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Area 7 ss-2

Page 23

by Matthew Reilly


  could be adapted for use on something the American government

  was working on--a vaccine against the Sinovirus, a

  virus that distinguishes between races."

  "So we brought him here," Schofield said.

  "That's right," Herbie said.

  "And now it seems we're discovering that Professor

  Botha isn't all that trustworthy."

  "It would seem so."

  Schofield paused for a moment, thinking.

  "And he's not working alone," he said.

  "How do you know?"

  Schofield said, "All those dead 7th Squadron men we

  saw when we arrived on Level 6 earlier. I've never met Gunther Botha before, but I'm pretty sure he couldn't wipe out

  an entire 7th Squadron unit all by himself. Remember,

  Botha opened three doors, the two X-rail doors and the

  Emergency Escape Vent--which opens onto Level 6.

  "He let a team of men in through that vent. They were

  the ones who killed the 7th Squadron men there. Judging by

  the bullet wounds in their backs and the amount of slashed

  throats, I presume Botha's friends caught the 7th Squadron

  men from behind." Schofield bit his lip. "But that still

  doesn't tell me what I want to know."

  "And what is that?"

  Schofield looked up. "If Botha is selling us out, what I

  want to know is: who is he selling us out to?"

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  Matthew Reilly

  "IT WAS A SECURITY RISK FROM THE START, BUT WE COULDN'T

  have done it without him," the President said.

  He and the others were sitting in the observation lab

  overlooking the smashed glass cube on Level 4, catching

  their breath.

  When they'd arrived moments earlier, they'd been confronted

  by the sight of a thick circular ceiling hatch lying on

  the floor of the lab.

  The 7th Squadron had been through here.

  Which hopefully meant they wouldn't be coming back

  soon. It would be a good place to hide, for a while.

  Libby Gant was the only one who stood--still on edge--gazing down at the destroyed cube. The underground complex had grown strangely silent since Caesar's last update,

  as if the 7th Squadron weren't prowling around it anymore,

  as if they had stopped hounding the President, at least

  for the moment.

  Gant didn't like it.

  It meant something was up.

  And so she had just asked the President about Gunther

  Botha, the man who had taken Kevin.

  "Botha knew more about racially targeted viruses than

  all of our scientists put together," the President went on.

  "But he had a history."

  "With the apartheid regime?"

  "Yes, and beyond that. What we feared the most were

  his links with a group called Die Organisasie, or the Organisation.

  It's an underground network comprising former

  apartheid ministers, wealthy South African landowners, former

  elite troops from the South African armed forces, and

  ousted military leaders who fled the country when apartheid

  collapsed, rightfully fearing that the new government would

  have their heads for past crimes. Most intelligence agencies

  believe that Die Organisasie only wants to retake South

  Africa, but we're not so sure."

  "What do you mean?" Gant asked.

  The President sighed. "You have to realize what's at

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  stake here. Ethnically selective bioweapons like the

  Sinovirus are like no other weapon in the history of

  mankind. They are the ultimate bargaining tool, because

  they have the power to sentence a defined population to

  death while absolutely, without question, protecting another.

  "Our fears about Die Organisasie don't just relate to

  what they'd do to the Republic of South Africa. It's what

  they'd do to the entire African continent that frightens us."

  "Yes ..."

  "Die Organisasie is a racist organization, pure and simple.

  They actually believe white people are genetically superior

  to black people. They believe that black people should be slaves to whites. They don't just hate South African black

  people, they hate all black people.

  "Now, if Die Organisasie has the Sinovirus and the vaccine

  to it, they could release it Africa-wide, and give the cure

  only to those white groups who supported them. Black

  Africa would die, and the rest of the world wouldn't be able

  to do a thing about it, because we wouldn't have the vaccine

  to the Sinovirus.

  "Do you remember in 1999 when Ghaddafi spoke of

  uniting Africa like never before? He spoke of creating 'the

  United States of Africa,' but it was regarded as a joke.

  Ghaddafi could never have made that happen. There are far

  too many tribal issues to overcome to unite the various black

  African nations. But," the President said, "an organization

  that had the Sinovirus and its cure in its possession could

  rule Africa with an iron fist. It could turn Africa--resource rich Africa, complete with a billion-strong black slave workforce

  --into its own private empire."

  SCHOFIELD'S BATTERED X-RAIL CAR RACED THROUGH THE underground

  tunnel.

  They had been traveling for ten minutes now and

  Schofield was beginning to feel anxious. They would be arriving

  at the loading dock adjoining the lake soon and he

  didn't know what to expect.

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  One question about Area 7, however, was still bothering

  him. "Herbie, how did the Air Force get a sample of the

  Sinovirus?"

  "Good question," Herbie said, nodding. "It took a

  while, but eventually we managed to turn two Chinese lab workers at the biowarfare facility in Changchun. In return

  for a one-way trip to America and twenty million U.S. dollars

  each, they agreed to smuggle several vials of the virus

  out of China."

  "The guys in the decompression chamber," Schofield

  said, recalling the Asian faces he had seen inside the chamber

  on Level 4 earlier.

  "Yes."

  "But there were four men inside the chamber."

  "That's right," Herbie said. "As you'd probably understand,

  in China, top-secret government lab workers can't

  just up and leave the country that easily. We had to get them

  out. The other two men inside that quarantine chamber were

  the two 7th Squadron soldiers who extracted them from

  China--two Chinese-American officers named Robert Wu

  and Chet Li. Wu and Li used to be a part of Echo Unit, one

  of the five 7th Squadron teams based at Area 7, which was

  why they were chosen--"

  Abruptly, Schofield held up his hand, moved to the

  front windshield.

  "Sorry, Dr. Franklin," he said, "but I'm afraid that'll

  have to do for the moment. I have a funny feeling that things

  are about to get a little hairy."

  He nodded at the tunnel ahead of them.

  At the end of the long concrete tunnel, beyond its rapidly

  streaking gray walls, was a tiny luminous speck of

  light--growing larger as they approached it--the familiar

  glow of artificial fluorescent lighting.

  It was the loading dock.

  They had
arrived at the end of the tunnel.

  "DON'T GO IN," SCHOFIELD SAID TO BOOK. 'THEY COULD BE

  waiting for us inside. Stop in the tunnel. We'll walk the rest

  of the way."

  The bullet-riddled X-rail train slowed to a halt in the

  darkness of the tunnel, a hundred yards short of the illuminated

  loading dock.

  Schofield was out of it in an instant—Desert Eagle in

  one hand, the Football flailing from his waist—leaping

  down to the concrete next to the tracks. Brainiac, Book II

  and Herbie followed close behind him.

  They ran down the tunnel toward the light, guns up.

  Schofield came to the end of the tunnel, peered around

  the concrete corner.

  Brilliant white light assaulted his eyes. He found himself

  staring at a giant rocky cavern that had been converted

  into a modern loading dock—a curious mix of flat concrete

  and uneven rocky surfaces.

  Two sets of X-rail tracks lay on either side of a long

  central platform. The track on Schofield's side of the platform

  was empty, while the track on the other side was occupied

  by another X-rail train ... Botha's.

  It lay still, unmoving.

  Some black steel cranes ran on wall-mounted rails,

  leading from the X-rail tracks to a wide pool of water at the

  far end of the enormous rocky cavern.

  The water in the pool glowed a brilliant aquamarine

  green, enriched by the minerals of Lake Powell. The pool itself

  disappeared to the west, winding its way into a twisting

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  black cave that Schofield could only assume led out to the

  lake. Three ordinary-looking houseboats and a couple of

  strange-looking sand-colored speedboats bobbed on its surface,

  tied to the loading bay's concrete dock.

  There was one other thing that Schofield noticed about

  the immense underground loading bay.

  It was empty.

  Completely and utterly empty.

  Deserted.

  Schofield stepped cautiously out from the tunnel, and

  climbed up onto the central platform between the two X-rail

  tracks, dwarfed by the sheer size of the cavern.

  And then he saw it.

  Standing at the other end of the platform, over by the

  pool of water leading out to the lake.

  It looked like some bizarre kind of supermarket display:

  a small chest-high "pyramid" of yellow ten-gallon barrels,

  in front of which sat a chunky Samsonite trunk--black and

  solid and high-tech. The trunk's lid was open.

  As he approached them, Schofield saw that the yellow

  barrels had words stenciled on their sides.

  "Oh, damn ..." he said as he read them.

  AFX-708: EXPLOSIVE FILLER.

  AFX-708 was a shockingly powerful explosive epoxy,

  used in the famous BLU-109 bombs that had ripped Saddam

  Hussein's bunkers to shreds in the Gulf War. A 109's super hardened nose would drive down into a solid concrete

  bunker and then the AFX-708 warhead inside it would detonate

  --hard--and blow the bunker up from the inside.

  With Book II, Brainiac and Herbie behind him,

  Schofield looked inside the open Samsonite trunk that sat in

  front of the collection of AFX barrels.

  A timer display stared back up at him.

  00:19.

  00:18.

  00:17.

  "Mother of God ..." he breathed. Then he turned to the

  others, "Gentlemen! Run!"

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  seventeen seconds later, a bone-crunching explosion

  ripped through the loading bay.

  The cluster of AFX-708 barrels sent a devastating ball

  of white-hot light shooting out in every direction, expanding

  radially.

  The rock-and-concrete walls of the loading bay cracked

  under the weight of the explosion, blasting outwards in a

  million lethal chunks, one entire wall just disintegrating to

  powder in the blink of an eye. Gunther Botha's X-rail train--

  so close to the source of the blast--was simply vaporized.

  SCHOFIELD NEVER SAW IT.

  Because by the time the explosives went off, he and the

  others were no longer inside the loading bay.

  They were outside.

  FOURTH CONFRONTATION

  3 July, 0912 Hours

  NORTH-EASTERN LAKE POWELL,

  UTAH, U.S.A.

  canyon

  Desert plain

  THE HEAT hit THEM LIKE A BLAST FURNACE.

  Blistering desert heat.

  It was everywhere. In the air. In the rock. Against your

  skin. Enveloping you, surrounding you, as if you were standing in an oven. The complete opposite of the subterranean

  cool of Area 7 and the X-rail tunnel.

  Out here, the blazing desert sun ruled.

  shane schofield sped down a narrow water-filled

  canyon at breakneck speed, blasting through the heat, sitting

  at the controls of a very odd-looking--but very fast--speedboat.

  With him in the boat was Book II, while behind them, in

  a similar craft of their own, were Brainiac and Herbie.

  Technically, Schofield's boat was called a PCR-2-- patrol-craft, river, two-man--but it was more commonly

  known as a "bipod," a small two-man jet-propelled rivercraft

  built by the Lockheed Shipbuilding Company for the U.S.

  Navy. The bipod was known for its unique design configuration.

  Basically, it looked as if someone had joined two small

  bullet-shaped jet boats with a thin seven-foot crossbeam, in

  effect creating a catamaran-type vehicle with two pods at either

  end of the beam. Since both open-topped pods were

  possessed of powerful two-hundred-horsepower Yamaha

  pump-jet engines, it made for an extremely fast--and extremely

  stable--boat frame.

  Schofield's bipod was painted in desert camouflage colors

  --brown blobs on a sandy yellow background--and it

  shot over the water at incredible speed, kicking up twin ten foot

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  sprays of water behind it. Schofield sat in the left-hand

  pod, driving, while Book II sat in the right-hand one, manning

  the boat's sinister bow-mounted 7.62 mm machine gun.

  The sun shone--burning hot.

  It was already 100 degrees in the shade.

  "How you guys doing over there?" Schofield said into

  his wrist mike as he looked back at the other bipod behind

  him--Brainiac was driving, Herbie sat in the gunner's pod.

  Brainiac's voice: "I'm okay, but I think our scientist

  friend here is turning green."

  They were speeding down a twenty-foot-wide slot

  canyon that wended its way southward, toward the main

  body of Lake Powell.

  The pool of water at the far end of the loading bay had

  indeed led out to the lake, a tight, dark, winding cave whose

  exterior door--a brilliantly camouflaged plate-steel gate designed

  to look like a wall of rock--had been left open by the

  escaping thieves.

  Schofield and his men had emerged from the cave at the

  end of a dead-end canyon and powered off not a moment before

  the entire wall of rock behind them had been blasted

  outward by the monstrous AFX explosion.

  The two bip
ods sped around a wide bend in the water

  filled canyon.

  When viewed from above, this canyon resembled a

  race-car track, a never-ending series of twists, turns and full

  180-degree bends.

  That wasn't so bad.

  The trouble started when it met up with all the other narrow canyons of Lake Powell--then the canyon system

  resembled a giant high-walled maze of interconnecting natural

  canals.

  They came to an intersection of three canyons, arriving

  at it from the northeast.

  At first Schofield didn't know what to do.

  Two rock-walled canals stretched away from him--a

  fork in the watery road. And he didn't know where Botha

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  was going. Presumably the South African scientist had a

  plan--but what?

  And then Schofield saw the waves. Saw a collection of

  ripples lapping against the sheer stone walls of the canyon

  branching away to the left--barely perceptible, but definitely

  there--the residual waves of a motorboat's wash.

  Schofield gunned it, swinging left, heading south.

  As he traveled down the canyonways, banking with the

  bends, he looked upward. The rocky walls of these canyons

  rose at least two hundred feet above the water level. At their

  rims, Schofield saw clouds of billowing sand, blowing viciously,

  offering sporadic relief from the blazing sun.

  It was the sandstorm.

  The sandstorm that had been forecast to occur that

  morning, but which the members of HMX-1 had expected to

  miss.

  It was absolutely raging up there, Schofield saw, but

  down here, in the shelter of the canyons, it was relatively

  calm--a kind of meteorological haven below the canyon

  system's high rocky rim.

  Relatively calm, Schofield emphasized.

  Because at that moment, he rounded a final corner and,

  completely unexpectedly, burst out into wide open space--

  into an enormous craterlike formation with a giant flat

  topped mesa rising out of the water in its center.

  Although the crater was bounded by magnificent sheer rock walls, it was too wide to offer total protection from the

  wild sandstorm above. Flurries of sand whipped down into

 

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