Plague

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Plague Page 1

by H W Buzz Bernard




  Promo Page

  In only a matter of days, 9/11 and the destruction of the Twin Towers will be rivaled by a lone-wolf terrorist attack on America. Atlanta is targeted as Ground Zero for the most horrifying plague in modern times.

  Alnour Barashi stared down from the window of the Sun Dial Restaurant, 73 floors up in the Westin Peachtree Plaza, at the weekend throngs below. At the crowds strolling through Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park, people perhaps headed for the CNN Center, the massive Georgia Aquarium or the World of Coca-Cola. Americans, a nation of infidels. He imagined all of them—men, women, children—writhing in agony. Dying.

  His determination and patience had been rewarded. The prize: a recombinant Ebola virus as easily transmittable as the common cold. It was something known in the field of microbiology as a chimera virus, named after the mythological fire-breathing creature with the head of a lion, body of a goat and tail of a snake.

  He leaned back in his chair, closed his eyes and considered what he was about to unleash. In the 14th century, bubonic plague, the Black Death, swept through Europe claiming more than twenty-five million lives. Death was excruciating. Victims often endured a week of continuous, bloody vomiting and decomposing skin before gasping their final agonizing breaths.

  Now, Barashi mused, it would be America’s turn. Payment had come due. For its arrogance, for its imperialism, for its brutality. For its dismissal and humiliation of us. For its crusade to project its values onto our culture and our religion.

  But no more. Of that he was certain. He held the power: the Black Death of the 21st century.

  Praise for Plague

  “A page-turning thriller rooted in today’s world of political unrest. This all too realistic fiction will suspend your belief in the safety of home and the assurance of government protection. PLAGUE will keep you up at night long after you’ve finished it.”

  —John House, MD, author of So Shall You Reap

  “If you love thrillers andhaven’t read Buzz Bernard yet, I suggest you stop what you’re doing and rectify that right now.PLAGUEgrabs you around the throat and squeezes, with believable characters, a realistic plot, and non-stop action. One of the best thrillers of 2012.”

  —Al Leverone, author of The Lonely Mile

  “An all-too-believable nightmare tale about the horrors of biological terrorism. Buzz Bernard will keep you up at night wondering What if?”

  —Tom Young, author of The Mullah’s Storm, Silent Enemy, and The Renegades

  “Fans of the late Michael Crichton should check out Buzz Bernard’s PLAGUE. This bioterrorism thriller is a real page-turner.”

  —Cheryl Norman, author of Rebuild My World

  “A delight for thriller readers. Intense, edgy, full of twists and scary plausibilities. A totally unexpected protagonist and a brilliant cast of characters. Fans of Michael Crichton, Robin Cook and Stephen Coonts will want to pick up H.W. “Buzz” Bernard’s PLAGUE, but not before clearing all decks and fastening their seat belts.”

  —Donnell Ann Bell, bestselling author, The Past Came Hunting

  About Buzz Bernard’s Previous Novel, Eyewall

  No one was aware of the storm’s sudden force. Not the Hurricane Hunter crew trapped in its center. Not the family marooned on a resort island while searching for their missing teen. A deadly Category Five hurricane has never hit the Georgia coast in modern times. Until now.

  “Buzz Bernard bursts on the scene with EYEWALL, a compelling and suspenseful tale told with the insight and authenticity of one who has walked in the world of the famed Hurricane Hunters and endured the harsh realities of a major, devastating storm. Great characters combine with razor-sharp suspense and leave you breathless. A one-sitting, white-knuckle read.”

  —Vicki Hinze, award-winning author of Deadly Ties

  “A well-crafted tale you can’t put down; characters you care about; a spot-on insiders look at hurricane forecasting and flying.”

  —Jack Williams, author and founding USA TODAY Weather Editor

  “A dramatic and frenzied story of how an angry hurricane collides with the frailty and heroism of human nature. After reading the exciting and emotional EYEWALL, I admire even more those who work to protect us from the next category five.”

  —Michael Buchanan, co-author and screenwriter, The Fat Boy Chronicles and Micah’s Child.

  “Riveting... Intrigue, power struggles... Frightening reality from several perspectives... EYEWALL will keep you more than interested. Having been on location interviewing survivors of a Cat 4/5 hurricane that hit Charleston SC in 1989 (Hugo) and witnessing the destruction left in its wake I fully understand how a Cat 5 might impact a barrier island along the southeast coast of the United States. The author takes us there and describes in frightening detail the impact of this scary scenario.”

  —Marshall Seese, retired anchorman and meteorologist, The Weather Channel

  Plague

  H.W. “Buzz” Bernard

  Bell Bridge Books

  Copyright

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), events or locations is entirely coincidental.

  Bell Bridge Books

  PO BOX 300921

  Memphis, TN 38130

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-61194-191-3

  Print ISBN: 978-1-61194-176-0

  Bell Bridge Books is an Imprint of BelleBooks, Inc.

  Copyright © 2012 by H. W. Bernard

  Printed and bound in the United States of America.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

  We at BelleBooks enjoy hearing from readers.

  Visit our websites – www.BelleBooks.com and www.BellBridgeBooks.com.

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Cover design: Debra Dixon

  Interior design: Hank Smith

  Photo credits:

  Biohazard symbol (manipulated) © Deformer | Dreamstime.com

  Cityscape (manipulated) © Ekaterina Novikova | Dreamstime.com

  Background texture (manipulated) © Kheng Ho Toh | Dreamstime.com

  :Apx:01:

  For my wife, Christina, whom I’m blessed to have

  Preface

  In 2008, a congressional commission warned, “...given the high-level of know-how needed to use disease as a weapon to cause mass casualties, the United States should be less concerned that terrorists will become biologists and far more concerned that biologists will become terrorists.”

  Chapter One

  NORTH METRO ATLANTA, GEORGIA

  SUNDAY, AUGUST 18

  David Gullison stared into the bathroom mirror, terrified by what he saw. Someone he didn’t know, someone he’d never known. There was something almost demonic about his image. His eyes swam in crimson. Dead rubies. His face, flushed and splotched with tiny scarlet blooms, gave the appearance of Edelweiss gone bad. He looked the caricature of an aged, hard-drinking Irishman. But he knew it wasn’t age or booze. It was much worse than that.

  The pain came again, squeezing his gut, wrapping around his chest. It had started suddenly a couple of days ago. At first it was just his back. “Too much golf,” his wife said.

  “Maybe.”

  “No maybe. I warned you. Take it easy. You’re retired now.”

  Then the fever had come, boiling up inside him like a pyrocla
stic flow. His throat felt as though a cheese grater had been dragged through it.

  “The flu,” his wife said. “Go lie down for a while. I’ll get some aspirin.”

  “Yes,” he said. He’d flopped down on his bed and didn’t move for twelve hours. It was unlike any flu he’d ever had. He felt as if he were on fire, burning up from the inside out. He struggled to take deep breaths; his lungs suffused with fluid. He coughed, deep hacking wheezes that expelled fine sprays of mucus tinged in pink.

  The pain spread, invading his stomach and bowels, locking them in vise grips of agony. Vomiting and diarrhea followed. Nonstop.

  Now the cramping hit again, sharp, wrenching. He leaned over the sink and vomited once more, long after there shouldn’t have been anything left to bring up. A tarry mixture, black and red, flooded into the basin. It was as if his insides were liquefying, turning to jelly. He gripped the edge of the sink, but had no strength left. The room spun in a dizzying spiral.

  He knew he’d waited too long; knew he needed to get to an emergency room. He tried to call for his wife, but before he could, the searing effluent rose in his throat again. He sank to his knees and crawled toward the toilet, but failed to make it in time. A rush of burbling flatulence shot from his bowels. A vile, malodorous slime of blood and dark, stringy tissue ran down his thighs and splattered onto the floor. It oozed over the bathroom tile, staining it with a harbinger of something far worse to come.

  He lost consciousness and collapsed into the repulsive emulsion.

  SUNRIVER, OREGON

  SUNDAY, AUGUST 18

  Richard Wainwright stood alone on the first tee of a golf course in Sunriver, just south of Bend, as the rising sun lifted into a pristine cerulean sky. The slanting rays lit the Cascade Mountains in a manner that exaggerated the contrast between their snow-capped peaks and the verdant darkness of the forests cloaking their slopes. Overhead, a golden eagle orbited, perhaps waiting to catch a ride on the first thermal of the day. The deserted fairways, notched among corrugated lava buttes and bubbly knobs of pumice, sported a fringe of sagebrush and juniper beneath open stands of ponderosa pines. The air, brisk and tinged with just a hint of dust, was redolent with the essence of evergreens. He could have been in the Garden of Eden. Yet he found no joy in the setting, for he was lost in memories, wrapped in melancholia, and clinging to a ghost that would never return. Karen.

  He stepped up to the ball, eight-iron in hand, and took his stance, committed to hitting the perfect shot. He began his backswing, but was interrupted by the ringing of his cell phone. He plucked the phone from his golf bag.

  “Wainwright,” he said.

  “Rich, I was hoping I didn’t wake you. I know it’s early out there.” The soft, deep rumble of a familiar voice.

  “Ned. Good lord, it’s been awhile. What on earth are you doing these days? I’d heard you’d retired.”

  Ned laughed, a sardonic chuckle. “And the answer is: two ex-wives, five kids in college and a huge mortgage in Greenwich.”

  “Ah, then you’re still billing yourself as the nation’s top executive headhunter?”

  “Business has never been better. There’s actually increasing demand for competent executives these days. Ones with integrity anyhow. Like you. And, well, I’ve got this company that’s in a real bind.”

  Richard drew a deep breath. He probably shouldn’t encourage Ned. But what the hell, it couldn’t hurt to listen. “Okay, lay it on me.”

  “Actually, it’s an easy assignment. Three months, six months. An Atlanta biotech firm, BioDawn, needs someone to step in and stabilize it while they find a new CEO. It’s a solid operation, well respected, in good financial shape. All you have to do is come in and look pretty. Hobnob with the investors and tell them everything’s going to be okay. And it is. Nothing nefarious here. The money people and board of directors just want a firm hand on the tiller while they ferret out new leadership. And there’s no firmer hand than yours.”

  Wainwright waited for Ned to elaborate. When he didn’t, Wainwright challenged him. “Don’t give the mushroom treatment, partner. I know damn well there’s more to the story than what you’re telling me. I can hear it in your voice.” Richard sat on a bench adjacent to the tee box and gazed out at a nearby pond. A sub-surface wake knifed through the water. A beaver performing homeland defense.

  Ned didn’t respond immediately.

  “Ned, talk to me. Why is the CEO being replaced?”

  “He’s dead.”

  “That hardly seems like a situation that would, as you said, put a company ‘in a real bind.’”

  “So are the COO, CFO, executive vice president and chairman of the board.”

  “Whoa, whoa, whoa. What happened to ‘easy assignment’? Jesus, what happened to the corporate hierarchy?”

  “Plane crash. The corporate Gulfstream was on its way to Munich from Atlanta when it disappeared over the Atlantic somewhere between Bermuda and the Azores. Only bits and pieces of wreckage were found. It may have been an explosion of some sort. But we’ll never know for sure.”

  “Why were all those guys on the same plane?”

  “Not too smart, I know, but they were young and inexperienced in the travel safeguards that bigger corporations use. They had their own plane and were excited to be going to Germany to open a new office. They probably viewed it as more of a field trip than a business trip.”

  “Still...”

  “Yeah, I know. They’re all dead.”

  “I’m sorry to hear that, Ned. But you know I’m out of the game.”

  “Yeah, but I want you back in. You were a legend.”

  “No, a myth.”

  “Not the way I heard it.”

  “That was twenty years ago.”

  “Whatever it was, it launched your career. Stepping out a window onto the ledge of a New York City office building; threatening to jump unless a group of Wall Street investment bankers agreed to back a federal bailout loan for Brighton-Reames Aerospace.”

  “It was a joke, a youthful shenanigan by a wet-behind-the-ears CFO. I only stuck one foot out the window. I had no intention of going any farther.”

  “Joke or not, it worked. You became a star.”

  “I was lucky.” Richard stood and walked back toward the tee.

  “No. You were the epitome of competence and integrity. You went on to raise more companies from the dead than Jesus Christ could have. And, on top of everything else, you oozed charisma. Even people you intimidated or fired respected you.”

  “Yeah. But I pissed off a lot of folks. Too hands-on, they said.”

  “Bull shit. That was your style, your strength. You could smell out deadwood like a hog after truffles. You knew how to read employees and understand their motives, their goals, their integrity, their competency ... or lack thereof. You couldn’t have done that with your butt anchored in a corner office someplace.”

  “Ned, read my lips—well, you can’t. So I’ll speak slowly. I. Am. Retired. It’s a beautiful day in Oregon. The sun is out. An eagle is soaring overhead. I’m on a golf course. And I’ve got it almost to myself.” A slow ripple fanned out over the pond as the beaver approached the shore.

  “Spare me. You don’t know a Callaway RAZR from a Gillette razor. Don’t light me up.”

  “I’m not available. And I know what a Callaway RAZR is. You have to know that before you can retire.”

  “You’re too goddamned young to be retired. Look, I heard what happened; I know you had some heavy duty shit laid on you. And I know you’ve heard all the platitudes, but...” He paused.

  Richard sensed he probably didn’t want to hear what Ned would say next, but then again, maybe he did.

  Ned spoke softly, his words threaded with compassion. “You can put down the cross, Rich. Nobody will blame you. It’s been over two years. It’s
okay. Get back in the game, move on with your life.”

  The beaver surfaced and fixed its gaze on Richard and his eight-iron. Richard dropped the club and covered the mouthpiece of his phone. “Relax,” he yelled at the animal, “I’m hitting in the other direction.”

  “Who are you talking to?” Ned asked. “I thought you said the course was deserted.”

  “A beaver.”

  There was a long pause on the other end of the line. Then, “You’re bored, aren’t you?”

  “Shitless.”

  “I win.”

  “Yeah, I was good. But you were always better.”

  “There’ll be a ticket waiting for you at the Redmond airport early this afternoon. Quick hop to Salt Lake, then Delta—first class, of course—to Atlanta. You’ll get in late this evening. There’ll be a driver at Hartsfield-Jackson waiting to pick you up. And bring your clubs. Lots of great courses in Atlanta. You’ll have plenty of time to hone your game.”

  Though he didn’t believe in sixth sense, something gnawing at Richard told him that wouldn’t be the case.

  DOWNTOWN ATLANTA, GEORGIA

  SUNDAY, AUGUST 18

  Alnour Barashi stared down from the window of the Sun Dial Restaurant, 73 floors up in the Westin Peachtree Plaza, at the weekend throngs below. At the crowds strolling through Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park, people perhaps headed for the CNN Center, the massive Georgia Aquarium or the World of Coca-Cola. Americans, a nation of infidels. He imagined all of them—men, women, children—writhing in agony. Dying.

  He gazed at the structures that towered skyward around him: the Bank of America Plaza, One Atlantic Center, 191 Peachtree Tower. Great steel and glass icons that symbolized everything he despised about American culture: its ill-gotten wealth, its excesses, its arrogance. “Faah,” he mumbled to himself. He finished his lunch, paid the bill in cash, and left.

 

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