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Authors: Kevin Anderson,Chris Carter (Creator)

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BOOK: Ground Zero (The X-Files)
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Now the time had come for their work to reach its climax. If they could not stop Bright Anvil soon, then all their efforts were simply smoke blown in the eyes of people who wanted to believe.

Kamida ate his salad, waiting for her to continue. His stiff, grave demeanor, however, led her to suspect that he had already guessed what she was about to say.

“Everything I’ve tried has failed,” Miriel said, picking at the greens on her plate and then spearing a chunk of pineapple with her fork. “The government has a momentum behind what it decides to do—and no one, not me, not you, can stop it once it’s started.”

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GROUND ZERO

“I take it that means that no one has heard our complaints.”

“Oh, they’ve heard them all right,” Miriel said. “They just don’t pay attention to them, any more than they would bother with a gnat buzzing in their ears.”

The blind man sighed, and his scarred face fell. Miriel continued, speaking louder, leaning across the table toward him—though he could hear her perfectly well. “The Bright Anvil test is going ahead, even without Dr. Gregory. Somewhere out in the Marshall Islands, on an abandoned atoll.”

Ryan Kamida sat up sharply. “Of course,” he said. “Enika Atoll. That’s where it will take place.”

“How do you know?” she asked.

“How could it not take place there?” he practically shouted. With a sharp gesture Kamida knocked his salad plate sideways, hurling it off the table. It smashed on the floor of the greenhouse. The noise was thunderous, but he paid no attention to it. He turned and fixed his milky gaze on Miriel Bremen.

“Our greatest nightmares are about to unfold,” he said. 159

TWENTY-TWO

Kamida Residence, Waikiki, Oahu

Tuesday, 11:17 P.M.

A blind man has no need for lights. Alone in his spacious house, Ryan Kamida sat in the darkened living room lit only by outside reflections from the moon shining over the placid ocean and a warm glow from the glassed-in fireplace behind him.

As the evening chill deepened, he had started a fire, carefully stacking small sticks of cedar and pine, aromatic wood that made pleasant-smelling smoke as it burned. Kamida enjoyed the incense of the smoke, the velvet touch of radiating heat. He listened to the snapping and popping as the flames gnawed the wood. It sounded like…whispers. He opened the glass patio door so that the ocean breeze could drift in. In the distance he could hear the gentle pounding of the surf, the steady drone of traffic on the coast highway below. Tourists coming to Oahu from time zones all across the world never

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slept, but busied themselves constantly, sightseeing, shopping, eating. Kamida sank back in his chair, scarred hands gripping the rough-textured arms. Waiting. The cushions conformed themselves perfectly to his body. Year after year, the weight of his body had shaped them during this nightly ritual. The voices would come soon. He both dreaded and anticipated them. This time, though, the dread felt stronger, more ominous. The situation had changed, worsened. He knew it and so did the spirits. A chill swept down his spine, and he turned his head to the left toward the fireplace, feeling the heat spill on his cheek.

Bright Anvil. Enika Atoll.

Kamida was more distressed than Miriel Bremen could ever know. He showed it in a different way. Regardless of the circumstances, though, he could not be with her this evening. He had obligations—to the ghosts. The spectral voices demanded their share of his time, and he had no choice but to give it. He could not complain. Ryan Kamida was alive, and they were not.

Outside, ocean waves continued to roll in, sounding like pebbles rolling in a steel drum.

On a table next to his chair, close at hand, he kept his collection of tiny soapstone sculptures. He amused himself by picking the small objects up, using the sensitive ends of his fingers to explore the details of their carving. His hands were scarred but his mind was sharp. The intricate yet minuscule figures of dolphins, elephants, dragons, and ancient gods fascinated him. Heard through the open porch high up on the hillside, the soughing sound of waves became muted. Kamida sensed a static building in the room,

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THE X-FILES

a charge in the atmosphere. His hand tightened around the sculpture in his hands, an image of Pele, the female fire god from many Island mythologies.

Then the voices buzzed in his ears, speaking his old, neverforgotten language. The phantoms were clustered all around him.

Kamida had never seen the spectral images directly, though he visualized their distinct shadows in his mind, echoes transmitted by senses other than his fried optic nerves. He knew the spirits bore faces frozen in a shriek at the moment of nuclear conflagration as their every cell became an inferno. He couldn’t see the harsh white light that bathed his own face as the spectres swirled in front of him, filling his home with blazing, cold light.

But the apparitions did not harm him. These spirits were not here to destroy. Not tonight. They had another purpose altogether; they had a use for Ryan Kamida, the sole survivor of his people.

The faces separated from the glowing, swirling cloud one by one and floated in front of him, giving him their names, telling of who they had been, describing their lives’ triumphs and losses, their stolen dreams.

His people’s lives had been cut short, but the phantasms had to relive every moment, force Kamida to witness it all. He
remembered
for them.

Though Enika Atoll had never been heavily populated, the mass of demanding ghosts seemed never-ending as they forced him to think of their lives, their names, one by one…as they had done every night for the past forty years. Ryan Kamida sat in his chair, helpless, gripping the small figurine of Pele. He had no choice but to listen. 162

TWENTY-THREE

The Pentagon, Arlington, Virginia

Wednesday, 10:09 A.M.

Following a hunch, Mulder went to see Nancy Scheck’s

“friend,” Brigadier General Matthew Bradoukis, in his Pentagon office. Mulder thought that he might have to talk fast to bluff his way into a brief meeting with the general, now that the man had had additional time to recover from his shock. Mulder frequently found that people avoided him because of his knack for asking constant, uncomfortable questions. This morning he suspected Bradoukis would be in a convenient meeting or otherwise occupied away from his desk. Surprisingly, though, the general’s administrative assistant spoke quickly into the intercom, then motioned for Mulder to make his way back to the large office Matthew Bradoukis called his own.

The brigadier general stood from behind his desk and extended a beefy hand. His wide, swarthy face looked as if it had been drained of self163

THE X-FILES

confidence—a quality few generals lacked. He squeezed his generous lips together as if to squash his nervousness.

“I’ve been expecting you, Agent Mulder.” The general’s red-rimmed eyes gave him the appearance of not having slept well in recent nights.

“Frankly, I was afraid you would refuse to see me, General,” Mulder said. “Some people don’t want me looking into certain aspects of this murder investigation.”

“On the contrary.” Bradoukis sat back down and folded his hands together, staring at his wooden desktop before raising his eyes to meet Mulder’s gaze. “You might not believe this, but I’ve been looking forward to your arrival—you in particular. I was upset with you yesterday and your embarrassing questions, wondering what the hell an FBI guy was doing at Nancy’s house. But then I looked into your background with the Bureau. I’ve got my sources, and I’ve learned a bit about your reputation, read summaries of some of the cases you’ve investigated. I’ve even met your Assistant Director Skinner. He seems a good enough man. He speaks highly of you, though guardedly.”

Mulder was surprised by the information. He and the assistant director had been at odds many times, because of Mulder’s insistence on exotic explanations that Skinner didn’t want to hear. Mulder couldn’t tell which side Skinner was on.

“If you know my reputation, sir, then I’m doubly surprised that you agreed to see me,” Mulder said. “I’d have thought my track record would scare you off.”

Bradoukis squeezed his hands together as if he wanted to pop all the knuckles simultaneously. His face took on a deeply serious expression. “Agent Mulder, we both know something highly

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unusual is going on here. I can’t say this in any official capacity—but I think your…willingness to accept certain things that others might find laughable could be a great advantage in this investigation.”

That got Mulder’s attention. “Are you aware that there were two other bodies found, apparently killed by identical means? One was a weapons designer at the Teller Nuclear Research Facility. The other was an old rancher down at the White Sands Missile Range near the Trinity Test Site. The bodies were found in a condition very similar to Nancy Scheck’s.”

The general pulled open a side drawer and removed a folder. He tossed it across the desk to Mulder. “And two more,” Bradoukis said, “two you don’t even know about. A pair of missileers at Vandenberg Air Force Base on the central coast of California.”

Surprised, Mulder opened the file. Glossy photographs revealed the now-familiar details of the hideously burned corpses. Mulder noted the control racks on the walls, the outdated buttons and oscilloscopes, the plastic knobs blackened and folded in on themselves in what appeared to be a cramped room somewhere, a sealed chamber that had contained the deadly blast.

“Where was this taken?” he asked.

“Deep underground in a buried Minuteman III missile control bunker. Those bunkers are the safest possible construction, which is why we place them so far below the surface where they can survive a nuclear attack. The bunker is hardened against a direct strike. Only those two men were down there. For security reasons no one else is allowed. We have complete records. The elevator was not used.”

He tapped the gruesome pictures. “But still…
something
came in and obliterated them
.”

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THE X-FILES

Leaving Mulder to stare at the photos, the general leaned back in his chair. “I know one of your operating theories in this investigation is that some new weapon under development at the Teller Nuclear Research Facility was triggered in Dr. Gregory’s lab, and that another such device went off at the White Sands Missile Range.

“Such an explanation, however, fails to take into account these two young officers in the missile control bunker, or—”

he stopped and swallowed as his voice caught, “or Nancy at her home.”

Mulder thought to himself that Scully could probably come up with some far-fetched but scientifically plausible scenario to convince herself that there was still a rational explanation. General Bradoukis continued. “Believe me when I tell you this, Agent Mulder. I work at the highest levels of the Defense Department. I manage some of those invisible programs you mentioned yesterday. I can tell you with
utter certainty
that no weapon we are currently considering or have under development can do this.”

“So it doesn’t have anything to do with Bright Anvil?”

Mulder asked, fishing.

“Not in the sense you mean,” the general answered, then took a deep breath. “Ah, would you like some coffee, Agent Mulder? I can have some sent right in. Perhaps a pastry?”

But Mulder would not allow himself to be distracted.

“What are you saying, ‘not in the sense you mean’?” he asked. “How are these events connected with Bright Anvil?

Is there a spinoff of the weapons project?”

The general sighed. “Nancy Scheck was in charge of the Department of Energy oversight on the entire Bright Anvil Project, and Dr. Gregory was the lead scientist. The test of the prototype device will

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GROUND ZERO

be conducted on a small atoll in the Marshall Islands, sometime in the next few days.”

Mulder nodded. He had surmised or known all of this information already.

“The Marshall Islands,” Bradoukis repeated. “Bear that in mind, because it’s important.”

“How so?” Mulder asked.

“Immediately before those two missileers were killed,” the general said, his voice laden with import, “they had gone through a routine missile-targeting exercise. Since the U.S. and Russia are no longer enemies, we’re not allowed to aim our Minutemen toward them, not even for practice.” He shrugged. “Diplomatic constraints. For the exercises we choose random coordinates around the world.”

“So how does that tie in?” Mulder said. The general jabbed a finger at him. “For that morning’s exercises, their missile was targeted toward a small atoll out in the Marshall Islands—the same atoll where the Bright Anvil test is scheduled.”

Mulder stared at the general. “What are you suggesting?”

“I leave that for you, Agent Mulder. You’re reputed to have an active imagination. But you may think of some possibilities I couldn’t suggest to my superiors because I’d be laughed out of my rank.”

Mulder frowned, looking down at the gruesome photos again.

“One other piece of information,” Bradoukis said. “The atoll—Enika Atoll—has a bit of history of its own. Another hydrogen bomb test took place there in the fifties—Sawtooth—though you won’t find it in any record book. It took place shortly after we went through such enormous efforts to clear those islanders off Bikini Atoll. In this instance, the scientists and the military were in a hurry, and the island wasn’t as thoroughly checked as it should have 167

THE X-FILES

been. There is some evidence that an entire group of indigenous islanders was obliterated.”

“My God,” Mulder whispered. Sick horror prevented him from saying anything else. The general waited, and finally Mulder said, “And you think this…this tragedy on the atoll forty years ago has something to do with these unexplained deaths today?”

Suddenly he remembered the results of Scully’s analysis on the residue in the vial found in Scheck’s swimming pool. Human ash, four decades old, and grainy sand. Coral sand. The general unfolded his hands again and stared at his fingernails. “I suggested no such thing, Agent Mulder. You are, of course, free to think what you choose.”

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