steel slider lifted with a gasp, and the DC techs entered immediately, dressed in full gear, spacemen in Mendenhallâs dream. She couldnât see their faces. There were four, one pointing orders, three heading back toward the lab to fetch the bodies from Claiborne. The suits slowed their movements. The leader handed Mendenhall a cap, which she put on immediately. She could tell by the straightness of his arm that there was nothing to say, no room for anything but the literal.
He could have been expecting her, forewarned.
The waiting truck, with its door rolled up and its ramp down, was white inside, a lab almost, with beds bunked along its side walls. Looming behind the truck, just beyond the entry light, a camouflaged jeep idled, its occupants hidden behind tinted windows.
The DC people returned to the bay with the bodies on gurneys.
The bodies were sealed in white bags. Mendenhall tried to identify them, found that she could. Dozier was the longest, Fleming the widest, Verdasco the thinnest. She recalled his cheekbones, how they reflected his hip points, paled the color of his skin.
Soon after they were up the ramp, the slider closed and she was alone again with Mullich, Silva, and three empty gurneys.
20.
When they returned to the lab they shed their masks and gloves. Mullich and Silva removed their caps. Mendenhall kept hers in place, wondering how her hair looked. Mullich appeared fresh from the barber. Silvaâs black hair cascaded into form and then shone even more as she pulled it into a ponytail.
Who were these people? She calculated the hours of her current shift. She was due a shower.
High on the far wall of the lab hung four large screens showing the four bodies in 3-D grids, blueprints. Claiborne stood working the desktop that controlled the screens. Like his main desk, that table was also a standing one. She wished she had his posture. His shift was just as long as hers.
For a moment, the only real movement was the roiling display left on Mullichâs screen. When Mendenhall focused there, she saw that it had been changed. She moved to it, felt Mullich and Silva turn with her.
On screen, the gel-block ballistic experiment had been replaced by another loop. This one showed the very old and famous clip of the circus strongman taking a cannonball to his stomach. Over and over, in slow motion, the cannon fired point-blank into the manâs belly, the huge iron ball trampolining harmlessly away while the strongman stood his ground. Claiborne had muted the sound, but Mendenhall heard it anyway, the prolonged and hollowed groan. Mullich and Silva were kind enough not to chuckle, but Mendenhall felt their smiles behind her.
âOkay, fine,â she said. âBut it shows the same thing, just from the polar opposite. And I bet the guy died from it. Eventually.â She paused the video at the point of impact, the ball buried in the manâs stomach, just missing his lower ribs. âItâs the fat that saves him.
And those big legs. But look, in this second heâs a bag of jelly with eyes and a mouth.â She pointed to the grotesque flap of his arms, the impossible angles of his elbows, the lifeless hands. âAnd there in the extremities you see the most damage being done.â
She felt the sting of tears, a mix of frustration and fatigue. She set the loop into motion again and sympathized with the strongman.
âScrew them,â she said. âRight, big fella? Screw them.â
She headed to the surgeonsâ lounge to take a nap. She would wake up and this nightmare would be over. Thorpeâs quarantines would expire into mere advisory and high caution, controlled exits.
All the beds and chairs and couches in the surgeonsâ lounge were taken. On one bed two nurses had doubled up, both snoring.
She considered waking them, claiming the space. But her heart rate was up.
Before she could leave the lounge, she felt a message ping. Two surgeons looked up from