home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.games.frp.archives
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!rpi!goldm
- From: jimv@ucrengr.ucr.edu (james vassilakos)
- Subject: Story: Harrison 25
- Message-ID: <y!n3#jb@rpi.edu>
- Followup-To: rec.games.frp.misc
- Sender: goldm@aix02.ecs.rpi.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: aix02.ecs.rpi.edu
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 23:06:57 GMT
- Approved: goldm@rpi.edu
- Lines: 760
-
-
- Copyright 1992 by Jim Vassilakos
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Permission is granted by the copyright holder to copy
- and distribute this work such that no commercial or
- barter consideration is obtained in exchange for such copies.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- Twenty-five
-
-
-
- She stayed there, motionless, as it dribbled down from her
- nostrils, spilling in thin trails over her lips and chin before
- settling in a dark, red stain along the front of her jersey. She
- didn't seem to mind at all, as though a little blood was beneath
- her notice. Mike stripped off his shirt, tossing it in her
- general direction, but she ignored it, her light brown eyes
- watching his every movement like a tiger preparing to strike. The
- man he'd shot lay crumpled on the carpet, the hypo-dart concealed
- somewhere underneath. Mike turned him over gently, extracting the
- tiny projectile.
- "Sorry to interrupt. Friend of yours?"
- She just stared back.
- "Not much a conversationalist, eh? Oh... I found some Anamesa.
- Thanks for asking."
- Her eyes registered only the barest trace of surprise. Mike
- patted his hip with his best expression of honesty.
- "Look Doc, I have a real gun here. And a can of chemicals a
- friend loaned me. You wanna see how it's used?"
- "I expect I'm going to find out."
- "Just tell me where the holocrystal is."
- Her eyes betrayed her, either by choice or accident, it didn't
- matter. The crystal was there, loaded in a player. Mike pushed a
- button, and Erestyl's image, gasping for breath, appeared in
- three dimensions. He hit it again and unplugged the unit,
- pocketing it with as little hesitation as he had clobbering her
- in the face.
- "Real sorry about your nose."
- "Just tell me one thing, Harrison," said with her blood still
- trickling. "Why did you kill all those people?"
- "Doctor, no insult to your medical skills, but do I look like
- I'm in any shape to go running around on a murderous rampage?"
- "But..."
- "I didn't kill anyone. The most violent thing I've done since
- I've been on-board was hit you just now... and I'm sorry."
- "Then who did?"
- Mike thought about it. He couldn't very well tell her about
- Johanes. He finally aimed the hypo-gun.
- "No... not again."
- "Sorry Doc. Been nice chatting with you."
- She was unconscious a moment later. He found a bandage for her
- nose, cleaning the blood off her face with his shirt and dropping
- her squarely on the cushi-bag. Outside, the hall area was
- deserted. Mike sprinted barefoot to the stairwell as best he
- could manage, ducking inside almost too quickly. Some idiot had
- turned the gravitics down to somewhere between point five and
- point seven. It made rapid maneuvers fairly interesting.
- Hopping the steps two by two, Mike descended as quickly as the
- meager gravity could carry him, the actinic lanterns casting
- intermittent patches of illumination along the walls. The
- combination of low gravity and low lighting reminded him of the
- shuttle rides he'd had over New Eden. His father used to switch
- off the gravitics in the empty cargo hold, teaching him to do
- flips in zero-gee. Such were his thoughts when he heard the click
- and slide of a door to his back.
- Mike grabbed the rail, halting his descent and pushed himself
- into the shadowy wall. He crouched down as small and tight as he
- could manage on a moment's notice. Drawing his gun, he counted
- only three, probably from the team he'd sent to the deck six
- goose chase. They filed into the stairwell and headed upward with
- not so much as a glance to either side, all except for the last
- one, who turning his head to sneeze, suddenly opened his eyes,
- all wild and berserk, like he thought he was some sort of Gorgon.
- Mike nailed him in the hip, shooting the closest light source
- with his next round. The others must have went hysterical with
- fear, because in the ensuing moment of darkness, he counted at
- least eight shots hammering down the stairwell, one of them
- whizzing by his ear before he'd found the next portal and
- barreled headlong into the adjoining deck.
- An alarm sounded by his ear. For a second, at least, it was
- all his scattered senses could consolidate. Everything else was
- dark. Then, for the barest fraction of a heartbeat, Mike thought
- he'd stumbled into an airlock, as all he could see was a
- horizontal slice of billowing, violet star-scape, the inner shell
- of the normal-space bubble undulating like a belly dancer in
- heat. Large tables began to take form, a roulette wheel here,
- long squat rows of wagering machines there. It was a casino,
- stretching clear from one end of the deck to the other, and
- running its entire length was a huge window via which penetrated
- the great chamber's only illumination.
- Mike turned from the glimmering, violet tapestry as the gun-
- spray in their stairwell grounded to sudden halt. For the next
- few moments of indecision, he imagined footsteps approaching and
- the noise of panicked breath in his ears. He tugged the canister
- off his belt, twisting its top until he could feel the vibration
- of chemicals meeting one another in jubilant release. It dropped
- to the floor, smacking his foot as it fell, and then he found
- himself scurrying along the wall as fast as his legs could pump.
- The lift shaft would be up ahead and to the left, or so he
- guessed, but the darkness was so thick that he could barely make
- out what was in front of his nose, much less the features of the
- corridor. He finally smashed face-first into a something solid,
- bouncing to the floor more as a terror-stricken mass of jelly
- than an armed and dangerous criminal. As he fumbled back to his
- feet, the throbbing noise of the alarm was suddenly replaced by
- silence. Mike waited motionless as his ears adjusted to the
- quiet. In the distance, he could distinctly make out a choking
- noise followed by the sound of more footsteps and numerous
- voices.
- Mike crept beside the wall, gliding his hand along its surface
- until he found the double doors of the lift. He tried prying them
- apart by what little brute strength he still possessed. It was no
- use. Except for a bare centimeter in which to stick his fingers,
- the doors held fast, some sort of bolting mechanism holding them
- from the inside. Mike ran a finger along the narrow crack until
- he found the offending piece of metal. One bullet later, it was
- gone.
- "Hey, that was a gunshot! Bring that light over here!"
- Blindly slinking into the shaft, searching by touch for some
- ladder or hand hold, Mike suddenly found himself unmistakably
- weightless. The sensation grabbed him as terrifying and unique,
- but the bullet ricocheting over his head convinced him to duck
- inside. Then, with legs tightly coiled, he propelled himself into
- the black pit with as much force as he could summon, flipping
- himself back over as his legs brushed against the walls. The
- guard was above him a moment later, brandishing her gun in one
- hand and a bright light in the other. She fired blindly, bouncing
- her shells off the shaft's interior as Mike pushed himself into a
- exit groove two levels directly below. Then he blew away a
- similar metal bolt, exiting the shaft and entering a new gravity
- field.
- The sudden shift in weight sent him stumbling, but the new
- deck he'd invaded was lighted enough that he could catch the
- carpet instead of slamming into it with his face. The passenger
- staterooms lining the narrow corridor seemed to streak past at
- lightning speed as he bolted back toward the stairwell. Inside,
- he could hear numerous voices above, some shouting orders while
- others yelled about poison gas. Mike continued downward, hopping
- the steps three by three, until the frantic voices faded gently
- into the distance, transforming over time into nothing more than
- venomous whispers, each interlaced with the vulgar rumblings of
- billowing vapors on a rainy seventhday.
-
-
- * * *
-
-
- She laid on her back, facing the endless sky, as the dark, warm
- grass stretched below, soft, green tendrils of life holding her
- in a gentle embrace. Overhead, the wispy clouds were mixing
- again, shifting their contour as though contorted by the sweet
- melody of leaves in the wind. Then, with laughing pride they
- crowding together, until with dark and menacing contempt, they
- loomed heavily like giants in the sky. She waited, open-eyed and
- innocent, blinking only when the brilliant spears of icy radiance
- screamed down. Rain soon followed, pouring over her, until she
- felt herself dissolving among the fine, velvety threads, sleep
- slowly receding into the hazy distance.
- *Ding* *Ding* *Ding* *Ding*
- Hunter opened her eyes. Brooks was still on the floor, slowly
- turning over, unable to shake it off.
- *Ding* *Ding* *Ding*
- With considerable effort, she rose from the cushi-bag and
- stumbled to the door. Feso was on the other side, still wearing
- his striped pajamas. Anders and another officer stood to either
- side, and from the looks on their faces she could vaguely surmise
- what they must have been thinking. She glanced over her shoulder
- as Brooks tried, again unsuccessfully, to regain his
- coordination. Feso finally voiced the question.
- "What's going on?"
- "Harrison was here. He brought more senthinol."
- "He was here!? In your cabin?"
- "It's a long story."
- Feso tried to help her back to the cushi-bag, but she shooed
- him away, slowly finding her way to the kitchen. Her chief nurse
- was duly impressed.
- "You must be developing a tolerance."
- "If he tries to shoot me again with that stuff... I swear...
- I'll just belt him. What time is it?"
- Anders stepped forward, "This isn't a social call, Doctor. We
- need you at sickbay. Another person's been wounded."
- "Serious?"
- "Just a bullet to the hip. He'll live. Two others are
- suffering from poison gas inhalation. They seem to be recovering
- on their own, but..."
- "More hydrogen-cyanide?"
- Anders nodded.
- "Okay, give me a minute. I just have to wash off my face."
- Her reflection surprised her even more than the second dose of
- the drug. Instead of a blood-smeared face, she was perfectly
- clean, a new bandage placed under her nose with just the right
- amount of pinch.
- "Nice touch, Harrison, but I'm still gonna belt you."
- By the time she reached sickbay, her mind had cleared, and the
- operation went smoothly. The regen specialist reported one more
- fatality, however. Hunter cursed herself for not being there, and
- then sucked down a highbowl of her favorite late night drink,
- particularly for those occasions when she knew that sleep was not
- a viable option. No more would die. Specialist or no specialist,
- they were ultimately her patients and her responsibility.
- The next several hours passed slowly, Brooks trying in vain to
- pull up the internal comm-net as he sent runners from one team to
- another, continuing his search on the most manual basis possible.
- He used the front chamber of sickbay as his headquarters since it
- was more central than the bridge, slurping down so much zardocha
- that she began to wonder if another shot of senthinol would have
- any effect whatsoever.
- The remaining patients finally began stabilizing, moving from
- the most critical stages one by one. When it finally looked like
- they'd all pull through without a catch, she decided to grab a
- nap in the cyberoptics lab. Feso woke her two hours later as he
- mulled about, whistling his face off, while he tried to hook
- together the remaining grav stretchers.
- "Huh... oh, I'm sorry. I didn't know you were in here."
- "What did you think I was? A corpse?"
- "Well, no... I uh..."
- "I'll take that as an affirmative. Where you taking these
- guys, anyway?"
- "Uh... shuttle seven."
- She yawned, "I thought we had more fatalities than just
- these."
- "Oh... we have a lot. Real bad time to be a crewmember on this
- damn boat."
- Then he smiled, shy and afraid, realizing he'd sworn in front
- of her for the first time in his life. She didn't bother to say
- anything. For all she was concerned, he had the right to swear at
- the top of his lungs for the next several weeks straight. That's
- how much she agreed with him. He continued about his business,
- however, keeping whatever thoughts he had to himself. Then, just
- as she was about to leave, he looked up, a knot forming at the
- base of his throat.
- "Doctor... you think they'll find him?
- "Harrison?"
- "I mean... Brooks said he's as good as dead anyway...
- something about mismedication, but something happened while you
- were at that meeting."
- "The anamesa?"
- He looked startled, "How..."
- "Harrison told me... more or less. And you were acting so
- funny... what happened, exactly?"
- "Ah... I don't know where to begin."
- "Try the beginning."
- He sucked in a long breath of air as though trying to remember
- that far back.
- "Remember Mr. Smyth?"
- "The druggie? How could I forget?"
- "He... well, he came in... you know... was real nice..."
- She smiled, for the first time in what seemed like a long
- while.
- "He bribed you?"
- "No!"
- "He gave you five hundred credits, and you gave him some
- anamesa."
- She checked her pocket. Sure enough, the money was still
- there. Feso just stood, mouth gaping, while he tried to stammer a
- response.
- "Yes... but..."
- "But what, Feso? He told you it was an aphrodisiac, so you
- figured it was harmless and let him have it? You broke the regs."
- "But the computer agreed with everything he said. It was only
- after I heard that somebody had broken into the system... I tried
- finding Smyth's room, but all the passenger records had been
- erased."
- She shook her head, "Don't sweat it, okay? In a way, what you
- did may have been a good thing. Talking with Harrison... before
- he let me have it... he just didn't seem like the killing type. I
- don't know what that's supposed to mean, but all he wanted was
- that holocrystal. I think I'm beginning to understand why."
- Feso regarded her with an incredulous stare, confusion webbed
- over his features like a rubbery mask. Hunter guessed that he
- didn't understand half of what she was talking about. It was
- probably better that way.
- "I know. I sound crazy. Guess I'd better get back to work."
- "No. Sit down. You can come with me to the shuttle."
- "And do what? Look at a bunch of corpses?"
- "Keep me company."
- She thought about it for half a second. It was a hell of job,
- she had to admit, pulling around dead bodies. If she were doing
- it, she'd want the company. Anybody would.
- "Ugh... what the heck."
- Shuttle seven was always locked up tight. It served as the
- Commodore's private transport on the rare occasions that she
- would visit a planet's surface. Anyone approaching from the
- outside would either have to be recognized and allowed entrance
- from someone inside, or they'd have to key open the lock. Feso
- had the combination on a flimsi he'd neatly folded and stuffed
- into his pajama shirt pocket.
- "You ever gonna change out of those?"
- "Ah... they're very comfortable. You should try it sometime."
- Inside, the grav-stretchers sat arranged in orderly rows, as
- though Feso had been trying to impress the former command staff
- with his space efficiency. The air was fairly cool, and when she
- reached to turn on the lights, something darted from one of the
- expiring shadows.
- "Hey... what are you doing here?"
- "Meow."
- Bending her knees, she hunched to the deck as Feso brought in
- the first of the stretchers. He stopped short when he saw its
- yellow eyes.
- "What's this?"
- "Meow."
- "Looks like a cat. I didn't know Reece was into pets."
- "Sheesh... I can't believe I didn't notice it before."
- "You know cats," Hunter offered, approaching it slowly. It let
- her get to arm's reach before bolting into the shadows underneath
- a row of grav-stretchers. She crouched to her hands and knees,
- spotting it against a corner. Meanwhile, Feso came in with the
- rest of the stretchers.
- "C'mon, doctor. Why bother?"
- "He's hungry."
- "Well, as long as he stays in here, he'll have plenty to chew
- on."
- "C'mon. I'm not going to hurt you. You want food? Food?
- Gotcha!"
- "Meyowrr!"
- He had sharp claws, the sort that could shred skin like finely
- ground needles. Hunter switched her hold to the scruff of his
- neck as soon as he'd drawn blood, erecting herself amidst the
- virtual sea of stretchers. They jiggled furiously as she stumbled
- about, their covers ruffling, exposing parts of bodies with every
- new collision. Meanwhile, her captive flayed his claws in every
- direction possible, finally seizing hold of the first fleshy
- object he could reach, a corpse's forearm, and ripping three,
- parallel stripes.
- "Ow!"
- Hunter froze, dropping the cat more out of impulse than any
- cognitive decision. She'd been a doctor for a good many years,
- and she'd never heard a dead person say ouch before. Then the
- sudden realization dawned on her like a smack across the face,
- and a combination of training and reflexes took over.
- The pistol jostled from Mike's grasp even before it was fully
- free of the holster, skidding along the metal floor as he tried
- to throw his plastic cover in her face. Catching his bleeding
- forearm, she twisted it backward, until he fell off-balance from
- the stretcher, pushing his body into her legs and waist. A moment
- later, he felt her elbow smashing into the side of his skull,
- jarring his neck so far to the left that he swore he heard
- something crack.
- The crack was actually a click, the click of a gun hammer to
- be more precise. Johanes was on the floor, shifting his aim from
- Hunter to Feso about every other second, his eyes dark and wild,
- sweat spilling into them as his eyelids went up and down with
- spasmodic velocity. Hunter let go of Mike's arms, her hands
- falling to either side as she backed slowly into the stretchers.
- "Feso... run!"
- "Try it and I'll blow your head off. Now get away from the
- airlock."
- Feso froze, unable to budge his legs. He'd never had a gun
- aimed at his face before. He'd never had a gun aimed anywhere in
- his general vicinity before. The feeling it gave him was strange,
- as though every moment were crystal clear.
- "Get away from it, now."
- "Run!"
- Feso edged along the inner wall, lowering himself to the floor
- as Johanes motioned him down with the gun.
- "Mike, you'd better close the airlock."
- "What are you gonna do, Jo?"
- "Just close it. This'll make considerable noise, and we can't
- afford to be heard."
- "Help!!!"
- Mike punched her in the stomach and then slammed her to the
- floor. It cut her scream if accomplishing nothing else. He
- finally had to place a foot on her back to keep her from getting
- back up.
- "Jo, I'd be happier if there was no more killing."
- "Just close the damned airlock!"
- The exertion from the yell seemed to wear him out, and Mike
- realized the Draconian was still in no condition to move around.
- That he'd made it to the pistol was a testament to the strength
- of sheer willpower. Mike pulled his foot off Hunter's back, and
- walked to the airlock, closing both doors with the flick of a
- switch and then evacuating the lock of all air. Now nobody would
- hear them. Even noises as loud as gunfire would sound only like
- muffled chokes to anyone directly outside. Johanes seemed to sigh
- inwardly as he aimed at the Doctor's chest, grateful that his
- command had been obeyed. A moment later he was unconscious, a red
- facsimile of Mike's heel on the side of his face. Mike collected
- and aimed the weapon before Hunter could close the distance. She
- skidded to a halt, not five meters from him, a wearied look on
- her face, as though she figured her end was at hand. Mike
- motioned her toward the nurse.
- "You might as well lie down, Doctor."
- "I'd rather stand, thanks."
- "You make me nervous. Lie down."
- She complied, slowly, settling herself face down on the deck
- next to Feso. It was cold, but she figured it warmer than the
- obvious alternative.
- "What are you going to do with us, Harrison?"
- Mike thought about it for all of two seconds.
- "Cecil, do we have anymore hypo-darts?"
- "Nope."
- "You have any bright ideas, Doctors?"
- "You could let us go."
- Mike smiled, "I'd sooner space you. No offense, but that'd be
- my fate were our positions reversed."
- "I doubt it," not that he'd be spaced, but that he'd live long
- enough to make it to the airlock. Of course, she wasn't about to
- say so.
- "You're full of it, Doc; you know that?"
- "You're going to get caught anyway, Harrison. Both you and
- your friends. Once we arrive in-system, what are you going to do?
- Spacejack the Commodore's shuttle and hope that nobody notices?
- Can't you see? There's no way out of this. You're trapped."
- "Shut-up."
- "If you let us go, you'll have a better chance. I promise you,
- I'll try to make it easier for you."
- "I'd sooner take my chances with the great outdoors."
- "Harrison, if what you told me before is true, that you've had
- nothing to do with the killing, then your chances are good. Think
- about it. Use your brain."
- Mike stepped forward, loading a shell from clip to firing
- chamber more out of anger and frustration than any desire to
- shoot.
- "Doctor, maybe you haven't figured it out yet, but ISIS is
- after me. They're after this holocrystal. One way or another,
- they're gonna find me... and you. And if you think what Jo did
- was in bad taste, you're in for one hell of a surprise!"
- "Then just give it to them."
- "Don't you have any idea what's on this? We're talking about
- the weapon to end all weapons, Doctor. Armageddon. Doomsday. For
- any planet the empire wants to make an example of. Think about
- that."
- She kept silent for a while, self-confidence falling into
- tattered ruins as the fervency of his words congealed around her
- mind like a hostile, alien landscape. Mike paced back and forth,
- between his two captives and the forward cabin, looking out the
- windows for some sign or a normal star-scape. She considered
- making a run for it on several occasions, but each time she'd
- gathered the courage, he'd look back over his shoulder, and she'd
- think a little bit longer about what he'd said.
- "Harrison."
- "The name's Mike."
- "If the crystal's so bad, why don't you just destroy it?"
- "I intend to. After I've had a chance to see what's on it."
- "Personal curiosity?"
- "Call it whatever you like. A lot of people died for this
- thing. I'm not just going to chuck it without taking a look.
- You've seen it, right?"
- "Most of it," She hunched up on her elbows. "Tell me
- something."
- "What?"
- "How did you get mixed up in all this?"
- Mike shrugged, "Same way you did... accidentally on purpose."
- Feso looked up, a shy brand of anxiety controlling the sum of
- his facial muscles.
- "Ah, I hate to call in a favor... but..."
- "What?"
- "Might there be a fresher? I've really got to... you know."
- Mike shook his head, "Hold it in."
- They continued to wait, each with his or her own personal
- degree of impatience, until the subtle disorientation washed over
- their senses with the "popping" of the normal space bubble. Now
- every moment was essential. Mike raced to the forward cabin,
- switching on the helm interface and hitting the disengage. He
- then brought the inertial compensators online, checking over his
- shoulder to see how the two guests were doing. Hunter was already
- at the airlock, trying rather ineffectually to override the
- safety lock. Mike hit the aft thruster and slowly brought it up
- to full. By the time he turned back around, Hunter was staring
- out the portal as the Crimson Queen slowly receded into the
- distance. She looking rather annoyed with her situation. It made
- Mike smile, at least a little.
- "Doctor, I may need your help. Why don't you come over here
- and sit down."
- With the gun aimed steadily, she had little choice but to
- comply.
- "What do you want?"
- "The Crimson's primary broadcast frequency."
- "Why?"
- "I'll explain later."
- "Explain now."
- Mike sighed, "If my guess is correct, they're currently
- rebooting their main computer, which means they'll have their
- communications back very soon. If we overlay the signal, we may
- be able to garble it enough so they can't sick their escorts on
- us."
- "You can't match the power of their transmitter, Harrison."
- "Even with the shouter?"
- "I seriously doubt it. Not at this range, anyway."
- "Maybe you got a better idea."
- "Even if I did, I certainly wouldn't tell it to you."
- "Doctor, you may not have noticed, but I saved your life back
- there."
- "I guess that makes us even."
- Mike blinked, not sure what to say. Then she dropped her
- snarl, as if no response was the right response.
- "It doesn't matter anyway. If you'd bothered to consult the
- EMS, you'd see that the escorts aren't in yet."
- "Where are they?"
- "Tyber is the recognized capitol of this district, Harrison."
- "So?"
- "The escorts come in a hour behind us... diplomatic courtesy.
- Until then, we're at the mercy of the locals... sort of a showing
- of the belly... a gesture of trust."
- "That's foolish."
- "That's diplomacy. However, if you still want to know the
- frequency, the Crimson's primary is reserved Imperial standard."
- "Huh?"
- "Fourteen hundred kilohertz. What's the matter? Never been in
- space before?"
- Mike opened his mouth to respond, then closed it again as he
- watched her fingers dance over the keys. She seemed to know what
- she was doing.
- "Where'd you learn to do that?"
- "Naval academy. Hmm... there's some sort of problem."
- "Cecil, did you turn off the shouter?!"
- "One moment."
- "...zzztztzt... seven... please respond... Shuttle seven, this
- is the Crimson Queen. You are not cleared for departure. Repeat,
- you are not cleared for departure. Please respond."
- "Looks like you're right. They've got comm back online."
- Her light brown eyes no longer seemed threatening, but Mike
- didn't find them particularly cooperative either. Cecil came up
- from behind, tapping her on the ear before he realized he had the
- wrong person.
- "Where's Michael?"
- "Over here, Cecil. What's up?"
- "Johanes."
- "He's up?"
- "Beginning to stir."
- "To stir."
- "To awaken, to revive... to bitch about a certain someone
- beating him senseless."
- Mike bit his lip. He didn't like the idea of going back there,
- no matter what the Draconian's condition.
- "Doctor, I think it's your turn to do the honors."
- "Is that an order?"
- "Consider it a diplomatic courtesy."
-
-
- * * *
-
-
- "What do you mean you can't fire?!"
- "Sir... the optical cores are warped."
- "All of them?"
- "Yessir. It looks like somebody spread a low power, wide-focus
- beam over the cores, switched off all the coolers, and just left
- it like this for the last couple hours. We have no lasers
- whatsoever."
- "Tell me, Lieutenant. Could the hacker have done it remotely?"
- "Yessir. It's a strong possibility that's what happened."
- Brooks slammed his fist on the console keyboard, eliciting a
- strange mixture of beeps and buzzes.
- "Tabor, get ahold the missile bay. Tell 'em we want a
- hellraiser loaded up with all the features."
- "Aye. Still no response to our hail, sir. Also, medical is
- reporting two personnel missing."
- "Who?"
- "Ensign Sosrodjojo and Lieutenant Commander Hunter. They were
- last seen headed toward shuttle seven."
- Brooks felt his mouth drop open.
- "Transfer the hail to my desk."
- "Aye sir."
- Brooks listened to the line pop open. There was a vague sea of
- static with followed it, various particles left over from the big
- bang.
- "Shuttle seven, this is Brooks. I wish to speak with Doctor
- Hunter."
- Mike blinked, turning up the volume as the voice repeated
- itself.
- "Doctor, you got a call! Want me to tell him to leave a
- message!?"
- Brooks tried again, ready to give up when there was no
- response. Finally, her voice crackled over the frequency.
- "Hunter here."
- "Doctor, what's going on?"
- "Um... would you believe a joy ride?"
- "Afraid not. Is Harrison there?"
- She looked at Mike, not sure what to say.
- "Yeah... I'm here. Wha'd'ya want?"
- "Unless you turn around now, I'll be forced to incapacitate
- the shuttle."
- "That may be difficult without any lasers."
- "We have other weapon systems, Mr. Harrison."
- "Commander, we are well aware of the arsenal at your disposal,
- but if you're thinking of firing a missile, this shuttle will be
- more than incapacitated. It'll be blown right out of space. You
- really want to do that?"
- "If that's my only option."
- Mike turned toward Hunter. For a moment, he found himself
- genuinely sorry she'd gotten herself mixed up in his mess.
- "Here, you talk to him."
- Feso, meanwhile, kept himself flat on the deck. Mike guessed
- that he could hear most of what was being said.
- "If you want to take a whiz in the airlock..."
- "I'll wait."
- "Suit yourself."
- Hunter looked back over her shoulder. Harrison was walking
- back toward his two friends, leaving her alone in the shuttle's
- bridge. His trust in her, as of recently, had been nothing short
- of amazing, a true feat of diplomacy, either that or insanity.
- Still, the way he carried the pistol suggested he'd use it with
- minimal provocation. It left a lump in her throat, knowing that
- all her training was essentially useless should he decide to get
- nasty.
- "Doctor, you still there?"
- "Huh? Oh... yeah, I'm here."
- "What's your situation? Are you being held hostage?"
- "Oh, c'mon Brooks. What do you think?"
- "I don't know what to think."
- "Well... yes, I'm being held hostage... sort of."
- "Sort of? Doctor, did you let them into the shuttle?"
- "Of course not."
- "I have it on very good authority that the Commodore's shuttle
- was locked up tight. How did they get inside?"
- "What, you think I let them in?"
- "You tell me."
- "They probably got in the same way I did."
- "What's that?"
- "Accidentally on purpose."
- "What?"
- During the accusations, Hunter kept her eyes fixed on
- Harrison. First he spoke with his blind friend, then shook the
- other one until he was awake. As a trio, they looked fairly
- distraught, a gloomy pallor of hopelessness on each of their
- faces. Embittered words were hissed, then a moment for excuses
- and explanations, and then someone said something, something that
- made Harrison blink a couple times with the sort of disbelief
- that for most people may come along once in a lifetime. Hunter
- frowned, their voices too low and too far away but to allow the
- faintest trace of comprehension.
- "Doctor..."
- "Brooks, I think something's up."
- He opened his mouth to respond, but Tabor cut him off before
- he could so much as enunciate one syllable.
- "Sir, gunnery reports that missile as launch ready."
- "Hold fire."
- "Also, sir... being hailed by the Tyberian starport authority.
- They must have overheard something, sir. They want to know if we
- request assistance."
- "Ignore their hails. Doctor, are you there? Doctor..."
- Mike switched the frequency, letting Cecil dictate his every
- key stroke.
- "Sounds like we're making a scene."
- Johanes grunted, "He knows what'll happen if he lets the
- locals get involved... big mess and front page news."
- Mike nodded, "You sure this is gonna work, Cecil?"
- "Heh heh... once in... always in."
- It was the hackers' motto, sort of a take-off on somebody's
- rules for magic, or so the story went. Dira was well of aware of
- the saying, and being so informed, she was the first to notice.
- "He's back, chief."
- Tuto turned around, spilling zardocha all over his shirt in
- the process.
- "Damnit..."
- "He's moving slow. Must be a decoy. I'm scanning the other
- channels for simultaneous entrance."
- Tuto hit the comm switch, "Tabor, get me Brooks."
-
-
- * * *
-
-
- "OTC to Crimson, tracking deviation from your cleared approach
- vector. Please correct. Over."
- "No response?"
- "None."
- "Are they changing course?"
- "No sir."
- "Ask them if they need help again."
- Commander Merces clasped his hands together, fully expecting
- at least a negative response. Instead, he was met only by static.
- Although a certain degree of aloofness was expected from
- Imperials, this sort of behavior was way out of protocol. He
- nervously chewed a lip, settling back down in the command chair
- as the communications officer tried another time.
- "Should I inform Administrator Chorea, sir?"
- "Negative. Lieutenant, go over again what you heard."
- "Crimson told their shuttle they were not cleared for
- departure. Then somebody started asking for a Doctor Hunter."
- "A doctor aboard the shuttle?"
- "That's right."
- "Anything else?"
- "They coded the signal immediately upon connecting, sir. I can
- begin saving the transmission."
- "No, it wouldn't help us. Scan Ops, run an identify on the
- shuttle. Is it a medical craft?"
- "Negative, sir. It says here that shuttle seven is Commodore
- Reece's personal craft."
- Merces nodded, "Lieutenant, try hailing the shuttle. Ask them
- if they are in need of assistance, medical or otherwise."
- "Aye sir."
- Merces rose back to his feet, pacing slowly in the dim, blue
- light of the orbital traffic control center.
- "Sir, detecting a missile launch from the Crimson. It appears
- to be directed at their shuttle."
- "Missile ID?"
- "Hellraiser-199. Nuclear package."
- "Estimated time to impact?"
- "Thirty five seconds."
- "Tell gunnery to enable laser cannon arrays delta, epsilon,
- and sigma. Target missile. Hold fire to my order. Any response
- from the shuttle?"
- "No si... yes sir, they are requesting assistance."
- "That figures. What about the Crimson?"
- "Negative... wait... sir, their transponder signal just
- vanished mid-stream."
- "Scan Ops?"
- "Detecting interweave emanations. Now detecting explosions.
- Sir, they're breaking up."
- Merces held his breath, unable to regain his voice for several
- seconds.
- "Sir, the shuttle is still requesting assistance. Impact in
- five..."
- "Fire lasers."
- Mike felt the explosion. The turbulence alone knocked him out
- of his seat. At first he though he was dead, when opening his
- eyes, he saw only darkness. Then somebody turned on a flashlight.
- It was Feso, floating in mid-air like he was doing some sort of
- flip for everyone's amusement. Mike realized he was weightless,
- that they were all weightless, and that both Feso and the doctor
- wore staid expressions, the sort generally reserved for funerals.
- Appropriate, Mike figured, considering how many people he'd just
- killed; not just people, but innocent people, and the strange
- accomplishment suddenly hit him like an electromagnetic overload.
- "I think I'm gonna be sick."
- Johanes took the statement as a license to go for the pistol,
- a legitimate assessment if not for Hunter's keen reflexes. He
- ended up floating in somersaults back toward the stretchers, a
- bloody lip for his trouble. Then she looked up, sort of
- apologetically.
- "Sorry, he was..."
- "I know. Here."
- Mike withdrew the ammunition clip from the pistol, conscious
- at once of both the idiocy and the necessity of his action as he
- handed it over. She seemed as surprised as he. Then a doubtful
- glare crossed her eyes.
- "You're forgetting something, Harrison."
- "Like what?"
- "There's still a bullet in the chamber."
- Mike tried to smile, "You're very observant."
- He extracted the final bullet, pushing it gently in the zero
- gravity. It floated between them for a second or two before she
- grabbed it. Then she looked up, soft brown eyes turning wicked as
- her boot collided with his stomach. Mike curled into a ball and
- just floated while the pain slowly subsided.
- "Thanks for the trust, Harrison."
- "Don't mention it."
-
-
- _ /|
- \`o_O' Jim Vassilakos
- ( ) <--- jimv@ucrengr.ucr.edu
- U jimv@silver.lcs.mit.edu
- Aachk! jimv@wizards.com
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- Back chapters available via anonymous ftp on ftp.cs.pdx.edu
- (131.252.20.145) in the pub/frp/stories/harrison directory.
- Better edited back chapters also available via Quanta Magazine.
- Write to quanta@andrew.cmu.edu for a free subscription.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-