Catalyst (Breakthrough Book 3) (11 page)

Read Catalyst (Breakthrough Book 3) Online

Authors: Michael C. Grumley

16

 

 

 

 

Langford raised an eyebrow.  “He turned it off?”

“Yes, sir.  There were a few towers he was still close enough to connect to.  And even if he didn’t have a strong enough voice signal, he should have been well inside the range of the control channel used for text messages.  Text messages can be received farther away, which still would have allowed the towers to triangulate.”

“So he receives the case from Li, immediately gets in his car and heads north, then turns off his phone.”  Langford’s face was somber.   “Then what?”

“That’s where things go from strange to bizarre.”  Borger hesitated before continuing.  “He disappeared from the grid for almost fourteen hours before his phone came back on, at roughly the same place as it went off.”

“So he turned it back on?”

“Yes, sir.”

Langford crossed his arms, thinking.  “Do we have any indication whether he still had the case with him?”

“There’s no way to know,” Borger replied.  “But my bet is that he didn’t.”

Langford nodded.  “I wouldn’t exactly call that bizarre.  My guess is our good General hid it somewhere, or with someone.”

“Uh, that’s not actually the bizarre part.  It’s that General Wei’s reappearance on the grid was short-lived, literally.  He never returned home.  Instead, he drove himself back to Beijing, found a parking lot, and killed himself in his car.”

“What?!”  Both Langford and Clay were stunned.  “Are you kidding?”

“No, sir,” Borger shook his head.

“Jesus,” Langford groaned.  “This just keeps getting worse and worse.”  He looked at his screen with exasperation.  “Any of this making sense to you, Clay?”

“I’m afraid not, Admiral.  But I agree with Wil.  If this General Wei went to so much trouble to get that case and then disappeared just before ending his life, I think we can be pretty certain it wasn’t with him when he came back.”

This wasn’t making sense to any of them. 

“Why on Earth would a man with that kind of power, who now has something virtually every person on the planet wants, simply kill himself?”

“To keep it quiet,” Clay mused.  He looked back to Wei’s picture on the screen and it suddenly fell into place.  “That’s it.  That’s the answer.”

“What is?”

Clay’s voice rose excitedly.  “There is no coup in China’s Standing Committee.  It’s in the Central Military Commission.  General Wei is the coup!”

“Wei?”

“Wei was in charge of the find in Guyana.  So he knew what they had.  He had the authority to launch a strike on the Bowditch.  And he also had the authority to order the sinking of their own ship
and
the Forel.  He was trying to destroy the cargo.  The last remaining piece was the DNA-infused bacteria in the case that Li flew back to him.  Wei was systematically destroying any evidence of what they’d found.”

“But why?” Langford asked.  “Why destroy the one thing that could change everything?”  He shook his head and thought it over, then looked back at Borger’s image.  “Wil, if he wanted to destroy the samples, couldn’t he have done that just about anywhere?”

“I suspect so.”

“So why disappear with it while trying to avoid being tracked?”

“It doesn’t make a lot of sense.”

“It does,” said Clay, “if Wei wasn’t intending to destroy it.”

Border nodded.  “For example if he were
hiding
it.”

Langford folded his arms again with a stern expression.  “He destroyed what he wasn’t able to contain and hid the rest.”

“It appears so.”

“Which means that briefcase may still be within a seven-hour drive from his phone’s last coordinates.”

“Or less,” added Borger.  “If he had to sleep.”

After a long silence, Langford looked back at the screen.  “How’s your Chinese, Clay?”

Clay was already searching for more on Wei when he looked back to Langford’s image in surprise.  “What?”

Langford checked his watch.  “Pack your bags.  I’ll arrange for your ride.  In the meantime, Borger, you have approximately thirteen hours to figure out exactly where Clay is going.”

 

 

 

By 3:30 a.m. Clay was already at thirty-two thousand feet aboard the C-20D Gulfstream III.  The model C-20D was the most common variant used by the U.S. Navy and retrofitted with special naval communication equipment.  It was also the same aircraft which Clay and Caesare had taken to Brazil just a few weeks earlier.  A trip which set in motion a chain of events that none of them could have anticipated.

Clay peered out of the small window to his left, into the morning darkness with twinkling stars above him.  There was an eerie feeling inside the cabin, sitting alone listening only to the roar of the two Rolls Royce Turbofan engines outside as they rocketed the aircraft through freezing air at top speed.

The Gulfstream would have to make multiple stops to reach its final destination in Manila.  It was as far as he could go without raising flags in a government plane.  From there he would have to travel aboard commercial flights, first to Taiwan and finally in through Hong Kong.  With the help of a falsified passport, it would be his best chance at entering China without too much attention from customs.  Once inside, it would be another 1,200 miles to Beijing and hopefully enough time for Borger to narrow down his search area.  Assuming the target was still there.

Clay tried again to relax and lay back against the chair’s soft headrest.  He struggled to imagine what had motivated General Wei to destroy or hide the treasure which his soldiers had worked so hard to recover in that jungle.

He closed his eyes and instead thought of Alison.  He pictured her face, with long brown hair falling over her shoulders.  Her beautiful eyes smiling back at him.  He was falling for her and let himself smile as he began to drift off to sleep.  

In the end, it was his exhaustion that had prevented Clay from figuring out Wei’s motives that night.  And when he finally did two days later, it would already be too late.

17

 

 

 

 

Alison sat in her office, thinking about John.  She had been expecting a call the night before, but it never came.  She wasn’t overly concerned, but it was just another example of the challenges in trying to maintain a long-distance relationship, especially with
their
jobs. Still, she had no regrets.  A man like John was a diamond in the rough.  The kind of man every woman wished for but rarely found.  There were certainly plenty of wonderful men out there.  But someone had truly broken the mold after John Clay.

Her thoughts wandered back to the week they’d just spent together after returning from Trinidad.  The walks on the beach holding hands, the feeling of safety she felt with him, and the way he spoke to her. They stirred emotions Alison hadn’t experienced in a long time, if ever.

  It made it all the more ironic that she hadn’t yet realized her cell phone was still in her car.  Nor that John Clay would be well over the Pacific before she discovered the voicemail he’d left while his plane was refueling in California.

With a sigh, Alison shook herself out of her daze and stood up from her chair.  She rounded the desk and walked to the door where, with a quick pull, she stepped through and proceeded downstairs.  Something had been haunting her since Trinidad.  Something she’d been reluctant to pursue without really knowing why.  So much had happened in the last few months.  So much had been discovered that Alison was almost afraid of what they might learn next. 

The breakthrough with Dirk and Sally was truly a miracle of modern technology.  It had blown open the doors to a real, genuine conversation between the two most sentient species on the planet.  But what they’d found was not just exciting, it was frightening.  Frightening in its potential to disrupt what
they
as humans had assumed for so long: that somehow animals without familiar or recognizable communicative abilities were little more than cute creatures in a kingdom over which humans claimed dominion.

But now…now they had discovered not only a shocking level of understanding in Dirk and Sally’s communication, but also exposed an almost shameful level of human hubris.  And a level of disconnectedness with the world around them that left Alison worried for her own species.  Even Alison’s own personal connections were beginning to feel devoid of any true meaning.  Instead, it felt like a detached view of the planet.  Mistakenly superior.  Materialistic.  Clinical.

The truth was, Alison was growing fearful of finding out that humans might not be very
human
after all.  That rather than contributing to the world as it really was, they were instead gradually destroying it under a veneer of “progress.”  The last thing she wanted to do was become even more disappointed in herself or her race.

Alison forced a smile and pushed open one of the doors into the observation area.  She’d often thought that the dolphins, especially Sally, could almost sense her coming.  Which made it all the eerier when Sally seemed to be waiting for her as she arrived. 

Hello Alison.

“Good morning, Sally.  How are you and Dirk?”

We happy.  How you?

“I’m happy too.”  She was thankful the dolphins were not able to read human faces yet.  Nevertheless, if Sally detected something different from Alison’s response, she didn’t show it.

Where Chris?

“Chris isn’t here yet.  He will come soon.”  She approached the tank and leaned against a desk just a few feet from the giant glass wall.

Chris funny.
  Dirk replied as he glided in.

“Yes, he is.”

Alison paused, thinking how best to begin.  Starting with the journey seemed a logical place.  Especially since it had turned out to be much more than any of them expected.

“Sally, Dirk.  I’d like to ask you some questions.”

Yes Alison.  We talk.

“How…often do you go on your journey?”

Many.

She frowned, suspecting IMIS had mistranslated.  “I mean, how many times in a year?”

One.

Alison knew the match for “year” was what the dolphins referred to as a “cycle.”

“One every cycle?”

Yes.

“Why do you go?”

Journey beautiful.

“Yes, it is.” 

She couldn’t argue with that.  Diving with them near the island of Trinidad was beyond beautiful.  An underwater oasis like nothing the team had ever seen.

And the population of dolphins there was simply breathtaking.  Thousands, tens of thousands, maybe even hundreds covered the surface of the ocean like a giant, moving sea blanket.

“So, you go because it’s beautiful?”

We go for connect.  For strong.

“For connect?”

Yes.  And for strong.

It was the first time Alison had seen that word translated: connect.  But it verified what she had suspected.  It wasn’t just a journey they carried out every year, it was a migration of some kind.  A return to something deeper and more meaningful to them.  And not just individually, but collectively.  As a group.  It was
culture!

She stared at the screen, reading the translation again.  What did “for strong” mean?  To strongly connect?  For a stronger connection?

“Sally,” she asked.  What is so special about your place?”

A beep sounded and IMIS flagged the word “special.”  She rephrased.

“Why do dolphins go to that place?”

Place from live.
 

Alison frowned, unclear on the meaning.

“I don’t understand.”

Place from live.
  Sally repeated. 
One cycle.

Alison mumbled to herself, trying to understand.  “Yes, every cycle.  I understand that.”

Live.

“I don’t understand.”  She shook her head.  Still at a loss, she decided to try another question.  “Sally.  Dirk.  How far back do you remember?”

The room became silent while she waited for a response.  When nothing came, she glanced at the computer screen to see if there was a problem.  No errors.  “Sally?  Dirk?”

No understand Alison.
  Dirk replied.

Alison opened her mouth to say it a different way but stopped abruptly.  Rephrasing the question suddenly appeared more difficult than she thought.

“I mean, how do your-” she stopped again. 
Dammit.  How the hell would someone describe a memory?

“Sally.  Dirk.  Do you know yesterday?”

Yes.

“Do you know yesterday yesterday?”

Yes.  Yes.
  Dirk followed his response with a laugh.  Alison frowned again. 

“I mean, do you know yesterday’s yesterday?”

Yes
.

“Do you know yesterday’s yesterday’s yesterday?”

On the other side of the glass, Sally’s dark eyes glanced at Dirk and then back at Alison.  She wondered if Alison were joking herself.

Three day back.  Yes.

From the edge of the desk, Alison smiled.  “Do you know ten days back?”

This time Sally’s response came quickly. 
Alison you play?

“No, I’m not playing.”

Dirk edged closer to her. 
Yes Alison.  We know ten day.  We know hundred day.  We know all day.  You question funny.

Alison grinned.  “How many days back do you know?”

All day.

“How many cycles back?”

All cycle.

“More than a hundred?”

Yes.

Finally, Alison asked the question she had been trying to work toward.  “
How
do you know more than a hundred cycles back?”

Sally’s response was exactly what Alison was hoping for.

Heads.

“You mean your elders?”

Yes.  Heads.

“You know from your heads?  Do they teach you?”

Yes.  Heads teach all.

How many elders are there?

Many.

Alison stared at them, momentarily transfixed.  Their elders taught them.  And they taught them things
older
than they were.  Her excitement was swelling.  If what Sally and Dirk just told her was correct, it was big.  Huge.  It meant that dolphins had more than just language and culture.  They had
history
!

 

 

Alison remained quiet, excitedly thinking through the impact of what Dirk and Sally had just said.  More questions began filling her head.  If there was a historical lineage, it meant a cognitive progression.  More than just memories or culture, it explained why their intelligence was so much more advanced than many other animals.  Real
knowledge
had many components, not the least of which were lessons or learnings passed down through multiple generations.  Knowledge that could lead in so many different directions.

Alison was looking for a pen and paper when she was suddenly interrupted. 

“Miss Alison!”

She spun around to find Bruna behind her, eyes wide with excitement.

“Bruna.  Is something wrong?”

“Miss Alison.  Come!  Come quickly!”

“What is it?”

“Come!  Come!”

Alison pushed away from the desk only to watch Bruna turn and rush back toward the entrance.  She instinctively fell in behind her, trotting until they reached the doorway. 

Bruna promptly opened one of the large doors and disappeared.

Alison caught the door before it closed, pulling it open again to peer down the hall.  All she could see was Bruna hurrying away and quickly disappearing around the far corner.

When Alison caught up, coming around the same corner, she stopped dead in her tracks.

There in front of her in the lobby stood Lara and Ricardo Santiago, the parents of young Sofia.  They were standing side by side.  Lara’s eyes were red and swollen from crying. 

Alison stared at them.  Her face suddenly drawn. 
Oh no. Not Sofia.  Not already!

“Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo,” her voice trembled.  “W-what is it?”

Lara Ricardo gulped back a sob and looked at her husband.  Without a word she turned slightly and took a step to the side.  There was someone standing behind her.  It was Sofia.

Alison was overwhelmed with relief, a feeling that was immediately replaced by astonishment.  Sofia was not just behind her parents.  With the help of crutches, she was actually
standing!

There was a loud gasp behind Alison at which point she turned to find DeeAnn, stunned and frozen with her own mouth open.

“Sofia!  You’re standing!”

Balancing carefully between the metal crutches, the young girl was beaming at both women.  Next to Sophia, her mother began crying again.

“She’s getting stronger!”

Other books

The Boom by Russell Gold
Before I Go by Colleen Oakley
Cuando cae la noche by Cunningham, Michael
Trinidad by Leon Uris
The Hanging Tree by Geraldine Evans
Foreign Éclairs by Julie Hyzy
Huntsman's Prey by Marie Hall
Green-Eyed Monster by Gill Mcknight