Chapter 2
Fight to the death for Truth, and the Lord God will fight on your side.
—ECCLESIASTICUS
The retarded teenager struggled with his burden of cameras and cases, trying to get out the hangar door to the Mongoose, but a pair of pimply security guards wouldn’t let him through. The boy and the two Children of Eden guards sweated heavily in the still humidity of the unconditioned Costa Bravan afternoon.
Isaac Green saw the struggle from the back of the hangar and yelled, “Get that stuff on board, Paul, we’re late and there’s another load to go.”
Paul surged forward against the arms of the security guards, then one of them got rough with him and Paul started to cry in his peculiar bellow. It always put the hair up on Isaac’s neck when Paul did that. Mirian was sorting the last of their equipment from the pile of incoming bags and said, “You take care of it. I handled him last time.”
Isaac Green left Mirian and the other Innocents to prepare the second load for their hop out to ViraVax. The security guards were getting pushy, which made Paul bellow even louder. Isaac slapped the back of Paul’s head.
“Shut up!”
Paul turned to hug Isaac, but Isaac pushed him away. Paul shuffled to the back of the hangar and joined the other two Innocents, who tried to comfort him. Isaac turned to the dimwit security guards and indicated the Mongoose, idling on the lift pad outside.
“We’ve got to get this stuff aboard, we’re already behind schedule. . . .”
“Your crew stays here,” one of the guards said. He tapped his Sidekick for emphasis. “Orders.”
“But we’re the camera crew,” Isaac said. “The Master invited us here himself to document the Easter Sabbath. You’ve made a mistake.”
Isaac reached for the strap of one of the cameras, and the security guard tapped his wrist lightly with a rifle barrel. It sent a shock all the way up to Isaac’s teeth.
“You’re making the mistake,” the blond kid said, his blue eyes as hard as his weapon. “Hump your stuff back there to your area, and wait.”
“But the Master himself . . .”
“. . . Handed me this manifest,” the guard said, brandishing a pokesheet on a clipboard, “and you’re not on it. Neither is your partner, or your three pets. I don’t know what’s going on, but I do know you’re not authorized on this lift.”
“Let me speak to your commanding officer.”
Both of the security guards smiled, and the Mongoose wound up in the background, screaming for vertical lift. Then it sucked in its landing gear and wallowed towards the Jaguar Mountains to the north.
“Shit!”
Isaac kicked at the canvas duffle at his feet.
“Yeah,” the younger guard laughed. “Now, what was it you wanted? The CO? He’ll see to the Sabbath shutdown out there, then he’ll be back here for shift relief.”
Isaac clenched his teeth and held his temper. Shouting would not get him what he wanted now. He spoke through a tight jaw, watching the heat ripple off the tarmac where the Mongoose had stood.
“And what time will that be?”
“They’ll shut down at eighteen hundred hours,” he said. “That’s six PM, your time. That’s three hours, you might as well get comfortable.” He pointed his weapon towards the back of the hangar.
Two cots sat next to their pile of bags and equipment, and Isaac had a bad feeling about how long they would be waiting in this oven of a hangar. Mirian had finished separating their gear from a supply shipment and was recording some background shots to test the cameras. She narrated as she shot.
“Good Friday afternoon, 27 March 2015, in the Confederation of Costa Brava, Central America. The Master goes on to the mystery facility without us and we’re stored here like these cases of vaccines and bottled water. . . .”
Isaac pulled his headset out of the duffle, plugged it into his Sidekick and keyed in his access to the Godwire. As his hardware snaked its way through the electronic maze between La Libertad, Costa Brava and McAllen, Texas, he noted the blinking time display in the lower, left-hand corner of his vision.
The highlighted numbers blinked 1500:00 low batt, and Isaac mumbled to himself, “Good Friday, and Jesus died at three.” He felt he should honor the moment with a prayer, but worry drove prayer from his mind. Commander Noas had authorized them to accompany the Master for this story, but Isaac didn’t have the proper security access code to speak with Noas personally. He left a brief message on the Godwire, describing their situation, and requested permission to complete their mission.
The two security guards, knowing that the news team was stuck, retreated to their office beside the hangar doors and began stuffing themselves with illicit tamales in anticipation of the coming bread-and-water fast of the Sabbath.
“Hey!” Isaac hollered. “We’ve got some low batteries. Can we plug in here?”
“Not on our grid,” the youngest answered through a full mouth. He nodded to indicate a Lightening beside his office. “Put one of your pets on that ballbuster; you’re welcome to it.”
The Lightening would give all three Innocents a workout, but at least they’d be powered up if they ever had a story to chase.
“You should have argued with them,” Mirian grumbled. It seemed to Isaac that she grumbled a lot, lately. “There’s been a bombing at the U.S. Embassy. Things are happening down here.”
“We weren’t sent here to cover the politics.”
“Well, we aren’t going to cover diddly squat unless we get out of this hotbox.”
“The whole country’s a hotbox,” Isaac said.
Mirian powered down her camera and marched past him to the pair of cots and patch of concrete that was their new home. The three Innocents fussed over their blankets and belongings on the floor, nervous about the change in plan. At twelve, thirteen and fifteen, they humped bags of gear with the best of them, but to get the best out of them required delicate handling, a lot of hugging, patting, kind words and fresh fruit. Isaac swallowed his frustration as he watched the three glum Innocents unpack their few things.
“Put your beds together later,” Isaac said. “There’ll be plenty of time for that. Let’s get all of our batteries topped off, first. Who wants to be the Lightening Bug?”
Maggie, the twelve-year-old, stepped forward.
“I be the bug, Isaac!”
“No, me! Me!” Arthur insisted.
Paul sat on his blanket, arms folded, looking at the jungle hillsides past the open hangar door.
“Everybody will have a turn,” Isaac said. “Let’s let Maggie go first.”
Isaac pulled the Lightening away from the wall, set four of their batteries into the appropriate slots, and diverted overflow power to the hangar’s grid.
If we’re stuck here long, maybe we can deal on the power we produce.
Isaac figured that the security guards took a turn each shift on the Lightening, and they might look favorably on the chance for relief. He set the overflow meter to zero to record their contribution, adjusted the pedals for Maggie’s legs and said, “Go for it, Mag.”
Maggie worked the flywheel up to speed, and Isaac ran through the gears for her until she was comfortable. Then he poked a straw into a chilled bottle of EdenSprings water and fixed it into the clamp for her. She was the youngest, but she had good legs and excellent wind, and she had hardly begun to sweat.
Isaac patted her on the back, checked that the meter was running, and said, “Arthur will take his turn when you’re ready. We’ll have something for you to eat by then.”
Maggie flashed him a smile and concentrated on pedaling at a strong, regular rate. Many of the Down’s syndrome youngsters suffered from heart ailments, and Isaac believed that daily time on the Lightening was their key to longer life. He and Mirian also took shifts when necessary, though Mirian remained unenthusiastic throughout their two-year mission for the Children of Eden.
Isaac turned in time to bump into one of the ViraVax flight crewmembers, who was preparing a cold pallet for shipment. Metallic blankets called “chill-coats,” battery-powered coolers, covered the cargo.
“Hey,” Isaac said, “any chance we can hitch a ride with you guys? We missed our flight out to ViraVax.”
The loadmaster shook his head.
“Not going that way, bro. This here load’s going to Mexico City.”
The loadmaster guided Isaac aside as two forklift drivers squealed tires in their enthusiasm for loading the plane.
“The charge in these blankets don’t last forever,” he explained, “and we’ll be close getting off-loaded under the wire for the Sabbath, so we’ve got to make some time. Besides, this old 737 takes too much runway for the lift pad at ViraVax. There you need the Mongoose, a chopper or a parachute.”
Most of the bottled water was loaded already, along with a dozen pallets covered with chill-coats. All that remained were these last two. The loadmaster tapped his Sidekick display that showed his shipping manifest.
“Isn’t the Lord’s work the greatest job?” he asked, and flashed a genuine smile. “Look what I get to send out into the world: the purest water, medicines, vaccines. I like a job where I get to be the good guy.”
“What did you do before you joined the Church?”
The loadmaster ducked his head, scuffed a boot on the concrete.
“Point man for the Latin Death Boys in Tacoma.”
This was the kind of story that Isaac wanted: “Vicious Gangbanger Redeemed.” These real-life uplifting stories reaffirmed, for Isaac, a flagging faith. But the Godwire stringers got the human interest. Isaac and Mirian got the Master, and Isaac tried his best to accept the honor with grace. Mirian, however, grumbled the whole way that they were nothing more than cogs in a two-bit propaganda machine.
The loadmaster signaled the forklift operator, who tilted the forks back with a jerk and tumbled one of the luggage-sized stainless containers from under the blanket to the concrete. Condensation beaded the outside of the box immediately, and several smaller, thermos-like containers rolled out of the sprung lid.
Isaac saw that each bottle was marked with the characteristic “V/V” and a lot number. He also saw that Mirian was filming with the low-light unit.
“What’s this?” he asked.
The loadmaster checked his manifest.
“Some kind of vaccine. Goes to World Health Organization in Mexico City for distribution. Those other pallets”—he indicated a row of cartons lining one wall—“those are the EdenSprings water shipments, for the Sabbath ritual up north and for the airlines.”
“And those?” Isaac asked. He pointed to a palletload of larger cases covered with a chill-coat.
“ ‘Vaccine components’ is all it says here,” the loadmaster said. “Those go back to the U.S. of A.”
He turned his back on Isaac, then, and directed the loading of the smudge-winged cargo jet. Already Mirian was behind the stack of larger cases and under the chill-coat, out of sight of security and the flight crew.
“What’re you doing in there?” Isaac whispered.
“Snooping,” she said. “Isn’t that what real reporters do?”
Before he could object, Isaac heard the click of a latch, then a gasp.
“Omigod!” Mirian whispered. “Omigod!”
She burrowed farther under the heavy, cold blanket and shifted her feet. Isaac almost allowed himself to think that Mirian had a cute little butt.
She wriggled out from under the chill-coat wide-eyed, her palm-cam still recording, her face whiter than he’d ever seen it.
“What is it?”
Mirian pulled him by the sleeve and walked him to their cots. She plugged a small preview screen into the palmcam and took a deep breath.
“This is weird,” she said. “This is way weird.”
She pressed “play,” and the screen showed the lid of the metal case lift a little bit, displaying what appeared to be tidy packages of raw meat in some kind of solution.
But we’re all vegetarians, he thought.
Then the palm-cam grabbed a close focus, and he saw a dozen neatly packaged hearts, just the size of human hearts, each awash in a very cold, clear liquid. A label on the closest package read: “15 y.o. male.” The lid dropped shut and clicked into place. A stencil on the top read: “MH, 12 ea., 3/27/15.” As the palm-cam pulled back, Isaac glimpsed the markings on the adjacent case: “FL, 4 ea., 3/27/15.” Mirian’s hand opened the latch, and he saw four livers packaged in the same clear solution.
Isaac took a deep breath, let it out slowly, and tried to drown out the voice in his brain that screamed, “Twelve male hearts, four female livers. Sixteen lives in two suitcases.”
“They’re human, aren’t they?” Mirian asked.
“Probably,” Isaac agreed, and tried not to sound shaken. “They’re obviously part of the transplant program. . . .”
“But why call them ‘vaccine components’? And where did they come from?”
“You mean who.”
“Whom,” she corrected, and nodded towards the Innocents. “We’ve taken in thousands of Innocents in hundreds of special homes for almost twenty years. The ‘Down’s-Up’ program. Why don’t any of them come out to work in the community?”
“They’re all given jobs with the Church, like our assistants here.”
“Until when? Until some elder needs a pair of lungs? I told you it wasn’t just a rumor. . . .”
Isaac shushed her as the forklift driver returned for the pallet of organs.
“You don’t know for sure. . . .”
“And how are we going to know, stuck in this tin box on this two-bit airstrip. . . .”
“Our job . . .”
“Our job,” Mirian interrupted, with a finger to Isaac’s chest, “is to parrot what the Church says and keep our eyes on the horizon. We’re not reporters, we’re secretaries, shills for the Children of Eden PR staff. Now, I came here to report, and I’m not going to stay locked up while the real news is happening out there. You can stay here if you want, but I’m getting a ride to town.”
That was when they heard the clang and grind of the hangar door coming down, and the snap of the latch as the dark-haired guard secured the lock. He unplugged his Sidekick from the locking unit, winked a brown eye at Mirian and sauntered into the office. The blond guard shoved a rattling kitchen cart towards Isaac and let it go, where it petered out a few meters short. The guard shrugged, his attitude easier and his rifle slung.
“Courtesy of the Master,” he said. “Ice water and bread for the Sabbath. Basin and towels below.”
“Thanks,” Isaac said, trying to keep his voice casual. “We heard the embassy was bombed. Any scuttlebutt on that? Is the Master safe here?”
The attitude returned.
“We can take care of the Master,” he said, “don’t you worry about that. Now, who’s going to take care of you, that’s the problem. Willy and I got the nod. Okay? They shot a couple of Irish that bombed the embassy, but they’re still looking for a yankee colonel, a Catholic. So, to take care of you we keep you here. The Mongoose picks you up at sunrise Monday. I am to remind you that you are not to perform work from sunset today until sunrise Monday. But you travel with the Master, you already knew that.”
“Right,” Isaac said.
He nodded towards Maggie wringing watts out of the battered Lightening.
“What about that? We need the batteries, you need power.”
The guard shrugged, his blue eyes steady, intimidating.
“No souls, no sweat,” he said. “The Innocents don’t count.”
“What do we do if whoever’s bombing the embassy bombs the airport?”
“They won’t. Everybody needs the airport, it’s hands off.”
That’s why they can afford two zitfaces on security, Isaac thought.
“Where can we get a ride to town? We can get a room. . . .”
“You’re to stay here until sunrise Monday and observe the Sabbath; those are my sole instructions.”
“What if we just leave?”
“Then you’d be forcing me to work on the Sabbath, and I’d prefer not to think about that. And I’d prefer you don’t think about it, either. Besides, you have zero chance to beat that lock. At least, while I’m alive.” He patted his Sidekick and his rifle for emphasis, and he did not smile.
“I see.”
“Good.”
The guard jerked a thumb over his shoulder, towards the office door.
“The Master’s speaking at eighteen hundred and we’ve got a peel if you want to come in and watch.” His gaze flicked to Maggie, then back. He shrugged. “After all, it’s your power.”
“Right,” Isaac said. “Thanks.”
He turned the cart around so that the wobbly wheel was in the back, then spoke, trying to make it sound like a casual afterthought.
“Maybe you two could give me and Mirian an idea of what to expect down here.”
The blond laughed a laugh much older than his years. He strutted towards the office, and called over his shoulder, “Expect anything. And no working on the Sabbath!”
Isaac pushed the cart to the rear of the hangar, where Mirian and the Innocents waited for the fresh spring ice water and the hot, fragrant mini-loaves of bread.
“What did he say? Are we locked in here?”
Isaac unpacked the ceremonial bowl and towels from the cabinet in the cart, poured them each a glass of ice water while there was still ice. They both downed a glass before filling one for each of the Innocents. The Innocents had no souls and the ritual meant nothing to them spiritually, but they liked being included, and this was the kind of thing that made them a team.
“Well?”
Isaac didn’t answer. He filled the foot-washing bowl from one of the stainless-steel pitchers, then knelt at her feet and began the Sabbath ritual.
“I really hate being locked in,” Isaac whispered, more to himself than to Mirian. “I got locked in the pantry as a kid. My parents said they couldn’t afford a babysitter. Sit down.”
Mirian said nothing and sat on the cot. Isaac removed her tennis shoes and sweaty socks, placed a clean towel under her feet and began washing them slowly, carefully, as he would want her to wash his own. She would just take a quick swipe with the cloth over his shoes, this he knew, but he thought that with enough example she might become more patient and see the virtue in this small but intimate gesture.
That’s the nice thing about ritual about instinct, he thought. It gives you time to think
Apparently they would have the whole weekend to think. And sweat. And remember what was in those cases from ViraVax.
A disagreeable smell soured Isaac’s nostrils, and he swallowed a biting remark about Mirian’s personal hygiene. The disagreeable smell turned putrid, a combination of burning hair and overdead meat.
“Whew!” Mirian said. “What . . . ?”
“Green!” Willy shouted from the office. “Green! Help me!”
Isaac and Mirian looked at each other for a blink, then Mirian snatched up the palm-cam while Isaac ran for the front of the hangar. What greeted him there stopped him cold, and he waved Mirian back. She stood fast in her bare feet and started filming anyway.
The blond’s uniform lay crumpled across the communications console, and it leaked a foul organic goo from a mess of rubbery bones. Willy lay on his back under the desk, his brown eyes wide, unblinking, staring at Mirian.
“She’s so pretty,” he whispered.
Willy winked at Mirian and the eyelid stayed closed. His chest heaved one last shuddering sigh, and then his whole body sighed. His face and scalp slumped from his skull and his brown eyes liquefied in their darkening beds.
“God save us,” Isaac whispered.
He covered his mouth and nose with his shirttail and couldn’t take his focus off Willy’s Sidekick, barely visible under the stinking viscosity that used to be the man who knew the access code. Isaac couldn’t bring himself to cross the threshold of the office, much less reach for that Sidekick.
A pale blue flame licked across the blond guard’s remains.
Isaac would have thought it a trick of holographic animation if it weren’t for the stench. He held his breath, reached a trembling hand to the half-empty water pitcher on the desk and tossed the ice water at the flames. There wasn’t enough water to contain it all, and in a moment little tongues of flame flickered over Willy, too.
“Maggie!” Mirian screamed behind him. “Maggie! Oh, God, Isaac!”
Isaac didn’t have to turn to know what was happening. He just stared, stupefied, as the spreading mess engulfed the office floor and burned up the Sidekick that controlled their hangar door, their prison, their sweltering, sheet-metal tomb.