Excerpt from A BETTER WORLD by Marcus Sakey
(Sorry I posted it a little late)
LIFE ISN'T EASY
But it's harder for our kind.
- For readers born knowing daddy's darkest secrets
- For eidetics reliving every humiliation
- For tier ones despised for being better
No matter what you're feeling, you are not alone. We've all been there. Literally --- our suicide hotline is staffed entirely by brilliant volunteers.
Everybody gets blue.
But if you're thinking about hurting yourself, call us first.
1-800-2BRIGHT
Just because you burn twice as bright . . .
doesn't mean you should burn half as long.
Air Force One was an hour shy of DC when the Secret Service
agent told Cooper that he was wanted in the conference room.
Across a military and agency career, Cooper had ridden on posh
private jets and rattling Army transports, had soared in a glider over the Wyo ming
desert and jumped out of a perfectly good C-17 with a chute on his back. But Air Force One was unlike any aircraft
he’d ever been on.
A customized 747, the plane had three decks, two galleys,
luxury sleeping quarters, a fully-equipped surgery, national broadcasting
capabilities, first-class seating for the press corps and the secret service,
and the capability to fly a third of the way around the world without
refueling—which it could do mid-air.
Cooper unbuckled his seatbelt and walked fore. The agents at the door of the conference room
nodded at him.
The room was a mobile version of the situation room, with a
broad conference table and plush chairs.
A holo-conferencing screen showed a sharp tri-d of Marla Keevers in her
office at the White House. The president sat at the head of the table, with
Owen Leahy at his right and Holden Archer at his left.
Archer glanced at him, said, “Tulsa ,
Fresno , and Cleveland have lost power.”
President Clay said, “Marla, how bad is it?”
“Based off satellite imagery, we estimate that the entire
metro area of all three cities has gone dark.”
“Why based off satellite imagery?” Clay asked.
“Because engineers in charge of the power grid for each region
report no unusual activity. All
substations report back green.”
“A cyber attack,” Leahy said.
“A virus tells the system to send massive amounts of power from the grid
to ind ividual
transformers, blowing them out, while at the same time co-opting the safety
systems so that there’s no warning indicator.”
“Yes,” Keevers said.
“That’s what’s got the engineers rattled. Work crews say there’s no damage to the
substations. The transformers are
working. They’re just not providing
power to the cities.”
“How is that possible?”
“The Children of Darwin ,”
Cooper said.
Keevers nodded. “It
would appear our protocols have been rewritten.
It would take abnorm programmers to pull that off.”
“So what you’re telling me,” the president said, “is that a
terrorist organization has turned off three cities like they flipped a switch?”
“I’m afraid so, sir.
With some anomalies. In each
city, several regions still have power.
Two in Fresno, three in Tulsa, and two in Cleveland.”
The image of Keevers was replaced by live satellite
footage. The view was haunting. Instead of the riotous glow of cities at
night, the holograms showed deep black marked by faint ribbons of light that
must have been highways. The only bright
spots were in discreet blocks, roughly rectangular, where things looked
normal.
“So the virus wasn’t a hundred percent effective,” Archer
said. “It’s a small comfort, but it’s
something.”
Cooper leaned forward, staring at the maps. There was a pattern, he was—
Two areas in Fresno,
three in Tulsa, two in Cleveland.
What connects them? Some are on major highways, some nowhere
near. Some downtown, some not.
And yet this doesn’t
look random. The virus was too
successful everywhere else to have failed completely in these spots.
These areas were left
powered on purpose. Which means that
they hold some value.
So what unites these
seven areas?
—certain. “Hospitals,”
Cooper said.
Archer looked at the screens, then back at him. “What?”
“Those regions all contain major hospitals.”
“Why would terrorists take out the power to three cities, but
leave hospitals functioning?”
“Because they need them,” Leahy said. He turned to the president. “Sir, I’ve spoken to the director of the FBI
and the DAR, as well as the head of the national institute of health. They all believe, and I concur, that this may
be the precursor to a biological attack.”
“That doesn’t make sense,” Archer said. “Why leave the hospitals running if they’re
trying to release a biological weapon?”
“Because,” Leahy retorted, “hospitals are the best way to
spread one. People get sick, and they go
to the hospital. While there they infect
others. Doctors and nurses and
receptionists and janitors and patients and families. With a really infectious biological agent,
the number of cases can expand massively even under normal circumstances. But because these three cities are lacking
food, and now power, the situation is far worse. Instead of resting at home, people will
flee. They’ll go to stay with relatives,
or to second homes. And in the process,
they’ll swiftly vector the disease across the entire country. Sir, we believe the COD created this chaotic
situation to mask their real attack.”
“That’s a huge stretch,” Cooper said. “Abnorms would be just as vulnerable to
infection. What good would a biological
attack do the COD?”
“I don’t know,” Leahy said, with a hard look at Cooper. “But the COD are terrorists. We don’t know what their endgame is.”
“Of course we do.
They’re upset over the treatment of abnorms, and they want change.”
“What are you basing that on, Mr. Cooper? Abnorm intuition?” Leahy smiled coldly. “I understand your sympathy for their
situation, but that can’t be allowed to color our response.”
Would you count my
response colored if I called you a close-minded bigot mired in old- world
thinking? Instead, Cooper said,
“Response to what? You’re wasting time
on a hypothetical situation when we have actual disasters in these cities. People are starving. With the power out, they’ll be freezing,
getting desperate, violent. Instead of
worrying about phantom attacks, why don’t we start getting them some goddamn
food and blankets?”
On the screen, Marla Keevers coughed. Press Secretary Archer made an elaborate show
of looking at his watch. Leahy fixed
Cooper with an icy stare. “Mr. Cooper,
your passion is quite touching, but you’re a bit above your pay grade
here. And you’re not qualified to speak
to what is or is not hypothetical.”
“Maybe not,” Cooper said.
“But I can speak to what’s right.”
He glanced around the room. You guys don’t get me, do you? I don’t even want this job, so I’ve got
nothing to lose by telling the truth.
“The people need food. They need
medicine. They need electricity. That’s what we should focus on. That’s our job.”
“It’s also our job to protect them from attack,” Leahy fired
back. “Food and blankets in Cleveland don’t protect people dying in Los Angeles .”
Before Cooper could respond, the president said, “Owen, what
exactly do you suggest?”
“Immediate quarantine of all three cities, sir. The National Guard has already been called
up. Assume federal command, back them up
with Army troops, and shut these cities down completely. No one in or out.”
For a moment Cooper thought the plane was banking wildly,
until he realize that was just his head.
“You’ve got to be kidding me.”
“I don’t find anything about this funny.”
Cooper turned to Clay, expecting to see the same thought, the
belief that this was beyond preposterous.
Instead, he saw that the president was nervous.
Nervous.
“Sir, you can’t possibly consider this. You’d be ordering military action on domestic
soil. Turning three cities into police
states, revoking people’s basic rights.
It will cause unimaginable chaos.
These cities are already on the brink.
Instead of helping, we’re locking them up.”
“No,” Leahy said.
“We’re temporarily suspending freedom of movement for fewer than a
million people. In order to protect
three hundred million more.”
“Panic. Hate
crimes. Riots. Plus, if soldiers are busy quarantining the
city, they can’t distribute food. All
based on nothing but a wild theory.”
“Based,” Leahy said, “on the collective analysis of the best
minds in the intelligence and health services.
A group that includes plenty of abnorms.
Mr. Cooper, I know you’re used to doing things your own way, but this
isn’t your personal crusade. We’re
trying to save the country, not play some moralistic game.”
Cooper ignored the barb.
“Mr. President, when you asked me to join you, you said that we were on
the edge of a precipice.” You’re an intellectual, a historian. You know how these things start. World
Wa r One was kicked off when a
radical killed an obscure archduke. And
nine million people died. “If you do this, we step toward that
precipice. Maybe over it.”
“And if you’re wrong?”
Leahy asked. “You say the COD is
interested in abnorm rights, but they’ve made no effort at dialogue. What if what they really want is to kill as
many Americans as possible? There are a
hundred biological weapons against which we have no ready defense—except
quarantine.”
The president looked back and forth between them. His hands were on the table, the fingers knit. His knuckles were pale.
Come on, Clay. I know you’re scared. We’re all scared. But be the leader we need you to be.
The president cleared his throat.
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