Authors: S.L. Dunn
“You actually created them?” Kristen said, her pale lips barely moving and her attention still on the empty window frames. “Vatruvian replicates based off your own genetics?”
Vengelis nodded gravely.
“Evidently, wherever you come from doesn’t place much stock in morality.”
“Evidently.” Vengelis nodded with a trace of sorrow. “But now it is up to me to deal with them.”
Kristen thought about the glowing blue eyes of the mice in their cages. It was going to require a lot of insight and speculation to shed any light on the Felix replicates mentioned in the report he had given her. She thought back to Cara William’s stress tests of the Vatruvian cells.
“The Felixes are resilient, strong,” Kristen ventured. “More powerful than you.”
Vengelis turned up to the projection screen, his eyes looking heavy. “Don’t speak to me of power.”
Kristen turned to where he was looking and saw that it depicted what was happening in Chicago. She forced herself to look away at once; it was too terrible and overwhelming. The hotel manager had evidently been successful in turning on the news broadcast, but he now lay wheezing on the stage. The giants had been too much for him.
“You did that?”
“Yes,” Vengelis said at once. “The two soldiers you just met did, under my command.”
“Why?”
“Simple, really. Submission. I gave the order so the scientists here would help me, though I never could have imagined Felix technology would actually
exist
here. In a sense I’m reeling as much as you are.”
“
Are
they strong? These Felix replicates?” Kristen asked quietly.
“Yes. Incomprehensibly.” Vengelis sighed as he watched the news report of Chicago with an expression that conveyed a hint of being overwhelmed himself.
“And their eyes?”
Vengelis froze and she noticed his chest constrict. “Their eyes . . . you know of their eyes? How?”
“I’ve seen them,” Kristen said. “Though not on the face of a human. The man who you just killed—my boss—created Vatruvian mice.”
“Mice . . .” Vengelis trailed off.
From beyond the empty windows a series of deep resonant clanging sounds echoed from far off, and the hint of a distant crowd’s high-pitched roar drifted faintly in the wind. Kristen turned for a moment to the windows and back to Vengelis. On the screen overhead, a leaning skyscraper in Chicago at last fell to its side, and the audience in the ballroom momentarily transitioned from whimpers to wails.
Vengelis roared for them to be silent, never taking his gaze off Kristen. “I have told my two men to destroy any bridges leading off this island so we can have all the time in the world for our discussion. With one word from me, they will shift from simply toying with your people to outright massacring them. Millions of people can die at your whim, right here and right now. Or you can do as I tell you and ensure that every one of them stays safe and sound and protected from my men.”
Kristen’s nostrils flared, and she nearly responded hotly, but quickly composed herself and tried to respond as lucidly as possible. “So what is it exactly that you are asking of me?”
“
Asking
of you?” Vengelis raised his eyebrows. “I am not asking you to do anything. I am ordering you to show me how to defeat these Felix machines.”
Kristen found herself unable to respond she was so afraid. Try as she could to stay calm, panic was rising in her stomach. How could she possibly describe how to destroy something she knew nothing about? She knew the genetics and molecular construction of Vatruvian cells, not how to
kill
a Vatruvian entity replicated off of an enigma that was obviously beyond the grasp of modern science.
Vengelis was looking at her with unmistakable hope, which Kristen knew was not good, for she now understood his question. Kristen also knew that—with Professor Vatruvia dead on the stage—she was the only person capable of answering it. And she knew she would not be able to.
T
he sun reflected against their Imperial First Class armor and shimmered off the buildings below, the noon radiance contradicting the dark nature of their charge. Hoff and Darien reached the last skyscraper lining the southern tip of Manhattan, and before them the end of the city met with the swelling gray waters of an open bay. On the banks surrounding the bastion of skyscrapers on the narrow city-island, dense populations extended as far as the eye could see. Where earlier in the morning the two soldiers had embraced boundless woodlands and rolling hills and fields, now they were witness to the grand kingdom of man: sharp angles, towering monoliths of austere glass and concrete. A mirage of smog hugged the horizon and spread across the region.
Two rivers extended up each side of Manhattan, and a few prodigious bridges connected the main island with the adjacent lands. Even from his distance, Darien could see the nearest one spanning the eastern waterway—an enormous and dignified suspension bridge—was congested to a standstill with evacuees seeking refuge outside the city limits. Surely they were the survivalists, the smart ones, leaving the city merely as a precautionary measure after what they saw happening in Chicago.
“Vengelis told us to seal off the island. Let’s separate and move up each side of the city,” the Lord General called, and pointed to the east. “I will take the river to the west. You go up the eastern river there, and bring down any bridge connecting the city to the mainland. I’ll meet you up north.”
“Okay.” Darien nodded.
The two soldiers turned from one another at once and soared northeast and northwest up the expansive rivers surrounding Manhattan.
…
Sam Larson pressed hard on the steering wheel of his Acura, more out of exasperation than as a command to the Taurus with Connecticut plates idling in front of him. The sound of his horn was drowned out in the resonance of puttering cars that sat at a dead stop along the Manhattan Bridge.
Twenty minutes ago, as Sam had hastened out of his office on William Street and made for his car, he had felt certain that if—god forbid—something did happen in New York, he would at the very least beat the traffic out of Manhattan.
Sam’s situation could not have been better, given the circumstances.
It was by chance that he had happened to drive his car to work that morning and swallowed the agonizing parking bill. Furthermore, it was by shear happenstance that Sam had been absentmindedly clicking the refresh button on
The New York Times
website for stock quotes when he saw the breaking news of the Chicago attack. Straightaway, it had not felt right as Sam read the bizarre headline. Preferring an approach of prudence, he stepped out early and stopped at a sandwich place near the parking garage while the broadcast was still speaking of a
single
skyscraper falling in the Windy City.
The moment the second skyscraper fell, his pastrami was in the trash and he was hastily pulling his car out of the parking garage and through the intersections toward the Manhattan Bridge.
Despite his seemingly good luck and quick thinking, Sam was forced to slam on his brakes as the lanes atop the bridge abruptly clogged to a halt the moment he crossed over FDR Drive. After several minutes of creeping along, he found himself utterly gridlocked, suspended a hundred feet over the East River and staring up past his sunroof at broad cables and naked steel girders of the bridge and blue skies beyond.
The Billboard Top Forty radio station he normally listened to was at the moment covering what the media had tentatively dubbed, The Devastation in Chicago. Sam listened in growing disbelief as the anchors stressed that this was no nine-eleven; this was no earthquake. This was something infinitely more terrible and catastrophic. The anchors described the video footage as unspeakable, as apocalyptic. Hundreds of thousands were feared dead. The word
war
was repeated over and over, and it filled Sam with a very poignant kind of dread that he was not accustomed to.
Who was responsible for the attack? What was it? How did it begin and end so abruptly? Were other cities in danger? Were other countries in danger?
No one had any answers.
Special correspondents and advisors were pointing fingers at everything and everyone from Al Qaeda to North Korea to the United States government itself. One evangelical correspondent even mentioned the End Times and The Second Coming of the Messiah. Sam swallowed at the man’s words, and ran his palms nervously around his steering wheel.
A ring tone sounded over the radio program, and Sam pulled out his cell phone.
“Hey, Dad.”
Sam pressed his horn again. He was thankful to have the towers of Manhattan in his rearview mirror, but not at all happy about his bridge-bound location should New York be next on the terrorists’—surely, they were terrorists—hit list. Though he was not truly concerned for his immediate safety, it was more of a negligible lingering sort of trepidation in the far recesses of his mind.
“Sam! Have you been watching the news?” his Dad asked, surely sitting behind the desk in his office in Stamford, a pile of paperwork in front of him and his phone balanced against his shoulder. “Oh my god. Chicago.”
Sam nodded. “I know.”
“Where are you? I want you out of the city right now.” His father’s voice was stern, his tone filled with concern.
“I’m already on my way out now. I’m sitting in traffic on the Manhattan Bridge.”
There was a pause. “You’re getting out of Manhattan by
car
? Are you crazy?”
“No—I’m not crazy. I’m at the front end of the traffic. I got a head start.”
“
Head start
? Sam it took people
days
to get out of the city after nine-eleven. The moment you’re off that bridge, pull your car over anywhere and get to a commuter rail station.”
“Dad, New York isn’t even in danger. You’re being a little drama—”
“Sam! Mom and I will pay for the bill if your car gets towed, I don’t care. Promise me you’ll get on a commuter rail at the next station you see and get as far from the city as you possibly can. I don’t care if you have to go all the way up Long Island.”
“I . . .” Sam raised a hand in exasperation and pressed hard on his car horn again. “Okay, fine, Dad. I promise. I’ll call you when I know where I’m headed.”
“Okay. I love you, Sam.”
“I love you too, but you’re being really dramatic here. Chicago is a thousand miles away.”
Sam ended the call with a roll of his eyes and turned his radio up just in time to hear a woman say something about New York City. Every hair on his body rose. He reached out and turned the volume knob to full.
“We have received word of a possible incident starting in New York City just minutes ago.” Sam felt his intestines turn to liquid as the broadcast continued. “Though at this point the unconfirmed claims of an attack on New York remain just that: unsubstantiated. There are pockets of civil unrest being reported across the nation in nearly every major city from Los Angeles to Miami. But there is no cause to believe that whatever assaulted Chicago will spread.”
The radio station continued to stress a lack of any reliable information as Sam stared out his passenger-side window to examine the Brooklyn Bridge. It looked to be in no better condition than the one on which his Acura was now parked. He could see lines of cars and a dozen or so semis waiting in similar traffic. Giving up with his car horn, he stared at the rear bumper of the Taurus before him, propping his elbow against the door and resting his chin in his palm as the minutes dragged on.
The chilling words of the broadcast echoed through Sam’s mind. It did not seem possible that terrorists could plant bombs in so many buildings. What could cause that level of destruction? Sam lifted his head up when he noticed a woman open the driver-side door of a Subaru a few cars ahead and step out of her car. A truck behind him beeped. The woman was staring southward in awe, the scarf wrapped about her neck blowing in the open air. Her passenger got out as well, standing and staring in the same direction downriver. Sam looked from car to car as more people opened their doors, exited their vehicles, and gazed southward. He was reluctant to match their stares, knowing what lay in the direction of their attention. They were all looking at the Brooklyn Bridge. A sudden terrible pang of nausea rose in the back of his throat. Fearfully and slowly, Sam turned his eyes downriver.
“Oh
shit
,” he moaned in a terrible whisper.
Sam pulled at the handle of his door and stepped out onto the pavement of the bridge. He was taken aback by the gusty wind that forcefully and loudly whipped about his face as the indicator alarm chimed familiarly from his open door. Staring in disbelief down the East River, a queasy pallor began to fill his features. He watched as the Brooklyn Bridge visibly rocked, swayed from side to side, and then collapsed into the devouring water of the East River. Countless toppling and tumbling cars crashed down against the surface of the water and disappeared into the veritable abyss alongside the loose rubble and cables. The sounds traveling across the open water from the calamity were unspeakable.
Sam was suddenly pushed forward against the hood of his car as a man sprinted by and knocked him out of the way, followed by another, and another. People were abandoning their vehicles in the middle of the Manhattan Bridge and moving on foot across its length toward Brooklyn. Within seconds everyone had collectively weighed the value of their lives versus their cars, and at once Sam left his Acura idling. He became one face in a horrendously crammed marathon across the top deck.
The events that followed the abandonment of his car all seemed to happen very quickly, though with a remarkable degree of clarity to Sam’s conscious mind.
Sam did not allow his thoughts to slip into a panic, or—for that matter—to think anything at all. On the contrary, he focused on pumping one leg in front of the other as he bumped elbows with other sprinters and wheezed in the chilly Atlantic air. Perhaps it was a primal mechanism of composure in the face of imminent death. Perhaps it was raw adrenaline. Regardless of the cause, the lucid awareness of his mind felt extraordinary—almost euphoric.