for a moment, then said, âThe only chance would be with help from the inside. It would have to be someone high up.â
âHow high?â
Schema shook his head. âHatch or an EGG. Nothing less. But youâll never get an EGG. Theyâre the eliteâsworn loyal to death. Theyâll never turn.â
âOne already has.â
Schema looked at him disbelieving. âHatch has lost one of his EGGs?â
âHis chief EGG,â the voice said.
âDavid Welch?â
âYes.â
Schemaâs brow fell. âThatâs unbelievable. And Hatch hasnât already killed him?â
âWelch is on the run. For now.â
âWhere is he?â
âIf we knew that, we might not be having this conversation.â
âWelch knows everything. If something had happened to Hatch, Welch would have taken over the Elgen. Welch could get you onto the Joule .â
The voice thought a moment, then said, âAll right, our priority has changed to find Welch.â He turned to Maggie. âGet me Simon at Christmas Ranch.â
H atch inspected his personal guard, then returned alone to his room to read. A half hour later his door opened and Hatchâs servant, a beautiful, long-haired Filipino woman, walked in. She left a glass of Scotch on the table, then bowed to him. âAs you requested, Excellency.â
âThank you,â Hatch said.
âMy pleasure, sir. May I do anything else for you?â
âGo to the dispensary and get me Ambien and Seroquel.â
âAmbien and Seroquel?â
âTheyâre sleeping pills.â
âYes, sir. How many?â
âJust bring me the bottles.â
âImmediately, sir.â
Hatch went back to his book as his servant hurried from the room. For the last week he hadnât been sleeping well. Most people living the horror and violence of his life wouldnât sleep well, if they could at allâtheir consciences wouldnât allow it. But Hatch wasnât wired that way. He didnât lose any more sleep over sending someone to the rat bowl than he would destroying a digital foe in a video game.
Hatch thought of himself as a warrior in that way, or, even more so, a general. It was logic. You couldnât become overly sentimental over one soldier if you wanted to defeat an army. Sentimentality didnât work in war. Hatch prided himself on being above such âsmall-mindedness,â as he called it. If you couldnât sacrifice a few men for the many, you could never be trusted to lead.
What was costing him sleep was just one man. Welch. As his former top man and EGG, Welch knew things. No, Welch knew everything . He not only knew the Elgenâs plans; he knew their strategies and methods of achieving them. He knew their technology. He even knew their finances. Most of all, he knew Hatch. Welch was a threat greater than the resistance because he was the ultimate insiderâa cancerous tumor inside the Elgen brain. Welch in the wrong hands, or speaking into the wrong ear, could spell disaster for the Elgen, and for Hatch personally. As long as Welch lived, Hatchâs plans were in peril. Welch needed to be exterminated no matter the cost.
Hatch regretted not just shooting Welch the night he was arrested. He wouldnât make that mistake again. But first Welch needed to be found, and that was no simple matter. Welch had overseen nearly all of the Elgen hunts for more than a decade and was personally responsible for finding six of the Glows. He knew the Elgen search techniques better than Hatch did. Finding Welch in Taiwan would be like finding a grain of rice in a rice paddyâa grain of rice that knew you were looking for it and knew how to be invisible. No matterâhe would be found. And next time Hatch wouldnât wait for a show execution. The million-dollar reward he had offered was for a dead Welch, not a live one.
F ormer EGG David Welch was barely twenty-one years