“Yes. Now where’re Klienerman and McMurtrie? And I also—’
“Dr. Klienerman left last night,” Thornton said, giving me a
“Last night?”
“By chartered plane. General Halliday insisted.”
“General Halliday?” The President’s father.
“Yes. They should be in Aspen by now.”
“I should have been notified,” I said sternly.
His eyebrows rose in alarm. “We didn’t know. They didn’t inform me—”
I shook my head. “There’s no excuse for this kind of screw-up. I know it isn’t your fault personally, but…”
He made a gesture that was almost like hand-wringing.
“Well,” I said, “as long as I’m here, I want to meet Dr. Pena. And I’ll need to see the bodies, of course. The
“Oh, yes! They’ve been subjected to extensive post-mortem examinations, you realize… but they’re here.”
“Let’s get with it, then.”
I had him on the run. He ushered me through the door and into the main building of the laboratory. We walked through miles of corridors, down stairs, through plastic-roofed ramps that connected different buildings. I got completely lost; I couldn’t have found the lobby again without a troop of Boy Scouts to lead me.
We passed a strange conglomeration of sights. At first we were in an office area, obviously administrative. Rugs on the floors, neat little names and titles on the doors. Secretaries’ desks placed in alcoves along the corridors. Then we stepped through one of those rampways into a different building. Here I saw workshops and what looked like chemistry laboratories: lots of glassware and bubblings and people in white smocks. Then a computer complex: more white-smocked people, but younger, mostly, and surrounded by head-high consoles with winking lights and display screens flashing green-glowing numbers and symbols.
Then we passed more offices, but here there were no doors, no names, no titles. The men and women inside these cubbyholes looked like researchers to me. They were scribbling equations on chalkboards or punching computer keyboards or talking animatedly with each other in words that were English but not the English language.
As we were going down a clanging flight of metal stairs, deeper into the basement levels underneath the surface building, it finally hit home in my brain that North Lake Research Laboratories was not a medical institution. It had nothing to do with medicine at all, from the looks of it.
“What’s the major area of research here?” I asked Thornton.
“Em… biomedical,” he said.
“Well… mostly biochemistry. Very advanced, of course.” He produced a chuckle that was supposed to put me off my guard. “I’ll tell you something. I’ve got a doctorate in molecular biochemistry, and I don’t understand half of what these bright young people are doing nowadays.”
‘That far out, eh?”
I was about to ask him who paid for all these bright young people and their far-out research. But we had come to the bottom of the stairwell. There was nothing there except a blank cul-de-sac, about four paces long, with cement walls and an unmarked steel door at its end.
Thornton, looking suddenly grim, fingered the buttons of the combination lock set into the wall next to the door. It swung open and we stepped through.
This area looked medical. A large room, with pastel green walls. No windows, of course, this far underground. Glareless, pitiless overhead lights. Cold. Like a morgue, only colder. Two rollable tables in the center of the room, each bearing a body totally covered with a green sheet. Nineteen dozen different kinds of gadgets arrayed around the bodies: oscilloscopes, trays of surgical instruments, heart-lung pumps, lots of other things I didn’t recognize right off.
I found myself swallowing hard. Despite the cold of the room, the stench of death was here. I went to the tables. Thornton didn’t try to stop me, but I could hear his footsteps on the cold cement floor, right behind me. I stopped at the first table. So did he. I lifted a corner of the sheet.
James J. Halliday stared blankly at me. Christ, it looked
I let the sheet drop from my fingers and went to the other table. This time Thornton stayed where he was. I lifted the second sheet. The same face stared at me. The same sandy hair, the same blue eyes, the same jaw, the lips that could grin so boyishly, the broad forehead, the thin slightly beaked nose.
“I wouldn’t pull the sheet any further back,” Thornton’s voice came from behind me, “unless you’ve had some surgical experience. It… isn’t pretty.”
I placed the sheet gently back on the cold face. Dammit, there were tears in my eyes. It took me a minute before I could turn back and face Thornton again.
“What were the results of the autopsies?” I asked. “What killed them?”
Thornton looked uncomfortable. “I believe Dr. Pena should discuss that with you.”
“All right,” I said. “Where is he?”
“He’s coming down to meet you. He should have been here by now.” Thornton glanced at his wrist watch.
The cold was seeping into me. “Look, couldn’t we—”
“Dr. Pena is a very frail man,” Thornton told me, and for the first time since I’d met him in the lobby, I got the feeling he was saying something that he really meant. “He’s nearing ninety years of age. He drives himself much too hard. I hope you won’t… say anything that will upset him.”
I stared at Thornton. The life of the President of the United States was being threatened. Hell—one of those bodies could just as easily
There wasn’t time for me to answer him, though. Through a second door, one set farther back in the room than the one we had used, Dr. Pena came riding in on an electrically powered wheelchair.
He looked older than any human being I had ever seen; even Robert Wyatt would have looked coltish beside him. His face was nothing more than a death mask with incredibly lined skin stretched over the fragile bones. His head was hairless, eyes half-closed. He reminded me of the mummified remains of pharaohs; not a drop of juice left in him. He was wrapped in a heavy robe that bulged and bulked oddly. And then I saw all the cardiac and renal equipment loaded on the back rack of the wheelchair, and realized that below the neck he was probably more machine than flesh. His hands were covered with barely discernible thin plastic surgeon’s gloves. It gave his long, bony fingers and the liver-spotted, tendon-ridged backs of his hands a queer filmy sheen.
His voice surprised me. It was strong, confident, alert; not at all the thin, quavering piping I had expected.
“You’re the President’s press secretary, are you?”
“And you’re Dr. Pena,” I said.
He fingered the control buttons set into the wheelchair’s armrest and rolled up to me fast enough to make me involuntarily step back a pace.
“I’m a busy man, Mr. Albano. As you might suspect from looking at me, time is a very precious commodity to me. Why are you taking up my time?”
I almost grinned at him. Frail old man, my ass. “I’m part of the team investigating…” I was momentarily at a loss for how to phrase it. I gestured toward the shrouded bodies.
He glowered at me. “I’ve already told Klienerman and that Secret Service man everything I’ve found out. Ask them about it.”
“I will. But while we’re both here, I’d like to get your opinions firsthand.”
“Waste of time,” he snapped.
“Why?”