The Geiger counter calmed down the farther from the entrance they progressed, to Huw’s profound relief. He picked his way carefully over a low berm of crumbled concrete-like stuff, then reached the nearest gantry. It looked familiar enough—a metal grid for flooring, the wreckage of handrails sprouting from it on a triangular truss of tubes—but something about its proportions was subtly wrong. The counter was content to make the odd click. Huw whacked the handrail with his torch: it rang like metal. Then he took hold of it and tried to move it, lifting and shoving. “That’s odd.” He squinted in the twilight. A thin crust of flaky ash covered the metal core. Paint, or something like it. That was comfortingly familiar—but the metal was too light. Yet it hadn’t melted. “Got your hammer?” He asked Yul, who was looking around, gaping like a tourist.
“Here.”
He took the hammer and whacked the rail, hard. “It’s not soft like aluminum. Doesn’t melt easily.” He tugged it, and it creaked slightly as it shifted. “You have got to be kidding me.”
“What’s wrong?” Hulius asked quickly.
“This railing. It’s too light to be steel, it’s not aluminum, but who the fuck would make a handrail out of titanium?”
“I don’t know. Someone with a lot of titanium? Are you sure it’s titanium? Whatever that is.”
“Fairly sure,” Huw said absently. “I don’t have any way to test it, but it’s light enough, and hard, and whatever flash-fried the shit in here didn’t touch it. But titanium’s expensive! You’d have to know how to make lots of it really cheap before you got anywhere near to making walkways with it…” He trailed off, glancing up at the twilight recesses of the dome overhead. “Let’s get on with this.”
The black rectangle, set in the cylindrical structure at ground level, looked like a doorway to Huw. It was high enough, for sure, but there were no windows and no sign of an actual door. He waited for Yul and Elena to close up behind him, then walked towards it. The counter was quiet. There was a pile of debris just inside the opening, and he approached it cautiously, sniffing at the air: there was no telling what might have made its lair in here. Thinking about the chill outside reminded him of wolves, of saber-toothed tigers and worse things. He shivered, and pointed the torch into the gloom.
“Over there.” Elena scuttled sideways, her gun at her shoulder, pointing inside.
“Where—” Huw blinked as she flicked on the torch bolted beneath her barrel. “Oh.” The thing she was pointing at might have been a door once, but now it lay tumbled on the floor across a heap of junk: crumbled boxes, bits of plastic, pieces of scaffolding. And some more identifiable human remains, although wild animals had scattered the bones around. “Good, that’s helpful.” He stepped across the threshold, noting in the process that the wall was about ten centimeters thick—too thin for brick or concrete—and the inner wall was flat, with another sealed door set in it.
A skull leered at him from the far corner of the room, and as the shadows flickered across the pile of crap inside the doorway he saw what looked like a stained, collapsed one-piece overall. The overall glowed orange in the light, slightly iridescent, then darkened to black where ancient blood had saturated the abdominal area. Huw held his breath, twisting the flashlight to focus on the shoulder, where some kind of patch was embossed on the fabric. He squinted. “Yul, can you get a photograph of that?” he said, pointing.
“What’s it say—” Yul closed in. “That’s not Anglische sprach. Or…Huh, I don’t recognize it, whatever it is.”
“Dead right.” Huw held the light on the remains while Yul pulled out his camera and flashgunned it into solid state memory. “What do you think it means?”
“Why would you expect Anglische here?” Elena asked archly.
“No reason, I guess,” Huw said, trying to conceal how shaken he was. He pointed the torch back at the skull sitting on the floor. “Hang on.” He peered closer. “The teeth. Shit, the teeth!”
“What?” Elena’s flashlight swung around wildly for a moment.
“Point that away from me if you’re going to be twitchy—”
“It’s okay, little brother. I’ve got it.” Yul hooked a finger into each eye socket and spun the skull upside down for Huw to examine. It had been picked clean long ago and had aged to a sallow dark yellow-brown, but the teeth were all there.
“Look.” Huw pointed at the upper jaw. “Bony here has all his dentition. And.” He peered at them. “There are no fillings. It’s like a plastic model of what a jawbone ought to be. Except for this chipped one here, this incisor.”
“Whoa!” Hulius lowered the skull reverently. “That’s some orthodontist.”
“Don’t you get it?” Huw asked impatiently.
“Get what?” Yull asked flippantly.
“That’s not dentistry,” Huw said, gritting his teeth. “You know what it’s like back home! The Americans, they’re good at faking it, but they’re not this good.” He glanced at the door on the inner wall. No obvious hinges, he realized. Fits beautifully. “Domes the size of a sports stadium that try to heal themselves even when you crack them open with a nuke. Metal walkways made out of titanium. Perfect dentistry.” He snapped his fingers. “You got the ax?”
“Sure.” Yul nodded. “What do you want me to hit?”
“Let’s see what’s inside that door,” Huw decided. “But then we leave. Magic wands? Dentistry.”
“They’re more advanced than the Americans,” Elena commented. “Is that what you’re saying?”
“Yes,” Huw said tensely. “I’m not quite sure what it means, though…”
“What about their burglar alarms?”
“After all this time?” Huw snorted. “Let’s see what else is in here. Yul?”
“I’m with you, bro.” He winked at Elena. “This is a real gas!”
And with that, he swung the fire ax at the edge of the door.
The Boeing Business Jet had reached cruising altitude and was somewhere over the Midwest, and Brill had just about managed to doze off, when her satellite phone rang.
“Who’s speaking?” She cleared her throat, trying to shake cobwebs free. The delay and the echo on the line made it sound like she was yelling down a drainpipe.
“It’s me, Brill. Update time.”
“Scheiss—one minute. I’ll take it in the office.” She hit the button to raise her chair then stood up and walked back towards the door at the rear of the first-class cabin. Rather than a cramped galley or a toilet, it opened onto a compact boardroom. As the only passenger on the luxury jet she had it all to herself except for the cabin attendants, but she still preferred to have a locked door between herself and any flapping ears. “Okay, Olga. What ails you?”
“Are you secure?”
Brill yawned, then sat down. Beyond the windows, twilight had settled over the plains. It was stubbornly refusing to lift, despite the jet’s westward dash. “I’m on the BBJ, arriving at SFO in about three hours. I was trying to get some sleep. Yes, I’m secure.”
“I’ve got to report to Angbard, so I’d better keep this brief. I went to see Fleming today. You know what that little shit Matthias did? He convinced the DEA, this new FTO outfit, everybody who matters, that he’d planted a gadget in downtown Boston. Then he managed to get himself killed before he could tell them where it was. So now they’re blaming us, and they want it handed over.”
“He what?” Brill blinked and tried to rub her eyes, one-handed.