Read Final Epidemic Online

Authors: Earl Merkel

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage

Final Epidemic (28 page)

It was an ingenious design, readily duplicated in field conditions anywhere. Or so the team hoped.

Inside the bubble, a half-dozen camp beds held the forms—some thrashing, some moving only feebly—of what were now the most important people on earth. Like worker bees attending a comatose queen, members of Porter’s team moved among them, testing and measuring.

And waiting.

“Dr. Porter.”

Ray tore his attention from the tableau and turned to the spacesuited figure who now stood at his elbow.

“There’s a woman outside—a Dr. Mayer—who insists on talking with you immediately. She says it’s urgent.”

 

“What do you mean, gone?” Ray Porter’s voice was frankly skeptical, even a little suspicious.

Carol took a deep breath, wishing she felt less like a traitor.

“I mean gone,” she repeated. “Missing. Nowhere to be found. Out of here.”

Porter snorted, the sound odd from behind the Plexiglas faceshield. “Not likely, Dr. Mayer. Not from here.”

“Look,” Carol said. “They’re two teenage girls. They were showing no symptoms; they are not incapacitated in any way.”

She waved her arm, a broad gesture that covered the entire grounds of the stadium. Outside the illumination that dappled the canvas treatment tents, an unyielding blackness reigned. Only a thin slice of the stadium’s perimeter fencing could be seen.

“Those are chain-link fences. There’s not even much of a moon tonight. Where are the guards? The only ones I’ve seen
here are stationed around your incoming operations. The people here are too sick to
want
to escape.”

Carol forced herself to remain calm.

“Correct me if I am wrong, Dr. Porter. My guess is that you did not choose a high school football field with the intention of preventing someone from going over the wall—certainly not two kids who think they’re healthy and feel like leaving.”

Porter looked hard at Carol. “You’re certain they’re not still here, somewhere?”

“I’m certain I can’t find them,” Carol retorted, “and I looked. If I were you, I’d start looking too. And you should ask someone to look in the parking lot of the clinic. That’s where I parked my pickup.”

“You’re worried about your truck?”

“No, Dr. Porter. I’m worried about the spread of this virus. You see, my keys are missing too.”

Chapter 34

Helena Memorial Hospital
Helena, Montana
July 23

The two of them looked a mess.

The back and right sides of April’s head were heavily bandaged; bruises, abrasions and deep scratches on her face, arms and hands were scabbing souvenirs of her crawl through the brush and rocks. Beck’s head was bandaged too: an X of adhesive tape held the gauze pad over the shaved patch where the doctors had taken six stitches. He sat in the visitor’s chair, his heel resting on the foot of April’s hospital bed. His pant leg at the thigh was tight over its thick cocoon of bandages. Gauze and tape also covered his wrists, where the weight of his body had forced the handcuffs to bite deep into the flesh.

Frank Ellis would have felt even more responsible than he already did—
should have known pairing O’Connor with this damn CIA spook was asking for trouble,
he berated himself—except both of his charges were in such high spirits that at first he wondered if they had been given an excess of painkillers. Then the realization hit the FBI supervisor: April and Beck were simply glad to be alive. Not many hours before, neither had expected to be.

“She snores,” Beck bitched happily. “And not a dainty little whistle, either. The damn windows rattle.”

“Nobody forced you to sit there,” April countered. “You could have hung around the cafeteria, tried hitting on the nurses. Play on their sympathy, maybe.”

It had been like this in the room since Ellis entered almost a half hour before. He understood the two were performing—partly for him, but mostly for each other. It was the same kind of postgame bravado that surfaces in any contest where the underdog pulls out a close, come-from-behind victory. There was no mention of the dark man they had both survived, and Ellis understood that too.

The only break had been right after his arrival. April had introduced the two men, and Beck had immediately asked for the status of the search for his daughter. Ellis had looked perplexed—no request for status and location of the missing girl had been relayed by Andi Wheelwright—then covered with professional ease, citing a litany of treatment centers and CDC field facilities where the name of Katie Casey had not shown up on any lists.

“That’s
good
news, Dr. Casey,” Ellis had insisted, remembering from his training classes at Quantico not to put too much obvious sincerity into his tone. “It improves the chances of her being outside the contagion ring. Your daughter may even have made it out of the state before the quarantine was ordered.”

Beck had eyed Ellis without expression, though the FBI man imagined he could see the wheels spinning behind Casey’s impassive demeanor. In his peripheral vision, he noted the way April O’Connor captured it all, her eyes flickering between the other two.

Finally Beck spoke. “You’ll keep looking?”

“Every agency involved will keep looking,” Ellis had replied, and realized that he meant it. Mentally, he made a note to alert every FBI facility to press hard to locate this
man’s daughter; he made a second note to find out why Andi Wheelwright had not already done so.

At that moment, the telephone on the table between the beds rang, and the shrill sound shattered the somber mood that had descended.

Beck won the almost-adolescent race. He snatched the phone from under April’s reaching fingers, and grinned in giddy triumph.

“O’Connor’s Seafood Shack,” he said into the instrument. “You got the time, we’ve got the crabs.” He ignored April’s mock-enraged hiss and listened to the voice at the other end. “Hey, Larry.” He winked at April, careful to hold the phone out of her reach. “Nah—we’re fine. Be out of here in no time.” He listened for a moment. “Yeah, they’re both here.”

A pause, and then Beck broke into a broad grin. “Sure, I’ll tell her. Hold on.”

He cupped a hand over the receiver, then turned to April. “Dr. Krewell says some county cop named McGuire’s been calling in every half hour, trying to find you,” Beck said, and watched as the FBI agent’s ears turned pink. “Aha. April’s got a boyfriend,” he crooned in a mischievous singsong, then raised his hands in mock-terror as she groped for something to throw.

 

“Sure, I’ll tell her,” Beck said, sounding stronger than Krewell had expected. “Hold on.” As he waited on the line, Krewell half-heard the buzz of conversation in the background. Then there was a loud clatter, almost like a lamp falling to the floor, and the unmistakable sounds of laughter.

“You behave, dammit,” Beck’s voice came over the line, sounding stern, “or I’ll have them tie you to your bed.” Then he also laughed. It had been days since Krewell had last heard genuine humor in Beck’s voice. He regretted being the one to crush it.

“Yeah, Larry,” Beck said. “I’m back.”

“When things are bad, they just get worse. We have a
report from New York City. They caught a guy in a boat on the Hudson, figured he was trying to hightail it out of town. He tried to make a run for it, and a police sharpshooter in a helicopter had to put a round in him.”

“Dead?”

“Yeah,” Krewell said. “They searched the boat and found a bunch of pretty vicious pamphlets in a bag on board. Seems the guy was a member of one of those militia outfits—something called the Legionnaires of the Empire State. The guy’s name was Dickie Trippett.”

“I don’t suppose that’s a coincidence.”

“He’s Orin’s cousin.”

“Uh-huh. So?”

“They found something else too. Three pressurized cans, one of ’em open. Looks like the virus has made it to New York. And I’d bet that Orin is carrying the same package his cousin had. CDC’s field lab in New York is testing the contents now.”

“Why bother?” Beck asked, and there was bitterness in his voice.

In the silence that followed, he sensed that Krewell wanted to confide in him. He waited for what seemed like a long time.

“We may have a chance—maybe,” he said. “One of the voodoo priests out at Fort Detrick has come up with an idea. It sounds dicey, but it’s the only one we have left.”

 

After Ellis left, April and Beck returned to something closer to their normal personalities. The banter slowed, and finally ground to a halt as the two retreated into their own thoughts. April surprised herself: she found herself thinking about Beck’s antics, and didn’t know whether to be touched, amused or alarmed. There was nothing sexual about the way he treated her—nothing overtly so, that is. In her experience, few people—none of them male—could make the jump to
intergender friendship without at least a brief sexual speculation.

Still, it would be good to have a friend.

“You asleep?” Beck’s voice startled her.

“Just thinking,” she said, and was silent for a minute. “Leg hurt much?”

Beck grunted, his mind obviously elsewhere. “The guy, the Russian—obviously, he was waiting for Trippett.”

“Yeah. Probably. So?”

“So the guy wanted to know who I was, who sent me—why I was with an FBI agent. He had a lot of questions, but he didn’t ask the obvious one.”

“Which is?”

“He didn’t find Trippett at the trailer. So why didn’t he ask if I had an idea where to look next?”

Beck frowned, as if wrestling with a stubborn mathematical equation.

“He already knew,” he finally said aloud. “Or he thinks he knows where Trippett is now.” He rubbed his eyes in frustration. “I’m not getting it. My head’s still fogged from these pills they gave me.”

“I’m kind of blurred over, too,” April admitted. “You’re trying too hard, Beck. Relax, and it’ll come to you. Drift for a while.”

“Uh-huh,” Beck said, doubtfully. He did not want to relax; he did not want his mind to drift. He did not like the thoughts it drifted toward.

When Beck had been in the hands of the Russian
Mafiya,
what had sustained him longer than he had thought possible was a single belief: that within the vast apparatus of the organization for which he worked, wheels were turning. A rescue was—
had
to be—both inevitable and imminent.

What had finally broken him had been neither the psychoactive drug injections nor even the often-hideous pain his captors had inflicted. It had been the realization that there
could be, would be no rescue. The revelation that, in the end, nobody was out there to come for him.

Before his capture, he had believed that he had two families. One was his wife and child, the other the CIA.

By the second week in the hands of the
Mafiya,
he no longer believed he would ever see Deborah and Katie again. In his guilt and shame, he told himself that was even for the best: he had long been too careless with their love, he knew, drawing on it like a spendthrift draws on a shared account until it is bankrupt.

Finally, when the interrogation had been at its most violent, he had pushed Deborah and Katie outside the torture chamber, locking the door behind them and shattering the key. It was an act of simple self-preservation: their very existence made Beck excruciatingly vulnerable to both hope and despair.

As for the CIA, which had asked for his loyalty and trust, which had demanded so much from him—he had waited, with the inculcated faith of the professional. In the end, the Company had coldly given back . . . nothing. At that moment, under the renewed attentions of the
Mafiya
technician, he realized that he had lost both of his families.

Since then, he had been empty, unwilling or unable to regain either of them.

Yes, and that’s why you would have cracked like an eggshell this time—a lot faster, too,
Beck told himself acidly.
Admit it—you were ready to tell him anything to keep it from happening. And would have, if she hadn’t come stumbling out of the dark with that beautiful gun in her hands.

Beck glanced at April, and saw her staring fixedly at the ceiling above her head.

He wondered if, in her mind’s eye, she too saw a thin Moorish moon in a black sky. And whether she too heard, mingled with the slapping of water against rock, a merciless voice offering the urgent, yearned-for relief of a quick death.

He hoped not; he would not wish that on anyone else.

Then the bedside telephone rang again. This time, April answered. She spoke—at first, with a wary expression. Gradually, her features relaxed, then brightened. And after a few moments more—during which she laughed three times, by Beck’s count—April pushed the receiver in Beck’s direction.

“It’s for you, double-oh-seven,” she said. “Remember my ‘boyfriend,’ Deputy McGuire? Said if we still want to find Trippett, maybe he can help. Wants to know if we’re still interested.”

As Beck snatched at the receiver, she plucked it back out of reach.

“I said we were,” April told Beck. “Please note the pronoun. We’re going out of here together, even if I have to commandeer a wheelchair.”

Chapter 35

Denver, Colorado
July 23

Orin Trippett knew better than to call any of his contacts directly, even from a pay telephone. He, like all members of his militia, was well briefed on the dangers associated with any form of electronic communication.

“NSA’s been intercepting every phone call in the continental United States for more than fifteen damn years,” he had told his people, reciting the information he and the other platoon officers had culled from various newsletters and militia-oriented Web sites. “Same with fax—and now, e-mail. It all goes through computers looking for key words they’ve got flagged.”

He had cocked his head quizzically at the group.

“You want to have the ATF, the FBI, maybe even the goddamn Boy Scouts show up at your door?” he asked. “Well, then—all you gotta do is use the words ‘president’ and ‘assassinate’ in the same phone call. I guarantee y’all have company
real
quick.”

The line never failed to bring down the house. Everybody always seemed honestly amused, if in an outraged sort of way. Widespread illegal surveillance, electronic or not, was just more proof that “the G” was capable of any abuse.

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