UNKNOWN: 6%
FINISHED DOSES EN ROUTE: 30,000,000
DOSES IN PRODUCTION: 12,000,000
INFECTED: 2,616,000 (15,350,000)
CONVERTED: 2,115,000 (6,500,000)
DEATHS: 284,000 (14,100,000)
The Converted were coming.
Blackmon’s people were trying to hurry her out of the Situation Room, but she was still the president and no one could make her go any faster than she wanted to. The time had long pa.s.sed for her to be airborne, safely away from the rapidly deteriorating situation on the ground.
The army had reported contact with at least five large mobs of Converted in and around the city of Washington, D.C. The mobs seemed poorly organized, poorly armed, but they all had one thing in common: they had been heading for the White House.
Air Force One — known as Air Force Two just yesterday — had landed at Ronald Reagan National Airport, delivering Vice President Kenneth Albertson. The military maintained firm control of that airport. After Fort Benning and Andrews AFB had fallen, the Joint Chiefs had issued “kill zone” orders for all critical facilities. No matter who you were, infected or not, if you came within a hundred yards of a protected area, you got shot.
Blackmon was heading to the airport. Albertson was on his way to the White House to take her place. The American people knew him. With his face broadcasting from the nation’s capital, it would remain clear that America had not fallen.
Not yet.
But Blackmon was a realist, and knew that worst-case scenario might come to pa.s.s. Elena Turgenson, the Speaker of the House, was third in the presidential line of succession. Blackmon had ordered her to Sacramento, to set up the next governmental seat in the eventuality that the Converted overran D.C.
Blackmon’s aides were all ready to follow her out. They held stacks of paper, briefcases, and laptops. She had cleaned up for the trip: hair done up right and a freshly pressed red pantsuit gave her that hallmark presidential look once again. She was waiting for Vogel to finish talking on the phone. Someone had submitted info to the HAC site, and apparently linked to a video.
Vogel whispered something, nodded, then hung up.
“Ident.i.ty confirmed,” he said. “The subject is Cooper Mitch.e.l.l. SSN and address are accurate. Facial a.n.a.lysis software registers a one-hundred percent match with DMV records. There is no question that this man was part of the HAC study.”
Blackmon let out a little puffed-cheek whuff of air.
“We have a chance,” she said. “Play the video.”
A paused YouTube page appeared on the main monitor. The frozen image was a blur of blacks and grays. Murray couldn’t make anything out.
“YouTube?” Blackmon said. “This video is public?”
Vogel nodded. “Yes, Madam President. It seems Mister Mitch.e.l.l didn’t fully trust our HAC form. He wanted to make sure everyone saw him, so he couldn’t — I’m quoting from his submission form — just vanish into a secret lab, you G.o.dd.a.m.n government s.h.i.teaters. End quote. The video’s play counter only shows three hundred and one views so far, which isn’t much. We’re still in control of this information.”
Blackmon nodded. “Play it.”
The image twitched and jumped, jostled by rapid movement. The face in the video belonged to the man holding the camera — Cooper Mitch.e.l.l. He looked panicked, had the sunken eyes of someone who had flat-out gone over the edge. A week’s worth of stubble. Skin red and cracked from exposure to wind and cold.
“It’s me,” Mitch.e.l.l said. “They come around me and they die. It takes, uh, maybe like twelve hours or so, but they die.”
He started laughing.
The sound of that laugh made Murray’s blood run cold. He’d laughed like that once, back in Vietnam, when he, Dew Phillips and six other men had heard the choppers coming to save them. Eight soldiers — all that remained from an entire company. They’d been overrun, covered in mud, fighting for their lives through the night in dark, sandbagged trenches. Murray had known his time was up, known he was going to die, right up until he’d heard those rotor blades slicing through the air. That sliver of sound had given him the strength to fight on.
The image jostled as Mitch.e.l.l walked, but stayed centered on his face. The background moved madly around him.
“Just look at this,” he said. “How f.u.c.ked-up is this?”
The image skewed as he turned the camera around. Murray saw a fire pit topped with a pig mounted on a spit. At first, he thought the scene was somewhere outdoors — because that’s the only place one saw fire pits — but then he realized it was inside the lobby of a trashed building.
Then, he realized it wasn’t a pig.
“Jesus Christ,” President Blackmon said. Her hand went to the cross hanging from her neck.
The image whirled to show a man in a red jacket, lying on his back. At first Murray thought this man was also dead, had to be dead from the tacky phlegm that coated his mouth and nose, but the man’s eyes cracked opened. The eyelids looked nearly glued shut by strands of viscous yellow.
The man looked at the camera for a moment, then coughed hard. Blood bubbled out of his mouth.
“See that?” Cooper Mitch.e.l.l said from off-screen. “f.u.c.ker is dying, man! Dying!”
The camera spun again, stopping on a p.r.o.ne woman. Her blank eyes stared out. Dried, b.l.o.o.d.y spittle flaked from the lips of an open mouth. On the woman’s neck, peeking out from the jacket, Murray saw the shape that had marked the beginning of this horror show …
A triangle.