“Send out a search team.”

“Yes, sir. Right away.”

35

I.D. MINUS 5 HOURS 28 MINUTES

BLUEBIRD TIME 5:32 AM

Ash checked the map, then nodded ahead. “We should be able to see the outpost from that ridge.”

Chloe gave him a nod, but said nothing, conserving her strength.

Around them, the wind was gusting, pushing at their backs as if urging them onward.

When they finally neared the top of the ridge, they dropped to their stomachs and inched the rest of the way up. The outpost was right where he’d expected it, about a quarter-mile away. It was a large structure, clad in snow, with light streaming out through several windows. There was no one visible through them, but it was early so that wasn’t surprising.

“They’re not going to be expecting anyone at this time of morning,” Chloe said. “Might be a good time to try and get in close.”

Ash pulled out their binoculars, flipped them to night vision, and surveyed the landscape ahead. Between the ridge and the outpost, there was no place to hide except against the building itself. As he searched for some way they might be able to sneak in, he couldn’t help but wonder how many people they’d have to get through to stop the Project’s plan before it could begin.

Stop it, he told himself. One task at a time. Just get to the building, and then you can figure out what’s next.

“Take a look,” he said.

As he handed the binoculars to Chloe, something crunched on the ice behind them.

He whirled around just in time to see the dark shape of a man rushing at him. He tried to roll out of the way, but the person piled into his shoulder, knocking him flat on his stomach.

He shoved back against the man’s chest, hoping to push him off so he could get away, but the guy was not only big, he was strong. The attacker pulled Ash to his feet, lifted him in the air, and slammed him back into the hard ice. For several seconds, Ash lay there, unable to move.

As soon as he could, he turned his head to look for Chloe, hoping she’d gotten away. But she was pinned to the ground, by a clone of the guy who’d jumped Ash.

Footsteps again, crunching toward him. Then a new figure stood above him. A hand went up to the face and removed the protective mask. A flashlight flicked on, and suddenly he could see who it was.

“Ash. What a nice surprise,” Olivia Silva said.

The last and only time Ash had seen Olivia in person was through a transparent wall that looked into the cell she lived in beneath the Bluff. Now their positions were reversed and he was the captive.

“I understand my information helped, and you were able to save your kids,” she said.

He and Chloe were on their feet now, three armed men standing behind them to make sure they didn’t try to run.

“It did. Thank you,” he said, meaning it.

“And my message? Were you able to deliver it?”

Her only request had been that he give a message to the man who’d taken Ash’s children, the same man who had left Olivia to be captured by Matt’s people.

“I did.”

“Good. I knew I could count on you.”

No one said anything for a moment. Then Ash asked, “So are you going to shoot us here? Or take us inside so your friends can watch?”

“Friends?” she asked, as if she didn’t understand. Then her eyes widened and she smiled. “Oh, I see. Who do you think freed me from my prison?”

“We know who freed you,” Chloe said. “Assholes from Project Eden.”

“I agree with your assessment of them,” Olivia said, “but they weren’t the ones who freed me. It was my friends. Others who had become…disenchanted by the Project.”

Ash looked at her warily. “Then what are you doing here?”

Her gaze turned momentarily in the direction of the outpost hidden behind the ridge. “I have no love for anyone in that building,” she whispered. She looked back at Ash and said in a stronger voice, “I have a feeling you and I have a similar goal.”

“I doubt it.”

“Oh, come, now. Don’t you want to get inside?”

Ash said nothing.

“I thought as much.” She stood up again. “The only way you’ll get in there is with my help.”

“And why would you help us?”

She said nothing for several seconds, then, “Because the last thing I want is for the people who left me to die to be in control of the world they’re trying to create. I’m here to kill them. I assume that’s why you’re here, too.”

There was an edge to her words, a hatred that made him know she was telling the truth. “We’re here to stop them,” he said.

She grinned, her eyes twinkling. “Given the circumstances, isn’t that pretty much the same thing?”

Ash remained silent.

“So are you coming with us?” she asked.

He glanced at Chloe. He could see she was reluctant, but had also come to the same conclusion he had.

“We’ll come with you.”

36

I.D. MINUS 2 HOURS 45 MINUTES

BLUEBIRD TIME 8:15 AM

The DOP was furious. “I should have been told about this immediately!”

“Yes, sir,” Ross said. “I’m sorry. I thought you might want a bit more rest before the day began.”

Not just any day, the day. Implementation Day. There, in the bowels of Bluebird, it was eight fifteen a.m. on December 22nd, but in a little less than three hours, at eleven a.m. Central Standard Time, it would be six in the morning in New Zealand on the 23rd-given the island country’s proximity to the International Dateline, it was designated as the initial release location of KV-27a. At that moment, the DOP would enter the Go code into the system and messages would be sent across the globe-activating timers on the IDMs and other automated delivery devices so that they would begin releasing their contents at the busiest time of the day, and notifying those teams who were relying on manpower to spread the virus, such as the spraying operations in Africa and Southern and Southeast Asia, and plane operations scattered all across the world.

Ross had been right to let him sleep. It was a momentous day, one at which the entire directorate of Project Eden would be present to witness from the start. What he didn’t like, however, was beginning this day of all days with news like this.

The suit he was going to wear had been laid out the night before. He grabbed his shirt, yanked it on, and started buttoning it up. “How? How could this happen?”

“We’re…not sure yet.”

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