“What thoughts? He’s crying!”
“You need to go in there,” Andy Morgan said. The same tone, she thought, that he might have used if he had told her it was time for her to do her wingwalk, or perhaps go over Niagara Falls in a barrel.
Behind him was a steel door, armored and locked with great, gleaming bolts. Why in the world would anybody be that locked up? What did they have in there, some kind of deranged superman? She tried to conceal her total and complete mystification, not to say her fear, and to concentrate on what she needed to know, here, on a practical basis. “Now, is this person going to be violent?”
“Baby, he is
“Before I go in there, I think you’d better tell me exactly what happened to him.”
He lowered his head. “Nobody told you?”
“They did not.”
“Okay. Your dad got a scratch.”
“A
“That caused an allergic reaction so intense that he bled out.”
She did not need to think very long about that. She sat down in one of the two chairs that stood before the control panel. “I’m not doing this.”
He was a gentle-looking guy, more than a little overweight, with sad, sad eyes. “They sent you all the way down here without telling you a damn thing, didn’t they?”
“That would be correct.”
“Okay, I’m going to level with you. Have you ever heard of aliens?”
“Yeah. No green card.”
“The other kind.”
“Oh, that stuff. I have no interest in that stuff.”
“Perhaps you had better see your dad’s office.”
“God, I’d love that.”
Across the small room was a door. The nameplate holder was empty. He unlocked the door and she saw a small, windowless space that had a steel desk, a couple of chairs, and a cot. There was a bookcase, also, and it was filled with books on electromagnetism and, of all things, UFOs. She read the titles,
“You can pick what you’d like to keep. We’ll ditch the others.” He lifted a picture that was lying facedown on the desk. “I knew you’d want this.”
It filled her heart and her eyes, the picture of the two of them taken when she was twelve. They were at Cape May, New Jersey, she was wearing her new bathing suit, and her Boston terrier, Prissy, was still alive. For a moment she smelled the salt in the air, remembered a radio playing down the beach, and heard the breeze fluttering in their cabana.
He took the picture and set it on the desk. “This is your office, now.”
“There’s an alien down here.”
“And your father was his empath, and you will be his empath.”
“Meaning?”
“You are going to find that you can see pictures he makes in his mind, and describe what you see to us.”
Her father had kept quite a secret. “I should have been trained.”
“Your dad wanted to wait until you’d had a little more Air Force. You know, you sign up and you wear a uniform, but really becoming part of this crazy organization takes time. Your dad wanted you to have that time.”
“I’m an Air Force brat down to my toes.”
“He knew that. He respected that. But duty is something different. I mean, our kind of duty. Keeping a secret so big that it is a kind of agony. Above all, knowing every time you go in that room over there, that you might die. Every time. But doing it like your dad did, on behalf of the Air Force, the country, and future of man.” He took the picture from her, looked at it. “We need you to get in there and calm Adam down. If we can’t get him to pull himself together, he’s going to literally be busted apart by knocking into those walls in there. Considering that he’s been doing this since your dad passed, we’re desperate, Lieutenant.”
Either she took up her dad’s sword or she let it lie, and let the meaning of his life lie with him in his grave.
There was no real choice here. Never had been. She took a deep breath. “Okay, what do I do?”
He drew her through a steel door into a tiny dressing area. She stood naked in a shower with nozzles on the ceiling and walls, turning slowly as instructed with her hands raised over her head while green, chemical-stinking liquid sluiced over her.
Still wet, she donned an orange isolation suit and what felt like asphalt gloves, they were so thick. “He’s electromagnetically active,” Andy explained. “If you touch him, he’ll extend into your nervous system and take over your body. You don’t want that.”
“No.”
“Cover your face with Vaseline. And here’s an epinephrine injector. If you get the least feeling of even so much as a tickle in your throat, press it against your leg and get out of there.”
As she dug into the Vaseline container, she reflected that her father’s hand was probably the last one to do this. She could almost feel him beside her right now, telling her not to be scared, to remember her duty, that he was with her every step of the way.
Then something changed. The room, the guy—everything around her disappeared. She was suddenly and vividly in another room. It had stainless-steel walls, a black floor, and a fluorescent ceiling. There was a man on a table, naked, surrounded by people in full protective gear, sterile suits, faceplates down, the works. The man was purple, his chest was heaving, and blood was oozing out of his eyes, out of his nose, down his cheeks like tears.
The hallucination, or whatever it was, was so vivid that she might as well have actually been standing in the place. She could even hear the air-conditioning hissing, and the muffled voices of the doctors behind the masks, who were trying to save the man on the table.
He gasped, gasped again as they set up an IV. A nurse intoned, “BP 280 over 200, heart rate 160, basal BP rising, glucose 320 rising, we have another infarction—”
There was a high-pitched whine and blood began spraying out of his skin, spraying their face masks and their white sterile suits, beading and running down to the floor as he bled from every pore, a haze of blood pink and fine, like it was being sprayed from a thousand tiny high-pressure nozzles affixed to his body.
Then his head turned and she saw his face, and an ice cold spike stabbed her straight in the heart.
In that instant, the vision of her dad’s death ended.
She realized that she was still in the basement room she had entered in the first place, and Andy was supporting her under her arms.
“Sorry,” she managed to mutter, regaining her footing and stepping away from him, “I—uh—I think it’s the… depth.”
“If you say so.” He put an arm around her.
“Back off!”
“Hey, okay! Okay. I’m just trying to help, here.”
She blew out breath, then shook her head. That had been vivid. That had been real vivid.
Andy watched her. “You sure you’re okay?”
“I’m not okay. No.”
“Uh, was that a seizure, because—”
“It’s my business, okay!”
“Okay! Sorry.” He paused, then, and when she said nothing more, continued. “I’m going to open up the cage itself. When you enter, you’ll see a chair and a table. Sit in the chair.”
“That’s it? That’s all I get to know?”
“It’s all any of us know. Frankly, what your dad did, and what we know you can do, is not understood. You