Triggers

Triggers Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Triggers Read Online Free PDF
Author: Robert J. Sawyer
the voice in her ear. “Justice Horvath is
en route
to Andrews, but says he can’t proceed without an official death notice. Has the president actually—”
    Screeeeech!
    Susan yanked her earpiece out; the wail from it was unbearable. The lights in the observation gallery flickered, then died, as did the ones down in the operating room. A few seconds later, emergency lighting kicked in below. Mark Griffin bounded up the steps in the small gallery and opened the door at the back. More emergency lighting spilled in from a ceiling-mounted unit containing what looked like two automobile headlamps.
    “Those are battery-operated lights,” said Griffin. “The main power is off—meaning so is that defibrillator, as well as the perfusion pump.” Susan saw someone run out of the O.R., presumably to get a crash cart with a portable defibrillator.
    Eric Redekop, starkly illuminated from the upper left by the harsh emergency lights in the O.R., reached his gloved hand into the president’s chest and began squeezing Jerrison’s heart. The surgeon glanced at the paired digital wall clocks—the actual time and the event timer—but their faces had gone dark.
    After a moment, the regular lighting flickered back to life. Susan looked down at the surgical bed. Redekop continued to squeeze the heart once per second. Other doctors were frantically trying to reboot or readjust equipment. She turned to Griffin. “What the hell happened?”
    “I don’t know,” he said. “The emergency power is supposed to kick in automatically. An operating room should never go dark like that.”
    Susan picked up her earpiece and, after making sure it wasn’t still wailing, put it back in her ear. “Dawson,” she said into her sleeve. “Whiskey tango foxtrot?”
    A deep male voice: Secret Service agent Darryl Hudkins, looking up at her from down in the operating room. “Could it be an electromagnetic pulse?”
    “Christ,” said Susan. “The bomb.”
    “Agent Schofield cutting in,” said another voice in Susan’s ear. “Affirmative. The bomb at the White House has gone off.”
    “Copy that,” replied Susan, stunned.
    “How are they managing with Prospector?” asked Schofield.
    Susan looked through the angled glass at the chaos below. Redekop was still squeezing the president’s heart, but the vital-signs monitor continued to show a flat line. “I think we’ve lost him.”
    RORY Proctor had been using his binoculars when the bomb went off. As soon as he saw the flare of light, he lowered them—just in time to see the entire curved back of the White House blow out toward him. A plumeof smoke started rising into the gray sky, and gouts of fire shot out of the shattered windows of the east and west wings. Screams went up all around him.
    SETH Jerrison’s deep, dark secret was that he was an atheist. He’d managed to secure the Republican nomination by lying through his teeth about it, by periodically attending church, by bowing his head when appropriate in public, and—after numerous reprimands from his wife and campaign director—finally breaking himself of the habit of using “Jesus” and “Christ” as swearwords, even in private.
    He believed in fiscal conservatism, he believed in small government, he believed in taking a strong stand against America’s enemies whether nations or individuals, he believed in capitalism, and he believed English should be the official language of the United States.
    But he did not believe in God.
    The handful of RNC members who knew this sometimes chided him for it. Rusty, his campaign manager, had once looked at him with a kindly smile—the sort one might bestow on a silly child who had claimed that when he grew up he was going to be president—and said, “Sure, you might be an atheist
now,
but just wait until you’re dying—you’ll see.”
    But Seth was dying right now. He could feel his strength fading, feel his
life
draining away.
    And still he felt secure in his atheism. Even as his
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Go In and Sink!

Douglas Reeman

The Templar Prophecy

Mario Reading

Tracie Peterson

Forever Yours-1

Chantress

Amy Butler Greenfield

Danger in a Red Dress

Christina Dodd

The Tattoo

Chris Mckinney

The Calling

Barbara Steiner