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Hurricane Fever
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For Karen Lord
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Acknowledgments
Tor Books by Tobias S. Buckell
About the Author
Copyright
1
As the sun dipped low over Miami’s canals and waterways, it glittered off the skyscrapers and the pools of ocean between them. Puddleboats meandered from lobby to lobby to pick up passengers. Traffic along the bridges and secondary roads arching over the Miami waters bunched up with anticipatory evening rush hour traffic.
Four security guards surrounded Zee in the lobby of the Beauchamp Industries offices, including one of the sketchy guards who always wore thick black turtleneck sweaters with long sleeves to hide his neo-Nazi tattoos. They’d been waiting for him as he walked out of the elevator, into the black-marble-walled lobby with back-lit mirrors and large bamboo plants.
They patted him down quickly, then turned him back toward a table near the elevators.
“You can’t leave,” the guard with the long sleeves muttered in his thick, Eastern European-accented English. “We need to look inside your briefcase.”
Zee wore a dark blue suit and purple-rimmed designer glasses, a look that vaguely suggested middle management. That is, if someone didn’t notice the extra-athletic build and dancer-like posture hidden underneath the clothes.
He sighed. It had been such a close thing. Three months infiltrating the building. And many more prior to that figuring out that this was the location in which a secret secondary biotech lab had been concealed. Something Beauchamp Industries didn’t want anyone to know about.
“Your briefcase, please,” the guard repeated.
“What’s wrong?” Zee asked.
“Just open the briefcase.”
Zee looked at him. Thickly built, a bullish neck and squashed face; there were signs the man’s nose had been broken multiple times. A bruiser. Twice Zee’s size and able to throw his weight well.
“Okay,” Zee said. He set the black briefcase on the table, pushing aside a potted fern, and flicked the two latches. The briefcase opened up. Nestled gently in between papers, a screen, and some oatmeal cookies, was a stainless steel injector. “I think this is what you’re looking for.”
The four guards took a step back. They might not be sure of what exactly was going on upstairs, but they had some idea that it was a bio-technology lab. And as general security contractors, they had a feeling there shouldn’t have been a floor up near the top with a dedicated lab in the company’s general offices.
“You will need to come with us,” the guard with the uncomfortably hot long sleeves said solemnly.
“I understand,” Zee said, and picked up the injector.
All four men stared at him as he jammed the point into his forearm and triggered the device. It hissed, spitting whatever it had contained down past Zee’s skin.
“Catch!” Zee said, and tossed the injector at them. They flinched back from it, which gave Zee the second he needed to close with the big guy. He flipped him into the table and pulled the gun out from his belt in one smooth sequence.
With gun in hand, Zee spun and ran for the doors with a head start. The dangerous one, still shaking his head, pushed away the help of the other guards. He patted his belt and swore. “Call Dmitri!” he shouted, and ran after Zee.
Outside on the docks around the skyscraper, Zee circled around for a second until he found a fast-looking powerboat. It took a second to smash the console open and jump-start it. He cast the ropes off and powered away, but not before the large guard jumped from the dock into the back of the boat.
“You must stop,” he told Zee.
Zee jammed the throttle up, surging the boat away from the dock at full speed, its wake splattering up against the sides of nearby downtown buildings as they ripped through the Miami canals. There’d been a time when these had been side streets that the Army Corps of Engineers fought to keep dry with dikes and walls, but ten years ago they’d finally accepted defeat. The ground under Miami was porous; they couldn’t stop the ocean from bubbling up even if they built dikes around the entire city. This wasn’t Denmark, this was Miami, all former swamp. So the lower floors of buildings had been waterproofed, barricaded, and the streets lined to divert and control the waterways. If he was quick about it, Zee could get this powerboat right back to his safe house and call in help, and never step foot on a dry road.
But he was going to have to hurry, because he was going to need all the help he could call in from his safe house very, very soon once that injection took hold.
A more immediate problem was the very determined guard behind him.
Zee spun the wheel and unbalanced the man. He elbowed the guard in the gut, but it seemed to have little effect. The guard’s pupils were wide as he bear-hugged Zee and then head-butted him. The powerboat careened off a wall and smacked off another boat. People shouted at them as they zagged past.
The world faded for a second, and then Zee sputtered back to consciousness with a face full of blood.
“You’re coming back to meet Dmitri, and then Dmitri will take you all the way up,” the man said, his voice slurred. “Stop fighting. You’re dead man already. We know you are with Caribbean Intelligence. And that injection will kill you.”
The bear hug was breaking his ribs, Zee realized. The man had ingested a fighter’s cocktail at some point: a dose of some slow release Adrenalin, as well as some other mixture of drugs to enable a spurt of speed and immunity to pain. None of the kicks or jabs Zee threw affected him at all.
The guard let go of Zee to grab the wheel. The powerboat, out of control, had turned for one of the docks.
Zee hit him in the head with the gun. As the guard shrugged that off, Zee flipped him out of the boat. Behind him, another powerboat appeared in the canal. Zee glanced behind and saw three shaved heads.
Friends of the guard he’d just thrown overboard.
There was a large park five miles away. Acres of natural preserve. A safer place to continue this battle where people wouldn’t get hurt in the crossfire. More open water to lose his pursuers in. Zee gunned the powerboat to full speed.
With a virus injected into his skin, the longer he waited to get help the more danger he’d be in. But first he was going to have to take care of his determined pursuers.
Well, all he had to do was get back to his safe ho
use and make a call. After that … Bullets stitched the back of the powerboat, making him wince.
Just focus on getting to the safe house, he told himself. From there he could call for backup.
2
Destruction brewed in the far-off trade winds. A storm sucking up moisture and heat, a dervish with a damaging appetite that ponderously barreled its way across the Atlantic toward the curve of the Caribbean islands scattered in an arc from Florida to South America.
The spinning mass had been tagged by algorithms and scientists days ago as Tropical Storm Makila. Makila’s winds topped out at around sixty miles an hour. The same sort of wind speed you got if you stuck your face out of the window of a car on a highway.
Curious satellites watched it form off the coast of Africa and bear its way across Hurricane Alley toward the center of the Caribbean.
And then, slowly curve.
The question always was: where would it hit? Weather sites showed animations and projections based on the best guesses of supercomputing networks. From the island of Dominica, halfway up the Caribbean chain, all the way up to Florida, people warily paid attention.
“Roo!” someone in a boxy yellow Suzuki honked a horn and shouted. “Stocking up good for Makila?”
Prudence Jones, or Roo as everyone called him, looked away from the eerily cheerful clouds in the sunny sky. He flicked dreadlocks out from his eyes and waved back. The car pulled away before Roo could tell who it was, and he looked back up at the sky.
The real hint of the storm to come out there was that lack of wind. The trade winds always swept through the Virgin Islands on their way to the larger island of Puerto Rico, keeping the air crisp and salty here on the east side of the island. But now the stillness let the sun bake the exposed asphalt and concrete of the town of Red Hook, let it glitter off the water, and let it choke the air with humidity. The winds were being sucked up by the distant storm.
Soon the humidity would be blown clean away. The sky would turn ominous. Winds and waves would scour any boats still bobbing in Muller Harbor here in Red Hook.
And that included Roo and his catamaran, the Spitfire II, if he didn’t get out of the harbor today.
Roo carefully checked that the groceries wouldn’t fall off the folding dolly, then paused. Something twitched in the back of his mind: the young man leaning against a corner of the wall on the far side of the parking lot. The one pretending not to be eyeing Roo.
How long, Roo wondered, had that been happening? He’d missed it. Caught the calculating look only by chance when he’d turned his head to see who’d honked, his eyes not making it to the windshield of whoever had hailed him but stopping at the wall for a second, then snapping back.
And then he’d continued checking his boxes of canned and frozen meals, thinking back to what had briefly flicked across his retinas: a somewhat overly muscled boy with a determined clench to his jaw.
Ratty sneakers. Old jeans. Scars on his fingers. Recently healed?
Shifting feet. He was getting prepared. Like a boxer before a match.
Shit.
Roo stood up and left the cart on the ground. He had cut between the store and an apartment building nearby, headed for the street to cross to the marina. But this was a good spot to get held up. Thirty feet of shadow, just out of sight of the road, right on the edge of the parking lot. Roo walked quickly back toward the store. The young man moved to intercept.
Roo sighed and backed up, reaching for his back pocket.
“Easy rasta.” The young man had a gun in his hand now. “Don’t be reaching for no trouble.”
“It’s my wallet,” Roo said. “You want me to continue?”
The young man’s mouth twitched. Over-challenged, a little too hyped up and nervous. He hadn’t done this too often. Roo wondered what the story was. Recently out, struggling to get a job? Moving in the wrong circles? “Gimme it,” the man demanded.
Roo tossed the wallet at his feet. And nodded at the groceries. “All yours.”
His mugger shook his head. “I saw you reading a phone on the way in.”
Roo blinked. Now there was a dilemma. He figured he’d lose the groceries and cash and some cards.
But the phone.
He thought about it for a second, and then shook his head. The young man moved from nervous anticipation to careful anger.
Roo’d spent over a week getting the new phone set up. A lot of tweaks and software to make sure he remained as invisible in a networked world as he could possibly imagine.
Most people who lost a phone, they could just redownload their settings when they logged in.
But Roo wasn’t most people. The exotic software that he preferred to use kept him safe, and it ran locally. And even then, every month he purchased a new phone. Started from scratch.
He’d just gotten it set up.
It was a pain in the ass to do it every month. He wasn’t going to do it again this week. Particularly not with a storm bearing down on him.
No. He shook his head again. “No. You can have everything but the phone.”
The mugger glanced left, then right, judged that shooting Roo would not be the smartest thing to do right away, then raised the gun to smack him with it.
He probably thought he would knock the phone out of him.
Instead, Roo walked forward.
There was no sweet ballet of moves, but a split second’s worth of damage. A knee to the groin, elbow to the nose, and a quick flip that put the youth on the ground, groaning.
Roo examined the gun he’d taken at the same time.
It was too light. No ammo.
He checked it to confirm his suspicion. Then bent over the young man. Roo tugged at the graphene paracord bracelet on his left hand. A few seconds and he could tie the kid up, leave the gun next to him, and send him right back to the place he’d probably just gotten out of. Toughen him up. Give him more chances to meet the real dangerous criminals there.
So Roo just picked up his wallet. The young man, hardly more than a kid, would come out of jail more of a menace than he’d go in. Roo knew that well enough.
He retrieved his groceries and wheeled them past the mugger, who now groaned and snorted blood over the concrete parking lot.
Roo grimaced and then stopped. Squatted next to him again.
“Hey, rudeboy?” Bloodshot eyes flickered open, scared. “Take a vacation,” Roo told him softly, and held all the bills in his wallet up in front of his face.
The eyes widened. Big bills. Roo liked having escape money on him. Always.
Roo pressed ten thousand in cash against the boy’s chest. “I have a price, though. You willing to hear me?”
His mugger nodded.
Roo let go of the cash. “I see you doing this again, I won’t be gentle. You’ll be an old man with a limp, understand?”
A few minutes later, with a lighter wallet and a faint frown on his face, Roo threw the empty gun into the ocean while standing at a marina dock just down the road. He shoved his hands in a tattered old jacket with an MV Tellus patch on it and stood silently for a moment.
A single, foreboding streak of dark clouds had crept onto the horizon over the green and gray hills of St. John, the next island east of St. Thomas and just a few miles across the sea. The glimmering white sand beaches were visible from here. But if Roo turned around and looked back, this side of St. Thomas would bristle with high rises and commercial activity. People weren’t on vacation here, they were living.
Time to get back to the boat, he thought, eyeing the clumpy slash of dark in the sky. Time to batten down.
* * *
At the Sand Dollar, an obnoxiously nautically themed bar attached to a waterfront hotel just by a set of docks, Roo eased his way down into a leathery Islay whiskey. He’d spent half the day storing stuff and checking over the catamaran one last time. From the corner of the polished wooden bar he squinted out over the muddy water of the harbor.
“You staying here for Makila?” Seneca asked, c
hecking his glass as she moved past with a couple beers in hand. The short blond bartender was a bit of a feature attraction for half the regulars growing roots on the creaky wooden stools here. She had a touch of sunburn on her cheeks today. Probably spent the weekend on a beach in St. John with her roommates. She was halfway through college somewhere up in the U.S. and working here in the summer, still in the honeymoon period of living here when she spent every spare moment she could on a beach.
“Just waiting for Delroy to get out of school. Then we head down to Flamingo Bay.” She didn’t know where that was, he saw, and added, “It’s on the western tip of Water Island. Lots of mangroves in the inside part. We can tie up. It’s not a full hurricane, we should be okay.”
Seneca shook her head. “I can’t imagine living on a boat. Let alone staying on board for a storm.”
Roo shrugged, and she moved on.
“She likes you,” Tinker growled. A large Viking of a man in grease-resistant overalls and a giant black beard, he nudged Roo hard in the shoulder with an elbow.
“She likes everyone,” Roo muttered. “It’s her job. You get your engine fixed? We gonna see you down at Honeymoon?” Tinker was, in theory, a mechanic. He did odd jobs around the harbor for trade. Food, parts, whatever. He owned an ancient diesel-powered Grand Banks motor yacht. It was a behemoth; seventy feet long and powered by two fuel-hungry, notoriously grumpy motors, it would have been a palatial ship to a prior generation.
Nowadays, who the hell could afford the fuel to run the damn thing?
Not Tinker. He’d gotten a deal on the motorboat and gotten it to Red Hook. Limping in on faulty machinery and fumes from the Bahamas. He’d anchored the damn thing, and it’d been sitting in the harbor through two hurricane seasons. And Tinker had become a fixture at the bar. Another piece of human driftwood tossed up here in St. Thomas.
Tinker was working on converting the engines to take leftover oil from fryers. He had tanks of the shit fastened to his decks, collected from restaurants all around Red Hook. Every once in a while the engines would chug and belch out the smell of grease and fried food all over the harbor. And then they’d fall silent.