Abby led us to a conference room on the second floor. We sat at a long table, Ashley right beside me and Abby Smith across the table with a laptop in front of her. She pressed a button and a screen slowly lowered from the ceiling. She tapped another button and the lights in the room dimmed.
“What’s going on?” Ashley demanded. “Alfred has a right to know.”
“A minor shift in the extraction protocol.” Abby hit a key on the laptop and a picture faded in on the big screen. It was an aerial shot of a tropical island on a sunny day. Palm trees, waves breaking on a sparkling white beach, a few buildings with whitewashed walls and straw roofs. It looked like something from a travel-agency poster.
“What is that?” I asked.
“That is Camp Omega-I, an uncharted island in the South Pacific,” Abby answered. “And our most secure base, other than headquarters. Besides the personnel permanently assigned to COI, only myself and the Operative Nine—and now, Ashley, of course—are even aware of its existence.”
“Well,” I said. “It’s not the Caribbean, but it’s more like it.”
Beside me, Ashley breathed, “Oh, no.”
“Why ‘Oh, no?’ ”I asked. When Ashley didn’t answer, I said to Abby, “I don’t get it. What’s this COI have to do with me?”
Abby refused to look at me. She was staring at the picture of the island. “It’s your new home, Alfred.”
She hit a button, and the picture changed to a closer shot.
I saw a cabana and some clothes drying on a line. The water was emerald blue. Paradise, I thought. And for some reason a shiver went down my spine.
“It looks pretty nice,” I said slowly.
“Alfred, you don’t understand,” Ashley said. “They’re not going to give you a new identity. There isn’t going to be a reinsertion into the civilian interface. They’re going to drop you there and keep you there. Forever.”
“For now,” Abby said.
“I still don’t get it,” I said. “Why are you dropping me on an unchartered island?”
Abby said, “I was informed of the modification just this morning, Alfred. The board’s decision is final, I’m afraid. It believes that, given the peculiar circumstances involved here, a standard extraction is out of the question.”
“How come?”
Abby glanced at Ashley. I went on. “And if you say ‘that’s classified,’ I’m coming over this table at you.”
“Because of his blood, isn’t it?” Ashley asked. “Because of what it can do.”
A voice spoke up behind me. “We cannot risk losing the carrier of the most important active agent in Company possession.”
Nueve. He was standing just inside the door, leaning on his black cane. Smiling. Eyes glittering. For some reason I thought of pirates.
“In short, you are simply too important, Alfred,” he said, patting my shoulder as he walked around the table to slide in next to Abby. “A vital concern for people your age, as I understand. More vital than small pores. Even if the Phoenix Protocol succeeds, there is still a chance, however small, that something, oh, shall we say irreversible, could happen to you.”
“If you’re worried about Jourdain and his boys, you could just kill him,” I said. “Extract him extremely or whatever you call it.”
“It is not merely that,” Nueve said with a shrug. “Of course, we could execute an extreme extraction order upon Monsieur Garmot, but that doesn’t preclude the possibility of your demise by other, more mundane, means. An accident, for example. Jaywalking across a busy street and squish! no more Alfred Kropp. We cannot risk that.”
Abby had hit another button and a slide show began to run of Camp Omega-I. Pleasant walkways that weaved among the tropical foliage. An Olympic-size swimming pool at the base of a hundred-foot waterfall. Tennis courts. A movie theater. A shining glass structure that sat high on a promontory overlooking the empty sea—my new house? Club OIPEP.
“Isn’t it beautiful?” Nueve asked with no hint of irony. “All the amenities. The finest chefs. A staff that would be the envy of the world’s greatest vacation resorts, if the world knew of it. There’s even a masseuse!”
“Omega,” I said. “Isn’t that like the last letter of the Greek alphabet?”
Nueve nodded. “Not just like it, Alfred. It is the last letter of the Greek alphabet.”
“End of the road,” I said.
“You’ll be safe there,” Abby said. She started to say something else, and then stopped herself. “It’s not what either of us wanted, but sometimes necessity trumps desire, Alfred. You of all people surely can understand that.”
“What if we just go ahead with the original plan and I promise to be very careful—like never jaywalking and always riding the bus?”
Abby shook her head. “I’m sorry, Alfred. I tried. I fought to keep the original protocol but”—she glared in Nueve’s direction—“I was overruled.”
“And what Ashley said . . . about forever. I can’t leave?”
Abby said, “We—I—may be able to arrange brief trips back . . .”
Nueve stifled a laugh.
“It’s a prison,” I said. “Maybe it doesn’t have the bars and the cot and toilet in the corner, but it’s still a prison. You’re flying me to that island and dumping me there, and that’s where I’m going to stay for the rest of my life.”
A hand touched mine under the table. Ashley’s. She slipped her fingers through mine and squeezed hard, and I felt tears come up in my eyes, like she was pumping them to the surface.
“Nothing is definite,” Abby said.
“Everything is definite,” Nueve said.
Abby ignored him. “I’m leaving tonight to make a personal appeal to the board.”
“And what if the board still says no?” I asked.
“It will,” Nueve said.
“How do you know?” I asked.
“He doesn’t,” Abby said. She looked at Nueve, who was smirking at her.
“I know all that needs to be known,” he said. He lost all his smirkiness and leaned toward me, black eyes shining.
“Do you really think my interest in you terminated with obtaining the Seal, Alfred Kropp? Are you so naive or foolish that you can’t see where the true value of extracting you lies? In your veins flows a power not seen in our world for over two thousand years. Why that power would be given to you, of all people, is for greater minds than mine to ponder. Nevertheless, because that power exists, we have an obligation to protect it and see that this Item of Interest more important than Solomon’s trinket does not fall into the wrong hands or become lost through carelessness and neglect.
“That is the purpose of our Office. That is the reason we exist. That is the mission, and I am the Operative Nine. I am the mission, and the mission will be accomplished.”
He shouted over my shoulder, “You may come in now!”
The door opened and a guy built like a tree trunk came into the room. He had a wide square head and a body to match. His eyes were narrow and his lips thin; you really had to look hard to see them. He gave a short, militarylike bow in Abby’s general direction.
“Alfred,” Nueve said. “May I introduce Dr. Mingus. He’ll be examining you today.”