“Forget what you said last night about bats as territorial carnivores,” Ramirez told Joyce. “Thisis my doctoral thesis.”
“Pretty amazing, isn’t it?”
“Yeah. And you bagged it.”
“Barely.”
Ramirez glanced at her. “How’re you doing?”
“I’ve had quieter nights,” Joyce said.
Lowery exhaled impatiently.
Ramirez stopped talking. But only for a moment.“Is he a vespertilionid?”
“He is,” Joyce said. “Myotis mystacinus.”
“How much does he weigh?”
“Five hundred and sixty-six pounds, seven and one-half ounces,” Joyce replied. “A lot of that’s muscle, though not as much as you might think. There’s an extremely high percentage of fat in the lower thorax, roughly forty-six percent of its body weight.”
“That makes sense,” Ramirez said. “He’d need to burn a lot of fuel when he flies.”
“But he’d burn that up very fast,” Joyce said, “which would account for his enormous appetite and the need to shift, very quickly, from insects to other life-forms.”
“And there’s a female like it still out there.”
“Right.”
“She’s probably, what? Seventy percent as large?”
“If the normal ratios hold, yes. I couldn’t tell when I saw her. She was too far away. It’s amazing, though, Marc. We were just looking in this one’s chest. The lungs and heart are enlarged seven percent more than the bat’s overall size increase, though all the other organs are proportionately smaller.”
“Providing more oxygen and increased blood flow, less flying weight,” Ramirez suggested.
“That would be my guess.”
Ramirez slowly shook his head. “So what part of them did the radiation kick into overdrive?”
“I haven’t gotten to the microscope yet,” Joyce said, “but the database references a similar mutation among mice. In their case, probably this one as well, the mutation was centered in the muscle. Radiation affected the gene that encodes myostatin-”
“Right,” Ramirez said. “So the growth-regulating protein shut down, growth continued unchecked outside the womb, and in just one generation you end up with Mothra.”
“Exactly.”
Ramirez thought for a moment. “How old is this bat?”
“About eight years.”
“Long past the age when it could have sired pups.”
“Right, and I know exactly where you’re going with that. I’ve been thinking the same thing. Increased musculature usually leads to reduced fertility, just as it does with heavy-duty human weightlifters. So when an animal like thisdoes become pregnant-”
“Its mate does everything it possibly can to ensure the safety of the offspring,” Ramirez said. “It searches for a place where there’s enough water, food, shelter, warmth, and privacy to suit the mother and child. It prepares a nest. Then it goes and gets her.”
“Or given the infestation we saw last night, she or he summons an escort,” Joyce said.
Lowery shook his head. “That kind of call-pattern communication among bats would be unprecedented, and I don’t see how radiation would affect that.”
“Not directly,” Joyce said, “as in increased intelligence. But we have no way of knowing what effect a larger larynx and a lower vocal range would have on a colony.”
“You haven’t done the larynx yet?” Ramirez asked.
Joyce shook her head. “The pest control people wanted the mechanics of the bat itself first. What it’s capable of, what its weaknesses might be in case they have to-”
There were pops in the distance. Joyce stopped cutting.
“What’s the matter?” Lowery asked.
“That sounded like gunfire.”
The others were silent. The sound came again; there were three muffled reports.
“That could be a car,” Lowery said, “or one of those people who bang on plastic containers in the street-”
“I know guns,” Joyce said. “That was a rifle.”
The woman put down the scalpel, took off her mask, and walked to the door. Before she reached it there was a crash that rattled the building. The frosted glass wobbled in the door, and there was a deep creaking sound from the other side of the back wall.
“Maybe it’s construction,” Heidi said. “Aren’t they building a new planetarium over on the north side of the building?”
Joyce opened the door and stuck her head out. The corridor was quiet. She listened. The creaking came again, from down the hall. There were shouts in the distance.
Joyce jumped when Lowery’s phone beeped. Since she was closest to the desk she turned and answered it.
“Professor Low-”
“This is Rebecca Oliver at security!” a woman shouted on the other end. “They’re all over!”
“What? Who is?”
“Thebats! They’re all over the lower level!” she shouted. “And another big one! It’s trying to get-”
The line went dead. Joyce looked over at the others. Her eyes shifted to the big bat.
“Shit,” she said.
“What’s wrong?” Ramirez asked.
“The bats are here,” Joyce said. “Little ones and a big one. And the phone just died.”
Joyce stood staring down at the desk. Bats had a very highly developed sense of smell, which enabled them to identify bats of the same species. This was especially true during courtship and mating. It became even more intense in expectant bats, since it enables females who might have difficulty flying to follow males to rich food sources.
“She’s here,” Joyce droned. “The female bat. She followed the scent of her mate.”
“But she went undergroundmiles from here!” Lowery said as he tore off his mask.
“Right. And she tracked him.”
“Yeah,” Ramirez said, “but that’s not the end of the love story, is it?”
Joyce looked at him. “What do you mean?”
“What if the lady doesn’t know her big ugly’s dead? She’s not going to take that well at all.”
Joyce agreed. She turned to the dead bat. It had taken six men to hoist it onto the table. There was no way they could move it down the hall, put it in the cryogenic freezer, and try to keep it from the female.
A loud series of groans and snaps echoed up through the floor. It sounded like a car wreck that kept on going. The building shuddered again and the lights snapped off.
“Passengers, I think we better get to the lifeboats,” Ramirez said.
The room shook again as though it had been punched hard. Jars fell over and stuffed bats dropped from their perches. There was a muted crash right outside the wall on the other side of the laboratory, behind the sink.
“What’s back there?” Ramirez asked.
“The elevator,” Lowery said.
“The subway stops directly under the museum,” Joyce thought aloud. “The bat goes from there to the elevator shaft to here.” She wished she had the Magnum Gentry had given her back in New Paltz.
There was a sound like a whip on the other side of the wall.
Ramirez grabbed Joyce’s forearm and tugged her toward the door. “I say we give the lovebirds some privacy.”
Heidi and Professor Lowery had already walked past her. They opened the door and stopped.
“God!” Heidi screamed.
Hundreds of bats were coming down the corridor. Lowery reached past her and slammed the door. The bats crashed against the frosted glass, fluttering wildly on the other side.
Lowery went to the desk and snatched up the phone. It was dead. He threw it down. “All right, think! What have we got in here to protect ourselves?”
Joyce’s eyes drifted to the wings of the dead bat.
“Ultrasonic sound can disorient it, intense cold,” Lowery thought aloud. “Come on, Nannie-think!”
She was thinking, but nothing was coming. She’d seen those two large claws in action.
The wall over the sink cracked. Plaster fell in thick chunks.
The door was rattling violently, and Joyce saw a tiny muzzle squeezing under the bottom.
She pulled off her lab coat and ran to jam it against the base of the door. While she did, Marc looked around. He disconnected the receiver from the phone and knelt next to Joyce. He smacked the creature on the head.
“It’s for you!” he snarled.
The bat squealed and stopped moving. Marc used the phone to push it outside as Joyce plugged the remainder of the opening.
She stood. “That’s not going to hold for long.”
“I don’t think it’s gonna matter,” Marc said as a hole appeared in the back wall. “Where’s the goddamn cavalry?”
“They’re probably fighting a few thousand vespers downstairs,” Joyce said.
The laboratory was lit only by the bright light of an emergency lamp over the lab table. Heidi picked up a scalpel and began backing toward the desk. She stumbled into the chair and seemed startled by it. Moving it aside, she crouched under the desk, her back to the wall. The white surgical mask bore the damp outline of her open mouth.
“Wait,” Lowery said. “Maybe this.” He slipped a fire extinguisher from the wall beside the door. “Nancy, get the other one from behind the table and come here. We can spray it in the face, the ears.”
The professor held out the hose and backed against the locker. It was the first time Joyce had ever seen him other than poised and collected.
A shower of plaster blasted into the room, leaving a hole nearly three feet across. The monster’s hourglass-shaped nose filled the opening, then its right eye, and then one of its hooks slid through. It pulled on the top of the opening, breaking away more plaster.
Behind them, beneath the door, Joyce’s lab coat began to move. The bats were shredding it and clawing through.
Heidi screamed. Ramirez tried to comfort her. Professor Lowery was facing the back wall, waiting.
And Joyce was looking around, praying for inspiration.
Thirty-Two
Gentry spent the morning catching up on work. At noon he went to the chief’s office to watch Mayor Taylor hold a televised press conference about the bats. The mayor said that he had some of the best “bat people” in the nation working on the problem, which was true, even though only Doyle and Berkowitz were with him at the press conference. The sixty-six-year-old second-term mayor said that a search was underway for the big bat and that the west side subways would not be reopened until it was found and “dealt with.” He said that the small bats would probably not be “much more than an inconvenience” for most New Yorkers and chided Kathy Leung for suggesting that the bats could go wild here as they had in Westchester County.
Doyle elaborated. “We believe that they were being affected by the presence of the large male bat, which we have destroyed,” Doyle said.
Gentry thought,Nancy Joyce did that, you prick.
“As we saw last night,” Doyle continued, “the approach of the female had no effect on the bats over the Hudson.”
When WABC’s science reporter Bob Wallace asked exactlyhow the bats had been affected by the big male, Doyle replied, “We have someone working on that right now.”
Nancy Joyce, you shit stain.
Mayor Taylor added that because the bat was apparently nesting downtown, Grand Central Station would remain open. He said that trains moving underground to and from Ninety-seventh Street would move through the tunnels slower than usual and that police would be standing watch along the way. He added that police vacation and days off were being canceled-which brought a very loud groan from the station house-so that the city’s forty thousand officers would be available to help the city through this “unusual situation.”
Though he said he would not be calling for a curfew, the mayor urged New Yorkers to remain inside after sundown. He said the number of bats in the city made accidental run-ins “inevitable,” and he also discouraged rooftop “bat watch” parties. Police helicopters had spotted a number of these impromptu gatherings the night before.
Gentry spent the early afternoon catching up on sleep. His “power naps” used to amaze the hell out of Bernie Michaelson. Because Gentry never knew when it would be necessary to work undercover for several days and nights at a stretch, he had trained himself not only to sleep anywhere anytime but also to get into and out of it fast.
After resting, he pulled his radio from the desk drawer, turned it on low so he could hear what was going on with the bats, then went back to reading accident reports. There were dozens of them, some bat-related, including fender benders due to a bat flying in a car window; a newsstand owner clocking a pedestrian while using a broom to shoo away a bat; window boxes dislodged by people trying to dislodge roosting bats. Gentry wondered how many people were going to be supremely unhappy when they discovered that these came under the “act of God” clauses in most insurance policies.
Several times during the day Gentry had to stop himself from calling Nancy. He knew she’d be busy with the big bat, and he hoped she’d let him know when she was finished or when she found something. It had been a long time since Gentry had been preoccupied with anything. The fact that it was a woman was surprising, exciting, and a little disturbing. He had become comfortable with the uncomplicated simplicity of his life.
He checked the central computer from time to time, and as of early evening the last missing persons report Gentry had heard about was the woman who vanished from the elevator at the World Trade Center. Investigators had followed the trail of blood up the elevator shaft but lost it around the fiftieth floor. A call to Marius Page confirmed that OEM was centering the search for the large bat in the downtown area between the financial district and the West Village. Despite the fact that there were more than five hundred police and transit officers taking part in the military-style maneuvers, progress was extremely slow. No one moved an inch without every section of tunnel being inspected.
And then came word that the giant bat and tens of thousands of small bats had ripped their way north along the B and D subway line. Gentry heard about it when a Times Square squad car called into division central, calls that were monitored by the station house. He turned up the volume.