Technosis: The Kensington Virus (12 page)

BOOK: Technosis: The Kensington Virus
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“Understands what?”


The lights went off in the stairwell and the team was submerged in absolute darkness.

“Get down! Ear plugs in!” Blaise shouted.

In the darkness Jaime struggled to find the balls of foam in his pocket. He had managed to jam one in his right ear when he saw the flash. The third floor door blew straight back across the landing above them and came tumbling end over end down the stairs. It came to rest on the second floor landing. Debris came raining down of the team and Jamie threw up his arms to shield his head. His left ear was ringing. Disoriented and nauseous, Jamie fumbled with the other foam ball. He couldn’t feel his fingers; he couldn’t…he couldn’t feel his left ear. He pressed until he thought he’d reached his ear. He willed his fingers to open, hoping to feel the ball expanding in his left ear. He felt nothing. He looked up in the partial light cast into the stairwell through the now demolished third floor landing door well. On the stair next to his feet was the foam ball. He looked up at Captain Blaise who was signaling for them to move up to the second floor landing. In a silent, ringing world, eyes wobbling, Jamie climbed the steps and followed Blaise through the second floor doorway. Blaise grabbed Jamie by the collar and pulled him to the ground. Jamie looked around and saw Ganos, Rosen and then Drake come in through the doorway. Drake dove to the floor. Everyone was covering their heads. Jamie watched in a daze as the central stairwell filled with a burst of light, the floor shook and smoke rolled in from the stairwell. Jamie felt it, but he heard nothing. He looked around him and saw that he was lying on broken glass and shards of shattered concrete.


“Damn,” Fenwick said, and sent more code down the line.

“What’s happening?”

“I managed to blow the tech personnel devices on the third and fourth floor. But they overrode my code for the fifth floor unit.”

“Are they still alive?” Lieutenant Marshall demanded.

“I can’t tell. There’s no working surveillance in the stairwell and on the third and fourth floors. I’m going to try and get into the sixth floor surveillance and scan for heat signatures below.”


Lights flickered on in the stairwell. Blaise looked around at his team. They were all there and intact. Jamie rose to his feet and looked at his hands. He still couldn’t feel them. There were slivers of glass pressed into them, but they’d not broken the skin. He saw Blaise signaling, but Jamie couldn’t understand. He wandered off into a corner and began to vomit.


“They’re alive!” Fenwick said. “I’ve got five heat signatures on the second floor, all still moving.”

“Thank God!” Lieutenant Marshall exclaimed.

Fenwick sent another series of codes down the line and surveillance picked up something else. On the sixth floor there were five figures whose outlines looked like those of the HDMP uniforms that Blaise and his team were wearing.

“The hostiles are on the sixth floor,” Fenwick said.

“How can you tell?”

“They’ve got the tech that the HDMP sent them out with when they arrived. Five hostiles. One is on a data panel. I’m getting a roof top scan. What the…. They’ve got a copter up there!” Fenwick said. “A copter?”

“Black copter, looks like a short flight unit, HDMP issue. I’m going to get municipal and federal to close the airspace…” Fenwick was saying, when his world went black.


Blaise helped Jamie to his feet. He signaled to him that they were going out into the stairwell. Jamie shook his head and vomited again.


“I’ve tucked in mother hen,” was the message Lieutenant Marshall sent from the data port. “Deliver the package and leave.”

Lieutenant Marshall received a confirmation message on the panel. He cleared the data screen, typed in a code and then picked up the keys to the limo. Lieutenant Colin Fenwick lay on his side on the floor, unconscious, blood seeping from a gash at the back of his head where Marshall had struck him. On the panel was a single word; Cronus.


The building shook and the stairwell filled with more smoke. Blaise left Jamie’s side and signaled to Rosen to follow him. They rushed up the stairs to see that the fifth floor door, like the third and fourth, had been blown off its hinges. Smoke was still licking at the obliterated doorway as they moved up past the fifth floor landing. Two floors up, they saw a flash of light. Someone had opened the door out onto the roof. Blaise saw a figure framed in the door way; took a bead on them and then fired. The figure spun out of the doorway and the door swung on its hinges, sending in small shafts of light.

Rosen and Blaise rushed up to the rooftop landing. Crouching, they nodded at one another, then on a silent count they pushed open the door and laid themselves out as flat as possible, guns pointing upward. There was a popping sound, as gunfire strafed the doorway. Rosen fired back at where the shots had come from.

Another strafing round of shots erupted lower in the door frame. Blaise saw the copter gliding away along the roof top. He rose to his feet, turned, and ran after it, firing a tight round at the gap in the armor over the main rotor. The helicopter disappeared over the edge of the building, then rose and pitched, moving away from the hospital. Blaise watched it for a few seconds, then turned and walked back to the rooftop entrance, where Rosen was pacing. Rosen signaled him and pointed at the roof. Blaise looked down and saw the blood. There had been a series of small drops near the doorway, and there was a large pool that had been deep enough to have been sprayed by the props’ lift.

Rosen took out his ear plugs. “Looks like you hit one.”

Blaise took out his ear plugs. “Femoral artery,” he said.

“Based on the blood spatter?”

“Based on where I was aiming.”

“You think Fenwick knows about the copter?”

Blaise shrugged. “If anyone could, he could. For now we’ve got to finish up.”

“Finish up?”

Blaise went back to the door of the stairwell. “You don’t think they just dragged us all the way out here and played with us for no reason? I’ve got a feeling they’ve left behind a gift.”

“What do you mean gift?” Rosen asked, following Blaise down.

Blaise returned to the second floor where agents Drake and Ganos were waiting, weapons trained on the doorway. “How’s Baxter?” Blaise asked.

Ganos and Drake signaled that they still had their ear plugs in. Blaise signaled for them to take them out.

“How’s Baxter?” he repeated.

“Vomiting blood. What is the status?” Agent Ganos asked.

“I think we can safely say floors three through five are clear and the hostiles departed via helicopter. But they are going to be having some trouble flying as I damaged their prop angle cable,” Blaise informed them.

“Then let’s follow them,” Drake said.

Blaise shook his head. “We’ve got to clear the sixth floor.”

“Why?”

“I’m pretty sure they left something they wanted us to find. Get Baxter on his feet, I’ll need him on point,” Blaise said.

Jamie’s head was still ringing and the left side of his face was numb. Hands reached under his arms and raised him to his feet. Fingers pulled the plug from his right ear, and he heard waves of sound.

“He’s got blood coming out of his left ear,” he heard someone say in the distance.

“Baxter. Baxter! Can you understand what I’m saying?” Jaime heard the words then saw Jericho Blaise’s lips moving.

“I couldn’t get the other plug back in before the door blew,” Jamie tried to say, but he couldn’t hear his own voice.

“Baxter, I need you to focus. You are having percussion trauma. Your equilibrium is going to be impaired for a little while. But I’ve got to have you with me to sweep the sixth floor. It might be a technosis hot zone,” Blaise said.

“No worries,” Jamie mumbled, and staggered forward.

“Rosen, you help Baxter walk,” Blaise said.

Rosen took Jamie’s arm across the back of his neck and then took Jamie’s weight across his shoulders. “Baxter, you remember the first rule?”

Jamie made a few steps, then stopped. “Don’t get Sergeant Rosen killed.”

“Good,” Rosen said, and walked him out onto the landing.

By the time they reached the sixth floor landing Jamie’s equilibrium was returning. The world was still a series of strange noises and waving sensations. But he could identify left, right, up and down, which had only been vague options a few minutes earlier. He was also feeling more clearly the pain from what his brain was informing him was his deafened left ear. He took his weight from Rosen’s shoulders.

“Are you sure you can?” Rosen asked.

“Rule number one, don’t get Sergeant Rosen killed,” Jamie quoted, and took out his weapon.

The sixth floor was marked with restricted area notices. Some notices informed individuals of the fact that they were on the floor with violent patients and others specified security level clearance requirements to be in restricted areas. These were odd, as Jamie had never seen them in the healthcare campus he practiced in or any of the ones he had trained in. The rooms that were to be found in this section of the building were smaller than the private rooms they had for post operative recovery stays and ICU. These were rooms built for a different purpose. Jamie tried a door and it opened. In the room was a single bed, with restraints, a skull harness and single lead going to a panel. Jamie had seen a similar device when he’d done his psychiatric rotations, but it had been experimental and was later deemed “Unsupported” by the federal practices board. The device, if it was what he thought it was, was an entrainment unit. But this one looked newer than the ones he’d seen fifteen years ago.

“What did you find?” Rosen asked him.

“New tech,” Jamie said; the hearing in his right ear was starting to resolve, but his sense of sound direction was gone. “It looks like an entrainment device.”

“You mean the tech lobotomy?” Rosen asked.

“You know about those?” Jamie asked in surprise.

“They were what they were using on troops coming back from the second Crimean war to treat conflict stress disorder,” Rosen said. “Friend of mine had the CSD and they put him on the treatments. Now he’s living in his parents’ basement composing poetry.”

“That doesn’t sound too bad,” Jamie said, examining the panel.

“You haven’t heard his poetry.”

“Thing is the fed practices board got rid of these things and this unit looks…new.”

“This facility closed down five years ago,” Rosen observed.

“I know, but this shouldn’t be here.”

“What’s the hold up?” Blaise asked.

“Dr. Baxter found some tech that shouldn’t be here,” Rosen reported.

“Ok, let’s clear the floor and then we will deal with that,” Blaise said, and moved on.

Jamie continued on point and found no one as they moved through the floor. He continued to find more of the entrainment devices. Finally he came to a medical conference room. He opened the door and immediately resented the bastards who had this. In the healthcare campus he’d been practicing at, the medics had a corner table in the cafeteria available to them between 12:00 and 13:30 two days a week to meet and discuss standards of practice. This room was an entire suite dedicated to the medics. There were reference source panels, case display stations for medics to present complex cases and there was a private kitchen and dining facilities. Jamie wished he could meet one of those medics so he could kick them in the balls.

The stations were shut down. The kitchen was mothballed. But it was all clear to him what this had been. Then he saw something flashing on one of the conference tables. A black tablet with the word CRONUS flashing on it.

“Is it clear?” Blaise called in after him.

“I found active tech,” Jamie called back.

“Technosis?” Blaise asked.

“Don’t know. Tablet is active, and the word ‘CRONUS’ is flashing on it,” Jamie said.

“Do you need any help?” Rosen asked.

“No, I’ll handle it.”

“Before you do that, kick your weapon out here,” Blaise said.

“Why?”

“Baxter, you may be resistant to the Kensington virus but we don’t know if that crosses over to KVB.”

Jamie hesitated.

“Rule one,” Rosen called in.

“Fine,” Jamie said, and set his weapon on the floor, safety on. Then he kicked it across the floor to the doorway, where Rosen retrieved it.

“Ok, go ahead now,” Blaise told him.

Jamie activated the tablet.

CHAPTER 14

PROJECT CRONUS

“B
axter? Baxter? You all right?” Blaise called in after a few minutes.

Jamie said nothing.

“Baxter, are you a frothing at the mouth, angry text messaging tech zombie?” Rosen asked.

The silence continued. Blaise looked at Rosen and signaled that he would go in high and Rosen would go in low.

“I’m angry,” they heard Jamie mutter. “But I’m not a tech zombie.”

“What is it?” Blaise asked.

“It’s reports; reports about patients from here,” Jamie replied. “It’s also surveillance reports on us going back to the Cyber Warfare Base. Someone in our group was recording…I can see me, I can see Drake, I can see Ganos.”

Blaise stepped into the room. “What is it?”

“All the recordings. All of the reports. Everyone is in here. Except Marshall,” Jamie said.

“We’ve got to get back to Fenwick,” Blaise urged.

“Not before we grab one of those entrainment units.”


Jamie sat quietly in the back of the Mustang, reviewing the tablet. The reports continued on and on. Forty subjects, all tech terrorists, all taken into the facility, and all treated with entrainment units. Then there were the videos from the Cyber Warfare Base in Fort Meade, Maryland. The files. The five files. As Jamie watched it again and again he realized he was watching Marshall gently guide them to those files, the five files. When he looked through the 40 on the tablet he tried to guess which of the 40 had been the five they were looking for. He read through medic notes. Patients with tech violent tendencies and genius or near genius levels of tech skills. The notes talked about the precipitous drop off in tech skills following the entrainment sessions. They talked about the preferred ability for the preservation of tech skills for project Cronus.

“What are you finding?” Rosen asked.

“This was a federal corporate project,” Jamie said. “They were trying to retain higher functions while controlling the antisocial behavior. They were trying to make killers docile geniuses so that they could work on a project. Project Cronus.”

“Any idea what that is?” Rosen asked.

Blaise was too distracted by concerns about what had happened to Fenwick to care about what Jamie was discovering.

“Cranial Retro Opthalmic Neurological User System,” Jamie replied. “It sounds like some sort of visual entrainment system for programming the brain directly through the eyes. There are all sorts of notes on wavelength frequency, kilohertz transmission signals, data transfer and repeat message propagation requirements. There are about a dozen patents in here for hemispheric brain synchronization and limbic bypass and selective engagement codes.”

“So they were test subjects?” Rosen asked.

Jamie shook his head. “Some of them might have been. But it seems most of them, or at least the ones they were really interested in, were the ones they needed to deliver or develop code for the system.”

“What happened to all of them?”

Jamie read on. “The Cronus notes talk about ‘feedback failure’ and ‘infiltrative brain trauma.’ There are a number of post mortems here where they tested tissue samples. Dendrite death in upper regions of the brain. Preservation of the motor function. Segmental preservation in the cross fibers and discrete function of the brainstem. The patients were experiencing a sort of functional brain death.”

“That sounds like the KV,” Rosen said.

“Except these were all done using visual entrainment with tech. People strapped to beds, goggles, repeated visual series.”

“So someone cracked the code,” Blaise suggested.

“What?” Jamie asked.

“Someone figured out how to deliver it another way. The texts, the social media, the hate messages,” Blaise explained. “Who worked on the project?”

Jamie read through a few more reports. “Dr. Tobias Wickham, Dr. Stephen Locum and Dr. Fritz Gottfried…”

“What is it?” Rosen asked.

“Wickham and Locum were the two doctors that ran the rage ward on the Health Campus and Dr. Gottfried was the doctor that treated me when I was passing through Cyber base to be sent out on assignment,” Jamie said, setting down the tablet.

No one spoke. They had arrived at the home and the Kennedy limo was gone.

Blaise was first in the door, followed by Drake and then Rosen. Agent Ganos stood outside waiting, weapon drawn.

Blaise found Fenwick motionless, his head in a pool of blood. He checked for the carotid pulse. It was strong. Fenwick was breathing deeply.

“He’s got a bad gash and a lump the size of an ostrich egg at the base of his skull. Get Baxter in here,” Blaise reported.

Agent Ganos ushered Jamie into the house and soon he was bandaging the injured officer. “How long do you think he’s been out?” Blaise asked.

“No idea,” Jamie answered. “But he’s lost about a liter of blood. Scalp wounds bleed a lot.”

“You can’t guess?” Blaise demanded.

“I’ll just get out a chart on rate of bleeding from a scalp wounds, punch in a liter and give you a magic number, shall I?” Jamie asked.

“Just give me a fucking guess.”

“A fucking guess would be forty-five minutes.”

Jamie started doing a neurological assessment, checking pupillary reflexes and ignoring everyone around him. Fenwick began to stir.

“Hey, sleepy head, wakey wakey!” Blaise said.

“Leave him alone,” Jamie told him. “How many fingers are you seeing?”

“Two on each hand.” Fenwick replied.

“Do you know what happened?” Blaise asked him.

“Follow my finger with just your eyes,” Jamie said.

“One minute I’m trying to shut down tech antipersonnel devices on the fifth floor of the hospital and get a no fly zone set by fed and municipal. Next thing the world went all black and…ow,” Fenwick winced, touching the bandage at the base of his skull.

“We need to glue that shut,” Jamie advised.

“Damn, that hurts like a mother -”

“Marshall was a mole,” Blaise informed Fenwick.

“Captain, that information would have been most beneficial before I got slugged in the back of the head,” Fenwick groaned, trying to get up.

“Don’t move,” Jamie told him. “We got no tech and minimal first aid. Before you go anywhere we’ve got to glue your scalp and make sure you are clear.”

“I’ll look for some glue,” Drake offered, and went into the kitchen.

“Doc, not to be mean, especially since there are two of you, but you don’t look too good yourself,” Fenwick observed.

Jamie reached up to the side of his face and felt the dry blood that had been dribbling from his ear since the door blew off the hinges on the third floor. “I’ll be fine. I’ve got a punctured eardrum is all.”

“If you say so, Doc. Just stop spinning so we can talk a while,” Fenwick said, lying back down on the floor.

“Stay awake, Fenwick,” Jamie advised.

“Just need to rest,” Fenwick pleaded.

“No, you don’t,” Jamie insisted, and started tapping Fenwick’s cheeks.

“Why can’t he just rest?” Blaise asked.

“Because he might not wake up.”

“I found a tube of clear glue,” Drake informed him.

“Perfect.” Jamie took the tube and rolled the officer to his side.

Removing the bandage caused the staunched blood to begin to flow again. Jamie wiped dry the lip of the torn flesh, applied the glue along its length and pressed it into place. “This might sting a bit,” he said, after he had started applying the pressure.

Fenwick swore and no longer wanted to go to sleep. The burning in his scalp cleared his head and he looked at Jamie with an animal hatred in his eyes.

“Give it another ten minutes to set,” Jamie advised, and got up to go wash the blood off his hands.

“How are you feeling?” Blaise asked, helping Fenwick to his feet.

“Like I’ve got a dozen wasps stinging the base of my head,” Fenwick complained.

“Do you think you can work your magic?” Blaise asked.

“I’ll try,” Fenwick said, and sat down at the data panel.

For several seconds the screen continued to show the word Cronus. Then an image appeared. It was Lieutenant Marshall. “By now you will have the Cronus files and you will also know that I was part of the Cronus test groups. This is being given to you so that you may know the reason for today’s actions. You are being sent to hunt me and my fellow patriots down for one reason. We pushed the button first. Everything that you have witnessed and everything that you will see, is the result of the intended designs of our federal government and their corporate partners. They have made the world a nightmare. We have made it a more vivid one. I won’t pretend that we have any demands you could even hope to meet or any ultimatums that will stop us from our appointed purpose. None of us are saints. All of us are serial tech killers, but we have, until now, been minor league compared to our government. We will, in the fullness of time, equal the outrages our government has perpetrated on its citizens and then, then we will dare to exceed them.”

“Among your leaders there are those who know us intimately. They are those who took our simple skills and trained them to a greater level. They are those who attempted to place us in harness to their purposes so that we might be one of the meat puppets and sheeple that populate this planet.”

“Dr. Baxter, you’ve been interesting, but like the general, I must concur. There is nothing special about you; you are simply a one off anomaly. Unlike us, you possess no specific genius to coincide with your ‘immunity’ and therefore are no longer of any use to us. When we meet again you will die because, like the other 40 subjects, you are expendable, and as Dr. Gottfried so eloquently put it, ‘contributing no material advantage toward our objectives and purpose.’”

“Fenwick, sorry I had to bash and go. You are a talented hacker and cyber warrior. But you’re not in our league.”

The image stopped. The word Cronus flashed on the screen and the panel began to smoke.

“Everyone out!” Blaise yelled, and the data panel caught fire.

There was no bang, or pop. There was instead the slow, steady flames as wire heated behind walls and the Federal Reserve Foreclosed unit slowly, steadily burned, where no monitors would report it, no services would come to put it out and where no neighbor would bother to say a thing about it.

“What now?” Agent Ganos asked.

“Regroup,” Blaise replied. “We still have a mission. We are here to stop the KVBs. We now know the face of one of the enemy, and we’ve injured another. Assuming there was any truth to what Marshall said, that only leaves three others.”

“I need to get my hands on some tech,” Fenwick said.

“We can break into another house,” Drake offered.

“No, I want a trunk access.”

“You think that corridor is still blacked out?” Blaise asked.

“I don’t see what not. At this point they will have to be far away from the area. I figure they are setting up operations downtown.”

“Then let’s make our way to Pontiac and take a run to the mall.”

BOOK: Technosis: The Kensington Virus
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