„Now say ‘ah’."
„Ahhhh."
„Oh, my! Will you just look at that!" Dr. Kyle Scott
clicked his tongue in a little jest. „Off hand I’d say you were taking
singing lessons, there, young lady!"
The little ten year-old gave him a broad smile and she
lifted her chin proudly.
„You know," Kyle continued as he scribbled notes on his
chart, „I’m willing to bet we can underhandedly sneak a balloon from Nurse
Tether’s smock pocket. Don’t you think so?"
The little girl gazed at the nurse who only raised a
brow, long since tired of Kyle’s ever-patient work with the people who
visited the clinic for immunization shots. The child read weariness and
loss of endurance in Tether’s face and shook her head. „She’d catched you
and you’d have to go someplace where they lock bad people up."
Kyle gave the girl a look the nurse had never seen him
give anyone before. She smirked and laughed.
Kyle ignored her. „You’re not considering becoming an
ambassador for the Autobots, are you, Charline?" He asked as he wrote up
a prescription for high-potent vitamin-A and C tablets. He remembered once
treating the girl’s mother when she was just Charline’s age. Time goes
by and it still did not recognize Dr. Scott’s appearance. He looked the
very same now, as he did the day he interfaced with Sentinel warrior Voodoo.
Although the two talked on many occasions, they were never very close.
Kyle had his work as a general practitioner/xenobiolgist when the need
arose and Voodoo did . . . whatever Voodoo did.
„I don’t know." The baby shrugged.
„Well, I’ll tell you-„ Kyle reached for a slip of paper
and
wrote the prescription down again for Charline’s mother.
„-you study hard and I’m willing to bet you’ll either be a diplomat, or
a really good singer."
Tether reached into her smock pocket and handed Charline
a balloon.
„Well!" Kyle said in mock surprise. „How about that?
Our nurse friend here decided to grow tired of a pesky doctor trying to
make friends by snitching balloons from her! Thank you, Tether." He smiled
warmly.
„Thank you, Miss Tether." Charline helped herself off
the table and her mother came in a moment later.
„Well, no more strep throat on that side of the family."
Kyle confirmed. He was sorry for the exodus that took
place when so many people defected from Earth after the Autobots left.
As with so many other inter-planetary explorers, the Humans had brought
some of their own diseases to Cybertron with them. „She’s in good health."
He reported, pocketing his ink pen. „Let her outside more than once in
a while. I’ve written a prescription for some vitamins."
The woman smiled right at Kyle himself, amused that he
hadn’t looked any different now than he did when she was Charline’s age.
„Thank you, Kyle." She batted her long eyelashes and gave the tired nurse
a glance. She sorta hoped Tether didn’t see the long line that still waited
for them.
She left the room as Kyle’s beeper paged him. He glanced
at it and memorized the number and welcomed the next child into the room
with same calmness he had for Charline.
Kyle welcomed seventeen more patients before another doctor
came to replace him. A couple of people who knew him and came to see him
personally were disappointed, but Kyle had been working since five-thirty
that morning and needed a good rest. He tousled one boy’s straight blonde
hair and said hello to a couple of the mothers he also knew from their
childhood and made way toward the break room. His pager beeped again and
Kyle silenced it and made the call from the visiphone.
The face of a half-human, half-alien woman came on screen.
She smiled broadly and held up a manuscript. „Hey," she
called. „I got it rewritten. Wanna look at it?"
Kyle stared at someone’s attempt to romanticize the life
of an Interface and the weariness helped him to keep a straight face. „Not
tonight, Lelel." He replied quietly. „It’s been too long a day."
She pouted. Not that it bothered Kyle. She had been chasing
him down for the last week, pestering him to tell her everything about
his life, insisting she see him every day. He yawned and covered his mouth.
„Excuse me."
„Awe. Long day? I could come over and give you a really
nice massage. It’ll cure your weariness in a jiffy."
He gave her a ‘professional’ smile. „I have to go, Lelel.
We can talk later."
„Okay." She pouted again. He really didn’t want to hurt
her feelings. But after all, he needed space.
„Bye-bye." He sounded a little more cheerful.
„Bye."
He hung up and answered the second message, a recording
came on over his A/V mail. Optimus Prime’s face appeared on the screen,
forcing Kyle to take a sudden step back, surprised the Autobot leader would
be calling him. „Hello, Dr. Scott," the recording greeted. „I have an off-world
assignment for you if you’re willing to take it. There’s an unknown medical
case on Chenobis and they had asked specifically for you. Contact me if
you’re interested. Prime out."
Always straight to the point, Kyle mused inwardly. He
replied to the call, via typed memo, his fingers flying over the small
keypad and sent it off.
„Going home, Dr. Scott?" Tether asked as she passed him
and gathered her coat.
„As fast as I can fly." Kyle turned and smiled at her.
She stared at him, her face blank. She shook her head.
„Wish I had half the patience you do."
Kyle took that as a double-connotation and chuckled.
The nursed wondered what he was laughing at, at first then realized what
she had said and smiled. „Good night, Dr. Scott."
The visaphone called just as Scott entered his quarters.
He clicked it on as he dumped his coat over a chair and undid his tie.
„Hello, Kyle." Came Prime’s soft voice.
„Good evening, Optimus Prime. Did you get my message?"
„Yes. Thank you. What’s this about?" He turned away and
loosened his shirt and slipped out of his shoes.
„There’s a patient on Chenobis who’s suffering from a
strange mental condition. The hospital in the capital city had asked if
we could help out."
Kyle thought it briefly over. „Vacation time?"
The Autobot leader smiled with his optics. „I can arrange
that, yes."
„Okay." Kyle finally smiled, feeling lighter. „When do
I leave?"
„Tomorrow. I’ll have all other business amended."
It meant Prime would contact the hospital where Kyle
worked, rearranging all the necessary rigamarole.
Voodoo was assigned to accompany Kyle to Chenobis. But
the Sentinel wasn’t too happy about it. He remained mostly quiet during
their voyage until the transport dropped them from orbit.
„Well, I suppose it was inevitable." The sleek dark blue
Sentinel jet muttered.
Kyle didn’t answer right away. He scanned over notes
on Chenobian physiology, placing some of it into memory and making other
amended notes in his book. „I’m sorry, Voodoo." He finally returned. „What
was that?"
„Oh, sure!" The Sentinel snarled. „Ignore me when I’m
in a crisis! There you sit all comfy and purdy and I, your humble slave,
have to drive you to your destination but you don’t have the courtesy to
listen to a thing I say!"
Kyle pretended to yawn. „I didn’t know I was such a burden
to you. Maybe we should have asked for other partners."
„That does it!" Voodoo snipped. „Just slice open my processors
and smear acid all over them! Was it fun for you?"
„You should only be so lucky." Kyle grunted. „You could
have ended up with someone worse than me."
„I could only hope." Voodoo grunted.
Kyle sniggered to himself, knowing Voodoo was only giving
him a hard time. „I’ll remember that come our next conversation."
But Voodoo fell very silent and Kyle realized Voodoo’s
mood suddenly swung to his proverbial sleeve and the jet pouted. The doctor
inwardly rolled his eyes.
Dr. Zenthemp greeted Kyle cordially and Doctor Scott found
he liked the deep grey skin that diversified this species of people from
his own. Most of them had dark hair, a few had brown, grey or white.
Zenthemp led Kyle to the patient’s room. Kyle liked the
hospital. Large windows on the north allowed plenty of light into the halls.
Outside stood a grand garden, tended with great care. Some of the upper
windows were marked with stained or frosted glass, forming a mosaic of
religious or comforting portraits. The floors were well-kept and the staff
proved very friendly.
Zenthemp opened the room and the patient greeted them
with a measure of respect, and unfamiliarity.
„Hello, Beth." Zenthemp greeted cordially. „I’d like
you to meet Dr. Kyle Scott. He’s come all the way from Cybertron to meet
with you."
The woman’s dark eyes flitted from Zenthemp to Kyle,
her face a blank page. „Do I know you?" She asked slowly.
„No, Ma’am." Kyle answered politely. He liked her soft
grey skin and the broadness of her shoulders. She was a strong woman, probably
either worked out on a regular basis or worked in some kind of construction.
„That’s good." Beth answered. „I don’t seem to know anyone
anymore."
Kyle took up her chart and gave it a professional glance,
able to take in pretty much of her history in a couple of scans. „Beth,
it says here you’re an archeologist, married and have two children."
She sadly shrugged.
Kyle said nothing further about it. „Well, what all can
you tell me about yourself?"
Again she shrugged. „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." Tears covered her eyes and she blinked, not bothering
to wipe them off her cheeks. „It’s eating me alive."
Chills ran down Kyle’s spine. „Can you tell me what it
is?"
Before she could answer, Zenthemp pulled Kyle aside,
politely excusing them from her presence for a moment. Kyle thought him
rude and looked a bit cross until Zenthemp handed him a small collection
of papers.
„What’s this?" Kyle examined them and found odd names
attacked to the upper portion.
„Bills." Zenthemp answered. „Her family turned them over
to us for some examination. They’re bills from two psychic healers and
a witch doctor, Kyle."
He stared at Zenthemp as though the other doctor had
lost his mind. „Does she think she’s losing her mind?"
„If she does, she’s not far off track. We did an MRI
and found about three percent of her hippocampus missing."
Kyle flinched, his brows knitted. He returned to Beth
and gave her a kind smile. „Beth, what are some of the things that you
know and remember?"
„I know how to do my job." She answered. „It’s not concerned
with knowledge, Dr. Scott. It devours memories based on emotions, on pleasures
and it creates fear and sorrow and feeds on that, too. And pain, Doctor."
She reached up and smoothed Kyle’s blonde-white hair, her hand trailing
down over his forty-something face. „You are so beautiful." She added wistfully."
Kyle actually flushed and looked away. Zenthemp chuckled.
„Well, I’m glad to see there’s a good relationship already
starting here. He checked his watch. „Uh, Beth, how about we come back
in an hour and go over all the tests we’ve done and see where we can go
from there?"
She smiled pleasantly. „Alright, Doctor."
Kyle was invited out for lunch with Zenthemp, which he
could not turn down. Zenthemp went over his hospital’s history and gave
some insight to their practices, which Kyle didn’t think all that much
different from Earth’s twenty-second century medicine.
Zenthemp’s beeper called for his attention, demanding
the two return to the hospital at once.
„So much for lunch!" He declared, grabbing a last fried
potato. Kyle chuckled and followed him out the door.
The police had taped off the hospital’s front entrance
and fought a nosy crowd. Zenthemp and Scott were given leeway and upon
entering the lobby, they raced in the direction of several terrible screams.
They pressed through a crowd of nurses and patients while authorities and
hospital security struggled with a half-crazed woman. She slashed at several
people with a glass shard, screeching at the top of her lungs. She uttered
words Kyle’s translator could not make out and finally, she gazed at him
and started to cry.
„Beth!" Zenthemp called. „You can’t do this! You’re hurting
people!"
But all she did was scream and slice the air this way,
that way and down. She slashed her legs and security tried once again to
suppress her. But she could not be bound. She shoved one man against the
wall, the other flew through the air and crashed into three onlookers.
Then she seemed to wrestle with an invisible foe and she tried to catch
her breath and poised, as though frozen.
Kyle caught his breath and flinched hard when Voodoo
demanded, not too kindly, what was going on. By flinching, Kyle did not
see how it happened. But the very next second, Beth was dead, her body
ripped to pieces by some unnatural force right there in front of them.
Then one of the male nurses uttered a horrible gurgling
sound and wrested a scalpel from a nearby doctor. He sliced the medic’s
face with one stroke, and sliced the back of Kyle’s hand in the next. Kyle
jumped back, holding his hand. Fire raced under his skin and his hissed
inward as it shot up his arm and coursed through his body in seconds. His
shields shot up as he sank to his knees, heedless that security just shot
the male nurse and herded everyone out of the hallway.
<<Kyle!>> Voodoo cried in his head. <<Kyle,
what’s wrong?>>
But Doctor Scott could not answer. Someone slid his hands
under Kyle’s arms and dragged him out of what he realized was a blood-drenched
room. He could not find Beth’s body lying anywhere. But there the male
nurse lay, blood seeping from the wound in his head.
They dragged Kyle into the hallway and propped him against
the wall while they waited for emergency personnel. Zenthemp’s face came
into view and he asked questions, but Kyle could not make them out.
„I think I’ve been poisoned." He said. The fire under
his skin made it difficult to stay conscious.
<<I’m coming to get you right now!>> Voodoo thundered
in his head.
<<You won’t fit here.>> Kyle brushed. It was the
last thing he remembered.
Kyle couldn’t figure out why people around him were fussing
so. He had no pain. They ushered him into the nearest room and set compresses
on his wound. Kyle still felt Voodoo’s demands running through his head.
But he simply could not answer right away. Voodoo snarled, almost indignant
that Scott did not answer any of his questions. Kyle merely moaned inwardly,
wishing Voodoo would calm down. <<You’re going to give me a headache.>>
he tried reasonably.
<<You ARE a headache!>> Voodoo boomed through the
link. <<It doesn’t matter what I do, you just go right on acting
as if everything’s okay.>>
But Kyle didn’t feel like arguing. He drifted again when
the attending nurse gave him another shot for the poison.
When he woke, Kyle found himself resting comfortably.
His wound was clean and presumably mended with a laser. Dr. Di Renaowski
smiled at him as she applied a light wrapping to protect his skin. „Well,
you’re either in shock, Dr. Scott, or you’re the calmest individual I’ve
ever met!"
Kyle examined her handiwork and met her warm smile.
„Probably a little of both." He admitted quietly.
„Is there someone who can drive you home? I think it
best you try not to drive."
Kyle’s head cleared a little more and he sent her a reassuring
smile. „I’ll be taking a taxi to my hotel. I should be alright. Thank you,
Dr. Renaowski."
She shook her head. „Call me Di." She laid a grey hand
on the gentle doctor’s shoulder and wished he would consider residency
at the hospital. But she knew the off-worlder would not think of it, not
when he worked with the Cybertronians.
Voodoo’s urgency echoed in Kyle’s head and Kyle tried
again to reassure Voodoo he was going to be okay. He smiled politely at
his attendant and sat up, finding his trench coat. „I really have to go.
Thank you, Di."
She smiled a welcome and he departed.
The down town traffic milled about like an ant colony
after a rainstorm. Kyle managed to move about two feet before having to
wait another ten minutes before moving again. He could feel Voodoo wordlessly
admonish him for being less than careful. The Sentinel jet was about ready
to abandon his current diplomatic duties right on the spot and pluck Kyle
right out of traffic. Kyle laughed quietly to himself, not meaning to hurt
Voodoo’s feelings. But after all, what happened was unforseen.
Voodoo seethed and shut himself out for a while. Kyle
frowned, suddenly feeling abandoned. The taxi moved ahead another six feet
and waited. The sun set behind the cityscape, casting eerie shadows across
the street. Kyle gazed up at a cheerful blue sky. It had been a very long
time since he’d seen a light blue sky with a sun in it.
Someone rudely honked behind and the taxi moved another
thirteen feet before pausing again. Kyle couldn’t figure out why Voodoo
was so worried at times, and almost antagonistic at others. They had gotten
into a fight the other day, but the arguments are usually short and soon
forgotten by both sides. Both really just wanted to live their own lives.
Kyle loved his profession, although more often than not, he had to act
like an emergency paramedic rather than a real doctor. But he supposed
that’s the way things worked out.
A watery red image slipped in and out of sight.
„Did you just see that?" The cabby asked Kyle.
Kyle took a second glance across the line of cars, not
sure what he almost didn’t see. But he saw nothing now. „I don’t know."
He answered carefully. He kept staring from the back seat, waiting. The
line of cars moved again and as they did so, the red watery image came
back in the form of an English bull dog. Kyle blinked and gasped, swallowing
air as the dog’s foot crushed a car and its occupants beneath it.
The cab driver panicked and abandoned the taxi. Kyle
did the same as the shadowy figure stomped on a couple more cars and explosions
from a pickup truck tossed metal in every direction. People disembarked
from their vehicles, screaming and the ‘ghost’ howled and two people disappeared
into its mouth. It batted at a woman, tossing her like a rag doll across
two cars and into the window of a nearby dress shop. Another paw raked
out in front of the beast, slamming Kyle through the air and hard against
another car.
Kyle lost his wind and fell flat on the ground, unable
to move. He didn’t see the manifestation spread across the area like so
much smoke, then divide into three smaller versions of itself.
A terrible explosion boomed through the streets and roused
Kyle back to consciousness. He lifted his head and blood poured into his
eyes. He tried to blink it away and struggled toward a woman who lay nearby.
Breathing hurt. Every breath he took caused him greater
pain than the last and he couldn’t move his body. He stretched his arm
out to the lady, but that hurt too. One of the three manifestations leapt
in front of the lady and sniffed at her. She didn’t respond.
Then it licked Kyle’s face and in so doing, painfully
extracted something from the doctor. Kyle gasped for breath. Pain shot
straight up his spine and constricted him. He thought his head was going
to implode at any second.
Try to breathe, he told himself. But the skin on his
hands and arms merely sunk in. He was suffocating. He felt his chest cave
in.
And then the dog took Kyle’s right arm and side into
its mouth and bit down.
Someone dragged the remains of the doctor’s body out
of his own blood pool. Voices shouted and drowned in his ears and in the
background, someone kept whispering his name. He was vaguely aware of the
city streets, the towering buildings. Kyle was told, he was told not to
take the requested job, wasn’t he? Distantly he heard someone mentioned
blood leaking from his ears.
Someone jumped to her feet and ran.
And she kept running, leaving colors in the air. The
air turned breezy and Kyle found he could breathe again. Suddenly he felt
better, too, not so heavy.
But the land under him bled red and the sky above him
bled blue and suddenly he didn’t feel so good.
He was completely alone. Half of someone he should have
been. Cold. Abandoned like doll nobody wanted anymore. And he thought the
buildings surrounding him tried to swallow him whole. He fell to his knees
and wept. For now he had not lost one life, but two.
The wind picked up again and whispered his name, but
Kyle did not know the voice. He was utterly alone. And now he realized
it wasn’t the land that was bleeding, but himself. He looked down at his
body and found it shredded and the shock of it made him black out.
Voodoo panicked. His right side was stricken, bitten off
and sewn clumsily back together. He fell from the sky and plunged hard
into the salt-and-sulfur ocean. The deep currents threatened to suck him
down and Voodoo wrestled with them as though fearing he would drown. But
he managed to push his way past them and broke through the ocean’s surface,
greeting the sun-lit sky with a fear he had never felt before. Something
had ripped into him.
And something had ripped Kyle out.
Voodoo felt a sense of urgency unlike anything before.
He allowed his body to fold just slightly in the water then pressed with
all his might out of the ocean, transformed and shot into the air.
Madness possessed the whole area and backed traffic up
for miles, no one could get in or out. The police were forced to use land
animals to move between cars and people to assist the wounded and those
eight who died.
Voodoo’s heart broke when emergency crews lifted Kyle’s
lifeless form from the ground onto a stretcher. They were going to carry
him back to the hospital and it was all Voodoo could do to keep himself
from snatching his friend from their grasp and fleeing directly to Cybertron.
After all, he told himself, there were forms and certain protocols to adhere
to. And Voodoo knew he was bound by good faith to follow those rules.
But there were times when desperate measures got the
best of the Sentinel. Emotion often clouded his own judgments and all Voodoo
could really think about were his instincts.
Protect and care for Kyle. That always comes first.
Always. Even if the two weren’t half as close as the
other Sentinels and their Interfaces. Kyle’s life was far more precious
than his own.
Far more precious.
And that’s why Voodoo’s irrationality finally took over
and
he swooped low along the panicked crowd and swept Kyle
off the stretcher before the paramedics could tie him down.
Voodoo heard Kyle softly moan in pain. The Sentinel transformed
around his friend, trying to be as careful as possible to prevent further
injury. Then Voodoo reached hyper speed and phased off-planet.
„Hey, looks like the ‘ol ticker still works in there,
eh, Voodoo?"
The Sentinel activated his optics, finding himself in
Skywolf’s lab. The old Sentinel chuckled softly and put away a scanner.
One second.
Two.
Three.
Voodoo shot up and would have transformed and smashed
through the walls had an assistant not activated a reinforcement
field. „KYLE!!" He cried. „Oh, Primus! Kyle! Kyle!"
„They’re caring for him even as we speak." Skywolf answered
as soothingly as patience allowed. „We brought the two of you in as soon
as you were found. Now, what happened to you two?"
Voodoo’s mind rushed with urgency and fear. A coldness
filled him and he tried ever so desperately to Reach his friend via their
mental link and he received nothing. But Skywolf’s voice found its way
through the Sentinel’s fearfulness and after repeating his question twice,
Skywolf finally got the answers he was after:
„I-I don’t know, Sky. I was flying over the ocean one
moment, then I felt terrible pain and I fell. And all I could think of
was Kyle; something had attacked him at the hospital, and then something
else attacked him in the streets. I tried to get him to talk-aaagghh!"
Voodoo’s form bucked against the force field holding him to the medical
flat. The field snapped and buzzed in protest. Skywolf and his assistants
rushed to get Voodoo calmed.
„He’s acting like he’s going through link-separation!"
Chaos cried.
„But Kyle’s still alive!" Skywolf denied. „Get me four
quams of phaseem!"
Voodoo’s life signs flattened, his body suddenly collapsed
into motionlessness.
„He’s in shock!" The nurse called.
And Skywolf ejected a nanite capsule straight into Voodoo’s
system.
All Kyle heard were muffled sounds and distant lights.
Pain danced madly up and down his body, lancing his right side several
times. He was sure his arm wasn’t there anymore and he would now bleed
to death. He didn’t know where he was; the hospital, perhaps.
„I’m losing him!" Jill announced. They raced around the
table, trying desperately to save Kyle as his life drained with blood that
flowed out his ears. Jill was hard put to keep her concentration as fear
kept trying to get in the way. The tried three different stimulants until
Jill finally decided to administer shock treatment to bring Kyle out of
flat line.
„Clear!" Jill rang
No result.
„Again!" She ordered. The machine recharged and an eternity
stretched between each level until it hit ninety percent and Jill warned
her staff before trying again to shock Doctor Scott back to life.
Her own breath came laboriously. Jill could sense Skywolf
struggle to get Voodoo to fight but he was getting nowhere either. „Come
on!" She shouted. „Kyle, dammit! Fight!"
„Pulse!" A nurse announced.
Jill set the panels down and scanned Kyle’s body again.
In addition to the bruises she just gave him, a strange bite-mark pattern
of welts had formed over the right side of his chest, curving down around
his back. She said nothing to her assistants but frowned inwardly and scanned
him once more, only a little satisfied that they had brought him out of
death’s grip and into the land of unconsciousness.
Voodoo managed to pull himself out of despair long enough
to regain consciousness. All he could think of was Kyle. His entire soul
had shut reality and the universe out. A sea of emptiness filled him. Something
was ripping his guts out. Something was tearing at their Interface.
A few moments later, the Sentinel’s visual sensors activated
and he came face to face with Skywolf and a very worried Midnight.
Both of them asked him questions, but Voodoo couldn’t
answer either of them. Kyle! Kyle! He was dying! He was going to lose that
perfect part of himself and . . . and Voodoo simply could not live on without
Kyle. He could not live on knowing that a precious part of his own soul
had faded out. Voodoo would rather be transfixed, lose his identity as
a Transformer, than to lose Kyle. Why couldn’t they just slice off one
of his arms or legs and cripple him for all eternity if but to allow Kyle
to live?
Why? Why in Primus did this happen?
Kyle, Kyle, Kyle!
Please! Please! He thought, just let me see Kyle! Let
me near him just so I know he’s okay!
„Voodoo." Midnight’s soft voice finally drew his friend’s
attention.
„I can’t feel him anymore, Mid. He’s dying, isn’t he?
Kyle’s dying."
„I don’t know. But I talked with Jill and she said it
was okay for you to stay in the room as long as you promise to behave yourself
and stay out of their way."
It was hope. There was hope and it grew with a great
deal of gratitude toward his thoughtful leader. Voodoo’s countenance brightened
and he vigorously nodded.
The dark blue, opticless Sentinel jet found a seat against
the wall in Kyle’s room. Nurses came and left every fifteen minutes, ignoring
him as if he were just another piece of furniture. All he could do was
sit and stare. He wanted so desperately to take Kyle in his arms and mend
Kyle’s broken body and soul with his own life force. But he could do nothing
but sit on the unforgiving floor, hour after endless, unpromising hour.
Nurses came and went. The scanning equipment softly lit and dimmed as they
closely monitored Kyle’s physical and brain activity.
Someone’s hand kindly rested on his shoulder but Voodoo
could not look Midnight in the optics.
„Come and get some rest." Midnight begged softly. „I’m
sure they’ll let you know-„
„No!" Voodoo snapped urgently. „I can’t. I can’t leave
him."
Midnight sympathetically patted his friend on the shoulder
and was about to leave when Voodoo started to rock slightly back and forth.
„I-I can’t phase him in. There’s nothing there! I—„
„Shhh." The Sentinel leader hushed. „Alright, Voodoo.
Calm down. I’ll bring you some energon. Try to stay calm."
Voodoo kept shaking his head even after Mid left the
room.
The Sentinel’s form kept rocking automatically, his systems
threatened to overload from anxiety. He bowed over and covered his face.
A part of him was dying and he had no control over it.
Kyle was dying. Pain twisted his face, blood slowly seeped
from his cold form. Voodoo held him close, feeling so terribly helpless.
He watched as minute by minute the person who shared his own existence
drifted from him. Pain pricked Kyle’s fragile Human form and his breath
fell shorter and shorter. Voodoo tried to keep his friend, his love as
comfortable as possible.
<<Don’t leave me.>> he begged. <<Stay with
me, Kyle. Stay.>>
Kyle slowly closed his eyes to sleep for just a few moments
and Voodoo crossed his legs and bent over so as to hide his aching heart
from the world. He didn’t want anyone to notice Kyle’s blood leaking between
his metal fingers. He didn’t want anyone to see how vulnerable he felt.
He was dying inside and with each wave of pain that assailed Kyle’s broken
body, Voodoo felt his own soul weaken. This gentle doctor was his life,
his soul, the center of his existence and soon Kyle would leave him and
Voodoo would either follow him in death, or live on under the torment of
madness.
A shadowy red dog bit his arm and Voodoo jumped out of
his stooper and found Midnight crouched before him, a cup of energon between
his hands. „Here, friend. Sorry to startle you."
„What?" Voodoo gasped. „Kyle! Oh Primus! Kyle!’
„Shh!" Mid admonished quietly. „You’ll wake him up."
He pressed Voodoo’s hand round the cup of energon and patted the dark Sentinel’s
shoulder.
Voodoo greedily downed the energon. He was exhausted,
needing a good recharge, but he was unwilling to leave the room. Someone
would have to come and drag him out (kicking and screaming, maybe) before
he would leave Kyle’s side. Something burned the right side of his chest
and Voodoo subconsciously rubbed it.
„What’s that?" Mid asked, pointing at his chest.
„What?"
„Those marks? Where’d you get them?"
Voodoo gazed down and found a series of dents and burn
marks lining around the front right side of his chest. „I dunno." And he
struggled to recall what he might have done to receive the marks. But nothing
came to mind and he shrugged. He drank the last wonderful drop of energon
and handed the cup back to his commander.
Midnight took to his feet and gazed at the Human whose
life hung so precariously to life support. He knew what Voodoo’s problem
was; he longed to phase Kyle in. He wanted to make his friend better. But
there was nothing poor Voodoo could do for Kyle. He turned back and grimly
smiled at Voodoo, wanting to pat the Sentinel on the shoulder, but daring
not to as Voodoo would see it as patronizing. Mid silently left as another
nurse came in and checked on the patient, not once acknowledging Voodoo’s
presence.
Voodoo waited another hour and forty-seven minutes before
he heard Kyle stirring under the covers. He sat right up and the very second
he saw Kyle’s eyes barely open, he flew to the bedside and set his hands
as carefully and tentatively on the bed rails as he dared.
<<Kyle?>> he Called. <<Kyle? Oh Primus! It’s
me!>>
Dr. Scott’s eyes fell again and after several more seconds,
they opened. But nothing registered. Voodoo had a hard time trying to keep
himself from simply sweeping his friend into his arms, and phasing him
into his body and soul. He so desperately longed for that connection! But
all he could do, all he could get away with was to place a finger under
Kyle’s injured right hand.
„Excuse me!’ A nurse announced. „Coming through. You’re
going to have to move your caboose, there buddy-boy." She growled. Voodoo
hurt, but he obeyed her nonetheless and withdrew to his spot against he
opposite wall.
„Well!’ The nurse nearly sang. „"What’s this? Our doctor-patient
is trying to gain consciousness? She leaned over and spoke into the intercom.
„Josie, better call Jill in. We have a waking Interface!"
He had walked in darkened lands he no longer recalled.
But Kyle found the hill and found a stream and there he drank deeply of
its life-enriching substance. He heard someone whisper his name and he
remembered that it was his name. He just couldn’t remember anything else.
And that was when he opened his eyes. A dark shape loomed
over him and his first reaction was to scream, but he could not move his
body. His eyes closed by themselves. He came back and faced the chubbiness
of a female dressed in pink and white. Her brown hair lay wrapped about
her head in a thick long braid and a name tag sat atop her shoulder. But
Kyle could not make it out.
They strapped a mask over his face and cold air rushed
into his lungs, clearing his mind of foggy sleep. Now he counted three
women, one of which held a scanner in her hand and ran it up and down his
body. She smiled kindly, her eyes sparkling with approval.
„You’re doing just fine, Dr. Scott. Welcome back to the
living."
But Kyle felt nothing except sadness. Someone had robbed
him of something, he was sure of it. He closed his eyes, not making so
much as a whisper and fell back to sleep.
He woke sometime later, his head a great deal clearer
than before. He had no idea where he was and something inside him said
not to be afraid, that he was among friends.
<<Kyle?>> another voice called in his head.
Kyle glanced around the room and found a robot sitting
against the wall.
No, that couldn’t be right. What would a robot be doing
sitting in the room? Where was he? Movement distracted him and he gazed
right and watched as a girl stepped in, checked his vitals and marked them
on the chart. She gave him a cursory glance at first. Then she paused and
her whole face brightened. „Dr. Scott!" She cried in pleasant tones. „Hello!
Stay right there! I’ll be right back."
He thought he saw the robot move. <<Kyle?>> the
voice came into his head again, but the man didn’t know why or how it was
entering his head. He wouldn’t just call his own name, now would he? He
ignored it and waited for the woman to come back.
„Lookit this!" Another woman nearly sang. „Hello, Dr.
Scott. Welcome back again. Are you hungry?"
He gazed from one woman to the other. „Where am I?" He
asked with a quiet, suspicious voice.
Both their faces fell blank. The older of the two blinked.
„Uhm . . . don’t you know where you’re at?"
The man stared at the woman as if she were insane. „Who
did you say you were again? And why is there a robot sitting across from
me?"
The older women’s face fell into disbelief. „Ohmigod.
Uhm, do you know what year this is? Do you know who you are?"
He threw her a puzzled look. He was looking for an answer,
not another question. He began to panic „My name is Kyle. And it’s . .
. um." He tried to think. What year was it? Nineteen eighty . . . two thousand
. . . his panic worsened.
„Do you know how old you are, Dr. Scott?" She pressed
on.
<<Kyle!>> came the voice again. Kyle tried to think
and he could not for his life, remember his own age! He didn’t know who
he was, what he did for a living. Kyle searched everywhere in his head,
struggling to come up with at least one answer, even his own middle name.
Nothing.
Nothing.
Nothing.
He gave her a hopeless look, his soul now exasperated.
„What did you do to me?" He demanded. „Did you steal
my memories and implant a mini communicator in my head?"
„No."
„Someone keeps calling my name."
Suddenly the robot, the giant robot came to life and
it sprang up on hands and knees and its huge hand reached for him.
„Kyle, it’s me! It’s Voodoo!"
Startled by the sudden movement, Kyle screamed and tried
to scamper up the bed. The women tried to hold him down and succeeded only
in frightening him further. Kyle fought them hard. Obviously they were
doing experiments on him.
„Let go of me!" He shouted. „I don’t know who you people
are! Leave me alone! Leave me alone!" He strong-armed the chubby woman,
bending her hand back. But the older woman laid something freezing cold
and sharp over his neck and with a hissing sound, his body betrayed him
and fell limp. He was now their prisoner, unable to decide what they could
and could not do to him. The robot had a hand in it all, he was sure. Tears
choked him but he found he could not cry. His body became one with the
bed under him and the next moment turned dark.
„He doesn’t remember me!" Voodoo cried when Kyle passed
out. „Oh Primus! What’s wrong with him?"
„Temporary amnesia, most likely." Jill answered. She
strapped Dr. Scott’s hands to the bed rails and made sure the blanket lay
snugly over his body. She apologetically smoothed his hair from his brow
and gave Voodoo a grim expression. „I can’t do anything until we calm him
down. That means you’ll have to leave the room."
„No way.’ Voodoo stubbornly argued. „I’m not going anywhere.
I’m staying right here with Kyle. And you don’t have to use those restraints.
I’ll watch over him."
Jill scratched something on the chart and pocketed her
pen.
„He’s not Kyle anymore." She answered firmly. „At least
not right now. The restraints stay per hospital policy. The very sight
of you scared the pants off him. I suggest you just leave and let him adjust
a little at a time. Got it?" And she departed to take care of someone else
for the moment. The nurse left afterward, giving Voodoo a sorry smile.
Voodoo’s heart ached and he crawled to the bedside. He
swept Kyle’s hair from his brow and mournfully made sure the coverlet warmly
covered his friend. „Kyle." He whispered. „Come back to me." He found Kyle’s
injured arm under the blanket and examined it around the restraint to make
sure the bandaging was done correctly. It was then that he noted a few
spots of blood seeping through Kyle’s gown. He carefully lifted the blanket
further away, peeled the gown back and examined the bite marks all circling
the whole right side of Kyle’s chest and shoulder. The shape matched mark
for mark the same pattern of dents and gouges now defacing Voodoo’s own
chassis.
He carefully covered his friend again, but kept his finger
under the injured hand, just to derive some meager form of comfort at the
doctor’s unconscious touch.
The sedative worked for a while. Voodoo’s optics shot
on, not realizing he had fallen into recharge mode by the bedside. He glanced
about, checking his internal chronometer and realized one of the nurses
neglected to step in for a fifteen-minute check.
Then he understood why he woke: Kyle’s eyes were wide
open, but being bound to the bed, he had been unable to move. He stared
at Voodoo with eyes that recognized nothing. And now that they made optical
contact, Kyle struggled against his bonds, becoming increasingly more frightened.
<<Kyle.>> Voodoo sent. <<It’s okay. It’s
just me.>>
Kyle didn’t know who he was-a tormentor or some other
figure
of death. He struggled harder and mouthed the words ‘help
me.’ But nothing came from his voice. His breath shortened and he began
to rub his hands raw against the velcro bonds.
„Shhh. Shhh." Voodoo tried to calm him down. „No one’s
going to hurt you, Kyle Scott."
„I don’t know who you are." Kyle whispered in a panic.
„Help." But his words failed to leave the room. No one
outside could hear him.
Voodoo felt hurt. The person closest to him could not
remember who he was. He withdrew his finger from under Kyle’s injured hand
and stroked his left arm in slow, careful movements.
Kyle fought against that too, certain the machine was
probing him for something. But with each stroke came a warmth that entered
his body and caused him to wear down. He fought and fought but the warmth,
a gentle trilling sensation, forced his fears to slowly subside, his eyes
drooped. His body finally succumbed to it, betraying his will, and wilted.
He feared the machine was readying to do something terrible to him. The
finger that rubbed his left arm, now moved to touch his face and Kyle began
to weep, unable to call for help, unable to leave the room, or flee from
his restraints. All he could do was weep.
And it worked. Voodoo finally realized he was doing more
harm than good and slowly withdrew, saddened that an emotional bond between
them had been severed. He wanted so desperately to hold Kyle, to heal him,
to be one with him again.
But now it seemed it would not be that way.
It opened its cavernous mouth, acidic saliva fell over
its scarred lips and it whispered Kyle’s name with foul breath and a dark
voice. Kyle’s breath was stolen from him. The creature-thing drank his
blood and touched his soul in places he would not speak. Kyle trembled
in terror and agony. He tried to call for help, but he was imprisoned by
glass walls. He tried to reach Voodoo, but the monster separated them while
it slowly fed on the doctor.
He opened his eyes to force his delirious and darkened
mind to think of other things when a tall woman in silky white hair prepared
to stab him with a needle. He startled and struggled against the restraints.
He trembled, the suddenness of her motion reminded him of the robot. „Who
are you?" His usual soft-spoken voice came raspy and fear-ridden.
The woman stared at him in disbelief. She glanced at
the needle and set it down. She gave Kyle as kind a look as she could and
wiped a tear from his flushed cheek.
„Kyle, it’s Jill. I’m a friend of yours."
„I never saw you before in my life." He twisted his hands
against the restraints. It hurt to move against them, but Kyle couldn’t
help it. He diverted his eyes away from Jill’s grief-stricken expression.
He heard her draw the nearby chair and sat at the bedside. „Kyle-„
„Don’t call me that. It’s not my name."
She paused for a moment and he glanced at her as she
chewed on her lower lip. She had pretty soft brown eyes, complimenting
her soft white hair. The woman had high cheek bones, granting her a delicate
look. She drew a deep breath. „Then what is your name?"
„I don’t know." He answered miserably. Now he was sorry
for snapping. He had no idea, no clue about anything.
Jill crossed her arms on the bedside. „Your name is Doctor
Kyle Scott. You’re a medic who specializes with Human Interface partners
and xenobiology. You’re . . . not have a resident doctor per se, you just
have a preference to work wherever you’re needed. I don’t know why; a short
attention span or other."
It was a joke, but it flew over Kyle’s head. He glared
at her, expecting a better explanation.
She bit her lower lip again. „Look, I’m sorry. Kyle,
you were in an accident several days ago. It seems to have left you with
temporary amnesia. Now we’d like to bring an empath to examine you and
determine what damage has been done. But we can’t do anything until you
can settle down and trust us."
Kyle’s dark brown eyes pierced into her. „I don’t know
you. I don’t know anybody here." And he glanced at Voodoo to make his point.
Jill caught that and sat back in the chair. „You’re right."
She admitted. „Perhaps we should put it off and reacquaint
you with everyone, first." Jill crossed one leg over the other, folding
her arms. „But then, would you let us examine your head without you panicking?
We’re just trying to help."
Kyle frowned, sorry for his behavior. He idly rubbed
his wrists against the restraints and nodded apologenticly.
Steve and Jill entered the room several hours later. Kyle
had fallen back to sleep some time before that. Voodoo remained silent
and motionless against the wall. He watched over Kyle intently.
„My god, Jill." Steve swore softly. „What’s with the
restraints?"
„Hospital policy, Steve. Kyle about jumped out of his
skin, ready to run out. Doctor Gatchel said-„
But she fell quiet when Steve threw her an annoyed look.
He approached the bedside and examined Kyle for a moment. His friend’s
face was ashen and worry lines creased his forehead.
Kyle’s eyes shot open with a start and they darted at
Parker. Steve gave him a casual smile. „Hi." He greeted cordially.
Kyle said nothing.
„Jill tells me your brain took a vacation. So I thought
I’d start out slowly, using single-syllable words."
But Kyle brightened for the first time since the accident
and a smile spread over his face. „Steve!" He greeted, his excitement at
recognizing someone finally forced him to calm and the monitors around
him took a big dip; everyone else’s face did too.
Steve stared wordlessly for a moment. „You-you remember
me?"
„Yes." Kyle answered as though it were a ridiculous question.
„You and your friend Midnight, right?"
Steve slowly sat in the chair, his eyes not falling from
Kyle. „Yes, that’s right! What, what else do you remember?"
„We-we’ve been in battle sometimes." Kyle replied cautiously.
Steve nodded, a big smile on his face. „Yeah."
Kyle traced one thought to another. „You’re a sports
fan of sorts." He added.
„Yeah." Steve answered.
„And you’re a pilot. And . . ." Here his voice softened,
„we’ve been friends for a very long time."
Their eyes locked and Parker carefully embraced Kyle’s
injured hand and nodded, very much pleased. „Yeah." The moment fell silent,
then Steve turned to Jill. „Well, this turn of events has left me hungry.
When’s lunch?"
Now it was Jill’s turn to give him an annoyed expression.
Several hours later, Jill reluctantly gave Steve the O.K.
to take Kyle for a very short walk around the hospital garden. Lush foliage
complimented with trees and plenty of places to sit made the garden a tiny
paradise in a world full of buildings and machines. Kyle couldn’t help
but grin and touch everything around him; as though he had never seen the
garden at West Central’s main hospital. Steve watched him sadly, saying
almost nothing at first. He answered Kyle’s questions regarding the garden,
explaining it was Kyle’s idea. He answered questions regarding the hospital
in general and Jill in particular. But after a few moments, Doctor Scott
had to sit down. He drew a deep breath and his shoulders sank. Steve sat
quietly beside him, just watching.
Finally Kyle’s eyes met his friend. „So Jill is older
than the two of us?"
„Yes. Or so I’ve been told. You and she have been Interfaced
a lot longer than me and Midnight."
„And what’s that?"
„What?"
„Interfaced."
Steve’s face went blank. Where would he start?
Kyle waited several beats, but when he received no answer,
he assumed it was a complicated answer. „Sounds personal." He muttered.
„Kyle," Steve called quietly, „do you . . . remember
anything at all?"
Kyle knew what he meant; memory of the cause for his
amnesia. He thought hard. Flashes came and left his mind like flares in
a meteor shower. „I remember screams." He said slowly. „I remember someone
pulling me out of something; water or other." One memory kept coming to
his mind; something fit his whole arm into its mouth and bit down. But
Kyle couldn’t believe it happened. It couldn’t have happened. There was
nothing alive that could be that big, that would leave him in one piece-not
an animal, certainly.
„Kyle." Steve called softly. He sensed his friend’s troubled
thoughts and laid a hand on Kyle’s right arm. The warm touch shot through
the doctor. For the first time in several days, Kyle felt connected to
someone.
„That machine in the room with me, Steve, it keeps watching
me."
„Voodoo is your Interface partner, Kyle. It’s natural
for him to want to be with you, to need to be with you. It’s natural for
him to need to protect you."
„It makes me nervous, like it wants to pounce on me or
something."
Steve gave him a wry smile. „Kyle, Voodoo would never
do anything to intentionally hurt you. He loves you and he’s worried sick."
Talking about Voodoo wasn’t really what was on Kyle’s
mind. He didn’t care about the robot. He knew something nagged him in the
back of his head. He knew his body responded to the creature-machine for
some odd reason. But something else kept screaming at him not to trust
it, no matter what anyone else said. Kyle took to his feet, gazing out
the garden through the thick glass wall. „Steve, something’s trying to
eat me."
Kyle thought for sure Steve was going to laugh at him.
But Parker did nothing of the sort. Instead, Steve stood and lined his
finger over Kyle’s right breast and shoulder, indicating his knowledge
of the bruises and welts under Kyle’s shirt. Kyle couldn’t look him in
the eye. Gratitude choked him into silence.
Kyle swallowed hard. „I’m glad you believe me." He whispered.
„I can’t believe it myself."
„Why?" Steve asked innocently.
„Because . . . it’s not real. It can’t be real. By no
medical definition can it exist. It has a shape, but no
substance. It’s force, power with no physical manifestation.
It has no body-„
„Kyle." Steve laid his hands on Kyle’s arms. „Just because
you can’t see it, doesn’t mean it’s not there.
Kyle took to his feet. „Then why, Steve, can’t anyone
else see it? I’m in that room day after day and there it comes and goes
and neither Jill nor Voodoo see a damn thing-„
„When, Kyle?" Steve took to his feet, too, sensing Kyle’s
agitation. „When did you see it?"
Kyle shook his head and turned toward the glass wall
standing between the garden and the great Cybertronian cityscape. „Last
night. Two days ago . . . it comes and goes even when I’m not awake."
„You can sense it when you’re asleep?" But Kyle had his
back turned to his friend and Steve waited, giving the doctor time to settle
down. A small smile played over Parker’s lips. The ‘old’ Kyle was just
like this, too. He’d get agitated and frustrated and words just wouldn’t
come out and he’d clam up so that his brain could sort them out again.
Kyle calmed and turned back to his friend. His dark brown
eyes reflected emotional distress. „I never thought what it would be like
to be a fly caught in a spider’s web. I never thought I’d find out first
hand what it’s like to remain conscious while your life is being drained
away. Will I remember you tomorrow? Will I remember who I am today two
weeks from now? Will I wake up tomorrow morning at all?"
Steve couldn’t answer him. His eyes caught movement over
Kyle’s arm thinking a bug had landed there, but it was blood that seeped
from the wound. Kyle gripped his arm and terrible cold settled over him.
Steve swiftly caught Kyle as he fainted. He slowly sank
to the ground, calling Kyle’s name with no response. Then he just chanced
to glance up and spotted a huge dog lined in red standing outside the glass
wall. It was huge, at least thirty feet, invisible except for watery-red
lines defining its physical shape. The beast stared longingly at Kyle then
it turned its gaze to Steve. It pawed three times at the glass, unable
to penetrate it.
Steve swallowed hard and held Kyle close, almost daring
the creature to separate them. But the very next minute the dog-beast melted
into a translucent red stream and shot out of sight.
Steve smoothed Kyle’s soft hair. His skin was icy to
the touch. Steve mind-linked Midnight for help and just waited.
Kyle woke later, groggy and sick, his mind unsettled.
He couldn’t recall where he was, at least until Steve came in with a cup
of coffee in his hands. An alien woman followed after. Her striking appearance
fascinated Kyle and he wondered if there were others of her kind on Cybertron.
Steve gave his friend a heartfelt smile. „Jill said you
were coming around. I thought I’d stop by a moment to see if you were okay."
Kyle adjusted his position, but his body was sluggish
and moving came with effort. He really needed to go back to sleep. He forced
himself to smile, but he knew he looked exhausted.
Steve -and Jill from behind him- exchanged a glance and
Steve laid a hand on the new stranger. „Kyle, This is Kayla . . . she’d
like to examine your hand."
The alien woman moved smoothly and slowly, her dark brown
hair hung tied behind her and she considered Doctor Scott with eyes that
missed nothing. She smiled sweetly and followed Steve to the bedside.
At first Kyle thought he would feel nervous meeting yet
another person he assumed he was supposed to know, but something in him
said to simply calm down and trust her. Maybe it was the fact that she
moved slowly, saying nothing. Kayla examined the wrapping before reaching
for a pair of sheers.
„I’m supposed to know you, aren’t I?" Kyle finally asked.
She met his gaze with another gentle smile and carefully
peeled the wrapping off his hand.
„We’ve always worked together, Doctor Scott." She answered.
„You’re a nurse? A specialist?"
„To some degree." She was very careful and Kyle found
he liked her bedside manners. Kayla turned his hand one way, then another,
first checking for other wounds, then examining the nasty slice mark. „Kyle,
can you remember how you got this?"
„Not clearly." Scott answered. „Someone cut me with a
scalpel."
Her eyes shot at him, but immediately returned to his
hand and she started to trace her fingers around the wound. A warm tingling
sensation flowed from Kyle’s hand to his shoulder and the pain in his arm
lifted. He smiled, relieved but turned and wondered if it was just the
fact that the pretty girl was touching him or if she had some power; Kyle
vaguely recalled knowing someone who had an unusual ability . . .
„It’s not healing." Kayla shook her head and turned to
Parker. „It’s there but, I can’t register it."
„What do you mean?" Voodoo finally spoke. He stirred
from his position and tilted his head slightly.
Watching Voodoo move, Kyle thought at first he was going
to freak again, but he didn’t. Somehow being around the others made him
feel a little more at home than he had in several days. He turned back
to Kayla and watched as she kept tracing the area around the opened wound.
Kyle settled comfortably and watched. Some of the pain in his head and
stomach lessened to a more tolerant level but sleep still called to him.
Kayla shook her head. „It’s not going away. I don’t know
what’s wrong. I’ve examined the underside and there’s no damage there.
The wound isn’t deep, it just won’t heal."
Voodoo leaned forward. „Do you think it might be caused
by some kind of poison or anti-clogging agent or something?"
Everyone else in the room stared at him, surprised Voodoo
would ask such questions.
But the Sentinel looked indignant. „Hey!" he snapped,
„I haven’t been Interfaced with Kyle for such a long time and not picked
up on things, you know! Give me some credit!"
Kyle laughed inwardly when the robot slumped against
the wall, arms crossed in a tantrum. It seemed familiar and Kyle was willing
to bet Voodoo behaved like this frequently. What was even more amusing
was how the others in the room ignored him entirely, as though it were
nothing new or insulting.
Jill approached the foot of the bed and cleared her throat.
„Doctor Gatchal and I were discussing asking Soundwave
to examine Kyle to see how much memory damage has been done."
„I don’t think so." Voodoo snarled. „I wouldn’t let anyone
loose in Kyle’s head anymore than in mine."
Jill turned to him, her eyes dark with annoyance. „I
think it’s Kyle’s head Kyle should be concerned about, not you."
„Okay." Voodoo’s voice softened with a snarl. „But over
my dead body."
Kyle smirked and received the same look Jill gave to
Voodoo.
„I’m sure Jill would be more than willing to oblige you,
Voodoo."
„Don’t start with me, Kyle!" Voodoo snapped. „You just
keep out of this; let me finish my own arguments."
Jill stared hard at him, her mouth drawn in a line. „The
telepathic scan wouldn’t interfere with your link, if that’s what you’re
afraid of. All we would do is scan for memory loss and determine how much
is gone."
„He’s brainless and stressed." Voodoo came back, „What
else do you need to know?"
„How Kyle puts up with you!" Jill answered too smoothly.
Voodoo opened his mouth to say something more, but her
answer caught him off guard and the Sentinel shut his
mouth and guiltily settled against the wall. He gazed toward Doctor Scott
and found his partner had fallen asleep.
Kyle woke later, finding himself examined by Doctor Gatchel.
The senior Doctor (physically speaking) hmmed and hawed over Kyle, making
notes and muttering to himself while he examined Kyle’s ears.
Gatchel stared at Kyle as one would or might consider
a weird insect. „Well, I guess you’re conscious now, aren’t you, Doctor
Scott?"
Kyle didn’t answer.
„Well, I will have to report the possibility that this
is self-induced. There are no signs of outer affliction. There are no apparent
bruises usually found in association with assault and injury. Are you sure
you didn’t do this yourself for personal attention, Doctor Scott?"
„Yes. I’m quite sure." Kyle didn’t allow himself to get
upset by this weirdo. But some other part of him, that didn’t seem to belong
inside him, seethed. And it came from Voodoo’s direction.
„Hmmhmm." Gatchel remarked. „Well, we’ll know for sure
when we do a few more tests." Doctor Gatchel pocketed a pen, glanced at
his watch, produced a scanner and ran it once over Kyle’s body. Kyle immediately
disliked this guy. First off, you never measure a patient by the time spent,
and you never question the validity of the client’s claim, thirdly, the
idiot wasn’t using the scanner right!
„Doctor Scott, it would seem the hospital had to replace
you with a young cadet fresh from Northgate. Bright young thing, I’m thinking
of personally taking her under my wing and training her myself."
„I’ll bet." Kyle answered cooly.
„You don’t seem to approve." Gatchel challenged.
„Approve?" Scott echoed. „I didn’t know you needed my
divine permission." And the doctor thought he could feel someone laughing.
But Gatchel frowned and took to his feet. „I do apologize
for the restraints, Doctor Scott. I know you and your . . . mechanical
companion here don’t approve of my methods. But perhaps if this were your
hospital, things might be different. But seeing how you practically got
out of bed and tried to sleep walk. . . . Well, we can’t have that here
at the facility. I wouldn’t want to be the recipient of bad news coverage."
„No," Kyle agreed quietly. „Of course not."
„I’m going to go ahead and order a mind scan for you.
We need to know exactly how much damage-„
„Over my own dead body!" Voodoo snapped. „No one has
any need or right to go poking in places they’re not supposed to. Why don’t
you go into his bones and see how much marrow they’re producing? You have-„
„Look," Gatchel snarled, „Who’s the doctor here, you
or me?
Hmm? If I say something needs to be cut, it gets cut,
if it needs to be sewn, it will be sewn. And if I determine Doctor Scott
needs a mental examination, then he’ll get a mental examination."
„No he won’t!" Voodoo bit back. „It’s not your place
to go poking into someone’s personal locker room."
„I am the doctor here, you metal-headed moron!"
Voodoo leered, „I don’t care if you were Optimus Prime
himself! I say no, and that’s final! And if you think you’re going to somehow
get around me, you’d better pick up another idea real fast, Doctor. So
take your little scanner there and leave!"
Gatchel’s face froze with anger. „You know, it’s jerks
like you that make me glad I’m not some Interfaced freak! I’ll come back
when you learn to behave more civilized-or when you’re not here at all!"
And Gatchel stomped out, infuriated.
Kyle and Voodoo watched in unison as Gatchel stormed
out the room, not so much as checking off the clipboard for his next assignment.
They remained quiet for several long moments then Kyle
turned to Voodoo. You were kinda mean to him." He admonished quietly.
Voodoo folded his arms, satisfaction spreading over his
body language. „Actually, that was the nicest thing I could say to him
in front of you. He’s what you’d call a di-uhm . .. No, I wont’ say that
in front of you, either. He’s a jerk, clear and simple. What I just gave
him was the very least he deserved."
Kyle stared at Voodoo as the Sentinel warrior settled
back against the wall, muttering unmentionable names to himself.
Kyle really didn’t know what to think of this robot;
but he found it comforting and amusing that Voodoo was so willing to protect
him from jerks of Kyle’s own species. Doctor Scott faintly smiled.
Jill came back a while later. Voodoo had turned the TV
on, but Kyle paid it no attention, falling in and out of sleep. She took
his blood pressure, temperature, checked his lymph nodes, checked his eyes
and his ears and cleaned them with cotton and solution. Then she reapplied
a fresh dressing on Kyle’s wound.
„Does it still hurt, Kyle?" She asked finally.
Kyle thought it over. „No, not really. Not like it did
in the garden."
Jill nodded. „Steve said he saw something there."
„What?"
„Steve said he saw something outside the glass wall.
He wasn’t sure-„
„Something like a dog?"
She paused in her work long enough to examine Kyle with
her soft brown eyes. Jill’s beauty was defined in simplicity. Kyle found
he liked it. She seemed to hesitate before applying tape over the dressing.
„I think so, Kyle." She answered softly.
Voodoo leaned forward a little. „Don’t tape it too tightly.
They taped it too tightly last time." Voodoo received two different expressions:
Kyle gazed at him, wondering how he knew, and Jill gave him another annoyed
expression, then turned to Kyle and looked puzzled. „Well, it’s true."
Voodoo added.
Jill shot him a dirty look. „Would you like to do this?"
„Well . . . no."
„Huh? No? Then let me do my job."
„I wouldn’t mind letting you do your work, but I just
want to make sure-„
„Voodoo," Kyle called, „It’s alright."
„It’s NOT alright!" Voodoo snarled, ignoring the fact
that Kyle finally said his name. „Here they drag you in here, pretending
to be all sweetness and light, althewhile they strap you down like you
some runaway horse and stick things in places where they don’t belong,
using equipment they obviously don’t know how to use and you’re telling
me it’s alright?"
Jill threw a paper towel in the basket. „You know, you
are a real headache. Why don’t you go out for a walk and give the rest
of us a break?"
„I’m not leaving Kyle here by himself." Voodoo replied
with finality.
„So you’re going to make everyone else suffer?" She looked
disgusted at him. „No wonder the two of you lived in separate towns! I
would have found a way to kill you a long time ago!"
Kyle softly chuckled, earning an opticless glare from
Voodoo.
„That’s not funny." Voodoo snarled.
„Yes it is." Kyle replied. „You sound like someone who’s
married."
Voodoo’s entire expression changed instantly. He shut
his mouth, too.
Jill’s expression died also, surprised at Kyle’s ability
to get his Interface companion to shut up. Few people knew how to shut
Voodoo up-Midnight seemed to have a knack at it. Kyle struggled against
the restraints and Jill felt guilty. The medical practitioner shook her
head and wished she could release him.
Then Voodoo lightened up. The robot pulled himself forward
and fear tried to touch Kyle’s heart. He didn’t know why he would be so
afraid of something that so obviously wasn’t going to hurt him. „Uhm, you
know," Voodoo said as softly as he dared, „I’d like to take Brainless and
Stressed out on a walk-can I? I could keep a leash on him and bring him
back by dinner."
Jill gave Kyle an inviting glance. „I don’t see why not.
I’ll inform Doctor Gatchel. The walk might do you some good. How about
it, Doctor?"
Kyle gave a grim smile. He couldn’t keep from fighting
the restraints, even though his wrists hurt. The walk sounded like a good
idea. Some measure of freedom from the four walls might help him feel better.
And Kyle knew Voodoo would be watching him like a cassette vulture. „A
short one, I guess." He accepted.
The robot set his hands at the foot of the bed, peering
worriedly at the patient. „Kyle," he said softly, „don’t you know who I
am? It’s Voodoo!" Pain lined his voice, knowing Kyle would give him the
same empty look he had given in several days. <<Kyle?>> he tried
with the same negative results. But Voodoo withdrew, frowning. Kyle had
looked away, unable to answer him.
Jill applied an anesthetic spray to the self-inflicted
injuries around Kyle’s wrists. Voodoo was appalled at the treatment his
friend was receiving, but kept quiet for right now. He decided he’d let
Gatchel have it later.
Kyle had to take a few moments to get his legs to obey
him.
Lying several days in bed had weakened his body. Jill
offered to get him a walker or a cane, but Doctor Scott insisted he could
walk, he just needed a few moments to get the blood flowing again.
Sure enough, Kyle managed out the room on his own and
he and Voodoo took their time traversing the hallway.
Kyle aimed for the main doors as he tucked his hands
in coat pockets. „You didn’t have to be so mean to Jill. She’s a nice girl."
He quietly admonished Voodoo.
„Yeah, well, that ‘nice girl’ is the one who strapped
you to your bed, or are you still wondering why your wrists hurt?"
„You were also pretty rude to Doctor Gatchel." Kyle reminded.
They left the building and Kyle caught his breath. Several terribly tall
dark buildings met his eyes. A cityscape greater than any he had seen towered
above and about him like gods. The world made its own light; generated
by the lower levels and highway divisions. Streetlights and neons paved
the roadways while windows from nearby skyscrapers provided other light
to a sunless world.
Everywhere he looked there were people of all races and
types, great and small, organic and metallic. In one place he espied a
small park complete with green grass and tall trees decked with green and
deep red leaves. A fountain stood at the entrance of the park and a humanoid
female and two children entered. A great dome stretched over the park and
simulated sunlight showered over visitors and foliage. But aside the park,
not a blade of green grass nor root of tall tree blemished the cityscape
of what was called Cybertron. Then Kyle reprimanded himself; this was his
home.
„Let me tell you something about Gatchel:" Voodoo snarled.
„He’s a jerk. He’s gotten you into trouble more than once. He’s also got
an attitude problem and I’ve been dying to give him a piece of my mind
for a long time!"
Kyle gazed at him, his eyes filled with puzzlement and
disgust. „Are you always this hostile? Can’t you be nice to anybody?"
„Nice?" Voodoo shot back indignantly, „That’s YOUR department,
Doctor. I’m just a warrior."
„And a crotchety old tin can." Kyle muttered. He rounded
Voodoo and made his way down the sidewalk.
Voodoo paused and smiled. <<I miss you, Kyle. You
have no idea how much I miss you.>>
Voodoo watched Kyle as they paced across the hospital
parking lot toward the park. He couldn’t help but notice how his companion
would wince in pain now and again, his walk not as fast-paced as it used
to be. And Kyle kept rubbing the right side of his chest.
He finally had to stop half way, out of breath and shaking.
Kyle leaned against a vehicle and drew a shuddering breath.
He forced a smile to cross his weary, troubled face. He tried to sound
cheerful, „Guess I’m more out of shape than I thought."
But it didn’t fool Voodoo. The Sentinel wept in his soul.
He carefully knelt before his beloved friend and painfully
watched as Kyle turned away, ashamed. „Let me carry you." He asked as quietly
as he could. „I’d really hate to see you return to that miserable hospital
so soon."
Kyle’s gaze turned to the immaculate white building that
rose a good forty stories high and stretched at least six city blocks.
He would rather not have to be restrained again. At least for now. But
walking was too tiring. He reluctantly agreed, though something inside
him insisted he was in terrible danger with this robotic creature; that
he was putting his life at risk by trusting Voodoo. But, he rationalized,
it was by far better than the restraints.
Voodoo kept his strides smooth and easy as he carried
Kyle down several streets through town.
„So tell me about our relationship." Kyle asked. „Everyone
around me seems to expect me to know and remember you."
Voodoo said nothing for a very long moment. Kyle glanced
at the robot, but could see nothing resembling expression. The area where
there should have been optics remained void and flat. „We’re Interfaced."
He finally replied.
„Interfaced?" It sounded weird. „Am I a computer like
you?"
„No. You’re Human, Kyle. We’re Interfaced, we’ve been
joined by some supernatural process."
„Oh gods. I married you?!"
„Yes." Voodoo answered before realizing what Kyle just
said. „No! Yes . . . no, not married. It’s kinda like being married. We-„
„Oh no!" Kyle threw his hands up, „I don’t want to know
any more about it!"
Voodoo smiled. „It’s kinda hard to explain. I don’t have
all the details, but Sentinels and Seekers have the capacity to merge with
humanoids. The process occurs instantly once the right person and the robot
meet-and it doesn’t have to be more than a few seconds. Two people merge
to create one person through what’s called ‘phasing’. It’s deeply personal;
they share consciousness."
„Is there a way to reverse the process?"
Kyle’s question forced Voodoo into silence for a moment.
The doctor felt a twinge of guilt and pain, but it wasn’t
coming from him. He felt weird all over.
„When the robot dies, the human just starts aging again
and dies later." Voodoo’s voice came soft, sad. Kyle wondered if his question
upset the robot. Knowing what a smart-ass Voodoo was, Kyle wondered if
anything really could upset the Sentinel. Voodoo passed several buildings
another block down. The area changed and around here, overpasses and underpasses
entwined in a ballet of highways. He joined a few other pedestrians and
waited to cross the streets.
„So, Voodoo, what happens to the robot if the Human dies?"
„Insanity." Voodoo answered. „There was one case, Archer,
who lost his sanity when his partner died. It was sad." And here, Voodoo’s
softened voice trailed off. His finger inadvertently lifted Kyle’s injured
hand. Kyle didn’t know what to think of it. A gentle trilling sensation
touched his skin and it was comfortable. But he didn’t know why he still
felt uneasy.
„Interface partners share . . . an intimacy unlike anything
ever experienced by most other races." Voodoo added a moment later. „Phasing
. . . I guess it’s like being home. You’re completely comfortable with
the other person, like discovering a part of yourself that’s been hidden
from you all your life."
Voodoo seemed to want to say something more. But he held
it back and Kyle wondered what it was that the Sentinel was dying to say.
Kyle’s mind reeled with the very idea that he was Interfaced with this
seeming unnatural creature. Interfaced . . . still sounded like he was
married! „What’s the purpose of Interface? I mean, if there’s so much at
risk, why bother?"
Voodoo shrugged. „Only the Tjineran could say. They built
us-the Sentinels and Seekers-with the ability to Interface with them. Then
there was a war and the Tjineran broke up into two factions. They weren’t
satisfied with the results, how the robots developed, and gave their experiments
and their consciousness, stored in Vector Sigma, to the Quints. Later,
the Tji decided they wanted the robots after all and tried to interface
with us by force. But you can’t force interface. It either occurs, or it
doesn’t.
Kyle fell quiet, completely astounded. Then he berated
himself an idiot. This was all stuff he should know about already! But
he thought it odd that the robots would Interface with humanoids rather
than those originally designed to merge with them. „If the Tjineran had
merged with the robot, then they would have become the dominate personality,
wouldn’t they?" He asked.
„Yes." Voodoo answered as he quickened his pace down
the sidewalk.
„So in a human-robot relationship, the robot is the dominate
personality, right?"
„Only when phased, Kyle. That doesn’t mean the robot
enslaves or controls the human partner. In fact, just the opposite is often
true. There has never been a case of one partner killing another. It’s
. . . it’s a symbiotic relationship." Voodoo smiled to himself, right pleased
that he was smart enough to recall some of Doctor Scott’s own observations.
And he sensed sudden understanding from his partner. Voodoo wanted to hold
Kyle closer and he so desperately wanted to phase! But he didn’t know if
Kyle could handle the suddenness of a process he so obviously had forgotten.
How? How could he forget?
Kyle watched as Voodoo crossed another street, the buildings
here were slightly smaller than those surrounding the hospital. They hadn’t
moved more than five blocks before Voodoo arrived at a lush four-story
building. It stood fronted with darkened windows and punctuated with upstairs
patios and greenery cleverly planted round the walls and ceiling. Voodoo
waited to cross the street and pointed to one corner of the building containing
one such lovely patio. „That’s where you live." He stated.
Kyle smiled, a little relieved that he was going to see
his own home. His wrists were hurting and he hoped he might have something
to ease the pain.
Voodoo carried him into the building and three flights
up, entering the room with an optical recognition sequence. The door slid
open and Kyle was almost appalled that he would be idiotic enough to give
someone else access to his own home. Married!?-Interfaced!? he told and
corrected himself.
He slid off Voodoo’s hand and had to steady himself against
a chair. Voodoo called for lights and the house lit up like a sunny day.
The place reflected someone with a knack for cleanliness,
but not necessarily immaculate. There were five book shelves standing nearly
as tall as Voodoo, crammed with books and digipads and memory crystals.
A lonely computer sat in the corner near the shelves and photographs sat
all around that. Plaques containing awards and certificates and diplomas
and degrees of all kinds dotted all around the living room. The decorum
was simple enough; the furniture was black leather, the kitchen and end
tables were of black metal and tinted glass. A nice stereo system crouched
next to the black leather couch. Kyle approached the stereo and read crystal
diskettes containing music; most of it he didn’t even remember. He sighed
heavily and ran his left hand through his blonde-white hair. „Looks like
I’m going to have to listen to this music all over again."
Voodoo smiled at him, his eyeless face reflecting a sense
of excitement. „Come here. I want you to look at some of these pictures.
I think they might help you remember."
Kyle left the stereo and took one framed picture from
Voodoo’s grasp. There were other robots and Humanoids in this picture.
But he didn’t know any of the people there.
„Look familiar?" Voodoo asked. He sat on his knees, his
head tilting just slightly in question.
„No." Kyle answered solemnly. He set the photo back down.
„Well," Voodoo wasn’t going to let it go that easily.
„Look, this is Midnight-„
„Steve’s Midnight?" Kyle’s jaw dropped. „I-I thought
Midnight was a man!"
„No." Voodoo answered with a smile. He pointed to a red
robot standing next to Midnight, „This is Rodimus Prime, the leader of
the Autobots. This one is ahh . . . hmm. I don’t remember her name. Well,
anyway. They’re all friends of ours."
Faces and names. They meant nothing to him. Just pictures
of a history that was no longer his. There was, however, one picture of
himself and a girl. Kyle swept it off the monitor. „Who’s this?"
„You. You moron."
„I know that, you idiot. I mean the girl."
At last! An insult! The word nearly caused Voodoo to
jump and dance with joy. Maybe Kyle was starting to return to his old self
after all! „Oh, uhhh, that’s Mirna. . . .was."
Kyle’s eyes shot at the robot. „Was? Who was she?"
„Ah . . . a love affair." Voodoo shrugged, but seemed
to refuse to say anything more.
„I loved somebody and . . ." rage and sorrow rose in
him and Kyle set the frame down and turned away. „Let’s get out of here."
„Well, okay. But, how about we bring some real clothes
for you? I know how much you must hate wearing those things everywhere."
Dr. Scott didn’t pay him any attention. He found the
restroom and subconsciously searched the medicine cabinet for pain reliever
for his wrists. He found just the thing and vaguely heard Voodoo yammer
on and on about something as the robot rummaged about the bedroom. Kyle
frowned, wondering how long this kind of relationship was going to last.
The robot was a virtual mother hen! He shook his head and examined the
bandage on his right hand, making a mental note to ask Jill to change the
dressing. He frowned and stretched with his left hand to grasp his toothbrush
when he spotted himself in the mirror.
And a red-outlined dog hung from his shoulder by its
teeth.
He caught and swallowed his breath and drew back so fast,
that the toothbrush container fell and shattered on the floor, he backed
against the far wall of the bathroom, his eyes wider than his mouth.
He gasped and tried to get himself to move.
„Kyle!" Voodoo called. „Kyle, what’s wrong? Kyle?"
It was enough to pull the doctor out of shock and he
fled the bathroom, trying to brush an invisible dog from his shoulder.
„Nothing!’ He answered hurriedly. ‘Nothing. I’m fine. I-I just can’t stay
here, that’s all. I can’t live here; it’s not my home!"
Voodoo came out of the bedroom, a suitcase in hand. „It’s
your home." He confirmed. „You had the whole building built as a side project
so that you could be closer to the hospital. I know. I was there."
„I can’t. I can’t stay here. I have to leave." And Kyle
turned to flee. But Voodoo merely stepped over and knelt before him. „Look,"
he stated gently. „I’d really hate to see you go back to the hospital."
He gazed at Kyle’s wrists and took the doctor’s left hand with his finger.
„I know Jill means well, she’s good at what she does. But restraints?"
He shook his head. „Look, why don’t you come to my place?"
Kyle looked dubious. „You have a place?"
„Sure I do!" He answered, almost insulted. „What do you
think I am? A toaster-oven you just stick under the cupboard at night?"
Dr. Scott withdrew, wrapping his arms about himself.
„I don’t know what to think anymore." he mourned. He turned away, not really
wanting to let the robot see the heartache in his expression.
„Kyle." Voodoo tried to keep his voice level, but he
was sort of starting to loose his patience. „You can stay the night at
my place. I don’t need sleep. If you start to sleep-walk again, I can just
put a harness around you. It beats bed restraints.
Kyle gazed at a painting on the wall. A pretty girl sat
at the bank of a stream, her dark hair trailed over her scantily-clothed
body. She rested against the trunk of an ancient tree while petals fell
from the flower she held between her hands. It was a calming picture and
he liked it. He sighed heavily. „Alright." He agreed. „But we should inform
Jill. It’s only fair to her."
Voodoo gave him a mischievous smile.
Kyle really didn’t like the idea of flying with someone
he hardly knew. Let alone flying with a robot that stood five times his
size. The scenery below was awesome and Voodoo proved a careful flier,
though Kyle suspected any robot with a design like Voodoo’s could not possibly
be this careful all the time. He said nothing, his chest tight, his stomach
knotted with anxiety. He should have never agreed to leave the hospital.
But the view round the next mountainous building made
him take back the regret. The city round the bend was huge, gorgeous. The
buildings were works of architectural art. Vehicles and transports of all
shapes and sizes came and left the city, many of them not carrying passengers
at all. He dared touch the window, his eyes wide with amazement. „You live
here?" He asked quietly.
„Sometimes." Voodoo answered. „When we’re not out rescuing
the universe from the next threat." He waited a couple of beats then: „That
was supposed to be a joke."
„I’m sorry, Voodoo."
Was that the first time Kyle said his name? For real?
The Sentinel settled on a rooftop and carried Kyle down one flight of stairs
and boarded an elevator. Everything around them seemed ten times larger
than Kyle’s home town.
Kyle looked a bit perplexed. „I’ve been here before,
haven’t I?"
Voodoo grinned. „You remembered something?"
„A statue, I think. But that’s all that comes to mind."
„It’s a start!"
They arrived at Voodoo’s humble abode. Huge windows facing
south displayed the terraced city and an ocean just beyond that. A terminal
sat in one corner, a televisor in another. There was a fuel dispenser and
upon walls that weren’t windows hung several war weapons; some of them
considered illegal.
Voodoo set Kyle on one of the few articles of furniture;
his recharging bed or flat. It was hard, whatever people called it. Kyle
frowned. Now he was certain he should not have left the hospital. He couldn’t
go home, but at least the hospital had some kind of cushion on their ‘flats’.
„Here it is." Voodoo opened a portion of the wall and
produced a blanket. Kyle stared at it suspiciously.
„What’s that?"
„Your bed, dummy. You come here every now and again.
I had to furnish something." He folded it until it was short but thick
enough and he set it on the flat.
Kyle was too tired to argue and he sat on it, finding
it more inviting than he thought. He inadvertently closed his eyes and
almost dozed off right there. But something slipped under his left hand
and he opened his eyes, knowing he really should just lie down and sleep.
Voodoo held his hand with a finger, staring at him from
across the recharger. „I miss you." He whispered. „I know we’ve never really
been that close, choosing to live our lives across the pathway, as it were.
But I miss you now more than ever. I guess it’s true; you don’t appreciate
what you have until you lose it."
Kyle wearily smiled. „Like my mind."
„Oh, heh, it’ll come back, Scott. These things take time."
Kyle dared a glance at Voodoo’s hand. Something there
told him Voodoo was very sincere. Something told him they had a deeper
relationship than what the robot was willing to admit. Exhaustion finally
caught up with Doctor Scott and he finally lay down with a deep sigh. Voodoo
thoughtfully covered him and gently rubbed his back left shoulder. It was
just the right kind of pressure, too and before he knew it, Kyle had fallen
asleep.
Kyle awoke later, finding an afternoon sun slowly making
its way down. Voodoo still sat there, watching him. He smiled wryly and
Kyle would have sat up, if not for the fact that he was just too comfortable
where he lay. Voodoo’s finger slipped back under Kyle’s hand and just stayed
there for a few moments. Then Voodoo picked up where he left off on the
shoulder rub. Kyle closed his eyes as the tension slowly ebbed away. Something
bothered him. Something nagged him in the back of his mind. Snatches of
fleeting memories came and dashed away from him.
He recalled a car accident. He recalled something about
a scalpel. And he remembered something about someone being devoured by
something else.
Voodoo’s hand moved to the center of Kyle’s back and
gently caressed it and sent vibrations of warmth into it. Dr. Scott drew
a deep relaxing breath, now assured that this giant was not out to harm
him. Not when Voodoo took a moment and ran a finger over Kyle’s face. Kyle
instinctively lifted his chin and Voodoo massaged his chest, moving carefully
back around.
Voodoo always knew just how to please him. And privately,
they shared moments of intimacy not spoken to anyone else. Who could understand
besides another Interface? How could the universe at large understand and
accept the most private moments between the partners of an Interface? A
Transformer and a Humanoid, sharing thoughts and emotions, making love
in the soul. The thought forced Dr. Scott’s eyes to open and he might have
protested over the frightening thought, were it not that Voodoo’s massages
made its way over the back of his thigh and Kyle reveled in the warmth
of Voodoo’s touch.
<<I miss you.>> came the soft unspoken words.
Kyle felt at ease and began to drift into another world
of dreamless sleep when Voodoo gathered him in his hands. It was a bit
rude, really. Perhaps the hyper robot wanted to take him elsewhere. But
instead, Voodoo held him close to his chest and to his horror, Kyle watched
as his body began to sink into the robot. He struggled, pulling his hands
out, trying to push away, unable to find his voice as his legs sunk into
dark metal. He thought he was going to drown!
„Stop!" He weakly protested. „Stop! Don’t! Don’t!" He
managed to hit a solid part of the robot and he panicked while the rest
of him sank in. He tried to breathe and his breath failed.
Darkness surrounded him and Kyle completely panicked.
He lost all sense of his own body and now ideas, images and memories not
his own flooded his mind with lightning speed. He tried to raise one barrier
after another, each of them absorbed by the robot’s will. Voodoo’s mind
forced itself upon Kyle, leaving only a little tiny part of the doctor’s
soul to himself. Kyle helplessly wept. There was nothing left of him! The
darkness had devoured him and the only other way to save himself was to
cease to exist.
And he began to mentally slice parts of himself off.
He sliced off his right arm first. Then he threw away his life as a doctor.
He loved no more. He cut off his legs. He gouged out his eyes. He destroyed
everything in his home. He cut off his breathing.
Voodoo cried out in agony and fell flat on his face.
Pain shot right through every inch of his body and he struggled to call
for help. He managed to pull himself up on his hands and knees but vomited
mech fluids. The pain in his limbs was excruciating and something ripped
up his muscle cables. He vomited again, losing vital lubricants. He managed
to make it to the wall and he hit whatever button he could see.
„Yeah." Midnight’s voice, his wonderful voice came over
the comline.
„Mid!" Voodoo gasped. „I’m killing him!"
„Voodoo?"
But Voodoo collapsed before he could answer.
„Voodoo?" Midnight called again and again.
Black.
White.
White and red.
Red, red like Human blood.
White, like the glaring noonday sun.
Black, like the darkness that filled his own soul, drowning
in sorrow.
„ . . . go. . . .oodoo . . . . go." The voice that entered
Voodoo’s sensors was so badly drowned he could not make out what was being
said. He thought someone was ripping up his innards. He could not feel
his arms or legs. He had gone blind.
And he bled.
Someone half lifted him and he managed to activate his
optic
sensors. His quarters . . . he was still in his own quarters.
Someone cupped his face, bringing it back. They all spoke, sometimes shouted.
He was so tired. He just lay there, unable to decide
what to do. There was so much shouting! Why were they shouting? Why won’t
they speak in clear words? Idiots! Morons!
Someone released his head and he gazed forward again,
just staring off into nothing. Then something appeared from nowhere right
in front of him. It looked like an animal of sorts, a really ugly animal
with a huge head, baggy skin and a flat nose module. It wavered in the
light, its form flowed like water, outlined and highlighted in red. It
seemed to be aware of him because it growled now and attacked him.
But Voodoo was too weak, too exhausted to resist. And
the creature-thing bit him deeply in the chest. Voodoo weakly arched his
back, unable to cry out in pain. The animal pulled something out of him
and licked it like a cat bathing its young.
And Voodoo felt himself fade slowly out of existence.
But now he could hear and sense others around him. They
shouted and ordered and rushed about. They lifted his body onto a flat
surface and it was then that he realized something was terribly wrong.
Something had gone completely wrong. But he could not for the life of Primus
figure out what it was. And he slipped into the darkness of unconsciousness.
They brought Dr. Scott back to the hospital and Jill
oversaw his every comfort. She regretted ever giving Voodoo permission-but
after all, they were interfaced. Nothing should have happened. No words
could describe how the woman felt:
Infuriated, puzzled, horrified, baffled. How could have
something like this have happened? Didn’t Voodoo realize what he was doing?
But, Jill reminded herself, Voodoo’s rashness had nearly cost Kyle his
life a few times before. But now she wondered how Voodoo was ever going
to forgive himself; let alone how Kyle thought about it. What was wrong,
anyway? What happened to their soul rapport? Memories or not, Kyle should
have still felt some attraction to Voodoo. What puzzled her most was something
Midnight had said, that Kyle managed to separate from Voodoo on his own.
But he emerged unconscious. And actively subconscious or not, Kyle would
not have been able to separate from Voodoo while unconscious. There had
to be more to the story.
But the only clue to her guess were the marks scarring
Kyle’s right side and the wound on his right hand that simply refused to
mend. He said he was cut with a simple scalpel. But the cut wasn’t deep
and while it did not bleed profusely, it would not close.
Jill watched Kyle for a long moment. The kind, calm expression
that usually defined the masculine features was replaced with pain and
nightmares. She leaned forward and checked his ears. Bits of dried blood
told of a story she could not guess. It was maddening. Something was affecting
him, but Kyle either knew and decided to keep it private, as usual, or
he did not know, was not aware of his uncharacteristic condition.
His dark brown eyes slowly opened in response to her
touch.
But they were empty of self-awareness or expression.
They closed again, his breath slowing as the tranquilizers beckoned him
to sleep off the shock.
Jill thought back to the accident, the very first few
moments when they dragged him in via chopper. He was shaking like a leaf
and shied from everything, every movement. His ears bled-but it could not
be from his brain; there were no tell-tale signs of brain damage. An ugly
bruise lay at the back of his neck where he must have impacted either a
car or the street itself. Jill recalled someone mentioning Dr. Scott was
not in the taxi, that something, an explosion, perhaps, had thrown him
several feet in the air. It was a bad, bad day. Twenty-four people died.
Fifty-seven were injured, claiming everything from bad weather and sudden
gusts to more imaginative explanations.
Kyle’s breath shortened in a sleeping panic. He wrestled
with an invisible figure, his hand weakly warding off an attacker. Jill
carefully took his bandaged hand between hers.
„Kyle." She called softly. „Kyle, it’s Jill. It’s just
me." But her words died in vain. His brows furred and his eyes opened just
slightly. His sleeping form trembled. She leaned forward and kissed his
forehead. „Shhhh." She whispered softly.
It worked. Kyle relaxed and took a deep breath. But Jill
watched him suspiciously, wondering what would have dragged him out of
a drug-induced sleep.
„Hey."
Dr. N’Doun peeked in the room. „We just got something
in I thought you might like to look at."
„Maybe later." Jill dismissed, not willing to leave Kyle’s
side.
„I think it might give a little insight to your friend’s
behavior. But I hope you haven’t eaten anything."
„Why?"
Jill left Kyle in the hands of one of her more trustworthy
nurses and followed N’Doun into the conference room. Three other senior
doctors from Upper North of Cybertron attended. Jill glanced at each of
them, puzzled.
„What’s this about?" She asked directly.
One professional dressed in street clothes and a heavy
jacket swept up a remote control and turned on the video screen. He paused
the recording on the form of a woman. She looked awful. Her hair had been
ripped out. Her shock-affected face was drawn, her eyes surrounded by dark
circles. Her hands were bandaged.
„This was Nasha Vyrm. Second grade language teacher.
She spoke six different languages, all of them fluently. She had a husband
and three children of her own. She was one of those who barely survived
the seventeen-car pile-on, on planet Chenobis several days ago-the very
same accident that brought Doctor Scott back from his assignment. They
carried her to the hospital and she was treated for this:"
He replaced the worn, woeful figure with a nude picture
of someone who had been lashed. Every inch of her body had been bruised,
cut and wilts striped those areas not touched by contusions.
Jill’s mouth dropped. She stared at N’Doun then at the
other three doctors. „What happened? No accident fire causes that."
„That’s why we’re here." The doctor with the remote control
answered. „Oh, I’m Doctor Eone from Platoun III and this is Doctor Yom
and Doctor Velador. Now, this is what she had to say at a recorded testimony:"
He released the paused picture and the poor woman came
to life. She cried and struggled to control herself. A voice off camera
said something and she started to answer.
„Uhm, no, I know people call me ‘Nasha’, but I don’t
remember if that’s my name or not."
„NASHA, YOU’RE DOING JUST FINE. JUST TELL US WHAT YOU
TOLD THE DOCTORS. NO PRESSURE, HON, JUST TELL US, THAT’S ALL."
„Uhm," she trembled. „I feel like I’m being eaten alive.
It attacks me when I least expect it."
„AND DOES IT ATTACK YOU IN YOUR DREAMS OR WHEN YOU’RE
AWAKE?"
„Either. It attacks me when I’m not thinking about it.
It tried to tell me that . . . that I belonged to it, that my husband was
evil . . . that my husband had tried to kill me on several occasions."
She cried again and the inquisitor off camera paused, allowing her a moment
to let it out then compose her sad little self.
„NASHA, COULD-COULD YOU DESCRIBE THIS THING? DO YOU KNOW
WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE?"
„I know you’d think me crazy."
„WELL, IT SEEMS PRETTY APPARENT TO US THAT YOU’RE NOT
CRAZY. LOOKING AT WHAT IT’S DONE TO YOU, I REALLY DON’T THINK WE CAN JUDGE
YOU CRAZY, HON."
„Uhm . .. It’s an animal of some kind. I dunno, it looks
like a dog of some kind. It’s wavy, you know, like water and it has highlights
in red. It’s -„ she stopped and wept more then controlled herself. „It’s
eating me."
The recording stopped and the video screen went black.
Jill had no idea what to think of the case. „Did you say she committed
suicide?"
Velador laced his hands on the table. „Well, they’re
calling it suicide. Autopsy showed drained brain fluids, part of the hippocampus
was missing. When she first came to the hospital, Nasha knew who she was.
She knew who her family was. The day before her death, she didn’t know
her name, her age or what color her eyes were."
„So, you think this might be why Dr. Scott’s condition
has failed to improve?"
No one in the room would answer. Velador pursed his lips.
„We’d like permission to speak to Dr. Scott, if it’s
alright with you."
„I wouldn’t mind." Jill replied diplomatically. „But
he’s suffered another trauma and I had to put him under for a while. Dr.
Scott, as you know, is Interfaced with Voodoo. Perhaps Voodoo can tell
you something. Kyle doesn’t remember who Voodoo is. He doesn’t remember
much of anything, except his name. I was hoping it was just temporary amnesia
induced by trauma. But if what you say is true, what can we do to save
him?"
Kyle awoke in emotional agony. A cloud of despair settled
over his soul and all he wanted to do was fade from existence. He had no
reason to continue like this; not when his mind and body were useless.
Not one ounce of joy touched his saddened heart. And the sadness drained
his strength so that it took great effort just to get up and use the restroom.
And the exhaustion led to even greater sadness. Pain danced over his body,
laughing at his feeble Human attempts to ignore it. It was his right hand
that hurt the most. He glanced at it, now realizing Jill had not tried
to restrain him again. The wound was clean, no signs of infection. But
it remained open like a stigma, refusing to close and heal.
And something else nagged him. Something very crucial
to his existence was missing and Kyle could not for his own life describe
what he needed. It was too frustrating! It was like being thirsty, but
it wasn’t for water. It was as though something other than his memories
had been stolen.
Dejected, Kyle heavily sighed and rested his head against
the pillow. What was the use of living? His whole life was gone, empty
like a glass emptied of wine and nothing replaced it.
Two and a half days slowly drifted along. Kyle found
no interest in television when it was offered to him. He had no energy
to read. But he did listen to a little radio. It took no thought to listen
to instrumental music.
And perhaps it was the one thing that did give the doctor
a boost to the soul. Jill encouraged him to go through his private music
library and listen to all the music he collected over the years.
To his delight, Kyle found himself remembering some selections
of music. He started making a list of all the pieces he knew and recalled,
making notes on others he could not. His enthusiasm in the music spread
to his appetite and where he was not eating more than a bowl of cereal
a day, he now ate two full meals, begging to try other things.
Jill took these signs to heart, hoping it was recovery,
not just the problem going into temporary remission. She timidly introduced
Kyle to his old lap top, hoping he remembered how to use it.
At first he wasn’t sure, either. He shook his head, unsure
whether he remembered how to type or not. But his fingers moved across
the keypad just as if nothing was wrong and in a few moments, he was on-line,
downloading his mail and scanning other programs containing his business
notes. All that lifted Kyle’s spirits and he indulged himself hour after
hour listening to his music and tapping at the keypad, reacquainting himself
with his life.
Doctor Scott called up all the latest news and many other
events he couldn’t recall. He delved into the history of the Tji War, the
alliance with the Decepticons and later the Seekers. At one point, however,
he began to get frustrated, knowing that he should know and recall all
these affairs, and many, many things never mentioned in the public news
casts.
Still, Kyle tried to keep his spirits up, teasing the
nurses attending him. In spite of his yet-unhealed arm, Kyle seemed about
ready to leave hospital care and retire to his own home for a while.
But Jill still noticed how Doctor Scott not once mentioned
Voodoo.
And it wasn’t that Kyle didn’t think of Voodoo. He thought
of the annoying, self-important, egotistical, brash robot all the time.
Kyle thought about how the entire time he slept, there Voodoo sat, motionless,
tireless, faithful. The doctor thought about how nice it was to have someone
else in the same room, just sitting and watching.
Kyle privately wondered how Voodoo was doing and . .
. if the Sentinel was thinking of him.
Most likely not, Doctor Scott told himself. After all,
what would a loud-mouthed overbearing robot-jet be doing wasting its time
with a helpless, brainless human? It wasn’t Voodoo who needed Kyle. But
Kyle kind of missed having someone look after him. Voodoo was so very careful
around him and so enthusiastic about sharing memories.
Kyle leaned over and hid his face. He’d give anything
to remember his life!
All this time we lived in two separate cities, Voodoo
thought sadly. On Alean, we were so close and we knew we could count on
each other. I used to talk him to sleep when he couldn’t rest. He used
to tease me for being too serious. Then we came here and things changed.
Each of us lived his own life, knowing the other was just a town away.
But . . . now I see the folly in such a life. The Sentinel stood on the
rooftop of his home-city library, staring far across the Great Sea. Kyle
was a part of him, a part he had neglected far too long. But he didn’t
know what to do!
Voodoo’s misery fell to depression several days ago.
He didn’t want to talk, see or be with anybody-that especially included
Kyle.
On the other hand, Voodoo had never felt so desperately
lonely before. In a world full of people, Voodoo felt terribly isolated.
A part of him had died, or so it seemed. And he believed no one would understand
what he was going through. Kyle was alive, but no longer a part of him.
The thought forced the Sentinel to his knees. As far
as his connection to Kyle was concerned, Doctor Scott was dead. Dead and
gone. Voodoo bowed over, stricken with grief. How would he ever find peace
again? All the experiences and feelings, thoughts and things Kyle appreciated
were no longer a part of his life. Never again would Kyle suddenly ‘Tune’
into him and tell him about a piece of music he heard and loved. Never
again would Kyle sit and listen in while Voodoo vented His soul. Kyle was
always so patient, so quiet. He listened to everything Voodoo would say
and always, always Kyle spoke kindly.
Kyle was the most gentle person Voodoo had known. Oh,
sure, the doctor had his ‘moments’. But often it was because Voodoo would
simply push the right buttons. Voodoo admitted he himself had a temper.
And it was all gone. Their relationship was destroyed.
And Voodoo blamed it on his own stupidity. If he hadn’t
pushed Kyle into phasing so soon, maybe things would have been different.
Maybe.
Maybe.
No more conversations. No more insults. Only a terrible
vacant sadness hovering over his heart like Death poised for the kill.
It ate into Voodoo and the Sentinel half wished he could stop living. Fleeting
thoughts of suicide shot through his mind. And something inside agreed
that if he were to commit suicide, it would have to be cleaver enough to
make sure Skywolf could not bring him back.
After all, Voodoo was just half a person now.
Midnight crouched before Voodoo’s sleeping huddled form.
The long hours of nightfall cast eerie shadows across Cybertron’s cityscape,
if that’s what Humans considered night. Even when it was daylight, Cybertron
still resided in darkness. The Sentinel leader knelt quietly and scanned
his friend for life signs. Voodoo was in terrible condition. His life energies
were deteriorating, his ability to function at his job had fallen drastically
short.
And as in poor a condition Voodoo was in, the stubborn
robot refused to seek help. Not that Mid could really say he’d act differently.
What was occurring between Voodoo and Kyle was a very private matter and
no amount of counseling or therapy would solve the dire situation.
Voodoo’s soul was falling apart.
„I can’t, Mid." Voodoo’s tiny voice murmured no stronger
than a whisper.
„What’s that?" Midnight asked equally quietly.
„Confront Kyle. He hates me. And I don’t know what to
do."
Voodoo unfolded from his position to finally looked his
leader through his optic shield.
Midnight thought his answer out carefully. „You can’t
stay away from him much longer, either. I know you’re lost and exceedingly
depressed without Kyle." Mid waited two beats, then added: „And Voodoo,
you can be assured Kyle feels the same way. But he’s clueless. You at least
know what’s wrong."
„I can’t feel Kyle any more. We haven’t mind-spoken in
what feels like years. It’s like . . . it’s like he’s . . . dead."
„Voodoo," Mid answered quietly, but sternly, „Go after
him! Talk to him! It’s the only way to solve the problem."
„But look at what I did! How would he ever forgive me?"
Midnight considered Voodoo’s words for a moment then
frowned, „Isn’t this Kyle we’re talking about?"
Voodoo stared at him, realizing what Midnight was saying.
Kyle had better character than that. It was worth a chance.
„I’m sorry, Voodoo. Doctor Scott checked out of here two
days ago. Doctor Gatchel gave him the go-ahead."
Voodoo was speechless for a moment. „You-you people let
him just walk on out of here, heedless that he’s still weak?"
„Well, we can’t make anybody stay here, Voodoo. Hospital
policy."
„Not make anyone stay, but you have no qualms about restraining
your patients!" Voodoo snapped. But all the receptionist gave him was a
shrug. She didn’t make the rules, just reported them.
Voodoo stomped out, infuriated at their lack of interest
in his partner. Then he became infuriated that he himself wasn’t there
to take care of Kyle. Kyle was hardly fit to walk across the parking lot,
for crying out loud!
Jill was going to hear about this!
Kyle answered the door and there stood Voodoo. At first,
the doctor did not know how to react. He shuddered with bad memory. He
rolled his eyes in annoyance. He frowned in displeasure.
But he let Voodoo in because really, it was nice to see
a face other than a nurse coming to take blood. He silently stepped back
and invited Voodoo inside. The Sentinel strolled in, really glad they had
made it this far. He loved Kyle’s place as much as his own. Redwood-stained
oak walls matched the smoked glass and black metal furniture in a nicely-kept
apartment. Kyle had the money to buy a gorgeous house but he liked the
small, simple quarters and the outdoor patio rather than something terribly
lavish.
Kyle went to the kitchen and poured himself a vegetable
drink. „I’m working out in the patio. You can come, if you’d like." He
invited. He made his way past Voodoo down the hall and outside. The cool
air filled his lungs, but did nothing to alleviate the ever-present darkness
in his heart.
Voodoo peered out the door and carefully stepped outside.
One of Kyle’s hobbies was gardening; trimming and shaping
bushes to resemble creatures or animals, sometimes buildings. It was a
lot of work, but Doctor Scott was, like so many other things, a pro. He
had a small herb garden located at the front of the patio and outdoor furniture
nearby that. Voodoo loved this place. The Sentinel never considered himself
very talented. Well, Kyle more than made up for that.
The doctor remained silent, sipping his vegetable juice
and carefully tending one bush he was shaping into a dolphin.
„Well," Voodoo started first. „I see you didn’t need
my help recovering and doing damage to the world at large. You’ve seem
to do well enough yourself."
Kyle eyed him, seeing the feeble attempt at humor. He
wasn’t laughing. He reached for the clippers with his right hand and Voodoo
took note how it was still bandaged. A good three weeks had passed since
the first accident and Kyle still had problems with his arm. The robot
assumptively took a position beside Kyle and the bush, sitting down so
that they could make better visual contact.
„Kyle," he started softly. „Can you recall anything,
anything at all about the accident?"
Kyle threw him an icy stare and took another sip of his
drink. „No. Not really. I’d rather not talk about it, to be honest with
you."
„I know." Voodoo answered carefully. „But, it might help
us piece together something of your condition."
Kyle clipped a tiny twig off and gave Voodoo a more meaningful
glance. „You know, I don’t even remember how I met you. It drives me crazy!
I didn’t even know I remembered how to do this until night before last
when I got out of bed, unable to sleep. I just automatically grabbed the
clippers and came out here and started working. As if-as if I had done
it all my life."
Voodoo marveled. „You have only partial amnesia?"
„Seems that way. I guess that’s why I remember so much
of my profession. For a while I thought I lost everything but I tested
myself over the net last night and my memory offered me a healthy ninety
percent accuracy on the test. There’s some things I’ll have to go back
and refresh. But it seems to be okay."
Voodoo caught a light of hope in Kyle’s eye and it warmed
his own heart. „Well, we weren’t exactly on good terms when we met. I,
uh, I kidnapped you."
Kyle wordlessly stared at him. „You kidnapped me?!" He
nearly shouted. „What? What the hell were you thinking?! You kidnapped
me?!"
„It was an emergency and you were the only person available
at the time." Voodoo shrugged. „At least I kidnapped the right person."
He grinned, inclined to laugh. Thinking about it now it seemed pretty funny.
He kidnapped his own Interface partner!
Kyle stared at him in blatant disbelief. He finally shook
his head and snipped a few more twigs. „I don’t think I want to know any
more." He grunted. If that was true, the rest of his past might be just
as insane. Kyle paused. „Kidnapped!" he spat. „Married!"
Voodoo leaned forward a little, intrigued by Kyle’s careful
work with the bush. His work was slowly revealing itself, becoming finer,
smooth. „Kyle," he said after a moment, „I can take you to Central Command
and Alean and other places, meet everyone. It might refresh your memory.
We have wonderful friends. And I could introduce you to-„
Kyle shook his head. „I can’t see anybody right now,
Voodoo. It’s just too soon still."
„It would do you some good." Voodoo insisted. „I mean,
think of it all as a vacation. We could go and really take our time-„
„Voodoo." Kyle interrupted again. „I’ve already set up
a part time job at the hospital. It’s not much, but it’s something to help
get me back to some sense of normality."
„A job?!" Voodoo snapped. „Come on! There’s so much more
out there! You can afford the time off, believe me!"
„Is that so?" Kyle snapped in return. „What else do you
know about me? I don’t even know who you are and you come parading in and
telling me how to live my life."
„Kyle!" Voodoo retorted. „We’re supposed to be a part
of each other’s lives! We’re Interfaced."
Kyle bit his tongue. How very presumptive! Almost rude,
really.
„Look," Voodoo snarled. „Like it or not, we’re linked.
And up until the accident, we’ve been able to tolerate each other pretty
well. Now suddenly you don’t remember and you won’t even give me half a
chance to prove myself! I mean, it’s frustrating knowing someone all your
life and suddenly you’re having to start the relationship all over again!"
Kyle turned back sharply. „Yes!" he said, his temper
barely kept in check. „I don’t know you, I don’t know any of your friends.
I don’t even know me." Suddenly disgusted, Kyle set the clippers down with
a weary sigh. He wished Voodoo hadn’t come at all. He was still trying
to sort things out in his head and this robot just comes around and messes
everything up again. Was his life really that complex? He wished the robot
would just stay away!
Unfortunately, Voodoo picked up on that and it hurt deeply.
„Fine." He growled. „I’ll leave. If you decide you suddenly
know me, I’m sure someone at your precious hospital will know how to find
me."
That put Kyle off. „Is this how we’ve always been?" He
snapped. „Have we always fought like this?"
Voodoo turned back around. „No. Sometimes you’ve been
worse."
„Oh, so you’re telling me that you’ve not always been
this pushy."
„Pushy? Me? Pushy? How would you like it if suddenly
you were bonded to a creature less than half your size and you constantly
felt responsible for it?"
Pain sliced through Kyle’s temples and a memory not his
own shot into him. Voodoo resented being Interfaced with him. Anybody,
anything else in the universe but Kyle would have been a better thing!
Kyle inwardly shuddered with two overwhelming emotions:
Voodoo’s initial rejection of the Interface and his own
terrible sense of worthlessness. In mere seconds, Kyle was condemned to
live and work with someone who basically hated him.
It was all Doctor Scott could do to keep himself together
for that very moment in time. He blinked, still shocked by Voodoo’s projections.
Then he reacted himself: Kyle shot him an acid look. „I don’t recall asking."
He answered brusquely, biting his tongue. He wanted to point out how he
felt when Voodoo tried for force him to phase. It was like being raped.
But the doctor would not stoop to say such a terrible thing. He silently
stomped past Voodoo into his home, unable to say anything.
Voodoo couldn’t stand it any more. He transformed into
jet mode. „I’ll see you around . . . Doctor." He snarled and shot off.
Kyle didn’t get past the hallway. He collapsed against
the wall, his arms wrapping himself tightly. He didn’t need that. It would
have been nice to just have some quiet, aimless conversation. It would
have been nice to just lean against someone for a while, not fuss over
what had happened, not trying to grasp something as fleeting and inconsistent
as a memory. Kyle staggered to his desk and swept up the one photo of Voodoo’s
friends. He wiped the oncoming tears and tried to bring his anger under
control.
Kyle concentrated on the photo, drawing a deep breath.
Robots and Humans. It seemed a very normal thing here
on Cybertron. But what were those other memories he had? A sun and blue
sky, mountains of trees and grass . . . he had no names or dates.
A strange rustling noise filtered behind him and Kyle
turned, wondering if it was Voodoo who came back for another session of
insults.
Instead, the wall wavered and a figure, outlined in red
watered through. Kyle caught his breath, his heart jumped to his throat.
It was back again, meaning to kill him completely. He activated the visiphone,
right out of sheer habit, and called the hospital.
A receptionist answered.
„It’s Dr. Scott. Can I talk to Jill? It’s an emergency."
„I’m sorry, Dr. Scott. She’s with another patient."
„This is an emergency!"
„I’ll see if I can patch her through."
The dog stepped nearer, growling. Something inside Kyle
desired to open himself to receive the beast. Something told him this creature
was all he needed in life. Something else screamed at him to listen to
nothing.
„Hello?" Jill’s voice impatiently came over the line.
„Jill," Kyle answered. „Jill."
„Kyle? What’s wrong?"
But he never answered her. The dog opened its mouth and
let loose a roar that hurt Kyle’s ears. It attacked, its weight bearing
down on the doctor like a lead wrecking ball. Kyle shattered the glass
coffee table beneath him.
The monster licked the back of Kyle’s head and pain shot
up his spine. The dog bit down on Kyle’s right shoulder and Doctor Scott
gasped for breath, the pain nearly knocking him unconscious. He fought
to stay awake and weakly reached for a glass shard, though he didn’t think
it would do any good. He sliced the watery image with it and the dog snarled
and jerked back, allowing Kyle enough room and time to escape. He scampered
to his feet, grabbed his coat and fled out the door. The monster pounded
hot on his trail.
Kyle tapped down the stairs and exited the building.
The dark metal streets outside offered him three directions from which
to choose. Kyle had no idea where any of them led. He veered right just
as a public transport slowed to pick up passengers. He boarded the hover
craft and it shot away as the doctor found himself a seat next to a woman
wearing well-fitted armor.
Kyle couldn’t look at anyone, fearful the person might
turn into his attacker. But he dared a glance toward the back window and
caught the sight of the watery red dog, pounding its way after the transport.
He turned back around and hoped with every inch of his life the creature-thing
might lose energy long enough for him to escape.
Five, six, seven city blocks down the line and the transport
hung a right. Two, three blocks and the transport took a left. And Kyle
safely remained on the transport for a good half hour before he took another
glance out the back window.
No sign of the dog.
Perhaps Kyle had lost him for a while. Doctor Scott knew
he
couldn’t run forever. He would have to try to call Jill.
The transport stopped at a huge mall and Kyle disembarked
with a group of kids. They chattered and giggled ceaselessly and Kyle followed
them through the entrance and quietly caught his breath.
The mall stood three and four stories tall, the ceilings
always high enough to accommodate a few of the larger Transformers. Shops
ranging from casual clothes to alien kitchen accessories lined the center
court.
The doctor felt this was a good decision. He strolled
around the court, now looking for a phone to call the hospital.
People came and left, filing around him in an exchange
of conversations and varying dress-wear. The mall paraded in front wafting
smells of wonderful foods and a live band playing to Kyle’s right. Several
young girls pushed strollers while they chattered on with their girlfriends.
A small group of young men compared hand-held games and cards they had
recently purchased and just behind them stood a tall figure in a long dark
coat. He eyed Kyle suspiciously and Kyle shied from his piercing dark eyes.
Then Doctor Scott dared a last glance, wondering why
the figure stared at him so. But Kyle’s action caused the wound in his
hand to agonize. It was as though someone had shot a lance right through
him. He stifled a cry and bent over in pain, clutching his right arm. His
body trembled as pain shot up his arm and aimed for his heart. He couldn’t
breathe and he glanced for the figure again and in place of a human’s face,
sat the face of a dog. It snarled at him, licking its chops.
Kyle bolted left, running around an indoor playground,
passing through a small indoor garden and aimed for a beautiful water fountain,
graced with mirrors and a spun-glass statue in the center. The figure dashed
after him, heedless of the two little kids it knocked over and stepped
on.
Kyle’s eyes caught a pair of lights that granted the
falling water color. Quickly he grasped and unscrewed one of them from
the floor, exposing wiring. He ignored the throbbing pain in his right
hand and waited until the figure caught up with him. The dog itself leapt
through the clothes and plunged into the fountain, heedless that Kyle held
a light fixture. Kyle leapt out of the water then immersed the fixture
into the fountain, jerking his hand back just as the electricity sparked
and sizzled, wrenching the dog left and right, up and down so that it made
a gurgling, growling sound.
Kyle abandoned the scene, not daring to wait for security
to arrive and arrest him. He knew it was only a matter of time before the
creature-beast would recover and come right for him. He remembered (!?)
Beth at the hospital and how she died and knew, he knew that was about
to happen to him.
Kyle shot through a department store exit and tried to
run across the parking lot, only to find his strength, granted by the mercies
of his adrenaline, now fell short.
What could he do, now?
His time was up and the dog crashed through the wall,
snarling and agony in his arm shot through Kyle’s heart and he crumpled,
whimpering weakly. The dog, now grown in terrible size, clamped its jaws
around Doctor Scott and bolted out of sight.
Voodoo ran the conversation over and over in his head.
Kyle was just being a jerk! What was with him, anyway? He didn’t want to
listen to anything Voodoo said or explained. Stubborn flesh creature!
But then, Voodoo digressed, he wasn’t very patient, either.
And then the Sentinel had to laugh inwardly. They were
starting out all over again much the same way when they first met. He considered
Kyle a jerk then, when he was the jerk. It really wasn’t that much different
now. Except that he knew the quiet man. He knew Kyle would not intentionally
hurt anyone, never to do so spitefully. And, Voodoo supposed, it was his
fault for forcing Kyle to do things before Dr. Scott was really ready.
Voodoo landed on a rooftop to think. He really should
go back and apologize. At least he should try-urgency alerted his senses
and Voodoo shot back to the apartment as fast as he could. But when he
arrived, all he found were the remains of a brief battle. A message on
the visiphone called his attention.
„Voodoo." He answered.
„Jill." She answered. „V, where’s Kyle? Is he alright?"
„He’s not here. Why?"
„He called a while ago, but didn’t say what the problem
was. We were cut off."
As she spoke, Voodoo found the slice from the glass table.
The shard was smeared with a watery substance-outlined in red.
„Oh, Primus." He whispered.
„What? Voodoo, what’s wrong?"
„Jill, the monster, the dog. It’s real."
„What?"
„No. I don’t have time to explain. I have to go."
And he took off, her voice still calling his name.
The Sentinel looped the immediate area twice, trying
to pick up on Kyle’s individual life signs. But that failed. Where could
Scott go in his weakened condition? Voodoo landed outside a tall office
building and pondered a moment. If something were chasing him, and he had
no resources, what would he do? Where would he go?
Voodoo supposed he’d head for someplace public, where
everyone could witness any vile attacks.
Three helicopters shot overhead, all of them city security.
Voodoo’s opticless visor sparked silver and he leapt
after them, transforming and made sure not to be too obvious.
The choppers lead him to the mall where several security
officers and investigators jotted notes and asked questions. Many people
flocked to the scene while an ambulance and paramedics tended two injured
children.
Voodoo landed and scanned everything around him. Was
this because of Kyle? Did something else happen?
„I saw it, too!" One little kid pipped. „It was wearing
a long dark coat and it was chased after him and he raned inta the fountain
and got all wet and electricuted the water and the thing lost its coat
and sizzled."
„And no one saw what happened to him after that?" One
investigator asked.
„He ran into Techman’s Department Store." A lady answered.
„I didn’t see anything other than that.
Kyle was here, but now gone without a trace. The investigators
would be looking for days for Kyle and Voodoo knew he didn’t have that
kind of time. Kyle’s amnesia had prevented the doctor from remembering
and knowing how to mentally communicate with his partner. Voodoo abandoned
the mall, taking his position in the sky. Where on Cybertron would that
monster take Kyle, if the monster did indeed survive the electrocution?
Voodoo zoomed around the area again, not so much as looking
as just to think. But his flight path led him to a distinguishable footprint
in the form of a crushed automobile. The Sentinel landed to examine the
wreckage a little more closely and sure enough, it was a footprint. The
monster didn’t simply fade from the scene, it walked. And Voodoo considered
the direction the print pointed; toward the older part of town and a transport
graveyard once used under the streets. He transformed and sped several
miles in a due westerly direction.
There were no signs for miles. Voodoo kept going. After
all, on a metal planet, a footprint would be hard to trace. Fifteen minutes
later, Voodoo came to the ‘grave’. The tunnel entrance was broken down,
but it had been like that for quite some time. Strips of the old system
lay rusting. Huge sheets of ‘garbage’ metal littered the area as no one
over too long a time bothered to clean it up after it was declared unsafe.
This ancient rail system proved a perfect ground for killing and disposing
bodies quietly.
And somehow, by some force of mercy and grace, Voodoo
found the one single clue he needed to confirm his suspicions; a single
drop of blood. Whether it was from Kyle’s unhealed wounded hand, or a fresher
cut, Voodoo could not tell. But joy and anxiety leapt into his chest and
Voodoo had to sternly remind himself Kyle was still in danger and if he
weren’t careful enough, the monsters would most likely kill Kyle right
on the spot.
The problem was that Voodoo forgot his mouth didn’t always
obey his own head.
„Kyle?" He called out loud.
Then realized what an idiot he was for calling out. <Kyle?>>
he called instead.
<< . . .>> faint like the dead calling from their
grave, but there it was! And it was all Voodoo needed. He called his gun
from subspace (as if that would do any good) and pressed forward into the
darkness.
<<Kyle!?>>
The dog laid Kyle face down on a cold slab of steel and
licked the back of the doctor’s neck once. A wave of terrible pain immobilized
Scott and his right arm weakly slipped off the edge of the slab. He didn’t
know where he was, or what had happened. He didn’t remember how he got
here. His mind fell to nothing but dancing colors and a few snatches of
sound. He could feel something devour him from the inside and soon he would
fall unconscious altogether and never wake up.
„Kyle?" Some voice echoed from a distance.
Wasn’t that his name? Was someone calling for him? Kyle
opened his eyes, but met darkness. Dripping water plicked
nearby and the dog left him for a while, perhaps to follow the sound of
the voice.
Kyle simply lay there, unable to move, too tired and
sad to care.
Voodoo searched deep into the tunnel. He walked some ways,
finding nothing but refuse and a few nasty off-world animals. The dark
tunnel oppressed him, stretching off into an eternity all its own and Voodoo
wondered if the damned thing was ever going to come to an end. But it kept
going, slightly bending now and again until it finally did end into a large
sunken cavern. Some of the older transports lay round in the sinkhole like
dead things. Voodoo stepped down into it, glancing round the mini graveyard.
Water seeped from above, making the only noise other than Voodoo’s own
feet.
He instantly sensed a part of himself here. He turned
a three-sixty and felt the strongest point from behind two large transports.
Voodoo used his sensors in the darkness and climbed over
the two transports, slipping once on the second one and softly cursing
the fact that no one bothered to clean up this part of town. Downright
sloppy, he told himself.
He jumped down, landing loudly in a pile of junk metal
and slimy refuse. He found Kyle laying face down on a pile of sheet metal.
His right hand had fallen off the edge, touching the dirty ground just
below him. His blood was everywhere. Fresh bite marks told the tale of
a slight struggle.
Voodoo put his weapon aside and made his way to his friend,
hoping against hope. He touched Kyle’s left shoulder and picked up his
right hand at the same time.
Kyle wearily raised his heavy head and didn’t need any
light to see who found him. He laid his head down again, unable to keep
it up. <<Voodoo.>> he sent weakly. <<You came for me? Even
after the awful things I said?>>
<<You’re a part of me, Kyle Scott. No matter what
happens. Nothing can change that.>> Voodoo nearly leapt for joy over the
fact that Kyle had remembered how to communicate with him.
But guilt drove Kyle back into silence. He thought it
nice to see someone, anyone other than the little prison in which he now
lay. He would most likely never see the outside again. Pain shot through
him and all Kyle could do was wince, catch his breath.
„Kyle!" Voodoo called. He could feel just snatches of
Kyle’s pain, but he kept the shields up in order to keep moving. He brushed
his finger over Kyle’s white-blonde hair, now dirty with blood. He was
about to gather his friend up and hold him when Kyle stirred.
„It’s coming back." Dr. Scott whispered weakly. „Voodoo,
you ... leave. If you go now, I can distract it."
Voodoo wasn’t about to leave. He laid his hands about
his injured friend and would have picked Kyle up had another sound not
distracted him.
The creature-thing came bleeding through the wall, licking
its chops. It approached them and Kyle’s right arm twitched under Voodoo’s
hand.
Something suddenly made sense to Voodoo: The wound in
Kyle’s arm was a mark of sorts, a way to let the monster know who its victims
were. Voodoo called his weapon from subspace and placed one hand on Kyle’s
back, the other sat on the trigger of his laser gun. He knew that something
like this would most likely not be affected by laser fire. But it was all
the Sentinel had. The monster was going to rip Kyle up right in front of
him.
The idea of a forced-phase instantly entered Voodoo’s
mind. The creature couldn’t reach Kyle if they were phased. But then he
recalled almost a week ago how he tried that and the shock of it sent Kyle
into a near-suicide. Then Voodoo remembered coming to consciousness, in
agony and watching in horror as something, some ghost of a dog, ripped
Kyle out of him. The Sentinel unconsciously touched his chest.
What could he do?
Then another monster came through the wall, and it too
peered hungrily at Kyle. But the instant the two dogs spotted each other,
they growled in unison, each threatening the other. Voodoo took that moment
and gently gathered Kyle in his arms and stole several steps backward.
The first dog started to follow, but it was attacked by the second and
a terrible fight ensued, one dog yelped and snarled, the other snarled
back and their fight lit the cave with an eerie red glow, allowing Voodoo
to see the ceiling was far higher than he thought.
While the two dogs kept fighting, Voodoo transformed
his body around Kyle’s injured, bleeding form and shot away. The tunnel,
however, proved a bit too small and the sides painfully skinned Voodoo’s
wings. But he kept going, knowing the pain he suffered was nothing compared
to his partner’s pain. And the two dogs were not going to fight each other
forever.
Voodoo brought Kyle right back to the hospital. One more
time! He thought to himself. But this time he was met with Skywolf and
a rather perturbed Midnight. The two followed him back to Kyle’s old room,
asking him why he hadn’t said anything, reported any incidents or asked
for help. But Voodoo was beyond words at this moment. He ignored them while
he carefully laid Kyle on the bed and stepped back as two nurses rushed
to his partner’s aid.
„Voodoo!" Midnight admonished.
But the Sentinel leader got nowhere before Voodoo collapsed
into his arms.
I thought you said he was going to be just fine.
I did until two days ago.
Symptoms?
None. Or none that he would speak about. Memory loss,
for the most part.
Jill, surely you can be a little more specific than that.
There has to be something you’ve noticed differently
about his behavior.
Pause.
Well, we gave him something to sleep off trauma. But
he woke just half an hour later. And this wound here on his right hand
. . . it won’t close. We’ve changed the bandaging on it, used laser mending
on it, we’ve checked for parasites and signs of infection-I was thinking
about sewing it together. But nothing we’ve done will work.
Kyle realized they were talking about him and his dark
brown eyes lifted, greeting a cheerfully lit room, complete with a group
of unknown doctors and Jill standing around staring at him.
„Well!" A bearded alien doctor piped. „Good to see you
finally conscious, Doctor Scott! How do you feel?"
But Kyle’s eyes diverted from him to another doctor.
He knew that person, but the name escaped him completely. And Kyle gazed
back at Jill who simply smiled sweetly. She produced a small scanner from
her smock pocket and quickly ran it over him then stared at the readings.
„Well, your temperature is finally up. Your blood count
has raised some and . . . „ she placed the scanner back in her pocket.
„Voodoo has been pestering us about you twice every hour."
Kyle forced his mouth open. „He came for me." He softly,
sadly answered. Kyle remembered the fight between the dogs and the agony
when one of them licked him.
All the occupants in the room stared at Kyle as if his
words were of a profound nature. Jill glanced at two other doctors before
turning back to Kyle. „You’re Interfaced with him, Kyle. It’s natural for
a Sentinel to rescue his partner."
„No." Kyle denied. „We had an argument . . ." From the
look on their faces, Kyle could tell he didn’t need to say anything more.
His eyes fell to the soft coverlets laying over his body. He felt very
empty right now. Emotionally he felt exhausted, but not so that it allowed
him to sleep more.
„Doctor Scott," the one alien doctor directed, „We have
some questions we wondered you’d be willing to answer."
Kyle again glanced from one person to the next and meekly
nodded. Though he didn’t think he could recall enough to satisfy their
curiosity.
„Doctor Scott, we’ve had reports of an invisible entity
crashing through your apartment, something of a similar nature attacked
you again at the mall. Four other people have been attacked and left for
dead-„
„It’s been eating other people?" Kyle’s eyes grew in
surprise.
The doctors eyed one another. „Well," the one alien acknowledged.
„We’ve found bodies torn to pieces. A few of them, not all, have records
regarding a measure of psychic tendencies. We were hoping you might be
able to shed some light on this little dilemma. Now, we were informed that
you went to Chenobis to investigate what they thought to be a rare disease.
But it turns out, the victim died much the same way these other people
have. But your case is different. Why?
Kyle shrugged. Suddenly they want him to remember Chenobis?
He hardly remembered the very name! But Kyle forced his
head to work, trying desperately to remember the trip. He knew Jill had
mentioned somewhere along the line his assignment to the planet. But that
was fleeting and in between moments of consciousness. „I don’t know." He
finally murmured. „The creature attacks me when I least expect it to. I
remember being at my place with Voodoo and . . . „ he couldn’t say anything
more. He was living a nightmare and Kyle wondered when he would wake up
and everything would be back to normal. The emptiness filled him and choked
off any other thoughts. Whether by attack or suicidal depression, the monster
was going to eat him alive.
Then a memory hit him, clear as a sunny day. „Glass."
He stared at his audience. „I remember . . . I cut it with a piece of glass.
Not deeply. It was right on top of me. But it reacted to glass."
„Fascinating." Another doctor piped.
„Quite." A third agreed. „Might have something do to
with
the steadfast properties of silicon. Or light refraction.
Maybe sound."
They chattered on for several moments, practically forgetting
Kyle for the time. He closed his eyes and rested his head comfortably against
the pillow. In another moment, their sounds died off and Kyle drifted aimlessly.
When he woke, the clock read several hours past their
interview and evening crept over the ward.
Kyle felt very much alone.
Kyle woke some time later. He had no idea the day or
the hour. But Steven sat there next to him, leafing through a book. He
glanced over and upon a second look, sent a wide grin. „Hey!" he greeted
his friend. „Glad to see you awake."
Kyle greeted him with a silent smile. But it was a forced
smile and it left him as quickly. Steve leaned over, locking eyes with
Scott. „I have something illegal for you."
„You’re a goof." Kyle weakly admonished.
Steve smiled broadly. „Funny, Mid says the same thing."
He reached under the bed and produced a magazine wrapped in plastic.
Kyle spotted a mostly-naked female on the cover and „PET
HOUSE" on the title. He about cracked up. „Put that thing away!"
Steve laughed and opened the plastic bag. „Not on your
life Kyle. This is precious."
„Yeah, I’ll bet." The smile, this time genuine, would
not leave Kyle’s face. What a goof!
Steve slid the bag off and Kyle realized the magazine
had no leafy interior. Steve held it with one hand and peeled the cover
with the other, revealing three magazine-shaped bars of pure chocolate.
Kyle laughed even more. „I do not believe you!"
„Dark or milk? What’s your favor flavor?"
„Nuts?"
„Yup. See? I knew you’d ask that." And Steve set the
first chocolate ‘plate’ down and handed the second one to Kyle. Kyle broke
off a piece and waited until Steve took his pick. „Chocolate bunnies."
Steve pointed to the picture of the girl on the cover. „My favorite."
Kyle laughed, feeling a little lighter than he had in
days.
He watched as Steve took a first bite then he copied.
The chocolate tasted wonderful, far more so than the stuff he’s had to
eat of late. He thought of Steve and the picture of the robot Voodoo showed
him a while back.
„Steve."
„Hmm?" Steve chewed with a broad smile.
„How long have you and your-uhm, Midnight been Interfaced?"
Steve fell silent for a long moment. „A long time." He
answered quietly. „Longer than I care to consider." He forced a smile,
but it was a weary one, „It’s sorta funny how we measure
time-thinking only a few short years and-„
„Steve," Kyle interrupted. „How long?"
Now Parker swallowed hard. „Two . . . „ his voice was
small, as though something awful . . .
„Two years?"
„Two thousand years."
Kyle fell silent, his face reflected the shock Steve
expected. Doctor Scott knew he was treading on delicate ground. Perhaps
he should not ask the next question, fearing the truth would indeed be
overwhelmingly horrible. „And me and Voodoo?"
Steve couldn’t look at him. He forced a smile. „Well,
you remembered me, I’m sure other memories will surface as time goes along,
they can’t take-„
„Steve."
Parker swallowed again.
„What?" Kyle insisted. „Two thousand? Three?"
Steve wanted to lie, to tell Kyle it wasn’t for a long
time, but he couldn’t deny anything. „Six." His voice mouthed so quietly,
so sadly.
Kyle lost all color in his face. „Six?" he whispered.
„Six . . . thousand years?" His whole body froze. „How many life spans
. . . I’ve never died?"
Steve embraced his friend.
„Oh gods." Kyle whispered.
Several days later the hospital allowed Doctor Scott to
move on his own again. He saw Voodoo less frequently. But Jill explained
Voodoo was being treated for surface damage to his wings and Skywolf was
not about to let the rash Sentinel out of his sight again. Kyle couldn’t
help but to miss his partner. They seemed to have an awkward relationship;
both of them rather stubborn in their individual ways.
Kyle strolled through the little park he found close
to the hospital a few days ago. It turned out to be quite larger than the
entrance permitted the eye to see. Trees standing taller than Voodoo stretched
to kiss a great glass dome designed to create prosthetic sunlight. A beautiful
stream flowed along one side, ending in a pond built so that it resembled
as natural a setting as one would see on another world. Kyle decided he
loved this place. But his heart hung heavy. Something was missing in his
life.
Laughter rang from his right and Kyle gazed as a man
and wife took turns swinging a baby back and forth. He smiled, seeing their
moment of happiness and hoping that moment would be one of many.
He still remembered nothing. At least nothing of moments
like those. Even with his freedom from the creature, there was no guarantee
he would ever regain his memory. Kyle mourned for a past he could not recall.
Memories make a person who they were, what they experienced in life, reminding
them of mistakes and pressing forward to new challenges and self-improvement.
Even with the truce between himself and Voodoo, Kyle
still felt very much ashamed of his behavior. Kindness was a virtue his
own parents struggled day after day to instill in him.
That little slice of memory at least made the doctor
smile.
Kyle had some snatches of memory of his parents. But
he still didn’t remember Mirna, or any of Voodoo’s friends.
Voodoo was a topic to himself. Kyle found himself thinking
of the over-sized tin can often, sometimes in jest, sometimes in antagonism.
Interfaced? What exactly did that mean? Kyle allowed himself to remember
the day Voodoo took him out of the hospital and forced him to . . . meld?
Phase? It was a horrible, terrifying memory. He quickly extinguished it.
A darker shadow of sadness descended over Doctor Scott
and his strength ebbed away with the oncoming depression. He wearily sat
down on a nearby bench overlooking the stream A couple of other children
ran after one another, a large dog happily trailed after them. Their laughter
did nothing to heal Kyle’s drowning heart.
Something was missing. Aside the fact that six thousand
years had faded from him, something very essential was missing in his life.
The depression made way for a coldness that settled over him like a cruel
winter frost. He bowed over, burdened by its load. He really had no reason
to continue living like this. There was no light or laughter in his soul.
The alien creature had stolen all that from him. Kyle could not even remember
the last day he worked. Just snatches of thoughts, words that made no sense.
He was only half a person.
Voodoo’s presence alerted him and Kyle wanted to slink
away.
He was ashamed of his depression and he tried to squelch
it, tried to put on a mask so that Voodoo would not feel the same guilt.
The robot sat down next to him, overlooking the stream a moment before
opening his mouth:
„I play a mean game of Chess." He offered, his tone barely
audible.
Kyle smiled lightly. „No doubt." He answered with a like
tone. But he had to hide his face, tuck away the darkness that crowded
all the merriment in his soul.
Voodoo felt that and turned to his friend. „You don’t
have to hide anything from me, Kyle." He said softly. „I am here for you."
Kyle merely looked away, staring at a beautiful wooden
bridge crossing the stream. No amount of beauty, no sound of laughter would
fill the void in his heart. Kyle did not care if he lived or died.
Voodoo crawled around to face him, but did not force
Kyle to look at him directly. He sat on his knees, concentrating on the
gentle doctor who shared his soul. „Kyle." He whispered. <<Kyle.>>
he sent as gently as he could. „You’re not alone in this. I know how you
feel. I know what you feel, every moment of it. But we can work through
it. We can work together. We can start piecing things together, a little
at a time, building memories to replace those that you’ve lost." He braved
it; Voodoo took Kyle’s bandaged hand, holding it carefully between his
fingers.
Kyle did not look at him, did not flinch. <<I have
nothing to give you.>> he sent mournfully. <<I feel nothing. I have
nothing. Even if I decided to phase with you, to make you happy, I don’t
even remember how.>>
Voodoo wanted to shout, wanted to tell Kyle that his
thoughts were all wrong. But he reprimanded himself for even thinking of
moving too fast. He swallowed the shout and took up
Kyle’s other hand. <<This isn’t about Phasing!>>
he thought gently. <<It isn’t about me and what I want! It’s about
you and me, working together. Being there for each other.>>
Kyle gazed at him finally, a tear escaped his eye and
he fought for self control. Voodoo wiped it away, but his action served
only to force Kyle to bend over and completely hide his face. Voodoo sighed
patiently and gently rubbed his friend’s arms, then his back. He sent warming
trills into Kyle’s body, hoping to alleviate some of the stress. They could
sit there just like that for hours, if need be. Voodoo no longer cared
about anything, or anyone. Kyle was all that existed in the universe.
Kyle said nothing in acceptance or rejection to Voodoo’s
touch. It was nice to feel someone there. He slightly moved in accordance
with Voodoo’s massage, his muscles reluctantly surrendering their tightness
to kind warm vibrations emanating from the robot’s fingers. Before he realized
it, the doctor sat up and allowed Voodoo to trace his shoulder line and
chest. Voodoo also caressed his neck and the sides of his face and forehead.
He watched as the robot’s fingers trailed down the right side of his body
and over his leg. Then Voodoo traced his chest again and Kyle lifted his
chin, concentrating on the sensation of warmth and nerve-stimulation. It
felt wonderful, better than a professional massage, because Voodoo knew
all the sensitive areas of his body.
And that fragment of memory hit Kyle like a ton of rocks.
No one really knew him better than Voodoo. No one in
his circle knew him quite so well . . .
<<The painting of the girl in my apartment . .
. >> he sent.
Voodoo stopped long enough to look Kyle in the face.
But he said nothing.
<<It was a gift, wasn’t it? You gave it to me.>>
Voodoo grimly smiled and caressed Kyle’s face with the
tenderest of strokes. Kyle drank the sensation in like a plant in need
of water.
<<It reminded me of you.>> Voodoo sent.
Kyle was about to joke of the gender difference, but
this was not the time. Voodoo came closer, setting his forehead against
Kyle’s forehead and the robot held Kyle’s tiny hands between his fingers.
They remained that way for a few minutes. Kyle felt comfortable in Voodoo’s
presence. He was no longer afraid or ashamed.
<<I have been an ass.>> he finally admitted to
his Sentinel friend.
<<You have been deeply hurt.>> Voodoo returned.
<<I"ve been the ass. I haven’t been there for you. I’ve only been
acting, when I should have been thinking.>>
Kyle didn’t know what to say to that. Shame touched him
and he could not resist its embrace. <<I’ve been so . . . sad.>>
the words didn’t come out right. They didn’t reflect the incredible intellect
of his profession. And that embarrassed him all the more. Kyle covered
his face, unable to stop the tears.
Voodoo Reached for his friend, gently surrounding Kyle
with both his hands while his grieving friend wept. Voodoo sought Kyle’s
heart with his mind, finding it scared by pain and fear. The doctor’s emptiness
reflected his own and although Kyle might not understand, Voodoo knew his
friend missed him as much as he missed Kyle.
Well, he was here to comfort his distressing partner
and he would do whatever it took, however long it took. Voodoo induced
Kyle to nestling against one hand while he gently tried to caress Kyle
with the other, hoping to coax Doctor Scott into a comfortable sleep.
As emotionally exhausted as he was, Kyle didn’t need
much convincing. He curled up half into Voodoo’s hand, the other half still
on the bench. He breathed deeply, gratefully knowing Voodoo would do nothing
to harm or frighten him again.
Voodoo was pleased, albeit a little surprised that Kyle
was so easily coaxed into a more relaxed position. It was most likely because
Kyle was still so very tired. Voodoo carefully collected his friend, his
love from the flat bench and held him close in his arms.
They were beyond words at this point. Voodoo merely sent
a mental sensation of comfort to Kyle, assuring him he would not leave
Kyle even for a second, if he so desired. Kyle would be safe for as long
as Voodoo lived.
Safe.
Kyle rested his cheek against Voodoo’s chestplate, feeling
the warm smoothness of his exterior skin.
Safe.
That was an extraordinary thought. No matter what would
happen in Kyle’s life, whether by creature or political power, Voodoo would
be there for him.
He sighed.
Voodoo would be there for him. Doctor Scott drew his
soul close to his partner’s.
He sighed again.
Closer.
They touched chest to chest and Voodoo mentally kissed
his neck. A comfortable warmth surrounded Kyle and for the first time in
a very long time, he found he could breathe so much more easily in this
state. His mind cleared and a sense of perfect calm fell about him. Perfectly
safe. And now, whole, entire. One person.
Voodoo drew a breath, though it wasn’t a breath at all,
really. He embraced himself, raising his head to meet a sky now indwelt
by simulated nightfall. Kyle finally phased in.
Voodoo was one person, perfectly complete. Perfectly
whole.