Career Opportunities
Part One
By Valerie Hope
Joseph Hargreaves dropped the last of his music CDs into the
nondescript brown box on the desk that had been the center of his universe for
the last three years. The office – only a week ago it had been full of
bustling people, ringing phones, shuffling papers and conversations – was empty
and hollow-looking, like some high-tech ghost town. Here and there, some
remnant of someone’s job hung forlornly: a Far Side cartoon still tacked to
the wall of a cubicle, a sheaf of papers which had fallen between a desk and a
wall still wedged there.
Joe lifted the box and tried to keep a bleak expression off
of his face as he threaded through the custodial crew which was cleaning away
the last of his company’s existence. He tried not to notice the maintenance
worker who was taking down the bas-relief chrome logo which had hung over the
receptionist’s desk for so long. The molded metal letters were dropped in a
box at the worker’s feet once taken down, and all that remained on the wall of
the once-proud name of Endotech was just "ECH." Which was just how Joe felt – ech.
He tried not to look through the glass windows into the lab, where his partners
and other scientists had worked those long, grueling hours. Where the spotless
machinery and glassware had been there were just long, empty tables now.
Joe sighed, dropped his security badge and keycard on the
empty receptionist’s desk and walked away from his failed business.
* * *
They’d fallen so short of what they’d set out to accomplish
– Stephen Randolph and Hale Gregory had wanted to shake the world, to not have
room on their mantels for the awards and accolades their research would have
brought them.
Instead they had a car full of junk, accumulated in their
lab over the course of three years. The important things – the results of
their research and their patents – were stored in a safety deposit box, waiting
for the hordes of lawyers to divvy up among the investors. The rest were the
notes, bullshit corporate documents and other detritus of their stay at
Endotech. It was a fairly lackluster collection to show for all their hard
work.
"So much for that," Hale said, wiping the sweat from his
pudgy face as he dropped the last box into the open hatchback of his Subaru.
"This sucks ass."
"I hear you," Steve replied, playing idly with a yo-yo he’d
found in a desk drawer. "What the hell do we do now?"
"Go home, get our résumés together and file for
unemployment," Hale said, slamming the hatchback in frustration. "So much for
that Nobel."
"There will be other research jobs," Steve said.
"Not where we had free rein and virtually unlimited
funding," Hale shot back, a little too hotly. "Face it, Steve. We’re
through. Might as well go back to the university and beg for scraps from the
endowment like before."
"Piss on that," Steve said, climbing into the driver’s
seat. "I’m not going back to being some lowly post-doc. There has to be
something we can do."
Hale slumped towards the passenger side of the car. "Of course
there is," he muttered. "We can starve."
* * *
It had been very hard to keep the brave face on and not let
the pain show. Corey Taylor had kept the smiles genuine and the handshakes
firm as he’d dismissed his loyal workforce one by one, referring as many as he
could to other companies and decent placement agencies in the hopes that they
wouldn’t be out of work too long. But it had been difficult to try to stay
helpful and strong when he wanted to be sick inside. Even though he couldn’t
have formed the company without Steve, Hale, Joe and the others, as Chief
Executive Officer he still considered Endotech his own company. And now it was
gone, only existing on paper in some lawyer’s briefcase.
"You going to make it, Corey?" asked a very forlorn Hollis
Wainwright from the window of his BMW Z3 roadster.
"I dunno, Hollis," Corey answered honestly. "I’m seriously
considering going out and getting righteously drunk right now."
"I thought about that," Hollis said. "But I doubt I could
afford it."
The joke was feeble, and Corey didn’t laugh. Hollis, the
financial officer for the company, had sunk every penny he had into Endotech
from the very beginning. Corey was only out of a job. Hollis was ruined. The
CEO put a friendly hand on his CFO’s shoulder.
"Who said you were buying?" Corey said with a half-smile.
"Hop in, then," Hollis said. "We can drown our troubles
together."
"Misery loves company," Corey said, moving around to climb
in the other side of the sporty little car. A car which would no doubt be in
the Greensheet by the end of the week with a pricetag only a fraction of what
Hollis paid for it.
"It’s not over yet," Corey said brightly. "We still have
Project Hestia. I still think we can sell it and recoup some of our financial
losses."
"It’ll take a while, but I think you’re right," Hollis
said. "The problem is what to do in the meantime."
"It’s not us I worry about," Corey said. "It’s all the
people I had to let go today. Did you know Marjorie Baker was pregnant,
Hollis? Three weeks along, and I had to hand her walking papers. Same with
Joe Whitcomb, who just sent a kid off to Princeton. It broke my heart."
Hollis nodded. "At least we managed some decent severance."
"But it doesn’t take the place of a job with benefits," Corey
said, inconsolable.
"Snap out of it, Corey," Hollis told him, scratching his
handlebar moustache which had begun to accumulate sweat in the day’s heat. "It
wasn’t your fault. We never saw this coming, there was no way we could have
prevented it."
"Our business plan was solid," Corey said. "I thought we
covered every angle."
"We did," Hollis said. "But we can’t compete with a
billion-dollar pharmaceutical company when we haven’t even gone public. People
are going to trust the longer-lived company – period, end of sentence. That’s
just the way business works."
"What steams me is that Hart-Pearson wasn’t even in direct
competition with us," Corey said. "We were breaking all this new ground, and
all of a sudden they slap us with lawsuits right and left, saying we’re
stealing their work. As far as I know, they weren’t even working on designer
virus technology."
"Hart-Pearson was working on everything," Hollis said. "And
they don’t publish what they have in the research pipeline."
"It still smells dirty to me," Corey said.
"They have an army of lawyers to tell you otherwise," Hollis
said, gripping his friend’s shoulder. "Just face it, kiddo. We’ve been had.
We were David, they were Goliath, and we didn’t bring our slingshot and we got
stepped on. We’ll know better next time."
"I don’t know if I can start over again," Corey said.
"Sure you can," Hollis interrupted before Corey could start
beating himself up again. "It’s the American way. They knock it down, you
build it back stronger. Chin up, Corey. You’re still a young man with a very
remarkable career. There is always a place for entrepreneurs like yourself.
Especially for entrepreneurs who can get back on the horse once they get thrown
off."
"I don’t care about my career," Corey said. "I care about
the careers of all the other people that got sent home yesterday."
"And that’s what makes you such a great boss," Hollis said.
"You’re amazing, you know that?" Corey chuckled. "You lost
the bulk of your personal assets in this business venture and you’re telling me
to cheer up."
"Easy come, easy go," Hollis said, starting the engine.
"Now, somebody mentioned something about getting hammered."
"Lead the way," Corey said, settling back against the seat.
* * *
"Subjects Taylor and Wainwright have stopped," the dark man
said into his radio, watching the two men leave the car and walk towards the
front of the club. "Entering the club now."
The dark man waved off the approaching valet who was coming
to offer to park his car, keeping the engine running and watching the former
CEO and CFO of Endotech walk through the front door.
"Confirmed," he said into the radio. "Subjects have entered
the club."
"Give me your location," the staticky voice on the other end
of the line said.
"The Perfect Ten Cabaret and Gentleman’s Club," the dark man
said. "642 East Rutherford Street. Do you want me to pursue?"
The voice on the radio seemed reflective. "The Perfect Ten
Cabaret," it repeated, obviously savoring the irony. "How fitting. No, don’t
pursue. Park nearby and maintain surveillance. We’ll give them the chance to
get some drinks in their stomachs and then make this happen."
"Acknowledged," the dark man said. "Unit Three out."
* * *
The light was excruciating and relentless, scouring his
brain even through his eyelids. Corey Taylor made a choked, gurgling sound and
tried to turn away from the light, to find a place of cool darkness, but there
was none. Reluctantly, he opened his eyes and regretted it instantly.
"Come on, Corey. Sit up." The voice came from somewhere to
his left.
"What happened?" Corey mumbled, his throat raw and dry.
"I don’t know," the voice – Hollis’ voice – rasped. "We
were at the titty bar, that’s the last thing I remember."
Corey managed to half-sit, half-roll over. He felt like
vomiting. "The drinks?"
"Maybe."
Corey forced his eyes the rest of the way open. They were
lying on the polished tiles of a floor in a large, drafty room. Other shapes
lay in heaps nearby – Corey’s eyes focused slowly to distinguish them as Hale,
Steve and Joe, still unconscious. Joe snored softly.
The room was perhaps twenty feet to a side and unremarkable
save for a row of darkened TV screens along one wall and five identical oblong
wall sconces opposite. The room itself had no doors or windows and harsh
fluorescent lights along the ceiling and floor. It contained five beds and
five free-standing stalls which looked like showers.
All of the men looked to have been beaten. Their clothes
were gone, and all they wore were large, white diaper-like loincloths. Each of
them had a pad of gauze taped over their left shoulderblades.
Hollis rubbed his eyes and groaned. "Where are we?" he
croaked weakly.
"No idea. How are the others?"
"They’re breathing. Some of them look to have been beaten
up pretty bad."
Without warning, the lights dimmed a little and a section of
the wall slid away. A tall, gawky man entered, wearing a scandalously
expensive suit and carrying a briefcase. He was adjusting gold-rimmed glasses
atop his beak of a nose. Two huge bruiser-types in similar suits accompanied
him, looking menacing in their complete silence.
"Mr. Taylor. Mr. Wainwright," he said in a polished voice
as the wall-section swished silently back into place. "How are you feeling?"
"Who the hell are you?" Hollis demanded.
The man smiled an oily smile. "Roger Kelly, Mr.
Wainwright. I’m Vice President of External Development for Hart-Pearson
Pharmaceuticals."
Corey narrowed his eyes. "You son of a bitch. It wasn’t
enough to drive us out of business. Now this. What the hell do you want?"
Kelly didn’t blink at Corey’s hissing tone. "Very simple,
Mr. Taylor. You were too smart for us, you allowed the patents in your
researchers’ names instead of the company. The settlement didn’t allow us what
we wanted."
"Which is?" Hollis asked.
"Project Hestia, of course. All your work into custom virus
technology," Kelly said matter-of-factly. "What else would we want?"
"That work belongs to us," Hollis said. "It’s the only
goddamn thing you left us."
"Hestia is not for sale," Corey adjoined.
Kelly laughed, a mirthless barking affair. "My dear Mr.
Taylor, who said anything about buying it? No, no, something like Project
Hestia would have far too big of a drain on our revenue stream, and certain of
Hart-Pearson’s executives have grown used to a certain amount of, shall we say,
benefit from the company’s revenue?"
"Can’t part with the cash, huh?" Hollis rumbled. "I knew
you were crooked."
"Indeed," Kelly said, adjusting his glasses again. "Which
is why you gentlemen are going to give us Project Hestia, free and clear."
"Or what? You’ll kill us?" Corey hissed.
"Not at all," Kelly said. "If we were to kill you, your
research would go to the government, which we don’t want at all. And people
would start asking questions that my company might find distasteful to answer."
"So we’re just going to give you Hestia out of the goodness
of our hearts," Stephen Randolph said, rolling over. He’d obviously been
listening for quite a while, playing possum while the other men talked.
"Mr. Randolph, welcome back," Kelly greeted. "No, you’re
going to give us Project Hestia because you want to."
"Well, we don’t want to," Corey snapped.
"Not yet, anyway," Kelly said, his eyes glinting evilly. "But
I give you my personal guarantee. Before you walk through that door, you’re
going to sign over Project Hestia’s research to this company."
He turned to go. "I would advise you all to get some sleep,
gentlemen – the beds are quite comfortable. You’re all going to have a very
long night."
"What the fuck did you do to us?" Steve demanded.
"Oh, this and that," Kelly said. "Hart-Pearson is a very
large company, you know. We develop pharmaceuticals for so many different
areas. The Food and Drug Administration can hardly keep up with our
development curve. We’ve had a devil of a time trying to get their approval to
move some of our experimental medications into human trials."
"You bastard," Hollis growled.
"Oh, but Mr. Hollis – think of the benefit to mankind! It’s
all in the name of scientific advancement!" Kelly said, taking his muscle-men
in by eye and moving towards the door. "Good night, gentlemen. The
time-release capsules we’ve implanted in your backs should be well on their way
to effectiveness, so you should start feeling the effects very soon."
The door slid open, but Kelly paused in the passageway
before exiting. "And don’t worry too much – these drugs worked fine on the
rats and monkeys."
The door slid shut and they were left alone.
* * *
The passage of time was hard to measure in the room – their
best guess was it had been about seven or eight hours since the others woke up
and the real hell started. It had begun with sweating and discomfort – like
there was something crawling just beneath their skins. Then the sweat turned
rank, like the smell of wet, decaying garbage, and the sweat which was oozing
out of their pores took on a greasy, heavy feeling.
The weakness has come next – a cold, trembling feeling in
the extremities and the panicky surety that it would take all their effort just
to move. The five men collapsed into the beds, groaning, sweating a substance
the consistency of bacon grease. It soaked the sheets and left them surrounded
by the stench.
Hale Gregory had been the first to succumb, the smell and
the discomfort finally driving him to vomit noisily over the side of the bed.
It fell onto the clean tiles with a wet splatter, which made the others
nauseous.
Hale grasped at the side of his bed, panting for breath and
spitting the vile taste from his mouth. Wiping tears from his bloodshot eyes,
he stared wordlessly at the ground for a while and then looked up bleakly.
"Steve, have a look at this," he croaked.
"You have got to be kidding," Steve said. "If I look at it,
I’m going to do it myself."
"What is it, Hale?" Joe managed to ask, swallowing hard to
keep his gorge down.
"There’s far more material in that than I ate today or
yesterday," he said, his biochemical and medical background coming to the
fore. "It’s got blood in it as well, and something that looks like – oh God."
"What?" Steve asked, his nausea forgotten as he examined the
mass on the floor.
"This isn’t anything I ate," Hale said. "It’s pure
biomass. Look at that – looks like liquefied fatty tissue, bone, muscle… what
the hell?"
"What did those bastards shoot us up with?" Steve asked.
"Whatever it is, it’s making our bodies shed mass." Hale
did a quick examination of himself, pressing his stomach, armpits and beneath
his chin. "All the waste-removal systems of the body are processing it:
digestive, renal, lymphatic, even the sebaceous and sweat glands."
Hollis ran a finger through the slick of greasy sweat on his
forearm and held it up. "You mean this is… me?"
"Parts of you, yes, I think," Hale said. "I’d need to
analyze a sample to be sure, but it looks like our bodies are ridding
themselves of fat, bone and muscle mass."
"To what purpose?" Corey asked.
"Could be anything," Hale said. "Maybe it’s to cause
atrophy of our bodies, make us invalid or defenseless. I wouldn’t put anything
past these people."
"Will it kill us?" Joe asked in a small voice.
Steve spoke up. "I doubt it. It’s using our body’s own
systems to break down the tissues, so it’s got to keep those systems intact to
do its job. It’s like trying to kill yourself by holding your breath.
Eventually you’ll pass out and start breathing again – it’s technically
impossible. But we’ll definitely be weak and dehydrated for a while, and it’s
likely we’re never going to be able to put up much of a fight until we can
start metabolizing protein and restore ourselves naturally."
"But why go to all this trouble?" Corey asked. "They’ve got
us where they want us."
"I guess we’ll have to wait for Mr. Kelly to tell us that,"
Joe said. "What do we do in the meantime? Just ride it out?"
"I don’t see that we have any choice," Hollis answered. "I
think I’m just going to try and get some sleep and wake up when this is all
over."
"That’s the best thing for us now," Hale agreed. "Rest
while you can. Whatever’s happening to us is obviously very traumatic to our
systems. Sleep will help us recover, give us some strength back so we can
fight our way out of here."
He was yawning as he said it. Aside from Hollis adding a
substantial part of his biomass to the floor next to Hale’s, they were all
asleep within the hour.
* * *
"God, what a stench."
"It’s to be expected. C’mon, c’mon, hurry up with those. I
don’t want to stay in here any longer than I have to."
"Who the hell are these guys, anyway?"
"Dunno, but Dr. Kelly says they’ve volunteered for some
experimental drug trials. Poor bastards. Looks like they didn’t know what
they were signed up for."
"Hell, they probably all had cancer of the asshole and were
going to die anyway."
Corey Taylor felt like a wrung-out rag, and it took him a
while to realize that the voices he was hearing weren’t a dream – there were
two people in the room with him. He tried to call out, to ask for help, but
his voice only came out as a prolonged, painful moan.
Strong hands turned over his arm. Corey felt a pinch in the
hollow of his elbow – a hypodermic injection. He tried to sit but could only
weakly flail his arms. Another set of hands was putting something cold and
hard behind his left ear.
"Wha… who…"
"Relax, buddy," once of the voices placated. "Easy. Don’t
fight. This’ll make you feel better."
"What’s happening?" Corey managed in a weak, moaning
whisper.
"Just giving you a nice cocktail," the other voice said,
"and cleaning you up a little bit. Go on back to sleep, now. Everything’s
fine."
Corey grunted and relaxed a little. The hands began to wash
him gently, using a wet cloth, waiting to talk until his breathing had slowed
to a steady pace.
"Poor sonofabitch," one of the voices commented quietly,
thinking Corey was asleep. "He’s just skin and bones. What is this, some
weird kind of chemo? His body hair is falling out."
"Nah," the other one replied. "Chemo would have all their
hair falling out. This guy’s got a head full of hair, and so do the others."
A head full of hair? Corey thought. I had a
receding hairline this morning, and Hollis Wainwright was bald as an egg last
time I looked.
"Did you see the Packers game yesterday?" one of the voices
asked.
"Just the first half," the other replied. "My wife decided
that the second half would be better spent cleaning out the fucking gutters. I
don’t know why in the hell I ever got married."
"Hell of a game, man, hell of a game. Won fifty bucks on
it."
Packers game? Yesterday? Corey thought. Then
yesterday was Sunday, and today must be Monday. My God! We were kidnapped on
aFriday afternoon! We’ve been here three days already! What the hell are they
doing to us?
"God, I don’t know if I can ever get this stink out of my
nose," one of the voices grumped. "These guys have puked and shit all over the
place. Hope Dr. Kelly doesn’t expect us to clean all this mess up."
"He can take that up with the union," the other said.
"C’mon, we’re almost done – just one guy left to go and then we can hit the
showers."
"Good, I’m starving. You want to go for Mexican tonight?"
"I guess so. Where?"
"There’s this great little place I found not too long ago –
Corriendo’s Cantina. Lots of food, real good, pretty cheap. It’s only a few
blocks from here."
"Is that the place on Sumter Drive?"
"No, the other way. Down on Richards Avenue. You’re
thinking of El Alambre."
This place is between Sumter and Richards. Out in the
suburbs, then – probably Ericksson Avenue, or Trevor Circle.
Corey thought. About ten miles outside the city. I think I know where we
are.
"C’mon, this guy’s as clean as we’re going to get him. You
finished with that monitor?"
"Almost… yeah. Good to go."
"Let’s get the hell out of here, then, before I puke," the
other voice said.
Corey heard the swish of the door and one of them mutter
"poor bastards" one more time before the door closed behind them. He felt the
thing behind his ear feebly – like a little hard plastic box, attached behind
his ear with some kind of adhesive or tape. Measuring brain activity, maybe?
Tracking?
Corey was still wondering about it when sleep claimed him
for its own.
* * *
Joseph Hargreaves awoke slowly, not sure what was the
reality and what was the dream. The stench which assaulted his nostrils was
still there, but had been with him for so long that his body had simply
accepted it as normal. A strange hissing sound was in his ears and his entire
body hurt – not just ached, but actively hurt. He stifled a groan and levered
his body up onto his elbows.
"Good morning, sunshine," a dry, raspy voice croaked to him,
off to his left. He turned his head slowly – vertigo was a problem – and his
eyes focused slowly on the emaciated, spindly figure of Hollis Wainwright, the trademark
handlebar moustache now just a few scruffy hairs across his top lip and his
once-bald head now covered with a wispy tangle of ginger-colored hair. Hollis
was covered with a sheen of greasy sweat.
"What happened?" Joe asked.
Hollis shrugged his rickety shoulders. "Who knows. Nobody
even knows how long we were all out. Looks like we were on the rapid
weight-loss program while we slept, though. Look at yourself."
With an effort, Joe pulled the soaked-through sheet from his
body and looked down. His muscles, once hard and firm from long hours at the
gym, were atrophied and denuded. His ribs poked through his skin and he could
clearly see the bones of his pelvis jutting skeletally against his hips. Once
covered lightly with a fine coating of wiry black hair, his skin now shone
depilated under its slick of oily sweat. Joe figured he couldn’t have weighed
in at more than 105 pounds soaking wet.
"How do you feel, there, champ?" Hollis asked.
"Weak as a kitten," Joe said. "And hungry."
"Hungry is good," Hollis answered. "Hale and Steve say that
return of appetite is the first sign of recovery. Maybe these bastards will
come up with something for us to eat."
"Hollis, what’s that behind your ear?" Joe asked, pointing
feebly.
"We can’t tell. We’ve all got ‘em."
Joe explored his own device gingerly while trying to take in
his surroundings. The room had been scrubbed out while they slept, ostensibly
when they’d been fitted with the little plastic boxes behind their ears. Hale
and Steve were looking at the walls and the doorway, trying to find some way
out. They looked very unsteady on their spindly legs, like baby fawns. From
across the room, Joe could easily count the knobby protrusions of their
vertebrae through the skin of their backs. Hollis was slumped in the bed, his
oily sheets in a heap on the floor beside him, and the one shower stall in use
must have been occupied by Corey. The wrist that stuck above the frosted glass
door of the shower while the figure inside washed its armpits couldn’t have
been bigger than two or three inches in circumference.
"What did they do to us?" Joe asked, swinging his legs out
of bed. His feet dangled several inches from the floor and he gasped.
"Well, looks like we lost nearly one hundred percent of our
existing body fat," Hollis said. "Steve and Hale figure that we’re due to
develop some pretty major deficiency diseases soon unless we’re fed and given
vitamins. All of us look to have lost minimum one hundred pounds in fat and
muscle mass, and our skeletons have shed mass enough to reduce us all anywhere
from five to eight inches in height."
"They shrunk us?" Joe asked, disbelievingly.
"Looks like it," Hollis answered. "They say they’re testing
out new drugs on us as guinea pigs. Problem is, none of us can figure out what
a drug like this would be used for in the market."
"Some kind of weight loss pill?"
"That puts the patient’s life at risk? The FDA would never
approve it."
"So you think they’ve got something in mind for us all?" Joe
asked.
"Corey thinks so," Hollis said. "I’m not convinced of what,
but I do know that they need us all alive."
"And why is that?" Joe said.
"Look at the group they’ve captured," Hollis explained.
"Steve and Hale are the original researchers on Project Hestia – they still
have their notes and most of the stuff in their heads. I was Chief Financial
Officer. I have the location of the safety deposit box with the Hestia
information in it and the key. You were the business manager. You have the
access codes for the encrypted servers, with all the files on Hestia. And
Corey was the CEO. He’s the only one who can transfer all the research legally
to Hart-Pearson."
"This – all of this – is just an attempt to blackmail us out
of a research project?" Joe asked.
"There’s probably more to it than that, but it’s our best
guess," Corey said, stepping out of the shower and wrapping a towel around his
midsection. The towel almost wrapped around twice, he was so skeletal. "And
it probably keeps us out of the picture long enough for Hart-Pearson to get any
drugs developed from Hestia to market."
"Do you have a plan?" Joe asked.
"Not yet," Corey said. "But we’re open to any and all
suggestions."
* * *
Perhaps the most uncomfortable circumstance of their
incarceration, it turned out, was the lack of anything to do except worry and
wonder. Even a deck of cards might have been the difference between agony and
tolerability. The five men had argued and discussed and brainstormed as much
as they could about their predicament and gotten nowhere. They’d slept as much
as they could sleep and talked about everything they could think to talk about.
So when the section of wall slid away once again to admit
Kelly and the muscle-men, it was almost a relief. There were five bruisers
this time, one for each of the starving scarecrow men, and a pair of orderlies
in scrubs. It didn’t take much coercion to get the five prisoners into their
beds and restrained.
"I trust that the first round of treatment didn’t leave you
too uncomfortable," Dr. Kelly told them as the orderlies began preparing things
on a wheeled cart. "We still have a lot of work to do, and I need you all in
decent physical condition."
"Look, Kelly, we know what you want," Hollis said. "Why
don’t you just ask us instead of all the injections and the rest of it?"
Kelly laughed. "Oh, I don’t need to ask. Project Hestia
will be turned over to me and my associates soon enough. But I intend to have
as much fun as I possibly can in the meantime."
"You can’t keep us here much longer," Corey said. "We have
families and friends. If we’re missing too long, someone is going to come
looking for us."
"You think?" Kelly said. He pulled a folded newspaper from
his briefcase and threw it across Corey’s lap with a knowing grin.
Corey looked at the paper’s headline and his eyes went wide
as teacups. "This can’t be real." The paper slipped from his nerveless
fingers, scattering on the floor. The others could read the headline clearly:
"Top Endotech Executives Form Suicide Pact When Business Fails."
"They even have bodies that match your DNA samples," Kelly
said. "Not a bad bit of engineering, actually – especially since you were kind
enough to part with so much of your viable DNA material last night. So don’t
lecture me about how people will come looking for you. They’re all arranging
for your respective funerals as we speak."
"You bastard!" Hollis roared, struggling feebly against the
orderly and the tough that were holding him in the bed. They held him in place
with almost no effort.
"So sorry to disappoint you," Kelly said.
"Just tell us what you want," Hale said, his voice hopeless
and flat.
Kelly’s face began to mottle with anger. "What do I want?
What do I want? I want a little justice, for one thing! A little evening of
the scales!"
"What in the hell are you talking about?" Corey demanded.
"I worked for years on retrovirus construction," he hissed.
"I dedicated my life to that work, lost my wife and all my friends in the
pursuit. And you five come along and undercut everything! Hart-Pearson yanked
my budget, my facilities, everything, and spent all their time trying to
leverage you five out!"
Hale chuckled. "Can we help it if you’re not as good a
scientist as we were?"
Kelly’s smile was chilling. "No," he said at length. "No,
you couldn’t help that. But your research, when added to my own, will salvage
my reputation and career, and make me a pile of money in the process. And you
won’t be in any position to complain."
"You’ll have to kill us, then," Hollis countered, "since if
any of us ever get out, all your work, and all of this, is going straight down
the toilet."
Kelly waved a hand dismissively. "I doubt it. You see, by
the time I’m finished, you’re not going to be very interested in medicine, or
biochemistry, or finance or business or any of it anymore."
With a nod from Kelly, the orderly plunged the needle into
Steve’s thigh and depressed the plunger. Steve’s body convulsed once, hard,
and he fell limp, moaning softly. The orderly then began to fit Steve’s limp
legs with strange looking footwear, looking like a cross between snow-boots and
some kind of futuristic armor. They were huge and clunky, looking
incongruously robotic on the end of Steve’s spindly legs and having enough room
for his foot and probably another three like it to spare. It clicked onto
Steve’s leg just below the knee with a strange gaseous hiss.
"No, not very interested at all," Kelly continued, watching
the same happen to Joe from the other orderly. "Consider all of this a career
opportunity, gentlemen."
* * *
Whatever the drug was, it wasn’t as potent as the first dose
which brought on the rapid loss of weight. The five men were awake quickly,
and felt a little more energetic than before. The pain and muscle fatigue were
all but gone. None of them were feeling particularly strong, but at least they
weren’t fighting the weights of their own bodies any more.
A great deal had happened to them while they were out, they
all discovered once the last of them was awake and they were all up and
around. All the men had been fitted with the strange armored snow-boots which
swallowed up their skinny legs from just below the knee. The boots were
unwieldy and heavy, forcing the men to walk with tiny little mincing steps and
a great deal of windmilling arms. Their diapers had been replaced with a very
snug-fitting plastic garment with a pouch on the back. They could plainly feel
that they’d all been catheterized as well. And all of them now wore what
looked like a clear vinyl shower cap which was filled with some strange-looking
greenish-white foam that bubbled and swirled beneath the caps.
Hale was the last to arise, clumping over to the rest of the
group which was examining one another closely. Steve was taking a closer
examination of the little black boxes which each of them had attached behind
their ears.
"It’s some kind of a transmitter or receiver," he was
saying. "I can’t begin to guess at the electronics. But I do see that there
is an implantation. Looks like some kind of electrodes passing into the skin,
just in front of the mastoid process of the skull.
"Hale, you’re awake. Good," Steve said when he noticed his
friend. "Come have a look at this and tell me what you think."
Hale stumped closer to examine the unit installed behind
Joe’s ear. It was a little black plastic box, about the size of a postage
stamp, with a few small stainless steel protrusions. On closer inspection,
Hale could see behind the facing on the side closest to the skin a small circuit
board and three small gold wires extending out of the unit and into the skin
behind the ear.
"What do you think?" Steve asked.
Hale tapped his chin. "Placement of this thing suggests
that the wires are used to stimulate the temporal lobe of the brain, which
doesn’t really make any sense. Short term memory, sound and smell
distinguishing… why would they want to fuck with that? Besides, it’s got
redundant functions in the temporal lobe of the brain lateral to it, on the
other side of the head."
"What else could it be?" Joe asked.
"It’s possible that these access the cerebellum, under the
brain and close to the brain stem," Hale postulated. "The cerebellum regulates
movement, like balance and muscle coordination. I can’t see why Kelly would
want to mess with that, either."
"What about the funny hats?" Joe asked.
"No idea," Hale said. "Some kind of foam which needs to be
kept in constant contact with the scalp. Doubt it could affect the brain,
though."
"And what about the nasal thing?" Hollis asked.
"Nasal thing? What nasal thing?" Hale said.
Steve smirked. "Try and pick your nose," he said.
"Up yours," Hale shot back.
"Seriously, Hale," Corey said. "Try it."
With a look of utter confusion, Hale wormed his pinky finger
into a nostril, trying hard not to feel like an idiot at the intent stares of
his coworkers. But before he could push his finger in very deeply, he felt
something hard and foreign, just beyond the nasal septum.
"It’s hard to tell without some kind of a light, but I think
it’s an implant kind of like the ones behind our ears," Steve said. "You can
kinda get a sense of the shape of it if you feel around the bridge of your
nose."
It was about the same size and shape as the units behind the
ears. "Not good," Hale determined.
"Why not?" Hollis asked.
"Well, figure the ones behind the ears are behind the ears
because they’re trying for some reason to access the temporal lobe or the
cerebellum. Which would mean these things have to be mounted close to the
region of the brain they’re trying to affect – if these things are
brain-related at all, that is, which we can’t prove."
"Okay, then, assume they are," Steve said.
"Which would mean that the ones implanted in the sinus
cavity are meant to access the anterior portion of the frontal lobe, or the
prefrontal cortex. The prefrontal cortex is incredibly complicated, but by and
large it governs personality, behavior and emotion."
"Some kind of control device?" Hollis asked, tapping his
nose.
"Doubtful," Steve said. "We’ve only just begun to research
how the brain works. Unless Hart-Pearson, or Kelly himself, has had some kind
of technological quantum leap forward, I doubt we could even externally
communicate with the brain, much less control it. Ryan Laskey over at MIT
messed with this stuff in the lab, about four years ago, and all he got for his
trouble was a bunch of comatose Rhesus monkeys."
"But then again, that was four years ago," Hale said.
"Practically, anything could have happened between now and then. There have been
a lot of advancements in stuff like behavioral therapy since then."
"You’re not making me feel any better," Corey said.
"Sorry," Hale shrugged. "Just trying to be practical."
The end of the sentence was cut off by a sharp signal and a
dimming of the lights. The men tried to look all around the room at once,
which only resulted in a great deal of clomping and lost balance. The five
television screens at the end of the room lit up at once, all showing the same
picture, the face of an attractive woman.
"Good morning," she said in a soft voice. "From now on, I
will be your contact. Anything you have to say, any questions you have, will
be addressed to me. I will contact you every morning and every evening. Is
that clear?"
"Who are you?" Corey demanded.
"Your contact," the woman repeated.
"Will we be fed?" Hollis put in. "We haven’t eaten in
days."
"You’ve been give the nutrients you need to survive," the
woman replied, "and your stomachs aren’t quite ready for food yet. A few more
days."
"What are they doing to us?" Hale asked. "The implants in
the nose, behind the ear. The boots and the codpieces and the head coverings.
What purpose do they serve?"
The woman smiled a half-smile. "You have volunteered to
test several experimental pharmaceutical and medical treatments," she said.
"The caps are testing a new scalp treatment for male pattern baldness, which
you were all experiencing. The ‘codpieces,’ as you put it, are simply for
waste removal, a mere convenience for our staff. The boots are a drug delivery
system. They’ve been injecting into your legs and feet since they were
installed. They also transmit to the devices behind the ear, which re-train
your cerebellum on how to maintain balance, gait and equilibrium. You will
become more and more comfortable with your movement in time. We hope that this
technology will allow paraplegics a chance to re-learn how to walk."
"And the nasal devices?" Steve asked.
"More implantation technology, hopefully for use with
violent criminals. They’re an early test of an electronic mood alterer. We’ve
been using them to diminish panic and combativeness in you."
"Interesting," Hale said. "Electronic stimulation of the
prefrontal cortex?"
"The impulses we can send can actually bypass the prefrontal
cortex and affect the premotor and motor sections of the frontal lobe as well.
These tests will help us conclude whether or not we can limit movement
painlessly and non-violently, which would be a huge help in the prison
systems. Imagine being able to press a button and temporarily paralyze a
violent person, without contact or pain."
"Why us?" Corey asked.
"Because you volunteered, of course," she said.
"We didn’t volunteer!" Joe said loudly. "Dr. Kelly just
told you that, but we didn’t! We’re being held here against our will. Lady,
you have to help us! Call the police!"
The woman gave Joe a stern look and he stopped talking in
mid-sentence.
"Would you like to say that again?" the woman asked.
"No, ma’am," Joe said meekly. "I’m sorry. I won’t raise my
voice like that again."
"Very well," the woman said. "If there are no other
questions, then, I’ll…"
"Excuse me, ma’am," Corey said, a little panicked by Joe’s
sudden reversal. Joe Hargreaves was one of the most stubborn people he knew.
"Can we get something in here to pass the time? Boredom is getting to be a
real problem. A game of some kind, maybe, or a deck of cards?"
The woman contemplated for a moment. "An excellent idea,"
she said. "I’ll have some diversions sent down to you immediately. We’ll also
allow you access to television and you’re going to be put on an exercise
regimen today as well. Hopefully the time will pass for you all a lot
quicker."
"Thank you," Corey said as the screen went blank.
"What the hell happened?" Hale said, turning to Joe.
"I don’t know," he said, feeling his nose gingerly with his
fingertips. "I was mad as hell, hoping she would help us, and then the next
thing I knew I felt so ashamed of myself for yelling at her like that, I
couldn’t live with myself. I thought I was going to cry, for Chrissakes."
Hale’s eyes were like saucers. "They’re doing it," he
breathed. "They’re actually modifying our behavior with the implants."
"So here’s the real kicker," Corey asked. "Modifying it
into what?"
End of Part One
since 11/19/02