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    Vitals

    Vitals

    4.2 5

    by Greg Bear


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      ISBN-13: 9781504025102
    • Publisher: Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller
    • Publication date: 11/24/2015
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 318
    • Sales rank: 179,092
    • File size: 2 MB

    Greg Bear, author of more than twenty-five books that have been translated into seventeen languages, has won science fiction’s highest honors and is considered the natural heir to Arthur C. Clarke. The recipient of two Hugos and four Nebulas for his fiction, he has been called “the best working writer of hard science fiction” by The Science Fiction Encyclopedia. Many of his novels, such as Darwin’s Radio, are considered to be this generations’ classics. Bear is married to Astrid Anderson, daughter of science fiction great Poul Anderson, and they are the parents of two children, Erik and Alexandria. His recent thriller novel, Quantico, was published in 2007 and the sequel, Mariposa, followed in 2009. He has since published a new, epic science fiction novel, City at the End of Time and a generation starship novel, Hull Zero Three.

    Read an Excerpt

    Vitals


    By Greg Bear

    OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

    Copyright © 2015 Greg Bear
    All rights reserved.
    ISBN: 978-1-5040-2510-2


    CHAPTER 1

    May 28

    San Diego, California

    The last time I talked to Rob, I was checking my luggage at Lindbergh Field to fly to Seattle and meet with an angel. My cell-phone beeped and flashed Nemesis, code for my brother. We hadn't spoken in months.

    "Hal, has Dad called you?" Rob asked. He sounded wrung out.

    "No," I said. Dad had died three years ago in a hospital in Ann Arbor. Cirrhosis of the liver. He had choked on his own blood from burst veins in his esophagus.

    "Somebody called and it sounded like Dad, I swear," Rob said.

    Mom and Dad had divorced ages ago. Mom was living in Coral Gables, Florida, and would have nothing to do with our father even when he was dying. Rob had stood the death watch in the hospice. Before I could hop a plane to join them, Dad had died. He had stopped his pointless cursing — dementia brought on by liver failure — and gone to sleep and Rob had left the room to get a cup of coffee. When he had returned, he had found our father sitting up in bed, head slumped, his stubbled chin and pale, slack chest soaked in blood like some hoary old vampire. Dad had died even before the nurses checked in. Sixty-five years old.

    It had been a sad, bad death, the end of a rough road on which Dad had deliberately hit every bump. My brother had taken it hard.

    "You're tired, Rob," I said. The airport, miles of brushed steel and thick green-edged glass, swam like a fish tank around me.

    "That's true," he replied. "Aren't you?"

    I had been in Hong Kong just the night before. I hadn't slept in forty-eight hours. I can never sleep in a plane over water. A haze of names and ridiculous meetings and a stomach ache from French airline food were all I had to show for my trip. I felt like a show dog coming home without a ribbon.

    "No," I lied. "I'm doing fine."

    Rob mumbled on for a bit. Work was not going well. He was having trouble with his wife, Lissa, a blond, leggy beauty more than a few steps out of our zone of looks and charm. He sounded as tired as I was and even more confused. I think he was holding back about how bad things were. I was his younger brother, after all. By two minutes.

    "Enough about me," he said. "How goes the search?"

    "It goes," I said.

    "I wanted to let you know." Silence.

    "What?" I hated mystery.

    "Watch your back."

    "What's that mean? Stop screwing around."

    Rob's laugh sounded forced. Then, "Hang in there, Prince Hal."

    He called me that when he wanted to get a rise out of me.

    "Ha," I said.

    "If Dad phones," he said, "tell him I love him."

    He hung up. I stood in a corner of the high, sunny lobby with the green glass and blinding white steel all around, then cursed and dialed the cell-phone number — no go — and all his other numbers.

    Lissa answered in Los Angeles. She told me Rob was in San Jose, she didn't have a local number for him, why? I told her he sounded tired and she said he had been traveling a lot. They hadn't been talking much lately. I spoke platitudes in response to her puzzlement and hung up.

    Some people believe that twins are always close and always know what the other is thinking. Not true, not true at all for Rob and me. We fought like wildcats from the time we were three years old. We believed we were twins by accident only and we were in this long road race separately, a fair fight to the finish, but not much fraternizing along the way.

    Yet we had separately chosen the same career path, separately become interested in the same aspects of medicine and biology, separately married great-looking women we could not keep. I may not have liked my twin, but I sure as hell loved him.

    Something was wrong. So why didn't I cancel my flight and make some attempt to find him, ask him what I could do? I made excuses. Rob was just trying to psych me out, as always. Prince Hal, indeed.

    I flew to Seattle.

    CHAPTER 2

    June 18

    The Juan de Fuca Trench

    We dropped in a long, slow spiral, wrapped in a tiny void as shiny and black as a bubble in obsidian, through eight thousand feet of everlasting night. I had a lot of time to think.

    Looking to my right, over my shoulder, I concentrated on the pilot's head bent under the glow of a single tensor lamp. Dave Press rubbed his nose and pulled back into shadow. It was my third dive this trip, but the first with Dave as pilot. We were traveling alone, just the two of us, no observer or backup. Our deep submersible, Mary's Triumph, descended at a rate of forty-four feet every minute, twenty-seven hundred feet every hour.

    Dave leaned forward again, whistling tonelessly.

    I narrowed my vision to fuzzy slits and imagined Dave's head was all there was. Just a head, my eyes, a thousand feet of ocean above, and more than a mile of ocean below. For a few seconds I felt like little black Pip, tossed overboard from one of Ahab's whaleboats, dog-paddling for hours on the tumbling rollers. Pip changed. He became no lively dancing cabin boy but a solemn, prophetic little thing, thinly of this world, all because of a long swim surrounded by gulls and sun. What was that compared to where we were, encased in a plastic bubble and dropped into the world's biggest bottle of ink? Pip had had a bright, cheery vacation.

    One hundred and eighty minutes to slip down into the trench, two hundred minutes to return, between three hundred and four hundred minutes on the bottom, if all went well. A twelve-hour journey down to Hell and back, or Eden, depending on your perspective.

    I was hoping for Eden. Prince Hal Cousins, scientist, supreme egotist, prime believer in the material world, frightened of the dark and no friend of God, was about to pay a visit to the most primitive ecologies, searching for the fountain of youth. I was on a pilgrimage back to where the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil had taught us how to die. I planned to reclaim that fruit and run some tests.

    This blasphemy seemed fair exchange for so many millions of bright-eyed, sexy, and curious generations getting old, wrinkled, and sick. Turning into ugly, demented vegetables.

    Becoming God's potting soil.

    A mile and a half below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, humans are unexpected guests in a murky and ancient dream. Down there, nestled in the cracks of Earth's spreading skin, islands of heat and poisonous stink poke up from shimmering chasms flocked with woolly white carpets of bacteria.

    These are the best places on Earth, some scientists believe, to look for Eden — the Beginning Place.


    I zoned out. Napped for a few minutes, woke up with a start, clonked my head on the back of the metal-mesh couch. I was not made for submarines. Dave tapped his finger on the control stick.

    "Most folks are too excited to sleep down here," he said. "Time goes by pretty quickly."

    "Nervous reaction," I said. "I don't like tight places."

    Dave grinned, then returned his attention to the displays. "Usually we see lots of things outside — pretty little magic lanterns of the deep. Kind of deserted today. Too bad."

    I looked up at the glowing blue numbers on the dive chronometer. One hour? Two?

    Just thirty minutes.

    All sense of time had departed. We were still in the early stages of the dive. I sat up in the couch and stretched my arms, bent at the elbows. My silvery thermal suit rustled,

    I liked Dave. I like most people, at first. Dave was in his late thirties, reputedly a devout Christian, short and plump, with stringy blond hair, large intelligent green eyes, thick lips, and a quick, casual smile. He seemed a steady and responsible guy, good with machinery. He had once driven DSVs for the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA. Just a month ago, he had signed on with the Sea Messenger to pilot Owen Montoya's personal research submarine, his pricey and elegant little toy, Mary's Triumph.

    It was cold outside the acrylic pressure sphere: two degrees above freezing. Chill had crept into the cabin and the suits barely kept us comfortable. I avoided brushing my hands against the two titanium frame beams that passed aft through the sphere. They were covered with dew.

    Dave grunted expressively and squirmed in his seat, not embarrassed, just uncomfortable. "Sorry."

    My nostrils flared.

    "Go ahead and let it out," Dave suggested. "It'll clear."

    "I'm comfy," I said.

    "Well, you'll have to put up with me. Rice and macaroni last night, lots of pepper."

    "I eat nothing but fish before a dive. No gas." That sounded geeky and Boy Scout, but I was in fact comfortable. Be prepared.

    "I'm trying to lose weight," Dave confessed. "High-carb diet."

    "Um."

    "A few more lights?" Dave asked. He toggled a couple of switches and three more tensor lamps threw white spots around the sub's controls. He turned their focused glare away from two little turquoise screens crammed with schematics and scrolling numbers: dutiful reports from fuel cells and batteries, the onboard computer, transponder navigation, fore and aft thrusters. When we were at depth, a third, larger overhead screen — now blank — could switch between video from digital cameras and images from side-scanning sonar.

    All we could hear from outside, through the sphere and the hull, was the ping of active sonar.

    Everything nominal, but I was still apprehensive. There was little risk in the DSV, so Jason the controller and dive master had told me before my first plunge. Just follow the routine and your training.

    I wasn't afraid of pain or discomfort, but I anticipated a scale of life that put all risk in a new perspective. Every new and possibly dangerous adventure could prematurely cap a span not of fourscore and ten, but of a thousand, ten thousand, a hundred thousand years ...

    So far, this was just an itch, an attitude I was well aware needed adjustment. It hadn't yet reached the level of phobia.

    At twenty-nine years of age, I worked hard to avoid what Rob had once called the syndrome of Precious Me. I could always rely on Rob to provide sharp insight. In truth, part of me might have welcomed a little vacation. The void might be a pleasure compared to the anxious, egocentric perplexity of my recent existence: divorced, cell-phone guru for radio talk shows, semicelebrity, beggar-scientist, mendicant, dreamer, fool. Prince Hal, my coat, my vehicle, forever and ever.

    Spooky.

    "You look philosophical," Dave said.

    "I feel useless," I said.

    "Me too, sometimes. This baby practically drives herself," Dave said. "You can help me do a routine check in ten. Then we'll make our report to Mother."

    "Sure." Anything.

    I rolled and adjusted the couch to lie on my stomach, Cousteau-style, closer to the chill surface of the bubble. My breath misted the smooth plastic, a spot of fog in the surreal darkness. Experimentally, I raised my digital Nikon, its lens hood wrapped in rubber tape to avoid scratching the sphere. I looked at the camera screen, played with the exposure, experimented with pixel density and file size.

    "They also serve who sit and wait," Dave said, adjusting the sub's trim. Motors whined starboard. "Sometimes we play chess."

    "I hate chess," I confessed. "Time is precious and should be put to constructive use."

    Dave grinned. "Nadia warned me."

    Nadia Evans, the number one sub driver on the Sea Messenger, was sick in her bunk topside. A rich, creamy pudding past its prime had made eight of our crew very unhappy. Nadia had planned to take me on this dive, but a deep submersible, lacking a toilet, is no place for the shits.

    Best to keep focused on where we were going and what we might see. Dropping into Planet Extreme. Eternal darkness and incredible pressure.

    Still more than a mile below, at irregular intervals along the network of spreading trenches, massive underwater geysers spewed roiling plumes of superheated water, toxic sulfides, and deep-crust bacteria. Minerals in the flow accreted to erect chimneys around the geysers. Some of the chimneys stood as tall as industrial smokestacks and grew broad horizontal fans like tree fungi. Sulfurous outflow fizzed through cracks and pores everywhere. Magma squeezed out of deeper cracks like black, grainy toothpaste, snapping like reptiles in combat. Close by, at depth, through the hydrophone, you could hear the vents hissing and roaring. Wags had named one huge chimney "Godzilla."

    Gargantuan Earth music.

    Down there, the water is saturated with the deep's chemical equivalent of sunshine. Hydrogen sulfide soup feeds specialized bacteria, which in turn prop up an isolated food chain. Tube worms crest old lava flows and gather around the vents in sociable forests, like long, skinny, red-tipped penises. Royal little white crabs mosey through the waving stalks as if they have all the time there is. Long, lazy, rat-tail fish — deep-water vultures with big curious eyes — pause like question marks, waiting for death to drop their small ration of dinner.

    I shivered. DSV pilots believe the cold keeps you alert. Dave coughed and took a swig of bottled water, then returned the bottle to the cup holder. Nadia had been much more entertaining: witty, pretty, and eager to explain her deep-diving baby.

    The little sphere, just over two meters wide, filled with reassuring sounds: the ping of a directional signal every few seconds, hollow little beeps from transponders dropped months before, another ping from sonar, steady ticking, the sigh and whine of pumps and click of solenoids.

    I rolled on my butt and bent the couch back into a seat, then doubled over to pull up my slippers — thick knitted booties, actually, with rubber soles. I stared between my knees at a shimmer of air trapped in the sub's frame below the sphere. The silvery wobble had been many times larger just forty minutes ago.

    Two thousand feet. The outside pressure was now sixty atmospheres, 840 pounds per square inch. Nadia had described it as a Really Large Guy pogo-sticking all over your head. Inside, at one atmosphere, we could not feel it. The sphere distributed the pressure evenly. No bends, no tremors, no rapture of the deep. Shirtsleeve travel, almost. We wouldn't even need to spend time in a chamber when we surfaced.

    The sub carried a load of steel bars, ballast to be dropped when we wanted to switch to near-neutral buoyancy. Dave would turn on the altimeter at about a hundred feet above the seafloor and let the ingots rip like little bombs. Sometimes the DSV held on to a few, staying a little heavy, and pointed her thrusters down to hover like a helicopter. A little lighter, and she could "float," aiming the thrusters up to avoid raising silt.


    An hour into the dive. Twenty-seven hundred feet. The sphere was getting colder and time was definitely speeding up.

    "When did you meet Owen Montoya?" Dave asked.

    "A few weeks ago," I said. Montoya was a fascinating topic around the office water cooler: the elusive rich guy who employed everyone on the Sea Messenger.

    "He must approve of what you're doing," Dave said.

    "How's that?"

    "Dr. Mauritz used to have top pick for these dives." Stanley Mauritz was the Sea Messenger's chief oceanographer and director of research, on loan to the ship from the Scripps Institution in exchange for Montoya's support of student research. "But you've had three in a row."

    "Yeah," I said. The researchers on board Sea Messenger fought for equipment and resources just like scientists everywhere.

    "Nadia's trying to keep the peace," Dave added after a pause.

    "Sorry to upset the balance."

    Dave shrugged. "I stay out of it. Let's do our check."

    We used our separate turquoise monitor screens to examine different shipboard systems, focusing first on air. Mary's Triumph maintained an oxygen-enriched atmosphere at near sea-level pressure.

    Dave raised his mike and clicked the switch. "Mary to Messenger. We're at one thousand meters. Systems check okay."

    The hollow voice of Jason, our shipboard dive master and controller, came back a few seconds later. "Read you, Mary."

    "What's going on between Nadia and Max?" Dave asked with a leer. Max was science liaison for the ship. Rumors of their involvement had circulated for weeks. "Any hot and heavy?"

    The question seemed out of character. "Nothing, at the moment," I guessed. "She's probably spending most of her time in the head."

    "What's Max got that I haven't?" Dave asked, and winked.


    (Continues...)

    Excerpted from Vitals by Greg Bear. Copyright © 2015 Greg Bear. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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    A harrowing thriller based on real-life discoveries in cell theory and the battle against aging and death by the bestselling author of Darwin’s Radio and War Dogs

    Scientist Hal Cousins is on the brink of success in his quest to determine the biological underpinnings of immortality. Funded by angel investors, the brilliant researcher makes a trip by submersible to the bottom of the sea, searching for primitive one-celled organisms that may be related to the earliest life forms on Earth. But the trip turns into a nightmare when Cousins’s pilot goes berserk and turns on him. The homicidal attack is only the first in a series of events that sends the biochemist on the run, pursued by faceless enemies who want his studies terminated and Cousins dead.
     
    Cousins must face the realization that his research has brought him into contact with a vast conspiracy. Across the country, scientists are being murdered to cover up the fact that someone has discovered how to control minds through bacterial manipulation—and that the trigger bacteria now infects much of the world’s population. Discredited and not knowing whom to trust, Cousins must gamble everything with Earth’s very survival at stake.
     
    Award-winning author Greg Bear creates a tense, stunningly plausible thriller all too firmly rooted in scientific fact.

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    • Vitals
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    bn.com
    The Barnes & Noble Review
    Hal Cousins was never close to his twin brother, Rob, despite the fact that both were microbiologists searching for the key to longevity. So when Rob calls to ask him if he has talked to their deceased father lately, Hal is confused and irritated, but not interested enough to follow up. He's focused on convincing a wealthy, eccentric financier to fund his controversial research.

    Three weeks later, his backing secured, Hal is in a deep submersible in the Juan de Fuca Trench, looking for the primordial bacteria that long ago invaded human cells and developed into mitochondria. Hal believes that mitochondria, now essential to human cellular activity, are also the triggers for the cellular decay that leads to aging and death. Hal's hope, his all-consuming passion, is to find a way to use "mitochondrial chromosome adjustment" to stop this decay and give human beings immortality.

    But deep in the trench, 8,000 feet below the surface, the submersible pilot freaks out and tries to kill Hal and wreck the sub. Hal initiates an emergency ascent, but things on the surface are no better. A scientist on the research ship has also gone on a rampage, killing several crew members while searching for Hal. Under suspicion by the FBI, Hal loses his funding, and his precious deep-sea specimens are destroyed. As devastating as that is, worse yet are the two messages on his cell phone. One is a strange warning and goodbye from his twin brother. The other is from Rob's estranged wife, Lissa, telling him that Rob has been found shot to death in a New York City alley. When a mysterious man who calls himself "K" approaches Hal with a package of documents from Rob, Hal learns that he is the target of a shadowy organization trying to stop his search for immortality. After his research is discredited, his apartment ia burned, and he's attacked on the street, Hal, K, and Lissa go on the run, trying to follow the clues in Rob's papers to the unravel identity of their tormentors and the truth behind Rob's death.

    Vitals made me wish I'd paid more attention in biology class and told me more about the symbiotic bacteria that live in the human body than I ever wanted to know. But Bear does an excellent job of explaining the science in layman's terms without dumbing it down. The story takes us from the bottom of the sea to the Satlin-era Soviet Union to a top-secret facility in New York City to a venerated doctor's Caribbean paradise, all united by a fascination with the properties and possibilities of bacteria. Another bonus in Bear's books, often not bothered with in "thrillers," is the wonderful complexity of his characters. Hal Cousins is at first too arrogant and obsessed to be likable. But, as he delves deeper into the puzzle and learns some hard truths about himself, his brother, and the scientific community they were immersed in, he becomes someone who can at least be respected. The cast of supporting characters is equally nuanced, with each never being quite what they seem, to either Hal or the reader.

    I thoroughly enjoyed Vitals and wholeheartedly recommend it to anyone who wants a story to be as smart as it is exciting. (K.C.)

    Publishers Weekly
    Bear's last novel, Darwin's Radio, won the 2000 Nebula for Best Novel. This inspired but disjointed SF thriller probably won't, though you wouldn't know that from rave blurbs by Tess Gerritsen, Stephen Baxter and David Brin. The book starts strong, with narrator Hal Cousins deep ocean diving in search of Vendobionts, primitive organisms harboring primitive bacteria that he hopes will catalyze his scientific quest for human immortality. Hal finds his Vendobionts, but as the sphere carrying him and his pilot ascends toward the surface, the pilot inexplicably attacks Hal, then the sphere. All survive, but soon after Hal learns that his twin brother, Rob, has been murdered. Both Hal and Rob had been pursuing similar paths to immortality, involving research into bacteria that colonize our bodies and that factor greatly in human life span; this research has brought them both into contact with a vast conspiracy called Silk, engineered by ex-Soviet scientists, that permits mind control through bacterial manipulation, with the trigger bacteria now infecting much of the world's population, including the U.S. president. If all this sounds far-fetched, it is, though the science is sound, and Bear doesn't make it more believable with flourishes such as a spooky Silk research facility in the middle of Manhattan hiding the immortal bodies of Russian elite including Stalin, and a book-ending assault on the seaborne headquarters of Silk; these and other narrative gambits smack of the Bond ethos at its hokiest. The novel is further undercut by Bear's confusing choice to alternate narrative duties between Hal and the former naval intelligence officer whom he turns to for help. Still, Bear creates strong characters and makes his pages fly, and his many fans will likely wallow happily in his paranoid vision. 8-city author tour; simultaneous BDD Audio. (On sale Jan. 2) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
    Library Journal
    Hal Cousins's investigations into prehistoric life forms lead him to nearly discovering the secret of longevity and mark him as a target by competing scientists, unscrupulous officials, and a mysterious mastermind. As Cousins tries to piece together fragments of precious clues, he uncovers a dark and deadly conspiracy that spans generations and continents. The author of Darwin's Radio continues to break new ground in imaginative and too-plausible sf, combining nonstop action and hard science to produce a powerful biotech-thriller that is both timely and frightening. A priority purchase for all sf collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 9/1/01.] Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
    Kirkus Reviews
    Near-future biological thriller, very much in the vein of Bear's previous outing, Darwin's Radio (1999). Researcher Hal Cousins, close to achieving human immortality, studies primitive bacteria and DNA, and embarks on a dive in a bathysphere to capture the organisms he needs. During the dive, his companion, Dave, inexplicably turns homicidal, obliging Hal to knock him unconscious. When the sphere surfaces, Dave struggles out of the hatch and vanishes into the sea. Aboard the mothership, too, there's murder and mayhem; later, when Dave's body is recovered, Hal comes under suspicion of murder. His wealthy backer dumps him, and his twin brother Rob, also a biology researcher, turns up dead. Then, the mysterious Rudy Banning brings a package of information from Rob. Hal learns that Soviet genius microbiologist Maxim Golokhov discovered back in the 1930s how to use bacteria to control human behavior. His program, Silk, apparently rejected by post-Stalin leaders, came secretly to America and spread its means of control all around the world. Banning, a historian, ran afoul of Silk and was sabotaged by them-but is that all he is? Rob's ex-wife, Lissa, shows up-but is she a Silk operative? Is Golokhov still alive? Why is Silk preventing Hal and others from perfecting the immortality treatments? Bear whips up a marvelous froth of doom and paranoia; his ideas are frighteningly plausible, and the whole thing clatters along at a smart pace. But where it's all going not even the author seems to know, and the upshot is both baffling and inconclusive. Author tour
    From the Publisher
    Terrifying . . . Not only does Greg Bear keep you guessing, he keeps you thinking. He is a master at turning a scientific concept into a crackling good thriller.”
    –TESS GERRITSEN
    Author of The Surgeon

    “Astonishing. I was blown away by its ferocious intelligence, astounding research and insight, and terrifying logic. Vitals is the ultimate conspiracy theory. Vitals is the future of the thriller, and a thriller of our future: Vitals is biotech noir. Read it with the light on. Prepare not to sleep easy.”
    –STEPHEN BAXTER
    Author of Manifold: Time

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