Wormhole

 

“We’ve got them.”

 

General Wilson looked up to see a rare smile on Levi Elias’s narrow face.

 

“Tell me.”

 

“It was the bird, all right. Saltator similis, a species of cardinal, indigenous to the hill country bordering the southern Amazon, specifically parts of Paraguay, Uruguay, and northeastern Bolivia. Also the electrical hum from the lights was fifty hertz, so that matches.”

 

“Pretty big area.”

 

“Yes it is. So we did a check against any of Jack Gregory’s previous assignments.”

 

“And?”

 

“Several years ago, Gregory was assigned to eliminate a threat against Miguel de Esquela, a senior Bolivian politician on the CIA’s payroll. A communist guerilla leader had placed a contract on de Esquela. Gregory eliminated the threat.”

 

“Did he have direct contact with de Esquela?”

 

“He did. After assassinating the guerilla warlord, the Ripper killed two hit men inside de Esquela’s house, saved the politician, his wife, and four children.”

 

“A man in Gregory’s debt.”

 

“Indeed. But there’s no record of any subsequent contact between them. We actually looked at this potential linkage several months ago, but came up dry. However, with this latest information we had Big John take another look.”

 

Levi handed Balls Wilson a folder containing six satellite images. The general spread them across his desktop.

 

“It’s a ranch about an hour out of San Javier, formerly the property of Nuremberg Trial fugitive and former SS officer Jori Klaus. Turns out that Miguel de Esquela was instrumental in confiscating that property after Klaus’s death, then arranging its transfer to another German, one Karl Jacques Frazier.”

 

“You’ve confirmed it’s Gregory?”

 

“There’s no photo of Frazier on file. Bolivia isn’t really at the top of the food chain in maintaining digitized records. But Big John thinks it’s him. Correlation 0.803.”

 

Balls Wilson studied the photographs more intensely. “These aren’t very good.”

 

“No. We don’t have any of our better spy satellites on an orbit that covers Bolivia. These are the best we’ve got unless we retask a U-2 or Global Hawk.”

 

The general frowned, leaned back in his leather chair, and closed his eyes for so long that Levi began to wonder if he’d fallen asleep. When Balls opened them again, he shook his head slowly.

 

“If Big John says there’s an 80 percent correlation that’s good enough for me. Retasking those assets dedicated to southwest Asia would be too visible. As good as Gregory is, I don’t want to risk tipping him off.”

 

General Wilson rose to his feet, walked around the big oak desk, and clapped Elias on the back as he walked him toward the door. “Damn fine work, Levi. Looks like it’s time for me to chat with the president. This time he’ll have to make the call.”

 

 

 

 

 

Heather leaned back in the chair and pulled the alien headband from her temples. Half a dozen feet away, Mark and Jennifer also came out of their links. The wind came in off the sloping hills damp and clammy, whipping Heather’s hair around her face as she turned her gaze toward Jack.

 

Three months ago she’d been sure the Bandolier Ship’s creators had good intentions toward Earth. Now she was pretty sure that wasn’t true. It was time to give Jack the bad news.

 

What began as a conversation among Jack, Mark, Heather, and Jennifer quickly expanded to include Janet as she glided silently out through the screen door. Heather led off, describing what she’d seen in the section of the alien database that dealt with Kasari operations, their thirst for new resources, including new species to assimilate. Many things drove them down a path of conquest, especially their powerful wormhole technology.

 

Jennifer went next. She’d focused on gaining an understanding of the motives that drove the Altreians. At the surface, those motives seemed beneficial, to preserve freedom of choice for all species, to stop the Kasari’s rampant environmental destruction, to oppose one society’s aggressive conquest wherever it occurred. But Jennifer had dug deeper, seeking to find out what happened to every planet where the Altreians had engaged the Kasari.

 

Again, her preliminary queries had yielded what seemed to be benign intent. If the Altreians’ ships were able to defeat the Kasari starship before a gateway could be constructed, they left the saved planet in peace. However, once the Kasari succeeded in seducing the planetary population to complete the gateway, the planet was lost. What disturbed Jennifer was that these outcomes failed to account for all the planets. Everywhere she looked she found holes, shifted around in the database in a way that made it extremely difficult to trace the connection.

 

It had taken a stroke of luck to spot the first hidden data link. Frustrated with her inability to pull up detailed information on what had happened to some of the planets, Jennifer had backed off, reviewing star system information gathered over centuries of mapping and monitoring the galaxy.

 

Jennifer filtered this data by narrowing her search to include only planetary systems she’d previously identified as Kasari-targeted systems. Suddenly she began to find cases in which previously teeming planets were now devoid of life. The odd thing was that these weren’t planets killed off by Kasari consumption of resources. Neither were they planets where the Kasari had been defeated before gateway construction had begun. Instead they were the planets on which, according to her previous search, the population had been attempting to build a gateway; then all subsequent military data had disappeared. It was as if that data had been purged from the Bandolier Ship’s database.

 

But why had the Altreians purged the military record of how these planets died? If the Kasari had been responsible, then surely the data would have been maintained. Even if the Altreians had managed to crush the Kasari after they had assimilated the planet’s inhabitants, it would have counted as a victory. So something else had happened. Something they wanted to hide.

 

At this point, Jack interrupted the telling. “So what do you make of it?”

 

Jennifer hesitated a second before speaking. “I think if the Altreians decided they were about to lose a world, they attempted to kill the entire population before the gateway could be completed.”

 

As much as she hated the idea, Heather found herself nodding in agreement. Mark’s silence spoke for itself.

 

“So how did they do it?” Jack asked.

 

“I don’t know,” said Jennifer. “All that data got wiped.”

 

Heather shifted in her seat. “I doubt the Altreians ever loaded that into the Bandolier Ship’s database.”

 

Janet turned toward Mark. “What about the AI?”

 

“It was a no-show. No sign of it at all, and I was looking.”

 

“Maybe that’s a good thing.”

 

“I wouldn’t count on it,” said Mark.

 

Jack rose, moving to the edge of the porch, looking toward the east, where a sliver of the full moon peeked over the horizon. If someone had painted little hands below it, it would have looked like a neon “Kilroy was here” drawing.

 

“We’re in a tight spot.”

 

“About to get tighter,” Heather said. “I think Stephenson was behind the November Anomaly, probably using the Rho Ship to generate it. Now he’s going to use that as the reason the world’s governments need to build the gateway. What really sucks is if we stop this Rho Project, the black hole will eat our planet. If we don’t, either the Kasari horde pours through or our beloved Bandolier Ship toasts us all.”

 

“That’s one thing I don’t get,” Mark said. “Now that the AI is gone, we have complete control over the Bandolier Ship’s computers. I didn’t detect anything that would be some sort of trigger for a self-destruct system or anything remotely like that.”

 

“And we don’t have any idea what really happened on those dead planets,” Jennifer added. “It might have been the AI triggering things or, considering the people who’ve worn that headset, it might have been the fourth crewman.”

 

“Careful.” Janet’s voice, low and soft, eased through the night air like a stiletto. Heather had forgotten how intimidating she could be, and apparently Jennifer had too.

 

Realizing the implication of her words, Jennifer hastily continued. “Sorry. I forgot. Anyway, it can’t be that. Robby’s just a baby.”

 

In the moonlight, Janet’s eyes flashed a silver reflection. Then, without a word, she walked back into the house, letting the screen door slam shut behind her, leaving a lump in Heather’s throat and a dull ache in her heart. It seemed she just couldn’t alter the destiny that made her hurt everyone she cared about.

 

 

 

 

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