“BP’s down to one twenty,” the nurse called.
“It’s coming,” the doctor cried.
“So much blood,” the nurse said.
“She’s DIC,” the doctor said.
Lisa held her gaze fixed on the sky, all the lights in their final convergence, becoming one dazzling ball of light.
“She’s bleeding out!”
And the light flashed in a huge magnificent radiance, an explosion in the vast night sky, but silent, utterly silent, so that all Lisa heard as the light engulfed the room was the faint cry of her newborn little girl.
A blackness settled over her, then rose in a slowly building light. When she opened her eyes, it was morning, and Nina sat beside her bed.
“Hey,” Lisa said softly.
“Hey,” Nina said. She smiled. “You weren’t supposed to be here, you know. You were bleeding to death.”
“What happened?”
“The bleeding stopped,” Nina answered. “No one knows why.”
“My baby?” Lisa asked fearfully.
Nina stepped over to a bassinet, picked up the baby and brought her to her mother. “She’s beautiful, isn’t she?” She placed the child in Lisa’s arms. “Seven pounds three ounces of perfect little girl.”
Lisa nodded. “Yes.”
“What are you going to name her?”
She hadn’t considered a name, but one sprang into her consciousness so quickly it seemed to have been there always, as if long ago implanted in her mind.
“Allison,” she said. “Allie. Her name is Allie.”
Eric stirred the lone olive in his martini and looked admiringly at a daughter he’d rarely seen since the divorce. His bright little girl had grown into a lovely, intelligent woman with intense, determined eyes. Looking at her, he felt a vague sadness for the inevitable passage of time, the way fathers grew weak as their children grew strong, shrank as they developed. Becky came to mind again and he wondered how his life might have been different if he’d simply met her on a spring day, just an ordinary guy, a doctor or a scientist perhaps. Had he been only that, she might have loved him. But he was Eric Crawford, Owen Crawford’s son, the dark legacy of his father like a stain on his soul.
“So,” Mary said with her usual directness. “Why did you want to see me, Dad?”
Eric smiled. Right down to business. That was Mary. No time for sentiment, for idle conversation, a simple inquiry into his health.
“There’s something I want to show you,” Eric said. He opened the drawer of his desk, took out the artifact and handed it to her. “Your grandfather found this in Pine Lodge, New Mexico. He found it at a crash site.”
Mary turned the artifact in her hand, and he could see the way she was drawn toward it, almost mystically, a power pulling her in.
She looked at Eric. “It’s all true then,” she said finally. Her eyes swept back down to the artifact, and he saw that she believed it, and was suddenly, miraculously in league with him.
Then he told her everything, the whole history of his involvement with the artifact, as well as her grandfather’s. The artifact she held in her hand was the one proof in all the world that the kooks and crackpots had gotten it right, that out there, somewhere in space, there was another world, that creatures from that world had visited the earth, taken people and in some way used them. He told her about the implants, his theory that people were being bred in some way and for some purpose he had not yet been able to discover. He told her about Charlie Keys and Lisa Clarke. Chet Wakeman knew all of this, Eric said, but he knew nothing of the artifact. That, and that alone, was a secret she must keep to herself.
“Chet’s coming by in a few minutes,” Eric said in conclusion. “He says he has some news. From now on, we’ll all be working together.”
Mary said nothing, but Eric saw her eyes flash with excitement.
When Wakeman came into the room a few minutes later, Eric noticed that Mary’s fingers instantly curled protectively around the artifact.
“Hello, thrill seekers,” Wakeman said as he stepped into the study. His gaze immediately leaped to Mary.
“Well, look at you,” he said. “All grown up and beautiful. How’s the quest for the Nobel Prize coming?”
“I came close to coming up with a genomic-mismatch scanning technique,” Mary answered proudly.
Wakeman smiled. “And you’re only in graduate school.” He looked at her admiringly for a moment, then turned to Eric. “Well, ready for the news?”
Eric nodded.
Wakeman sat down in the chair opposite Eric. “Well, here’s the latest. Lisa Clarke has had a baby. A little girl.”
“Are we going to try to pick them up?” Eric asked immediately.
“What would be the point of that?” Wakeman asked.
A few hours later, Mary lay in Wakeman’s arms, her eyes moving along the walls of the small motel room.
“God, I’ve been waiting a long time to do that,” Wakeman said.
“Me, too,” Mary said. She leaned over, kissed him, then drew away. “Why don’t you pick up the baby?”
Wakeman smiled. “You don’t waste any time, do you?”
“She’s clearly important,” Mary said. “In fact, I’d say, she’s the point of this.”
“Definitely.”
“So pick her up. Take her.”
Wakeman shook his head. “They’d just take her back… and they’re way better at that than we are.”
“So what do we do?”
“We watch and wait,” Wakeman told her. “And we work on a way to take her that will work.”
“‘Watch and wait,’” Mary repeated. “That sounds a lot like my father.”
Wakeman chuckled. “I’m nothing like your father.”
Mary kissed him softly.
“I have a theory about who she is,” Wakeman said. “Want to hear it?”
Mary nodded.
“Evolution tends to eliminate, or at least, subjugate emotion,” Wakeman said. “The limbic brain is still down there.” His eyes slid over to Mary. “Imagine their… abilities combined with the energy of our strong emotions.”
“They’d be cherry bombs,” Mary said, her eyes lifting toward the ceiling as if picturing the terrible force of such a combination. “But she’d be a thermonuclear weapon.”
PART SEVEN. God’s Equation
Chapter One
Charlie lay naked on the bed, his body glistening with sweat. Or was it sweat? In the dream he’d been suspended in a tank of translucent liquid, floating upside down, his arms spread. Through the thick liquid he’d seen figures scurrying about, slender, with elongated arms, their pear-shaped heads and almond eyes continually glancing toward him.
He sat up and stared around the room, his gaze moving over the vast amount of testimony he’d gathered over the years, tapes and transcripts, printouts from alien abduction sites he’d found on the Internet. None of that seemed as real as the dream, however, none of it actual proof of what had happened to him, or that it had ever happened to anyone else, proof that he wasn’t crazy, proof that he was not alone.
Allie knew that they came to her because they sensed that she could calm them, give them direction, Denny and Milo and even Nina. Her eyes moved silently from one face to the next, all of them in a circle around her. There was something about them that made her think of the fairy tales her mother had read to her. People were like characters in those tales. They were abandoned in the woods. They were locked in towers. They couldn’t reach each other. They went after things they thought were valuable or important or would last, but they couldn’t be sure that the things they went after had any of those qualities. Half the time they seemed lost and desperate, as if some horrible monster were chasing them, and they were growing tired, and it was closing in.