Authors: Greg Bear
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Thriller, #Childrens
“The kids are so gentle,” DeWitt said. “They bond so tight, like family, all of them. Tell that to the world out there.”
“They don’t want to listen,” Dicken said under his breath.
“They’re scared,” Augustine said.
“Of me?” Toby asked.
The cart’s small walkie-talkie squawked. Middleton pulled away to answer. Her lips drew together as she listened. Then she turned to Augustine. “Security saw the director’s car go out the south entrance ten minutes ago. He was alone. They think he’s skipped.”
Augustine closed his eyes and shook his head. “Someone alerted him. The governor has probably ordered complete quarantine. We’re on our own, for the time being.”
“Then we have to move fast,” Dicken said. “I need specimens from the remaining staff, and from as many of the children as is practical. I need to learn where this virus came from. Maybe we can get word out and stop this insanity. Have the children in special treatment had contact with the children outside?”
“None that I’ve heard of,” Middleton said. “But I am not responsible for that building. That was Aram Jurie’s domain. He and Pickman were part of Trask’s inner circle.”
“Pickman and Jurie said the specials should be kept separate,” DeWitt added. “Something about mental disease being additive in SHEVA children. I think they were interested in the effects of madness and stress.”
Viral triggers,
Dicken thought. He was torn between disgust and elation. He might find all the clues he needed, after all. “Who’s there now?”
“There are six nurses left, I think.” Middleton looked away, tears brimming.
“I’ll need specimens from those nurses in particular. Nose swabs, fingernail scrapings, sputum, and blood. I think we should do that now.”
“Christopher is the point man,” Augustine said. “Do whatever he asks.”
“I can take you,” DeWitt said. She squeezed Middleton’s arm supportively. “Yolanda wants to get back to the kids. They need her. I’m baggage for now.”
“Let’s go,” Dicken said. He walked over to Toby. “Thank you, Toby. You’ve been very helpful.”
36
PENNSYLVANIA
G
eorge Mackenzie shook Mitch’s shoulder. Mitch lurched up in the bed. The pastel walls of the tidy bedroom swam around him; he did not feel at all rested. He had fallen asleep without pulling back the covers on the bed, still dressed in his rumpled Mr. Smith suit.
“Where’s Kaye? How long have I been asleep?”
“She’s with your daughter,” George said. He looked miserable. “You’ve been out about an hour. Sorry to wake you. Come take a look at the TV.”
Mitch walked into the next room first. Kaye sat on the side of the bed, hands folded between her knees, head bowed. She looked up as Mitch checked Stella, now under the covers. He felt Stella’s forehead. “Fever’s down.”
“Broke about an hour ago. I think. Iris brought some tea and we just sat with her.”
Mitch stared at his daughter’s sleeping face, so pale on the sky blue pillow, topped by a damp, matted thatch of hair. Her breath came in ragged puffs. “What’s with that?”
“She’s been breathing that way since the fever broke. She’s not badly congested. I don’t know what it means. The doctor said he’d be back . . .” She checked the clock on the nightstand. “By now.”
“He hasn’t come,” George said. “I don’t think he’s going to.”
“George wants me to watch the news,” Mitch said.
Kaye nodded and waved her hand; she would stay.
George led Mitch down the hall to the den and the flat wall-mounted screen. Huge faces sat behind a fancy rosewood desk, talking . . . Mitch tried to focus.
“I am as liberal as the next fellow, but this scares me,” said a middle-aged male sporting a crew cut. Mitch did not watch much television and did not know who this was.
“Brent Tucker, commentator for Fox Broadband,” George explained. “He’s interviewing a school doctor from Indiana. That’s where our son, Kelly, is.”
“Haven’t we been expecting this?” Tucker was asking. “Isn’t this why we’ve agreed to put the children in these special schools?”
“The footage you’ve just shown, of parents dropping off their children, finally coming forward and cooperating, is very encouraging—” the doctor said.
Tucker interrupted with a stern expression. “You left your post this morning. Were you afraid?”
“I’ve been helping explain the situation to the president’s staff. I’m going back this afternoon to resume my duties.”
“The scientists we’ve interviewed on this show insist that the children could pose a severe risk to the population at large if allowed to roam free. And there are still tens of thousands of them out there, even now. Isn’t it—”
“I cannot agree with that characterization,” the doctor said.
“Yes, well, you left your school, and that says it all, don’t you think?”
The doctor opened and closed his mouth. Tucker moved in, eyes wide, sensing a kill. “The public can’t be fooled. They know what this is about. Let’s look at our forum instant messages and what the public is telling us right now.”
The figures came up on the screen.
“Ten to one, they want you to arrest parents who don’t cooperate, get all the children where we can watch them, and do it now. Ten to one.”
“I do not think that is even practicable. We don’t have the facilities.”
“We built the schools and support your work with taxpayer dollars. You are a public servant, Dr. Levine. These children are the result of a hideous disease. What if it spreads to all of us, and there are no more normal children born, ever?”
“Do you advocate we should exterminate them, for the public good?” Levine asked.
Mitch watched with grim fascination, jaw clamped, as if witnessing a car crash.
“
Nobody
wants that,” Tucker said with an expression of affronted reason. “But there is an imminent health risk. It’s a matter of survival.”
The doctor put his hands on the rosewood counter. “No illness has spread to staff in any of the schools I’m aware of.”
“Then why aren’t you in the school now, Dr. Levine?”
“They are
children
, Mr. Tucker. I will be going back to them.”
Mitch clenched his fists until his fingernails dug into his palms.
Tucker smiled, showing perfect white teeth, and turned to the camera, which zoomed to a close shot. “I believe in the people and what they have to say. That is the strength of this nation, and it is also the Fox Media philosophy, fair and balanced, and I am not ashamed to agree with it. I believe there is an instinct for preservation at work among the people, and that is
news
. That is
survival
. You’ll catch more details here, Fox Multicast, and touch your screen to check our expanded coverage on the Web—”
George turned off the TV. His voice was thin and choked. “Neighbor must have seen you arrive. He told me he’s going to turn us in for harboring a virus child. A sick child.” He held up and jangled three keys on a ring. “Iris and I have a cabin. It’s about two hours from here, up in the mountains. On a small lake. Real nice, away from everybody. There’s food for at least a week. You can mail back the keys. Your girl is doing better. I’m sure of it. The crisis is past.”
Mitch tried to figure out what their options were—and how adamant Mackenzie was. “She’s not breathing right,” he said.
“I’ve been out of work for five months,” George said. “We’re running out of money. Iris is on the edge of a breakdown. We can’t be a safe house anymore. This neighborhood is like Sun City for the wealthy. They’re old and scared and mean.” George looked up. “If the feds come here and find you, they’ll put your daughter someplace where the care is worse than you can imagine. That’s where our child is, Mitch.”
Kaye stood behind Mitch and touched his elbow, startling him. “Take the keys,” she said.
George suddenly fell back into a chair and shook his head. “Stay here until dawn,” he said. “The neighbors are asleep. I hope to God everybody is asleep. Get some rest. Then, I’m sorry, you have to leave.”
37
OHIO
T
he Special Treatment center occupied a long, flat, single-story building with reinforced concrete walls. Dicken and DeWitt walked around the empty school trailers and crossed the asphalt square in the brilliant glow of a dozen intense white security lights.
The door to the center hung open. A tangle of sheets and rubber mats had been tossed out like a filthy, lolling tongue. Two iron-barred and wire-reinforced windows gleamed like flat, blank eyes on either side. The building looked dead.
Inside, the air was cooler but not by much, and stank. Beneath the cacophony of stench wavered a weak chord of Pine-Sol. Dicken did not pause, though DeWitt held back and coughed under her mask. He had smelled worse; the professional refrain of a virus hunter.
Beyond the security office and the open double gates of the checkpoint, the doors to all the cells stretched down a long corridor. About half, in no particular order, had been opened. No nurses or guards were in sight.
The body of a boy of eight or nine lay on a mattress in the corridor. Dicken knew the boy was dead from several yards away. He put down his bag of specimen kits, knelt with difficulty beside the soiled mattress, examined the boy with what he hoped was clear-eyed respect, then pushed on the floor and one knee and got up again. He shook his head vigorously at DeWitt’s offer of assistance.
“Don’t touch anything,” he warned. “Yolanda said there were nurses.”
“They probably moved the children into the exercise area. The center has its own yard, at the south end.”
They checked each room, peering through the observation slit or pushing open the heavy steel doors. Some of the rooms held bodies. Most were empty. A black line drawn on the floor marked the division between rooms equipped for children who need restraints or protection: the padded rooms. All of the doors to these rooms had been opened.
Two rooms contained bodies lying on cots in restraints, one male, one female, both with abnormally large heads and hands.
“It’s a condition unique to SHEVA children,” DeWitt said. “I’ve only seen three like this.”
“Congenital?”
“Nobody knows.”
Dicken counted twenty dead by the time they reached the door at the end. This door was a rolling wall of steel bars covered with thick sheets of acrylic.
“I think this is where Jurie and Pickman ordered the violent children kept,” DeWitt said.
Someone had jammed a broken cinder block into the track to prevent the door from automatically closing, and a red light and LED display flashed a security warning. Behind thickly shaded glass, the guard booth was empty, and the alarm had been hammered into silence.
“We don’t have to go through here,” DeWitt said. “The yard is that way.” She pointed down a short hall to the right.
“I need to see more,” Dicken said. “Where are the nurses?”
“With the living children, I presume. I hope.”
They squeezed through the narrow opening. All the doors beyond were locked by a double bar system, one lateral, one reaching from the ceiling to the floor and slipping into steel-clad holes. Each room held a lone, unmoving child. One stared in frozen surprise at the ceiling. Some appeared to be asleep. It did not look as if they had received any attention. There were at least eight children in these rooms, and no way to confirm they were all dead.
None of them moved.
Dicken stepped back from the last thick view port, shoved his back against the concrete wall, then, with an effort, pushed off and faced DeWitt. “The yard,” he said.
About ten paces beyond the door, they met two of the treatment center nurses. They were sharing a cigarette and sprawling on plastic chairs in the shade at the end of a broad corridor lined with padded picnic tables. The two women were in their fifties, very large, with beefy arms and large, fat hands. They wore dark green uniforms, almost black in the overhead glare. They looked up listlessly as Dicken and DeWitt came into view.
“We done everything we could,” one of them said, eyes darting.
Dicken nodded, simply acknowledging their presence—and perhaps their courage.
“There are more out there,” said the other nurse, louder, as they walked past. “It’s damned near midnight. We needed a break!”
“I’m sure you did your best,” DeWitt said. Dicken instantly caught the contrast: DeWitt’s voice, precise and academic, educated; the nurses’, pragmatic and blue collar.
The nurses were townies.
“Fuck you,” the first nurse tried to shout, but it came out a wan croak. “Where was everybody? Where’re the doctors?”
Brave townies. They cared. They could have bolted, but they had stayed.
Dicken stood in the yard. A canvas tent had been pulled over a concrete quadrangle about fifty feet on a side and surrounded by tan, stucco-covered walls. The lighting was inadequate, just wall-mounted pathway illumination surrounding the open square. The center was a shadowy pit.
Cots and mattresses had been laid out on the concrete in rows that began with some intention of order and ended in scattered puzzles. There were at least a hundred children under the tent, most of them lying down. Four women, two men, and one child walked between the cots, carrying buckets and ladles, giving the children water if they were strong enough to sit up.
Moonlight and starry sky showed through gaps and vent flaps. The quadrangle was still almost unbearably hot. All the water coolers in the building had been carried here, and a few hoses hung out of plastic barrels surrounded by fading gray rings of water slop.
A hardy few of the children, most of them younger than ten, sat under the pathway lights with their backs against the stucco walls, staring at nothing, shoulders slumped.
A woman in a white uniform approached DeWitt. She was smaller than the others, tiny, actually, with walnut-colored skin and black almond eyes and short black hair pushed up under a baseball cap. “You’re the counselor, Miss DeWitt?” she asked with an accent. Filipino, Dicken guessed.
“Yes,” DeWitt said.
“Are the doctors coming back? Is there more medicine?” she asked.
“We’re under complete quarantine,” DeWitt said.