The Bone Labyrinth (12 page)

Read The Bone Labyrinth Online

Authors: James Rollins

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Thriller & Suspense, #War & Military, #United States, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Military, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Contemporary Fiction, #Thrillers

BOOK: The Bone Labyrinth
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Monk tried next. “How about a little love this way?” he asked, also dropping to one knee and holding out both arms.

Baako grunted, looking ill at ease.

“He’s a nice man,” Maria said, signing her assurance by sliding her right palm over her left.

[
Nice
]

“Say hello,” she encouraged.

Baako came forward, plainly reluctant, but from the pinch of his eyes, he was also curious. He sniffed the air as he approached. Once near enough, he motioned with his right hand, waving from his brow.

[
Hello
]

He then cupped his hand before his chest and swept it down. Then his fingers flashed through various letters.

[
I am Baako
]

Those dark eyes stared up at Monk, who looked bewildered.

Kowalski nudged his partner. “The guy’s telling you his name.”

Maria glanced to Kowalski, her eyebrows lifting. “You’re right.”

Kowalski pointed to Monk, then spelled his partner’s name.

[
His name is Monk
]

Baako bobbed his head, clearly understanding, and closed the distance. He took Monk’s hand in his own, squeezing it. Then he leaned over and sniffed his partner’s other hand, cocking his head and hooting quietly.

“It’s a prosthetic,” Monk explained both to Baako and to Maria, who came over.

“Really,” Maria said. “I couldn’t tell.”

Kowalski was not surprised. The prosthetic hand was an amazing bit of hardware, and not just due to its lifelike match. It had been engineered by DARPA to function with amazing dexterity, and this was the latest model, built to respond to a neural implant in Monk’s brain, allowing him to control his artificial hand not only via the titanium contacts that linked the nerves in his wrist to the prosthesis, but also by his very thoughts.

Monk demonstrated another unique feature of his new hand. He reached over and detached the prosthesis from his wrist, freeing it from the metal cuff wired to the stump of his arm. He let Baako hold the hand.

The gorilla flipped it over and examined it from every angle. Monk was even able to wiggle those fingers, the motion achieved via a wireless command. Baako’s brows climbed higher at this demonstration. Even Maria gasped slightly at the sight. Baako lifted the prosthesis to his mouth and gently bit at one of the fingers.

Kowalski cringed, doubting the DARPA engineers would appreciate such abuse to their technological marvel. Monk must have felt the same way and stepped forward.

Maria held him back, eyeing Baako with amusement. “Don’t worry,” she explained. “He’s only trying to tickle you. It’s the way gorillas sometimes do that, by biting softly at fingers or bellies.”

Monk laughed—but it was less because of the tickling and more likely amazement. “I can actually feel what he’s trying to do.”

“Amazing.” Maria pinched her eyes and stared anew at the prosthesis. “I had read that DARPA was testing artificial limbs with sensory inputs, but I never imagined they were so far along.”

Monk shrugged. “Just consider me one of DARPA’s guinea pigs.”

Finally Baako offered the hand back.

Monk accepted it. “Thanks, little guy.”

The gorilla turned to the last member of the party and eyed both of Kowalski’s arms.

Kowalski raised his hands. “Don’t get any ideas. These are both real.” He finished by clamping the fingers of one hand over the other.

[
No biting
]

Baako chuffed loudly, followed by an offended grunt of protest.

Maria smiled, her eyes twinkling toward Kowalski. “You sign well. I’m impressed.”

Feeling awkward at her attention, he spiraled two fingers in the air and landed them on the back of his other hand.

[
Of course I do
]

Baako was less awed. The gorilla refused to draw closer and dropped heavily to his haunches. He then flicked his fingers in Kowalski’s direction, then pointed at him.

[
Don’t like you
]

Kowalski scowled back at the ape.

Feeling’s mutual, bud.

11:48
A
.
M
.

Baako sees how the man stands, smells the sourness to his body, reads the small tics of disdain on his face. He knows the man does not like him and doesn’t understand why. Confusion leads to hurt—also to anger.

His mother comes over, her lips hard, ready to scold. She gestures.

[He is nice man, too]

Baako doesn’t know how to explain, to argue, so he crosses his arms, refusing to talk.

Man doesn’t like me, so I don’t like him.

Plus his mother had praised the way this man talked with his hands. He saw how she smiled at him. She should only like the way Baako talks.

Not this man.

She points to the door at the back and motions firmly. “Go to your room, Baako.”

He grunts, voicing some of his hurt and frustration.

She points her two fingers again to his bedroom door.

[Go]

He huffs and obeys, pushing up. He heads away, walking on both arms, burning with chagrin. Before he leaves the room, he casts one last glare in the man’s direction. He doesn’t sign it, but he thinks it.

You go away.

11:49
A
.
M
.


He’s tired,” Maria explained, hoping she hadn’t been too hard on the little guy, but firmness was necessary at times.

“Don’t worry,” Monk said with a grin. “Kowalski has that effect on a lot of people. It takes time for him to grow on you.”

His partner frowned but didn’t protest otherwise.

Maria felt sorry and tried to reassure the big fellow. “Baako didn’t sleep well last night. He had some nightmares about Lena.”

Amy stepped closer. “Is that right?”

Maria heard the interest in her voice and tried to dissuade it. “It was just a coincidence.” She glanced away. She certainly wasn’t going to talk about waking with similar misgivings about her sister.

“Speaking of Lena,” Monk said, “what exactly was your sister doing in Europe?”

Maria was happy to turn the discussion in this direction. “We were granted a fellowship by the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. It’s the predominant research institute when it comes to hominin studies. The fellowship allowed for one of us to work in a program whose goal was to build a more accurate model of genetic variability in the Neanderthal species, along with developing new retrieval methods for collecting DNA from old bone fossils.”

“And why did Lena end up going instead of you?” Monk asked.

“While we both have an interest in genetics, my research leans more toward a
macro
understanding of DNA. The end results, you might say. Whereas Lena concentrated at the
micro
level, fixing her studies on gene-editing and -splicing. So it seemed more important that she take on this German fellowship.”

Stabbed by guilt, Maria hugged her arms around herself, regretting that decision now. Here she was safely in the States while Lena faced who knew what dangers out there.

“We thought this fellowship was important,” she continued. “I can count on one hand the number of Neanderthal fossils that offer decent recoverable DNA. Good sources are few and far between. With better samples, more accurate collection techniques, and a comprehensive understanding of the variability of genes among the different Neanderthal tribes, Lena and I hoped to discern what made the Neanderthal species unique from us and how a hybridization of those traits could have helped trigger the Great Leap Forward. There was so much to gain.”

She pictured Lena’s face.

And now so much to lose.

“Do you know who she’s working with over there?” Monk asked.

She gave a shake of her head. “There was a whole team. I have their names on my computer upstairs, but they’re all experts in various fields, studying other hominins who contributed to our genome.”

Kowalski cleared his throat. “So we have more than just Neanderthal genes in us?”

She nodded. “That’s right. Another hominin species, the Denisovans, were contemporaries of
Homo sapiens
and Neanderthals. They also interbred with us, leaving behind their genes in our gene pool.”

Kowalski grunted. “Sounds like that
pool
was getting pretty damn polluted.”

“On the contrary, those Denisovan genes helped our species survive. For example, the gene EPAS1 activates when oxygen levels are low in the atmosphere to produce more hemoglobin. A variant of this gene is found in the Tibetan people and allows them to survive at extreme altitudes, where oxygen is extremely low, like high in the Himalayas. Data shows this variant came from the Denisovans.”

“So is that everybody?” Kowalski asked, scoffing a bit. “Or were there other cavemen who joined this prehistoric orgy?”

Maria glanced to Amy. She knew this question was of particular interest to her friend.

Amy spoke up. “Genetic analysis of bone fossils from both Neanderthals and Denisovans suggest there was a
third
species who also interbred with us, a hominin who so far remains unknown and, as of yet, undiscovered and unclassified.”

“Proving yet again,” Maria added, “that if it weren’t for those matings, we wouldn’t be who we are today. All of this supports our theory of hybrid vigor and that the interbreeding of man and hominin species gave us the genetic variability to allow us to spread across Europe and eventually around the world. These borrowed genes were what allowed our species to survive to the modern day.”

“And that’s what you’re studying with Baako,” Monk asked. “Analyzing those unique traits that might have contributed to the Great Leap Forward.”

“Exactly. And while Baako is still young, we’ve already noted some remarkable progress in his cognitive abilities. He’s learning at a rate threefold faster than any ape studied in the past. And the anatomy of his brain is also significantly different, showing an increase in surface folding of the cortex and a larger volume of gray matter making up his cerebrum, all of which we’ve documented through a series of MRIs.”

“I wouldn’t mind seeing those,” Monk admitted. “It sounds fascinating.”

“They’re filed on my office computer. I can show you where—”

A whimpering cut her off. The noise was quiet, easily dismissed, but with a mother’s keen sense of a child in distress, she stopped and turned toward the neighboring bedroom. Baako hunched in the shadows of the threshold and circled his chest with his fist.

[
I’m sorry
. . . ]

Amy touched her arm. “I can take the others over to your office and help them review the pertinent reports. In the meantime, it looks like someone is trying to make amends.”

Maria’s heart ached at seeing Baako so wounded and distressed.

“And I need to report in with D.C., too,” Monk added, stepping away. “Hopefully I’ll also have an update from Croatia for you shortly.”

“Thank you.”

Monk pointed to his partner. “I’ll leave this big guy with you. Something tells me he’s part of the problem here and may be part of the solution.”

“What did I do?” Kowalski asked.

Monk ignored him. “Once we’re done in your office, I’ll phone Kowalski and let you know.”

Maria nodded. She suspected all of this was an excuse for Amy and Monk to compare notes with a measure of privacy. She glanced at Kowalski as the other two left. Apparently this one’s contribution regarding scientific matters was not wanted. They were leaving him to babysit her instead.

She wasn’t sure who should be the more offended.

Still, she was too tired to protest, and she wanted to soothe Baako anyway. But before she headed over to him, she pulled out her cell phone and hit redial. She called up the last number—Lena’s number—and waited for the connection to be made. She expected the usual discordant beep, followed by an automated voice telling her the call failed.

Instead, a shiver of static screeched, then died away into a voice.

“—ria!” The answer was both frantic and shocked. “Can you hear—?”

Those words cut off as the connection dropped again. A
CALL
FAILED
message flared on the screen.

Still, Maria yelled into the phone. “Lena!”

7

April 29, 6:04
P
.
M
. CEST

Karlovac County, Croatia

No, no, no . . .

Lena clutched her phone and tried to reconnect the call. She breathed hard as attempt after attempt failed. Gerard and Roland stared at her. Roland had tried his phone, but he had no better luck.

“It was her,” Lena swore. “My sister.”

The trio stood vigil on a shelf of rock overlooking a subterranean lake that filled a massive cavern before them. It stretched at least a hundred yards across and twice as long. To the far right, a large river roared in from a tunnel, flowing heavily into the lake, slowly flooding the place. The reason it hadn’t already completely flooded lay to the left. There, the black surface of the lake churned with a large whirlpool, marking the cavern’s drainage point. She pictured that water flowing into the deeper levels of this system, washing everything into the roots of these mountains.

And we may be next.


That must be the River Dobra,” Roland said, studying the thunderous flow of water. “The river runs into the village of Ogulin, then vanishes underground at Đula’s Abyss.”

“Father Novak must be right,” Gerard said. “We must be near that gorge if your phone got signal, even for a moment.”

Lena lowered her cell, giving up. “We’re so close.”

She stared toward the fierce deluge.

Yet so far
.

“If only we could swim against that current . . .” Roland said.

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