“Basically a laboratory and a barbaric third world surgical suite.”
“I took 20-some pictures if you want to take a look?” Finn said as he handed the SD card from his camera to one of the coffee-pouring majors who put it in the general’s laptop and warmed up the projector.
“I found this in the trash,” Camp said as he handed Ferguson the Poly Prothese PIP packaging.
“What is it?”
“Industrial grade silicone breast implants, made by a French company. We suspect they abducted Major Banks probably because he was a female surgeon,” Camp said.
“You can’t be serious,” Ferguson responded.
“Boob jobs for burka babes, general. You can’t make this shit up,” Finn cracked with a sly grin on his face.
“Ready, sir,” the major said as the first of Finn’s photos appeared on the screen. The major handed Finn the remote clicker.
“There were two or three bottles of ether. Ether was used for anesthesiology way back in the day, maybe 40 years ago, but it still gets the job done. Here you see surgical sutures, scalpel, bandages, gauze and rubbing alcohol,” Camp said as he narrated the photos.
“What are those? Looks Russian?”
“No clue, sir. Finn found three of these bottles, but the labels were in Russian,” Camp said to Ferguson.
Ferguson waved his hand at Major Spann. “Get me an American or British Russian speaker right now.”
“Sir, many of the Afghans speak—”
Ferguson cut him short. “I don’t want a damn Afghan who kinda speaks Russian, then tries to translate what he’s thinking in Dari Persian or Pashtu and then over to the English he kinda speaks.”
Spann left the room before Ferguson could finish ranting.
“How’d they kill Banks?”
“Single shot to the temple. At least they didn’t make him suffer. Then again, not sure what he may have gone through before they shot him,” Finn said.
“Looks like he was performing some surgeries based on the PIPs and the ether,” Ferguson answered. “What about the Terp’s son? Did you find him?”
“Yes, sir, at least we were pretty sure that was her kid. We put him in a vacant house across the street, bound and gagged. I’m sure they found him within minutes. Any word on Miriam?”
“She’s here in Kabul. Recovered nicely, no infections, but I’m told some ugly scars on her face and arm. You certainly saved her life,” Ferguson said.
“Right, not every day that you can save a suicide bomber. What’s going to happen to her?”
“Well, the geniuses from the State Department are trying to find another country for her. She’s a dead woman walking in Afghanistan or Pakistan… literally. I’m guessing she’ll go into the SIV program and be resettled as a refugee in Virginia. She’s highly educated and speaks fluent English.”
“Not to mention she only tried to kill 40 Americans,” Camp said with sarcasm duly noted by Ferguson and Finn. “Sir, why don’t you just email the photo to the Russian desk at the Pentagon, State or CIA. I’m sure they could give you an answer in 60 seconds. I’d really like to get a hot shower.”
Ferguson nodded to the sole remaining major who took the SD card out of Ferguson’s laptop and sat down at the PC on his desk.
“Were you able to immobilize the SkitoMister? I had our intel guys hide a GPS beacon on it so the drone could lock in,” Camp said.
“It was the 18th beacon, Camp. We thought it was Banks until it headed in the other direction. Until I spoke with you, there was no way that I was going to authorize an airstrike.”
“Other direction?”
“It moved. First to Miran Shah, then Islamabad… then we lost it.”
“Do you think the Paki’s found the beacon?”
“No, they put the whole machine on an airplane and then we lost it… until it landed in Tehran. Now it’s in Damghan, 300 kilometers east of Tehran… close to the Caspian Sea and not far from the border with Turkmenistan.”
Ferguson stood up and paced rapidly in his office.
“General?” Camp asked.
“Crap,” Ferguson grumbled as he rubbed his balding head. “Raines.”
“Leslie Raines?”
“Daniels and some other agent from Langley briefed her on some biologicals a few weeks ago at Detrick. Raines called me afterwards and told me the Agency was tracking a rail shipment of stockpiled biologicals from the Kirov Oblast west of the Ural Mountains along the Vyatka River on a 36-hour ride on the Trans-Siberian railway to Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.”
Ferguson walked over to a different classified map on his wall as the full picture started to emerge and dots were connecting themselves.
“Ashgabat is less than 700 kilometers from Damghan,” Ferguson said.
“What’s on the train?” Finn asked.
The major got a quick response from the Pentagon.
“Sir, we have a translation on the Russian labels. But it’s more like Latin than Russian. Francisella tularensis, or something like that.”
Ferguson looked Camp straight-on square in the eye.
“Tularemia. That’s what Major Banks reported from FOB Lightning. That’s what Colonel Raines is working on right now in the BSL-4 at Detrick. That’s what you found in Datta Khel Village. And that’s what’s on this damn Russian train.”
National Interagency Biodefense Center
BSL-4 Facility
Fort Detrick, Maryland
The slightly chubby technician got in the elevator without buttons, swiped her card, scanned her biometrics and rode the car down to the first floor. Running through the atrium, past the coffee bar, leather chairs and couches, she ran out into the parking lot as Lieutenant Colonel Raines was getting out of her Wrangler.
“Colonel… Colonel Raines,” she yelled as she got closer.
“Tina, are you okay?” Raines said as she picked up her pace.
Tina was out of breath and bent over in exhaustion.
“Ma’am… four… dead… monkeys!”
Raines looked up toward the secret floor in the NIBC.
“Oh my… Tina are you sure?”
“Positive… we suited up and verified.”
“We did it. A vaccine-resistant strain of tularemia. If we can do it, they can do it. Let’s go girl. Now we need a new vaccine and new antibiotics. Now we’re even. Gotta get one step up and ahead.”
“More dead monkeys?” Tina asked as the redness started to leave her swollen cheeks.
“I hope not, not anymore… Now I want them to live!”
Dr. Groenwald was standing in the Command Center looking at the BSL-4 TV monitors when Raines burst in.
“No skinny latte today, colonel?”
“Champagne if they’d serve it,” Raines responded as she looked at the four non-human primates dead in the bottom of their cages.
“What’s next?” Groenwald asked.
“Now we cook vaccines. The variations shouldn’t be that far off from our existing protocols. Get the recipe out to a pharmaceutical company and manufacture supply.”
“Who do you plan to work with?”
“Haven’t even thought that far, Dr. Groenwald.”
“Well, I know of both a French and German company who have done bio vaccines and antibiotics in the past. I can make some calls.”
“That would be great,” Raines said as Tina ran into the Command Center.
“Colonel Raines, you have a telephone call on the SIPR line… Afghanistan… a U.S. Navy Captain Campbell.”
“On the SIPR? Okay… ,” Raines said as a warm flush filled her face. She thought the news couldn’t be that bad if he was well enough to call her, though he always called on her personal cell phone.
“Camp? Are you okay?”