by Alten-Steve
Dominique watches helplessly as he struggles. “Nurse, what’s going on here?”
“Mr Gabriel is to receive three shots of Thorazine a day.”
“Three?”
“Foletta wants to turn me into a vegetable! Dom, don’t let him—” Mick is thrashing wildly on the bed, the orderlies struggling to keep him down. “Don’t let them do it. Dominique, please—”
“Nurse, I happen to be Mr Gabriel’s psychiatrist, and I—”
“Not anymore. Dr Foletta’s taken over. You can speak to him about it in the morning.” The nurse swabs alcohol on Mick’s arm. “Hold him steady—”
“We’re trying. Just stick him—”
Mick raises his head, the blood vessels protruding from his neck. “Dom, you have to do something! The Chicxulub crater—the clock’s ticking—the clock’s—”
Dominique sees the dark eyes roll up, his head flopping back against the pillow.
“There, that’s better,” the nurse coos, retracting the syringe. “You can go now, Intern Vazquez. Mr Gabriel won’t be needing your services anymore.”
9
OCTOBER 21, 2012: PENTAGON, ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA
Pierre Borgia enters the briefing room and takes his seat at the oval conference table between Secretary of Defense Dick Przystas and US army Chief of Staff General James Adams. Seated directly across from him is CIA Director Patrick Hurley, Air Force Chief of Staff, General Arne Cohen, and Chief of Naval Operations Jeffrey Gordon. The six-foot-six-inch Chief of Naval Operations acknowledges Borgia with a quick nod.
General “Big Mike” Costolo, Commandant of the Marine Corps, follows Borgia in, taking his place to Gordon’s right.
At the head of the table is General Joseph Fecondo. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and veteran of the Vietnam and Persian Gulf Wars wipes the palm of a manicured hand across his tan, receding hairline and gazes at Borgia and Costolo with a look of annoyance. “Well, now that we’re all finally here, I guess we can begin. Director Hurley?”
Patrick Hurley takes his place at the podium. Trim and fit, the 52-year-old former all-American shooting guard from Notre Dame looks like he still plays competitive basketball.
Hurley activates a control switch at the podium. The lights dim, and a black-and-white satellite photo appears on the large screen to the CIA director’s right.
Borgia recognizes the quality of the image. The digitalized photo comes from the C-8236 high-resolution thermal-imaging camera, mounted aboard the Air Force’s top-secret aircraft, Darkstar. The stealth Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) is a flat, clam-shaped vessel with enormous wings. Darkstar operates at altitudes of 65,000 feet and can transmit close-up images in all weather conditions, day or night.
A computerized square appears in red. Hurley positions it, then enhances the image within. Details of a small school and children’s playground enlarge and focus. Adjacent to the school is a well-enclosed concrete parking lot.
The CIA director clears his throat. “The series of photos you’re about to see were taken above an area just northeast of Pyongyang along North Korea’s western coast. On the surface, the site appears to be nothing more than a children’s elementary school. But buried 1.3 kilometers beneath this parking lot is Kim Jong-Il’s underground nuclear-weapons facility, the same facility the North Koreans used when they first began test-firing two-stage medium-range missiles back in 1998. We suspect the site may also house the new TAEPO-DONG II missile, an ICBM with a range of twenty-two hundred miles, capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads.”
Hurley clicks to the next photo. “Darkstar’s been monitoring the facility for the last two weeks. The photos I’m going to show you were taken yesterday evening, between the hours of eleven o’clock and 1:00 a.m., Seoul.” Hurley magnifies the image to reveal the figures of two men exiting a black Mercedes-Benz.
“The gentleman on the right is Iranian President Ali Shamkhani. The gentleman on the left is China’s new Communist Party Leader and former military commander, General Li Xiliang. As Pierre will tell you, the general’s hard-line Communist all the way.”
Hurley clicks through several more photos, stopping at a man dressed in a long, black, leather coat, who seems to be staring up at the heavens as if he knows his picture is being taken.
“Christ,” Borgia whispers, “it’s Viktor Grozny.”
“Almost looks like he’s staring at our camera,” General Cohen adds.
“The roll call’s not quite over.” The CIA director changes the image. “And our host for the evening—”
Borgia’s heart races faster. “Kim Jong-Il.”
Hurley turns the lights back up and takes his place at the conference table. “Viktor Grozny’s nuclear deterrent summit was held weeks ago. So why would the leaders of four nations representing 38 percent of the nuclear weapons on this planet choose to meet in secrecy at this particular site?”
Secretary of Defense Dick Pryzstas leans back in his chair and brushes back his mop of white hair. “Admiral Gordon, would you share the information you and I spoke about earlier?”
The lanky admiral strikes a key on his laptop. “Our latest satellite surveillance indicates the Iranians have bolstered their military presence along the northern shores of the Persian Gulf. In addition to repositioning their Howitzers and mobile SAM sites, Iran recently purchased an additional forty-six Hudong-class patrol boats from China. Each of these vessels are equipped with C-802 antiship cruise missiles. The Iranians are also in the process of doubling their Chinese Silkworm missile sites along the coastline and, despite UN protests, have continued to fortify their surface-to-air and surface-to-surface missile batteries on Qeshm, Abu Musa, and the Sirri islands. In essence, Iran is preparing to effectuate a gauntlet at the narrowest section of the Strait of Hormuz, an area only fifty kilometers wide.
“The Iranians claim the military buildup is in preparation for Grozny’s military exercise in December,” Secretary of Defense Przystas states. “Of course, should hostilities break out in the Middle East, the Iranian gauntlet would prevent our fleet from accessing the Persian Gulf.”
“Not to add to the paranoia, but what about nukes?” General Costolo pushes back from the table. “The Israelis claim Grozny sold the Iranians sickle missiles with nuclear warheads when he helped negotiate the 2007 Middle East Peace Accord.”
Admiral Gordon turns to face Costolo. “Iran has the strength and geography to carve out a new domain for itself in the Middle East. If war broke out, Russia would be in a position to consolidate the Middle East as a hegemony.”
“Grozny certainly looks like he’s preparing for nuclear war,” Borgia states.
“Pierre, Russia’s been preparing for nuclear war for the last sixty years,” General Fecondo interrupts. “Let’s not forget that it was our own forging ahead to build a Missile Defense Shield that added to their own paranoia.”
“There may be one other hidden variable to consider, General,” the CIA director says. “NSA intercepted a communication between Russian Prime Minister Makashov and the Chinese Defense Minister. The conversation concerned some kind of new high-tech weapon.”
“What sort of weapon?” Pryztas asks.
“Fusion was mentioned, nothing more.”
Sanibel Island, West Coast of Florida
Dominique slows the black Pronto Spyder convertible, keeping the roadster just under fifty as she passes through the Sanibel Island bridge tollbooth. Electronic sensors record her vehicle’s license plate and VIN, the information instantly fed to the Department of Transportation, which adds the amount of the toll to her monthly transit bill. She keeps the car under fifty for the next mile, knowing she is still in range of the automated system’s radar gun.
Dominique maneuvers the Spyder across the bay bridge to Sanibel and Captiva Island, a residential and resort area nestled on a small island on the Gulf Coast of Florida. She drives north along the heavily shaded single-lane roadway, then winds her way west, passing several large hotels before ente
ring a residential area.
Edith and Isadore Axler live in a two-story cube-shaped beach home situated on a half-acre corner lot facing the Gulf of Mexico. At first glance, the exterior redwood slats enclosing the home give it the look of an enormous party lantern, especially at night. This protective layer of scrim protects the structure from hurricanes, creating, in effect, a house within a house.
The south wing of the Axler home has been renovated to accommodate a sophisticated acoustics lab, one of only three on the Gulf Coast interfaced with SOSUS, the United States Navy’s Underwater Sound Surveillance System. The sixteen-billion-dollar network of undersea microphones, built by the federal government during the Cold War to spy on enemy submarines, is a global grid tied to navy shore stations by some thirty thousand miles of undersea cables.
As the military’s need for SOSUS began to dwindle in the early 1990s, scientists, universities, and private businesses successfully petitioned the navy for access to the acoustics network. For oceanographers, SOSUS became the Hubble Telescope of undersea exploration. Scientists could now hear the super-low-frequency vibrations made by ice floes cracking, seabeds quaking, and underwater volcanoes erupting, sounds normally lying far below the range of human hearing.
For marine biologists like Isadore Axler, SOSUS provided a new way of studying the planet’s most intelligent ocean-dwelling life forms: the cetaceans. With the assistance of the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the Axler home had become a SOSUS acoustics station, focusing specifically on the cetacean inhabitants of the Gulf of Mexico. Using SOSUS, the Axlers could now record and analyze voiceprints of whales, identify species, count populations, even track single subjects across the northern hemisphere.
Dominique turns left down the cul-de-sac, then right into the last driveway, comforted by the familiar sound of pebbles crunching beneath the weight of her roadster.
Edith Axler greets her as the convertible top snaps shut into place. Edie is an astute, gray-haired woman in her early seventies, with brown eyes that exude a teacher’s wisdom and a warm smile that projects a mother’s love.
“Hi, doll. How was your drive?”
“Fine.” Dominique hugs her adoptive mother, squeezing her tight.
“Something’s wrong?” Edith pulls back, noticing the tears. “What is it?”
“Nothing. I’m just glad to be home.”
“Don’t play me for senile. It’s that patient of yours, isn’t it? What’s his name—Mick?”
Dominique nods. “My former patient.”
“Come on, We’ll talk before Iz comes out.” Edith leads her by the hand to the Gulf-access canal located on the south side of the property. Docked along the concrete seawall are two boats, the smaller of the two a 35-foot fishing boat belonging to the Axlers.
They sit together, hand in hand, on a wooden park bench facing the water.
Dominique stares at a gray-and-white pelican basking on one of the wooden pilings. “I remember when I was young—whenever I had a bad day, you always used to sit with me out here.”
Edie nods. “This has always been my favorite spot.”
“You used to say, ‘How bad can things be, if you can still enjoy such a beautiful view.’” She points to the rustic-looking 48-foot trawler docked behind the Axler’s fishing boat. “Whose boat is that?”
“It belongs to the Sanibel Treasure Hunters’ Club. You remember Rex and Dory Simpson. Iz rents the space out to them. See that canvas, there’s a two-man minisub secured to the decking beneath it. Iz will take you out for a spin in it tomorrow if you’d like.”
“In a minisub? That’d be fun.”
Edie squeezes her daughter’s hand. “Tell me about Mick. Why are you so upset?”
Dominique wipes away a tear. “Ever since fat-fucking Foletta switched my assignment, he’s kept Mick on heavy doses of Thorazine. God, Ead, it’s so cruel, I can’t—I can’t even bear to look at him anymore. He’s so doped up—he just sits there, strapped in a wheelchair like some drooling vegetable. Foletta pushes him out to the yard every afternoon and just leaves him sitting in the arts and crafts area, like Mick’s some kind of hopeless geriatric patient.”
“Dom, I know you care a great deal about Mick, but you have to remember, you’re only one person. You can’t expect to save the world.”
“What? What did you say?”
“I just meant that as a psychiatrist, you can’t expect to help every institutionalized resident you come in contact with. You’ve worked with Mick for a month. Like it or not, this is out of your hands. You have to know when to walk away.”
“You know me better than that. I can’t just walk away, not when someone’s being abused.”
Edie squeezes her daughter’s hand again. They remain silent, watching the pelican flap its wings as it maintains its precarious balance on the piling.
Not when someone is being abused. Hearing her own words, Edie thinks back to the first time she met the frightened little girl from Guatemala. She had been working part-time as a school nurse and counselor. The ten-year-old had been brought to her, complaining of stomach cramps. Edith had held the little girl’s hand until the pain had subsided. This small act of motherly love would forever bind Dominique to the woman, whose own heart broke as she learned about the sexual abuse being inflicted upon the child by her older cousins. Edie had filed a report and arranged for foster care. She and Iz had adopted Dominique six months later.
“Okay, doll, tell me what we can do to help Mick.”
“There’s only one solution. We need to get him out of there.”
“By out, I assume you mean to another asylum.”
“No, I mean out, as in permanently out.”
“A jailbreak?”
“Well, yes. Mick may be a bit confused, but he’s not insane. He doesn’t belong in a mental institution.”
“Are you certain, because you don’t sound too sure yourself. Didn’t you tell me that Mick is convinced the world is coming to an end?”
“Not the world, humanity, and yes, he does believe that. He’s just a little paranoid, but who wouldn’t be after spending eleven years in solitary.”
Edie watches Dominique fidget. “There’s something else you’re not telling me.”
Dominique turns to face her. “This will sound crazy, but there seems to be truth in many of Mick’s delusions. His whole doomsday theory is based on some 3,000-year-old Mayan prophecy. I’m in the process of reading his father’s journal, and some of the findings are mind-boggling. Mick practically predicted the arrival of that deep-space radio signal on the fall equinox. Ead, when I lived in Guatemala, my grandmother used to tell me stories about my maternal ancestors. The things she said were pretty frightening.”
Edie smiles. “You’re starting to scare me.”
“Oh, I know it’s just superstitious nonsense, but I feel like I owe it to Mick to at least check some of these things out. It might help alleviate some of his fears.”
“What things?”
“Mick is convinced that whatever’s going to destroy humanity is hidden in the Gulf of Mexico.” Dominique reaches into her jeans pocket and removes several folded pages, handing them to Edie.
Edie glances at the printout. “The Chicxulub impact crater? How’s a depression buried a mile beneath the seafloor going to kill humanity?”
“I don’t know. Neither did Mick. But I was hoping—”
“—you were hoping that Iz could check it out using SOSUS.”
Dominique smiles. “It would make me feel a lot better.”
Edie gives her daughter a hug. “Come on. Iz is in the lab.”
Professor Isadore Axler sits at the SOSUS station, headphones on, eyes closed. His face, speckled with liver spots, is serene as he listens to the haunting cetacean echoes.
Dominique taps him on the shoulder.
Iz opens his eyes, his thinning gray goatee spreading into a tight smile as he removes the headphones from his ears. “Humpbacks.”
“Is that how you
say hello? Humpbacks.”
Iz stands and gives her a hug. “You look tired, kiddo.”
“I’m fine.”
Edie steps forward. “Iz, Dominique has a favor to ask.”
“What, another one?”
“When did I ask the last one?”
“When you were sixteen. You asked to borrow the car. Most traumatic night of my life.” Iz pats her cheek. “Speak.”
She hands him the information on the Chicxulub crater. “I need you to use SOSUS and tell me if you hear anything down there.”
“And what am I supposed to be listening for?”
“I don’t know. Anything unusual, I guess.”
Iz gives her his famous “stop wasting my time,” stare, his tangled gray eyebrows knitting together.
“Iz, stop staring at her and just do it,” Edie commands.
The elderly biologist returns to his chair, muttering, “Anything unusual, huh. Maybe we’ll hear a whale farting.” He types the coordinates into the computer, repositioning the headphones.
Dominique hugs him from behind, kissing his cheek.
“All right, all right, enough with the bribes. Listen, kiddo, I don’t know what you’re looking to accomplish, but this crater’s spread out over a vast area. What I’ll do is estimate the center point, which looks to be somewhere near the Campeche shelf, just southwest of the Alacan Reef. I’ll program the computer to begin a low-frequency search. We’ll start at one to fifty hertz and gradually increase the cycles. Problem is, you’re focusing in on an area that’s loaded with oil and gas fields. The Gulf basin is all limestone and sandstone, containing porous geological traps. Oil and gas are constantly leaking out from fissures along the seafloor, and SOSUS is going to register every one of these leaks.”
“So what do you suggest?”
“I suggest we eat lunch.” Iz finishes programming the computer. “The system will automatically home in on any acoustical disturbances in the area.”
“How long do you think it’ll take SOSUS to find something?” The remark earns Dominique another stare.