21
Sunday, June 12th
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
At home, Jay came out of VR, took a deep breath,
and removed his headset and gloves. It had been a milk run, a visit
to a library, and no matter how skilled you were in creating
scenarios, sooner or later, reading a pile of material came down to
reading a pile of material.
He had all he could find on Dr. Patrick Morrison,
and while he had skimmed it as it was being copied, he hadn’t begun
to take it all in. From what he’d gleaned so far, the guy was legit
enough. Degrees, work experience, marriages, the usual living-life
stuff. No trouble with the law, no beefs at work, pretty much Mr.
Dull N. Boring right down the line.
The only blot on an otherwise white-bread career
was at the job he’d had before going to work for HAARP. He’d been
doing some kind of behavioral modification experiments on chimps,
working with extremely low-frequency radiation, a post-doc research
project at Johns Hopkins, and it had apparently petered out. He
failed to get the results for which he had been looking. His grant,
as the report mildly and politely put it, had not been renewed, and
he’d been out of a job.
A small red flag went up in Jay’s mind, but when he
thought about it, it wasn’t that big a deal. Yeah, the guy was into
ELF stuff, but that’s what a lot of HAARP was about. If you were
looking for a plumber, you didn’t hire a cabdriver, now did
you?
“All work and no play make Jay a dull boy,” Soji
said.
He smiled up at her. She stood there in a bathrobe.
“Look who’s talking. You’ve been so deep into the web I haven’t
been able to see anything but your back for days.”
“Want to see something else?” She undid the
bathrobe and held it open.
“Oh, mama! Come here!”
Before she could move, however, the phone played
the opening strains of Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
Unfortunately, his phone was programmed so it played that
particular tune only if the call was IDed as coming from Net Force
HQ or Alex Michaels’s virgil.
“Shit,” he said.
Soji closed her robe and belted it shut. “He who
hesitates stays horny,” she said.
“Hey, Boss,” Jay said.
“Better get to the office, Jay,” Michaels said.
“There’s been another case of collective madness.”
“In China?”
“No,” Michaels said. His voice was grim. “Closer
than that.”
Sunday, June 12th
Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon
John Howard watched as his son came up to make his
throw. The boy stopped, rubbed his fingers back and forth, and
allowed some glittery dust to fall to check wind direction. He held
a stopwatch in one hand and his boomerang in the other. The judges
waved Tyrone into the circle.
Howard felt more tense than he’d thought he would.
It was a big deal to Tyrone, of course, but it was just a game,
after all. No reason to be digging his fingernails into his
palms.
Off to one side and behind Tyrone, Little Nadine
stood, waiting for her turn to compete. She was three contestants
behind Tyrone, so she’d know what time she had to beat. So far, the
times hadn’t been very good, according to Tyrone, and both kids had
done better in practice.
The judge nearest the circle held up his hand in a
halt sign, then called another judge over for some kind of
consultation.
“Come on, come on!” Howard said. “Let the boy throw
before his arm gets cold!”
Next to him, his wife said, “Asshole.”
He looked at her. “You talkin’ to me?”
“Not particularly, I was referring to the judge,
but if the shoe fits ...”
That pissed him off. What was she on the rag about
now? He hadn’t done anything. He glared at her. She glared right
back.
Tyrone stood there for another few seconds, then
walked to where the judges were. Howard couldn’t hear what his boy
had to say, but apparently the judges really didn’t like it.
The head judge reached out and slapped Tyrone
upside the head.
“Fuck!” Howard yelled. “You see that? He hit
our son!” Even as he spoke, Howard ran toward Tyrone and the
judges.
The second judge must have figured the slap was
rude, because he hauled off and punched the head judge square in
the mouth, knocking the man down. Certainly this was justice, but
that irritated Howard even more.
“Leave him!” Howard yelled as he ran. “That bastard
is mine!”
Tyrone stepped in and delivered a solid kick to the
fallen judge’s ribs. It sounded like somebody dropping a
watermelon, thoo-wock!
Even as he drew near to the trio, Howard was aware
of noises coming up the hill: horns honked, metal crashed into
metal. He slid to a stop as the second judge spun to face
him.
“Get off the circle!” the man screamed. “You can’t
be here!”
“Oh, yeah?” Howard said. “Hey, pal, I’m
already here! What are you gonna do about it?”
Tyrone gave the fallen judge another kick. Not as
good as the first one; it had a flatter sound. Weak, son,
weak.
The second judge threw a haymaker at Howard, who
ducked it, came up, launched a fast left hook to the face, then a
right cross to the chin, bap-bap! That straightened the
sucker out like popping a shoe shine cloth. The guy sailed backward
and to the ground. Get off that, asshole!
The judge Tyrone was kicking got to his feet and
lurched at the boy, but before Howard could get there, both Nadines
arrived. His wife kneed the guy in the crotch as Little Nadine
latched onto his arm and sank her teeth into his shoulder.
Irritated, Howard moved toward them. This was
his business to take care of, he didn’t need the goddamned
women getting in the goddamned way—!
A car came across the field, lights on and horn
honking, a big, powder-blue Cadillac. It plowed into a group of
five men who stood there giving the driver the finger. The men flew
like dolls in all directions as the driver gunned the engine.
Not real smart to shoot the bird at a man coming at
you in a car at speed.
“Eat shit and die!” the driver screamed. Then he
started to laugh.
Four or five other people attacked the Caddy,
slamming their fists and feet at it. The driver spun a donut in the
grass, still cackling madly.
Something wrong here, Howard thought. He
shook his head, then looked at the man he had just decked. What was
he doing?
He looked down the hill and saw a dozen people
fighting. One of them was a policeman. The cop pulled his gun, and
a quick succession of shots—pop-pop-pop-pop-pop! —echoed up
the hill. Gunshot victims fell, and added more screams to the
din.
Dazed, Howard looked up the hill. There were people
there, too, but they weren’t fighting; they were watching, staring
in surprise.
Howard’s thoughts were fogged with rage, but
something was trying to make its way through the anger: This was a
bad place. Down the hill it was worse, but up the hill, it was
better. Therefore ...
“Come on!” he yelled to his family. “We have to get
up the hill!”
“Fuck off!” Tyrone yelled back.
Little Nadine released her hold on the judge, who
was screaming in pain. She stared at Howard. “What is going on?”
she said, her voice high and frightened.
“I don’t know. Gas, maybe. We’ve got to get out of
here. Help me.”
His wife kneed the judge in the nuts again. The man
gurgled in agony. Howard grabbed her, pulled her off.
“Leave me alone! He hit my son!”
Howard jerked her backward. “Tyrone!”
The boy turned, and the mask of primal rage on his
face slipped a little. He raised his eyebrows. “Dad?”
“Up the hill, son, up the hill. Go, go!”
Tyrone nodded. Little Nadine grabbed his hand and
they started running.
Howard had to pin Nadine’s arms to her side and he
half carried, half dragged her away from the meadow. She kicked and
screamed at him for a hundred meters before she stopped. She was a
lot stronger than he’d realized.
Finally, when they were two hundred meters away,
Nadine came back. “J-John? What—?”
“I don’t know, hon. But whatever it is, the farther
away we get, the better. Come on.”
They caught up to the children, and the four of
them kept moving. Howard looked back as they ran. The Cadillac was
lying on its side, and a mob had the driver out and on the ground,
kicking him. He was a dead man. More gunshots echoed from farther
below. Horns honked. Cars crashed. People screamed in voices full
of incoherent fury. This beautiful park, what the locals like to
call God’s country, had gone mad.
It was the Devil’s land, now.
Howard reached for his virgil. Who to call? The
local cops were down there shooting people. They needed help, and
they needed it bad.
Sunday, June 12th
Quantico, Virginia
Quantico, Virginia
Toni had come with him this time, and he was glad
to have her here. Along with Toni was Jay Gridley. It was seven
P.M. on a Sunday, but they wouldn’t be going home tonight.
“All right, here is what we have so far,” Michaels
said. “It’s still kind of sketchy. Late this afternoon, people
inside what appears to be a rough circle ten miles across and
centered in the Westmoreland area of Portland, Oregon, went nuts.
So far, there are sixty-seven confirmed deaths—murders,
self-defense, traffic and freak accidents. There have been hundreds
of people hurt bad enough to require hospitalization, and thousands
more lesser injuries. Whatever caused it seems to have stopped, but
the city is in chaos. The numbers of dead and injured keep
climbing.”
“Lord, Lord. How is General Howard?” Jay
asked.
Howard had been the one who’d called it in. He’d
gotten hold of the National Guard, then Michaels.
“He and his family are fine. They were apparently
right at the outmost edge of the phenomenon’s effect. A couple
hundred meters closer in, and they’d have been in a lot more
trouble. What have you got for me?”
Jay said, “If we assume this is coming from some
very powerful broadcast station, then it’s a matter of figuring out
which one, and who is running it. I played a hunch and put in a
call to HAARP, talked to a guard there. They are supposedly on
hiatus, except for some calibration tests.”
“That’s what Morrison told me,” Michaels
said.
“Well, Morrison is up there right now running one
of these tests. And guess what—according to the guard’s logs, he
was running other ’calibrations’ on the same days those two
villages in China went bonkers.”
“Jesus.”
“Yeah. Awful coincidental, ain’t it?”
“Toni? What do you think?”
“I think maybe you ought pick up this Dr. Morrison
for a serious chat.”
Michaels nodded. “I’ll get a federal warrant and
some marshals on the way.”
“You don’t want to toss this one over the fence to
the mainline feebs?” Jay said.
“Not yet,” Michaels said. “This looks like our
mess. We should clean it up on our own if we can.”
Maybe Morrison wasn’t involved with this, but given
the situation in Portland, they couldn’t afford to take the chance.
The next incident might happen anywhere—New York, Chicago, even
Washington, D.C. While the thought of senators and congressmen
beating each other to bloody pulps sounded fine as a joke punch
line, the reality of it was different.
Getting a warrant would be easy enough, and there
were probably federal marshals somewhere in Alaska who could serve
it. And while he was at it, he would give General Howard a call.
After his personal experience, John might like to go along to have
a few words with Morrison himself. In his position, Michaels knew
he would.