Authors: Dan Smith
âHe moved.'
âIsabel?' The word escaped his lips in a single breath.
âAsh. You're awake.'
He opened his eyes. He was in a room exactly like the one he had woken in yesterday morning. Seeing the white ceiling brought back everything that had happened. The lockdown, the jungle, the clifftop mansion, the terrible explosion . . .
âMum?' He tried to raise his head but it felt too heavy for his neck. Everything ached.
âI'm here,' Mum said. âI'm right here. We gave you some painkillers and something to sedate you for a while, so you might feel groggy.'
âHow long?' Ash let his head fall back onto the pillow and turned to see her sitting by the bed. Isabel was standing just behind her.
âA few hours.' Mum reached across to press a button and there was a mechanical whirring as the top half of the bed started to lift, pushing Ash into a semi-upright position.
He looked at Mum, seeing that her eyes were still bloodshot and her shoulders still hunched. She was tired and weak, but she was right there in front of him and he knew that time must have run out by now. Was he too late? He couldn't smell that sickening sweetness of overripe fruit on the turn, but was she dying? Had Shut-Down begun?
âYou're alive,' he said.
âThanks to you.' Mum glanced away, then forced a smile. âCain said you were very brave. They got here just in time. We're going to be all right. All of us.'
âYou saved everyone,' Isabel said. â
Everyone.
Your mama. My papa. You were amazing.'
The relief was intense, but something cut through it. One name. âCain.' Just saying it made him shiver. âWhere is . . .?'
âRight here.' Cain stepped into view and stood next to Mum, back straight, arms by her sides. She had a pistol holstered on her hip.
Ash pushed back in the bed. His instinct was to get away
from her, and he felt hatred rise in his throat.
âIt's all right.' Mum said. âShe's not here to hurt us.'
Ash stared at Cain.
âWe tried to tell you.' Isabel came forward. âWe were waving from the cliff. Cain was trying to help us. She works for the British government, andâ'
âNo. That's what Thorn said about himself, and we should never have believed him.'
âBut Cain had a satellite phone. She'd already called for help. She pulled you out of the water,' Isabel said. âShe brought help and came straight back to the BioSphere.'
âOnly so they can have
Kronos
,' Ash said.
âNo.' Mum shifted in her seat. âYou destroyed it. Cain told me you blew it up.'
âAnd you didn't make any more?'
Mum shook her head.
âBut she tried to kill you,' Ash said. âShe locked you in the lab withâ'
âPierce did that,' Mum told him.
âShe's lying.' Ash stared at Cain. âYou knew Mum would die. And I saw you shoot down that helicopter. You were going to let Pierce kill me.'
Cain cleared her throat. âI had to do some regrettable things â as I have
often
had to do in my profession â but my mission here was to identify a highly dangerous organization known as The Broker. Our intelligence was that Pierce was going to sell
Kronos
to The Broker. He needed a team to help him get it, so my organization put me and my men undercover and placed me close to him. He hired us and I
was to follow
Kronos
at all costs. Once Pierce locked that lab and took the virus, I had no choice other than to stay with him.'
Ash read her for evidence that she was lying. A twitch or a blink. A missed heartbeat. Anything.
âIt's true.' Isabel came closer and sat on the bed. âCain saved your mama and my papa.'
âNo,' Cain said. âAsh did that when he stopped Thorn getting his hands on that research. Until Pierce let it slip at the camp, I had no idea Thorn was working for The Broker. I can only guess that they let Pierce hire us, instead of using their own people, to avoid any link to The Broker â and to let Pierce feel like he was in charge. Pierce
liked
to be in charge, and if Thorn had chosen a team of his own, Pierce would never have trusted them. I suspect Thorn planned to pay us off as soon as we got to the mainland, let us leave, then kill Pierce and take
Kronos
to his boss. Getting trapped in the BioSphere complicated his plans.'
âAnd we helped him get out,' Isabel explained. âThat's why he didn't hurt us. He was using us to escape.'
âLooks like he had a helicopter waiting,' Cain said, âjust like ours was. Thorn must have been one of the few people who are close to The Broker leadership. If I had known sooner, I might have been able to get him to talk . . .' She shook her head. âWell, the link's gone now. But don't be mistaken; that's the
only
reason I brought help. Not to save you. The Broker was my priority. With Thorn and Pierce dead, though, I had no reason to continue my mission.'
Ash watched his mum and wondered how she felt about
all this. None of it would have happened if she hadn't created
Kronos
. He wondered if she knew that Dad would still be alive if not for her work.
âYour life is going to be very different from now on,' Cain said. âIn my experience, The Broker gets what it wants, one way or another. They know who you are, so you'll have to disappear. Very few places will be safe for you. We need to leave immediately; we've already stayed longer than we should.' She watched him for a moment. âAnd you're in debt. To me.'
Ash didn't understand.
âIf it hadn't been for you, Pierce would be leading me to The Broker right now. You owe me.' Cain's expression was serious. âAnd I think you might become very useful.'
âNo,' Mum said. âHe doesn't owe you anything. You can't make himâ'
âI'm afraid you don't have a choice, Dr McCarthy. There is nowhere for you to go â you belong to us now. Your son is special and we intend to find out just how deep that goes.' Cain lifted a mirror from the bedside table and held it up for Ash to look into. âWhen I pulled you from the water, you were burnt and half your face was hanging off. Bringing you here in the helicopter, I watched you heal. Never seen anything like it.'
Ash looked at his green-eyed reflection and traced a finger along the cut running across his eyebrow and down his cheek. It was red and raw, but in a few more days the only trace of it would be a nick in his left eyebrow where the hair would never grow.
âWe're going to find out exactly what Type Twenty-four did to you,' Cain said. âNow, get up. It's time to leave. The pilot is already preparing the helicopter.' She turned on her heels and left the room.
Isabel bustled out after her, and the room fell into silence.
Ash put down the mirror and looked at Mum. Everything over the past twenty-four hours had led to this moment. Everything he had been through had been to protect her, and it didn't matter what she had done. He didn't care that she had made
Kronos
. All that mattered was that he had kept his promise to save her. He hadn't lost her the way he had lost Dad.
âYou're so brave.' Tears welled in his mum's eyes as she reached out to take his hand. âI'm so sorry about everything; that I let Pierce . . . do that to you. I should never have brought you to the island . . . I shouldn't have . . .' Tears were rolling down her cheeks now. âI should never have left you alone with Pierce. I didn't know what kind of man he was, that he could do such aâ'
âIt's all right.' Ash took his hand from Mum's and picked up the identity tag that lay nestled in the coils of its leather cord. He put it over his head. âPierce changed me. This
island
changed me. It made me better.' He sat forward and put his arms around Mum. âAnd I came back, didn't I?'
âYes you did.' Mum hugged him tight.
âAnd I saved you.'
âDad would be so proud.'
âI saved you,' Ash said again. âJust like I promised.'
1 hr and 23 mins later
S
OMEWHERE OFF THE WEST COAST OF
C
OSTA
R
ICA
T
he Blackhawk helicopter skimmed thirty metres above the waves as it flew out across the Pacific Ocean towards
Isla Negra
. Modifications to its design meant that it was one of a kind. The engines ran quieter than any known helicopter, and it was equipped with stealth technology and terrain-following radar to enable low-level flying. It was undetectable â a ghost that was able to deliver swift and violent destruction from its Hydra rocket pods, Hellfire missiles and dual mini-guns.
Inside the cockpit, the co-pilot watched the screen in the centre of the instrument array, then looked up at the white-crested sea. âContinue on this heading.' He spoke into his headset without looking at the pilot. âWe'll reach in one minute.'
âCopy that.' The pilot took the helicopter lower and glanced at the screen. It showed an image of the area they were flying over, with the north tip of
Isla Negra
just visible. A kilometre from the shore, in the expanse of the Pacific Ocean, a single green dot pulsed silently. At the bottom of the screen was displayed the heartbeat, blood pressure, respiratory rate, body temperature and blood sugar levels of the owner of the green dot.
âComing up on it now.' The co-pilot spoke once more. âTwenty seconds.' He watched the screen. âAnd . . . mark.'
The pilot slowed the helicopter and settled it into a quiet hover, descending close to the surface of the water. When he had reached the lowest safe height, he spoke into his headset. âReady for pick-up?'
âOn your order,' came the reply from the rear cabin of the helicopter.
âExecute.'
In the rear cabin, one soldier drew back the door while another stepped forward and out. Harnessed and attached to a winch, he dropped quickly to the surface of the water where a slender man floated, clinging to a piece of wreckage from a boat named
Olympian
. His clothing was torn and singed, his hair was completely burnt away, and one side of his face was scorched and bleeding.
The soldier clipped the slender man to his own harness and spoke into his headset. âBring us up.'
Once aboard the Blackhawk, a medic was standing by with a syringe in one hand. He had been monitoring the slender man's vital signs and already knew what emergency treatment would keep him alive.
Exactly thirty seconds after receiving an injection, Lathan Thorn opened his left eye and took a deep breath. His whole body was wracked with pain. The leg was bad, but his face was worse. When he had been blown out of the helicopter by the HEX13 explosion, the blast had almost melted the right side of his face, sealing his right eye shut.
He looked up at the medic, then at the soldiers sitting on either side of the rear cabin. Four men to his left, four to his right, each of them armed with an FN SCAR Mk 17 assault rifle.
âOrders?' A face came into view, leaning over.
Lathan Thorn watched the team leader for a moment, but when he tried to speak, only the left side of his mouth would open. He took a moment to compose himself, then tried again. âBioSphere,' he said. âCentre of the island. All survivors . . . to be taken alive.'
âCopy that.' The team leader relayed the information to the pilot, and the helicopter began heading south.
Flying at over two hundred knots, it only took the Blackhawk a matter of minutes to cover the distance that Ash and Isabel had covered in hours. When the BioSphere was in sight, the pilot slowed and descended into the clearing, close to the wreck of another, less impressive helicopter.
Before it had touched the ground, the doors were open and the soldiers were jumping down, moving into formation as they approached and entered the building. Two stayed on board, stationed at the mini-guns.
Lathan Thorn remained on board too, unable to move, but at least the pain was beginning to subside.
âThe painkillers will work for a while,' the medic told him. âBut we need to get you back ASAP. The longer we wait, the less we can do.'
âKeep waiting.'
âYes, sir.'
Eleven minutes after entering the BioSphere, the team of elite soldiers returned, weapons held at ease.
âIt's empty, sir.' The team leader reported his findings. âFour security guards, who've been dead at least a day. A scientist.'
âNo women?'
âNo one else.'
âChildren?'
âNo one, sir. Not a soul. The place is a ghost ship. There's nothing here.'
Lathan Thorn closed his good eye, and for the first time in years he felt rage. Pulse-racing, thought-scrambling rage. In a lifetime of service to The Broker, he had never failed.
Never.
And he would not begin now.
This was not over. He would survive his injuries, he would heal, and then he would find Ash McCarthy. There was nowhere on earth the boy would be able hide from him.