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one of the drivers in the truckā€™s cab, leaving Cortez to handle the brute alone. Cortez didnā€™t seem to mindā€”heā€™d raised Diamond and the others from infancy, from the time when heā€™d fed them from bottles. Apparently fearless, Cortez calmly coaxed the big bull into the transport.

Ginger sidled up to Anjou. ā€œHenri, we have a problem.ā€

ā€œWhatever it is, it can wait until we get the herd on the road.ā€

ā€œThat was my friend in Washington. The army has formally terminated Project Hannibal.ā€

ā€œUm. Disappointing, but not unexpected. It wonā€™t matter now. In a week or two, the herd will be in the wild. Once the news . . .ā€

ā€œIn a week or two, the herd could be dead.ā€

Anjou turned to stare. A joke? Ginger had never shown any sign of having a sense of humor.

She nodded, completely serious. ā€œThe army isnā€™t just ending Project Hannibalā€™s funding, theyā€™ve decided to terminate the product of the projectā€”to slaughter the animals.ā€

ā€œSlaughter them?ā€ Anjou felt the blood drain from his face. Twelve years of work. His hope for scientific recognition, for fame, for the rewards that ought, by right, to accompany his achievement. Heā€™d brought back mammoths, for Godā€™s sake!

He grasped Gingerā€™s sleeve. ā€œWho can we call? The vice president, she was interested. That senator . . .ā€

Ginger shook her head. ā€œMy contact informs me this decision was taken at the highest levels. With the election coming soon, the administration has decided to back the homestead movement whole-heartedly. Theyā€™re eliminating all evidence that they funded ā€˜mutantā€™ animals that might get in the way of drought-stricken Midwest farmers making a new start in Alaska.ā€

All the work, all the planning . . .

ā€œThere must be something we can do,ā€ Anjou whispered. ā€œIā€™ll tell Cortez to take them into Canada. Out on the tundra, the borderā€™s just a line on the map.ā€

ā€œCanada wonā€™t defy the US military,ā€ Ginger said.

ā€œIā€™m not giving up! Weā€™ve done so much, come so far . . .ā€

Ginger held his arm in a catā€™s-paw grip, red-painted nails ever-so-lightly digging into his skin. ā€œThis changes nothing. Luis will keep the mammoths out of sight. Let the army waste its resources searching for a handful of animals in the vastness of the Arctic. Meanwhile, weā€™ll do as we said. As soon as Luis gets the herd safely to the target point, weā€™ll begin the campaign to enlist public sympathy.ā€

Anjou began to feel a little brighter. ā€œYouā€™re right. Hell, the public screams if the forest service tries to cull a few feral horses or wild deer. Theyā€™ll go nuts over killing a mammoth. But still . . .ā€ He sobered, picturing Diamond, his exquisite creation, cut down in a hail of machine-gun fire from a hovering helicopter. ā€œThis is the army. Killing is what they do best.ā€

Ginger made calming motions with her hands. ā€œDonā€™t despair. Even if the worst happens, even if we lose the main herd, the army doesnā€™t know about Gold and Silver. As long as we keep those two mammoths hidden, we have hope. Eventually, the administrationā€™s position will change. Environmental concerns will once again be seen as essential for national security.ā€ Her smile dimpled her cheeks. ā€œAnd the first time some hunter brags online about bagging a mammoth or offers a tusk for sale, sympathy will increase tenfold.ā€

Anjou cringed at her cold-bloodedness, but he knew she was right. ā€œPublicity is the key. Weā€™ll have to rally every tree hugger in the country to save the mammoths.ā€

Cortez had all eight mammoths loaded in the transports now. With shouts and bangs, the drivers stowed the loading ramps and locked the cargo doors.

Anjou nodded toward the trucks. ā€œCortez will go ballistic when he finds out the army wants to kill off his pets.ā€

ā€œThen we wonā€™t tell him.ā€

Cortez gave a final wave as he and his partner boarded the passenger compartment of the lead truck. With a noisy grinding of gears, the two mammoth transports pulled out.

Ginger patted Anjouā€™s hand. ā€œDonā€™t worry. Soon the US government will come to us, begging to reinstate Project Hannibal.ā€

Anjou gazed after the departing mammoths. ā€œAnd if they donā€™t?ā€

Ginger nodded sagely. ā€œLet me think about that. Itā€™s always good to have a backup plan.ā€

CHAPTER 6

The worst road in America

In the lead truckā€™s passenger cabin, Luis turned his tablet to the video feeds from the cargo bays. The mammoths looked quietly miserable, heads down, ignoring the stacks of hay, swaying with the trucksā€™ jerky movements. Donā€™t worry, babies. Soon youā€™ll have a whole new world to explore.

Beside him, Brandon sighed happily. ā€œThree weeks in the wild on someone elseā€™s dime, then the rest of the summer off. Ginger must have put something in Anjouā€™s coffee for him to be so generous.ā€ He stretched his six-foot three-inch frame as far as the compartment would allow. ā€œI like old Ginger. Sheā€™s kind of like the doting aunt I never had.ā€

Only if youā€™re nephew to a barracuda, Luis thought. But Brandon, never the most penetrating of men, was easy to win over with a smile and an attaboy.

Luis looked up. ā€œYou packed the wind-powered generator?ā€ Keeping his tablet charged was crucial to the mission: it was loaded with detailed topographic maps and able to track the mammothsā€™ positions by satellite from a transponder chip inserted under each animalā€™s skin.

ā€œStop worrying,ā€ Brandon said. ā€œWeā€™ve got the portable generator and everything else on the list. All first-class stuff, very light. Down sleeping bags, nice pop-up tent. Four weeksā€™ worth of food, just in case. I told Anjou that if you and I had to camp out in the bush, I was damn well going to pick the equipment out myself. I mean, what does he know? He thinks ā€˜roughing itā€™ means no room service.ā€

ā€œIā€™m sure itā€™s all fine.ā€ Luisā€™s teeth rattled as the trucks bounced over anonymous backroads, bumping over broken pavement and gravel.

He zoomed the camera in on

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