“On the contrary, Dr. Lee, a pandemic is a certainty. And it will kill millions before it runs out of victims.”
Song Lee glanced at the door to the auditorium. “That’s not what I heard in there. Everyone seemed quite optimistic that this epidemic can be contained.”
“That’s because the speakers don’t know all the facts.”
“What are the facts, Dr. Huang? Why is this SARS epidemic any different from the last?”
“There is something I must tell you . . . this business about SARS . . . well, it’s a fraud.”
Lee glared at Huang.
“What are you saying?”
“The epidemic we are concerned about is caused by another pathogen, a variation of the influenza virus.”
“Why didn’t you tell me this? Why did you let me blather on about SARS?”
“It pained me to do so, but the presentation was intended as a smoke screen to hide the fact that the pathogen we are dealing with is much more dangerous than SARS.”
“The experts speaking in the auditorium may beg to differ . . .”
“That’s because we have been feeding them misleading information. When they have asked for specimens of the strain to help with their research, we have given them the old SARS virus. We are trying to prevent a panic.”
She felt a dryness in her mouth.
“What is this new pathogen?”
“It is a mutated form of the old influenza strain. It spreads faster, and the mortality rate is much higher. Death comes more quickly and more often. It’s incredibly adaptable.”
Dr. Lee stared in disbelief. “Hasn’t this country learned its lesson about secrecy?”
“We have learned it very well,” Dr. Huang said. “China is working with the United States. We and the Americans have agreed to keep the existence of this new pathogen a secret for now.”
“We saw before that delay in releasing information costs lives,” Lee said.
“We also saw forced quarantine,” Huang said. “Hospitals shuttered, travel and commerce interrupted, people attacked in Chinatowns around the world. We can’t tell the truth now. There’s no way to stop this pathogen until we’ve developed a vaccine.”
“You’re sure of this?”
“Don’t take my word for it. The Americans have far more sophisticated computers. They have created models suggesting we can temporarily contain pockets of the disease, but it will eventually break out and we will have a worldwide pandemic.”
“Why didn’t you tell me all this back in the province?” Lee asked.
“I was afraid you might still think I had betrayed you before and wouldn’t believe me,” Huang said.
“Why should I believe you now?”
“Because I am telling the truth . . . I swear it.”
Dr. Lee was confused and angry, but there was no doubt in her mind that Dr. Huang was being forthright.
“You mentioned a vaccine,” she said.
“A number of labs are working on it,” he said. “The most promising drug is being developed in the U.S. at the Bonefish Key lab in Florida. They believe a substance derived from ocean biomedicine will produce a vaccine that will stop this pathogen.”
“You are saying that one lab has the only viable preventative?” Lee almost laughed at the absurdity despite the direness of the situation.
The auditorium doors opened, and people were starting to spill into the corridor. Huang lowered his voice.