After an hour, his OPSAT told him he'd covered nearly eighty feet, which meant he was nearing or already under the fort's outer wall. He wriggled belly first through a gap between a cracked beam and the earthen wall and suddenly found himself crawling over solid stone. He looked around. Here the tunnel was wider and taller, roughly twelve feet by eight feet. Down the length of the tunnel, which ran fifty feet and ended at an upsloping ramp, were what Fisher could only describe as horse stalls dug into the earth and shored up by stone. He caught a whiff of something sour in the air, and it took him a moment to place it: manure, rotting hay. Though the leavings of the Russian cavalry horses had long ago merged with the earth, their scent remained, if only faintly.
He rose into a crouch and scanned the tunnel ahead. Nothing. If Grimsdottir's Prague professor was correct, there was another subterranean level above him: living quarters and storage.
He headed for the ramp. At its foot he dropped flat and crawled upward until his eyes were level with the dirt floor above. This level was much wider than the stable floors below, nearly forty feet from wall to wall and a hundred long, Fisher judged. Jutting from each dirt wall was what Fisher could only describe as a row of wooden shacks, each about ten feet wide, eight tall, and sharing a wall with its neighbor. Aligned down the center of the space were a dozen or more telephone booth-size structures, each raised off the ground a few feet by stilts and fronted by wooden steps. Latrines, Fisher guessed.
He counted twelve doors to each row of shacks. Grimsdottir had said the fort's complement was 160, so figuring eight men to a shack, that left at most six shacks for food and ammunition stores.
He'd seen pictures of similar living arrangements in books about World War I, where soldiers had lived for months on end like moles in trench cave systems. The phrase, sardines in a can,didn't do this place justice, Fisher thought.
Tarnished oil lamps, their glass flutes black with soot, hung at six-foot intervals from chains in the ceiling. One of the lamps was lit.
At the far end of the level, near the far ramp, he could see a lone figure standing beneath the dim glow of the lamp. Fisher switched to NV. Standing in the shadows across from the man, leaning against the door of the last shack, were two more soldiers. All three were talking and smoking, and all three were armed with AK-47s.
On a break, or guarding something?Fisher wondered. Or someone?
Fisher crept down the center of the space, using the latrines as cover, until he reached the last one, some twenty feet short of where the soldiers stood. He crept around the back side of the latrine; here the glow of the oil lamp faintly illuminated the wooden wall. Fisher got down on his belly and peeked around the corner. The guards hadn't moved. He backed up, crept around the other side until he could see the stone ramp, which he now saw was two-tiered, jogging to the left and to what he assumed was the ground level. He could see light filtering down from above and could hear voices muttering in Kyrgyz. Fisher closed his eyes, concentrating, and listened. Four to five men, he judged.
Suddenly there came the squelch of radio static. Then a commanding voice shushing the other voices, followed by a tinny voice over the radio. Fisher strained to hear, but was unable to catch any of the transmission. Whatever it was, it provoked an immediate response. A soldier came trotting down the ramp, barked an order at the three chatting guards, then ran back up. Fisher caught a bit of it: ". . . ready . . . bring her . . ."
One of the guards standing against the door turned, lifted the latch, leaned inside, and said something. A moment later a diminutive figure shuffled out and into the lamp's light. Carmen. The hair was shorter--they had shaved her head at some point, Fisher guessed--and the face more gaunt, but it was her. Fisher was momentarily taken aback--not so much by her appearance but by simply having found her. From the start Carmen Hayes's disappearance had been the cornerstone to not only Peter's journey but his own. Fisher felt as though he'd been chasing a ghost all this time, and now here it--she--was, in the flesh.
And then Carmen did something that stunned Fisher. She looked up at the soldier who had released her and said something in Kyrgyz. Though he didn't catch what she said, there was no mistaking the authoritative tone of her voice. Similarly, her gaze wasn't that of a broken prisoner but that of a superior. Or was it simply defiance?
The soldier nodded to her and replied in Kyrgyz, "Yes."
What is going on?Fisher wondered. But he already knew the most likely answer.
They'd broken her. They'd broken her and turned her mind.
The North Koreans and/or Omurbai and his people had had Carmen Hayes for at least four months. Four months was plenty of time to break anyone, to turn their mind to a cause not their own. Whether by torture or conditioning or drug therapy or a combination of all three, they'd not only secured Carmen's help but her allegiance as well.
There was part of Fisher's mind that didn't want to believe it, but he had little choice. There was too much at stake to risk it.
In his mind, he shifted Carmen from one column to another: friendto foe.
48
FISHERwaited until Carmen and the three soldiers walked up the ramp, turned the corner, and disappeared from view, then darted around the latrine, paused at the hanging lamp to turn down the wick to its lowest setting, then trotted in a half crouch to the foot of the ramp and crab-walked up to where it jogged left. He peeked around the corner.
And froze.
Six feet away, standing at the top of the ramp under a stone arch was a pair of guards, their AK-47s held at ready low.
With exaggerated slowness, Fisher pulled his head back around the corner. He pulled out the flexicam and snaked it around the corner. Past the two soldiers Fisher could see an open room with a stone floor and a vaulted, crossbeam ceiling. A pair of fluorescent shop lights hung from the center beam, casting the room in cold, milky light.
One of the walls was open, a pair of barnlike doors, and backed into the opening was the rear third of a truck. Fisher zoomed in on it. It was a Ural-4320, an old Soviet army utility truck: heavy-duty, made for mountainous terrain, with six wheels, two in the front and four in the rear on a double axle. Affixed to the rear step bumper was a winch drum wrapped in a hooked steel cable.
The Ural's tailgate was down and the canvas flaps thrown back. Dangling over the tailgate from a wheeled hoist was a white plastic fertilizer tank, elliptical in shape and measuring roughly four feet wide and five feet long, with a pair of toboggan-like runners affixed to the bottom. Three hundred gallon capacity, Fisher estimated.
He counted nine soldiers, all armed, and Carmen, who stood off to the left, watching.
As he watched, two of the soldiers began maneuvering the hoist forward, guiding the tank deeper into the truck's bed. Inside the tank Fisher could see a brownish red fluid, thick like molasses, sloshing against the interior walls.
Manas. The Chytridiomycota fungus.
He pulled back.
Think, Sam . . . think. . .
Nine soldiers, all armed. However slim the danger, he was reluctant to risk penetrating the tank. They knew so little about Chytridiomycota--how long it lived, its potency. Better to secure the tank intact. That left him few options. No grenades, no stray bullets. And even if he managed to take out all of these men without dying in the process, or penetrating the tank, or letting anyone get off a warning shout or shot, there were at least two dozen more of Omurbai's troops in the compound outside that would be on him within seconds.