“I told you to be quiet and eat your dinner,” Kimmy said. She tried to break the tension with Lee. “I used the whole-wheat noodles from Whole Foods, you know, to try and keep it healthy for you.”
“I was wondering why it tasted like shit,” Lee said. He threw his linen napkin at the table, knocking over the empty glass, and stomped into the living room. This room was the whole reason he’d bought the condo. All he could think of when he first took in the view was how much he wanted to bring people up to his place and show it off.
Harbor Point was perched at the north end of Grant Park. Lee’s condo was on the fifty-first floor and had a southwestern view. The floor-to-ceiling windows allowed him to watch the sun set over Chicago’s skyline every night. Tonight, the sun was nearly down, leaving the buildings of the Loop in silhouette. The remaining sunlight behind them was still strong enough to wash away any lights in the individual windows, giving the impression that Chicago was constructed of monolithic monuments, standing silent guard along the lake.
He blinked, shifting his focus from the darkening city to his own reflection as it grew stronger and more defined in the fading light. He didn’t like the furtive, hunted look in his eyes so he turned his attention to the sixty-inch plasma above the fireplace and watched the news for a while.
Things hadn’t gotten any better. Every goddamn channel in the world was focused on Chicago. It made the city look bad.
Fucking rats.
At least the federal government was in control. It wasn’t official yet, and it might never be official, but the CDC owned Chicago right now. So whatever went down, Lee wasn’t responsible. He couldn’t be held accountable. Shit happens. It wasn’t his fault. There was no way it could come around to bite Lee on the ass. And if things went real south, the boys in power always pinned everything on some pissant, second cousin to somebody low, and crucified him in the media. They’d do anything they could to aim the public’s hate at one guy while the rest scurried for cover.
Lee turned back to his reflection in the windows. He didn’t think he’d ever been this close to the real power in the federal government. It was like nothing he’d ever seen. All these guys had to do was snap their fingers, and entire streets got shut down like it was nothing. His reflection didn’t reassure him. It had the opposite effect. He looked weak. He looked finished.
As much as he didn’t want to admit it, it suddenly occurred to him that to these feds, he might be a small fish. Small enough that he could be the scapegoat. For the first time, Lee faced the uncomfortable truth that they could blame everything on him.
He wished his uncle would call.
CHAPTER 43
8:41 PM
August 13
Sam drank in the relative peace and quiet of the city. The horns had tapered off, and all the flashing police lights gave the darkening city a festive feel, like it was some obscure holiday, the offspring of Halloween and the Fourth of July. And normally, at this relatively early time of night, eight o’clock, the pedestrian walkway, over twenty feet above the river, would be half-filled with smokers, getting those last puffs in before they got to their cars after a long ride home on the Metra. Tonight it was empty.
Sam popped a piece of nicotine gum into his mouth and relaxed on the bench, enjoying the view. Ed waited next to him, staring at the blacktop under his feet, ignoring the view. Ed was troubled, Sam could see tell, but he didn’t know what to say.
They’d passed Cook County General on their walk. The place was now surrounded by sawhorses with blinking lights, all wrapped in razor wire and supported with sandbags. It looked more like a barrack in Afghanistan than a hospital in Chicago.
“Where’s the goddamn media for this shit?” Ed had asked.
They watched as several ambulances pulled into the emergency drive. Sam whistled low, as soldiers, not paramedics, hopped out and escorted the gurneys into the emergency room. The ambulances took off, lights flashing, sirens going.
It was Sam who noticed the late-model sedan with the tinted windows parked at the intersection of Wacker and Monroe. He caught the silhouettes of hulking figures inside as the ambulance roared past. Ed wanted to go over, show them his badge, see what the hell they were doing. With everything going on, he was feeling powerless, and wanted to bust some skulls.
Sam cautioned against it. He got a bad vibe from the car. If they went over, shoving their badges around, they might make themselves more of a target. All they’d do is give those soldiers an excuse to fan out through the streets and hunt them down. And there was no way they would stand a chance against that kind of firepower.
Ed reluctantly agreed that Sam might have a point. So they kept walking. Two more blocks until they crossed Adams and found all the benches empty. They had been sitting there for over an hour before they heard the rattle of the shopping cart.
“You seen Old Henry?” Qween appeared in the dim glow of the streetlights.
“Earlier,” Ed said. “We need to talk to you.”
“Damn right you do,” Qween said, leaning on the handles to her cart. “’Bout time you figured that out. Where’d you see Henry?”
“Down by the river.”
“When was this?”
“This morning sometime. Why?”
“He gone. We ain’t talked all day. Ain’t like him.”
“I don’t know about that. But this,” Sam said, pointing at the hospital. “This is a problem.” He stood and paced. “The government has taken over in that place. We stick our heads inside, we ain’t gonna make it five feet. You say the rats are sick. The news is now saying the rats are carrying some kinda disease. And meanwhile, people are going bug-fuck crazy.” Sam spread his hands. “So. Let’s start with the rats. What’s wrong with ’em?”
Qween worked her mouth, chewing on something for a while. Sam and Ed weren’t sure if it was gum or something left over from dinner. She finally said, “I don’t know if it’s the rats or not. But if you wanna know about the rats, then go talk to the people that see ’em, day after day.”
“Streets and Sans, they’re not exactly cooperating.”
“No, not them. You need to talk to some folks that are out on the streets, day in, day out.” She looked from Ed to Sam. They didn’t get it. “Folks like me.”
“Foul-mouthed and cranky?” Sam asked.
The Man himself stared into the camera. “Doctor . . . Reischtal, is it?”
Dr. Reischtal said, “Yes, sir.” He sat alone in the conference room on the top floor. He had pulled back the hood of his hazmat suit and taken off the faceplate and twin filtration bulbs. It rested on the table within arm’s reach.
The Man got tired of waiting for Dr. Reischtal to say something else. “Understand the situation is critical. I’ve seen the news footage. Looks like things are going to hell in a handbasket.” He was the placid eye in a hurricane of activity. Aides rushed around him, and high-ranking officials like the secretary of defense flanked him. Everybody else had a cell phone glued to his or her ear, but the Man ignored all of this, and barely moved as he watched Dr. Reischtal’s video image.
Dr. Reischtal nodded. “The infection is reaching pandemic levels, yes. We are collecting and isolating individuals exhibiting any of the symptomology, as well as anyone else that may have been exposed. They are currently being treated at this hospital. However, we are running out of room.” He clasped his long skeletal fingers and stared back at the Man. “If we do not destroy the root cause, the origin of the virus, we have no chance of containing it.”
“Worst case?”
“Entire world. Within four or five months.”
“Best case?”
“Isolate it and destroy it. Downtown is already lost, I firmly believe this.”
“That’s not what we’re hearing from this end,” the Man said.
“Your end is not here. I am here. I know what is coming. I know how the virus is spreading.” Dr. Reischtal smiled. It did not contain warmth. “This is a species-ending virus, something tha
t will latch on to anything you have in the way of a brain, and will live with the short-sighted goal to simply procreate and survive, even if it burns out an entire planet and ultimately kills itself.” He struggled not to say the word “God” or especially “wrath.”
The Man was silent for a moment. “Are you serious?” He turned to the secretary of the interior. “Is there any way what he’s talking about is even close to the truth?” He looked back at Dr. Reischtal. “You people are supposed to be the best in the business. How did it get this far?”
“Until recently, we were unable to determine the exact transmission method. Now we know. Therefore, I need authorization to begin an evacuation of downtown Chicago in response to the virus outbreak. “
“Is that really necessary? I mean, extreme measures have already been taken, have they not? I understood that downtown was already restricted.”
“I don’t think you understand the ramifications of not taking decisive action immediately. The situation has escalated, and it makes no matter whether we want it to stop when convenient. We are about to engage in a war here, make no mistake, where we are fighting for our lives, our very souls.”
Dr. Reischtal stood up and raised his voice. “It. Will. Spread. Of that I have no doubt. Have your people described, in detail, exactly what happens when one is infected with this particular virus? Have they explained that after a brief coma, anywhere from twelve hours to one or two, the victim awakes to some of the most intense skin irritation I have ever witnessed? An irritation so severe it invariably leads to the victim clawing his or her own skin off? I have personally witnessed a victim take a corkscrew to their thighs and chest in an attempt to satiate the irritation.” He did not mention that the corkscrew was, in fact, a scalpel, and the blade had been provided to the patient for the sole purpose of observing the reaction. “And then”—he spread his fingers flat on the table—“the victim becomes hypersensitive to any kind of sound, and reacts violently. You do understand that these infected patients will not stop. They will attack and kill anyone in their paths, using anything at their disposal. Do you not see the possible consequences if this particular virus spreads beyond Chicago?”
“You said that you now know how the virus is transmitted. Can you . . . enlighten us?”
Dr. Reischtal paused a moment. When the arm of his hazmat suit rubbed against his torso, it squeaked like a children’s bath toy. “Very well. But I believe this information should be kept from the public. It will only serve to hinder our primary focus, which is isolating the virus, studying it, and ultimately finding a vaccine.” He took a deep breath. It was time to reveal the truth. “The virus is being transmitted by parasitic insects, commonly known as bedbugs.”
The Man raised his eyebrows.
“Again, I must urge you to keep this information as quiet as possible. If you were to tell the general population what is really happening here, that death is crawling up through the cracks in the walls and hiding in their beds and couches, biting them when they sleep, feeding on them while they are hypnotized by their televisions, you would witness an unprecedented panic that will rip this country apart.”
Dr. Reischtal wasn’t the least surprised that the Old One had surfaced in a parasite, hiding in a bug that had once fed on the blood of mankind’s ancestors as they slept in caves and trees. He faced the camera and tried not to let anything into his voice or escape through his face as he fought to control what he said out loud. It was so obvious. Why could they not see it? The Ancient One, the End Foretold, No Rebirth without Death. “You asked if an evacuation was really necessary to stop this, this abomination. It is. In fact, it is the only way to burn this virus out with all the fury of our Lord.”
The Man shook his head. “I don’t know if you can comprehend what factors are involved in such a decision. The consequences can be far-reaching and quite unpleasant to contemplate. I do not need to remind you that an election is imminent. This is unacceptable.”
“And watching an entire city, then the entire country, fall victim to this virus, that would be acceptable?”
“Stop right there. I—”
“Listen to me!” Dr. Reischtal shouted, and if he felt any trepidation about interrupting the most powerful man in the free world, none of it showed on his face. He looked positively possessed. “This is what will be necessary.”
Dr. Reischtal began to tell the president exactly what was necessary.
Qween insisted on bringing a bowling ball bag that she had pulled from under the cart. She left her cart on Monroe, taking only the wheels and the bag. God knew what was inside. Ed didn’t think she could physically carry an actual bowling ball, but damned if he could figure it out; whatever it was, it was heavy.
She put her bag on the floor, stretched out in the backseat of the car, and made herself at home. She said, “Go south. Stop when you get to Roosevelt.”
The bag made Ed nervous. He said, “If there’s something you ain’t telling us, I will not appreciate it. I will take you in and make sure they put you in a hole for a long time. If this a wild goose chase, I will make it my purpose in life to make you unhappy.”
“You need to relax, Ed Jones.”
“What’s in the bag, Qween?”
“Stop when you get to Roosevelt.”
“Okay. Have it your way.” Ed didn’t say a word until they passed Eleventh Street. “Left or right.”
“Right. We heading west.”
Ed got into the right lane. They rode in silence for a while. Qween said slowly, “It used to be my mother’s. We spent a lot of time at Providence Hospital when I was young. Had some problems. ’Course, we didn’t start out there. Mama took me to the closest hospital first. Bunch of white doctors. Mama said that they took me in, but wouldn’t tell her the name of the disease. A white doctor prescribed a bunch of pills. She never did like to admit it, but years later, Mama told me I came outta there worse off. Said she tried to take me back, but they wouldn’t readmit me. I had been in there one night. That’s all Mama would say.
“Had to hear the rest from my aunt, who went with us. She said we first tried to get in to see the doctor through the front entrance. The whites acted as though we oughta be embarrassed for making the white folks actually come out and say that the hospital was filled, and that we should try Provident, down on Fifty-first.” She was quiet for a long time.
Sam and Ed didn’t say anything. They knew that Provident Hospital had been established to care for black folks in the late 1800s, since none of the other hospitals would.
Qween said, “So we waited for the doctor to leave his hospital. Mama saw him on the sidewalk. Confronted him right there in front of all the other people, other doctors, nurses, everybody. She said, ‘My girl hasn’t been right since. Something is wrong, doctor.’ Well, he just looked at her and said, ‘I saved your daughter’s life. Good day.’ And that was that. I’ll never forget Mama. He’s walking away, and she screamed at him, ‘You should have let her die.’
“I think she always felt bad for saying that. At least, saying it in front of me. So after we were done at Provident, we had to go back, over and over I remember, and so afterwards, she always took me bowling, down on Sixty-third Street. They had special hours for us black folks. We’d throw this nine-pound ball down the lane, praying it wouldn’t end up in the gutter, you know. I remember it real clear. Like it was last week. Mama had this look on her face, flinging this big old heavy black ball at the white pins.”
Qween gave a sly grin. “That’s how I got the bag, Ed Jones.” She gave him a few more directions, and they worked their way a few blocks south. Pretty soon they pulled past a big neon cross at the center of a long two-story building. HIS NAME BE PRAISED HOLY MISSION was spelled out below the cross in white neon letters. Ed pulled into the alley behind the mission.
“You better not be yanking our chain, Qween. This place—you know damn well what’s really going on here. Last chance to tell us the truth.”
“Yeah, yeah. You done wa
rned me.” She got a solid hold on the handle of her bag. “We here ’cause of the spacemen.”
“The spacemen, Qween?” Ed asked and killed the engine.
“Spacemen. This place, they be selling people to the spacemen.”
“Good enough for me,” Sam said and got out.
He slammed his door to find three young black gentlemen in sharp suits and close-cropped hair. They all carried Bibles and gave him tight-lipped smiles. One of them said, “Evening, brother.”
Sam grinned right back and flashed his star and his handgun. The three gentlemen faded back to the front of the building, joining a couple of others in shouting upbeat slogans at passing cars. Sam shook his head and spit his nicotine gum on the sidewalk.
Anybody who had spent any time at all on the streets knew this place was as crooked as the day was long. Like a lot of other nonprofit organizations, this place wore a mask. Out front, and on paper, this place looked like a god-fearing Christian charity, spreading the good word while they clothed and fed and sheltered the less fortunate. They paid the local cops and their alderman good money to make sure that mask stayed in place.
Under the mask, they used the homeless men as drug mules, carrying small shipments to the various gangs across the South and West sides. Nobody who knew said anything. You throw a wrench into the Machine, and no matter how strong the wrench, the Machine would chew it up and spit out shards of steel. If you were lucky, you lost an eye. If you weren’t, your family would find what was left after you swallowed the business end of a twelve-gauge shotgun.
Ed helped Qween out of the backseat. She always walked a little bit like a movie cowboy, as if only her head and feet had received the original instructions, thanks to whatever childhood disease she had endured. When she carried the bag, the effect was more pronounced. She carried it close to her hip, back straight, bearing the weight with her entire body.
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