The
Dragon Factory
Sunday, August 29, 12:51
A.M.
Time Remaining on the
Extinction Clock: 83 hours, 9 minutes
E.S.T.
Hecate and Paris stood together on a small
balcony that jutted out from a metal walkway built above and around
the central production floor of their primary facility. Below them
over a hundred employees moved and interacted with the mindless and
seamless choreography of worker bees. It was an image they had
discussed and one they always enjoyed. Everything was color coded,
which added to the visual richness of the scene. Blue jumpsuits for
general support staff, white lab coats for the senior researchers,
green scrubs for the surgical teams, orange for the medical staff,
charcoal for the animal handlers, and a smattering of pastel shades
for technicians in different departments. Hecate liked color, Paris
liked busy movement.
The production floor was circular and a
hundred feet across, with side corridors leading to labs, holding
pens, design suites, bio-production factories, and computer
centers. The lighting made it all look like
Christmas.
Rising like a spike from the center of the
floor was a statue of the tattoo each of the Twins wore in secret:
a caduceus in which fierce dragons were entwined around the
shepherd’s staff to form a double helix. Dragons were each carved
from single slabs of flawless alabaster, the milky stone a perfect
match for their skin. The central staff was marble, and the wings
were made from hammered gold. The Twins had no personal religion,
but to them the statue was sacred. To them it revealed aspects of
their true nature.
Paris leaned a hip against the rail and
sipped bottled water through a straw. He and his sister always
drank from a private stock of Himalayan water. The general staff
was provided with purified water. Their dockside warehouse,
however, was filled to the rafters with bottled water from the
bottling plant in Asheville owned by Otto on behalf of Cyrus. No
one at the Dragon Factory was allowed to drink any of those
bottles. Hecate and Paris certainly wouldn’t.
Generally the water shipments went directly
from the bottling plant to the customs yard and then by ship to
ports all over the world. The current store was scheduled for
distribution to several islands here in the Bahamas. The cargo ship
was scheduled to dock in ten hours.
“You really think Dad put something in the
water?” asked Paris.
“Don’t you?”
He shrugged. “Like what? We’ve tested it for
toxins, mercury, pollutants, bacteria. it’s just
water.”
“Maybe,” Hecate said neutrally.
“Maybe.”
“If you’re that concerned with it, then dump
it into the ocean and fill the bottles with tap
water.”
“We could,” she said. “But wouldn’t you like
to know what’s in it?”
“You ordered a battery of new tests as soon
as we got back. Let’s leave it until our people finish their
analysis.” He narrowed his eyes. “Or. do you think you know what’s
in it?”
She took his bottle from him and sipped it.
“Know? No, I don’t know, but I have some suspicions. General
suspicions. ”
“Like.?”
“Genetic factors.”
Paris looked at her in surprise. “Gene
therapy?”
“It can be done in water. It’s difficult,
but Dad could do it. We could do it.”
“What kind of gene
therapy?”
“I don’t know. If Dad was just a corrupt
businessman I’d think he was adding something to create an
addictive need for the water. For that particular brand of
water.”
“We tested for hormones.. ”
“No. Dad’s all about genetics these days.
And viruses.”
“We checked for viruses,” Paris said
nervously.
“And found none, I know. That’s why I’m
having the water tested for DNA.”
“What do we do if we find something in
there?”
“Well, Brother. that depends on what the
gene therapy is intended to accomplish. If it’s just an addictive
component, then we let it slide but ask for a bigger cut of the
water market.”
“What if it’s something
bad?”
“ ‘Bad’?” She smiled at that. “Like
what?”
“Like something destructive. Something that
will kill people.”
Hecate shrugged. “I don’t know. Why? Are you
getting squeamish?”
“After what the Berserkers found in Denver?
What if I am?”
“God! It’s a little late to start developing
a conscience, Paris.”
His eyes met hers and then shifted away.
“I’ve always had a conscience. Something like a poison or a plague.
that would be different.”
She shrugged.
Paris said, “The stuff we recovered from
Denver. That’s Nazi death camp stuff. That’s. that’s wrong on a
whole different level from anything we’ve done.”
“It’s fascinating.”
“Christ! It’s gruesome. I can deal with some
slap and tickle. And, yes, I can deal with a little snuff. but the
systematic torture and extermination of millions of
people?”
His sister gave another dismissive
shrug.
“Why the hell does Dad want that
crap?”
“Why would any geneticist?” she
asked.
“I don’t want it.”
“I do. I wish we had the Guthrie cards.
Hundreds of thousands of blood samples, all neatly indexed with
demographics. They’d be useful for collecting genetic
markers.”
He shook his head. “I don’t think I’d like
to build our empire on those kinds of bones.”
“What. you don’t like being an evil
mastermind?”
“This isn’t a joke, Heck.”
“I’m not joking. And don’t call me
that.”
“Is this how you see us? I mean, really? Do
you think we’re evil?”
“Aren’t we?”
“Are we?”
Hecate handed back the water bottle. “We’ve
killed people, sweetie. A lot of people. You yourself have
strangled two women while you were screwing them. Not to mention
all the people the Berserkers have killed. I never saw you shed a
tear. Evil? Yes, I think that pretty much covers
it.”
“We’re corrupt,” Paris said, almost under
his breath. “Corruption isn’t actually evil.”
“It’s certainly not a saintly
virtue.”
He crossed to the other side of the balcony
and stared out through a big domed window at the warehouse on the
dock. The doors were open and he could see the pallets of cased
water. “Is there a line? Between corruption and evil? If so. when
did we cross it?”
Hecate studied her brother’s profile. She
had suspected that this was coming, but she hadn’t expected to hear
this much hurt in Paris’s voice. “What’s going on with you? You’ve
been in a mood ever since we left Dad’s place.”
“Dad. Alpha.” Paris snorted. “If we’re evil,
Hecate, it’s because he made us that way. He’s a monster. We’re.
by-products.”
“The apple and the tree,
Paris.”
Paris shook his head.
Hecate frowned. “What are you saying, that
if you had a choice you’d have done things differently? That you
would have chosen a different path than following in Dad’s
footsteps?”
“I don’t know. And I don’t want to get into
a whole nature-versus-nurture debate, either,” he snapped. When she
said nothing he leaned on the rail and stared out over the water as
if he could already see the freighter. “I enjoyed what we did. I
know that about me, and in a way I’m comfortable with it because I
know that it serves my appetites. So. maybe there’s a level of
corruption-of evil-that I’m okay with. Maybe even a level I want to
be part of what defines me.”
“But.?” she prompted.
“But I don’t know that I want to believe
that I have no limits. That my darkness has no
limits.”
“That’s a little grandiose,
Brother.”
He turned and spread his arms. “Look at me,
Hecate. Look at us. We’re grand. Everything about us is larger than
life. None of it’s real, a lot of it’s not even supposed to be
possible. but here we are, and we’ve begged, borrowed, and stolen
so much science that we’ve made the impossible possible. There’s
never been anything like us before in history. Dad calls us his
young gods, and in ways he’s not far wrong. We bend nature to our
will.” She opened her mouth to speak, but Paris gave a curt shake
of his head. “No, let me finish. Let me say this. Hecate, we’ve
always been the Jakoby Twins. People would actually kill to be with
us. People would kill to be near us. You know that for a fact
because men have killed each other over you on two continents.
We’re legends. We also know we’re not normal. We’re not even true
albinos. This skin color is too regular, too pure white. Our bodies
are without a single genetic flaw. We have blue eyes and perfect
eyesight. We’ve never even had cavities. We’re stronger than we
should be; we’re faster. And we’re almost identical twins despite
being of different genders.”
“Yes, we’re genetically designed. Big
surprise, Paris. our father is probably the smartest geneticist on
the planet. He wanted genetically perfect children, and that’s what
he got. He also made sure that we’re gorgeous and really fucking
smart. Smarter than anyone else except maybe the occasional freak.
He tweaked our DNA to make us better, to try and create the ‘young
gods’ that he’s always dreamed of. So what? This isn’t
news.”
“There’s a fine line between genetic
perfection and freakism,” Paris said. “And no matter what you or
Dad says, we are definitely freaks. If we did nothing else, nothing
new or innovative, people will write books about us and talk about
us for the next century. Maybe for a thousand years. We broke
through boundaries of science no one has dared
push.”
Hecate folded her arms under her breasts and
said nothing.
“So. what does that mean to us?” Paris
continued. “We’ve been raised by Dad to believe that we are
elevated beings. We’re gods or aliens or the next phase of
evolution, depending on which of Dad’s personalities is doing the
talking. Whether he’s right or wrong, the truth is we’re not
normal. We’re like a separate species.”
“I know.. ”
“So, is that why we do what we do?” he
demanded, his voice quick and urgent, almost pleading. “Is that why
we can kill and steal and take without remorse? Are we above evil
because evil is part of the human experience and we’re not quite
human?”
“What do you want me to
say?”
He shook his head. “I don’t know. I. don’t
want to feel bad about what we’re doing, Hecate, and yet it’s
tearing me up inside. It was bad before we saw Dad, and now it’s
worse. Maybe because when I see him I think, There. that’s true
evil in its purest form. Or maybe it’s that I think that all of
this is bullshit rationalization and that we’re just a couple of
psychotic mass murderers who have no right to
live.”
“Jeez, Paris,” Hecate said with a crooked
smile, “when you get a case of existential angst you don’t screw
around.” She came over to him and took Paris in her arms. He
returned the hug sluggishly and tried to pull away, but Hecate held
him fast. For a moment it seemed to him that she was stronger than
he was. Hecate leaned into him, her lips by his ear. “Listen to me,
sweet brother. We are gods. Not because Dad says or the
National-fucking- Enquirer says so. We’re gods because we say so.
Because I say so. And, yes, we’re evil. Our souls are as black and
twisted as the Grinch’s, but there’s no Cindy Lou Who in Whoville
that’s going to turn us into good guys in the third act. We’re evil
because evil is powerful. We’re evil because evil is
delicious.”
Her arms constricted around him with
crushing force, the pressure making him gasp.
“We’re evil because evil is strong and
everything else is weak. Weak is ugly; weak is stupid. Evil is
beautiful.”
She purred out that last word. Then she
kissed Paris on the cheek and pushed him away. He staggered back
and hit the rail. If he hadn’t grabbed the rail, he might have gone
over. Paris stood there, his knees weak, gasping and
startled.
“What the fuck.?” he breathed. “What the
hell was that all about?”
Hecate smiled at him. Her blue eyes were
dark and deep, the irises flecked with tiny spots of gold that he
had never noticed before.
“What the hell are you?”
“I’m your sister,” she said softly. “And,
like you my sweet brother, I’m evil. I’m a
monster.”
Hecate licked her lips.
“Just like you.”