the
chance," Edelman said ominously. "Once you got this thing in effect,
you can rig Congress and the courts at the point of a gun."
She started to protest.
"But the government isn't going to—"
"You been around this
town and you can say that?" he shot back. "I been here since before
you were born. This is a company town, and the product is power. The workers
are the bureaucrats who keep everything going by following orders. They like
power, too. Hell, they're having a ball with all this power. They don't think
of people as people. When you got to talk in trillions on a budget, what's a
dollar? When you got to figure a 900-page law that affects all the people, who
thinks about the people it pushes around until election time?"
"You're a fine one to
talk," she pointed out. "You're one of them."
He frowned. "No, never.
Never one of them. I just understand them, that's all."
"With your attitudes I'm
surprised you're still around," she said. "I'd think you were very unpopular
about now."
Jake Edelman shrugged.
"So I'm one man still doing his job. They don't even think about me, as
long as the paperwork's right and I don't somehow make this speech over TV or
even the Bureau intercom. But I worry all the same."
She didn't like the tenor of
the conversation. He seemed to sense this, and changed the subject again.
"So what was Dr.
Speigelman working on?" he asked.
"The Wilderness
Organism, of course," she told him. "He'd worked out a good deal
about it and its behavior which tallied with the findings of the other lab
personnel. In a sense, he'd finished his job."
Edelman's bushy gray eyebrows
rose. "So? And yet he still worked? On what?"
"I told you he was a
genius," she reminded him. "Once he determined the basic nature of
the Wilderness Organism—or organisms, really—he set out, it seems, to try and
duplicate them, to find out how they were constructed."
Edelman was interested.
"You mean he was doing this recombinant stuff? I thought that was a
no-no."
She nodded. "Oh, yes, in
real life. What he was doing was running computer models, where you take the
basic chemicals and start trying all sorts of combinations and see if you can
make something that matches your live sample."
"And did he?"
Edelman was more than interested now.
"Oh, in a way," she
said. "He had a start anyway. A really amazing start considering the
number of random possibilities to build that organism, but, as I said, he was a
genius."
"Give it one more try,
will you?" he urged. "The clue—the motive—has got to be there. It's
what I need. I need it desperately and I need it yesterday. You don't know how
bad I need it."
She didn't understand, and
she was tired, but she said, "All right, I'll try. Another work day.
That's about it, though. I've called in Joe Bede—a really fine biologist, and
the first on the scene in that Maryland tragedy—to see if I'm missing something
elementary. But if this doesn't work, that's it. I can't do it forever."
"That's all right,"
he said softly. "Do it that once.
Here are others working on
it, of course. I just figured that, while you might not be the best
microbiologist in the world, you knew how Mark Spiegelman thought better than
anybody else. I want to know what would panic him and not a dozen other
scientists. Go to it, Doc. Give me what I need."
Again she said, "I'll
try."
Dr. Joseph Edward Bede shook
his head for the hundredth time. "1 just can't see it, Sandy,"
he told her. "A really good run of model work, yes, but nothing that would
cause me to run screaming." He looked up at her, and she was
staring off into space. "What's the matter? Too many tabular columns and
bar graphs?"
Her expression didn't change.
"No, it's not that.
Something the FBI man Edelman, said. About me knowing how Mark thought."
Joe Bede chuckled, but his
voice was gentle, consoling. "You were always in love with him, Sandy. We
all knew it. I think he knew it. He was always Jupiter up on Olympus to
you. The perfect man."
Suddenly she was agitated,
but not by Bede's revelation that what she had always believed was her
innermost secret was out.
"Maybe that's it,"
she murmured, more to herself than to Bede.
The other doctor was
interested. "What? Got something?"
"What you just said,
about me always thinking of Mark as Jupiter. Perfect. A genius who could do no
wrong." Suddenly she whirled around and looked straight at him, slightly
excited.
"Joe, maybe I've put
Mark on too high a pedestal."
Now he was puzzled.
"What the hell are you talking about?"
"Listen!" she
continued, growing more intense. "Joe, how many chemicals go into making
up a DNA molecule?"
He thought a second.
"Four. Adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine," he told her.
"Why? You know that. You been looking at the four of them for days
now."
"Okay. Now if you're
going to build the Wilderness Organism, you first construct your DNA molecules
so they transmit the right instructions, okay?"
He nodded. "Sure. You
get one of twenty protein molecules made by RNA. The amount and combination of
these determine the cellular makeup."
"Joe," she asked
slowly, "what are the odds of getting several hundred correct genetic
orders in a period of three hours' research?"
He thought for a moment.
"Pretty slim," he admitted, "although not outside the realm of
chance with a good mind and a good computer."
She shook her head. "No,
no. I mean getting the code right to build the specific organism under study.
Think of the variables! It's days, weeks of work at least! But Mark got
almost the entire bacterium built in model in a little under three
hours!"
He considered this. "But
we all knew he was a genius."
"Joe! That's what's
caused my block!" She was almost yelling. "I was so damned in worship
of him I admired how easily he did it. Joe! I don't think he did do
it!"
"Sure he did," Bede
said, still puzzled. "There it is.”
"Joe!" she
persisted. "Suppose he just got the first few steps right inside the
overall problem? Suppose, Joe, that the computer took his admittedly
genius-level start and completed the rest of the model for him?"
Bede was incredulous.
"No way, Sandy. That's impossible."
She sighed, seemed to collapse,
and started feeling a little scared. She felt, in fact, just what Mark
Spiegelman had radiated over the phone in that last, fatal coversation.
"Not if the Wilderness
Organism was already in the computer, Joe," she breathed.
Joe Bede laughed nervously.
"Oh, come off it, Sandy. In order for that to be so, either somebody else
would already have had to have broken the WO code makeup ..."
"...Or designed it on
our own damned computer," she finished.
He shook his head in disbelief.
"That's not possible, and you know it," he objected. "Why,
that'd mean that somebody inside our own staff was behind all this."
She was shaking now, very
scared indeed. "Yeah, Joe. And Mark was killed inside the Dietrick secured
labs. Imagine! A lot of trial and error, then a few combinations hit, then
several—and suddenly the machine completes the model for him! My God!"
Joe Bede was looking a little
nervous himself now. "Hell, Sandy, if what you say is true we'd better
damned well get the hell out of here and over to your FBI friend. If they
killed Mark ..."
He didn't have to spell it
out.
She grabbed the phone and
dialed Jake Edelman's number. There was a click and a whirr and then a
mechanical voice that said, "The-number-that-you-have-dialed-is-not-in-service-to-this-telephone.
Please-hang-up."
She slammed it down like it
was an angry snake. "What's the matter?" Bede asked nervously.
"The phone." She gasped. "I—I called Edelman on it this
afternoon. To get a chance to see him.
Now it won't connect me."
He shrugged uncomfortably.
"Probably just more of this martial law nonsense."
"Let's go, Joe,"
she urged, getting up. "Let's go over to the FBI Building ourselves."
He sighed. "Okay, Sandy.
Hell, I won't look scared if you don't."
They grabbed their coats and
walked out the door. The sentries were still there, and they nodded politely.
Sandra O'Connell suddenly
felt extremely paranoid, as if unseen eyes were watching everything they said
or did, as if unseen enemies were waiting to pounce at any moment.
The elevator came at last,
and they got in. She pushed "G" and the doors closed and the car
started up, taking an incredibly slow path by her imagination's reckoning.
It opened and they walked
out. Immediately four men converged on them. She felt panic.
One flashed a badge.
"Secret Service, Doctors," he informed them in a crisp, businesslike
manner. "We'd like you to come with us for a few minutes."
They were puzzled, but
complied. It was reassuring, at least, to be in the hands of the law, she
thought.
A small office door down the
corridor was opened by one of the men, the other three of whom flanked them,
and they entered.
"Now, will somebody
kindly explain to me what this is all about?" she demanded angrily.
"This," said one of
the men, wetting down a rag from which issued the strong odor of chloroform.
ELEVEN
He was in a hazy fog, vaguely
aware of what was going on but unable either to do much about it or to care
very much. The drug was a minor hypnotic rather popular with the young; you
floated, you felt wonderful, everything looked beautiful, and you didn't think
but were willing to be led around or do anything you were told. In the popular
culture two people took it, whispered wonderful things about love or sex or
something in a nice, quiet room, then acted out their fantasies until, in a
couple of hours, they went to sleep and woke up feeling great.
Like most such substances,
its popularity sprang from the fact that the average person's life is simply
too damned boring. And, it was true, the stuff didn't hurt you at all—but it
had one nasty little effect, being a hypnotic. You were totally open to suggestion
and unfiltered outside stimuli; in wrong or, worse, sadistic hands, you were
strictly at the mercy of whoever was around.
It was a handy little drug
for an underground force.
So he'd cheerfully gone with
the nice people, with vague, blurry memories of a long car ride to a small
private airfield, and from there into a plane with numerous other people. Then
he was asleep.
In between the periodic
dosages administered in cups of juice or even water, there were occasional
flashes but not much else. A seaplane landing, a ship pickup on the ocean, a
voyage of who knew how long, a landing on some deserted shore, more flights,
funny-looking people with strange languages and accents—but all of it ran
together and none of it made much sense.
Sam Cornish awoke. It was a
gentle awakening as if from a deep and restful sleep; he yawned, stretched, and
felt really good.
He was strapped in a plane
seat and was in the air somewhere. It was a very old crate; there was a lot of
vibration and the interior hadn't been maintained in quite some time.
Looking around he saw a
number of other men and women in the other seats, most sleeping deeply but a few
awake and looking around or just staring.
For the first time he
realized that all of the windows in the aircraft had been painted jet black.
He looked over at the person in the seat next to him, a black man with a few
streaks of gray in his kinky hair who was still sleeping, then turned to the
window. He was still wearing the clothes he'd worn in the apartment back in
West Newton. They, and he, smelled pretty gamy. He fumbled in his pockets, but
there was nothing there. Wallet, penknife, everything had been taken.
He had fairly long nails,
though, and found after a few tries that he could scratch off a little paint
with his index fingernail. It was slow and frustrating, but he didn't have
anything else to do, anyway.
Finally he produced a tiny
line of glass under the paint, and he leaned over and tried to see if anything
was visible outside.
Either it was night out there
or else they'd painted the outside, too. All was still blackness.
He sighed and settled back.
There was nothing to do but wait.
After a while more and more
of the passengers came awake. Finally the man next to him stirred, blinked, and
sat up, looking around at the plane and then at Sam. His expression was more
thoughtful than puzzled.
"Very efficient,"
he mumbled at last. "Much better than the old days." His voice was
deep and rich, and there was the slight trace of a West Indian accent in it.
"I think we could all
use showers, though," Sam said, trying to open a dialog.
The other man nodded, then
smiled wistfully, as if remembering. "Even so, back in the old days we
used to have to go under for weeks." He chuckled. "I often wondered
why the pigs never caught us by our stench alone."
"Who were you
with?" Sam asked.
"The Black October
Brigades," the man said. "You?"
He shrugged. "A number of
different groups. Synergistic Commune Action Brigade was the last one."
The other nodded again.
"I remember that. Jim Foley and I were in Cuba for a while together a few
years back. Whatever happened to him, anyway? I got a little fed up cutting
sugar cane and came back, but he stuck it out. Never thought somebody like him
would stay—drives you nuts."
"He didn't," Sam
Cornish said then checked himself. No names had been released on that California
raid; he wasn't supposed to know about Foley. A slight tinge of fear rose
inside him and he suddenly realized how easily he could betray himself, and how
fatal that would be. His mind raced.
"I got word from some
mutual friends that he was back in action again," he managed. "I
don't know much else, but I did hear he was back in action."
That seemed to satisfy the
other and he let it drop, looking around. "Several familiar faces
here," he noted, "and a few who might just be familiar. I think a lot
of plastic surgery has been done."
"And a lot of years have
passed," Sam pointed out. "Less hair, dental work, and a decade can
do a lot. I know it did for me."
The dark man sighed.
"Don't I know it. This hair is grayer than it looks, and these wrinkles
and vein pop-ups are constant reminders. What happened to us, I wonder? We
believed so damned much in all of it. It's not much better now than it was
then, but here we are, here we all are, out of it and
domesticated."
Sam knew what he meant better
than the other understood himself. Here, on this plane, were a bunch of overage
radicals, ages from the mid-thirties to almost fifty. From their college days
and into their mid-twenties they'd been committed, fanatical firebrands, but,
slowly, and not usually from a clear cause as his had been, they'd retreated
from the front lines. The job was left to the newer, younger radicals whom they
didn't even understand, couldn't even talk to.
"I think it's a lot of
things," he said. "In my case I was just plain tired. After all, I'm
human, like you, like everyone. You can only hit, run, live forever fearing the
knock on the door, in a constant state of tension, for so long. It gets to you
the older you get."
The other man shrugged.
"I don't know about that. I suspect it was as much our small numbers and
lack of unity. We kept our groups very small to minimize betrayal, and that
worked well enough, but we never got together, never got a common program, and,
worse, were so far underground we couldn't recruit our own replacements."
He grew less reflective, more serious. "I think that's what this is all
about."
Sam Cornish's eyebrows rose.
"Huh?"
"Look around you,"
the man said, gesturing with his right arm. "A lot of folks from the old
days. Suppose some of these younger cult-groups and the remaining members of
the old guard could be brought together under a single unified structure, a
common program, with proper money and support?" His eyes gleamed.
"Why, man, we could take over anything!"
Sam shrugged. "Who
knows? I think we'll find out in a little bit, though. My ears just popped and
I think the plane's banking for an approach."
It was true. Almost as he
finished saying those words they heard the thump, thump, of the landing
gear being lowered and locked, and within a minute or so more they were on the
ground, there was the rush of engines reversing, and the plane slowed to a
crawl and began to taxi.
It was a short ride on the
bumpy ground until the plane stopped with a jerk and a groan. Most of the
people were awake now, many talking in hushed whispers, but all eyes were
looking forward to the pilot's cabin and the door just before it.
Now the cabin door opened and
a bearded young Latin-looking man in olive drab fatigues emerged and opened the
door. The engines shut down, and when the door opened a blast of tremendously
hot, dry air rushed in. The temperature in the cabin rose tremendously.
A stair or ramp of some kind
was quickly attached and there were footsteps running up to the plane. A thin,
small woman in fatigues entered, shook hands with the crewman, exchanged a few
words they couldn't make out, then walked back to the main passenger cabin,
stopping at the galley.
Cornish wasn't the only one
who noticed four V-shaped chevrons in dark red on her left sleeve. She was
tanned darkly, but could have been any nationality with European antecedents.
Sam guessed she was no more than twenty-five.
Her voice was deep, rich, and
loud, and had the ring of confident authority. "Welcome to Camp
Liberty," she announced. She sounded like she was from Kansas or another
of the midwestern states—neutral, a little nasal, and totally American. "I
am Sergeant Twenty-Four. As far as you are concerned, that will be the only
name you'll ever hear. All of you will receive code names and/or numbers here.
Stick to them and do not use any other. You will be training with, and trained
by, literally hundreds of freedom fighters from around the world. Naturally,
when we go into action, a few of us may wind up in enemy hands. If so, you will
be placed under conditions where you might tell all you know. Because of this,
you will know what you need to know and nothing else. That way no one can
betray another."
The man next to Cornish
chuckled. "You see?" he murmured. "Organization. Yes, sir, real
pros."
"Camp Liberty is a
military camp and is run as such," the woman went on. "You are all
now in the Liberation Army. In the times ahead, we will train you, equip you,
and weed out those who can and will carry out the armed struggle and those who
can or will not do so."
Sam felt slightly ill, not
entirely from the building heat and effects of little to eat and drug
suppression. There was very little doubt in his mind as to what would happen to
those these people found could not or would not aid in the struggle. Everyone
there was a non-person, someone easily and efficiently eliminated.
"You have many long and
hard days and nights ahead of you," the sergeant warned. "However,
you are among friends, people from across the globe committed to eliminating
the fascist corporate states who still dominate the world. In the past you
worked alone or in small groups, and you know what that got. Publicity, and
little else. Now, this time, we are in a different position. Revolution not
only within our lifetime, but within the year."
She went on and on with it,
but Sam was tuning her out rather quickly. A fanatic like those in the past;
her face shone with vision and purpose, and the rhetoric was the same.
It was getting damned hot,
and sweat was pouring out of most of them. He was uncomfortable and he itched.
He admired the way this overdressed young revolutionary seemed oblivious to all
that, and, indeed, oblivious to the discomfort and boredom of her passengers, all
of whom had also heard this or said this long before, when this woman was a
pigtailed elementary schooler.
"I wish she'd run
down," he whispered to his seat companion out of the side of his mouth.
"I think this is the
start of it," the other said in the same hushed tone and manner. "She
wants to see who the troublemakers are at the very beginning, who can't take
this and who can."
Sam sank back in his seat and
wiped the perspiration from his brow. They'd even taken his handkerchief.
The other man was right,
though. The more she droned on, the clearer it became to everyone that they
were in a contest, the sergeant in those heavy fatigues versus those in regular
clothes in the plane. Suddenly he noticed the plane crew in the background. The
fellow who'd opened the door was standing there with a clipboard, eyes looking
around at the passengers. Every once in a while he'd jot something down.
The other two of the crew,
both of the same type and background as the man with the clipboard, stayed for
a little bit, then walked out and down the ramp.
Sam began to be amused by it
as time wore on. The woman started slurring her words slightly, and seemed
uncomfortable and a little dizzy. She kept recovering, but these flashes were
coming more and more frequently now, and her uniform was drenched. Finally she
admitted defeat and wound it up.
"You will now exit the
plane from the front. When you get to the door, Navigator Nine Sixteen will
hand you a card with your own identity for the duration of this exercise.
Memorize it, learn to use it exclusively for your own sake later on."
They disembarked. When Sam
passed the navigator he was handed a little white index card on which was
printed 2025. Easy enough number, he thought, and went out.
It was even worse under the
sun, but it was dry as hell and with a slight wind. The greedy dry air sucked
up much of his perspiration.
They were in a desert, that
was for sure. Whitish sand was everywhere in great dunes and depressions, with
no features and no signs of living things.
The sand was hard-packed
right here, though, and felt solid as a rock. Somebody had put down a paved
runway and a little bit away was Camp Liberty.
It looked like something out
of an old desert movie combined with a cheap war picture. Lots of large tents
all over, interspersed here and there with old-type quonset huts, buildings of
tin that looked like the upper half of buried tubes.
There were lots of people
about, all wearing either the military fatigues and boots of the sergeant and
flight crew or olive tee-shirts and shorts. Some wore armbands of one sort or
another, and all wore incongruous-looking hard khaki-colored Jungle Jim hats.
Men and women were about equal in number.
They headed first for a large
tent nearest the plane, directed by a few uniformed people. They didn't enter,
though. Instead they were broken up into groups of ten, equally male and
female, and made to stand there a bit more. The sorting was by number.
There were eight groups, he
counted. Eighty old revolutionaries on that plane.
Now a big man and a husky
woman in uniform emerged from the tent. They went to the first group, and the
man, in a Slavic-sounding accent, said, "You will follow us, please."
As soon as the first group
was away, the second was met by another man-woman team, and then it was his
turn.
An Oriental-looking man and a
tiny black woman were his group's caretakers, and both had soft but definite
accents as well.
"You will follow
us," the woman commanded in an accent that was somewhat African-English
with traces of French. They followed, all feeling like they would drop any
second.
Several hundred meters later
they reached another large tent.
"As I call your
number," the Oriental man said, "you will enter, disrobe completely,
then enter the shower and rinse completely. When you emerge, you will give your
number to the person there and they will give you a box with your number on it.
Go out the back, dry off with the towels there as necessary, unpack the box and
put on the top set of garments in the box. We will be there to take you
farther."
There was a big bin inside
into which they shed clothes, then walked to a set of a dozen or so showers
fed by large tanks plainly in view. They were not on; water was to be conserved
here. You went in, turned one on, and bathed in the cool liquid using a little
bit of gummy-looking soap, rinsed, turned off the shower, and walked out the
back.
There was some grumbling from
a couple of the people at being pushed around, but all realized that they were
there by choice, and they had no other option.
Sam took the box marked 2025
and walked back outside, still nude. He felt slightly embarrassed and
uncomfortable standing nude like that, although he was in exceptional condition
and almost nobody paid him any mind. Old conditioning dies hard, he thought in
self-reproach.
The top clothing proved to be
one of the hard hats with his number stencilled on it, the tee-shirt and
shorts, some short matching socks that seemed to cling, and a pair of low
military-style boots. To his surprise, they all fit perfectly.
Finished, they lined up in
front of their boxes.
"I am Sergeant Eight
Eighty-One," the Oriental man told them. "This is Sergeant Seven
Sixty-Four. We are your training instructors. We will be living with you for
the duration of your stay here, and we will chart your progress and go with you
to classes and drills. Please feel free at any time not in class or drill to
ask us any questions you like or to register complaints, make comments, et
cetera, et cetera."
A woman about thirty-five,
small, plain, with short-cropped reddish-brown hair, spoke up. "Sergeant,
will we get to eat and rest?"
The Oriental nodded almost
imperceptibly. "Yes, yes. First we will go to our living quarters, your
new home, and store your boxes. Then we will eat, then sleep. Tomorrow you will
awaken before dawn to start. Most of our physical program will be done very
early, very late, or at night. Midday, as you can imagine, is rather too hot
for this, and that time you will spend inside at classes. Any other questions?"
One thin, tall, lanky man
raised his hand and was recognized with a nod.
"Where are we, and how
long will we be here?" he asked.
"You are in Africa . As
to exactly where, that you will never know. You will be here as long as it
takes. If you all progress at the correct rate, a few weeks at best. Remember,
though, that you are older than many of our recruits, and unused to our ways.
Also, you are, on the whole, in less than the best shape. This program is
designed to help you survive when you go back into action. Once back into
action, you will be in small groups, on your own, as you used to be, the
difference being that you will be part of a larger and well-coordinated
infrastructure. Together, we will accomplish the impossible, and we will do it
quickly and effectively. Together, we will accomplish the collapse of the
fascist corporate state of the United States of America, and when it tumbles
the world will quake so much from its fall that those of us who survive will
truly see the revolution for which we've prayed so long."
The food was typical field
kitchen stuff. What it was and how it had gotten into that condition were total
mysteries. They were starved, though, and it tasted just fine.
Sam had a bad night of it.
His own inner fears combined with his personal demons. He did not cry out—some
subliminal self-preservation brake kept that from happening—but he saw it all
once again: the plane, the launcher, Suzanne Martine's ecstasy as the great
airliner exploded ...
He awoke several times in his
hammock, staring. By the time the two sergeants came to get them up at 4:30
A.M. he guessed he'd slept less than three hours.
Breakfast wasn't great,
either—powdered eggs, some tough sort of meat, and a vitamin-fortified juice
that tasted like rotten tomatoes. It filled, though, and then they went to
work.
In the gloom and through
sunrise they did basic calisthentics right out of gym class, running, jumping
jacks, pushups and situps, the whole routine, until their bodies ached from
it. Sam alone had no real problems; he was in superb physical condition and
found the exercises refreshing and effortless. The two sergeants were duly
impressed.
Another shower, some
coordination drills to instill teamwork, and then it was time for class.
The indoctrination lecturer
was a matronly woman of late middle years with a Russian accent, although she
made it clear that they were not working for the U.S.S.R.
"Camp Liberty was not
established by any of the major powers," she told them. "Instead, it
is a project of a number of radical revolutionary third-world nations working
in concert, financed in part by the patriotic work of brigades around the
capitalist world and by some excess revenue from some of those states better
endowed with natural resources. We look upon the U.S.S.R. and the People's
Republic of China as stalled regimes, continually reactionary once the elite
assumed power. They are better than the U.S.A, of course, but only in degree,
and we shall attend to them in due course. However, it is the U.S.A. that has
only a sixteenth of the world's population yet consumes a fourth of its
resources. It is the principal cancer holding back the attainment of basic
human rights to food, shelter, and protection throughout the less fortunate
nations of the world. Remove it, and you excise eighty percent of the cancer.
"However," she
continued, "we wish to remove it without placing the entire world in the
center of a war it has avoided for decades. Atomic rain benefits no one, for
there would be no one left. As a result, this project was established by
progressive theorists. To the capitalists of America, the enemy remains totally
mysterious. They cannot attack or threaten or pressure or cajole when they do
not know whom to do it to. In the meantime they are being shown up as impotent
fools, and already America is taking its first steps toward becoming a fascist
state in day-to-day practice. We will let it continue, while the people chafe
under true dictatorship for the first time.
Then, suddenly, we—you here,
and the others who have passed through this camp—will strike, massively,
despite all of their militaristic repression. Out of the rage at their
heavy-booted impotence will come the popular revolution many thought
impossible."
During the questions, one
thirtyish man with a southern accent stood.
"I'm an American, born
and reared," he told her, the implication that she was not obvious in his
tone. "I firmly believe that the American just doesn't think in those
terms. That's why I quit the Movement. All we were doin' by our little
bombin's was to entrench the government in power. It's the lack of pressure,
good and uneventful times, that make Americans forget about their nationalism.
How can this work now?"
She didn't seem upset at the
question. "First of all, Americans have never before experienced true
repression. The poor may be starving to death, but they are free to gripe all
the way to the grave, which is what keeps things as they are. We have induced a
situation where, now, for the first time, they are finding out what it means
to be dictated to, to have the Army and a single group run them. Since it is in
power to serve the corporations and bankers, it is those institutions who will
be protected and prosper; the individual will simply get stepped on,
constantly. This will fuel revolutionary fires. And as for there not being a
revolutionary spirit there—well, the U.S.A. was founded in popular, bloody revolution
although it was perverted in the hands of the merchant and slave-owner
aristocracy who seized control. And as late as the 1930s, under the Depression,
granges and collectives in South Dakota took up the red banner and had to be
suppressed by federal troops. The seed is there, it needs only to be
fertilized and nurtured to grow."
There was more. This was only
the introductory phase and it only spelled out the theories. Sam realized that
he could only place two people in the camp, old revolutionary hands he knew
more from the newspapers than experience. He didn't know who these people were,
where he was, what countries were involved, or anything.
Some spy, he thought glumly.
The next class, in another
tent, was on modern counterinsurgency techniques. They sat again in folding
chairs and waited for another lecturer to come in.
Finally, she did. A small
woman, exotic and dark complected who moved with the grace of a cat to the
front, where she turned and looked them over.
Sam Cornish could only stare
at her, a knot forming in his stomach and a tingling coming over his body. His
mind raced and couldn't settle; he was numb, overcome.
After a decade, Suzanne
Martine was as beautiful as ever.
TWELVE
A tall, good-looking man in a
business suit entered the room and looked at the unconscious forms of Sandra
O'Connell and Joe Bede. He turned to the other men who'd done the deed; the
chloroform smell was still in the air.
"Give 'em each a hypo to
keep them out," he said. "Harry, go get a laundry cart. Phil, call
Baker Control and get a laundry truck of ours over here. Then get back
here."
The others nodded and went to
their tasks. He turned to the remaining ones in the room. "Edelman's
people are watching the building, so we have to move fast," he warned
them.
Harry came back with a large
laundry cart, complete with laundry. They removed a lot of it, all medical
whites and other standard uniforms used internally by the R&D and lab
departments. Joe Bede, who was large, they put in first, then the smaller and lighter
Sandra O'Connell. Neither stirred, although they had some problem getting them
both in so that they didn't harm each other. Both would be bruised and battered
by this, but finally the leader was satisfied that they wouldn't die on him.
Some of the laundry was piled loosely on top, allowing breathing space, with a
single loose crumpled cloth hiding the faces.
Within five minutes the one
called Phil reentered the room with a small and mousy-looking white-clad man.
The two men got behind the cart and started pushing. It was heavy going, uneven
and unbalanced, and they were straining. It looked extremely suspicious to be
laundry.
The sentries at several
checkpoints noticed the problems, but at each point the high-level IDs of the
men and their passes got them through unquestioned. Soldiers are trained to obey
higher authority; once the authority of the men was established, it was none of
their affair what was in the cart.
Finally they got the cart
into the truck and it started off into midday Washington traffic. After an
extraordinarily long and complex route through the streets and clearances at
dozens of military checkpoints, they were satisfied that they had not been
tailed or spotted and relaxed. The state of emergency helped them; the normally
congested streets were nearly empty of vehicles, and a tail would have been
pretty obvious.
Now the driver made for the
Capital Beltway, also nearly deserted and with military checkpoints at each
entrance and exit ramp. They cleared the first, got on, and went around until
they reached Andrews Air Force Base and cleared two more checkpoints. They
drove onto the base, down to the airfield itself, and to a small hangar off to
one side. There the two were unloaded, and the little laundry truck rumbled off
to its pickup points. As it actually was the Andrews area truck, it followed
its routine with no trouble. Later the driver would report some mechanical
problems that had delayed him, and there would be a motor pool sergeant with
appropriate paperwork to back him up.
Two small planes were inside
the hangar, and a crew of efficient technicians placed Sandra O'Connell's still
unconscious form in the back of one, tying hands and feet and gagging her just
in case, and the equally limp form of Joe Bede in the other.
Two military-garbed men got
into each plane, and, one by one, they rolled out and took off. One man made
certain the passenger stayed unconscious, the other flew the plane.
As they disappeared into the
afternoon sky, one of the men came over to the leader, now visibly relaxed and
smoking a cigarette.
"I don't get it,"
he said to the smoker. "Hell, why not just wipe 'em and be done with
it?"
The other man smiled.
"They're both useful people. Better to ice them than wipe them if you
can. You can always wipe 'em if the icing doesn't take."
The small plane circled and
landed at a private field in upstate New York. An ambulance was waiting for
it, and they made the transfer at the far end of the field. Few words were
exchanged; the plane was off again in moments, ready to make seven scheduled
stops on minor errands so that no one would ever know that anything was out of
the ordinary.
The ambulance carrying Dr.
Sandra O'Connell travelled back roads for close to an hour. During that time a
technician monitored her, making certain that she remained out. Finally it
pulled up to a gate, where the driver said a few words to a guard and then
entered and drove up to what appeared to be a cross between a hospital and a
rest home.
Sandra was wheeled in, taken
to a special room, undressed and then redressed in a hospital gown, then placed
in a bed with sensors attached to her skin monitored by a technician outside.
As soon as she started to come out of the drug-induced state of
unconsciousness, they would know it. When the first signs showed, he punched a
button.
A man dressed as a doctor and
another wearing nursing insignia responded almost immediately and went in to
her. The doctor checked her over. She shifted, mumbled, and groaned. Not
completely out of it, but emerging.
"The usual dosage?"
the nurse asked.
The doctor nodded.
"Standard. Remember, this stuff's dynamite. I want her on the B schedule,
twenty ccs every thirty-six hours, like clockwork. No slips."
The nurse nodded and prepared
the syringe. "You worry too much," he told the doctor.
"I don't like using the
stuff," the doctor said. "Just a little too much and you kill them. A
little under and they come out too quickly. I wish we had a better way."
The nurse put down the
syringe and picked up a little chart, glancing at his watch. "Sixteen
twenty?" he asked.
The doctor nodded. The nurse
picked up the syringe again, waited until his digital watch clicked over, then
plunged the needle in. Sandra O'Connell started, seemed to come awake, then
sank back down as if asleep once again. The doctor checked her nervously,
waiting a few minutes for full effect.
"What're you gonna use
on her, Doc?" the nurse whispered as they waited.
"Regression. I don't know
enough about her to do much else. It's as good as any."
He made some more checks,
then seemed satisfied. The unconscious woman was breathing deeply and
regularly, and did not respond when he thumped her in a few places and even
partially opened an eye. The pupils were heavily dilated. He seemed satisfied,
and pulled up a chair close to the head of her bed.
"Just relax," he
told her soothingly. "You are in a deep, deep sleep but you can hear me,
you can hear only the sound of my voice, hear and understand me and even talk
to me although you will remain in that deep, ever deepening sleep."
He kept it up as a trained
hypnotist would for several go-rounds, then seemed satisfied.
The drug, a derivative of
several compounds used both legally and illegally, had been developed as a
truth serum, a chemical hypnotic of the strongest sort. It hadn't worked; there
was a kind of euphoric effect that sometimes produced the same sort of
falsehoods as scopolamine and the other so-called "truth" drugs. But
it was found that anyone under its influence was tremendously susceptible to
hypnotic-type suggestion, not merely while under but for almost two days after.
Behavioral scientists and the
CIA both found it useful.
"How old are you,
Sandra?" the doctor asked her.
"Forty," she said.
He sniffed. A lie already.
"All right, but now you
feel yourself drifting, drifting in time and space. You are not forty any more
or in your forties at all. You are thirty years old now, but you are still
drifting back. Now you are twenty-five. Now you are twenty. Now you are fifteen."
He paused.
"How old are you,
Sandra?" he asked again. "Fifteen," she answered. Her voice
seemed slightly different tonally.
"I see. And you go to
school?"
"Urn. Hum."
"Where do you go to
school?"
"Sacred Heart of Mary
High School for Girls," she said.
''All right," he said.
"But now you are drifting again. You are not fifteen. Now you're fourteen
.. . thirteen . . . twelve . . . eleven . . . ten . . . nine .. . eight ...
seven . . . six . . . five ... four. Now you are four years old."
Her face and positioning
changed as he said this. She seemed to curl up, her face showed an almost
childlike gleam, and, slowly, she brought her thumb up and put it in her mouth.
"A good subject,"
the nurse whispered. "The bright ones usually are the best."
The doctor nodded and turned
back to Sandra O'Connell.
"Now, how old are you,
Sandy?"
The thumb came out, and she
drooled slightly. She tucked the thumb in and weakly held up four fingers.
"This many," she lisped, and back the thumb went.
He nodded. "Now, listen
to me, Sandy. You are four years old, and no matter what happens don't you
forget it or think otherwise. You will see yourself as four years old, you will
act as if you are four, you will believe you are four, and you will react to
other people as if you were four. You are away from home, in a hospital, but
that's okay. You're not scared, and you're not really sick. You like it here.
It's fun. Now, when I say `four' again you will go into a normal sleep and
sleep really nicely, and when you wake up you'll feel real good and you'll be a
four-year-old little girl and if you ask nice the man who will be here will
give you a lollipop. Okay?"
Her head nodded yes but the
thumb stayed in.
"Four," he said,
and sighed and got up. He and the nurse walked outside to the hall and shut the
door.
"You sure this'll be okay?"
the nurse asked, worried. "I mean, why four?"
"Literacy and
vocabulary," he replied. "She's a doctor. Lots of stimulation around
here. Three's too parent-dependent, five's a little too old. It's only for a
while. Maybe after I study her records a bit and come up with a profile I can
get a better and more useful set. Right now this'll have to do." He turned
to leave and the nurse turned to go back into Sandra's room. Then the doctor
stopped, turned, and called, "Oh, Jerry?"
"Yeah, Doc?"
"Next cycle integrate
her with the rest of the Baby Brigade so she can play with them." He
frowned as if trying to remember something. Then he had it. He reached into his
pocket, pulled out a large lollipop, and threw it to the nurse who caught it
and pocketed it.
She awoke several hours later
and looked around. It was a strange room, and for a few minutes she was scared;
then she remembered she was in the hospital for something, and hospitals were
fun places. When she grew up she wanted to be a doctor.
There was a grown-up dressed
all in white sitting by the door reading something. "Hi!" she called
out, removing her thumb from her mouth to do so, then putting it back.
The man put down his book,
got up, came over to her and smiled. "Hi, yourself, big girl!" he responded
warmly.
"You have a
lol'pop?" she asked playfully.
He grinned. "It just so
happens I do," he replied, and took it out.
She had some trouble until
she finally figured out that she couldn't fit both her thumb and the lollipop
into her mouth at the same time. She settled for the latter and lay back,
contentment on her face.
Hospitals were such fun!
THIRTEEN
Jake Edelman was furious.
"How the hell could you
let this happen?" he demanded of a young man and woman standing before
his desk. "It was your responsibility! I warned you something like
this could happen!"
The man shifted nervously.
"Look, I mean, we had all the entrances and exits covered, and the guards
as well. Hell, we had no reason to believe they'd pull this today—and those
guys had proper IDs and everything. Passed everybody by."
Edelman picked up a sheaf of
reports on his desk and gestured with them.
"All right, let's see
what we do know. We know they found out something, possibly who or why
Dr. Spiegelman was killed. We also know that, as soon as they found it out,
somebody else knew as well and sprung the trap. Somebody with real top connections
in government."
"I don't see how that's
possible," the woman said. "I mean, that would mean somebody big in
with these terrorists."
Edelman shook his head. "Now
you're catching on. That's been obvious from the start of all this. How else
could Spiegelman have been murdered?" The line of thought was
uncomfortable for the two agents. "I just can't believe somebody like that
could be in such a position without us knowing about it," the female said.
Jake Edelman gave her a grim
smile. "Years ago in Italy they had a terrorist organization that
kidnapped big shots and sometimes killed them—despite bodyguards, varied
schedules, everything. They were so damned cocky they often used the same trash
can for ransom drops time after time. How? Were the Italian police that bad?
No, it's because everybody has a fear line or index, and upper level people
have husbands, wives, kids, too. Find the one weak link in the bigwigs and you
got a man on the inside. In that case they actually had a bunch, including a
cabinet minister who wasn't being buffaloed but was part of the brains of the
outfit, figuring to run the place in a revolution. No, being high up has very
little to do with it." He paused for a second, collecting his thoughts.
"So now we have to ask ourselves why these things happened and what we can
do about it."
"You said yourself it
was because they found out something," the man pointed out.
"Yeah, sure, but what? I
ran the tapes of their conversation." He noticed the expressions of the
others. "The place was bugged, of course. After Spiegelman you think I'm
that much of an ass? Our opposition knew it, too, or suspected it—which is why
they weren't collared until they were out into the halls. Well, enough of that.
Their conversation indicates that the NDCC computers had a number of variations
of the Wilderness Organism already in their memory banks. Once Spiegelman
figured out the nature of the beast, he asked the right questions and, instead
of a lot of possibilities coming up, the computer gave him precisely what he
asked for. Obvious conclusion: somebody in NDCC had used the computers to
create the Wilderness Organism."
"You mean it was created
right here?" The woman agent gasped. "Oh, my god!"
He nodded. "Sure. The
easiest place to work treason is within the civil service. One in eight people
work for the government, you know. True, they couldn't get to the military
computers, but a can opener's a weapon in the wrong hands. Someone who really
knew his or her stuff got the NDCC bio computers to whip up a nicely
complicated Wilderness Organism, complete with variant recipes. This was then
passed to our terrorists, who found a lab capable of whipping the buggers up.
Much easier to make them than to design them. Now, the question is how this
person knew that Spiegelman got those results so quickly—and the answer tells
us a lot about where our bigwig is."
The young man's eyebrows
rose. "Sure! A biggie in NDCC, of course! They could plug into the computer,
maybe program it to flag them when and if Spiegelman or, later on, O'Connell
and Bede stumbled onto anything."
Edelman nodded. "True enough,
but let's take it further. First, why wasn't the information erased from the
computer? Why was it left there to incriminate somebody? And, second, who in
NDCC has the authority to have CIA or whoever. it was on hand, order
them unquestioningly to snatch these two and get them out under our noses in an
operation tight enough that these people wouldn't leak it to our own
contacts?"
They saw what he meant.
"I used to do some computer work," the woman said. "With the
newer types with fully integrated logic you might be too intrusive if you tried
to erase certain types of basic work. That is, anybody going into that area
would immediately see that things had been tampered with. Easier to take the
very good chance that nobody will ask the right question."
Edelman nodded again.
"That makes sense. An alternate explanation is that it was left there to
be found, but it was found much too soon. But, we'll let that pass for now. How
about the second question? Who at NDCC has the authority to call in the cloak-and-dagger
boys?"
The young man shook his head.
"Nobody, really, unless it was done with GSA security staff, and I'd seriously
doubt that. It would have to be one of the Pentagon boys at the very least, and
they wouldn't necessarily have monitoring capabilities for the computer."
The senior agent took out a
cigar and lit it, letting out a huge cloud of blue-gray smoke. "Okay,
then. I agree military's in on this, but I doubt if that's the direct link. Too
obvious. We need the go-between. What agency would be able to coordinate the
NDCC stuff with some of the Pentagon boys?"
They saw it and they didn't
like it.
"The White House,"
the woman said, amazed.
Edelman looked satisfied.
"Okay, then. That's our boy. Now it's time for our computers to go
to work. We want a rundown of the top-level White House staff—we already did
security checks on all of them. We need a key scientist at NDCC who owes his or
her position to somebody in the current administration, and likewise
somebody in the top brass, probably military intelligence, we can link to this
same person in the White House." His expression turned
suddenly grim. "I hope you realize that we're battling against time here.
With the state of emergency on and getting more and more pervasive, this
top-level agent we want will become more and more impregnable with each passing
day. If we don't find out who the son of a bitch is pretty quickly, when we do
finger him we might wind up disappearing ourselves."
That was the most unsettling
thought of all.
"Now we have the next
question. Why not just bump O'Connell and Bede off'?" Edelman continued.
"Ideas?"
"Maybe because they
didn't have to, or they needed them for something," the woman suggested.
"After all, with Spiegelman they had no choice."
Their boss nodded agreement.
"Okay, so they have some kind of plans for the two of them, or some need,
that called for taking the risk of icing them. So, if you were using the
government to subvert itself, where would the government stash two such hot
properties?"
"Mental hospitals,"
the young man answered. "Military or VA, probably. Anyplace else and you
run the risk of somebody from NDCC or with NDCC experience bumping into them.
Besides, we all agree it was a military-style snatch despite their IDs."
"Okay, then, get on
it," Edelman told them. "But —remember. Since we're dealing with a
diabolically clever traitor at the White House level, that person's going to be
watching us like a hawk. Tread softly and assume you've got the enemy looking
over your shoulder. Use our special teams of reliables and stay out of the
general Bureau hierarchy as much as possible. Somebody around here probably
owes this SOB a favor, too." He growled slightly, looking down at the
sheaf of papers. "I want this bastard. I want this person bad."
According to the military
guard's records before him, the chief agent with the laundry cart had been an
FBI agent named Jacob Edelman.
FOURTEEN
Sam Cornish could hardly
believe his eyes when he saw Suzanne Martine up there, lecturing. But then, of
course, a corner of his mind told him, if she were still alive this was where
she'd be, and if this place was in fact the center of the mysterious virus
attacks on the United States she would quite naturally, almost as a law of
nature, be in the center of it.
She had changed, of course;
she was older, face more firmly set and somehow tougher, too. She was still
very small and thin; her voice was still incongruously deep, brassy,
commanding when it wanted to be.
He sat through the whole
thing without really hearing a word she was saying. He wished he knew if she
knew he was here. The thought both excited and scared him; they had once been
lovers, but Suzy knew him better than anyone, and was the greatest threat to
him on this base.
And now it had ended, and
they'd marched out, and through the next few hours and, in fact, the next few
days there was no sign that she had noticed.
Still, to be here, in the middle
of nowhere, and suddenly find her again, to know that she was around, that any
chance might bring them together, was ever on his mind. He couldn't help
dwelling on what would happen if they did meet, and was chided several times by
the sergeants and some of his own comrades for daydreaming.
Life in the camp pretty much
resembled all those movies he'd seen on Army basic training. A lot of lectures,
many political in nature, and a lot of physical training—running, jumping,
doing obstacle courses and the like. Some of the old-timers were having a
really rough time of it, and several simply gave up along the way, refusing to
get out of their hammocks in the morning. No one said anything to them about
it, but when the group returned at the end of the day they and their effects
were gone.
There was something wrong
with the base, too, although it took him a while to figure it out. Occasionally
there'd be jet contrails overhead, and billowing trails to mark their
progress—far more than there should have been, with no one apparently minding
or nervous about any detection. More, people seemed to come and go very
frequently, particularly some of the upper level people. Jeep tracks went off
into the desert, and occasionally helicopters of short-range type with nondescript
markings would land or take off. He couldn't help wondering where in this waste
they could be going.
At the end of the second week
things got more serious but the pressure eased up. The extremely tough and
demanding regimen, he realized, was to weed out the weaklings. Now the
winnowing was done; those who remained were deemed qualified and fit, and
classes went from being basically polemic to the practical.
Tactician One Thirty was a
case in point. A black man with a heavy English-African accent, he finally got
them down to specifics.
"The plan, you see, is
really simple," he told them. "We will organize you into small teams.
Each of these teams will have a major city as its target. Under the new rules
of overtly fascist America, you will have to move undetected to a rendezvous
point, there to get both your target and your weapons. On one glorious day we
will strike—simply, silently, but not without a great deal of personal danger
and risk. Three days after that, the major cities of America will crumble from
an enemy long since through and gone, and fully protected in any event. Our ultimatums
will be everywhere; the alternative to the bulk of the American people will be
revolution or death. They will chart their own revolution, of course; we shall simply
be there to provide the leadership when it comes."
"But what about the
Soviets?" somebody asked. "Or the Chinese?"
The tactician smiled.
"Right now both of those countries are straining to demonstrate that they
have nothing whatsoever to do with the attacks. At all times the leadership of
the United States, whether in present hands or ours, will have control of the
nuclear arsenal. The Chinese are not postured for a first-strike iniative on
the United States in any event. The Soviets have finally managed to get two
generations by without war. We feel they will welcome the revolution as an
alternative to nuclear confrontation. At first they will see us as friends and
allies. We will welcome them as such, and send home with them little
delayed-action presents, again not attributable to us. We feel that if we can
accomplish internal revolution in America, it will be that much easier in the
U.S.S.R."
Cornish saw what he meant,
although he sincerely doubted the end result. No matter what the risk of nuclear
confrontation, though, there was the specter of horrible plagues marching,
first on the great cities of the United States, then across densely populated
Europe and the Western Soviet Union. The leaders of Camp Liberty were fanatics,
that was for certain. The kind of people so committed to the idea of total
revolution that they would never even dare permit the hard questions to be
asked.
And willing to massacre half
the human race in the name of the Cause, a cause they could only vaguely
define.
The man on the plane had been
wrong; it was not like the old days. It was the same blind, mindless
devotion to undefined revolutionary principles, yes, but where ten could only
dream themselves a threat to power, this network of who-knew-how-many thousands
could cause the massive death and chaos that revolutionaries of the old days
only dreamed about.
And, in further lectures,
they unfolded their long-range plans. Massive liquidations of the middle and
upper classes; a return of the citizens of the world to a controlled
subsistence economy, a world of happy peasants with none above.
Somehow, he thought, it all
sounded like a return to the New Stone Age.
Ten days after he first saw
Suzanne Martine on that podium she came to him. He was just lying there in his
hammock, looking over a manual on a new Czech sniper rifle they were going to
be issued, when she walked in.
"Hi, Sam," she said
softly.
The book fell slowly.
"Hello, Suzy," he managed.
She smiled and looked him
over approvingly. "You haven't changed all that much. A little older, a
little more hair on the face and a little less on the body, but that's about
all."
He didn't know what to say,
so he echoed her. "You haven't changed a bit. How long have you known I
was here?"
"I saw you the first
lecture," she told him. "I couldn't believe it was you at first, so I
checked and checked and kept sneaking peeks to see if it really was. Then, as
soon as the indoctrination was over, I got here as quickly as I could."
She stared at him again unbelievingly. "What the hell are you doing here,
Sam?" she asked.
So many emotions jumped up
and down in him that he didn't know what to say or do. There she was, standing
there, and he wanted her again, even after all this time, even though he'd
walked out on her before. Wanted her, and feared her, too.
Suddenly he had it.
"Penance," he said dryly.
She chuckled, then suddenly
grew serious once again. "Why did you walk out, Sam? Where'd you go and
what did you do? And why?" She sat down on the canvas floor of the tent,
looking up at him.
Honesty, to a point, was the
best policy, he decided. "I had a crisis of faith," he said slowly.
"I really believed in us, in our group, in our ultimate motives. I
never once minded ripping off a bank or an insurance company or like that. We
were fighting for those people who never had any money to put into a bank or
buy insurance. Hell, I wouldn't have minded if we'd knocked off Congress.
But—we knocked off 386 innocent, ordinary folks and Congress and the President
and Wall Street just went on and laughed at us. It was like, well, going out to
assassinate the President and winding up snatching purses from little old
ladies on Social Security. It blew my mind, and I had to get myself back
together again. I had a —a breakdown, I guess. Like the kid who finds out
there's no Santa Claus right on Christmas Eve. I couldn't handle it."
He could see in her face that
she was trying to understand but couldn't, quite.
"You knew what terrorism
was all about," she said, not accusingly but questioningly. "To
achieve the greatest goals for the greatest number of people, some have to
perish. The innocents were martyrs to the Cause; they died so that their
children and neighbors and their children could have better lives. That's the
principle of terrorism. That's how a very small group becomes a force huge
enough to topple governments."
He nodded. "I know, I
know. But, Christ! There were sixty-four kids on that plane! Children! It blew
me away."
"And yet you're
here," she noted.
He nodded again. "Yes,
I'm here. I'm here for a lot of reasons, Suzy. I'm here because I've spent ten
years rotting in a commune in New England not thinking or accomplishing
anything. I'm here, too, I guess, because there's a goal in sight. What did we
accomplish by knocking over the stuff we did? Federal fugitives, exile, death,
that's all. No rocking the corporate boat, nothing. This time we can accomplish
something. This time it's make-or-break. We'll see the results or we'll
die. That's something I can get a handle on, work for. I never lost my dreams,
Suzy, only my feeling of doing something worthwhile."
She seemed to accept that,
although he still was certain she hadn't understood the logic. It was a good
story, a convincing story to explain his presence here—one he and a number of
experts had worked long and hard on.
One that was very close to
the truth.
For the first time, lying
there, looking at Suzy and seeing the organization of Camp Liberty and the enormity
of their plan, he began to wonder whether or not he didn't really want to be
reconverted. He yearned for the comradeship, felt thrilled by being an
instrument of history.
And he wanted her. Just
sitting here, after all these years, with Suzy this close, he was totally
turned on.
She seemed to sense it; she
softened. "Come on, Sam. You're not due for anything else today. Come with
me over to my quarters. Get some air conditioning and some decent food."
He went with her, although
air conditioning and food were not really on his mind at all.
She lived in one of the
quonset hut structures. This one had small but comfortable individual rooms,
air conditioning, and storage space.
"How did you wind up
here?" he asked her.
She flopped on the too-narrow
bed and sighed. "After the big bang, they caught Knapp and shot Crowder to
death. You walked out and vanished, and the rest of the group panicked. We
split, saying we'd get together at such-and-so, but we never did. I took the
pipeline to Havana first, then to Iraq, finally to Thailand—mostly training
guerrillas, recruiting and organizing women's brigades, things like that. When
this came up and the word went out, well, hell, of course I volunteered."
She paused, and her voice lowered. "But I missed you, Sam."
She was undressing slowly
now, and he followed suit. He wanted her, wanted her badly; it was the only
thing in his mind.
And hers.
And yet, when the
preliminaries were finished, he couldn't do it. He wanted to, but something
just went out of him. He couldn't follow through, make himself stay in that aroused
state.
It'd been like that for
years. He'd always told himself that it was because of Suzy. Now he found that,
even with her once again, he was emotionally short. It upset him, disturbed
him.
He wasn't impotent; he knew
that, deep inside. All those other girls, they had been Suzy-surrogates. He'd
acted with them as if they were Suzy, imagining them as Suzy.
It was that barrier that
still stood now that she was reality and not fantasy.
He loved her, yet there was a
gulf there. They were of two different minds, from two different worlds, alien
creatures deep inside. This same kind, loving Suzy had cheerfully killed 386
people she didn't even know and had thought nothing of it, and this same Suzy,
who reacted to him as a loving human being, saw all other humans as ciphers,
statistics, somehow unreal.
He could not cross that
barrier. He had to be one or the other, with Suzy or with humanity, and his
subconscious was making that choice.
She was disturbed, but not
angry.
"If not now, tomorrow or
the next day," she said philosophically. "We'll have plenty of
chances, Sam, like old times."
He looked at her strangely.
"What do you mean?"
"I arranged for you to
be with my team," she told him. "You and me, Sam, again! Back home and
back in action! The Liberation Army rides again, back from the dead past to
haunt them!" Her enthusiasm was genuine. She shifted, looked at him,
doubt and hesitation creeping into her eyes. "Isn't that what you want,
too, Sam?"
"Yes, Suzy, it is,"
he told her, and cursed himself inwardly because he was telling the absolute
truth.
FIFTEEN
The four-year-old mentality
of Sandy O'Connell, fortified by the addition of a teddy bear called Mr. Jinks,
fell into the routine very easily. The floor she was on was devoted almost
entirely to cases such as hers; people who were hot and needed to be put on ice
for a while, and were expediently regressed. The drug-induced hypnosis was
useful in many ways; those under it could also be persuaded for fairly long
periods to see others differently. All in all, there were fourteen
"children," nine males and five females, in the wing. Their average
age was forty-four.
This technique allowed a
close but relaxed watch on all of their activities. Like most drug-induced
things, there were no certainties here, and the human biochemistry differed
from individual to individual, making dosages tricky and occasioning a few
times when reality began to peer through at inopportune moments. For the most
part, though, they saw themselves and each other as children, and they laughed
together and cried together and played together. The one drawback to
regression was the necessity of keeping their section on the ground floor,
since they needed to be outdoors regularly. A playground had been established,
and a fence built to prevent wandering, but from the playground could be seen
rolling hills and thick green trees, and not too far away a small stream on the
other side of which passed a road down which occasional trucks and official
cars passed.
There were no ordinary
patients at Martha's Lake Veterans Hospital, as the place was called. There had
been, once, before the emergency, but not now. Many of the people there were
there without a lot of medical hypnosis; they were there because wives,
children, others they were close to were hostage to their willing
self-commitments. They, on the other hand, had no reason to believe that this
venerable government sanitarium did not contain some real patients, and the
impression that it did was reinforced by the staff. The old fellow who insisted
that he was Secretary of the Army under Millard might well have been—but he
might also have thought he was Napoleon last week. And who remembers the name,
let alone the looks, of even current, let alone former, Secretaries of the
Army?
So, too, it was unsettling to
see the childish adults in the yard over there beyond the fence. Whether they
were truly retarded or insane, or whether they were made that way, was not for
the others to say. If the latter, those poor people were a reminder of what
could happen to those who made trouble or got out of line.
But the drug only made you think
you were four; these regressed adults were still in possession of their
reasoning faculties under it all, although filtered through their delusion.
That fact was becoming an interesting and unforeseen reality to the warders,
who found themselves the victims of devilishly sophisticated childish jokes
and games, and also caused still greater problems.
Hospitals were fun,
Sandy O'Connell thought, but she missed her Mommy and Daddy and her big brother
and sister. The longer things went on, the more she thought of them and the
more she missed them. They hadn't come to visit her once, and she was beginning
to fear that they had abandoned her here, didn't want or love her any more.
It was an oversight for the
strained technicians at Martha's Lake; a parental visit could have been easily
programmed in. They were simply too busy and too pressed to think of
everything.
Finally, Sandy started to stare
at the green fields and trees and road beyond the fences. Down that road,
maybe, was home, her home and her friends, and her Mommy and Daddy. Maybe they couldn't
come to see her, maybe the doctors wouldn't let them.
She decided to go to them.
It became one more game, but
this time with a purpose. She snuck around, Mr. Jinks in tow, watching how the
attendants in their white jackets walked and worked, how closely they watched
everybody and how sloppy they sometimes were.
She also found that where the
big, tall fence met the brick side of the building, there was a narrow gap. The
fence hadn't been put in with a prison in mind; it was part of the original
establishment, and the fence post was prevented by its design and mooring from
being too close to the building. Even so, there were roughly twenty centimeters
between wall and fence. A terribly tight squeeze, but very inviting to the
four-year-old child who discovered it.
Like most children's plots,
though, this one was only partly thought out and not deeply considered. The
idea was simply there, and when the opportunity came along it was available.
That opportunity came when a
big fellow named Mike suggested hide-and-seek with the seekers to be the
warders. The other "children" thought it a tremendous joke for all
of them to hide in and around the ward and make the hospital people find them.
There was only one of the
white-coated attendants watching them, half-heartedly, his bored mind on a lot
of other things than this.
And now it was on. With a
yell from Mike a bunch of them started running for the door where the attendant
sat, leaning back on the rear legs of a folding chair. They caught him
completely by surprise, deliberately bowling him over as they rushed to their
hiding places.
He yelled, picked himself up,
and ran through the entryway after them, screaming bloody murder. He ran right
past Sandy O'Connell, not very well hidden behind some large metal cabinets
stuck in the hall just inside the door. When he swept past and she saw she
wasn't discovered, she crept outside, looking for a new and better hiding
place. Her eyes went to the fence and that telltale opening she'd discovered
but shared with no one except Mr. Jinks. She headed for it, made it, and
started trying to squeeze through.
For a while it was tough
going; the jagged ends of the fence snared her flimsy hospital gown, which tore
when she pulled the material away, and it hurt and scratched when she pressed
on. She began to be afraid now, began to be afraid first that the attendant
would come and see her and her secret would be lost, afraid, too, that she
wasn't going to make it, that she was going to be stuck between the fence and
wall forever. She started to cry and tears welled up,but she kept at it, and
suddenly, with a ripping sound, she was through and falling on her side, rolling
down a grassy meadow.
She stopped at the bottom and
lay still for a minute. A lot of little cuts stung, and she was still afraid,
looking back up at the fence. There was no one in sight.
Finally she picked herself up
and ran off toward the trees. Once there, she picked a big tree near the edge
of the glade and looked back, fearfully. She could see the whole playground
now, and still there was no one.
Now, suddenly, a couple of
white-clad adult figures emerged and stalked around, looking over the sliding
board and other kid's apparatus. Satisfied that none of the
"children" were hiding there, they took one last glance around and
went back inside. Sandy O'Connell pressed back into the recesses of the tree as
the men seemed to look her way, but when she peeked out again they were gone.
She turned and walked deeper
into the forest, toward the small but fast-flowing stream she could hear, still
clutching her teddy bear and suddenly preoccupied with other things a
four-year-old would find fascinating on a warm summer day: flittering
butterflies, pretty flowers, and a babbling brook.
The brook itself looked
inviting, and she managed to get her sneakers off and wade in. The water was
real cold, and she got out fast. The sneakers wouldn't slip back on, though,
and she didn't know how to untie the laces to get them on, so she left them.
The adult Sandra O'Connell would have followed the nearby road; the
four-year-old Sandy followed the pretty if cold brook.
* * *
The chief of security was
furious. "Crofton! Damn it! How could you have let this happen?"
Crofton, the attendant bowled
over by his charges, looked sheepish.
"Jeez, boss, I was just
sittin' there, lookin' at 'em, you know, when all of a sudden, pow! They all
give a big yell and charge right at me! Hell, I didn't know what was goin' on
until they hit me full and spilled me! Even so, it was only one of their kid's
games, you know, nothin' serious."
The security man stared at
Crofton hard. "You have them all back in their rooms now?" he asked
softly.
Crofton looked distinctly
uncomfortable.
"Well, no, not exactly.
A couple got all the way past the ward desk and out into the lobby. They were
hell gettin' back, let me tell you. We got all but one now, though. Looks like
she managed to lose herself in the shuffle and got into the main hospital, but
it's only a matter of time, you know. After all, she's only four in the head,
you know."
"Name?"
"O'Connell," the
attendant replied. "Nice-lookin' broad, you know? A little older than I
like 'em, but—"
"Can the evaluation,"
snapped the security man impatiently. "You sure she's still in the
hospital? No chance of a breakout?"
"You know the exits are
all guarded, and there's the main gate, too. She didn't get through there, so
she must've got into the other wings."
The security chief was
dubious. "Show me where you lost her," he ordered, getting up from
behind his desk.
* * *
Eight attendants were still
searching the "Children's Wing" and many more the rest of the
hospital when the chief of security and the hapless Crofton walked down the
hall from his office to the exit to the playground.
All his life John Braden, now
the security head, had played hunches. He was in a powerful position here, and
he meant to keep it. Things had gone sour many times in his thirty-two-year
government career, but never irrevocably so. He was good, and he knew it.
Mistakes couldn't be avoided in any situation; the trick was in making sure
they didn't get you.
The playground seemed
innocuous enough. The fence itself was ten feet high, double-braided
chain-link, not something you could easily climb. At the top were sharp barbs
at the termination of every strand.
His eyes followed the fence
all the way around, until it came back nine or more meters away to meet the
brick side of the building. From any angle except almost on top of the
juncture, it didn't appear there was an opening.
Still, there was something
that caught his eye, something that felt wrong. He walked down to where the
fence met the building, Crofton following silently.
Braden spotted it almost
immediately. Shards of light blue cloth were caught on the edges of the fence,
and the ground dug up in the area of the opening.
"Jeez! You mean she got
through there?" Crofton gasped. "But—that's so small! She
ain't no big woman, but she's got enough up front to—"
"Nevertheless, that's
what she did," his boss said. "Back when I was with the federal
prison system we had a guy over eighty-two kilos get out through a vent shaft
less than three-quarters of a meter square." He picked at the torn remnants
of cloth.
"Let's get going,"
he told the attendant. "I want to see the outside here. You notify Region
Security Command that we've had a break, then get Dr. Ahalsi to run a check on
every one of the patients in the kiddie ward. I want to know if this was a planned
break or not. I want Region to know if they're dealing with a retard or a fully
functioning adult."
Crofton hesitated.
"Jeez! Either way, she must be dirty and bruised and half-naked, with no
money or nothin'. She sure shouldn't be hard to spot and pick up.
"Get going, Pollyanna,
before I commit you to this place!" Braden snapped acidly.
Crofton got going.
Following the water, Sandra
O'Connell came to Lake Martha—not a big lake, but a nice, pretty blue one used
by a number of people for trout fishing. It being mid-week, though, there was
no one around when she got there.
She stood there for a moment
just staring at the picture postcard scene, the girl-woman entranced by this
new place. After a moment she went down to the lake, testing the water first
this time to see if it was warm. It felt cool, but not cold, and she waded in a
little, sat down in the water, splashed around and had a good time although Mr.
Jinks got as wet as she did.
Soaked and sloppy, she
started walking around the lake, just a meter or two from the shore. Her more
adult common sense seemed subconsciously to keep her from walking out into the
deep center.
A thousand meters or so
brought her to a partially submerged boat-house. The double doors were locked,
but by going under the part that was angled just out of the water she found a
number of missing boards. It was an old place, neither used nor fixed up in a
decade or more.
Feeling suddenly very tired,
she crawled into the boathouse from underneath and pulled herself wearily onto
a fairly flat dry section smelling of oils and paints. It didn't matter to her;
she was sleepy and it was a nice place to stretch out just for a few minutes.
Just a few minutes ...
"Mitoricine," the
psychiatrist told Braden, "is a funny drug. I've never liked our using it,
and its effects and aftereffects are extremely unpredictable. Enough constants
are there, though, to tell me that I would not like to be on the stuff myself,
ever."
Braden nodded. "Tell me,
when is her dose going to wear off?"
The medical man looked at a
chart and shrugged. "Hard to say. She was due for it today at two, and
repeated early doses at a larger rate were administered, so the last shot, to
be on the safe side—this stuff can kill you or turn you into a vegetable if you
blow it—was a low to medium dose. Assuming vigorous exercise, which will
aggravate the drug condition, she should just about pass out within a couple
of hours, maybe sooner, maybe later—it varies with the individual. She'll sleep
a good long time, the body fighting the remnants of the drug, then wake up
uncomfortable and lethargic. It'll take a long time to get her back to normal,
and it'll come gradually."
"So you mean she'll
still be a retard?" the security man asked eagerly.
The psychiatrist shook his
head. "Not in that sense. Reaction time will be down, things will be
foggy, like that. She'll be jumbled, confused, have some trouble behaving
normally. It's much like an adverse reaction to pentathol, only much
longer."
"So she'll still be no
problem to catch," Braden said hopefully.
The other man shrugged.
"Who knows? All I can tell you is that she might have a hell of a time convincing
anybody she was a doctor."
Military men and State
Policemen combed the area with bloodhounds. They quickly followed her to the
stream, found the abandoned sneakers, and picked up the trail. They were all
convinced that they were after a severely retarded woman, and that intensified
their search.
Within minutes they made the
lake, and were stopped dead. A complete circle of the lake was made with the
hounds, but there were no signs of Sandra O'Connell coming out of that lake.
More than once they passed the old, broken-down boathouse, but it was obviously
padlocked and there were no signs of any sort of forced entry. Once or twice
one of the searchers would duck under and shine a light around, but saw
nothing.
They decided then to drag the
lake, and it took time for the local fire department's rescue equipment to
arrive. It was past six in the evening before they started dragging; the sun
went down a little over two hours later, and they were forced to call it off
for the night.
They had found two badly
decomposed bodies in there, a lot of junk, and an entire automobile the New
York State Police had been looking for as a getaway vehicle for over three
years.
They didn't find Sandra
O'Connell, and patrols that ringed the lake farther out found no sign, either.
They concluded that she had to be in the lake when they knocked off for the
evening. They felt sorry that they hadn't found her, but weren't in much of a
rush any longer.
During this entire period,
Sandra O'Connell slept in a drug-induced comatose state inside the boathouse,
unmoving and barely breathing.
They were all gone by ten;
most had been out in the field for many hours, through suppertime and beyond.
They left their equipment and went home. An all-points bulletin was issued for
her, however, on the off chance that she had indeed escaped. Phony name, of
course. But they weren't finished with her, no, not finished.
Braden needed a body to
preserve his own neck.
SIXTEEN
Jake Edelman checked the
funny-looking greenish box that was now attached to his phone. It was a little
larger than a cigar box. A three-pronged plug connected it to a nearby wall
outlet, but the only sign of power was a dully-glowing red LED in the middle of
the box's faceplate.
There was a recess in the top
of the box containing a number of copper-clad conductors. From his pocket,
Edelman removed what appeared to be a small pocket calculator with a series of
copper bars on its back that corresponded to those in the recess atop the box.
He placed it in the recess and pressed down, only to fume when it wouldn't go
in.
Cursing, he glanced at his
watch to see that it was approaching midnight. This thing had to be working by
then. Finally he admitted defeat and buzzed for his secretary, an older woman
named Maxine Bloom who'd been with him over ten years. She smiled that
infuriating smile, grasped the calculator, turned it upside down, and put it in
the recess. It snapped into place with a satisfying series of clicks.
He glowered at her to cover
his embarrassment, sighed, cleared his throat, and nodded to her.
"You might as well be here
anyway, Maxine," he said. "I can't take any notes or written records
on this and I'll need a good backup memory."
She nodded and took a chair
to one side of his desk. It wouldn't have made any difference if she'd been
there or not, he knew. Maxine was the best spy any office ever had. He was just
thankful she was on his side.
He looked at her. "You
checked the bug detector?" he asked.
She nodded. "Used the
hand-held one, too. You know the department's computer missed two of
them?" She didn't seem at all surprised. "The only leak's the phone,
now—I guarantee it."
He shook his head in
satisfaction. "The phone and box were installed and checked by the
best," he said. "And then I uninstalled it and had Fred do a number
on both. It's clean."
"Let's have at it,
then," his secretary suggested.
He turned and stared
carefully at the calculator. It really wasn't one, of course; the numbers were
more on the order of a touch-tone phone faceplate, with an additional two rows
of symbols. He held his breath nervously as he punched the laborious thirty-two
digit combination of numbers and symbols that would connect him with the party
he wanted. One mistake and it would clear. Three mistakes and, on the third
clear, it would short out.
Despite his nervousness, he
didn't make any mistakes.
He put it on the speakerphone
turned to low volume, then set up an additional desktop debugger nearby that
would let out a squeal if there were any last-minute attempts to eavesdrop. The
debugger was the best there was; it was programmed to detect just about every
known device except a person in the room or leaning against the door. He had
other precautions against that old-fashioned kind of stuff. He was certain that
if the device didn't go off no one else would hear him except those to whom he
was talking.
A decade of counterespionage
work was behind that confidence.
It was amazing, the number of
clicks and funny phone-like noises the thing went through. First, anything
going through his phone would pass through the incrediby sophisticated
scrambler circuits in the green box. Unless you knew the entry key, there was
simply no way to decipher the oddball digital scramble that came out the other
end. Quite a number of government phones all over the country did know
the key, and at midnight had punched the proper codes into their decoder boxes
and waited for the phone to ring. All of those locations were also carefully
debugged, and most would listen, not talk.
Additionally, the decoder
slightly altered the received signal. In fact, it could make the speaker sound
like anybody the programmer determined. A number of isolated military units
using similar devices had given gruff-voiced muscular male sergeants
high-pitched, sexy, feminine voices to relieve the boredom.
Jake thought this one made
him sound like Mickey Mouse.
Finally the clicks and whirs
stopped, and, one by one, lines were connected. He watched a little LED readout
on the "calculator" tell him the number of connections being made. It
was hoping too much that all would get it, but all but three checked in. Those
three would later let him know, circuitously, who they were and why.
He locked the talk bar on his
voice amplifier down.
"Ladies and gentlemen,
thank you for all the time and trouble you have undergone at my instigation and
your discomfort. What we are dealing with here, I believe, is something of such
magnitude that such measures may, in fact, still be inadequate.
"Know, however, that all
of you have undergone extensive mind-probes, so your headache is not a
lonely one, nor connected to any one department. Those of you who underwent
that ordeal should appreciate the fact that people like me, heading up this
extraordinary organization, also underwent the same checks. In the process, we
found twenty-six people—twenty-six!—who were, quite simply, on the wrong side.
Two of these particularly amazed me, as they were people who had been with my
department for years. I knew them personally, and would have trusted them with
my life. This should be a warning to all of you. Trust no one, absolutely no
one, unless you have personally cleared that person through our methods. And
that means husbands, wives, children, you name it, as well as the partner who
once saved your life." He paused to let the words sink in, grumbling
slightly that so stern a warning should be delivered in Mickey's high-pitched
tones.
"Now I will tell you
what we are dealing with," he continued. He began with a recap of the
history of the Wilderness Organism, sparing little. "And so, you see, the
fact that the basic blueprints, as it were, for the Wilderness Organism were in
the NDCC computer bank means that the disease is of domestic, even government
manufacture. The killing of Spiegelman in an absolutely secure place and the
kidnapping of O'Connell and Bede from NDCC itself just after they made the same
discovery shows just how pervasive all this is."
He paused again for effect,
about ready to drop the bomb. "Despite the use of those overage radicals
and the tacit cooperation of some rather oddball Third World dictatorships, it
is apparent that we are dealing with a plot that is basically domestic and
reaches to the highest levels of government. CIA and FBI have striven in vain
to find the source of the enemy, the brains behind it. We believe now that we
have been looking too far afield, that this is a plot, carefully planned and
prepared for years, perhaps decades, from within. There is a massive conspiracy
here, and none of us is safe. We are currently under a state of quasi-military
dictatorship, and this is hardening. Those within the government behind this
plot can use this dictatorship, which is bureaucracy-supported, to do
practically anything they wish, including kill me or you if we get in the way.
There is only one way to wage a war against a shadow in your own house, and
that is to create and deploy an organization as shadowy and tenuous as the
enemy's. That's what you are, ladies and gentlemen. Soldiers in a war of
shadows. Whichever side shines the bright light on the other first will win. We
will use the computer data bank as our weapon, too. We will use the
bureaucracy. And where a shadow is found, we will expose it to the glare of
sunlight, extinguishing it. In three minutes this conversation will be
automatically terminated; after that, you will be called by your own unit heads
for instructions. Good luck and God bless you all."
He sighed and tapped the bar,
then looked over at Maxine, herself a veteran of the nasty mind-probing
techniques used to gather this squad.
He sighed. "Well, there
it is, Maxine. A pep talk to the troops. Somehow I never expected to be a
general."
She grinned. "Jake, you
make a fine one, even if you do sound like a mouse. You going to brief the
Bureau people personally?"
He shook his head negatively.
"No, I'll leave that to Bob. Give him forty minutes, then tell him I want
to see him in here." He sank in his padded chair, looking suddenly tired,
worn out.
"How long has it been
since you've had some sleep?" his secretary asked.
"Two, three days, I
guess. I tried a few times, but I just can't. The nightmares are too
real."
She understood. "Jake,
we're both Jewish. Our people have undergone every kind of horror known to
history. We've always won in the end, Jake. Remember that."
"But at such a
cost!" He sighed. "Six million in the Holocaust, God knows how many
in the Israeli wars—and before that, back to the diaspora. You know what we
were in the Middle Ages, Maxine? Balebatishkeit. Property. Walled in at
night, trotted out when convenient, to get around Christianity's anti-usury
laws or when they needed a scapegoat for something. For over fifteen hundred
years, Maxine. This republic of ours has gone on for what? Two and a quarter centuries,
more or less. A blink of the eye in history. And now—we have over two million
people in concentration camps in the Southwest and Alaska, Maxine. Two
million! And more coming as soon as they can build them. No trials, no
questions. How many more are disappearing forever without anybody even knowing
it? Gas controls so nobody can drive. Electricity controls, so nobody can ride.
ID cards and lots of paperwork to take a plane or bus anyplace. A soldier on
every street corner. How can we fight that? A totally controlled
press. You remember Sonny Deiter, with the Post?"
She nodded.
"I saw him the other
day. He told me that the big leaks on the Wilderness Organism story came from
Her Highness Georgianne Meekins, the H&W Queen herself."
Maxine Bloom looked surprised.
"You think she . . .?" The question trailed off.
He shrugged. "Who knows?
Won't get any more from Sonny, either. The government censor at the Post canned
him when he tried to sneak a story about the camps past to the copy desk. He's
probably in one, now. Hell, Maxie, the American public doesn't even know! As
long as they get their steady diet of soap operas and shoot-'em-ups, mow their
lawns if they have any, and read Schlock Confessions while listening to
funk music they're oblivious."
"Call Nadine," his
secretary said. "Tell her you love her and all that. Then talk to Bob.
After that, I'm going to get Maury Edwards up here to give you a sleep
shot."
"Now wait a
minute!" he protested.
She was hearing none of it.
"Jake, we'll probably all be dead or in those camps before this is
out," she said ominously. "If we aren't, it'll be because of the
passion you've shown here. We can't afford to lose you, Jake. It's my neck,
too, you know. How's the heart?"
He grimaced. "Okay, I
guess. I feel so rotten it's hard to tell."
Maxine Bloom was one of a
handful of people who knew that Edelman had had a triple bypass operation less
than five years before. He was to have retired after that, but they needed him.
They all needed him now. He
realized that, although the thought made him uncomfortable. So many lives, so
many husbands, wives, children needed him, depended on him. He held their lives
in his hand.
Maxine went out, and a little
while later Bob Hartman came in. Thirtyish, prematurely balding, Jake had rescued
him from the obscurity of an inspectorship in Butte, Montana where he'd been
sent for nailing a ranking senator with over $138,000 in illegal payoff money.
The senator had resigned, of course, and was convicted and sentenced to three
years' probation. They replaced him with another crook, and Hartman saw scenic
Butte, where he'd considered quitting and taking a nice police job in a small
town somewhere when Jake had tagged him. He was forever grateful to Jake, and
intensely loyal to the little man.
"How'd it go?" the
chief inspector asked his aide.
Hartman loosened his tie and
threw his sports-jacket over the back of his chair. "Not bad. We have a
pretty good selection of agents around the country, including here."
"No word on O'Connell or
Bede as yet?" Edelman asked.
The younger man shook his
head from side to side. "Nothing. Hell, they're probably dead. Even if
they aren't, it was pretty easy to bury somebody before, and a cinch now. If
anything turns up, though, we'll know it instantly."
That satisfied the boss;
there was little else he could expect. Edelman changed the subject.
"What about the old rad
connection? Anything?" "None of the sleepers has surfaced, it that's
what you mean. Still, there're rumblings. Something big is up, something not
clear but absolutely strong. Best guess is they're going to hit the
cities—maybe one, maybe a lot, all at once."
"When?" Jake
Edelman leaned forward. "Nothing clear. Best guess is sometime during the
week of September fifteenth."
Edelman involuntarily glanced
over at his desk calendar. It was August twenty-fifth now, as he well knew.
Three weeks. Three weeks to
win the war of shadows, and he was still too much in the dark.
SEVENTEEN
Twelve people sat in a small
tent watching the instructor, six males and six females. For the last two
weeks they'd lived together, trained together, practically showered together
and washed behind each other's ears. But, aside from Sam and Suzy, none knew
the names of the others.
"In two days," the
political officer, who seemed to be an Arab told them, "you will leave
Camp Liberty. You will travel independently, although if you wish a pair can
go together. No more. You will be provided with all of the identification and
background you will need to pass routine muster, but you will not be
able to withstand a detailed check. Basically, you are all in the U.S. Army,
all of you will have military IDs, uniforms, and orders. Act military, think
military, and use their system to get you where you are going."
Suzy, who'd given up smoking
anything but dope while at the camp, was back on the weeds now. They were
foul-smelling, a Middle Eastern brand with Arabic writing on the pack. She lit
one, then looked up at the instructor. Sam stared at her; he knew that manner,
that gleam in her eyes. The old Suzy was back now, back in action, and she was
loving every minute of it.
"Okay, so where are we
going?" she asked.
The instructor nodded at a
projectionist in the rear, the battery-powered lighting went out, and a slide
projector came on.
"On August
twenty-seventh you will be dropped at various points up to six hundred miles
apart up and down the Atlantic Coast, far enough from each other to minimize
suspicion of so many independent personnel going to an obscure place. Your
orders will state that you are reporting for duty at Catoctin Station, the
alternate Pentagon in the Catoctin Mountains just north of Frederick, Maryland,
about a hundred kilometers from Washington, D.C., or Baltimore, Maryland. You
won't be going there, though. Instead, you'll be heading here."
The slide, which had showed
Maryland, then Frederick County, flipped again to show a closeup of the
Catoctin area. The instructor walked to the screen and pointed to a spot just
to the right and slightly south of Catoctin National Park. It was still
parkland, and there seemed to be a lake there.
"At this recreation
area," the instructor continued, "you will use the pay phone to call
a number we will give you. You will call it, say your Camp Liberty number, and
hang up. You won't be noticed—the place is currently off limits for tourists,
and is used entirely by military personnel in the area to take days off. Relax
and do the same. Someone will contact you there after they've looked you over
and determined that you are indeed you. They will bring you to an old
farmhouse we have prepared for you, and there you will wait until our people
get to you and tell you where your weapons are."
That intrigued another_ of
the team. "Weapons?" The instructor nodded. "Standard pistols,
rifles, and other equipment will await you in the farmhouse, of course.
However, you will have to troop through some woodlands to get your share of
blue cylinders."
They understood what that
meant. They had practiced with mockups.
"You will, sorry, have
to carry them back to your base, check them out, and store them. A supply of
antidote and a large supply of syringes will be included as well for that
particular strain, although, as you now know, the antidote is only effective
for three to five days. That is enough, of course, but don't take it too early
and feel protected. After you are set up, we will again contact you with your
target, date, and equipment you will need to carry out our task. Please rest
assured that we will provide material to effectively paint and disguise the
cylinders. Anyone walking in the U.S. right now with a blue sprayer of any
kind would get hung on the spot by locals. We had to place the caches before
the military emergency ever was declared, though, so blue and exposed they
will be when you carry them back to base. Remember that!"
"What happens
then?" Sam asked.
"Huh?" The
instructor was taken aback by the question, and didn't seem to know quite what
was on the big man's mind.
"After we accomplish the
mission," Cornish said. "Then what?"
"Why, you get the hell
out of there and back to base, and then your target gets very sick, that's
what," the political officer replied, still puzzled.
"No, no," the big
man pressed. "After that. Then what happens to us?"
"You'll have to stay
underground for quite some time," the instructor said. "After all,
when all of the teams strike all over the nation at the same time, there will
be all hell breaking loose." That was true enough. "After
that, we will have other work for you. I have already told you as much as I
dare. One or more of you could get picked up, you know."
The briefing ended abruptly
at that point, and they walked back to their quarters. Suzy was silent for a
little while, then turned to him. "What's the matter? Why did you press
him like that?"
He frowned. "I don't
like it. There's something wrong here, something smelly. You don't feel
it?"
She shook her head. "I
think you've just got the willies."
"It's more than
that," he insisted. "Well, like, for instance, why did he tell us
about the farmhouse? If any of us were picked up, the pigs could sweep every
farmhouse in that county and the others on all sides, looking for one with a
new group of tenants who roughly fit descriptions they'd have."
"You're crazy," she
said. "Ten to one they've had it established for quite a while, with
people who look kind of like us. You worry too much." She reached up,
kissed him, then swatted him one in the behind. It didn't shake him out of it.
"Maybe you don't worry
enough," he said softly, wondering if in fact she ever worried at all.
EIGHTEEN
Sandra O'Connell awoke. It
was pitch dark wherever she was, and damp, and terribly smelly. Everything
seemed odd; she tried to sit up and found for a while that she could not.
Finally, after several tries, she did it, but her head was spinning and her
whole body feeling oddly numb, distorted, misshapen.
She tried to think, to
remember where she was and how she'd gotten here, wherever it was. Memories
were misty, fragmented, disjointed, but she had a sense of identity, she knew
who she was. She remembered, as if through the wrong end of a spyglass, walking
out into the lobby of NDCC, being approached by the security men, going into an
office—and that was that. Nothing more until now. How long ago? Days? Weeks?
Worse?
Almost as disturbing was the
quality of the memories; nothing would go together right, get connected.
There were odd scenes, strange places and faces, and she couldn't connect names
or situations to any of them. It was a disembodied collection; she seemed to
remember those things as if she'd been a third-party observer there, and her
mind sometimes pictured her own image in a place or conversation fragment as if
she were seeing through someone else's eyes.
She moved her arm out a
little and touched something soft and large. It startled her, and she almost
screamed, but managed to get hold of herself. Steeling herself in the
darkness, she reached back out again, felt it, then grabbed it and picked it
up. It was a real job picking it up, although it was neither heavy nor bulky.
Her hand and arm didn't feel right, wouldn't quite do what she wanted and
willed them to do.
At first the shape of the
thing puzzled her. There was no light to see by although the perception of a
slight glow coming through slats somewhere assured her she was not blind.
Finally she felt the sewn mouth, the button nose and two plastic eyes.
A teddy bear? she thought, totally confused.
She tried to collect her
thoughts. It was easier to concentrate on one thing at a time, although matters
were still cloudy, dreamlike and easily lost.
Drugs, she decided. They had
drugged her with some sort of hypnotic or hallucinogen, and for quite a long
while, too. This was bad; some such drugs had lasting, even permanent side
effects and aftereffects, and this scared her.
Somehow, though, she knew,
she'd been drugged and locked away and had still managed to escape. That was
the only explanation for her being here. But if she had escaped, then they were
looking for her, and could find her at any moment.
She felt around the shed,
finding the two half-broken boards that had been her entryway. Slowly,
carefully, she edged over to the opening, and carefully dangled her legs down.
Her feet touched water. It
was odd; that tingling numbness was still there, and contact with the water
produced a sensation more like wading in gelatin, but the message of water came
through.
She hesitated for a moment,
first to listen for any sounds—there were none she could hear except insects
and the lapping of the water—and then because she had no idea how deep the
water would be. Finally she decided to chance it; it couldn't be very deep
or she'd never have gotten inside in a drugged condition. Cautiously she
lowered herself down. It was little more than knee-high, which was a relief.
She bent low and emerged from
under the boathouse, looking around. It was still dark, but her eyes,
accustomed to it from the moment of awakening, saw fairly well the lake and
the looming shadows of boats, lights, and equipment. Only one small light was
on now, far over to the other side. There seemed to be some movement there, a
guard perhaps, but whoever it was had to be pretty far off. The sky was
overcast, and the humid air had the feel of thunderstorm about it.
She moved away from the
light, back to the shore behind the boathouse, and looked around. Trees all
over, it looked like from the darkness and the sounds. She knew she had to get
moving fast or else they would catch her, even though she didn't know who
"they" were. Then she heard the sound of a distant truck just off to
her left. A road! she thought excitedly. Not too far, either. She
decided to head for it, despite the risk of exposure there. Roads went somewhere,
and somewhere was where she needed to go.
She was still uncoordinated;
it took a little time for her to get things moving in a semblance of normality,
but she made the trees and bushes nearest the direction her ears assured her
the road was.
Once concealed in the
foliage, she paused, feeling momentarily safe and hidden, and took stock of
herself. It was dark and she was farsighted without her glasses, so visual
checks were blurry and tenuous. Still, she found that she was dressed in tattered
shreds of what must have been a hospital gown, and nothing else. She was dirty
and covered with grease and grime, but, mercifully, someone had cut her hair
extremely short, so it was the least of her problems.
She was a little chilly, but
it was the result of the high humidity and approaching storm—and yet the
overall warmth and humidity cheered her in that they said that it was still
summer, and perhaps not a whole lot of time had passed. The thought that she
might be in Florida or some other warm climate area crept slightly up to her
thoughts, but was pushed back as unacceptable.
The sound of another truck
came, somewhere ahead of her, and she started for it. Stumbling, still dizzy
and feeling somewhat disembodied, she made the road in about half an hour.
It was a pretty fancy
freeway: four lanes in each direction cutting a swath through the wilderness.
It would take a lot of traffic to justify a road like this; in normal times it
would be crowded day and night. It was empty now.
There was a green exit sign
off to her right, and she headed for it, hoping that it would tell her where
she was. Keeping close to the bushes and trees in case another truck should
come out of the darkness, she came close to the big sign in a few minutes.
And, suddenly, she felt real
panic, and started to tremble and feel sick. Despite her farsightedness, she
was in good position to read the huge white-on-green letters and they stood
out reasonably well in the lightning flashes.
They just didn't make any sense.
Her mind simply refused to put the symbols together into words she could
recognize, no sounds or images forming as she stared at them.
She spent a few minutes
getting hold of herself, telling herself it was another byproduct of the drug
that would wear off in time, but that thought only helped a little.
There was a rumbling sound
off in the distance, and before she could move a large tractor-trailer truck
came over the hill and rumbled toward her, its bright lights cutting like
knives through the darkness. She flattened against the ground, and it came
toward her as she held her breath. Finally it passed, fairly close to her, its
lights briefly illuminating her but obviously not enough to give the driver a
clear look at her. It went past without slowing down, a big rig with a tandem
trailer, and passed out of sight.
She turned slowly and looked
at the sign again. It still made no sense to her, but now she noticed the
little blue signs underneath. These were symbols telling what could be found
at the exit. The little white words underneath were so many random squiggles,
but there was the tent sign that meant camping—the lake, of
course—and an additional white cross that meant hospital.
Hospital, she thought. Of course.
She looked at the squiggles
underneath, knowing what they must say, but they just wouldn't say the words to
her.
She'd heard of the effect,
but its happening to her was terrifying.
Still, there was nothing that
could be done about it. It was probably something that would pass, she had to
believe that, and clung to it. For now, she had to get moving, and that meant
away from that hospital, away from this exit sign.
She was starting to feel
hungry, with a particular craving for something sweet, but she knew that meals
might be few and far between in the near future.
Now what, though? she mused, a dark feeling of hopelessness
coming on. She was as good as naked, hungry, in a wilderness the whereabouts of
which she didn't know, and with, undoubtedly, a search on for her.
Escaping was a lot easier in
the movies than it was in real life. Still, the alternative, turning herself in
and going back to wherever she'd come from, was as good as death to her. That
truck had to be going somewhere important; she decided to keep hidden but
follow the road.
Several hours later, when the
sunrise told her that she was heading west, she was itchy and aching and even
more hungry, but at least the storm had not hit and the clouds seemed to be
breaking up a bit.
At the next exit there was a
military checkpoint. Several trucks were backed up as soldiers examined
cargoes, bills of lading, and the truckers' passes and orders before allowing
them to proceed. They were not looking for anyone on foot out here, though, and
she avoided them easily.
A bit later in the morning she
came upon a small pool, panicking some deer who'd stopped for their early
morning drink. In the surface of the pool she could see herself for the first
time.
The water could be used to
wash off some still painful cuts and to get rid of some of the dirt and grime.
It made her feel better, but the gown was only a collection of rags held by
tenuous threads into a semblance of a garment now, and stained with oil and
grease. Her hair had been cut in a boyish style and to within three centimeters
in length. Even slightly blurred and distorted by her vision and the pool, she
thought her face looked more like a young man's in his mid-twenties than a
woman in her early forties. It looked like a different person entirely. The
rest of her body, however, betrayed her sex if not her age. She was in very
good condition and had a nice shape which the remains of the gown did nothing
to hide.
She drank some needed water
and headed back into the woods toward the road. After a minute or two she hit a
huge patch of moss and lichens growing out from and connecting several fairly
large trees. The result formed a mat which felt soft and nice, and she was
terribly tired. She stretched out on it to rest for a few minutes, and was soon
fast asleep.
She awoke when the sun was across
the sky. She felt rested and refreshed, although her back ached from the uneven
natural bed. The disembodied and uncoordinated feelings remained, but could be
controlled. A result of the sleep, though, had been, in twisting and tossing,
the end of the bindings of the gown.
She considered what to do
now. Oddly, being alone and naked in the wilderness had an oddly sexual
feeling. This feeling of arousal disturbed her, but she couldn't fight it.
Still, naked she was even
more restricted, and she turned finally to the remains of the gown. It was a
long one, of course, which had caused some of the problems, but there was a
fair amount of whole cloth left. Carefully experimenting, trying it several
ways, tearing a bit here and there, she managed to make a makeshift wraparound
that covered her from bust to a little below the thighs. Binding it together
was a pain. She finally managed, by a combination of biting and tearing, to
make a couple of small holes and use the remnants of the gown's straps as a
sort of tie, done in front so there would be little chance of slippage without
her knowing it.
She was so proud of her
fast-thinking handiwork that it was all the more frustrating when she couldn't
seem to tie bows in the straps. She finally managed to make knots, knots that
might have to be broken to be untied, but it made an unholy mess and drew the
thing tightly where tied. They were like a little child's attempts at knots,
she thought angrily, but after a lot of false tries they seemed to hold and
that would be enough for now.
Near dusk she reached some
vineyards. The country was picture-postcard style, with rows upon rows of
grape vines stretching out in all directions. They were sour and probably not
yet ripe, yet she ate them and ate them, spitting out seeds with abandon. They
filled a need, and if they made her sick later, well, so what?
She crossed the vineyards by
the light of a three-quarters moon, disturbing a couple of dogs that stayed
mercifully distant, and skirting around the large farm area that was obviously
the headquarters for the vineyards. She still couldn't read the logo on the
sign, but it was obvious that this was part of a major winery operation.
Wine country, she thought.
The soldiers at the road check had been in familiar uniforms, so she was sure
she was still in the United States. If that were so, where would major
vineyards be? Northern California or New York State, most likely, she decided.
The land didn't look like the Napa Valley, and the trees looked more northern
than anything else.
Upstate New York, then, she
decided. It made her feel better. New York State—she tried to think. Wasn't the
wine country somewhere in the northwest part? That would make the road the New
York Throughway, which went to the Great Lakes, to Buffalo, Niagara Falls—and
Canada.
Canada.
And she was heading west!
But how far, she wondered.
Hundreds of kilometers, or was it over the next hill?
No matter. For the first time
she dared to hope.
The next hill didn't reveal
Buffalo, but it did reveal a small town nestled in a pretty valley with a small
river flowing almost through it. In the moon-light it looked almost storybook
in quality, a fairy tale village of a couple of thousand homes. A number of
older houses on a series of very large lots were off on a small road by
themselves. She was attracted to them by the long clotheslines they all had in
their backyards. She hoped that at least one of them would do washing today,
and that, somehow, she could sneak down and steal something, even if a sheet
and clothespins, to replace her disintegrating makeshift garment.
She picked a spot and settled
down to wait. It didn't matter how long, she thought wearily. The grapes had
soured her stomach but stayed down; she could always sneak back for more. She
would wait until the opportunity presented itself for her to get clear with
what she needed.
Down at the far end of the
road, where it met the main road from the town to the freeway, she spied a
phone booth. She chuckled to herself. With a quarter she could call for help.
Or could she? she suddenly
thought. Who would she get? While she waited for them to find someone she could
trust, the inevitable security patrol tap would pick her out, and it would be
back to the hospital and the drugs again. The operator could be called without
money, of course, but it would bring the local cops and the same result.
No, she decided. She was on
her own and she would remain so as long as possible. If she were going to place
any calls, they would be from Canada or not at all.
For a while she dozed,
awakened once when a curious dog came by. The small black and white mutt proved
friendly, however, and didn't betray her. She petted him. He licked her face,
and, after a while, lost interest and wandered off.
Nobody did their washing the
next day, but the house at the end of the row of a dozen or so caught her
interest just the same. She watched through the day and saw a young woman leave
the house and walk down the hill to a lot where there were a number of school
busses parked. The woman got in one, started it up, and rolled off; soon the
others were started by men and women walking from different parts of town.
She watched the house for
some time. There was no sign of life there, although other houses along the row
had people going to and fro, being picked up in clearly marked company cars and
minibusses, and from a few there were the sounds of radio and TV and stereos.
But not the house on the end.
The woman was gone about two hours, then came back and parked the bus out front
of the house, next to a very dusty little foreign car.
The little black-and-white
dog was doing what dogs have done for an eternity in her backyard, and the
woman spotted the mutt as she drove up. She jumped out and ran back, yelling at
the dog to get out of there. The dog got, but it was too late; he'd already
left a messy souvenir.
Muttering to herself, the
young woman turned and opened the back door of her house. This excited Sandra
O'Connell; she'd opened the back door without a key. The house had been left
unlocked.
The back door was still open
now, and no noises issued from the screen. The placed looked a little big for
just one person, but she dared to hope. Reservists would be off on security
duty now; it was just possible that, for one reason or another, the woman was
alone in that house.
She waited and watched
through the hot, muggy afternoon. Twice the woman in the house emerged for one
thing or another, but nobody else. Finally, after a long and hard wait, in
which the temptation to return to the vineyards or find a brook for a drink was
almost overpowering, the woman of the house left again, entered the school bus
and, making a three-point turn, started off down the hill again.
She had to take the
chance, she decided. Had to. There was no choice in the matter. Later, when she
could—if she could—she would pay this woman back somehow.
Just when she was preparing
to make her move, the back door of the house next door opened and a middle-aged
woman emerged, dressed in a skimpy garden-type suit that made her look ridiculous.
Sandra O'Connell watched
nervously, knowing that precious minutes were being lost, while the woman
pulled open an aluminum-framed lawn recliner, lay down, slapped on some
tanning lotion, and relaxed.
It seemed like forever until
the old bag fell asleep. There was the sound of gentle snoring, and her mouth
was open.
Sandra saw that the woman
with the bus hadn't closed the back door; there was only the screen door to
contend with, and without waking up the sleeping neighbor.
Cautiously but deliberately
Sandra stepped out of the bushes and walked toward the door. The little dog saw
her and ran to her, running around her playfully. She was almost to the back
door when the dog started after a butterfly, went over into the next yard, and
almost ran into the sleeping woman there.
Silently the amateur burglar
opened the kitchen door and closed it quietly behind her, and just in time,
too. The dog had made one leap too many at the butterfly, started barking, and awakened
the matronly sunbather.
Once inside the house Sandra
didn't worry about what was happening outside; time was pressing.
The house was smaller than it
seemed: a one-story affair with a large kitchen, a dining room, a small living
room, and two bedrooms, one of which was made up to look like a tiny den.
The bedroom contained a
queen-sized bed and some dressers. A photo next to the bed of a man in uniform
confirmed her belief that the woman's husband was, in fact, away.
Sandra couldn't get her own
makeshift garment untied, and finally ripped it off. She opened a closet, and
came face to face with a full-length mirror which startled her.
She looked a mess, it was
true, but still somehow young and attractive, far younger than her years,
although the image remained slightly blurry to her.
Finding a perfect fit was
something she didn't expect and didn't achieve, either. She rejected a lot of
clothing that would fit, though, simply because it required some kind of
undergarments, and those definitely would not fit.
An old, ragged, washed-out
and faded pair of jeans proved a tight fit, but she managed to pull them around
her thighs and zip them up, although it took tremendous effort and more
precious time. She felt like she had a tightening noose around her waist.
The woman had some shirts but
they didn't fit; she found under a pile of old clothing some white tee shirts
that were obviously destined for a rag bin. They were the man's shirts, or
undershirts, but they had shrunk in the wash. One of them went on all right,
but felt wrong in the shoulders and didn't go all the way down to her jeans,
exposing her navel. She looked at herself in the mirror. A bad fit, with the
very short haircut setting it all off wrong.
She looked like an overage
high-schooler on the make.
Well, it would have to do.
None of the shoes or sandals fit; she was in a hurry and decided to abandon
them. She took a few precious seconds to put everything back in an undisturbed
condition, hoping that it would be some time if ever before the theft was
noticed. The remains of the gown she picked up and took with her; it would be
discarded outside later, perhaps in a convenient garbage can.
Going back to the kitchen,
she noticed, on the small dining table, a purse. She couldn't resist. Looking in,
she spotted the wallet with several bills inside. She took them and a little
change and squeezed the money into a front pocket of her incredibly tight and
uncomfortable jeans. She went back to the kitchen, looked in the refrigerator,
and grabbed a piece of cake from a half-finished store-bought creation. Now she
went back to the back door, looking out.
The matronly woman was awake
and petting the dog. A middle-aged man farther down was mowing his lawn.
Panicked, she walked to the
front door, opened it carefully, and looked out. Nobody was in sight, although,
down the road, she could see a yellow school bus pulling into the lot and she
was pretty sure who was driving. She decided to chance it, walked out the front
door, closed it firmly, and went out to the street and slowly started walking
down. She was still holding the remains of the gown, and when she got near the
bottom of the hill, at a little bridge over a brook leading to the river, she
walked down, shoved a rock into the cloth, and pushed it down into the wet
stream bottom. A couple of rocks on top finished the job.
And now, for the first time,
feeling satisfied with herself, she suddenly realized that what she'd done
meant very little. Up on the overpass to her left was a military checkpoint; to
her right and ahead was a small town where a stranger, particularly now, during
the emergency, would stand out like a sore thumb.
She didn't care immediately.
She was hungry, and there seemed to be a drive-in food stand a couple of blocks
away. She headed toward it, thankful at least that she could now walk in
civilized company. Even barefoot and in painfully tight old clothing, she no
longer felt like a wild beast, naked in the wilderness.
There were three trucks
stopped at the drive-in, big, long-distance rigs. She considered it. Trucks and
military vehicles were obviously the only things that moved without a lot of
official help these days.
She still felt uncoordinated
and distant, but she had to risk it. She went up to the drive-in, a little
two-person shack, really, and looked at the hand-lettered menu. Nervousness
started to creep in again; she couldn't keep it down. The jittery feeling
seemed to affect her thinking; it muddied, and she felt confusion where,
minutes before, she'd been thinking fairly clearly.
She couldn't read the menu. That
hadn't changed. But she could see a small grill near the window, and smell
hamburgers cooking. It was irresistible.
She went up to the window. A
girl who looked young enough to be in high school stared at her curiously and
asked, "Yes ma'am?"
Sandra started to say
something, suddenly realizing that these would be the first words uttered
since she woke up in the boathouse, and she stammered. She wanted to say,
"I'll have a hamburger, please," but she couldn't seem to get it up.
Finally she pointed to a picture of a hamburger on the side of the service
window and asked, "How much is one of those?"
The girl gave her something
of a pitying look, and she suddenly realized that she must have looked and
sounded like a retarded person.
"Two dollars with a Coke
thrown in," the girl told her.
Sandra reached into her
pocket and brought out the bills. She was suddenly doubly confused, and the
more confused and frustrated she was the more so she became. She took one of
the five crumpled bills and handed it with some difficulty to the girl.
She was patient, at least.
"You need one more," she said softly.
O'Connell fumbled, got the
other bill and handed it to the girl.
"And twenty cents for
tax," the girl persisted. Sandra reached in, took some coins out, and put
them on the window ledge.
"Take out what you
want," she told the girl.
A quarter was removed, the
sale was rung up, a nickel was replaced, and, shortly, a hamburger and a Coke
arrived.
Embarrassed, upset, and
ashamed as well as a little afraid of her conspicuousness, she put the change
back in her pocket and took the food and drink over to a picnic table.
She ate the burger greedily
and sloppily, and the Coke was gone almost as quickly. She wiped off her mouth
with a paper napkin and calmed herself down.
The drug they had given her,
she decided, must be a particularly nasty one. Two days after it'd worn off,
her brain still wasn't working nearly right, and she was afraid that it might
not ever get back to normal.
The problem wasn't really
with her thinking, though. It was with making her body do what her mind
commanded. A series of little short circuits kept coming up. She knew what a
hamburger was, knew the word, but somehow couldn't get it out when she wanted
to. She could count, too, except when she had to.
She was still sucking on the
ice, sitting there, letting the sun which had already darkened her body warm
it more, when one of the truck drivers came over to the table, put down two
burgers and a shake, and sat down opposite her.
"Hello, there!" he
said pleasantly.
She broke out of her reverie.
"Hi," she managed, listening to how childish it sounded floating from
her lips, both a little higher and softer than it should have been.
He was a rough but
kindly-looking man, perhaps in his mid-forties, with a sleeveless blue shirt
and jeans over cowboy boots.
"You look kinda
lost," he said.
She smiled crookedly. "I
am, kinda," she admitted.
"You're not from around
here, then?"
She shook her head, and now
her will power forced itself through. The same mind that couldn't think of
hamburger when it needed it managed something more difficult, although
haltingly, with effort great enough that it reinforced the retarded image.
"I'm from Belo,"
she volunteered. "I been stuck here, run outta money an' all."
The trucker looked her over,
trying to fit her into his current world picture. The woman was older than she
looked, he could see it in her face, but he couldn't guess how old.
Mid-thirties, maybe. So here was a woman, mid-thirties, dressed like she was twenty
and talking like she was a slow twelve. He made a guess.
"You have an identity
and movement card?" he asked suspiciously.
That question unnerved her.
It was outside of her available memory, this encounter with military
checkpoints, monitoring devices, and such things as identity and movement
cards. Since the emergency had begun, she'd been drugged and locked up. She'd
had a card, of course, but never the occasion to need it.
"N—no," she
stammered.
He shook his head slowly. He
was pretty sure he had it, now.
"You wanna get back
home, honey?" he asked her casually.
She leaped at it.
"Y-yes, sure, yeah."
"I'm headin' to Buffalo.
There's plenty of room. I'll take you," he volunteered.
She was stunned. This was
better luck than she had reason to dream about. Suddenly a thought entered her
head. "The soldiers ..."
He smiled. "Don't worry
none about them. I make this run between Syracuse and Buffalo so many times
they know me by my first name." When he had finished his burgers, they
tossed their trash in the can and went over to his rig.
She'd never been inside a
tractor before. There was lots of room, and even a bed behind the seats. There
were too many gearshifts and pedals and such to figure out; driving one of
these rigs was definitely a lot harder than driving a car.
With much shifting and
double-clutching, he backed up, then moved forward and around to the road. It
was an interesting and somewhat exciting view; had the man not been so much in
command of his cab, she would have been even more nervous, though. They were
sitting over the engine, so when the front of the truck cleared a tree by
inches it was inches from the windshield as well.
He pulled onto the entrance
ramp, climbed laboriously up, and entered the highway.
"Lots easier since they
got the cars off," he muttered.
It was bouncy and
uncomfortable, but it was a ride to where she needed to go.
Checkpoints were infrequent
on the freeway; for the most part it was exits that were monitored, so it was
about thirty miles before they had to slow to a stop. They'd talked little,
which was all right with her, and he played irritating country music on his
radio and sang along.
Now, as he slowed for the
checkpoint, he shut off the radio and glanced at her.
"What's your name,
honey?" he asked, seemingly unconcerned.
She was going to give a false
name, but "Sandy" came out.
He nodded. "Okay, Sandy.
Just sit and look bored and let me take it. This is the only one we'll face
until we get off in Buffalo, so relax."
He pulled to a stop, set the
brakes, and got out of the cab. She could hear him talking to the soldiers, all
of whom looked very young and very bored, and once he came back and reached in,
grabbed a sheaf of papers on a clipboard, winked at her, and returned to the
soldiers.
Finally, after what seemed
like forever, he climbed back in, stuck the clipboard back in its holder, and
put the truck in gear.
She was amazed. "How—how
did you get me past?" she asked him.
He grinned. "Told 'em a
tall story. They like tall stories, they're young enough to want to believe.
Don't worry. We'll have you home sometime tonight."
About ten miles down the road
darkness overtook them; about three miles beyond that he took a turn for a rest
area, pulled up in the rear parking area where it was almost completely dark,
and turned to her.
"Okay, honey, time to
pay the fare," he said jovially.
She was confused, and reached
into her pocket, pulling out the remaining bills. "This is all I
got," she said apologetically.
He laughed. "Now I see
what happened to you," he said. "They took you out for a party with
the soldiers, with some other girls, and when it came time to do what they
brought you for, you wouldn't —so they stuck you there. Right?"
She was appalled. "Nooo
. . ." she protested.
"Oh, yes," the
driver said, still not unkindly.
Sandra O'Connell had been
raised in the upper middle class, had gone to sheltered parochial school and a
good Catholic college. She was not a virgin, but she had lived alone for a long
time. Her whole life had been a protection—the right schools, the right
neighborhood, the right government hospitals and agencies.
Even at her age, she was
naive about the real world.
Now that real world caused
panic to race through her. She fumbled for the door, but the driver reached
out, grabbed her with powerful arms, pulled her to him, and started kissing
her. She kicked and started lashing out with her arms, and that finally made
him mad. He slapped her, hard, and while she was reeling from it she felt him
undo her jeans. She tried to pull away, but he'd partially undressed her now
and, holding her wrists together with a brawny, incredibly powerful hand, he
turned her over and bound her hands with some cord and her feet with a spare
belt.
And, for some time afterward,
he did to her exactly what he pleased in that little bed in the back of the
cab.
When he was through, he
climbed back into the front seat of the truck, put his own pants back on, then
his cowboy boots, and put the truck in gear. Once back out on the road he
turned on the country music and started whistling to it. She was still bound in
the back.
Sandra O'Connell felt sick,
disgusted, furious. She would cheerfully have shot this animal at the wheel if
given the chance, but she didn't have the chance. She was as helpless now as
she had been during the ordeal.
She lay there, stunned and
helpless, as he rolled on. Finally, after a period of time she could not judge,
he stopped again, climbed in back, picked her up and brought her to the front
seat. He released her bonds, and when she started for him he belted her almost
senseless.
She gave up.
"Git your pants
on," he ordered. "Time for you to get out."
She had a hard time complying
with that, and he helped, somewhat painfully, with the zipper. Finally he said,
"Okay, now we both got what we wanted. Now git, and don't fall for any
more party gags again." His tone of voice infuriated her even more. He was
giving her a lecture in morality, as if she'd done something terrible and he'd
meted out punishment for it to cure her of future wrongdoing.
"I'll tell on you!"
she warned him.
He shrugged. "Go ahead.
See if anybody'll listen. All you'll do is get arrested for no IDs and passes.
Hell, woman, they don't care about people like us any more. They never
did."
He pushed her out of the cab,
slammed the door, and roared off.
She collected her thoughts,
looked around for the first time, and saw that she was not, as he'd said, quite
in Buffalo. He'd let her out at a roadside area by the river, before he had to
exit and go through another checkpoint.
What made her feel even more
helpless was that the man didn't realize how safe he was. She couldn't read his
licensing or pass information, couldn't read the name of his trucking company,
or even the numbers on his truck. What was worse, even if she knew his whole
history and full address, she could still do nothing. She had police to avoid
and capture to evade.
So she climbed down the side
of the embankment, bruised and hurting all over, and found a culvert, and there
she sat down and cried like hell.
She dozed fitfully in the culvert,
finally giving it up as an impossibility. She hurt too much, so at last she
made her way around and looked out on the water. It was very dark, but a large
ship was going by, a Lakes tanker of some kind, and its flag, lit by stern
lights, was not her flag. A Canadian ship, she thought wistfully. That must be
Canada over there, she realized with a surge of renewed energy and hope.
There were other, smaller
boats about as well, she saw. Small, fast patrol boats that seemed to keep
closer to the other side, perhaps a kilometer or less from her perch.
She searched her memory, and
recalled that a narrow neck or peninsula of Canada came over almost to
Buffalo, splitting Lakes Erie and Ontario. But why the patrol boats?
Suddenly she was brought up
short. She remembered idly reading that the centuries-old unfortified border
between the two largest North American nations was now effectively patrolled
by both sides, and that fences and guards were being erected all along it. The
U.S. wanted to take no chances on an infiltration from Canada, whose borders
were far less secure and much vaster than those of the U.S., and the Canadians,
in turn, didn't want anyone coming over and bringing any funny bacteria. They
were hardly sealed off; there was too much economic interdependence for that.
But they were a lot tougher than they used to be.
So near and yet so far, she
thought. How will I ever get across?
She considered swimming.
She'd always been a good swimmer, but the current was fast here and she was
still uncertain of how much stamina and control she had in her body.
And yet, the mare she thought
about it, the more the idea appealed. There were some bridges, of course, but
they were sure to be guarded and restricted. The odds of finding a boat and
being able to use it were slimmer still; the boats would be carefully watched
and examined.
A kilometer, she thought
again. Perhaps less. The small patrol boats seemed to come out in a regular
pattern every few minutes to roughly the center of the channel, go down it for a
bit, meet others coming the other way, and turn. If worst came to worst, she
could hail one of the boats and take her chances. If the swim proved too much,
there were alternatives like floating for a while and eventually getting back
to shore on this side.
It was worth a try, she
decided. She was almost ready to jump in when she saw a different looking,
slightly larger white craft cruise by, spotlights trained on the U.S. bank. It
wasn't hard to make out the U.S. Coast Guard logo. The Canadians weren't the
only ones patrolling the border.
The light was haphazard and
missed her easily, but the patrol gave her a moment's pause. There was that
danger, too—as well as the danger of being shot at, perhaps, by either side.
There was no choice. It was
dark and the boats were far away now. She slid into the water.
It was damned cold, and that
gave her some worry at the beginning, but she soon grew accustomed to it. Her
wet clothing was in the way, but she was damned if she was going to shuck it
and go through this to the end stark naked.
The current proved
deceptively slow; dams and canal locks kept it from rushing with the force of
Niagara only thirty or so kilometers north, and the old swimming skills came
back to her, were there as if she'd never been out of the water. She wasn't a
particularly strong or fast swimmer, but she could swim reasonably well and for
long periods. Ordinarily she could take this distance in a moderate pace, but
some grapes, a piece of cake, and a hamburger and Coke weren't the best stores
of energy. She tired quickly, and let herself drift until she got her breath
back, then started again.
The patrol boats with their
searchlights came again, and again, but they didn't see her. She reached and
clung to a center-channel buoy for a while, until she was ready to try the rest
of the way. She was in Canadian waters now, and somehow that felt safer.
Inside of ten more minutes,
she was within sight of shore. Some automobile lights were moving on a road
back from the dark shoreline, an indication in itself that she was in Canada
now, nearly safe.
She made the other side, and
faced a wooden wall that didn't look at all hard to climb although a bit
slippery. She reached the top, only three meters above her, hauled herself out
of the channel and lay there on her back, gasping and exhausted but feeling
exultant.
She'd made it!
Suddenly a voice said, in a
slight Canadian accent not too far from her, "Just lie still there, ma'am,
and don't move. I have a rifle trained on you and it has an infrared
sniperscope attached."
She lay still as ordered, too
tired to care what he said and too washed out to have made a move if she'd
wanted to.
She heard the sentry or
whatever he was talking on a walkie-talkie, but couldn't hear either end of the
conversation.
"What is your name and
why have you swum the channel?" the sentry demanded.
"San-Sandra," She
forced herself to speak.
"Sandra O'Connell. I
have been drugged and kept in a pris'n. I got away. I need help."
The sentry relayed this
through his walkie-talkie.
A couple of minutes passed
with no words between them. She just lay there and looked at the patrol boats
and city lights across the way and marveled to herself that she'd swum that.
Now an ambulance arrived, and she heard people getting out. She turned, and was
surprised to see that they wore protective suits of some kind.
They lifted her gently onto a
stretcher and wheeled her efficiently to the ambulance, slid her in the back,
and closed the doors. No one got in with her, to her surprise, and they were
soon under way.
There was a hissing sound,
which, she discovered, was oxygen being pumped into the rear chamber which was,
incongruously, sealed.
They have me in isolation,
she realized with a start.
For a moment she was afraid
that she was not in Canada. However, there was a light on inside her mobile
cubicle revealing no inside door handles but also showing the oxygen supply
system. She couldn't read the red warnings, but there were two sets of them,
one under the other, with a maple leaf atop each.
It was Canada, all right.
The ambulance—or prison
van?—stopped and backed up now. Someone fumbled with the doors, and they opened
to reveal a strange plastic tunnel of some kind.
"Please get up if you
can and walk through the tube," a crisp, official voice said. "If you
can not walk, say so, and we will arrange to move you."
"I can walk," she
said, and got up unsteadily, staggering a bit. Suddenly she wondered if she
really could.
The plastic tunnel went about
ten meters, and felt sticky to her bare feet. She entered a doorway then, and
recognized a standard-looking hospital corridor.
"Proceed to the chair
facing the window to your left," the PA voice said, and she saw what it
meant and went there.
It was a comfortable chair
that felt very, very good. There was a microphone in front of it, and, she saw
double glass in front. On the other side sat an official-looking gray-haired
man in a black suit and striped tie. He, too, was equipped with a micro-phone.
"I am Inspector Charles
Douglas of the RCMP," he told her. "You understand that you are being
isolated because we have no idea what you might or might not be bringing us,
and medical tests will have to be made to clear you."
She nodded.
"I want you to tell your
story into the microphone," he instructed. "Spare nothing. Take as
long as you want, but hold nothing back. It is being recorded."
She nodded again. "I have been un'er
drugs for a long time," she told him. "Bad ones. They have hurt me,
done some brain dam'ge, don' know how bad or if it'll wear off in time."
The inspector nodded.
"You aren't the first one we've encountered," he told her. "Just
go ahead, relax, take all the time you need to collect yourself." She did.
It was tough going, telling the story in halting phrases and malformed words.
She spared nothing, though. Not who she was, what she was doing, about being
spirited away, about waking up and its problems escaping, even the rape.
Douglas sounded sympathetic
but noncommittal. When she finished he just puffed on a pipe for a few minutes,
thinking about it. Then he said, "There is a shower just down the hall, a
closet with some hospital clothes, and a bed. I suggest you go make use of
them and get some sleep while this information goes to Ottawa. If you're
hungry, we can send in some food."
"I'm starved," she
told him, "but I'm more tired than an'thing." She got up and he did
the same. She looked at him seriously through the glass. "Thank you,"
she said.
He didn't reply.
She was out of the painful
clothing, in seconds and showered thoroughly, particularly flushing the
memories of the trucker out as much as possible.
Another hospital gown, but
white this time and much better made, and a typical hospital bed which she sank
into gratefully. She remembered little else.
While she slept, the
recording and Douglas's report went to Ottawa by RCMP wire. Officials there
studied it, considered it, discussed it. Hospital technicians in isolation garb
took fingerprints from her sleeping form, and these, too, were transmitted and
matched up.
Finally, decisions were made.
They called the National Disease Control Center for verification of the
existence of a Sandra O'Connell, and notified the FBI through priority channels
to get confirmation of her photo and prints.
The FBI check flagged the
computer monitors in the Special Section, Jake Edelman's branch. Bob Hartman
was called, checked out the print information, determined that, indeed, it was
Dr. Sandra O'Connell they had in Ontario, and called Jake.
Edelman was excited. It was
the first real break in the domestic side of the case. "Hell, if we can
get her back she can tell us a lot about where she's been!" he said
hopefully. "We can trace the sons of bitches back to here!"
The Buffalo office was called
on the special line, reaching a particular agent at home. She was told to go to
Diefenbaker Hospital and see Dr. O'Connell, and if possible to take her out of
there and get a plane direct to Washington. One was being readied to pick them
up by another friendly commander at an airbase in Vermont. RCMP's Special
Branch, which was very much in league with Edelman on this, agreed.
The Buffalo agent, a young
woman named Mason, cleared the border checks with special IDs and permissions
and was met by the RCMP on the other side. They sped to the hospital, about
eight kilometers distant, making it in record time.
When they walked into the
special isolation section, they were met by a very confused Inspector Douglas.
"What the hell is
this?" he demanded.
"This is Mason,
FBI," the RCMP cop told him. "She's got the proper papers to pick up
a Dr. Sandra O'Connell."
Douglas looked stricken.
"But that's impossible! She was picked up ten, fifteen minutes ago!"
he said.
Agent Mason was upset.
"Who picked her up? On whose authority?"
"An inspector from the
FBI," Douglas said. "Absolutely faultless credentials, with the
proper Canadian releases as well. An Inspector Braden, I think his name was.
Yes, Inspector John Braden."
NINETEEN
They knocked the team out
being moving them from Camp Liberty, of course. Although a few of the top
people obviously knew its location, none of the teams going into action could
be trusted with the information. If even one were caught by the authorities,
it would be impossible to conceal any information from them.
Most of the team chose to
make the run individually, but Sam and Suzy wanted to go together. Their old
relationship had deepened in the weeks at the camp, and with the possibility of
death ahead, they were both unwilling to separate until they had to.
They awoke on the deck of a
tramp steamer of Liberian registry somewhere in the North Atlantic. The crew
appeared to be mostly Chinese and only a couple of the merchant officers spoke
good English, one mate with a pronounced British accent. He was in charge of
their drop.
"We'll be in position to
drop you sometime tonight," he told them. He walked over to a chest in
their cabin and opened it. "Here, try these on," he told them,
handing out some clothing.
They were military uniforms,
obviously tailored for each of them. Since they were supposed to be part of the
Air Force personnel team at the alternate Pentagon, they made Suzy a master
sergeant and Sam a tech sergeant. "Enlisted personnel are never
scrutinized as closely as officers," the mate explained. "But don't
forget to salute."
They wouldn't. Knowing they
were to be in the Air Force, they had memorized an awful lot of material they
would be expected to know.
Next came the identification
cards and orders. They were supposedly Security Police, formerly with the
1334th SP Squadron at Shaw AFB near Charleston, South Carolina. Their orders,
papers, IDs and the like were perfect. Being SPs, they would be expected to
demonstrate a lot of technical knowledge, and, as military cops, they would
carry a lot of weight, particularly as regulars in a military occupation force
composed primarily of reservists, guardsmen, and draftees.
They had suitcases with other
uniforms and some civilian clothes and toiletries as well. Sam was particularly
impressed by the used look of them, even to a worn bar of soap and a partially
coiled tube of toothpaste.
A little before 2:00 A.M.
they, their equipment, and the mate were lowered into a large rubber raft with
two enigmatic Chinese seamen doing the paddling. About an hour later, they
were met by an elderly-looking crab boat and transferred aboard.
The crabber was for real;
he'd worked Pamlico Sound in North Carolina for almost ten years since
retiring, he told them, as a drug smuggler. His folksy reminiscences of raiding
small pleasure craft, murdering all on board, then using the boats to make drug
runs before scuttling them, were eaten up by an admiring Suzy. Sam was much
less enraptured, thinking of all the lives lost for no cause but profit. But,
he realized, a lot of his friends and associates used the substances men like
this had brought in without thinking of how they got there or asking to see
their pedigree. Smuggling remained a romantic pastime older than America, and
its grisly side was never played up.
They turned in, past
dangerous reefs, to the sound. A couple of times Coast Guard planes and
helicopters looked at the old crabber, but it was a known ship with a long
history and Suzy and Sam were well concealed. The familiar wasn't checked very
much by the authorities; they were looking for the unusual and out-of-place.
Since the crabber had already radioed that he had engine trouble and was
heading in, it wasn't thought unusual for him to be on this course.
"I was supposed to go up
to Virginia to help out some friends," he told them, "but, of course,
I was supposed to have a partial breakdown and turn back. Nothing odd. There
really is a bad clutch in one of the engines, too."
"Why not just take us to
Virginia?" Suzy asked him. "After all, it's closer."
He frowned. "Hell,
Norfolk's a naval base and shipyard. Wall-to-wall checks of just about
everything. And the Chesapeake and James are just crawlin' with boatloads of
bored, suspicious patrolmen. No, easier here."
He pulled into the slip at
his pier without incident. There was nobody around; the watermen were long
gone, and the rest of the world still hadn't awakened as yet.
An official-looking military
car was parked out front of the crabber's storage shed, and a man in his early
fifties with more stripes than they could count on his Air Force uniform was sitting
in front drinking a Coke and smoking a cigar. They stopped fearfully when they
saw him, but the crabber called out, "Hi, Mike!"
The old sergeant smiled and
got up. "Hello, Joe. These my two recruits, eh?"
The crabber nodded. "All
yours now." He turned to the confused pair. "Joe's as genuine as you
are," he assured them. "See you all."
They were dubious but had
little choice. "Joe" put their luggage in the trunk of the staff car
and told them to get in, which they did. In minutes they were away.
"I hope you two have
eaten," he called to them. "No way I can get us anything until we're
well into Virginia."
"That's all right,"
Sam told him. He was nervous. Joe didn't fit at all the image of the
conspirators he had built up over all this time, and the car had an awfully
authentic look to it.
"Is this car
stolen?" he asked the driver.
Joe chuckled. "Hell, no.
I signed it out at Shaw and I'll turn it in at Andrews. You steal one of these
and they have you in ten seconds. Nothing but military and truck traffic to
hide in."
Even Suzy was intrigued now.
"Then you really are an Air Force SP?"
Again the older man chuckled.
"No, ma'am, definitely not. But I was, once-before they caught me with my
hands where they shouldn'ta been. Sweetest smuggling racket ever done, all on
Air Force equipment. I had twenty-seven years in, so they didn't throw me in
jail, just reduced and booted me."
That seemed to answer the
motivational questions, and even tied him in with the likes of the crabber
and the underground drug trade. But they would get no more information out of him
about himself, just reassurance.
"The sergeant's for
real, he's just somewheres else," Joe said. "All of the procedures
are perfect. You can do almost anything in the military if you got the right
orders and the right forms." He chuckled. He seemed to find everything
slightly amusing. "That's what got me in the end—one form. A real form,
perfect signature and everything —and the damn ninnies lost it in the
bureaucratic shuffle. Lost it! Military inefficiency defeated me. There was no
way to duplicate the signatures on the spot, this drew attention, and that was
that. You remember that. Depend on nothing but yourself, and keep it as simple
as possible."
They passed a large number of
military check-points. It was easy. All they had to do was pass over their
orders and ID cards. Joe had his and the proper authorization for the car
which was real and therefore would withstand even a check with Shaw. Their own
IDs had their photos, and their orders said they were proceeding to Thurmont
with transfers to the 2794th SP Squadron, Headquarters Command. It was true
that a check with the 2794th wouldn't reveal that anybody knew they were coming,
but that was so normal in military circles that it wouldn't even be wondered
at.
For the first time they saw
how tightly the government was gripping the country. Military were everywhere;
in a small town in southeastern Virginia they saw several ordinary-looking
people pull over others, flash IDs, and randomly check papers. The roads
themselves were ghostly not only for their lack of auto traffic but for the
graveyards of motels, eateries, and tourist traps ruined by the restrictions.
Outside the towns, where
public transportation was the only way to travel, school busses, trucks, and
anything else that would do had been pressed into service as shuttles for the
people. Those who lived too far out even for that could phone for service; farmers
were allowed to use their tractors to get to shuttle-serviced routes.
Two things amazed Sam and
Suzy: the apparent ease with which the majority of the population seemed to be
coping with the tremendous inconvenience, and its almost casual acceptance by
the people.
"Oh, there's been a lot
of trouble," Joe told them, "but once you clamp down martial law and
use it publicly, consistently, and effectively, you get obedience. Acceptance
comes from the isolated cases of terrorism that manage to penetrate the
security screen, and the occasional shootouts when they find one of our safe
houses. The government controls the press, radio, TV, everything very tightly,
and they use them to best effect." Again the chuckle. "Hell, they've
caught and killed more of our organization that we ever had! And crime's down
to just about zero."
It was Sam's turn to smile.
"You mean they fake big victories?"
Joe nodded. "Sure. And,
remember, for every really heavy-handed guy in uniform who gets power-drunk
there are hundreds of ordinary folks in uniform. The power-drunks get short
shrift; report a really bad actor to the local commander and you nail him.
Congressmen are also keeping close watch for abuses in their districts."
His voice grew grim. "And the real bad abuses, they get covered up. Lots of
people just disappear in the night, never to be seen again. They got big
concentration camps all over the West, too, guarded with the best elite troops.
Americans weren't any different than any other population once they started
living in constant fear."
Suzy seemed to like the idea.
"So our `different breed' is just the same after all. It won't be
difficult to remold them, with the proper guidance."
Sam was silent on that one,
but he didn't believe it. Revolution looked exceptionally unlikely under these
conditions, and a lot of human misery was being perpetrated, and perpetrated
not by some dictator in a poor and starving country or one with a long
tradition of dictatorship, but by a government with its finger on the nuclear
trigger and growing increasingly fascistic.
This quickly, too! he thought. He found it hard to accept.
Maybe American society was truly as rotten as he'd pictured it—and maybe it was
also the most totally politically naive society on earth.
Speed limits were something
for the distant past; they filled up several times at military stations, grabbing
food at the same time, but mostly they kept going. From Mann's Harbor in North
Carolina to the Catoctins was four hundred fifty or so kilometers; they made it
in the early afternoon.
"It's Saturday,"
Joe told them, turning off a road and passing through the checkpoint at a
little town called Thurmont, then up a small, winding road where the signs read
Catoctin Mountain Park. The scenery was beautiful, wild and isolated; it
was amazing that there was so quiet a wilderness this close to so many
millions.
They turned off on a road
where a sign directed them to Cunningham Falls State Park, then got
backed up behind three olive drab school busses full of people. Finally they
turned, went past a beautiful lake, and down to an enormous parking area.
"Put on the SP armbands
and strap on the pistols under the seats," Joe told them. He was already
doing so himself. "We're going to be three cops—me the old hand and you
two being introduced to the area. All of these people are military having some
fun in the water here. Just act new, poke around, and use that phone box over
there to make your calls. You have a little money, so get something to eat if
you want in the snack bar. Then just wander around, and wait."
They pulled in near the snack
bar just up from the bath houses. Hundreds of men and women were here, playing
games in the grass and woods, and making use of the man-made beach to swim and
play in the beautiful and large man-made lake.
Joe wandered into the snack
bar, and for a few moments, the first in a long while, they were truly on their
own.
"Now what?" Sam
asked her.
"I'm going to take a
shit," she said. "You get what you like from the snack bar and make
your call. I'll do it later."
He nodded and she went off.
He didn't feel like eating. What he felt like was getting a bathing suit and
joining those people having fun down there on the lake. Still, he was also
conscious that this was the place for them to get out of as quickly as
possible, and he fumbled in his pocket, found a quarter, and went over to the
phone box.
He stared at the phone for a
moment, then reached back into his pocket. Yes, he had two quarters. He
sighed, put a quarter in the phone, heard the dial tone, then dialed the number
that was supposed to bring the next stage of people here. It was an interesting
number, unlike any he'd ever heard of before. One-500-555-2323. What was a
"500" number, anyway? And wasn't "555" information?
The phone clicked several
times, then rang once, and he heard another picked up. For a second he was
confused, somehow conditioned for a response, but now he realized that there
would be none. It was probably a recording anyway. "Twenty
twenty-five," he said "Two-oh-two-five." There was a click, a
dead silence at the other end of the line, and, even before he hung up, his
quarter came back.
He remembered suddenly his
first encounter with this organization, the TV mail-order switchboard, and
realized that this number was probably tied to something like that. A perfectly
public toll-free number for subversion, he thought. It was somehow ironic; it
said something else about the culture.
He considered whether or not
to make the other call. He put the quarter in, then hesitated for a long time.
Did he, in fact, want to use the FBI signal?
He thought about fascist
America, now actually what he'd always claimed it was. He thought of the camps,
of the terror, and of the people in this new organization. Most of all, he
thought of Suzy.
Did he want to betray
them? Deep down? He had to confess to himself that he did not, although those
pictures of the Wilderness Organism victims were never far from his mind. Most
of all, it was Suzy. She would never be taken alive, he knew that. He couldn't.
Not now. He just couldn't.
He hung up, got his quarter
back, and turned. Suzy was coming toward him.
"God! I feel
better!" she enthused. She drew close to him. "Did you make it?"
He nodded.
"Okay, then, go buy us
both Cokes. I'll be with you in a second."
He turned and walked into the
snack bar. He didn't see Joe around and figured that the older man must have
come out while he was on the phone. Almost at the same time as the Cokes came,
Suzy was there as well, smiling and nodding to him.
"Let's go outside. May
as well look the place over," he suggested, and they walked outside.
The staff car was gone.
They walked around a while,
looking officious, and talking with some of the people, particularly some of
the lower-ranking MPs and SPs on routine patrol. Both bluffed extremely well,
and were extremely well briefed for the job, but it wasn't comfortable.
Parading in front of the enemy when one slip could ruin you wasn't the most
pleasant fun in the world; Cornish was only happy that it was hot enough that
heat perspiration masked the nervous type.
"I wish they'd
come," he muttered between clenched teeth.
"They're looking us over
good first," she whispered back. "Want to make sure."
The hours passed, making it
all that much worse, and since their cover had them on duty they couldn't
relax. Suzy almost had a problem when she failed to salute a first lieutenant
in uniform but it was glossed over quickly with apologies. Afterwards she swore
that one day she'd kill the son of a bitch.
Finally an official-painted
green station wagon with the logo of the Maryland Parks Service pulled up next
to them. A young woman in park ranger garb and Smokey the Bear hat leaned out
the window and peered at them through dark sunglasses.
"Hey!" she called
to them. They went over to her.
"One-500-555-2323,"
she said softly to them. "Get in."
They got in, still sweating,
and moved off.
"I thought you'd never
get here," Sam said, relieved.
"Only the first
step," the woman replied. "Remove the gun belts and armbands and put
them in that first aid locker back there." They did as instructed,
although reluctant to part with the weapons.
The car turned off onto a
dirt road in the middle of the forest. It was marked Official Use Only—Keep
Out. At the end of the road was a maintenance shed of some kind, but no
people.
"Go into the shed, get
rid of your military clothes, and put on the clothing you find there. You also
will have new IDs identifying yourself as Maryland State Police
undercover."
They went in and did as
instructed. Now they both wore shorts, tee-shirts, and sandals. The new IDs,
with badges, looked impressive, and their photos again matched. The clothing
fit perfectly.
They walked back out to the
ranger, who was leaning against the side of the station wagon.
"Over there you'll see a
trailhead," she told them. "Take it. Walk a kilometer and a quarter
until you reach a small road. You'll be picked up there. Don't rush. Your
contact will go by several times."
They started walking. The
woods were beautiful this time of year, the air warm and the shade of the giant
trees invitingly romantic.
"I could stay around
here forever," Sam told Suzy. "Sort of like Vermont. You know some of
those trees back at the lake were maples?" He looked at her, seeing that
she was sharing some of the same feelings.
"If we had a blanket
it'd be real neat," she whispered sexily. They kissed long and hard
there, then, after a while, arms around each other, they continued down the
trail to the road.
The reason why their contact
passed here several times was that he ran a shuttle bus. He was a teenager, no
more, in an Army private's uniform. His bus was empty.
He pulled up to them as they
sat by the roadside. "Hey! You the state cops?" he yelled.
They got up, went over, and
boarded the bus. "That's us," Suzy told him. "Want to see our
IDs?"
The kid laughed. "Naw.
Too much of that now. Just take a seat. I got a long run here."
They wound up, down, around
and through the woodlands, often picking up people and dropping others off.
Once they passed a gatehouse and Sam whispered to Suzy, "Look! That's Camp
David!"
She stared at the sign and at
the strange network of walls, fences, and sophisticated electronics detection
gear atop them. It was Camp David; they were passing right by the
getaway White House.
"Boy! How I'd like to
spray some pixie dust in this neighborhood!" Suzy breathed. For
once Sam agreed with her. If the President were in, he suspected, millions of
Americans would applaud him for it.
They finally rolled into
Thurmont, and the bus driver stopped near a small parking area now crowded with
official cars.
"I was told to tell you
that the keys were in it," the kid said. They got off and he rumbled off.
They stared after him for a minute. "Do you think he knew what the hell he
was doing?" Suzy wondered.
"I doubt it," Sam
replied. "Just asked to do a favor, I think. We'll never know for
sure."
They started looking over the
dozen or so cars. Six were State Police cars and they found one, a brown
plainclothes-type vehicle with a flasher that popped up through a roof opening.
It had the keys in it.
They got in. Sam decided to
drive, and he turned to her. "So where do we drive to?" he asked her.
She rooted around the glove
compartment and other places but found nothing. She shrugged. "Start the
car. Maybe there's something ..."
He started the car and the
police radio sprang to life, startling them. They were now at a loss as to what
to do next, and sat there for a minute or so, wondering. A uniformed man
looking like state troopers of all states had looked since they were invented
came out of a store, looked over, stared, then started running for them.
"Oh, oh," Sam
muttered. "Wrong car, maybe?"
Suzy looked around. There was
a shotgun in a case in the door, and she reached for it. The trooper was there first,
immediately saw her fumbling for the shotgun, and drew his revolver.
"Okay. Don't make a
move," he told them. "Get out of the car and spread 'em!"
They had no choice. Sam had
the sinking feeling that this was the ironic ending to their spy-novel odyssey.
All this to get pinched in the wrong car. He cursed the spy-masters inwardly,
remembering Joe's admonition: keep it simple. They had gotten so
cloak-and-dagger they'd gotten tripped up.
Suzy was different.
"Wait a minute!" she told the trooper. "I'm Sergeant Fearing and
this is Corporal Woods. We're working for the same people you are. Check our
IDs!"
The trooper looked dubious.
He pulled Sam's wallet from his hip pocket and flashed it open. Then he
carefully got Suzy's.
A police van pulled up,
driven by a trooper who looked like the first's brother. The side door was unlocked,
pulled back, and revealed a bench seat and wrist and leg irons in an inset
cast-iron cage. The two troopers had them exceptionally covered, and got help
from a couple more. Despite Suzy's protests they were both placed in the leg
irons in the van and the door was slammed shut.
The van lurched into motion.
TWENTY
John Braden was nervous. He'd
had to use his real ID to get Sandra O'Connell from the RCMP ahead of the
Buffalo office; he was now very hot and he knew it. There had been very little
choice in the matter, though; when the RCMP request for information had been
transmitted to Washington, it went through a long series of chains of command
and, at one point, came up on more than Edelman's computer. Braden had gotten
the call with very strict orders: get there ahead of the Buffalo office or
else. With the aid of a helicopter and direct information, he'd managed it, but
he had no sense of victory.
Just a hundred kilometers or
so southwest of Buffalo were a series of small islands in Lake Erie. The
helicopter put down on one long enough to get Braden and O'Connell off, then
took off again.
Sandra O'Connell still had no
idea that she hadn't been rescued. She stood there on the island watching dawn
come up and wondered why she was there.
"This is what, in the
FBI, is known as a `safe' house," Braden explained, and it was the truth.
"That means the place has a reputable non-government cover and an
official owner who pays property taxes and uses it for recreation. Nothing odd
or unusual, just an old family resort gone to seed. Nobody can be traced here,
and only inspectors and above can even find out where it is, and then only on a
need to know basis. No computer files, nothing. A small list. It's the kind of
place we take witnesses against big crime figures to hide 'em out, and to
prepare them for new identities."
She looked around. She was
feeling much better, more in control. Things were coming easier for now, and
she felt that she was working out the aftereffects of the drug.
"But why am I
here?" she persisted.
He sighed. "Dr.
O'Connell, somebody had you snatched. Somebody really high up. That somebody now
knows that you're alive, that you've escaped from Martha's Lake VA Hospital,
that your story is now on file with the RCMP. They didn't want to kill you, you
know. Just keep you out of the action until whatever they want to do gets done.
Now they probably would."
She accepted that, and they
walked up to the house.
It looked old,
semi-Victorian, and not in very good repair. It was sheltered from view from
the lake, but you could tell it was there, the upper story roof peeking through
the trees.
The place was a lot nicer
inside. Nice rugs, early American furniture, a modern kitchen and a large
number of neatly made bedrooms. The place had at one time been a resort; the
kitchen and dining room were truly huge, and the living room could seat almost
two dozen people.
There was a staff, too. An
ordinary looking bunch of what appeared to be hotel-like personnel, except that
they all obviously wore pistols. Sandra guessed that there were a half-dozen
total, four big men and two women with strong, serious faces, all no more than
in their late twenties.
"You're the only guest
at the moment," Braden told her. "You go upstairs, take a shower,
freshen up, whatever you want, before we have a big breakfast. Meg, there, is
close to your size I think, at least for casual wear." He called to the
women. "Hey! Meg! See if you can find something to fit our guest."
The woman smiled, nodded, and
said, "Follow me," to Sandra O'Connell. She followed the woman up the
big old oaken staircase.
Braden walked back into the
living room, then to the dining room, where he spotted one of the men.
"Alton!" he said.
"Sir?"
"I'm going into the
office and call in. You make sure she's watched at all times."
The big man nodded.
"We're well prepared. You know that."
Braden should have felt
secure and satisfied, but he couldn't. This prisoner had gotten away from them
once, and now his career was going up the creek because of her.
A small den was off the
dining room. He entered, closed the door, and went to a phone on a desk there.
He picked up the receiver and dialed. One-500-555-2323.
There was a click and a ring,
then silence. "Braden," he said into it, hung up the phone, and
waited.
The phone rang inside of a
minute. He picked it up anxiously.
"Braden? You have
her?" asked a man's voice on the other end.
"Oh, yes, sir. Tight as
a drum. She still thinks she's been rescued. Want us to just wipe her?"
There was silence for a
moment, as if the man on the other end were thinking hard. Finally he said,
"No, not exactly, anyway. We have the medical information from
Diefenbaker, as much as they did, anyway. Is she improved?"
"Yeah, pretty
good," Braden said. "She still stumbles over some big words and she
can't seem to read, but otherwise you'd hardly know it."
Again the silence, then,
"Okay, I'm going to send Conway over to run some tests on her. We can excuse
it as a routine physical exam. I think she'll be cooperative. He'll have
several alternatives depending on what he finds. We may just have to zap her
and be done, but we had pretty good reasons for icing her. We weren't going to
do it until the sixteenth, but maybe we can advance it a bit. Just sit
tight."
"Ah, sir?" Braden
said hesitantly. "Ah, what about me? I mean, I can't go back, not
now."
"You'll have to ice
yourself until after the sixteenth," the man told him. "You know
that. Cheer up. There are worse places to be iced. We won't forget you,
Braden."
"Thank you, sir,"
was all he could say, and he heard the other end click dead. He hung up himself
and considered it for a moment. There were worse places to be iced, and
worse ways. He ought to know. He got up and went back into the dining room to
join the others for dinner.
Late the next afternoon Dr.
Peter B. Conway arrived by small boat, along with some equipment. They helped
him unload and used a hand truck to get it to the big house.
Sandra O'Connell had slept
most of the day, and was feeling as good as she had since her kidnapping. She
was, as the man on the phone had predicted, delighted to take a physical
examination and discover just what had, in fact, happened to her.
The equipment was of the
relay type. Conway could conduct a complete physical here by using phone lines
connected to his monitors and to big medical computers in Cleveland.
"I'm not going to kid
you," he told her. "You're a doctor yourself, so I'll give you
nothing but the facts."
The exam was thorough and
took over two hours. It included blood tests, trace injections and monitoring,
everything. They also did a psych profile under mild and proven medication, the
best way of determining just what was wrong and where. Not incidentally, it
gave Conway the additional information he needed on her present
state of mind.
Finally, it was finished, but
it was the next morning before everything had worn off enough for her to meet
with the examining physician over a breakfast of eggs, sausage, and pancakes.
"Mitoricine,"
Conway told her. "Ever hear of it?" She shook her head. It sounded
similar to hundreds of other names.
"It's a synthetic and a
powerful hypnotic," he told her. "It was all the rage
several years ago among the drug counterculture, but it didn't last too long.
For one thing, some of the chemicals involved are hard to get, so manufacture
was limited. Also, while just exactly the right dose will produce almost any
pleasing effect you want, that effect is determined by the programmer, the
person who gives it to you. If you underdose you'll be awake but in a
trancelike state, open to every single suggestion. That was popular among the
wealthy for its orgy potential. Overdose, however, causes the same thing as
long-term usage. There is always some minor brain dysfunction. In the
usual counterculture uses, it took months of use to show up noticeably. It
affects different people in different ways at first, of course, depending on
age, body weight, dosage accumulation, whatever. But, slowly, it was obvious to
people that users were getting slower—motor, nervous system, memory, basic
skills, all deteriorating. You had three or four heavy doses, and that's what
you felt and still feel to an extent."
"But it is reversible,"
she said hopefully. "I mean, I've already gained back a lot."
He sighed. "Well, it is
and it isn't. The more you have, the longer it takes to get rid of the effects.
The brain works around the problem areas, forges new linkages. I think you got
out just in time. Two or three more doses like those they were giving you, or
one big overdose, and it might have been beyond your body to repair."
That shook her up.
"What—what would be the result if that had happened?"
He shrugged. "As I said,
it varies. But let's say you woke up much like you did originally, only slightly
worse. No reading, no math, no significant use of vocabulary, unable to tie
your own shoelaces, but, locked inside, you'd be at least dimly aware of what
happened to you. But, unlike now, where it's wearing off faster and faster,
this one would never wear off. You'd be like that for the rest of your
life."
It was a sobering thought. In
fact, she felt slightly sick. She remembered her inability to tie those knots
in the woods, her frustration at the still effective reading skills block, her
inability to even order a hamburger by name or count and recognize the change.
It was a horrible thought to be like that, or worse, forever.
Forever.
A living death.
"Excuse me," she
said nervously, and got up and left the room. Alton rose to follow her but
Conway said, "No, let her be. She's just going outside to think about
it." His tone left no doubt that that was what he wanted.
Braden's voice lowered.
"Okay, I can see you working on her. Mind telling me what this is all
about?"
Conway hesitated a moment,
then said, "You saw how she took to the horror story when she thinks she's
safe. Suppose it came true? At least, suppose she thought it had?"
"My god! She'd kill
herself!" Braden's voice rose slightly, and Conway put a cautionary hand
to his mouth.
"No she wouldn't,"
the doctor said. "She's had a good, strong parochial Catholic upbringing.
She might hole up and barely exist in misery, but she would not kill herself.
And that, of course, is what she must do."
Braden was intrigued.
"You mean fake it? Then why . . . ?"
Conway shook his head.
"No fake. A cumulative combination of things. There must be no question of
her suicide so they will not question the incomplete suicide note."
Braden had it in a minute.
"Oho! But—she's hot. She's going to start asking questions about Edelman,
about NDCC, everything. Particularly when we don't get her clothes and effects
to her."
"We managed to get some
of her stuff," Conway said. "I'll brief you and the others before
leaving. Now, you keep her happy as long as possible, but never let her forget.
I'm going to leave some pills which contain small amounts of mitoricine. This
will keep her slightly off, inhibit recovery but very slightly. Hold her until
the fifteenth if you can. If you can't, well, whenever it becomes impossible,
do it."
Braden nodded. "You want
her found on the sixteenth."
It was now the first of the
month.
TWENTY-ONE
"Bingo!" shouted
Bob Hartman. He almost ran up one flight and down the hall to Jake Edelman's
office.
Edelman was looking over some
reports when the excited younger agent burst in. "What's up?" he
asked.
"John Braden. He is in
fact with the Bureau, the Chief Inspector of the Syracuse office. Lots of time
in, an old pro."
"You're sure it's the
right man?" Edelman asked. "Remember, I'm supposed to have kidnapped
O'Connell and Bede."
"Dead on," Hartman
assured him. "Prints, handwriting, physical description all match. They
had to move fast to get there before we did and they used him."
Edelman assumed his
thoughtful pose. "Syracuse, huh? Not much for an old pro."
The younger man nodded.
"It's fairly new. He was shifted up there replacing Ben Waxier just after
the emergency was declared. His own office said he was out most of the time at
the Martha's Lake VA Hospital about twenty, thirty kilometers west of the
city."
"That would
figure," Edelman noted. "Okay, then, so we have an old pro switched
to a nothing post so he can oversee security at a VA hospital rather than the
GSA who's supposed to. You know what that means."
Hartman nodded. "Hot
potatoes. So? What do you think?"
"Raid the son of a
bitch," snapped the Chief Inspector. "I want the staff and the
doctors involved. Bury 'em at Whiteoaks. And run a check of plane drops in the
Syracuse area."
"Ahead of you," the
younger agent said. "I already got one. He landed there the day after the
snatch. Courier plane, unscheduled. We've run it down."
"You get up to Martha's
Lake," Edelman ordered. "Take care of it personally. I'll take care
of the crew on this end."
"I've got a plane
waiting," the excited agent said, and left quickly.
Jake Edelman called Internal
Security. It was his base of power, this counterespionage section, and it was
both cleared of questionables and secured in its conversations.
"Billy? Pick up on Bob's
rundown of an unscheduled courier drop in Syracuse. I want the crew in the IS
tank yesterday, get it? Then call me."
He hung up and sighed. For
the first time he seemed to be getting some breaks. More than he expected, he
admitted, looking at the papers in front of him. Plants in the terrorist
organization had now tipped him to nine locations. Nine. Now this was breaking,
too. They had to know. Had to at least suspect that he was starting to
break it open.
Why were they letting him get
away with it? he wondered.
* * *
Bob Hartman got to Syracuse
in what he believed was record time. The sleek Air Force jet had used more time
taking off and landing than it had in the air.
The rest of the team was all
ready and waiting for him at the airport. He didn't ask if they were all
cleared; he knew that Carlos Romero, the agent in charge, was and Carlos had
picked the others.
They sped off in a five-car
caravan to the West. There was one military checkpoint, staffed by a hunch of
green kids. For a moment he considered drafting them, then decided better of
it. These people wouldn't be gang chiefs or terrorists.
Twenty-two highly trained and
experienced agents walked into the hospital and simply took it over. Hartman,
authoritative, rounded up the staff and separated them by occupation and
classification without trouble. A small green cigar box was produced, and a
calculator-like device, and a call was made.
Less than three-quarters of
an hour passed before military busses from Whiteoaks Air Force Base started
rolling up. General Kneiss had been prewarned and ready, one of Jake's good
guys.
It took more than three hours
to evacuate the staff and "patients" at Martha's Lake, and Hartman's
team left it an empty shell, lights still burning.
Special staff flown in on
Edelman's orders were already arriving at Whiteoaks by the time he arrived.
The severely drugged patients were placed under guard in the small hospital
they had on the base; the others were billeted in spare barracks. Hartman recognized
quite a number of the patients. They were all scared shitless, he thought, but
to an absolutely frightened and beaten person authority is authority and force
is force. They had no idea whose side anybody was on, or if in fact there was
another side.
The staff proved different.
They knew they were in the wrong hands; most demanded to make phone calls or
see various government personnel. A few demanded lawyers. The names and
numbers of everyone they wanted to talk to were dutifully recorded, but
messages were left unsent.
General Kneissel's trained,
cleared, and hand-picked Intelligence boys tapped eight officers and nineteen
noncoms trying to make interesting phone calls. Again the numbers were
recorded, and these people joined the staff.
The doctors broke first, of
course. One little Iranian doctor who said his citizenship was on the line
finally admitted all and told the story of Sandra O'Connell. Crofton, the
attendant who'd let her escape, was hauled in next and informed that he was in
for highly unpleasant treatment for the kidnapping and possible murder of
O'Connell. He broke, blaming Braden for everything.
"Where is Braden
now?" Hartman demanded.
Crofton shrugged. "I
dunno. An Army helicopter came and got him a couple of days ago and we haven't
seen or heard from him since."
This was also noted. A circle
was drawn around Martha's Lake, and the Army helicopters capable of getting to
Braden within the time frame were catalogued. Flight logs and orders were run
through computer networks.
Not having to play by the
rules made life a lot simpler, Bob Hartman had to admit to himself.
The helicopter, and the name
of the captain who had flown it, was quickly isolated. A Bureau helicopter
then took Hartman to a National Guard unit just outside Syracuse.
The Officer of the Day and CQ
were surprised and startled by the FBI visit, but the OD had been a used car
salesman until the emergency and the CQ had been a supermarket clerk. They
weren't about to argue with the authoritative agents.
In an Army car Hartman
traveled in the early hours of the morning to the home of one Captain Irving
Wentzel, getting him out of bed. His wife's protests and shrieks were a bit too
much; they had no kids, so they took her, too.
The whole thing had been done
under tight security, and yet too many people were involved, too many
bystander types and buck-passing types to keep it completely quiet.
While Captain Irving Wentzel
was being harshly interrogated as to where he'd gone in that helicopter after
leaving Diefenbaker Hospital, somebody called somebody who called somebody
else.
Finally, somebody dialed
1-500-555-2323.
TWENTY-TWO
Sam felt relieved by their
uneventful capture, and both amazed and grateful that Suzy had been taken so
completely unaware and so unable to do anything at all that she was still
alive, whole, and hearty. It eased his conscience a great deal.
Suzy had been silent for most
of the ride, but now, suddenly, she was getting curious.
"Sam, look at this
road," she said.
He couldn't see as well,
being shackled farther from the tiny barred and screened window, but still he
could see what she meant.
It was a glorified, slightly
paved cowpath.
They had travelled a long
time—an hour or more, they guessed—stopping only briefly for occasional
roadblocks, which held them up not a bit. No roadblocks out here, though. This
was a combination of farm country and rich people's homes, the kind with an
acre or more of lawn.
Now the van slowed to a stop.
Suzy craned her neck to see out the window.
"Anything?" he
asked, getting both curious and apprehensive.
"Cows," she
replied, echoing his feelings.
There was a key in the side
lock, then a pullback of the van door. The trooper produced a second key and
unlocked the cage, climbing in.
"Sorry to put you folks
through this, but it frankly was the easiest way to get you through the blocks
and into open country like this," he said.
Both their mouths dropped.
"You mean this was planned?" Suzy asked.
He nodded as he unlocked
their manacles. "Yeah. Sorry about the lack of warning but your expressions
and manner made it all the more convincing back there. Most of those folks
were real cops. Sorry we couldn't make it easier, but Charlie was taking a crap
and I was getting a candy bar. Hell, we didn't know when you'd get
there."
"I wouldn't use this
again, though," Sam cautioned him. "Hell, Suzy almost blew your head
off, and we could easily have gotten ours shot in by some of those real
cops."
He shrugged. "Fortunes
of war." They were free and he helped them out of the van. They stretched
and massaged their legs.
"Okay," continued
the phony trooper. "Maybe a thousand meters around that bend is Route 30.
When you get to it, make a left and cross the road. About a kilometer up you'll
see an unpaved road on your right—it's the last road in Maryland. If you go
under a sign that says `Welcome to Pennylvania' you've missed it. Ten or so old
but nice homes up there. You want the last one in, a big old house maybe a
century old. It usta be the farmhouse for the place before they subdivided
it."
Suzy was all business again.
"Ten houses? Won't that attract attention?"
He shook his head.
"Nope. Don't worry about it. Most of those folks moved into apartments up
in Hanover because of the transportation problem, and others got called out in
the emergency, down to Baltimore and D.C. and whatever. If anybody's in any of
those houses now, it's one of us."
"Somehow I can't bring
myself to thank you, but it's been a long day and still there's a long walk
ahead, so goodbye," Sam said.
The "trooper"
smiled. "Okay, good luck and all that. Five got in ahead of you, so things
seem to be going well."
With that he got back in the
van, did a three-point turn, and headed back along the way he'd come.
"Back to the wars," Suzy said brightly.
He was thinking the same
thing, only for a far different set of reasons.
The neighborhood was on the
edge of a deep woods, and the other houses, as they'd been told, were empty
now. Mt. Venus Road had at one time been paved, but not for thirty years.
There was a phone installed,
with a funny sort of gadget attached which they guessed was a scrambler
circuit. All they knew was that there had been a note under it in computer
typewriter characters telling them to call in to The Man at midnight each
night. If there was no call, then it would be assumed that they had been taken.
There was also a caution that any attempt to tamper with or remove the funny
box from the phone circuit would trigger a nasty explosive charge.
Nobody wanted to touch it.
The next couple of days were
spent just exploring the area. They had no orders or assignments, so they spent
the time walking in the woods, doing light housekeeping, and discovering the
shuttle bus, a standard yellow one, that made hourly shuttle runs between the
state line and the county seat of Westminster perhaps twenty-five kilometers
southwest. From there you could get regular busses to the other towns in the
county and Greyhound to Baltimore, from whence you could get just about anywhere
you wanted—if you had the proper papers to even board the big bus.
They had clothing and money
and good fake IDs, so they weren't too worried, but Suzy was the leader and she
ran a tight ship. It was four days later, and all but one of their team had
arrived, when they ran out of groceries. Sam volunteered to go, but two others
were sent, and he went back to just relaxing, enjoying Suzy and the nice
countryside, his conscience fulfilled. He'd tried and failed. Suicide was not
in his makeup, not when life was like this.
The next day the phone in the
house rang. It startled them; Suzy answered it, half expecting to hear a pitch
for storm windows or something.
"This is 1-500-555-2323,"
a clear announcer's type voice told her. "Now, listen
carefully, for this will only be said once. Your team is complete, I repeat,
complete. The missing member was killed by security forces but did not have the
opportunity to betray you. The things you will need and all instructions are
buried in a chest in a grove approximately eight hundred meters due north of
the house in the woods. It is marked by three white-painted stones, is about
two meters down, and has been there since before the emergency. Understandably,
the things are still the standard blue, so be careful when transporting them to
the house. A single stray individual seeing people carrying blue anything will
get you lynched. Anticipating this, materials in a subbasement of your house
have been left to change the material into more unobtrusive form, along with
instructions. When the transfer is completed, call this number again and
report it so. The subbasement is reached by trapdoor under the coal pile. That
is all." There was a click and the line went dead. She stood there a
moment, thinking, while the others clustered curiously around. It had obviously
been a tape recording.
Sam and two of the others who
were muscular made their way into the woods with shovels found in the basement.
It didn't take them long to find the spot; they'd been walking the woods
anyway, and most had casually noticed the stones.
"Something's really
fishy here," Sam told them.
One of the others, a younger
man who said his name was Carl, looked up. "What do you mean?" he
asked.
Sam pointed to the ground.
"Anything buried here was buried a hell of a long time before the
emergency. A year at least. Look at the trees and shrubbery. I just find it
hard to believe that this could be so well advanced."
The others shrugged.
"So? It was 'cause here it is. Come on! Let's get digging! If we don't
find it before dark we'll be chopping each other's heads in."
It was at least two meters
down, a huge coffin-shaped box four meters long and over a meter deep. It even
had handles on it, but it took them until well after dark, with some of the
others holding flashlights, before they cleared all obstructions away and
brought it up. It took ropes and their combined muscle power to do so; the box
weighed over 450 kilograms.
They opened it anxiously but
carefully. The clamps had almost all rusted shut and took some nervous taps
with a hammer to undo. Finally the top came off.
Inside, packed in cotton,
were six baby-blue cylinders with complex valves and nozzles at one end sealed
with a waxy compound. To some they looked like single tanks, but they also
resembled fire extinguishers with rounded bottoms.
And they were heavy. They
weighed almost fifty kilos each.
Also in the box there was an
ordinary looking attaché case with a ten-digit touch lock. It was also heavy,
but not extremely so, and Suzy took it while the three stongest men each
gingerly lugged a blue cylinder back to the house guided by a companion with
flashlight, then went back for a second. There was an anxious moment when one
was dropped, but there seemed to be no damage and no hissing sounds. They kept
going.
Finally they had the worst
job. "We have to rebury the box," Sam told them. "Even if somebody
came by and saw a freshly dug area, which is unlikely, they'd hardly be
willing to dig all that way. If we tamp it down and there's one decent
thunderstorm, there'll be no more signs."
The others protested, but
Suzy agreed completely, and she was the boss.
It was past two in the
morning when they finished, dead tired.
Suzy made the call. To her
surprise there seemed to be a live voice on the other end, not a tape. She could
hear the breathing. It wasn't the same voice, but they were all being distorted
anyway, she knew. "The combination is the complete phone number," the
voice told her, then hung up.
She went to the briefcase.
Suspecting some kind of explosion if she tried and goofed, she'd just left it
there. The cylinders were all in the kitchen, stacked like wood and covered
with a blanket, and the others had all gone exhaustedly to bed after eating.
She punched the number on the
keys. One-500-555-2323. There was a click and the lid opened as if on a
pneumatic riser.
Inside was a foam rubber
insert covering the whole inside. Spaces had been cut out, and small bottles,
three of them, holding some clear liquid, were strapped in. A cutout below them
held a wooden box which, when opened, revealed two dozen wrapped and sealed
disposable syringes, some cotton, and a sealed plastic bottle of alcohol. When
she took the box out she saw that under the rubber was a thick Manila envelope,
and she reached under, having to pry it up where the foam rubber had stuck, and
got it out.
The next morning, when they
came downstairs for breakfast, a Suzy too excited to sleep greeted them.
"Guess what!" she
said excitedly. "We're the ones who get to hit Washington, D.C.!"
Sam Cornish's heart sank.
"When?" he asked her. "On the sixteenth," she said.
He looked with the others at
the wall calendar. It was September ninth. A week from today, he thought.
Seven more days.
Now what do you do, Sam
Cornish?
TWENTY-THREE
The phone in Braden's den
rang. Alton got it, talked for a few minutes, then called the self-exiled
security man.
"Yes, sir?" he said
crisply.
"The Edelman team is on
to you," The Man told him. "They raided Martha's Lake and have everybody
out. They know the whole story. It will only be a matter of time before they're
there now. I had hoped for six more days, but we can live with this. Give
O'Connell the treatment, get her out, then you get out, fast."
Braden nodded absently, fear
creating a knot in his stomach. "Yes, sir. At once." Suddenly he
heard a whirring of rotor blades and panic rose. "I hear a chopper now. Do
you suppose...?"
"That's for O'Connell,
from me," The Man assured him. "You get out by boat. Time is short.
Move!"
Braden hung up the phone and
went out to the dining room. Alton was waiting with two of the other men,
Gurney and Stone.
"I talked to him before
you did," Alton reminded him. "Gurney and Stone know where to take
her, and the bird's down and waiting. Shall we?"
He nodded, and the four of
them mounted the stairs. The other agents were also busy around, destroying
anything that might be of use to the inevitable raiders, shredding and
incinerating papers and the like. One of the women was hauling out the
firebombs and checking their clocks and fuses.
Sandra O'Connell was in her
room, relaxing listening to a Cleveland radio station. She was really
depressed; after so much rapid progress over the few days after her escape, she
hadn't improved at all in the past week or more she'd been here. She was
beginning to fear that her condition was now at its best state, and the
somewhat clumsy attempts to cheer her up by Braden and the staff hadn't helped
but just made her dwell more and more on the drug and its effects. What good
was a forty-two-year-old illiterate doctor to anybody?
The four men hurriedly
entering the room surprised and startled her. She looked puzzled. "What
is it?" she asked apprehensively. She'd heard the helicopter, too.
Alton took a briefcase and
opened it on a nightstand next to her bed. Gurney and Stone, looking grim, went
over to her and held her down.
"Masquerade's over, Dr.
O'Connell," Braden told her. "I'm afraid you've been had. You see, I
was the director at the hospital where you were kept. I was the one who drugged
you."
The shock was almost too much
for her. She struggled and started to scream, but a gag was inserted in her
mouth and securely tied. Then handcuffs bound her arms behind her back, and
despite frenzied attempts to keep them off, a pair of handcuff-like leg irons
were attached to her ankles.
"We'd hoped to be able
to spare you," Braden told her, "because you knew so much about
biochemical matters. However, that is no longer possible. We could just
kill you, of course, but you've put us to so much trouble for so long that it
would seem a shame to do so without you performing some last service."
Her eyes showed horror.
Braden reached over to the
open briefcase and pulled out a small pump-spray bottle of sealed plastic.
There was some sort of wax seal and a tiny gauge on top of it.
"This is what the
newspapers so romantically call the Wilderness Organism," he told her.
"As you no doubt know, it is a synthesized bacteria. During its active
stage, about twenty-four hours after exposure to air, it is highly contagious.
Anyone even remotely in the area will catch it, and it'll happily live in the
air, on walls, floors, anyplace an infected person touches. Of course, after
that period its own little disease, the bacteriophage, or antibacterial virus,
has at it, and it's all over for the poor germ. Except that, since it is a
catalyst, the damage has already been done to and programmed into the victim's
brain. Three days after exposure, give or take a few hours, and you come down
with the nasty symptoms."
She shrank in terror from the
bottle he so playfully held and about which he so casually talked.
"What we do, you see, is
infect somebody, then turn them loose in a crowd to spread it," he continued,
obviously enjoying her horror and comprehension.
"Yes, my dear, we'd like
you to spread it," he said. "And you will have a unique honor. So far
it's only been small towns. You will be turned loose in a major
city."
She was obviously trying to
say something, and
Braden was giving her the
full treatment. "Lower the gag for a minute," he told the others
calmly. They looked puzzled, but complied.
"You monster!" she spat at him.
"You'll rot in Hell for this!"
"If such a place exists
it will be infinitely preferable to a place with naive little saints like
yourself."
"You can't make me
spread it!" she told him.
"That's true,
normally," he admitted. He put the bottle back in the briefcase and
brought up another, smaller one filled with a reddish liquid and a syringe.
"Know what this is?"
She shook her head, waiting
for the next terror. "It's mitoricine," he informed her.
She gasped. "No, no, you
wouldn't ..."
"A big, big dose,"
he said with relish. "We're going to give you a nice chemical lobotomy,
then turn you loose in the big city just sprayed filthy with the Wilderness
Organism. But—don't worry. The mitoricine contains a vaccine for this
particular strain. You won't catch it. You'll go on and on and on . . .
as a mitoricine retard." He looked at the others, his expression and tone
all business again. "Put the gag back and hold her!"
She tried to shrink from it,
tried to get away, but she couldn't move, and she felt that horrible needle
penetrate her arm, saw the massive amount of red liquid being pushed into her,
and was helpless.
In less than a minute she was
out.
Braden looked at Gurney and
Stone. "Okay, it's all yours now. Don't forget the note and the
knife."
They nodded. "Don't
worry," Stone said. "We know our job."
They picked her up, carried
her downstairs and out the door to the waiting helicopter. Braden and
Alton stayed in her room,
wordless, until they heard it take off. Both men breathed a sigh of relief.
"That's that,"
Braden told the other man. "Hope it works. Let's set the firebombs and get
out of here." He turned for the door.
"One more thing,
Braden." Alton's voice came from behind him. "A loose end to attend
to."
Braden stopped and turned,
puzzled. He saw the pistol in Alton's hand and froze.
"What the hell?"
Alton smiled. "The Man's
orders. You're the only one they know about in this end of the operation.
Sorry." He shot Braden twice in the stomach. The agent cried out, was
pushed back by the force of the shots although doubled over, and then lay still
on the floor in an increasing pool of blood.
Alton, satisfied, holstered
his pistol and ran down the stairs. One of the women ran in the front door,
practically screaming, and spotted him. "Mr. Alton! My god! It's too late!
The whole goddamn United States Coast Guard's out there! It looks like an invasion!"
From the direction of the den
there was a loud explosion as a special telephone, triggered by remote
circuits, blew itself to hell.
TWENTY-FOUR
"I think Sam's
right," one of the women, Miriam, said. There were other nods of
agreement.
Suzy was furious. "Damn
it! What do you want me to do? I say the things don't leak."
"But they've been in the
ground for a pretty long time, Hon," he pointed out for the hundred time.
"Besides, we'll have to transfer the stuff this week to the spray bottles
from the cellar. There's real danger and you know it."
"And Sam's right about
things smelling funny," a man named Harry put in. "From the Camp on,
a lot of stuff hasn't made sense. I, for one, don't want to come down with the
disease."
"Easiest way to get rid
of us," Sam said. "Once we've done the job, well, we spread it some
more. I remember the one in the papers where everybody lost their memory. It'd
be a perfect end for our mysterious chiefs to plan for us. I tell you we have
to know if that vaccine works."
"It works, it
works!" Suzy protested for what she prayed would be the last time.
"Look, at the Camp we had a demo chamber to check out the effects of some
of the new strains. I had the vaccine, so did all the others working there. It
worked then, it'll work now.
"You lose, Suzy,"
Harry said. "We all agreed.
We're not gonna touch that
stuff until we know."
She gave up. "All right,
all right—but how can we know? We can't just walk into a chemical lab in
Westminster, say, and tell them, `Pardon me, this is supposed to be Wilderness
Organism vaccine, but we don't dare spread it to major cities until we know
we're safe!' "
"I think we'd be
satisfied to be told it's either a biosolvent or contains dead bacteria,"
Sam said. "They can do that in a hurry. Just a quick report on what it is,
roughly. We don't have to make it, only know it's a complex chemical and not
just tap water."
Defeated, Suzy agreed that
she and Sam would go into town. They walked down to Route 30 and waited for the
bus, a bottle of the stuff in her bag. She didn't say a word to him the whole
time, and pulled away when he tried to put his arm around her.
"Look, I'm doing this
because I love you," he told her seriously. "We have something going
now, something good. I don't want either of us to lose that it we can avoid
it."
She melted a little, looking
resigned. "I know, Sam. I know. It's just ..."
"Just what?"
She shifted uncomfortably.
"Nothing," she said. The bus's arrival cut short his argument, and
they rode in silence to the county seat.
There were two chemical labs
in the city, which surprised them. It was a gigantic small town, really, only a
half-hour from Baltimore. It had grown with the county, but never quite to true
city status. Everybody went to Baltimore for the rare stuff.
The lab wanted them to leave
it overnight, but they refused, and offered to pay quite a bit for it if done
fast. "We don't have to know what it is, just if it looks like it'll hurt
us," Sam told the woman at the desk. "It's an additive to our water
supply and we're a little concerned about the well."
Finally she agreed and took
it back into the hack room. "Only a real quick check, though," she
warned.
Suzy decided to pick up some
things she wanted. She was particularly interested in a purse and a couple of
wigs; the purse she needed would handle a small spray bottle, and the wigs
would help in the disguise, even if bought off the shelf.
Sam found himself alone in
the office. The woman obviously was part of the lab establishment—it was a
small affair, a second-story place run by a couple of former college teachers
as a sideline. They mostly handled water questions; a lot of homes in Carroll
County still had wells and septic tanks, and there was always a demand to test
for hardness, pollution, and the like.
Sam was sitting next to the
woman's desk, and for a little while he stared at the touch-tone phone there.
Somehow, he knew, things were
going wrong. Everything was too easy, too slick. All the little nagging
inconsistencies came to the fore.
Somehow, he was certain, they
were all being had.
His concern over the vaccine
had been genuine, a part of that feeling. Now, though, here it was, the final
question at last.
What the hell, he thought. A
little penance, a payback for those hundreds on the airliner. Suzy had been
taken alive before; that phony trooper, if he was a phony, might as well
have been real. And the others—perhaps one or two might fight, but most weren't
really willing to die in the cause any more or they wouldn't have backed him on
this panic trip.
He reached over, lifted the
phone off the hook until he heard the dial tone, and, holding it poised just
above the two plungers so he could drop it in a second to rest, he reached
over with his left hand and punched a number.
And a lot of numbers.
He'd thought about it a lot,
worked it out again and again in his mind, until he knew the numbers by heart.
He dialed the special
"500" number the FBI had given him, heard it click over, ring, then
stop. He punched the touch-tone keys.
Three-4-7-3-6-8-8-3-6-8-7-3-2-8-4-8.
He slowly lowered the phone
back onto its cradle.
He felt no sense of victory
or accomplishment; in a way, he felt himself a traitor. And yet, and yet, deep
down, something far in the back of his mind seemed to relax and and whisper
that he'd done a good thing this time.
The woman returned before
Suzy. The speed of it surprised him.
"I can't do any more
with this. It'll take days to get a more thorough analysis, but—you say this
was in your well water, or was your well water?"
He nodded. "You mean there's
something wrong?"
She shook her head from side
to side. "No, but as far as I can tell from my and my husband's quick
look, I'd swear it was distilled water. I'd love to know how you can get
distilled water in a well."
A sense of satisfaction
flooded through him. It was the justification for his phone call. All feelings
of being a traitor vanished. They—they were trying to kill him, all of them.
He'd just caught them at it, and he no longer felt he owed anything to them.
"Well, frankly, we've
had an older dry well on the place," he lied, "and I went to check it
yesterday and got this out of it with a siphon. It kinda surprised me. I think
maybe now I understand. They been dumping the stuff from the dehumidifier down
the old pipe."
It was an outrageous
explanation, and if only for that reason the woman accepted it completely.
"Forty dollars,"
she told him. He paid it and walked out to the stairs and down them to the
street below.
Distilled water, he thought
bitterly. Sure. All those elaborate places to be, places to spray, in the
instructions. Bullshit. They were to be the primary carriers. Just
riding into D.C. on a train would do it, as the orders called for. Mix with
crowds. Maybe a special strain, this, that stayed communicable for several days
but delayed its effect longer.
As he'd understood it, the
bacteria in the body somehow transmitted instructions to selected brain cells,
causing them to produce an acidic substance instead of the normal enzymes for a
period, an acidic substance that would literally burn out predetermined centers
in the brain.
Anybody who could build a
germ that could do that could give it any time schedule, any time frame they
wanted.
He saw Suzy coming toward him
with a bunch of boxes. She saw his expression and knew at once it was bad news.
"Distilled water,"
he told her.
She just nodded and didn't
say a word. They caught the bus that would take them back to Mt. Venus Road,
got off at the intersection, and walked back up the hill to the house. She'd
asked and he'd offered to carry the packages, although he couldn't see to what
purpose, now.
They were almost to the front
door when she said, softly, "Sam?"
He stopped. "Yes,
Hon?"
"You understand I do love
you?"
He frowned. Now what the
hell? "Yeah, sure, but . . . ?"
"But I have one thing I
live for, Sam. One thing only. All else pales before it. I believe in
the cause, Sam. I know you don't, not deep down. Most of them don't. But we all
do what we have to do."
The tenor of the conversation
disturbed him, and he turned. Suddenly he felt an exploding pain go through his
jeans to his rump and felt a needle enter.
He stood there, dizzy and
confused, for a moment, then toppled, packages flying. He was out so fast he
never saw her put the gas-injector syringe back into her purse.
A couple of people inside the
house witnessed it and ran outside.
"What the hell?"
Miriam demanded. "Why?"
Suzanne Martine sighed.
"Sam was never a revolutionary. He just was a sort of revolutionary
groupie. He wanted the vaccine to be just water, and when it wasn't he
started talking all crazy."
"You mean it's really
vaccine?" Harry asked, relieved.
She shook her head. "At
least it's a thick egg-based compound with suspended bacteria in it, all dead.
All the way back he kept saying as how it'd kill us anyway, that he couldn't go
through with it. Many years ago he bugged out when our group downed a plane. He
just doesn't have the guts to be a revolutionary."
They were disturbed.
"So? Now what? Do we kill him?"
"No!" she almost
shouted, then caught herself and softened. "Look, I'm still in love with
him. He's just too nice for our kind of business. Solid, though. Even when he
bugged out on the plane deal he didn't stop us, and afterwards, when he ran, he
never copped or finked. No, he's just not right on the raid."
"But what do we do with
him, then?" Harry asked. "Hell, it's only the tenth."
"So we change things a
little," Suzy said. "I got the word from The Man. We go tonight.
We'll do the transfers of what we can this afternoon. Sam? Well, tie him up so
he doesn't wander off again and leave him here. We'll be back, let him go, and
live happily ever after."
Miriam was suspicious.
"When did you call The Man?"
"From town," she
lied glibly. "I had to report the uneasiness in this unit and the testing.
I was told to go at once." She looked down at Sam, knelt down beside him,
and kissed him on the forehead.
"Help me get him
inside," she said.
TWENTY-FIVE
Alton stood on the stairway,
frightened and undecided. His first impulse was simply surrender to
overwhelming forces, but he glanced back up toward where Braden's body lay and
knew there was no escape from that. Capture meant death in any case; The Man wouldn't
spare anything to keep him and his agents from talking.
"Head for the
boat!" he yelled to the others. "It's pretty fast—you might still
make a getaway in the dark!"
The woman nodded. "What
about you?" "Don't worry about me!" he called back.
"Move!"
The three agents made their
way out the back. The mini-invasion was still in progress, but troops and FBI
field personnel were already on shore. Some Coast Guardsmen made immediately
for the boat landing to secure it, while a small cutter broke off and headed
for the pier.
The man and the two women,
still cloaked in the shadows, saw they'd never make it. They were about to turn
back when two shots came at them from behind. They returned fire, attracting
the attention of the beach personnel who also opened up.
Alton, who'd fired the shots
at them, now made his way to the shrubbery just outside the house and waited
silently. When a group of men, a couple of whom had on suits instead of
uniforms, ran by, he let them clear, then bolted after them on the run, catching
up to them in a matter of seconds. There were so many people running around now
that his action wasn't even noticed.
"There goes one!"
he shouted, seeing a form running across from the beach side to a grove of
trees. They hesitated, unsure of who was who in the dark, but the figure turned
and fired back at the pursuers, and the group Alton had joined poured it into
the figure.
It was overkill.
Bob Hartman ran toward the
house just behind a phalanx of agents. They entered cautiously, checking out
every room on the ground floor first. In the den, a small fire was still going
from the phone explosion, but it had failed to ignite much else and was burning
itself out. They were able to smother it quickly.
Now Hartman's squad ran up
the stairs. He stopped, by the body of Braden while the others searched the
bedrooms on this and the third floor.
Carefully he turned the
blood-soaked man over, saw it was Braden, and was surprised to hear a groan of
anguish.
"Hey! Get a medical
team—quick!" Hartman yelled. "This guy's still alive!"
Blood was running from Braden's
mouth as well as his wounds. He opened his eyes, tried to speak, and coughed.
"Just take it
easy," Hartman cautioned. "Medical help's on the way."
Braden shook his head slowly
and with difficulty, coughing some more, but managed to speak in a hoarse,
blood-choked whisper.
"Don't care," he
said. "Sons of bitches shot me. Alton."
"How many were there
here?" Hartman asked. "Six—no, four. Other two ... helicopter. Took
the Doc . . ."
Hartman felt triumph slipping
out of his grasp with the dying man. Gone! "Where did they take her?"
Braden was having trouble,
fading in and out. Hartman had to yell the question to him several times.
Finally he got it, coughed again, and said, "Coney Island . . . 944
Pritchard . . . 3A . . ." Again a cough. "Shot her with mitoricine .
. . Told her she had the live germ . . . S'posed to kill herself ..."
The medical people were there
now, but Hartman waved them away. Until he got what he needed, he wasn't going
to let Braden go. The younger agent looked up at one of his assistants.
"Get that?"
The other agent nodded.
"Nine forty-four Pritchard, 3A," he repeated. "Want me to get on
it'?"
Hartman shook his head.
"No. Get Edelman up there—fast. He's the only one she'll trust now. Move!"
He turned back to the man
whose hatred of those who betrayed him was keeping him alive—that, and a
possible hatred of himself, too.
"Who's behind this,
Braden?" he pressed. "Give me names."
Braden seemed to smile
strangely. "Dunno .. . call 1-500-555-2323. Ask The Man who he is
..."
Braden collapsed. Hartman let
the medics take over, and watched as they worked. "Dead?" he asked.
The Coast Guard medic shook
his head. "This guy's got a constitution like a bull ox. But the odds
aren't good."
"Do what you can,"
he told them, and went downstairs. A Coast Guard captain entered, and he asked,
"Captain Grimes! How many did we get?"
"Three," the
commander of the operation told him. "That seems to be all there
were."
Hartman shook his head.
"No, Braden said there were four. We're missing one."
"Unless he had a hiding
hole someplace, I don't see how," the commander said.
Hartman thought a minute.
"Hmmm ... Braden was with the Bureau. This is a Bureau safe house. Makes
sense the other four were Bureau, too. If you were with the FBI,
Captain, and you were being attacked by your own people, where would you hide?
Suppose, say, you were a Coast Guardsman in full uniform."
Grimes saw what he was
getting back. "I'd join the hunters at first opportunity."
The agent nodded. "Come
on. Let's check out my people."
It took some time to sound
them up. Hartman had them in a semi-military formation, and he knew his count.
He had only one name from Braden, but it was the right one.
"All right,
people!" he called to them. "Now, we can go through processing, or
ugly shootouts, or like that—but why not make it simple? Agent Alton, why not
just step forward and save us a lot of trouble?"
Alton, several rows back,
felt a shock go through him at the mention of his name. Everything seemed to
just drain out of him; it was all over now. There was no more use.
He pushed through the crowd
and walked to Bob Hartman. "I'm Alton," he said softly.
"Who'd you work for,
Alton?" Hartman asked him, an almost casual tone in his voice.
The renegade agent shrugged.
"We never knew. Somebody big. Somebody who had access to all the computer
files. Somebody who knew where all the bodies were buried on people like
me."
Hartman nodded. "Blackmail,
huh? Well, Alton, it's all over now." He turned to the Coast Guardsmen.
"Take him."
Sandra O'Connell awoke and
looked around. She knew the feelings she had now; she'd awakened much like this
once before.
It took considerable effort
to get up and sit on the edge of the bed. Yes, it was a bed. It was a little
efficiency apartment, old, with a lot of roaches and bad smells. Outside, all
around, came the sounds of people, children mostly.
She tried to clear her head,
to think. It was hard. The pictures were there but the words wouldn't come.
She was nude, but some
clothing lay draped over a chair near her. It looked familiar.
There was a small table in
front of the chair, and on it was a ty—ty—she couldn't think of the word
"typewriter" to save her life. She stared at it.
She got up, dizzily,
unsteadily, and made her way over to the chair. There was paper in the machine,
and some words had been typed on it. At least she thought they were words.
She couldn't read the words.
Even the letters, the symbols, made no sense to her now. Just so many funny
lines. Several balled-up sheets of paper were around on the floor. She ignored
them, sat down on the chair, and tried to get hold of herself.
That bad man, what was his
name? He gave her some stuff to make her dumb. For always, they said.
But they also gave her stuff
to make people sick.
She tried to get dressed. It
was a simple pair of underpants, a simple bra, a simple button-type flowered
shirt and zip-up skirt.
It took her over half an hour
to get it on right. She kept getting the shirt sleeves on wrong, and she
couldn't fasten the bra and finally gave up on it. It took a long time to
figure out how the buttons worked, and she misbuttoned them time and again, finally
giving up and leaving them that way. The skirt was on backwards, but she didn't
care.
The sneakers were a
challenge, too. Try as she might, they wouldn't fit, and it was some time
before she realized that she was trying to put the right one on the left foot
and vice-versa. When she did get them right, the laces were beyond her, and she
finally gave up in frustration.
There was a basin there, and
she went over to it, turning handles until the water came on. She grasped an
old ceramic cup with both hands and filled it with water to overflowing, then
drank from it. It spilled and dribbled all over.
In the cracked mirror above
the basin she looked at herself. It was hard to see close-up, and she backed
away a little.
It was a drooling, misdressed
idiot she saw. The sight frightened and fascinated her at the same time. That's
me, she told herself. That's me for always. She sat down on the
floor and started crying, and for the longest time she couldn't stop. Finally
she wiped her face on the pillowcase and looked around.
There was some money on the
table, too, she noticed. She reached up for it, pulled it down to her, and at
the same time knocked another object off. It fell to the floor with a clatter
and she stared at it.
It was a big, long, sharp
knife.
She looked back at the money.
Except for it being green, it made no sense to her. She couldn't tell one bill
from another, nor recognize any of the portraits or place them with their
proper denominations.
She tried to count how many
there were, but she got lost after "five."
She was hungry, and there was
nothing to eat here. She knew she was in a city, a place with a lot of people.
Out there she could get something to eat. There was this money.
But—she would make people
real sick if she did, she remembered. Anybody she saw or touched. She didn't
like that. She wanted to make people feel good, not sick.
They said they would make her
dumb and they had. They said she'd be so dumb she'd go out and make people
sick. Well, she'd fool them. She remembered that much. She wasn't all dumb.
She would fool them. She would sit right here, that's what she would do.
It didn't take very long at
all for her to get bored sitting there, and she finally got up and made her way
unsteadily to the window, which was open. She almost tripped over her own feet
doing so.
She looked out. It was day
time, and there were lots of buildings and lots more people. Lots of shops and
stores and people walking all over. Music was coming from somewhere, and it
sounded nice. She started trying to hum it, but even as it continued to play
she got all mixed up.
She'd drank more water. A lot
more. She was soaking wet now, and the water was going through her like a
sieve. She had to go to the bathroom and there was no place to do that.
Her eyes went back to that
knife. If she wasn't going to make other people sick, she couldn't stay in the
room forever. She sank down on the floor, tears welling up in her, eyes on that
knife, wishing she knew what to do.
Bob Hartman beat Jake Edelman
to New York; a swift Air Force executive jet had sped him from Whiteoaks in
under an hour and a quarter, getting him in about 10:00 A.M. He hadn't slept a
wink in almost three days and looked it, but he was running on adrenalin. After
being frustrated by this case for so long, things were finally breaking all
over and he couldn't rest.
Jake came in by shuttle at
10:20; New York police and the local Bureau office had prepared for him He
bounced off the plane and hurried to a waiting black car.
"Hello, Bob!" He
greeted his associate and they got in with a quick handshake. The car took off,
ant Edelman looked over at the younger man.
"You look like
hell," he said.
Hartman smiled. "Well, I
take after my teacher.' The Chief Inspector got down to business. "She' in
there? You're sure?"
Hartman shrugged. "Who
knows? We've had units around the place for a couple of hours. The neighbors
know nothing, of course, except that the apartment was rented a couple weeks
ago, furnished, but as far as they knew never lived in. They have one john to the
floor up there in that project, and nobody's run into anybody else taking a
crap. Our sensors heard someone moving in there, but we decided not to move
until you got here. Considering Braden, we'd all be the enemy to her."
Edelman nodded. "I
checked with Dr. Romans at Bethesda about mitoricine. It's an ugly drug but it can
be treated. The real question is whether or not she really was infected
with the Wilderness Organism."
"No way," the
younger agent assured him, grinning a bit evilly. "Braden died on the
operating table, but we had Alton and probed him—and it was simple to pick up
the other two who brought her here. None of them would touch the germ with a
ten-foot pole. They're scared to death of it."
Edelman seemed satisfied.
They sped through streets clogged with pedestrians but strangely devoid of
cars. Soldiers were everywhere, along with a lot of New York police cars. When
the emergency had cracked down, this city was one of the few with real
resistance, and it still wasn't completely under control. The rioting and
arson had been pretty well stopped, though; they had simply shot the legs off
anybody violating the curfew. Still, there was more potential for trouble here
than almost anywhere else in the country; you could almost smell the seething
resentment.
The apartment house was a
dingy, ancient, crumbling structure, the remains of some long-ago project for
the very poor. The squalor, filth, and smell of the place was more animal-like
than human. People shouldn't have to live this way, Jake
Edelman thought.
Up the stairs to 3A; the door
was so warped it looked off its hinges, and there were only the ghosts of where
the numbers once had been, slightly cleaner than the surroundings. The other
residents had been cleared out by this time; most were grumbling and protesting
behind police barricades in the street outside.
Edelman put his ear to the
door. There was no sound, and for a moment he feared that she was dead. Then,
suddenly, he heard a noise, a shifting of a body.
"Dr. O'Connell?" he
called, as calmly as he could. "Dr. O'Connell, this is Jake Edelman. Are
you in there?"
Suddenly her voice came back
at them, its sound strange, almost terrible to hear, its inflection reminiscent
of a hysterical retarded person. "Stay away! Don't come near me!"
"I'm coming in," he
told her. "I don't want to hurt you, only help you."
"No!" she screamed.
"I'll make you sick, I will!" "They lied!" he said.
"You don't have the disease! They lied to you! Now, let me in!"
"No, no! Keep out!
I'll—" There was the sound of someone getting up, moving away, then the
sound of something dropping on the floor and the person struggling to pick it
up.
Jake Edelman acted. The
landlord's passkey was already in the lock and now he twisted it suddenly and
pushed open the door.
She screamed wordlessly and
ran to a far corner of the room, standing there, a little hunched over, like a
cornered and frightened animal. She had the knife in her hand.
Edelman looked at her and
found it almost impossible to believe that it was the same woman he'd known.
There was a sadness mixed with outrage at the sight of her, but he kept it
inside.
"Give me the knife,
Doc," he urged gently. "It's all over now. No more drugs. No more
pain. No more double-crosses. No more fear. Just give me the knife."
She looked at him wildly.
"Go away!" she said. "I'll kill m'self!"
He shook his head slowly from
side to side. "No, now, don't do that. That's what they want you to
do, and you don't want to do anything they want you to, now do
you?" He slowly started toward her as he talked. Finally he was just two
meters from her, but she raised the knife, awkwardly, to her own throat. He was
afraid she might do it without meaning to.
"They lie, Doc,"
Edelman told her. "They said you had the germ. You don't. That was to make
you kill yourself. The drug was to make it hard for you to think, to figure a
way out, and to make it easier for you to kill yourself. They did this
to you. Don't do what they want you to do now." He held out his
hand, his voice calm, gentle, and steady. "Let me help you. Give me the
knife."
Her eyes were wild, her
expression afraid and confused. The knife shook a little, but it touched her
throat, scratching her.
"For the love of God,
Sandra, give me the knife!" he said, more a prayer to himself than a
statement directed to her. She wavered; the knife moved away a little. There
was a tiny trickle of blood on her throat.
"I talked to Bart Romans
at Bethesda," he told her. "The drug you got can be
treated, Sandy. It can be treated!"
Again there was that frozen
tableau for a few seconds; all seemed suspended in time. None of the people
just outside the door moved or breathed; even the street sounds and the air
seemed stilled.
Suddenly the knife dropped
onto the floor and she pitched forward. Edelman caught her, and she pressed
into him, sobbing uncontrollably. He put his arms around her and hugged and
soothed her.
Now the others came into the
room, slowly, carefully, led by Bob Hartman. He walked over first to the
typewriter, looking at the sheet still in it.
I, Sandra O'Connell, can
stand it no longer, it
read. I became part of the conspiracy to destroy the United States many
years ago, while still in college. The deaths 1 have caused It broke off.
Another agent reached down,
picked up a balled-up piece of paper, flattened it out and handed it to
Hartman.
I, Sandra O'Connell, can
no longer stand the burden of my sins, it read. I killed Mark Spiegelm
Jake, still gripping the
sobbing woman, walked out with her as they uncurled more of the balled-up
papers. There were lots of them, each apparently a false start on a suicide
note. Joe Bede, who'd been abducted with her, was implicated in some, in others
there was an almost insane mixture of leftist radical rhetoric and Catholic
moralizing.
"I woulda been convinced," one of the
agents said to Hartman. "But the autopsy would have showed the mitoricine,
wouldn't it? Made it obvious she couldn't write these notes."
Hartman nodded. "I'd
think so. But they must have prepared for that somehow. Find out how long
traces remain in the body, and also check with the city medical examiner's
office. An autopsy shows only what a coroner says it does."
The agent nodded. "Okay,
we'll work on this end. You?"
Bob Hartman sighed. "I
think it's time for me to go back to D.C. and get a good twelve hours' solid sleep,
then see what your field boys came up with." Counting the hour on the
plane, he managed to get seven hours' sleep before they called him back in.
TWENTY-SIX
"Three-4-7-3-6-8-8-3-6-8-7-3-2-8-4-8,"
said the computer technician. "I wish there'd been a better, more
effective code. Do you know how many combinations that makes? And most of
these sons of bitches used non-standard abbreviations like mad."
Jake Edelman was sympathetic.
"Remember, these people have risked more than their necks for us," he
said. "And this was the most unobtrusive manner of getting information to
us. So—what have we got on this one?"
She sighed. "Well, of
all the ones the computer flashed past we think we have it. It came in on the
number for a Sam Cornish. The back-billing on the 800 exchange gave us a small
chemistry lab in Westminster, Maryland. As far as we can tell, the lab's
clean." She handed him the paper.
The general idea was to
assign each plant a separate 800 number, so when he or she called in they
could immediately tell who it was—and by that also know who not to
shoot, if it came to that. Since the 800 numbers were toll-free only to the
calling party, the recipient had the long-distance record of what number and
area made the call, which made it easier.
The code was simplicity
itself. You just used the letters still on most phone dials to spell out your message.
This meant three possible combinations per number, unless it was a
"Q" or "Z", which were not on the dial, in which case the
"1" was a "Q" and the "0" a "Z". So the
first three letter combinations were punched and run up and down until they
made some kind of sense, then the next was added, and so on. The problem was in
abbreviations and strange geographical expressions.
Jake Edelman looked at the
paper. FHSE MT •VENUS DC TGT, it read. He looked up at the technician.
"F-H-S-E?" he asked.
She shrugged. "Firehouse,
farm house, something like that," she guessed. "Believe me, it could
be anything. Those first four are the big questions."
"What's this `Mt.
Venus?' " he asked. "Couldn't it be something else to go with the
first four?"
"It could be," she
said, "but I punched up the Carroll County atlas for Westminster and
started looking. There's a Mt. Venus Road #1 and a Mt. Venus Road #2 in
Carroll, although they're a ways from Westminster. Still, it checks. And no
firehouses on the roads. I'd say they're in a farmhouse on Mt. Venus Road in
Carroll County, about twenty kilometers northwest of Westminster, Maryland.
There's an emergency shuttle service from there through Manchester and then to
Westminster. I'd say it checks out."
He nodded approvingly.
"Well done." He looked back at the paper. "D.C. target, huh? How
many does this make?"
She didn't hesitate.
"Fourteen now, with the batch that came in in the last day and a half. We
have the locations for most of the major cities. Of the tops, we're only
missing Chicago, the Bay Area, Houston, St. Louis, Detroit, and New
Orleans."
The Chief Inspector gave her
lavish praise and she left, but inwardly he was disturbed. He called for
Hartman, who saw his superior's concern.
"What's the matter? I
thought you'd be overjoyed," he asked, stifling a yawn.
"It's good, all
right," Edelman said. "It's too good. If we got results like
this on a routine counterespionage case or a syndicate plot, I'd smell
something there, too." He looked up at the sleepy younger
agent. "Don't you see, Bob? How many plants did we have? All told?"
"Thirty-five or forty, I
think," Hartman said. "Want me to check?"
Edelman dismissed the offer
with a wave of his hand. "So, let's say forty. Now, they're going to hit
the twenty top U.S. cities—maybe the top twenty-five, but the ones we have are
all in the top twenty so let's stick to that." He shifted, looking
directly into the eyes of the other man. "Bob, even if the impossible
happened and all of our plants got through undetected—an incredible result for
a makeshift organization like this—what would be the odds of us getting plants
on fourteen different teams out of a possible twenty? Or fifty, for that
matter. See what I mean?"
Hartman was awake now, and
his mouth opened a bit in surprise. "So that's the answer," he said.
Edelman nodded. "That's
right. It all ties together now. All of it, a hundred percent. I don't think we
have to hold off on those raids for fear of warning the others any longer.
Let's hit them."
Hartman nodded. "And
then what?"
Edelman's face was grim, his
tone of voice more chilling than Hartman could ever remember. "Bob,"
the older man said, "I came into this agency when it was rocked up and
down by abuses of power. In reaction, they weakened it beyond its ability to
function, lots of nasty things happened, and we got a compromise that lasted
until the emergency. Secrecy was the rule, yes, and we played by the rules.
Absolutely. Or we got tossed in the pen ourselves. Besides, I believed that my
grandparents had been gassed to death by a system that abused its absolute
power, opening up the worst in human beings. I was never going to let that
power rule me, never let the temptations of abuse creep up on me, for that would
be a betrayal of the principles for which my grandparents died."
He sighed. "And now, after all this time, I realize that when this crunch
came it was a cage, a prison. It was one of the reasons they put me on this
investigation. Hell, Bob, the Nazis of my grandparents' Germany arose in a
democracy, and took over and dominated an enlightened and educated population.
That was because the Nazis didn't play by any rules, Bob—and in opposing them,
you had to debase your principles or you would be debased by them. My ancestors
didn't, and they died."
Hartman, who had no such
connections to the past and no particular feeling for it, still saw the older
man's point.
Edelman's fist slammed down
on the desk, making papers and objects jump. "Damn it! I've been used—we've
all been used—by the spiritual children of those Nazis! I'm mad, Bob. Damned
mad. They set up this emergency, they created this crisis, and all so they
could play by these rules, gain this absolute power. Well, by damn, I'm not
going to be another good Jew who's marched to the ovens! We're the
authority, too, for a while—as long as they let us.
And we've got all the powers
they gave themselves for the emergency. Well, now we're going to use them! I'll
still play by the rules—their rules! Let's see how they like it!"
The last was said with such
bitter acidity that it made even Hartman uncomfortable. "Easy, Jake. You
know your heart—"
"Heart be damned!"
he said. "That's the other reason it's me in this chair, Bob. When they
don't need me any more, a little syringe filled with air and —zap! The
old man's ticker went out. Hero's burial." He calmed down a little.
"What about our mysterious phone number?"
Hartman's eyebrows rose. He
was taken aback by the sudden change in tone. "Well, the 500 exchange is
the overload from the 800s," he replied. "A lot of it's legit
business. The 555 exchange, however, is strictly Executive Branch, White House.
The number goes into a centrex computer inside the White House and is routed
according to a preprogrammed codex. No way to trace it specifically unless we
were inside the computer with somebody who really knew what was what, and
that's out of the question."
"Not Health and
Welfare?" Edelman was genuinely surprised.
Hartman shook his head.
"No, that's 517. This is White House."
Jake Edelman sighed and
assumed his thinking pose. Hartman knew better than to disturb him, and,
frankly, he felt like hell and didn't want to, anyway. Finally the senior agent
broke out of it, lit a cigar, blew a big cloud of bluish-gray smoke into the
air, and said, "Bob, I'm going to take a gamble. It's a big one, but
solid, I think. If not, it won't make much difference anyway. I'm asking you to
handle it, so the initial hot potato is in your lap. It can kill you, Bob. Are
you game?"
The younger agent was
puzzled, but nodded. "You know I am, Jake."
"You know Allen
Honner?"
Hartman whistled. "The
Chief of Staff? By reputation. I've never met him."
"Well, I have, many
times," Edelman said. "He's the. President's man on the
crisis committee. I checked out a lot of that committee, Bob. Several of them
are fans of Mickey Mouse. But Honner—hell. He could do anything—program that
centrex computer, get the goods on anybody blackmailable, even rig the
assignments of Secret Service. And, if I were running a plot as elaborate as
this, I sure as hell would be on the committee to solve my own crisis, wouldn't
you? It'd be the only way to know whether the plan was working, developing
cracks, whatever. I'm betting on him, Bob."
"Logical," Hartman
admitted. "So?"
"I want you to put the
snatch on Honner, Bob," Edelman said icily. "I want him snatched,
then stashed at a safe house so secure even you don't know where it is. I want
Bart Romans from Bethesda brought in, and I want a complete mind probe. A
hundred percent. I want names, dates, places. When you get him established,
call me on the green box line and I'll get there. Clear?"
Hartman shook his head slowly
from side to side. "You don't want much, do you?" he sighed.
"Wow! Kidnapping and mind-probing the Chief of Staff!" He looked up.
"Where'll you be until my call comes in? Here?"
"An even better
alibi," Edelman said. "I'm going to personally lead a raid on the
D.C. target team over in western Maryland."
The younger man yawned again,
got up, and stretched. "Well, okay. Have fun. I'm going to go run some
Mickey Mouse fan names through the little computer. We'll see just what the
hell is going on here."
The house was easy to spot;
there wasn't anybody living in the others and hadn't been for some time. Although
the target showed signs of occupancy, it still looked as if no one was home.
They had it ringed and
targeted, and were ready for just about anything when they delivered the
utimatum through bullhorns.
The lack of any response
worried Edelman. Soldiers and agents finally rushed the place, and got no
response, either. The door was blown open and they ran inside, quickly fanning
out all over the house.
The only human they found was
one handsome, muscular black man bound and gagged in one of the bedrooms. In
the kitchen, though, they found the remains of the paraphernalia used to
administer the vaccine and a number of blue cylinders. None of them were
leaking, but the gauges on three of them showed them to be partially empty.
Edelman had no trouble identifying
Sam Cornish; he had a photo and prints to settle his plant's identity.
Cornish was upset. "You
the head man?" he asked the Chief Inspector. Edelman nodded. "Good!
They're crazy! She's the craziest of the bunch!"
"Did they make
you?" Edelman asked. "And, if so, how come you're still
breathing?"
Cornish shook his head almost
in disbelief. "No!
At least, I don't think so. I
got them to check out the vaccine, though. I had this feeling all along we were
gettin' played for suckers. And we were! It's water—Plain water! And she knew
it! Knew it and still sent 'em out, after icing me to make sure I wouldn't tip
'em! Water!"
It took a little pressing to
get the full story from the distraught man, and when they got it they were all
a little upset.
"She must have decided
they couldn't wait for the deadline," Edelman said. "Not unless she
wanted to kill you. So they're gone. In action with what they could take. The
mean of the true fanatic, I guess."
Sam Cornish still couldn't believe
it. "But—we were had and she knew it! Those phony Air Force and State
Troopers—they weren't phony. Camp Liberty—hell, I bet those jets I saw so
regular overhead were official flights. I bet it's in Nevada or
something!"
Edelman smiled. "You
guessed a lot, didn't you? I think maybe you'd better give us what you can on
the other people so we can stop them if possible. Then you're coming with me."
"Hey, inspector!"
one of the agents called. Edelman turned. "You won't believe this, but in
this briefcase is everyplace they're going to strike!" the agent said.
"God! They didn't even bother to take the stuff with 'em or destroy
it."
Sam Cornish nodded slowly.
"Wasn't any use," he said. "Suzy knew they weren't long for this
world after the mission"
For the next hour and a half
they went over descriptions while the place was dusted. Before Edelman and
Cornish reached Washington again, the bureau's computers had already made eight
of them.
Edelman stopped only long
enough to call in. There was a message from Hartman, but he could only tell the
other man to take it on his own. Somewhere in or nearing Washington right now
were ten terrorists armed with the Wilderness Organism, nine who thought they
were immune and a tenth who was so fanatical she would go on with it anyway.
"She's spent her whole
life in the revolutionary movement," Sam explained. "One of the
tenets of the faith was that you induced a repressive fascism as the setup for
revolution. I guess if you really believe that shit you might do what she's doing,
even though you know you're a fascist tool."
Edelman nodded agreement.
"She just was too much of a true believer in her own peculiar brand of
religion. But—she loved you, Mr. Cornish. Loved you enough to save you when she
knew she had to die."
Sam Cornish's face was sad,
and there seemed a distant look in his eyes. He turned slowly to Edelman and
said, "Can I go with them to Suzy's target? I—I'd like to be there. Maybe
I ..."
Edelman nodded. "I'll
take you there. She's to board the Metro at Connecticut and Calvert, and ride
it out to Glebe Road in Arlington. She has only the one spray, and it's got to
look like hair spray or something to get by the checkpoints. She'll spray the
train and station. The best time would be just before rush hour, or possibly
during it. After four—which gives us a little over fifteen minutes." He
paused, a thought rising in his mind. "You don't suppose she'll vary the
plan? Get on elsewhere?"
Cornish was positive.
"No, not Suzy. Once the plan was made and rehearsed, she followed it to
the letter, always."
By the time they made the
station, several other things had been accomplished. The partial prints and
Sam's descriptions had been computer matched and they knew the identities and
general appearances of all of them now, along with their targets.
Additionally, while the station was open, Metro trains were ordered to skip it.
The crowds were backing up, but the soldiers at the station checkpoints looking
at ID cards had kept things even slower.
"If she sees you she
might not use the spray," Edelman said hopefully. "We'll see. We have
to take the chance. Too many people down there to do a general shootout unless
it's the last resort."
"Worth a try,"
Cornish said, his nerves tensing, stomach tight.
Behind them, special Army
trucks were pulling up, and men climbed into strange looking suits like
spacesuits and checked out nasty-looking tanks with insulated hoses terminating
in what looked like single-barrelled shotgun housings.
Now Edelman and Cornish
joined a group of FBI and DC police personnel for the walk down into the
station.
The well-lit station was
spacious and clean under the monitors of Metro security. The station itself was
a distinctive work of architecture, cool and efficient. While the field agents
continued on into the gathering crowd, Edelman pulled his charge over to one of
the security booths. "Let's see if we can pick her up on the circuit
first," he said, adding ominously, "If it's clear she's already
started any spraying or is about to, the flamethrowing team will come in full
force. Remember that." Cornish nodded but said nothing.
The cameras started their
sweep, the technician adjusting so that the faces of many of the people could
be seen. They were looking for lone female figures of small stature, and they
found several, but Cornish shook his head "no" to each as they
looked. Finally they reached all the way down to the end of the platform,
where, off by herself, a slight female was reading a paper, a standard shoulder
purse suspended from a strap around her neck.
"Hold that one!"
Cornish ordered. "Can you blow it up a little more?"
They tried, but as long as
the newspaper was up little could be seen but the top of long, reddish-brown
hair. Suzy's was short and jet black, but she'd brought wigs while in Westminster.
The big man stared hard, praying that it was she, not quite understanding his
own feelings at this point, nor even why he'd insisted on coming along,
participating in the crackdown. He wasn't sure what he'd do it if was Suzy
behind that paper. He could only wait and hold his breath, while the other
cameras continued to pan and the security and police teams mingled below,
trying to get a make on her.
Two figures walked,
hand-in-hand, along the sidewalk next to the Congressional Office Building.
They looked like two lovers out enjoying a break from whatever routine they
normally followed. They turned a corner, and someone with a walkie-talkie in
the part just across the street whispered, "It's a make. Go!"
Men and women armed with
automatic weapons seemed to pop out of every place at once. A bullhorn barked,
"You on the corner! Stop and put both hands in the air!"
The couple broke apart, and
the man reached into the woman's bag for something as both dropped as one to
the sidewalk. It wasn't good enough. From all over hundreds of rounds poured
into them, making in split seconds an awfully bloody mess. Now figures in the
white pressure-suits moved up, a confirmation was made on what remained of the
dead, and it was noted that there were several holes in the leather purse. One
of the suited figures reached in and pulled out a metal object looking much
like an ordinary can of shaving cream complete with brand name and trademark.
There was a nick in it, but it looked unopened and undamaged. A bomb-disposal
truck was called, and the can was placed inside. They were about to clear the
mess when they noticed a slight bulge under the man's coat. They opened it to
see two small pressurized cylinders strapped to his underarms, and long, thin
plastic tubes running down the sleeves. There was no way to tell quickly if the
stuff was on.
They stood back and bathed
the dead bodies and most of the street corner until it was ablaze with
white-hot liquid fire.
The National Visitor's Center
used to be the train station when trains were the chief mode of transportation;
it still was for some, a center for commuter trains and high-speed megalopolis
runs. Out of one train from Baltimore stepped a hesitant young woman, looking
nervously around. She got three steps off the platform when figures moved in
back of her, grabbing her arms while one shot an injection that knocked her
cold. The jets, fed by two small cylinders worn under her blouse and shooting
downward to the ground, had obviously not been activated.
A young-looking officer, an
Air Force captain in full uniform, got off the bus at the Pentagon and showed
his credentials. He was carefully checked by the first team and waved on,
making his way, courier-style briefcase in hand, across the inner parking area
toward one of the entrances. A check-point sergeant, after waving him on,
lifted his walkie-talkie and said a few words.
As the captain neared the
last rows of cars, figures popped up all around him, weapons pointing directly
at him from all directions. He stopped, looked completely around, saw there was
no way out, then smiled, shrugged, and put up his hands, the brief-case,
unopened, still in his right hand.
The frail, elderly woman in
the wheelchair being pushed by a younger man up to the entrance of the Sheraton
Washington looked terribly harmless. The man, however, met all but one of the
criteria the personnel on guard had on the people they were looking for; he
was clean-shaven, but moustaches are easily removed. They decided to take no
chances. Armed men and women popped out of the bushes and nearby cars.
The man looked confused and
let go of the wheel-chair. The old woman started rolling downhill, and, as she
did so, a couple of the cops moved to stop her. Quickly the blanket fell,
revealing a submachine gun with which the "old woman" opened fire.
Also unmasked were two bologna-shaped modules on either side of her in the
chair, aimed slightly down.
Two men in white
pressure-suits suddenly popped up just in front of her and, as she tried to
shift the submachine gun to them they opened up with liquid fire. Back near the
hotel entrance, the younger man stood frozen, then slowly raised his hands in
the air. There was fear on his face and panic in his voice as he screamed,
"I haven't triggered it! Don't burn me!
For God's sake, don't burn
me!"
And so it went across the
city. Some were uglier than others, needing extensive flamethrowing, then
sanitizing and scientific teams from the Bureau of Standards to determine that
none of the Wilderness Organism were loose, and a few innocent bystanders were
caught in the mess as some of the terrorists surrendered and others resisted
to the death.
"It's Suzy,"
Cornish said softly as the woman lowered the newspaper a bit. There was no
mistaking her now.
He and Edelman walked down to
the platform, and were joined by several others as they made their way toward
the far end. Calls were already going out to stop all westbound trains, and
slowly soldiers moved in to start clearing away the people already down there.
Suzanne Martine was a
survivor. She smelled the wrongness and felt the danger even before she saw
anything to justify it. Still, she was calm, folding the newspaper and putting
it on the bench carefully before casually looking up and around.
She made her hunters easily;
they were the only people moving toward her. She went through the various
options quickly as she continued to pretend that she hadn't seen them, picked
the one that seemed most likely to provide some sort of chance, and walked
slowly over to the edge of the platform.
Pistols came out, and the men
and women of the authority she hated so much started running toward her.
"Suzy! No! Don't!"
she heard a familiar voice scream, and for a split-second she hesitated, seeing
Sam. Then, suddenly, as the first shots started, she jumped down onto the
trackbed, managing somehow to keep her balance, and ran into the tunnel as
shots ricocheted around and near her.
Sam Cornish got to the edge,
turned to Edelman, and said, "Please! Let me go!"
The Chief Inspector thought
for a second, then nodded. "Okay, son," he said, "but flame
squads will be at both ends. Talk her out or I won't be able to stop
them." Again the split-second hesitation, then he reached into his jacket
and brought out his .38. "Take this."
Sam stared at the pistol for
a second, as if he'd never considered the possibilities before. Then he took
it, turned, and jumped down onto the track bed. "Watch that third
rail!" somebody shouted, but he was gone into the darkness.
TWENTY-SEVEN
He was a tall man of about
forty-five, in a brown suit and yellow shirt with brown-and-yellow striped tie,
horn-rimmed glasses, and the look of a successful business executive.
He'd received a call from one
of Edelman's team on some breakthroughs, and since actions were still in
progress they'd requested that he come over there to get the information. He
needed and was entitled to it; Allen Honner was the President's Chief of Staff.
A sleek, black car passed the
east gate checkpoint at the White House and rolled up to the entrance. The two
men inside looked like what they were: career FBI types. One got out, nodded
to Honner, and opened the rear door for him. He got in without hesitation, and
the agent, picking up a briefcase from the front seat, switched around and got
in next to him.
The car started off, passed
back out onto Pennsylvania Avenue, and turned right toward the FBI Building.
Honner was confident and
interested. "I'll be having a late dinner with the President," he
told the agent beside him. "I'll need all you've got. You know there'll be
a meeting on the fifteenth on the status and need for the emergency, and a
speech on the conclusions reached there on the sixteenth."
The other man nodded.
"Don't worry," he said. "I expect we'll have most of this case
wrapped or on the way to cleaning up by late this evening."
Honner glanced around.
"Hey! Wasn't that the Hoover Building we just passed?" he asked,
suddenly disturbed.
The other man shrugged it off
and reached into his briefcase. "Don't worry about it. We're not going to
the Bureau. Too many leaks there. We need absolute privacy for this."
The Chief of Staff seemed a
little upset, and he started to press the matter when the agent's right hand
came out with a small pistol with silencer attached and pointed it at him.
"What's the meaning of
this?" Honner demanded. "Who are you?"
The agent's left hand fumbled
in the case and emerged with a gas-powered syringe. "I'm a fan of Mickey
Mouse," said the agent, and, pushing the injector against Honner's
buttocks, fired the drug through the Chief of Staff's expensive brown pants.
A few blocks down they
switched to a D.C. police van, which roared off, lights flashing. None of the
patrols, sentries, and the like checked it. They turned and headed back along
Pennsylvania Avenue, reached the circle, turned onto Wisconsin, and headed
into Georgetown, turning the lights off now. Down into the old but fancy
original section they drove, finally reaching the spot they wanted, turning
into a back alley, and pulling up behind a particular house.
The agent fumbled in Honner's
pockets, got a key ring, and got out. Quickly and efficiently they got the
unconscious man out of the van and through the back door of the house. Four
other agents, two male and two female, walked down the alley from opposite
directions and, one by one, entered the house. The van drove off, to be
replaced in the D.C. police garage.
It was a safe house nobody
knew, all right. Allen Honner awoke, bound hand and foot, in his own bed.
"What the hell is
this?" he demanded. "Who are you that you dare this?"
A thirtyish man in
shirtsleeves, looking tired and serious, came up to him. "We're the FBI,
Mr. Honner," he said dryly. "The part you don't own."
Honner's face showed panic.
"You have no right to do this!" he almost yelled at them. "No
right at all! Do you realize who I am?"
Bob Hartman nodded slowly.
"We know, Mr. Honner. And, yes, we do have the right. You gave it
to us. You and whatever others are involved in this. Preemptory arrest of
citizens whenever an officer believes there is cause, suspension of habeus
corpus, suspension of civil rights. Yes, Mr. Honner. We do have the
right. And, thanks to directives coming out of your office, and those of the
Justice Department, we may use any and all means of questioning if it is in the
interests of internal security. My boss thinks you're a traitor, Mr. Honner.
That gives me the right to break every damned little bone in your body, stuff
you with any and all mind-probes, drugs, and other devices, and do whatever I
feel like to get the truth." He smiled evilly. "And I'm not even responsible,
Mr. Honner. I'm just following orders."
Allen Honner was scared to
death. His face was white, and he was sweating profusely despite central air
conditioning.
"Look," he said.
"I'm powerful. One of the most powerful men in this country! Anything you
want! Power, money—you name it. Anything. Just—don't hurt me."
Bob Hartman gave a dry
chuckle. "All right, Mr. Honner, I'll make you a deal. The truth. The complete
and full story, no commas and periods omitted. That's the price, Mr. Honner.
The truth, or we get it our way."
The Chief of Staff looked
around at the grim faces staring down at him on his own bed. Fear was mixed
with confusion. "I don't understand you people! What's in it for you? What
the hell will this get you?"
Hartman shook his head sadly.
"I see a brilliant mind reduced to a pathetic pawn. I see men and women
afraid to move, to think. Others—who knows how many countless lives wracked by
a disease that was engineered by human minds. Engineered!" His
voice exploded with rage. "Crippled minds, crippled bodies!" Suddenly
his tone lowered, became calm and mixed with pity. "No, Mr. Honner, I
don't think you and your kind will ever understand what we get out of
this." He turned to one of the women, nodded, and she brought up a huge
case filled with, it turned out, medical gear and monitors. Honner's eyes fell
on it and went wide with terror.
"All right! All right!
What do you want to know?" he cried, then seemed to sink down in the bed,
resistance gone. And yet, as they stared at him, a curious half-smile crept
into his expression, and his eyes seemed wild. "I'll tell you what I
can," he said. "It won't matter. It's too far along. Even if you know
everything now, there's not a damned thing you can do to stop it."
Hartman didn't like the
switch in the man's manner; that last was spoken not with bravado but out of
conviction. He began to have the creepy feeling that Honner just might be
right.
He reached over, got a chair,
and sat down in re-versed position, leaning forward on the chair back.
Recording devices started.
"Whose phone rings when
I call 1-500-555-2323?" Hartman asked.
Honner chuckled. "One of
mine—if I'm there. If not, one of my assistants'. The coder on the phone makes
the voice identical no matter who is speaking."
Hartman nodded. "Where
was the Wilderness Organism developed?" he asked.
This, too, amused Honner.
"At Fort Dietrick, at NDCC, of course. A private foundation we helped
endow started the work based on the Cambridge stuff long ago. A couple of solid
scientists felt they knew where both we and the Russians had made our mistakes,
and saw the total ban on research as dumb. They, like we, were convinced that
other nations were working on the recombinant DNA problems, and that we would
be vulnerable, wide open in fact, if that were the case. It was good defense
and good science. The work was there; you couldn't wipe it away. It was inevitable
that it be pursued. When President Wainwright was elected to his first term, we
arranged for that and a number of other projects to be transferred, funded, and
masked by NDCC, supposedly as cancer research—which it was, too, among other
things."
"Where are the remaining
blue cylinders and Wilderness Organism cultures?"
"Some are at Camp
Liberty, some are at Dietrick, in a special bunker, and the rest—most of it—is
with the poison gas stores at Dugway in Utah," Honner said. "Except,
of course, for the stuff already distributed. We didn't want some of it out
very long. It's subject to easy mutation, and that lowers the effectiveness of
the vaccines."
Hartman took a deep breath.
"Who are `we', Mr. Honner? Who, besides you, is involved in this?"
"Patriots," Honner
said. "Men and women of vision. This isn't anything that's just grown in
the last couple of years, you know. It began, in fact, before I was born—a
group of patriotic, concerned citizens who saw how this country was going to
hell. We were weakening ourselves and retreating from the world in a slow,
steady erosion of power and authority—matched by the same disintegration of
society inside the country. Open sex, the breakup of the family, the discarding
of old values without gaining or adding any new ones. These people deplored
this, organized, worked long and hard to set this up, to stave off the eventual
collapse either by external attack or from within until they were in a position
to control this country and reverse the declines. It was a long time coming—I
doubt if a single one of the original people is still alive. But they did their
work well. Younger people, bright, ambitious people were raised and nurtured
and came up slowly within the system, aided by political maneuvers to place one
key person here, another there, working, waiting, until the seat of power was
also ours, occupied by one of our own people."
"President
Wainwright," Hartman said. "They always said that he was the type of
man you'd invent for President. Now you're telling me he was invented?"
Honner nodded and laughted.
"And, you see,that's why you can't win. It isn't one guy like me in a
power position, or a dozen. It's hundreds and hundreds, all in the right
places. We control the Executive Branch. We control five Supreme Court
positions—thanks to some timely and easily arranged natural deaths. We already
had two seats anyway. Some top senators and key congressmen. And, most
important, a lot of key civil service bureaucrats."
Even though Jake had guessed
it and Hartman had suspected it, the sheer scope of the conspiracy staggered
him. And, once in those positions, those key people had unlimited access to
information on most Americans, including others who worked for government. The
IRS could tell them just who was spending what on what. The Treasury had a
record of every check anybody ever wrote. Blackmail, pressure, and outright
power bought the others—and, in many cases, bureaucracy did it of its own
accord. If the proper codes and the proper signatures were on the proper forms,
you could get away with anything.
Honner talked on and on, and
the more he talked the more confident he became, and not without reason. After
all, what could Bob Hartman and Jake Edelman do with all this? Go to the
press—which was totally controlled and censored? Get powerful political help?
Who was who? Even Honner wasn't sure of everybody; they needed a computer to
keep track. And on the sixteenth President Wainwright would announce that the
plot had been smashed, that it was in fact internal, and launch a massive purge
of government. He would eliminate—literally —those he needed to, consolidate
his power, so that only his own people held the reins in all three branches of
government. Scapegoats would be trotted out and shot, some after giving drug-induced
confessions. The takeover would be absolute; within one to two weeks after the
address, the last echoes of democracy and freedom in the United States would be
gone, probably forever. Even the radicals—the products of schools, universities
would be purged. A new generation would be raised under different standards
according to government edict. Conformity would be enforced by merciless
pressure; the price of not obeying would be too great.
The plot was cracked, all
right—but not in time, not in time at all. Honner, Hartman thought with a
sinking feeling, was right. They were discovering the evidence of a coup
d'etat weeks after it had already taken place.
Sam Cornish walked into the
darkness of the subway tunnel. He suddenly felt a little foolish and out of
place, and he looked at the pistol in his right hand and thought, What the
hell am I doing here?
It was not complete darkness;
signal lights and occasional bulbs planted for emergency use every ten meters
or so made it possible to see without breaking his neck. Once or twice he came
close to the third rail, the source of power and current for the trains, but
managed to avoid stepping directly on or leaning into a hot section. He
frankly wasn't certain what was hot and what was not.
The next station was some
twenty blocks or more away; there was no sign of it in the ghostly-lit tunnel
whose bulbs spread out before him almost to infinity. He knew what lay at the
next station: a squad of riflemen and a flamethrowing team, the same as was in
back of him. She must know it, too, he thought, still surprised and
still not understanding why he was still surprised. His mind kept going around
and around like that.
Either he would find her or
he would miss her. If he did the latter, well, the next group to come in sure
wouldn't. And if he found her?
Why had he taken the pistol?
It was Suzy out there, Suzy running and hiding in the dark, not
some mysterious ogre.
There was a dripping sound,
some leak or something that reverberated up and down the empty tunnel.
Yes, it was Suzy out there,
he told himself, but not the Suzy of the camps or the Suzy of the good days
just over in the Carroll County woods just over? It seemed years ago—but the
Suzy of Kennedy Airport and the marshland near the end of the runways. The Suzy
who told them to hold the vertical mortar steady as she timed the takeoff of
the great silver bird with hundreds of innocent and non-idealogical people on
board, and smiled and laughed as she timed it just right and dropped it in and
it had gone whomp and torn into that plane and she'd laughed when the
explosion littered the sky and found pleasure in the screams, the screams, the
screams .. .
Several minutes in, he
thought he detected movement. There was some sort of sign up there on the
right, and he was sure that some figure had moved near it. Just a shadow,
but...
The sign marked an escape
shaft in case the trains got stalled without power or crashed or whatever.
"There was also a pumping noise as it became clear that the shaft was also
used for providing some ventilation for the stagnant air of the tunnels.
How many between here and
there? he wondered.
Would Edelman and his people
have them all covered?
But, no, he scolded himself.
He was thinking like himself. He would be looking for a way out; not Suzy, oh,
no. She had a mission to complete. She couldn't get on one of their fancy big
trains now, no, but she could if possible still do a little damage. What would
Suzy do?
Air shaft, his mind told him. Not only fresh air down
but dead air and exhaust and fumes up. An outlet to the air.
He walked more quickly now,
toward that exit sign. And then, there he was. He stopped and listened. There
were noises all right, slight and easily overlooked, but there, beyond the
exit.
"Suzy!" he shouted,
his voice echoing eerily up and down the length of tunnel. "Suzy! It's
Sam!"
The sound of his own voice
obscured all other sounds for a moment.
"Suzy! Don't do it! It's
a plot by The Man, Suzy! We've been suckered by the pigs all along! None of the
big boys will die—they got the real stuff! Just you and me and a lot of
ordinary people! Suzy! Don't you end up working for the other side!"
Still there was no response.
He pushed open the exit door and walked into the shaft. Surprisingly, even to
him, he felt no fear at all. He no longer had anything to be afraid of. That,
in itself, was a wonderful thing, and he savored it.
There was a wide metal ladder
in the center of the shaft, and, looking up, he could see light from the distant
street. For a moment he thought he'd guessed wrong, but then he saw her, on a
metal ledge not eight centimeters wide, near an access valve for the air
system. She was just standing there, looking down at him, but she had opened
her shirt to expose the two gas nodules, and had the two long, thin spray tubes
out of her pants legs. One hand steadied her on the precarious perch; the other
was on the left gas cannister.
He started up the ladder.
"Stay back, Sam!"
she warned him. "This isn't any of your fight. I don't know if you finked
or what, but it's not your fight, Sam. You don't belong here. Go away."
He continued up at a steady
pace. Now he was only a few meters below her.
"Stop where you are,
Sam, or I'll just let these jets go right now," she said. Her right hand,
which she'd been using to keep her balance, came free, and she grasped the
right tube and stuck it in a cavity in the wall behind the air intake valve.
He stopped and stared at her,
surprised now at himself as tears welled up in his eyes.
"Stop, Suzy! Please!
This is crazy! There's no reason ... " he pleaded.
"Only in blood can come
the revolution," she said, eyes not on him but on something distant,
something neither he nor most other human beings could see. "The blood of
the innocent, though it count in the millions, buys the future of
mankind."
"Suzy, if you don't stop
I'll have to shoot you," he said, his voice choking up. "I can't let
you do it again. Not a second time, Suzy."
Suddenly she seemed to notice
him again, and she looked down on him with an expression of mixed arrogance and
bewilderment. "Why, Sam?" she asked. "Penance for the plane
job?" Her hand moved to the trigger for the cylinder.
He could hardly see her, yet
the pistol came up and pointed at her all the same. "No, baby," he
said. "Love." He fired the pistol, not once, but all five rounds in
the chambers, and he continued to pull the trigger, clicking away at the
useless pistol.
Suzanne Martine stood on the
perch, that same expression still there but the arrogance now fading, leaving
only the bewilderment. "Sam?" she said, the tone carrying that
bewilderment to him as if, for the first time in her life, she questioned
everything.
And then she fell, dropping
down the shaft, her body striking the ladder once and bouncing, until it hit
the cement floor and lay still.
He stopped firing and looked
at the pistol again in wonderment, as if he had no idea how he'd gotten there.
He let it drop out of his hands and it fell, too, to the floor below.
He started climbing for the
sunlight above him.
TWENTY-EIGHT
Jake Edelman looked like he
was about to have a heart attack at any moment. He'd aged terribly in the past
few days, and he was neither young nor in the best of condition to begin with.
Bob Hartman, who didn't look
so great himself, entered, nodded, and sat down in the familiar chair.
For a while his boss said
nothing, as if thinking of another world. Finally he looked over at his associate.
"It's the
fifteenth," Jake Edelman said.
Hartman nodded. "You're
ready?"
Edelman shrugged. "Hell,
how do I know? Do you realize what a long shot this is?"
The younger man knew
perfectly. They had it all now, everything. Everything but a way out except for
an outlandish gamble by his weakened boss.
"I visited Dr. O'Connell
today," Hartman said. "She's doing pretty well, but it'll take time.
A lot of time. She's a remarkable human being, though, Jake. We owe a lot to
her."
Edelman nodded. "Pity we
couldn't get to Dr. Bede. Dead in LA with those nice little suicide notes."
"Mitoricine?"
"Who knows?" The
older man shrugged. "The county medical examiner, who owes his job to Mayor
Stratton, who went to college with Allen Honner, says self-inflicted with some
trace of barbiturates and the like but no really funny stuff. He's the ME.
Who's to argue? Bede's in Forest Lawn already."
Hartman sniffed derisively.
"Well, I dropped in on our doctor after looking in on you-know-who."
Edelman managed a smile.
"Poor Mr. Honner still in C.C.U. at Bethesda? That was some heart
attack! I understand they have to keep him so doped up for pain that he hardly
recognizes anybody."
They both shared a laugh over
that.
Jake Edelman looked down at
the thick transcript of the Honner confessions. "Jesus! The names in here,
Bob!"
The other man nodded. "I
know, Jake, I know. We'll have a tough time getting them all. A slow process.
But everybody in the Mickey Mouse organization has them, knows them, as do the
RCMP and MI-5. They're through, Jake, if we aren't."
"Hear about Colonel
Toricelli's group raiding Camp Liberty?" Edelman asked. "No wonder
that boy, Cornish, saw jets taking off and landing regularly! It was
forty-eight kilometers southwest of the Tucson airport!"
Hartman smiled. "Well,
there's nothing left now. The papers have been playing up the smashing of the
terrorists and the discovery of domestic traitors. All the usual bullshit,
except that it's all true. We're heroes, Jake. The President's going to give
you the Medal of Freedom and I'm going to get the New York office and all that.
Didn't you know?"
Edelman snorted. "You
know he wants me to meet with the cabinet and the emergency council tonight.
Wants to be sure he has everything. I've been asked to appear on tomorrow's
address, can you believe? He told me to bring maps, pictures, exhibits."
Hartman was suddenly bright
and alive. "He did, did he?" His expression suddenly feel. "They
can't be that dumb, Jake. They just can't be. I mean, Allen Honner
absolutely did not know what the hell Mickey Mouse was except a cartoon
character. They must at least suspect that we're on to them."
"Arrogance, Bob,"
Jake Edelman said. "Arrogance and conceit. Back in the old days, in World
War II, the Germans conquered practically all of Europe and came within a
whisker of the world. They did this even though their intelligence apparatus
was so lousy the British were almost running it. They just couldn't believe
that they could be fooled by some slick tricksters. At the same time, we'd
broken the Japanese code yet were so damned dumb we set Pearl Harbor up so it'd
be easy for the Japanese to cripple us, and we even courtmartialed a general
who said we'd get hit by the Japs from carriers there! They've got it made,
Bob—and they know it. That's our defense. That and the fact that they are men
and women like Honner—they're not used to being on the receiving end.
Conspirators and masters of terror are quite often the easiest to terrorize—they
assume you think like them. You watch."
The tone did not have the
full confidence the words conveyed. Hartman knew it, but echoed it all the
same. "Go get 'em, Jake. All that can be done has been done."
The old man got up wearily
and started packing his exhibits case, then closed it, picked it up, and walked
slowly for the door.
"Jake?"
He turned. "Yes,
Bob?"
"God be with you,"
Bob Hartman said.
Jefferson Lee Wainwright,
President of the United States, was going over his speech before his cabinet
and emergency council. It was a distinguished group: thirty-four men and women
who, together, handled much of the top echelons of government and the military.
"And so, my fellow
Americans," he was saying, complete with flamboyant gestures, "these
radicals of bygone days, defeated and demoralized but not deradicalized, went
different ways. Some left the country, some went underground to hiding-holes,
but some, the best and the brightest of them, went into normal careers and rose
brilliantly in them. Men like Dr. Joseph Bede, who wormed his way into the
National Disease Control Center and, there, in a major authority position,
secretly used your tax money and your facilities to create what became known as
the Wilderness Organism." He paused and looked directly at the crowd, and
in a lower, more normal tone said, "And, you know, the son of a bitch
really was involved in the blowups when he was an undergrad? Man! Will that hold
up!"
Suddenly he changed back into
the Presidential orator.
"These radicals, still
dedicated after a decade or two of dormancy, waited for the rallying cry. And
it came! It came from those who had wormed their way into government and
society and positions of importance! They trained at an abandoned Army test
range near Tucson, gathering the scum of the earth from its four corners. And
Bede gave them the weapon. The Wilderness Organism."
Again he paused, but remained
in his professional charismatic pose.
"Yes, my fellow
Americans! But it was not complete. Oh, no. No such beast could be perfect
without testing. So they tested it on you. On small-town America, where they
could observe its properties and effects. And, when they were ready, they made
plans to strike at the heart of our major cities. The tragedies in Chicago and
New Orleans are witness to what the whole country could have undergone—and
may still. For such elements as these still exist in society!"
He stopped, relaxed, and put
down the sheets. "That's all the further Barry got on it. We probably will
go through another draft or two, but it's pretty effective. The rest is
spelling out the plans and justifying them, and you know all that by now
anyway."
Most of them nodded.
There was a commotion at a
far door, and heads turned as two Secret Service men entered, flanking a tiny,
strange-looking little man with a big nose.
"Chief Inspector
Edelman!" Wainwright boomed. "Please come up here so I can shake your
hand." He turned to the rehearsed audience. "This is the man who
saved the country!"
Jake Edelman came up and
accepted the handshake and the polite applause of the bigwigs.
"Inspector, I would like
you to brief us all personally on the plot, how you solved it, and how it all
worked," Wainwright said. "Barry Sandler, there, is writing
tomorrow's speech, and we want to give credit where credit is due and also get
the thing a hundred percent accurate." He pointed. "You can take that
chair, there. It's Al Honner's. As you might have heard, he had a really bad
heart attack."
Edelman's expression was
grim, but he smiled slightly at the last and took the plush chair. He was at
the corner of the long double conference tables; he could see just about
everybody in the room.
"Go on, Inspector. Don't
be shy. We're you're biggest fans," said Attorney General Gaither.
Jake looked at the President.
"May I have some wafer?" he asked meekly. The President smiled,
nodded at an aide, who got up, poured some from a pitcher on a little table to
one side, brought it to Edelman, and resumed his seat.
The audience really was
attentive and expectant. Edelman was to be the proof of the pudding; if he gave
the official version, then all was well. If he did not, there was still enough time
to paper over mistakes.
"Mr. President, ladies
and gentlemen," Jake Edelman began. "I wish to tell you tonight of
all that my department and its capable staff, with the help of a lot of people
throughout government, discovered about this conspiracy against our country. I
hope you will bear with me until I am completely through."
They were peering at him
expectantly.
"The story starts many
years ago, in the turbulent years when Presidents were killed or forced from office,
when our enemies made spectacular gains abroad while we did nothing. A lot of
people saw this as the end of civilization. Many of these were corporate heads,
millionaires, men of influence and power. They formed the Institute for Values
and Standards, and endowed it with over a hundred million dollars."
There were murmurings in the
room, and a few whispers of "He knows," but they calmed down. They
wanted to know all that he knew.
"This Institute endowed
research in forbidden areas, masked by the corporation's international operations,
and at the same time picked the best young minds they could find in every
field. Poor families in particular were targeted, and lavish scholarships were
offered. Ideological purity was stressed, as well. These people were young,
ambitious, bright, and, of course, malleable. The Institute saw to their
philosophical upbringing—wasn't above eliminating those who later strayed or
would not stick to the path. This elite, brought up in much the same way the
criminal syndicates of America were brought up and replenished, slowly attained
position and power in government and industry. All doors were open to them.
Their names read like a Who's Who in American government, business, and
industry. In fact, their names are a lot of the current Who's
Who."
He paused and sipped some
water. Some of the men and women he was discussing stared at him in stunned
silence.
"Their eventual goal was
to attain enough power, influence, and prestige that they could literally take
over the government of the United States of America, take it over,
totalitarianize it, and create out of it the nation that their founders had
dreamed about. This they did, by hook, ability, and crook. When they had a
member President, they felt no compunction about cleverly murdering a sufficient
number of Supreme Court justices and other such posts so that they could be
replaced with members of the club. But, still, it was far-fetched. You can't
become the Congress, for example, not only because of the value of incumbency
but also because the voters are damned obstinate. And, of course, the Institute
could hardly have a native son in each state and district. And, again—what
about Americans used to freedom? Would they respond to a military and governmental
coup meekly? Hardly—and they have the guns and the geography to make it
damned difficult for anybody who did take over to ever hold on. So what
to do?"
Again a sip of water, and he
continued.
"The obvious answer was
a popular war, but that's out of style. Wars aren't popular these days, and a
war on the scale of a sneak attack means annihilation. So, these bright folks
thought, suppose you had a sneak attack by an unknown enemy? Some of their
scientific types had continued the recombinant DNA research banned by U.S. law
and international treaty. True, the Institute was interested in more than just
pet germs—they were interested in designing their own, superior breed of
humanity, among other things. There are lots of potentials with recombinant
DNA. But what they could make, easily, on the sly, was germs—bacteria,
specifically. They made the Wilderness Organism. They did it right here, in the
government labs, with NDCC and NIH computers and facilities. The trouble was,
they had no idea whether or not their designs worked. Now came the next part of
the plan."
He paused again for a sip,
and somebody whispered, "Why don't we just shut him up?"
She was waved to silence by President Wainwright.
"So," continued
Jake Edelman, "friends in the CIA, and those who could be blackmailed—and
friends in the FBI as well—combed the files, scoured the world, and plugged
into the international terrorist network. The word got around. A mysterious
Third World nation with a lot of money and a radical leadership had a weapon
to strike at dirty old imperialistic America. They needed volunteers—and they
got them, sometimes with the unwitting cooperation of governments hostile to
us. The first waves were double tests—first of the engineered bacillus and its
properties, as well as the vaccines against it, and second of the network that
would be needed for the big job later. Small towns geographically isolated were
chosen. The diseases would be studied by NDCC and NIH, of course—including the
creators. Modifications could be made, corrections in the biological clocks, degree
and means of communicability, everything. Since they also created a
bacteriophage, a bacteria-eating virus, they eliminated the evidence as well.
Many of the early experiments failed completely, or failed to work as
predicted. A terrible plague became a case of the town getting the sniffles.
But, after a while, the right combination popped up. They began, by using the
bacteria as a catalyst for certain interactions with brain cells, to be able to
get just about any effect they wanted. They made a number of strains of the
stuff they'd proved out, and they were ready."
There were uneasy murmurings
and shufflings in the room now, but these were quieted by the leaders. They
wanted to know just how Edelman knew these things.
"A camp was set up and
run by radicals for radicals. They didn't even know where they were—they were
duped and drugged and thought they were in Africa. There their old-time
revolutionary religion was recharged, and they were given lessons in how to
release the organisms in major cities. In the meantime, one of their blackmail
victims, an FBI agent named Harry Reed, who'd worked on the radical fugitives
years ago, was assigned to eastern California and `just happened' to recognize
James Foley, head of one of the early small-town strike teams. We jumped at it,
raided the place, and discovered the Wilderness Organism and pegged it to known
terrorist fanatics."
They were getting really
upset now. Jake Edelman started to feel his one greatest fear, that they would
not let him finish.
"Using the idea that we
had a mysterious enemy controlling a horrible fate, we scared the American
people half to death. They were willing to do just about anything to feel safe
from this dreaded disease. It was much worse than soldiers of an enemy. It was
silent, invisible, and permanent in its effects. They demanded protection from
Congress, Congress gave extreme emergency powers to the President, and we had
the military state of emergency called and the mechanics of dictatorship
established and tested, and some really embarrassing enemies and problem people
vanishing. The American populace was militarized and computerized faster than
anyone would have believed, and mostly with its willing cooperation. They were
naive and terrified."
He was out of water now.
"So now this radical
step had to produce results. There was an early slip, too—much of the Wilderness
Organism's model-building was done in NDCC computers, and this was stumbled on
by a brilliant doctor, Mark Spiegelman. When taps and monitors showed that he
had, in fact, discovered the domestic origins, a minor flunky in the security
apparatus at Fort Dietrick panicked and had the security men murder him. It
was clumsy and needless, since part of the plot was to show that the thing was
indeed of domestic origin. His real crime was that he had discovered the truth
too soon; it'd been planted there for later, more carefully planned discovery.
"My own team was charged
with solving the mystery. I was chosen because of my impeccable reputation,
if I do say so myself, and my heart condition, which would prove a convenient
out if I stumbled onto the wrong things or if I followed the script and
retired. Now, using the handouts I got from the conspirators, I was to slowly
crack the case. Plants I placed in the large body of radicals were spotted and
allowed to pass, apparently undetected. They were even spread around, to make
sure that I would get word on each team before it was to hit a major city. Of
course, some casualties were to be anticipated, but most we got, and the
communicability of the strains was kept low. We failed to get word on the
Chicago and New Orleans teams, as you know, but seem to have only localized
hits. Ten, twenty thousand people in Chicago, less than a third of that in New
Orleans. We also almost missed the one for D.C., but got lucky. One assumes
that the important people all had their shots, anyway.
"To take the blame, Dr.
Sandra O'Connell and Dr. Joe Bede were put under drugs and placed under
conditions where suicide would result. We rescued Dr. O'Connell, but not Bede.
One assumes that there is now a list of the `ringleaders' of this conspiracy,
that a purge in government and elsewhere will turn these traitors up, and that
these will include a large part of Congress and other agencies not under
control. Using this as a guise, the Institute personnel will now
totalitarianize the nation and hold it in their absolute grip for remolding.
Only one thing stands in their way, though, and it's formidible. It's something
that will have to be faced here and now, which is why I am here."
He paused and looked around.
"Can I have some more water, please?" he asked, holding out his
glass. President Wainwright smiled, took the glass, personally refilled it,
brought it back and handed it to him.
"Thank you," he
said, drinking a bit.
"And what stands in the
way of this conspiratorial group?" the President asked him. "If what
you say is true, then it would seem that they've won."
Jake Edelman looked up at
them and smiled. "The friends of Mickey Mouse," he said.
Most of them met with blank
stares, but Attorney General Gaither and Admiral Leggits both looked up in surprise.
Wainwright looked at them quizzically.
"An underground
group," Gaither explained. "Using the most elaborate codex device
we've ever seen. We've identified a number of them, but the codexes are
self-destructing and they've been deep-probed and conditioned, all of them. Dig
deep enough and you turn their minds to garbage, but you don't get any
information."
Wainwright was intrigued.
"Why Mickey Mouse?" he asked.
"That's what their
leader sounds like over the phone," Leggits put in. "I almost
interrupted a conversation in the Pentagon. He was a good officer, too,"
he added, a trace of sadness in his voice.
"And you are a friend of
Mickey Mouse?" Wainwright asked Jake.
The Chief Inspector shook his
head from side to side. "No, Mr. President, I am not. I am Mickey
Mouse."
There was an uproar. It took
more than a minute to calm everybody down. Wainwright was still in command
here, though, and still confident. After all, Edelman was here. Alone. But that
very fact suggested that there were things still to know, things that would
make him admit everything openly and sign his own death warrant.
"All right, Inspector,
let's play no more games," Wainwright said. "What are you trying to
tell us?"
Edelman reached into his case
and brought out a blue spray can. It looked very much like the one on the front
pages of all the newspapers—a spray aerosol can in baby blue.
"When we first
discovered the truth, we created our organization, feeling that if one agency
could use government and bureaucracy, then so could the other. Most Americans,
even those in positions of relative power, find the current emergency
abhorrent. When shown evidence of this conspiracy, they are only too willing to
help fight it. My team raided Camp Liberty a week ago, several days ahead of
your anonymous tip. We also raided the NDCC bunkers, and we have made a lot of
changes at Dugway Proving Grounds, and moved a lot of stuff. Further, loyal researchers
at NDCC and NIH have been working on a problem for me for a month, since before
I even guessed the scope and breadth of this thing. Ever since I discovered the
computer models for the Wilderness Organism, from the day of O'Connell's and
Bede's kidnap. We worked on it, discovering just exactly the correct sort of
radiation necessary to make the Wilderness Organism cultures mutate slightly.
And what do you know? They found not only the mutating method, but at the same
time the simple, quick treatment killed the bacteriophage! We then wiped the
Wilderness Organism clean out of the computers, to avoid making your
mistake."
H&W Secretary Meekins was
the first to see it, and she was appalled. "You mean that current strains won't
disappear in a day? They'll continue to live and multiply?"
Edelman nodded. "And
they'll be mutated, beyond the vaccine's effectiveness. There will be no
defense. Oh, don't worry. It won't destroy the world, I'm assured. There is
sufficient radiation from the sun alone to mutate it into harmlessness in a
matter of a few days. But, I think, a few hundred strategic releases all over the
country will be sufficient to eliminate most human life in North America."
Again they were in an uproar.
Wainwright's eyes kept going to the blue cannister in Jake's hand. "That
can—that is the new stuff?" he asked nervously.
Edelman felt much better.
That question was what he'd waited for.
"Yes, it is. This is the
stuff that makes you feeble-minded," he told them cheerfully.
"Washington wouldn't even notice. This spray can alone is sufficient to,
say, infect the entire White House area if I push the little wax-sealed plunger
here. See?"
Many were on their feet now.
The Secretary of State started for him, angry and panicked, but was stopped by
two of his fellows.
When they'd calmed down
again, Jake continued. "The friends of Mickey Mouse have the cylinders.
I don't even know who they
are, nor does anybody know them all. We've all been deep-probed and blocked, so
I haven't any idea how anybody would know. We voted on it—you remember
voting, don't you? We decided that we'd rather have death for us and our
children than live under your new order. Man will survive. But we won't. And
you won't. And if I don't walk out of here, at the proper time, they will know
your answer."
Wainwright was shaken, as
were the others. None of them could take their eyes off the small blue can in
Jake Edelman's hand.
"And you expect us to
surrender, to expose ourselves?" Wainwright said. "Hell, man, you
might as well push that button. We're dead anyway."
Now it was Jake Edelman's
turn to smile. "No, sir, I do not. What I propose is a simple compromise,
the art of political expediency. We have the names of all the Institute
personnel. It was simple, once we cracked your computer code. We will be
watching you. But—here is what I propose you do. I propose you change that
speech of yours for tomorrow. I propose that, instead, you outline the plot
exactly as you were going to—use the same scapegoats you intended to, except
keep it to the dead and those quickly silenced. Then announce that the plot has
been completely and thoroughly broken. Democracy is saved, freedom is restored.
Slowly you will lift the state of emergency, and all constitutional guarantees
are back in force right now. The computer ID system will be phased out.
Military controls will be lifted. Slowly, the country will return to normal.
Tell the people that Abraham Lincoln suspended constitutional guarantees during
the Civil War, and instituted military government to save the nation, as you
have. He then ended those measures; now you will, too. Slowly, over the next year,
the majority of you in this room will retire or leave for better opportunities.
After all, Mr. President, you're nearing the end of your second term. It's
natural. You'll retire a hero, an elder statesman. They'll sing songs and write
epic plays about you.
"Hell, they'll probably
build a giant granite statue of you on the Mall as a hero like Lincoln, and put
you on the dime, you son of a bitch."
Wainwright looked thoughtful.
His eyes now left the blue cannister for the first time, going to the others
in the room.
"Comment?"
"He's bluffing!"
one of them said. "We're so close, we can't give in now!" another
echoed. But the majority had more pragmatic looks on their faces. Finally
Wainwright exhaled and turned back to Edelman.
"We'll have to check this,
you know," he said.
Edelman smiled. "Try and
find a blue cannister, or a Wilderness Organism," he invited. "Try
and find the models. Your five-person team at NDCC are all dead now. They—ah,
committed suicide."
Wainwright gulped.
"Leave that can there, for analysis," he said.
Edelman shook his head.
"Uh-uh. I need it with me. Find your own, if you can," he said, and
got up.
"Where do you think
you're going?" somebody asked.
"I'm going home, to a
wife I haven't seen in two and a half weeks," he said wearily. "And
tonight I'm going to wine her and dine her and romance her like there's no
tomorrow. And then I'm going to sleep. And when I wake up, I'm going to turn on
my television and watch your speech, Mr. President. That's what I'm going to
do. I won't be hard to find if you want me."
He placed the can in his
pocket, keeping a hand also in the pocket, and closed and latched the briefcase
with his left hand. With that, he turned and walked out the nearest door.
Nobody stopped him.
He walked wearily down the corridors,
then down the stairs, and out the east entrance to a waiting car. Bob Hartman
was driving, and seemed to come alive when he saw his boss.
Edelman got in, and they
drove slowly off, out the gate, and down the mall, turning right and heading
out over the 14th Street Bridge.
Jake Edelman stared at the
muddy Potomac. "River level's high," he said. "Pull over to the
side, Bob, and stop for a minute."
Hartman, puzzled, did as
instructed. Edelman pulled the can from his pocket and looked at it.
"You know, that was
cheap spray paint Minnie got," he said. Hartman looked at the can. Coming
through the dried baby blue paint were the words Action Ant and Roach Killer
and the picture of a dead roach, upside down. It was faint, but unmistakable.
Hartman whistled slowly.
Edelman got out of the car, looked for a moment at the center of the river
channel, and tossed the can into the water.
Slowly, looking very tired,
he got back in and they started off once again. Hartman stared at him. "Do
you think they'll buy it?" he asked.
"I'm still here,"
Edelman pointed out. "And so are you. They know there's an organization,
they won't find any blue cylinders, and they won't find any trace of the
Wilderness Organism at NDCC except five dead traitors. Right?"
Hartman nodded.
"With the founders of
the Institute, I think we might have lost," he said. "But with their
adopted children? Well, we'll know for sure tomorrow."
They drove on a while in
silence, clearing two military checkpoints. Another seven kilometers and they
were into the northern Virginia suburbs, and not long after that they were
pulling into Jake Edelman's driveway.
Edelman started to get out of
the car.
"Jake?" Bob Hartman
said.
Jake stopped, turned, and
said, "Yes?"
"You're a great man,
Jake."
Jake Edelman smiled, turned,
got out of the car and slowly walked up to the front door. He fumbled for his
keys, found them, and opened the front door.
Bob Hartman just watched him,
a tiny little figure, ugly and unkempt, as he disappeared into his small brick
house.