“Mishka,” he greeted Dimitrov as he came into his office. The air was stale and the curtains were half-shut, defending the room from the scorching heat outside. Dimitrov hated air conditioning, and preferred it turned off. He said cold air gave him migraines. I bet it’s this stuffiness that gives him the migraines, Myatlev thought, eager to finish the business he was there for, and get back to the breathable habitat of his own office.
“Vitya,” Dimitrov replied. “What news are you bringing?”
“Nothing good, I’m afraid. Not yet.” He paused for a little while, almost afraid to speak his mind. It was a big step he was about to take, a big step on a road with no return. “They can’t fully control the effects, not yet, anyway,” he added, shrugging apologetically. “I think we need to be prepared for attack in a different way, and give Petya what he wants, what he always wanted.”
Dimitrov took off his thick-rimmed glasses and set them down on the desk slowly, massaging the bridge of his nose with his thumb and index.
“What are you saying, Vitya?”
Maybe there could be a way to prosper in a post-nuclear world. Or maybe he could do something to manage Abramovich’s belligerence and ensure the prosperity of his business empire at the same time. Maybe he could just be prepared, but not act, just to have a plausible excuse in case the shit would hit the fan with their beloved president. Maybe he could invest in food futures; in the post-nuclear world, clean, radiation-free food supplies would become very expensive. His investments could yield three-digit, even four-digit returns.
“Can you make me some small nukes?” Myatlev finally asked, just a hint of hesitation tinting his voice. “They’d have to fit in a small backpack, nothing big.”
Dimitrov’s jaw dropped, then he replied quietly, “How many?”
“Fifteen or so. Not sure yet… I’m still thinking,” Myatlev replied, lost in thought.
Or maybe I should have let that fucking bear finish its business before killing it.
…43
Dr. Gary Davis watched closely as Adenauer’s elegant hands mixed the compound ingredients quickly, after measuring them on the digital micro-scale. Every step he took in preparing the compound he documented clearly in a notebook, each step listed in detail under the heading “Compound 11.” It was the eleventh formulation they were trying. If I were to see him out of context, Gary thought, it would seem like he’s in his own lab in Germany.
Then Adenauer started preparing the capsules. He made ten of them, putting them in a small jar.
“Why so many?” Gary asked.
“I can be more precise mixing a larger quantity of compound, you know that,” Adenauer replied, visibly irritated to be challenged.
“I only want to test on two subjects, that’s it,” Gary stated firmly.
“No, we’ll need more. We’ll raise suspicions if we test only two,” Dr. Teng intervened.
“I’ll handle the suspicions,” Gary replied, sounding more confident than he felt. “If we could at least attempt like we’re talking about human beings here, that would be great,” he snapped, sarcasm cutting through his voice and glinting in his eyes.
“Do you think I can ever forget that?” Adenauer said, keeping his voice low but loaded with anger. “Who do you think I am?”
Under Gary’s surprised eyes, Adenauer’s angry glare turned to immense sadness.
“I’m ready to die right here, today, if that removes a single other human being from harm’s way,” Adenauer continued somberly. “Next time they want to kill someone to make a point, I will volunteer. I am ready.”
“Theo!” Marie-Elise exclaimed, getting One-Eye to lift his eyes and scrutinize their small group. “You can’t do that!” she continued. “We need you! We all need one another!”
“It’s pointless,” Adenauer replied calmly. “My decision has been made.” His eyes stared somewhere in the distance, looking past them, toward the back of the lab. “No one will come for us… we’re all doomed. I will die anyway, so I’ve made up my mind to die before loading my conscience with more harm done to these innocent people. I can’t live with that.”
“None of us can,” Gary replied, “but we have to. Have you considered what will happen to the other passengers if we give up and they no longer need them, or us?”
No one replied. Gary looked at Adenauer encouragingly. “Come on, Adenauer,” he said, “let’s put our heads together and figure out how to survive, while causing the minimum amount of damage possible.”
“What if I’m wrong?” Adenauer asked. “What if this is wrong, what if it’s deadly? How would I live with myself then?” he added, pointing at the jar holding the ten capsules.
“It’s a risk we have to take,” Gary replied. “The fact that we’re trying keeps them alive, don’t forget that.”
Yet Gary could see Adenauer’s point, and, for the most part, he felt the same way. How much longer could they resist, and to what end? Was there any shred of logical hope left? What scenario made sense? They were buried underground, in an abandoned bunker, most likely being exposed to some form of residual radiation, hidden someplace so deep and so remote that no one could ever find them. He couldn’t think of any scenario, any theory that made a rescue even remotely likely to happen.
As for an escape, they weren’t even close. They were empty-handed in front of thugs wielding machine guns and flaunting their lack of conscience. The pilot had no idea where the plane was. That sack of shit had told them they’d landed in the middle of a forested swamp, so remote from any city that they could be walking for tens, maybe hundreds of miles before finding help. And what help? More Russians? Nope, they didn’t have a single card in this game.
Yet for the Phoenix, Arizona-born, Gary Davis, former Boy Scout and Afghanistan veteran, losing was not an option. Neither was captivity. He would think of something, he’d find a way. Until then, regardless of the cold, bare facts, he couldn’t afford to spiral into depression and hopelessness.
He made an effort to gather his strength, then approached One-Eye and said, “We need two test subjects, male. Give them these,” he added, handing him two capsules with the newest formulation.
“Why two? We have hundreds,” One-Eye asked in heavily accented, barely understandable English.
“We need to run aerosolized tests, and for those we’ll need more people. We can’t waste them. Do you understand what aerosolized means?”
One-Eye grunted and left the lab, taking the capsules with him.
Gary sighed and clenched his fists, shoving them in his pockets. There was nothing else he could do… not at that point, anyway. He went back to the table and turned on the monitors.
There was no sound, so they couldn’t hear the two men screaming and grunting as they fought the guards who quickly overpowered them. One of the Russians would grab them from behind, immobilizing their arms, while the other would grab them by the nose and force their mouths open, then shove the capsule down their throats. Then they’d force their mouths shut and their heads tilted back, so they would have no other option but to swallow the pill or choke to death. It wasn’t a fair fight; the passengers were no match for the guards, whose physical builds were testimonials to years of lifting weights and popping steroids.
Bogdanov joined them in the lab, watching the monitors intently. Gary had a hard time keeping a straight face in the presence of so-called Dr. Bogdanov. What kind of doctor was he? But then again, even Josef Mengele, the infamous “Angel of Death” at Auschwitz had been a properly licensed physician.