Part 3 Chapter 6
By Phantom Bard
For Disclaimer: See Part 3 Chapter 1
I've been workin' on the
railroad,
All the live long day.
I've been workin' on
the railroad,
Just to pass the time
away.
Don't you hear the whistle
blowing?
Rise up so early in the
morn.
Don't you hear the captain
shouting
"Dinah, blow your horn?"
(First verse of, "I've Been Working on the Railroad",©1936, by Calumet Music Co)
December 6, 2005 - Amtrak Atlantic Ave. Station, Boston, Ma.
How does an army of two set
out to cripple the world's most powerful nation? In 58 BC, Xena and Gabrielle
had gone to war against the Roman Republic of Julius Caesar. At that time,
their goal was to rescue Eve, and that goal didn't require them to topple
the western world's most powerful state. Still, they'd spent a dozen years
at war, used every tactic they knew, and slaughtered over 86,000. In the
21st century, cloned Xena and Prima began their war against
their divine enemy by attacking her patron state. Their first objective
was to undermine the technological and military might of the United States.
It was the same goal the Islamists had held, but they'd had neither the
Destroyer of Nations' abilities nor her experience. They'd lacked the resources
that the DON GROUP's now $108 billion could provide, and they'd never had
the Blessing of their god. Where all of America's enemies had failed, she
would succeed. Removing the USA as a power base for Athena was Xena's first
goal. Her second goal was the nullification of nations that could become
secondary threats, a strategy she shared with her enemy. Her final goal
was the utter defeat and elimination of the Goddess of Wisdom and Warfare.
The Hellene's Bane had four
months before her army was mature. During that time she was free to act
anonymously, to strike without warning, and to capitalize on the advantage
conferred by her paucity of troops…the advantage of surprise. Unlike an
army, two could hide in plain sight.
At 6:00am Prima stood beside
a departure monitor and looked at the milling rush hour throng moving around
her. Commuters and travelers hurried past like a disorganized school of
sardines. She was the barracuda. She regarded their frenetic activity with
a cold disregard, feeling no connection to them on any level. They were
not near-self and they were not her sisters. To the "special", they moved
as if in slow motion. She found their lack of intuitive survival awareness
even more appalling. They rushed right past death incarnate without the
slightest clue to her presence.
A woman holding a cell phone
crushed against the side of her head nearly slammed into the clone as she
blabbered and strode towards a departure gate. Prima's eyes flicked to
the name badge hanging from the woman's jacket; Spittoonia May, Mass. Dept.
of Health it said. Another foot closer and Prima would have snapped her
neck in a blur of movement too quick to see, but the woman barely saved
herself. After jerking to a halt with a gasp, she stood well within the
clone's personal space. Her eyes traveled up Prima's form to meet her face
with a sheepish expression. The glacial blue of a killer's calculating
attention met her caffeinated brown and made her blanch. The clone's glare
was so inhumanly cold that the woman gulped, stuttered an apology, and
fled from her in abject terror.
The "special" discreetly
reached into her jacket pocket and extracted an aerosol can the size of
a "D" cell battery. She scanned the area for anyone that might be paying
her too much attention, but they were all too self-absorbed. After seeing
no one observing her actions, she twisted the cap and placed the can atop
the departure monitor. Almost immediately, a soft puff of vapor issued
from the six pinholes around the circumference of the can's cap and swirled
off on the currents of air. It would spritz the surrounding space once
every two minutes until it was empty…about three hours hence, dispensing
a melange of influenza, small pox variola major, and Ebola Zaire. Over
that period of time, thousands of people would pass by the place Prima
had chosen as the first infection source for the plague that Xena had directed
her to spread.
She took a last look around,
saw the second puff of germ-laden air expelled from the can, and walked
briskly to departure gate 2S. The "special" had a southbound Acela Express
to catch. Her next stop would be Penn Station in New York City, and then
on to the 30th St Station in Philadelphia. At each stop, she
would leave a can of engineered microbes, though the other two would have
time delays that wouldn't actuate until 4:45pm, when the evening rush hour
crowds were getting thick. At each stop she would have to wait for the
next train out, but she had almost twelve hours to travel the six hours
of actual train time. Finally she would reach Washington D.C. to meet the
Destroyer.
Xena had started out the
night before in Miami. She'd boarded the northbound Amtrak Silver Service/Palmetto
after placing her first can of microbes in the station at 37th
Ave. Her next stop had been the Sligh Blvd. station in Orlando. She left
a third can in Savannah, Ga., but somehow, when the conductor announced
the stops for Denmark, Columbia, and Camden in South Carolina, the Destroyer
of Nations didn't leave her seat. Instead she cursed the Amtrak routing
that had denied her Atlanta, Ga. as a target, and didn't leave the train
until she reached Raleigh, NC. She left a final can puffing out germs in
Richmond, Va., boarded the next Amtrak Regional train, and went to the
club car for a Coke. By the time she reached Washington's Union Station,
she had missed the evening rush hour in the Capitol City. A cab brought
her to the Gangplank Marina at 8:30pm. Prima was already waiting for her.
"You're ahead of schedule,
Strategos," Prima dispassionately observed. Xena only grunted in
response before going below. She was over three hours early.
The clone tossed her briefcase
onto the bench in her cabin. She calculated that there were less than eight
hours before her war began in earnest and the casualties started streaming
into hospitals up and down the eastern seaboard. The people who were infected
first at the train stations would fan out to their destinations and spread
the plague. The Destroyer of Nations had no problem with that. Like Athena,
she was preparing the battlefield.
Unlike Athena, who had spread
her initial military actions across three years in hopes of remaining undetected,
Xena could only gain by striking quickly and with ferocity while still
unknown. The element of surprise was a strategic advantage that she intended
to milk for all it was worth. Once she openly declared herself and her
army took the field, she could never regain her anonymity. After a change
of clothes, she went back up and rejoined Prima on the bridge. She needed
some time alone to think.
The two clones readied the
Miss Artiphys and cleared her moorings. This time, as the ship made its
way down the Potomac, Xena piloted the hydrofoil personally. She dismissed
Prima and stood at the wheel looking up at the stars. Despite the impending
destruction she'd unleashed, the thing that bothered her most was the canisters
that had remained unused. Surely her deviation from the plan wouldn't save
anyone as the epidemic spread. She could find no reason for why she'd spared
those three cities, giving Columbia a breathing space of a couple hundred
miles. It might translate into only a day's grace. She told herself that
in the long run, it would make no difference at all.
"Capture brings one to the heart of the enemy."
~ The Destroyer of Nations
December 18, 2005 - Somewhere in the North Atlantic
Things had been growing quieter
for the last nine days. The Hellene's Bane sat at a desk in a cabin aboard
CVN-75, the USS Harry Truman. The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier was the
centerpiece of carrier group five, which was patrolling the north Atlantic,
a thousand miles east of Maine. Across the room, Prima was inputting files
on the laptop, having received it back after a through examination by the
onboard intelligence officers. The two clones had been aboard since December
9th, after the USS Kauffman, a frigate patrolling the carrier
group's perimeter, had approached the Miss Artiphys and noticed the Phalanx.
The Destroyer of Nations had been amazed that they'd been able to shadow
the naval vessels for almost two days before being approached and taken
into custody. It seemed that becoming a prisoner was only difficult when
it was a tactical ploy.
On the evening of the 9th,
the frigate had edged closer and closer, probably only intending to warn
them away from the carrier group at first. Xena had watched them and tapped
her foot on the bridge deck in exasperation. Finally, at a quarter-mile's
distance, the ship had turned broadside to them, allowing it to bring its
5-inch guns to bear, and had demanded that they hold their position. Prima
had complied and they had waited. At last someone on watch had noticed
the domed gun carriage of the MK 15 Phalanx system and become curious.
After fifteen minutes, a
motor launch had delivered a junior grade lieutenant and a dozen MPs to
the Miss Artiphys. They were jumpy, not knowing what to expect. First they'd
noted that the Phalanx was loaded and looked operational. Then they'd demanded
to be allowed to inspect the ship. Though they were in international waters,
Prima had just shrugged and stood aside, as per the strategos' orders.
The LTJG had left four MPs to guard the two clones after restricting them
to the cabin. The men stood with their fingers on the triggers of their
M16A2 rifles, nervously breathing the cabin's microbe tainted air. The
officer and his remaining men searched the hydrofoil thoroughly. They found
no contraband. They found no dead bodies. They found no hidden terrorists.
They too breathed the infected ship's air as they examined the reactor,
the advanced high-pressure waterjet propulsion system, and the ship's electronics
that were as sophisticated as their own. Finally they'd made their report
and been ordered to pilot the ship to the waiting carrier group and deliver
its crew to the USS Harry Truman for interrogation.
Aboard the carrier two hours
later, the clones had been confined under guard in a cabin. They were made
comfortable while inspectors and US Navy intelligence officers went over
the Miss Artiphys again with a fine toothed comb. In all, a total of 47
naval personnel went aboard the hydrofoil at one time or another. They
were more than enough to ensure that the plague spread throughout the massive
ship. Because the emergencies in the US and their unusual prisoners demanded
radio silence on intelligence matters, a limited exchange of intelligence
officers to brief the other captains in person spread the plagues throughout
the task force. The security detail had returned to the USS Kauffman.
Eventually both the Harry
Truman's captain and the rear admiral in charge of the carrier group met
with the clones. After three days and six meetings, Xena and Prima slowly
began to tell them lies that sounded like what they wanted to hear. On
the fourth day, neither officer arrived at their cabin, and Xena had remarked
to Prima that both had been flushed and concentrating poorly the day before.
Two days later, the commanding officers and their closest subordinates
had been dead of Ebola.
Panic had broken out on
the aircraft carrier. The clones were confined and shunned. Having come
from the mainland, from which horrific intelligence reports of epidemics
had been received, they were regarded as the obvious disease vectors. Only
the medical corps questioned why they were still alive and uninfected.
Since the deaths of the captain and the admiral, Xena and Prima had seen
almost no one, had spoken with almost no one, and had remained alert to
the increasing silence on the ship.
"Strategos, it is
0900 hours on the eighteenth. Projections show that 94% of the crew should
have succumbed by now," Prima reported as she closed the laptop.
With a crew of 3,200 and
an air wing of 2,480, the projected casualties numbered 5,340.
Without answering, Xena
rose to her feet. She crossed the cabin, from the desk to the door and
with a hard flying sidekick, sent it crashing off its hinges into the passageway
outside. The single Marine guard spun from his station beside the door
to face her. His presence confirmed Prima's assessment. The last time the
clone had caught a glimpse outside, there had been three sentries, one
to each side of the door and one across the hall.
The Marine began to raise
his rifle, but Xena was prepared for the encounter and she had the element
of surprise. The Destroyer of Nations whipped her left arm out, the hand
clenched flat, the thumb tucked tightly against her palm. She caught him
squarely in the throat with the ridge of the knuckle at the base of her
index finger, and his trachea collapsed with a sharp crunch. She snatched
the rifle by the barrel and wrenched it from his grasp as he fell. Prima
was already at her back carrying the computer. The "special" stooped and
retrieved the guard's sidearm and spare magazines.
They headed upwards, making
their way through deserted hallways, empty stairwells, and vacated spaces.
The few remaining officers and crew were expected to be on the bridge,
in operations, or below in engineering. Their first stop was Operations,
the nerve center of the carrier. During the entire trip, they only shot
one sailor, an engineer's mate who looked more lost than they were and
had tried to flee.
In the passageway outside
of Operations, they heard only a few voices. The large room was grossly
understaffed. The acting Chief of Operations was busy receiving reports
from the acting Communications Officer. He was standing beside a ship to
ship transceiver with one hand over his face, wiping sweat from his brow.
The man was obviously sick. Their news wasn't good. As the clones listened,
a crackling transmission came through from a Ticonderoga-class guided missile
cruiser. It was reporting massive numbers of crewmen going down with a
deadly flu. Only 7 of their 24 officers and 51 of their 340 enlisted men
were healthy. The next status report was from a Burke-class destroyer.
276 of DDG-55, the USS Stout's, 323 personnel were infected or already
dead, and the ship was being commanded by an ensign. A second destroyer,
the USS Cole, DDG-67, failed to answer its hail. The USS Kauffman reported
in next. The Perry-class frigate normally carried a crew of 300. It was
the ship that had first encountered the Miss Artiphys, and it had led the
epidemiological evolution. What the USS Harry Truman's Com received was
a "mayday" distress call from a dying man, a young cook's mate who'd wandered
into operations and managed to get the radio to work.
"Sir, there are only a dozen
of us left…no officers at all…and we're all sick over here," the panicky
voice from the Kauffman warned. "We're a death ship, god save us. Stay
away, sir. Don't try to come aboard. I'm scared, sir…we're doomed."
"We're sick over here too,
son," the Chief said in a soothing voice before breaking into a fit of
coughing, "and we've been unable to contact anyone in Washington or Norfolk
for a week. They're sick too. Stay in contact as long as you can. It feels
like the end of the world."
The Chief turned away from
the Com and was violently ill, gagging and heaving up a vomitus that looked
like coffee grounds. He was bleeding out from Ebola. The Communications
Officer rose to steady him when he staggered and then froze as Prima stepped
into the doorway and shot the Chief in the head. She shot the Communications
Officer next, and then the other six crewmen who were just beginning to
react. Against her speed, they never had a chance. Eight shots…eight dead
in just under three seconds.
"Capture brings one to the
heart of the enemy," Xena whispered softly, "their ever vulnerable heart."
It was a ploy that she'd used many times in her original life.
Xena wandered over to an
animated chart screen set in an island in the center of the room. It showed
surface and submerged objects across most of the Atlantic. Among the blips
were the "friendly" blue dots representing the carrier group centered on
the USS George Washington, CNV-73, and the red dots of the Russian North
Atlantic Fleet off the Iceland coast. Both were moving towards the USS
Harry Truman, the blue dots at what appeared to be flank speed, the red
dots at a conservative and inquisitive 6 knots. She nodded to herself and
made a hand sign to the "special". Without a second look, she followed
Prima out of Operations and headed for the Flag Bridge.
Five stories above the flight
deck, the clones entered the admiral's bridge. It was deserted. The Destroyer
of Nations looked down out a window and saw bodies littering the 4½
acres of asphalt below. Most of them were flight deck crew, wearing yellow,
red, brown, purple, and blue vests, color-coded to their duties. Only a
few were feebly moving. Equipment sat abandoned on the deck like a bored
child's forgotten toys.
On the next level up, Xena
shot two officers in the ship's bridge, the acting Officer of the Watch,
and a Marine captain. On the seventh and top level, they found Air Control
empty. There was no one left to fly, no one to operate the catapults, and
no one to prep the planes. It might take another day or two for the remaining
crewmembers to succumb completely, and before that time, the USS George
Washington's carrier group would arrive. After a week of remaining on station
and overhearing a few hundred panicked radio transmissions, the Russians
would approach for a look. Both would start their investigations with the
carrier. Within a month at most, they would all be dead. Their battle readiness
would falter long before that.
Beyond those nearby ships,
both navies were crippled by epidemics at home. Neither the Americans nor
the Russians wanted to deploy ships and then find their crews dying at
sea from diseases contracted in port. Any other naval vessels already on
the high seas were patrolling the Pacific or Indian Oceans, and were not
a threat at present.
"Prima, go forward and set
two canisters on different levels in the berthing spaces, then meet me
in the magazine," Xena ordered. "We'll make this the mother of all plague
ships."
The "special" removed the
lower casing from the laptop and extracted four "D" cell sized aerosol
cans. She handed two to the strategos, then nodded and quickly headed
back towards the forward stairs. Xena reassembled the laptop and headed
toward the aft stairwell. Her two canisters would be placed in the engine
room and the passageway to the main hanger. All four would create a reservoir
of microbes; virulent, concentrated, and located so far below the weather
deck that they would be slow to disperse. It would be Xena's final surprise
aboard the USS Harry Truman.
A short time later, when
Prima reached the ship's magazine, she found the strategos taking
an inventory. Among the conventional and guided munitions for the aircraft
wing, there were also a dozen Mark-28 strategic weapons configured for
aerial delivery.
"Let's make ready to transfer
these to the Miss Artiphys," Xena said. Acquiring them was the second goal
of her strategy involving the carrier group.
An hour later, the two clones
had made their way to the waterline after hauling the Miss Artiphys abreast
of the Harry Truman's open stern. A loading crane there lowered the dozen
Mk-28s through the forward hatch in the hydrofoil so they could be stowed
below deck. It was slow work with only the two clones, but they proceeded
methodically and without interruption. When the weapons were finally secured,
the clones cast off from the carrier. Once aboard their own vessel, they
stood off from the doomed Harry Truman with the channel motor and set a
course of 112º that would place them at the Strait of Gibraltar in
just over two days.
"Bring us to flank speed,"
the Destroyer of Nations ordered.
As always, Prima obeyed
in the blink of an eye. The hydrofoil came onto its new heading and began
its acceleration to 90 knots. It wasn't yet 1500 hours, but they'd already
had a busy day. In their wake, 7,000 sailors lay dead or dying. With the
arrival of the second carrier group and the Russian fleet, that number
would eventually climb to around 24,000. Xena wasn't sure of the exact
compliment of the Russian ships' crews, but that wasn't important. What
was important was that no major power would control the Atlantic for some
time to come. Equally important, the Hellene's Bane had acquired a dozen
hydrogen bombs and procured a troop transport. As she stood gazing ahead
across the miles of open ocean, she indulged in neither malicious celebration
nor maudlin self-recrimination. She felt no guilt, only accomplishment
and purpose. She was already refining her New Year's plans for the Mediterranean.
Cometo me when winter's snow lies thick upon the ground,
Cloaking all the world in white and shrouding every sound.
Then gift me with a peace so still, all's frozen as in death,
And the only hint of living is the billow of my breath.
(Opening stanza of verse 4 from "The Lay of the Conqueror", author unknown, circa 42 BC)
December 30, 2005 - USAMRIID, Ft. Detrick, Maryland
0415 EST came with three
hours of darkness still remaining on a chilly winter morning. At the main
gate of Ft. Detrick, a pair of sentries sat in a small guardhouse watching
the views from surveillance cameras on a bank of black and white monitors.
One of them rubbed cold-stiffened hands, sipped lukewarm coffee, and slipped
his US Army issue lined gloves back on. His duty shift had begun at 2200
hours the previous night. Now, after over six hours, he wasn't as alert
as he'd been earlier. The chill sapped his energy, the boredom sapped his
concentration, and the last vehicle to approach USAMRIID's main gate had
come in at 2340 hours, over four-and-a-half hours ago. Guard duty didn't
get much duller than this.
"I'm going to step out for
thirty," he said to his partner who was sitting with heavy eyelids at the
console next to him. She grunted and nodded absently, then shook herself
and drank from her own coffee cup.
Outside the guardhouse the
air was bracing. A newly fallen foot of snow carpeted the wide parade ground
and softened the silhouettes of the nearby trees. In the near distance,
the massive USAMRIID building squatted with its air scrubber vent stacks
pointing from the roof up into the sky. The cold slapped him awake in an
instant, and he looked overhead at the crystalline night, admiring the
sharpness of the stars. It was so different from the ever-present glow
of the city he'd grown up in, but then, he'd never seen snow in Miami either.
Here, just across US-15 from Fredrick, Maryland, and only 40 miles from
the US Capitol, the sky was wide above the trees, dark as velvet, and speckled
with twinkling points of light. One of those points, he noticed, was moving.
Could it be a falling star? A satellite in orbit? He watched as it seemed
to trace an arc from east to west, its speed ever increasing, its brightness
growing fast.
By the time he realized
that something was very wrong it was far too late. Perhaps the first real
clue was the shattering series of sonic booms, which came one after another
like the reports from a howitzer battery, and reverberated back from the
nearby foothills of the Allegheny Mountains. He'd never heard anything
like it. In what seemed like an instant, the star was falling on the base.
It struck its target with devastating accuracy.
The scramjet cruise missile
slammed into the containment labs at Mach 8, almost 6,000 mph. Its mass
was a scant 300lbs and there was no warhead. There was no explosion. The
inertia from the impact alone shattered buildings for two hundred yards
in all directions. Most of the high value USAMRIID technical facilities
were destroyed in an instant. All the positive pressure containment labs,
the microbe isolation storage, the biological agent weaponizing factory,
and the medical research areas disappeared in a cloud of debris and dust
that rose a half-mile into the night sky and slowly followed the prevailing
winds southeast.
By dawn, the first of the
microbial fallout had reached the western suburbs of Baltimore and Washington,
D.C. By noon, both cities would be enveloped in an unseen pall of death.
The US military would be deprived of its biological arsenal, courtesy of
the Destroyer of Nations. More importantly, any unprotected scientists,
agents, or clones in Athena's strongholds would be infected.
0430 EST hours saw full
dark in Hanford, Washington. The local time was 1:30am. In a replay of
the events at the USAMRIID facility in Maryland almost 2,200 miles to the
east, a falling star slammed into its target. This star had a total mass
of 600lbs, a full-size scramjet cruise missile. It carried a warhead weighing
120lbs, composed of 27.5lbs of weapons grade plutonium, the triggering
mechanism, and the guidance system. The yield for the warhead was 25 kilotons,
rather modest by modern standards.
Hanford, Washington was
a small town on the west bank of the Columbia River. In all honesty, it
was in the middle of nowhere, east of the Cascade Range and the populous
Pacific Coast. The nearest town was Edna, population 349. Still, it was
a high value target. Hanford had been a notorious government production
facility for weapons grade plutonium. It had been active from 1943, to
1989 when it was closed down, and it had accumulated the nation's largest
collection of high level nuclear waste. An eerie, neon blue water pool
containing cylinders of radioactive cesium and strontium, the by-products
of four-and-a-half decades of nuclear weapons production, was the primary
target.
The scramjet cruise missile
struck it dead on at 6,000mph. The impact and the blast vaporized the glowing
pool, its contents, and another 53 million gallons of deadly radioactive
waste stored in shallow-buried, single-walled tanks nearby. Within minutes
of the strike, a cloud of high level fallout was headed outwards from an
altitude of six miles, and with a volume of almost 300 million gallons.
The radioactivity from the bomb itself only served to enrich the ejecta
of what was the mother of all dirty bombs. Within five hours the cloud
would reach Seattle, Vancouver, Portland, and Boise. In ten hours, Salt
Lake City and San Francisco would be sterilized. In two days, the fallout
would spread south to Los Angeles, Denver, Phoenix, and Las Vegas. The
Air Force Bases at Ellsworth, Mountain Home, Dyess, and Whitman, would
become dead zones. The prevailing winds would carry the radioactivity east,
all the way to Chicago, Detroit, and Indianapolis. The projected short-term
lethality was on the order of 65 million souls.
432 nautical miles due east
of Virginia Beach, at 70º0'0"W X 36º0'0"N, the Argo had surfaced
after salvaging the torpedoes and reactor core from the sunken Alfa. The
Argo's pilot had set the helm onto a heading of 310º, but held her
position steady at station keeping. The hecatontarches had raised
the beam along the submarine's spine and elevated it to thirty degrees.
In the aft hold that served as a weapons bay, a team of clones had loaded
a 600lb Mach 8 cruise missile onto the launch rail. When it was in position,
they'd sealed the aft bay doors and prepared for the launch.
By 0400EST the reactor aboard
the Argo had charged a battery of capacitors and the fire control officer
in the sail triggered the current. The prodigious power stored in the capacitors
charged the series of electromagnets in sequence, from the rail's rear
to its front, drawing the metal cruise missile down its length and launching
it into the night sky. The process took only a few hundredths of a second.
The cruise missile left the electromagnetic launcher at 90Gs, and accelerated
to Mach 9 within two seconds. After a twenty-eight minute flight at Mach
8, the scramjet with its nuclear fission warhead would slam into the Hanford
atomic waste site 2,800 miles away. Ten minutes later, the 300lb half-scale
cruise missile was launched towards Ft. Detrick.
The Destroyer of Nations
had used an electromagnetic launcher, or rail gun, instead of a solid fuel
rocket booster, to accelerate her scramjet to supersonic speed. She had
minimized the necessary mass and expense of her weapon system, and reduced
the telltale procurement of the sensitive materials required. With the
same system, she could launch non-self-propelled projectiles as well. The
result was that the Argo was tens of tons lighter and hosted much less
explosive material than a conventional submarine. The only drawback was
that it took almost a full ten minutes to accumulate the electrical charge
necessary to fire a single projectile. In the Destroyer's plans, neither
rapid fire nor simultaneous multiple launches were necessary. The Hellene's
Bane had opted for an "economical" approach to conquering the world.
At 0415EST, as the first
impact demolished the USAMRIID facility, the Argo sank silently into the
Atlantic, leaving no trace of its presence. The pilot set a course of 75º,
or east-northeast, and brought the Argo to flank speed, 45 knots. The diving
officer made the sub's depth 400 feet. In 3 days, 18 hours, and 45 minutes,
the Argo would be lying 500 miles off the coast of France, in position
to prepare the battlefield of Europe for the coming war. Since the Miss
Artiphys' mission earlier in the month, the Atlantic Ocean had been largely
unpatrolled, a free zone for those with the means and the will to sail
it. The Destroyer's forces had both the means and the will.
January 1, 2006 - The Mediterranean, West of Sardinia
Moscow- After nearly a month, the influenza epidemic that began here and in Kiev and Minsk has claimed an estimated 11.4 million lives in Europe. Within days of the official report, thousands of cases had been diagnosed. The death rate began to accelerate during the second week of December as the epidemic spread through Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Romania. The next week, Austria, Germany, the Balkan states, and Bulgaria were affected. These countries have now confirmed 4.8 million fatal cases in the last week of 2005. In Brussels, experts are skeptical as to the efficacy of the European Union's control measures. Isolated pockets of cases began showing up in London, Paris, Lyon, Milan, and Bern as early as December 20th. The World Health Organization has refused to make predictions about the eventual death toll. "This could be the start of a worldwide pandemic far worse than what was endured in 1918," said Dr. Bozo Wasascu of the Bucharest Red Cross, last Thursday. The doctor could not be reached for further comment today, and a colleague explained that he had been struck and killed on New Year's Eve by a car whose driver had collapsed at the wheel and died of the flu.
The Miss Artiphys rested
at anchor in 14 fathoms of clear blue water, two miles off the Sardinia
coast, at the mouth of the Bay of Oristano. It was a travel poster beautiful
afternoon, in a travel poster beautiful destination. The hydrofoil lay
gently bobbing among other pleasure craft. Her occupants were relaxing
on the bridge like any other pair on a vacation. Sunglasses and bikinis
had replaced their black uniforms, helping them "blend in" as rich and
beautiful American twins enjoying their carefree leisure while the world
around them died.
Xena and Prima had been
busy over the last two weeks. 50 hours after leaving the Northern Fleet
behind, the catamaran had passed through the Straits of Gibraltar and sailed
into the Mediterranean Sea. It was a homecoming of sorts, for two souls
who had never plied its waters in their present lives. Both remembered
their days spent as pirates, ranging from Hispania to the Hellespont, harrying
the coasts of Italia, Illyricum, Achaea, Macedonia, Thrace, Ionia, Lydia,
and Caria.
But those memories were
2,080 years out of date. The present day Med was a pond, criss-crossed
by container ships, fishing vessels, passenger cruisers, and the naval
vessels of over a dozen nations. Most ports were so congested that the
clones had fought ebb tides to make the docks early enough in the day to
claim a berth. The big hydrofoil drew attention as well, being such an
uncommon type of craft. Still, the two clones had achieved their mission
and maintained their timetable…barely.
They'd made landfall at
the ports of call for Athens, Rome, Tel Aviv, and Alexandria. At each stop,
they'd succeeded in hiding two Mk-28 warheads. Usually they distributed
them, one in the harbor, and the second near the government centers within
the city limits. The eight thermonuclear bombs were counting down the seconds
until 3:15:44pm, using the local time for Rome. It was a subtle message
that Xena intended to send. The time represented a special date. The bombs
were synchronized according to the clock in the city where she'd died,
on March 15th, 44 BC…the Ides of March in the year that her
original self had been crucified.
New Years Day 2006 fell
on a Saturday, and by mid-afternoon, no celebratory crowds would be congregating
as they might have been near midnight. Only government and military personnel
would be carrying on their duties, and the more of them who were killed
the better.
"This year'll be remembered
as the year of war," Xena said, "the year the past ended. It was fated
to be the year of change. It just won't be changin' the way Athena hoped."
"1515 hours, Strategos,"
Prima reported as they stared east towards Sardinia and the sea beyond.
They waited in silence.
The closest bombs were in
Rome and its port of Ostia, two hundred miles away. In the daylight, they
wouldn't even see a flash. The only clue that the detonations had occurred
was the radio suddenly crackling and falling into harsh static as the electromagnetic
pulse from the blasts shocked the atmosphere and created magnetic fields.
Although the effect was minimized, because the explosions were either at
ground level or submerged in water rather than occurring in the atmosphere,
the local AM radio station in Arborea disappeared. Prima checked the tuner's
presets and found nothing being broadcast from any of the stations in Oristano
or Terralba either.
The Destroyer of Nations
waxed philosophical. "With the epidemic in Europe claiming so many lives,
maybe I shoulda' skipped Rome and Athens and attacked Istanbul, Beirut,
an' Tunis instead. Seems kinda excessive, like bombin' the dead."
"We'd have no assurance
or control over the timetable or the targets affected," Prima commented
in response, "and for all we know, Athena's microbes have been engineered
to lose virulence in a month. Maybe Athena wanted to spare Rome an' Athens.
They were once her cities."
"You're right," the strategos
conceded, "and the first lesson is to never second guess a plan after its
execution. You can only adapt. If there was a mistake made, then the error
was overkill, and that's a lesser flaw than omission."
"No victory comes from an
unused weapon, but excess is acceptable in war."
"Exactly. It trains the
enemy to despair rather than to expect sloppiness or mercy."
"So do we maintain the timetable,
Strategos?'
"Yes, Prima. Make our course
255º for the Strait of Gibraltar."
January 2, 2006 - Bay of Biscay
Europe was reeling as it
never had before. Even at the height of the Second World War, the destruction
and loss of life had been spread over many months and years. The fear of
nuclear war that had traumatized a generation during the Cold War paled
before the realities of the raging influenza epidemic and the New Year's
Day destruction of Rome, Athens, Tel Aviv, and Alexandria. Throughout the
European Union, over 16.2 million lives had been lost to disease. The casualties
in the bombed cities hadn't been tallied.
Throughout the Old World,
voices were raised in horror, fear, and helpless anguish. No country was
unaffected. Every nation quaked as social order decayed. The last month
had brought more death than any month of war known to mankind, but for
the first time, there was no declared war. There were no enemies, no allies,
and no understanding of the hostilities. There were no visible good guys
or bad guys and no "sides", only casualties. Most people didn't believe
that a war was raging. They saw the epidemic as an act of nature, and the
bombs as the work of terrorists. And yet there was war. Those who would
have reflexively blamed the Americans could only shudder at the destruction
that had been wrought in that country.
Right on time, at 2300 hours
GMT, the Argo surfaced outside the Bay of Biscay, five hundred miles off
the coast of France. The submarine was positioned at 7º0'0"W X 47º0'0"N,
as per the strategos' orders. The trip had taken just shy of four
days, and though the time had been short, the crew of clones had been busy.
They had fashioned an atomic device, crude but operational, from the reactor
core of the sunken Alfa. Its yield on detonation would be greater than
any of the remaining three warheads made from the black market Russian
plutonium that Xena had bought. The Alfa's high-pressure reactor had provided
twenty kilos of enriched uranium, forty-four pounds worth, which had been
divided into five sub-critical masses. These would be blasted together
by charges derived from a couple of the salvaged torpedoes.
In the sail, one of the
chiliarchoi raised the rail of the electromagnetic launcher. Another
passed the order to the aft weapons bay, and a crew of hecatontarches
readied a scramjet cruise missile for firing.
The first weapon left the
rail gun at 2312 hours, followed by three more at ten-minute intervals.
Each accelerated to incandescence as it left the launcher at Mach 5.5 and
reached its maximum velocity of Mach 9 less than two seconds later. After
another ten seconds, as the projectile decelerated toward Mach 7, the scramjet
engine ignited and maintained the missile's speed at Mach 8. With that
speed, most of the warheads were detonating before the next weapon could
be launched.
Berlin disappeared in a
fireball at 2324 hours after an eleven-and-a-half-minute flight by the
first cruise missile. 2.7 of the 3.4 million innocent people there died
in the 25-kiloton blast. Launched at 2322 hours, the second warhead vaporized
Brussels at 2330. The third scramjet to be launched struck Paris at 2338
hours, needing only six minutes to reach its target. All three cities had
been struck by fission bombs built with Russian plutonium. Like the weapon
that had destroyed the Hanford site, these produced a yield equal to 25
kilotons of tri-nitro-toluene. The fourth bomb had been assembled from
the enriched uranium gleaned from the Alfa's reactor core, and devastated
London at 2348 in a blast of 50 kilotons. England's capitol city had been
selected because of that country's close ties to the US and its having
been least affected by the European plague. The Destroyer of Nations was
"leveling" the playing field in more ways than one.
In each case, there had
been so little time between detection of the incoming object and the resulting
destruction, that no action beyond confirmation of the target and a first
communication with the military command had been possible. The longest
flight time had been under twelve minutes, the shortest, just five-and
a-half minutes. In no case had there been time for a response. There hadn't
even been time to sound the air raid alarms.
As the London bound scramjet
screamed into the night sky with air friction bringing it to a red-orange
incandescence, the weapons control officer in the sail began retracting
the launch rail. The clones in the weapons bay secured the aft hatch. The
helm turned the Argo onto a new course of 225º, and the sub moved
in a starboard turn at one-quarter speed. Seconds before 2400 hours, or
midnight GMT, the Argo submerged.
The communications officer
had radioed the Miss Artiphys at 2342, directly following the fourth launch,
to report that the action had proceeded on schedule and according to plan.
That transmission was received by Xena as the hydrofoil sped past Tangier,
to the south of the mouth of the Strait of Gibraltar.
Before the electromagnetic
interference from the blasts in Paris and London disrupted radio reception,
the strategos replied to the Argo, "Preparation of the European
Theater is complete. Proceed as planned."
January 6, 2006 - Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee
"Daaaaad! How long do we
have to stay in this dump? There's dirt all over the ground here. Do you
think you coulda' found anyplace more egreeeegiously boring?"
Harry Tasker rolled his
eyes at his 21-year old daughter, Dana, who was braying her displeasure
with the grating whine of an indignant teen. Across the picnic table, Helen
groaned and dropped her face into her hands.
"See, even Mom's like…bored
to tears!"
Harry sighed. In the last
month, his daughter had lost ten years of maturity and his wife had gained
twenty. The agent just felt tired and irritable. He was too worried to
be bored, and too scared not to worry. He hated it, but could do almost
nothing about it.
"Do you think this is my
favorite place in the world?" He snapped at the GW Univ. senior. He still
thanked god that she'd been a commuting student living at home. "All the
interesting places are full of dead people! You want to join them?"
His eyes bugged out and
the veins stood inflated in his neck. Take ten deep breaths, he ordered
himself, recalling the anger management courses from his military days.
Slowly he calmed down enough to feel thankful that his family had survived
the last month. Up and down the eastern seaboard, 31 million others hadn't.
Early on December 7th
he'd already been in bed with Helen when Spencer Trilby himself had called
the agent at home. It was a first. Harry had jerked awake in response.
Trilby had told him that four cases of Ebola had been diagnosed in Miami,
a case of small pox and three cases of influenza in Boston, and another
of each in Philadelphia. Two cases of influenza and a case of Ebola had
just been admitted in Orlando, and New York was hosting two cases of small
pox and one of Ebola. Savannah Georgia had just reported a case of influenza
and a case of small pox. Omega Sector's computer had made a projection
and the data supported a sweeping epidemic of three unrelated diseases
moving from both the north and south and slated to converge on Washington.
The first cases were expected in the Nation's Capitol around 9:00am. It
was already 2:35am, early on Pearl Harbor Day. America had been victimized
by another sneak attack, maliciously timed. Get out, Spencer Trilby
had told him, stay away from the cities and await further orders.
Harry Tasker had never heard from Omega Sector again.
By 3:00am he'd been on the
road, having hauled his wife from their bed and Dana off the computer and
out of a chat room. He'd driven from McLean, Va., speeding around I-495,
the Washington Beltway, to I-66, heading west. While Helen and Dana questioned
him, he'd done 80mph all the way to the junction with I-81 south. Most
of his answers had been, "I don't know. People are dying." His wife had
been terrified and his daughter had been angry. After 25 miles he'd turned
off onto US-211, heading east for 10 miles, and then pulled into the parking
lot of Luray Caverns, 6 miles west of the Shenandoah National Park. It
was 4:50am by then. He'd picked the locks on the doors and herded his family
underground.
By morning they'd been joined
by an increasingly panicked group of locals. The proprietor of the cave
had chained the gates of the parking lot, locked the building that contained
the entrance elevators, and hung a "closed" sign on the door. The natives
of Luray, Virginia didn't want outsiders bringing their diseases to the
rural town.
For a week they'd waited,
listening to the area radio stations reporting on the spread of the epidemics.
Those stations had gone off the air, one by one. By December 14th,
the last one had fallen silent. On the 15th, a farmer came down
with flu symptoms. It might not have been the plague flu. It might not
have been the flu at all, but Harry had no way to tell. He and his family
were back on the road a half-hour later.
They continued south on
I-81, staying to the west of the cities. After 30 miles, they reached the
junction with I-64, the main highway leading west from Richmond. There
hadn't been a car in sight. Harry had pressed the gas pedal down harder
and kept on going. They drove all day and their single reassurance was
that the small towns off the interstate seemed mostly normal. Harry stopped
in Fancy Hill, Va., and charged $600 worth of camping supplies and dehydrated
food. A hardware store had provided P-100 particle masks and batteries.
Though he suspected that he'd never pay the bill, he carefully stashed
the receipts out of habit. After that, it was back out onto the highway.
Soon he found that he'd
have to make a choice. Knoxville, Tn., sat astride I-81. Beyond it lay
Chattanooga and then Atlanta. They'd started to see a few cars on the road
when they'd passed through Roanoke, 200 miles north. Now traffic was getting
heavier, and as it grew, Harry's nervousness grew along with it. For each
vehicle they encountered, his blood pressure went up a point. Finally he
couldn't take it any more. He'd turned south onto SR-66, driven 15 miles
down US-321, passed through the town of Gatlinburg at 45mph, (though the
place looked normal), and driven into the Smokey Mountains National Park.
Off the Little River Trail Rd he'd pulled into a campground, parked in
an end space, and fallen asleep at the wheel with the doors locked and
his sidearm in his lap. When he awoke the next morning, he'd discovered
that many others had had the same idea. The campground was over half-filled
with cars and RVs, though it was the dead of winter.
Fearing infection, people
in the campsites kept to themselves. No one had approached the Taskers
that first day, nor on the second. They'd rigged their campsite and tried
to make themselves as comfortable as they could, without electricity or
running water, in the year end winter's chill. Harry remembered the skills
he'd learned as a commando in jungles and hostile places around the world.
After his shopping spree in Fancy Hill, he was better equipped than on
any mission he could recall. Still, Dana soon began whining, and Helen
took on a resigned melancholia. Both were unused to "roughing it", and
both missed their home and friends. Without understanding the background
info that Harry did, they couldn't understand the gravity of the threat
around them. They both expected to pack up and go home any day. The longer
it went without that happening, the lower their spirits got.
By the second week of their
stay, their tempers were frayed. No one was unaffected. The people camped
around them understood even less than they did. They were displaced and
terrified refugees, hiding from the epidemics that they'd heard were ravaging
the cities along the eastern seaboard. These campers recreated the migrant
peasants of England and Europe in 1348 AD, when Yersinia pestis, the Black
Plague, had driven them off their productive lands and into wandering lives
of starvation, looting, and lynching. They were afflicted with the same
ignorance, horror, anger, helplessness, and even superstitions of their
predecessors in suffering from 650 years before. The South had never lacked
for fire and brimstone preachers, a wrathful god, or predictions of the
apocalypse. The Taskers stayed in their tent, hearing shouted arguments
in the night, then finally gunshots, screams, and wailing. That was Christmas
Eve. Harry had grimly loaded magazines for his HK-53 as Helen and Dana
watched with wide, fearful eyes.
Like the world of pre-industrial
times, darkness ruled the night. The physical darkness that had followed
the death of so many utility workers was mirrored by the psychological
darkness of scared people for whom the constraints and order of society
were failing. It was the same effect seen in asylums, where "lights out"
inaugurates a cacophony of wailing and gibbering as inner delusions replace
institutional structure. After the first few nights, the four park rangers
took to patrolling the grounds, spotlights stabbing into the dark from
their Jeep as they enforced a sundown curfew with rifles. They controlled
the worst behavior, and most people stayed in their tents at night.
During the daylight an air
of depression and resignation prevailed in the campground. It was dismal.
The Taskers felt it like everyone else. Harry, unable to stand the inactivity,
finally undertook a project, mostly to preserve his dwindling reservoir
of hope. Each day, he spent a couple hours driving the park roads, visiting
each campground he came to, and searching for a familiar face.
It was on his sixth foray
that he drove through Right Hand Gap on US-441 and crossed the state boundary
between Tennessee and South Carolina. He continued along the scenic road,
worrying and watching, and hopefully twisting the tuner dial on his radio.
Nothing but static came from the speakers. The agent wasn't surprised.
The last Knoxville station had gone silent on the 23rd.
Finally he entered an area
on the park's South Carolina side, where the park shared a boundary with
the Cherokee Indian Reservation. Only a mile from the park boundary he
saw the sign for a campground and pulled in.
Driving into the campground
was like riding into a paranoid small town in a cheap western movie. Suspicious
eyes watched him from the campsites as he rolled past. It had been the
same everywhere he went. Everyone was a potential danger; everyone was
a stranger. Harry had driven down the first two short roads that had joined
the main road from the right. There had been no vehicle and no face that
looked familiar in either place.
Back on the campground's
main road, Harry took the third turnoff, a left this time. For the first
hundred yards it was the same tiresome scenery; muddy cars beside dirty
tents, muddy RVs, and suspicious-eyed people, all under a coating of half-melted
snow. He passed them with failing interest. Another fifty yards down the
road there was a splash of color. A pair of ancient VW mini-buses with
a carnival bright awning stretched between them sat parked on either side
of a raised BBQ and picnic table. On the ground a slow fire was smoldering
beneath an old style iron tripod from which hung a kettle right our of
a witch's dream. A heavyset woman was stirring the contents with a long
metal rod. She looked up at the sound of Harry's car, and the agent jammed
on the brakes when he saw her face. It was Lynn, Ray Fell's significant
other, and the co-owner of the Congressional Diner in Columbia.
Harry Tasker leapt out of
the door, leaving it hanging open in the middle of the road. With a whoop
he crossed the few yards and ran into the campsite. Lynn recognized him
only moments before he hoisted her substantial bulk off the ground in a
bear hug.
At the sound of his voice,
Ray had stepped out of the nearer van with a large revolver in one hand
and a machete in the other. The Ph.D. certainly looked capable of murder.
In fact, he'd never looked more like Hannibal the Cannibal. He stopped
in amazement when he saw who it was and a wide smile spread across his
face.
"Harry," he exclaimed, "Harry
Tasker! Of all the people I could possibly see out here, you're the last
I would've guessed we'd meet. How the hell are you?"
"I'm depressed and angry,
but I sure am happy to see you," the agent answered. He took a quick look
at the vans and saw Angie peering out a window of one, Allan peeking from
behind a curtain in the other. "I see you managed to escape the city. I'm
very glad."
"How about Helen and Dana,"
Lynn asked seriously, "are they with you? She'd checked the car for anyone
else and seen that it was empty. She looked worried.
"They're in a campsite at
the other end of the park, in Tennessee," Harry said. "They're safe, but
depressed and angry."
"Look, Harry, there's plenty
of room here," Ray told him, gesturing expansively down the road past their
vans. The remaining sites were deserted. "We'd feel much better having
you close by, and honestly, it's pretty disturbing around here at night.
I don't think I've slept a wink after dark in weeks." He'd tucked the revolver
into his waistband and laid the machete on the picnic table. He sighed
and said, "I haven't been this on edge since Nam."
"I know what you mean,"
Harry said, "and I think Helen and Dana would love to have someone else
to talk to." He checked his watch. "If I leave now, I can pack up our site
and bring them back here. We should be able to set up our camp before dark."
"We'd be glad to help y'all,"
Angie offered, having stepped out of the van and joined Ray and Lynn. She
gave Harry a wide smile.
"Great!" Harry said, answering
her smile with one of his own. Then he gave Ray a serious look. "Tonight
after we've settled in, I've got some serious stuff to discuss with you.
I couldn't have hoped for a better person to ask about some of the things
that have occurred to me over the last couple weeks."
"Well, I'll be here," Ray
told him, as if he had anywhere else to be, "just go and bring back your
family. There's strength in numbers and I'll tell you, frankly, I believe
we're the only sane ones in the park."
He still looked so much
like Hannibal Lecter, and hearing him speak of sanity in any context struck
the agent as humorous. With a wave and a wide smile, Harry Tasker hurried
back to his car and swung it around, letting the tires spin on the gravel
and slush. On the drive back, he was so happy that he whistled badly all
the way and didn't touch the radio once.
Helen and Dana thought he'd
cracked when he leapt out of the car and practically danced over to the
tent. They were eyeing him nervously until he told them who he'd found.
Helen and Dana were barely aware of who Ray, Lynn, Allan, and Angie were.
They'd heard of the Congressional Diner, but had never been to it. Harry
talked non-stop about it as he stuffed things haphazardly into the car's
trunk, finally pulling down the tent and stuffing it into the back seat
with their clothes and sleeping bags still inside.
"Never mind," he told them,
"you'll like it better than here."
"I'd like anyplace better
than here," Dana muttered as they drove off. "I'm sure things always look
greener on the other side of the park." Her mother shot her a look.
"So who are these people,
dear?" Helen asked.
"Well, I guess you could
call them hippies," he told her.
"Daaaad, the last hippie
died of a drug overdose in 1974," Dana claimed with absolute certainty,
"so, duh, everyone knows that."
Harry spent the trip telling
them about their new neighbors. The Taskers had absolutely nothing in common
with the uber-hippies except for Xena. Still, after a month without seeing
a friendly face, the prospect of having familiar people nearby was more
positive than anything that had happened in weeks. It was the first really
good turn to come their way since leaving home.
That night, after they'd
set up their camp, the Taskers joined the uber-hippies and traded stories.
Though they'd all introduced themselves when the Taskers had first arrived,
they hadn't had time to get to know each other. Now, with the flickering
flames from burning logs lighting their faces and Lynn softly plucking
notes on a guitar, they resembled groups of travelers from centuries long
past. In the damaged modern world, they reverted to the kind of social
activity that had developed through the ages. It grew from the pull of
the human instinct to seek out others of their kind, and provided the opportunity
to pass on the wisdom that they'd gleaned in their daily struggle to survive.
Now, without telephones, TV, radio, or computers, face to face communication
reclaimed the place it had enjoyed though all the centuries of human history.
The Taskers and the uber-hippies partook of a nighttime ritual that had
arisen in a time before humans were truly human.
"We'd heard the reports
of rapidly spreading plagues to the north and south," Ray told them, "and
I thought it was suspiciously similar to what had happened in other countries
around the world. We'd heard about the flu in Russia and Europe, and then
there were those epidemics in China, North Korea, and the Sudan a few years
ago. All I could think was that if the cities were the centers of infection,
then we had to get away. Then Alex Williams showed up on duty wearing a
gas mask. That was it. We left."
"You see, before we settled
in Columbia, we spent all our time traveling," Lynn told them, gesturing
vaguely at the VW mini-buses, "so we just went back out on the road after
Alex warned us of the plagues. Anyway, no matter where you are, there's
always a campground nearby."
Allan nodded his head in
agreement, but said nothing. He eyed the Taskers shyly and only offered
a self-conscious smile.
"I always liked travelin',"
Angie added, as she popped open a can of Pepsi and dropped the bag of Doritos
she'd been holding in her lap, "it reminds me of when Ray an' Lynn found
me after I'd run 'way from home."
Sitting next to her at the
log, Dana found herself retrieving the bag of Doritos and handing them
back to the blonde. Angie gave her one of the wide smiles that came so
easily to her.
"Thanks," she said, taking
the bag and fumbling the can of soda, "but maybe y'all had better hang
onto 'em." She was holding the can tightly in one hand and the bag in the
other, and didn't have a free hand left to eat with. "Help yourself if
ya want," she offered.
Dana took the chips back
and started munching. For some reason, the sometimes-cynical young woman
didn't comment on the blonde's clumsiness or the fact that she could have
simply set her soda can on the ground at their feet.
"What about Alex and Karen?"
Harry asked, since Ray had mentioned the policeman.
"Well, we'd planned to meet
here in the park if he ever got away from Columbia," Ray said, "but being
a cop…" He trailed off and shrugged.
They both knew that with
the responsibilities Alex's job carried, he'd probably be the last to leave,
if he didn't end up dead in the line of duty. Columbia was in the midst
of its most serious emergency, and with all the social disruption, law
enforcement would be critical. After a prolonged silence, Harry continued,
relating his side of the story.
"I got a call from my boss
warning me of the first cases in Boston, Philly, Miami, and Orlando," Harry
said, "and I was ordered to leave town."
"It was terrifying," Helen
added, "and they thought the diseases were going to be coming to Washington
in a few hours. We drove away from the city and spent the next week hiding
in Luray Caverns…until someone there got sick. Then we came here."
"Harry, what does your boss
think is going on," Ray asked. He was trying to ask the man he'd become
convinced was a covert government agent for information, without forcing
him to reveal his connections.
"I don't know," Harry admitted,
"I haven't heard anything from them since. They were based in Washington,
and for all I know, everyone there is already dead."
He looked down and shook
his head sadly, thinking of Albert Gibson, with whom he'd worked for almost
twenty-five years, and Spencer Trilby, the man who'd freed him from the
badgering of the CIA and given him a new life.
Ray realized just how profoundly
changed the world was. Their country, the most powerful on earth, no longer
had a functioning intelligence community. It was a safe bet that the military
and civilian authorities were just as disarrayed. With that in mind, he
felt less necessity to preserve their past illusions. Many of their secrets
simply weren't worth keeping secret anymore.
"Do you have any theories
about what's happened?" Ray asked the question allowing plenty of latitude
for the agent's answer. He could preserve whatever level of cover he thought
was still necessary.
Harry thought about the
question. He sighed and looked up at the frigid, clear, night sky, with
its twinkling stars and half-moon. Unchanging…uncaring…all our troubles
come to nothing when all's said and done. I'm a spy. Who'll know or care
in a thousand years? Finally he composed his thoughts and took a deep breath
before answering.
"There's been a war going
on for the last five years. The clone we know as Xena has become the Destroyer
of Nations. Her enemy is the Goddess Athena, who has positioned herself
to rule mankind through our own devotion to science, technology, and modern
warfare. The goddess was responsible for the deaths of Xena's daughter,
Eve, and her partner, Gabrielle. I believe the Destroyer of Nations is
committed to bringing Athena down." He paused for a moment and noticed
that everyone except Ray was regarding him as if he were a maniac. "You
can believe me or not, but I will tell you that over the last five years,
the group I work for have been her allies, and we have built her an army."
"You can't…you must not…"
Ray was stuttering in horror at what Harry had told them, for better than
anyone, he knew what the Destroyer of Nations was capable of, especially
without Gabrielle's moderating influence. "She will not hesitate to destroy
the world in her quest for vengeance. Harry, she isn't even fully human,
and now…now there are no limits to what she will do. With an army to back
her, she will become the Conqueror."
"Her army won't be ready
until March, Ray," Harry admitted, "so she can't be behind all this. There's
only her right now," but that wasn't really true, and though he only had
suspicions, he realized that they were based on denial, "and maybe two
others."
"What two others?" Ray narrowed
his eyes.
"There may be two clones
with her. They escaped from the lab where they were being created, back
in April of 2004. We thought they'd joined her, but we weren't sure."
Eight months ago, Ray mused,
plenty of time to act for someone as ruthless and decisive as Xena. "What
kind of clones, Harry? Clones of her? Clones of Gabrielle?"
"Enhanced clones of Xena,"
Harry said, and as he revealed this, he realized some other things as well,
"according to the timetable, she may also have her officer corps by now."
Ray groaned out loud and
covered his face with his hands. "How many?" He asked.
"She may have as many as
ninety cloned warriors at her command."
"All clones of herself?"
"Yes," the agent answered,
"eighty-eight exact duplicates, and two that are engineered to move over
twice as fast as she can."
Ray Fell looked at the agent
in shock. Each revelation seemed worse than the last.
"And what other assets does
she have?" Ray asked. He was beginning to think like a soldier again after
four decades…an ex-soldier who had studied ancient warfare and realized
how little it differed in some respects from modern warfare.
"We don't know," Harry told
him, "we were never able to track her movements or discover her contacts.
After she left Columbia she had help. I…we…were taking her to Washington,"
he began hesitantly, "we were aboard a jet over the city, and she just
vanished out of the cabin at 20,000 feet. We discovered that she'd gone
home briefly and then left again. There was no trace of her on the public
air carriers, and no records of her travel. It was as if she moved instantly
from place to place whenever she wanted, and we couldn't follow her. That
was shortly after I asked you about the chakram, remember?"
Ray did remember. He remembered
the mission video Harry had shown and the supposedly hypothetical questions
the agent had asked about the Temple of the Chakram, the nature of the
weapons themselves, and the possible uses for them. That had been over
five years ago. Xena had been patient, and she had prepared for her campaign
far in advance. She had moved step-by-step, but even in the beginning,
she had been steps ahead. At this late date, with the first moves already
made, there would be little anyone could do to stop her, even if they had
the assets to deploy and knew what was going on.
"She most certainly had
help, Harry," Ray said, "the help of her patron god. In Gabrielle's scrolls,
the bard often referred to the Olympians' mode of travel; appearing and
disappearing in flashes of light. There was a flash of light on the plane,
wasn't there, Harry?"
"There was a flash of intense
blue light," he admitted, just like the flash she disappeared in at the
temple after the air strike. But that time, there had also been a flash
of golden light a moment later.
"Then Ares, the great
God of War, appeared to his Chosen Warrior in a blaze of azure, colored
like the heart of a flame, and offered to her his Blessing on her campaign."
Ray recited, "That's how Gabrielle described Ares' appearance to Xena at
the beginning of her war against Rome, in the scroll, One Against An
Army. In 58 BC, Xena declined his Blessing and chose to fight without
it because she had renounced her role as a Conqueror and didn't want to
lose her soul to the katalepsis. The choice had a lot to do with
Gabrielle's presence and influence."
"Because she didn't want
to disappoint her lover by becoming a bloodthirsty warlord again?" Harry
asked.
"Because in Gabrielle, Xena
found a reason to love, to accept love into her heart, both the love she
felt for her partner, and a love of mankind. Harry, she was the daughter
of the God of War. Her natural love was for battle and conquest, not for
her fellow man. In Gabrielle, she found an inspiration that allowed her
human soul to rule her divine blood. Gabrielle's love was her drug…a balm
for her bloodthirsty mania."
"And now that she's dead?"
"And now she's dead, and
Xena has an army of ninety clones, with a larger force to come in March?
She has no love for mankind and has probably accepted Ares' Blessing. She
is fighting a war of vengeance and conquest. She will stop at nothing and
cares for nothing but the success of her campaign to destroy Athena. That's
why she took the Chakram of Day five years ago. Even then, she probably
had a plan.
You see, Harry, she was
already the foremost tactician of her day, and tactics don't change as
much as weapons or assets. Now she is preparing her battlefield, removing
potential challengers and the advantages of modern technology. She is moving
to level the field between herself and the goddess. In doing so, she will
try to ensure that the final battle will depend on her warriors' personal
weapons prowess, their bravery, and violent face-to-face bloodshed…all
those aspects of warfare ruled over by her patron god.
Add to that, she holds a
god-killing weapon. If she has also accepted Ares' Blessing, then the outcome
is almost preordained. This was a fact everyone lived by in the ancient
world, and she believes it viscerally. She will defeat her enemies and
kill the goddess, and then she will rule what remains. It will be a world
based on individual mastery, warrior skills, and ferocity, not on science,
technology, and law. She will rule an empire, not create a democracy."
Most of that had become
apparent back in June, when Harry had talked with Ray and Alexander Williams
in the Congressional Diner. Back then, Harry had come to understand what
helping Xena would mean, but seeing it becoming reality was another thing.
He realized that like most modern men, he lived in a world of ideas, where
concepts could be weighed and analyzed in the abstract. Xena lived in a
world of realities, of blood and guts, where decisions were made with a
sword, not a conversation. The two worlds had begun to clash, and taken
by surprise, the modern world would fall.
"You see, Harry, when Xena
fought Caesar, she had only Gabrielle as a constant ally. Do you remember
reading The Eternal City? They infiltrated Caesar's palace in Rome,
decimated the Praetorian Guard there, and escaped with Eve. In the years
before that, they inflicted a constant stream of casualties on the Roman
legions. Now Xena has clones of herself as allies…maybe ninety of them.
She understands modern weapons and will use what she can without mercy.
Before she leads her full army onto the field, she will lay waste to nations
and end millions of lives. To her, they have no intrinsic value. They are
nothing but obstacles.
We don't know what other
weapons she has amassed. We can't know what she has been able to capture
from her enemies. We can only make the most general assumptions based on
knowing her goals and history. I can tell you this though. When she was
a warlord acting as Ares' Favorite, she was merciless to her enemies. They
feared her, with good reason. Gabrielle tells us this in Sins Of The
Past. No one but Athena would understand that now. I think that what's
left of this world will be Xena's within a year, because without Gabrielle,
this world is facing something it has never seen."
As Harry and Ray chewed
on their thoughts of the coming inferno, Lynn softly strummed and Helen
chewed her nails. Allan looked up at the sky, where no demands on him had
ever come from and where he could get lost in an impersonal grandeur. Across
the fire, Angie looked at Dana and opened her mouth. Dana carefully fed
her another Dorito.
January 7, 2006 - Columbia, South Carolina
It was shift change on Friday
afternoon. The squad room held only a dozen officers. They sat around the
table in silence with an air of resigned depression and fatigue. The soft
wheezing of their breath could be heard as it passed through the full-face
respirators they'd worn almost constantly since December 14th
when the first evidence of plague was reported in the city. Since that
day, several thousand cases of small pox, flu, and Ebola had been diagnosed.
The most affected groups were medical personnel and the public employees
who were on the streets. They covered more ground, came in contact with
more potential disease carriers, and had often been called in to support
ambulance and EMT crews working with the afflicted. In the last two weeks,
almost 70% of the force had been infected.
Alexander Williams looked
up through the faceplate of his mask. A sergeant, the highest-ranking officer
left, had just entered the room. The other tired patrolmen gave him their
attention.
"Gentlemen," he said, "we
just got an unprecedented directive from the state's Deputy Attorney General,
who's assumed the responsibilities of the governor's office this afternoon.
He's been unable to contact federal authorities. He's been unable to contact
his counterparts in North Carolina, Tennessee, or Georgia. Now, while there's
no reliable estimate of the death toll, video from helicopter flyovers
has revealed unattended dead in the streets of every city that's been visited.
In most places it actually sounds worse than here.
Well, the DAG admitted that
there was no realistic way to maintain control at the state level and he
released the localities from enforcing state laws." The sergeant looked
each man in the eyes before continuing. "Bottom line is, I guess I'm in
charge of Columbia's law enforcement, but that's where the problem lies.
See, there's no Columbia municipal codes with respect to maintaining basic
order. We always just used the state and federal laws. Guys, I'll be honest
here. I don't know what to do and I don't know if anything we do will help
anymore. I'm open to suggestions."
The room was silent. Nobody
even moved. What they'd just heard was the abdication of central authority.
Rule was being turned over, not to the states, but to the municipalities.
The union had dissolved itself, something that the Civil War had been fought
to avoid. For all practical purposes, at least here in the southeast, the
United States had ceased to exist.
Alex had spent his adult
years as a cop. He had given his duties the better part of his life. Along
the way, he'd accepted the necessities of the job…the compromises and long
hours it demanded, because he'd always felt that law and order were the
necessity that separated his country from many others around the world.
Whenever he'd read a news story of some bloody uprising or revolution overseas,
he'd thank god that he'd been born in a stable nation. Though America had
plenty of faults, something he knew well as a racial minority, still the
available options were mostly worse. Besides, he'd grown up in Columbia;
it was home. Now though, everything had changed.
Alexander rose to his feet,
nodded to the sergeant and his fellow officers, and headed out the door.
The sergeant was asking for suggestions. Alex voted with his feet. If central
authority had lapsed, then his next responsibility was to the individuals
who were dear to his heart. He walked out of the station for the last time
and got in his car.
On his way home, he looked
at the empty streets and empty stores. The Congressional Diner was carefully
closed down. The Columbia School of Martial Science was boarded up, unchanged
for over five years. He drove around a body lying face down in the street,
scattering a flock of crows and a mean looking dog. He'd seen that more
than he cared to think about during the last couple weeks. Even a week
ago, someone would have collected the body the same day it fell. Not anymore.
Karen met him at the door.
She too wore a respirator. In their new ritual of greeting, they touched
faceplates and hugged.
"You have the stuff packed?"
He asked. She nodded. She'd been packed for weeks.
"We're finally leaving?"
"Yes," he told her, "just
one stop and then we're out of here. Sweetheart, they've more or less dissolved
the Union."
Karen looked at him in shock
for a moment as he moved past her. He walked into their bedroom and pulled
down the prepacked duffel bag from the shelf at the top of their closet.
He added the boxes of ammunition for his service pistol and walked back
through the house to begin loading up their car. Karen had already taken
out the suitcase she'd kept beside the front door for the last three weeks,
just hoping for this. When Alex came back inside, it was to drag out the
cases of bottled water and the boxes of MREs. He came back one last time
and went to the basement to shut off the gas and water at the meters, and
shut down the circuit breakers. The last thing Karen brought out to the
car was the massive photo album that held a lifetime of memories, and the
carton of replacement P-100 particle filter cartridges for their hazard
masks. Between the two of them, they used four a day. They still had enough
for another month.
They took a last look back
at their darkened house. Somehow it already looked sad and empty, abandoned
like the city they called home. Alex put the car in gear and drove down
the street towards the south side of town. He had one stop to make before
leaving Columbia. "As our most senior student, you can help most by
watching out for the others," Gabrielle had told him on that last fateful
night. He was still the most senior student and he still felt that
responsibility.
There was no phone service
anymore and no way to call ahead. He honked twice as he pulled into the
driveway. Ahead under the trellis sat a car covered by a heavy tarp. Alex
knew that underneath the oilcloth was Xena's black Z-28 Camaro. He'd brought
over enough cans of gas for it. Danielle had made sure to run it each Saturday,
lurching and stalling it until she finally mastered the racing clutch and
vertical gate shifter. Now he saw that the windows of the house and the
kitchen door had been sealed with plywood. He got out, went up the steps
to the porch, and pounded on the front door. After a few minutes he heard
a muffled voice inside demanding to know who he was. He shouted his name
and moments later the door swung open.
Danielle stood in the front
hallway, dressed in desert camo BDUs and wearing a US Navy gas mask with
a single large ABC canister filter. She was cradling an M-4 carbine in
the crook of her right arm, the stock resting along the outside her biceps.
Behind her, two large duffel bags leaned against the doorframe leading
to the parlor.
"Ready?" He asked as he
entered.
The CWO nodded and slung
the carbine over her shoulder, then they each hefted a bag and went out
onto the porch. Danielle snapped open a key case and carefully locked the
front door of the Pappas house. The old place had been her home since she'd
moved to Columbia in 2001, and she'd stayed even after Xena and Gabrielle
had disappeared. She'd done a responsible job of keeping the place up for
its owners ever since. Now she looked back at the building one more time,
shook her head, and followed Alex to the car. She greeted Karen in the
mask muffled speech they'd grown accustomed to over the last month, tossed
her bags into the back seat with her carbine, and climbed in after them.
Alex wasted no time in starting the car and driving off.
They headed south, driving
out of the city following Bluff Rd to its junction with I-71. Their route
had been long planned, and Alex was happy to see almost no traffic moving
on the highway. Everyone who had opted to leave was already long gone,
like Ray and Lynn, the Chu clan, or Owen and Debbie Chambers. Soon the
sign announcing I-26 came up, and Alex stayed on the highway, the compass
on the dashboard read a few points off due north. I-26 turned northwest
after eight miles, and Alex followed it, finally leaving the city of Columbia
behind.
The group followed I-26
for 150 miles, past Newberry, Clinton, and Spartanburg, until it dead-ended
just west of Asheville. There they took I-40, following it west for eighteen
miles until they reached US-19. The road got smaller, finally becoming
a two-lane asphalt road. The sun was going down as they entered the Cherokee
Indian Reservation. The road twisted and turned for ten miles before its
intersection with US-441. Here they turned north, and two miles later entered
the southern end of Great Smokey Mountains National Park. According to
their plan, they would meet Ray and Lynn somewhere nearby.
The owners of the Congressional
Diner had been among the first people that Alex had warned to leave. They
had heeded his warning, while staring in horror at the full-face respirator
mask he wore. They'd packed up the next day. He hoped they'd made it safely
in their antique mini-busses.
Alex started into the park,
keeping his eyes peeled for campgrounds. The first one he came to was only
a mile-and-a-half inside the park boundaries. He slowed and made the right-hand
turn into the campground.
"Take a look," Danielle
said from the back seat. She was gesturing at the unprotected people eyeing
them from the campsites. No one was wearing a mask.
"Leave 'em on a while longer,"
Alex advised, just being cautious, "you can't wear a mask you don't have,
even if you should."
Danielle nodded in agreement.
Alex continued down the camp road and took the first turnoff leading right.
They searched and found no evidence of Ray and Lynn. In the same fashion
they took the second road to the right and again found nothing but more
unhappy and nervous people. The campers quickly noted Alexander's police
uniform and Danielle's BDUs and military issue assault rifle. Like Harry
Tasker had, Alex, Karen, and Danielle continued their methodical search.
It was the only way to precede. And like Harry Tasker, they found their
friends on the third road, with their VW mini-busses set up parallel in
a campsite with the colorful canopy bridging them overhead.
It was a joyous reunion,
hoped for, but less and less expected with each passing day. It was an
even less expected surprise to find the Taskers right next door. Alex parked
in the site just past them and finally took off his mask. No one in the
park was wearing one.
January 17, 2006 - The Northern Persian Gulf
"There," Xena said as she
pointed through the special glazing of the bridge to a shadowon the water
about a quarter mile distant. Prima's eyes locked onto the target, black
on black, and estimated its length with a calibrated range finder scope.
The distant hull read mostly as an absence of the slight reflections from
the sliver of moon and stars that shone down on the placid chop all around
them. Higher up, the superstructure was lit from within the bridge, but
the important targets were much lower.
"Got it," Prima acknowledged
after a few moments, "target bearing 347º, range 431 yards, length
1,090 feet…locking on." She entered the data into a fire control computer.
"Five second bursts. Fire
at will," Xena commanded.
Prima flipped up a safety
cap on the console and depressed a large red button. High torque motors
jerked the MK 15's gun carriage around to conform the targeting radar's
data to the fire control computer's coordinates. A fraction of a second
later, the low-pitched belch of firing was combined with the high pitched
whine of the rotating barrels and the zip of projectiles. A gout of flames
eight feet long lit the nearby water as the Phalanx fired at a rate of
4,500 rounds per minute. The MK 15 tracked its own output and adjusted
its pitch a fraction of a degree for windage. It fired for five seconds,
ceased for a heartbeat as it adjusted to a new target's coordinates, opened
fire again for five seconds, and then repeated the sequence two more times.
A quarter mile away, four
groups of 375 20mm, depleted uranium, armor piercing rounds breached the
hull of the supertanker Exxon Malachi in four places. The rounds struck
a yard above the water line, punching neat rows of overlapping perforations
into each of the ship's four internal oil tanks. Almost immediately, the
cargo of high-grade Kuwaiti heavy crude oil began gushing out into the
night-darkened waters. From the supertanker's deck, spotlights stabbed
down to light the hull as the crew inspected for damage. They didn't immediately
realize that they'd been shot. The tanker's cargo of roughly 3.1 million
barrels of oil was gushing out at a gravity fed rate of almost 32,000 barrels
per hour.
"Secure that gun," Xena
ordered. She shifted the annunciator to bring the Miss Artiphys to three-quarter
speed as she took the wheel, turning to port and making their course 285º.
"We need a fresh magazine for our next stop," she remarked to the "special",
who immediately moved to reload the Phalanx.
The Miss Artiphys sped over
the water at 67 knots, heading just north of west towards the Saudi off
shore oil fields near Khafji. Their sailing time was about 45 minutes.
The black hydrofoil ran without beacons, nearly invisible in the dark.
At the end of their run, Xena slowed to 4 knots and brought the vessel
to within a furlong of the main pipeline before ordering Prima to open
fire.
"Firing on the first target,"
Prima reported as she depressed the red button.
The Phalanx growled for
a full twenty seconds in response, emptying the 1,500 round magazine into
a set of 6-foot diameter feeder pipes running parallel to each other along
a sand and gravel levee. The attack damaged over a hundred yards of piping.
The resulting hemorrhage of crude oil fountained out under 3psi of pressure.
The clones reloaded the MK 15 as quickly as they could and the gun swung
around to its second target. This time, a ten-second burst demolished a
tanker loading station capable of pumping two million barrels a day.
Somehow, somewhere, the
leaking oil was all part of a contiguous stream, through pipes and down
well heads, and finally, into layers of sand and rock where the billions
of barrels of Persian Gulf crude oil lay in reserves like Safaniya, Zuluf,
and Marjan. The outflow from the tanker and the Saudi pipelines were the
first of a series of targets to be hit within a 150 mile circle that also
included Kuwait, Iraq, and Iran. Those four countries produced about 82%
of the area's oil. Xena and Prima would strike Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates as they left the gulf.
While the physical damage
to the pipes and the environmental impact was highly destructive in the
short term, it was an integral part of Xena's plan to cripple modern technology.
By depriving the world's armies of their gas and oil, she could greatly
decrease their effectiveness. Air power would become strategically nonviable
and no conventionally powered ship would be combat ready. The Phalanx opened
a doorway with its hail of projectiles, but the real damage would be done
on the molecular level.
Into the gushing oil spills,
the Destroyer of Nations released submicroscopic nanobots, developed with
the best of intentions years before by Dr. Eric Drexler, for cleaning up
accidental slicks. The tiny self-replicating nanobots indiscriminately
broke down hydrocarbons and reorganized some of the basic organic molecules
to replicate themselves. The remainder, they rendered into its elemental
constituents. Working in the secret lab in Yokohama, Dr. Drexler had created
the first Von Neumann machines
The infinitesimal creations
that the strategos introduced into the Persian Gulf oil reserves
were bugs of the very sort that opponents of nanotechnology had prophesized
as the source of doomsday. In the presence of hydrocarbons, the nanobots
reproduced like a virus, multiplying arithmetically and eventually pervading
the environment. Like any arithmetic growth curve, the beginning would
be slow and the initial numbers small, but there would come a point of
saturation, reached in what seemed like an instant, when the last few generations
doubled their numbers. It might take weeks or months to reach the saturation
point, but the final outcome would make its impact like a comet. Then like
a virus, "infected" oil added to international reserves would simply widen
the affected area. Refineries and distribution centers for the finished
products would soon host swarms of oil eating nanobots. Xena had projected
that it would take about eight weeks for the petroleum dependant world
to grind to a halt.
By noon of the next day,
the Miss Artiphys was passing the Strait of Hormuz and heading into the
Gulf of Oman. Xena steered a course of 100º and brought the hydrofoil
to flank speed. Soon they would be in the Arabian Sea, beginning their
cruise back to the decimated New World. They would clear Oman to the south
and then steer a course of 210º that would take them down the eastern
coast of Africa, all the way through the Mozambique Channel before they
turned west to round the Cape of Good Hope. There were things to do before
the main army was ready, a timetable to keep, and a plan to bring to fruition.
The first twinge came at
1130 hours local time on January 21st. Xena slowed the Miss Artiphys to
40 knots in two-foot swells, four miles off the coast of northern Tanzania.
The sky was clear overhead, the ambient temperature about 72ºF. With
the wind chill on deck, it was closer to 50º. It was something else
that Xena felt though, as she stood at the wheel in the weatherproofed
bridge.
It came as a tingle at the
edge of her awareness, and while she easily maintained control of her craft,
she allowed a segment of her consciousness to contemplate this unknown
sensation. It wasn't wholly unpleasant, only unexpected. That in itself
was worthy of attention because it wasn't part of the plan. The strategos
tried to decide if it constituted a threat. The clone still hadn't reached
a conclusion about it when Prima came topside from her berth in the cabin.
She stared out to sea, swiftly turning in a circle and dismissing her surroundings
as normal.
"You felt it too," Xena
said. It was not a question.
"I felt…something," Prima
acknowledged, making neither judgements nor conjectures.
Both clones eventually came
to face towards the distant land off the starboard side. The enhanced "special's"
finely tuned senses pinpointed what Xena could only feel vaguely.
"It comes from there," she
stated with certainty, lifting her arm and pointing 60º off the starboard
beam.
"Yes," Xena agreed, then,
almost too softly to be heard, "like a second sunrise…"