“Doctor Scott . . . when do you see this monster?”
“All the time I was there. It tried to attack Steven once,
but Midnight came in the room and the dog-beast ran out through the wall.”
“Doctor Scott, what do you know or remember of this monster?
When did you first see the beast?”
“I don’t know. It comes and goes whenever it pleases.”
“When did you first see the beast?”
“It comes and goes whenever it pleases.”
“When did you first see the beast?”
“It comes and goes . . .”
“When . . .”
“ . . . whenever it pleases.”
“I have fleeting dreams. Cold. I walk over a land
met with a bleeding sky. Something comes to me when I least expect
it. It tells me it wants to make love to me. But all it does
is steal more from me. It’s eating me alive.”
“Trias nyt skau”- To do no harm.
“Trias plindau nyt pnumau”- To endanger no life.
“Trias neesam yvlan, richat”-To respect and uphold and praise
“ . . . Trias cres noothoo pnumau linth kem kemkan”-. . . to
put another life before my own.
“Trias nyt skau . . .”
“Shhhh.” A warm kind hand lay on Kyle’s chest and he could feel
the life force flood his weakened soul. He slowly opened his eyes,
still murmuring the oath he took hundreds of years ago. He blinked,
slowly adjusting to the bright friendly light in the hospital room.
The first thing he saw was Kayla’s lovely face, so sweetly framed by her
curling horns and silky dark brown hair. Her wild dark eyes sparkled
with a hint of sadness, her brows fixed with worry.
“It attacked Steve.” Kyle weakly murmured. “I remembered,
but I forgot again. Midnight was there, but that was a long time
ago. But there was something else . . . something I can’t remember
. . .”
“Shhhh.”
His brow tingled from her lingering kiss. Kyle closed his
eyes, the moment lifted his pain and he wished she would kiss him on the
lips, just once.
And the very next moment, she did. A light touch of her
soft lips crossed his and Kyle took in her scent and felt her strong soul
caress his lovingly, kindly. She gently kissed him between the eyes
and took his hand in hers then she withdrew.
Kyle watched as she sat next to him. She too was wearing
a hospital gown, her favorite robe covered her body, bordered at the shoulders
and sleeve cuffs with lace and a silk tie string at the neck piece.
His eyes fell to her hand, still kindly holding his. A new bandage
wrapped his wound but blood stained the back of his hand near the stigma.
His mind remained foggy. He struggled to recall the last few . .
. days? Weeks?
Months, at least, it had to be months.
“What day is it, Kayla?” He finally asked.
“Tuesday.”
“And . . . and . . .” Kyle shook his head. There
was a question he needed to ask, but Kyle could not find the reason to
ask it, nor could he figure out what he wanted to ask.
“Half a week.” Kayla answered. “We’ve all been here
for half a week, Kyle. I’m getting out on good behavior.”
Kyle’s face twisted in confusion. “A week?”
“Four days.”
“. . . why?”
Kayla knitted her own brows but Kyle could not tell if she was
wondering why he was asking questions, or if the answers were as puzzling
to her. “Respiratory treatments, Kyle. All four of us inhaled
toxic gasses.” She shook her head slightly. “Kyle, don’t you
recall the ship? Falling into the ravine? The light went out in the cave
and-“
Scott turned pale. “Steve!” He whispered. “Oh,
Primus!” he about jumped out of bed and then realized a tube snaked in
and out of his left arm. His eyes followed the tiny hoses containing
blood and he bounced his eyes from that back to Kayla.
“Blood loss.” Kayla answered quietly. “You’ve lost
four and a half pints. They raced for hours trying to close off torn
veins.” Her eyes fell. “At least, that’s what Spellbinder told
me.
Kyle only recalled the deep darkness, the blue panel lighting
the hallway, guiding he and Steve as they walked. Then he remembered
the autopsies, the bridge and . . . and . . . Steve and the cold and .
. . “We came to a dead end. Steve was hurt somehow and I had to force
myself to try the combination lock.”
Kayla nodded. “They found deep pierces like tooth marks
in his left shoulder. And . . . they found blood in his ears.
But they don’t know why-“
”Xesnex.”
Kayla turned her head just so, her eyes peering at him out their
corners.
“He attacked us.” Kyle explained. “I-I recall it
raced down the corridor just as I was trying to pry the door open and It-he-attacked
Steve . . .” Kyle shook his head when he realized his memories were
all out of sequence. All gone. There was something more; a
memory that refused to surface and the more he thought of it, the more
elusive it became and Kyle decided to leave it. Another thought instantly
replaced it, however.
“Jill?”
Kayla’s eyes darted away, striking the hall in a southern direction.
“She’s in ICU, too. We . . . we were in the ravine and I saw these
holes in the rock walls all around us and I could not figure out what they
were. We didn’t see them during the day; they weren’t visible.
But when we found them, Jill tried to pry the rock away, too see what it
was and that was when it sprayed directly in her face. Seconds later,
the whole area filled with a gas. We passed out.”
“That’s where we landed, wasn’t it?” Kyle asked.
“You remember?”
“No. I don’t recall anything but the wall suddenly lifted
and I fell.” Kyle would have said more but he spotted Steve against
the open door. Doctor Scott blinked and a vision flashed before his
eyes:
THIS JUST IN: SIXTEEN UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS HAVE BEEN SPOTTED
OVER THE CENMAR AND YINSTARK CONTINENTS. SOURCES SAY NO ONE IS TO
PANIC, THEY MOST LIKELY ARE HERE FOR REFUELING. I REPEAT-DO
NOT PANIC AT THE UFO’S . . . DO NOT PANIC
And sixteen black shapes became harbingers of death . . . sixteen?
Weren’t there nine?!
Weren’t there nine?!
Kyle shook his head, the voice faded with his inner demands.
He watched Parker stand in silence. His face did not bother to cover
the anxiety and terrible oppressions darkening his mind.
Vicious dreams of merciless cruelty left Steve’s nerves a tangled
mess. He came see Kyle, to make sure Kyle was okay.
But while this confirmation lifted his fears for his friend, did not
lift Steve’s oppressing mood. Something was stolen from him and Captain
Parker could not tell what it was.
He turned every direction to evade their memory but they haunted
him like a dying man forced to stare into a mirror. He blinked, unable
to think of anything to say to Kyle at the moment. It was the terrible
lidless eye that haunted him. It watched him constantly-right now.
Right now.
An awkward silence ensued and for once Kyle saved the moment:
“Really, now, Nurse Kayla. If you were going to have me examined,
the least you could do was get someone more experienced than a monkey.”
Parker caught the joke and his jaw dropped in mock humiliation.
“Will you listen to this guy? He’s been barely conscious for two
seconds and already he’s bossing you around!”
Kayla studied his pale face then she turned to Kyle. “You
know, Jill and I went along to keep you guys out of trouble. Seems
you got into it, anyway. You owe me a breakfast for it, Mister.
A good breakfast, not something made up here or at the kitchen.”
Kayla beamed and turned back to Parker. “He just called you a monkey,
Steve.”
Steve crossed his arms. “How do you like that? I try to
save a man’s life and sanity and all he can do is call me names.
Did the other nurses tell you to say that, Kyle?”
Kyle blinked slowly. “They won’t tell me anything.” He
complained. “I ask about the girls. They tell me ‘everything’s
fine, Doctor Scott. Take yourself a holiday.’ I asked about you.
They say ‘Steve’s doing fine, Doctor Scott, you just lie quiet.’
Holidays and quiet . . . not meant for someone who can’t mentally settle
down, Steve.” He paused, subtly smiling. “I’m glad you’re okay.”
Steve returned the smile with a grim reaction. He didn’t
feel much like anything at this point. He approached the bedside
and frowned. He tried to think of something else to say, anything.
But nothing bright nor cheerful came to mind. Nothing at all.
“What now?” Kayla asked quietly breaking the moment.
Kyle blinked slowly. Weariness called him to back to sleep.
The nurse would return in a while to give him more fluids. “Now .
. . we compare notes and try to make sense of what we saw.” He closed
his eyes again and sighed.
Steve nodded in mute agreement.
* * *
Jill laid flat on her back. Her arms lay stretched out,
clamped to a table’s cold surface. Her legs lay apart, supported
by a ramp, the rest of her body was exposed to chilly air and Jill wished
someone would cover her. Something covered her eyes, prohibiting
her from seeing anything. She prayed she was in Medbay . . . she
assumed . . . McKennan tried to lift her head and found it pinned
tight from her temples-no, she was attached to a machine from her temples.
She tried to wiggle her fingers and felt tiny metal rods all buried lengthwise
under the skin.
Her heart started to pound in fear. The more she tried
to move, the more devices and things she found in her body.
Jill moved her lower jaw and found it still worked. She
swallowed, finding her mouth terribly dry. “Somebody?” Her
voice scarcely, scarcely made a sound. “Somebody, help me! Is anybody
there? Anybody?”
Then she realized it was an idiotic idea to call for help; she
might be heard by the wrong people!
Something hissed open and shut and Jill started to hyperventilate.
“Hello?” She called. “Kyle? Steve? Is somebody there?
I’m cold!” She waited for response-the terrible blindness drove her
mad, “Hello?”
“Zhack.” An alien voice said beside her.
“I don’t know what that means.” Jill’s voice broke in fear.
“Please, I can’t see anything! Who’s there?”
“Lath.”
“I’m sorry.” Jill’s voice wavered. “I don’t recognize that
word-wait . . . Zhack . . . that’s Chenobian for demon. Did you just
call me-“ she caught her breath as ice cold metal kissed her at the top
of her chest and trailed clear down her front. Jill tried to squirm,
but clamps and rods held her naked body taut and she started to cry.
The metal punctured her skin down two more layers, hurting and
she started breathing hard. “No!” She screamed.
One more long slice and long cold fingers dug into the cutline
and pulled her skin apart.
Jill squirmed and struggled to sit up and tried to open her eyes.
Something warm and wet plastered her face and she tried to pull it off,
but her hands were bound to bed rails and she kicked and screamed through
the wrappings. She screamed louder and alarms whined, calling people
to attend her.
“Don’t touch me!” Jill screamed. “I’m sentient! I’m
sentient!” The hiss of a tranquilizer sounded in her ears and the
girl’s body wrestled and bucked in protest. She started to weep.
<<Jill . . .>> Skywolf’s presence whispered her name
and Jill gasped for breath, her body struggled to resist.
“Easy, child.” a gentle feminine voice sounded to her right,
“You’re safe. Right here in Medbay. You’re alright.”
Jill calmed, faintly hearing the noise outside the room as people
came and left . . . ICU? “ICU?” She slurred.
“Yes, hon. We got’cha taken care of.”
“Kyle and Steve?”
“Here. Safe. Sleep.”
That was all she needed and McKennan passed out.
* * *
Four days elapsed before Doctor Hashu gave Scott, Kayla and Steve
the okay to leave. Hashu privately explained to Kyle they feared
Jill might have lost her sight due to the frontal impact of the gas.
Steve insisted they say nothing to their ‘little friend’ and
he expected everyone to allow no time for Jill to feel downhearted.
They visited her everyday, several hours at a time.
Three days later, Doctor Hashu performed a final surgery and
later that afternoon, they started to remove her bandages.
Kyle sat there with her, holding her hands while Hashu carefully
cut away the gauze.
“This is so much better than the dream I had.” Jill was
grateful Kyle held her hands while Hashu undid the binding one medicated
layer at a time.
“What dream?” Kyle’s soft professional voice filled the
air and McKennan realized she had forgotten how much she loved his manners.
“I was bound to a table of sorts and dissected.” Kyle gently
squeezed her fingers.
“That’s frightening, Jill.” He answered softly.
She swallowed hard, unable to cry. “A terrible dream.”
She whispered. Again he gently squeezed her hands assuringly.
Hashu removed the remaining bandages and gingerly cleaned her
new skin. He smiled at Kyle’s admiration of his work and applied
a layer of lotion over McKennan’s restored face.
“Okay, Jill.” Hashu paused in his work. “You need to apply
lotion to your face every day for five days.”
“Okay.” McKennan answered softly.
The two doctors exchanged a silent worried glance. Kyle
remained still, “Jill, when Doctor Hashu takes off the bandage, keep your
eyes closed a moment later then cover them before you open them.”
“Okay.” Her voice nervously echoed.
Hashu removed the little pads of woven cotton from her eyes and
Jill covered her face.
Kyle laid his fingers over his mouth, silently praying.
She slowly withdrew her hands and blinked a set of pretty brown eyes.
“It’s all blurry.” She reported, “I’m okay, though.”
“You most certainly are, Jill.” Hashu answered. He scribbled
everything down on the chart beside him and turned away one moment then
came back and handed Jill a lollipop. “This is for you for being
the best patient of them all.” He congratulated.
Jill graciously accepted it, trying hard not to smile.
* * *
Kyle and Steve agreed to hold a meeting and exchange notes they
and the ladies acquired from Chenobis. Steve decided to invite Nick
for his technological expertise. Then he thought of another friend
of theirs: Matt Frasier. The problem was timing. Matt was in
the middle of a divorce and Nick had been called away to handle a black-out
in Below.
Kyle did not want to wait any longer than they had to.
Urgency filled him from the moment he woke, to the time he dropped off
to sleep. Voodoo said very little to him, almost sulking.
But knowing the Sentinel’s behavior, Kyle understood Voodoo was merely
trying to deal with the whole mess. At least they weren’t fighting.
Not yet.
“You never said anything to me.” Voodoo quietly stated
two days after Kyle was released from the hospital. They traversed
the park, walking slowly so that Doctor Scott did not have to catch his
breath. Kyle sipped water and caught sight of the one hill sloping
off to the eastern part of the park. It was Steve’s favorite place.
Crowned with large trees and a bench, it stood watchful over the rest of
the garden. “I tried to contact you in the ship.” He answered.
“But I couldn’t get through.”
“Tell me about the ship, Kyle. What happened?”
Kyle shook his head. “I don’t know, Voodoo. At least,
I don’t remember too much. There was alien technology . . . something
happened to Steve and I know I have those memories, but I can’t tap into
them.”
Voodoo suddenly collapsed to his knees, his form hunched over.
“Why are you blocking me?” He asked.
“What?”
“Can’t you hear me anymore? I tried on hundreds of occasions
to talk to you over the link, but you keep a shield between us. It
hurts, Kyle. You’re hurting me.”
Kyle flinched in surprise. “But . . . I thought you were
holding a shield against me. I thought you didn’t want me poking
around in your head, that you might have some . . . top secret
. . .” he felt a vibration through the link. Weak, plaintive, sad.
If it was from Voodoo . . . “V, why would I shield you from me? I
need you. I need to know someone is there for me.”
Voodoo shrugged. “I dunno. I figured you were mad
at me.”
Kyle stared at him and accessed artificial implanted memories.
It was hard because unlike true memory, Kyle had to access them like one
would textbook material. He frowned. “Voodoo, have you ever
known me to be angry without finding the time to snap at you?”
Voodoo frowned. “Kyle, you are not the kind of person to
loose his temper unless pushed to a point. I can press buttons all
day and you won’t make a move. Not until I start attacking you emotionally.”
Kyle blinked at this revelation. “Oh.” He turned
away, taking another quaff of water. He turned back and pointed a
finger at Voodoo. “I think there might be something wrong with the
link.”
“How so?”
Doctor Scott shook his head. “Don’t know. Most likely
outside interference. Or my own physiological condition might be
setting up prohibitive parameters attacking neural pathways through the
coroander nerves, thereby affecting your ordysimic sensors.”
Voodoo snorted and smiled, struggling not to laugh.
Kyle blinked. “What’s so funny?” His voice was level,
indicating he wasn’t mad, just curious.
“You rattle that stuff off as though nothing had ever happened.
I didn’t understand a thing you just said.”
Kyle blinked again and drank more water. Then he smiled,
admitting it all did sound kinda funny. “Perhaps we should go talk
to Skywolf.”
Kyle followed Chaos out to the Observation and Scanning Auditorium
(OSA). Standing fifty feet high and seventy feet in either direction,
the room remained the only facility in three solar systems capable of doing
x-ray, CAT scans, MRI’s and EEG’s right on the table without moving the
patient. Originally, the OSA was the only means of tapping into the
consciousness that made the Interface links. Kyle and Skywolf collaborated
on it for thirty years just prior to the Tji war. There was almost
nothing a patient could hide from the sensitive (very expensive) equipment.
Even dreams could be monitored on the sub-psycho laser graph.
But Kyle never dreamed he would end up on one of those tables
himself. He squirmed, trying to forget that he was just here for
a quick exam, not a bug under a microscope. He could not figure out
why he was so nervous.
Ten feet from him, Voodoo lay on a similar table. But he
remained very still. He gazed at his nervous partner and forced a
smile. “It’ll be okay, Kyle.” Voodoo said softly. “I
won’t let them stick needles in you.”
Kyle flinched and nearly sat up but Voodoo beat him too it, supporting
his weight on one elbow. “Kyle.” He called softly. “Don’t
panic.”
“I’m trying not to.”
Hashu called from the control room above them, his voice full
of concern. “Is everything alright, you two?”
Voodoo gazed up at the transparent titanium windows. He
automatically patched into the intercom system. “Kyle’s . . . having
subconscious flashbacks, Doctor.”
Skywolf patched in from his station. “Voodoo . . . I thought.
. . I thought you talked to him-“
”Who’s had time?” Voodoo snapped. “Just . . . just
gimme a minute, will ya? Hold on to your reserve tanks a second.”
He slipped off the flat and knelt at his partner while Kyle sat up.
“What’s wrong with me?” Kyle held himself tightly and batted
his eyes against the glaring floodlights from the control station.
“It’s an old wound.” Voodoo answered simply. “I guess
it’s one of those bad moments-you know, when they transferred some of my
memories to you . . . something like that. But, how did the emotion
transfer? I thought you said the emotions . . .” Voodoo stopped
himself and frowned. “Okay, we were both there. I think you’re
. . . “
Kyle looked down, unable to retain eye contact. Something
awful must have happened and it caused him to have a panic attack.
“I don’t want to know.” He said softly.
Voodoo took Kyle’s hands between his fingers. “We don’t
have to do this.” He emphasized.
“Yes we do.” Kyle argued.
“No. We don’t. We don’t have to do a damned thing.
If you don’t feel comfortable enough to do this, we won’t do it.
I won’t have you freaking out on me. Kyle, it’s not your fault.”
Kyle drew a deep breath. That helped. Whatever it
was that had happened seemed to fade and Kyle put his trust in Voodoo’s
sincerity. He nodded and laid back down. “I’ll be okay.”
He gazed at his partner’s opticless face but Voodoo remained stern.
He waited a moment, watching Kyle and scanning his life signs for trouble.
But Kyle seemed to genuinely relax. Perhaps it wasn’t the flashback
at all. Perhaps Kyle just needed a little reassurance. Voodoo hoped
so. He returned to the examination table and patched back into the
intercom.
“He’ll be okay. But no dilly-dally. You know he hates
this.”
“Alright, Voodoo. Just be patient. We’ll get you
two out as soon as possible.” Wolf turned to Chaos with a frown.
“Testy, isn’t he?” he asked, meaning Voodoo.
Chaos frowned. “Scott’s like most doctors, Wolf, better
on the handle-side of a scalpel.”
Skywolf grunted and he and Hashu started on the sequence of scans.
“Physical patterns normal.” Hashu reported.
“Same here.” Wolf replied. He watched the monitor
as UV blue scans shot between Kyle and Voodoo at one frequency then changed
frequencies for variation patterns then changed again toward the dark light
spectrums, picking up the Interface auras and life force patterns.
Chaos stepped a little closer to the window as the dark light
revealed the sequence Interface patterns unique to Kyle and Voodoo.
“What the hell is that?” she asked.
Wolf stood and watched as the patterns between Kyle and Voodoo
fluctuated much like a subspace message suffering from massive interference.
He shook his head. “I don’t know. Let me run another scan on
the Ra’nine frequency.”
“That’s going to make Voodoo really edge.” Chaos warned.
“I know.” Wolf frowned. He tapped in the order for
the computer and the scan light changed rapidly, shooting out streams of
red light intermixed with blue. Voodoo covered his face and turned
his back to Kyle.
“I’m getting peeks and valleys.” Hashu warned.
But he went unheard as Wolf and Chaos strained to see what the
scans were revealing. Wolf glanced at his monitor and shook his head.
“Oh Primus.” He swore. “Okay, I think I’ve seen enough.
Shut it off. Shut them all off.” He sat down and started piecing
the information together. But he already knew what it was saying.
Jill entered the auditorium with a robe for Kyle. He sat
up as though just waking from a restless sleep. But he did not greet
or look at her. Jill laid the robe over his shoulders and tried to
make eye contact. “Kyle?” She asked carefully. “Are you
okay?” She waited, but he still said nothing. She glanced up
at the control center. <<Wolf, he’s not responding.>>
<<We had to use ra’nine frequencies.>> he answered objectively.
Jill frowned and shielded her partner from her fearful reaction
when Kyle’s nose began to bleed. She swept up tissues for him.
“Wolf said he had to use ra’nine, Kyle.” She answered his puzzled
expression. Jill glanced in Voodoo’s direction and found the Sentinel
had not moved. Perhaps he had blacked out.
Kyle’s mind raced to recall what that meant. In his confused
state, all he knew was that it was painful. Then he remembered ra’nine
was a dark light frequency that reached deep into the subconscious mind
and extracted meta-DNA information from the life force. If used for
an extended period of time, the frequency would kill the patient.
He thought his head was going to shrivel up. Kyle weakly
laid on his side and almost instantly fell asleep.
A female flung herself at Steve the moment Parker stepped into
his quarters. He staggered in surprise, staring into the eyes of
a feline-like creature with silver hair and green eyes. She gripped
him in a fierce kiss.
His stunned reaction faded to astonishment after she turned angry
when he didn’t remember her-or the fact that they were married. Her
tight little figure huddled in grief and it was all Steve could do to comfort
her.
Then came the argument.
And standing in Medbays’ diagnostics section, the last thing
Parker wanted to hear is some long-ass report from Skywolf. But his
attitude changed with Skywolf’s grave news:
“The link between Kyle and Voodoo, the reason for their inability
to communicate . . . the link is diminishing.”
Steve and Mid gave the doctor the very same expression.
“That is impossible.” Mid voiced first.
“I thought nothing could change the strength of the link once
it’s established.” Steve added.
“Normally, yes.” First Aid agreed. “Once Interface
occurs, there is no going back. There is nothing you can do to strengthen
the link. It simply is. But three tests confirmed the very
same thing: Kyle and Voodoo have thirty percent link left.
And it looks like it’s diminishing.”
Midnight leaned against the wall, astounded. “That, that
will kill them both, won’t it? It will be like they died. That
means Voodoo will loose his mind, won’t it?”
“Not altogether at once.” Skywolf answered. “He’s
already going through the withdrawal stages: headaches, slowed reflexes,
irritability.”
“But because Kyle is still alive, and Voodoo is aware of it,
it’s slowing the insanity stages to a crawl.” Parker assumed.
Mid gazed to Steve and thought briefly how he would feel if anything
like this ever happened to his partner. Not Steve, Mid thought, I
won’t loose Steve. He watched as Steve turned away, lost in his own
thoughts, raising a shield to keep Mid out of the confusion and pain over
Ashtar and the whole affair with Kyle.
Midnight sighed. “What do we do?”
Skywolf and First Aid glanced at each other, looking for an answer
neither of them had.
The silence became awkward after a moment then Steve pocketed
his hands. “I think,” he called, “we just move on with our plans:
find out what the hell those creatures are and what we can do to put a
stop to it.”
Mid frowned and nodded in silent agreement.
Kyle struggled with the same nasty headache two days after the
examination. He carefully poured over the recorded images Jill brought
back from Chenobis. She sat quietly next to him, sipping a tall glass
of iced juice. Kyle scribbled notes wishing she would say something
about her findings. The silence in his head was slowly forcing him
out of his mind. Sound, any kind of sudden sound, made him jump because
the quiet in his soul was so terrible. Voodoo’s voice wasn’t in the
back of his mind anymore and Kyle forced all his concentration on anything
that passed him in order to avoid the stillness. But there he and
Jill sat there quietly in the library, waiting for the others to attend
the meeting.
Finally he paused to stretch. Jill turned from an empty
glass, watching Doctor Scott as he paced the room.
“What do you think?” She asked, looking forward to his professional
opinion.
“About your recordings?”
“Yes.” Jill stared at him, not at all liking his sweater
and jeans outfit. Kyle usually ate, slept and lived in his uniform
but for the past two days, he hadn’t so much as thought about it.
“Well . . . I think it’s frightening. The scratch marks
on the walls are very indicative of what Steve and I assumed during the
autopsy.”
“And what’s that?”
“Mass murder-or war, depends on your point of view.”
Jill’s weary three-fingered hands pressed controls over the digipad
as she transferred other data from one gadget to another and in the next
moment, the printer located next to the south window clicked on and started
spewing paper.
The doors swished open and both silently gave the entrance a
wary glance. Nick more or less dragged Shan in, a wide grin plastered
over his face, his eyes hungrily scanning the table for alien technology.
Jill kindly offered it to him by producing a little plastic bag containing
the flat crystal from Chenobis.
“Here you go, Nick.” She baited, dangling the bag like
a carrot on a string. “But don’t tell a damned soul you have it.
The governments on Chenobis will kill to get their hands on this.”
Nick made a beeline for the ‘honey’ and swept it away. He examined
it closely as though preparing to bid a handsome price.
Steve came in the very next minute. His eyes scrutinized
Kyle, but he said nothing; neither his nor Kyle’s expressions changed,
as though they knew what the other was thinking. Steve cast his gaze
to the table, dreading the inevitable.
Kyle just glanced at the blue-skinned woman that arrived with
Nick. He offered her a weak smile, but had no idea who she was.
He took his seat next to Jill and fingered an empty cup of coffee.
Shan shot him a surprised look. Kyle didn’t say hello.
Her eyes jumped from Kyle to Steve in silent question. Steve berated
himself for forgetting. Kyle knew Nick because a week before the
conference, Nick was being treated for burns. And while Nick talked
about Shan, Kyle did not meet her face to face. He moved in, laying
his right arm across Shanygn’s shoulders and guided her to Kyle.
“Kyle,” he called. He waited until Scott gave him eye contact.
“Kyle, this is Shan.”
The moment proved awkward. Kyle forced another smile, but
Steve could tell he was upset and embarrassed about his behavior.
He regained his composure a moment later, but he did not offer his hand
in greeting. Instead, Kyle hid it under the table and Steve’s heart
ached for him. “Hello, Shan.” Kyle whispered.
To Steve’s relief, Shangyn sent him the warmest smile he had
ever seen the lady offer anyone but Nick. She sat in the next chair
and touched Kyle’s shoulder then took his hand. “Hello, Kyle.”
She answered softly. She squeezed his hand.
Kyle looked back, grateful for the contact. Shan, like
Kayla, was unique. A black sleeveless turtleneck hugged her torso,
revealing more of her blue skin. Electric nodes and tiny wire connectors
punctuated her joints and a pair of slim black braces wrapped her wrists
and upper arms. Her short, cropped, dark blue/black hair framed her
face in an expression of power. Kyle figured in a tough situation,
Shan was more than capable of handling herself.
Shan couldn’t get over the fact that Kyle was not wearing his
uniform. She tossed her gaze to Steve and sent him a ‘something’s-not-right’
look. Steve read the expression and nodded, slowly blinking.
The entrance doors opened and a well-built male slipped in, carrying
a coat and brief case. “Hi.” He smiled at Steve who invited
him to have a seat. The blonde man lapped his coat over the back
of a chair and set the case on the table. He nearly sat when he wiggled
his fingers at Shan who shined him on. Jill waved at him without
making eye contact.
“Sorry I’m late.” Matt sighed. “Bad day.”
“It’s okay.” Steve forgave. “We’re still waiting
on Kayla. Matt, you remember Doctor Scott, don’t you?”
Matt opened his brief case and gave Kyle a second look.
“No, actually. We’ve never formally introduced.” He stood and
extended a hand.
Feeling a little more at ease, Kyle stood and accepted the shake.
Matt sat back down. “Good to meet you, Doctor Scott.”
“It’s just Kyle.” He answered simply.
“Well, I’m supposed to be Colonel Matthew-something-Frasier.
But I like Matt.” Frasier buried his face in his brief case, sorting
through papers and digipads. “Short, to the point. And don’t
ask me what my middle name is. It’s a horrible name and I’ve tried
for years to change it.”
Shan smiled.
The doors opened again and Kayla quickly entered, taking a seat,
acting like a little girl late to class. “Sorry.” She whispered.
Steve ran his tongue over his teeth. “Well . . . I guess
we should get started. Anybody want to go first?”
Silence.
Matt closed his brief case and set it on the floor. He arranged
three digipads and two paper tablets in front of him and wrestled a pen
between his hands. “If no one is willing to say anything, how about
someone start by filling me in on what’s going on?”
Kyle’s eyes snapped up, surprised. “No one’s told you?”
Matt struggled not to smile. “No, Doctor Scott. All
I got in subspace transmission was quote:‘Matt! We discovered something!
Could you come and check it out?’ Unquote.”
The corners of Kyle’s mouth tightened as he tried not to smile.
He folded his hands on the table and leaned forward just a little.
“About a month ago I was asked to investigate a very abnormal medical case
on Chenobis. Beth D’Chlavic suffered from severe amnesia and self-inflicted
wounds. The day I was there, something, some force, ripped her to
pieces then turned and injured several other people.” Kyle paused
a moment, struggling against his emotions to tell the rest of the story.
“Whatever afflicted D’Chlavic, has affected me. Steve and I did some
investigating and found Beth was not the only one killed by It.”
Matt opened his hands, his pen twitched in one of them.
“So this is just the matter of finding out what ‘It’ is.” Kyle nodded.
Frasier batted his eyes. “I’m sorry, Doctor, but I don’t feel you
need me. It would seem the medical mystery is more your own forte
than mine.”
Steve sat in the chair next to Matt at this point. “There’s
a great deal more to the story than poltergeists, Matt. We’ve uncovered
the story of a planet-wide alien invasion and the near-extinction of the
entire Chenobian population through cross-breeding.”
Shan, Nick and Matt stared at Parker, startled.
“It gets better.” Kyle added, pleased their new cohorts
had attained interest. “Steve and I were trapped in the space ship
found by D’Chlavic. The things we found . . . the autopsy I performed
. . . It seems the Chenobians saved their own race through genetically-manipulated
biological warfare.”
Matt’s eyes widened and he gazed down at his hands with a great
exasperated sigh. “Okay. So, what you’re asking is my help
in unveiling the connection between the so-called medical problem and the
alien factor.”
“Right.” Kyle and Steve chorused. They caught each
others’ gaze and Steve smiled far more broadly than Kyle.
Matt sat up straight. “Well, let’s see what you have.”
Kayla drew items out of subspace and placed them on the table
next to Beth’s journal and the manilla folder Jill brought from the cave.
“I have a photograph and map of the area we were in from Doctor Rychel’s
tent. There is also a very weird artifact . . . some kind of scroll
or other.” And she laid this on the table, expecting someone
to grab it.
Kyle stared at it suspiciously. “Where did you get that?”
“From Rychal’s tent.” she answered simply. “Take a look
at it. It’s really weird.”
Steve took it first, sliding the scroll out of its leather keep
and unraveled it. He flinched immediately, batting his eyes as though
shocked with bright light. “It’s a contract.” He announced.
Kyle’s dark eyes met Steve’s and memory shot through him; “I
call them the Watchers.” he recited: “ . . . The freakiest part of the
alter-find is the skin scroll tucked away in the little ceramic box.”
Kyle’s expression remained impassive as Steve turned blank. Doctor
Scott repeated word-for-word what Parker read from the journal about a
week ago
Matt glanced from one Tentchi to the next. “What’s he
saying?”
“It’s a passage I read from the journal.” Steve answered
as he leaned back in his chair, impressed. Kyle was only half conscious
at the time it was read.
Kyle considered the words carefully and recalled the room he,
Steve and the ladies visited. “The tanks.” He said softly to
himself. “File cabinets.”
“Yes.” Jill nodded. “We were all in that room, Kyle.
We were separated.”
“That’s not what I’m thinking about, though.” Kyle shook
his head, not looking at her. “It was the cube we were examining
when the . . . light flickered. The cube was what Beth described
as an alter. I don’t think she meant a literal alter; she was being
poetic. As you recall, Rychal and his brother were killed there.
And it was that very place all the trouble started.”
Kayla watched Steve lay the scroll on the table and stared at
it for a long moment as though caught in a trance. “What about the
two dog statues D’Chlavic mentioned?” The Kshi asked. “Where
are they? What would they be doing in the ‘alter’?”
Matt nodded. “Could be a storage place or something.”
Scott shook his head. “The one thing we all need to remember
is that one major event followed another.” Kyle took to his feet
and paced in a small circle. “First the aliens invaded. Years
afterward, a new civilization started to form and a rebellion took place.
It very well could be that the people were oppressed and culturally, they
rebelled.”
“The removal of the female reproductive organs.” Kayla agreed.
“Art or fashion, it became a symbol.”
Steve laid the scroll on the table and stood as Kyle laid his
arms across the back of his chair and leaned forward. The two stared
at one another for a moment as though trying to read one another’s thoughts.
Steve frowned. “The alien invasion begets a breeding program
that begets a mutation factor which begets a cultural rebellion and then
diseases break out . . . what are we missing here, Kyle?”
Scott blinked. “Sightings?”
Matt glanced from the Doctor to the Captain. “You mean
ghost sightings?”
Both men gave him their attention and for some reason, Frasier
wanted to crawl under the table. He shrugged and fell silent.
Kyle turned his attention to Nick who remained silent up till
now. “What do you have to say about all this, Nick?” he asked.
Nick shrugged. “Only that someone promised to let me see
something of crystal technology and I don’t have anything to look at other
than the trapezoid.”
Kyle stared at him cooly before sliding his hand into a pocket
and produced the three pieces of flat metal from the ship. “Here.
See what you can make of these.”
“What are they?”
Doctor Scott shrugged. “Someone’s mystery novels, I’d guess,
Nick. There was a whole shelf case of them.”
Steve nodded and reached for the manilla folder Jill brought
with her. “That was just before we entered a death chamber and found
all kinds of torture victims.”
Shan paled and threw her eyes on the table. Steve caught
the moment and smiled apologetically. “Sorry, Shan.”
Nick glanced in his wife’s direction, amused that anything should
bother her at all. Then something from the table caught his eye.
The techno-wizard spotted the scroll lying unrolled near Steve. The
deformed head of a dead alien reared out of it and turned to him with a
terrible evil smile. When its lips split, blood seeped from between
its stained teeth. Nick nearly dropped the plates and glanced about
to see if anybody else saw it. But no one at the table reacted in any way.
Matt scribbled over a tablet while Steve leafed through the folder.
His eyes drifted toward the scroll as his mind tried to fit all the pieces
together. He heard only a few reports regarding the deaths in West
Central and Strata-Mainframe. It seemed a little odd that no Transformer
had been injured or killed by the ghosts; just the Humanoid population.
As he continued to stare aimlessly, a veil of darkness settled
over his eyes. He shook his head, finding his sight left him.
He glanced from one side of the room to the other and before he could say
anything, a shadow crossed the darkness. It turned toward him; a figure
of ash and rain and it bore the face of an old man, deathly pale and burdened
by decades of grief. A fearful green light glowed softly from behind
the holes that served as a set of eyes. Matt tried to look in Kyle’s direction
and the moment he did so, the vision passed, his sight returned.
But it left the Colonel unsettled. He cleared his throat, uncertain
whether or not he should mention what he just saw. “So the poltergeists
are the ghosts of the aliens?”
Everyone stared at him. Kyle frowned. “No.”
Doctor Scott replied quietly. “According to D’Chlavic’s journal,
Chenobis has suffered severe plaques. Each time the plaque hit, it’s
only been certain parts of the world and very particularly the science
community.”
Matt sat back in his chair, confused and frustrated. “That
makes even less sense. How about approaching this from another angle? What’s
with the crystal?”
Jill glanced at Nick who intensely studied the plates.
“I found it stashed in one of the cars there at the site, a pile of letters
along with it. One of which, and I have it here, clearly states that
Beth’s team was in terrible danger and they tried to use the crystal as
a bargaining tool to get government help. But the letter never arrived.
It seems they were sabotaged from the very beginning.”
Matt looked puzzled, “Sounds like this ghost doesn’t like
professional communities.”
Nick sat on the table top, his feet on the chair and he stared
at Kyle. “So you’re saying that the excavation woke up a pair of
sleeping ghosts.”
“Yes.” Kyle nodded.
“But who are these ghosts?” Matt asked, unnerved about
the whole thing.
“Ptysar.” Steve answered. “One ghost is Ptysar.”
“Xesnex.” Kyle instantly added. “The other’s name is Xesnex.”
“How do you know that?” Steve asked with a contorted expression.
Kyle couldn’t look at him. “I-I guess I remembered when I regained
consciousness.”
Steve expected a better, more detailed answer, but Kyle offered
nothing. And rather than forcing it out of them man, Parker swept
up the journal and flipped through the pages, finding the one passage describing
the scroll: “The word ‘Zhagk’ . . . means ‘demon’. Could this be
a contract with a demon? If so, that would explain the Keepers of
the alter-“ he lowered the book. “I suspect that is the descriptions
of our ghosts.”
Kyle shook his head. “But the contract was made with one
demon, not two.”
Steve held up a finger and continued the passage: “ . . .and
the One they were protecting. He must have been a prince or a king
at one point.” He closed the journal. “So what we’re looking
at is a hypothesis stating that a couple of demons, maybe more like aliens,
made a contract with this king.”
“But for what?” Nick asked. “What has that got to
do with this? Why is it so important?”
Kyle furred his brows. “Here’s another question for you,
Nick: Why the hell was the scroll and the ghosts there at a research facility?”
Matt leaned back in the chair. “Maybe they instigated the
research program.” He quietly suggested. Parker beside him
took to his feet and started to pace.
Then another idea hit Kyle. “The ghosts are blamed for
the plaques that have hit Chenobis from time to time. What if the
contract was created in addition to the DNA virus? You and I both
have seen what those ghosts can do, Steve. Murder en mass.”
Steve stared at him for a moment. “So what you’re saying
is this prince or king started a research and torture program to rid the
world of their alien invasion problem. He wasn’t satisfied with the
fact that the scientists were capturing and murdering hundreds of aliens.
So he made a business contract with a pair of aliens who . . . were killing
Chenobians rather than aliens? Does that make sense, Kyle? Why were
they killing Chenobians?”
Matt interceded again: “If I might make a suggestion here.”
He said quietly. All eyes turned to him. “I would guess the
plaques aren’t meant to murder so much as they were designed to weed out
alien DNA. It would seem that if the people were mutated with the
alien contagion, the only way to create a reversal process is to wipe out
populations that have more of the mutation factor than others.”
“And what about the science community?” Nick added.
“Why would the aliens keep the Chenobians from technological improvements?
If you want advanced equipment, here it is. I suspect the alien invaders
had a system of crystal and kinetic technology. I doubt they had
vocal interface at all.”
Kyle nodded in agreement. He frowned “How did the king
get in touch with two aliens? And why are they so willing to carry
out their contract to this day? This whole incident, the invasion,
occurred almost two thousand years ago. Why are the aliens still
bothering with it?”
Steve shook his head. “It must have something to do with
the contract. Maybe it’s binding.”
“Know what I think?” Matt answered in turn. “It sounds
like these ghosts are doing more than just murdering at their pleasure:
they’re feeding off death.” A soft bleep interrupted the moment and Matt
snapped out his wrist and read the message. He frowned. “Guys, I
need to go. How about we continue this tomorrow?”
Kyle frowned, saying nothing, and looked away. Steve silently
nodded and Nick sighed and stared out the windows into the park.
Jill offered Matt a sad smile with a permissible nod. Kayla sat with
her arms folded. She merely nodded, glancing once at Kyle then pressed
her lips tightly.
Shan gave him an open smile, “Sure.” She agreed.
“Okay.” Frasier snapped his case closed and abandoned the
group.
Silence hung suspended like frozen time. Kyle felt cold
inside. He softly rubbed his stigmatic hand, itching to release
the tension and stress built up from the past few days. Skywolf’s
news burdened him in a way Kyle had not felt before. His whole life
was being ripped up, one strand at a time and he did not know how to deal
with it. The silent room drove him crazy. Everyone fell to
their own thoughts and considerations. Kyle about bolted out of his
seat when Steve finally spoke up:
“Anyone for Chinese?”
Two hours later, Kyle strapped on protective gaming gear.
He did not enjoy lunch. All the others chattered on about things
and people or events he knew nothing about. It annoyed him so much
that they knew what they were talking about and he hadn’t a clue.
Kyle thought about burring his pain in news articles and medical updates.
He thought about reacquainting himself with his office at Medbay.
He thought about going over the Internet at home and pouring over all the
oldest news and history he could read in as short a time as possible.
But his agitation would not let him sit. He needed to vent.
He tightened his boot straps and slipped on a pair of gloves.
He remembered the rehabilitation center on level six south of
the geriatrics ward there at Medbay. Standing almost isolated from
the rest of the complex, Rehab claimed the same amount of space as three
private housing districts. There were sixteen huge holodecks, eight
gyms, four indoor basketball courts, four indoor pools, twenty-six saunas,
twenty-six jacuzies and one football field. Most of the Rehab was
filled beyond capacity during the day as classes were held for the public
and private sectors outside the Complex.
Kyle managed to reserve holodeck nine to himself. But he
suspected it was more because of VIP privileges rather than a list of first-come-first-serve.
Not that it was fair, but Kyle was very grateful nonetheless.
“Computer,” he called and a bleep echoed in answer, “Uhm, I’d
like to try one of Captain Steve Parker’s programs.”
SPECIFY
Kyle swept a dragonrod from the wall. “I think it’s called
Duality.”
REQUIREMENTS: DRAGONROD. SINGLE PLAYER ON FIRST LEVEL. PROTECTIVE
JOINT GEAR.
That was what he was after. The doors slid open and he
entered, bearing the dragonrod; a heavy battle axe with a crescent blade
at both ends.
The room greeted him with an ancient ruins theme. Stone
slabs covered in overgrowth squatted in some semblance of order.
A dreary grey sky brewed overhead and the floor grounded under his feet
with the burden of old crumbling bricks and dirt.
A holographic humanoid stomped its way toward Kyle. It
sized him up and down, sneered and made a defensive stance.
Kyle sized him up too and shook his head. “This is too
easy.” He complained under his breath. He let it attack first
and he whacked its midriff with the flat side of the axe. The opponent
stumbled back, rebounded and thrust at the doctor. Kyle deflected
easily and sliced its head off. The humanoid sizzled out of existence
and Kyle frowned.
“Computer, next level, please.”
Two guys jumped out from nowhere. Kyle sliced one down
the front side and kicked the other in the center then also decapitated
it.
“No. Computer, next level.”
Steve rendezvoused with his wife at a familiar café.
Well, he remembered the café, but not her. And once again,
they fell to the same frustrating argument; he simply could not remember
her. She brought photo albums this time and holographic recordings
of parties and places they had visited over the years.
The hour he spent with her was very trying. Finally, she agreed
they would discuss it later when he had been able to handle other business
first.
But honestly, Steve did not know how to deal with the fact that
he was married; nor that he once loved someone and could not remember her.
So Captain Parker turned to the one thing that was most familiar to him;
an old friend.
Steve made a beeline for Medbay and straight to Kyle’s office.
But Doctor Scott was not there. Steve checked the roster but Kyle
had not signed in, meaning he was not there in the organics wing.
He turned to the reception desk on level four.
The four-armed receptionist greeted him with a quick smile just
as she answered the phone. She gave Doctor Neth the room his patient
was in and turned to Steve.
“Looking for Kyle.” Parker raised his left brow.
She tapped a few keys at the computer and answered the phone
again while another doctor asked her for a report on the emergency lines
coming in at two P.M. She handed him that and drank a sip of coffee.
“Doctor Scott is not here today, Captain Parker, I’m sorry.”
“He’s not home, either.” Steve informed quietly.
“The man has to be here somewhere. Kyle won’t go anywhere else.”
She nodded politely and tapped at the computer again and answered
the phone with another hand and scribbled a note all at the same time.
She turned to him again. “Rehab.” She nodded, staring at the
computer with some perplexity. “Rehab.” She repeated.
“Kinda odd. Kyle rarely goes there unless he’s jogging around the
track.”
Steve patted the counter top. “Thanks”
Kyle was hardly tired. One level followed another.
He just beat five guys attacking him at once and they all sizzled out the
same fashion as the first. Either Steve’s program was sissy-stuff,
or . . .
Doctor Scott laughed at himself.
The doors opened and Steve’s figure silhouetted against the glaring
outside light. “Hey.” he greeted.
Kyle twirled the dragonrod once. “Hey.” He returned.
“Heard you were hanging around. Thought I’d come and see
what you were up to.”
Kyle smiled humorlessly. “I thought I’d blow some steam.
This program of yours sucks.”
“Is that so?” Steve entered, wearing protective gear, but
bearing no weapon. The doors clanged behind him, completing the scene
again. He folded his arms and stared at Kyle, his left brow rising.
Kyle slightly lifted his chin. “Computer,” he called. “Level
eight.”
Steve turned cold, but did not allow his shock to hold back his
response: “Computer, belay that. Replicate one dragonrod weight:
forty pounds.”
A dragonrod appeared from nowhere and Steve took it up.
“Level eight, Doctor Scott?” He spired. “I don’t think so.”
Kyle twirled the rod once again and set the corners of his mouth.
He was ready for a fight-a real fight. His eyes went dead set against
Steve. If Parker needed some exercise . . .
Steve took stock of Kyle’s stance: Relaxed, positioned
correctly. But Kyle had a blind side at the left knee. Steve
went for that first and found himself not only swiftly deflected, but forced
to defend himself at the ankle and again at the neck. They stood
still again, sizing one another. This time Kyle attacked, aiming
for the waist and again at the head. Steve parried and ducked then came
back for Kyle’s left arm. Kyle blocked him and kicked him in the
chin. Steve fell back and sprang right back up.
Kyle meant business.
Parker moved his lower jaw back and forth. “Nice.”
He congratulated. “Maybe you are level eight material after all.”
He jumped back when a blade nearly sliced him in half.
He stepped in with a right swing, the rods clanged hard and Steve nearly
nicked Kyle across the chest. Kyle kicked his weapon, but Parker
held it too skillfully for that kind of tactic.
Kyle still got him by the ankles, kicking Parker off his feet.
Scott swung up and Parker rolled as the bladed weapon plunged into the
ground he lay on seconds ago. Steve backrolled and came back with
a broad upperstroke that could have shattered Kyle’s lower jaw.
Kyle dropped to a hard right, doing half a cartwheel then snapped
right back out with the other end of the rod. Steve leapt and jabbed,
sinking the blade into a nearby tree, missing Kyle by inches.
Scott rounded the tree, breathing heavily as the two paused
a moment.
“Now what do you think of my program?” Steve asked.
“It still sucks.” Kyle joked. “All the opponents
have the same ugly face-yours.”
Steve silently pointed at Kyle. Now he was in trouble.
Steve jumped at him and jabbed for the midriff. He was deflected.
Uppercut. Block. Lowpoint. Block. Left, right, middle, left,
left, and one turn, one jab, one thrust after another was met with a block
and a similar move from Kyle. The rods swung in the air with a deadly
swishing sound and clang hard, angry metal against angry metal until Steve
pulled a level twelve maneuver, ducking, jabbing and swung up with his
right foot, kicking in the waist and butt the center of the rod hard into
Kyle’s chest, knocking Scott’s wind right out of him. Kyle fell back,
stunned. He dropped his weapon and lay very still as Steve swung
up for the final blow. The blade came within three inches of Kyle’s
face and froze.
Kyle closed his eyes. If Steve had lost once simple ounce
of concentration and control, he would have been killed.
Steve held himself tightly. He shuddered from adrenaline
overdose and it took him a moment to come down from it. He slowly
retrieved the blade from Kyle and stabbed the ground in victory.
But Steve did not feel victorious. He collapsed to his
knees and stared at Kyle, gasping for breath. “Kyle.” he coughed
once. “If I hadn’t seen it and experienced it myself, I would never
in my life believed it.”
“What?” Kyle slowly pulled himself up, shaking. He
dusted his hands.
“This. Up until this moment, you have never gone beyond
a level six. I just tested you at level ten. Wanna explain
that?”
Kyle’s eyes widened in astonishment. He turned cold.
“Good day?” He guessed.
Steve shook his head in turn. He did not want to know.
The intercom beeped just then. DOCTOR SCOTT? Came a nurse’s
voice.
“Here!” Kyle answered as he and Steve stood.
“PATIENT TO SEE YOU IN ROOM 1120.”
“On my way.”
Steve lifted his left brow. “Thought you were going to take the
day off.”
Kyle smiled wryly. “They do that only for certain patients.”
“Ah-huh.”
Kayla puttered about her quarters for two hours after arriving
home from the miserable meeting. Everyone around her wallowed in
the same dour mood and it wore her out. The empath poured herself
a cup of hot cocoa and opened a package of apple chips. She collapsed
into her couch and turned the TV on. At first she ignored it, just
surfing through channels, coasting through soap-operas, sports and documentaries
(most of which are pirated from Earth and Centauri TV). She ignored
the kiddie puppet shows and Captain Kangaroo and finally found the news.
“ . . . while trade is at an all-time high on Cybertron, some
sources say tough times are ahead. With the unusual pirate ships
that appear from nowhere, attack and leave, it means precious patrolling
resources will have to be expanded to include most trade routes to and
from Cybertronian space lanes just to insure desperately needed supplies
arrive safely. Prathos of Strata-Mainframe reporting for CNN.
The scene shifted to the anchor reporter, a fellow in
dark tan skin and white hair. He stared into the camera without expression.
“More mysterious deaths reported in West Central today. Doctors from
Medbay are puzzled over the oddity of the crimes, calling the events ‘Red
jack murders’. Twenty-six people were found dead when a shuttle crash-landed
outside the main landing strip outside the city. Workers were not
injured, but all twenty-six passengers were found dead at the scene.
Critics point fingers to Doctor Kyle Scott who earlier had warned the medical
community of a possible threat concerning a murderous poltergeist loose
on the planet. While authorities refuse to comment, sources suggest
the ordeal is under intense investigation.”
Kayla rolled her eyes and shut the TV off, sinking into her cushiony
couch. She sipped her cocoa and thought about Chenobis, the dead
man she found yet standing.
Kayla took another sip of the comforting warm drink. Kyle
had lost a dangerous amount of blood and Steve had that odd look in his
eye, as though . . . as though something were robbed from him. Their
escape was nothing short of miraculous, now that she thought of it.
It was so coincidental that Steve and Kyle should end up escaping the ship
right in the same area as she and Jill.
Kayla had lost faith in the gods hundreds of years ago.
But now . . . now she started to wonder.
She set her empty cup on the floor, folded her hands and fell
asleep.
*Here! Come and witness this great triumph!* The cold voice
filled Kayla and she shuddered, but had no choice. She unwittingly
participated in witnessing an event.
Quintessons floated round about the table, the room nearly completely
dark other than that. A poor Human female lay strapped to the table,
her legs spread as she prepared to give birth. The five-faced monsters
all gathered round her as though she were an animal, paying no mind to
her screams and cries.
Then it happened.
And Kayla thought she was going to be sick.
The poor woman gave birth, alright-to a miniature version of
the five-faced monsters around her.
*Success!* One Quint declared, its tentacles flaying in
unrestrained excitement.
*Yes.* Another agreed. *We now understand the use
and versatility of this organic species. We can order bounty hunters
to begin collecting other females of this species. Through them,
we may increase our numbers successfully.*
*Wait!* A third Quint called. In his tentacles, a scanner
bleeped in alert mode. *Someone is sending a mental transmission.*
*Find it!* The Second Quint ordered. *Kill it!*
And they searched the room. Kayla hid in the shadows of her prison,
but her eyes did not leave the sight of the poor woman, now dead from neglect.
Three other caged creatures squealed in protest as the Quints prodded for
information, trying to pinpoint the source of telepathy.
And they found her.
*Here!* Declared the one with the scanner. Two of
its comrades peered into the cage and Kayla realized she too was pregnant.
She held her head high. She was going to die, liberated from further
tests and degrading treatment. One Quint simply passed a spear through
the energon bars and cut off her head.
Kayla shot from the couch and screamed.
Doctor Scott didn’t need to ask how she felt. Her pale face
and clammy skin told a good part of the story. He rolled a seat in
front of her and silently examined her first, checking her lymph nodes,
then her temperature.
“It was real.” She said softly. “I was there, Kyle.
I was really there.”
Kyle’s dark brown eyes drifted from her to her Dokiah Interface.
“A dream.” Spellbinder answered softly. “She woke
up screaming and I couldn’t calm her down.”
“I was in a cage and pregnant and I watched another woman, a
Humanoid female, give birth to a Quintesson and they found out I was sending
a telepathic message across space and then they sliced off my head.”
Kayla was not the kind of person to give into imaginative fears.
She was as down-to-reality as Steve. Kyle took her hands into his,
her cold skin no doubt glad for his warm touch. “I am not going to
discredit your experiences, Kayla.” He said quietly. “More than any
of us, you are most sensitive to extra-sensory perceptions.”
Kayla swallowed hard, her lips almost as white as the paper sheet
she sat on. “Are you saying that what I saw might be real?”
Kyle didn’t answer her right away. He believed her but
he wasn’t sure how Spellbinder would take his answer. “I think it’s
possible.” He finally replied.
It did help to ease her distress. Kayla wasn’t crazy, everyone
knew that. Much of her trembling slowed.
“Go home, Kayla.” Kyle instructed. “Take a bath,
put on your jammies and watch some TV. I think you’ll feel better
tomorrow.”
Kayla smiled at the ‘jammies’ word. “Thank you, Kyle.”
She slid off the table and picked up her coat.
* * *
Midnight was so sorry he could do nothing to protect his soul-mate.
He did what he thought was the best way to ease Steve’s suffering: he forced
Steve to drink a glass of poison.
He promised it wouldn’t hurt. Steve would just go to sleep
and never wake.
Steve wept, begging Midnight not to make him drink it.
He could just move on, live elsewhere-maybe Kyle would let him stay with
him for a while.
But it was unacceptable. Midnight didn’t want to be seen
as vulnerable. And Steve was a weakness. And so he forced Steve
on his back and poured the drink in his mouth and Steve wept, begging,
begging.
Steve woke crying. He felt so helpless, so vulnerable compared
to the giant robotic creature. He would be forced to
die without a choice. He gathered his arms about himself, cuddled
in his chair.
Realizing he was in a chair, it dawned on Parker he was dreaming.
His eyes caught sight of a framed piece of metal proudly hanging from the
opposite wall. He was safely in his own quarters. Audience
laughter spilt from the TV but it did not catch Steve’s attention.
The Captain stared at the slice of metal, one of few pieces left of Braintrust.
He shuddered weakly and tried to tell himself everything was just a really
bad dream. But it left him cold.
* * *
Three days passed but the Tentchi held no other meetings. Steve
was called back to the council meetings
The last thing Steve wanted was to hear was another hour-long
rant concerning the Nagk. The trading embargo enraged several other
planets, stating Cybertron had no right to impose such a treatment upon
business. The problem was, the Nagk had been caught red-handed intercepting
and stealing and/or destroying supplies to other worlds. Optimus
accused them of high-rolling piracy. Naturally, the Nagk were outraged.
They demanded a hearing-they got one on Emright, but now they didn’t want
to wait for Emright. They demanded the meeting be held there on Cybertron
in a sterilized environment.
Steve did not want to hear it, no matter what Midnight said.
He did not want to attend.
And for all the resistance Parker put up, Kyle still did not
hear anything from him.
Doctor Scott kept busy, however. Immersed into his own
past, Kyle struggled to piece things back together. But it was slow,
very slow.
Kyle heard himself laugh in the recorded journal. He thumbed
through folders and files and re-familiarized himself with his computer
and every other nook and corner of his office in Medbay. Actually,
Doctor Scott mused, his office was more a mega-library than the libraries
Downstairs.
“Will you stop? I have to record this!” he heard his own voice
break over laughter. “Okay . . . Um, we’re on this wonderful exotic
planet full of-Steve, put the crab down. Okay. We are on oceanfront
property and believe it or not, the water here is BLACK. And Steve
can’t pretend he’s an adult long enough for me to make this entry.”
Scott grinned. It was one of very few happy entries in
his extensive recorded journal. So far he had heard all of twenty
recordings. Three days after Kayla’s vision, things seemed to have
settled. No signs of mischief from the dog-beasts and Kyle wondered
if they were planning something else, or busy elsewhere.
“Kyle?” Steve called over the recording. “Lookit.”
“What?”
“Found a hermit crab.”
“How do you know it’s a hermit crab?” Kyle’s voice came
with amusement.
“I know.”
“Well, I doubt it’ll come out of its shell, Steve.”
“Oh . . .well there’s a little trick to that. You see,
you never ever force the hermit out of his shell; you allow him to come
out. You just hold him like so and sooner or later, he starts to
feel secure and-ah-see? there's the little guy's antennae. He's checking
the place out. Now, we just talk to him, soft, slow. We don’t
demand anything. Hello little fellow."
A space of silence crossed the recording and Kyle smiled then
heard himself greet the hermit crab. “Hi, fella. Pretty thing, isn’t
it?”
Just faintly Kyle could hear Jill’s voice call from a distance
and Steve said something about food. The recording ended and Kyle
shut the machine off. He had no memory of the incident, but hearing
it made him feel good.
He rounded his desk and sat in the chair, thumbing lazily through
folders, reacquainting himself with names and faces and dates. He
took particular notice how many of Medbay’s latest cases seemed to have
sleeping problems. Kyle tucked that thought away for a later time
and read up on all the patients from one wing of Medbay’s organic section
to the other.
He closed his eyes for a moment.
The dim light echoed a terrible sound of distant coldness and
fear. Ghosts of the dead and injured touched him all over and Kyle
wanted to wash himself of it.
The death stank, not so much in a smell as it was a feeling.
He could feel the death, he could feel the filth of the tortured females
as their bodies were invaded and forced to bear things unnatural to their
own species.
Cold light.
Cold light.
And a name from deep, deep in his subconsciousness.
But the name came blocked by someone else’s imposition.
Kyle found himself trapped in a dream within a dream and the
dream liquified into a terrible memory dark and forbidden by ancient walls
of sentient will.
They were tests, weren’t they? And Steve was there, wasn’t
he? Old. Old. Old.
Fabin.
Fabin.
And the Fabin traded off and on with another creature, a creepy
dark creature resembling sort of a frog-like bodies, biped in nature, huge
triangular faces and large bulging eyes. Forked black -
Kyle lurched, but trapped in the dream, he could not break free.
He remembered the tongues . . . one kissed him as he lay bound to a table.
They-the Fabin-had broken his hands and were not merciful in their torture.
They drained his blood and put it back before he died.
Kyle gasped for air, struggling to pull out of the trapped dream.
He felt himself fall to the floor in front of his desk and he still could
not break free.
“THEY’RE FLYING!”
“THEY’RE FLYING!”
And they came, riding over the cloud-bounded sky, things on wings
buzzed like insects from the bowels of places unspoken by sentient tongues.
And they came by the millions, amassing across the great cities, they encircled
the building and set them afire and the people died as they ran.
Fire and smoke, destruction-Doctor Scott recalled a word from his own home
world-Tachnau-planetary destruction. The Earth equivalent to an apocalypse.
And they drained his blood again-and somewhere else in his mind,
a terrible, terrible sin was committed-a memory locked down so tightly
Kyle’s conscious mind could not bear it if it were ever uncovered.
Something even Voodoo could not comprehend. Kyle instinctively nailed
another barrier between it and his mind. For if he ever remembered
the incident, if he ever brought it out of that one tiny space in his soul,
Kyle believed he would plunge straight into a coma.
And once again he tried to surface, tried to pull out of the
dream he could not rise from. Wake up! His unconscious mind
told him. You’re laying on the floor of your office! You must get up! Breathe!
You must call for help! Breathe! Breathe!
And the music continued to lure him back from surface unconsciousness.
It tried to pull him back under. He tumbled down, down . . . like
a drowning victim . . . and somewhere there he felt something begin to
change him inside.
“You are ours, Doctor Scott, mind, body and soul. Ours.
. . ours. You belong to us.”
. . . SsssssSteve . . . he dismally thought. And for some
reason he started to weep, pleading for someone, anyone to help him.
He reached up and wrapped his hands round the back of his head.
And the ran’kas tramped the ground with sure-footedness.
A bloodied sun dipped beyond the smoky horizon. The battle ground
wallowed in blood and death; one of many hundreds of battlefields.
The cities burned in the late of night, the hillsides groaned under the
weight of the dead.
And blood splattered the wall as they hacked his mother to pieces
before his eyes and Kyle-Ptysar-swore with all his soul the freak aliens
would pay and pay and pay and pay and pay.
Kyle’s eyes opened, his body now so weak he could not so much
as lift his hands.
A stream of water and blood slipped into the room and flowed
silently around the desk and nestled under Kyle’s arm. A face formed,
staring at Doctor Scott eye to eye.
“Ours.” it said. “Mind, body and soul. You will become
a part of me and me, you and sooner or later you will not be able to tell
where you end and I begin. We will become a part of each other.”
And the thing washed itself over Kyle’s languid form, warm and
liquid-like without feeling wet.
Kyle thought it was like being raped.
Doctor Scott woke again much later, finding himself laying on
a couch Downstairs. A thick warm blanket lay over him and Voodoo
sat dutifully beside him, one finger under Kyle’s left hand.
<< . . . >>
Nothing. A presence but no sound and it choked Doctor Scott.
He had been cut off from the voice in his soul and the resulting emptiness
consumed him. Kyle hid his face in shame as tears refused to be held
back.
“I can’t hear you anymore!” He sobbed softly. “It’s all
silent!” Voodoo gently gathered him into his arms, saying nothing.
Kyle relaxed, longing to phase, and knowing in his heart they could no
longer do even that. The Dokiah bowed his body over Kyle as if to
protect his love from spying eyes. He could think of nothing to say
to consol Kyle’s grief.
And hours turned toward the next day.
Kyle woke again, finding Voodoo’s hunched form folded over him.
Voodoo had long since shut down himself and Kyle could only guess his partner
was just as devastated as he. Kyle did not want Voodoo to go anywhere
anymore. His hand softly stroked the metal under him, searching almost
unconsciously for some gentle stimulation. The separation left him
so alone, so cut off from a constant stream of encouragement and support.
Kyle sighed and nearly fell asleep again when Voodoo stirred
and sat up. He gave his partner a weak smile.
Voodoo did not return the smile. He scanned Kyle’s life
signs, unhappy at Kyle’s weakened condition.
“Something touched you, Kyle.” Voodoo somberly whispered.
“I actually felt it. You were falling from me entirely.” He
carefully laid Kyle on the library couch and shifted to his knees.
“I . . . I was caught in a dream I couldn’t get out of.”
Kyle’s voice was equally as soft, but weaker. “I was so terrified-“
”A nurse found you laying on the floor unconscious, but crying.”
“It was all over me.” Kyle quickly answered. “I felt
it all over my skin. It was horrible.”
“You had a memory lapse.” Voodoo pressed.
Kyle frowned. “No I didn’t.”
“Yes, you did.”
Kyle shook his head. “No. I had no-“
”Kyle, you had a memory lapse-you remembered the Fabin.”
“How do you know?”
“I know. Our link maybe only thirty percent, but I can
still feel things, if only remotely. I felt your fears. I thought
. . . “ Voodoo shook his head and stared at the floor.
“What?” Kyle whispered. “What?”
“I . . . I thought it was something you would not remember.
You and Steve and Ray were in such terrible shock-“
”They broke my hands.” Kyle came right back.
“Yes.” Voodoo whispered.
“And they did other things, didn’t they?”
Voodoo could not answer.
“Who were they, Voodoo?”
“Merchants.” Voodoo made the word sound like a spitting
word. “Like the Harvesters. But the Fabin like to play with
their prey. They changed Ray’s blood type entirely. He was
sick for years.”
“What triggered the memory?” Kyle started feeling better,
now, not quite so afraid. He sat up, his back to the couch and crossed
his legs. But he drew the blanket close for emotional security.
“I don’t know.” Voodoo answered with the same soft voice.
“Maybe something Ptysar did or said to you. Maybe something else
you might have dreamed. Trapped in a dream in a dream . . .dark places
with terrible lights . . . and the sound of a music not quite melodic.”
“Voodoo, stop.” Kyle swallowed hard, not wanting to remember.
Voodoo slowly closed his mouth. He stared at Kyle who read
a chilling sadness in his Partner’s expression.
Kyle’s eyes narrowed and he carefully thought over Voodoo’s words-and
dared remember just glimpses of the nightmare. “You.” He whispered.
“Part of what I was remembering was what you were going through . . .”
And Kyle struggled again, a little more deeply, a little more daring.
But he felt no fear, so long as Voodoo was there with him. “They
pulled you apart.” He surmised. “Didn’t they? The music
. . . they used ultrasonic frequencies to dis . . . member . . . “ Kyle
shut his mouth, understanding the music, the dreaded sounds in the cold.
“Oh, Voodoo.” He choked and whispered, tears dimmed his eyes.
“Voodoo.”
Voodoo took Kyle home to let him rest more comfortably.
He knew he should have done that earlier, but at the time, all the Sentinel
could think about was holding his love. Kyle hoped no one would reprimand
his partner for his fears.
Scott decided to ‘order out’ rather than bother trying to come
up with something to cook.
“Chinese.” Voodoo cheerfully input. “You always liked
Chinese.”
“How do you know?” The doctor smiled as he scanned the
net for a place.
“I know everything.” Voodoo beamed.
“I’ll bet.” Doctor Scott grinned, his eyes glued to the
computer. “Just anything, then?”
“Well, I know you like Peking. You raved about their wonton soup.”
Kyle typed in the name of the restaurant and sure enough, it
popped up and boasted of branch restaurants in West Central, Strata-Mainframe
and Below-and branches opening in the newer cities. Kyle clicked
on the menu and stared at it. It all looked like a jumbled mess and
he shook his head, not knowing what to do.
“It’s written in English.” Voodoo knelt next to his partner.
“I can’t read English, Voodoo.”
“You don’t have to, Kyle. You just click . . .” He
took the mouse and hit file on the task bar and scanned down until he clicked
TRANSLATION. The screen melted and popped back up into Cybertronian.
Kyle gave Voodoo a grateful smile and it warmed Voodoo’s heart. He
gazed at the screen with his partner and gazed over the menu. “Uhm
. . . looks like menu Number Five is a good one. You like stuff that’s
a little spicy-“
Kyle quietly laughed.
“What’s funny?” Voodoo asked.
“You. Do you know everything about me?”
Voodoo gently took Kyle’s hand and the touch swept through Kyle’s
body like a cool breeze under a warm afternoon sun. It sent chills
down Kyle’s back and he found he could not tell if it was his reaction,
or stimulation from his Dokiah. “Six thousand years is a relatively
short time compared to our life span, Kyle. It is precious to me.
We’ve had our ups and downs like the other Interfaces. But I’m the
lucky one, Kyle. I’m the lucky one.”
The delivery girl brought Kyle a veritable feast he wasn’t anticipating.
But Doctor Scott found he was hungrier than he thought and Voodoo was glad
his partner was able to eat anything at all.
“You’re right.” Kyle confirmed, “They do make wonderful
soup.” He paused, picking at the cashew chicken. “It’s sorta
odd how things like this exist on a planet that’s dominated by buildings
and machines.”
“Imports.” Voodoo shrugged. “The Council sees to
it that the Humanoid population is well cared for.”
Kyle looked puzzled. “Why?”
“Humans are essential to Cybertron. They have given us
a culture Transformers have never had in millions of years of war.”
Kyle stared at Voodoo for a long moment then harumphed in mild
amusement.
“What?” Voodoo smiled, only able to guess what’s going
through the Doctor’s mind. It was maddening not being able to tell
what Kyle was thinking at any given moment.
“It sounds like . . . I don’t know . . . a petting zoo and you
have to keep feeding the animals somehow.”
Voodoo’s face lit up as though he were about to burst laughing.
But he did not. “Humans have enriched our lives, Kyle. As a
Human, you have such a wonderful way of seeing the universe. Before
meeting you, all I really cared about was flying and fighting and exploring.
But . . . I never really stopped to think about things like . . . bugs
and flowers.”
Kyle smirked, trying to keep closed a mouth full of food.
He nearly swallowed everything whole. “Bugs and flowers, Voodoo?”
He asked with a smile and a sip of tea.
Voodoo smiled more broadly and wondered what else he could say
to make Kyle laugh.
The night moved on in a peaceful silence. Voodoo was glad
he decided to just stay with Kyle. He knew the workers needed him
at South Continent, but Kyle was far more important.
Voodoo watched Kyle for several hours while Scott leafed through
photo albums, examined books hidden inside bookshelves in wall panels.
Voodoo hoped the Doctor would go to sleep sooner or later. But Kyle
merely laid on the couch his eyes slowly opened and closed as the stereo
softly played one of many thousands of recordings. Finally Scott
drew a deep breath and opened his eyes, staring back at his partner.
He forced a smile.
“Babysitting does not become you, Voodoo.” he quietly teased.
“No.” The Sentinel agreed. “But I’m not sitting a
baby. I’m guarding my Ten-she . . . or whatever-“
”Tentchi.” Kyle corrected. “It’s a short ‘N’
Voodoo smiled. He knew that, but he liked to give Kyle
a hard time whenever possible. He sat closer to Kyle and ran his
finger along the carpet. “Sometimes . . .” he started carefully,
“Sometimes I wish I could shrink down to your size, Kyle. Just for
once. Just . . . just so I can hold you while you sleep. Just
so I can hold you with my whole body, not just my hands. Just once
I’d like to sleep with you in my arms and wake before you do and hold you
while you sleep.” He ran his finger over Kyle’s hair, watching as
Kyle’s eyes started to fall under the power of sleep. “Just sometimes.”
he repeated softly and smiled grimly as Kyle’s eyes finally fell shut and
he passed on into a dark rest.
The hours slipped away. Voodoo laid Kyle in his own bed
and tucked the covers about his Tentchi’s small frame. Kyle was so
small, so frail, fading from Voodoo’s consciousness like daylight eroding
into the impenetrable darkness of a winter night.
I can still feel him, the Sentinel tried to comfort himself.
He’s still there. But it was a very small comfort. He thought
they were through all that, he thought that with their phasing, it reestablished
their link.
But . . . but it was a phenomenon for which no one had an answer.
Was he losing Kyle?
Voodoo sat against the nearby wall, resolute in his determination
to stay conscious until Kyle woke again. But one hour slipped into
another and since Cybertron had no sun to tell night from day, it didn’t
matter when people slept . . . and before he realized it, Voodoo faded
into a state of rest, the house still active by means of the stereo playing
soft melodies.
Some time later, Voodoo thought he heard something in the back
of his mind. It grew louder until he awakened and found Kyle whimpering
in agony. Voodoo sat on his knees and activated his night vision.
“Kyle?” He softly called. “Kyle, what’s wrong?”
Scott buried his head under his arms and blankets. “My
head’s going to explode, Voodoo.” He murmured weakly. He whimpered
and moved as though the pain would decease if he left the bed. He
lifted his head slightly and Voodoo gaped at the bloodied sheets and pillow.
He started to object when Kyle simply passed out.
Voodoo panicked. He laid his hand on Kyle’s back.
“Kyle?” He called. “Kyle! No! Don’t do this! Don’t do this!
Kyle, don’t leave me!”
His gaze bounced off the walls in the bedroom, searching frantically
for an answer. “Oh, Primus! What am I supposed to do? No! I
don’t want you to go . . . Kyle, I-I’d rather you not be Interfaced with
me than be dead!” Voodoo’s optics bounced off Kyle’s desk in the
front room and he remembered to call Medbay. He dashed to the visiphone
and called Jill.
“Come on!” He ordered desperately. The screen blinked
on as Jill yawned from sleep.
“V?” She greeted groggily. “V, what’s wrong?”
“Kyle . . . he’s bleeding and he passed out.” Voodoo’s
patterned skin vibrated, his hidden optics flashed.
“Okay. Bring him into Medbay. I’ll meet you there
on the landing strip.”
Voodoo didn’t worry about phone protocol. He abandoned
the desk and returned to Kyle, checking pulse and life signs. Scott
was still alive, but Voodoo had no idea if he suffered brain damage or
not. He carefully wrapped Kyle in clean blankets and cupped his love’s
tiny body in his hands. Voodoo made it just outside the threshold
of the patio when his knees gave out in grief. He bowed over, gently
holding Kyle as close to his body as he dared. “Don’t leave me.”
He begged in a whisper.
It took a couple more moments before Voodoo managed to pull himself
together. He forced himself on his feet and carefully transformed
around Kyle and took off.
Jill did not want to do anything but find the very best pillow
on Cybertron, fall into it and just sleep. Finally after nine hundred
milligrams of sleep medication and three cups of herbal tea, she found
herself wrapped in merciful darkness.
Then Voodoo called and she snapped wide awake and scampering
to put on fresh clothes and gloves. She alerted Compton, the ER CO,
and they hastily organized staff to make way for the Sentinel’s landing
They raced to the wind-beaten landing strip the second Voodoo
touched its dark metal surface. Nurses and specialists dashed to
and fro, shouting signs, reactions and orders between them. Voodoo
sat on his knees, watching them carry his love away. The Sentinel
covered his face in despair and bowed over. A terrible coldness settled
over his heart and Voodoo felt the link bleed.
Kyle opened his eyes as someone laid and oxygen mask over him.
He weakly struggled to lift his left hand and a nurse patted it back down
as Hashu administered a stimulant.
“. . . Steve . . .” Kyle weakly murmured.
Jill batted her eyes against the noise around them. “Shh,
Kyle, we’re here with you, it’ll be-“
” . . . Steve, Jill. We’ve Touched.”
Jill’s knitted in dread.
Steve trudged up one lonely hill under the hydroponics terradome.
It was his favorite place because from its flat top, a person can stare
down fifty feet into the park’s gorgeous vista of foliage.
Steve sat against one of the older trees and tried to see beyond
the glass and transparent titanium dome that contained the little green
world and its simulated sunshine.
He managed to steal just a little time to himself. Another meeting
was supposed to commence, something about the Mayor in Below being accused
of something . . . Parker didn’t have details and he didn’t care.
Everything seemed so complicated and it drove him nuts. He was married
to a beautiful, exotic woman, of whom he had no memories. Parker
felt Midnight’s anxiety trickle down their quieting link. Something
was wrong, but Steve could offer his friend no comfort. Kyle was
drifting from him, further and further . . .
Steve knew a lot of people, most of them were friends and many
others he had high regards for. But Kyle was sorta special.
Not just because Scott had saved Steve’s life more times than Steve could
possibly count, but because Kyle himself was a dynamic individual.
Always the quiet ones, Steve mused darkly. He stood and
started to retreat from his moment of solitude when pain lacerated his
brain. The sudden impact threw Steve off his feet and he fell forward,
clutching his head.
<<STEVE!>> Midnight called. <<STEVE! WHAT’S GOING
on? Steve? . . . steve? . . .st . . .>>
Something sliced his back down the vertebrae. Parker weakly
arched his back, struggling for breath and tried to see past the blood
in his eyes. More pain radiated from his head down his back and with
each wave, his awareness of Midnight faded further and further.
Steve collapsed, unable to move. Please, he begged inwardly.
Please help me. He lay there in the green grass, thinking of Kyle
. . . lying in Medbay.
* * *
He was a child lost in a huge city. The buildings towered
over him like gods, the inhabitants stared at him from their lofty heights.
He mentally called and called and called for Voodoo. But no answer
came.
Something sliced the skin off Kyle’s back and he crashed to his
knees. His breath failed and he could not cry out. Suddenly,
the silence between he and Voodoo increased a million fold and he was utterly
alone. The void devoured him. He was no longer Kyle Scott.
Some power, some great thing tore away that which made him who and what
he was. Now he was nothing, just a shadow passing through a dimension,
a wisp in the wind.
Nothing.
And he wept because his existence was forgotten . . . it must
have been forgotten because no one called him by name.
Something from a distant place heard him cry, though. It
Reached and just kindly touched him. Shame and embarrassment made
Kyle retreat from the Touch. But the contact was made. The
Touch found him again and Kyle realized there was no running away from
it. He let it Reach him one more time, though fearful it would rape
him, steal away even his name and leave his tattered self-consciousness
to the winds of non-existence.
But no such thing happened. Instead, the Touch wrapped
itself about him and embraced him tightly in equal fear.
Kyle was stunned. The Touch embraced him as though for
dear life.
Steve.
Kyle sensed a presence nearby. His bed was warm and comfortable.
He had no notion of time or day, except that by the sounds pouring from
the hall, he knew he was in Medbay, fourth floor, second wing and it was
‘day’ shift. He tried to open his eyes but found them covered.
His hands were bound securely to the bed rails. Someone checked his
temperature and he opened his mouth to say something.
“You’ve been out cold for two days, Doctor Scott.” Came
a firm voice from someone he did not recognize.
Kyle fought against the restraints. “What happened?” he
asked anxiously. “I was home with Voodoo and-“
”We finally sent him to get a little rest. He hasn’t rested
in nearly a week, or so I’ve been told. Just take it easy, Kyle.
You’ll be fine.”
Kyle twisted his hands against the restraints and inwardly cussed.
“I don’t want to be fine.” He spat sternly. “I-I need to get
out of here.”
“And do what, Doctor Scott?” The nurse returned the tone.
“You’re still recovering from the incident on Chenobis. You were
brought in because of cranial hemorrhaging. They STILL don’t know
what caused it, or if you’ll have seizures because of it. It’s a
wonder you didn’t have a stroke.”
Kyle shook his head, frustrated because he couldn’t see anything
around him, irritated because they insisted on restraining him (Gatchel’s,
idea no doubt) and anxious because he sensed something terrible was about
to happen. <<Voodoo!>> he called. <<Voodoo?>>
Ghastly silence. As broad and deep and long as the vastness
of space, the void in his soul ached as if a limb had been torn from his
body. Someone broke into him and ripped out his guts. Kyle
slammed his head against his pillow once and gasped for breath.
“Keep it up, and we’ll have to sedate you again.” The nurse
warned.
“Again?” Kyle echoed.
“We’ve been through this three times already, Doctor Scott-“
”I wasn’t aware . . . did Voodoo say when-“
”I’m sorry, Doctor Scott, I have other patients waiting.
You will have to calm down, that’s all there is to it.”
“Where’s Jill?”
“On sedatives. Good-bye, Doctor.”
Help me! He thought, I can’t even cry if I wanted to! Where
is Voodoo! Where? He strained against the bonds holding his hands.
He HATED the restraints! He squirmed and yanked to no avail, his
whole body proved powerless against them and he wept, still unable to shed
any tears.
<<Shhh.>> and the Touch came back and embraced him.
Kyle about jumped out of his skin. “Who’s that?!”
He shouted. “Who’s there?!”
“Are you alright, Doctor Scott?” Another nurse asked.
“No! I’m not alright! Who’s in the room with me?! I want out
of here!”
“Take it easy, Doctor Scott, you’ll be fine. Just relax.”
He was hallucinating. Kyle lifted his chin toward the ceiling
in frustration. What was wrong with him?
<<Kyle, hush. It’s alright. We’re alright.>>
a completely different voice . . . came over his link. Not Voodoo.
Kyle lost his wind. << . . .>> . . . << . . .>><<
Steve?>> he dared <<Steve-?!>>
<<Sh. I’m trying to sleep. Hush.>>
<<But->>
<<Go back to sleep, Kyle. We’ll talk later.
Hush. Sleep.>>
* * *
Kyle woke again some time later. Utensils tapped against
metal plates as someone set a tray of dishes on the nearby cart.
<<Get a load of this idiot, Kyle.>> Steve’s voice came
back to haunt him. <<You’re right, he’s a pompous snot-box of self-indulgence.
I’ll bet he sleeps with threesomes.>>
Kyle shook his head, unable to bat his eyes in disbelief. <<Steve?>>
<<Yup.>>
<< . . . how?>>
<<Don’t know. Except that something blew my head
open. Or at least, it felt like it.>>
<<Me too. . . .telepathy?>>
<<I don’t know, Kyle. Honestly. Oh, you’ll
love this: Gatchel is giving me a lecture on safety-going out to the park
by myself. What a blockhead! I’m willing to bet he listens
to Country music at night, has a picture of his mother in hair curlers
sitting on his desk at home and talks to himself while he watches TV.
I’m even willing to bet he wears bikini underwear. You’re a boxers
kinda guy, Kyle, whaddya think?>>
Kyle about died laughing. <<Stop it! You’re killing me!
And how do you know I wear boxers?>>
<<Hey! I’ve been around you for four thousand years, I
do know a few things about you! Oh! Ohmigod, Kyle, this guy just picked
his nose and ate it! And in front of ME!>>
Kyle laughed harder and squirmed against the restraints.
“Kyle?” Jill’s voice pulled it all to a screeching halt,
but Kyle had a hard time trying to stop laughing. He kept seeing
Gatchel in a bikini. The guy’s form was slim enough to fit into one,
no doubt . . . but Gatchel was so ugly, Kyle was sure only the guy’s mother
would approve.
Kyle drew a deep breath and tried to control himself. “Jill!
Jill, I’m so glad to hear you. Something goofy is going on.
Why are my eyes bound like this?”
McKennan forced a smile over her face. “Your eyes were
bleeding, Kyle. They don’t know why. So . . . what’s so funny?”
“Uhm . . .” Kyle didn’t know how to explain it, if he should
tell anyone at all.
<<No.>> Steve objected. <<Don’t say anything until
we know ourselves. It could be a fluke.>>
<<You mean we could just be a part of one another’s figments.>>
Kyle returned.
<<I don’t hallucinate like this, Kyle. You know that.
And neither do you.>>
Kyle drew a deep breath. “I was just thinking of Gatchel
running down the hall wearing a pair of bikini underwear.” He answered
Jill’s inquiry.
Jill’s brows wrinkled. “Kyle, you need to get out more.”
Up to this point, Kyle thought he knew Steven Marcus Parker. But
everything he thought he knew fell by the proverbial wayside each time
Steve said something-especially when a nurse attended him.
<<This ol’ girl hasn’t ‘had any’ in several weeks.
I can tell by the way she looks at me. Sorry, hon, I’m supposed to
be a married man. Oh, looket this gal, Kyle. She likes to use
needles, I can tell by the way she handles this thing. It’s a weapon,
not a tool-OUCH!>>
Kyle giggled with every description and nuance Parker sent his
way. Scott talked kind-hearted Jill into asking Gatchel (or Gotta-Itch-My-Pants
as Steve called him) to remove the blindfold. But he was denied the
request.
<<Tightwad.>> Steve spat when Kyle passed the message on
to him. <<Can you get a load of this guy? No, you’d better not. It’ll
make me jealous.>>
Kyle only smiled, so pleased someone else was there to fill the
emptiness in his soul. But then, as he grew tired, he thought of
Midnight. <<Are you two . . . has your link been severed, Steve?>>
<<No. I hope it doesn’t either. It-it’ll freak
me out. I know it sounds kinda silly, but I can’t imagine my life
without Mid.>> Steve fell quiet for a moment and Kyle could sense Parker
debated with himself. <<You know, Kyle, I about freaked when I found
out we were . . . connected. But when you started crying, I found
I just worked it all out as if it were natural. You know what I think?>>
<<What’s that, Steve?>>
<<I think all Humanoids have latent abilities toward ESP
and suchlike. I think we all have something, but not everyone has
the natural know-how. Oh, some people try to say “you can be taught”
but you can’t. It’s something that has to come natural, like . .
. like music or art. It has to come from the soul.>>
Kyle thought of Voodoo and how he missed his Partner, how he
missed Voodoo’s silly musings, too. He flexed his hands against the
restraints and wished someone would cover his cold fingers. Kyle
sighed wearily. He was worn out and frustrated because he could not
see anything. <<Something has to be done soon, Steve.>> Kyle
finally sent. <<I’m very worried. Nothing like this was ever
mentioned by Beth, or in anything we looked over. What do you think
those ghosts want with us?>>
<<You think they’re responsible for this, Kyle?>>
<<I’m damn sure of it . . . Steve. Damned sure.>>
Steve paused a moment as a nurse fed him ate a spoonful of pudding.
<<They want us for . . . bodies? As lame as that might sound, does
it make any sense to you?>>
<<Yes. Yes it does. The dream I had . . . Ptysar
said the borders between him and me will become so that I can’t tell .
. . oh gods, Steve . . . Steve? Please, please tell me I’m still me! Tell
me I’m still Kyle! Tell me I’m not some freak! I don’t want to be->>
<<Kyle, shhhh. Shhhhh.>>
His tears moistened the padding in front of his eyes and Kyle
raised his face to the ceiling again. <<I won’t be me anymore->>
<<We’re not going to let that happen.>> Steve answered
gently. He could feel Kyle’s frustration rise again, a terrible sadness
leaked down the link and Steve tried to mentally embrace his friend. <<Kyle.>>
<<I’ve . . . I’ve lost Voodoo, Steve. The link is severed.
Gone. I feel like someone has ripped me up inside and did nothing
to sew it back together. And I don’t know where he is. Do you
think he’s already lost his mind?>>
Steve thought it over carefully. <<Not yet. The impact
wasn’t fatal for you or me. It could be there is a little bit of
time.>>
<<Time for what?>>
<<To plan, Kyle. To figure out what to do.
We should sleep on it->>
<<SLEEP?!>>
<<Sleep.>> and Steve wrapped himself about Kyle’s soul
and Scott resisted at first. But he quickly calmed and relaxed and
fell asleep soon after.
Cold metal touched Kyle’s head and he flinched a little before
realizing someone was cutting the binding from his eyes.
“It’s just me, Kyle.” Kayla whispered. “It’s okay.
Just hold still. Were you asleep?”
“Yes.” Kyle replied groggily. “I-“ he squirmed in
the restraints and wished he could put Gatchel in them for a good forty-eight
hours. “I guess I’ve been a good boy. Do I get pudding for
dinner?”
Kayla blinked in surprise. “Was that a joke, Kyle?”
Scott’s face lit up with a smile. “Yes.” Actually,
he surprised himself. Kayla removed the first two layers of bandage and
sponged the area around his cheeks. “Kayla, how long have I been
out?”
“About five hours, or so. At least that’s what Voodoo says.”
“Voodoo? When did he say that?”
“Just before I came in here.”
“Is he here?”
“He said he was going to be right back.”
Kyle moaned inwardly. He felt nothing from Voodoo.
Nothing at all. Kayla clipped away the last of the gauze and sponged
the area around his eyes. Kyle forced himself to be still while she
carefully peeled the small circular pads. “How does it look?”
He asked with some dread.
“There is some blood, but it’s dried.” She reported.
“I cried yesterday. I assume that means my tear ducts work
just fine. Did they say I had broken blood vessels?”
She dabbed gently with warm water and a soft cloth, carefully
removing dried blood from his eyelashes. “I wasn’t here when V brought
you in. They just told me what was going on.”
He gripped her hand firmly but gently. “Kayla, I was attacked
by Ptysar here at Medbay. Voodoo took me home and I was alright for
a while then something shot through my head. Talk to Steve-“
”I did.” She answered deadpan. “And he said very
much the same thing. He was in the park, but then, how did you know
that? And how did he know you were ICU at the time Midnight brought him
in?”
“Midnight brought him in?” Kyle loved the warm water Kayla
used over his eyes. It felt good. And it felt good to be attended
by her. Perhaps at any other time, Kyle would have laughed at himself
about his feelings. But he really didn’t think his feelings for here
were a laughing matter.
Not after she kissed him.
Kayla patted his face dry and Kyle slowly lifted his eyes.
It took a little effort because there was still some blood sealing the
inner rims. But her smiling face greeted him and warmed his heart.
Kyle returned the smile. “Hello, Kayla.” He said softly.
He had to stay for observation purposes, but Kyle was well enough
to begin thinking of other things. He had planning to do and worked
while Steve slept. He tried to keep his demeanor light as Steve told
him distance was beginning to form between he and Midnight. Kyle
knew time was shorter than he cared to think. He mentally recalled
all the things discussed in the meeting, all the information they gleaned
from the journal, some things Jill brought back with her and the scroll
Kayla found. Somewhere there had to be a weapon they could use.
<<Can’t kill a ghost.>> Steve grunted.
<<Playing peeping tom?>> Kyle grinned.
<<You’re a loud thinker.>> Parker returned.
<<Funny. Voodoo never complains.>>
<<I’m not Voodoo, I’m cuter than that.>>
<<That’s it!>> Kyle announced. <<I’m learning shields!>>
<<The whole thing is temporary, Kyle. I’m sure once
we bag these ghosts, you and I will no longer be making these long-distance
phone calls.>>
<<What did you say?>>
Steve stuttered mentally, suddenly caught off guard. <<The
whole thing is->>
<<No, about ‘bagging’. You said ‘I’m sure once we bag these
ghosts-Steve, that’s exactly what we have to do!>>
Parker was dumbfounded.
Kyle grunted, amused. <<You know, I recall somewhere in
the journal Beth mentioned a broken jar. Do you recall that?>>
<<My name is Steve Parker. I remember that.>>
<<Alright, Smarty. How about this: “Mordi 17.
We’ve broken through. There’s furniture and an alter, bowls, vases
and jewelry. We found the alter is a false alter with a secret door
just behind it. We open that in two days after taking inventory.
We found three dead cats in the alter and a beautiful dark blue glass
jar. How it was made is unclear. There are symbols all around
the jar painted in red. I really want to take it home.”>>
<<You know, I hate it when you do that.>> Steve teased.
<<I wish you could teach me.>>
<<Me too.>> Kyle answered wistfully. <<But what I’m
getting at is the jar. None of the things Beth mentioned in her journal
were there.>>
<<Well, if you recall, Kayla found the scroll in Rychal’s
tent. What does that say?>>
<<These people were archeologists, Steve.>>
Kyle could feel Parker frown. <<That doesn’t mean some
of them weren’t thieves, Kyle.>>
<<True. But, Steve, Beth made no mention of the tanks,
the cabinets, the files, the control panel on the door . .. What
gives?>>
<<It could be at the time of discovery, much of that equipment
was covered, wouldn’t you think? The place was sealed-with dirt.>>
<<Yeah . . . what of the other things, the dog statues,
the jewelry she mentioned->>
<<Kyle, what if, what if the so-called jewelry wasn’t jewelry?
What if she assumed it was jewelry? What if it was more like remote controls
you wear around your wrists?>>
<<Ahh. It’s funny how reading her descriptions gave
the impression she was looking into some ancient tomb, rather than the
star ship of some advanced civilization.>>
<<Maybe she didn’t have the words to describe what they
saw.>> Steve thought about what Mid told him of the half-buried ship, the
mounds of graves on top, all the things neither he, nor his companions
ever saw. It was freaky to think that Mid had the ability to see
past the alien shields and holographic projections.
And Steve wondered about the ‘liquid figure’ that led he and
Kyle to safety. Was that a result of the Interface? Another
ability, perhaps? And there was something else that bothered him:
Kyle was still able to recite what he himself read word-for-word while
only half conscious. Kyle surprised him from time to time.
Though he’d never say it, Steve suspected Kyle had the latent ability to
transfer information from his subconscious to his conscious mind at will.
It would certainly explain how he knew Steve was nearly attacked by the
dog-beast while visiting Kyle just after the very first encounter.
Parker considered asking his friend, but didn’t think this was the right
time.
He stared out the windows from his own personal room in Medbay
(and still couldn’t get over the fact that Kyle bought the place for him).
<<What about the jar, Kyle?>>
<<I think the dog-beasts were contained there. I
think that’s where they were-but I have no way of proving that. There’s
no way we can find the jar. All we have are assumptions.>>
<<Well, we have one fact: they don’t like glass.
They can’t cross into it. So how would you lure two blood-thirsty
ghosts into a glass prison?>>
Kyle fell very quiet, now, considering. <<They can’t pass
through it . . . what if they could, but at the cost of losing something,
some part of their essence?>>
<<How can a ghost-or anything for that matter-loose its
essence? Are you saying the dog-beasts won’t attempt to cross glass because
it really will hurt them?>>
<<“Might have something do to with the steadfast properties
of silicon. Or light refraction. Maybe sound.” that’s what
Doctor Glibson suggested . . .>> Kyle did not know how he managed to recall
that, but he did. He frowned and stared at his hands, still bound
to the bed.
<<What’s that?>> Steve asked.
<<The steadfast properties of silicon. Or light refraction.
Maybe sound.>> Kyle repeated. But both of them fell quiet the next
minute. Kyle kept going over Glibson’s observation. Somehow, it didn’t
seem right; the silicon idea, anyway. Light may not also have anything
to do with it-they were ghosts and if they could seep through walls, murder
people en mass, move objects or devour memories, what would or could imprison
them?
Steve’s thoughts kept going back to the restaurant he and Kyle
visited on their first trip to Chenobis. Kyle defied it with a simple
drinking glass. So it wasn’t the amount of glass, or the thickness
of glass-and he remembered the first time he saw the dog-beast in the hydroponics
at Medbay. Sound? Sound? Or was it the impact of sound?
<<Kyle?>>
<<Yes?>>
<<What about the impact of sound? What if it’s the sound
of glass, the impact it makes? It doesn’t matter how thick or thin
glass is, the ghosts react to it the same way.>>
. . . liquid without feeling wet. Kyle flinched when he
recalled the attack in his office not more than a few days ago.
Visions of a drop of water hitting glass came to mind.
The drop of water had a face to it. The face didn’t fall,
however, it slammed into something and could not go through it. It
slammed time after time, forcing itself, but unable to penetrate the glass.
<<Unless there was a way to hit them so hard, so suddenly,
they were forced into the jar.>> he thought carefully.
Steve turned very perplexed. <<What?>>
<<Well, if these things can pass through all the things
we’ve seen them pass, why would glass be the exception? Why does it have
to be? What if, what if they can go through glass, but only at an extreme
velocity?>>
As crazy as it sounded, Steve knew what Kyle was saying.
He remembered something about a girl and a crossbow and a glass jar and
the speed. The impact. The horrible resultant pain. And
the anger, oh, the anger! Parker shook his head. Where did
that memory come from? And was that the answer?
<<Kyle, what if the jar was indeed a holding cell of sorts,
and what if the ghosts were caught at such a high speed->>
<<A shooting bullet, perhaps?>>
<<Okay, a shooting bullet-that they could not resist passing
through the glass. And what if after ending up in the jar, it was
capped and they could not pass through because there was no way they could
regain that velocity?>>
It made sense. Kyle remembered being able to run from Ptysar
by bus. The ghosts weren’t fast, just clever. He settled back.
<<Faster than a speeding bullet.>>
* * *
Two days later, the two were released from the hospital.
Steve was immediately called away to a meeting. He and Kyle still
did not know how to tell anyone about their new link. Kyle anticipated
some difficulties until they could get it all straightened out. The
best part was, however, they could communicate when they chose. But
the downside started to reveal itself as Kyle began to exhibit signs of
an empathic link.
With a promise he’d try to be good, Steve bade good-bye and boarded
Midnight.
Kyle watched them take off and disappear beyond the multitude
of skyscrapers. Voodoo was patiently waiting for him.
“What will you do now, Kyle?” The Sentinel asked quietly.
Kyle let him fly, having no desire to weave in and around traffic,
or bother with remembering if he could fly. He recalled the conversation
between he and Steve and the tentative plan he worked out the day before.
“I need to go shopping, Voodoo.” He finally answered.
“I have a weapon to make.”
* * *
Cathy-Lee sat at her couch, drinking lemonade with three eyeballs
swimming around in it. One of them winked at her as she reached to
take a sip. The news came on the TV and she lowered the newspaper
in her hand. The reporter expressionlessly spoke of food shortage
around the world and how the business communities around the world were
closing one or several at a time.
A coldness covered Cathy’s skin and she glanced around to see
who it was. No one was in the room, however and she looked back at
the TV and saw it was looking at her.
“What are you staring at?” She asked it. “Mind your
own business.” and she went back to reading the paper.
It kept staring at her.
She snapped the paper down and glared at the TV. “I SAID, mind
your own business!”
The very next minute, she found herself ramming her coffee table
into the screen and out poured billions of tiny dark spider. She
screamed and stepped all over them to run away and then they mutated and
turned into disgusting long white worms and they started to wrap themselves
around her ankles.
And the coldness came back and wrapped itself about her and Cathy
fell through her floor and down, down, down.
She sprung up from her couch with a start, finding the TV and
her kitchen lights on, a cup of coffee on her table and an email flashing
on her computer.
Cathy-Lee stumbled off the couch and accepted the email.
“Hi, Cathy,” it read and instantly she knew it was from Jeff.
“Coming home soon. Miss you. Love J.”
Russell sank to the floor and breathed a great sigh. An
alarm struck the air and she startled with a cry of surprise.
It was time to go to work.
* * *
Kyle traversed the mall the following day. Like other Tentchi,
he had not slept well, if at all in the last two days. The silent
link between he and Voodoo threatened to drive Doctor Scott out of his
mind. Steve’s presence helped to alleviate some of the torment, but
not all of it; his connection to Steve was not the same as Voodoo.
The background noise from Voodoo had been there so long, Kyle
could not be anywhere without noise of some kind. He grew accustomed
to carrying a crystal music player everywhere. It helped to some
degree.
The mall walkers passed him by, their faces bent on whatever
their errands required. A great many young people came and left,
their laughter hanging in the air like little chimes. Kyle smiled
as a couple of giggling girls caught him returning their stare. The
cuter of the two, a curly blonde with a hat, turned away in terrible embarrassment.
Her friend laughed hard. “Josi thinks you’re cute!”
She shouted at Kyle.
Doctor Scott graciously smiled. “Likewise, Ma’am.”
He returned with a touch of his hat. Josi peered over her shoulder,
her eyes shining as Kyle walked on.
Kyle passed by a bookstore and a few eateries. He even
passed by an indoor garden shop and stepped into a jewelry store. Peeling
off his hat like a gentleman should, Kyle approached a clerk.
The chubby lady greeted him cordially, then recognition touched
her eyes. “Doctor Scott!” She greeted warmly. “Hello!”
Kyle had no idea who she was, but he used the customary procedures:
greet the person as if you know them and hope they reveal their name to
you sooner than later. “Hello-“ and he found her name tag-“Patty.”
“What can I do for you today, Doctor?”
“Uh, a very odd request. I hope you can fulfill it.”
She held her hands aloft, palms to the ceiling. “That’s
what we’re here for.” And she laughed.
Kyle smiled and waited for her to listen. “I need to find
someone who can blow glass bullets.”
She blinked. “Glass bullets?”
“Yes. The price is inconsequential and I will pay three-fourths
up front. They have to be exactly the size of my specifications.”
He produced a small tablet from his pocket and flipped the cover and handed
her the designs.
Patty mused over it then gave him a quizzical expression.
“One point seventy five millimeters circular and three millimeters tall,
Doctor Scott?”
“Yes.” Kyle replied quietly. “Is that too small?”
“No.” She gazed at the plans again. “And you want
an air bubble in the center?”
“As dead center as you can possibly make it.”
“Souvenirs, Doctor?”
“A medical procedure.” He read the frightened look on her
face and added a smile to his answer.
Then she lightly laughed. “For a moment, I thought you
were serious!”
“How soon can this be done?”
“Mmm . . . week or so-“
”I need it in the next six days if possible.”
“Six days?”
“Yes. It’s . . . a gift.”
“Just one bullet?”
Kyle opened his wallet and found his bank card. “No.
Make it four. Just in case two doesn’t do the job.”
Patty nodded and charged him. “They’re not doing much anyway.
I’ll have them start right on it.” She offered him a wink and Kyle
smiled in turn.
“Thank you.” He replaced his hat and departed. He
would have to make the gun himself.
* * *
It ripped her wide open and Shan laid there, drained of life while
an unholy thing stretched its fetal form before her. Its wings glistened
with birthing fluids and its eyeless face stared at her with mild consideration.
“Mother.” It whispered and it reached for her and laid
its sickly, sticky lips on hers, its wings fanned and folded.
Shan sat up in bed again and wept in frustration.
“LEAVE ME ALONE!” she shrieked to no one in the room. She
rolled over and slammed the button on the visaphone.
“Hey.” Nick answered, rubbing his sleep-groggy face.
“I had another one.” Shan sobbed miserably. “I don’t
know what to do.”
“Hon, go see if Kyle’s awake. Maybe he can give you something
for it.” He waited a beat. “Shan?”
She sat on the bed, her slim figure hunched over in grief.
“I gave birth again.” She murmured.
Nick laid his hands on either side of the visiphone and sighed
deeply. The remnants of his own dream still plagued him. “Hon,
I know it’s freaky. Go to Medbay, explain. I’m sure someone
can help you.”
* * *
Jill unrolled the scroll and set two glass paperweights on either
side to keep it down. She hated the scroll more than anything else
she’d seen. It made no faces at her this time, but it vibrated with
evil and sent chills down her back.
<<Jill?>>
<<Hi, Wolf.>>
<<Everything okay?>>
<<Mostly. Nothing’s reached out and tried to choke
me, if that’s what you’re asking.>>
Jill came across the ‘prince’ word again. This time it
accompanied ‘ragchash’ meaning ‘cursed’. Her lips lined in uncertainty.
<<Will you be okay?>> Wolf asked after a moment.
<<Yeah.>> McKennan passed off. <<Steve said I can
call him if there’s a problem.>>
She lined ‘bogknau aud a’ran’ with ‘ragchash’ but found the word
‘ragchash’ was changed to ‘ruthu’ which was another word for ‘murder’.
The girl grunted impatiently. What was all this about? Were the scientists
murdered? Well, it was said the science community was killed . .
. She sighed heavily.
She sprawled paper print-outs from one corner of the library
to the other. She taped the most important pieces to the glass walls.
On the conference table lay tablets and notepads, binders and six dictionaries.
A tape recorder stood on end, recording every movement, every little noise
she made.
“I don’t know.” She sighed wearily. “Zhagk
. . . demon. But there’s no plural like there is in the journal.
I’m finding a discrepancy here, as if something were mistranslated.
“I’m finding things like bogknau aud a’ran which means ‘people of learning’
and transliterated as scientists and the word ‘prithanay’ which means ‘to
die by violent means.”
She moaned and thought about taking a break, “I think Steve should
just come in here and read this out for me.”
Jill re-examined the journal, the scroll and a particular picture
she took of the dog drawing. Four words: Princes, demon king and
curse. She sat down, her eyes shot from corner to corner as she tried
to piece the mystery together.
And the scroll started to smoke. Jill jumped to her feet
and poured water in a cup. She turned to douse the flame and found
the scroll was no longer on the table.
Jill patted her hands over the table top, damned sure nothing
could just disappear like that. Not like that. She kept patting the
table, confounded. Then she stood very still and silently fumed while
Skywolf nagged her about the problem. Her eyes ran back and forth
over the table’s surface, finding not one clue of fire or smoke.
And one tiny area of the table lay shadowed just under the paperweight.
Jill realized she was not playing with a simple scroll, but an intelligence.
She approached the table and pointed at it.
“Lachna, Yawk nanath!” She cussed in her own language.
She still stared at it and then did the unthinkable: she pulled a table
knife from the cupboard and stabbed the visible discoloring. Instantly
the scroll reappeared and a face reformed from the letters. It looked
like it was spitting at her. Jill lost her temper and stabbed it
between the eyes. “SHUT UP!!” she screamed.
Jill did not sleep for two days after that. Skywolf grieved
over her inability to sleep. But her mind ran like a doctor racing
against the clock. The library which she now inhabited was pasted
floor to ceiling with photos printouts. She couldn’t figure it out.
There were layers of things the camera picked up and she did not know how
or when to call Kyle and let him know that the ravine was haunted.
Jill printed one photo, went back to it later in the recorder and printed
it again but ended up with something slightly different.
She placed the scroll in a small containment field to keep its
energies away from her. But it still affected her in ways she could
not put into words. The thing caused her vision to shift and her
mind spun in endless hallucinations. It was all Jill could do to
keep her head on straight. She cussed at it continuously, but refused
to give up.
Finally she turned back to the cubical and glared at the scroll.
“All I ask is an answer. Who are Ptysar and Xesnex? That’s
all I ask. I know about the deaths, the obliteration of one continent
on Chenobis. I know about the murders and the rape. But where
do the ghosts fit in?”
No answer.
Jill sighed in frustration and poured her umteenth cup of coffee.
She sat at the table, her eyes stabbing the pin-ups as though willing them
to speak to her. She cast her eyes at the cup of coffee, took a sip,
ordered herself to remain awake.
Don’t sleep.
Don’t sleep.
Stay . . . a . . .wake . . .
The alien freaks murdered her lover right before her eyes.
She cried for him and her House. They stripped Queen Gani Yi of her
crown and clothes. The monsters slaughtered her daughters and nieces
before her four eyes. Then they dragged her and her sons outside
the castle walls. Their hideous dark hides glinted cold in the smoky
sun. The monsters forced Gani Yi to her knees and drew blades from
the pockets of their hides.
She forced a smile, staring at her youngest boy, the pride of
the family. “Be strong.” She told him. “Be strong for
mama. Take care of your brother.”
And they sliced into her arms.
She mouthed the words ‘I love you’ as the blades slashed pieces
of her flesh, sending waves of searing pain into her dark skin. But
Gani Yi would not give the freaks the pleasure of her screams.
And they sliced off her head.
Jill sat up with a start and started to cry. It was okay.
She was okay. It was just a dream. She stood and wiped her face.
McKennan recalled the dream: Two little boys. A queen mother-and
something clicked.
“They ARE Chenobians!” She cried. “Oh gods, ohmigod!
They ARE Chenobians!” She ignored Skywolf’s demands to let him in
on what was exciting her. She activated the visiphone and called.
Kyle
“Come on!” She urged. “Kyle, please be home!”
But he was not. The answering system came on and Jill about
panicked. “Kyle!” she cried. “Kyle! If you’re home, you’ve got to
pick up the receiver! Kyle! Kyle I figured it out! The
ghosts-the journal-Beth mistranslated! It’s all backwards, Kyle!
There was only one demon, one alien but two princes-and THEY are Chenobian,
Kyle! You’re not dealing with an alien force, but supernatural! It
might explain the glass, the need to feed on living energy, and why they
won’t take on Transformer life force-it’s the wrong frequency! Kyle,
CALL ME!”
* * *
Kayla considered going back to work the next day but voted against
it, deciding to stay home instead. She panned over her mail and worked
a little on her embroidery.
Lost in thought, she almost didn’t hear the door buzz for attention.
She jumped and opened the door for Shan.
“I need to do some serious shopping.” Shan said without
preamble. She walked right in and crossed her arms, her dark blue
eyes stared through the Kshi. “And I don’t want to go alone.”
Kayla was surprised Shan was asking her. She blinked.
“Come on in. I’ll change clothes.”
Shan examined the pictures on the walls while Kayla swiftly departed
for her room. “Where’s Cathy?” She asked from her closet.
“On business.” Shan groused. “She wanted to come,
but couldn’t make it until later and Roddy wants me at that awful Nagk
meeting tonight.”
Kayla came back wearing a pair of blue jeans and pulled over
a shaker sweater. Her dark hair swung freely about her shoulders
and Shan smiled.
“What? Does it look awkward?” The tall dark lady asked,
freezing in position.
“No.” Shan shook her head. “It looks really great.”
Not so sure, Kayla pulled a jacket over the sweater and she smiled
bashfully. Shan was thinking of a time Kyle stared at Kayla in that
same sweater.
But all that was gone. Kyle was lucky if he remembered
anybody’s name let alone how he felt about them.
Kayla peeked about the crafts section, seeking ideas for a new
project. She thought of creating a photo album, but didn’t know what
theme to base it on. She thought of putting one together for Kyle,
but honestly, the Kshi had no idea where to start or if she had any photos
worth using. She also thought of putting something together for Ashtar,
but didn’t know if Ash liked flower wreaths or swags. Cathy did.
Well, over time, Cathy did.
“Hey, Kayla.” Shan called, “Lookit this.”
Kayla rounded three wrong isles before finding Shan in an isle
full of woven baskets and ceramic vases. She plucked up a shallow
basket and twirled it one way then another. “I guess for long-stemmed
flowers, huh?” Her bright eyes caught the empath’s silent stare and
Kayla slightly flushed. “I supposed you could use one of those foam
bases and stick in hundreds of tiny flowers into it and place a salt-and-pepper
shaker set on either side for a table center piece. A ribbon at the
top would be pretty too.”
Shan shrugged. She herself was not into arts and crafts-she
liked stuff like that, but could never figure out how to put it together.
She replaced the item and glanced at other pieces hanging from hooks.
“Didja find anything?”
“No.” Kayla answered softly. “Not today.”
Shan gave her a swift but guilty glance. “There’s a really
nice candy store down the way. Wanna go?”
Kayla nodded. She never shopped very often and felt a bit
out of place. She followed Shan toward the exit when something caught
her eye: a series of unpainted ceramic trolls. She bent closer to
the merchandise, examining each crafted piece for potential flaws.
“I guess I found something after all.” She lifted one and turned
it one way then another while Shan waited.
Outside the craft store, Shan caught Cathy swiftly making her
way through the crowd. Shan lit up, excited and waved an arm.
“Cathy!” She called. “Hey!” She pressed her way between two
paying customers and out the shop into the mall’s sectionway. “Cathy!”
She called again.
A terrible force of stone slammed into Kayla’s right side and
she hit an endcap. Two hooks ran into her left arm, exiting out the
other side. She moaned in pain and pushed herself away. But
whatever hit her to begin with, kicked her in the ribs and she hit her
head against other hooks. Blood poured down her head.
“Hey you!” A clerk shouted. “I’m calling security right-“
A stream of water and blood shot out from the stranger’s arm
and sliced the lady clerk’s head off her shoulders. Customers and
co-workers panicked, their attempts to leave the scene were met with isles
blocked by merchandise and other fleeing bodies.
The stranger, cloaked in grey and dark robes lifted Kayla and
a stream of water and blood rushed toward her face. But as Kayla
was brought up, her hand grasped a sculptured glass dragon and she stabbed
her attacker with it.
The creature dropped her, a sound, humanoid/inhumanoid resounded
off the walls and mirrors cracked under its spell.
Shan and Cathy bounded in, aiming for the dog-beast on two fronts.
It split in half, two rivers of blood and water raced about the
room, the sounds of deadmen moaned as it passed over shelves and countertop
displays. One stream chased a female customer while Shan tried to
lift Kayla out of the shop.
The poor customer uttered a sound that could not be described
by words. Her body was pulled inside out before the monster devoured
her before three witnesses.
It was Cathy that dealt a final blow. She picked up a slender
glass vase, broke off the end.
The aim proved true and the alien creature shot straight to the
ceiling.
“CATHY!” Shan screamed. “GET OUT OF THERE! CATHY!
CATHY!”
Russell wasted no more time. She kicked her heeled shoes
off and leapt over a register counter and out the store as the two alien
parts shot back together and spread out like a cloud. It swiftly descended,
killing the three people who failed to leave on time. Then it gathered
itself and disappeared through the ceiling.
Kayla fainted in Shan’s arms.
* * *
Kyle felt well enough the following few days to return to Medlab.
Voodoo didn’t mind so much (since he had to get back to work) as the nurses
in Reception promised to look after Kyle for him and inform him should
something go wrong. Kyle merely made a beeline back to his office.
This time he spent several hours musing over his books. Some of his
private library turned out to be very ancient, extremely valuable.
He had text on species of aliens he could not recall and notes on the inside
of some covers, indicating which alien species were extinct.
Kyle shook his head, considering his life span. On one
shelf, Kyle discovered a scrap book. He had to use both hands just
to tug it off the shelf. He sat at his desk, carefully setting the
book in the center.
Photographs, organic samples of trees, bugs, DNA samples, lists
and lists and more lists of names and numbers and brief descriptions of
people. His face twisted in puzzlement. He turned back to the
beginning and found a crystal recording. He pulled that out and set
it in the computer.
“Well, it’s done.” He heard himself sigh. “It seems so
odd that I would collect such a thing. But at least here is a memorial
of a dead civilization. We could not stop the slaughter. We
could not find a cure. But here it all is; the only outside evidence
of Nebulos.” Kyle turned it off and stared at it. A dead civilization?
He leaned back in his chair, his finger rested across his lips
in thought. What caused the death of an entire people? Did he have
anything else like this?
A little boy’s voice filtered through the silent halls.
He talked to someone incoherently, but incessantly. Words came all
jumbled and ended with affirmation. Someone else’s voice answered,
an older, calmer boy.
Footsteps echoed eerily and Kyle gazed up from his studies and
spotted two ghostly boys as they passed his office. He took to his
feet and watched them as they slowly moved on. Their forms were not
solid, their movements echoed as though out of time sequence. The
little boy kept talking, his voice now a bit clearer, spoke of great heros
and warriors. He spoke of their deeds and their deaths.
“ . . . And I’m gonna be one too. Mamma said I could.”
The older boy, not more than thirteen, shook his head. “You get
the strangest of ideas.”
“My ideas aren’t strange.” The child protested. “I’m
a hero. All those monsters died like they were supposed to.
But you keep wanting to drink their blood. How come?”
The older boys shrugged. “Just something to do, I guess.”
The little boy pointed a thumb over his shoulder toward Kyle.
“I get to keep him. I found him first.”
Kyle sat up with a start, gasping. He found himself in his office,
a pile of folders under his arms. At first he recognized nothing.
His eyes took in the TV, the eight book cases, the computer, a small hanging
garden and three file cabinets. But nothing registered until he found
a coffee cup lying on the floor, its contents spilled . . . and it reminded
him of something but Kyle could not grasp the memory. He staggered
to his feet.
*DOCTOR SCOTT TO EMERGENCY WARD, PLEASE. DOCTOR SCOTT TO
EMERGENCY WARD. DOCTOR MEIER TO EMERGENCY, PLEASE, DOCTOR MEIER TO
EMERGENCY.*
Kyle swept up his coat. They were calling Meier, too?
The blood loss must be very substantial to call him in. Kyle raced
down the hall and stopped abruptly when the older boy in his dream appeared
from nowhere and smiled viciously then disappeared. Kyle froze for
a moment then immediately hauled out his communicator. “Caprice!
Pull those people into the observation ward! Caprice!”
He broke into a sprint, taking the stairway rather than the elevator.
He ran five stairs down, then jumped to the next level and repeated the
process two more times. He whacked through the doors and swept up a mask
as seven people were wheeled in. Kyle pointed to the left.
“Observation.” He ordered stoutly.
“Doctor McDere-“ the paramedic stopped cold when he realized
Kyle stared at him. “Yes, Doctor.”
They pushed their patients into the auditorium and nurses rushed
to pull carts of supplies and curtains as one patient after another was
brought in.
“What’s the meaning of this?” Someone demanded. She
was short but mighty. Doctor Compton made a beeline right for Kyle.
And gave him ‘the eye’.
“These patients are victims.” Kyle answered evenly.
“If we don’t try to protect them-“
”This is MY ward, Kyle, you are here because you enjoy helping.
We like to have you here. But everything is done through ME.
Got it?”
“If we don’t get these patients behind glass, they will be attacked
again-“
”MY. WARD.” Compton snarled again. She turned as patient
number five came in and pointed toward the regular emergency facility.
Kyle about lost it. He cringed and turned away when Patient
Number Five started screaming. Nurses and three doctors rushed to
help but Kyle knew . . .their shouts did nothing to save the patient’s
life. Kyle heard him gurgle, drowning in his own blood.
And the next patient came in: Kayla.
Kyle silently pointed to the observation room and the medics
complied without question.
They stabilized those six whom Kyle managed to send to Observation.
Meier had to work on three transfusions and kept a constant vigil on each
of them. Kyle operated six hours straight that afternoon, reattaching
blood veins, sewing up burst organs and realigning broken bones.
He finally collapsed into a chair, keeping an eye on Kayla as
she slept. Kyle nearly fell asleep himself when footfalls entered
his ears.
“Doctor Scott.” Compton’s tight voice brought him off the
edge of a dream and he blinked himself awake. “I owe you a sincere
apology. How did you know?”
“Premonition.” Kyle answered quietly.
She frowned and turned away.
* * *
They all poured back into the council chamber. After another half
an hour of insults, temper tantrums and accusations, Optimus called for
yet another break.
Well, at least it was a break Prime was calling, and not everyone
just getting up and walking out because of bad manners, Parker mused.
Two days! Two days of the same head-numbing nonsense!
Well, no. This was not a part of the Nagk conferences.
Reports from Level six, West Central rolled off the mayor’s tongue
like toothpicks. She had a hard time speaking Common Cybertronian
and it made everyone weary. Mid kept working on the finer details
for the next Nagk meeting since Rodimus was called away to an emergency
in Below. Steve didn’t catch the details except there had been a
serious fight.
The mayor finally moved from the rations report to the power
reserves, accounting for every jot and ounce used. The reason for
her being there were complaints of theft by those in charge. To settle
the matter, a meeting was set up so the mayor could account for everything.
Frankly, Steve couldn’t care less. He was asked to be there
because he represented the Human side of the situation. His mind
lingered back to his own problems with his wife and his friends.
Steve frowned and played with a pen between his fingers. He laid
it down and tried to stifle a yawn. The mayor moved from the power
supply report to the waste management and her terrible droning continued
like the torture of a dipping faucet. Steve set the pen down and
stared at it. It just lay there like a dead thing. He fingered
it, moving it this way, that, but remained subtle so as not to annoy anyone
else. Then he tucked his hands under the table and just continued
to stare at the pen. For some reason, he commanded it to move right.
It moved right.
Parker swallowed air and slammed his hand on it. Then he
glanced about to see if anyone else noticed his sudden movement.
His heart jumped and he lifted his hand and stared at it again. He
silently ordered it to move left.
It moved left and he grabbed it off the table, his eyes wide
with silent shock.
<< . . . steve?>> Mid’s voice managed to filter in. <<
. . . what’s wrong? . . . fidgeting.>>
<<Nothing.>> Steve swallowed hard. <<Just imagining
things, that’s all. Just goofing off.>>
Optimus Prime broke in here, “I think we’ll take a break at this
point.” His voice overpowered the mayor’s and she gazed up at him,
blinking a set of huge saucer-shaped eyes.
“Ze vaste minigmint r’prt eesn’t feeneeshed. Zer izz seex mur
peeges-“
”We are taking a break.” Prime repeated and he himself
rose first and exited the room. The others filed out one at a time
until Steve remained. Mid stared at his Partner for a long moment
until Steve produced the pen. He held it horizontally in the air
and waited three seconds before releasing it. He held it aloft with
just a thought.
“Steve!” Mid gasped. “How are you doing that?”
“I don’t know.” Steve shook his head, his voice remained
soft. He concentrated, ordering the pen to spin sideways then switch
direction and spin up and down and it did both. It seemed so normal
a thing.
But Midnight was freaked and he grasped the object as though
it were bewitched. Steve remained calm. He crossed his arms
and turned to his Dokiah. “I think I’m going to visit Kyle.”
“Saw him yesterday.” Mid pointed.
“No. I saw Nick yesterday. He said he’s been having
some really bad dreams in the last couple of days. I told him he
was just working too hard.” Parker shrugged. “I don’t know.”
The doors opened and Steve and Midnight turned, expecting the
other Council Members to enter. Instead it was an Autobot communications
clerk holding a digipad in her hands. “Captain Parker?” She
addressed.
“Yeah.” Steve blinked, grateful the meeting wasn’t going
to recommence so soon.
“Message from Doctor Scott. He says Kayla is in the emergency.”
Steve cussed softly.
“I’ll take you there, Steve.” Midnight offered.
“No. You’re needed here. I’ll be okay.” He
swept his coat off the chair and met Midnight’s concerned expression.
“I’ll let you know how it is, you know I will.”
Midnight silently nodded but inside he ached. Steve’s presence
was fading further and further from him and while Midnight suppressed the
urge to keep his partner close to him, he understood Steve had responsibilities,
too. It was hard to let go, especially now that the Sentinel leader
sensed it might be the last time he’d see his Tentchi.
* * *
The baleful thunder rose, crying a harbinger of death.
Smoke enshrouded sunlight and plunged the world into shadow. The
terrible sound of buzzing engines hummed overhead and their music preceded
several great black ships propagating a plaque of the devil’s own savages.
As a bloodied sun dipped beyond the smoky horizon, eight
ran’kas tramped the ground with sure-footedness. They bore eight
of Chenobis’ greatest generals. Nanag against alien invader-flesh
pitted against cold unfeeling exoskeleton.
D’Than scanned the carnage, knowing his men were doomed.
But, he thought, better dead than enslaved by these abominations.
Better dead than live to watch the fall of civilization.
By the end of the day, the space demons slaughtered every last
Nanag soldier in their path. Not one was spared even to sign a truce.
For D’Than, no regrets. Not for the lives of his people,
his country, his wife and son.
D’Than’s face was crushed and he lived long enough to hear the
victory yelps of demon spawn. He heard them laugh and clash weapons.
Blood raced over the fields.
And the women screamed.
Kyle startled out of sleep when the screams faded into the cries
of an alarm.
“No. Shh.” Steve’s face came into view and Kyle shuddered
and turned away.
Steve peeled off his coat. “You’d think they were trying
to use patients as cryogenics subjects, not save them.” His complaint
of the cold air went unheard as he laid his coat over Kyle’s shoulders.
Then he knelt beside his friend. “I got the message, Kyle.” he said
softly. “I got here as fast as I could. How is she?”
“Out of danger.” Kyle murmured. “But we’re keeping
her here just in case she goes back into shock.” He slipped his hands
from under Steve’s black leather coat and rubbed his face.
Steve approached the bedside and stared into Kayla’s face.
She was pale, laying on the bed like an angel unconscious with cold.
He ran his finger affectionately round the inside of her curved horned.
Normally it would earn him a sharp but amused glance from the lady empath.
Steve knew Kayla would never admit she was ticklish there. But the
lack of response from her made him gravely withdraw and Steve glanced at
Kayla’s chart dangling over Kyle’s head. He swiftly counted the checks
marked by Kyle himself and blinked. Steve stared at Kyle then narrowed
his eyes “When was the last time you had something to eat?”
Kyle shrugged.
“Let’s go get some coffee.”
“I’m not hungry, Steve.” Kyle argued.
“Yes you are. Come on, get up.” Steve laid a hand behind
Scott’s back and pulled him up. Kyle did not fight but his eyes remained
on Kayla. Steve lowered toward Kyle’s ear to whisper, “She’ll be
okay.” he assured his friend.
Compton walked in at that moment bearing a clipboard.
“Won’t she, Doc?” Steve said loudly to Compton.
The short woman stared at Parker as though he were infectious.
“What’s that, Captain?” She spired in her most authoitive voice.
“I’m trying to buy Kyle something to eat, but he seems to think
Kayla is going to jump out of bed and run away.”
Kyle looked sheepish.
Compton stared at Steve’s intense blue eyes and nodded firmly.
“Of course.” She answered. “Someone will come in to check on
her in a moment.”
Pleased that she understood what he meant, Steve rested his hand
across Kyle’s shoulders and led him out.
Kyle remained abysmally somber. They traversed the hallway
in silence and entered the elevator. “Downstairs.” He ordered.
The doors rumbled shut and the elevator slipped down one floor then two.
He crossed his arms. “What happened, Kyle? How did that happen?”
It was the one thing that called Scott out of his mood.
The professional side took over, but he still did not make eye contact.
“Kayla and Shan were in the mall when Kayla was attacked. Or so Shan
said. She saw Cathy and called to her when the ghost-dog appeared
from nowhere and attacked Kayla.” He paused a moment, his brows winkled.
Kyle narrowed his eyes, considering something he hadn’t thought of before.
“Why does it keep trying to attack Kayla?” He really wasn’t asking
Steve.
Parker stared at him a moment. Kyle’s eyes glued to one
corner of the elevator. Steve’s coat draped over the doctor’s shoulder
line like an inanimate hug and Kyle held on to it like a security blanket.
His mouth was tight with worry. “Kyle,” Steve softly called, “I want you
to realize that what happened wasn’t your fault. Not be any means.
You did nothing to cause it.”
Kyle shot him a swift glance, a deep breath came with the intent
of an argument. “Steve-“
Parker held up a finger to silence the doctor. “Auh-Not
one more word out of you.” he ordered softly but sternly. “There
is no law in the universe that says ‘the ghosts are Kyle’s fault.’
None. What happened to Kayla was incidental.”
Kyle lips tightened, knowing it would do him no good to argue.
He knew Steve was right, anyway. Scott lightened up a little and
finally greeted his friend with eye contact. “I had a very strange
dream prior to the emergency.” He reported as the elevator landed.
“You too?” Parker noticed Kyle’s demeanor picked up slightly.
A good sign. “Nick’s been complaining about them for two days.”
“I’m not sure . . . but I think I’m seeing myself as a little
boy.”
“You were never that young, Kyle.” Steve joked. That
earned him a smile from Scott.
They entered the cafeteria located at the forefront of the Downstairs
level. Just a few doors down began the series of hospital libraries
and Kyle silently reminded himself Jill was in one of them pouring over
the journal, her photos and the scroll.
Steve had Kyle sit and he made a quick order of the largest breakfast
the cafeteria offered. He rejoined his friend whose head laid over
crossed arms on the table. Steve studied Kyle, thinking carefully.
“You said you had a dream.” He spoke gently and waited
for Kyle to pull himself together.
Kyle sat up with a soft moan. “Two boys were talking as
they walked down the hallway. I couldn’t make out everything they
were saying but, Steve, I somehow felt I knew who they were. And
just before I reached the ER, I saw the older of the two smile right at
me.”
A waitress came by and set their plates before them. Steve
smiled his thank you and looked back at Kyle. “Have you heard from
Jill?”
Kyle shook his head. “No. Not for the last couple
of days. I’ve tried catching up on casework, she’s been living down
here, piecing the information together.”
Steve grinned and remembered another friend of theirs that did
the very same thing. “Remember how Draynor would do that?”
Kyle chuckled, recalling the face of an old man and how he would
eat, sleep and drink research. “I recall how he would lock the door
on us now and again and-“ Kyle’s whole face brightened with the memory
of a fortress made of solid stone and a great and heavy wooden door that
lead to the family library. “-and you would slip packages of food
to him with little notes that said things like ‘we usually feed our prisoners.
Here’s your rations!” And he laughed.
Steve echoed the laughter. “I remember Dad once sliced
a lock off the door to shove one of the prettier maids in, locked the door
behind her and shouted ‘I’d better hear noise!”
Kyle laughed harder-“And Raylan was still a virgin when she finally
came out!”
And the two laughed again. “I think,” Steve shouted above
their laughter, “I think the old man must have forgotten what a woman was
for!”
That stopped them both cold and Kyle dropped his fork.
Steve froze, his eyes blank with shock. Never would Steve say such
things.
Kyle’s mind raced frantically, searching through all Voodoo’s
memories, digging through the hours he listened to his journals but not
once was there any mention of a Raylan or a Draymor. There were no
fortresses made of stone, no wooden doors-not on Alean or Cybertron.
He pushed his plate away, his eyes shifting from one abstract
place to another, searching for a reason or a place or something to explain-“
”Gods, Kyle.” Steve swore, “What’s happening to us?
* * *
The crystal lit up the topside of the ship and set it ready for
departure. It released the air hatch so the shipment can be traded
and equipment loaded and ready for disbursement. All was well for
the moment. The people were perfect for the task; the first stage
of redevelopment was about to commence and the greatest part of it; if
they succeeded here, they could conquer other planets, other worlds.
And soon, their kind would number in the trillions and what a perfect army!
What a wonderful galaxy it would be! Theirs would be a dominate life
form and the Humanoid population would be bred to serve them. Everything
was going according to plan. The troops started to bring the females
in, the scientists began the first stages of impregnation.
Gk’zamth was most pleased. He recorded it carefully, word for word
because they would soon have a whole new generation of Shagch’nauch to
teach and train.
He turned to the female he chose to bed that night. The
look of horror on her face was almost precious. Gk’zamth purred with
glee. The Chenobians had soft bodies and small faces. Their
four eyes riveted his imagination and he approached her and pulled her
head back by her hair and necked her. She wriggled under him, exciting
him further and he played with her, pleased that he was strong enough to
do whatever he wished.
And she screamed.
And she screamed and shocked him and he growled and back-slapped
her. She fell off the bed and he reached for her. She screamed
in Chenobian gibberish and he growled and spoke in his own language.
He chased her down and pinned her by her shoulders. The female was
going to do exactly as he wanted! But she squirmed and managed to
kick him away and she raced for the lavatory and sprayed him with blood
and sprayed him with
and sprayed him with
and . . . and . . .
And she cried and he batted his eyes and Gk’zamth fell away and
all that stood there was Nick Cavanaugh. He sank to his knees, bewildered
and fearful. His wife huddled against the wall in the bathroom and
wept.
* * *
No sooner had Kyle calmed Cathy down for the third time in two
weeks, than Shan called him. She wept uncontrollably, freaked.
Kyle listened to her calmly and asked if there was something he could do
for her. Poor Shan, however, refused any sleep medication.
Kyle was not surprised, really. After reviewing her records, he found
ancient notes made to himself how Shan refused medication whenever possible.
She wouldn’t even take aspirin for occasional migraines. He suggested
some weak herbal tea, which he knew she would try and a light-hearted movie.
But there really wasn’t much else he could do for her.
Then he was called back to Kayla.
Kayla was taken off duty for the next several weeks, given light
sleep aids and told to watch some ‘good’ TV or do lots of reading and meditation.
Kyle discussed Jill’s discoveries with her the very moment he could get
free of Medbay. With the final pieces in place, all Kyle needed was
a reason for the dog-beasts’ interest in he and Steve. Jill remained
quiet on the visiphone while Kyle scribbled out the final sketches for
his new weapon. He frowned, struggling to concentrate on two things
at once.
“Do you think that by possessing you and Steve, the princes are
more powerful, Kyle?”
Kyle sighed deeply and tapped the pencil against his pad.
“You know, they have the power to kill en mass and at random. They
have the ability to travel and pass through matter. What’s left?”
Jill shook her head, her white hair sliding off her shoulders
as she did so. “Maybe just to feel like a person again. They
gave up being a person when they became what they are now. Wouldn’t
you miss being able to touch people?”
Kyle thought it over carefully, trying to logically guess their
behavior. He added a little targeting notch to his drawing. “You
know, Jill,” he started softly. “Ptysar has cut me off from Voodoo
entirely. And yet, I feel nothing from Ptysar except on rare occasions.”
“Do you think he’s trying to replace Voodoo?”
Kyle frowned and something surfaced to his mind. He lifted
his eyes to the monitor, “You know, Jill, I recall finding a notebook
in my office at Medbay concerning anextinct cannibalistic race. They
believed that to devour a person, was to take in that person’s soul and
magic and power. And that could be the philosophy used here-Ptysar
and Xesnex are . . . “ and suddenly Kyle could not bring himself to say
‘devouring’. He didn’t want to think about the possibility that he
and Steve were slowly being consumed by the dog-beasts. But the awful
truth stood naked before him. Doctor Scott swallowed hard, his eyes
darted down the hall toward his outdoor patio. “ . . . Ptysar and
Xesnex are trying to acquire our abilities.”
Jill flinched in surprise. “Kyle, are you saying that by
possessing you and Steve, Xesnex and Ptysar think they will become Interfaces?”
Doctor Scott winced and looked back to his friend over the visiphone,
“Well, I think Ptysar, who’s the smarter of the two, sees Interfacing as
the next step in the evolutionary scale. He’s looking to add to his
existence, Jill. He’s looking for another form of power.”
Jill’s eyes peeled fearfully away.
The conversation ended when she was called away to Medbay.
Kyle sat there quietly for several long moments, listening to his stereo,
working out the finer details to his weapon. Once again, he was grateful
to Voodoo. Memories of dimensional physics came in handy for this
weapon. Kyle figured it would take a tremendous amount of air pressure
to fire glass bullets: compressed air would ensure the glass would not
crack or break when fired.
He sighed and examined his artwork. So much to do . . .
Steve had been very quiet of late. Both of them tried to stay out
of one another’s lives as much as their new gift allowed. Steve sometimes
nattered on about the meetings, the incessant politicians and their little
games. Kyle calmly listened, expressing some concern while he reviewed
his records and journals. They were not more than five days from
their ordeal and already both men felt time press against them. Duties
. . . duties.
* * *
Ashtar had left Steve alone for the night. He tossed about
his bed, half wishing his estranged lover had not left after all.
At least with Ashtar there, Steve did not have to face the fear of a nightmare.
But the sleeplessness would not let up. Parker finally
sighed and abandoned his bed for his customary chair. He swung his
legs over the arm and draped a blanket over his tense form. Steve
plucked up the remote and remembered not too many days ago, he was doing
this too, facing some dream about being poisoned.
The news came on, but knowing pretty much what was going on already,
Steve flipped channels, having no idea what he wanted to watch.
<<Can’t love you anymore. You’re just too weak for
me to care for.>>
<<You can return me to the pet shop, Midnight. Some
wayfarer will find me.>>
<<No. You’re mine. I can do what I please.>>
And Midnight proceeded to inject Steve with air bubbles.
Steve startled hard, nearly falling right out of his seat, finding
his heart really hurt-but that was brief and the flickering light from
the TV reminded Captain Parker he was safe, he was still loved.
. . . wasn’t he? The link between he and Midnight was diminishing
further and further. I’ll end up just like Kyle, Parker thought dismally.
How can he bear under it? The silence! The isolation!
And Steve remembered what it was like to be isolated, to feel
separated from everyone around him. Worse yet, the depression forbade
him to get out of his chair and call for help.
He fought it. Steve peeled the blanket off his body and
struggled to move. He fell to the floor and found he could not even
stand. He curled up as darkness and emptiness assailed him.
And Steve wept.
* * *
Mid patiently listened to Ambassador Plak’nu’s endless whining.
Mid and Roddi were on their way to a little off-time when Plak’nu caught
up with them. Everything from her burnt shakla to details covered
at the meeting poured from her mouth in long fragmented sentences.
Mid wondered how he and Rodimus might be able to escape her. A terrible
pain settled in the back of his head. He wondered if it wasn’t the
link again. Or maybe Steve was having problems.
That was the last thought before a black light struck him from
behind. The impact was such that it knocked him off his feet. Rodimus
caught him as Midnight fell to the ground and Steve disappeared from his
consciousness.
Skywolf and First Aid sent for Optimus Prime. The message
merely stated that it was urgent and that he absolutely had to be there.
Prime entered, anticipating a terrible discovery, or a surprise of some
kind.
That’s not what he faced.
Midnight fiercely wrestled against the containment field holding
him to the flatbed. He growled and yelled and called Steve’s name
twice before screaming in frustration.
Optimus turned to Roddy for an explanation.
But First Aid spoke in his stead. “He’s been like this
for twenty minutes.” The medic reported.
“We were doing fine.” Rodimus added. But then he
had this funny look on his face and blacked out.”
Optimus crossed his arms. “What is going on?” He
asked sternly.
Skywolf shook his head. “Steve.” Both Primes gave
him pointed stares. “You see, the Tentchi have all been suffering
terrible nightmares and bizarre circumstances since Kyle and Steve returned
from Chenobis.”
Prime’s optics darkened. He recalled reading some of the
reports handed him. But the crisis regarding the Nagk had taken all
his time and energy. He wanted the piracy problem to be over and
done with already, but the Nagk insisted on more hearings, more evidence,
more and more attention. “What can we do?” He finally asked.
Skywolf and First Aid shook their heads. “Nothing.”
Skywolf answered like a death knell. “Essentially, there was nothing
any of us could do to begin with. There is nothing any of us can
do now. We don’t know how to pinpoint the source.”
“What’s worse,” First Aid broke in, “Kyle and Steve seem to know
what’s going on, but they have not volunteered any real information.
Both of them have spent extensive time in Medbay-as injured. But
Kyle has not come to either of us with this problem.”
Skywolf nodded. “Jill tells me Kyle suffers from amnesia.
She says their trip to Chenobis has proven nearly-fatal, which I can account
for as she had spent nearly two weeks under Doctor Hashu’s care-“
”And none of them have come to the Council regarding this?”
Optimus was astounded.
Rodimus glanced at his feet once, then back to his friend.
“Kyle is suffering from traumatic stress syndrom, as reported to me a week
ago. Hashu suggests therapy, but hasn’t come to me with a plan yet.
Steve is showing similar symptoms, plus several irregular characteristics.”
Optimus waited for more. “Like?”
“Telekinetics? Ashtar said she caught him doing odd things
like making salt and pepper shakers float in the air.”
“What is causing this?” Optimus was nearly breathless at
this point.
“Possession.” First Aid answered for the other two.
“It’s the only explanation.”
Chaos entered just then bearing a digipad between her hands.
“Skywolf, we’re ready.”
Rodimus turned from her back to the Sentinel medic. “Ready
for what?”
“A test on Midnight’s link. We’re trying to contact Steve,
but can’t seem to get through to him. He’s not answering our paging.
Chaos, have Midnight taken to the chamber.”
They never got that far. Midnight managed to transform
under the containment field, tearing his skin and injuring himself in the
process. The containment field broke under his maddened state and
he readied to blast off right in the room. Optimus and Rodimus jumped
on him, holding down the Sentinel leader by his wings. Midnight shrieked.
“THIEVES! He screamed. “You can’t keep Steve from
me! I’ll find him and I’ll come back and I’ll kill you all!
I’LL KILL YOU ALL!” He ignited thrusters as Skywolf bolted from the
room and returned seconds later with a fancy laser rifle.
“Optimus, move slightly to your right!” He targeted the
Sentinel and Prime, not knowing what the weapon was for, obeyed.
Skywolf shot him and a blue light glowed about Midnight a moment before
his form shrank and rearranged itself into the robot form. Midnight
was transfixed in his alternate mode, incapable of changing back.
That didn’t mean Mid was helpless, just unable to fly.
He screamed again: “TRAITORS! YOU’RE ALL TRAITORS! I’LL KILL YOU
ALL! ALL OF YOU! YOU’LL SCREAM HOLY MURDER! HOLY MURDER!”
Rodimus gasped in pain-induced shock. The finely smoothed
surfaces of his body superheated and started to blister. “Skywolf,
you’d better do something NOW!” Roddy demanded. He shut off
pain receptors to his arms and the right side of his body as Midnight’s
aura started to flare. Optimus and Rodimus took one glance at the
other and jumped away before their bodies fused to the Sentinel leader’s.
Prime grabbed First Aid and Rodimus grabbed Skywolf as the aura shot out
and enveloped nearby equipment, sizzling and warping the components.
But as fast as the aura shot out, it died and with a heart-broken whimper
of Steve’s name, Midnight curled up and passed into a coma.
* * *
The project was only half way done. Kyle picked up his
package from the jewelry store just the day before and all he had left
was the note, two vials of antivirus made for two very special people,
and the weapon itself.
The clock struck late, almost past his bed time. The stereo
played a wonderful ancient piece of music: Prayer Cycle. Voices from
various languages and dialects filtered through soft tones, wooing the
listener to a somber, soulful mood. Beautiful and sad, and it fit
Kyle’s mood perfectly. Voodoo was called away to South Continent
to assist in an emergency demolition. He promised to be back in a
few hours, or as soon as possible. Kyle didn’t mind. He didn’t
want Voodoo to see what he was doing because he knew it would be hard for
his friend to understand. That was why the package was addressed
to Kayla. He knew she would see to it the instructions were
followed. It’d hurt. Kyle knew the Community would be deeply
hurt by it, but it was the only option he had left. Time grew shorter.
Just today the news reported five unexplained deaths in the mall.
It seemed the dog-beasts had an affinity for the mall-a lot of people and
potential destruction.
Xesnex loved violence.
Something weakly tapped at his door. Kyle glanced up from
the kitchen table and wondered if it were some prank from a neighbor’s
kid. He waited but heard nothing more. Doctor Scott resumed
his work, carefully tightening the barrel to the loader, adjusting the
primary laser directive center so that the compressor did not break or
crack the glass bullets on impact. According to his schematics, the
weapon should prove powerful enough to crack through a human skull.
The tap came again and Kyle decided to simply see what it was.
Maybe paranoia ate at him.
<< . . . Kyle . . .>>
Scott jumped to his feet, careful as not to damage his work,
and dashed. Steve fell forward the moment Kyle opened the door.
He caught his friend and Kyle lowered to his knees, bringing Steve close
to him.
“Steve!” He anxiously called.
<<Mid . . . he’s gone from me. Gone.>> Parker’s emotional
state gave him no strength. But Kyle had already guess what had happened.
He secured Steve’s arm across his shoulders and managed to pick his friend
up and carried Steve to his room.
Steve lay on the bed in deep shock. Kyle covered him and
reached round the corner to his desk and punched in a call to Medbay.
<<Kyle . . . Kyle, don’t leave me. I’m all gone .
. . it’s all gone from me, Kyle . . .>>
<<I’m here.>> Kyle promised. <<I’m here.>>
*Hello?*
Kyle turned to the televisor. “This is Doctor Scott.
I need to speak to Doctor Hashu immediately.”
*I’m sorry, Kyle. Brian has left for the day-*
“Endema, Captain Parker is here and in traumatic shock.
I dare not move him. Get on the goddamned phone and call him!”
Kyle cut the communication before she could object, speaking out her nose.
Kyle returned to his room and laid his hand on Steve’s chest, checking
heart rate and blood pressure. Steve seemed unresponsive, laying
there like a deadman.
<<Steve?>> Kyle called softly. <<It’s me. I’m
here.>>
<<It’s all I have.>> Steve’s inner voice was that of a
child. <<It’s all gone from me. Lookit, Kyle, I’m bleeding
to death. It’s all over me . . .>> Steve was so overcome with shock
he could not even cry.
Kyle crawled on the bed and held Steve in his arms and waited
for Hashu to arrive with emergency med staff.
* * *
A N D R E A . . . the voice whispered like the sound of a million
fell voices, rising and falling with the highs and lows of death.
Across a vast wasteland, long since obliterated by war and disease, she
stumbled; a half dead thing that should be shot out of her misery.
She wept when the voices used her first name. It wasn’t her name anymore.
Nobody calls her that fell name, not even Roddy.
A N D R E A . . . it was like being licked clean of privacy.
She stumbled on, her feet bloodied by the acid laying on the ground, her
skin burned with radiation and her belly swelled with the fruit of her
desecration. The sun peeled her dark skin, chewing away at it with
boils and festering radiation wounds. Her face, naught but a mask
of horror.
A N D R E A . . . and a contraction hit. She cared nothing
for the child about to be born. Shan knew what it was going to be;
a spawn-a living abomination.
She contracted again and again and the pain threatened to rip
her apart. She crouched low to the acid ground, screaming, bending
over and screaming more, but her cries went unheard, drifting off with
the putrid winds. And finally it arrived, sliding out of her onto
the ground and Shan searched for something with which to cut herself free
of the unwanted child. She grasped a piece of glass and when she
rolled over to complete the birthing task, she found not a child, but a
huge black beetle.
Shanygn shot up from her pillow and screamed, pounding the bed
in an unbidden fit of rage and terror.
* * *
. . . Steve plucked lint from his overalls as he sat against the
outer wall of the topside vent shaft. Midnight sat next to him, saying
nothing for a long time. The inevitable had happened. Midnight
found himself someone better, someone who could handle more responsibility
more efficiently.
“I just want you to understand that it’s nothing personal.”
Midnight explained gently. “It’s just that . . . you’re so weak and
small. So fragile and I’m honestly tired of being so fearful that
something will happen to you day and night.”
Parker gazed out toward what should have been a cityscape.
But only a dense vaporous blue haze met his eyes. The world shrank
down to him and his partner.
But Midnight didn’t want him anymore.
He wasn’t wanted anymore.
“I’ll get better.” Steve struggled to swallow his fear,
his grief. “I promise. I’ll do better.”
“I’m sorry, Steve. I will simply have to put you to sleep.”
“Don’t put me to sleep!” He tearfully quailed. “Somebody
still loves me! Somebody still loves me!”
Kyle tried to think what day it was. Thursday. Might
be Friday. He paused in his work. The weapon was nearly done.
He never thought in his whole life he would have to administer medicine
in a gun. But here it was. Kyle made it so that it could easily
and swiftly be assembled and disassembled and/or added to a Sentinel’s
weapon.
Kyle paused in his work for another moment and smiled to himself.
It seems that although he had lost his memory, had lost six thousand years
worth of experience, he still thought like a Tentchi. But then the
smile faded. He did not know how much time he and Voodoo had left
together. Scott glanced past his dining table to the couch where
Steve soundly slept. There was nothing they could do for him, not
really. They ran three tests, all proving Steve was in Link Shock,
a dangerous state of mind that crippled the individual close to a vegetative
state. Kyle did not know if Steve could regain enough of himself
to pull out of it, nor not. Hashu insisted, however, Steve merely
stay with Kyle where he could be monitored constantly and closely rather
than spend time in a hospital scrutinized by nurses who were there just
to work.
Kyle agreed to it and arranged a meal service to his quarters
three times a day. If he had to have company, he was going to make
sure Steve was able to eat without food poisoning. Not that Kyle
couldn’t really cook, he just preferred not to.
Scott checked the accuracy of the weapon’s target system and
lowered it to finish the trigger mechanism. In a chair beside him
sat a white box with white tissue paper flowering out. The
box, and its contents including the weapon, the bullets, two vials of counterpoison
for Matt and Nick and a good-bye note were for Kayla.
“Who’s going to fire the thing?”
The sudden voice nearly made Kyle jump out of his skin.
He shuddered in surprise. “Steve!” He knew his eyes had to
be huge. “You’re . . . awake!”
Steve’s face was a blank. He stirred under the blankets
on the couch, so grateful Kyle kept him here rather than abandon him to
his own empty quarters. He just realized he had been here for at
least a couple of days; he could not really tell. He knew Kyle had
taken good care of him, just as he always did. Kyle talked with him
when he wasn’t working on the weapon. Kyle had him watch TV, making
comments on the really bad shows and even watched some sports programs-the
ones Voodoo said Steve liked. And Kyle slept beside him at night
just to make sure . . . just to make sure. If a man ever had a friend
closer than brother, Steve knew Kyle was that man. He laid his head
weakly against the couch and batted back tears. The nightmare haunted
him.
Kyle got up to comfort his friend.
<<What are you doing, Kyle?>> Steve actually meant why
Kyle was building the weapon.
Kyle did not need to answer him; he knew Steve knew. He
embraced Steve in silence and waited for his friend to calm down, maybe
go back to sleep.
* * *
She was a little girl, playing hop-scotch with some friends.
Her mother just fired the latest mentor-teacher and now it would be several
days to several weeks before Nitha would get another private teacher.
Of course, she’d make trouble for the next one, too and that one would
get fired by her parents and Nitha would be without a teacher again.
She laughed all the time. Her folks got her everything she ever wanted.
She’d never have to grow up and go to work, because her folks did all that
work stuff. But while Ausa took her turn at the squares, a huge shadow
appeared overhead. Nitha and Ausa and Darci raised their little heads
and beheld a black arrow, bigger than any building they ever saw.
Bigger then the daun-sphere field her brother played on at his games.
Big, big, big and Nitha watched as these things on wings poured from a
white square in the ship. They dropped down and flew in different directions
and then they started to shoot people with guns.
And that was when Nitha heard Ausa scream and scream and scream-her
leg was cut off and she screamed and-
-and four in the morning seemed too early to get out of bed.
But Kayla had been unable to sleep. She simply got up, showered and
dressed, hoping the nightmare she woke from would not infect her the rest
of the day.
<<What can I do to help?>> Spellbinder asked gently.
<<Knock me out and tell me when it’s all over.>> Kayla
joked dryly.
<<Give me another option.>>
Kayla about pouted in misery. Then the terrible thought
hit and she stopped fussing with her hair. She stared herself in
the mirror. Dark circles touched her face, the light in her eyes
dimmed from distress. <<Just tell me we can find a way to save Kyle
and Steve.>>
<<We will find a way to save Kyle and Steve.>> Spellbinder
repeated confidently. <<Have you opened the package yet?>>
<<What package?>>
<<Oh. I forgot.>>
<<Spellbinder?>>
<<You were resting, so I took it for you yesterday.
It’s on the table.>>
Kayla rounded the corner from her bathroom to the coffee table.
A white box, sealed with packaging tape sat square in the middle.
She approached it apprehensively and stared at the little tag on top.
<<It’s from Kyle.>>
<<I know.>>
<<What’s in it?>>
<<I don’t know.>>
Kayla undid the seal and fished through the tissue paper.
She found a smaller box and opened it first. Four glass bullets with
a single air bubble rested in a row. She made a face in puzzlement
and fear. Then she dipped her hand in the box again and pulled out
a letter. She held that with her other hand and found the hand-made
weapon at the bottom.
Kayla covered her mouth and tried not to cry. She drew
a deep breath and took strength in Spellbinder’s loving presence.
*MY DEAR KAYLA,* Kyle wrote, *BY THE TIME YOU RECEIVE THIS LETTER,
STEVE AND I WILL NO LONGER BE THE SAME PEOPLE YOU ONCE KNEW. ALL
THAT MATTERS IS THAT MATT AND NICK WILL BE SAFE ONCE STEVE AND I ARE GONE.*
The words broke Kayla’s heart and she started crying before she
could read the rest of the letter. Even Spellbinder’s kindness could not
consol her. She covered her face and cried a while longer, her heart
pouring out in agony. Too late, they were too late!
<<Kayla?>>
She tried to stop crying.
<<Kayla, Kayla, you have to keep reading. It’s important,
Little One.>>
Kayla swallowed hard and wiped her eyes and forced herself to
concentrate:
*INSIDE YOU WILL FIND A SMALL BOX CONTAINING GLASS BULLETS.
YOU HAVE TO SHOOT DIRECTLY INTO OUR FRONTAL LOBES-THAT’S WHERE THE THINGS
RESIDE. THE BUBBLE INSIDE THE BULLET WILL BE THEIR ONLY MEANS OF
ESCAPING THE GLASS AS IT ENTERS OUR BODIES ONCE THEY ARE INSIDE THE BUBBLE,
THEY CAN’T GET OUT. THAT’S THE THEORY, ANYWAY. I HAD EXTRAS
MADE IN CASE THE TARGET (THAT’S ME) ISN’T COOPERATIVE.*
Kayla smiled, hoping Kyle was just trying to be funny.
*I HOPE YOU DON’T FEEL I JUST GAVE UP. I HOPE YOU CAN FORGIVE
ME, IF YOU DO. I’M SORRY FOR MANY THINGS, KAYLA. I’M SORRY
WE DID NOT GO TO THE BREAKFAST YOU ASKED FOR. I’M SORRY YOU GOT INVOLVED
IN THIS MESS. I’M SORRY I NEVER TOOK THE TIME TO TELL YOU HOW MUCH
I LOVED YOU.*
Kayla cried a long time before she took the weapons and the upper
half of the letter to Jill.
* * *
Shan fled through a dimly-lit passage. A soft blue glow
emanated from a panel strip along the wall, guiding her ever forward.
Spray-painted graffiti scarred the walls on either side. But the
language was different from that of the letters and signs used on the panels.
In her silk nightgown and bare feet, Shan raced over freezing cold floors.
Then tall ominous doors materialized, their sudden appearance
resounded like the echoes of a slammed door. Shan dashed from door
to door to door, desperately seeking a way out.
One tall, ancient wooden door opened into a torture chamber.
Alien bodies dangled from the ceiling like so much rotting meat.
She rammed the door closed but it opened again, moaning on its hinges.
She shut it and it opened itself once more. She darted away running and
whimpering in fear and frustration. But the room followed her, faster
and faster, gaining as though to swallower her whole, to add her to its
vile collection.
Shan finally fell to her knees weeping on the freezing floor.
“GET ME OUT OF HERE!” She screamed at the top of her voice.
“No. I need to wake up. That’s all. I need to wake up.”
And she tried to think of ways to wake up, to escape the hallway.
She slammed against another door and tried with all her might,
willing the stubborn, metal door to open. Grudgingly, it did so.
But to her dismay, Shan found herself in another corridor, lined on either
side with doors and graffiti scribbled everywhere.
Shan stumbled against a wall and wept, unable to escape.
Nick woke the following morning and found his wife trapped in
a coma.
* * *
Steve slowly pulled on a thick black sweater. Two days passed
and this morning, Kyle received a call from Nick regarding Shan.
Hashu begged Kyle to come take a look and Steve demanded to go; it was
Community business and he needed to be there, too.
Kyle had someone go to Steve’s apartment and bring back a few
sets of fresh clothes. Steve had showered and shaved and although
a bit slow, he insisted on dressing himself, too.
Kyle stepped out to his patio and watered his small herb garden.
Voodoo stirred from shut-down and stretched a little. He offered
Kyle a weak smile, but did not get one in turn.
“I have to go to Medbay. Something regarding Shan in a
coma.” Kyle informed.
“You have to do what needs to be done.” Voodoo answered
softly. “Let me take you there.”
“Steve will be coming with us.”
Kyle reached out and ran his hand over Voodoo’s warm metal skin.
He choked up, wanting to say something, but lost his voice.
<<It’s okay.>> Steve Touched. <<V understands.>>
<<Does he?>> Kyle challenged. “Voodoo, I-I’m not
going to beat around the bush about this. I want you to be prepared
for what might happen.”
“Kyle, don’t.” Voodoo begged. “We’ll make it-“
”We may not.” Scott shot right back. “Often in life, bad
things happen and it’s nobody’s fault, they just do.”
Voodoo sent his gaze elsewhere. “I won’t live without you,
Kyle. You know that. I won’t live without you. No matter
what you say-“
”I’m just asking you to be strong. That’s all. I’m
not asking you to be rational, to move on as if nothing happened.
I just want you to be ready for the worst.” Kyle shed the tears Voodoo
could not. He struggled to pull himself together.
Voodoo gently set his finger along Kyle’s spine, but did not
try to stimulate Kyle with gentle bursts of power. If the link was
broken, Kyle would not survive the stimulation; he was no longer Tentchi.
And Voodoo grieved that he could no longer even do that.
“I’m still here, though, Kyle.” He said quietly. “I can’t hear
you in my head anymore. I can’t tell what you are thinking, I can’t
hear the music in your mind. But I know that when I come back here
late in the day, I know you’re still here. I can still hear your
voice. I’m-I’m happy with that.
But Kyle was not and he leaned against Voodoo, drained.
Steve stepped out wearing a black leather jacket over his thick
black sweater and a pair of black jeans with black boots. Like Kyle,
he still thought like a Tentchi. <<I’m ready, Kyle.>>
Nick sat at his wife’s side in a very quiet room at Medbay.
Kyle checked her chart, signed it and stared into Shan’s blank countenance.
“Will she wake up any time soon?” Nick asked, batting back
tears.
Kyle was prepared for Nick. Shan was brought in at ten
that morning after Rodimus informed Medbay there was a problem.
“I don’t know, Nick.” Kyle quietly replied. “This
is an area for which I have no expertise. Nor do I know anyone who
does.”
Nick swallowed hard. “There’s no such thing as magic, Kyle.”
He said sternly. “Someone or something has done this to her.”
“The key word, Nick is *Something.”
Nick shook his head. “I don’t-I can’t believe anything would
do this to her. Why? Why do this?” He pushed himself away from
the bedside and strolled toward the window. He stared out the dark
cityscape and tried to bring his grief under control. “I guess I’ll
have nightmares about this, too.”
Kyle clutched a hypo in his coat pocket. He didn’t want
to do it. To him, it was an abuse of trust. But he saw no other
avenue. Nick turned back and Kyle swiftly shot him in the neck.
Nick gasped and fell forward. The drug raced through his
system faster than he could react. “Kyle!” He gasped.
“Forgive me, Nick.” Kyle answered quietly. “You have
been targeted. No more deaths. The monsters will die with me
and Steve.”
Nick passed into a simulated coma without another word.
A nurse came in to sign for her rounds and spotted Nick, then
looked at Kyle. He merely shrugged. “Better get someone in
here.” He ordered softly.
She ran out and Kyle sighed heavily, mentally preparing to do
the same for Matt, hoping he could come up with some excuse to get the
man to see him.
Kyle woke the following morning with the worst headache on record.
He could not so much as climb out of bed. Steve left early to attend
personal and political business, but promised to check in later.
Kyle shuddered and rolled over, drawing his blankets tightly about him.
Voodoo hadn’t returned yet and his quarters stood terribly silent except
the stereo which played at a low volume all hours of the day and night.
<<Kyle, I’m coming back.>> Steve warned.
<<I’m still in bed.>> Kyle grumped a little.
<<It’s important.>> Steve insisted gently. <<We have
to talk.>>
<<Sounds bad.>>
No response and Kyle moaned. It was bad. And he guessed
what it was about: the little ‘treatment’ he gave Nick and Matt.
Nick was easy: he was at the hospital. Matt . . . well, Kyle was
lucky in that department. Matt was at the mall that afternoon.
Unfortunately, Matt’s estranged wife was there, too. They exchanged
pleasantries with Kyle outside a gift shop. Then Kyle swiftly administered
the same shot to Matt he gave Nick that morning.
He caught Frasier as the well-built man fell then Kyle gazed
expectantly at Tracy. “Well?” He asked
“What?” Tracy stared as if nothing happened.
“Aren’t you going to call the paramedics or the police?”
Her bright red and shiny lips parted slightly. “Is he dead?”
“No.”
Her pretty face scrunched into an ugly sneer and Kyle suddenly
did not think her so pretty after all. “Too bad.” and she stepped
over Matt’s fallen form and exited the mall, leaving Kyle to call the paramedics.
Kyle forced himself up from his pillow and the room spun one
way, tilted another. He feably lay back down. He knew, he just
knew Dagger was going to blow a whistle on him.
“Doctor Scott?” Oma’s voice filtered in from the front
room. “Doctor Scott? I’m sorry to wake you. But Captain Parker
is here. He says it’s urgent.”
Kyle moaned in pain and forced himself up. He pulled over some
clothes and shuddered from cold. He staggered to the table as Steve
silently greeted Oma with a small smile and turned directly to Kyle.
“The Council has called a meeting, Kyle. They want to know what’s
going on.”
Kyle stared into Steve’s blue eyes. “You mean Matt and
Nick.” He assumed.
“Yeah, that too.”
“Too?” Kyle’s head throbbed and he was grateful Oma made
him a cup of tea.
“They want to know about the hundred and twenty-four people that
have died in the last six hours.”
Kyle stared, wide eyed and pale. His heart turned sick
and suddenly he needed something more than good tea. Steve
remained standing, arms crossed, his face and eyes struggled to maintain
a facade of stern calmness.
Kyle propped his head on his hand on the table, covering his
eyes with his fingers. He did not see the blood beginning to seep
from the back of his hand. Steve approached, drew a chair leaned
forward and folded his arms across the table top.
“Kyle.” He whispered. “Kyle, what were you thinking?”
Kyle mutely shook his head as Oma set a cup of tea in front of
him. He heard her quietly ask Steve if he wanted any and Steve almost
said no, but changed his mind. Kyle sat up with a forced breath.
<<You know why.>> he answered quietly. <<It was necessary.
You know it had to be done. I’ve already made necessary arrangements
for them to be wakened after . . . after.” He couldn’t bring himself
to say ‘our deaths.’
“Thank you.” Steve glanced at Oma and took a sip of hot
tea. <<They’re going to want to know everything, Kyle. Everything.>>
Kyle drew another deep breath and reached for his cup.
“Time is too short to placate to the ignorant, Steve. I have a recording
Voodoo promised to send to them afterward. Right now, I just want
to rest.” Kyle somberly traced his finger over the edge of the tea
cup. He took another sip. His shoulder started to ache, but
he forcibly shoved it to the back of his mind. He didn’t want to
face the possibility he and Kyle might be attacked. Not now.
Steve set his cup down and studied Kyle.
“No, Steve.” Kyle whispered in answer to Steve’s concerned
expression. “I haven’t been well. Not since last night.
I awoke exhausted.”
Steve glanced away then turned right back and sipped his tea.
He waited for Kyle to say something more, but Scott did not have anything
else to say in his defense. Parker laid a hand on Kyle’s and the
two exchanged weary glances. Honestly, neither of them had to say
a word, verbally, or otherwise. They had to do what needed to be
done, whether or not it was pleasant.
“Well,” Doctor Scott sighed, “let me contact Voodoo. He’ll
want to take us there.”
Kyle and Steve stepped out to his patio. Kyle more or less
dragged his feet, not willing to face a congregation of robots who may
or may not understand his position. What he did to Matt and Nick
was necessary. Should Ptysar and Xesnex decide they no longer wanted Kyle
and Steve, Doctor Scott believed the poltergeists would turn to Nick and
Matt
A coldness settled over Kyle’s heart the moment he crossed the
threshold to his patio. He thought he was going into a cardiac arrest.
He tried to breathe, but could not. His sight faded and darkness
took him.
Steve froze half way across the patio. Parker’s stomach
lurched, as though he could vomit all his insides out but nothing came.
Biting cold twisted his spine into impossible angles-or so he thought.
Razors clawed his heart, threatening to rip it right out of his chest and
Steve could not breathe.
Something wormed inside him. It tried to push out of his
skin, but could not quite do so. His eyes blackened over and something
in his head laughed.
*RIGHT TO THE EDGE! RIGHT TO THE EDGE OF DEATH AND BACK AND OVER
AND BACK AGAIN! I COULD PLAY LIKE THIS FOR DECADES!*
It pulled his head back by his hair and Steve could not so much
as whimper in pain. It greedily licked his neck and then his chest
and he fought and It laughed.
*I LIKE THIS. KEEP IT UP, CAPTAIN. A CHALLENGE IS ALWAYS
WELCOME*
<<Xesnex.>> Parker spat.
Voodoo hovered next to the patio wall. Kyle climbed in
first, then Steve. But neither Tentchi greeted the Sentinel.
Voodoo really didn’t think much of it until he took off. Generally,
business made both he and Kyle grouchy. However, Kyle would usually
say something, or Steve would greet the Sentinel with the usual ‘hi,-how-are-you’
ritual. Voodoo veered from the building and shot across town. The
silent men still said nothing and Voodoo’s already-irritable mood intensified.
He landed minutes later at the council chamber and allowed Kyle and Steve
out first, then transformed. “You’re welcome!” He snarled,
at their poor manners. But as the two approached the glassy chrome
chamber doors, Voodoo spotted their reflections.
And where Steve’s form should have been, walked a huge misshapen
beast, more demonic than animal. Its teeth were enormous. Saliva
dripped from its jaws and massive claws stalked the ground. It turned-not
Steve’s actual form-but the reflection turned and smiled at Voodoo.
The Sentinel’s fuel lines ran cold. He cast his gaze to
Kyle, who acted as if nothing happened.
They entered the great hall. A huge metal circular table
rounded the room like a great opened yawn. In the vacant center of
the room rested a witness stand for those on trial. The rest of the
seating remained arranged according to species and size. Voodoo did
not know what to do. Were Kyle and Steve still alive at all, or did
the . . . did they . . .
Voodoo didn’t want to think about it; couldn’t think about it.
Kyle HAD to be alive somehow. He just HAD to be!
The council was already assembled when Voodoo brought Parker
and Scott in. All optics and eyes shot to the entrance and watched
as Voodoo followed the men in at a discrete distance. He watched
their every move as they found a place on either side of Jill.
He sat nearby as Megatron proceeded with old business regarding
the Nagk; stuff of which Voodoo was not involved. He continued to
watch McKennan, fully aware that Rodimus Prime was watching him.
Jill glanced from Kyle to Steve and back then glanced at Voodoo, her face
bright with fear, her eyes wide with terror.
“Ms. McKennan,” In spite of its soft tones, Optimus’ voice
made her jump slightly. “Is there something wrong?”
“Wrong?” Jill stammered.
Optimus set his elbows on the table top and laced his fingers,
gazing at them over his clasped hands. “Perhaps we should move on
to another problem at hand. Doctor Scott, we thank you for being
here today. We know this may be inconvenient for you, but we need
to ask some questions.”
Steve stood instead.
A chilling sensation struck Rodimus and he bolted to his feet.
The face of evil stared straight into his soul and smiled. Rodimus’
first thought was to flee.
Kyle stood next and Jill jumped, kicked her chair out of the
way and dashed down the stairs away from the table.
“VOODOO!” she screamed.
A stream of water and blood phased between Kyle and Steve and
shot out at Rodimus, struck him square in the chest. He staggered
back at first, then dragged against the table, pulled toward the
tiny creatures now possessed by an ancient evil. Megatron aimed his
cannon at them, but instantly withdrew, realizing what it would have cost.
Rodimus opened his mouth, but no sound came. His optics
shone brightly as Voodoo leapt over the table into the center and aimed
his modified weapon at Steve. Attached to the edge of his gun sat
the weapon Kyle made just a few precious days before. Voodoo swore
no one would pull the trigger but him. Nobody but him. He didn’t
want to look, but had to. He fired, aiming first at Steve.
The glass bullet bounced harmlessly off Parker’s forehead.
Kyle looked right at Voodoo, his usual dark brown eyes turned
glassy white.
Kyle was the key.
Voodoo fought to control his reaction. He didn’t want to
do it; he didn’t want to hurt his love. But then the Sentinel remembered
he vowed he’d join Kyle in death. They’d never be parted again.
With that thought, he trained the weapon on Kyle, as Rodimus finally cried
out in agony, and fired.
Kyle fell back, his eyes still open.
Voodoo shot Steve when Parker turned to him again.
The streams of blood and water bridging Rodimus and Kyle and
Steve ceased to flow and reversed coarse. Voodoo swore he saw faces
in those streams, the distorted faces of two young boys, screaming in pure
terror. The streams cascaded back to their source and Rodimus collapsed.
Jill cried out and raced back up the steps. Voodoo could
not watch or listen around him. Council members either asked stupid
questions, gathered around Rodimus, called medics or ran toward the fallen
Humans. Voodoo didn’t care. He and Kyle were dead. Steve
and Midnight were dead. Voodoo carefully unmodified his weapon with
ease and set it to kill. He was going to be join with Kyle again!
He and Kyle were going to be-
“Ohmigod!” Jill cried, “They’re alive! V! They’re
still alive! We have to get them back to Medbay!”
* * *
“ . . . who will help me to gather the corn so that I may make
cakes?’ asked the little red hen. ‘Not I,’ said the fox. ‘Not
I,’ said the little dog. ‘Not I,’ said the pig. ‘And not I,’
said the cat. ‘Well,’ said the little red hen, ‘I and my chicks will
have to do it ourselves. And so they did. They gathered the
corn and dried it out and grounded it and later the little red hen made
wonderful sweet corn cake and then she asked ‘Who will help me eat the
cake?’ ‘I will!’ said the fox. ‘I will,’ claimed the little
dog. ‘Me too,’ said the cat. ‘Don’t forget me!’ declared the
pig. ‘No.’ said the little red hen. ‘You did not help
me dig the ground or plant the corn. You did not help me water the
corn, or keep out the weeds. You did not help me gather the corn,
or dry it. You did not help me bake it. My chicks helped me
and they and I shall eat the cake-“
Kayla glanced from the book and found Kyle’s dark brown eyes
open and clear and shining with a smile. She set the book down and
tried to think of a million things to say, all of them so pointless at
this moment. She leaned over and took his hand-his warm strong hand-in
hers and all she could do was stare.
Nurse Ady came shuffling in, a digipad in hand, yammering on
with another nurse as she passed along. Ady stopped cold. “What’s
this?” She nearly sang. “Doctor Scott’s come back to us, has
he? Lord bless us all! Let me get Doctor Hashu!”
Kyle slowly blinked. “Little Red Hen, Kayla?” He
asked quietly.
She smiled broadly. “It’s a great story. I read Little
Red Riding Hood earlier, but . . . you didn’t seem to like it quite so
much. I think it was when the wolf ate her. It seemed to upset
you.”
Kyle smoothed the back of her hand with his thumb. Her
hands were warm, soft and gentle. She was real. And the dreams
. . . the dreams were all gone.
“Well! This is unprecedented, Doctor Scott.” Hashu declared
as he walked in. “Seems you’ll have to make a note of it: five people
go comatose and all five come out of it.”
Kyle found it hurt to wrinkle his brows. “Five?”
Hashu exaggerated his nod. “We received the antidote for
the simulated coma you put Matt and Nick in. Steve came out of his
four hours ago, then went right back to sleep. Midnight is recovering.
And I have a present for you.”
Hashu disappeared for the moment and Kyle turned to Kayla. “Voodoo?
Voodoo?”
She sighed and looked sad. “He’s been so lost, Kyle.
We’ve already started him on counseling and therapy. But while he
will be very happy to know you’re alright, he’s already showing symptoms.”
Kayla swallowed a lump in her throat and looked away as her eyes glassed
up with tears.
Kyle understood what she was saying, but his foggy mind couldn’t
fathom it just yet. He started thinking it over when Hashu returned
and handed Kyle a small gift-wrapped box. Kyle slowly slipped his
hand from Kayla and frowned at the bandage still covering his right hand.
He undid the wrapping and found the bullet. The glass was clear save
for a small bubble in the center. A blood-red liquid swished with
his movement and Kyle nearly freaked. His eyes zipped from Hashu
to Kayla.
“. . . Ptysar?” He dared. “Ptysar?”
Kayla nodded. As bizarre as it sounds, that’s him.
Your theory was right.”
“There’s only one.” Kyle shook the bullet and inwardly
laughed, knowing he was shaking up the life force that could never escape
its tiny prison.
“The other one rightfully belongs to Steve.” Hashu bounced
on his heels.
Kyle smiled but found his forehead hurt when he did so.
He lifted the bullet to the light and stared at the blood that sloshed
inside on its own. “One good torment deserves another.” He
muttered quietly. He lowered it, finding the pretty Kshi lady a far
better sight than the new toy. “I know I still owe you a breakfast.”
He offered as Hashu was called away to deliver a baby.
Kayla smiled and stared at the coverlets and straightened them
out just a little. “Breakfast sounds good. But I want you to
wait until you’re strong enough to go out.” She looked back up with
her eyes only.
Kyle stared at her and found himself lost in their sparkle. He
wondered how he could have known her for six thousand years and not once
fallen in love. Maybe he had and never realized it.
But there was another matter to take care of.
“When can I see Voodoo?”
Kayla sat up and uncustomarily shrugged. “When he feels
he can handle it.”
Kyle nodded in acceptance. Voodoo was starting to loose
his mind and Kyle only wanted to treat him with as much love and patience
as he could possibly give.
But just two days later, Kayla came in with good news. She
brought Kyle some fresh clothes and a menu from a restaurant. “They
said you seemed to be okay and you can go home. And Voodoo is on
his way to take you there.”
Kyle looked up and it was then that Kayla realized Steve was
there, too. She blushed, realizing she had interrupted a private
conversation.
But Kyle graciously encouraged her to step into the room and
Steve offered her his seat. She took it, all in silence.
“I’m glad you came by.” Steve greeted.
The smile fell from her face. “Kayla,” he drew a breath
and touched the bandage wrapping his wounded forehead. “We have something
to tell you that needs to be kept confidential.” And Steve closed
the door.
Kayla glanced from one man to the other, speechless.
Kyle gave her a grim smile. “Steve and I developed some
form of telepathy during our possession. The telepathy turned into
an empathic link. I thought that with the exorcism, the link would
fade. But as it turns out, the link was strengthened. I don’t
know how it happened, I don’t know if it’s reversible, or if it can be
broken. I doubt it. But for the last few days, Steve and I have begun
to build a vocabulary based on moods and emotions. As odd as that
sounds.”
She again glanced from one gentleman to the other. “Gods.”
She breathed. “Wh-why are you telling me this?”
“Someone has to know.” Steve broke in. “We needed
to tell someone in case something should happen to one or the other of
us. Midnight knows. Voodoo does not. Not yet.”
Kayla stared at them a long moment, having no idea how to respond.
Then she remembered. “Oh, he’s coming-and you’re not dressed yet!”
She handed Kyle his clothes and he slowly disembarked from the bed.
With another smile, he slipped into the restroom to change.
Steve stared at her with weary blue eyes. “Kayla, I know
it will be hard for you to deal with all this, adjusting-“
”Steve,” she smiled. “You’re still alive. We still
have Kyle. Isn’t that enough for right now? Isn’t that just
enough? I know you have a new link. That’s good. But
right now, I just want to rest and have breakfast and take care of someone
I love.”
Truer words could not have been spoken. She voiced the
very thing Steve had been thinking: he had no idea what he was going to
do with Ashtar. In time, he believed they could get through it.
But the tragic thing of it was, (and it was a thought he really had been
avoiding all this time) was the broken link between Kyle and Voodoo.
No doubt, Voodoo’s Interface systems were scarred. Kyle most likely
had already begun to age and Steve did not want to think that in thirty
years or so, Kyle would be gone.
He just couldn’t face that reality right now.
Kyle stepped out of the restroom in a dark blue sweater and dark
blue jeans. Kayla had graciously remembered to bring his coat, which
hung over his left arm.
Steve’s smile dimmed a little. Kyle had lost weight and
he didn’t look quite right, not quite the same. But then, Steve had
also lost a lot of weight and he didn’t look quite so well, either.
Time, Parker thought dismally, time heals all wounds.
They stepped out the hallway, greeting a brighter light than
in Kyle’s room.
And Kyle spotted Voodoo emerging from the elevator from the other
end of the hall.
Silence before the song.
Like the stillness before the storm.
A breath is stolen, maybe two.
Eye contact.
The match is lit.
Gasoline is poured
and an explosion of experiences cascade through, rising and pushing.
The breath is stolen.
The voice fades, unable to express the million lifetimes of experiences
compacted into a split second.
Faces
death
wars
peace
fear
flight
dead silence
Braintrust
Thon Roque
Death
Midnight
Anger
war
survival
guilt
fear
sorrow
death
flight
and
<<Kyle.>>
The pain struck just once, slamming him atop his head and shot
straight down his spine. His heart stopped. Kyle’s eyes never
closed, but he saw nothing, either. He didn’t hear Kayla call for
him. He wasn’t aware of the call for help.
Dead silence.
Then:
<<Kyle.>>
His eyes filled with tears.
A presence filled all his soul. It embraced him first kindly
then passionately.
<<Kyle.>>
It was as if a door had slammed shut, or more appropriately,
like a rubber band snapping together when stretched too tightly.
The face and the mental sound struck Voodoo against the transparent titanium
windows. He slid to the floor, paralyzed with shock.
Someone contacted Skywolf.
Someone shouted “V! V!”
But it was Kyle . . .Kyle’s precious presence that kept Voodoo
from going out completely. He could feel Kyle struggling to breathe.
He could hear Kyle’s heart beat. He could sense the terrible shock.
<<Kyle,>> he mentally whispered. Voodoo loved Kyle’s name.
He loved Kyle’s soul. And it dawned on the Sentinel just how precious,
how . . . awesome . . .
The world for him brightened suddenly. He could hear everything
around him, sense all things to such a degree as he had forgotten.
The power of Interface was such that a Sentinel was no longer just another
creature, but something the ancient gods feared. He was not one person,
but two. And with all this might at his call, with all the
energies and powers at his disposal, he returned his attention back
to Kyle.
Someone touched him. He was a million miles away.
Someone called his name. Voodoo heard them but couldn’t
really answer.
<<Kyle.>> He called again.
But Kyle lay in shock, unable to answer.
Voodoo wrapped his mind about his Tentchi. <<Kyle . . .>>
he whispered softly. Voodoo became vaguely aware of a commotion down
the hall. His optics flashed off, on, and he gazed left, ignoring
Skywolf’s voice. People milled around Kyle, Kayla’s voice called
over and over.
No response.
<<Kyle.>> Voodoo called again. <<Breathe.
Kyle . . .>>
One breath.
Despair.
Traumatic shock.
<<Kyle.>> Voodoo enclosed himself about his Interface.
No response. Voodoo substituted and breathed.
One breath.
Forced through.
Two breaths.
Kyle came to but remained right where he lay. He felt himself
the dead center of a terrible storm. He didn’t see anything, couldn’t
hear anything around him. But a set of huge hands cupped around his
weak form and brought him close to warm, smooth metal. Kyle’s fingers
glided along the metal. It became familiar to him.
Kayla and Skywolf harped on Voodoo to get Kyle back to his room
so they could examine him. But all Voodoo wanted was to hold him.
“Bring him in so we can check on him.” Gatchel barked.
“NO!” Voodoo whined. “I just want to hold-he’s okay.”
Kayla firmly signaled him to lower Kyle and Voodoo reluctantly
obeyed like a child told to share his toy. But he kept Kyle in his
hands, unwilling to do anything more.
Kayla ran a scanner over Kyle twice. She read the results
then smiled, pleased. Kayla snapped the scanner shut. “The
shock is slowly wearing off. Take him home, Voodoo. He’s going
to be sick for a couple of days. No phasing until he’s better.
Okay?”
It took Kyle several days just to recover from the sudden attack.
Voodoo laughed at him nearly all the time because it didn’t occur to Kyle
until the third day that he and Voodoo re-Interfaced.
“This is a new one.” Kyle mused, adding to his journals.
“A Tentchi-Dokiah are separated by supernatural means. Then they
are snapped back together, the link stronger than before.” He paced
about his little garden, hand in pockets. “There should have been
scarring on Voodoo’s Interface systems. But there is none. The two
of us tested at ninety percent the other day, a thirty percent increase
over our original Interface. I’m, I’m still trying to sort it all
out. I think back to what Prophetess Alandra once said to me and
Steve: ‘You are the new species in the universe.’ She
said ‘you may soon find others who will become Tentchi-Dokiah. Every
new species must be given permission to exist.’ I am astounded by
the thought that there are or will be many others like us. But I
think Alandra meant something else, something entirely different.
Another species, perhaps.” Kyle sat on the edge of his patio and
stared out toward the vast and crowded citiscape. He thought about
Voodoo’s offer several weeks ago regarding a trip to Alean.
Kyle grinned when a familiar presence let Himself into his quarters-Steve
still had the access codes and Kyle didn’t see the need to change them.
He warmly greeted his friend through their empathic link and received an
emotional embrace. Steve stepped out to the patio.
“Place needs some sunlight, Kyle.” He suggested.
“I think WE need sunlight, Steve.” Kyle waited until Parker
joined him on the metal wall. “How did it go?”
“Ashtar is still upset. I told her it was going to take
a lot of time for me. I don’t think she understands.”
“No.” Kyle agreed. “It’s something you have to experience,
I suppose.”
Steve studied Kyle a moment. His friend looked far better
than he had in weeks . . . the last three months, actually. “How’s
Voodoo?” He asked quietly.
“Doing vertical loops in forbidden zones. I tell him he’s
going to get caught and Midnight will give him something unpleasant to
do as punishment.”
Steve stared a little more intently, daring to ask the next personal
question. “Have you phased yet?”
Kyle shook his head. “No. I’m still a bit shaky and
Voodoo doesn’t want to push me into anything.” Scott bowed his head
with a broad smile. “He spoils me, Steve.” The forty-something
gentleman’s eyes sparkled in a way Steve had not seen in decades.
“Voodoo makes me coffee and talks . . .just talks. He says he wants
to take me to Vega Three where they hold races and sports year-round.
He says the football there-“
”Oh yeah!” Steve grinned equally broadly. “Vegan football.
There’s nothing that compares to it.”
“Come with us.” Kyle invited.
“I might.” Steve replied easily. “But I want to see
you back to your old self first . . .” His voice drifted and he thought
about the ‘old Kyle’ and bit his words. He stared deeply into Kyle’s
dark brown eyes. “Kyle, come play pool with me tonight.”
Kyle looked puzzled and found he had to keep reminding himself
not to scrunch up his brows so much; the wound was still there. “Pool?”
“Hmmhmm. It’s uhm, a table with a whole bunch of round colorful
little balls and you hit them with the tip of a stick.”
Kyle stared at Steve in mild disbelief. It sounded ridiculous.
“Well, uhm, um . . .”
“Kyle, I don’t want to force you into anything you’re not ready
for. It’s just that in the past, you were always too busy.”
Kyle heard that accusation before. He couldn’t believe
he’d be too busy to goof off.
Steve went on: “Long before we came to Cybertron, it was just
you and me, Kayla, Shan, Jill, Mike and Ray. We used to do all kinds
of crazy things together. We were very close. Then, of course,
Midnight met Rodimus Prime and things haven’t been the same since.
You’re my very closest friend. We’ve always had good rapport and
I want to spend more time with you.”
At first Kyle wasn’t so sure. He was being dragged out
of his comfort zone. But he knew Steve would do nothing to deliberately
embarrass him. He smiled again. “Okay.”
Steve stood, triumph beamed in his face. “Well, I need
to get back. Mid wants a report made for the Counsel. At least
you and I did not have to set another appointment for another meeting-that’s
one thing I like about Optimus Prime: he won’t waste his time on things
he’s already aware of.”
“Names.” Kyle shook his head.
And Steve was sorry. It would take Kyle years, if not a
life time to reacquaint himself with his life. “Oh!” Steve
brightened. “Before I forget again-“ he brought out a small wrapped
box and gave it to Kyle. “I know Hashu said I get this one.
But really, for all you’ve been through, Kyle, I think you deserve it more
than me.”
Kyle’s face went blank and he opened the little box, finding
the other bullet containing Xesnex. “Really now, Steve. If
you were going to propose to me, you should have used something a little
more romantic.”
Steve pointed a finger at him and opened his mouth to say something,
but Parker caught his words when he realized he didn’t know what
to say at all.
Kyle grinned and made his way back inside his quarters.
“Don’t worry, I won’t tell Ashtar.”
“You’re really asking for it, Scott.” Steve finally said.
Kyle placed the bullet between Ptysar and an ancient hourglass
on the bookshelf of his desk and thought of Kayla.
End
T.L. Arens
koontah@mail.snowcrest.net