Chapter Thirty-Seven
The Deck
Saturday, August 28, 3:22 P.M.
Time Remaining on the Extinction Clock: 92 hours; 38 minutes E.S.T.
The Twins walked arm in arm toward their plane. It was an old affectation-a European habit they’d picked up that also allowed them enough physical closeness to have a confidential conversation.
“Slow down,” Hecate said, tugging gently on her brother’s arm. “He’s watching. Probably Otto, too.”
“They’re always watching,” murmured Paris. “God! I can’t wait to get out of this place. He gives me the creeps.”
“Who? Dad or Otto?”
“Either,” Paris muttered. “Both. A couple of pit vipers, the two of them.”
“Mm. Useful pit vipers,” she said, and tapped her purse, in which she carried several CD-ROMs of data Cyrus had downloaded for them. Material that would either solve the rage problems with the Berserkers or at very least dial it down.
They reached the jet. Two of their own guards flanked the stairs and straightened as the Jakobys drew close.
“Anything to report, Marcus?” Hecate asked quietly.
“Nothing much, ma’am. The jet’s been refueled and no one has been aboard.”
Paris snorted. “Did anyone try?”
“Yes, sir,” said Marcus. “Mr. Otto asked to go aboard to leave you both some flowers. I told him that we were under orders to allow no visitors.”
“The flowers?”
“He took them with him.”
Paris shot Hecate a knowing look. “Probably a tracking device hidden in the bouquet.”
Marcus said, “I can promise you, ma’am, that no one and nothing got aboard this plane.”
“Good job, Marcus,” Paris said.
Hecate cast a quick, doubtful look at the plane; then she turned and ran lightly up the stairs. Paris threw a wicked glance back at the Deck and hoped his father or Otto was watching. He mouthed the words:
A few minutes later the jet was rolling fast down the runway.
OTTO WIRTHS STOOD looking out of the observation window in the Deck’s communications center. Now that the Twins had left, the techs had pushed buttons that sent a big wall sliding backward in sections to reveal the other two-thirds of the room, in which there were many more workstations for communication and scanning. The deck panels slid away to reveal the glass floor below which the computer cold room and the virus production tanks hummed with terrible potential. As he had told Mr. Cyrus, the Twins saw only what he wanted them to see.
“They’re airborne, sir,” said a tech at a nearby console.
Otto looked down at the screen. “Wait until they’re at twenty thousand feet,” he said softly. “And then turn on the jellyfish sensors.”
“Yes, sir.”
When the Twins’ jet had been refueled the fuel had included dozens of tiny sensors no bigger than a drop of water. They floated in the gasoline and transmitted a signal via several wiry tendrils. The sensors used collaborative nannite technology-singly their signal strength was faint, but a dozen of them could broadcast a strong, clear signal for miles.
“What’s the status on the pursuit craft?”
“Birds one, two, and four are at thirty-five thousand feet. Bird three is coasting along the deck at one thousand feet. All remote stations are on alert and the infiltration teams are on deck. Everything’s ready to go, sir.”
Otto smiled.
“Good,” he said as he watched the blip on the radar climb into the sky and begin a slow turn toward the southeast.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Sokoto, Nigeria
Six Days Ago
Dr. Hans Koertig banged through the swinging doors of the field surgical suite, tore off his mask and gloves, and threw them into the trash. For two minutes he stood in the center of the scrub room, his eyes bright with fury, his fists balled into knots. He didn’t turn or look when the doors opened and Frieda Jaeger came in and quietly began stripping off her stained scrubs.
“I’m sorry, Hans,” she said softly, but he said nothing. Cartilage bunched at the corners of his jaws. “You did your best, but these things happen-”
Her words died on her tongue as he suddenly wheeled on her. “Did my best? Is that what you think, Frieda? That I did my best?”
He took a step toward her and she backed up.
“What I did in there was
“Perhaps you’re just overworked-” But as soon as she said it Frieda Jaeger knew that it was the wrong thing to say. Koertig’s eyes blazed with dangerous fury and for a moment she thought he was going to hit her, but instead he wrenched himself away, stalked to the sink, and began scrubbing his hands as if he wanted to wash the reality of it from his skin.
“I don’t lose patients, Frieda,” he said over his shoulder. “You can call me an arrogant ass, but the facts are the facts. I don’t lose patients. Not here, not in Kenya, not back home in Munich. God damn I
“I know, Hans,” she said weakly, “but the children are dying. It’s not just you. We’ve lost thirty in six weeks.”
Koertig wheeled on her. He looked stricken. “Thirty? What are you saying?”
Noma was a terrible disease, a severe form of infectious gangrene of the mouth or cheek that affected malnourished children throughout Africa, parts of Asia, and sections of Central America. Nearly all of the patients were between two and six years old and the disease literally ate away at the flesh of their cheeks and mouths, leaving them horribly disfigured and vulnerable to secondary infections. Since the mid-nineties the AWD-Stiftung Kinderhilfe, Dutch Noma Foundation, and Facing Africa has sent medical teams to Nigeria and other afflicted places. The teams, like this one in Sokoto, had done miraculous work in combating the disease and improving living conditions for the people. Plastic surgeons from Interplast had volunteered to do hundreds of reconstructive surgeries for children so they could return to normal lives. So they could
The disease was no longer universally fatal unless left untreated… but treatments existed, preventive medicines were being distributed, and food supplies were coming in from humanitarian organizations around the world.
And now this. Children dying from a disease that should no longer be able to kill them.
“How are so many dying?” he demanded.