Mount Dragon (16 page)

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Authors: Douglas Preston

BOOK: Mount Dragon
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I
was converted,” Harper said, “when I saw the kind of dough an assistant professor makes.”

“Thirty thousand,” said Vanderwagon, “after six or eight years of graduate education. Can you believe it?”

“I remember when I was at Berkeley,” said Harper. “All my research proposals had to go through this decrepit bureaucrat, the chairman of the department. The fossilized SOB was always grousing about cost.”

“Working for Brent,” Vanderwagon said, “is like night and day. He understands how science operates. And how scientists work. I don't have to explain or justify anything. If I need something, I e-mail him and it happens. We're lucky to be working for him.”

Harper nodded. “Damn lucky.”

At least they agree on something
, thought Carson.

“We're happy to have you aboard, Guy,” Singer said at last, nodding and raising his beer in salute. The others followed.

“Thanks,” Carson smiled broadly, thinking about the quirk of fate that had suddenly landed him amongst the pride of GeneDyne.

Levine sat in his office, the door open, listening in silent fascination to a telephone conversation his secretary Ray was having in the outer office.

“I'm sorry, baby,” Ray was saying, “I swear I thought you said the
Boylston
Street Theater, not the Brattle—”

There was a silence.

“I swear, I heard you say
Boylston
. No, I was there, at the front door, waiting for you. At the Boylston Theater, of course! No wait, hold on. Baby, no—”

Ray cursed and hung up the phone.

“Ray?” Levine said.

“Yes?” Ray appeared in the door, smoothing his hair.

“There
is
no Boylston Street Theater.”

Comprehension dawned on Ray's face. “Guess that's why she hung up.”

Levine smiled, shaking his head. “Remember the call I got from that woman at the Sammy Sanchez show? I want you to call her back, tell her they can book me after all. I'll appear at their earliest convenience.”

“Me? What about Toni Wheeler? She won't like—”

“Toni wouldn't approve. She's a stick-in-the-mud about those kinds of television shows.”

Ray shrugged. “Okay, you got it. Anything else?”

Levine shook his head. “Not for now. Just work on your excuses. And shut the door, please.”

Ray returned to the outer office. Levine checked his watch, picked up the telephone for the tenth time that day, and listened. This time, he heard what he had been waiting for: the dial tone had changed from the usual steady tone to a series of rapid pulses. Quickly he hung up the phone, locked the office door, and connected his computer to the wall jack. Within thirty seconds, the familiar log-in device was on his screen once again.

Well, dust my broom, if it ain't the good professor-man, came the words on his screen. How's my mean mistreatin' papa?

Mime, what are you talking about? Levine typed.

Aren't you a fan of Elmore James?

Never heard of him. I got your signal. What news?

Good and bad. I've spent several hours poking around the GeneDyne net. It's quite a place. Sixty K worth of terminal IDs, connected above and below. You know, satellites and dedicated land lines, fiberoptic networks for asynchronous transfer videoconferencing. The architecture is impressive. I'm something of an expert in it now, of course. I could give tours.

That's good.

Yes. The bad news is that it's built like a bank vault. Isolated-ring design, with Brent Scopes at the center. Nobody except Scopes can see beyond their own profile, and he can see everything. He's Big Brother, he can walk the system at will. To paraphrase Muddy Waters, he's got his mojo working, but it just won't work for you.

Surely that isn't a problem for the Mime, Levine typed.

Have mercy! What a thought. I can stay cloaked without much effort, sipping a few milliseconds of CPU time here, a few there. But it's a problem for YOU, professor. Setting up a secure channel into Mount Dragon is a non-trivial undertaking. It means duplicating part of Scopes's own access. And that way danger lies, professor.

Explain.

Must I spell it out? If he happens to contact Mount Dragon while you're in the channel, his own access may be blocked. Then he'll probably run a bloodhound program back over the wire, and it'll bay up the good professor, not Mime. ISHTTOETOOYLS.

Mime, you know I don't understand your acronyms.

“I should have thought that obvious even to one of your lame sensibilities.” You won't be able to dawdle, professor. We'll have to keep your visits short.

What about the Mount Dragon records? Levine typed. If I could get at those, it would speed things up considerably.

NFW. Locked up tighter than Queen Mary's corset.

Levine took a deep breath. Mime was unreadable, unmovable, infuriating. Levine wondered what he would be like in person: no doubt the typical computer hacker, a nerdy guy with thick glasses, bad at football, no social life, onanistic tendencies.

Why, Mime, that doesn't sound like you, he typed.

Remember me? I'm the Monsieur Rick of cyberspace: I stick my neck out for no one. Scopes is too clever. You remember that pet project of his I was telling you about? Apparently, he's been programming some kind of virtual world for use as a network navigator. He gave a lecture on it at the Institute for Advanced Neurocybemetics about three years ago. Naturally, I broke in and stole the transcripts and screen shots. Very girthy, very girthy indeed. Groundbreaking use of 3-D programming. Anyway, since then Scopes has clamped the lid down tight. Nobody knows exactly what his program is now, or what it can do. But even back then, he was showing off some heavy shit at that lecture. Believe me, this dude is no computer-illiterate CEO. I found his private server, and was tempted to take a peek inside. But my discretion bested my curiosity. And that's unusual for me.

Mime, it's vitally important that I gain access to Mount Dragon. You know my work. You can help me to ensure a safer world.

No mind trips, my man! If there's one thing I've learned, only Mime matters. The rest of the world means no more to me than a dingleberry on a dog's ass.

Then why are you helping me at all? Remember that it was you who approached me in the first place.

There was a pause in the on-line conversation.

My reasons are my own, Mime responded. But I can guess yours. It's the GeneDyne lawsuit. Not just for money this time, is it? Scopes is trying to hit you where you live. If he succeeds, you'll lose your charter, your magazine, your credibility. You were a little hasty there with your accusations, and now you need some dirt to prove them retroactively. Tut, tut, professor.

You're only half right, Levine typed back.

Then I suggest you tell me the other half.

Levine hesitated at the keyboard.

Professor? Don't force me to remind you of the two planks our deep and meaningful phriendship is built on. One: I never do anything that will expose myself. And two: my own hidden agenda must remain hidden.

There's a new employee at Mount Dragon, Levine typed at last. A former student of mine. I think I can enlist his help.

There was another pause. I'll need his name in order to set up the channel, Mime responded at last.

Guy Carson, Levine typed.

Professor-man, came the response, you're a sentimentalist at heart. And that's a major flaw in a warrior. I doubt you'll succeed. But I shall enjoy watching you try; failure is always more interesting than success.

The screen went blank.

Carson stood impatiently in the hissing chemical shower, watching the poisonous cleansing agents run down his faceplate in yellow sheets. He tried to remind himself that the feeling of choking, of insufficient oxygen, was just his imagination. He stepped through into the next chamber and was buffeted by the chemical drying process. Another air-lock door popped open and he walked into the blinding white light of the Fever Tank. Pressing the global intercom button, he announced his arrival: “Carson in.” Few if any scientists were around to hear him, but the procedure was mandatory. It was all becoming routine—but a routine he felt he would never get used to.

He sat down at his desk and turned on his PowerBook with a gloved hand. His intercom was quiet; the facility was almost deserted. He wanted to get some work done and collect whatever messages might be waiting for him before de Vaca came.

When he had finished logging on, a line popped on the screen.

GOOD MORNING, GUY CARSON.

YOU HAVE 1 UNREAD MESSAGE.

He moused the e-mail icon, and the words came rushing onto the screen.

Guy—What's the latest on the inoculations? There's nothing new in the system. Please page me so we can discuss
.

Brent
.

Carson paged Scopes through GeneDyne's WAN service. The Gene Dyne CEO's response was immediate, as if he had been waiting for the message.

Ciao Guy! What's going on with your chimps?

So far so good. All six are healthy and active. John Singer suggested we cut the waiting period down to one week under the circumstances. I'll discuss it with Rosalind today.

Good. Give me any updates immediately, please. Interrupt me no matter what I'm doing. If you can't find me, contact Spencer Fairley.

I will.

Guy, have you had a chance to complete the white paper on your protocol? As soon as we're sure of success, I'd like you to get it distributed internally, with an eye toward eventual publication.

I'm just waiting for some final confirmations, then I'll e-mail a copy to you.

As they chatted, more people began to arrive in the lab, and the intercom became a busy party line, each person announcing his or her arrival. “De Vaca in,” he heard, and “Vanderwagon in” then “Brandon-Smith!” loud and in-your-face, as usual; and then the murmur of other arrivals and other conversations.

De Vaca soon appeared in the hatchway, silently, and logged on to her machine. The bulky bluesuit hid the contours of her body, which was fine with Carson. He didn't need any more distractions.

“Susana, I'd like to run a GEF purification on those proteins we discussed yesterday,” he said, keeping his voice as neutral as possible.

“Certainly,” said de Vaca crisply.

“They're in the centrifuge, labeled M-one through M-three.”

There was one thing he was glad of: de Vaca was a damn good technical assistant, maybe the best in the entire lab. A true professional—as long as she didn't lose her temper.

Carson made the final additions to the write-up that documented his procedure. It had taken him the better part of two days, and he was pleased with the result; though he thought Scopes might be a bit hasty in requesting it, he was secretly proud. Near noon, de Vaca returned with photographic strips of the gels. Carson took a look at the strips and felt another flush of pleasure: one more confirmation of imminent success.

Suddenly Brandon-Smith was in the door.

“Carson, you got a dead ape.”

There was a shocked silence.

“You mean, X-FLU?” Carson said, finding his voice. It wasn't possible.

“You bet,” she announced with relish, unconsciously smoothing her generous thighs with thickly gloved hands. “A pretty sight, I assure you.”

“Which one?” Carson asked.

“The male, Z-nine.”

“It hasn't even been a week,” Carson said.

“I know. You made pretty short work of him.”

“Where is he?”

“Still in the cage. Come on, I'll show you. Besides the rapidity, there are some other unusual aspects you'd better see.”

Carson rose shakily and followed Brandon-Smith to the Zoo. It was impossible that the cause had been X-FLU. Something else must have happened. The thought of reporting this development to Scopes came into his head like a dull pain.

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