Authors: Dean Crawford
Two sleek, angular fighter jets sat on the tarmac awaiting them, technicians swarming around the craft as they approached. Jarvis gestured to them.
‘F-15E Eagles from the 85th Test and Evaluation Squadron at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida,’ he said. ‘Requisitioned by me to ensure a swift arrival on site. I’ll follow
you down on an Air Force transport and brief you when you’re airborne on a secure channel.’
Ethan stared at the fearsome-looking aircraft and then at the two female pilots awaiting them. Ethan raised a surprised eyebrow.
‘You got a problem with women drivers?’ Lopez challenged. ‘Man up.’
A woman almost a foot shorter than Ethan, who looked no more than twenty-five, her blonde hair tied in a neat ponytail, extended a hand to him.
‘Captain Emma Rawlings,’ she said, smiling brightly. ‘I’ll be your pilot for today. If you’d like to get aboard?’
Ethan nodded, lost for words as he climbed the ladder beside the cockpit and clambered in. A bewildering array of dials, switches, television screens and lights faced him on the control panel as
a crewman strapped him into the ejection seat. He looked across at Lopez, who was being strapped into the other aircraft, and saw her make the sign of a crucifix across her chest as her pilot
closed the canopy and began starting the Eagle’s engines.
Ethan wasn’t afraid of flying. Throughout his time with the Marines, both in training and on deployment in Afghanistan and Iraq, he had flown in various types of aircraft – CH-47
Chinooks, Black Hawks, Hercules and Super Stallions, to name but a few. But they were all helicopters. This was a fighter jet, the real deal, the kind he’d seen screaming overhead in battle
zones, dropping ordnance powerful enough to vaporize small villages.
The canopy on Ethan’s F-15 closed and he heard a distant whining sound as the turbofan engines started. Captain Rawlings fired off a quick broadside of radio commands to the control tower,
and within minutes they were priority taxiing to the active runway right behind Lopez’s aircraft. The two jets lined up on the runway in a tight formation and then, with another barked
command, Captain Rawlings eased the throttles forward. A distant roar erupted from somewhere behind Ethan and he saw bright jets of flame blast from the nearby Eagle’s exhausts as it
thundered down the runway, its wingtip mere feet from that of his own aircraft. A terrific acceleration pinned Ethan into his ejection seat as the jets roared along the dark asphalt, and then
suddenly both aircraft lifted off the runway, undercarriages rolling up as they climbed steeply away from the airfield in close formation. A scattering of cumulus cloud shot past them as Ethan saw
the altimeter spin through five thousand feet.
‘Jesus,’ he uttered, his voice distorted by both the aircraft’s intercom system and his tightly fitting oxygen mask, ‘that would have taken two hours in an
airliner.’
Captain Rawlings’ voice chortled back to him over the radio.
‘
We were being gentle
,’ she replied. ‘
We only use minimum afterburner when we take off in formation.
’
Ethan watched as Lopez’s aircraft led them up through the cloud layers to twenty thousand feet, the long teardrop canopy of the F-15 affording him a vertiginous view of the world below,
hazy fields and glittering towns beneath a scattered patchwork of small clouds trailing shadows. The other F-15 was so close he felt as though he could reach out and touch it as it bobbed and
weaved on the wind currents as the east coast passed by beneath them.
Ethan saw Lopez’s F-15 drift away out of formation until it was a silvery speck on the hazy band of the horizon.
‘Where are they going?’ he asked.
‘
We’re moving to battle flight
,’ Captain Rawlings explained, ‘
to avoid the shockwaves.
’
‘What shockwaves?’
Captain Rawlings didn’t reply to Ethan, instead broadcasting to her fellow pilot in the other jet.
‘
Scorcher flight, buster-buster!
’
A moment later Ethan felt the F-15 surge forward as the throttles hit the firewall. Full afterburner launched the aircraft toward the horizon as though it had been fired from a cannon, and
suddenly he realized what she had meant. They were going supersonic. The airspeed indicator shot through Mach 1 as Captain Rawlings hauled the F-15 up into a steep climb. G-force slammed Ethan down
into his seat, straining his neck as the aircraft soared up into the atmosphere. Rawlings slowly rolled the F-15 upside down, and the sun flashed through the sky around Ethan before the cockpit was
plunged into shadow. The straps from his harnesses dangled before his eyes, the upside-down world and the curve of the earth easily visible some fifty thousand feet beneath them.
Ethan’s senses reconnected themselves as the colossal G-force eased, and he saw the coast of Virginia passing by beneath rippled blankets of cloud as Rawlings rolled the F-15 right-side
up. The sky above was almost black, the sleek fighter flirting with the edge of space.
‘How fast are we going?’ he enquired, as a vague sense of nausea poisoned his innards.
The reply came back as casually as though Emma Rawlings were driving a car.
‘Just over Mach 2, faster than a rifle bullet. We’ll have you in Florida in an hour. I’m opening a three-way data-link channel with your boss, stand-by.
’
Ethan heard a hiss and a squawk across the airwaves, and then Jarvis’s voice crackled in his ear as one of the screens in the cockpit showed the old man’s face as he spoke from the
cavernous interior of a transport aircraft. A second screen showed most of Lopez’s face obscured by her oxygen mask and helmet, only her exotic almond eyes visible.
‘Ethan, Nicola, pay attention. If the situation in Miami is not resolved within twelve hours, then we feel certain that the answers we seek at the Defense Intelligence Agency will be
lost forever.’
Ethan frowned beneath his oxygen mask.
‘Why the time limit?’ he asked Jarvis.
‘
I told you that Charles Purcell was involved in research into the nature of time at NASA
,’ Jarvis explained.
‘It would appear that after leaving the space agency he
continued his work. When he contacted the police at the scene of his family’s murder, Charles Purcell accurately predicted future events as they unfolded.’
Lopez’s voice crackled over the radio.
‘No way! I’ve read about things like that. You can’t see into the future, it’s impossible. Physics won’t allow it. You’re saying you pulled us off eighteen
thousand dollars of bond money for pure fantasy?’
‘That may be so,
’ Jarvis responded.
‘But fact is fact and this guy got it right several times during a single conversation. He also claimed that he wasn’t
responsible for the murder of his family, and would himself be murdered sometime today.
’
‘He knows that this will happen?’ Ethan asked in surprise.
‘
Apparently so
,’ Jarvis replied. ‘
He even stated that his killer does not yet know he will commit the act
.’
‘Which is why we’re being rushed down there,’ Ethan said. ‘To try to stop it before it happens.’
‘
Correct
,’ Jarvis replied. ‘
Whatever this guy’s been up to, he’s either an exceedingly clever psychopath or exceedingly desperate to prove his innocence.
The FBI has written the case off as nothing more than the ramblings of a madman, sheer coincidence. I only saw the paperwork myself four hours ago, and managed to get control of the
case.
’
‘
It sounds like Purcell’s smart enough to fool people into thinking he’s seen the future
,’ Lopez suggested. ‘
If he’s lost his mind he could be
presenting like a classic psychopath – severe narcissism combined with a god complex.
’
‘Where do we start?’ Ethan asked Jarvis.
‘
Captain Kyle Sears of the Miami-Dade Police will meet you at Homestead Joint Air Reserve Base. He’ll be your liaison. I’ll meet you when we arrive. For now, you’d
best be on your way.
’
A thought crossed Ethan’s mind.
‘
How do you know that we’ve only got twelve hours left to solve this case?
’
Jarvis’s voice sounded ominous over the radio as he replied.
‘
You’ll have to see that to believe it. Jarvis out.
’
June 28, 09:18
Warner sat in the front seat of a Crown Victoria Interceptor as it sped away from the airbase at Homestead toward Miami, lights blazing and sirens wailing as it joined the
freeway and accelerated past lanes of traffic lumbering north. He felt mildly disorientated after the fearsome speed and maneuverability of the F-15, as though he’d awoken in a different time
zone.
‘We’ll be in Hallandale shortly.’
Captain Kyle Sears, his eyes concealed behind a pair of Aviators, looked in his rear-view mirror at Lopez sitting in the rear seat. Ethan guessed from the weary creases lining Sears’ face
that he was a career officer, probably in his late forties, highly experienced and most likely allergic to bullshit. That he’d experienced first-hand somebody predicting the future probably
hadn’t gone down too well.
‘You guys got here in a real hurry,’ Sears observed.
‘Priority case,’ Lopez said.
‘That so?’ Sears replied. ‘Well, we sure could use the help, because I don’t have a damned clue what the hell’s going on down here.’
Ethan concealed a smile as he replied.
‘Tell us what you know.’
‘We walk into a crime scene, two victims shot in the head. I get a call from the husband and father of the victims, Charles Purcell, who then predicts what’s happening around me,
doesn’t miss a damned thing. I figure maybe he has cameras set up or something, but the area is clean. He predicted an automobile accident, the ambulance turning up, when my partner would
trace the call, everything. Turns out that Purcell was calling from an apartment in Hallandale several miles away, no chance he could have observed what he saw as it happened.’
Lopez frowned, her long dark hair rippling in the breeze funneling through the Interceptor’s open window.
‘I take it he took off before you got there,’ she said.
Sears nodded as he took the next exit off the freeway.
‘His prints were all over the apartment; he’d made no attempt to conceal his presence, but he was long gone. We checked local cameras for his movements but the guy had cut the cables
before calling us. That’s what’s so weird. He claimed that he didn’t kill his family, but this whole thing must have been set up in advance, else how could he have predicted the
phonecall, the accident, everything?’
Ethan watched palm trees flashing past against the blue sky outside. Most all people associated palms with vacations, but he’d only ever seen them against the war-scarred deserts of Iraq
or in the sweltering alleys of Colombia. He and Joanna had rarely had any downtime, travelling from one warzone to another in pursuit of the next big story. He briefly regretted that they had not
taken the chance to spend time together doing something else.
Now, here he was again beneath a burning sun and swaying palms, yet in the middle of an investigation.
‘Anything else odd that you noticed?’ he asked Sears, shaking off his reverie.
‘You mean apart from this guy predicting the future? Well, he asked us to pick up the ammunition used in the homicides and analyze them for traces of something called Rubidium-82.’
Sears leaned forward, grabbed a sheet of paper from the dash and handed it to Ethan. ‘We sent the rounds to the labs and sure enough, the compound turns up. Some kind of mildly radioactive
dye used by scientists and medical teams. Again, how could he have not committed the murders and yet know that the bullets were dipped in that dye? It doesn’t make any sense.’
Ethan looked down at the sheet of paper. Rubidium-82 was a form of rubidium chloride that contained a radioactive isotope and was used in a technique called PET perfusion imaging. Easily
absorbed by heart muscle cells, its presence helped identify regions of poor blood flow in heart muscle. A graph recorded its radioactive signature on each of the two bullet casings found at the
scene of the murders. While Ethan had heard of some killers going to extraordinary lengths to tease officers in their pursuit, leaving hints and clues behind as to their identity, he could see no
sense in leaving traces of such a material on the bullets and then blatantly informing the police of its presence. Surely doing so only risked confirming Purcell’s guilt, or at least some
kind of involvement in the crime?
‘What about the apartment?’ Lopez asked. ‘Anything there that could help us?’
Sears chuckled. ‘Oh yeah. You’re going to have to see it to believe it.’
‘People keep saying things like that,’ Ethan replied uneasily.
‘You’re sure that you’ve never met this guy Charles Purcell, right?’
‘As far as I know,’ Ethan replied. ‘The DIA checked him out and we’ve got no apparent history. Only time I ever visited Miami was on a family holiday when I was ten years
old.’
Sears nodded but said no more, guiding the Interceptor between lanes of traffic that parted before his blazing sirens and lights. A few minutes later and they pulled in alongside a cheap-looking
motel, the kind with tired, flickering neon lights over thin and unkempt lawns.
‘Not the usual haunt of a NASA scientist,’ Lopez said as she got out of the car.
One of the first-floor apartments was sealed off with ribbons of crime-scene tape that fluttered listlessly, and two uniforms guarded the entrance.
‘Crime scene and forensics been through yet?’ Ethan asked Sears as they walked across the half-empty lot toward the apartment.
‘Yeah, like I said, they found his prints everywhere but no evidence of a weapon or other residues from the homicide. If Purcell hadn’t called us we’d probably never have known
he stayed here.’
Sears waved his badge at the uniforms and they opened the apartment door for him. He gestured for Ethan to take the lead, and Ethan stepped through the doorway.