“You’ve been lost in the ice for forty-five years.”
She was good. Damned good. She looked so sincere, sounded so American! Charlie’s lip curled.
“Helluva…story, blon…die,” he rasped, his throat raw and aching. “Too bad…I’m not buying it.”
“It’s true.”
“Yeah, and…I’m Joe…DiMaggio.”
The Commies knew just how to wring a man’s head inside out. Charlie had flown during the Korea War. He’d lost buddies, had heard tales about the POWs who’d disappeared into China. Only now, three years after the war had finally ended, was the truth beginning to seep out.
The Soviet masters of both North Korea and China had perfected a technique the CIA labeled brainwashing. According to highly classified reports, they’d programmed American POWs to betray their country, burying the traitorous impulse so deep in their psyche that no one, even the POWs themselves, knew it existed.
The CIA had proof, had shown Charlie and his fellow U-2 pilots the case file of a lieutenant who’d returned home to lead a quiet, ordinary life as a Frigidaire salesman until something or someone had triggered him. Without warning, the former officer had walked off the job, retrieved his hunting rifle, and calmly put a bullet through the powerful senator who was making a whistle stop campaign appearance in town that afternoon. To this day, the lieutenant had no idea why he’d killed the charismatic presidential candidate.
Charlie wasn’t about to let this green-eyed blonde play with his head.
“I know it’s hard to believe, Major Stone,” she was saying calmly, “but I’m telling you the truth. You’re at an American oceanographic station one hundred and eighty miles north of Point Barrow, Alaska. And the date is really June 2002.”
The woman—what had she called herself? Remington. Dr. Remington—pushed against his chest with the flat of her palm.
“If you’ll let me up, perhaps my colleagues and I can convince you.”
Charlie wasn’t about to admit he didn’t have the strength to hold her if she fought him. He was shaking like a kitten, so weak the mere act of uncurling his fist took every ounce of strength he possessed. Sweat popped out on his skin, chilling him instantly. Only then did he realize he was stretched out flat on a table, as naked as a skinned coon. Tubes and wires snaked from his arms, legs and chest.
His gaze narrowing, he followed the tangled umbilical cords to the bank of equipment they sprouted from. Another wave of shivers rippled along the surface of his skin. As one of the first test pilots selected for the U-2 high altitude program, Charlie had been poked and prodded and subjected to just about every experiment known to man. Yet he’d never seen equipment like this.
Setting his jaw, he reached across his chest. With one vicious tug, he ripped the IV from his arm. Drops of blood and intravenous solution sprayed around the room.
“Hey!” The short, balding man beside blondie jumped back. “Careful with those bodily fluids! They’re as dangerous as a machine gun!”
Charlie’s throat closed. What the hell had they pumped into him?
The woman—Remington—shot her companion a look of disgust. “If you’re worried about AIDS, Greg, the first case wasn’t documented until 1981, twenty-five years after Major Stone dropped out of the sky.”
The man reddened, but kept his distance. “Who knows what he picked up in the ice? There has to be some reason for the anomaly in his protein regeneration.”
None of what they were saying made the least sense to Charlie, but one thought surfaced crystal clear through his swirling confusion. No one was going to stick anything else in him—or take any further readings—until he figured out what the hell was happening here. Setting his jaw, he swung his legs to the side of the table and pushed himself up.
His head buzzed. The ring of faces around him blurred. Gritting his teeth, Charlie blinked to clear the swirling haze and proceeded to yank off every telemetry lead.
“Major Stone!”
“Don’t hurt yourself!”
“Careful with the equipment.”
His fierce glare silenced the instant chorus. Chest heaving, Charlie gripped the metal table with both hands. His breath rasped on the cold air, the only sound in the lab until the blonde broke the tension.
“Why don’t we make you more comfortable? I believe some clothes would be in order, and a move to the living quarters. Is that agreeable to you, Major?”
Stone’s gaze roamed the makeshift lab, taking in the monitors and cameras, before locking with hers again. A curt nod signaled his acquiescence.
To the fierce disappointment of everyone on recovery team, Diana included, Major Stone lived up to his name and made like a rock. Once installed in a hastily cleared bunk room and outfitted in borrowed clothing, he crossed his arms and refused to answer questions or respond to the team’s revelations. Nor was he ready to accept that he’d awakened in the second millennium A.D.
The team tried their best to convince him, presenting printed material, digitized images and TV shows beamed in by satellite over the station’s system. The major’s eyes narrowed to slits as he stared at the flickering images, but he kept all thoughts to himself.
At one point, Diana thought they’d finally gotten through to him, but Dr. Wozniak’s excited explanation of the cloning process and impassioned request for a DNA sample produced another severe case of lockjaw.
No one, he declared ominously, was going to produce a test tube duplicate while he was able to prevent it.
“It was bad enough when he thought we were trying to worm information on the U-2 program out of him,” Diana reported to OMEGA’s new chief some hours later. “After we sprang the fact that he’s been on ice for more than four decades, he shut down completely. My guess is he thinks we’re playing mind games with him in an effort to get him to talk.”
“So he hasn’t said anything about his aircraft or what happened to it?”
“Roger that, Lightning.”
“His mental condition sounds pretty stable. How’s his overall physical condition?”
“Incredible. Absolutely incredible.”
If Nick noticed the husky note in her voice, he chose not to comment on it. “Do you still have him under close observation?”
“In a manner of speaking. We’ve moved him into living quarters and posted a research tech outside his door…just in case he decides to depart the station.”
“Well, keep me advised on his progress.”
“Will do, Lighting.”
She started to sign off, hesitated. “Did you dig anything up on Greg Wozniak?”
“Not yet. We’re still looking into his financial holdings. They’re nothing if not diversified. In addition to his lucrative research grants, he owns a chain of sperm banks and a piece of several companies that manufacture cyrogenic equipment. But his real money appears to come from wealthy clients who pay him six figures or more to freeze a part of themselves for future cloning.”
“Have any of those clients availed themselves of his service?”
“None that we’re aware of.”
“So Stone would have really been a feather in Wozniak’s cap professionally, as well as a walking advertisement for his business. No wonder he was so eager for the recovery team to declare the major legally dead.”
“Eager enough to somehow falsify the protein profiles?”
Suspicion was an ugly little worm, one every undercover agent learned to live with. This particular worm had been turning and twisting in Diana’s mind since she’d discovered the faulty readings.
“I don’t know.”
“Keep an eye on him,” Nick advised. “In the meantime, we’ll dig deeper.”
“Roger that.”