Authors: Jason M. Hough
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Espionage, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Hard Science Fiction
The tone of a slighted man, a bruised ego. The idea that someone could be worried about their reputation or jurisdiction given the billions dead or dying across the world just made Skyler sink farther back into his seat. He decided he wouldn’t move unless called. Let Skadz deal with it. If he’s so anxious to take credit for flipping that truck, he can take the fallout, too.
Boots clanged on the scaffold stairs that led to the aircraft’s side door, and a new voice came through the intercom speaker. “Two hundred and fifty kilos,” a man said. An older man, Skyler thought. Australian, but a bit more refined than the first speaker.
“Pardon?” Skadz asked.
“Two hundred and fifty kilos of explosives in the back of that truck, the blokes outside are estimating. Religious paraphernalia on the two occupants, who are unfortunately beyond questioning.” A pause. “Chief Constable Arthur Braithwaite,” the man said then. “We’re in your debt.”
“Skadz,” Skadz replied. “A nickname, and all I’m willing to share if you don’t mind,” he added at a presumed raised eyebrow.
“Fair enough. Welcome to Darwin.”
The slighted man spoke up again. “That grenade was just a warning shot. We could have—”
“That’ll be all for now, Mr. Blackfield. Thank you.”
“We had them—”
“Thank you.”
Silence followed, then boots on the ladder again, receding this time.
“Don’t mind him,” Braithwaite said. “We’re all a bit tense, I suppose. The security situation…well, you saw it for yourself. The disease is driving people insane whether they’re infected or not. A nasty business.”
“We heard Darwin was safe.”
Skyler flipped off the intercom and slipped out of his harness. He
pulled the last three switches in his shutdown sequence to the off position and sat in the silence of the darkened cockpit. Before him lay a city under siege. The streets, those he could see, were a morass of people silhouetted against trash fires and the headlights of hastily abandoned cars. Everyone seeking shelter or defending it. A giant and lethal game of musical chairs too complex and fluid to wrap the mind around, like a fog that blocked sight of anything beyond the immediate surroundings.
He went back then, and shook Arthur Braithwaite’s waiting hand. “Skyler Luiken. Dutch air force. Or was, I guess.”
The old man nodded. “Tell me truthfully now, boys. You’ve really been exposed? No symptoms at all?”
“None,” Skyler said.
Skadz nodded. “We put down in Abu Dhabi for a bit, then Diego Garcia after that for almost a day. Before that I ran into Skyler in Amsterdam after everyone else…well, you know. We hoped there’d be more like us here.”
“Only one or two that I know of, sadly,” Braithwaite said, a genuine gloom in his wrinkled features. “The rest of us are confined here. A nine-kilometer radius around the Elevator, unless that changes, too.”
“Not a lot of space to work with,” Skyler said.
The man studied him for a second, then sighed. “Well, you both look like you could use a hot meal and a pint. I’ll take you to the cafeteria and get someone to find you some quarters.”
Skyler’s stomach growled at the prospect of real food.
“Once you’re settled,” Braithwaite added, “some doctors will want to examine you. Maybe…” He trailed off, a faint twinkle of hope in his blue eyes. “Look, I can’t order you to stay close, but if you’re really immune…”
“We’ll help any way we can.”
“My thanks.” His gaze gravitated to the sealed plastic crates, each labeled with their contents:
DUPONT LEVEL-B HAZMAT, QUANTITY 50.
Skadz cleared his throat. “They were just sitting there in Diego Garcia. We thought…well, they might be useful, right? And nobody else was around.”
The police chief stepped up to one of the yellow boxes and ran a hand along it. “I’m not sure what would constitute a fair payment.”
“Well,” Skadz said before Skyler could speak, “take a crate now. Gesture of goodwill and all that. You’ll want to make sure they work, somehow. We can discuss the others later, once we all know the lay of the land.”
Skyler closed his mouth. He’d been ready to say “take them,” before Skadz stepped in. His new friend had a different way of thinking. Survival instinct mixed with business acumen. They would need both to thrive here.
DARWIN, AUSTRALIA
21.APR.2278
A day later, in a room of white, Skyler sat on a paper-covered bed. He was naked save for a thin blue gown that covered his front. A team of doctors surrounded him, waiting for the vitals harness to complete the basic examination. An array of articulated arms and protrusions extended out from the box, sampling Skyler’s pulse, blood pressure, and reflexes. Imaging his eyes, mouth, ears, and nostrils. Foam-padded robotic fingertips probed his scalp, neck, spine, and abdomen.
The machine chirped the conclusion of its examination and rose back into the ceiling. One of the doctors stepped in and began the more delicate work. He took blood—three vials’ worth—from Skyler’s left arm, and moved on from there. Skin samples, hair samples, a swab of the tongue. On and on it went, all the while the doctors in the room talked quietly among themselves. Occasionally a runner would come in and summon one or more of them in hushed, urgent tones. They’d leave reluctantly, probably off to deal with an actual injury. The city was a mass of terrified, hungry savages, after all, and those were the ones without the disease. But the doctors always came back. They couldn’t resist the curiosity that had flown in from beyond the aura.
A thousand questions were asked. Allergies? Medications? Family medical history? Ever dabbled in experimental drugs or designer
viruses? Did the Luchtmacht do anything to you? There’s no secrets now; you can tell us if they did. On and on it went.
“Lie down, please,” one said when the questions finally ended. She was an Indian woman with graying hair and a kind, wrinkled face. “We’re going to take you down the hall for an LMRI.”
“I can walk,” Skyler said.
The woman insisted, so Skyler lay back and allowed the team to escort him through the wide, white hallway outside. Through the door of the next room he caught a glimpse of Skadz undergoing his equally invasive exam. Skadz saw Skyler, too, and flashed a middle finger and a twisted-up face of mock horror. Skyler returned the obscene gesture and lay back, a mild headache nagging at him.
Scans of his brain were taken. So detailed that a datacube had to be fetched to store the three-dimensional imagery. Then he was wheeled to an elevator and taken up twenty stories to a recovery ward. “This floor has been cleared for you and…well, the others like you,” a nurse explained. Skyler was about to ask what that meant when the young man pushed him into a long room with two rows of beds—twenty at least—along the ubiquitous white walls. Skadz sat on one, still in his exam gown.
Only two other beds were occupied. A man lay in one, studying a personal comm. He glanced over at Skyler’s entrance and sat up. Neatly folded on the table next to his bed were military fatigues, though of what nation Skyler couldn’t tell.
A few bunks farther down the line lay a woman, one leg wrapped in bandages from ankle to waist. Her eyes were closed. An IV drip line snaked from her wrist to a clear plastic bag hanging from a chrome pole beside her. She had blond hair and an imposing build, tall enough that her feet dangled over the end of the bed.
“Turns out we’re not alone,” Skadz said. “Skyler, meet Jake.”
The man rose to his feet with a soldier’s practiced efficiency and shook Skyler’s hand.
“Immune, I take it?” Skyler asked.
“Yep,” Jake said. His face betrayed nothing.
“You’re military?”
He nodded. Again, the lack of expression.
“Who with? What’d you do?”
“Sniper,” Jake said flatly. “Australian Army.”
Skyler let go of the man’s hand. Sniper made sense. The man was calm, precise. His face conveyed, well, not confidence exactly but something between it and boredom.
Turning back to Skadz, Skyler jerked his chin toward the sleeping woman farther into the room.
Skadz only shrugged. “Don’t know about her, she’s been asleep. Now that we’re all here,” he said, his voice lowered to a conspiratorial level, “and without our minders hovering, perhaps the three of us could talk.”
Jake sat back down on his bed. An answer without answering.
Skyler sat across from him and nodded to Skadz.
“Jake here was just telling me a bit more about what’s going on,” Skadz started. “Seems the specifics of who’s running what around here, and above, are still being settled.”
“Makes sense,” Skyler said. “The world is suddenly a lot smaller.”
“Musical chairs,” Jake observed.
Skadz flashed the man a grin, then continued. “Be that as it may, there’s talk of putting some kind of militia together. They’re testing using hazmat suits as a way to venture out, and if it works they want a few hundred people who know the business end of a gun to go out there and clear the diseased from the land around the Elevator’s aura. A purge. Then they’re going to barricade us all in and wait for this all to blow over.”
“Assuming it ever will,” Skyler said.
Jake grunted.
“Stands to reason,” Skadz said, “they’re going to view us as particularly important in this operation. Maybe even put one of you in charge, with your backgrounds.”
“I’m not so sure.” At the puzzled expression on Skadz’s face, Skyler went on. “We represent a possible cure for, um, this thing.”
“SUBS,” Skadz said. “They call it SUBS. Synaptic Uncoupling…I forget the rest.”
Skyler spread his hands. “I think they’ll keep us here. Study us to the atomic level if they have to. We’re rare specimens to them, nothing more.”
“Well,” Skadz said, “I don’t know about you two but I can’t live like that.”
“I’m not sure we have any choice.”
“Of course we do.”
“You think they’ll just let us walk out of here?”
Skadz’s face twisted up, dubious. “They can’t exactly follow us.”
“This again,” Skyler said, shaking his head. “Look, do what you want, but this is no time to be selfish.”
“Jake?” Skadz asked, turning to the other man.
“Yeah?”
“You’re a quiet bastard, aren’t you?”
“Mm-hmm.”
Skadz grinned, despite himself. “Well, talk, man! What’s your take on all this?”
Jake glanced at each of them in turn, then looked down at his hands. “We, our kind, need to stick together.”
“Look, you two are military. This life-of-service bullshit is in your bloody genes. But that’s not for me, mates. I need something more. I need a life. I need to make my own decisions.”
“No one’s stopping you,” Skyler observed.
“Yeah, well,” Skadz said, “that’s the thing. Jake here is right. We need to be unified if we’re going to control our own destiny. A unified front, right? That shit only works if we’re unified.”
Jake nodded solemnly.
Skyler shook his head. “I’m not saying you’re wrong, I’m just saying I won’t leave. We can help these people, in more ways than just as specimens.”
“So let’s figure out a way to do that,” Skadz said, “where we’re not caged animals. All right?”
“Can I get in on this?”
The three men turned in unison to the new voice. The woman on the far bunk had woken. She’d propped herself on her elbows and winced as she tried to ease back toward the wall. Jake was up and at her side in an instant, a pillow clutched in his hand. He stuffed it behind her.
“Thanks,” she said.
“No problem,” Jake replied, returning to his own bunk.
“What’s your name?” Skadz asked.
The woman took a moment to let a wave of discomfort pass. “I’m Samantha. Everyone calls me Sam.”
“And you have the immunity, too?” Skyler asked.
She looked at each of them in turn before nodding once. Then her face twisted up, concern on her brow. “Wait. Are we it? Just the four of us?”
The group debated ideas for almost an hour, and when one of the nurses finally returned to fetch them, it was Skadz who spoke for them.
Skyler listened to the defiant words, watched the nurse’s face pale, and then sat back to wait as Arthur Braithwaite was informed that the patients had revolted.
“I really don’t have time for this,” Braithwaite said as he strode into the room.
“Well, make some,” Skadz shot back. “This is important.”
And so the negotiations began, and they lasted until well past sunset. Skyler let Skadz do most of the talking—the man had a gift for it, no denying that—and interjected only when he thought it would cut the palpable tension.
Jake said nothing at all. He seemed content to do whatever Skadz and Skyler wanted, or at least he planned to let them come to a deal and then he would decide if he wanted it or not. Sam voiced strong
opinions, always taking Skadz’s side. But she lasted only ten minutes before the medications took over and sent her into an uneasy sleep.
In the end Braithwaite agreed. They all agreed, and thanks to some clever wordplay by Skadz, Braithwaite seemed to feel like he’d just brokered peace in the Middle East. The man brought in an assistant to draw up a formal agreement. A sickly-looking, stringy-haired man named Kip. He tapped on a slate as Braithwaite recounted the agreement.
“You’ll keep your aircraft,” Braithwaite said, “the…?”
“Melville,”
Skyler said, before Skadz could interject. The Jamaican shot Skyler a somewhat furious glare at that, then somehow turned it into a grin like a schoolboy who’d just been pranked.
Braithwaite went on. “You’ll keep the
Melville
in a hangar at the airport, not here in Nightcliff as I’d hoped, on the condition that any excursions outside the known limits of the protective aura be cleared with the tower here. Our needs will take priority, with payment agreed upon ahead of time. Though, I have to warn you gentlemen it’s unclear at this point what will serve as currency in Darwin.”
“I’m sure we can figure something out,” Skadz said.
“Anything else you manage to bring back is of course yours to barter or use; we’ll make no claim to any of it. However, we reserve the right to inspect your cargo anytime we deem it necessary to do so. This will be true of anyone else leaving the city.”
Skadz perked up. “I thought it was just the four of us?”
“You’re the only immunes that we know of,” Braithwaite said, “but I was informed just before coming in here that the hazmat suits seem adequate protection against the disease. One does not need to remain near the Elevator, one simply needs to avoid contact with air that has not been scrubbed by it.”
“Interesting,” Skyler muttered, the ramifications settling like tumblers on a lock. Immunes wouldn’t be the only ones who could leave the city, but they could just stay outside longer than anyone else, and with more freedom of movement and use of senses. The news brought a mixture of relief and anxiety.
Samantha stirred. A sound just short of a fearful cry escaped her lips. The sound made them all jump, including her. Her imposing size, obvious even under the hospital blankets, combined with the set of her jaw and the cool look in her eyes, made Skyler morbidly curious as to what she’d been through that would bring her nightmares. The world beyond Darwin could break anyone if it could break her.
“What’d I miss?” Samantha asked, rubbing her eyes.
“We’re just talking details,” Skadz replied. He motioned for Braithwaite to continue. “You were saying, about the hazard suits?”
“Yes. Given our success with the outfits, there will be others able to find and recover that which the city needs to function. And, soon, taking the battle beyond our protective field.”
Here it comes,
Skyler thought.
“You want us,” Skadz said, “to lead that effort?”
The police captain sucked in his lower lip and shook his head. “No. Well, maybe. Until the few doctors and scientists we have left finish analyzing the samples you provided today, I think it’s best you avoid excessive risk.”
“Good,” Skadz said.
Skyler glanced between them. “We’ll help if needed, of course.”
“Of course,” Braithwaite replied. “This leads me to one other condition of our deal, however.”
“Which is what?” Skadz asked.
The chief constable inhaled deeply. “Until we know if there are more like you, at least one of you should stay behind during any excursion outside. We can’t risk losing all four of you at once.”
“I can’t see how we can function as a team without the four of us,” Skadz replied.