The Andromeda Strain (14 page)

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Authors: Michael Crichton

Tags: #Thrillers, #Science Fiction, #Suspense, #High Tech, #Fiction

BOOK: The Andromeda Strain
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Stage IV: Maximal sterilization procedures: total immersion in four baths of biocaine, monochlorophin, xantholysin, and prophyne with intermediate thirty-minute UV and IR irradiation. All infection halted at this stage on basis of symptomatology or clinical signs. Routine screening of all personnel. Six-hour delay.

Stage V: Redundant sterilization procedures: no further immersions or testing, but destruct clothing x2 per day. Prophylactic antibiotics for forty-eight hours. Daily screen for superinfection, first eight days.

2. EACH STAGE INCLUDES:

1. Resting quarters, individual

2. Recreation quarters, including movie and game room

3. Cafeteria, automatic

4. Library, with main journals transmitted by Xerox or TV from main library Level I.

5. Shelter, a high-security antimicrobial complex with safety in event of level contamination.

6. Laboratories:

a) biochemistry, with all necessary equipment for automatic amino-acid analysis, sequence determination, O/R potentials, lipid and carbohydrate determinations on human, animal, other subjects.

b) pathology, with EM, phase and LM, microtomes and curing rooms. Five full-time technicians each level. One autopsy room. One room for experimental animals.

c) microbiology, with all facilities for growth, nutrient, analytic, immunologic studies. Subsections bacterial, viral, parasitic, other.

d) pharmacology, with material for dose-relation and receptor site specificity studies of known compounds. Pharmacy to include drugs as noted in appendix.

e) main room, experimental animals. 75 genetically pure strains of mice; 27 of rat; 17 of cat; 12 of dog; 8 of primate.

f) nonspecific room for previously unplanned experiments.

8. Surgery: for care and treatment of staff, including operating-room facilities for acute emergencies.

9. Communications: for contact with other levels by audiovisual and other means.

COUNT YOUR PAGES

REPORT ANY MISSING

PAGES AT ONCE

COUNT YOUR PAGES

As Hall continued to read, he found that only on Level I, the topmost floor, would there be a large computer complex for data analysis, but that this computer would serve all other levels on a time-sharing basis. This was considered feasible since, for biologic problems, real time was unimportant in relation to computer time, and multiple problems could be fed and handled at once.

He was leafing through the rest of the file, looking for the part that interested him—the Odd Man Hypothesis—when he came upon a page that was rather unusual.

THIS IS PAGE
255
OF
274
PAGES

BY THE AUTHORITY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE THIS PAGE FROM A HIGH-SECURITY FILE HAS BEEN DELETED

THE PAGE IS NUMBER:
two hundred fifty-five / 255

THE FILE IS CODED:
Wildfire

THE SUBJECT MATTER

DELETED IS:
Odd Man Hypothesis

PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS CONSTITUTES A LEGAL DELETION FROM THE FILE WHICH NEED NOT BE REPORTED BY THE READER.

MACHINE SCORE REVIEW BELOW

255 WILDFIRE 255

Hall was frowning at the page, wondering what it meant, when the pilot said, “Dr. Hall?”

“Yes.”

“We have just passed the last checkpoint, sir. We will touch down in four minutes.”

“All right.” Hall paused. “Do you know where, exactly, we are landing?”

“I believe,” said the pilot, “that it is Flatrock, Nevada.”

“I see,” Hall said.

A few minutes later, the flaps went down, and he heard a whine as the airplane slowed.

Nevada was the ideal site for Wildfire. The Silver State ranks seventh in size, but forty-ninth in population; it is the least-dense state in the Union after Alaska. Particularly when one considers that 85 per cent of the state’s 440,000 people live in Las Vegas, Reno, or Carson City, the population density of 1.2 persons per square mile seems well suited for projects such as Wildfire, and indeed many have been located there.

Along with the famous atomic site at Vinton Flats, there is the Ultra-Energy Test Station at Martindale, and the Air Force Medivator Unit near Los Gados. Most of these facilities are in the southern triangle of the state, having been located there in the days before Las Vegas swelled to receive twenty million visitors a year. More recently, government test stations have been located in the northwest corner of Nevada, which is still relatively isolated. Pentagon classified lists include five new installations in that area; the nature of each is unknown.

10
Stage I

HALL LANDED SHORTLY AFTER NOON, the hottest part of the day. The sun beat down from a pale, cloudless sky and the airfield asphalt was soft under his feet as he walked from the airplane to the small quonset hut at the edge of the runway. Feeling his feet sink into the surface, Hall thought that the airfield must have been designed primarily for night use; at night it would be cold, the asphalt solid.

The quonset hut was cooled by two massive, grumbling air conditioners. It was furnished sparsely: a card table in one corner, at which two pilots sat, playing poker and drinking coffee. A guard in the corner was making a telephone call; he had a machine gun slung over his shoulder. He did not look up as Hall entered.

There was a coffee machine near the telephone. Hall went over with his pilot and they each poured a cup. Hall took a sip and said, “Where’s the town, anyway? I didn’t see it as we were coming in.”

“Don’t know, sir.”

“Have you been here before?”

“No sir. It’s not on the standard runs.”

“Well, what exactly does this airfield serve?”

At that moment, Leavitt strode in and beckoned to Hall. The bacteriologist led him through the back of the quonset and then out into the heat again, to a light-blue Falcon sedan parked in the rear. There were no identifying marks of any kind on the car; there was no driver. Leavitt slipped behind the wheel and motioned for Hall to get in.

As Leavitt put the car in gear, Hall said, “I guess we don’t rate any more.”

“Oh yes. We rate. But drivers aren’t used out here. In fact, we don’t use any more personnel than we have to. The number of wagging tongues is kept to a minimum.”

They set off across desolate, hilly countryside. In the distance were blue mountains, shimmering in the liquid heat of the desert. The road was pock-marked and dusty; it looked as if it hadn’t been used for years.

Hall mentioned this.

“Deceptive,” Leavitt said. “We took great pains about it. We spent nearly five thousand dollars on this road.”

“Why?”

Leavitt shrugged. “Had to get rid of the tractor treadmarks. A hell of a lot of heavy equipment has moved over these roads, at one time or another. Wouldn’t want anyone to wonder why.”

“Speaking of caution,” Hall said after a pause, “I was reading in the file. Something about an atomic self-destruct device—”

“What about it?”

“It exists?”

“It exists.”

Installation of the device had been a major stumbling block in the early plans for Wildfire. Stone and the others had insisted that they retain control over the detonate/no detonate decision; the AEC and the Executive branch had been reluctant. No atomic device had been put in private hands before. Stone argued that in the event of a leak in the Wildfire lab, there might not be time to consult with Washington and get a Presidential detonate order. It was a long time before the President agreed that this might be true.

“I was reading,” Hall said, “that this device is somehow connected with the Odd Man Hypothesis.”

“It is.”

“How? The page on Odd Man was taken from my file.”

“I know,” Leavitt said. “We’ll talk about it later.”

The Falcon turned off the potted road onto a dirt track. The sedan raised a heavy cloud of dust, and despite the heat, they were forced to roll up the windows. Hall lit a cigarette.

“That’ll be your last,” Leavitt said.

“I know. Let me enjoy it.”

On their right, they passed a sign that said GOVERNMENT PROPERTY KEEP OFF, but there was no fence, no guard, no dogs—just a battered, weatherbeaten sign.

“Great security measures,” Hall said.

“We try not to arouse suspicion. The security is better than it looks.”

They proceeded another mile, bouncing along the dirt rut, and then came over a hill. Suddenly Hall saw a large, fenced circle perhaps a hundred yards in diameter. The fence, he noticed, was ten feet high and sturdy; at intervals it was laced with barbed wire. Inside was a utilitarian wooden building, and a field of corn.

“Corn?” Hall said.

“Rather clever, I think.”

They came to the entrance gate. A man in dungarees and a T-shirt came out and opened it for them; he held a sandwich in one hand and was chewing vigorously as he unlocked the gate. He winked and smiled and waved them through, still chewing. The sign by the gate said:

GOVERNMENT PROPERTY U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE DESERT RECLAMATION TEST STATION

Leavitt drove through the gates and parked by the wooden building. He left the keys on the dashboard and got out. Hall followed him.

“Now what?”

“Inside,” Leavitt said. They entered the building, coming directly into a small room. A man in a Stetson hat, checked sport shirt, and string tie sat at a rickety desk. He was reading a newspaper and, like the man at the gate, eating his lunch. He looked up and smiled pleasantly.

“Howdy,” he said.

“Hello,” Leavitt said.

“Help you folks?”

“Just passing through,” Leavitt said. “On the way to Rome.”

The man nodded. “Have you got the time?”

“My watch stopped yesterday,” Leavitt said.

“Durn shame,” the man said.

“It’s because of the heat.”

The ritual completed, the man nodded again. And they walked past him, out of the anteroom and down a corridor. The doors had hand-printed labels: “Seedling Incubation”; “Moisture Control”; “Soil Analysis.” A half-dozen people were at work in the building, all of them dressed casually, but all of them apparently busy.

“This is a real agricultural station,” Leavitt said. “If necessary, that man at the desk could give you a guided tour, explaining the purpose of the station and the experiments that are going on. Mostly they are attempting to develop a strain of corn that can grow in low-moisture, high-alkalinity soil.”

“And the Wildfire installation?”

“Here,” Leavitt said. He opened a door marked “Storage” and they found themselves staring at a narrow cubicle lined with rakes and hoes and watering hoses.

“Step in,” Leavitt said.

Hall did. Leavitt followed and closed the door behind him. Hall felt the floor sink and they began to descend, rakes and hoses and all.

In a moment, he found himself in a modern, bare room, lighted by banks of cold overhead fluorescent lights. The walls were painted red. The only object in the room was a rectangular, waist-high box that reminded Hall of a podium. It had a glowing green glass top.

“Step up to the analyzer,” Leavitt said. “Place your hands flat on the glass, palms down.”

Hall did. He felt a faint tingling in his fingers, and then the machine gave a buzz.

“All right. Step back.” Leavitt placed his hands on the box, waited for the buzz, and then said, “Now we go over here. You mentioned the security arrangements; I’ll show them to you before we enter Wildfire.”

He nodded to a door across the room.

“What was that thing?”

“Finger- and palm-print analyzer,” Leavitt said. “It is fully automatic. Reads a composite of ten thousand dermatographic lines so it can’t make a mistake; in its storage banks it has a record of the prints of everyone cleared to enter Wildfire.”

Leavitt pushed through the door.

They were faced with another door, marked SECURITY, which slid back noiselessly. They entered a darkened room in which a single man sat before banks of green dials.

“Hello, John,” Leavitt said to the man. “How are you?”

“Good, Dr. Leavitt. Saw you come in.”

Leavitt introduced Hall to the security man, who then demonstrated the equipment to Hall. There were, the man explained, two radar scanners located in the hills overlooking the installation; they were well concealed but quite effective. Then closer in, impedence sensors were buried in the ground; they signaled the approach of any animal life weighing more than one hundred pounds. The sensors ringed the base.

“We’ve never missed anything yet,” the man said. “And if we do …” He shrugged. To Leavitt: “Going to show him the dogs?”

“Yes,” Leavitt said.

They walked through into an adjoining room. There were nine large cages there, and the room smelled strongly of animals. Hall found himself looking at nine of the largest German shepherds he had ever seen.

They barked at him as he entered, but there was no sound in the room. He watched in astonishment as they opened their mouths and threw their heads forward in a barking motion.

No sound.

“These are Army-trained sentry dogs,” the security man said. “Bred for viciousness. You wear leather clothes and heavy gloves when you walk them. They’ve undergone laryngectomies, which is why you can’t hear them. Silent and vicious.”

Hall said, “Have you ever, uh, used them?”

“No,” the security man said. “Fortunately not.”

They were in a small room with lockers. Hall found one with his name on it.

“We change in here,” Leavitt said. He nodded to a stack of pink uniforms in one corner. “Put those on, after you have removed everything you are wearing.”

Hall changed quickly. The uniforms were loose-fitting one-piece suits that zipped up the side. When they had changed they proceeded down a passageway.

Suddenly an alarm sounded and a gate in front of them slid closed abruptly. Overhead, a white light began to flash. Hall was confused, and it was only much later that he remembered Leavitt looked away from the flashing light.

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