The intent of the designers had been to provide relief from the sterile white corridors of the rest of the facility. However, given the moratorium on paper products at Mount Dragon, the library contained mostly electronic resources, and in any case few members of the overworked Mount Dragon staff had time to enjoy its solitude. Carson himself had only been in the library twice before: once when poking around the facility during his initial explorations, and again just a few hours before, immediately after leaving Singer and Nye to themselves.
As he closed the heavy door behind him, he was glad to see that de Vaca was the library’s only occupant. She was sitting in a white Adirondack chair, dozing despite herself, long black hair fallen carelessly across her face. She looked up at his approach.
“Long day,” she said. “And long night.” She looked at him speculatively. “They’re going to wonder why we left the Fever Tank early,” she added in a lower tone.
“
“Hell, and I thought
Carson gave a short shake of the head. “We can’t take that chance.”
De Vaca stiffened slightly. “Don’t pull a Vanderwagon on me, Carson. Now, what’s this about beta testers for PurBlood?”
“I’ll show you.” He motioned her over to a data terminal in a far corner of the library. Pulling up two chairs, he put the terminal’s keyboard on his lap, entering his employee ID at the waiting prompt.
“What research have you done on PurBlood since you got here?” he asked, turning to her.
De Vaca shrugged. “Not much. The later lab reports of Burt’s. Why?”
Carson nodded. “Exactly. The same kind of materials I examined: sample runs, lab notes Burt made while he was transferring his attention to X-FLU. The only reason we were interested in PurBlood at all was because Burt had worked on it prior to getting involved with our own project, X-FLU.”
He punched keys. “I did see Singer this morning. But I didn’t really speak with him. I came here instead. I remembered what you’d said about PurBlood, and I wanted to learn a little more about its development. Look what I found.”
He gestured at the screen:
mol_desc_one
vcf
10,240,342
11/1/95
mol_desc_two
vcf
12,320,302
11/1/95
bipol_symmetr
vcf
41,234,913
12/14/95
hemocyl_grp_r
vcf
7,713,653
01/3/96
diffrac_series_a
vcf
21,442,521
02/5/96
diffrac_series_b
vcf
6,100,824
02/6/96
pr
vid
940,213,727
02/27/96
transfec_locus_h
vcf
18,921,663
03/10/96
“These are all the video files in the PurBlood research archives,” he went on in a low tone. “Most of them are the usual: animations of molecules and the like. But look at the second from the last on the list, the one called
“What is it?” de Vaca asked.
“It’s a rough-cut video, unreleased, probably created for public-relations purposes.” With a few more keystrokes, he called up a multimedia software object to play back the video file. An image appeared in a window on the terminal screen, grainy but perfectly distinct.
“You’ll have to watch closely,” he said. “There’s no associated audio file.”
“Scopes,” Carson murmured.
“Looks like a camp meeting,” said de Vaca. “Who’s that big-nosed guy standing next to Singer?”
“Burt,” Carson replied. “It’s Franklin Burt.”
“Jesus Christ,” de Vaca said. “He’s getting PurBlood, isn’t he?”