Whiteout - Ken Follett [89]
One moved.
She looked more closely. They were guards, all in dark uniforms; and their hands were behind their backs, as if they were tied up.
“No, no!” she said aloud.
But there was no escaping from the dismal conclusion that the Kremlin had been raided.
She felt doomed. First Michael Ross, now this. Where had she gone wrong? She had done all she could to make this place secure—and she had failed utterly. She had let Stanley down.
She turned for the door, her first instinct being to rush to BSL4 and untie the captives. Then her police training reasserted itself. Stop, assess the situation, plan the response. Whoever had done this could still be in the building, though her guess was that the villains were the Hibernian Telecom repairmen who had just left. What was her most important task? To make sure she was not the only person who knew about this.
She picked up the phone on the desk. It was dead, of course. The fault in the phone system was probably part of whatever was going on. She took her mobile from her pocket and called the police. “This is Toni Gallo, in charge of security at Oxenford Medical. There’s been an incident here. Four of my security guards have been attacked.”
“Are the perpetrators still on the premises?”
“I don’t think so, but I can’t be sure.”
“Anyone injured?”
“I don’t know. As soon as I get off the phone, I’ll check—but I wanted to tell you first.”
“We’ll try to get a patrol car to you—though the roads are terrible.” He sounded like an unsure young constable.
Toni tried to impress him with a sense of urgency. “This could be a biohazard incident. A young man died yesterday of a virus that escaped from here.”
“We’ll do our best.”
“I believe Frank Hackett is on duty tonight. I don’t suppose he’s in the building?”
“He’s on call.”
“I strongly recommend you phone him at home and wake him up and tell him about this.”
“I’ve made a note of your suggestion.”
“We have a fault on the phones here, probably caused by the intruders. Please take my mobile number.” She read it out. “Ask Frank to call right away.”
“I’ve got the message.”
“May I ask your name?”
“P.C. David Reid.”
“Thank you, Constable Reid. We’ll be waiting for your patrol car.” Toni hung up. She felt sure the constable had not grasped the importance of her call, but he would surely pass the information to a superior. Anyway, she did not have time to argue. She hurried out of the control room and ran along the corridor to BSL4. She swiped her pass through the card reader, held her fingertip to the scanner, and went in.
There were Steve, Susan, Don, and Stu, in a row against the wall, bound hand and foot. Susan looked as if she had walked into a tree: her nose was swollen and there was blood on her chin and chest. Don had a nasty abrasion on his forehead.
Toni knelt down and began to untie them. “What the hell happened here?” she said.
1:30 A.M.
THE Hibernian Telecom van was plowing through snow a foot deep. Elton drove at ten miles an hour in high gear to keep from skidding. Thick snowflakes bombarded the vehicle. They formed two wedges at the bottom of the windshield, and they grew steadily, so that the wipers described an ever smaller arc, until Elton could no longer see out and had to stop the van to clear the snow away.
Kit was distraught. He had thought himself involved in a heist that would do no real harm. His father would lose money, but on the other hand Kit would be enabled to repay Harry Mac, a debt that his father should have paid anyway, so there was no real injustice. But the reality was different. There could be only one reason for buying Madoba-2. Someone wanted to kill large numbers of people. Kit had never thought to be guilty of this.
He wondered who Nigel’s customer represented: Japanese fanatics, Muslim fundamentalists, an IRA splinter group, suicidal Palestinians, or a group of paranoid Americans with high-powered rifles living in remote mountain cabins in Montana. It hardly mattered. Whoever got the virus would use it, and crowds of people would die bleeding from their eyes.