Blood and Ice (69 page)

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Authors: Robert Masello

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BOOK: Blood and Ice
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Charlotte shuddered at the thought.

 

�And the second poses a more immediate threat.�

 

�It's worse?�

 

�You be the judge.� Darryl picked up a clean slide, rubbed it vigorously against the dry skin on the back of Charlotte's hand, then put it under the microscope. The living and dead cells appeared on the video monitor. Then, he added a drop of the AFGP-5. Nothing happened; it was a picture of peaceful coexistence.

 

�This is a good sign?� Charlotte asked, glancing over at Darryl.

 

He was holding an ice cube between two gloved fingers, his pinkie delicately extended. Gently touching the ice to the surface of the slide, he said, �Keep your eye on the magic monitor.�

 

On the screen, even the tiniest corner of the ice cube was like a glacier, instantly blotting out half the field. Darryl promptly removed it, but the damage had been done. Like a wind blowing across a pond, a million tiny fissures rippled across the surface of the slide, touching each skin cell and radiating outward in all directions until, finally, all activity had stopped. What had been moving and circulating only seconds before was completely still. Frozen. Dead.

 

�As you can see, once you let ice come into direct contact with tissue, all bets are off.�

 

�I thought the AFGP-5 would prevent that.�

 

�It can prevent ice crystals from propagating in the bloodstream, but not from binding to the skin cells,� Darryl said. �That's why antifreeze fish stay well below the ice cap.�

 

�Eleanor should have no problem with that,� Charlotte said.

 

�But can she make sure�absolutely sure�that she never touches ice in any form? That she never takes a cold drink and lets
an ice cube graze her lips? That she never slips on a sidewalk and puts her bare hand down on an icy patch of ground? That she never reaches into a freezer, absentmindedly, to remove a bag of frozen vegetables?�

 

�And if she did?�

 

�She'd freeze so hard, she'd shatter like glass.�

 

 

 

 

 

���
CHAPTER FIFTY

 

 

December 25, 1:15 p.m.

 

 

MICHAEL HAD BUNDLED ELEANOR
up in so many layers, even her own mother would not have known her. She was just a bundle of clothes, moving slowly across the frozen concourse. Michael kept a lookout in all directions, but there was no one around. That was the thing about going for a walk in Antarctica�you weren't likely to bump into many other pedestrians, even on Christmas Day. As they passed the old meat locker, he hurried her along, then, when they got near Betty and Tina's glaciology lab, he did so again; in the core yard, he could hear a buzz saw going. Eleanor gave him a curious glance, but he shook his head and pulled her along. At the kennel, a couple of the dogs stood up, their tails wagging, hoping to be taken for a run, but fortunately they didn't bark. The lights were on in the marine biology lab, which was a good sign. Michael hoped that Darryl was hard at work, perfecting some solution to Eleanor and Sinclair's problem.

 

Off in the distance, apart from most of the other modules, he
saw his destination, and guided Eleanor toward it. They passed under the wooden trellis, then up the ramp. Even under all the clothes she was shivering.

 

Michael opened the door, parted the plastic curtains just inside, and ushered her into the botany lab proper. Hot, humid air suddenly engulfed them, and Eleanor gasped in surprise. He drew her farther inside and helped her to unzip her coat and pull off her hat and gloves. Her hair fell loose around her shoulders, but there was a welcome spot of color in her cheeks. And her green eyes shone.

 

Shrugging off his own outer gear, he said, �They study all kinds of plants in here�the local variety, to the extent that there are any, and foreign. Antarctica's still the cleanest environment on earth for lab work.� He brushed away the long hair that was plastered to his forehead. �But the way things are going, it may not be for long.�

 

Eleanor had already wandered away, drawn by the fragrant aroma of fat strawberries, ripening on the vines that hung from the hydroponic pipes that crisscrossed the ceiling. Their green leaves, with the serrated edges, were studded with white flowers and yellow buds, and the berries, wet from the misting tubes, glistened in the artificial light. Ackerley had rigged up the whole lab himself, so it was a mixture of high-tech equipment and jerry-built contraptions, aluminum tubes and rubber hoses, plastic buckets and high-intensity discharge lamps. At the moment, the lamps were on low, but as Eleanor, with her eyes closed, buried her face in the flowering vines, Michael flicked the lamps to high.

 

Instantly, the whole area was flooded with light, magnified by rows of reflectors that Ackerley had fashioned from coat hangers and tinfoil. The strawberries glowed like rubies, the white petals gleamed, the droplets of water clinging to the green leaves sparkled like diamonds. Eleanor's eyes sprang open, then she shielded them with her hand, laughing.

 

Michael hadn't heard her so happy since he'd introduced her to the miracle of Beethoven on the stereo.

 

�Didn't I tell you?� he said.

 

And she bobbed her head, still smiling, and said, �You did, sir, you did�though I still don't understand how it's been done.� She quickly surveyed the glowing lamps and the silver reflectors, before once again protecting her eyes.

 

�Try a strawberry,� Michael suggested. �The cook here uses them to make strawberry shortcake.�

 

�Truly?� she said. �It's all right?�

 

Michael reached up and plucked a juicy one from the vine and held it toward her lips. She hesitated, a hot flush rising into her cheeks, then bent her head to the berry and neatly bit it in half.

 

The hot lights played across her hair as she savored it, and the golden rim of her brooch gleamed.

 

�Finish it,� he said, still holding out the remaining half.

 

She paused, her lips moist from the berry, and their eyes met. His heart was overwhelmed by such a confusion of feelings�tenderness, uncertainty, desire�that he could barely hold her gaze.

 

But she held his, as she leaned forward and took the rest of the fruit into her mouth. Her teeth grazed the tips of his fingers before she withdrew, delicately plucking the green crown of the strawberry from her lips. He stood, transfixed.

 

And she said, �Thank you, Michael.�

 

Was this the first time she'd used his name�for real and not just in a dream?

 

�That was a great treat.�

 

�It's a Christmas present.�

 

�It is?� she said, surprised. �Is this Christmas Day?�

 

He nodded, his shoulders positively aching from wanting to reach out and embrace her. But he didn't dare. That was not why he'd brought her to the lab. That was not in the game plan. There was no future in that.

 

So why did he have to keep reminding himself?

 

�At Christmas, we would decorate the house with mistletoe and ivy and evergreens,� she said, meditatively. �My mother would make a pudding, stick a sprig of holly in the top, and douse it with brandy. When my father touched a match to it, the whole room would blaze like a bonfire.�

 

After a few seconds, she turned around and stepped out of the glow from the lamps. �The light is very hot.�

 

She moved down one of the aisles, the long blue dress with its billowing sleeves and high white collar emphasizing her slender frame; her fingers trailed across the rows of tomato plants on trusses, the lettuces and onions and radishes all being grown on tabletops and in shallow bowls of clear liquid.

 

�There is no soil,� she said, over her shoulder. �How does anything grow?�

 

�It's called hydroponics,� he said, following her up the aisle. �All the minerals and nutrients that the plants need are mixed into the water supply. Add light and air and you're done.�

 

�It's miraculous,� she said, �and rather like the hothouse at the Great Exhibition. My father took me there, with my sister Abigail.�

 

�When was that?�

 

�Eighteen fifty-one,� she said, as if it were generally known, �at the Crystal Palace in Hyde Park.�

 

The shock never entirely wore off.

 

There was another bank of lights off to the rear, illuminating a tiny garden of roses and lilies and Ackerley's prized orchids.

 

�Oh, how beautiful,� Eleanor said, stepping into the narrow aisle surrounded by the brilliant red roses and the multicolored orchids, on their long, crooked stems. Even without the soil, there was the hot, humid scent of a jungle. Eleanor unfastened the top button on her collar, but no more, and breathed deeply.

 

�I could not have imagined a place like this,� she said, taking in the riot of color and scent, �in a country so remote and cold. Who takes care of all these plants? Is it you?�

 

�Oh, no,� Michael said, �they'd be dead in a week if I were in charge.� But how could he possibly explain, to her of all people, what had happened to Ackerley? And what would she say if he did? Would she then confess to him her own undeniable, but secret, need?

 

If there was one thing he knew, it was that he never wanted to hear words to that effect pass her lips.

 

�We all pitch in,� he said, to provide some sort of answer. �But most of it's programmed by computers and timers.�

 

He realized that none of this would make any sense to her. �It's mechanical,� he added, simply, and she seemed content � but reflective, too. Even as she pressed her face to the roses to inhale their aroma, he could tell her thoughts had entered a darker channel. Her brow was furrowed, and her head held still.

 

�Michael,� she finally said, without finishing her thought.

 

�Yes?�

 

After another moment of deliberation, she plunged ahead. �I can't help but feel that there's something you're not telling me.�

 

She has
that
right, Michael thought, but there were so many things he wasn't telling her that he wouldn't have known where to start.

 

�Does it have to do with Lieutenant Copley?�

 

Michael hesitated; he didn't want to lie, but he was forbidden to tell her the truth. �We've been looking for him.�

 

�You know that he will come looking for me. If he hasn't already, he soon will.�

 

�I'd expect that,� he said, �from your husband.�

 

She looked at him intently, as if her suspicions�or at least some of them�had been confirmed. �Why would you say that?�

 

�Sorry, I just assumed��

 

�In Sinclair's eyes, that may be so. But in the eyes of God, we are most assuredly not. For reasons I can't explain, it could never happen.�

 

Why her peremptory tone should have pleased him so, he did not wish to dwell on. But since the topic had been introduced, he felt he couldn't let the opportunity go.

 

�But wouldn't you want to be reunited � assuming, of course, that he's alive and well?�

 

She studied one of the yellow orchids intently, rubbing her fingers on the waxy leaves.

 

He was surprised that she wavered at all.

 

�Sinclair was, and always shall be, the great love of my life.�

 

Her fingers caressed the golden yellow petals themselves.

 

�But the life we are forced to lead together cannot be sustained � nor should it be.�

 

Michael knew of course what she was referring to, but kept silent.

 

�And over the years, I fear that he has fallen in love with something else�something that holds him in its sway more powerfully than I can ever do.�

 

The misters suddenly went off, sending a fine spray of cool water into the air above their heads, but Eleanor didn't move.

 

�What?� Michael asked.

 

And she replied, �Death.�

 

The misters stopped again, and she turned to one side, as if ashamed by what she'd just admitted.

 

�He has been steeped in it so long that he has learned to live
with it. He keeps it by him at all times, like a loyal hound. He wasn't always like that,� she quickly added, as if regretting her betrayal. �Not when we met, in London. He was kind and attentive and always so eager to find ways to amuse me.� That last caused her to smile.

 

�Why are you smiling?�

 

�Oh, just remembering. A day at Ascot, a dinner at his club in London. Poor Sinclair�I think he was often just one step ahead of his creditors.�

 

�But didn't you tell me once that he came from a family of aristocrats?�

 

�His father was an earl�and Sinclair would have been one, too, one day�but he had called upon the family fortune on too many occasions already. His father, I believe, was sorely disappointed in him.�

 

The mist had settled like a fine veil atop her hair.

 

�And his prospects � they were altered in the Crimea. Everyone who went there was changed by it, everyone who survived was damaged. It was impossible not to be.�

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