Read The Deep Zone: A Novel Online
Authors: James M. Tabor
“You did? Who were they?”
“Their names were Brant Lee Kathan and James David Stikes. Kathan was former Army Special Forces. Dishonorably discharged for torturing prisoners in Iraq. Stikes had been a SEAL. Honorably discharged. Both worked for the security firm Global Force Multiplier.”
“GFM? My God. The same contractor that provides security for VIPs in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
“None other.”
“We suspect that they were to kill everyone on the team, including Al Cahner, and retrieve the moonmilk. They knew nothing of its real value.”
“So Cahner would have been double-crossed. And GFM was behind all of this?”
“No.” Barnard frowned, sighed. “We’re not sure yet who was the prime mover. But we do know someone else was involved.”
“Well?”
“Nathan Rathor.”
She gaped. “Rathor? The HHS secretary?”
“None other.”
“Why would Rathor be part of something like this? And what did he do?”
“I’ll take the second question first. We believe he was connected with David Lathrop’s death.”
She could only shake her head. “How about the why?”
“Before he was named HHS secretary, Rathor was the president and CEO of BioChem.”
“Right up there with Johnson & Johnson and Merck.”
“Yes. Biggest of the Big Pharmas. We’re fairly certain that he was part of a larger effort to get the moonmilk directly to BioChem. With your whole team dead and missing, we could only have assumed that the mission failed. BioChem, meanwhile, would have been creating new antibiotics, effective against ACE and maybe other MDRBs as well. Their profits would have been obscene. Rathor’s stock would have increased a hundredfold in value, if not more.”
“Is he going to jail?”
“Sadly, probably not. The evidence is strong but circumstantial. More importantly, a criminal trial of a member of the president’s own cabinet—and in particular one he personally recruited—would be disastrous for him.”
“So what will happen to Rathor?”
“I understand that he was instructed to present a letter of resignation to the president. He did that late yesterday, in fact. His departure will be attributed to health reasons or the need for more personal time or some such. You know how it works here, Hallie.”
“Indeed I do. How’s it playing?”
“The media are chewing on it now, but it’ll be forgotten by next week. They will know the reason given for his departure is bullshit. But they’ll probably figure the real reason was his failure to react quickly to the ACE problem. And many insiders will figure he just pissed off the wrong people, something Rathor was very good at.”
“And Al Cahner?”
“Tougher case, that. He had some very sophisticated software that we were able to track back to people in Ukraine, but not beyond. Turns out he had a secret Caymans bank account, but it had
been drained and closed while he was in the cave. It appears that whoever paid him didn’t expect him to be around long after he came out.”
“What are we saying about the antibiotic? How we discovered it, I mean.”
“We’re simply saying that BARDA’s brilliant scientists came up with the drug after working themselves nearly to death.”
“How is Lenora?”
“She’ll be heading back to her family in a couple of weeks, if not sooner.”
“Brave lady, that one. Did anyone discover the infection’s source? How the Z man got it, I mean?”
“You won’t believe this. It was a tampon.” Barnard looked like he still could hardly accept it himself.
“What?”
“They use them for bullet wounds. No one knows exactly when they started doing that, but it’s common practice now.”
“So somebody stuck a tampon in a soldier’s wound and he got the infection from that?”
“Appears to be the case.”
“How would a tampon become contaminated with ACE?”
“A very good question. That tampon was sold by a company called FemTech. Manufactured in China, shipped to the U.S. for distribution to all the big-box discounters. Some found their way into the military supply chain as well.”
“So this whole thing started with an accidentally contaminated batch of tampons?”
“That’s one possibility, certainly.”
“There are others?”
“Someone could have contaminated the tampons intentionally.”
“Why would anyone do that?”
“Suppose you could initiate an epidemic against which only one antibiotic on earth would be effective?”
“You mean that old drug, colistin?”
“Yes.”
“Nobody had made it for decades, though.”
“Because there was no market. Suppose you could create a market.”
“You’re suggesting that somebody intentionally infected people with ACE?”
“Here’s what we know. Tampons are not required to be sterile, because the area of the body where they are used is not sterile. At no point in their production are they tested for sterility. So introducing bacteria into them would not be all that difficult.”
“But how would the bacteria live? They need something to feed on.”
“Tampons are mostly cellulose. Perfect bacteria food. Here’s something else. In the year before the first case was diagnosed, one company, MDC Pharmaceuticals, produced a large amount of colistin.”
“Possibly anticipating a sudden need?”
“Possibly.”
“Anything else?”
“Nothing probative. But who do you suppose owns FemTech?”
“No idea.”
“BioChem. And who do you suppose owns MDC?”
“BioChem?”
“None other.”
“My God. Will the government prosecute?” She was becoming tired, her eyes drooping, easing toward sleep.
“Who can say? It’s a long and very complicated way from an incident like this to the courtroom. All kinds of things can happen. I think of the ocean. You can see the surface and everything that’s on it. But beneath the surface, there are countless invisible currents and forces at work.”
Neither spoke for a few moments. Hallie’s chin dropped, came back up. Barnard patted her shoulder. “Well, look. You need to rest, and I need to get back to BARDA.”
“Before you go …”
“Yes?”
“I do want to rejoin BARDA, but not as a staff researcher.”
“No? What, then?”
“Field investigator.”
He hesitated only for a second. “Done. A good fit for you. We’ll take care of all the official stuff once you’re up and around.”
He turned to go, but her voice stopped him again, the words soft, some slurred. “Jus’ one more thing, Don?”
“Of course. What is it?”
“Need to get in touch with Bowman. Cellphone number? Email?”
He slapped his forehead. “My God. I almost forgot. I am getting old, Hallie. His services were needed elsewhere. He left town last night.”
“Uh-uh. The man was shot, Don. Twice.”
“Apparently he has amazing powers of recovery. With some help from his shadowy friends at DARPA, probably.”
She had forgotten. It came back: him in her room, the fake sling, tossing the coin, catching it. “Where is he?”
“I can’t say, Hallie. I mean, I don’t know. Truly.”
She frowned at Barnard. “Is his name really Wil Bowman?”
“That much I can vouch for. It is.”
“I’ll find him, Don. You know I will.”
“Hallie, I suspect that when this new business is finished, he may find you first.”
She smiled, lifted a hand, let it drop. Her head sank into the pillow. In that dim and soft-edged place between sleep and waking, she drifted out of the hospital and back to the blue house awash in the scent of oranges, opened the door, and saw Bowman, white Florida light flowing around him, around them, carrying her into sleep, a fine thing to dream on.
This is a work of fiction, pure if not simple, so any resemblance between the novel’s characters and real persons is coincidental.
On the other hand, any resemblance between everything else that happens in the book and true life is real.
During the height of the Iraq War, so many wounded soldiers contracted
Acinetobacter
infections that Army doctors started calling it “Iraqibacter.” Military officials at first said that ACE in Iraqi soil was responsible, but that turned out to be untrue. In fact, soldiers were being attacked by a new ACE in the military’s own hospitals. No one knows, or will admit to knowing, how it came to be there.
Soldiers do routinely use tampons as emergency wound compresses.
According to the National Institutes of Health, two million people acquire bacterial infections in U.S. hospitals every year. Some ninety thousand die as a result, a number that has
sextupled
since 1992. (And those are only the deaths attributed to such infections; the true total is almost certainly much higher, for the very reasons Mr. Adelheid discussed with Al Cahner in this book.) Each year, more and more such infections occur.
Seventy percent of these infections are resistant to at least one
of the drugs most commonly used to treat them. Others are rapidly developing multiple resistances. “Various strains of bacteria that cause serious diseases, like meningitis and pneumonia, could mutate to the point that all of our available therapies are ineffective,” said John Powers, an antimicrobial expert at the Food and Drug Administration, in 2006. And some bacteria are already resistant to
all
drugs.
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, biologists discovered that bacteria are nature’s counterterrorists: in the proper conditions, some bacteria become able to kill their fellow bacteria. Understanding this, scientists identified, isolated, and distilled these bacterial ninjas into what we today know as antibiotic drugs. Their development was one of the greatest boons science ever delivered to humankind. That was the good news.
The bad was that most antibiotics used today are derived from one soil-based order of microorganisms known as Actinomycetales (Ac-tin-o-my-CEET-al-ees). Relying on this one order produced a generation of miracle drugs, but ultimately that has worked against us. Antibiotics benefit from inbreeding no more than humans do.
Indiscriminate use of antibiotics in everything from soap to sheep to farm-raised salmon has made it easy for bacteria to acquire resistance. And there is something else: perhaps more than any other organism, bacteria have a unique ability to exchange DNA not only with their own species but with others as well.
MDRAB, multiple-drug-resistant
Acinetobacter baumannii
(Ah-si-NEET-o-bac-ter bough-MAN-ee-eye), is a highly drug-resistant bacterium with yet another personality quirk that makes it inordinately dangerous. ACE may be the “great communicator” of all bacteria, able to pass on immunological mutations with speed that, in evolutionary terms, is lightning fast. When Don Barnard tells Hallie Leland that geneticists discovered, in ACE, the greatest number of genetic mutations ever found in a single organism, he is speaking the truth. They actually did, in 2005.
Antigenic shift, which produces the killer species of ACE, is a recognized evolutionary phenomenon.
Moonmilk is a real extremophile that lives in wild caves. A number of microbiologists believe that subterranean extremophiles are our best hope for developing new strains of antibiotics for use against microbes that, like ACE, are resistant to all existing drugs. Some—notably Dr. Hazel Barton, of Northern Kentucky University—have already synthesized new antibiotics from deep-cave extremophiles.
BARDA does exist and manages Project BioShield, which supports “advanced development of medical countermeasures for chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear agents.”
Several supercaves are found in southern Mexico: Huautla and Cheve are two of the most famous. Cueva de Luz is another character in the book, a combination of Cheve, Huautla, and several other such giants. These caves contain all the bizarre horrors described in the book, though no one cave—as far as we know—contains
all
of them.
Many—perhaps most—native peoples with sophisticated cultures dating back to prehistory truly believe that caves are sentient living beings.
Soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are using BADS, the boomerang anti-sniper detection system developed by DARPA. “Gecko Gear” was created by DARPA, which refers to it as Z-Man Tools and continues working in a “thrust area” called BIM, for biologically inspired materials. The DARPA devices are a bit different from those depicted in the book, but both operate on the same principle. While still experimental, the tools are thought to be deployed with certain special operations units today.
Soft robots that use “jamming skin enabled locomotion” to shape-shift and conform perfectly to, say, human hands and feet were developed by a private company called iRobot.
Ethan Ellenberg, my intrepid literary agent, first saw potential in
The Deep Zone
and worked with me to make it better. My stellar nonfiction editor, Jonathan Jao of Random House, introduced me and the novel to Ballantine’s editorial director of fiction, Mark Tavani. Mark helped transform the novel into the one I had dreamed of publishing for forty years. I am also deeply indebted to publisher Libby McGuire, editor in chief Jennifer Hershey, and deputy publisher Kim Hovey for their vigorous and unwavering support for the novel.
Kelli Fillingim masterfully guided
The Deep Zone
through the countless refits and refinements that transform a book from raw manuscript to published hardcover. Bonnie Thompson once again proved why she is the copy editor I would not write a book without. There are other worlds across the seas, and for introducing me to them I owe huge thanks to Denise Cronin, Rachel Kind, and everyone in subsidiary rights. And without the invaluable help of everyone in sales and promotion, the novel would have been like a tree falling in the forest. It might have made the most beautiful sound imaginable, but no one would have heard it.
Elizabeth Tabor, Wallis Wheeler, Steven Butler, Sheila Bannister,
Tasha Wallis, Lisa Loomis, Damon Tabor, and Jack Tabor all read early drafts of the novel and offered invaluable feedback. My good friend Jim Parker, an expert cave diver and perhaps the smartest and bravest man I’ve ever known, helped me avoid wrong turns in the diving passages.