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Ruth frowned. The situation in Timberline was remarkably like things had been aboard the space station, divisive and cold. During the past week she had seen many of the scientists here act as cruel to each other as only family can be, deriding rival concepts, trading insults over who was to blame for disorder or contamination in the shared labs.

Ruth tried not to care. Ruth had done her best to close herself to it all, using a smile and easygoing humor like a lab suit against the interpersonal grime.

Maybe if things had gone better with Ulinov, she would have felt differently. Maybe if…

But it was easier to limit her vision to the microscope. Easier to limit herself and stay uninvolved. She’d rather be lonely. She was used to that, at least.

She’d even ignored a conspicuous slap in the face.

While she was still in the hospital, Gary LaSalle and his development team had downloaded her files and begun examining everything they thought they could use. Before she was shown around Timberline, they’d run the first of several new refining trials on her machining atomic force microscope.

Ruth wouldn’t have waited either. That wasn’t the issue. She had hoped to solidify her name and reputation by formally presenting her research, and by showing off the MAFM and customized application modules — but she’d realized it wasn’t safe to complain. She’d always meant to share her work anyway.

LaSalle wasn’t sharing. The council had awarded him exclusive round-the-clock rights to her gear, at least initially, as well as first access to her records.

It was a rejection of everything Ruth had done.

Since the first days of the plague, she’d aligned herself with the hunter-killer group. In concept the HK ANN was a true weapon, specific and controlled. They had yet to perfect their discrimination key but the HK worked, if inefficiently.

As much a chemical reaction as a machine, LaSalle’s “snowflake” ANN operated on natural atomic bonding. It disabled locusts by pulling them into nonfunctional clusters. Each compacted bunch then recombined around the original seed and shed more artificially weighted grains, which would attract other locusts — and since early April, LaSalle had conducted nineteen successful tests in lab conditions.

The HK ANN also tested out in prearranged environments, but with a best target rate of 58.8 percent. LaSalle’s bug simply clotted everything within the test chamber.

Ruth had not been the only one to point out the obvious danger. Other prominent names in Timberline had raised the same objections, yet LaSalle insisted his snowflake would only affect locusts because it was fundamentally incapable of exerting force on larger, more complex molecular structures. Ruth didn’t understand how he could make that claim, although she hadn’t seen schematics of the snowflake since early March.

No one outside his group had seen anything recent either.

The development teams had normally been open with each other, because peer review was their only safeguard. That had changed, however, after the council gave LaSalle priority two months ago. A reorganization of the labs had isolated LaSalle’s group on the third-floor wing, which they now claimed entirely. His people couldn’t avoid the other scientists in the residence hall, yet they were close-mouthed about their progress.

Ruth didn’t believe the council would be overconfident, not after everything that had happened. Their decision implied that LaSalle had indeed run favorable tests with rats or weeds and other things exposed to the snowflake.

Still, she trusted her instincts. LaSalle’s bug could not work as advertised. It might disrupt the molecular integrity of all organic beings — mammal, insect, plant, even bacteria. Nothing would ever live on this world again.

She needed a breakthrough now more than ever. There was no other option. It was too easy for nontechnical people to hear only what they wanted, and without something new to wow the president’s council, without any shred of progress, she might never make them listen.

She glanced pointedly at her scope but Aiko was still reciting complaints. “It’s not fair. All of us are busy. If someone has to go, it shouldn’t be—”

Ruth ducked her head so that eye contact was impossible and made a business of worming her index finger into her cast. The itch of her unwashed skin was real but Aiko’s reaction was more important.

Aiko raised her voice, trying to recapture Ruth’s attention. “They’re talking to somebody out there on the radio.”

Ruth looked up.

“It’s true. I swear.” Aiko’s dark eyes were intent on Ruth’s face. “A guy who helped put the locust together managed to get to a mountain with a radio. He’s alive, just barely, but his story totally checks out and he swears he can lead us to their records, their gear, everything.”

“Holy shit.”

Aiko laughed. “I knew you—”

“Vernon,” Ruth called, “hey, Vernon, have you heard anything about this?”

Aiko blinked, her lips parting in surprise and hurt. Then she took a step back as if to shield Ruth from their colleague as he turned his head from a pressurized isolation system.

Vernon Cruise was a smallish man, five-nine, with thick sandy hair and glasses. He acted the grandfather to many people here, being old enough to retire, and was rightly proud of his contributions in mapping the locust’s structure. Too bad he’d tried to tell Ruth all about it on her third day, and again on her fourth, pushing his laptop and his printouts in her face when she was hot to familiarize herself with the bug on her own.

They could have been friends, but Ruth remained leery. It wasn’t just the monitoring devices — any of her lab mates might be doubling as a spy for the president’s council, to stay in favor, to earn extra food or cigarettes.

Ulinov had done her a favor. Ulinov had made it all too clear where she stood in this place.

“The army’s sending another plane to California!” Aiko blurted, before Ruth could say anything else. “The guy who built the locust is still alive.”

Vernon’s eyebrows went up but Ruth didn’t bother to contain a rude sound. “Hah.” Already this mystery man had gone from being a member of the research team to the lead designer, and so the rumor would grow.

“I hope it really is him,” she said.

* * * *

Hurrying to James’s office took most of her strength. If he’d been on a different floor, Ruth would have needed to sit and rest. She had been in physical therapy for six days now, mere stretching at first, then light weights and a treadmill. She hated to break up her afternoons but recognized that she’d better rebuild her stamina if she was going to be mentally effective for more than a few hours at a time.

“Not now—” James called as she pushed through his door.

He was at his desk, spine straight, hands clasped together among the few papers set before him.

Senator Kendricks sat in the only other chair, also stiffly. “Well, speak of the devil,” he said, turning his head and his white cowboy hat.

Beyond them was a gorgeous day, a clean blue sky and the near horizon of snow-topped peaks. The windows in the labs were all boarded over, and Ruth still felt confused whenever she walked in here during the day and found a rectangular hole in the wall full of sunshine and mountains.

“Dr. Goldman,” James said. His formal tone was a warning. “My office has a door for a reason.”

“No, no.” Kendricks waved her in. “Might as well get her side of it.” He stood, gesturing to his chair. “Please. I know you’re still getting your legs back.”

She didn’t object. Let him do this tiny favor. Were they talking about California?

“Missed you the other day,” Kendricks said.

Ruth smiled, a loathsome new reflex. She found herself being more and more false. “I hear it went great.”

There had been a parade after all, two days ago, but Major Hernandez suggested it wasn’t worth the risk of driving her into town and Ruth was glad not to waste the time. She was glad, too, to avoid Ulinov and Gus and Deb. It would have been satisfying to thank Bill Wallace personally, but he had yet to be released from the hospital.