Fall of Night (Dead of Night Series) (11 page)

BOOK: Fall of Night (Dead of Night Series)
8.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Okay, okay, yeah, I get it. Fuck.”

“So letting us have the flash drives is the quickest and surest way to help us understand this enough so that we
can
get you out of there.”

“I get the logic, General, but pardon me if I don’t trust your motives worth a wet shit.”

The general sighed. “Is there something else I can do for you that would encourage you to do the right thing here?”

“Fuck you.”

“Officer Fox, I—”

“No, General, fuck you. In fact, fuck you and that asshole in the White House, and fuck everyone else who had a hand in this. Fuck all of you.
All
of you. Am I making myself clear? Is any of that getting through? You deserve to burn in hell.”

General Zetter’s response caught her totally off guard. He said, “I know.”

A sob broke in Dez’s chest. She squeezed her eyes shut as tightly as she could, wincing at the effort not to see anything, even her own thoughts.

“You killed him,” she said.

“Who?” asked Zetter sharply, clearly alarmed. “Is Mr. Trout—”

“Not him, you douchebag. You killed JT.”

“Who is that, Officer Fox? Was that a friend of yours?”

“Patrol Sergeant JT Hammond, Stebbins Police. A good man. A family man. A decent person who only ever cared about other people. You maniacs killed him.”

Zetter said, “Was he the officer who went outside with the other infected?”

“Yes.” It hurt Dez to say that one word.

“I … he…” Zetter cleared his throat. “I saw what happened to him. I saw what he did. He protected the children from the infected. Officer Hammond died a hero.”

Dez banged the back of head against the wall. “JT was murdered and you bastards killed him. And now you want us to spread our legs and let you fuck us.”

“That’s not how it is, Officer.”

“Yeah,” she said. “It is.”

Neither of them spoke again for several burning seconds.

Then Zetter said, “We
need
those flash drives.”

“If you try to take them, General, I’ll burn them. You can come in here with guns blazing and you won’t find shit. But I can promise that every single thing you do will be streamed live to the Net. The world’s watching, General.”

“Officer Fox,” said the general, “be careful not to overplay your hand. You might not have as many good cards as you think. I’m trying to work something out we can both live with—and I do mean
live
—don’t make fools out of both of us, and don’t make martyrs out of the children in that school.”

Dez almost told him to eat shit, but she kept her tongue. What he’d just said chilled her, filling her mind with awful possibilities.

“Look,” she said, “Volker gave the flash drives to Billy. It’s his call. I’ll talk to him and get back to you.”

“Very well, Officer Fox, I apprec—”

She switched off the walkie-talkie.

Moving slowly, like someone awakening after surgery, she got to her feet, closed the door, crossed to the teacher’s desk, pulled out the chair, and crawled into the footwell. It was a tight, dark space that smelled of shoe polish, crayons, and old coffee. Dez pulled her knees up to her chest, wrapped her arms around her shins, and laid her head down. Sobs shuddered through her whole body and tears steamed hot and thick down her face.

“Oh, God,” she wept. “JT.”

The shakes began then.

Dez crammed a fist into her mouth to block the scream that tried to tear its way out of her throat.

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

THE OVAL OFFICE

THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON, D.C.

The president returned to his office and there received an endless flow of advisors, including generals of different wattage; planners from FEMA; senators from Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, and Ohio; scientific advisors; the senior members of his staff; and Scott Blair. Over and over again, Scott Blair.

His desk began piling up with reports on everything from estimated casualties—the current guess was more than nine thousand—to letters from heads of state expressing sympathy and offering assistance. The offers were rote lip service that carried as little actual weight as people at a funeral suggesting the bereaved call on them if there’s anything they can do. Most people wouldn’t want to take that call, and that was doubly so in global politics. Besides, the quickest way for his administration to look even weaker than it was would be to ask for help from another country.

However, that was secondary.

When he was alone for a few minutes, the document that caught and held the president’s attention was the estimated loss of life. He read the numbers, then closed his eyes and winced as if each digit gouged a fishing hook under his skin.

Nine thousand people.

Three times as many people than died in the fall of the Twin Towers.

Nearly twice as many as died during the Iraq War; more than twice the number of Americans killed in Afghanistan.

Nine thousand. All in one day, on American soil.

On his watch.

During 9/11 he’d been a junior senator from a midwestern state, and he’d been at home when the tragedy happened. He met with dozens of groups of citizens, from a few dozen at a Rotary Club to tens of thousands at a memorial service in a baseball stadium. He saw something in each one of them, something that connected them, one to another, while also binding them to that moment in time. It was a pervasive, shared wound that would never really heal. The scar itself would hurt, and it would continue to hurt for years, possibly for the lifetime of each person who’d lived through that terrible day. Even now, so many years later, if you mentioned the Towers or 9/11, there was a flicker behind the eyes. Not exactly pain, but a memory of pain, an awareness of that scar gouged into the national soul.

Now this.

Nine thousand people dead. Not from a foreign enemy or fanatics prosecuting a radical ideology, but from within the U.S. government. Illegal bioweapons research. Military action against civilians.

It wouldn’t matter that the research was initiated before his presidency and conducted without his knowledge. He would still be blamed.

It didn’t matter that the Colonel Dietrich’s attack on Stebbins and the school were desperate measures to prevent the pathogen from spreading and killing millions. If your dog gets out of the yard and bites people, you get no sympathy. You’re still to blame.

Which meant that in the eyes of the public he was the villain of this piece.

It would destroy him. His career, his credibility, and his legacy.

The only chance he had, the only way he could imagine to save some shred of his presidency, would be to prove that Volker acted alone and without sanction, that the man was mentally unstable, and that all actions taken were the only ones left.

All of which was true.

But none of which could be proved.

Without the flash drives.

As the night wore on, he began to regret Blair’s suggestion that they label Billy Trout as an anarchist hacker and cyber-terrorist. That was useful in the heat of the crisis, but if this thing was truly over, then the truth about Trout would come out and he’d become the hero opposing the big, bad villain in the White House.

“Shit,” he muttered. He decided that it was Scott Blair’s problem to fix.

His intercom buzzed. “Mr. President, the secretary of state is here.”

The president rubbed his eyes and sighed. “Okay. Send him in.”

He listened to that aide, and others, and still others; hearing what they said, interacting, pretending to give his full attention, while all the time waiting for General Zetter’s call. Waiting to be told that the drives had been obtained.

Waiting for a lifeline.

Then he got a call from Scott Blair.

“Mr. President,” said Blair, “the FBI have located Dr. Volker…”

 

CHAPTER THIRTY

GOOD-NITES MOTOR COURT

FAYETTE COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA

The two FBI agents who parked in front of the motel were named Smith and Jones. Actual names, and the pairing was done by random chance rather than due to some supervisory sense of humor. Adam Smith and Miriam Jones were both of average height, average build, early thirties, with good hair and off-the-rack suits. They carried the same model handgun, wore identical wires behind their ears, and worked out at the same gym.

And they liked each other.

Smith privately thought that Jones was a closet liberal who was probably using the job as a way to leverage herself into the much higher-paying world of corporate security. Jones thought that Smith was a semiliterate mouth-breathing Hawk who yearned for the chance to shoot someone.

They were both entirely correct about the other.

Neither ever expressed their opinions to anyone, and certainly not to their partners. On the job they were clinically precise, appropriately efficient, and entirely humorless.

Smith nodded to one of the units whose door opened to the parking lot. A Toyota Rav4 was parked outside.

“Credit card trace says Volker booked that room,” he said.

Jones consulted her iPhone. “Tags match.”

As one they looked from Volker’s car to the one parked next to it, a Crown Victoria nearly identical to theirs. There were no other cars in that part of the lot. Sodium vapor lamps painted the falling downpour a chemical orange. Winds blew the rain across the lot in serpentine waves.

They got out of their car and Jones placed a hand on the hood of Volker’s Toyota.

“Cold,” she said. Neither of them wore hats or used umbrellas, and they were immediately soaked. Neither of them cared.

Smith felt the hood of the Crown Vic. “Warm.”

“Federal tags,” said Jones.

Smith cocked an eyebrow. “CIA?”

“They weren’t scheduled for this pickup,” said Jones, frowning his disapproval. “Not that I heard.”

The agents unbuttoned their jackets to facilitate reaching their guns, crossed to the motel unit’s door, and knocked. It was opened almost at once by a man dressed in a business suit very much like the one Smith wore. He had an ID wallet open to show them his credentials.

“Saunders,” he said.

“What are you doing here?” demanded Jones.

“Volker’s one of ours.”

“We know that,” said Smith. “But we were assigned to pick him up. The Agency doesn’t have jurisdiction here.”

Saunders was a tired-looking man in his fifties. Probably a former field agent relegated to scut work on the downslope of his career track. “Moot now,” he said, and he stepped back to open the door.

Smith and Jones gave him hard looks as they entered the motel room of the man who had created Lucifer 113.

They stopped just inside the door.

There were two other men in the room. One was Saunders’s partner, a gap-toothed and freckle-faced young man who looked like Alfred E. Newman, except he wasn’t wearing a goofy smile. Instead he was staring up at the second man.

Dr. Volker’s shoes swung slowly back and forth ten inches above the carpeted floor. His arms and legs were slack, head tilted to one side, eyes wide, and tongue bulging from between his parted lips. A length of heavy-duty orange extension cord was affixed to the neck of the ceiling fan and cinched tight around Volker’s throat.

A handwritten note was affixed to his chest with a safety pin.

I gave my research notes to the reporter, Mr. Trout.

This is all my fault.

I hope there is a hell so that

I may burn in it for all eternity.

“Ah, shit,” said Smith.

“Fuck,” said Jones.

“Yeah,” said Saunders.

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

WHAT THE FINKE THINKS

WTLK LIVE TALK RADIO

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA

Gavin Finke’s producer and engineer were screening a huge number of calls and putting them in queue.

“Okay,” said Gavin, “we have Ron from Fayette County. Thanks for calling.”

“Hey, Gavin, big fan of the show. Been listening for years.”

“Thanks, my man. So tell me, what do you think is happening in Stebbins?”

“It’s all a big government cover-up,” said Ron. “I heard they were testing some kind of bioweapon on the people in Stebbins County and it got out of control.”

“That’s quite a claim, Ron. What makes you think that?”

“It was on the Internet.”

“And if it’s on the Net it has to be real?”

“Well … no, but I saw a video by a reporter from Stebbins. Billy Trout. You know the guy, he does that
Fishing for News with Billy Trout
thing. Did all those stories about Homer Gibbon all the way up to the execution and all. He’s a real reporter.”

“Not sure there are any
real
reporters anymore, Ron, but sure, Billy Trout’s a friend of the show. We had him on with the Yardley Yeti story.”

“I heard that show. I think that was a
chupacabra
and—”

“Keeping on point here. Why do you think Billy has his finger on the pulse of a government conspiracy?”

“Well, c’mon, man … why else would they have tried to kill him?”

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

CHECKPOINT #43

STEBBINS COUNTY LINE

The young sergeant stepped into the muddy road and made that air-slapping gesture that meant to slow down and stop.

Without turning to the captain, the driver said, “We good here, boss?”

“I got this,” said Imura. “Put on your poker faces and don’t say shit.”

The four members of his team—three men and a woman—said nothing, but they each removed credentials from their pockets and held them on their laps. The sergeant was a thin Latino with a precisely trimmed mustache and absolutely no air of authority. New to his stripes, thought Imura.

“Identification, please,” said the sergeant. He wore a white combat hazmat suit over which were gun and equipment belts. His protective hood was pulled off, though, and hung behind ears that stood out at right angles to his head. The sergeant looked cold, wet, far too young, and completely terrified. The rain had slowed to a steady, depressing drizzle and the two small all-weather camp lanterns set on either side of the road did little to push back the darkness. Lightning flashed behind the trees but the thunder was miles off.

Other books

The Good Daughter by Jean Brashear
Nostalgia by M.G. Vassanji
American Philosophy by John Kaag
Annie On My Mind by Garden, Nancy
Twilight Robbery by Frances Hardinge
The Detective and the Devil by Lloyd Shepherd
To Kiss in the Shadows by Lynn Kurland
When Pigs Fly by Sanchez, Bob
Inspiration Point by M.A Casey