Author's Note:
All sexuality involves persons over the age of 18. This chapter is set in a real town, but I have never been there. Any resemblance to the actual location, or to persons living or dead is pure coincidence. If by some chance anyone knows this town, I hope you have a good laugh!
--
2:37 AM, EDT
"Just answer it! It's driving me nuts."
Emily McKinnon sighed and rolled her latest discovery off her. He was a handsome grad student named David (never Dave) with a lively interest in the physical sciences.
Dr. McKinnon already knew it was going to be Jane. The mid-atlantic team-lead was far too enthusiastic about her job, and had already called in her latest preposterous theory. She would either be calling to apologize, or to exchange it for some even more ridiculous hypothesis. McKinnon already regretted putting an alert in with the CDC.
"Yes, Jane?" she held the device up to her ear so David wouldn't be privy to this nonsense.
There was silence on the other side of the call. For a moment McKinnon thought she had missed the call after thirty rings; but no -- she could hear the spaciousness of the connection. It wasn't a dead line, it was an eerie silence.
"Jane?"
* * *
2:54 AM, EDT
McKinnon had artfully arranged herself in her bathrobe. She had time to put on professional clothes, but she wanted to make sure they perceived her as rumpled and disturbed as they would be.
Even while engaging emergency protocols, she hustled David out of her apartment. He desperately wanted to be part of it, offering to make coffee, put earplugs in, whatever she demanded, but this was no place for a civilian. It would be her greatest moment, or her absolute worst, and either way, she didn't want her boy toy part of it.
Given this was all derived from a late-night call from Dr. Jane Fitzpatrick, McKinnon was betting on a worst case outcome. But the cost of ignoring the situation was far too high. They might accuse her of grandstanding or put her in the same category of over-enthusiastic functionary as McKinnon put Jane, but this was what her small, forgotten, under-funded department was for, and, however unlikely the circumstances, this was exactly why she and her team of two administrative appointees and eight field agents were for. If she didn't raise the flag tonight, they might as well disband the operation.
Before the conference call, she had those two admins awake.
"I want you to find, and call, every phone in Bumfuck PA. I want you to find someone on the ground who can check on our agents."
"Phillipsburg, population 2800."
"Find someone. Call the police if they have them, and then the diner, and then the gun range. Wake people up. Get the cell phone list from Homeland Security and go in order. I want someone on the phone in 20 minutes."
The conference call:
Andrew Mueller was already on screen when McKinnon connected. Mueller was her supervisor, and reported directly to the Deputy Administrator. He looked surprisingly sharp, and very serious. He wore a crisp, white button-up shirt.
Next online was Ana Gonzales from the CDC. Then a grim grey-stubbled man identified only as being Homeland Security. And they all waited another minute before Maj. Gen. Brad Buckley came on from USSOCOM, in uniform of course.
Dr. McKinnon tabbed to her checklist.
"Sorry to wake everyone. I am obligated by command to read the following verbatim:
"This meeting is to enact protocol Wildfire, authorized by Congress in 1962, and renewed under joint supervision in 1992. This meeting is being recorded. We are under code black security clearance; anyone not holding that clearance is hereby granted clearance for this material only.
"The business at hand. At 9:35PM, Eastern time, a field team in central Pennsylvania notified me of possible organic material in a meteorite landing. I contacted Dr. Gonzales at the CDC as per protocol, and ordered the field team to hold position and wait for further instruction. It's extremely difficult to positively identify organic material on-site. Contamination from terrestrial sources is 100% guaranteed, and we have had many disappointing false positives in the past. None have required this protocol.
"However, I received a call at 2:37 from my field team. I confess I didn't answer it as promptly as I should have. When I did, it was dead air. My field team is not responsive, which is highly anomalous.
"Although this is an extremely low-probability event, it is within the realm of possibility that the team came in contact with an infectious agent unknown to terrestrial science."
McKinnon paused to let it sink in.
Gonzales broke the silence. "I confirm Dr. McKinnon's prior contact. We put out a general alert, and do have corroborating evidence. The CDC received a courtesy call from the coroner of Centre County PA indicating a non-identifiable cause of death, pending further investigation. We do get hundreds of such notifications each day, so this did not trigger any particular concerns, but it must be considered relevant data."
Another pause.
"What's this Wildfire protocol then?" the General asked. "Not familiar with it."
The grey stubbled H.S. man answered. "Had to look it up myself. Basically obsolete cold-war stuff. Early space program holdover. On-call scientists prepared for first-contact. Real science-fiction stuff, but not as bad as some of the DARPA garbage. Budget of 11 person headcount, none appointed. Too small to register. Surprised NASA hasn't cut it to fund a couple of solar panels on the ISS."
My life in a nutshell,
McKinnon thought.
"Correct me if I'm strong Dr. McKinnon, but my understanding is your team scavenges and sells meteors. Kind of a NASA bake sale?"
"Meteorites. And you are correct. We use the proceeds of private sale of extraterrestrial mineral objects to keep our equipment up-to-date."
"How the mighty have fallen," he said. McKinnon couldn't tell if he was contemptuous, sympathetic, or philosophical.
"So: what does this 'protocol' say we are supposed to do?" the General asked.
"With joint supervision -- that is this committee here in session -- we have the option of engaging our team of civilian-scientists to put together a research team. Our organization no longer has dedicated facilities, so those would be secured as needed by the oversight committee. Additionally, if a regional quarantine is determined, the CDC and military are expected to lead that effort. Finally--I'm not advocating for this, but just so you know what the letter of the law is--this committee has authorization to direct the President to call a nuclear strike on domestic territory."
The General laughed. "That's 1962 alright. Well, thank you for performing your duty, Doctor.. MacOnion was it? I think we can all get back to bed now?"
McKinnon's phone lit up. Her admin Gebre had something.
While McKinnon was catching up, the CDC official shook her head. "Not so fast, General. We need to take the possibility of infectious agent seriously. If the past few years have taught us anything, it is the importance of decisive early action. I move that we formalize this committee, dispatch an investigation team to arrive in the morning, and put the Pennsylvania National Guard on alert for possible physical quarantine."
"You're seriously talking about a space disease?"
"It doesn't need to be extra-terrestrial. That could be coincidence. But we have two, possibly three warning signals, and history will not look kindly on us if we ignore them to disastrous consequence."
"Pardon me," Dr. McKinnon said. "We have someone from Phillipsburg on the phone. I'm going to put them into the call. She had Gebre on speaker so he could hear her directive. "Gebre, please add your contact to the conference."
There was a moment or two as another panel established connection.
A young woman in pajamas was sitting in her kitchen, her face red and blotchy with tears.
"Hello, this is Dr. McKinnon. I am sorry to intrude on your grief, but this could be a matter of utmost importance. We don't know what has happened. Could you please explain what you told my assistant?"
The girl gasped for breath. "I... I... I..."
"Take your time, girl," McKinnon's boss Andrew Mueller spoke for the first time.
She took a deep breath. "They're dead, Sir."
"I am sorry for your loss. Can you tell us who? And how?"
"My... my mother. My--" she suddenly spun off camera, to the sound of vomit.
Even the Homeland Security guy looked concerned.
The girl came back on. "Sorry... it's... My mom and my brother, Sir."
"And what happened?" Mueller asked.
"I heard sounds. It sounded like maybe my mom was in pain. Or... something. I didn't know what to think. I got up and..." She closed her eyes and took a deep breath.
"Slow down, lass," the H.S. guy said. "Let's take this carefully. What's your name?"
"M... Melissa Becker, sir."
"Ok, Melissa. And how old are you?"
"Eighteen, sir. I just graduated last month."
"Ok, Melissa. And where do you live?"
"On Sheffield St., Sir. 403 Sheffield St."
"And this is Phillipsburg, PA?"
"Yes Sir."
"And who else is home right now?"
"Um... just me, Sir. My Mother and Brother are..."
"I understand. And your father?"
"Cancer, three years ago."
"Ok, I'm sorry. Now, tell us slowly, what happened."
"I heard noises, and I thought maybe something was wrong, maybe my mother was sick, or... having a dream."
"So you got up to check on her."
"Yes sir."
"And what happened?"
"I... I really shouldn't say, Sir."
General Buckley started to cut in, but the H.S. man muted him.
"I understand, Melissa. This is a difficult thing. But I need you to understand that more lives may be at stake. Please just state the facts. We already have people on the way to help."
Dr. McKinnon found herself surprised at the man's steady manner, and almost found herself believing that help was on the way.
"Well, Sir. They were... they were in sin."