九味书屋 > 文学经管电子书 > jefflong.yearzero >

第20部分

jefflong.yearzero-第20部分

小说: jefflong.yearzero 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



hen lost their mates。 Death had taken her Victor just six months ago; and tried to take her; too。 The surgeons had repaired her broken heart; but she was still frail。 Impulsively Abbot wanted to take her hand in his; to hold it without the excuse of fear or consolation; just to remind them both of what might have been。 But he did not。 If they were younger and it mattered; perhaps。 But neither of them would marry again。 That's how it was。
 The bus wound toward the mesa top。 They passed through Los Alamos; and its plain buildings and green park could have been anywhere in 1970s Middle America。 It was a pany town。 Their business was simple: Big Science。
 The bus stopped at a bridge above a sheer canyon。 Traffic normally flowed into the research plex beyond。 But this morning; following the demonstration outside Rancho Encantado; heavily armed Pro Force soldiers were ready and waiting。 An officer with a clipboard mounted the bus and walked down the aisle to where Abbot and Golding sat。 Golding knew right where to sign the paperwork。 He said; 〃Thank you; ma'am;〃 and started handing out security badges and dosimeters。 Soldiers waved the bus through a makeshift barricade。 As they crossed the bridge; the air of tension relaxed。 The sight of machine guns on hummers was a novelty to many of the scientists。 They treated the security badges and radiation tags like tickets to a James Bond theme park。
 Occupying some twenty square miles; the laboratory grounds were hived off into technical areas containing research facilities and office buildings。 Back in the early '50s; when Godzilla and the Blob were leaving wakes of fear; the U。S。 Atomic Energy mission had been tasked to study mutations caused by ionizing radiation。 If they were going to start dropping H…bombs or building nuclear reactors; the government wanted to know the consequences。 With time; the Mesa had gotten a makeover of sorts。 The Atomic Energy mission had bee the Department of Energy。 Los Alamos had e under the administration of the University of California。 Genetic research morphed into the Human Genome Project。 And now two former peaceniks; Elise Golding and Paul Abbot; were largely in control of the birthplace of the Bomb。
 They reached an empty parking lot in front of a newly built structure。 ALPHALABORATORY; read a sign。 The bus stopped。 A solitary; twisted figure awaited them in a wheelchair。 He looked like a broken fighter pilot; his wheelchair a veritable cockpit bristling with gadgets; joysticks; and a built…in puter terminal。
 〃Cavendish;〃 one of the passengers hissed。
 Someone said; 〃The dark prince。〃
 He looked much the way Abbot remembered him at the mission hearings in Washington two and three years ago。 No buttons: a turtleneck。 Penny loafers。 The small chin shaved clean。
 The occassion of the first Congressional hearing had been Cavendish's infamous 〃meat tree。〃 Funded by Burger King; working in a private lab in Nebraska; Cavendish had conjured up a herd of headless cows。 As a matter of fact; Cavendish's cows did have heads; but genetically stripped to the basics; a tiny bone casing with a hole for breathing and one for tube feeding。 He'd deleted eyes; ears; jaws; and horns; anything superfluous to rudimentary existence。 Technically each animal had a brain。 The nubbin of a brain stem ensured that the lungs respirated and the food digested。
 Until then; no one had ever heard of Edward Cavendish。 That changed。 Skirting the academic publishing process; he'd released the story directly to the public。 His photos had shocked the world。 Meat trees; he'd dubbed his creations。 He offered a variety of uses and excuses for them。 The animals would provide a cheap protein source for the Third World。 Housed in factories; they would save the rainforest and return America's grazing lands to the buffalo。 And since his mutant cattle were born into a state of a; he pointed out; they felt no pain at 〃harvest。〃 They had no consciousness; no 〃animal soul;〃 meaning even vegans could eat them without qualm。
 The pundits quickly jumped on the real underlying issue。 If one could create headless cows for harvest; why not headless humans for organ transplants? For a few horrified weeks; Cavendish had dominated international attention; even edging out the latest supertyphoons in Bangladesh and car bombings in Quebec。 The supermarket tabloids whipped public hysteria into a froth。 Everyone had an opinion; from cowboys predicting the end of family farms to bishops and philosophers damning his twist on nature。 All in all; the incident had been a bold; clumsy ing…out party for himself; a one…man show。 Congress quickly passed a law against meat trees。 But that wasn't the end of Cavendish。
 The second time Abbot met him had been after the Neandertal incident。 Using DNA from a frozen dental nerve in a preserved mandible; and 〃borrowing〃 a Jersey milk cow for the womb; he had cloned a Neandertal infant。 Again his creation shocked the world; and carried an underlying twist。 SinceH。 neandertalis was by strictest definition notH。 sapiens; Cavendish had managed to break the taboo against human cloning without technically breaking it。 The psychological barrier was crossed。 Human cloning had arrived。
 A Presidential mission; chaired by Abbot; had dutifully listened to the moralists and Chicken Littles。 During the course of the hearings; Abbot had e to respect Cavendish。 The young man's contempt for timid research sprang from a deep vein of misanthropy。 He had smarts andcojones; and the cunning of a young Turk。 In certain ways; he was a dead ringer for Abbot himself back before he'd learned the public was not a tool; it was the toolbox。
 〃I thought he'd been outlawed;〃 one of the scientists said。
 〃Censured; not outlawed;〃 a woman said。 〃He's still being allowed to dabble。 Here。 Subsidized with taxpayer money!〃
 It was Abbot who had 〃disappeared〃 Cavendish into Los Alamos after the Neandertal controversy。 Elise despised the man; but accepted Abbot's reasoning。 Science could not afford to lose a mind like Cavendish's。 At the same time; they couldn't afford to have him running amok in the world at large。 At Los Alamos…in theory…his genius could be caged under the watchful scrutiny of his greatest critic; Elise。 The problem was she had fifty other projects to oversee; plus budget meetings and a university system to help administer。 Her heart attack had effectively halted all oversight。 No one was quite sure what Cavendish had been up to for the last six months。 An artificial womb was in the making; Abbot knew that much。 And Miranda was somehow involved。
 He looked for her out his window。 As the years caught up with him; Abbot missed his rebel daughter more and more。 It was no surprise she had not e out to greet him。 Cold; lofty Miranda。 The daughter of her cold; lofty father。 Elise read his disappointment。 〃We'll find her;〃 she said。 〃She wants to see you。〃
 〃Don't pretend;〃 he said; 〃please。〃
 〃Take her on her terms;〃 Elise said。 〃That would be a start。 Be proud of her。〃
 〃You think I'm not?〃
 〃Paul;〃 she said; 〃Miranda is not your enemy。〃
 〃What?〃
 But Elise was silent。
 Grunting under the weight of their weapons and riot gear; the cops dismounted first and took positions。 Like children on a field trip; the scientists filed out of the bus。 Several of the elders needed a hand descending the steps。 It was early September; and the air was chill up here at eight…thousand feet。 They clustered uncertainly; some bundled in wool blankets with the Rancho Encantado logo。
 〃Good morning;〃 Cavendish cheerfully greeted no one in particular。 His eyes swept across them; a head count。 He noticed Abbot。 He noticed Golding。 He recognized power。
 〃Ha;〃 someone tossed back at him。 Now that they were on the outside of it; the passengers were shocked by how much punishment the schoolbus had taken。
 Cavendish seemed oblivious to the spoliation。 〃Follow me;〃 he said。 〃You're late。 It's almost time。〃
 〃This better be good;〃 a woman enunciated loudly。
 〃Damn good;〃 another added。
 They were rude; Abbot saw; because they were intensely curious and didn't want to admit it。 Also; Cavendish scared them。 The group started inside。 Cavendish waited while Abbot helped Elise down the steps。

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的