even the dust motes in the slanting sunlight from the windows seemed to move. Everything froze.
Finally Jeffrey found his voice. “What… did you say?”
I’d never seen such an expression on the President’s face before. It must have been the way Lincoln looked when he learned of the carnage at Gettysburg.
“It’s one of us,” John said, his voice deceptively level. “No one else could be doing it. One of us is systematically killing the others. One of us wants to be the sole occupant of that office down in the West Wing.”
They looked back and forth among themselves. No one spoke. Wyatt seemed to be in a state of shock, ashen-faced, immobile, staring at the floor. I could see the wheels working inside those four identical heads. They recognized the truth of it. Maybe each of them had suspected it from the first, but pushed it away. Now it was out in the open. They could no longer ignore it.
“One of us wants to be the only President of the United States,” John repeated.
“I can’t…” Joshua started, then lapsed back into silence.
“It does make some sense,” Jackson admitted.
Jeffrey said, “But… killing his own brothers. It’s horrible… he’d have to be insane.”
John nodded. “I suppose so. But power can corrupt, we all know that. There’ve been enough murderous families in history to drive the point home. And we’ve done a few kinky acts here and there… we’re not immune to the disease.”
“It can’t be!” Joshua said firmly. “I just won’t believe it. Not unless you can show me how the murders were done. Hell, we don’t even know that they
“Wrong, Josh,” said John softly. “I know.”
Wyatt looked up at him. “Tell me. Tell me how it was done and make it convincing, because I don’t think I could ever believe that one of you boys is killing the others.”
“It’s very simp1e,” John said. “I merely asked myself how I’d go about killing the rest of us. Once I became convinced that they were murders, I tried to work out in my head what
“And?”
“The key was Jesse.”
“He died nearly forty years ago.”
“Yes, but how did he die?’
Wyatt answered, “From a breakdown of his body’s immunological defenses. He lost his immunities to disease germs. The only way he could have been saved would have been to put him in a germ-free chamber, but we didn’t recognize that untilit was too late.”
John nodded agreement. “And Joe, Jerry, and Jason all died the same way. All body immunities suddenly gone. Common cold germs became fatal to them.”
No one moved. No one answered. We all focused on John so intently that an ICBM attack could have hit Washington and we’d never have known it.
“I checked with North Lake a week ago,” John said. “Put in a scrambled call to their contracts department. They gave me a list of the research contracts they’re now working on for the Defense Department. One of them is for the development of a mutated virus that breaks down the human body’s immunological systems, like AIDS, only faster. It’s top-secret work. Access to information about it is limited to only a handful of people in the Pentagon.” He almost smiled, sadly. “I had to remind the man I spoke with that I’m the Commander-in-Chief.”
“A virus that breaks down the body’s immune systems?”
“Non-traceable,” John said. “Apparently the Defense Intelligence Agency wants to develop the virus as a standby for perfect assassinations. No visible cause of death. The victim just stops living. Any germs in his body can multiply out of control and kill him in less than a day.”
“Jesus Christ.”
“And you’ve known about this for a week?” I asked.
John gave a helpless shrug. “I’ve worried over it for a week. I guess I didn’t want to face reality. You forced me to bring it out into the light of day, Meric.”
“This virus is being developed for the Defense Department?” Joshua asked.
“I didn’t know anything about it,” Jeffrey snapped.
“Nobody’s saying you did,” John answered.
“This virus,” Wyatt asked, “it’s been tested? It works?”
“It’s been used on primate apes and other lab animals. Totally successful. One hundred percent fatal. The North Lake people haven’t tried it on human beings, for obvious reasons…”
“But you’re saying,” Wyatt’s voice trembled badly “that one of you boys—one of you in this room—got his hands on samples of this virus and used it…used it to…” His voice cracked altogether. He buried his face in his hands.
John stepped over to him and put a hand on his shoulder. “We have to face the facts, Robert. It’s what I would do, if I wanted to be the only resident of this house. And we all think pretty much alike, don’t we?”
“That’s for sure,” Jackson said.
“So—what do we do?” Joshua asked, his voice pitched higher than the others.
Jeffrey gave a sharp, bitter laugh that was almost a cough. “It’s simple. We wait until there’s only one of us left, and he’s the guilty one.”
“Or,” John countered, “we let the guilty one know that we’re aware of what he’s doing, and how he’s doing it, and we ask him to come forward and admit it.”
They looked uneasily at one another.
“I think we all know that whoever’s doing it is mentally unbalanced,” John said. “We won’t punish him. We want to take care of him, cure him. Whichever one of us it is, he’s our brother. We want to help him, not punish him.”
No one moved, except to search one another’s eyes for an admission of guilt.
Finally Joshua said, “We’d better bring the General out here. Maybe he can get to the bottom of this.”
Wyatt shook his head. “No… he’s an old man. He’s not as tough as he pretends to be. If he ever found out about this…”
Jackson said, “If he ever finds out that we went through this
Jeffrey grinned ruefully. “Or he might kill the rest of us.”
John said to Wyatt, “Robert, you’d better go out to Aspen and tell him about this. In person. No phone calls. See what he wants to do.”
“He’ll come boiling back here at Mach Five,” Wyatt said.
“All right. If that’s what he wants to do, we won’t stand in his way.” He turned to his brothers. “Right?”
“No way we could stop him,” Jackson admitted.
“Someone should check out North Lake Labs,” Joshua said. “It might be possible to find out who took the virus samples.”
“Ridiculous!” Jeffrey snapped. “Even if one of us was foolish enough to acquire the virus cultures in person —which I doubt—he wouldn’t have given his correct name. None of the lab people can tell us apart. Not even Pena could.”
“I suppose so,” Joshua admitted. “We used to play all sorts of tricks on him,” he said to me wistfully.
But John said, “We should check out the lab, though. I’ll get Pournelle at the FBI to take charge of that end of things personally.”
“You’re not going to tell him about us?” Jackson asked sharply.
“Of course not,” John said. “But I want to find out who made off with that virus sample.”
“If anybody did.”
“Somebody must have. And Pournelle’s people can find out who and when. Then we find the man and talk to him ourselves.”
“If it was a man,” Jackson said, with a slight smirk. “You’re lapsing into male chauvinism, Johnny. Don’t do that in front of the voters.”