out of here,” Katelyn said.
“Mom!”
“Come
on!”
She took him by the wrist, yanked him away, heading back toward their empty house.
“No!” He broke away.
And suddenly she was terribly afraid. Afraid for her son. He was vulnerable—to what, she did not know, but she knew that he was vulnerable.
“Conner, please, I am begging you. I am begging you right now to come back with me.”
“Mom, I think I know what this is!”
“Conner, no. You have no idea. Nobody does. But it’s not right and it’s dangerous.”
He threw his arms around her. “Mom, don’t worry.” In an instant, he had broken away and was running back into the light.
The Thieves were concerned now. Conner should not be here, and they could feel the fury and the fear of the whole collective. Of course everybody was scared: their survival depended on this child, who had been bred through fifty human generations.
Katelyn had the awful and frightening sense that the thing was somehow
watching
her son. She took off after him, her feet slamming into the winterhard ground, and she tackled him and brought him down.
It made him cry out in astonishment. Katelyn had never disciplined him physically. Such a thing was unthinkable, to humiliate a brilliant child in that way—or any child, for that matter.
She got up on all fours, crying, trying to keep herself between him and the thing. She had the hideous feeling that it would somehow suck him into its fire, and he would join the poor woman who was screaming there.
He stood up. Glaring down at her, he turned away from the object and strode back toward the house. Thanking God in her heart, she followed her son home.
FIVE
THE YOUNG LIEUTENANT HANDED COLONEL Robert Langford a sheet of paper. “My God,” he said as he read it.
“Sir?”
“This is under the blanket,” he said. The young man, who was not cleared to hear what was about to be said, left the room.
The glowboy that had been snooping around Wilton, Kentucky, had just done something that Rob had never seen, and that he was quite sure no monitor had seen from the beginning of this mission, which dated back to 1942.
He pulled up a satellite view of Wilton. The glowboy was bright, its plasma fully deployed. The thing was ready to move out of there fast. He zoomed in on the image. Disbelieving, he zoomed in on it again. What in hell were people doing crowding around the thing? The grays considered their secrecy essential, and they had threatened dire consequences if it was ever compromised. But they themselves were breaking it.
And also breaking a fundamental policy of the United States of America, which was to keep their secret until and if something could be said to the public other than, “We know they’re here, we know that they come into your bedrooms and kidnap you in the night, but we don’t know why and we are helpless to stop them. And yes, some of you disappear, and some of you die.”
He stared at the image, watching the figures move, trying to form some sort of a rational explanation of what might be happening.
Rob spent too much time in the Mountain, or so he’d been told by practically everybody who worked with him. Because the grays operated at night and tracking their movements was his duty, over the years he’d gradually become a night person.
Mike Wilkes had negotiated a treaty with the grays, using the interface between Bob and Adam and Eamon Glass. The agreement was that they would limit their abductions in number and region. In return, the United States had guaranteed to protect their secrecy.
It was Rob’s job to keep track of the abductions, and, in the most extreme cases of treaty violation, to put up a show of force.
This was not to be done lightly. The grays would not stand to be fired upon. That had been tried back in the forties, and the reply had been horrifying. The grays had caused six hundred plane crashes in the year 1947. Shortly thereafter, President Truman had ordered that they were