Part 12 (2/2)

Quantico Greg Bear 65800K 2022-07-22

William had seen one agent, unable to get behind a s.h.i.+eld fast enough, fly backward with feet dangling like a doll's. Smoke and dust had immediately made viewing almost impossible. And then the entire screen had blanked.

A chair creaked. Fouad put his hand on William's shoulder. Then, shouts and everyone standing, talking. William jumped up from the soft cus.h.i.+ons and slammed into the end of a couch. As someone reached out to steady him, he threw up his hands, glared, then ran up the steps for the phone bank. He didn't have change. Fouad was right behind him, and somehow, Fouad had his phone card out and quickly dialed in his access code.

To William this was all transparent. He hardly saw any of it. He had bitten his tongue again. He tasted the blood in his mouth and knew it was going to hurt. But a certain bitter irony lapped up like a salty sea around his broken thoughts and fear. Here he was, in one of the nerve centers of the law enforcement world, and he was calling his mother to find out what had happened, to see if she knew anything.

Fouad was not judging, he was just there, and then so was Jane Rowland. William, who towered over them both, saw Pete Farrow striding down the short hall toward them.

'Who're you calling, Griffin?' Farrow asked.

He had not finished dialing the number. He could not remember the last four digits. 'My mother,' he said. She had moved into an apartment recently, selling the big old house. The house where he had grown up.

'I think we should take care of that. We don't know what happened out there. Not yet.'

William stared at the receiver in shock. 'Okay,' he said. Then, plaintively, 'Did anybody see? Did Griff get out?'

'I don't know,' Farrow said. He took the receiver out of William's hand, gently prying loose his fingers, and hung it up. Then he gripped William's elbow. 'Let's go.'

Fouad and Jane Rowland followed. Rowland's face was pale as a sheet. Behind them, members of their cla.s.s stood in a cl.u.s.ter, staring.

Then they were walking back down the hallway past all the pretty prints. Past the chapel. The chapel was empty. For some reason that struck him. They climbed a flight of stairs. William wasn't sure where they were going. He could hardly see. He stumbled on the steps. He was crying. He felt ashamed for a moment then looked to one side and saw that Farrow had tears on his cheeks.

They all converged on Farrow's office. Rowland pulled up a chair. William sat. Someone handed him a cup of water. He sipped. Farrow gave him a handkerchief. William looked down and saw a little blood on his s.h.i.+rt, from his tongue. He wiped his lips and blood came away.

'Take a deep breath,' Farrow said. William took it as an order and sucked in a scant mouthful of air.

'I need to know,' he said and dabbed at his lips again.

'We'll all know soon,' Farrow said.

'I want to fly out there. Can you get me on a plane?'

'We'll see,' Farrow said.

'I'm sorry,' William said. 'I'm a mess.'

Farrow bent over him. 'You have to maintain, Agent Griffin,' he whispered in William's ear. 'This h.e.l.l is just beginning.'

An agent whom William did not know stepped into the office doorway and spoke in a low voice to Farrow. William caught part of the conversation. At least one dead, several injured. That was all they knew. The barn, what was left of it, was burning. He tried to stand but Jane Rowland was behind him, hands on his shoulders, and for some reason she was holding him down. He looked up at her, twisting his neck painfully. She stared straight ahead and dug in her fingers.

Somehow that calmed him. He stopped struggling.

Farrow knelt in front of him. 'They haven't found your father. We've lost people outside the barn. One at least. A lot more are injured. It's an inferno. They're bringing in fire trucks. You saw what happened, William.'

Graduation would have been the day after tomorrow. They would all drink beer in the boardroom. They could hang out with the instructors and the National Academy people, listen to their stories, smiling and nodding and being humble like the rookies they were. Rowland, Fouad, nearly all of the others, would get their credentials. They would be agents. Agents behaved in a certain way, the FBI way, different even from cops. Learning the FBI way-by osmosis, observation, cruel comment, or just plain being emotionally pounded on-was part of what Quantico was all about.

William stilled an urge to s.h.i.+ver. With Fouad in front of him and Jane Rowland holding on to his shoulders, he kept himself stiff as a ham.

Farrow was right.

This h.e.l.l was just beginning.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN.

Temecula, California.

Tommy's mother and father had been in their late fifties. Ten years before, using money they had earned in the stock market boom, they had paid a premium for the sprawling Temecula property. They had then invested two thirds of their life savings to turn the old hillside estate into a boutique winery.

Their plan had come a cropper in the wine glut of the last years of the twentieth century, and then had ended with an insect invasion and Pierce's disease. Never very savvy about either business or the needs of their strange child, they had fallen to arguing, and then to planning for divorce.

Tommy was sensitive to noise.

The world had become too noisy.

In 2000, his parents had died from food poisoning. Sixteen-year-old Tommy had been spared. Everyone around Tommy in those awful days had considered him incapable of taking care of himself. Not quite an imbecile, but strange and inept both socially and financially, so the will had described him: a naive incompetent.

He had spent most of his time working in a concrete room off the underground vaults where the estate's wine was stored in rows of oak barrels. 'All he ever does is putter with chemistry sets and computers,' the probate court had been told by one of his uncles, a rich fellow who had no interest in the property, the inheritance-or in Tommy.

Tommy had inherited everything, but the court had appointed a caretaker, his father's older sister, Aunt Tricia, to watch over his interests until his majority. A cheerful, outdoorsy, garrulous woman in her seventies, Aunt Tricia had refused to take no for an answer, much less sullen silence, and she had promptly packed a few bags into her old Jaguar coupe and taken Tommy traveling.

They had spent three months on the road, between August and October of 2001. They had visited Oklahoma and Illinois, then driven south to Florida and back up the coast to New Jersey and New York. Tommy had been miserable, terrified by so many strange places and strange people-and by what he had heard on the news.

They had then returned to Temecula. Resolute to the end, convinced that Tommy must finally grow up, the formidable Aunt Tricia had been planning a second trip when she died in November of that dreadful, noisy year.

After her death, Tommy had mustered up enough courage to approach several local attorneys before finding one desperate to earn some fees. The attorney had brought Tommy out from under the shadow of court protection. Tommy had then inherited the remainder of his parents' money, enough to pay taxes and keep him comfortable-if he could ever be comfortable.

Tommy had sought to hide away from a world he knew was trying to find him, a world going to war (he believed he was partly to blame for that), a world that made unexpected and unwanted phone calls and sent him suspicious junk email with impossible promises and lures, a world he knew wanted all of his money and cared nothing for him-an inhospitable world he 'thought' was going completely mad.

He had stripped away the winery's signs and erected a barrier across the road to the vineyard.

Within a few years, the winery had been forgotten. The fields, hidden in rolling hills, had dropped off the tourist maps. Tommy had kept to himself, staying well away from the watchful eye of Homeland Security, even after federal edicts had required registry and yearly inspection of wineries, breweries, and other facilities capable of growing large quant.i.ties of microbes.

Aunt Tricia's jaunt across America had taught Tommy that he had wellsprings of unknown strength. Still, he preferred to leave the estate only at night, driving the El Camino or the red Dodge pickup. Rather than buy more equipment and attract unwanted attention, Tommy had burgled local high schools, junior colleges, even a university, to get what he needed, based on what he read in his large collection of textbooks and stacks of science magazines.

Tommy had proven himself much more than an idiot savant-he had become a wizard of improvisation and stealth. But for Tommy, stealth was not a goal in itself. His true delight lay, as always, in reading about nanotech and biotech, playing around in his lab, learning new techniques-and having people leave him be.

Until he needed to reach out and touch them.

As far as Sam could judge, Tommy had only done that two or three times-the first time with his parents, the second, in 2001, with the mailing of fifteen small envelopes.

The death of Tommy's aunt was an unknown. Tommy did not discuss it.

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