Twenty minutes later, they pulled to the curb at a quiet lit corner in an anonymous suburban district. There was a fueling station on one corner, offering the usual array of hydrogen, electrical hookups, biofuels and even some hideously expensive fossil fuel. Across the narrow side street was a small tea shop and chemists, one of the vanishing breed of family-owned neighborhood everything-stores that used to fill the English countryside. And caddy-corner, near a small park, was an abandoned entrance to the underground. A lopsided gate, somewhat the worse for wear, blocked the grimy staircase that led down into the shadows. The mangled sign dangling from it read, “OPEN FOR CONNECTIONS, MARCH 2036.” Three years late, Simon thought. Just a bit behind schedule.
Hayden rolled out of the car almost before Simon had pulled to a complete stop; it was all the younger man could do to park and run after him. “Hey!” he called, still pitching his voice low. “Will you wait, please?” Hayden was heading somewhat unsteadily to the underground entrance. He passed the sign that named the station, but Simon couldn’t read it; it was completely covered with graffiti.
As he stumbled to the gate, Hayden pulled a huge rusted key from his pocket. It looked a hundred years old to Simon, at the very least, and it took more than a moment of twiddling and cursing for Hayden to fit it into the massive padlock on the entry gates and pop the lock open.
Hayden shoved the gate wide-open and bolted inside. He gestured for Simon to follow as he dashed down the steps of the old subway. There was a gate at the bottom as well; it took Hayden even less time to produce a different key and open another set of locks.
Simon closed the outer gate behind them and dashed down the stairs to join his father’s old friend…but he skidded to a halt beside him as Hayden pushed the inner gate open with a theatrical squawk. It was dead black inside; the lights had been turned off long ago.
Hayden turned to peer back up the steps, making sure no one was following. Simon could smell the stench of the street bums that lived in the area, but none were in sight. It was hard to see anything in the gloom.
“Hayden,” he said, “This is-”
There was a burst of blinding white light, strong and sudden enough to make Simon lurch back. Hayden turned to him and waved a powerful flashlight in his face. “Always prepared,” he said.
He turned and dove into the darkness. Scowling, and against his better judgment, Simon followed.
They trotted down a second series of steps, moving even deeper into the underground. There was a strangely linear gleaming light below and in front of them; it took Simon a moment to understand what he was looking at: the subway tracks, still clean and shining despite years of disuse.
“Hayden, where the hell are we going?”
This time Hayden didn’t look back. “Just follow, Simon.” As they trotted through the darkness, Simon noticed sections of the track had been disassembled. They were obviously in some long-abandoned section of the tubes, far from any working lines.
Hayden abruptly stopped, so fast that Simon almost crashed into his back. But he pulled up short as Hayden spun and shined the light directly into his face.
“Simon, you and I have never been here.”
He turned to the left and walked through a side tunnel that opened into what appeared to be a utility room. At the far end of the room was another door with yet another lock.
“Where did you get all these keys?”
“Where did you get all those questions?” Hayden muttered as if talking to Teah and pushed the third key into the third lock and turned it. He pulled the door open…only to reveal another door directly behind it. But this one was different than the others. It was newer, cleaner, and there was the dimly glowing box of a biometric sensor cut into it, almost like a small MRI with a three-dimensional scanner. It was so clean and new it seemed entirely out of place in the murk of the abandoned room.
Hayden placed his hand inside the device with an oddly casual air, as if he had done it a thousand times before. Simon saw a blue light flow out of the device as it read the entire form of the scientist’s hand.
It took only moments. The light flashed blue and then green, then the door popped open with a mechanical chunk. Hayden pushed through, gesturing for Simon to follow. “Stay close,” he said.
Simon could feel his heart pounding. They were in a short, dark corridor that led to one more door-this one with no lock at all.
“Where the hell are we?” he said again.
“It’s an entrance. A secret entrance, really. The fact is, there are much easier ways to get here, but this is the only one without cameras.” He belched quietly into his fist. “I think.”
“Hayden, what the hell are you talking about?”
The scientist looked him up and down as if he was making some kind of final decision. After a moment he nodded his head and pushed open the far door.
Simon took one step inside and stopped in astonishment.
The space was as big as a football field and taller than a four-story building. The ceiling was curved into a high dome, buttressed by arcs of dull gray material that looked like steel and plastic at the same time. The floor was concrete, but the vehicles and devices that filled it-cranes, haulers, transformers, and machines he couldn’t begin to understand nearly filled the space.
Above him, suspended from the domed ceiling, were three huge cradles. One cradle was empty; the other two filled, at least in part, with unfinished technology-a vehicle, Simon thought, and one that looked strangely familiar. Cables and scaffolding connected the two constructs; robots rode the cables and flitted through the air between them, in the midst of completing some impossibly complex assignment.
“This…this…”
“This is what I like to call the Spector safe house,” Hayden said with ill-conceived pride. “I invented it.”
Simon tore his eyes away from the panorama to look at his father’s close friend. “Spector,” he said. “The experimental submersibles. But I thought-you told me the project wasn’t even half-finished.”
“Oh, come along, Simon,” he said. “I’ve been working on this for more than twelve years. I’m the recipient of a Nobel Prize, I’ve received the Renssaelaer Award twice now, and I’m a Fellow at the most prestigious robotics college in Europe. Surely you don’t think I’ve gotten this far by lying around waiting, do you?”
He dowsed the flashlight and strolled easily farther into the room. He was clearly comfortable here; it was his home.
The robots and technology hummed and twittered around him as if they weren’t there at all. “The outer project-the one you knew about-is roughly seven years behind the inner project-this one. Over three hundred scientists and engineers from seventeen countries are working on the outer project. Inside? Only thirty-two people even know it exists.” He stopped and turned, then smiled, almost embarrassed. “Well…thirty-three now.”
Simon was nearly speechless. “But…why? Why keep it a secret?”
“Good Lord, Simon. Think it through. Do we really want the Chinese to know we’re this far along? Or the Russians for that matter? It’s vital that they think we are as far behind as the outer project seems to be. This isn’t going to be like the development of the A-bomb after World War II, or the space race-done in public, so unsecure that everyone knew what we were doing, where we were doing it, how far along…”
He stopped, pulling himself up. Simon wondered how many times Hayden had given that speech. “But…it doesn’t matter anymore,” he said. “Not now.”
“Why not?”
He blinked in surprise, as if the answer was obvious. “They shut it down. All of it.”
“What? When?”
“Three weeks ago. Right after the Antarctic Quarantine. Right after they told us both that Oliver was dead.”
He wandered into the room, tortured by the memory. “They took it all-the files, the fabricators. Cancelled the assembly contracts, diverted the shipments. They pushed me out, Simon. Me, the one who created it all! The one who built the entire Spector Project literally out of a hole in the ground! Twelve years of my life, six of yours, and the work of hundreds of other scientists, gone.”