by John Ringo
“How long have people like . . . yourself . . . ?” Bateman asked, frowning.
“People who are actual researchers,” Curry said with another of those mirthless grins, “Or who work as consultants to afford all the conferences and papers? And who understand them? About two years ago it was generally recognized that you could do a zombie virus. Which is one of those ‘Only adults in the room and we’ve had too much scotch’ discussions. Not for open conference. We’d estimated the general ‘monkey in the basement’ would be able to do it in about five. So they’re three years ahead of our most optimistic schedule. Which is why those same sort of people—on closed boards and who know about this—are arguing for it being a major effort, something big, expensive and noticeable. This kind of breakthrough generally is at the beginning. Maybe an experiment at one of the universities or research centers that was in development and got swiped. One of the reasons bandied around in those drunken discussions to come up with one is that you were guaranteed to make headlines, and headlines mean funding. I’m one of the minority arguing for mad scientist. Or mad, angry, former grad student. Bright, mind you. Brilliant, even. Skipped right past three or four steps. That takes real mad-scientist genius.”
“Quite mad,” Bateman said. “Doctor, what are your plans?”
“I’m thinking island in the Caribbean,” Dr. Curry said. “But Mr. Smith has made me a very generous offer of semi-permanent consultant until this is over one way or the other. I’ve been around enough research and on WHO teams to have stared this sort of death, in general, in the eye before. Not looking forward to losing my mind, mind you. It’s my only real asset. If you’re asking if I’ll hang in there with one of the richest and best prepared banks in the world . . . We’ll talk. Depends on the fringe benefits.”
“Such as?” Bateman asked.
“I understand you have a retreat point,” Curry said, shrugging. “I don’t, really. Assuming we get to that point, I and one other are guaranteed a slot on the planes or whatever.”
“Do we have a retreat point?” Depene asked. “And why aren’t we going there now?”
“Because we’re not anywhere near that point, Brad,” Bateman said with a sigh. “It’s not about a downtick in the stock market. We evacuate only when that point has been reached.”
“And when is ‘that point’?” Depene asked.
“I’ll let Mr. Smith cover that,” Bateman said. “Tom?”
“There is a specific condition under which the Federal Reserve ‘temporarily’ terminates operations,” Tom said. “For the duration of a global emergency. But upon either suspension of trade ‘for the duration of the emergency’ or upon vote of the board to suspend business activities for same, we then and only then activate the Executive and Special Personnel Evacuation Exercise. Which is generally called E-S-P. Meaning ‘when’ is ultimately up to Mr. Bateman and/or the Board and/or the Fed, which means I’ll be reading my crystal ball. If, in my opinion, the security situation, including biological security situation, has degraded past operability I will request Mr. Bateman to so inform the Board. But that is only if the Fed doesn’t act first. So . . . You may know before I do, Dr. Depene. As to Dr. Curry’s request, I’d suggest that that be discussed in a separate meeting as well as any hostile-environment business plans.”
“Agreed,” Bateman said. “Dr. Curry, your contract is at the least extended for the duration of the emergency. Usual bonuses. And we’ll be with you by Monday on inclusion in the evacuation plan.”
“I can wait that long,” Curry said. “I need to get back into the information stream.”
“We all do,” Bateman said, blowing out a heavy breath. “And I need to get a statement prepared for investors . . .”
CHAPTER 3
“Is the boat going to be able to hold all of this?” Faith asked. “And how are we getting it there? Pushing?”
When you’ve basically bought a Costco out of toilet paper and feminine hygiene products, these were reasonable questions, if poorly timed.
“We can strap some to the roof of the Nissan,” Stacey said, looking around the pile of toilet paper on the pallet. She certainly couldn’t see over it. They’d gotten some very odd looks but no serious questions. “Stocking up for hurricane season” was the simplest answer. And it wasn’t like anyone in Williamsburg knew who they were. She grimaced in annoyance when her phone rang. But it was Tom’s burn-phone number.
“Tom?” Stacey said. “Hang on a second. We’re walking across a parking lot.”
“Roger,” Tom asked. “What’s your status?”
“Nominal so far,” Stacey said, keying open the doors. “Inside for the chat, girls.”
“Public places are to be avoided,” Tom pointed out.
“Toilet paper is a right, not a privilege,” Stacey said, getting in the car and putting the phone on speaker. “Okay, we’re all in. Go.”
“Everybody there?” Tom asked over the speakerphone.
“Steve’s negotiating the boat,” Stacey said. “Go.”
Tom covered the highlights, such as they were, of Dr. Curry’s analysis.
“Naked zombies?” Faith said. “Gross!”
“Makes sense to me,” Stacey said. “If they kept their clothes on and are still ‘alive’ they’d have difficulty with waste passage.”
“That means they couldn’t shit, Faith,” Sophia said.
“I know what it means!” Faith said. “Yuck again!”
“Short time, here,” Tom said seriously. “End-of-the-world stuff.”
“Sorry, Uncle Tom,” Sophia said, just as seriously. “We’re just having a hard time . . .”
“Go, Tom,” Stacey said.
“Increasing incoherency to an essentially animal state. In that state, hyperaggression. May be just the cases so far identified, but aggression seems to be increased. Very bitey, from the reports from the West Coast—which also spreads because of the blood-pathogen effect. At least one cop who dealt with a case is infected. Six confirmed cases on the East Coast, four in Asia. Confirmed. CDC has decided to go public at noon. News media is already asking questions.
“They’re looking at a vaccine. Go.”
“Any pre-symptoms notable other than ‘flulike’?” Sophia asked.
“Nothing particular,” Tom said. “Not until second stage. May not be blood pathogen until then. General flu-prevention procedures, which is what the ‘powers-that-be’ are going to be calling for. Swine flu again, but this is already spread, probably world-wide, and spreading fast. Stand by . . . Pasteur confirms cases in England and France . . . Six now in Hong Kong alone . . . I need to cut this short. I’ve got another meeting.”
“We’re using the Aurelius Corporation plan,” Stacey said. “Can you . . . do something about it? We’d prefer to avoid actually stealing the yacht.”
“How much?” Tom asked.
“One forty,” Stacey said with a wince.
“Done,” Tom said. “I’ll authorize the transfer as soon as we’re off the phone. What’s the cover name?”
“Jason Ranseld. R-A-N-S-E-L-D.”
“I’ll take care of it. Just get offshore.”
“How is your jump plan?” Stacey asked.
“If they come up with a vaccine, nominal,” Tom said. “If they don’t, you don’t want me infecting you. Out here.”
* * *
Steve waved to bemused looking Felix as the wind carried the boat away from the dock. He could tell that the broker was wondering if he’d somehow been taken.
It certainly would hold for a couple of weeks. By which time this would either be a false alarm and the Smiths, one and all, would have to start their lives over, probably in Australia, or the world would be so clearly headed to hell in a handbasket that nobody would care.
“Jason Ranseld” had some very interesting papers indeed. Among others was a mate’s license. It wasn’t forged. Steve had gotten it while he was living the “Jason Ranseld” life many years agone. So he had some experience working wit
h boats this big. In wind even. Twenty years agone.
He thus managed to maneuver out of the marina without major incident. What he hadn’t thought to bring was a coat. And it was bloody chilly. The clouds were high, thin and rippled in a regular humped pattern, and the sun shone through them weak and gray. There was a name for that type of cloud formation, but Steve couldn’t quite recall it.
He was worried about Stacey and the girls. Against direct threats they could take care of themselves, but a plague . . . There just wasn’t any way to truly prevent it absent quarantine gear. And it was in the general population. . . .
He looked up at the scudding clouds and still couldn’t remember the official name for the formation. But he remembered the day he’d asked his Grandfather Smith about them. Gran had been a veteran of WWII starting from his days as a militia man in New Guinea and always knew everything.
Gran had looked up, said it was called “a graveyard sky,” then walked back in the house and had gotten very drunk.
* * *
“Come on, honey,” Stacey said. “Where are you?”
It was a nice neighborhood despite the relatively low occupancy. The housing downturn in the Virginia area had tended to impact high-end homes more than lower end. And it was a very nice neighborhood. Which was why the beat-up Nissan Pathfinder with something piled on top under a tarp was getting a lot of looks from the remaining residents. Before long she’d have to explain their presence to the police. And since there wasn’t a good explanation . . .
“Jail?” Faith said.
“I don’t need that right now, Faith,” Stacey said. She didn’t want to call Steve in case there were problems. He didn’t need her nagging. “Besides, the check is good. Sort of.”
“Have a little . . . faith, Sis,” Sophia said.
“Oh, that’s sooo wise,” Faith spat back.
Stacey started as her phone rang. She checked and it was Steve. Which could be good or bad . . .
“Tell me you’re not in jail,” Stacey said.
“Inbound to the rendezvous,” Steve said. “Glad you got that payday loan from Tom. The seller wasn’t impressed by lots of important-looking paperwork. I think he’s still wondering about the wire transfer.”
“Which, as I understand it, we’d better be able to cover, or things have to go to hell in a handbasket quick,” Stacey replied, putting the idling car in drive and creeping forward.
“Any problems on your end?”
“Just keeping the toilet paper on top of the car.”
* * *
“Okay, I see what you mean,” Steve said, chuckling.
The house was about ten thousand square feet and right on a navigable “creek” that would meet most areas’ definition of river. And it included a very nice T dock with enough room to tie up, say, a 45-foot Hunter sailboat named Mile Seven. There was even a convenient drive to bring a car around to the end of the dock. Which Stacey was, cautiously, doing as the girls ran down to the dock.
The reason for the caution was apparent by the cargo. Stacey was, in Steve’s opinion, an unrecognized mechanical and electrical genius. On the other hand, he had a tendency to hit other people’s thumbs with a hammer. That being said, as a former para he always handled packing. Especially if it involved anything torqued onto the roof of the Pathfinder.
Stacey had apparently gotten two of the spare tarps from the trolley and done . . . something with a great deal of twine and far too much para cord. He’d seen some smaller cars more overburdened in the Stans. However, those drivers had a bit more understanding of things like aerodynamics. And load shifting. The tarp looked a bit like a wind-battered green-and-brown potato.
“I can’t remember how the knot goes . . .” Faith said, pulling the stern line in and then bracing as the boat started to head out to sea again. “Help?”
“I’ve got it,” Sophia said. She’d already secured the fore line. Between them they got the stern of the boat alongside, and the older sister quickly had it secured with a double hitch. “It’s simple.”
“Simple is a shotgun and a zombie,” Faith said.
“Quit arguing and start unloading,” Steve said, shutting down the boat. “We’re on short time.”
“Shaking it for all we’re worth, Captain, sir!” Sophia said, saluting sarcastically.
“That’s more like it,” Steve said.
* * *
Besides the mass of material, the main problem was first in was also first in. That is, just as the trailer had had to be packed with the heaviest items on the bottom and forward, the boat had to be packed with the heaviest items first. Which required unloading the entire trailer before they could get started on loading the boat.
They had just gotten the trailer completely unloaded when the visit Steve was dreading occurred.
“Dad,” Sophia said, glancing around the trailer. “Cop.”
“Roger,” Steve said. “Start the load.”
* * *
“Can I ask you what you’re doing, sir?” Officer Jason Young, Williamsburg PD, asked.
The morning shift had started slow. A couple of kids speeding, couple of burglary reports from Friday night. The usual.
Things seemed to be picking up, though. He’d just heard two separate 10-64, indecent exposure, calls, then a 10-64, 10-28, fight or disturbance. Whatever, things were picking up and here he was dealing with . . . well he wasn’t sure what he was dealing with. The call had been 10-37: suspicious person. The people just seemed to be loading a boat. But according to the neighbor who had called it in, the house connected to the dock was in foreclosure and nobody was supposed to be using the property. And the car, with badly secured materials on the roof, had been hanging around the neighborhood for nearly an hour.
“Loading my boat, Officer Young,” Steve said.
“This is private property, and according to the neighbors, not your property,” Young said. “Which means you are trespassing, sir.”
“A valid position, Officer Young,” Steve said. “The dock was convenient and the property is clearly not being used. It was, at best, a minor transgression and we’ll be gone within the hour.”
“Mind if I see some ID, sir?” Young asked. “You’re not American. Irish?”
“Australian,” Steve said, pulling out his driver’s license and trying not to wince. Americans could never sort out Commonwealth accents. “And I’m a naturalized American citizen. Not a resident. I have a passport, American, as well.”
“Says here you live in Warrentown,” Young said. Which matched the plates on the Nissan.
“Yes, Officer,” Steve said, politely. “The address is correct.”
“Mind if I see your registration and proof of insurance?” Young asked.
“Of course,” Steve said, turning around.
“Before you open the car,” Young said. “Are there any weapons in the vehicle?”
“Ah,” Steve said, turning back to face the officer. “I was wondering when we’d get to that part. Yes, as a matter of fact. They are all in locked cases in the rear. My wife and I also have CCLs but we are not, at this point, carrying.”
“Okay,” Young said, his brow furrowing. “All?”
“There are quite a few,” Steve said. “Would you like to see? They’re rather buried still. We were loading from the trolley first.”
“Trolley?”
“Sorry,” Steve said, too calmly, “trailer.”
Young looked at the ladies continuing to load the boat. They didn’t look as if they were preparing for a trip to the Caribbean. They looked nervous. And this cat was just too calm.
“Don’t open the vehicle,” Young said. “Please do not approach the vehicle. I need to talk to the ladies.”
Steve started to open his mouth to ask why, then just nodded.
“As you prefer, Officer.”
* * *
“Officer, sorry about this,” Stacey said as the cop walked over. “I know we’re sort of trespassing but the house is empty. It looks like i
t’s in foreclosure. And it was so convenient to load! I’m really sorry but we won’t be long.”
She didn’t do bimbo well but she was going to give it her best shot.
“There are marinas for that sort of thing, ma’am,” the officer said. “Everything else okay?”
“Yes?” she asked, looking past the cop to Steve and trying to catch a clue. “What do you mean?”
“Are you under any form of duress?” the officer asked. “I mean, is this your idea? Are you okay, ma’am?”
“I’m fine,” Stacey said, frowning. “We’re fine. We just want to get loaded and off to sea!”
“And you are married to Mister . . . Sorry, what was the name again?” he asked, glancing at Steve’s license.
“Oh,” Stacey said, laughing. “You mean Steven John Smith, my husband of seventeen years? Would you like to meet our two children, Sophia Lynn and Faith Marie? Yes, he’s my husband, these are our children and we’re all real people.”
“May I see some identification, ma’am?” the officer asked.
“It’s in my purse in the car . . .”
“Which I’d like to hold off opening until I’ve examined the weapons inside,” the officer said.
“You’re in for a treat then,” Faith said, stopping. “What’s this about?”
“Just keep loading, Faith,” Stacey said.
“What?” Faith said. “While you and Da stand around talking to the cop?”
“Just keep loading, Faith,” Stacey said evenly.
“What’s the rush?” the officer said.