Dr. Greenspan pulled over at the crossroads, got out and leaned against the side of the car. The plain seemed to stretch endlessly in all directions. The road was deserted, and for a moment, she enjoyed the stillness. In the backseat, Jacob slept soundlessly, a little boy, exhausted.
She glanced to the left, and saw a truck approach from the distance. She watched silently as it drew in upon her, then hurtled by, followed by a car that drew over to the side of the road and pulled up behind her.
“Jacob’s in the backseat,” she said, as Tom and Becky got out. “We were followed, but Jacob stopped them.”
“Is he all right?” Becky asked.
“He’s in a lot better shape than the men who followed us,” Dr. Greenspan answered.
Tom glanced into the backseat of the car. “Thank you, Dr. Greenspan,” he said. “From my family.”
“He’s a very special boy,” Dr. Greenspan said. “Take care of him.”
“There’s a family he can live with,” Tom told her. “An older couple. He’ll be safe there until he’s ready to go out on his own.”
In the backseat, Jacob rustled slightly, then opened his eyes.
“Hey, Jake,” Tom said.
Owen and the wing commander stood at the end of the corridor as Jesse Keys was led toward the cell where, only a few hours earlier, Lieutenant Wylie had been taken.
“That’s the boy,” Owen said to the wing commander as the two MPs stopped before the cell door, each holding firmly to one of Jesse’s arms. “I saw Lieutenant Wylie giving him specific figures. Numbers and types of planes, payloads.” He shook his head as if appalled by such treachery. “At the time, I didn’t realize what they were doing, but when the Defcon order came through…”
“You tricked me, you bastard,” Jesse cried. He tried to break free of the MPs, but they held him in place. “You were supposed to help us and you tricked me.”
Owen smiled coldly. “Kind of young for a spy.”
“A spy!” Jesse shrieked. “What the hell are you talking about? What about the UFOs? What about the flying saucers?”
Owen shook his head, as if in astonishment at such lunacy. “He must be hopped up on something to give him the nerve to do what he did,” he told the MPs. “I just pray to God he didn’t manage to deliver his information.”
The wing commander nodded. “I’ll notify the Pentagon, let them know we have a breach.”
“Where’s my father?” Jesse demanded as the two MPs pushed him into the cell. “I want to see my father!”
Owen stared briefly into Jesse’s desperate face. Then he turned, walked out of the brig and headed toward his car. Jesse Keys was now well in hand, he thought, absolutely secure. And as to Russell Keys, what did it matter? He was worth no more than the tumor that was about to be taken from him, no more than whatever it was the visitors had sunk into his brain.
Chapter Two
Russell rode silently in the backseat of the car, listening absently to the drone of the conversation, two soldiers discussing various trading commodities, cottonseed oil, poultry, their minds focused on ways to make a killing. Their world was ordinary, Russell thought, just a couple of guys trying to figure out some way to get ahead. He yearned to feel as they did, live an ordinary life, plan ahead in a world where the future was predictable, and nothing watched you from behind the overhanging stars.
“Here we are,” the driver said as he brought the car to a halt in front of Utah Bob’s Used Cars.
Russell pressed his face closer to the window. Utah Bob’s was a run-of-the-mill auto lot presided over by a small trailer. There was nothing to distinguish it from a hundred others he’d seen.
“Okay, let’s go,” one of the soldiers said as he opened the door.
Russell got out of the car and, escorted by the two soldiers, walked to the trailer, opened the door and stepped into a state-of-the-art medical theater, all stainless steel and spotless tile and gleaming light. Two medical technicians stood waiting by an operating table. Along the walls, variously colored lights blinked efficiently from softly purring banks of dials and screens.
A doctor stepped forward from the group. “Good evening, Mr. Keys,” he said. “I’m Dr. Kreutz and I want to thank you for letting us take a closer look at that tumor of yours.”
Russell glanced about. “Where’s Crawford?”
“Colonel Crawford has left this phase of his operation to me.”
Russell’s voice hardened. “I don’t do anything until I talk to Crawford.”
Dr. Kreutz’s warm bedside manner chilled. “It doesn’t appear to me that you’re in any position to make demands, Mr. Keys.”
Two armed soldiers suddenly appeared.
“Prep him,” Dr. Kreutz said.
Russell summoned the last reserves of his strength, wheeled around and kicked one of the technicians just as the other swept forward and sank the needle into his side.
“Stay away from my boy,” he cried, the words coming from him like something screamed from the stage as the curtain falls.
“All right, let’s begin,” Dr. Kreutz said.
The two soldiers lifted Russell onto the table while the surgeon waited.
“Good,” Kreutz said. He looked at the surgeon. “Be very, very careful.”
The surgeon nodded, then made an incision in Russell’s forehead, peeled back the skin, and with a surgical saw, took off a large section of the skull. Then he took a probe from a metal tray and gently inserted it into Russell’s brain. “There it is,” he said after a moment.
Kreutz smiled as he watched the surgeon draw out a small, darkly glistening mass. “At last,” he whispered. “Physical proof of…”
Suddenly the table rattled as Russell’s body heaved and began to thrash about.
“Seizure,” the surgeon cried. “Get me the retractor!” He glanced at the technician who stood beside him and saw that he was in some kind of trance. “What the hell’s the matter with you?” he shouted.
The technician dropped to his knees and in a quick, slashing motion cut his own wrists, red torrents gushing from the severed veins.
Kreutz stared about, his face frozen in shock and terror. They were all moving like robots now, soldiers and technicians, responding to nothing but the inaudible commands inside their own heads. In stricken horror, he watched one soldier step up behind the surgeon and cut his throat. The other soldiers suddenly raised their rifles and fired in all directions, shooting mindlessly, filling the room with fiery sparks and thick smoke, until a bullet hit the oxygen tanks and a blast rocked the building and the trailer exploded in a single ball of flame.
Jesse startled as an MP entered the cell. “Come with us,” one of them commanded.
“What’s going on?” Jessie asked fearfully.
“We got orders to move you. That’s all I know.”
Jesse followed them down the corridor, then out of the building. He could see military personnel scattering in all directions, a frenzy of activity.
“What happened?” he asked.
“Russians shot down one of our U2s,” the MP said as he ushered Jesse into another building. “You’re being taken to a bomb shelter.”
Inside, the room was pitch black, save for a single naked bulb.
The MP stared at Jesse threateningly, then stepped out of the room,
Jesse slumped down on the bare floor. He could hear the two MPs talking beyond the door.
“You hear what happened to Henderson and Slide? They were transporting some guy for a secret surgery, and the building blows up.”
Jesse got to his feet, rushed to the door and pressed his ear against it.