It was typical of the man. He had the sensitivity — the subtlety — of a dinosaur. Kammler glanced at the wine. He’d asked for only the one glass.
‘Good evening. I presume you’d like a Tusker?’ Tusker was a brand of Kenyan lager popular with tourists and expats alike.
Jones eyes narrowed. ‘Never touch the stuff. It’s African, which means it’s piss-weak. I’ll have a Pilsner.’
Kammler ordered the beer. ‘So, what news?’
Jones poured his beer. ‘Your man — Falk Konig — got to take his medicine. He was a little reluctant, but he wasn’t about to argue.’
‘And? Any progress on this boy?’
‘Apparently a kid did arrive here, around six months back, as a stowaway on a transport aircraft. He came complete with some wild story. Sounds like a heap of bullshit to me.’
Kammler’s eyes — reptilian, cold and predatory — fixed themselves on Jones. ‘It may sound like bullshit to you, but I need to hear it. All of it.’
Jones proceeded to relate a similar story as Konig had told Jaeger and Narov several days back. By the end of it, Kammler knew pretty much everything, including the boy’s name. And of course, he didn’t doubt that the tale was one hundred per cent accurate.
He felt the cold claws of uncertainty — of an impossible eleventh-hour dread — tearing at him. If the same story had made its way to Jaeger’s ears, what had he learned? What had he deduced? And where had that taken him?
Was there anything in the boy’s story that might have revealed Kammler’s wider plan? He didn’t think so. How could it? Already the seven flights had landed at their chosen destinations. Their cargoes had been unloaded, and as far as Kammler knew, the primates were parked in quarantine right now.
And that meant the genie was out of the bottle.
No one was about to put it back in again.
No one could save the world’s population from what, even now, was spreading.
Unseen.
Undetected.
Unsuspected even.
In a few weeks’ time it would start to rear its ugly head. The first symptoms would be flu-like. Hardly alarming. But then would come the first of the bleeding.
Well before that time, the world’s population would be infected. The virus would have spread to the four corners of the earth, and it would be unstoppable.
And then it hit him.
The realisation was so forceful it made Kammler choke on his wine. His eyes bulged and his pulse spiked as he contemplated the utterly unthinkable. He grabbed a napkin and dabbed at his chin absent-mindedly. It was a long shot. Next to impossible. But nonetheless, there was still just the sliver of a chance.
‘You all right?’ a voice queried. It was Jones. ‘Look like you just seen a ghost.’
Kammler waved the question away. ‘Wait,’ he hissed. ‘I need silence. To think.’
His teeth locked and ground against each other. His mind was a maelstrom of seething thoughts, as he tried to work out how best to combat this new and utterly unforeseen danger.
Finally he turned his gaze on Jones. ‘Forget every order I’ve given you. Instead, concentrate on this one task exclusively. I need you to find that boy. I don’t care what it costs, where you have to go, which of your… comrades you may need to recruit —
‘I hear you,’ Jones confirmed. It was a long way from going after Jaeger, but at least it was a manhunt of sorts. Something to get his teeth into.
‘I’ll need something to go on. A starting point. A lead.’
‘All will be provided. These slum dwellers — they use cell phones. Mobiles. Mobile internet. I’ll have the best people we’ve got listen out for him. Search. Hack. Monitor. They’ll find him. And when they do, you will go in and terminate with extreme prejudice. Are we understood?’
Jones flashed a cruel smile. ‘Perfectly.’
‘Right, go make your preparations. You’ll need to travel — most likely to Nairobi. You’ll need help. Find people. Offer them whatever it takes, but get this done.’
Jones departed, his unfinished glass of beer gripped in his hand. Kammler turned to his laptop. His fingers flashed across the keyboard, placing a call via IntelCom. It was routed to a nondescript grey office in a complex of low-lying grey buildings, hidden within a swathe of grey forest in remote rural Virginia, on the eastern coast of the USA.
That office was stuffed full of the world’s most advanced signals intercept and tracking technology. On the wall next to the entryway was a small brass plaque. It read:
A voice answered. ‘Harry Peterson.’
‘It’s me,’ Kammler announced. ‘I’m sending you a file on one specific individual. Yes, from my vacation in East Africa. You are to use all possible means — internet, email, cell phones, travel bookings, passport details,
‘Understood, sir.’