The Einstein Pursuit (21 page)

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Authors: Chris Kuzneski

BOOK: The Einstein Pursuit
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‘I was here a few years ago,’ Eklund explained. ‘I knew where to find you.’

‘Very good. Many visitors – not that we have many visitors per se, mainly officers such as yourself – they get confused and wind up in our business offices, which are located in a separate building.’

‘Everyone, this is Björn Zander, the head of the Rättsmedicinalverket here in Stockholm.’ Eklund turned to introduce the makeshift investigatory team. Zander nodded around at them all.

‘Pleased to meet you. If you will follow me, I will show you what you have come to see.’ Without waiting for a response, he swiped his access card through a security reader, unlocking a hallway that led into the bowels of the facility.

After a short walk, they arrived at the laboratory that was handling the victims of the explosion. As Dial entered, he caught the unmistakable scent of processed air.

‘Is it supposed to smell like this?’ Hedman asked.

‘You smell something peculiar?’ Zander replied.

‘Actually, there’s no scent of any kind. That’s what’s peculiar.’

Dial knew what Hedman meant. Air typically smelled of
something
: floral oils that drifted in from the outside, chemical disinfectant, or one of a thousand other odors. Even scents that couldn’t be distinguished by the nose – such as human pheromones – were still perceptible. But not in this room. The air was different here. Not stale, but empty.

‘Please, forgive me,’ Zander insisted. ‘I am here so much that I think nothing of it. The scent – or lack thereof – is simply a by-product of the air purification system. Most systems rid the air of microbial agents, but in here we must take extra precautions. Our air is treated to remove microbes, spores and other airborne particulates. The treatment leaves the air virtually free from impurities. It can be unsettling at first, but I assure you that everything is fine.’

‘I wasn’t unsettled – just curious,’ Hedman assured him.

‘As you should be. After all, you are a man of science.’

‘So,’ Eklund said, trying to move things along, ‘your assistant told my assistant that you uncovered some startling results in the course of your examination? Something about the resiliency of the cells?’

‘Yes,’ Zander said as he led them to the far side of the room. He stopped in front of a gigantic microscope and began to explain his findings. ‘In ancient times, it was often reported that a body’s hair and fingernails would continue to grow after death, but this has long since been explained as the mere appearance of growth due to shriveling of the tissue in the scalp and fingertips.’

Dial braced himself for a roundabout explanation of things. He couldn’t imagine that any description that began with ‘in ancient times’ would get straight to the heart of the matter. He appreciated the coroner’s attempt to provide them with the necessary background information, but he wouldn’t have any problem cutting him off if he started to ramble.

‘That being said, we have discovered that certain biological functions do not stop immediately upon expiration. There are secondary functions that transpire as a result of the continuing existence of bacteria in the body or the eventual loss of muscle tension. These include the release of excrement and urine, as well as the digestion of any foods retained in the body at the time of death.’

Hanna, the matriarch of the group, leaned close to Hedman and expressed herself in rapid Swedish. Eklund overheard the comment and was forced to bite his tongue to keep from laughing.

‘What’d she say?’ Dial whispered.

Eklund whispered back. ‘She said if we were brought here to learn that people piss and shit themselves when they die, she could have saved us all the trip.’

Dial was forced to bite his tongue as well.

Zander stared at them like they were mischievous schoolboys.

‘Sorry,’ Eklund said to the coroner, ‘police stuff.’

‘Of course,’ Zander replied, shaking off the interruption. ‘There are also more direct continuations that occur after death. The brain, for instance, does not immediately stop functioning. When the circulatory system stops pumping blood, the brain enters a “panic mode” of sorts. Its cells struggle to find the oxygen that a person’s pulse used to deliver. Synapses fire uncontrollably as the brain launches into overdrive in a final effort to survive. Only after this ultimate flurry of activity does the brain eventually succumb to the lack of nutrients.’

‘Are you saying that people are still
thinking
after they die?’ Hedman asked.

‘No,’ Zander replied. ‘This activity is in no way indicative of consciousness, ability to reason, or even the capability of perceiving the events that are unfolding. Not to sound indifferent to human life, but these are little more than chemical reactions, a by-product of the body shutting down. They are significant only in regard to the timeline, meaning that they occur
after
the events that precipitate death.’

‘Thank God for that,’ Hedman said.

‘In the same manner, the central nervous system can often radiate impulses from the spinal column to the peripheral muscles. Twitching and spasms in the minutes after death are not uncommon. These do not mean that the individual is in some way still alive.’

‘Your office mentioned something about cellular activity in their report. Is that why you’ve called us here?’ Eklund asked. ‘Some of the cells from some of the bodies in the explosion exhibited these involuntary impulses?’

‘I would not have called you here for that,’ Zander assured him. ‘What we have found goes well beyond the established posthumous activity that has been documented.’

‘In what ways?’ Miles asked.

Zander flipped a switch on the microscope and a powerful lamp illuminated the specimen slide that was pinned to the stage. Next he reached over and pressed the power button on a flat-screen display that was mounted next to the lab table. When the screen came to life, the group could see that it was connected to the microscope. Everything seen through the eyepiece was now projected for them to examine.

‘What do you see?’ Zander asked.

Miles and Hanna stepped closer to the screen for a better look.

To Dial, the screen simply looked like a collection of squiggly lines against a blue background, with paler blobs dotted across the image. He had no idea what he was looking at.

‘Healthy human tissue cells,’ Miles answered.

Hanna nodded, confirming his assessment.

‘That is precisely what they are,’ Zander said. ‘
Healthy
human cells. What I would like to know is … how?’

‘What do you mean?’ Dial asked.

‘These are the cells from one of the victims, Chief Dial. The donor died more than a full day ago, yet these cells continue to exist. Not only that, they appear to be
thriving
.’

Hanna shook her head and gesticulated wildly as she spoke.

Eklund translated for Dial’s sake. ‘She says that’s impossible. She says the fire alone should have damaged the cells beyond repair, and if any cells did somehow manage to stay alive in the blaze, they would have died shortly after. Without the bodily functions of the host – fresh air from the lungs, fresh blood from the heart – the cells cannot exist on their own.’

‘And yet you are looking at them doing just that,’ Zander said defensively. ‘Feel free to choose a sample for yourselves if you have doubts, but I assure you this sample was pulled from the remains of one of your victims.’

‘There’s no known chemical compound, natural or otherwise, that can prolong the life of a cell in that way,’ Miles argued. ‘It has been discussed, but only in a theoretical sense. It’s always been assumed that science of this kind was centuries away, if it was even possible at all.’

Dial cleared his throat. ‘Didn’t you tell me that Berglund was ahead of his time? It seems to me that you said he was a visionary.’

The comment hung in the air without a response.

Several seconds passed before Hanna broke the silence.

‘Tell me more about the sample,’ she said in Swedish. ‘Is this an isolated discovery from a single body? A single organ? Or are these findings widespread?’

Zander answered in English. ‘The phenomenon is not relegated to specific organs. Tissue samples from the skin, liver, kidneys and brain all show the same signs of cellular activity. And no, the findings were not widespread. Only a few of the victims suffered from this affliction, if those are even the right words. Five, to be precise.’

Dial groaned in realization. He knew the number wasn’t a coincidence. And yet he still had to ask the question to eliminate all doubt from his mind. ‘Which five?’

34

Dr Zander knew the answer to Dial’s question about the identity of the victims without consulting his notes. Details like this were impossible to forget. ‘The five felons.’

Dial nodded. ‘That’s what I figured.’

‘Felons?’ Hedman remarked. ‘What felons?’

‘We’ve identified the majority of the victims,’ Eklund explained. ‘Most were scientists, but there were also five men with distinguished criminal records. As of yet, we have no idea what role they played in all of this. We can’t say for certain why they were there.’

Hanna launched into a line of questioning, but Dial had to wait for Hedman to translate.

‘She wants to know if cell activity within the sample has changed over time. Was this exact number of living cells always present?’

‘What does that tell us about the criminals?’

‘Nothing,’ Hedman answered. ‘At least not directly. Frankly, Mr Dial, the presence of criminals is the least of her concerns. That is a mystery for you and Agent Eklund to solve. Her focus is on the science involved.’

‘And the number of living cells tells her …?’ Eklund asked.

Miles answered. ‘It tells her whether the cells were dying off, or whether they were multiplying.’

‘They were dying off,’ Zander announced. ‘At least at first.’ He sat in front of the keyboard and tilted a nearby computer monitor so that he could see the screen. After finding the right file, the image on the large plasma screen changed as he loaded a video. ‘This is a recording of the cellular activity over the course of our examination. As you can see, the cell count was much greater when the sample was first taken.’

Dial could see that the footage plainly supported Zander’s claim. The image they were looking at a moment ago had only showed a handful of pale blobs; now the screen was completely speckled. Dial guessed that at least seventy-five percent of the picture was covered in the pale oblong cells.

‘Watch what happens over the next several hours,’ Zander said.

With a click of the mouse, the footage began to roll forward at high speed. A day’s worth of video sped by in the time-compressed clip. Dial watched intently as more and more of the screen changed from white to blue.

‘Do the cells always stand out like that?’ Eklund wondered.

‘No,’ Zander explained. ‘We add a blue dye to the sample before it goes under the microscope. The walls of healthy cells keep the dye from penetrating into the interior of the cell, so they show as white against the blue background.’

‘And what happened when the screen turned mostly blue?’

‘The balance shifted from a majority of living cells to a majority of dead cells. The cell wall loses integrity when the cell dies, allowing the blue dye to permeate the remains.’

Miles, the microbiologist, stared at the screen. ‘Something kept the cells alive through the fire, but let them die afterwards. Something common to the subjects? A mutated gene, perhaps?’

Zander shrugged. ‘It’s impossible to answer that without a full sequencing of each subject, but the odds of probability would suggest otherwise. For an unknown genetic mutation of that type to manifest itself in five individuals from the same Scandinavian subset would be a nearly impossible likelihood. If it were that common – present in one out of every five million people, given the populations of the relevant countries – it would have been detected long ago.’

Miles agreed with the assessment. ‘Which means you believe the variable was introduced into the subjects.’

Zander nodded. ‘I do.’

Eklund was a half-step behind the others. ‘Introduced into the subjects? Does that mean what I think it means? The scientists at the lab were running tests on humans?’

‘That’s exactly what they’re saying,’ Hedman answered.

Eklund stared at them, incredulous.

Hedman did his best to explain. ‘The world at large condemns those who would dare to use humans in the name of scientific advancement. But the truth is, such experimentation is essential to the development of science. Innovation in every field – surgical, pharmaceutical, medicinal and more – requires exhaustive studies across a wide range of subjects. There is only so much that can be gleaned from mice, rats and chimpanzees.’

Miles concurred. ‘Eventually you must involve the targeted recipient. That means humans must be tested, and studied, and tested again.’

Hedman continued. ‘Every medical advancement in history was tested on humanity in one way or another, but today’s society only accepts it in the form of sanctioned clinical trials. However, many of the true breakthroughs came as a result of so-called “unscrupulous” behavior involving human volunteers and those willing to push the boundaries of accepted doctrine.’

Miles glanced at Hedman. ‘I only question the decision to use prisoners. Why draw exclusively from that pool?’

The answer was obvious. Prisoners – especially those with lengthy sentences – were willing to do just about anything to get out of prison, whether that was risking their lives in dangerous escape attempts or volunteering for speculative medical trials. But to coordinate a program like that would require government involvement, or at the very least corrupt prison officials.

In Dial’s mind, neither topic was suitable for ‘mixed’ company, which meant he needed to focus the scientists on a specific task, which would give him a moment to pull Eklund aside for a frank conversation about the Swedish justice system.

He pointed at the computer screen. ‘Dr Zander, if you don’t mind, can you play the video for my colleagues one more time? I’m sure they have plenty of questions about your discovery.’

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