She quietly chiseled away at her plaster job in the wall. When she had made a big enough gap she pried the piece of drywall out exposing the pistol and ammunition, and her fake travel papers. Next she took apart the radio and destroyed them and separated the working parts into different plastic bags to be put out in garbage bins around the block. When she was done setting up her apartment for permanent vacation, she picked up the dozen plastic bags of incriminating refuse and took them down to her bike where she spotted her tail for the evening. She took off down a cobblestone alley and turned sharply into a thin walkway that was lined with trees and sped up. The tail was already gone, allowing Xue Lin to dump the evidence around the neighborhood in different bins. She headed back to her apartment quickly to make sure that no break-in would occur.
Safely upstairs in her living room again, she packed her tools into her kevlar backpack and then took a shower which would hopefully be the last shower she would take in Wuhan. Tomorrow was a Go. She hoped Jimmy was ready with the cars. If not she would have to take travel plans into her own hands.
She set an alarm for six and put on her pink pyjamas and got into bed. She went straight to sleep and had strange dreams about opening fire in the lab with a submachine gun killing everyone but her friend, the other new lab-assistant.
Jimmy took a nap after eating dinner at home. His alarm woke him at two in the morning. Wearily he swung his legs out of bed, already in his suit. He picked up the burner phones he’d bought the day before and added them to the heavily laden Go-bag, slinging it over his shoulder. He headed out to take care of the car situation.
He drove his Government issue Mercedes to the next neighborhood which was known to be the turf of a young street gang who had been selling drugs, stealing cars and robbing old people over the last few months. He parked the car and rolled the driver side window halfway down and got out with his bag, leaving the keys in the ignition.
Then with his bag over one shoulder he wandered the neighborhood looking for a van which would serve for the highway miles they would drive if they managed to get out of the center. He found a tan colored van and broke in easily. He started it with a screw driver and drove it to a twenty-four hour gas station and filled up the tank and checked the oil. He then drove to the planned
Jimmy then set out on foot to search for a Chinese-made sedan, white or black, which would serve to take the three of them from the scene to the van. He walked the streets for a good hour before he came across a black sedan that could pass for a Government vehicle. He felt under the mudguards for a spare key container. This time he was in luck. After putting Dr. Wu’s passport and ID into the glove compartment he drove the car back to his apartment and parked it a block away before heading back to bed to try and get some sleep. Tomorrow he would be leaving China forever, if all went well.
Chapter 36
Mandatory Vaccinations
The mandatory vaccinations began in China in December. Wuhan’s outbreak had been building for a few weeks and had been receiving a good amount of publicity in China and in the foreign press. The head Doctor of the vaccination committee followed his directive to start with the large manufacturing cities: Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing. Government teams started showing up at factories, quietly without publicity, giving everyone a small shot of the clear liquid that contained the vaccine and traces of certain metals that the Government scientists had found would work with the 5G frequencies.
The factory workers submitted their forearms willingly and without question. Everyone knew when something was ‘mandatory’ that nothing was to be gained from causing trouble or protesting. Very few of them thought about whether it was good or bad. They just knew that there was no choice.
The medical teams moved efficiently from factory to factory before moving on to smaller companies, and then finally setting up public vaccination sites in gymnasiums and halls in each neighborhood where people lined up with their identification. The elderly were vaccinated, even though it would not protect them if they were infected by the virus from Wuhan.
Vaccinations continued around the country including rural areas. Wuhan was left until later. The vaccination committee didn’t understand why Wuhan was being left to the end, but when they did arrive in Wuhan to begin work, they were shocked at the extent of the viruses spread, and even more shocked at the number of bodies that were being incinerated.