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‘Did you see much of the people who worked there?’ asked Patterson.

The barman shook his head. He held up the paper Karen had given him and said, ‘This may say “near” Capel Curig, but it’s a bloody long drive up into the mountains.’

‘When was the last time you saw anyone from the field station?’ asked Patterson.

‘Must be… last summer, I’d say.’

‘So you didn’t see anything of the two scientists who came to work there about four weeks ago?’

‘News to me,’ said the man.

‘Can you tell us how to get there?’ asked Karen.

‘But there’s nothing left,’ said the barman.

‘We’d still like to see it.’

The barman gave them directions and they went back out to the car. Karen offered to drive. ‘If you’re sure,’ said Patterson, who’d had quite enough of driving in miserable conditions for one day.

When they reached the junction the barman had warned them about, Karen strained to see through the windscreen. ‘He said it was just after here… on the left… there it is.’ She swung the Toyota on to a rough mountain track, and they began to bump their way slowly up an ever-steepening incline that was rapidly turning into a river with the rainwater streaming off the mountains.

‘I’m not even sure why we’re doing this,’ said Patterson.

Karen thought for a moment, then said, ‘We are going to the place where the people we love were last known to be,’ she said. ‘Anything else starts from there.’

It took them nearly fifty minutes to negotiate the track and reach the charred ruins of the field station. Karen kept the engine running and the headlights on while they surveyed the remains in silence.

‘Do you have a torch?’ she eventually asked.

Patterson reached over into the back and brought up a large rubber-handled torch.

Karen switched off the engine. She killed the headlights but left the sidelights on to provide a reference point in the darkness.

‘What a mess!’ exclaimed Patterson as they walked among the ruins. ‘I suppose they couldn’t get a fire engine up here.’

‘If they even knew about it,’ added Karen.

‘All the same,’ said Patterson thoughtfully, ‘the fire did a remarkably thorough job. Makes me wonder what they were storing here — aviation fuel, by the look of it.’

Karen saw what he was getting at. There was practically nothing recognisable left in the shell of the building. She moved to the side and said, ‘Bring the torch over here.’

Patterson brought up the beam to illuminate a burned-out car. Despite the rain, it still smelled strongly of burning rubber. ‘Looks like a Land-Rover,’ said Patterson.

‘Do you think it’s the one Peter and Amy used?’

‘So why is it still here?’ said Patterson. ‘They’d have needed transport to get away.’

‘It’s not exactly hitch-hiking territory, is it?’ agreed Karen.

The moment was interrupted by the sound of a labouring engine. ‘Who the devil?’ exclaimed Patterson.

They turned to face the track, and a few moments later two headlights topped by a flashing blue light appeared. A North Wales Police Land-Rover drew up and two yellow-jacketed policemen got out.

‘What’s your business here?’ asked one aggressively. He shone his torch directly at them.

Karen put her hand up to her eyes and said, ‘My husband was working here.’

‘And my wife,’ added Patterson.

‘You must be the two from Scotland, then?’ asked the policeman, changing his tone.

‘How did you know that?’

‘We had a call from Lothian and Borders Police asking us to keep an eye out for a Land-Rover owned by some outfit called Lehman Genomics. Turns out it’s this one here,’ he said, pointing to the wreck. We identified it from the VIN number on the chassis.’

‘So what does that tell us?’ asked Patterson.

‘Not much,’ said the policeman. ‘The only comfort I can give you is that the building was unoccupied at the time of the fire.’ In the ensuing silence he added, ‘You’ve come a long way. I’ll have a word with the local taxi firms in the morning, if you like.’

‘Thank you,’ said Karen, still looking at the ashes.

THIRTEEN

By mid-afternoon William Victor Spicer had been taken into custody, charged with the murder of Anthony Pelota, and Steven was nearing his wits’ end trying to establish how Spicer had managed to contract the disease. The MP had not been anywhere near Africa in the past five years and could recall no recent dealings with anyone who had. Absolutely nothing in what Spicer had told him in their long interview even hinted at a new line of inquiry.

His worst fears about the man being a red herring, rather than the common factor in the virus outbreaks, looked like being realised. Humphrey Barclay, Victor Spicer and Frank McDougal still appeared to be independent, unconnected sources of filovirus outbreaks. He called Fred Cummings and arranged to meet him over at City General. He needed a sounding board and Caroline was working down at St Jude’s; her answering machine had just told him so.

‘You did well in getting to Spicer,’ said Cummings when Steven told him about the morning. ‘Cane’s people didn’t even know he existed.’

‘But it hasn’t got me anywhere. Spicer has just replaced Ann Danby as the wildcard in the pack. We’re left with a virus that looks as though it’s breaking out at random.’

‘But we both know better than that.’

Steven nodded. ‘But I am beginning to wonder.’

‘You’ll find the link,’ said Cummings encouragingly. ‘It’s out there somewhere, as someone used to say.’

‘Thanks a lot.’ Steven smiled. ‘So what’s happening in the real world?’

‘More and more cases, and it’s been spreading out of the city, as we knew it would. People move around, and with the best will in the world we’re not going to put a stop to that with a city population of over two and a half million. All the medical services have been put on the alert for it nationwide, so there’s a better chance of snuffing it out than there was here in Manchester at the beginning. There are no new wildcards as far as we know, but there are still a few cases we have to work on to establish the line of contact.’

‘What are CDC up to?’ asked Steven.

‘They’re having a re-think about whether this particular flilovirus might be airborne after all.’

‘Shit,’ said Steven.

‘They’re reaching the same conclusion we did: that there are just too many people going down with it for it to be body-fluid transmission alone.’

‘So what happens now?’

‘We ring-fence the city and burn down all the houses,’ replied Cummings, adding, in response to Steven’s expression, ‘It’s ironic, really, but that’s what they do in the African outbreaks and it’s very effective.’

‘But not an option.’

‘I think a curfew is the best we can manage. We’ve got to stop people mingling in public places. We’ve closed the big things like cinemas and football grounds, but so many small businesses got exemptions from the last order that it ended up making very little difference. People are more frightened now, though, and that’s going to work in our favour.’

‘Fear is our friend,’ said Steven.

‘A good soundbite,’ said Cummings. ‘I’ll make a note of it.’

‘How about resources?’

‘No problem about equipment. The Americans and Swedes have been flying in state-of-the-art stuff. I think the CDC people see us as a bit of a testing ground for what they’ve been preparing for in a big American city for years. The Swedes have prided themselves on being expert in mobile facilities ever since Linkoping in 1990. That aside, we have a growing nursing-staff problem as I think you’ve seen for yourself?’

Steven nodded.

‘There’s a country-wide call going out for volunteers, preferably those with infectious-disease experience but they’re a dying breed. Most of the old infectious-disease hospitals have been closed down over the last ten to fifteen years.’

‘I guess we didn’t need them with all these old churches lying around empty,’ said Steven sourly. ‘They’re ideal. All we need do is tack a crematorium on the back and they’re tailor-made for the job.’