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Authors: Trevor Hoyle

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BOOK: Last Gasp
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“Yes, we’re both healthy.”

“Are you carrying drugs?”

Chase was about to say no when Ruth said, “Medical supplies. No hard drugs or hallucinogens.”

“Show me.”

She opened the aluminum case and the sergeant looked at the plastic bottles, capsules, and vials in their padded compartments, the syringes in their pouches. Everything was clearly labeled, though whether the sergeant knew the difference between digitoxin and ethyloestrenol was open to doubt, in Chase’s view.

The trooper returned with the ID cards. He handed them to the sergeant without a word, who folded the papers he was holding and gave them to Chase. The sergeant recited:

“You are allowed to remain twelve hours within the Reno city boundary. One minute longer will be considered a violation of the special emergency law, as will the sale or purchase of drugs by trade, barter, or any other form of exchange, punishable by imprisonment and confiscation of all possessions and personal effects. Unauthorized purchase of oxygen is also forbidden, subject to the same penalties.” He stepped back and waved them on, his attention already on the next vehicle in line.

A mile farther on visibility was so bad that they had to don the goggles and respirators. Their skin felt prickly, as though a static charge were playing over it.

“Twelve hours,” Chase laughed shortly. “Who in his right mind would want to stay any longer?” He squinted up through the murk. The sun was a diffuse orange blur and it was noticeably warmer, by several degrees. A thermal inversion layer, trapping the heat and fumes in a thick vaporous blanket that hugged the ground. It was like driving through a hot burning mist of sulfuric acid.

Buildings loomed and they realized they were in the city itself.

Beyond knowing that he wanted to head roughly northwest Chase hadn’t a clue where he was going or which direction to take. Headlights came toward them like dim yellow eyes. Several times he had to stamp on the brakes as a glowing red taillight warned him of stalled traffic.

“Like being back in New York,” Ruth said with mordant humor.

Chase peered hopelessly ahead. “Can you see any signs? Can you see anything?” Nightmares were like this, wandering about lost in an eerie blank timelessness. He began to believe that it was a dream and would last forever, driving through acid mist for all eternity. It was almost restful, nothing to see, everything distant and muffled and muted—

“Watch out!”

Chase wrenched the wheel and the jeep skidded, missing the tailgate of a truck by less than a foot. They hit the curb with a bouncing jolt that threw them forward, Ruth striking her forehead above the goggles on the windshield’s metal upright, blood spattering the glass like teardrops.

They had stopped with their headlights blazing into a shop window. The world was indeed going crazy. Illuminated like a stage set, the window was filled with inflatable rubber dolls with jutting red nipples and silky vaginas.

Ruth was holding her head in both hands and moaning softly, blood seeping through her fingers and running down her wrists.

 

If there was one part of the procedure that Cy Skrote abhorred, it was this. Bad enough to theorize about it in the sterile atmosphere of the labs, or engage in dispassionate debate over coffee with his colleagues, but the surgical blood and guts of it made him physically ill. There was no escape, however—he had to be present in the operating room, gowned and masked, custodian of the refrigerated vacuum flask containing the culture.

The seeds
of our
own
destruction
... the thought flitted unbidden through his mind like a torn scrap of paper.

Standing three feet away from the operating table he had a ringside view of the surgeon at work. The column of mirror-directed light from above made every last detail clear and sharp. On a stretcher nearby the round gray flask with the chrome handle and the recessed red stirrup release mechanism waited ominously: on its side in stenciled black letters,
STERILE CELL CULTURE,
and underneath in scrawled graphics,
Experimental Batch MC-Dl 17-92.

The last two digits indicated that this was the ninety-second strain to be tested. Incubation would take anything from fourteen weeks to the usual nine months, always supposing the fetus didn’t self-abort. The success rate wasn’t high. Of the previous ninety-one, forty-eight had been rejected within six weeks, some in under two weeks.

What had come as a surprise was the fourteen-week pregnancy. Not a termination, as had been supposed, but the full-term delivery of a perfect specimen: blind, dumb, deaf and mentally retarded, but with lungs three times the normal capacity. Dr. Rolsom had congratulated the team, calling it “an important and encouraging breakthrough.”

Skrote tried not to look as the surgeon’s scalpel sliced through the epidermis and the fatty layer of the abdomen. The surgeon made another incision at right angles to the first and a nurse folded back the flap of tissue and swabbed the V-shaped area underneath, already saturated with blood.

“Tie off,” the surgeon instructed. The nurse clamped the pumping arteries and applied ligatures to stanch the flow.

“Young, healthy, good pelvic cavity,” the surgeon said, pleased. “She should give us a fine bouncing mute or my name’s not Sweeney Todd.”

Everyone around the table laughed. It was one of his standard jokes, but it helped break the monotony.

Before going in, the surgeon glanced toward the anesthesiologist, who was looking down at the woman’s face, obscured by a sterile green sheet. “How is she?”

“Everything okay. She’s dreaming of fluffy white lambs in a spring meadow.” The eyes of the anesthesiologist curved as he grinned behind his gauze mask.

“I’m fond of lambs myself,” the surgeon quipped. “Especially with mint sauce.”

Everyone laughed again, and one of the younger nurses got the giggles.

“Right, boys and girls, in we go.” The surgeon began cutting in earnest, the three assisting nurses standing by with sponges, clamps, plastic tubes and ligatures. It was a perfectly choreographed ballet of gloved hands and shiny steel instruments. As the layers were stripped back and the cords of muscles pushed out of the way, the surgeon became more intent as his work became more intricate. In the center of the raw gaping hole the narrow end of the Fallopian tube, at the point where it entered the uterus, was now exposed. A tiny snick of an incision in the wall of the Fallopian, high up at the site of fertilization, and he was ready for the cell culture.

Grasping the red stirrup, Skrote unscrewed the heavy lid from its brass seating and lifted it out. A puff of dry ice floated away. Very carefully he withdrew the stainless-steel core and set it down on the stand alongside the operating table. Now the surgical team would take over; ensuring that the correct culture was delivered safely from lab to operating room was Skrote’s task and responsibility, implantation was theirs.

Batch ninety-two was rather special. It comprised the splicing of genes from two patients with different characteristics. Both were severely deformed, yet each possessed certain physical peculiarities that, combined in the right proportions, might produce the ideal specimen. Skrote wasn’t too optimistic, however. It was a wild gamble and he had the nagging fear that the “ideal” specimen might well resemble a monster.

Part of its genetic heritage would enable it to survive in conditions normally hostile to human beings—the lungs would be rudimentary, their function taken over by gill-like growths on either side of the neck and chest. These would give it an appearance not unlike that of a humanoid water-dwelling lizard.

The other fundamental difference was in cranial capacity. Breathing deoxygenated air would render a normal-size brain comatose, followed quickly by death. So this brain had to be smaller and less complex and yet capable of the basic modes of comprehension and communication. After all, there wasn’t much point in breeding a new species that was incapable of understanding commands and carrying them out.

Something between a cretin and an educationally subnormal person was what they were aiming for, with an IQ, say, in the low sixties.

Skrote closed his mind to picturing such a hybrid. Equally distasteful to him was that this creature would receive its sustenance from the body of a normal healthy woman, growing and forming inside her womb like an alien reptile. Suitable female incubators were shipped in from the mainland. Like the woman on the table, they were poor, ignorant, and sadly misinformed. Told that a minor form of pollution sickness they were suffering from (usually a rash that proper treatment could have cured) was a terminal condition, they were invited to participate in an experimental drug program that, while risky, would give them an excellent chance of survival.

“Right, kiddies. Let’s sew the lady up and make everything shipshape!”

With the culture in place, fertilization would now begin. The newly formed zygote would start to divide into a cluster of 64 cells, taking about a week to travel down the Fallopian tube to the uterus. There the young embryo—the blastocyst—would attach itself to the lining of the uterus and—if there were no complications—pregnancy would proceed in the usual way.

Using an interrupted suture, the surgeon was sewing up the subcutaneous tissue. One by one the layers were folded back, the wall of the abdomen sealed up, and finally the outer flap of skin and fatty tissue replaced and stitched, leaving a puckered V-shape edged with red against the alabaster white.

Skrote felt relieved that it was over. He thought longingly of a cup of coffee. Even more longingly he thought of his rendezvous with Natas-sya after dinner that evening. Her note said that she couldn’t make it to the bar, their usual meeting place, but that he was to go directly to her room where she would be waiting.

The surgeon called out jovially, “Next, please!” and the operating-room staff dutifully laughed, if a little wearily this time.

As he turned to leave, Skrote noticed a group of people watching from the observation room, high up in one corner behind the angled glass panel. Dr. Rolsom was there—he sometimes liked to look in—but it wasn’t usual to see General Madden among them. Madden was gazing down with a rare smile; in fact, he seemed to be actually laughing.

For one dreadful moment Skrote imagined that Madden knew about him and Natassya. But it was impossible. He was being stupid.

“Excuse me, sir.”

“Sorry.” Skrote stepped aside as the nurse wheeled the trolley to the door, the rubber tires squealing on the linoleum floor. He looked down at the bleached face above the white sheet, the eyebrows like black brush marks on a flawless porcelain vase.

Skrote stood rooted to the spot, his heart small and hard as though the blood had been squeezed from it by an angry fist. He watched as Natassya was wheeled out and the doors swung silently shut behind her.

 

Sierraville. Loyalton. Vinton. Doyle. Milford. Janesville. Standish. Ravendale. Termo. Madeline. Likely.

The small towns on highway 395 rolled by, the cozy suburbanity of their names in stark contrast to what they had become: the refuge and the dumping ground for those fleeing north to escape the stench and decay seeping up from the south. They had escaped, but they were tainted by it. For Chase and Ruth it hung in the air like a sickly odor.

Chase had done the best he could with the nasty gash in Ruth’s forehead. It really required medical attention, though the idea of looking for a hospital (never mind what it would be like if and when they found one) filled them both with wearisome despair. Chase had decided that the sensible course was to reach Goose Lake with all speed; there would surely be somebody at the settlement with medical expertise.

Highway 395 was patrolled by state police and the armored personnel carriers of the National Guard, their blue-and-gold crest fluttering from the radio masts. Without such protection Chase doubted whether they would have made it past Sierraville.

By late afternoon they were midway between Likely and Alturas, about sixty miles from the settlement. Chase had made room for Ruth in the back of the jeep where she was wedged into a cubbyhole padded with blankets. She lay back, eyes closed, her face whiter than the bandage around her head. Without actually thinking about it he’d made up his mind to take Cheryl and Dan back with him. A vulnerable community like Goose Lake was no place for a seriously ill woman, and besides it wouldn’t be long, at this rate, before the craziness he’d observed spread there too. The Tomb wasn’t impregnable but it was a lot safer than being out here. And it had the supreme advantage of being a sealed enclosure; as the atmosphere continued to deteriorate, such places would be the last remaining refuge in an increasingly hostile environment.

Chase had lost count of the number of checkpoints they’d passed through since Reno. There was another one ahead now. In a sense it was reassuring to know that some form of rule of law was still operating.

The ebbing sun was distended into a flattened brown balloon by the stratified layers of noxious gases in the lower atmosphere. It would soon be dark, and traveling the last fifty or so miles on a pitch-black highway—with or without patrols—was an experience he would much rather avoid. Aside from which he felt ragged with tiredness and his bruised ribs throbbed painfully.

Yet again he went through the rigmarole with documents and IDs, explaining for the umpteenth time what was the matter with Ruth. The young state police trooper on duty, not unsympathetic, advised them, “Don’t go through Alturas after nightfall. There’s been some bad trouble there. Even the National Guard had to pull out.”

“What kind of trouble?”

“Riots, looting, arson. A lot of people killed. There’s a big refugee camp near Cedarville and they send raiding parties in who take whatever they can lay hands on. You want my advice, mister, you’ll find someplace to stay overnight. They’re a bunch of crazies, believe me.”

Chase glanced over his shoulder at Ruth. “Is there another route into Oregon?” he asked the trooper.

“Not unless you go back to Standish and take one-thirty-nine through Susanville, and even then I couldn’t guarantee it.”

BOOK: Last Gasp
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