Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4

ballast. In Spanish colonial times the town’s wealth had come from

agriculture, particularly cocoa and coffee production, and it had

graciously supported a population of several thousand people.

But the town’s history changed dramatically after 1959, the year of

Equatorial Guinea’s independence. The new president, Macias Nguema,

quickly metamorphosed from a popularly elected official to the

continent’s worst, sadistic dictator whose atrocities managed to

out-class even those of Idi Amin of Uganda and Jean-Bedel Bokassa of the

Central African Republic. The effect on the country was apocalyptic.

After fifty thousand people were murdered, a third of the population of

the entire country fled, including all the Spanish settlers. Most of the

country’s towns were decimated, particularly Cogo which had been

completely abandoned. The road connecting Cogo to the rest of the

country fell into ruin and quickly became impassable.

For a number of years, the town was fated to be a mere curiosity for the

occasional visitor arriving by small motorboat from the coastal town of

Acalayong. The jungle had begun to reclaim the land by the time a

representative of GenSys had happened upon it seven years previously.

This individual recognized Cogo’s isolation and its limitless

surrounding rain forest as the perfect spot for GenSys intended primate

facility. Returning to Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea, the

GenSys official immediately commenced negotiations with the current

Equatoguinean government. Since the country was one of the poorest of

Africa and consequently desperate for foreign exchange, the new

president was eager and negotiations proceeded apace.

Kevin rounded the last corner and approached his house. It was three

stories like most of the other buildings in the town. It had been

tastefully renovated by GenSys to give it storybook appeal. In fact it

was one of the more desirable houses in the whole town and a source of

envy of a number of the other GenSys employees, particularly head of

security, Cameron McIvers. Only Siegfried Spallek, manager of the Zone,

and Bertram Edwards, chief veterinarian, had accommodations that were

equivalent. Kevin had attributed his good luck to intercession on his

behalf by Dr. Raymond Lyons, but he didn’t know for certain.

The house had been built in the mid-nineteenth century by a successful

import/exporter in traditional Spanish style. The first floor was arched

and arcaded like the town hall and had originally housed shops and

storage facilities. The second floor was the main living floor with

three bedrooms, three baths, a large through-and-through living room, a

dining room, a kitchen, and a tiny maid’s apartment. It was surrounded

by a veranda on all four sides. The third floor was an enormous open

room with wide-plank flooring illuminated with two huge, cast-iron

chandeliers. It was capable of holding a hundred people with ease and

had apparently been used for mass meetings.

Kevin entered and climbed a central stairway that led up to a narrow

hall. From there he went into the dining room. As he expected, the table

had been laid for lunch.

The house was too big for Kevin, especially since he didn’t have a

family. He’d said as much when he’d first been shown the property, but

Siegfried Spallek had told him the decision had been made in Boston and

warned Kevin not to complain. So Kevin accepted the assignment, but his

co-workers’ envy often made him feel uncomfortable.

As if by magic Esmeralda appeared. Kevin wondered how she did it so

consistently. It was as if she were always on the lookout for his

approaching the house. She was a pleasant woman of indeterminate age

with rounded features and sad eyes. She dressed in a shift of brightly

colored print fabric with a matching scarf wrapped tightly around her

head. Besides her native tongue, she spoke fluent Spanish and passable

English that improved on a daily basis.

Esmeralda lived in the maid’s quarters Monday through Friday. Over the

weekend she stayed with her family in a village that GenSys had

constructed to the east along the banks of the estuary to house the many

local workers employed in the Zone, as the area occupied by GenSys’s

Equatoguinean operation was called. She and her family had been moved

there from Bata, the main city on the Equatoguinean mainland. The

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