The only light in the limo’s trunk was what leaked through the backs of the taillight housings—a weak red glow that occasionally flared brighter when the driver hit the brakes. Though the floor of the trunk was fully carpeted, it was hardly comfortable. The overloaded limo was riding very low on its suspension. Every time it hit a bump, Dr. James Nudelman bounced in the air and came down with a jarring thud. So did the pile of automatic weapons jammed in beside him. Disoriented by the numerous turns the driver had made, he had no idea where he was, except he was pretty sure they hadn’t left Manhattan.
The vehicle had made just one stop since his kidnapping. The purple gang had left him bound and gagged in the trunk while they’d attended to another matter. He’d cringed at the first sounds of gunfire from outside; he’d known people had to be dying as a result. The shooting had gone on and on, like the soundtrack for an action movie. When it had finally ended, nothing had happened for the longest time, then the trunk lid had popped open again. In the glow of the courtesy light, a creature had loomed over him with a knobby outstretched hand. It had grabbed him and rolled him to one side. Looking warily over his shoulder, he’d watched as armload after armload of M-16s was dumped on the floor. More and more flat black weapons were piled in, until the heap avalanched, toppling over against his back and head. He had no idea where the guns had been stolen from. Turned to face the wheel well, he couldn’t see out of the trunk. Then the lid had slammed shut and he’d been in darkness again.
After about ten minutes of driving, the limo turned and suddenly angled up. Then it hit a big bump and there was a sharp scraping sound, as though the undercarriage was dragging on pavement. A moment later the vehicle stopped. The trunk lid reopened and the reptilians began unloading the heap of guns. When they had emptied the compartment, one of them took hold of his ankles and hauled his legs out over the back bumper. Gathered under a massive arm, he found himself being lugged across a ground-floor parking garage. It was hard to focus because his captor held him so loosely—his head kept bouncing up and down, and he couldn’t raise it high enough or long enough to take a good look around. Though he was pressed against the creature’s side, his skin rubbing against its ridged hide, he felt no body heat. Under the thin layer of purple satin, it was as cold as a stone.
The reptilian carried him to an elevator but didn’t take it. Instead it followed the others through a doorway and down a flight of stairs to a concrete hallway. From the steady hum of generators and the start and stop of pumps, Nudelman assumed it was the building’s environmental-system-and-maintenance level. The air seemed much warmer, probably a result of the heat given off by the machinery.
Over the drone of equipment, he heard what sounded like people yelling, but the noise was muffled and he couldn’t make out what they were saying. If it was in fact people, they didn’t sound pleased. As he was hauled down the corridor, the volume of the shouting grew steadily louder.
When the creature who held him stopped and opened a door, a torrent of frantic noise washed over him. They entered a long, windowless, gray concrete room, harshly lit by banks of overhead fluorescents. On either side of the room, the yellers and screamers were housed in individual, widely separated cells with steel bars. There were at least twenty of them. They weren’t cells like in a prison; they were on four wheels, as if they’d been designed for circus animals or use in a medical lab or veterinary clinic. The captives couldn’t stand upright; the best they could do was crouch on all fours, and that put their backs against the inside of the ceiling bars and their heels against the rear wall.
Almost all of the prisoners wore the white lab coats of physicians, scientists and engineers, which made him think their captors were in the process of collecting a particular breed of homo sapiens, as a dog fancier might do with corgis or standard poodles.
Even inside the long room, it was difficult for him to understand what the other prisoners were shouting about. The sound of their voices had an odd quality—like an echo or reverb effect. It distorted the separation between words, turned them into unintelligible mush.
After a few seconds, his brain sorted out the voices and the words crystallized. Some of the prisoners were cursing a blue streak, while others were making angry, empty threats of criminal prosecution and civil action. They weren’t directed at the creature who carried him; the captives were shouting blindly into space—like madmen.
After being dumped on the floor, Nudelman was untrussed and shoved headfirst into an empty cage. Before he could turn, the barred door clanked shut behind him.
The shouting continued unabated after the purple monster left the room. It was relentless, and it set Nudelman’s teeth on edge.
As he glared at the prisoners on the other side of the room, he noticed a blurring of his vision. And in the air between him and them, there seemed to be flurries of tiny glowing sparks. When he tried to focus on these little spots of light, they instantly disappeared.
Using his knowledge of human anatomy and physiology, he immediately put it down to blood rushing to his head and strain on his retinas from cutting his eyes sideways, trying to see where he was going, while he was being carried. The intermittent noise that he had at first determined to be the sound of pumps starting and stopping seemed to be nothing of the sort. The grinding wasn’t from a motor. It was too loud, too deeply pitched, and it made the floor and walls shiver. The noise seemed connected to the appearance of the strange sparks. In the pulses between grinds, they were absent. He knew that had to be sheer coincidence—the spots and the slight blurring were a function of his brain and his eyes, not the result of some outside phenomenon. The combination of grinding sound, bright spots and blurring made him queasy. Then a darker thought occurred to him: he could have sustained a serious head injury when the pile of assault rifles had fallen on him.
The man in the cell directly opposite began to beat his balled fists on the barred floor of his cage. He wore blood-spattered hospital scrubs, and his face was cherry red, suffused with fury. He looked vaguely familiar.
“What the hell is going on?” Nudelman shouted over the din. “Who are these things? What are they going to do with us?”
The man in the lab coat kept beating on the floor and ignored him.
“Hey! What is going on here?”
His fellow prisoner threw back his head and unleashed a blood-curdling scream at the ceiling.
Nudelman could see the man was losing it. There was no way to tell how long he had been kept hunched over like a pill bug in the little rolling cage. He tried again to communicate, shouting at top volume over the chaos in the room, slowly and distinctly enunciating each word. “Who...are...these...creatures? What...do...they...want?”
The man in the scrubs looked right at him, but there was no response. It was not only as if he hadn’t spoken, it was as if he didn’t exist.
Shock, Nudelman told himself. It had to be from the shock of being kidnapped and caged in a madhouse.
The bars that made up the floor of his cell hurt his knees. He shifted his weight, but there was no way to get comfortable. The cage was designed for a much smaller prisoner, say a golden retriever or chimpanzee.
He took in the rest of the room. A thick hose was coiled on the wall next to a water tap. In the aisle between the two rows of cages was a metal-grated floor drain. Nudelman found the sight unsettling. He was beginning to feel pressure in his bladder; soon he was going to have to relieve himself. Were they expected to do their business in their cells, like hamsters, have it fall to the floor beneath, and then at some later time, it would be hosed off down the drain?
Everything that had happened to him so far pointed to a bad outcome.
Were they being held so they could be experimented on? To what possible end? Or perhaps their bizarre captors intended to slaughter, then eat them. He discarded both ideas almost at once. Any person off the street would fill the bill for experiment and slaughter; the preponderance of lab coats in the room meant they had been specifically selected. Their knowledge and specialized skills had put them in harm’s way. One thing was clear, there was no national government or rational mind behind it.
As he looked at the prisoner opposite, the grinding noise returned and once more he saw a shower of tiny twinkling lights, like fireflies winking on, then off. As before, he felt as if he was going to throw up. The other man had stopped yelling, perhaps because he was exhausted, but the others took up the slack. His face remained blurred, as did everything else on that side of the room. Again Nudelman got the sense that he knew the man from somewhere. Had he seen him in the hospital? At a medical convention? At a biotech symposium?
No, that wasn’t it.
It seemed vitally important to place the fellow. If the two were linked by their past, it could be a way to break through to him. A point of contact might also help explain their current predicament.
A name popped into his head. Danson. No, that wasn’t it.
Hansom. No.
Ransom!
Oh God, Nudelman thought. It was Dr. William Ransom! Aka “Wild Bill” for his surgical panache and legendary, three-second fuse in the OR. He gripped the bars of his cage and pressed his forehead against them. Ransom was the foremost neuro cutter in Manhattan, ranked number ten in the world. They had met at a three-day wealth seminar in the Bahamas several years ago. Over umbrella drinks at the poolside bar, Ransom had seemed a likely pee-battery-investor prospect. They had exchanged business cards and talked expensive, big-boy toys—private jets and yachts; Ransom had one of each—and politics and economic theory. Nudelman thought they had made a real connection, and with its disfiguring mark, his face was not easily forgotten.
“Dr. Ransom!” he roared through cupped hands. “Dr. Ransom, it’s me, James Nudelman!”
Wild Bill stared right at him, but it was as if he was looking at a blank wall. Tears were streaming down his face and his fingers, his precious surgeon’s fingers, were battered from pounding them on the bars.
“Doctor, are you all right?”
The world famous surgeon swept the back of a hand over his contorted face, smearing it with blood, tears and snot.
“Doctor, are you all right?”
Slowly Ransom’s eyes rolled back in his head until only the whites showed. Then he took a deep breath and started screaming again.
That set Nudelman’s blood boiling. They were no more than thirty feet apart! Elite surgeons were notoriously self-centered and dismissive of those outside their specialty—or those in the specialty but below their global rank—but he and Ransom knew each other! They had talked at length about the failure of Ross Perot’s presidential campaign in 1996. So what if he wasn’t an MD? So what if he wasn’t a big-time cutter? So what if he hadn’t flown in to the seminar on his own private jet? So what if he didn’t have a three-hundred-foot yacht to sail home in? They had history!
Suddenly the most important thing in the world was to get Ransom to acknowledge the fact that he was alive and a prisoner in the same room. Nudelman waited for a lull in the yelling match with the grinding, then bellowed as loud as he could, “Ransom you fucking asshole, answer me!”
The words cut through the layered din like a cannon shot.
Then the din swallowed them up.
Across the aisle, the world-famous surgeon stared at Nudelman as if he didn’t exist.
* * *
THE WORLD-FAMOUS SURGEON, a man who could restore life and function to the disabled, who could reanimate the seemingly dead, who routinely held the very seat of the soul in the latex-gloved palm of his hand, crouched on all fours and screamed. He screamed until he was on the verge of blacking out from oxygen deprivation. The inarticulate, strangled cry echoed in the long concrete room. The walls were lined on either side with rolling cages just like his.
Waiting empty cages.
Over the span of a half hour of confinement and isolation, he had gone from shouting “Help me!” to just roaring as loud as he could. His throat hurt from the sustained effort. At this rate he knew he would soon lose his voice altogether.
Why didn’t someone answer him?
He had guessed from the trek down to the windowless room that he was in the bowels of a Manhattan high-rise office building or condominium. There were usually video cameras in such places. If not, there had to be security guards or maintenance men. Someone had to pass by the metal door.
At least in theory.
The empty cages stared back at him. There were dozens of them. Why so many? he thought. Who else were they—the horrid creatures who had kidnapped him—going to put in them?
“Someone help me!” he croaked.
Ransom regularly paid a large number of people big money to do just that. And not just to help—to serve his every whim. He paid annual salaries with bonuses and benefits to the flight crew of his Gulfstream jet, the captain and crew of his Feadship yacht and the full-time staffs at his medical offices and mansions around the world.
Where were they all now, when he really needed them?
The memory of Mr. Carstairs’s brains splattering the team around the OR table came back in a ghastly Technicolor rush. No doubt about it, he had fallen into the hands of murderers. Whoever, whatever his captors were, he knew if he did not obey he would meet the same or a worse fate than his poor patient. The littlest monster had promised him as much.
Under different circumstances, Ransom would have liked to examine that strange creature more closely and at length. As a scientist and physician, he found the Frankenstein-esque interface between living flesh and nonliving components both fascinating and remarkable. Such a thing had been thought impossible outside B movies and comic books: metal and muscle crudely joined to create functional movement and a reasonable semblance of life. How had the contraption been assembled and where? Had someone actually designed it, or had it just been cobbled together as needed out of spare parts? Was there a real human brain squatted inside that half-metal skull?
Questions of scientific knowledge aside, whatever the shambling abomination asked of him, he was determined to do without question. He had worked too hard and too long to be snuffed out like a candle flame. He didn’t understand the degrading, inhuman treatment he was receiving—it was as if the creatures were trying to break his spirit. Or maybe they just didn’t give a damn. At that thought, his face flushed with outrage. What manner of certifiable moron would cage like an animal the eighth most sought after neurosurgeon in the world?
Then he recalled the little monster had said something about taking him a hundred years into the future. That was by far the most frightening threat of all.
It made Ransom think he was in the grip of an insane cult targeting the uber-rich and uber-talented. Is that what the other cages were for? Good grief, he thought, were they going to murder him here in this overheated dungeon, in the deranged belief that it would transport him to the future? Like the thirty-nine Heaven’s Gate suicides thinking that in death they were going to be taken up by a spaceship hiding behind a passing comet?
For a person so thoroughly grounded in the scientific process and the mechanics of neurobiology, in the purely rational, in experimental fact, the ultimate insult and irony would be to die because of a homicidal maniac’s delusion.
That did nothing to explain the appearance of his captors, of course. The big ones were miniature Godzillas, with similar temperaments; the little monster was a demented version of Pinocchio. Nothing on earth looked like that. Nothing acted like that.
And for sure, nothing smelled like that.
Suddenly it occurred to him that the delusion in question might actually be his and his alone. A direct consequence of a brain strangled by an invasive and pervasive hostile growth. Perhaps he had acquired a big old tumor of his own? The possibility made him sag against the hard bars.
Why hadn’t he thought of that before?
It explained the hallucinations, both visual and olfactory. Was any of what he was experiencing real? Had a single cancerous cell divided and divided until its tendrils infiltrated his brain like tree roots? Could the beast he had fought for so long and so valiantly have taken residence in his own skull?
He tightly shut his eyes and thought it through, step by step.
If that was the case, if an undiagnosed tumor was causing the hallucinations, if there was no cage, then how had he hurt his aching hands? Why did the bars of the imaginary cage hurt his knees? Why couldn’t he stand up without hitting his head?
Every turn in the logical analysis of the situation came full circle to the same dead end. If he was seeing things, he couldn’t have hurt his hands on the bars. If he wasn’t seeing things, then the mini-Godzillas and the Pinocchio from hell were real, which he knew was impossible.
For a man accustomed to seizing Fate by the balls and squeezing, the situation was now reversed: the balls in the vise were his. The loss of personal control and critical understanding tipped the very Earth on its axis.
“For God’s sake, someone please help me!” he screamed at the door. “Please!”
The shrill cry seemed to mock him as it bounced back and forth off the walls of the empty room.
No one was listening, or no one gave a damn.