“You’ve not seen the news?”
Camp stopped in his tracks and put his bag down.
“What news?”
“The festival has been pushed up… by two weeks. Your friend from the Hindu Kush… he’s dead.”
“Why?” Camp demanded. Reuven could hear the anger in Camp’s voice.
“It wasn’t us.”
“Why does that seem hard to believe right now?”
“If I wanted him dead, he would have never finished his picnic.”
Reuven paused and let the silence and realization sink in for Camp.
“So… he tried to stop it, they killed him and they moved the plan up,” Camp finally said as the pieces started to come together.
“I must reach your scientist, Shepherd’s Pie… we have moved to ‘orange’. There is not much time now.”
“Okay, Molly, do we need to play all this covert code shit, innuendos and chain calls, or do you want her name and phone number?”
Reuven rubbed his eyes and blew the frustration out of his mouth. There was little time left to maintain controlled conversation security and Reuven had to move quickly.
“I know her name, give me the number… call her first and tell her to expect my call.”
LyonBio
Lyon, France
The office phone in Raines’ lab was ringing. It was the first time it had rung since she was in France. Raines had forgotten that she even had a desk phone.
“Leslie Raines.”
“Les, I’ve been trying to reach you for almost 18 hours.”
“Camp,” Raines said with comfort.
“Are you okay?”
“Didn’t you play my message? I took a long bath, drank a full bottle of wine and slept for nearly 20 hours straight. I forgot to turn my phone back on. Sorry.”
“Les… we have big problems. I have to speak ambiguously, so track with me. Les, the rabbit is coming earlier than we planned.”
The rabbit, she asked herself. Rabbit fever… the tularemia. Raines was panicked.
“How much earlier?”
“Two weeks earlier. The rabbit may be visiting our friends as early as a week from today.”
“Camp… it won’t be ready by then. You know that, right?”
“How much? How much can you have ready?” Camp begged.
“I don’t know… some… nowhere close to all of it.”
“Les, you’re going to get a call from a man. I gave him your number. Don’t ask questions just give him answers. Imagine every question he is about to ask you and have the answers ready.”
“Good God, Camp… you’re scaring me.”
“You should be scared, Les. I’m scared.”
“What’s his name?”
“Doesn’t matter. Call him Molly Bloom.”
41
Beirut Luna Park
Beirut, Lebanon
The 50 balloon teams met in a classroom at Beirut Arab University. The teams were sponsored by several governments, businesses, news organizations and even airlines. The prize money was put up by QLS, a research organization based out of Islamabad with offices in Iran, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen. Qazvin Life Sciences was highly regarded throughout the Middle East, and Dr. Markazi was their ambassador of goodwill.
“I am Dr. Markazi and on behalf of the many event organizers, I am pleased to welcome you to the first annual Unity Festival. First, I want to thank you for arriving early. The weather forecasts for late October were growing worse by the day. The entire world will be watching, so we wanted to make sure that our skill and expertise were on full display with proper conditions.”
The 50 pilots and their teams were excited. The prize money was certainly a good incentive, but the international television news coverage was just plain seductive. Every balloon was painted with the decorative logos of sponsoring businesses, governments and universities.
“This will be a very challenging race. From Beirut to Port Said is 418 kilometers, or 260 miles. We expect the wind to be blowing from north to south. You may use your own judgment, but we recommend that all pilots stay at 3,000 feet and below,” Kazi said.
“What about the Zionists?” one pilot shouted out.
“Obviously, do not stray or even navigate over their non-existent territory. International law indicates that every country’s territorial waters extend for 12 nautical miles, or 14 miles by car. But I’m quite certain the Zionists will have international blood on their hands if they shoot down hot air balloons during a Unity Festival race.”
The room erupted in laughter and applause
“Come as close to the Zionist’s coast line as you feel comfortable doing. But smile for the cameras. Every television news network in the world will have their cameras focused on you as you fly past Tel Aviv. Your skill, proficiency and speed will be on display for the entire world to see. If you are too far out above the Mediterranean, you will not be seen on TV. That is why we are offering a 5,000 Egyptian pound bonus for every team that is filmed on western TV news. Brothers… every team. That’s a huge bonus.”
The room filled with thunderous applause.
“Each team has different skills. There must be two people in every balloon. To level the competition and make it fair among all teams, each balloon must take a separate vapor tank on board, which is designed to eliminate the advantage that a lightweight team might have over a heavier team. The heaviest team is the benchmark. If the heaviest team weighs 300 pounds, for example, and the lightest team weighs 225 pounds, then the lightest team must carry a 75-pound tank of water. Each balloon will have additional water tanks added to their balloon, depending on the weight deficit between them and the heaviest team.”
The pilots were not thrilled with that rule. If every team was even from the start then no team would be a clear winner. Dr. Markazi addressed that.
“As soon as you cross into the Zionist’s air space and you can see the hook in the shoreline that is Haifa, you can start to vaporize your water, reduce your weight, and increase your speed. If you start to vaporize your ballast weight before you get to Haifa, then you will be disqualified.”
Dr. Markazi lifted up one of the water ballast tanks and the vapor unit that was attached to each.
“I have personally built each one of these systems. Simply turn this knob, when you are over Haifa, and the water ballast in your tank will start to burn off. Any questions?”
The elderly woman, sitting in the middle of the room with various members of Luna Park’s employees and event organizers, pressed the clicker in her hands and snapped photos as Kazi demonstrated the vapor unit he had built.
The room full of pilots and teams were more than excited.
“Next Tuesday morning at 8:00am, the Unity Festival race begins from Luna Park. Once your ship has been inspected and your ballast tank has been filled according to your weight, you will receive your ribbon and will be ready to fly.”
A young man from the back of the room raised his hand.
“Yes.”
“Dr. Markazi, are you a hot air balloon pilot? Are you racing?”
“No, I’m a nitrogas RC pilot, an astrophysicist and a microbiologist. My grandfather is the head of QLS, and he’s putting up the prize money. But balloons don’t go fast enough to suit me.”
The audience of pilots and crew laughed and were probably relieved that Markazi wasn’t one of their competitors.
“Now, as a special treat, reporters from three major Arabic networks are about to come in. They want to interview you, learn about your skills and abilities. Talk to them about Islamic unity. Make your countries and your God very proud of you.”