Micro - Michael Crichton [146]
“Which—ones—are—you?” he said, his voice rumbling. He held Karen delicately, and he tried not to breathe too much as he spoke. He didn’t want to blow her off his hand.
Karen held up her radio headset and pointed to it. She remembered that Jarel Kinsky had said the radios could be used to communicate with full-size people. Maybe it would be easier to talk by radio.
“You—bet.” He put her down on the dashboard, with her plane, and opened the glove box and took out a headset, and plugged it into a mess of electronic equipment sitting on the seat. “Go—to—seventy—one—point—two—five—gigahertz,” he said.
Rick and Karen put on their headsets and tuned their aircraft radios.
The man opened his mouth and spoke words that rolled out: “Can—you—understand—me—now?” An instant later the same words sounded on their headsets in Eric’s normal speaking voice: “Can you understand me now? This is a squirt radio. It collects my voice and speeds it up and squirts it at you. It also slows down your voices so I can understand you.”
They explained to Eric what had happened. “We need to get into the generator as soon as possible,” Karen said.
“First…about my brother.”
They told him. As Karen described Peter’s death, Eric’s palms hit the steering wheel, throwing the micro-humans and the planes into the air. They came down amid choking dust particles, and waited. They gave him time. When he opened his eyes, his face had become set and calm. “I’m taking you into Nanigen. Then I’m going to find Vincent Drake.”
Chapter 48
Chinatown, Honolulu
1 November, 2:30 a.m.
Dan Watanabe woke to the buzzing of his cell phone. He reached for it in the dark and knocked it off the bedside table, and heard it hitting the floor. He groped for the light, fearing bad family news: his seven-year-old daughter, living with his ex-wife; his mother…but the caller was the security chief of Nanigen: “Got a minute, lieutenant?”
Watanabe ran his tongue over a sticky mouth. “Yeah.”
“There was a fire on Tantalus tonight.”
Watanabe grunted. “What?”
“It was small, probably didn’t get reported. Some people died in it.”
“I’m not following you.”
“Those students—they were murdered.”
He sat up fast, instantly full awake. Take the man into custody, get a statement. “Where are you? I’ll have a car—”
“No. I just want to talk with you.”
“You know the Deluxe Plate?” It was open all night.
He was nursing a cup of coffee at a back booth, the only customer in the place, when Don Makele walked in. The man seemed…resigned. Makele eased himself into the booth.
Watanabe didn’t waste time with chitchat. “Let’s hear about the students.”
“They’re dead. Vin Drake has killed at least eight people. They were small people.”
“How small?”
Makele put his thumb and forefinger half an inch apart. “Really small.”
“Tell you what,” Watanabe said. “Let’s pretend I believe you.”
“Nanigen has a machine that’ll shrink anything. Even people.”
A waitress came over and asked if Makele wanted breakfast. He shook his head, and waited in silence while the waitress walked away.
“Will this machine shrink another machine?” Watanabe asked.
“Well—sure,” Makele answered.
“Will it shrink a pair of scissors?”
Makele squinted. “What are you talking about?”
“Willy Fong. Marcos Rodriguez.”
Makele didn’t answer.
Dan Watanabe went on: “I understand you want to tell me what happened to the missing students. But I also want to hear about the micro-bots that cut Fong’s and Rodriguez’s throats from ear to ear.”
“How do you know about the bots?” Makele said.
“Did you think the Honolulu Police Department doesn’t have microscopes?”
Makele sucked on his lips. “The bots weren’t supposed to kill anybody.”
“So what went wrong?”
“The bots were reprogrammed. To kill.”
“By who?”
“I think by Drake.”
Watanabe took that in. “So what happened to the students?”
Makele explained about the supply stations in Manoa Valley, and about Tantalus Base. “The kids must’ve found out something bad about Drake, because he’s been pushing me to…get rid of them.”
“Kill them?”
“Yes. They ended up in Manoa Valley. Drake