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The Twelve (The Passage 2)

Page 22

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"When was this taken?" Guilder asked.

"Seventeen months ago. These are Richards's files."

God damn, Guilder thought. It was just like Lear had said.

"If he's got the virus," Nelson said, "the question is why it's acting differently in his body. It could be a variant we haven't seen, one that activates the thymus like the others and then goes dormant somehow. Or it could be something else, particular to him."

Guilder frowned. "Such as?"

"Your guess is as good as mine. Some sort of natural immunity seems the likely culprit, but there's no way of really knowing. It might have something to do with the anti-androgens he was taking. All the sweeps were taking pretty big doses. Depo-Provera, spironolactone, prednisone."

"You think the steroids did this?"

Nelson shrugged halfheartedly. "It could be a factor. We know the virus interacts with the endocrine system, same as the anti-androgens." He closed the file and turned in his chair. "But here's something else. I did a little digging on the woman. Not much to find, but what there is is mighty interesting. I printed it up for you."

Nelson presented him with a fat file of papers. Guilder opened to the first page.

"She's an MD?"

"Orthopedic surgeon. Keep going."

Guilder read. Lila Beatrice Kyle, born September 29, 1974, Boston, Massachusetts. Parents both academics, the father an English professor at BU, the mother a historian at Simmons. Andover then Wellesley, followed by four years at Dartmouth-Hitchcock for her medical degree. Residency and then a fellowship in orthopedics at Denver General. All impressive, but telling him nothing. Guilder turned to the next page. What was he looking at? The first page of an IRS form 1040, dated four years ago.

Lila Kyle was married to Brad Wolgast.

"You're kidding me."

Nelson was wearing one of his victorious grins. "I told you that you were going to like it. The Agent Wolgast. They had one child, a daughter, deceased. Some kind of congenital heart defect. Divorced three years later. She got remarried four months ago to a doctor who works at the same hospital, some big cardiologist. There's a few pages on him, too, though it doesn't really add anything."

"Okay, so she's an MD. Is there any record of her at the Chalet? Was it possible she was on the staff?"

Nelson shook his head. "Nothing. And I seriously doubt Richards would have missed this. As far as I can see, there's no reason not to think Grey found her just like he said."

"She could have been in the truck in that first aerial we got. We wouldn't have seen her."

"True. But I don't think Grey's lying about where he met her. The story's just too weird to make up. And I checked: her Denver address puts her within just a couple of miles of a Home Depot. The way Grey was headed, he would have gone right through there. You've talked to her. She seems to think Grey is some kind of handyman. I don't think she has a clue what's going on. The woman's crazy as a bedbug."

"Is that your official diagnosis?"

Nelson shrugged. "There's no history of psychiatric illness in the paperwork, but consider her situation. She's pregnant, hiding, on the run. People are getting ripped to shreds. Somehow she manages to stay alive, but she gets left behind. How would you feel? The brain's a pretty nimble organ. Right now it's rewriting reality for her, and doing a hell of a good job. Based on Grey's file, I'd say she's got plenty in common with the guy, actually."

Guilder thought a moment and returned the file to the desk. "Well, I'm not buying it. What are the chances that these two would simply bump into each other? It's too big a coincidence."

"Maybe," Nelson said. "Either way, it doesn't tell us much. And the woman might be infected, but we're just not seeing it. Maybe her pregnancy masks it somehow."

"How far along is she?"

"I'm no expert, but from fetal size, I'd say about thirty weeks. You can check with Suresh."

Suresh was the MD Guilder had brought in from USAMRIID. An infectious diseases doc, he'd been tasked to Special Weapons only six months ago. Guilder had told him little, only that Grey and the woman were "persons of interest."

"How long before we can get a decent culture from him?"

"That depends. Assuming we can isolate the virus at all, somewhere between forty-eight and seventy-two hours. If you're really asking my opinion, the wisest course would be to pack him off to Atlanta. They're the ones who are best equipped to handle something like this. And if Grey's immune, I can't see why they wouldn't just let bygones be bygones. Not with so much at stake."

Guilder shook his head. "Let's wait until we have something solid."

"I wouldn't wait long. Not with the way things are going."

"We won't. But you heard the guy. He thinks he's been sleeping in a motel. I doubt anybody's going to take us seriously if that's all we've got. They'll lock us both up and throw away the key if we're lucky."

Nelson frowned, touching his beard with a thoughtful gesture. "I see your point."

"I'm not saying we won't tell them," Guilder offered. "But let's move cautiously. Seventy-two hours, then I'll make the call, all right?"

A frozen moment followed. Had Nelson bought it? Then the man nodded.

"Just keep digging." Guilder clapped a hand on Nelson's shoulder. "And tell Suresh to keep the two of them sedated for the time being. If either of them flips, I don't want to take any chances."

"You think those straps will hold?"

The question was rhetorical; both men knew the answer.

Guilder left Nelson in the lab and rode the elevator to the roof. His left leg was dragging again, a hitch in his step like a hiccup. Outside, the Blackbird officer in charge, named Masterson, nodded a terse greeting but otherwise left him alone. Vintage Blackbird, this guy: built like a dump truck with arms as thick as hydrants and a face petrified into the self-satisfied sneer of an overgrown frat boy. In his wraparound sunglasses and baseball cap and body armor, Masterson seemed less a person than an action figure. Where did they get these characters? Were they grown on some kind of farm? Cultured in a petri dish? They were thugs, pure and simple, and Guilder had never liked dealing with them-Richards being Exhibit A-though it was also true that their almost robotic obedience made them ideally suited for certain jobs; if they didn't exist, you'd have to invent them.

He moved to the edge of the roof. It was just past noon, the air breathless under a shapeless white sun, the land as flat and featureless as a pool table. The only interruptions to the perfectly linear horizon were a gleaming domed building, probably something to do with the college, and, just to the south, the bowl-like shape of a football stadium. One of those kinds of schools, Guilder thought-a sports franchise masquerading as a college where criminals drifted through phony courses and filled the coffers of the alumni fund by pounding their opposite numbers to pieces on autumn afternoons.

He let his eyes peruse the FEMA camp below. The presence of refugees was a wrinkle he hadn't anticipated, and initially it had concerned him. But when he'd considered the situation more closely, he couldn't see how this made any difference. The word from the Army was that in a day or two they'd all be gone anyway. A group of boys were playing near the wire, kicking a half-deflated ball around in the dirt. For a few minutes Guilder watched them. The world could be falling apart, and yet children were children; at a moment's notice they could put all their cares aside and lose themselves in a game. Perhaps that was what Guilder had felt with Shawna: a few minutes in which he got to be the boy he never was. Maybe that was all he'd ever wanted-what anybody ever wanted.

But Lawrence Grey: something about the man nagged at him, and it wasn't just his incredible story or the improbable coincidence of the woman in question being Agent Wolgast's wife. It was the way Grey had spoken of her. Please, it's me you want. Just don't hurt Lila. Guilder never would have guessed Grey was capable of caring about another person like that, let alone a woman. Everything in his file had led Guilder to expect a man who was at best a loner, at worst a sociopath. But Grey's pleas on Lila's behalf had obviously been heartfelt. Something had happened between them; a bond had been forged.

His gaze widened, then taking in the entirety of the camp. All these people: they were trapped. And not merely by the wires that surrounded them. Physical barricades were nothing compared to the wires of the mind. What had truly imprisoned them was one another. Husbands and wives, parents and children, friends and companions: what they believed had given them strength in their lives had actually done the opposite. Guilder recalled the couple who lived across the street from his townhouse, trading off their sleeping daughter on the way to the car. How heavy that burden must have felt in their arms. And when the end swept down upon them all, they would exit the world on a wave of suffering, their agonies magnified a million times over by the loss of her. Would they have to watch her die? Would they perish first, knowing what would become of her in their absence? Which was preferable? But the answer was neither. Love had sealed their doom. Which was what love did. Guilder's father had taught that lesson well enough.

Guilder was dying. That was inarguable, a fact of nature. So, too, was the fact that Lawrence Grey-this disposable nobody, this goddamn janitor, a man who had in his pathetic life brought nothing but misery to the world-was not. Somewhere in the body of Lawrence Grey lay the secret to the ultimate freedom, and Horace Guilder would find it, and take it for his own.

Chapter 18

The days crawled past. And still no word on the buses.

Everyone was restless. Outside the wire, the Army came and went, its numbers thinning. Each morning, Kittridge went to the shed to inquire about the situation; each morning, he came away with the same answer: the buses are on the way, be patient.

For a whole day it rained, turning the camp into a giant mud bath. Now the sun had returned, cooking every surface with a crust of dried earth. Each afternoon more MREs appeared, tossed from the back of an Army five-ton, but never any news. The chemical toilets were foul, the waste cans overflowing with trash. Kittridge spent hours watching the front gate; no more refugees were coming in. With each passing day, the place had begun to feel like an island surrounded by a hostile sea.

He'd made an ally of Vera, the Red Cross volunteer who had first approached them in the check-in line. She was younger than Kittridge had first thought, a nursing student at Midwest State. Like all the civilian workers, she seemed utterly drained, the days of strain weighing in her face. She understood his frustration, she said, everyone did. She had hoped to take the buses, too; she was stranded like the rest of them. One day they were coming from Chicago, then next from Kansas City, then from Joliet. Some FEMA screwup. They were supposed to get a bank of satellite phones, too, so people could call their relatives and let them know they were okay. What had happened to that, Vera didn't know. Even the local cell network was down.

Kittridge had begun to see the same faces: an elegantly dressed woman who kept a cat on a leash, a group of young black men all dressed in the white shirts and black neckties of Jehovah's Witnesses, a girl in a cheer-leading outfit. A listlessness had settled over the camp; the deflected drama of nondeparture had left everyone in a passive state. There were rumors that the water supply had become contaminated, and now the medical tent was full of people complaining of stomach cramps, muscle aches, fever. A number of people had radios that were still operating, but all they heard was a ringing sound, followed by the now-familiar statement from the Emergency Broadcast System. Do not leave your homes. Shelter in place. Obey all orders of military and law enforcement personnel. Another minute of ringing, and the words would be repeated.

Kittridge had begun to wonder if they were ever getting out of there. And all night long, he watched the fences.

Late afternoon of the fourth day: Kittridge was playing yet another hand of cards with April, Pastor Don, and Mrs. Bellamy. They'd switched from bridge to five-card poker, betting ludicrous sums of money that were purely hypothetical. April, who claimed never to have played before, had already taken Kittridge for close to five thousand dollars. The Wilkeses had disappeared; nobody had seen them since Wednesday. Wherever they'd gone, they'd taken their luggage with them.

"Jesus, it's roasting in here," Joe Robinson said. He'd barely been off his cot all day.

"Sit in a hand," Kittridge suggested. "It'll take your mind off the heat."

"Christ," the man moaned. The sweat was pouring off him. "I can barely move."

Kittridge, with only a pair of sixes, folded his cards. April, wearing a perfect poker face, raked in another pot.

"I'm bored," Tim announced.

April was sorting the slips of paper they used for chips into piles. "You can play with me. I'll show you how to bet."

"I want to play crazy eights."

"Trust me," she told her brother, "this is a lot better."

Pastor Don was dealing a fresh hand when Vera appeared at the flap of the tent. She quickly met Kittridge's eye. "Can we talk outside?"

He rose from the cot and stepped into the late-day heat.

"Something's going on," Vera said. "FEMA just got word that all civilian transportation east of the Mississippi has been suspended."

"Are you certain?"

"I overheard them talking about it in the site director's office. Half the FEMA staff has bugged out already."

"Who else knows about this?"

"Are you kidding? I'm not even telling you."



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