“Besides, baby,” he said, “here’s what’s going to happen. One way or another, we’re going to get out of here. Then, for a while, we’ll be in a boat, and Arlette can’t be any more chaperoned than in a sixteen-foot boat with both her parents. And after we get back to civilization, Jason will go home to his daddy, and Arlette will be in Arkansas, and that will be that.”
He felt Manon’s sinew resist his fingers, and then Manon gave a long sigh, and he felt her relax, lean back against his strength. “Oh, why’d you have to bring that boy here?” she murmured. “He’s going to be nothing but trouble.”
“That’s the truth,” Nick said. He studied the nape of Manon’s neck, the loose tight curls that had escaped the kerchief in which she’d bound her hair. The sheen on her fine mahogany skin, supple as the day they were married. He leaned close to her ear.
“Jason’s only thinking what’s natchel,” he said. “He’s not thinking anything I’m not thinking.” He felt Manon stiffen. “That’s what I’m worried about,” she said, and then, after a moment’s resistance, she relaxed again, her head lolling back against one of his hands. “Not now, Nick,” she murmured. “I can’t deal with this now.”
“Don’t worry, baby,” Nick smiled. “We’re chaperoned.”
There was a honk from the speakers, and then Frankland’s voice telling all work parties to assemble to the trucks.
“There,” Nick said. “See what I mean?”
Jessica stood with Larry Hallock next to the Auxiliary Building. Stood on dry land, her boots covered with dry dust, not river mud. A hundred feet away an Army brass band, gratefully reunited with their instruments after days of debris removal, were exercising their callused fingers on “Hail to the Chief.” Operation Island was a success. The twenty-four-hour air-lift of earthquake debris had finally produced a plausible island of twenty acres raised six feet above the river’s current flood stage. The last loads consisted not of debris, but of gravel to provide a safe surface to walk on. Army bulldozers were currently grading the surface flat. More material would be added later, but right now it was more important to get Larry’s people into the business of getting spent reactor fuel out of the Auxiliary Building and then out of the earthquake zone.
A channel had been carved into the island just for this purpose. A little canal, wide and deep enough for a fully laden barge, ran from the edge of Poinsett Island to the end of the Auxiliary Building. There, a barge could be loaded with flasks of spent fuel, then towed to safety downriver. A barge was now being towed into place by a pair of bulldozers. Its rust-streaked hull rode high in the water, ballasted only by the three huge steel flasks into which fuel units could be loaded. Jessica felt good knowing that at least one thing had gone right. With Nature stomping on her every effort to control the river, with the evacuation she’d recommended shattered by a second major quake, this, at least, was something she could point to with pride.
Her very own island. Built of much more solid material than anything else in the river, Poinsett Island might well last hundreds of years.
“Looks good, General,” Larry said. “Nice piece of work, here.”
“Thank you,” Jessica said.
“I like the shiner, too.”
Jessica raised a self-conscious hand to her black eye. “My husband thinks it’s kind of dashing,” she said.
“Makes you look determined as heck.”
They both glanced up at the sound of a helicopter. They had both grown so used to copters in Army green or Navy blue that civilian white seemed a little startling against the cloudless blue sky.
“Here comes the press,” Jessica said without enthusiasm.
“Bet they like the black eye, too,” Larry said.
Despite the media’s voracious twenty-four-hour-per-day demand for information—or, in the absence of information, baseless rumor, innuendo, and sensation—Jessica had managed to keep the press at arm’s length till now. She had appointed a press officer in Vicksburg to manage the information flow—the information went not just to the media, but to politicians demanding information about their districts—and Jessica had stopped by the briefings at least once per day to add a little personal, calming dimension to the day’s news riot.
Much of her work with the press consisted of stamping out one terrifying, sensational rumor about Poinsett Landing after another. Stories about giant poisonous radioactive clouds floating over the South, or a river of pure liquid plutonium burning its way down the Mississippi, continued to persist in the face of any data to the contrary. The biggest earthquake in human history isn’t enough for you, Jessica wanted to say, you have to have Chernobyl, too?
As if that weren’t enough, she had to be very careful with place names. Foreign journalists had demonstrated an understandable difficulty in separating the Mississippi, a river, from the State of Mississippi, a political entity, and the Mississippi Delta, a geographical feature. As if that weren’t confusing enough to information-saturated foreigners, it was also necessary to keep straight the State of Arkansas, the Arkansas River, and the Arkansas Delta, the Missouri River and the State of Missouri, and bear in mind that much of Kansas City was not in the State of Kansas but in Missouri. Compared to that, Operation Island was simple. Operation Island was Jessica’s showpiece. The press were going to stand on the island, prove to themselves that it existed, that the panic they’d been broadcasting was baseless and that the Corps of Engineers could work wonders. Jessica didn’t know about civilian morale, she supposed, but it would sure as hell do her own morale a lot of good.
The press landed, and were shown to their reserved area by their liaison people. Secret Service, conspicuous in neat summer-weight suits, had stationed themselves around the island. More Secret Service, equipped as snipers, stood atop the Auxiliary Building.
The sound of helicopter rotors chopped through the air. Big Marine copters appeared over the treeline to the east.
“Here comes your boss,” Larry said.
Jessica looked down at her BDUs, brushed dust off the pants legs and the toes of her boots, then made sure her helmet was square on her head. The commander-in-chief was coming to give her work on Poinsett Island the official presidential seal of approval.
The Army brass band did some last-minute tuning, almost inaudible in the helicopter roar. Jessica made a smart turn and marched across the gravel to the place where the presidential helicopter was expected to land.
Offer condolences before you say anything else, she reminded herself. The poor guy’s lost his wife. Try not to talk every single minute, she told herself as the presidential party circled the island. Let the man get a word in edgewise.
He’s a politician, she reminded herself. He’ll want to talk.
The fact was, Larry thought, that a presidential visit lasts only a few minutes. But cleanup is a task that lives forever.
The afterglow of the presidential visit, the presidential handshake, and the presidential compliments had lasted all of maybe twenty minutes. After that, it was back to policing the power plant. Larry stood on the fuel handling machine and watched Jameel as he rolled the big crane along its tracks. Floodlights gleamed in the murky river water of the fuel holding pond. The crane came to a stop.
“This is where you wanted us, Mr. Hallock.”
“Test the turret,” Larry said. “Let’s make sure everything works.” Electric motors whined. Larry, hanging his head over the edge of the platform, saw the turret rotate beneath his feet. Nothing shorted out on the instrument panel.