Read Immune Online

Authors: Richard Phillips

Tags: #Space Ships, #Mystery, #Fiction, #science fiction thriller, #New Mexico, #Extraterrestrial Beings, #Science Fiction, #Astronautics, #Thriller, #Science Fiction; American, #sci fi, #thriller and suspense, #science fiction horror, #Human-Alien Encounters, #techno scifi, #Government Information, #techno thriller, #thriller horror adventure action dark scifi, #General, #Suspense, #technothriller, #science fiction action

Immune (14 page)

BOOK: Immune
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29

 

By the time Heather finished breakfast, finished picking up her room to her mom’s satisfaction, and made her way to the Smythes’, the morning was halfway gone. It really was absurd that she found herself annoyed by the delay. Her mother did so much for her on a daily basis; it was only right that Heather pitch in and help a little. But today, she just couldn’t help feeling put out.

Mark opened the door with a look of surprise on his square face. “Well, I thought you blew us off.”

Heather shrugged. “House cleaning.”

“You?” Mark’s laugh only added to her annoyance.

“Where’s Jen?”

“Garage. She got tired of waiting. Said she wanted to make some final system checks before we take it apart and crate it.”

Heather nodded as she headed for the kitchen and the door, which opened from there into the Smythe garage. This was the weekend when they had to have everything crated for shipment to Denver, the site of the final competition for the national high school science contest. Their cold fusion entry had breezed through the regional competition. Now it was on to the big show.

Heather had read all the write-ups about the other finalists and their projects. From what she had seen, none of them could hold a candle to what Mark, Jennifer, and she had done. Not only did their project work spectacularly, their report was first-rate. As far as Heather was concerned, victory was in the bag. Just so long as they didn’t screw it up.

As expected, Jennifer sat at the terminal, her fingers flying across the keyboard, her face lit by the twinkle of multicolored LED light, completely oblivious to Heather’s entry into the garage. It was amazing. Jen no longer glanced at the laptop display, instead focusing her gaze upon her custom-made LED board attached to the lead side of the cold fusion tank, the colors showing the internal contents of the registers. She was thinking in hexadecimal.

“Earth to Doc.” Mark’s loud voice brought Jennifer’s face around, a look of annoyance tightening the corners of her mouth. Despite her best efforts, Heather laughed out loud.

“What?”

Heather shrugged. “Jen, I’m sorry Mark interrupted you so crudely.”

“Uh-huh.”

“And I’m sorry I laughed,” Heather continued. “It’s just that Mark provokes you into some pretty funny expressions.”

Mark leaned in, a sly grin on his face. “And I’m just as sorry as Heather is.”

Heather’s elbow caught him in the stomach before he had a chance to tighten it, producing an audible exhalation of air, a sound that finally brought a smile to Jennifer’s lips.

“Since you’re finally here, come over and take a look at these readouts.”

Heather walked around the equipment to stand behind Jennifer’s swivel chair. Her eyes swept the numbers that filled the spreadsheet on the laptop screen. Now here was something with which she was completely comfortable. The equipment was performing far better than would normally be expected. Between Heather’s slight modifications to the theoretical equations and Jennifer’s magical command of computers, their final touches looked complete.

Heather straightened. “Looks great.”

Mark raised his hands in a hallelujah salute. “Good. Let’s bag it and tag it.”

Jennifer nodded in agreement.

The rest of the day passed in a flurry of activity. Every piece of the apparatus had to be carefully tagged with a number and listed on diagrams before disassembly. Then, carefully packaged, the parts were placed in a set of crates. By the time a copy of the diagrams and inventory list had been placed in the last of the crates and Mark had nailed the lid closed, Heather was exhausted.

“My God,” Heather gasped. “Are we really done?”

“Oh, shit, we left something out.” A look of horror spread across Mark’s face.

As Jennifer and Heather’s panicked gazes swept the room for what they had missed, a chuckle brought their heads back around.

Mark’s grin was ear to ear. “Oh, your faces are priceless.”

This time Mark was ready, moving aside just in time to dodge Heather’s elbow. Unfortunately, his sidestep exposed his upper arm to Jennifer’s flying fist.

“Ow. Hey, Doc! That hurt.”

“Serves you right.” Jennifer’s angry gaze showed no sign of softening.

Heather clenched her teeth. “Mark, sometimes you’re not nearly as funny as you think you are. That was just mean.”

Before Mark could respond, Jennifer stormed from the garage. Mark glanced down at his arm, raising his short sleeve to examine it. Seeing his look of amazement, Heather leaned in for a look.

As incredible as it seemed, Jennifer’s punch was raising a deep blue bruise in the hard muscle of Mark’s neurally enhanced shoulder.

 

 

30

 

“Peaches. You okay in there, Peaches? Such a pretty bird. My Peachy, Peachy, Peachy.”

Freddy Hagerman glared at the woman across the airplane’s central aisle as she stared into the multicolored bird-carrying travel bag on her lap. Jesus H. Christ. If the idiotic woman’s cooing wasn’t bad enough, now the damn thing was squawking. He’d been hoping to get some sleep on the flight to LA.

Three quick presses of the call button brought the head stewardess, an aging blonde who could have passed for a storm trooper, beelining toward him.

“Sir, one press of the button is quite enough. May I help you?”

Just then the bird squawked again, this one an ear-splitting screech highlighted by the laughter of several people in nearby rows. Freddy stared at the stewardess, his raised eyebrows leaving no doubt as to what he regarded as the problem.

The stewardess turned her attention to the woman. The bird woman was an older lady, probably in her mid to late sixties, her attention so focused inside the mesh of the travel cage that she had failed to notice either Freddy’s annoyance or the stewardess’s arrival.

The stewardess leaned in closer. “Ma’am. Excuse me, but I’m going to have to ask you to put the case under the seat.”

The look on the woman’s face could not have been more horrified if the stewardess had just told her the bird would now be served as lunch. A heated discussion ensued, only abating when it became clear that the chief stewardess, whom Freddy had begun to think of as Mein Frau, would not be cowed.

With the bird case safely settled beneath the seat, the squawking miraculously subsided. Then Freddy discovered that, because he was in front of an exit row, his seat would not recline. For the next four hours of sleepless hell, he was forced to endure his head nodding forward hard enough to cramp his neck and a panic from bird woman as Peaches discovered how to unzip its case. This time the old lady refused to be mollified until a frantic search turned up enough tape to secure the zipper.

LAX, perhaps the most crowded and uncomfortable airport in the continental US, had never been something Freddy looked forward to walking into, until now. By the time the plane rolled to a stop at the gate and Freddy rose to retrieve his carry-on from the overhead storage compartment, he was ready to wade through hell itself if it got him off that plane.

Bird woman leaned down and retrieved the case from its resting place, cooing out a string of “Peachy, Peachy, Peachies” before setting it on her seat. Something in Freddy’s face must have given her the impression that he wanted to hear a detailed explanation of why she had been so concerned about the damn bird because she immediately turned toward him and began imparting a detailed breakdown of the events. As if he hadn’t been a firsthand witness.

As her voice droned on, the bird case on the seat behind her tumbled to the floor with a small thud that sent the woman spinning in that direction, a squeal of horror issuing from her lips. “Peaches!”

As Freddy disengaged himself to follow other passengers off the aircraft, a grin split his face. Perhaps there was a God after all.

His newly acquired good mood failed to last. Arriving at the rental car terminal, Freddy failed to find his name on the Gold Club reservation board, something that resulted in an hour-long delay while the attendant placed repeated calls to the office, trying to locate his reservation.

As he pulled onto Airport Boulevard, Freddy glanced at his watch. 4:30 p.m. LA traffic at rush hour. Lovely. He could only hope this trip wasn’t a harbinger of things to come.

It was just after 11:15 p.m. when Freddy finally pulled into the Motel 6 just off El Camino Real in Santa Barbara. As he stumbled into the office to check in, his gaze fell on a sign printed with the slogan, “Welcome to the American Riviera.”

“Yeah, right,” Freddy mumbled to himself as he dropped his bag and banged on the bell.

One thing he had to admit; although the attendant was away from the desk, they had left the light on for him.

 

31

 

Denny’s Grand Slam Breakfast slid down his gullet, chased by half a pot of coffee, hot, strong, and black. Freddy’s eyes swept the front page of the
Santa Barbara News-Press
, settling on the headline story, a follow-up to yesterday’s presidential press conference. Since the president had focused a large portion of his comments on the Rondham Institute for Medical Research, located right here in Santa Barbara, almost the entire front page had been devoted to the story.

As much as Freddy hated to admit it, it sure looked like the entire thrust of his big Pulitzer Prize story about the out-of-control government nanite program was dead wrong. Unless he could find something wrong with the information the president had presented, he was fucked. But that was all right. Finding stuff that was wrong with something was what Freddy did. In the divorce papers, Dalia, his latest ex-wife, had claimed it was his sole defining trait.

Even though he now knew it by heart, Freddy studied every detail of the story. In his press conference, the president had admitted that the second alien technology involved an injected form of medical nanotechnology. He had even admitted that a rogue scientist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, a certain Dr. Rodriguez, had abused the national trust, conducting his own illicit nanotechnology experiments outside the secure confines of the laboratory. Although the man had enjoyed a top security clearance, the terminal brain cancer of Dr. Rodriguez’s son had caused him to try to accelerate his own research, violating all accepted scientific protocols. That illegal research had involved experimentation on the maniac who called himself Priest Williams, something that had contributed to the man’s sense of invincibility and thus to his homicidal rampage.

As the string of presidential admissions had continued, the assembled press lay waiting, expecting anything from a presidential apology to a presidential resignation. But that hadn’t happened. In a single move that would have brought a smile to Machiavelli’s corpse, the man transformed from Commander in Chief to Caregiver in Chief.

The Rodriguez security lapses and their associated consequences had been quite dire and had merited a detailed investigation. According to the president, the reason he had waited several weeks after Freddy’s big news story had broken to hold this press conference was to give the investigators the time they required to conduct a detailed review of every aspect of the alien nanotechnology research. That review was now complete.

Initial experiments using the technology on animals at the Los Alamos National Laboratory had produced such impressive results that several months ago the US government had commissioned an independent study of the technology that was conducted at the Rondham Institute for Medical Research in Santa Barbara, California.

The study involved the injection of a serum of tiny microscopic machines, called nanites, into the bloodstreams of children in the final stage of terminal cancer, children for whom all other treatments had failed.

The nanites were really quite simple machines and had only two functions: they would read the DNA of the person into whom they were injected, and they would attempt to aid the body in correcting any problems.

At first, the results of the study were so amazing that everyone involved assumed something was wrong with the data. A new round of testing with new patients was overseen by experts from around the world and again the results were the same. Every patient experienced a complete recovery from his or her cancer within days of being injected with the nanite serum.

Again, the study was expanded, this time to include children with other fatal conditions, including AIDS and heart, lung, or liver failure, and again the results were the same. One hundred percent of the patients experienced complete recovery. Not remission. Not some sort of immune response. The nanite-assisted healing process made it as if the conditions had never existed.

The government had been on the verge of announcing the experimental results and releasing the nanotechnology for public trials around the globe when Freddy’s story had broken, forcing several weeks of delay while another thorough review of the program was conducted. That review was now complete. The original test results had been thoroughly validated.

The president had paused to read a statement signed by a host of internationally acclaimed medical research scientists and doctors who had participated in the final review, among them several Nobel-Prize laureates. Their report left no doubt. Every day of delay in the release of this incredibly beneficial technology meant that thousands of people across the planet would die unnecessarily, people who could now be saved.

BOOK: Immune
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