
DAY
6
7:12 A.M.
With the vibration of the helicopter, I must have dozed off for a
few minutes. I awoke and yawned, hearing voices in my headphones.
They were all men speaking:
"Well, what exactly is the problem?" A growling voice.
"Apparently, the plant released some material into the environment.
It was an accident. Now, several dead animals have been found out
in the desert. In the vicinity of the plant." A reasonable,
organized voice.
"Who found them?" Growly.
"Couple of nosy environmentalists. They ignored the keep -- out
signs, snooped around the plant. They've complained to the company
and are demanding to inspect the plant."
"Which we can't allow."
"No, no."
"How do we handle this?" said a timid voice.
"I say we minimize the amount of contamination released, and give
data that show no untoward consequence is possible." Organized
voice.
"Hell, I wouldn't play it that way," said growling voice. "We're
better off flatly denying it. Nothing was released. I mean, what's
the evidence anything was released?"
"Well, the dead animals. A coyote, some desert rats. Maybe a few
birds."
"Hell, animals die in nature all the time. I mean, remember the
business about those slashed cows? It was supposed to be aliens
from UFOs that were slashing the cows. Finally turned out the cows
were dying of natural causes, and it was decomposing gas in the
carcasses that split them open. Remember that?"
"Vaguely."
Timid voice: "I'm not sure we can just deny -- "
"Fuck yes, deny."
"Aren't there pictures? I think the environmentalists took
pictures."
"Well, who cares? What will the pictures show, a dead coyote?
Nobody is going to get worked up about a dead coyote. Trust me.
Pilot? Pilot, where the fuck are we?"
I opened my eyes. I was sitting in the front of the helicopter,
alongside the pilot. The helicopter was flying east, into the glare
of low morning sun. Beneath my feet I saw mostly flat terrain, with
low clumps of cactus, juniper, and the occasional scraggly Joshua
tree.
The pilot was flying alongside the power -- line towers that
marched in single file across the desert, a steel army with
outstretched arms. The towers cast long shadows in the morning
light.
A heavyset man leaned forward from the backseat. He was wearing a
suit and tie. "Pilot? Are we there yet?"
"We just crossed the Nevada line. Another ten minutes."
The heavyset man grunted and sat back. I'd met him when we took
off, but I couldn't remember his name now. I glanced back at the
three men, all in suits and ties, who were traveling with me. They
were all PR consultants hired by Xymos. I could match their
appearance to their voices. A slender, nervous man, twisting his
hands. Then a middle -- aged man with a briefcase on his lap. And
the heavyset man, older and growly, obviously in charge.
"Why the hell did they put it in Nevada, anyway?"
"Fewer regulations, easier inspections. These days California is
sticky about new industry. There was going to be a year's delay
just for environmental -- impact statements. And a far more
difficult permitting process. So they came here."
Growly looked out the window at the desert. "What a shithole," he
said. "I don't give a fuck what goes on out here, it's not a
problem." He turned to me. "What do you do?"
"I'm a computer programmer."
"You covered by an NDA?" He meant, did I have a non -- disclosure
agreement that would prevent me from discussing what I had just
heard.
"Yes," I said.
"You coming out to work at the plant?"
"To consult," I said. "Yes."
"Consulting's the way to go," he said, nodding as if I were an
ally. "No responsibility. No liability. Just give your opinion, and
watch them not take it."
With a crackle, the pilot's voice broke in over the headsets.
"Xymos Molecular Manufacturing is dead ahead," he said. "You can
just see it now."
Twenty miles in front of us, I saw an isolated cluster of low
buildings silhouetted on the horizon. The PR people in the back all
leaned forward.
"Is that it?" said Growly. "That's all it is?"
"It's bigger than it looks from here," the pilot said.
As the helicopter came closer, I could see that the buildings were
interlocked, featureless concrete blocks, all whitewashed. The PR
people were so pleased they almost burst into applause. "Hey, it's
beautiful!"
"Looks like a fucking hospital."
"Great architecture."
"It'll photograph great."
I said, "Why will it photograph great?"
"Because it has no projections," the man with the briefcase said.
"No antennas, no spikes, no things poking up. People are afraid of
spikes and antennas. There are studies. But a building that's plain
and square like this, and white -- perfect color choice,
associations to virginal, hospital, cure, pure -- a building like
this, they don't care."
"Those environmentalists are fucked," said Growly, with
satisfaction. "They do medical research here, right?"
"Not exactly . . ."
"They will when I g