Dogs (25 page)

Read Dogs Online

Authors: Nancy Kress

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Medical, #General, #Science Fiction, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers, #Fiction

BOOK: Dogs
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Jess said, “When did Tyler get all these troops?”

“This morning, after the explosion. Scott Lurie's hell-bent on nobody's saying FEMA isn't doing a total job on
his
watch. He's over-compensating, if you ask me, for all of the agency's past screw-ups. Trying so hard to keep the epidemic contained in Tyler that he's bound to create a backlash. When he heard about the West Virginia Doberman, he went ballistic.”

“Joe, what do you think will—”

“I don't know,” Dr. Latkin said, pulling his hands over the gray skin on his face as if to force some life into it. “I've seen Ebola in Africa and Marburg in the Philippines and cholera in South America and we got them all under control, but none of them involved eradicating people's pets. People just aren't rational about their pets!”

Jess had been an animal control officer for twenty years. He didn't need a CDC doctor with a lot of advanced degrees to tell him that. And since Joe Latkin didn't seem able to tell him anything else, he got back in his truck and headed for West Virginia and the fruitless search for the home of the escaped Doberman that, Jess increasingly suspected, they were not going to be able to find.

» 49

Tessa checked into a Maryland motel a few miles south of the Pennsylvania state line. That was as close as she could get to Tyler because every other place displayed NO VACANCY signs, full of reporters and gawkers and Tyler citizens exiled from their town for the duration of the quarantine. The motel featured bullet-proof plastic between the desk clerk and his patrons, accepted cash, and didn't question her story that she had no car. Bars shielded the windows. The sink ran a trickle of rust-colored water. The phone allowed only local calls.

She showered, a much overdue necessity, retrieved her car from the supermarket parking lot down the road, and found the local library. She was getting tired of rural libraries.

One of its two Internet terminals was down. Tessa waited while three teenage girls noisily used the other one, emailing somebody named Zach that somebody else named Emily was secretly in love with him. Finally the librarian chased them away. Tessa accessed her email.

My dear Tessa,

You asked about my “cause.” How laughably naïve you are. First, to think that I don't know what you're doing. You think the more you know about me the easier it will be to find me. You are mistaken. Second, you are naïve to think that I have a single “cause,” as if there is only one thing wrong with the world.

You, and all like you, will soon learn otherwise. The decline of the United States has many causes, but all come back to one thing: we have become soft. Don't you read the newspapers, my Tessa? Men no longer stand up, take command, do whatever proves necessary to bring about a righteous society. Soft men—even women—take office and then can't even hold their own positions, let alone bring forward those who truly deserve to hold power. Our politicians cannot rule. Our soldiers cannot fight. Our children cannot compete. Softness has nearly destroyed us. I have seen the world, and I see how we are despised by those that
we
should despise.

But not for much longer. A New Order is coming. The soft elite shall fall, and the true men come out of the shadows and rule. I am owed this. I have earned it.

More later.

Richard

 

“Ma'am, are you almost finished? I got a term paper due tomorrow.”

Tessa looked up at the girl. Thin, tall, shy, with accusing blue eyes. The same blue, she thought numbly and irrelevantly, as the eyes of the Brit shooter in London. Small world.

“Just let me print this, and…just let me print it in private, okay?”

The girl moved to the side of the computer station, but kept staring balefully at Tessa. She hit PRINT, heard the communal printer whirr behind her, and was about to log off when the PC announced, “You've got mail!” The girl sighed.

Madame,

I have received what follows from frère Luc-Claude of our order. Since you have said your French is not good, I will tell you what he tells to me.

Tessa glanced at the message reprinted at bottom of the email; it was long, detailed, and in complex French. She returned to Abbé LeFort's summary.

Richard Ebenfield was indeed with les Frères de l'Espoir céleste in Mogumbutuno two years ago. He was very ill and our order cared for him until he recovered. He told frère Luc-Claude that he has been into the jungle, at a village besieged by wild dogs. There Richard was bitten. When he came to les frères, he had a very strong fever but this passed away after some days and Richard once more left. He seemed then once more healthy. Frère Luc-Claude has not seen him ever since. He adds only that in his fever Richard said many violent things about both the United States and the man named Salah.

I wish you success under God in your endeavors.

Abbé Guillaume LeFort

les Frères de l'Espoir céleste

The girl whined, “It's a term paper on
Faulkner.
And he's hard.

“Just another few minutes,” Tessa said, and somehow the words came out normally. The girl scowled and flounced off.

She printed the email. The girl reappeared with a middle-aged woman. “Ma'am,” the librarian said, “there's a ten-minute limit on use of the Internet connections, and Sarah here says you've exceeded your limit. Is that true?”

“No,” Tessa said. “I've got two minutes left.” She had no idea how long she'd been on.

“Sarah, dear, I think you can wait two more minutes.”

“She's lying! She's been on longer than ten minutes already!”

Tessa forwarded both Ebenfield's and the abbé's email to Maddox with the heading “VERY IMPORTANT” She signed off, grabbed her printouts, and matched the girl's scowl. She wanted to tell the brat, “I hope you flunk your SAT's.” She didn't say it; she'd already drawn enough attention to herself.

Tessa drove back to a public phone. Using one of her phone cards, she called Maddox's cell. He answered instantly.

“John, Tessa again. I just sent you email. See that the medical information gets to that CDC doctor, Laskit or whatever his name was. Tell him to watch the dog-bite victims who didn't die, looking out for high fever. And—”

“Tessa, where are you?”

“—and
find Ebenfield
.” She hung up. Nowhere near time for a trace.

She parked the Toyota on a carefully-chosen residential street, where it was less likely to be noticed overnight than in the supermarket parking lot, and walked through the cold winter night to her ratty motel. The TV was broken. Too exhausted to look for a bar with a television, she fell into bed and slept like a stone, without dreams.

INTERIM

He sat alone in his house, smoking, gazing out the window. The foliage was withered and sere. It would come back in the spring, of course, but spring seemed, at that moment, a long time away.

It was not supposed to come to this.

He had been very careful. Launching the rapid but still meticulous investigation since the woman's visit, since she had planted the suspicion. He had used every resource at his command, gathering information until he was sure, hoping all the while that he was mistaken. Hoping that no one connected to him could be that stupid. And, when he finally knew there had been no mistake, enduring the heartache.

It was not supposed to come to this, and he did not want to do what was required.

But his flesh, his bone, his blood…his son.

Ruzbihan al-Ashan stubbed out the cigarette, picked up the house phone, and gave the order.

WEDNESDAY

» 50

Cami woke with a headache worse than she had ever had in her life.

Ordinarily she didn't get sick. At her high school graduation, she'd won the perfect attendance award for never missing a single day from kindergarten through grade twelve. Nor had she ever called in sick to work, not even once, and she'd been a little shocked at the nurses who called in to take “mental health days.” But now Cami felt really awful.

Getting out of bed only made her head hurt worse. Throwing off the bedclothes—they were so hot!—she stumbled into the bathroom and groped in the medicine cabinet for her thermometer. One hundred one point five.

She barely made it to the toilet to vomit.

It might be some kind of flu. Or an infection from the bite of Mr. Anselm's dog. Or…oh, dear Lord, no…something transmitted by the bite, something unknown. If so—

She vomited again.

Her head feeling as if it would shatter, Cami made it back to the bedroom. Her nightgown was soaked with sweat. She got it off and pulled on a light T-shirt plus sweat pants, all that would fit over the dressings on her leg. Almost immediately sweat soaked the tee. She lay on the bed and fumbled for the phone.

“Billy? It's—”

“Cami! 'Morning, beautiful!”

“I'm sorry to bother you so early—” What time was it? She had no idea. “—but I—”

“What is it? What's wrong, darlin'?”

“I'm…I'm sick. I have to go to the ER and I can't drive. I'm sorry to bother you but—”

“I'll be there in ten minutes. Just stay still and…and do whatever it is you're supposed to. I'll get Jess and we'll be right there.”

She lay on the bed, feeling the sweat bead and roll down her forehead, her breasts, her belly. The door…she had to unlock the front door for Billy and Jess. He was so good to come get her…this was probably just the flu, the flu season wasn't really over yet although it had been a light year for flu oh she was so
hot!
She had to unlock the door for Billy had to get up and unlock the door…Billy and Jess so good to come right away—

But it wasn't Jess who came. Billy alone burst through the door, making so much noise that Cami's headache spiked into unbearable pain and she cried out from her slumped position against the wall. Billy stopped, stared, and then knelt beside her.

“Well, you really are hurtin', nurse Cami,” he said in the softest voice she'd ever heard from him. “But it's gonna be okay, everything's gonna be just fine, darlin'. Now I can't lift you, worse luck with my damn arm, but I'm gonna pull you up slowly and you're gonna lean on me down to the car. Can you do that, beautiful? Here we go.”

He got them both through the door, down the steps, outside. The cold air felt wonderful. But she didn't have on a coat or shoes…when had she put slippers on? Had Billy done it? She couldn't remember. Billy was easing her into the car, Billy was—

“Where's Jess?”

“Not home. I'm driving you.” The car lurched forward as Billy maneuvered it with his left hand on the steering wheel.

“But I have to see Allen! I promised!”

Billy scowled. “Who's Allen?”

“Allen! I promised! At the hospital!”

Billy's face cleared. “Oh, the kid. Right.”

“I promised! I promised!”

Something was wrong; someone was screaming. And then she cried, “Fire!” because all at once flames were dancing along her arms, red and blue and orange and cold…but the weird thing was that they didn't hurt. How could flames not hurt? The car went forward. Belle…was Belle all right? Why were there flames? She had to see Allen, she'd promised!

“Steady, Cami, we're here,” somebody said, and the flames surged once more before someone did something and she slid down into the blessed cool dark.

Billy was scared.

He couldn't remember the last time he'd been scared. Not when this dog plague had started with young A.J. Wright and his dad's pit bull. Not even when that fucking lunatic Victor Balonov had shot Billy. But turning Cami, twitching and raving about Allen, over to the ER nurse, Billy was terrified.

The ER was full of people again, and Billy recognized nearly all of them. They were the same people who had come in with dog bites and had since gone home, been moved upstairs to ICU, or died. Now here they were back again, minus the dead ones, and most of them were screaming or twitching or raving like Cami. There was old Mrs. Carby and the Wingerson kid and Jayne Steadman and one of the little Gladwell twins…

Everybody who got bit was now getting sick.

Helplessly he watched Cami being wheeled away. Now there was probably something in her brain, like Dr. Latkin said was in the dogs' brains. Oh, Christ, were all the infected people going to die? Or—and this was what twisted Billy's stomach into what felt like the mother of all knots—were they going to start acting like the infected dogs, trying to bite people and so spread the disease?

And if people could get the plague—if that could happen, Billy couldn't imagine what on God's green-and-shit-smeared Earth could happen next.

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