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Authors: Ken Follett

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BOOK: Whiteout
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The others began to notice her, and slowly the room fell silent. At last, Stanley turned around. “Ah! Toni!” he said, jumping up from his seat, and Miranda was struck by how pleased he looked. “Kind of you to drop in. Kids, this is my colleague, Antonia Gallo.”

The woman smiled as if she thought there was nothing more delightful
than a big quarrelsome family. She had a wide, generous smile and full lips. This was the ex-cop who had caught Kit stealing from the company, Miranda realized. Despite that, Stanley seemed to like her.

Stanley introduced them, and Miranda noticed the pride in his tone. “Toni, meet my daughter Olga, her husband Hugo, and their children, Caroline with the pet rats, and Craig the tall one. My other daughter Miranda, her boy Tom, her fiancé Ned, and Ned's daughter, Sophie.” Toni looked at each member of the family, nodding pleasantly, seeming keenly interested. It was hard to take in eight new names at a time, but Miranda had a feeling Toni would remember them all. “That's Luke peeling carrots and Lori at the stove. Nellie, the lady does not want a chew of your rawhide bone, touched though she is by your generosity.”

Toni said, “I'm very glad to meet you all.” She sounded as if she meant it, but at the same time she seemed to be under strain.

Miranda said, “You must be having a difficult day. I'm so sorry about the technician who died.”

Stanley said, “It was Toni who found him.”

“Oh, God!”

Toni nodded. “We're pretty sure he didn't infect anyone else, thank heaven. Now we're just hoping the media won't crucify us.”

Stanley looked at his watch. “Excuse us,” he said to his family. “We're going to watch the news in my study.” He held the door for Toni and they went out.

The children started to chatter again, and Hugo said something to Ned about the Scottish rugby team. Miranda turned to Olga. Their quarrel was forgotten. “Attractive woman,” she said musingly.

“Yes,” Olga said. “About, what, my age?”

“Thirty-seven, thirty-eight, yes. And Daddy's lost weight.”

“I noticed that.”

“A shared crisis brings people together.”

“Doesn't it just?”

“So what do you think?”

“I think what you think.”

Miranda drained her glass of wine. “I thought so.”

1 P.M.

TONI was overwhelmed by the scene in the kitchen: adults and children, servants and pets, drinking wine and preparing food and quarreling and laughing at jokes. It had been like walking into a really good party where she knew nobody. She wanted to join in, but she felt excluded. This was Stanley's life, she thought. He and his wife had created this group, this home, this warmth. She admired him for it, and envied his children. They probably had no idea how privileged they were. She had stood there for several minutes, bemused but fascinated. No wonder he was so attached to his family.

It thrilled and dismayed her. She could, if she allowed herself, entertain a fantasy about being part of it, sitting beside Stanley as his wife, loving him and his children, basking in the comfort of their togetherness. But she repressed that dream. It was impossible, and she should not torture herself. The very strength of the family bonds kept her out.

When at last they noticed her, she got a hard look from both daughters, Olga and Miranda. It was a careful scrutiny: detailed, unapologetic, hostile. She had got a similar look from Lori, the cook, though more discreet.

She understood the daughters' reaction. For thirty years Marta had ruled that kitchen. They would have felt disloyal to her had they
not
been hostile. Any woman Stanley liked could turn into a threat. She could disrupt the family. She might change their father's attitudes, turn his
affections in new directions. She might bear him children, half-brothers and half-sisters who would care nothing about the history of the original family, would not be bound to them with the unbreakable chains of a shared childhood. She would take some of their inheritance, perhaps all of it. Was Stanley sensing these undercurrents? As she followed him into his study, she felt again the maddening frustration of not knowing what was in his mind.

It was a masculine room, with a Victorian pedestal desk, a bookcase full of weighty microbiology texts, and a worn leather couch in front of a log fire. The dog followed them in and stretched out by the fire like a curly black rug. On the mantelpiece was a framed photograph of a dark-haired teenage girl in tennis whites—the same girl as the bride in the picture on his office wall. Her brief shorts showed long, athletic legs. The heavy eye makeup and the hair band told Toni that the picture had been taken in the sixties. “Was Marta a scientist, too?” Toni asked.

“No. Her degree was in English. When I met her, she was teaching A-level Italian at a high school in Cambridge.”

Toni was surprised. She had imagined that Marta must have shared Stanley's passion for his work. So, she thought, you don't need a doctorate in biology to be married to him. “She was pretty.”

“Devastating,” Stanley replied. “Beautiful, tall, sexy, foreign, a demon on the court, a heartbreaker off it. I was struck by lightning. Five minutes after I met her, I was in love.”

“And she with you?”

“That took longer. She was surrounded by admirers. Men fell like flies. I could never understand why she picked me in the end. She used to say she couldn't resist an egghead.”

No mystery there, Toni thought. Marta had liked what Toni liked: Stanley's strength. You knew right away that here was a man who would do what he said and be what he seemed to be, a man you could rely on. He had other attractions, too: he was warm and clever and even well dressed.

She wanted to say
But how do you feel now? Are you still married to her memory?
But Stanley was her boss. She had no right to ask him about his
deepest feelings. And there was Marta, on the mantelpiece, wielding her tennis racket like a cudgel.

Sitting on the couch beside Stanley, she tried to put her emotions aside and concentrate on the crisis at hand. “Did you call the U.S. embassy?” she asked him.

“Yes. I got Mahoney calmed down, for the moment, but he'll be watching the news like us.”

A lot hung on the next few minutes, Toni thought. The company could be destroyed or saved, Stanley could be bankrupted, she could lose her job, and the world could lose the services of a great scientist. Don't panic, she told herself; be practical. She took a notebook from her shoulder bag. Cynthia Creighton was videotaping the news, back at the office, so Toni would be able to watch it again later, but she would now jot down any immediate thoughts.

The Scottish news came on before the UK bulletin.

The death of Michael Ross was still the top story, but the report was introduced by a newsreader, not Carl Osborne. That was a good sign, Toni thought hopefully. There was no more of Carl's laughably inaccurate science. The virus was correctly named as Madoba-2. The anchor was careful to point out that Michael's death would be investigated by the sheriff at an inquest.

“So far, so good,” Stanley murmured.

Toni said, “It looks to me as if a senior news executive watched Carl Osborne's sloppy report over breakfast and came in to the office determined to sharpen up the coverage.”

The picture switched to the gates of the Kremlin. “Animal-rights campaigners took advantage of the tragedy to stage a protest outside Oxenford Medical,” the anchor said. Toni was pleasantly surprised. That sentence was more favorable than she would have hoped. It implied the demonstrators were cynical media manipulators.

After a brief shot of the demo, the report cut to the Great Hall. Toni heard her own voice, sounding more Scots than she expected, outlining the security system at the laboratory. This was not very effective, she
realized: just a voice droning on about alarms and guards. It might have been better to let the cameras film the air-lock entrance to BSL4, with its fingerprint recognition system and submarine doors. Pictures were always better than words.

Then there was a shot of Carl Osborne asking, “Exactly what danger did this rabbit pose to the general public?”

Toni leaned forward on the couch. This was the crunch.

They played the interchange between Carl and Stanley, with Carl posing disaster scenarios and Stanley saying how unlikely they were. This was bad, Toni knew. The audience would remember the idea of wildlife becoming infected, even though Stanley had said firmly that it was not possible.

On the screen, Carl said, “But Michael could have given the virus to other people.”

Stanley replied gravely, “By sneezing, yes.”

Unfortunately, they cut the exchange at that point.

Stanley muttered, “Bloody hell.”

“It's not over yet,” Toni said. It could get better—or worse.

Toni hoped they would show her hasty intervention, when she had tried to counter the impression of complacency by saying that Oxenford Medical was not trying to downplay the risk. But, instead, there was a shot of Susan Mackintosh on the phone, with a voice-over explaining how the company was calling every employee to check whether they had had contact with Michael Ross. That was all right, Toni thought with relief. The danger was bluntly stated, but the company was shown taking positive action.

The final press conference shot was a close-up of Stanley, looking responsible, saying, “In time, we will defeat influenza, and AIDS, and even cancer—and it will be done by scientists like us, working in laboratories such as this.”

“That's good,” Toni said.

“Will it outweigh the dialogue with Osborne, about infecting wildlife?”

“I think so. You look so reassuring.”

Then there was a shot of the canteen staff giving out steaming hot drinks to the demonstrators in the snow. “Great—they used it!” said Toni.

“I didn't see this,” Stanley said. “Whose idea was it?”

“Mine.”

Carl Osborne thrust a microphone into the face of a woman employee and said, “These people are demonstrating against your company. Why are you giving them coffee?”

“Because it's cold out here,” the woman replied.

Toni and Stanley laughed, delighted with the woman's wit and the positive way it reflected on the company.

The anchor reappeared and said, “The First Minister of Scotland issued a statement this morning, saying, ‘I have today spoken to representatives of Oxenford Medical, the Inverburn police, and the Inverburn regional health authority, and I am satisfied that everything possible is being done to ensure that there is no further danger to the public.' And now other news.”

Toni said, “My God, I think we saved the day.”

“Giving out hot drinks was a great idea—when did you think of that?”

“At the last minute. Let's see what the UK news says.”

In the main bulletin, the story of Michael Ross came second, after an earthquake in Russia. The report used some of the same footage, but without Carl Osborne, who was a personality only in Scotland. There was a clip of Stanley saying, “The virus is not very infectious across species. In order to infect Michael, we think the rabbit must have bitten him.” There was a low-key statement from the British Environment Minister in London. The report continued the same unhysterical tone of the Scottish news. Toni was hugely relieved.

Stanley said, “It's good to know that not all journalists are like Carl Osborne.”

“He asked me to have dinner with him.” Toni wondered why she was telling him this.

Stanley looked surprised.
“Ha la faccia peggio del culo!”
he said. “Hell of a nerve.”

She laughed. What he had actually said was “His face is worse than his arse,” presumably one of Marta's expressions. “He's an attractive man,” she said.

“You don't really think so, do you?”

“He's handsome, anyway.” She realized she was trying to make him jealous. Don't play games, she told herself.

He said, “What did you say to him?”

“I turned him down, of course.”

“I should think so, too.” Stanley looked embarrassed and added, “Not that it's any of my business, but he's not worthy of you, not by a light-year.” He returned his attention to the television and switched to an all-news channel.

They watched footage of Russian earthquake victims and rescue teams for a couple of minutes. Toni felt foolish for having told Stanley about Osborne, but pleased by his reaction.

The Michael Ross story followed, and once again the tone was coolly factual. Stanley turned off the set. “Well, we escaped crucifixion by TV.”

“No newspapers tomorrow, as it's Christmas Day,” Toni observed. “By Thursday the story will be old. I think we're in the clear—barring unexpected developments.”

“Yes. If we lost another rabbit, we'd be right back in trouble.”

“There will be no more security incidents at the lab,” Toni said firmly. “I'll make sure of that.”

Stanley nodded. “I have to say, you've handled this whole thing extraordinarily well. I'm very grateful to you.”

Toni glowed. “We told the truth, and they believed us,” she said.

They smiled at each other. It was a moment of happy intimacy. Then the phone rang.

Stanley reached across his desk and picked it up. “Oxenford,” he said. “Yes, patch him through here, please, I'm keen to speak to him.” He looked up at Toni and mouthed, “Mahoney.”

Toni stood up nervously. She and Stanley were convinced they had controlled the publicity well—but would the U.S. government agree? She watched Stanley's face.

He spoke into the phone. “Hello again, Larry, did you watch the news? . . . I'm glad you think so . . . We've avoided the kind of hysterical reaction that you feared . . . You know my facilities director, Antonia Gallo—she handled the press . . . A great job, I agree . . . Absolutely right, we must keep a very tight grip on security from now on . . . yes. Good of you to call. Bye.”

Stanley hung up and grinned at Toni. “We're in the clear.” Exuberantly, he put his arms around her and hugged her.

She pressed her face into his shoulder. The tweed of his waistcoat was surprisingly soft. She breathed in the warm, faint smell of him, and realized it was a long time since she had been this close to a man. She wrapped her arms around him and hugged him back, feeling her breasts press against his chest.

She would have stayed like that forever, but after a few seconds he gently disengaged, looking bashful. As if to restore propriety, he shook her hand. “All credit to you,” he said.

The brief moment of physical contact had aroused her. Oh, God, she thought, I'm wet, how could it happen so quickly?

He said, “Would you like to see the house?”

“I'd love to.” Toni was pleased. A man rarely offered to show guests around the house. It was another kind of intimacy.

The two rooms she had already seen, kitchen and study, were at the back, looking onto a yard surrounded by outbuildings. Stanley led Toni to the front of the house and into a dining room with a view of the sea. This part looked like a new extension to the old farmhouse. In a corner was a cabinet of silver cups. “Marta's tennis trophies,” Stanley said proudly. “She had a backhand like a rocket launcher.”

“How far did she get with her tennis?”

BOOK: Whiteout
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