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Darwin's Children Part 17

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"With so much power, I know you could help us here," Augustine said.

"Honestly. I can't. Did you hear that France offered to send in wide-spectrum antivirals, and President Ellington refused?"

"I did not."

"All the precious beltway schools are well-supplied. n.o.body raided their their medical stores. And remember, Ohio did not go for Ellington, last election." medical stores. And remember, Ohio did not go for Ellington, last election."

Augustine pinched the bridge of his nose. He had had a headache for the last two hours, and it showed no signs of going away. "I hear no charity, Rachel. Why the call?"



"Because the s.h.i.t that pa.s.ses for opinion around here is starting to scare even me. I can't get through to the NRO or NSA bosses. Secretary of Health and Human Services is unavailable. I think they're all in conference in their secure little rabbit holes in Annapolis and Arlington. Mark, you know as well as I do that everyone in the House and Senate had their kids well before SHEVA. Only two senators and four representatives have SHEVA grandkids. Tough luck. Statistically it should be more. Sixty-four percent of our aging electorate favored shoot-on-sight policies against fugitive virus kids in a CNN-Gallup Poll yesterday evening. Two out of three, Mark."

"How secure is this line, Rachel?" Augustine asked.

Browning made a sharp raspberry between her teeth. "Can you guess what's coming down from the beltway?"

The headache pounded. He leaned over the desk. "All too easily."

"Queen's X, Mark?"

"Who's Queen today?"

"That would be me. I'll authorize a special pickup for Kaye Lang and her daughter. People I know and trust."

Augustine thought this over for a few seconds. He had never been angrier in his life, or weaker. "I'm obliged, Rachel."

He could hear the triumph in her voice. "I'm not as stupid as you think I am, Mark. Alive, she's a pain in the a.s.s. Dead, she's a martyr."

"Do what you can, Rachel."

"I always do. No timetables, though. I'll do this on my own schedule and tell you as little as possible."

"All right."

"If this works, you owe me, Mark. Now, here's what-"

Abruptly, the phone died. He shook it and punched the on b.u.t.ton several times. The phone flashed to life, but, receiving no signal, turned off again to conserve power.

Very likely, SRO had taken over the wireless networks and shut down cell towers around all the schools. First stage of PDD 298.

Augustine put the phone down just as DeWitt returned to the room.

"Dr. d.i.c.ken wants to see you," she said. "They've found something."

"Supplies?" Augustine asked hopefully.

DeWitt shook her head.

42.

PENNSYLVANIA.

On the state route, the traffic was light, three or four cars in the last fifteen minutes. n.o.body wanted to be caught driving. Simply being out on the road would be suspicious. George had said the turnoff to the cabin was tricky, hard to see. He had nailed a red plastic strip to a large pine tree to mark the spot.

Mitch drove more slowly, looking for the red plastic strip and a wooden plaque that joy-riding vandals tended to splinter with ball bats.

Suddenly, the interior of the Jeep filled with shadow. He felt immersed in inky night. The sensation pa.s.sed, but it scared him; he could almost smell the darkness, like crankcase oil.

"Too d.a.m.ned tired," he told himself, and wondered whether they had heard him in the backseat. He could feel both of them back there, both alive, both quiet. Stella's breathing had lost some of its harshness, but Mitch knew her fever was high.

Maybe he was coming down with it, too. That would be more than Kaye could stand, he suspected. So, I will not become sick. So, I will not become sick.

Whistling in the dark. In the oily dark.

43.

OHIO.

"Jurie left the number codes in a desk drawer," Middleton said as Augustine and DeWitt followed her into the concrete cube of the research building. "Dr. d.i.c.ken told me to bring you all here."

d.i.c.ken came through the opposite door, carrying a thick folder of papers. He glared at Augustine. "You rotten son of a b.i.t.c.h," he said.

Augustine took this without blinking. "You've found something," he said.

"You're G.o.dd.a.m.ned right I've found something. How much did Americol pump into the schools? The camps camps?"

"To my knowledge, nothing."

"You're going to blame it all on Trask, right?"

Augustine shook his head cautiously. He looked around the big room and focused on the wall of steel refrigerators. "I don't even know what it it is." is."

"What would Marge Cross want with all these children?" d.i.c.ken held out the folder. Augustine reached forward, leaning on his cane, and d.i.c.ken pulled it back, then dropped it on a desk next to the stainless steel cold storage units. Photographs spilled out: color photographs of autopsy proceedings. Even from a distance, it was obvious the subjects were children, some of them infants.

d.i.c.ken took a step away, as if too disgusted to let Augustine come near him.

Augustine shifted his eyes from face to face, facial lines deepening. He pushed aside the photos, then lifted the cover page on the folder and leafed through it.

"I know you too well," d.i.c.ken said. "You wouldn't be stupid enough to just let this happen."

"Show me the rest," Augustine said.

Middleton punched in the code numbers that unlocked the first stainless steel refrigerator door. Fog fell, revealing ranks of jars. Augustine immediately recognized the contents for what they were. The jars on top were small and contained anonymous meaty lumps in colorless fluid.

The jars below, on taller shelves, contained whole internal organs.

Middleton's skin had faded to a sickly shade of olive, and her eyes were almost closed.

"How many?" Augustine asked.

"There're the remains of maybe sixty or seventy children here, and more scattered throughout the building," d.i.c.ken said.

"What do you think . . . what purpose?"

"I won't even hazard a guess," d.i.c.ken said.

"We never lost this many children," Middleton said, "and Dr. Jurie . . . Dr. Pickman . . . left before . . ." She did not finish. She closed the first door and opened the second. Trays of thousands of frozen tissue samples, mounted on slides or stored in solution in smaller bottles, had been stacked to the top of the compartment.

Augustine surveyed the trays, then stepped forward and motioned for Middleton to open the third door, and the fourth. His cane made rubbery squeaks on the linoleum floor. "You're positive none of these were from the last two days," he said, grasping at some reasonable explanation for all the jars and tubes and dishes sealed, neatly numbered, and marked with yellow-and-red biohazard labels.

"It's a tissue library," d.i.c.ken said. "Healthy tissue, pathological specimens, whatever they could get. There's a fully equipped laboratory for a.n.a.lyzing them. Jurie and Pickman autopsied all the children who died at this school, and all the schools in this region. I presume they were bringing the dead here from wherever they could get them," d.i.c.ken said. "A central clearing house for cadavers."

"Cross paid for the equipment?" Augustine asked. His demeanor was so quiet, his expression so utterly devastated, that d.i.c.ken pushed back his anger.

"Americol," he said.

"Mm hm," Augustine said. He took the list of codes from Middleton and unlocked and examined the next three doors. Two contained the by now familiar stacked trays of specimens. The last contained five cadavers, wrapped in transparent plastic, suspended by hooks and slings from rails at the top of the compartment.

"My G.o.d," DeWitt said.

"I should have known," Augustine murmured. "That's certain. I should have known."

Middleton approached the open compartment. "Autopsies would be standard, wouldn't they? Is that what we're looking at, a pathology study being done on behalf of the students, to protect them?"

"No," Augustine said abruptly. "No studies were ever pa.s.sed up to Washington, and I doubt they were even sent to the Ohio Central authority, or I would have heard of it. Before this week began, a total of three hundred and seventy-nine children in custody of the schools have died. Very low mortality, statistically speaking. Many of them are probably here. They were supposed to be returned to their families or buried if left unclaimed." Augustine closed the door. "I did not authorize this."

d.i.c.ken stepped forward. "Was there any value to the children in doing this . . . research?"

"I don't know," Augustine said. "Possibly. Doubtful, however. Anatomically, the children are so much like us that storage of organs or whole cadavers for research never seemed strictly necessary. Biopsies and specific tissue samples from the dead were all I ever authorized. You would have done the same."

d.i.c.ken admitted this with a quick nod.

"This implies some sort of large-scale morbidity study. Whole body a.s.sessments, thousands of tissue a.n.a.lyses . . . I need to sit down."

DeWitt brought a chair. Augustine slumped into it and leaned forward, shaking his head. "I'm trying to make sense of it," he said.

"Try harder," d.i.c.ken urged.

"I know of no reason other than retrovirus expression," Augustine said. "Tracking expression of novel HERV in the new children. A statistical sampling of expression in dozens or hundreds of individuals, correlated with known biographies, stress patterns. That would require an unprecedented effort. Monumental."

"To what end?"

"It could be an attempt to understand the whole process. What the ancient viruses are up to. What dangers they might present."

"To predict incidence of Shiver?" d.i.c.ken asked. "That's being done elsewhere. Why do it here, unauthorized?"

"Because nowhere else do they have access to so many new children, dead or alive," Augustine said.

"This is making me sick," DeWitt said, and leaned on the small desk, pushing aside the folder.

Augustine looked up at d.i.c.ken. "I'm not the puppet master, Christopher. They broke me in the ranks months ago. I've been trying to keep whatever responsibility was left to me in order to maintain some sense of order." He waved his arm feebly at the stainless steel doors. "People died, Christopher."

"That's what Marian Freedman said, last time I visited Fort Detrick. Some excuse. Anything goes. You're not the bad guy here?" d.i.c.ken asked.

"Were they bad guys, really?" Augustine asked. "Do we know that?"

"What about the parents?" DeWitt asked.

"Sentiment must be considered," Augustine said. "Medical ethics should prevail even in an emergency. But we've never faced this kind of problem before."

d.i.c.ken took Augustine's arm and lifted him to his feet. "One last bit of evidence," he said.

Augustine walked slowly through the benches in the molecular biology lab, taking in the collection of expensive machinery with impa.s.sivity, long past the possibility of surprise. d.i.c.ken opened the hatch at the back of the lab and switched on the fluorescent lights, revealing a long, narrow room. All hesitated before entering.

Steel shelves reaching to the ceiling held hundreds of long cardboard boxes. d.i.c.ken pulled out one and opened the hinged lid. Within were bones: femurs, tagged and arranged according to size. Another box held phalanges. Bigger boxes on the lower right, none more than four feet in length, held complete skeletons.

Augustine leaned against the edge of the frame. "There's nothing I can do here," he said. "Nothing any of us can do."

"This isn't all," d.i.c.ken said. "There's an upper floor. It's still locked."

"What do you think they keep up there?" DeWitt asked, her face ashen.

"No excuses, Christopher," Augustine said. "We should not forget this, but what in h.e.l.l does anger do for us, now? For the sick children?"

"Not a G.o.dd.a.m.ned thing," d.i.c.ken admitted. "Let's go."

44.

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Darwin's Children Part 17 summary

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