Whistleblower and Never Say Die (40 page)

BOOK: Whistleblower and Never Say Die
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“One thing, Dafoe.”

“Yeah?”

“I can’t have any interference. Pull all your people out. We’ll take it from here.”

Dafoe paused. “I might…have a problem.”

“A problem?” The voice, though quiet, took on a razor’s edge.

“It’s, uh, one of my men. Sort of a wild card. Sam
Polowski. He’s got this Holland case under his skin, wants to go after him.”

“There’s such a thing as a direct order.”

“At the moment, Polowski’s unreachable. He’s in Palo Alto, digging around in God knows what.”

“Loose cannons. I don’t like them.”

“I’ll pull him back as soon as I can.”

“Do that. And keep it quiet. It’s a matter of utmost security.”

After Dafoe hung up, his gaze shifted automatically to the photo on the mantelpiece. It was a ’68 snapshot of him and the Cowboy: two young marines, both of them grinning, their rifles slung over their shoulders as they stood ankle-deep in a rice paddy. It was a crazy time, when one’s very life depended on the loyalty of buddies. When Semper Fi applied not only to the corps in general but to each other in particular. Matt Tyrone was a hero then, and he was a hero now. Dafoe stared at that smiling face in the photo, disturbed by the threads of envy that had woven into his admiration for the man. Though Dafoe had much to be proud of—a solid eighteen years in the FBI, maybe even a shot at assistant director somewhere in his stars, he couldn’t match the heady climb of Matt Tyrone in the NSA. Though Dafoe wasn’t clear as to exactly what position the Cowboy held in the NSA, he had heard that Tyrone regularly attended cabinet meetings, that he held the trust of the president, that he dealt in secrets and shadows and security. He was the sort of man the country needed, a man for whom patriotism was more than mere flag-waving and rhetoric; it was a way of life. Matt Tyrone would do more than die for his country; he’d live for it.

Dafoe couldn’t let such a man, such a friend, down.

He dialed Sam Polowski’s home phone and left a message on the recorder.

This is a direct order. You are to withdraw from the Holland case immediately. Until further notice you are on suspension.

He was tempted to add,
by special request from my friends in Washington,
but thought better of it. No room for vanity here. The Cowboy had said national security was at stake.

Dafoe had no doubt it truly was. He’d gotten the word from Matt Tyrone. And Matt Tyrone’s authority came direct from the President himself.

 

“This does not look good. This does not look good at all.”

Ollie Wozniak squinted through his wire-rim glasses at the twenty-four photographs strewn across Milo’s dining table. He held one up for a closer look. Through the bottle-glass lens, one pale blue eye stared out, enormous. One only saw Ollie’s eyes; everything else, hollow cheeks, pencil lips and baby-fine hair, seemed to recede into the background pallor. He shook his head and picked up another photo.

“You’re right, of course,” he said. “Some of these I can’t interpret. I’d like to study ’em later. But these here are definitely raw mortality data. Rhesus monkeys, I suspect.” He paused and added quietly, “I hope.”

“Surely they wouldn’t use people for this sort of thing,” said Cathy.

“Not officially.” Ollie put down the photo and looked at her. “But it’s been done.”

“Maybe in Nazi Germany.”

“Here, too,” said Victor.

“What?” Cathy looked at him in disbelief.

“Army studies in germ warfare. They released colonies of Serratia Marcescens over San Francisco and waited to see how far the organism spread. Infections popped up in a number of Bay Area hospitals. Some of the cases were fatal.”

“I can’t believe it,” murmured Cathy.

“The damage was unintentional, of course. But people died just the same.”

“Don’t forget Tuskegee,” said Ollie. “People died in those experiments, too. And then there was that case in New York. Mentally retarded kids in a state hospital who were deliberately exposed to hepatitis. No one died there, but the ethics were just as shaky. So it’s been done. Sometimes in the name of humanity.”

“Sometimes not,” said Victor.

Ollie nodded. “As in this particular case.”

“What exactly are we talking about here?” asked Cathy, nodding at the photos. “Is this medical research? Or weapons development?”

“Both.” Ollie pointed to one of the photos on the table. “By all appearances, Viratek’s engaged in biological weapons research. They’ve dubbed it Project Cerberus. From what I can tell, the organism they’re working on is an RNA virus, extremely virulent, highly contagious, producing over eighty-percent mortality in its lab animal hosts. This photo here—” he tapped one of the pages “—shows the organism produces vesicular skin lesions on the infected subjects.”

“Vesicular?”

“Blisterlike. That could be one route of transmission, the fluid in those lesions.” He sifted through the pile and pulled out another page. “This shows the time course of the illness. The viral counts, periods of infectiousness. In almost every case the course is the same. The subject’s exposed here.” He pointed to Day One on the time graph. “Minor signs of illness here at Day Seven. Full-blown pox on Day Twelve. And here—” he tapped the graph at Day Fourteen “—the deaths begin. The time varies, but the result’s the same. They all die.”

“You used the word
pox,”
said Cathy.

Ollie turned to her, his eyes like blue glass. “Because that’s what it is.”

“You mean like chickenpox?”

“I wish it was. Then it wouldn’t be so deadly. Almost everyone gets exposed to chickenpox as a kid, so most of us are immune. But this one’s a different story.”

“Is it a new virus?” asked Milo.

“Yes and no.” He reached for an electron micrograph. “When I saw this I thought there was something weirdly familiar about all this. The appearance of the organism, the skin lesions, the course of illness. The whole damn picture. It reminded me of something I haven’t read about in decades. Something I never dreamed I’d see again.”

“You’re saying it’s an old virus?” said Milo.

“Ancient. But they’ve made some modifications. Made it more infectious. And deadlier. Which turns this into a real humdinger of a weapon, considering the millions of folks it’s already killed.”

“Millions?”
Cathy stared at him. “What are we talking about?”

“A killer we’ve known for centuries. Smallpox.”

“That’s impossible!” said Cathy. “From what I’ve read, we conquered smallpox. It’s supposed to be extinct.”

“It was,” said Victor. “For all practical purposes. Worldwide vaccination wiped it out. Smallpox hasn’t been reported in decades. I’m not even sure they still make the vaccine. Ollie?”

“Not available. No need for it since the virus has vanished.”

“So where did
this
virus come from?” asked Cathy.

Ollie shrugged. “Probably someone’s closet.”

“Come on.”

“I’m serious. After smallpox was eradicated, a few samples of the virus were kept alive in government labs, just in case someone needed it for future research. It’s the scientific skeleton in the closet, so to speak. I’d assume those labs are top security. Because if any of the virus got out, there could be a major epidemic.” He looked at the stack of photos. “Looks like security’s already been breached. Someone obviously got hold of the virus.”

“Or had it handed to them,” said Victor. “Courtesy of the U.S. government.”

“I find that incredible, Gersh,” said Ollie. “This is a powderkeg experiment you’re talking about. No committee would approve this sort of project.”

“Right. That’s why I think this is a maverick operation. It’s easy to come up with a scenario. Bunch of hardliners cooking this up over at NSA. Or joint chiefs of staff. Or even the Oval Office. Someone says: “World politics have changed. We can’t get away with nuking the enemy. We need a new weapons option, one that’ll work well against a Third World army. Let’s find one.” And some guy in that room,
some red, white and blue robot, will take that as the go-ahead. International law be damned.”

“And since it’s unofficial,” said Cathy, “it’d be completely deniable.”

“Right. The administration could claim it knew nothing.”

“Sounds like Iran-Contra all over again.”

“With one big difference,” said Ollie. “When Iran-Contra fell apart, all you had were a few ruined political careers. If Project Cerberus goes awry, what you’ll have is a few million dead people.”

“But Ollie,” said Milo. “I got vaccinated for smallpox when I was a kid. Doesn’t that mean I’m safe?”

“Probably. Assuming the virus hasn’t been altered too much. In fact, everyone over 35 is probably okay. But remember, there’s a whole generation after us that never got the vaccine. Young adults and kids. By the time you could manufacture enough vaccine for them all, we’d have a raging epidemic.”

“I’m beginning to see the logic of this weapon,” said Victor. “In any war, who makes up the bulk of combat soldiers? Young adults.”

Ollie nodded. “They’d be hit bad. As would the kids.”

“A whole generation,” Cathy murmured. “And only the old would be spared.” She glanced at Victor and saw, mirrored in his eyes, the horror she felt.

“They chose an appropriate name,” said Milo.

Ollie frowned. “What?”

“Cerberus. The three-headed dog of Hades.” Milo looked up, visibly shaken. “Guardian of the dead.”

 

It wasn’t until Cathy was fast asleep and Milo had retired upstairs that Victor finally broached the subject to Ollie. It
had troubled him all evening, had shadowed his every moment since they’d arrived at Milo’s house. He couldn’t look at Cathy, couldn’t listen to the sound of her voice or inhale the scent of her hair without thinking of the terrible possibilities. And in the deepest hours of night, when it seemed all the world was asleep except for him and Ollie, he made the decision.

“I need to ask you a favor,” he said.

Ollie gazed at him across the dining table, steam wafting up from his fourth cup of coffee. “What sort of favor?”

“It has to do with Cathy.”

Ollie’s gaze shifted to the woman lying asleep on the living room floor. She looked very small, very defenseless, curled up beneath the comforter. Ollie said, “She’s a nice woman, Gersh.”

“I know.”

“There hasn’t really been anyone since Lily. Has there?”

Victor shook his head. “I guess I haven’t felt ready for it. There were always other things to think about….”

Ollie smiled. “There are always excuses. I should know. People keep telling me there’s a glut of unattached female baby boomers. I haven’t noticed.”

“And I never bothered to notice.” Victor looked at Cathy. “Until now.”

“What’re you gonna do with her, Gersh?”

“That’s what I need you for. I’m not the safest guy to hang around with these days. A woman could get hurt.”

Ollie laughed. “Hell, a
guy
could get hurt.”

“I feel responsible for her. And if something happened to her, I’m not sure I could ever…” He let out a long sigh and
rubbed his bloodshot eyes. “Anyway, I think it’s best if she leaves.”

“For where?”

“She has an ex-husband. He’ll be working down in Mexico for a few months. I think she’d be pretty safe.”

“You’re sending her to her ex-husband?”

“I’ve met him. He’s a jerk, but at least she won’t be alone down there.”

“Does Cathy agree to this?”

“I didn’t ask her.”

“Maybe you should.”

“I’m not giving her a choice.”

“What if she wants the choice?”

“I’m not in the mood to take any crap, Okay? I’m doing this for her own good.”

Ollie took off his glasses and cleaned them on the tablecloth. “Excuse me for saying this, Gersh, but if it was me, I’d want her nearby, where I could sort of keep an eye on her.”

“You mean where I can watch her get killed?” Victor shook his head. “Lily was enough. I won’t go through it with Cathy.”

Ollie thought it over for a moment, then he nodded. “What do you want me to do?”

“Tomorrow I want you to take her to the airport. Buy her a ticket to Mexico. Let her use your name. Mrs. Wozniak. Make sure she gets safely off the ground. I’ll pay you back when I can.”

“What if she won’t get on the plane? Do I just shove her aboard?”

“Do whatever it takes, Ollie. I’m counting on you.”

Ollie sighed. “I guess I can do it. I’ll call in sick tomorrow. That’ll free up my day.” He looked at Victor. “I just hope you know what you’re doing.”

So do I,
thought Victor.

Ollie rose to his feet and tucked the envelope with the photos under his arm. “I’ll get back to you in the morning. After I show these last two photos to Bach. Maybe he can identify what those grids are.”

“If it’s anything electronic, Bach’ll figure it out.”

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