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Degrees of Wrong

Page 15

by Anna Scarlett


  Nicoli sat back and studied me. “And it’s highly contagious.”

  “Highly.”

  “What are the symptoms?”

  “Well, there’s a range of symptoms, really. First, a fever will develop, the

  body’s first response to an intruder. Some victims start to develop buboes, or

  bulblike growths that normally turn purple or black, hence the name. Others will

  develop severe pneumonia, as did our doctor in this journal entry. I’m sure we’ll find as we read on that his sputum will start to consist entirely of blood, instead of just tinged with it. And, as his little girl did, others will develop septicemia.

  No matter the symptoms, the outcome is always the same. The virus attaches to

  the cells, makes its way to the lymph nodes and attacks our immune system. We

  have no defenses against it.”

  Nicoli nodded. “Would you like me to keep reading?”

  “Please.”

  He began again:

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  “‘Wednesday, September 17th. It is the late-night hours, and I have just been

  informed that my little Belle has already succumbed. I barely have the strength to move, my own blood even spotting these pages. My strapping boy Philippe has

  taken to the disease, and although my wife shows no symptoms as of yet, I am

  sure she will by morning. She has decided to come along with us, and is lying in

  the bed with our son, holding him tightly. I hope…’ It doesn’t say anything else.”

  A long moment passed before either of us spoke. Finally, he handed me the

  papers.

  “Thank you,” I whispered as I stood.

  Before I could turn, he caught my wrist. “Elyse.”

  The shock of his touch was almost as powerful as the flutter I felt when he

  used my first name. He cleared his throat. “Dr. Morgan. I have confidence in

  you, for what it’s worth.”

  As the elevator doors shut behind me, I acknowledged to myself that his

  confidence in me was worth very much. Very much, indeed.

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  Chapter Nine

  Despite my initial complaints about the amount of information I received, I

  managed to sift through and organize it within two days. I reviewed the lab tests first—most of which had been thorough and relatively creative. It became

  obvious that the UN sent me every single piece of information they documented

  on the virus, without regard to relevance. The spectrum of the work started at

  completely silly and ended with impressively ingenious. But they all ended up in

  the same category: failure.

  One doctor’s work irritated me. He’d found a way to halt the functioning of

  infected cells. Unfortunately, he had stopped the functioning of every other cell in the patient’s body as well. By using hydrogen cyanide. The whole experiment

  was conducted with scarcely more elements than a grade-school science project. I

  wondered that this man’s findings even had a place among the experiments of

  his more brilliant counterparts. At the very least, a few lab rats could have been spared in preventing this man from practicing medicine. I shuddered at the more

  serious implications of his primitive experiment.

  I was also disgusted, physically sickened, when I came across an experiment

  conducted with live human patients. Furiously, I scrolled through it, reading

  with horror that the anonymous scientist had intentionally infected human

  beings and had found to his surprise that he couldn’t reverse the effects of the

  virus. Every single patient died within the usual forty-eight hours, ranging from small children to the elderly. Happily, one of the patients tried to escape,

  Degrees of Wrong

  facilitating the need for the doctor to restrain him, and thereby infecting himself with the disease. I scrolled to the end. His closing entry read:

  I’m relieved to find I’ve been infected with the Black Death. I can now desist with these inhumane experiments and hope that God will understand why I had to do it. My only comfort is that I won’t live long enough to see my family executed for my failure.

  Surely they will understand that I sacrificed everything that a person could sacrifice for them. May God forgive me.

  He had been held by the very terrorists who engineered the disease—

  somehow the UN had confiscated his findings. I hardly made it to the bathroom

  before vomiting. I lumbered back to the computer, still on the verge of tears. I

  needed a break.

  Nicoli would be expecting me soon, anyway. That I even considered giving

  him the benefit of the doubt now seemed like a laughable waste of deliberation.

  The last few evenings were not dissimilar to the very first night that he appeared at the gym—except that I changed the variables leading up to my inevitable

  failure.

  That second night, he’d materialized again on the machine next to me,

  choosing the same run I did—the Mountain Run. So, to test my theory—to give

  him the benefit of the doubt—I’d waited until he warmed up before changing my

  setting to the Beach Run, despite my aversion to it.

  I’d known the moment my dot disappeared from his input screen—his head

  jerked in my direction. Mere seconds had passed before the devil red dot

  appeared on my input screen once again, only seconds more before it passed me

  there on the beautiful, unspecified shore.

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  Not even the solitude of the sunshine and gently lapping waves could have

  consoled my temper.

  The third night, I’d waited a little longer before going to the gym. I’d figured

  that, as a scientist, I should introduce a new variable before I called a theory a fact. At one o’clock in the morning I started my warm-up on the Highway

  Endurance Run. I breathed in the solitude as I breezed through one small town

  and saw another one on the horizon.

  The sound of the machine next to me starting up smothered the momentary

  peace. Nicoli grinned—though not at me directly—as he selected the Highway

  Endurance Run at a pace faster than mine. This completed the testing period, the

  theory now a proven fact—Nicoli was irritating me. On purpose.

  I’d considered waiting until he ran at full speed before reaching over to push

  his emergency stop button. Dr. Folsom and her silly do no harm policy held me back. Barely. Instead, I plodded along, fuming, accepting my inescapable defeat

  at the end of the run—and cursing myself for eating so much chocolate in the

  first place. Because of the chocolate alone, I stayed and endured the humiliation.

  And as always, he finished before me and left the gym, depriving me of the

  chance to flail at him with my limp limbs and scream things at him no educated

  person had any business thinking about, especially at two o’clock in the

  morning.

  So now, the fourth night, it was with burdened feet that I made my way to

  the gym. He leaned against my usual machine, grinning in his usual foolish

  fashion—which caused the usual heart palpitations.

  “You’re making a nuisance of yourself, Captain.” I noticed he was fully

  dressed and fought back the disappointment.

  His grin widened. “Am I? That’s not my intention, Dr. Morgan.”

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  “
Perhaps you could explain your intention, then. Because from my

  perspective, it appears that you come here each and every evening, regardless of

  the time, and break the joint custody contract we verbally agreed to.”

  “How much chocolate have you eaten today, Dr. Morgan?”

  I could barely see him through my narrowed eyes. “You, of course, can see

  how that wouldn’t be any of your business, Captain.”

  He chuckled. “I was just wondering if you could skip your workout this

  evening.”

  “What for?” And why was he dressed? Get a hold of yourself, idiot.

  He shrugged. “There’s been a development which…Dr. Folsom thought you

  might be interested in.”

  Dr. Folsom had been up to no good, of late. “What is it?”

  He shrugged again. “It’s easier to show you than to tell you. Why don’t you

  run your things to your room and meet me at the transport pods?”

  The transport pods? “Um, no, I don’t think so. Thanks anyway.”

  I walked to my machine, but he moved to block my way. Undeterred, I

  moved to the next one. He caught my arm and whirled me around, scorching my

  skin with the contact.

  “You’re making my life very difficult right now,” he mused. “You well know

  how Dr. Folsom can be when she doesn’t get her way.”

  Yes, yes I did. And it suited me just fine. “That doesn’t sound like my

  problem.” I made a display of giving it more consideration, then reiterated,

  “Nope, definitely not my problem.” Besides, the idea of working out sans Nicoli

  seemed too peaceful a temptation to pass up.

  “I need you to cooperate.”

  “I am absolutely not going.”

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  “Not even for one of these?” He offered his open hand, revealing a little

  gold-wrapped jewel I knew to contain dark chocolate and caramel.

  “Where did you get that?” Had he gone through my things? Had Dr. Folsom

  shown him my hidden stash? Well, stash es?

  “I ordered twenty- one pounds.”

  I stared at the bribe in his hand, the shiny little morsel so alluring, even in

  this horrible gymnasium lighting. “I am not some treat-trained pet,” I informed

  him as I snatched it from his hand and strode to the door. “I’ll meet you there in ten minutes.”

  “What a splendid weakness you have.” He laughed.

  It did not warrant comment.

  I dropped off my water bottle and towel in my room, chewing my chocolate

  prize as I approached the elevator. I felt a bit relieved for the change of pace—

  especially since the evening wouldn’t end with me breathless, sweaty and, well,

  a loser.

  He waited for me at the end of the transport hall. I followed him into one of

  the transport rooms, where he had prepared a smaller pod—a four-seater—for

  our excursion. With an agile hop, he landed in the pod and reached his hand out

  to help me in. The intimacy screamed at me, and I hesitated.

  “Dr. Folsom’s not coming?”

  “No. Just me and you.”

  I bit my lip. “Why don’t you just tell me what it is? You could tell Dr. Folsom

  I went, and I would corroborate your story. She wouldn’t have to know the

  difference.” I shoved my hands in my pockets to keep from fidgeting. Now was

  not the time to show weakness. Again.

  His hand fell. “Don’t you trust me?”

  Implicitly. “No.”

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  He laughed and held out his hand again. “Don’t worry. Your virtue is safe

  with me.” He smiled with the cliché.

  I eyed his hand long enough for him to be insulted. The reasonable part of

  me demanded that I turn, run from the transport room. The curious,

  irresponsible and admittedly larger part of me wondered why I wasn’t already

  seated and strapped in. I took his hand.

  He used it to pull me closer, and when close enough, his arm encircled my

  waist. He lifted me in with ease, as if I didn’t consume three thousand calories of chocolate per day. When my feet met with pod, I scrambled away from his

  disorienting touch.

  He seated himself in the conductor’s spot, and I strapped myself next to him.

  He maneuvered the controls with a seasoned finesse. Within seconds, the glass

  shield closed around us and the room filled with water. The lights dimmed, the

  controls the only illumination in the cabin.

  “When the floor opens, we’ll drop out,” he said.

  Despite my expectation of it, my stomach fluttered with the sense of lost

  gravity when we dropped, and I gasped. I heard his soft chuckle but wouldn’t

  satisfy him with a dirty look.

  He negotiated the pitch black without the spotlight, instead pulling up a

  screen which appeared to be a map of the ocean floor and surrounding sea

  structures.

  Noticing my interest in it, he said, “This is an explored region of the ocean.

  When a defined area has been thoroughly explored, we work to put it into map

  form, for easier navigation.”

  “Ah. And how much is mapped out?”

  “When the UOC first began its exploration, only roughly fifteen percent of

  the oceans of the world had been explored, and only twenty percent of that had

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  ever been officially documented. Now, we’ve covered about thirty-five percent

  of the oceans. It may seem slow-moving.” He shrugged.

  “Not at all. It’s a huge undertaking.”

  “Very. That’s why the UN decided to place less emphasis on space

  exploration and concentrate their efforts right here at home. They haven’t

  regretted it.”

  “No,” I agreed. “They haven’t.”

  In fact, it had paid off richly. In the past fifty years, they found oil pockets

  scattered throughout the ocean floors of the earth, containing enough of the fuel to sustain the entire population for hundreds of years. Although, due to the

  developments in technology—and the use of hydrogen-powered everything—the demand for oil had dissipated to almost nonexistence. Still, because of these

  massive discoveries, more funds were shoveled toward the UOC to see what else

  they could find—and to protect the assets already detected. At least, that was Dr.

  Folsom’s rendition.

  “So, is it useless to ask where we’re going?” I turned around in my seat,

  surprised to find the outline of the massive Bellator was no longer visible.

  “You’ll see. We’re almost there.”

  Without warning, fireworks appeared. Everywhere. I shook my head, peered

  closer—fireworks couldn’t exist down here. All around us, a soup of illuminated

  marine life exploded into color.

  Purples, blues and fluorescent whites glowed in the water in forms large and

  small, creating an orchestrated symphony for the eyes. Some seemed to move

  with the ocean current, while others displayed rigid control of their flighty,

  harmonic movements. Tiny, indiscernible dots and larger silvery fish and even

  eellike creatures flitted about the cabin, all glowing with different colors and at different intensities.

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  “Breathtaking.” I had seen pictures of this, but the images fell marginally

  short of seeing this miraculous display firsthand.

  “Yes. They responded to the movement of the pod. It’s a chemical reaction

  called—”

  “Bioluminescence,” I said, still in a state of awe.

  He chuckled. “Yes. ‘I forgot you’re a genius of some sort’,” he quoted me.

  The pod shuddered, and the glowing forms disappeared for a moment as the

  muck stirred up from our landing encompassed them.

  “Are we on the bottom?” I asked nervously.

  “Yes. Don’t worry, we’ll be fine.”

  “How—how far down are we?”

  “About two thousands meters.”

  “We’re over a mile deep?” Could he hear my heart beat—hear it skip beats? I thought I could.

  “You need to trust me, Elyse. I wouldn’t let anything happen to you. I’ve

  done this countless times. This isn’t even close to the crush depths of these

  pods.”

  “Crush depth? What is that?”

  “I would think it would be self-explanatory.”

  I gulped. “What kind of pressure can the pod withhold?”

  “That’s top secret.” He winked. Then he saw that I wouldn’t be placated.

  “Look, we’ve taken pods similar to this to the ocean’s deepest point.”

  “The Mariana Trench?” I asked, incredulous.

  “We’ve taken it there too.”

  “The Mariana Trench isn’t the deepest point?” I was sure I’d studied that

  somewhere. Not prone to forgetting statistics, I remembered reading the Mariana

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  Trench was some eleven thousand meters deep. If he had meant to distract me, it

  worked.

  He shook his head.

  “What’s the deepest point?”

  “The Mariana Trench is, as far as the textbooks are concerned. Between you

  and me though, we’ve found a point deeper than that. Much deeper.”

  “Where? Where is it?” Was he deliberately feeding me tidbits at a time?

  “Sorry, Doc.” He stretched out in his seat, resting his head on his interlaced

  hands behind him. I noticed he never bothered to buckle in. “Top secret.

  Unless…” His rakish grin was illuminated by the gentle glow of an inquisitive

 

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