by A. G. Riddle
“What did you expect to find, Martin?”
“I could ask you the same question.”
“I asked you first.” Sloane continued searching the desk.
“Maps. And if we were lucky, a tapestry.”
“A tapestry?” Sloane twisted the head of the bulky suit around, blinding Martin with the bright lights.
Martin threw a hand up to block the light. “Yes, a large rug with a story—”
“I know what a tapestry is Martin.” He returned his attention to the desk, rummaging through more books. “You know, I may have been wrong about you — you’re no threat, you’ve simply lost it. You’ve been drinking the Kool-Aid too long, Martin. Look at what happened to him — chasing tapestries and superstitious legends.” Sloane tossed a bundle of papers and books back onto the frozen desk. “There’s nothing here, just some journals.”
Journals! It could be The Journal. Martin fought to act casual. “I can take those. There may be something we could use.”
Sloane straightened, made eye contact with Martin, then glanced back at the stack of skinny books. “No, I think I’ll take a look first. I’ll pass anything… scientific along.”
Dorian was sick of the suit — he had been in it for six hours: three hours in the sub and three hours in decontamination. Martin and his research egg heads were thorough. Cautious. Fans of overkill. Time wasters.
Now he sat across from Martin in the clean room, waiting for the results of the blood test — for the “all clear”. What was taking so long?
Every now and then, Martin would glance at the journals. There was something in them, something he wanted to see. Something he didn’t want Dorian to see. He pulled the stack of books closer to him.
The sub had been the biggest disappointment of Sloane’s life. He was 42 years old and since he was 7, not a day had gone by when he didn’t dream of finding that sub. But now that day had come and he had found nothing — almost nothing: 6 fried bodies and a mint condition U-boat.
“What now, Martin?” Dorian asked.
“Same thing we always do — keep digging.”
“I want specifics. I know you’re excavating under the sub, next to the structure.”
“What we think is the other vessel,” Martin added quickly.
“Agree to disagree. What have you found?”
“Bones.”
“How many?” Dorian leaned back against the wall. A pit developed in his stomach, like the anticipation you got before you went over the drop-off in a roller coaster. He dreaded the answer.
“Enough for about a dozen men so far. But we think there are more,” Martin said wearily. The time in the suit had really taken it out of him.
“There’s a bell down there, isn’t there?”
“That would be my guess. The area around the sub collapsed when two researchers approached it. One man was incinerated — similar to what we saw on the sub. The other was killed when the ice collapsed. I expect to find the rest of the crew down there.”
Dorian was too tired to argue, but the idea scared him to death. The finality of it. “What do you know about the structure?”
“Not much at this point. It’s old. At least as old as the ruins in Gibraltar. 100,000 years, maybe older.”
One thing had bothered Dorian since they had arrived: the lack of progress on the excavation. Even though Martin’s people had only found the site 10 days ago, with their resources, they should have had the iceberg carved up like a Thanksgiving turkey. The staff here was almost minimal, like the action was elsewhere. “This isn’t the main site, is it?”
“We have resources… assigned elsewhere…”
Assigned elsewhere. Dorian turned the idea over in his head. What could be bigger than this — a piece of… ‘Bigger’ than this? A piece. Dorian leaned forward. “This is just a piece, isn’t it? You’re looking for a larger structure. This part simply broke off from some primary structure.” Dorian wasn’t sure it was true, but if it was…
Martin nodded, slowly, without making eye contact with Dorian.
“My God, Martin.” Dorian stood and paced the room. “It could happen at any minute. They could be upon us in days or even hours. You’ve put us all at risk. And — you’ve known about this for 10 days now. Have you lost your mind?”
“We thought it was the primary—”
“Thought, wished, hoped — forget it. Now we have to act. When we’re clear, I’m going back to shut down the China operation and start Toba Protocol — don’t bother protesting, you know the time has come. I want you to contact me when you find the larger structure. I have several detachments of agents on their way here. They’ll help you if you have trouble operating your sat phone.”
Martin put his elbows on his knees and stared at the floor.
The door to the holding room slid open with a hiss as fresh air rushed in ahead of a 20-something woman carrying a clipboard. She wore an almost skin-tight outfit — she must have selected a suit 3 sizes too small.
“Gentlemen, you’re both cleared for duty.” The woman turned to Dorian. “Now, is there anything else I can do for you?” She dropped the clipboard to her side, then clasped her hands behind her back, arcing her back a little.
“What’s your name?” Dorian said.
“Naomi. But you can call me anything you like.”
CHAPTER 46
Somewhere off the Java Sea
Kate couldn’t tell if she was awake or asleep. For a moment, she simply floated there in total darkness and dead silence. The only sensation was the soft cloth at her back. She leaned to the side and heard the crackle of the cheap mattress. She must have fallen asleep on the cot in the bomb shelter. She had lost track of time as she and David had waited in the bomb shelter while their pursuers marched back and forth, searching the cottage for what seemed like hours.
Was it safe to get up?
She felt another sensation now: hunger. How long had she slept?
She swung her legs off the tiny bed and planted them on—
“Awww, Jesus!” David’s voice filled the tiny space as he did a sit-up into her legs, then curled up and writhed on the floor.
Kate shifted her weight back to the bed, pawing the floor for a firm foot hold — one that wasn’t somewhere on David’s person. She finally planted her left foot and stood, swatting the air for the string that activated the dangling single-bulb light. Her hand connected with the cord, and she jerked the light on, sending a flash of yellow like lightning into the small space. She squinted and waited, standing on one foot. When she could see, she moved to the corner of the room, away from David who was lying still in a fetal position in the middle of the room.
She had hit him there. God. Why was he in the floor? “We’re not in middle school, you know. You could have shared the bed.”
David grunted as he rolled onto his hands and knees. “Apparently chivalry doesn’t pay.”
“Hey—”
“Forget it. We need to get out of here,” David said as he sat up.
“Are the men—”
“No, left 90 minutes ago, but they may be waiting outside.”
“It’s not safe here. I’m coming—”
“I know. I know.” David held up his hand. He was getting his breath back. “But I have one condition, and it’s non-negotiable.”
Kate stared at him.
“You do what I say, when I say. No questions, no discussion.”
Kate straightened. “I can take orders.”
“Yeah, I’ll believe it when I see it. When we’re out there, seconds could matter. If I tell you to leave me or to run, you have to do it. You could be scared and disoriented, but you will have to focus on what I tell you to do.”
“I’m not afraid,” she lied.
“Well, that makes one of us.” David opened a set of double steel doors built into the concrete. “There’s something else.”
“I’m listening,” Kate said, a little defensively.
David looked her up and down.
“You can’t wear those clothes. You look almost homeless.” He tossed her some clothes. “Might be a little big.”
Kate perused her new attire — some old blue jeans and a black v-neck t-shirt.
David threw her a gray sweater. “You’ll need this too. It will be cold where we’re going.”
“Which is?”
“I’ll explain on the way.”
Kate started to pull her shirt off but stopped. “Can you, um.”
David smiled. “We’re not in middle school.”
Kate turned her head, trying to decide what to say.
David seemed to remember something. “Oh, right. The scar.” He spun around, knelt, and began sorting through some boxes in the bottom of the cabinet.
“How did you—”
David took out a gun and a few boxes of ammo. “The drugs.”
Kate flushed. What had she said? Done? For some reason the idea terrified her, and she wished desperately that she could remember. “Did I, or we—”
“Relax, outside the gratuitous violence, it was a very PG evening. Is it safe for kids again?”
Kate pulled the shirt on. “And immature soldiers.”
David seemed to ignore the jab. He rose and held a box out to her — another carton meal. Kate read the letters MRE: Meals Ready to Eat. “Hungry?”
Kate eyed the box — bbq chicken with black beans and potatoes. “Not that hungry.”
“Suit yourself.” He peeled the plastic film back, plopped down at the metal desk, and began devouring the cold food with the included spork. He must have only heated the meal yesterday for her sake.
Kate sat on the cot opposite him and pulled on the sneakers he had laid out for her. “Hey, I don’t know if I’ve said it before, but I wanted to… say thank you for…”
David stopped shuffling the papers and forced down the bite he’d been chewing. He didn’t glance back at Kate. “Don’t mention it. Just doing my job.”
Kate tied her shoes. Just doing his job. Why did the answer seem so… unfulfilling?
David shoved the last of the papers in a folder and handed it to her. “This is all I have on the people who took your children. You’ll have time to read it on the way.”
Kate opened the folder and began reading the papers. There must be 50 pages. “On the way to where?”
David wolfed down a few more bites. “Check out the top page. It’s the latest cryptic communication from a source inside Immari. Someone I’ve been communicating with for about a week now.”
Kate took out the paper and read the message.
—————
30,88. 81,86.
03-12-2013
10:45:00
#44
33-23-15
Cut the Power. Save my kids.
—————
Kate put the paper back in the folder. “I don’t understand.”
“The first part is a set of GPS coordinates; looks like an abandoned train station in Western China. The second part is obviously a time, probably a departure time for a train. Not sure about the middle part, but my guess is it’s a locker in the station with the combination. I’m assuming it will have some kind of further message. It’s unclear whether the kids will be at this train station or if it’s just another clue. Or I could be misreading it. It could be another code or mean something different. I had a partner who decoded all the earlier messages.”
“Can you consult him?”
David finished the last bite, tossed the spork in the tray, and gathered up the items he’d pulled from the cabinet. “No, unfortunately I can’t. I assume the time is Jakarta local; if so, we have about four hours to get there.”
Kate closed the folder. “Western China? No way.”
“We’ll see. One step at a time. First we find out if they left any troops upstairs. Ready?”
Kate nodded, then followed him up the stairs, where he told her to wait while he swept the cottage.
“It’s clear. Hopefully they moved on. Stay close to me.”
They jogged from the cottage, in the thin underbrush along a dirt road that showed no signs of use. The road ended in a cul-de-sac with four large blue warehouses, also clearly abandoned years ago. David led Kate to the second warehouse, where he pulled a piece of the corrugated sheet metal wall out, exposing a triangular hole just big enough for Kate.
“Crawl in.”
Kate started to protest but, remembering his one demand, she complied without a word. For reasons she couldn’t understand, she tried not to get her knees in the mud, but she couldn’t quite fit. David seemed to sense her dilemma, and he strained harder at the metal flange, giving Kate enough space to squeeze through comfortably.
David followed her inside, then unlocked and rolled the building’s doors open, revealing the warehouse’s hidden “treasure”.
It was a plane, but just barely. And an odd one — a sea plane, the type Kate imagined people used to get to remote areas in Alaska… in the 1950s. It probably wasn’t that old, but it was old. It had four seats inside and two large propellers on each wing. She would probably have to turn one, like Amelia Earhart. If it would even turn on and — if he could fly it. She watched as David took the tarp off the tail and kicked the blocks from beneath the wheels.
Back at the cottage, he had said “no questions,” but she had to. “You can fly this thing, right?” Kate asked.
He stopped, shrugged slowly and looked at her as if he had been caught trying to get away with something. “Ah, well, generally.”
“Generally?”
CHAPTER 47
Immari Corporate Jet
Somewhere over the Southern Atlantic Ocean
Dorian watched Naomi finish the last of her martini, then stretch out on the long couch on the opposite side of the plane. The white terry cloth robe fell to her side, revealing her plump breasts, which rose and receded at a dwindling rate as her breathing slowed like a contented cat who had just gorged itself on some prey. She licked the last drops of the martini off her fingers and ran her right hand down her chest and then the rest of the length of her olive torso, finally coming to rest at her white lace panties — her only article of clothing. She fingered the small strip of lace that joined the small patches of cloth at her front and rear. Dorian thought she would continue, but instead, she sat up and propped herself up on her elbow. “Are you ready again?”
She was insatiable. And coming from him, that was saying something. Dorian picked up the phone, “Not just yet.”
Naomi made a half pout and flopped back onto the couch.
Dorian held his hand over the receiver. “But wait on me.”
Naomi threw her head back against the leather couch but said nothing.
On the line, Dorian heard the communications officer on the plane say, “Yes sir?”
“Connect me to the China Facility.”
“Immari Shanghai?”
“No, the new one — in Tibet. I need to speak with Dr. Chase.”
Dorian heard mouse clicks in the background.
“Dr. Chang?”
“No, Chase. Nuclear section.”
“Stand by.”
Dorian watched Naomi scratch at the robe bunched around her on the couch. He wondered how long she could hold out.
The phone clicked. A distracted voice said, “Chase.”
“It’s Sloane. Where are we with the nukes?”
The man coughed and spoke more slowly. “Mr. Sloane. We have, I think, 50, or 49 operational.”
“How many total?”
“That’s all we have, sir. We’re trying to get more, but the Indians and Pakistanis — neither will sell us anymore.”
“Money doesn’t matter, whatever it co—”
“We’ve tried sir, they won’t sell them at any price, not without a reason, and we don’t have a better story than backups for our nuclear reactor.”
“Ok, can you work with Soviet Bloc weapons?”
“Yes, but it will take more time. I think they will probably
be older devices, they would need to be checked out and converted. They will likely be lower yield.”
“Fine. I’ll see what I can do. Be prepared for a new shipment. And speaking of conversions, I need you to make two bombs portable… something a small person, or… someone… tired could carry easily.”
“That will take some time.”
“How much?” Dorian exhaled. It was never simple with these freaks.
“Depends. What’s the weight limit?”
“Weight? I don’t know. Maybe 30 or 40 pounds. Wait, that’s way too much. Maybe… 15 pounds. Assume 15 or so, can you do that?”
“It will decrease the yield.”
“Can you do it?” Dorian said impatiently.
“Yes.”
“How long?”
The scientist exhaled. “A day, maybe two.”
“I need it in 12 hours — no excuses, Dr. Chase.”
A long pause. Then, “Yes sir.”
Dorian hung up the phone.
Naomi had finally broken. She was pouring herself another martini, and she tilted the bottle to him expectantly.
“Not right now.” Dorian never drank when he was working.
He thought for a minute, then picked up the phone again. “Get me the Tibet facility again. Dr. Chang”
“Chase?”
“Chang, rhymes with hang.”
The clicks were faster this time.
“Chang here, Mr. Sloane.”
“Doctor, I’m in route to your facility, and we need to make some preparations. How many subjects do you have there?”
“I think—” Chang started. Dorian heard papers shuffling, keys clacking and the man was back on the line. “382 primates, 119 humans.”
“Only 119 Humans? I thought the enrollment was much higher, the project plan is for thousands.” Dorian looked out the plane window. 119 bodies might not be enough.
“Yes it is, but, well, with the lack of results, we’ve halted human recruitment. We’ve focused more on rodent and primate trials. Should we start back up? Is there a new therapy—”
“No. There’s a new plan. We’ll have to work with what you have. I want you to treat all the humans with the last treatment — Dr. Warner’s research.”