It was early in the morning with the mist
still clinging
to the ground and the sun not yet strong enough to
pierce through the cloud
cover. It spoke of snow already and by midday it would
probably pour down
again. Nicholas MacKenzie stood in front of the security
fence and got
out, looking at the ruins shrouded in the wavy
whiteness. A week had gone
by since the facility had been destroyed and by now
construction equipment
was lining the driveway up to what had once been the
main entrance. Bulldozers,
steam shovels, Bobcats and more. The moment the
officials gave the go,
this ruin would be torn down. It had been declared
highly unstable and
dangerous, and multiple signs had been put up.
The fence was locked by a rather
primitive combination
lock, but Nick had no intention of breaking it. He was
expected. The guard
was a rough-hewn, tall man with light brown hair and
watery eyes. He nodded
at Nick as he flashed his ID and unlocked the fence.
"Keep on de designated tracks," he
told him, his voice
heavily accented. "Dis is a dangerous ruin."
"No problem, thanks."
Up close the ruin looked even more
impressive than from
afar. It had the look of a movie set for a
horror movie, just waiting for
someone to shout 'action' and monsters to lurch
toward the hero or heroine.
Walking into the once proud building, Nick
stepped over charred wooden
beams, molten plastic, fallen roof sections,
always cautious not to stray
too far from the route declared safe.
A labyrinth of more debris lay
ahead of him and he peered
into the murky twilight. Getting out a high
power flash light he searched
on.
<Whoever destroyed the lab,
he was thorough> he muttered.
<And knew where to place
the bombs> Karr answered.
Nick had to agree. The
X-Treme lab had gone up in a brilliant
explosion of flames and debris, killing
five people in the furnace fire
and destroying everything within a short
period of time. The fire fighters
had not been able to save anything. This
had once been a high-tech place
of futuristic designs in glass and
steel. Now it was a heap of debris.
He stepped deeper
inside, ducking his head to avoid
fallen
poles, charred and split open from the
heat. Some of the walls around him
had collapsed, partitions blackened,
windows blasted out. Nothing left
at all. Why would someone destroy a
research lab of a company that did
nothing more than just test survival
gear under extreme conditions. It
wasn�t even their own gear. They
offered their services to other
companies.
Insurance fraud had been one
accusation, but he had quickly
dismissed it.
Rachel Foxx, the CEO of X-Treme, had
given him all the access he needed
and it had given him a good idea of
who he was dealing with.
Nick kicked lightly
against some charred wood and it
cracked. Normally he would not be
here to have a look into the events,
but he had been called by an old
friend of his and since there was no
other
urgent case waiting, he had accepted
the little detour to the Northwest
Territories.
<Nothing here at
all>
<What did you
expect? Neon signs?> Karr
asked sarcastically.
He smiled wryly.
<Maybe. One can always
hope. What
about the main computer
system? Any news about
possible recovery?>
<Burned to
crisp>
<Oh
great>
Taking a
last look around, Nick
decided to head back
to X-Treme.
* * *
The Bell Model 430 helicopter churned
through the crisp
morning air, leaving a faint trail as it made its way
across the white
winter landscape of Alberta. The Rockies loomed up not
far from where the
pilot was steering the aircraft and they were getting
ever closer, actually
aiming to pass over the impressive rock formation. The
landscape below
was beautiful. Everything seemed to be covered in a
sugary white crust,
from the trees to the ground to the high mountains. It
was in the middle
of winter and all looked untouched and wonderfully
romantic.
Leonardo Devereux grinned to himself as
he checked his
position and corrected it slightly. Dressed in a
pilot�s uniform, glasses
covering intelligent blue-gray eyes, he deftly and
surely handled his �baby�,
a multi-million dollar helicopter.
�Enjoyin� yerself?� he asked his
passenger.
Nick gave him a lazy smile. His eyes
were hidden behind
shades. �It was a nice week, Leo.�
�Thought as much. Yer bin a big
help for Rache.�
�I aim to please.�
The pilot chuckled. �Yer did
good. Knew yer were the
right lad.�
Nicholas MacKenzie chuckled
softly. He and Leo went back
a long time. He had known the pilot since
Devereux had worked for the CIA.
They had met on a mission that had nearly
ended fatally for the older man.
He owed his life to the quick thinking of
a stranger who had turned out
to be a fellow CIA operative. In a way
they had kept in contact, but it
had taken a while for Leo to find out that
Nick wasn�t who he appeared
to be.
Nick gazed out the window.
The Rockies passed beneath
them. The solution to the case of the
burned lab had been easy. A company
trying to cover up that their gear
wasn�t as good as they promised. It
had been a rather unspectacular solution
and Nick had been slightly disappointed.
It was easily earned money, though he
had moderated his bill. Rachel Foxx
had told him she would pay him fully,
but Nick had just shrugged. It wasn�t
like he would go broke because of it.
As Leo corrected his
flight coordinates, Nick watched
the mountains fall away to the right,
still pretty near and a fascinating
panorama outside. He reached for his
partner, feeling a slightly
disgruntled
Karr respond. He chuckled silently.
<I promise to pick
a more interesting case next> he
told him.
Karr rumbled but
didn�t respond verbally.
<We could have
taken the android along>
The response was
the expected one. <No
way!>
A soft alarm
echoed through his headset
and Nick turned
his attention away from the
grand view to the
instruments. Nothing was
on the radar, but Leo
frowned at one of the other
screens that adorned
the control dash of the
state-of-the-art helicopter.
�What�s up?�
�Pickin�
up a signal.�
�Identification?�
�Impossible.
System cannet get a
fix. It�s like every
time I�m tryin� to
find it, it jumps to
another spot.�
Nick
frowned.
�Display?�
A
small
holographic
sphere popped up
in the pilot
cabin,
a white dot in
the middle of
it, representing
their location.
Leo pushed
a key and the
computer did
some
calculating.
Suddenly there
were a lot
of red dots
flashing all
around them,
showing Nick
just what his
friend
had meant by not
being able to
get a fix, that
the target
always moved.
Now that was
weird.
�Could
it be a
natural
phenomenon?�
he wanted to
know,
brows drawn
into a frown.
�Never
seen one like
it.�
Nick
frowned some
more. Before
he had time to
ponder
this
phenomenon
some more,
something
appeared right
next to him.
Nick�s
trained mind
recognized it
immediately.
It was another
helicopter, a
Mil
Mi-34 Hermit,
and the side
door was open.
He could make
out a figure
dressed
in a thick
white overall,
holding what
looked like a
futuristic
bazooka
of a kind.
�Shit!�
Leo cursed and
twisted the
controls, the
helicopter
banking left
and diving.
Nick�s
eyes narrowed
at the sight
of the strange
helicopter
following
them, actually
matching their
speeding
descent. Leo
was an expert
pilot, had
been so when
he had joined
the Company,
and he could
fly this
baby with his
eyes closed.
�Pissed
someone off
lately?� he
asked casually
as he
evaded the
smaller and
apparently
very
maneuverable
Mi-34.
�Not
to my
knowledge,�
Nick answered,
gritting his
teeth
as Leo threw
the Bell
around and
climbed up
again.
�Hope
yer don�t get
airsick,� Leo
called, eyes
darting
back and
forth, trying
to get a
glimpse of
their pursuer.
The
radar still
wasn�t picking
it up and the
computer
scan came up
with the dots
flashing all
over the
place.
Suddenly the
Mi-34
appeared next
to him once
more. Leo
cursed
heartily,
throwing the
helicopter
to the left.
�What
the heck....�
he muttered.
Nick
was gazing at
the open side
door of the
other �copter,
studying the
bazooka
device. Leo
was about to
say something
when something
seemed to hit
their aircraft
like fist into
the face. The
controls lit
up like a
Christmas tree
one second,
then all went
dead the next.
Nick
saw little of
what came
next. For him,
the world
ceased to
exist as a
burning
red-hot spike
buried itself
in his neck
and
he screamed.
The pain was
absolute,
over-powering
all other
senses, and
then pushed
him into the
black abyss of
unconsciousness.
The
helicopter
dropped like a
stone.
* * *
Karr hadn�t liked the idea of staying
behind while his
driver and partner flew to a remote outpost on a new
case. The problem
was, there was no way he could have come physically
along. The outpost
was in the middle of nowhere; no roads leading there.
Hauling the Stealth
along in a cargo helicopter would have been a waste of
time and manpower
since Nick wouldn�t do much more than investigate into
the insurance fraud
claims. He would spend most of his time on the computer,
hacking, or reading
old files and latest reports. Karr�s assistance was
required to get into
mainframes or to crack security codes, but that was
about it.
He sighed and went over the security
parameters of Nick�s
highly secured server once more. He did it once a week
and had decided
to keep himself occupied while his driver was on his
way back. A week sitting
in the warehouse had been enough to make him
stir-crazy. Nick�s light jibs
and remarks through the last five days hadn�t helped.
He couldn�t help
it. He hated sitting still. He hated the prospect of
being unable to help
his driver in case of an emergency even more.
<We could have taken the android
along> Nick remarked,
barely able to contain his laughter.
Karr snarled. <No way!>
He hated the bipedal form. Kitt
might have chosen it
voluntarily, and for different reasons, but Karr
wasn�t about to do it
again. Not a chance in hell. His brief time as
an android had been enough
to tell him this wasn�t the existence he was
craving. He could�t protect
his driver, he was too vulnerable, and it showed
too much of what he tried
to hide. Having a face was a vulnerable spot.
People could read his emotions.
Swan had added a few new
components to the android Karr
had been forced to live in for a few days,
despite the fact that he had
no intention of ever using it again. She had
installed a rudimentary booster
for the neuro-implant signal, which would
enable the two partners to receive
each other�s neuro pulses while Karr was not
in his CPU. She wouldn�t develop
this any further unless Karr wanted to change
bodies on a permanent basis,
but that was not an option. He�d never go
there voluntarily ever again.
He liked who he was.
Suddenly Nick�s presence
changed and he felt a brief
surge of alarm. <Nick?> he inquired.
There was no reply. He felt
the tightly controlled emotions,
gathered the information that something
was wrong from the echoes he was
allowed to feel through the shields, and
then there was pain.
Karr was flung back from
the neuro link with a force
that drove the energy out of him,
flattened him against his own CPU,
tearing
apart the link with such force that he
barely had time to voice his pain
over it. It was like watching a bridge
break in a storm, blown away, cut
to smithereens as it went, and then
there was nothing but the raging river
of his own emotions.
<Nick!> he yelled.
His dark voice echoed
hollowly in the vastness before
him. The river disappeared, making
way to the flat, dark planes of �
nothingness.
The nothingness that had been there
before the link had been activated.
<No!> he
screamed. <No!>
* * *
The cell door slammed shut behind them.
Michael slid onto
the top bunk, ready to wait things out as typical. Kitt
on the other hand
paced, from one end of the small brick room to the
other, clearly agitated.
"Kitt, please. Stop."
"Is this what it's always like?" The
insinuation clear
in his frustrated tone.
Michael tried to hold his laughter
in check. "What do
you think?"
"How should I know? I've never
been in jail before."
"Sure you have, it's called an
impound yard, except here,
you don't get rained on."
Kitt spun to face Michael, his
angry expression leaving
in light of Michael's laughing one. "I guess
you have a point."
"And just like the impound
yard, there is nothing we
can do. So, take a load off, rest and
enjoy the view."
Kitt took in the gray
brick walls, the suspended bunks
in blue broadcloth, the white toilet in
the corner with a tiny sink beside
before glaring at his partner. "View
huh? At least the impound provided
fresh air."
Lying back on the top
bunk, his feet dangling off the
edge, Michael tucked his hands behind
his head. "It could be far worse
Kitt. I've been in some dives before.
At least this one's clean."
Hopping up to sit
beside his partner, Kitt shook his
head. "And I can't even blame this
one on you." Michael's eyes opened
in
surprise. Laughing, Kitt pressed the
matter at hand. "Speaking of which,
what did Devon say?"
Michael snorted.
"Nothing much complimentary
towards
the FBI." Shifting his hips
towards the wall, he made room for
Kitt to
sit comfortably on the bunk. "It's
going to take some time though."
"Great," Kitt
whined. "I don't know how you
put up with
this." Glancing at Michael's
face, seeing the barely
suppressed laughter
as it danced across the link.
"It'll be easier
this time."
"Why's that?"
Kitt drummed his fingers on
the edge of
the cot, not seeing the
humour value at all.
"'Cause I
have good company this
time."
"Does this
mean I won't have to
deal with your temper
later?"
"Naw,
heads are still gonna
roll. I'll just stew
about
it for the duration,
let it gather some
steam." Shaking his
head, Kitt
watched Michael's eyes
close as he attempted
to get some sleep. For
a second
he wondered whether or
not to open the
private link to his
brother, then
decided against it.
Karr would have a
field day.
* * *
Nick woke slowly, his mind a fuzzy mess
and his head pounding
viciously behind closed eye-lids. There seemed to be a
horde of dwarves
in his head, doing some ceremonial log-splitting and
mining in the depths
of his cranium. He wished they would stop. Then there
was the unnatural
cold on his face. Like a piece of ice resting against
his cheek. Cracking
his eyes open, he was greeted by whiteness. Bright and
cold whiteness.
He blinked once, but the whiteness stayed, barely even
taking on a shape
or anything. He exhaled and a cloud of warm breath
floated up, startling
him. Then the cold hit his senses for real and Nick felt
himself shivering
in the iciness that surrounded him.
With the cold stimulating his nerve
endings into transmitting,
even if it was more pain and the ice around him,
memories floated back.
As his memories reached the specifics of what must
have happened to let
him end up here, he felt a jolt in his mind, his body
reacting, and he
tried to sit up.
They had crashed!
They had been attacked by an
unmarked helicopter and
they had crashed.
Nick�s mind returned to almost
working order and he took
in his position. He was lying on his side, one
cheek resting against the
cold metal of door. The helicopter lay on one
side, the whole vehicle tilted
to the left. He levered himself up and looked
over to the pilot�s seat.
Leo lay in his harness, a sizable gash on his
forehead. He was breathing,
but he appeared to be trapped behind the broken
controls.
�Leo?� Nick rasped, sounding
hoarse.
No response. He cursed and
half slid, half stumbled out
of the passenger seat, landing
unceremoniously on his butt in the snow.
His left knee had simply given out from
under him and it felt like his
leg no longer belonged to him. He must have
bumped it quite severely in
the crash. It was a miracle nothing else had
been broken. At least nothing
felt broken.
Nick looked around. There
was nothing but snow around
him. Oh damn...... They had to be right in
the middle of nowhere! Making
his way to the pilot�s side, Nick marveled
at how intact the helicopter
looked from the outside. Some paint had
scraped off from the rocks and
there were dents, but it looked far from
the twisted wreck he would have
expected after such a crash. It had left a
broad trail of its descent and
slide across the frozen, snow-covered
surface, and the tail was nearly
torn off, but it was still in good shape.
Nick remembered little of
what had happened after the
sudden flash of pain. He still had no
idea what might have caused it. He
was feeling a bit light headed and there
was a dull headache pounding behind
his eyes, but he was actually feeling
rather good.
Leo was still out cold.
Nick forced his dizzy mind to
work his limbs, and he managed to open
the pilot's door, crawling inside.
Checking Leo more thoroughly, he
discovered the pilot had a few mild
bruises,
probably where the harnesses had
bitten into his body as well, but they
were hidden under the uniform. There
was a cut on one cheek and on the
forehead. What worried him more was
the swollen looking wrist of the right
hand. They had to find a way out and
fast. Whoever had taken them down,
he might be back to finish what he had
started.
Leo chose that moment
to wake. He groaned softly, eye-lids
fluttering but not opening.
�Leo?� Nick called.
Another moan.
�Wake up, Leo.
We got trouble.�
�I don�t wanna
know,� was the mumbled
reply. Then his
eyes flew open. �Shit!�
Nick smiled
humorlessly. �That about
sums it up. How
do you feel?�
Leo sank
back into the chair,
grimacing in pain. One
hand fumbled for the
harness release. The
restraints snapped off
and he
sighed in relief. �Fine.
What happened?�
�What do
you remember?�
�We
were attacked and
crashed....�
�That�s
exactly what
happened.�
Leo
grimaced again.
�Hell.� He
looked through
the windshield.
�Snow.�
�Lots
of it,� Nick
confirmed. �I
have no idea
where exactly
we are. The
instruments
are dead.
Nothing
works.�
�So,
nobody knows
where we are,�
the former CIA
agent
muttered.
�Nice.�
�And
we might have
another
problem.
Whoever took
us out,
I don�t think
they�ll be
very happy to
see us still
in one piece.�
�Only
if they
intended to
kill us,� Leo
said, frowning
mildly. �Tell
me the truth,
who did yer
kick in the
ass lately?�
�No
one, Leo, as I
told you. I
don�t know who
they are.�
The
older man
narrowed his
eyes,
searching
Nick�s face
for any clues.
Finally he
sighed,
leaning his
head back
against he
head
rest. His eyes
went over the
controls.
�They
used EMP on
us, Nick,
while they
could�ve tried
ta shoot us
out of the sky
with something
really big and
nasty. What�s
going on?�
Nick
felt like
slapping his
hand against
his forehead.
EMP! Of
course! And
then it hit.
Realization of
the facts. No�
god, no
please�. He
accessed the
implant and
was hit in the
face by the
sudden
blackness that
touched him.
Not the silky
blackness of
Karr, but the
blackness
of
nothingness.
No one at the
other end.
Nothing there.
Nothing at
all.
�Nick?�
His
mind reeled.
He felt it
shred,
plunging into
the
ever-widening
hole. The
implant was
dead�.
Dysfunctional.
Nothing left.
�Nick!�
Someone
touched his
shoulder and
Nick reacted
out of
instinct. A
yell of pain
answered him.
�Stoppit!�
He
blinked. Icy
cold air
rushed into
his lungs,
burning
them, and he
stumbled back,
tremors racing
through his
body. He was
gone.
His partner
was gone. No�!
<Karr!>
�Nick,
what the heck
is wrong with
yer?�
<Answer
me!> he
demanded,
shivering the
coldness that
seeped into
his mind.
<Answer me,
damnit!
Karr!>
�Nick!�
The
voice was
there again
and with an
immense
effort,
Nick dragged
himself back
into the
outside world.
His blurring
vision took
in Leo, who
was cradling
his already
injured wrist.
�I�m
sorry,� he
managed.
<Karr?>
Leo
gazed at him.
�What�s wrong
with yer, man?
Yer totally
zoned out
there for a
moment!�
Nick
ran a shaking
hand through
his snow-damp,
dark hair.
There was no
response from
his partner.
Not even the
slightest
shiver.
�I�m
fine,� he
whispered.
Damn, even his
voice was
shaking.
He turned
away.
He
tried to think
of what Leo
had last said
about the
EMP. Whoever
had taken them
out, had
chosen a way
that would
insure minimal
damage.
�So,
what next?�
Leo
interrupted
his thoughts.
What
next indeed?
Their only
vehicle was
down, they had
no way of
calling for
help, and they
were in the
middle of
nowhere. They
could try
repairing the
radio, send of
a call to
whoever was
listening,
but there was
the very real
danger of the
people who had
shot them down
listening in.
Then again, it
might be the
only chance
and they had
to take
it. The
implant was
dead and Nick
could only
pray that Karr
was in control
of himself
right now.
�Ever
done some
radio
repairs?� Leo
wanted to know
when
Nick didn�t
answer his
other
question. He
squinted into
the harsh
light
of the snow
and slipped
his sunglasses
back on for
relief. �I
might need
an assistant.�
�I
think I can
manage,� Nick
told him with
a smile.
�X-Treme
will look for
us for sure,�
Leo went on as
he
started to
take off some
of the
armor-plating
at the rear of
the Bell,
looking
through the
wires and
stuff
underneath.
He
wasn�t a
mechanic, nor
did he think
of himself as
talented with
tech-stuff. He
was a hands-on
man, someone
who could fly
and race-drive
and had been
trained by the
CIA for field
missions, but
repairing
things; no,
not really.
Still, he had
had a few
rudimentary
courses.
�Yes,
but it�ll take
them a while
to locate us,
let alone
get us out of
here. I want
to speed that
up. The sooner
we are out of
here,
the better.�
Nick
watched his
friend fiddle
with the
wires,
scanning
the landscape
after a while,
keeping guard
duty. Suddenly
something
caught
his eye. He
squinted.
Movement? Had
he just seen
something
move? There
was nothing
but the
blinding snow
around him,
but something
told him he
hadn�t
hallucinated.
He frowned,
concentrating,
wishing his
eyes would
stop watering.
His headache
was increasing
and he was
incredibly
tempted
to just slide
along the
darkness in
his mind, lose
himself in the
abyss.
And then he
saw it again.
Movement.
White against
white. Someone
in a snow
coverall, a
camouflage
coverall.
�Leo!�
he hissed
sharply.
Before
he could say
more, there
was a sharp,
stinging
pain in his
thigh and when
he looked
down, his eyes
widened. A
dart was
sticking in
the muscles of
his thigh, a
bright orange
against his
gray
and blue
uniform. He
tried to rip
it out, but
his hands
refused to
follow
the command.
His vision
seemed to
narrow down,
turn into a
tunnel vision
with the
blinding snow
an
ever-decreasing
source of
light, until
it blipped
out
completely.
Nick never
felt his body
hit the snow,
nor did he see
Leo
collapse
behind him.
* * *
�Package secured.�
The words echoed through the cavernous
room and a figure
dressed in light clothes swiveled a chair to face the
gigantic screen that
occupied most of the forward wall.
�Good,� the man said, smiling an
unnatural smile. It
looked like painted, completely unreal. �Get the
package to the base. We
will be ready to receive it.�
�What about the excess baggage?�
There was a short, thoughtful
pause. �Get rid of it.�
The speaker clicked off his com
and silence descended,
only disturbed by the distant sound of falling
water. The man in the chair
remained still for a moment, then he rose and
left the room, the door closing
noiselessly behind him.
* * *
Bear walked purposefully toward the
warehouse that was
Nick�s home. He had no idea why Swan had called him in
the middle of the
night. The sun was just now gracing the horizon with
some purplish-orange
light and the streets were empty. It was a Sunday and no
one in his right
mind would go out in the middle of the night. Swan had
simply told him
she had a situation and needed a pick-up for the package
at Nick�s place.
The package was the code name for the Stealth � without
Karr inside. A
sick feeling had spread through him at the very idea
that something had
happened to the AI and he had left everything back at
the Shop, driving
like a mad man across town to the old harbor.
�Hey, slow down! I�m still sick,� a
voice moaned behind
him.
Bear glanced at the smaller man who
was stumbling after
him. He shook his head. Duck was sick; he had motion
sickness. This always
happened to him when he wasn't driving, and it
didn't help that he hadn't
had time for breakfast. Duck had been at the Shop
when Swan had called
and Bear had simply grabbed him. If something needed
to be done with the
Stealth, Duck was the right person to have along.
That the dark-haired
mechanic was mortally frightened of the AI was
another matter. The man
usually never got close to the car or the AI if Nick
wasn�t around. With
Nick somewhere up North, waiting wasn�t an option.
�Will ya hurry up!�
Bear stormed through the doors
into the warehouse and
looked around. His eyes fell on the Stealth and
he immediately checked
for visible damage. None. No dents, no bruising,
no cracked MBS. He looked
just fine, but Bear had learned not to trust
mere appearance. Swan was
standing next to a work table, talking to
someone. It was a tall man, dark-haired,
dressed all in black, almost towering over the
smaller woman. Bear felt
shock settle in him like a fist in the stomach.
He stopped a few feet away
from the pair.
�Holy��
Swan turned and smiled tightly
at her larger friend,
while the other man was simply giving Bear a
neutral look. Cold, gray eyes
regarded the mechanic emotionlessly and he
didn�t move a muscle.
�Swan?� Bear managed, his
mouth suddenly parched.
Someone bumped into his
back and annoyance hit him. Duck
was really making a nuisance out of
himself. How could he get car sick
when he was spending most of his waking
time in his truck anyway?
�Sorry,� Duck started,
then his eyes fell on the android
next to Swan. �Ah, hell!� he
exclaimed, stumbling back and falling
over.
�Shit, shit, shit!�
Bear witnessed a small
smile crossing Karr�s lips and
the eyes took on a malevolent look.
He would have laughed if not for the
growing dread in his stomach.
Something must have happened for the
AI to
take this step. He pulled Duck to
his feet and the smaller man tried
to
hide behind the mechanic.
�Stop being such a
child!� Bear snarled under his
breath.
It had little
effect. Duck was scared shitless
of the
AI and while Karr had been in
the android body the first time,
he had talked
of nothing but the possibility
of the AI attacking him. Duck
considered
himself with a little chance of
survival as long as Karr was
inside the
larger Stealth, but a humanoid
form could get everywhere he
went.
�What�s going
on?� Bear asked. �What
happened?�
�Nick went
missing,� Swan explained.
�No signal, no life
sign.�
No signal?
Bear felt the dread
double. He met Karr�s
eyes and saw the
confirmation there. The
implant link had been
severed.
�Damnit,�
he whispered. �Where and
when?�
�He was
on his way back from
his last assignment
when
there was a sudden...
disturbance of the
link,� Karr said
monotonously.
�I failed to raise him
since.�
Shitshitshit,
Bear continued
cursing silently.
�You know
where he is?�
�I
have the
approximate
location of the
crashed helicopter
from satellite
images. It�s in a
remote location. I
have already
arranged
a drop.�
�So
where do we fit
in?�
�I
need someone
to take care
of the
Stealth.
Michael
and Kitt are
currently on
an undercover
mission at the
East Coast.
They
won�t be back
any time soon.
Take the
Stealth to the
Shop or
wherever it
is safe.�
Karr�s
intense eyes
met Bear�s.
The larger man
nodded.
�No problem.
Are you sure
you are up to
this search
and rescue?�
A
humorless
smile, so like
Nick�s, spread
on the cold
lips. �Don�t
worry, I will
have a guide.�
Bear
frowned, but
he didn�t ask.
He looked at
the still
hiding Duck
and sighed.
The man
couldn�t be
convinced that
Karr was
simply
acting and had
no intention
to kill him.
Duck had once
called Karr
�terminally
dangerous�,
and though
Bear had to
agree that it
fit the dark
AI, Karr
had yet to
attack any of
them. At least
more than
verbally.
�We�ll
take the car
to the Shop.
Duck?�
�No
way I�m
getting into
that machine!�
the younger
man
immediately
protested.
Bear
rolled his
eyes and Swan
smiled
slightly. �Get
my
truck back.
I�ll drive the
Stealth.�
Duck
took off at
high speed,
leaving the
lab. Bear
chuckled
and shook his
head as the
door to the
outside
slammed shut.
�One
day you have
to set him
straight on
the matter of
you wanting to
kill him.�
�There
is something
he doesn�t
understand
about the
concept?�
Karr asked
malevolently.
Bear
grinned.
�Right!� He
grew serious
again. �Are
you
okay?�
Karr�s
impassive face
met his
inquiring
gaze. Finally
the AI looked
away. �I�ll
function,
don�t worry.�
�I�m
not talking
about that,
Karr�.�
The
android turned
away. �Time is
of essence,
Bear. I
have to get
ready for my
pick-up.� With
that he strode
out of the
room.
Swan
sighed and
shook her
head, then met
Bear�s eyes.
�He�s taking
it badly. It�s
eating away at
him.�
�Guessed
as much. How
long?�
�It�s
been fifteen
hours. I
arrived here
last night
after
he called and
demanded the
transfer. He
told me what
had happened.
I had
no choice.
Sadly enough,
I can�t even
fine-tune or
boost the
connection
he has to the
implant in
Nick in this
body as long
as there is no
reaction
from Nick�s
side. The
little he has
now is all I
could give
him. And even
that is dead.
If Nick dies
or is dead,
you know what
will happen.�
Bear
ran a hand
over his bald
head. �Yes, I
know,� he
answered
quietly.
�Shit, shit,
shit!�
�My
sentiment�s
exactly.�
�Who�s
picking him
up?�
�No
idea. He made
a few calls.�
Bear
sighed again
and walked
over to the
silent
Stealth.
He hated this.
He wasn�t a
field agent
and he knew he
was doing what
he
did best, but
he didn�t have
to like it. If
Nick was dead
or would die
while Karr was
in that
android body,
hell, in any
moving shape,
there would
be no hiding
for those
responsible.
Karr was a
killer and
Nick was his
catalyst.
Without the
catalyst� Bear
shivered. He
didn�t want to
think
about it.
Ever.
* * *
�The chopper disappeared off the radar
screens at 2:06
p.m. local time. The monitoring station in Edmonton
reported that the contact
was lost from one second to the next, without a distress
call or another
signal after that. Prior to the disappearance, no
communication had been
going on between the pilot and the controller. We have
tried contacting
them, but so far without any luck. No homing or distress
beacon has been
picked up on any frequencies. We have launched a search
around the last
known coordinates. So far we have found nothing. We�ll
keep looking.�
Karr listened to the conversation with
only half an ear.
Most of him was turned inward, trying to pick up
anything from Nick though
the coldness that resided where the implant had once
been. He knew that
in this form, he wouldn�t receive his partner�s
signals as strongly as
in the Stealth, but there was nothing. Nothing at all.
<If you can hear me> he sent
<we�re coming. We
know where you crashed, Nick. Just hold on>
�What puzzles me is how fast the
chopper disappeared.
Even if it was an engine failure, which I highly
doubt, the pilot should
have been able to send out a distress call. We
have zilch. Nothing at all.�
�I understand. Thank you, Mr.
Montan.�
Alexandra Christopher hung up
and turned to look at her
friend. �Anything?� she asked.
�Nothing.�
She touched his arm and
squeezed it lightly. �We�ll find
him.� She didn�t add in what shape or
whether dead or alive.
Karr had called her
because, frankly, there was no one
else he could call and also trust. Nick
had countless associates and contacts,
but Karr wouldn�t want to work with any
of them. Not in this form. The
android was known to no one but the
closest of friends. Alex had come to
mind because she was reliable and
trustworthy, because she was a Ranger,
she knew nature, and because she had an
interest in finding Nick.
Kitt and Michael would
have been the other choices if
Alex hadn�t been able to make it.
Maybe they would have been the primary
choices as well, but currently his
brother and his partner were hip-deep
in surveillance and espionage. Kitt
was shielding, which was for the best,
and Karr had by now added a lot of
layers to his own shields. No use in
distracting or even frightening Kitt.
Alex had been shocked
of course, but she had agreed on
being his guide. She had taken on a
professional air while dealing with
the facts and the people who could
help them get where they needed to,
but there were moments of pain, of
despair, and Karr found it hard to
comfort
her. He wasn�t good at it, so he
didn�t approach. He simply watched,
wishing
he could reach out; it was too
difficult.
�Ready?� Alex�s
voice now interrupted his
thoughts.
Karr nodded. Their
ride was leaving in a few hours.
The
last call had gone to the air
traffic control office. Alex had
used Foundation
ID and priority codes to get the
necessary cooperation, but it
didn�t tell
them anything new.
�Let�s go,� he
said roughly.
* * *
Nick woke a second time. This time, the
dwarves in his
head had been joined by the whole dance ensemble of the
Riverdance troupe.
They were creating quite a ruckus and he wished they
would keep it down.
Cursing softly, he tried to open his eyes, and regretted
it immediately.
Bright lights hurt him and he couldn�t suppress a groan.
He tried again
a second time after the pain had subsided, and
gratefully discovered that
the lights weren�t as bright as he had thought. His eyes
were simply way
too sensitive. It took another five minutes until he was
ready to get up,
and he felt like a hundred years old as he dragged
himself up into a sitting
position on the floor. Then he looked around.
He was in a small, very enclosed space
with only a door
leading outside. There were no windows and the walls
were completely smooth.
Massaging his temples, Nick sighed. Who had gone to
this extent to kidnap
him and why? All the people he knew who would want him
harm wouldn�t go
to this extent. They would just take him out. And
speaking of �them�, where
was Leo?
He rose, a bit unsteady on his leg,
and walked over to
the metal door. Running his fingers across the door,
Nick sighed wearily.
He didn�t have to be an expert to realize that he
wouldn�t be able to break
out of here just like that. He sank down on the bed
again and stared at
the wall, trying to get his brain to work. He
remembered the crash, how
he had woken, how Leo had tried to get the radio to
work, and then... how
he had been shot with a red dart. Tranqs or drugs.
Whatever. They had taken
him out.
Why? Why not kill him right away?
Whoever had staged
all of this, he would know who he had taken. Or
didn�t he?
Something cold trickled along his
mind and he winced.
Karr�s non-presence was growing more and more
pronounced. This wasn�t like
the times he had been separated because of one
incident or the other. This
was the complete failure of the chip in his
mind, all the complicated connections
it had to his brain. Nick tried not to think of
what this might mean. If
the EMP had destroyed it � there was no way to
repair the delicate circuitry.
He knew all there was about this implant and one
thing that was for sure
was that he couldn�t remove it, ever. It would
be too dangerous to get
it out. It had been inside him for two decades
and the tissue had accepted
the intruder, had grown around it, had included
it. If someone tore it
out, Nick could just as well say good-bye to his
sanity.
He smiled wryly. If it was dead
because of the EMP, he
could do the same.
There was a muffled sound from
the other side of the
door and he turned as the door opened. A
muscular man in a tight fitting
jeans and sweater looked at him with
narrowed eyes. He was armed and there
was no doubt that he would use force if Nick
didn�t comply with whatever
he wanted him to do. Nick decided that he�d
first check out the situation
and then see what course of action to take.
�Ready to play?�
�Play what?� Nick asked,
assessing his position, the
speed the goon would be able to fire and
his strength.
�The game, Mr.
MacKenzie,� another voice said.
The man who now
stepped next to the muscular goon
was
tall as Nick, with a narrow face,
pronounced cheekbones and gray eyes
that
had an unnervingly washed-out
quality. Blond hair fell on his
shoulders
and he was dressed in a light gray
suite. He didn�t wear any jewelry,
not
even a wrist watch. The smile on his
thin lips seemed almost like
painted.
�Who are you?�
Nick asked, keeping his voice
neutral
but firm.
�My name is of no
importance.�
�You know mine.
I think it�s bad manners.�
A chuckle
escaped the thin lips. �The
game starts in
fifteen minutes. I think
you�ll find it highly
entertaining. The aim is
to survive, but I think
you�ll figure that out by
yourself soon enough.
Good luck, Mr. MacKenzie.�
�Where is my
pilot?� Nick called as the
door was about
to close.
The blond
stopped, the smile
turning downright nasty.
�I never burden myself
with excess baggage.�
Cold
fury flooded Nick as
he realized the
implication
of those words. On the
outside his mask
didn�t waver, but on
the inside,
the death warrant of
the blond had just
been sealed. Even if
it was the
last he ever did. Most
likely, it would be
the last. There was
nothing
for him anymore, he
realized as the cold
blackness beckoned to
him again.
He didn�t know what
the game was, but even
if he made it through,
what
was there? Nothing.
The implant was dead.
Part of him had been
torn out.
Minutes
ticked past as he
assessed his
situation. Something
inside of him shut
down, dying.
Something old and
nearly forgotten
surfaced.
A cold glint came to
his eyes, his face
expressionless. So
someone wanted
to play? He would be
happy to oblige.
The
door slid open
once more, but
this time, no one
was
waiting outside.
Nick felt his body
vibrate with
tension and
apprehension
of the game. He
left the small
room and looked
around. He was in
a featureless
corridor with no
doors or windows
leading left or
right. There was a
massive
door straight
ahead and he
slowly set off
toward it.
* * *
Soft curses could be heard in the
otherwise silent car
and Kitt smiled as he watched his partner glare at the
light traffic. If
looks could kill, the car in front of them would have
been blown up by
a blast that would have made George Lucas weep with
appreciation of the
art. Michael wasn�t in a good mood, and it wasn�t
because of the traffic.
�Two months of work down the drain!�
Michael muttered,
finally overtaking the slower car. �Two months! I
spent two months undercover
in some sleezy pool halls! With guys who have the
worst breath! Two months!�
Kitt sighed. He knew this would go on
for a while. He
was always learning some new curse words on these
occasions.
�And what happens? Some FBI agent
thinks he has to make
a big bust! Blows our cover, the case, everything!
When they were handing
out brains he must have arrived too late, and all
he got was a rain check!
Back to square one, damnit! Two pointless months!�
The case had really turned into a
disaster, Kitt had
to admit. They had nearly succeeded in getting
the information for a major
weapons deal going on in one of the pool halls,
when the FBI had charged,
arrested everyone, and blowing what Michael and
Kitt had so painstakingly
built. They had spent the night in jail because
some, in Michael�s words,
�asshole of a rookie agent� had had too much
fun. Then they had listened
to rather unconcerned apologies and finally had
been kicked out.
�I know potted plants that have
a higher IQ than those
guys! We were busting our butts to get this
far! And what do they do?�
Kitt had to smile. He
distinctly remembered Michael telling
the team leader who had blown it all to
smithereens to try using his head
next time. It would be a new experience.
Now, both were on their way back
home and Michael�s mood hadn�t changed from
what it had been like throughout
their time in jail.
Kitt leaned back into the
passenger seat. Michael had
demanded he drive. Kitt hadn�t been one to
argue. You shouldn�t argue when
Michael was in this mood. It would only
get worse. Instead, he lowered
the shields around his mind and sought out
the private channel to Karr.
To his surprise, he encountered barriers.
Strong and heavy barriers. More
than Karr would normally put up on a case.
He felt over the seamless obstacle
and then retreated. Something inside him
tightened in brief fear.
The silence in the car
roused him to a change of moods
from Michael. He turned his head and
Michael briefly met his eyes before
looking forward again to keep them from
ending up in an accident. �Kitt?�
he asked, sounding worried. �Something
wrong?�
�I� don�t know,
Michael,� he answered slowly. �I don�t
know�.�
* * *
Their breaths crystallized in the frosty
early afternoon
air as Alex led the way up the treacherous mountain
slope, her feet finding
purchase in the deep snow. She was bundled up against
the wind in a camouflage
thermo-jacket and her eyes were hidden behind snow
glasses that took the
painful edge off the glare. Behind her, Karr followed
her effortlessly,
but he made sure never to stray from where his guide was
making a safe
path for them. While he had greater endurance and
strength, Alex knew what
they were facing. The sparse trees they encountered at
this altitude acted
as a buffer against the relentless wind. The sun shone
high in the blue
cloudless sky but offered no warmth.
They had been dropped off as close to
the crash site
as possible, without alerting whoever might be
watching, and Alex had stated
that it wouldn�t take them more than maybe three hours
to get to the coordinates
by snow mobile. Karr took her word for it. He trusted
in her to make it
to the site. They had had to leave the vehicles at the
bottom of the steep
hill they were now trying to master. There was no way
they could make it
up there and taking a detour wasn�t an option.
Alex stopped and checked her map, then
nodded. �Over
that ridge,� she told him, her voice muffled by the
scarf over her mouth.
He nodded silently and they
continued. As they passed
over the ridge, leaving the last vegetation
behind, Karr stopped and felt
something inside of him clench in fear. Not far
ahead, brightly visible
in the white snow, lay the wreck of the Bell. Alex
started out toward it,
her face set in a determined mask. Karr had to
admire her. He felt a lot
of trepidation and fear. There was the very real
possibility that Nick�s
body was in that wreck. He followed her, long legs
eating up the distance
she had already put between them.
As they approached the wreck, Karr
took in the damage.
It looked worse than it actually was. The main
body of the chopper looked
very much intact. The tail had broken off, the
blades were bent, the nose
had deep grooves in it, but it hadn�t broken
apart. Walking to the pilot�s
cabin, Karr found it empty. One door was hanging
open.
�Karr.�
The toneless voice alarmed him
and he quickly went over
to where Alex was staring down at something.
�What?� he demanded, then
stopped.
Before them, next to an
open panel and in the shadow
of the bent and broken tail, lay a body.
Karr knew the face. His name had
been Leonard Devereaux, one of Nick�s
old associates, and the man who had
asked for his help. A small, red-rimmed
hole in his forehead told of how
he had died. The dart sticking in his
thigh added some chapters to it.
�Leo,� he said softly.
�Nick�s friend?�
He nodded. Alex
gazed at the dead man, then turned
away,
hugging herself. In a gesture that
amazed even himself, Karr wrapped
an
arm around her shoulders and
hugged her gently.
�I�m okay,� she
muttered.
�I�m not,� Karr
said so softly, Alex nearly
didn�t catch
the words. She met the dark
eyes and gave him a gentle
smile. The moment
passed and she knew he would
deny ever saying what he had.
Karr wasn�t
the person to make confessions
of need out loud.
Half an hour
of searching the immediate
area around the
wreck found no sign of Nick,
but Alex discovered tracks
of a snowmobile
leading away into the
distance. Karr had checked
the helicopter and when
Alex returned, he nodded at
the wreck.
�Circuits
are scrambled. Something
hit it and I suspect
it�s nothing short of an
EM pulse.�
She
whistled through her
teeth. �Someone really
brought
out his expensive toys.�
He
nodded. �What about
the tracks?�
�Easy
to follow. I guess
we have about two to
three more
hours of sunlight.
We should use them
and then stop for
the night. It�s
no use getting lost
in the dark,� she
added when Karr
didn�t look very
pleased. �We can
cover a lot of
ground with the
skis.�
He
simply gave a
brisk nod and
twenty minutes
later they
set out again,
skis attached to
their boots. No
one had buried the
body.
They would come
back later to give
Leo a descent
burial, but right
now,
time was of
essence.
* * *
Nick crouched in a dank and grimy tunnel,
studying his
surroundings. Dim lights made it possible to discern
that the tunnel was
barely high enough to stand, that there was water about
ankle deep in the
middle indention of the tunnel floor, and that walls
were covered by a
muddy slime he wasn't looking forward to touching. The
smell was a mixture
of damp rot and brackish water. This place hadn't been
emptied and cleaned
for a long time. It was also the only route he could
take. The corridor
had been a dead end, the massive door nothing but a
fake. He had discovered
the sewer lid, and though he knew this was exactly where
he was supposed
to go, he had had no other alternative.
Nick carefully put the sewer grill back
into place and
crept forward. His feet splashed slightly and he tried
to be as silent
as possible as he scouted the moldy, dim and very much
garbage-ridden tunnel.
He didn't see any security measures, no cameras, no
infra red beams, but
he had to be careful anyway. After crawling around the
tunnel for another
ten minutes he arrived in what looked like an
intersection. The tunnel
he had come out of branched off into two others, one
very narrow, the other
a bit wider. Both were dark and there was no telling
what lay beyond. In
the middle of the junction he had arrived was a larger
water puddle and
he carefully stepped through it.
Nick inspected the two tunnel
entrances and then stood
back, thinking. He had to make a decision and if he
made the wrong one,
he might end up dead. There was no guarantee that
taking either entrance
would let him live, but if the object of the game
was to watch him struggle,
he guessed both would lead somewhere nasty or
difficult anyway. It was
his decision just what kind of nastiness came next.
Silently he slipped into the wider
tunnel, the darkness
folding around him like a cloak.
* * *
�What?!�
Michael nearly dropped the portable
phone as he spun
around. He had come back home to an empty warehouse
and an urgent message
waiting for him. The message had told him to call
Bear, which he had just
done, but he hadn�t expected to be told what Bear just
had.
�Why didn�t he call us?�
�You know Karr,� was the answer over
the phone, clearly
audible to Kitt because Michael had switched on
the loudspeakers. �He�s
not very communicative when it comes to asking for
help. You two were also
deep undercover and blowing that wasn�t an
option.�
Michael had to grudgingly agree.
At the time, he wouldn�t
have wanted interference or disturbance. �So
where are they?� he asked,
trying to calm down.
�Right in the middle of Canadian
wilderness. I�ll give
you the coordinates. Alex accompanied Karr as
a guide. They left a day
ago.�
Michael muttered a thanks and
then cursed heartily as
he hung up the phone. Kitt met the turbulent
grayish blue eyes of his partner,
worry dancing in his own.
�Any idea where my Northpole
survival gear is?� Michael
asked with a touch of humor.
Kitt chuckled. �I�ll
arrange a transport,� was all he
said.
* * *
So this was it. From the outside, it
didn�t look like
much more than a resort. A tourist place to spend money
on being pampered
all day, relaxing, maybe do some skiing or walking tours
in summer. It
didn�t look like Bad Guys HQ for sure. The house as such
was a solid wooden
building, made up in the shape of a log cabin, with a
broad verandah to
the back. There were high windows, all covered, a lake
not far away, which
was currently frozen solid, and if she was not mistaken
it had a helicopter
landing pad to the left. From her position it was hard
to tell, but there
was a secondary building made of metal that had all the
looks and feel
of a hangar. If this was a holiday hideaway, it figured
they�d have a helicopter
to get here or take them to the sights of this nature
area.
Alex put down the binoculars and
frowned. This was the
only place for miles and the snowmobile tracks had led
into this direction.
It had taken them a whole day to find this place and
to get here undetected,
but they had made it. Currently, Karr was taking a
look at security. And
that place had security! Loads of it. There were
motion detectors, infrared
cameras, security personnel with guns, and the likes,
and all of that didn�t
fit a holiday resort. Well, it did if the people who
came here were some
kind of high-placed individuals. She doubted it
though.
Sliding back down the snow-covered
hill she had used
as a look-out, Alex wondered just why Nick had been
kidnapped � and if
he was still alive. The thought wormed itself into
her mind again and she
shivered. She held firmly onto the belief that he
had to be alive. Who
would drag a body all this way?
A noise to her left made her whirl
around. Karr raised
his hands as she pointed her gun at him, a small
smile flickering over
his features.
�You have learned.�
Alex returned the smile and
lowered her weapon. �Only
from the best.�
Years of being Nick
MacKenzie�s partner had given her
some training when it came to the spy games.
�The house is like a
fortress,� she commented.
�Every fortress has a
secret passage way,� he said with
a nasty smile.
�You think this is where
he is?�
�You are the tracker.
You tell me.�
Alex smiled again.
�This is where the tracks led.�
�Good enough for
me.� Karr�s eyes drifted over to
the
cabin. There was a hard to read
expression in them.
They walked back
down the way they had come to
where
the gear had been deposited.
�So?�
He didn�t
meet her eyes. �So what?�
�So what�s
next?�
�I�m
going in.�
Alex
reached into her
thick overcoat and
withdrew handgun.
She held it out to
Karr. He eyed it for
a second, then took
it with a nod.
She smiled and took
the hunting rifle
that had been
stashed in her
backpack.
�Good
luck,� she
whispered.
Ten minutes later Karr was on his way,
making his way
through the outer defense perimeter without setting off
any alarms. To
them, he was only a ghost, but Karr knew it would get
trickier the closer
he came. He was prepared for all eventualities.
* * *
Nick stood on a narrow metal catwalk,
looking down at
the sluggishly moving sewage about two feet below. It
stank abominably,
but he managed to breathe in as little of the stink as
humanly possible.
He had left the narrow tunnel behind a minute ago and
discovered that it
ended in what could be almost called a hall. The room
was five times as
high as the tunnels, had a wide sewage river in the
middle, narrow, slimy
banks to both sides, and a rusty catwalk as a kind of
bridge leading from
one side to the other.
There was a creaking, groaning sound and
then a loud
bang as the two exits to the chamber were suddenly
sealed off. Almost simultaneously,
four large holes in the ceiling opened.
"Oh-oh," he muttered to himself.
Cold water rushed out of the
openings and crashed into
the chamber, rapidly filling it.
* * *
It had taken Karr three hours. He fumed
silently, angry
at himself for having been detoured so often, and he
blamed his surging
emotions. He tried to suppress them, but every time he
felt the disconnected
link, they raged to the surface. Nick was in there and
every minute counted.
Now he had wasted three perfectly good hours on breaking
into that thrice-damned
compound. But he was in and it was all that counted.
He crept along a formerly heavily
guarded corridor. The
two guards, who had just come on duty as he had
observed the change of
personnel, were lying in a near-by room that looked
like it hadn�t been
used for ages. Both were dead. Karr normally didn�t go
around killing people,
but this was personal and they wouldn�t hesitate to
take him out either.
As he came upon a door marked
�control�, he felt a smile
cross his features. That sounded promising. He went
in.
* * *
The trip to Edmonton had been spent
alternating between
calming Kitt down because of his fear of flying, and
calming himself down
because of his increasing worry about Nick and Karr.
Michael had called
in a favor from one of Nick�s associates to get a flight
leaving within
one hour after his call. He didn�t know the person on
the other end of
the phone line, but he was aware that his name was
well-known. It hadn�t
been a problem to get the flight at all. The real
problem had been to convince
Kitt that nothing was going to happen, that he was fine,
and that this
was the only option. Driving to Canada would take too
long and they had
no time. Kitt, pushed by the inner fear about his
brother and Nick, had
reluctantly agreed to an aerial transport, but he still
didn�t like it.
The plane had turned out to be a Lear
Jet. It streaked
through the night sky, its position lights blinking at
regular intervals.
In the cockpit, a man of undetermined age was talking
to the control tower
and requesting landing information. The cabin Michael
and Kitt sat in was
spacious and resembled a large office, complete with a
satellite linked
computer, phone and TV. A heavy mahogany desk with a
black leather executive
chair dominated one side of the airplane, a cream
colored couch with two
matching armchairs the other. Soft, likewise cream
colored carpet swallowed
all sound.
Michael was simply amazed by it all,
but he refrained
from asking. This was definitely a company jet,
though he had no idea whose
company, and it had cost a lot to outfit. Kitt was
clinging to the seat,
looking rather pale and about to throw up. Michael
reached out and touched
the nervous spark in his mind.
//Almost there//
//You said so an hour ago!// Kitt
complained.
He smiled. Kitt�s fear of flying
was well-known, but
now that he was in the android body, the fear
really showed in his features
as well.
They touched down thirty
minutes later and Michael thanked
the pilot, who simply nodded wordlessly. He
had no idea if they would need
a ride back and he hadn�t asked. The TransAm
was unloaded from the aft
section and one of the customs officers
started to ask him a string of
questions which he ended abruptly by
flashing his ID. The officer nodded,
let him sign some papers, and then told him
he could leave.
�Anything from Karr?� he
asked.
Kitt shook his head.
�Nothing. He�s� shielding very heavily.�
Michael sighed and wove
through the early morning traffic
until he was on the highway. Then he
floored the accelerator.
* * *
The water fountained from the valves,
billowing around
him, rising past head level. Nick was treading water,
paddling, as he was
buoyed closer to the ceiling. The mass of water rushed
up around him, icy
cold and not exactly the cleanest of liquids. He was
pushed inevitably
toward the ceiling, his breathing space getting smaller
and smaller. There
was only one way out and Nick knew it was risky, but
much better than dying.
As his last resources of air vanished and he bumped
against the rough,
stone ceiling, he bent back his head to snatch the last
bit of air, then
held his breath and swam toward one of the water vents.
He pushed himself
inside. He had a time limit of maybe four minutes, the
longest time he
could hold his breath. He had managed to hold it longer
before, but it
had been a very close call.
Nick dove into the long, dark tunnel,
leaving the chamber
behind. His strong arms pulled him forward and his
legs pushed up. Swallowing
and reswallowing deoxygenated air, he rose into the
darkness. But with
each passing second, his body seemed to fade into
terminal numbness. The
water was liquid ice, biting into his unprotected
skin. Soon the only sensation
was that of his lungs burning in his chest, his mind
screaming for him
to breathe. The logical part reminded him that all he
could breathe was
water, which would mean suffocation. The survivor in
him refused to give
up, ordered his body to keep moving.
Time passed.
Too much time.
Way too much time....
And then his head broke through
the water and he gulped
in breaths of air, coughing wildly. His lips
were tinged blue and he was
totally breathless. Nick groped helplessly for
something to hold onto and
his hands touched what looked like metal
rungs. Numb fingers curled around
them and he hoisted himself up with what
little strength still remained
in him. He collapsed on the icy cold, metal
floor that was all around him,
shivering violently.
He had to get warm.
Waves of delirium swept over
him and he fought to stay
conscious.
Get warm.
Nick stared at the
greenish-gray walls surrounding him.
The room seemed to alternately expand
and contract, distances were
inconsistent,
and the reality of his own physical
existence seemed questionable. His
hands twitched, numb fingers grasping
for something invisible.
Get warm.....
Delirium threatened
to blank out every rational
thought
and he moaned softly. Warmth. From
somewhere, he could feel warmth.
The
delirium made way to an abominable
feeling of utter cold, which soon
turned
into just feeling too cold to be
comfortable and then warmth.
Nick closed his
eyes, inhaling deeply, his lungs
feeling
like chips of ice. He was still
warming, but the effects of the
cold were
receding only slowly. With a
weak sigh he simply surrendered
to the warmth.
* * *
Karr stood in the middle of the control
room, fury and
emotional pain racing through him as he took in the
sight. In front of
him was a wall full of monitor screens, showing him
different camera angles
of what was a maze of tunnels and rooms. Each room was
different and if
he wasn�t completely mistaken, one of them showed a
body. It wasn�t Nick,
he assured himself with a closer look, but it had been a
male human once.
Now he lay in a dried pool of his own blood, multiple
arrows protruding
from his chest and back. A control board sat beneath the
screen and there
were different settings, some of them giving Karr a
vague idea what was
happening.
He searched the screens for a sign of
Nick and found
it in the lower right corner. Nick was currently
trying to struggle to
his feet, looking wet and exhausted, barely able to
stand. But there was
a determination in each move that Karr knew only too
well. Fury surged
and he clenched his teeth. He wildly looked around for
some means of determining
just where his partner was, but there was no map.
�You won�t be able to get him out.�
The voice made him spin around and
suddenly he was facing
the wrong end of a gun. A thin, blond man smiled
sickly at him and Karr
snarled softly. Left and right of the man were his
bodyguards, two mean-looking,
muscular goons.
�Who are you?� Karr demanded. �Why
are you doing this?�
�My name is of no importance. As
for the reason, that�s
simple. Entertainment.�
Karr�s mind froze for a
second. Entertainment? He found
this entertaining?
�It pays well, too,� the man
went on, making a grand
gesture to encompass the whole room.
�You are a very sick
individual,� Karr said tonelessly.
�I only give people what
they demand.�
�Death.�
A chuckle could be
heard. �If it pays. Mostly, it�s
entertainment
only that the customer demands.�
Karr felt fury
build up inside of him.
�I have to
confess that you surprised me,
Sir,� the blond
went on. �I didn�t expect any
visitors, but the more the
merrier. The moment
Mr. MacKenzie has outlived his
usefulness as a pawn, I think
you will provide
us with some more
entertainment for the
evening.�
�Don�t count
on it,� Karr hissed, sizing
up his opponents.
He would be
able to take them out and
while they couldn�t
kill him with bullets or
anything else they might
throw at the android
body, injuries would be
painful. A glance at the
screens told him it was
even more painful for Nick
to remain in this death
trap any longer. For
a second, he felt glad
that the link was
dysfunctional. On the
other hand,
it would have fueled his
own rage just perfectly.
He made
his decision. He
attacked.
* * *
The helicopter touched down next to the
wreck of the Bell,
disturbing the powdered snow that had fallen throughout
the night. Michael
gazed at the wreck, a feeling of dread rising once more.
�Inform the RCMP,� he instructed the
pilot as he got
out.
The man nodded and got on the line to
the next outpost,
calling for back-up. Kitt jumped out behind Michael
and they made their
way over to the broken aircraft, keeping their heads
down to escape the
miniature storm the rotorblades were creating. They
found the body of the
pilot and Michael simply nodded once as he
discovered just how the man
had died. Due to the cold weather the corpse was in
a rather good shape.
Further exploration got them no sign of Nick, but
some faint tracks led
away from the wreck.
�We are following the tracks,�
Michael informed the pilot
as he got their gear out. �We�ll keep in touch.�
�Understood. The RCMP will be here
within the next few
hours. I�m staying.�
�Thanks.�
�Good luck, Mr. Knight.�
Michael smiled grimly. They
would need it.
* * *
Nick had no recollection how he had
gotten here. His mind
was exhausted, as was his body, and he moved on
automatic. �Here� was a
room full of old theater props, looking eerie and like
it hadn�t been in
use for ages. Fake pillars were left and right of him.
Moving slowly and
carefully, he tried to listen to any strange noises or
tell-tale activity.
There was nothing but silence.
Suddenly there was a creaking noise,
followed by a loud
splintering. He stopped and looked around and his eyes
went wide. A curse
left his lips and he forced his body into a run.
Behind him, the first
pillars exploded into plastic and wood fragments as
the ceiling squeezed
them together, coming ever closer toward the ground.
And in front of him
the exit became inevitably smaller as the ceiling
lowered further and further.
He panted painfully as he pushed himself to his
limits. With a yell he
jumped and slid through the narrowing door, hitting
some obstacle just
outside, though not hard enough to knock him out.
Stars exploded in front
of his eyes and for a moment there was nothing but the
blood rushing in
his ears. Gradually it was replaced by the loud
cracking of splintering
wood and plastic, shards of destroyed fakes exploding
into the small corridor
Nick lay in. He weakly shielded his eyes, wishing he
could just lie here
for a while. His wrist hurt abominably from where it
had slammed into the
wall and his limbs felt like lead weights attached to
his body.
Finally the loud noises died down and
he squinted over
his arm. Where the room had been was just a dark
wall now, the entrance
barred by the lowered ceiling. Nick closed his eyes
again, trying to steady
his breathing.
* * *
Karr felt no remorse as he let the body
of the second
man slide to the floor, his neck broken. The first one
was merely unconscious
from a severe blow to the chest that had cracked ribs
and breastbone alike.
The leader was gone, had taken off the moment Karr had
launched his attack,
but right now, it was of no importance. Pain signals
alerted him to the
fact that he had been injured. It was a mere flesh wound
and though it
bled the synthetic fluid that posed as blood for this
body, it wasn�t fatal.
Karr ripped some strips out of the dead man�s shirt and
applied pressure
to the shot wound in his side. He hissed in pain, then
waited for it to
pass. He knew why he disliked this body. It was too
vulnerable; way too
vulnerable! Though the MBS shielded core was
unbreachable by normal weapons,
the skin had nerve endings and conducted pain signals.
Very distracting.
Checking the monitors, he discovered
that Nick had moved
further through the game grounds and was currently
about to meet some heavy
resistance from four men who looked like they came
from the same place
the two goons he had taken out had hatched from. But
where in the maze
was the room he now saw? Karr�s eyes took in the pale,
bruised and damp
figure that was determinedly and rather doggedly
fighting his way through,
and he felt pride blossom inside of him. Nick wasn�t
easy to keep down,
but he knew his human partner could take only so much.
<Hold on> he sent down the
useless link. <Just
hold on>
Walking over to the console again,
he let his gaze wander.
He had to get access to the controls and find the
room. Suddenly something
brushed over his shields. With growing horror Karr
discovered that throughout
the fight and the injury, some of the outer
shields had crumbled because
his concentration had wavered. Kitt was waiting on
the other side, asking,
needing to know. Karr moved away from the private
line. Then he stopped.
He would need help here soon, especially with
Nick, and Kitt and Michael�..
he let the thought trail off. After two seconds,
which were a long time
for an AI, he sent a burst of information along a
tiny opening in the shields,
then closed the link once more.
Karr turned back to the console,
concentrating on finding
a way to Nick.
* * *
Kitt hadn�t expected any kind of reply
from Karr, even
though he had felt the barriers between them weaken.
Something was happening
and it wasn�t good. Karr wasn�t easily convinced to drop
shields he thought
of as necessary, and whatever had occurred in the last
hours, it must be
taxing his endurance. And then the burst of information
had hit.
Kitt had had to stop, knees almost
buckling at the myriad
of data, but before Michael could even utter his
worry, he smiled. Michael�s
frown lifted into an expression of hope.
�Karr?�
Kitt nodded. �Nick�s alive, but not
well. He�s trapped
in what appears to be a maze. Someone�s using it
to entertain people�.�
Kitt shivered. What Karr had sent were cold facts,
but his imagination
was good enough and his experience had shown him
what the human mind was
capable of.
�Where?� Michael demanded.
�Not much further. We should be
there within half an
hour.�
Determined, the two moved on.
* * *
He had found it! Karr�s fingers flew over
the keyboard,
cursing the slowness of this body. If he could just
interface with the
mainframe, he would be through the files much faster,
but he was restricted
to typing and reading the data on the screen. One after
another, he shut
down the death traps, working as quickly as the accursed
system allowed
him to. Finally, the last green light turned the red of
inactivity, and
he sat back. Two minutes. The whole procedures had taken
two long minutes!
Cursing to himself, he drew the map out
of the system
and checked where Nick was. Then he ran off down the
corridor.
* * *
Alex had been huddling inside a
camouflage tent for what
seemed like eternity. The tent kept her from prying
eyes, hidden beneath
some weathered pines and kept in shades of snowy white
and gray. She didn�t
have a heater, but the thermo gear kept her reasonably
warm. Six hours
had passed already and Karr had told her to wait for no
more than eight
before heading back and getting help. She had hated
staying behind, but
Alex was well aware of the fact that she wasn�t
superwoman. She couldn�t
go up against the enemy forces; she would endanger Karr.
A noise alerted her. It wasn�t a natural
sound, not made
by snow dropping from the heavily laden pines or an
animal passing by.
She grabbed the hunting rifle and peeked out of the
shelter. From her position
she discovered a heavily dressed figure making its way
along the barely
visible path she and Karr had taken. The snow that had
fallen throughout
the last hours hadn�t been able to cover their tracks
completely. Alex
gritted her teeth and slid out of the tent, lying low.
There hadn�t been
any patrols outside the complex since they had
arrived. So why now?
Another noise could be heard, this
time behind her. Shit!
She rolled around, bringing up the rifle. A figure
in a white thermo suit
stood above her, its face covered by snow glasses
and a scarf. The gun
was pushed aside and she heard a muffled
exclamation, but she didn�t listen
or tried to understand. Her heavily booted foot
connected with her attacker�s
knee and she heard a yell of pain.
Alex jumped up the moment the man
went down and made
to sprint away from the attacker. She got quite
far, but she hadn�t thought
of the second man moving as well. Something
tackled her around the waist
and she crashed into the snow. With a yell, Alex
twisted around and kicked
hard again. Nick had shown her a few very mean
moves and told her that
her strength were her legs. She might not be able
to hit someone hard enough
with her fists to knock him out, but she had leg
power. The kick didn�t
dislodge her captor and it jarred her foot.
�Alex!�
The voice, though muffled,
sounding vaguely familiar,
and she hesitated for a second. The attacker
pulled down the scarf from
his lower half of the face, then pushed up the
snow glasses.
�Kitt?� she breathed.
He smiled at her. �Yes, it�s
me.�
He sat back, giving her
the freedom she needed to sit
up. Alex stared at him, then something
struck her. �Michael!�
�I�m okay,� a voice
muttered and she grimaced in sympathy
as Michael limped over to them. �You
pack quite a kick, Dr. Christopher.�
�Sorry.�
He shook his head.
�No need. Shouldn�t have surprised
you like this. Where�s Karr?�
Alex climbed to
her feet, accepting Kitt�s
outstretched
hand. �He went in. Six hours
ago. Haven�t heard from him
since.�
�In where?�
�There�s some
kind of cabin or lodge half
a mile down
there.� She gestured into
the direction. �It�s where
the tracks of the
snow mobile we followed led.
How did you two guys get
here?� she finally
asked.
�We followed
the same tracks.�
�I mean�
how did you get from
your assignment here?�
Alex clarified.
�Lucky
coincidence. Our case
was blown and we were
back
home early. Bear had
left a message and I
called in a few favors
to get
here ASAP.�
Alex
smiled gratefully.
Michael
surveyed the
winter landscape.
�I guess there
is about a ton of
surveillance
around the
compound, hm?� She
nodded. Michael
sighed and
replaced the
goggles. �No time
to waste.�
�I�m
coming along
this time,� Alex
told them, not
accepting
any arguments.
�I�m sick and
tired of
freezing my butt
off out here.�
She
glared at
Michael, daring
him to voice his
obvious
objections.
Michael
bit his lower
lip, shrugged,
then walked
off,
following the
barely visible
footsteps from
Karr. Kitt
smiled at
Alex,
who came next,
and then
brought up the
rear.
* * *
Karr was following the memorized map,
long legs taking
him down endless corridors and through rooms that had
been death traps
before. Some, Nick had never had to fight through; some
he had.
�How did I know you�d end up trying to
save your friend?�
The smooth, cold voice stopped him.
Karr whirled around
just as the gun sounded. He felt something spin him
around, pain flashed
through the positronic mind, and the body crashed
heavily to the floor.
He located the wound. It was a head shot. The bullet
had been deflected
by the MBS shielded skull and was bleeding heavily.
He lay still, ears
straining to hear where the enemy was. He heard
footsteps and muscles tensed.
�My, my, so easily defeated. I�d
have thought to be the
same challenge as your friend. I was explicitly
asked to acquire him as
a game participant by a highly paying member of
our exquisite club. He
came much further than most of the others. Sadly,
the human body can only
go so far and I believe Mr. MacKenzie is by now
finding that out as well.�
Karr�s fury turned into blinding,
screaming rage, tearing
at his sanity. He threw the blocked, dead link
to his partner wide open,
feeling the darkness descend into his mind,
embracing it. It fueled his
mindless rage. He rolled around and brought his
left leg up, kicking the
foot full force into the blond�s ribcage. The
man�s look of surprise turned
into one of horror as he heard the bones in his
chest break. He was flung
back and the gun cluttered from his hands. Karr
jumped to his feet and
struck out at the gasping man with his flat
hand. It hit the throat and
crushed the larynx. The man wheezed in pain.
�You chose the wrong victim,�
Karr snarled, the next
blow sending the blond back against the wall,
blood spewing out of his
broken nose. �You chose my partner. I don�t
take kindly to that.�
A roundhouse kick broke more
ribs and the breastbone.
Karr grabbed the barely conscious man,
reading the pain and terror in the
pale eyes.
�Not kindly at all,� he
snarled, listening to the wheezing
breaths escaping the thin lips.
Karr�s fingers curled
around the already severely injured
throat. Cold, gray eyes bore into the
fading blue ones. He flung the blond
aside and the thin body connected with
the other wall. Karr didn�t look
at the broken heap of a man as he
stalked out of the room.
* * *
His opponents were outnumbering him four
to one, but Nick
had never been for numbers in a fight. He knew his
abilities and the men
he was facing were more counting on their size and
strength. All were broad-shouldered,
with the general build of a brick wall, and their faces
were set in the
unimpressed, rather unintelligent expression of a bully
who didn�t expect
much resistance.
Nick proved to be a lot of resistance.
The first attacker
went down as a hand struck his throat. He gasped for
air, clawing at his
throat. Nick spun around and his foot connected with
the groin of the man
behind him. A large hand grabbed his neck, but a
vicious elbow to the stomach
ended that attack. A large fist connected with the
left side of his jaw
and he went down hard. He rolled away and jumped back
to his feet, his
head ringing, his vision a bit blurry.
Except for the one with the breathing
problems, the other
two had stumbled to their feet once more. They
didn�t look overly happy
about Nick�s resistance.
The dance continued, but it was
taking its toll. Nick
removed a second attacker from the game, the man
collapsing in a heap.
He actually had no idea if he was dead, but the
crack he had heard hadn�t
sounded very healthy. The others didn�t appreciate
his efforts. A fist
slammed into his stomach. He wasn�t allowed to
double over. The second
one held him up and hit him again. Four times the
fist met with resistance,
the fifth time, ribs cracked under the onslaught.
He was finally allowed
to slump to the floor.
Breathing hard, holding one arm
protectively to his ribs,
he focused on his next move. One of his
opponents chuckled and reached
for him, but Nick didn�t let him. He let himself
fall to his uninjured
side and his foot snapped up, catching the man
in the jaw. There was a
resounding crack and the goon howled in pain. He
kicked out again and his
left foot connected with something. His friend
tried to catch Nick, but
the smaller man lashed out once more and
connected with his groin. Another
howl joined the first. Nick added a blow to the
head and the man collapsed.
Pain lanced through his injured
side and Nick fell against
the wall, suppressing a groan. Broken ribs. No
fun. Damnit, why did they
have to break his ribs? There was a low snarl
of pain and Nick opened his
eyes long enough to see the back of a fist
heading towards him. He tried
to move away from it but his reactions were
slow. It hit him with enough
force to double his vision. Again, his legs
were his better weapons. This
time, he hit a knee and the yell told him it
had been a successful hit.
Stumbling forward, heading for the door, Nick
willed his tiring and aching
body to move. He left three unconscious and
one semi-conscious goons behind.
He didn�t see the small hole
in the ceiling open, but
he felt the needle prick his skin. It was
too late by then. The liquid
that now invaded his blood stream quickly
began to do its work. Nick blinked
rapidly in an effort to clear his blurring
vision. It only made it worse,
so he closed his eyes instead. He fell
against the wall, so tired, but
the blackness wouldn�t come for him.
Instead, the steady chunk of black
ice that was his constant companion seemed
to expand, encompass his whole
thinking, driving him on.
He stumbled down the
corridor, continuing his struggles
against the game.
* * *
<_Karr? Please answer me! We are here.
We can help,
Kitt pleaded.
Michael, Alex and him were slowly making
their way through
the silent house. They had found two dead guards and
there wasn�t much
guesswork involved just who had ended their lives.
Kitt had to grimace
at the thought. While Karr was a mirror of Nick most
of the time, the AI
might not so readily handle ending a human life as his
driver did. He would
have to keep an eye on him after this was over.
<_Karr!
There was a faint noise at the other
end, then Kitt felt
his brother�s presence. <_What took you so
long? he asked, his voice
sounding rather faint and exhausted.
Kitt reached out and joyously
hugged the single tendril
of his brother�s presence. He felt Karr�s
exhaustion and his pain, as well
as his fear.
<_Where are you?
<_We are on Level �2. All
traps and game mechanisms
have been deactivated. It�s safe.
Traps? Kitt shivered at the
sound but he didn�t inquire
further. Karr and Nick needed their help
now. He told Michael and Alex
of the short contact and they started to
search for level �2.
* * *
Nick was under the influence of the drug
that had been
injected into him. He couldn�t fight it. He was too
tired, too beaten,
and he knew he was losing the game. He stumbled and fell
against the wall,
trying to catch his breath. His ribs hurt with every
breath and he couldn�t
think straight anymore.
Suddenly there was a shape coming
closer, a voice talking
to him. Nick�s survival instinct screamed. His fist
connected with his
attacker�s chin, snapping the head back. Nick stumbled
away and nearly
fell. He made it three steps farther down the room
when something caught
him. His hand flew up, catching the attacker once
more, then he added a
roundhouse kick to the fist. The form moved away with
a grunt, but not
far enough. He fought the hands, striking out at
whatever he could hit,
employing hands, feet and his head. Whatever he could.
His body, weakened
from the game, was quickly approaching a total
shutdown, but Nick knew
he would take as many with them as possible. His hand
connected with an
unforgiving surface. Pain lanced through his wrist and
he clenched his
teeth, attacking once more. His injured wrist was
grabbed in a vice-like
hold and he screamed this time. His knees buckled and
he fell to the ground,
but he still fought.
Another hand tried to touch him and a
voice was talking
to him, insistently, trying to get him to
understand. He didn�t. He didn�t
care who it was. He had been sentenced to die in the
game and he wouldn�t
go without evening the score. Leo had died because
of this and he would
make them pay.
Karr winced as he heard Nick�s scream of
pain. There had
been no other choice but to grab the injured wrist and
hold on to the madly
fighting man. Wild, blue eyes looked at him without
seeing anything. Nick
was in a fighting fury, throwing all he still had, and
which was formidable
considering the injuries and signs of exhaustion, at his
�attacker�.
�Nick, it�s me!� he tried again and was
rewarded with
a blow to the chest.
While it smarted, it hurt his partner
more than him.
Karr desperately caught the other hand and twisted
Nick around so he was
resting with his back against Karr�s chest. His arms
were crossed in front
of his own chest, immobilizing him somewhat. Nick
threw his head back and
it crashed into Karr�s face. With an angry snarl, he
tightened his hold
on the injured wrist and heard Nick hiss in pain. It
pained him just the
same, but he had to quiet him down.
�Nick, it�s me, Karr,� he whispered
into his partner�s
ear. �You are safe. Calm down. It�s okay. You are
safe.� He repeated it
over and over again.
Suddenly the body in his arms grew
limp. The adrenalin
that had sustained him deserted him without
warning. �Karr?� Nick whispered,
sounding weak and broken.
Karr smiled and allowed himself
to slide down the wall,
cradling Nick in his hold. �Yes, it�s me.
You�re safe.�
�Safe?�
�Yes.�
Karr held Nick tightly,
feeling the lean body tremble
uncontrollably. He rested his chin on
the dark head and continued to softly
reassure his partner that he was safe
now, that everything was going to
be okay.
�What are you doing
here?� Nick whispered. His eyes were
closed and Karr felt Nick�s good hand
curl around his own wrist.
He smiled. �Saving
your sorry butt.�
A dry chuckle
escaped him. Blurry eyes fell on
his face.
He knew he had a split lip from
Nick�s blow and there was the head
wound
from the bullet. The blood had
dried but it was coating his face
and hair.
Nick could pack quite a punch even
when weak and exhausted, but he
was
secure now.
�Thank you,� his
partner breathed, slumping
against him.
Karr
protectively laid his hand and
arm over the dark
head, feeling the tremors
increase. After some time,
Nick quieted down,
going limp against him, his
ragged breathing still a bit
uneven. They simply
sat together for a while.
There was no more danger and
help was on the
way. All that counted was that
Nick was alive, that he was
here. Karr had
no intention of ever letting
go again.
He felt Kitt�s
calls and tiredly
acknowledged his brother�s
presence, telling him where
they were.
* * *
Kitt ran into the semi-dark room and
stopped. His worried
features relaxed into a smile of relief, then the worry
came back. Karr
sat with his back against the wall, cradling Nick in his
arms. Nick was
disheveled, his hair matted by blood and sweat and dirt,
and his clothes
showed tears. Blood crusted some of the gashes.
<_Karr? he whispered through the
link, not wanting
to speak out loud. It seemed inappropriate.
<_He�s alive, was the soft answer.
<_In pain, very
confused, exhausted, but alive.
Kitt walked closer and to his
horror, discovered the
blood on his brother�s face and clothes. Karr had
been injured as well.
He crouched down and reached out. He wordlessly
asked for permission and
when Karr gave it, he carefully touched the dark
head. Nick didn�t react
to it at all.
<_Unconscious, Karr added.
<_Help is on the way.
<_Thanks.
<_We should get him out
of here.
Karr nodded and slowly
climbed to his feet, lifting Nick
with him. The human was completely
unresponsive. Kitt discovered the
makeshift
bandage around Karr�s middle and bit his
lower lip.
Michael was outside with
Alex and when they came out,
Alex�s eyes widened. Michael�s face
seemed to grow rigid with worry and
Kitt felt him reach out, asking. He
assured his partner that Nick was
alive.
�Karr?� Alex breathed.
�He�s unconscious,�
Karr told her, lowering the limp
form to the ground.
She sank down
beside Nick, then glanced at the
android.
�You?�
A brief smile
flickered over the
blood-coated features.
�Messy but only superficial.�
Michael
grabbed a blanket and draped
it over Nick.
//God, he
looks bad// he sent.
Kitt had
to agree. There were so
many scratches, bruises
and cuts, and Nick�s
face was showing a lot
of discoloring. Karr
looked
just as bad and there
was a strange expression
in his eyes. He was
fully
concentrating on Nick,
unable to reach his
partner through the dead
implant,
and Alex was simply
sitting next to them,
one hand lightly holding
a cold,
pale hand.
The
Medivac helicopter
arrived thirty minutes
later.
* * *
�Hold still!�
Karr glared at his brother, eyes trying
to relay a fair
amount of menace. Kitt ignored him as he quickly and
expertly cleaned the
multiple wounds on Karr�s face and head. Karr winced
as Kitt applied more
pressure to the laceration where the bullet had
clipped his temple.
�That hurts!� he hissed.
�I know,� was the almost sweet
reply.
�You are doing this on purpose!�
�No, but you are making this
harder than it actually
is,� Kitt countered.
�I don�t need this!� Karr
objected, trying to pull away.
Kitt�s strong grip held him
in place. �You want to stay
with Nick? Then you have to look better
than a roadkill!�
The glare intensified.
Kitt gave him a bright smile and
deftly combed some hair over the
stitched skin.
�Now take the shirt
off.�
�I most certainly will
not!�
�Karr�.�
�I only need a new
shirt,� Karr told him
forcefully,
trying to rise from the chair.
�Sit and take
that shirt off!� Kitt growled
dangerously.
Karr�s eyes
widened slightly. Kitt�s
face was set in
a threatening expression.
<_You
learned fast, Karr
muttered.
Kitt
chuckled. <_Only from
the best. Now take it
off,
please?
Karr
worked the shirt off
and Kitt grimaced as
he discovered
the torn flesh over
the ribcage. It had to
hurt. He knew it
would. These
android bodies were
quite sensitive,
almost like a human
body, and there
was no way Karr could
take the sensors off
line.
�This
will hurt.�
�More
than what you
already did?� Karr
grumbled.
Kitt
cleaned the
dried synthetic
fluid off and
then started
to stitch the
wound. Karr
hissed in pain.
That about
answered the
question.
When he was
done, he
regarded the
torn and bloody
shirt.
�That
won�t do. You
can take one
of Michael�s
spares.�
Karr
grimaced but
shrugged into
the
uncharacteristic
white shirts.
It fit, though
rather
loosely, and
he carefully
rose.
�Thanks,�
he said
softly.
Kitt
smiled.
�You�re
welcome.�
* * *
Michael sat in the back of the Rescue
helicopter, a silver
thermo blanket around his shoulders. A well-meaning
paramedic had checked
him after discovering the limp, but he had waved him
away. He was fine
and the bruise on his knee from Alex�s kick would be
colorful, but not
life threatening. He was watching RCMP scurrying around.
Michael had already
been interviewed by an officer and he had answered as
best as he could.
The simple question the man had posed as to what the
hell had been going
on, had gone mostly unanswered. He didn�t know himself.
//They have readied Nick for transport//
Kitt informed
him.
His younger partner had been watching
proceedings, keeping
physically close to Karr because he wanted to
prevent any kind of incident
involving a hyper-tense and easily infuriated AI. So
far, Karr had been
almost docile. Due to the nature of what he was,
Kitt had had to almost
force him to relinquish his hold on Nick before the
EMTs arrived. If they
saw the blood and open wounds, they�d try to treat
him. They would immediately
find out that he wasn�t human. It had been a fight
to get the older AI
to surrender Nick to the care of Alex and Michael,
but in the end, he had
gone.
Ten minutes later, the helicopter took
off, heading toward
Edmonton.
* * *
A TV was mounted in the upper left hand
corner of the
waiting room, switched on and playing an old I Love Lucy
episode. Red,
rather comfortable chairs graced the small room. The
floor must have been
redone just recently. It was a smooth, chocolate brown
and very clean.
Old and new magazines and children�s books lay on
imitation wood square
coffee tables. A Coke machine and vending machine sat on
the opposite side
of the room. The unmaskable, disinfectant institutional
smell that permeated
all large city hospitals hung like a blanket in the air.
Alex had gotten
herself a coffee and was sitting on one of the chairs,
warming her cold
hands on the cup. It was late at night and there was no
one in the room
but her. Apparently, Nick was the only emergency with
family and friends
present at the moment.
The door opened and Michael walked in,
looking tired
and beat. He was still sporting a slight limp and she
winced in sympathy.
She hadn�t meant to hurt him but at the time, he had
been classified as
the enemy.
�They�ve taken him to Radiology,� he
explained. He held
out the clipboard he had been carrying to her.
�Think you are better qualified
than me.�
Alex took the hospital form with a
slight smile. �Considering
the times he has been hospitalized, you should
know this inside out.�
Michael grimaced. �True. Truth is,
I�ve never been good
with forms.�
Alex unhooked the pen from the
clipboard and started
to fill out the form. It took her only a few
minutes and finally she handed
it back to Michael. He let his gaze fly over
the piece of paper and whistled
appreciatively.
�You lie even better than I
do.�
�It�s a knack.�
The problem with Nick was
that his personal data was
either non-existent or unknown;
sometimes even to him. His name and
address
were partially right. The address was a
townhouse in San Francisco he actually
owned, but no one lived there. They used
it as a safehouse now and then,
or when a place of residence was needed.
Michael didn�t know if the date
of birth Alex had jotted down was real
or her own creation. He didn�t put
it past Nick to tell her and not him.
The assorted insurance numbers were
fakes. If checked, they�d turn out to be
valid, but the person who taken
out the insurance was not the same as
the one who was currently being treated.
Alex had written down her cell phone
number in the spot where a contact
was requested, as well as her name.
�Where are Kitt and
Karr?� she then asked.
�Karr is refusing to
leave Nick�s side and Kitt had to
use some major arguments to get him
out of the treatment room.� Michael
shrugged. �He�s staying with him
right now, making sure nothing
happens.�
�To Karr or the
doctors?�
Michael chuckled.
�Both.�
Alex placed the
pen back in the holder on the
clipboard.
She pushed back an errand
strand of hair. �Think they
have a shower here?�
Michael shook
his head with a grin. Alex
was the most
practical woman he had ever
met, aside from Bonnie. And
she had a lot of
experience, too much
experience, with hospital
procedures. Nick would be
in treatment for a while and
she was dirty and in need of
a chance of clothes.
Before he could answer, the
door to the waiting room
opened.
�Mr. Michael
Knight?�
Michael
nodded. The visitor was
a man not much older
than him, wearing a
police uniform.
�I�m
Carl Standish, RCMP.
We need to ask you a
few questions��
He cast a meaningful
look at Alex.
She
smiled. �I get the
hint. I�m off to
hunt down that
shower, Michael, and
then I�ll see what I
can do about Karr.�
Michael
nodded gratefully
and followed the
officer. He
knew this would be
a long night.
* * *
Nick wanted to scream at the suffocating
darkness that
surrounded his mind. He had thought he'd gotten away,
but he was mistaken.
He tried to find his way through this nightmare and his
body tried to force
itself out of its prison. The game. He was still in
there. A voice whispered
to him, but it couldn�t be heard over in the panic his
mind projected.
The link. It hurt so much feeling the icy blackness
coming from there,
telling him he was alone. His body wanted to react by
fighting, but he
was too weak. His breathing pattern changed; it became
rapid. He was beginning
to find it hard to get the air he needed into his lungs.
A hand touched his face and he couldn't
help but jerk
away from it. The voice began to talk to him then,
calling his name and
telling him that he was going to be fine, that he was
here with him now.
His mind finally forced the scream to leave his body.
His pain filled form
began to fight. He couldn't stop it. It was more a
reaction than a request.
He wanted it to stop but it wouldn't. He tried to ward
off the hand touching
him, but something was keeping them down.
Hands gripped his face and held it
tight. A voice began
to whisper in his ear, but he couldn't calm down;
the fear was too great.
He struggled even harder. The hands still held his
head in a vice-like
grip and finally words filtered through.
�Nick�. you�re safe�..�
Karr?
�Open your eyes.�
His body went limp and he
tried to force his eyes open.
It was an effort. The blurry image that
greeted him turned into face.
�Karr?� he whispered, his
voice rough and weak.
�Yes. You are safe, Nick.
Relax.�
The dead link blazed
through his mind, hurting more than
any other physical wound he had
sustained.
�It�ll be okay,� Karr
said softly, gray eyes bearing
into Nick�s blurry ones.
�Not� okay,� Nick
managed. �Alone.�
With that, sleep
claimed him again.
Karr sat back, feeling the weight of
those three words
settle on him. No, it wasn�t okay. The link was dead,
maybe even destroyed,
which he prayed was wrong. He gazed at his sleeping
partner, then closed
his eyes, wishing he could just shut down as well. But
he couldn�t and
he wouldn�t.
Alone�.
The word echoed in his mind. He felt
tremors race through
the android body and his hands curled into fists.
Karr�s jaw almost creaked
from clenching it so hard. In a sudden movement he
rose and paced the room.
They were both alone, the link was
gone, and being reminded
of it only brought the pain again. With more force
than before, clawing
at the last defenses he had against the oppressing
feeling of being alone
in his mind. How could he have treasured this
loneliness before? How could
he have wanted it before? How could he have wanted
to kill the man who
was now part of his soul? The tremors increased
and Karr felt like driving
his fist or any other body part into the wall. He
didn�t want to be alone.
He couldn�t be alone. He wasn�t meant to be�..
In one smooth move he whirled
around and his fist connected
with the wall.
*
Alex had showered, dressed in fresh
clothes from her bag
and gotten a bite to eat, though she had been unable to
taste the food.
The hospital cantina had actually rather good snacks,
but it had been tasteless
nevertheless. Her mind kept going over what had happened
over and over
again. Nick was fine, he would heal; he always did. But
this time something
was different. This time, something else had been hurt
and she knew that
no amount of medical treatment could heal it.
She entered the room Nick was in,
knowing that Karr was
there, who seemed to be part of the inventory by now.
The smile on her
face faltered and was then replaced by shock and
immediately flaring worry
as she took in the damage to the wall. There was a
fist-sized indention
in it and Karr was sitting with his back against the
damaged wall, head
buried in his hands.
She let the door fall shut behind her
and quickly walked
over to the android. �Karr?� she asked.
�Leave,� was the harsh reply.
Alex saw blood on Karr�s right
hand and grimaced. She
crouched down beside the AI and touched the left
upper arm. Karr�s head
snapped up and blazing, gray eyes bore into her.
She saw fury in there,
a lot of unreleased rage, combined with fear and
smoldering panic. There
was so much suffering, so many emotions, in
those eyes; all unable to sort
themselves out.
�Leave me!� he hissed again.
�No,� she answered simply.
She wouldn�t be scared off
by him. Karr needed her, if
he wanted it or not. He wouldn�t accept
help from anyone and currently,
he was in an even worse state than Nick,
if that was possible.
�Did he wake?� she asked
softly.
Karr glared at her, face
set in a rigid mask. He wanted
her out of this room, but unless he
bodily shoved or carried her out, Alex
would stay.
�Don�t try that look
on me, Karr. You know it doesn�t
work,� she said in a low voice.
Indecision flickered
over the pained eyes, then he
looked
away. �Briefly,� he finally
answered. �Nightmare.�
Alex placed a hand
on the android�s shoulder and
squeezed
it gently. Karr had an aversion
to the physical display of
affection, but
she managed to get away with
little gestures. Right now, she
could probably
get away with a hug but she
didn�t want to press her luck.
�He feels the
separation even more now,�
Karr added softly,
almost to himself.
�I know. You
both do.�
�Alone.� It
was barely a whisper.
�Can I
stay?� Alex asked
permission.
Karr
gave her a surprised
look, rallying for
composure.
She smiled at him,
then, seeing his
agreement to her
presence, rose slowly
and walked over to
where Nick was resting
almost peacefully. She
reached
out and gently brushed
back some errand
strands of hair. He
had come out
of treatment hours
ago, but since they
had wanted to keep an
eye on him,
visitors had been
restricted. Add to
that the time of day,
it had been
a small miracle that
Karr had been allowed
to stay. Then again,
she knew
they would have had to
remove him by
considerable force.
Alex
pulled up a chair
and prepared herself
to wait until
Nick woke. There was
nothing else she
could do, no words
or gestures to
take away the
emotional pain. She
hoped her presence
was enough to at
least
ease some of the
discomfort.
Karr
joined her a few
minutes later,
having cleaned the
blood from his
hand. They sat in
mutual silence,
each lost in their
own
thoughts.
* * *
The hospital corridors were quiet, only a
few nurses walking
from room to room, checking on their more critical
patients and adjusting
IV drips or giving medication. It was late afternoon,
past the normal visiting
hours, and except for in the emergency rooms, not much
activity was going
on. Michael strode through the corridors, eyes scanning
the room numbers
until he found the one he had been looking for. He was
tired, angry and
very worried in one. The nurse at the night reception
desk had felt it,
though he had tried to keep calm, and after a lot of
subtle threats and
not so subtle flashing of official IDs, he had been
given Nick�s room number.
Michael had spent too much time, as he
thought, talking
to officials and on the phone with Devon Miles or John
Landes. Most of
the day actually. Kitt had briefly gone to the
hospital to check physically
on Karr and Nick, but Nick was still sleeping the
sleep of the exhausted,
and the doctors said it was normal after what he had
been through.
He entered the private room after a
short moment of hesitation.
Nick lay on the single bed, eyes closed. He had
various IV lines sticking
out of his arms. His handsome face was pale and
slack with a large, deep
purplish bruise covering half of his left side.
Michael could hardly tell
he was even breathing and he glanced at the heart
monitor for assurance.
He wasn�t alone. Karr sat on one of the very
uncomfortable looking plastic
chairs, one hand curled around Nick�s wrist, eyes
riveted to the pale face.
Alex had curled up on a slightly more comfortable
couch chair, fast asleep.
Michael had asked if she wanted a motel room close
by but she had declined.
When the door opened, Karr looked
up. Burning, gray eyes
pierced into Michael�s. The expression softened a
bit as he recognized
the intruder. There was a large band-aid covering
the wound on his temple.
Luckily, the head shot had torn more into the skin
beneath the hair than
into the visible areas. Some quick cleaning and
expert combing had hidden
the wound. Michael still cringed at what Kitt had
had to do. He didn�t
envy his partner the task of sewing the synthetic
flesh closed. Swan would
have a fit. The wound in Karr�s side had been
equally treated and clean
clothes hid the injury.
�How is he?� Michael asked softly.
�Sleeping,� was the monotone
answer. �He will heal.�
He nodded slowly. Yes, he
would, but what about the damage
done to the implant? Kitt had slipped in
behind him. Michael hadn�t even
been aware that his partner had followed
him.
�I called Dr. D�Angelo,� he
said softly. �She said she�ll
be here by tomorrow and to call her if
Nick insists to be moved before
she has arrived.�
�I�ll make sure he
doesn�t.�
Michael smiled. Nick was
well-known for bailing out of
the hospital the moment he could walk
more than three steps without keeling
over. Christa D�Angelo was a
neurologist and someone who had helped
Nick
in the past. She was also the only one
who had ever taken a closer look
at the implant and how it worked in
cooperation with the nervous system
and the brain. She was the right
person to examine what damage the EM
pulse
might have done.
Karr didn�t move at
all or let his gaze wander from the
slack features of his partner. Kitt
stepped toward him and gently
squeezed
one rigid shoulder.
<_Karr?
<_Can�t feel
him, the dark voice whispered.
<_Christa
will be here tomorrow to check
on him.
<_He�s
gone.
<_Nick�s
here. He survived this
horrid game and we
will get him back to you.
<_You
can�t promise that
Kitt
winced. No, he
couldn�t. No one
could. In the
beginning,
Karr had frantically
tried to pick up even
the slightest twitch
of an active
implant. Now he was
simply watching,
waiting; fearing.
<_You
won�t lose him! he
insisted.
<_I
already have�.
Karr�s
hands started to
shake again.
Kitt knew he
hated
these human
reactions, but
the barrier he
was keeping up
was thinning.
The emotional
stress Karr had
been under was
wearing all his
defenses out.
Kitt felt pain
swamp him, pain
and sorrow.
<_Do
you want me to
stay?
<_No
�We�ll
be back
tomorrow.
Don�t scare
the nurses,�
he
said out loud,
strangely hurt
by the denial.
Karr�s
only reaction
was a barely
perceptible
nod. Michael
bit his lower
lip and then
followed Kitt
out of the
room.
�He�s
scared,� Kitt
whispered as
they walked to
the parking
lot. Terrified
actually, he
thought.
He
scanned the
parking lot
without really
seeing it.
There were
fewer cars
here now that
visiting hours
were
technically
over.
The evening
air was fresh
and cool, but
unusually mild
for the
season.
It almost felt
like spring.
�We
all are,�
Michael
muttered.
* * *
�The RCMP found several bodies inside the
game maze and
outside. Five had died recently, two not so recently.�
Kitt played with
the edge of the folder he was holding. It was the
preliminary report that
had been faxed to them throughout the day.
Michael sighed. He remembered the bodies
outside the
lodge. Karr had killed them to gain access. Somehow,
it disturbed him.
If it had been Nick, he would have been able to accept
it. But it had been
Karr. A very desperate Karr. Taking the report from
Kitt, he read over
the facts. The two older corpses had clearly died in
the game. Four of
the more recent deaths had been rather quick and
clean. The fifths had
been beaten up pretty badly. He had died from
suffocation. The coroner
wasn�t clear on whether he had suffocated on his own
blood because of the
multiple punctured lung or from obstruction of the
upper airways. No one
had identified the man yet, but the police suspected
that he had been the
boss.
Michael looked up and met Kitt�s
concerned gaze. �He
did it, right?�
Kitt nodded.
Michael�s eyes rested on the
autopsy report of the blond
who had been labeled the head of the operation.
He grimaced as he read
over the medical terms. The man hadn�t died
immediately. He had been conscious
throughout most of what had been done to him.
//He�s not a killer!// Kitt sent
forcefully as he felt
Michael�s thoughts brush by. //He didn�t do it
intentionally//
Michael hesitated. This looked
mighty intentional to
him, but he knew what emotional upheaval did
to a person. It could cloud
the mind and take all rational thought away.
//I never said that, Kitt//
he then answered calmly.
//They drove him to the
extreme// was the fierce addition.
//He protected his own//
There was a fire in the
brown eyes that both touched
and frightened Michael for a second.
//Would you have done it?//
//Michael�..I nearly
did it as well one time!//
Michael blinked and
shot him a confused look. A flash
of memories hit him. They were
Kitt�s memories because at the
time, Michael
had been less than coherent. Roger
Geiger, the millionaire who
collected
the extraordinary and who had
wanted Kitt for his collection.
Michael and
Kitt had been separated by the
cuff Geiger had invented, and it
had driven
them both nearly insane. In a
final fight outside Geiger�s
residence, Kitt
had believed Michael to be dead
and had been ready to run Geiger
over in
revenge. Karr had stopped him back
then. It had been a close shave.
He sighed and sat
down beside the slender form.
�Kitt�.�
�What?� came the
sullen reply.
�Kitt, it�s
just�.�
�It�s just
that what he did fits in a
behavior pattern
from twenty years ago,
right?� the AI snapped,
glaring at Michael. �Well,
so be it! He had every
right! Those people wanted
to kill Nick and they
tortured him! He saw it,
Michael! He might not have
felt it through the
link, but he saw it!� Kitt
clenched his hands into
fists. �This man shot
him and was about to
deliver the killing blow.
I don�t want to imagine
something like this
happening to you, but if
it had been you�. I don�t
think I�d have had the
control to stop myself
from hurting someone else�
maybe even killing someone
else in return�.. No one
would stop me, Michael.
No one.�
Michael
wrapped an arm around
the trembling shoulders
and pulled Kitt close.
�I�m sorry, Kitt,� he
murmured. //You know I
don�t
look at Karr like I used
to any more. I trust
him. It was just�.
something
unexpected. Despite his
� appearance and
bluster, I never thought
him capable
of it//
Because
usually, Nick did the
killing when it had to
be done, when there
was no alternative.
Karr had never run
someone over
as far as Michael
knew. Now he had
killed five people
while he was in the
android body. It was
frightening; an
eye-opener.
//He�s
no killer// Kitt
insisted weakly.
//He�s not!//
//No,
he�s not// Michael
murmured.
None
of them were. He
had killed
before as well.
It was
self-defense.
Karr felt something disturbing the link
between himself
and Kitt and he tilted his head slightly. He listened to
the faint echoes
that were coming from his brother and sighed deeply. He
knew this would
come sooner or later. Reaching out, he touched the
shields between them.
<_Kitt?
The shields fell and he felt the touch
of the lighter
AI.
<_Don�t, Karr whispered.
<_Don�t get worked up
over this
<_I�m not
He chuckled softly. <_Oh
really?
Kitt sighed. <_Maybe a
little
<_Kitt, it happened. I
couldn�t stop it. I saw what
he had done to Nick. He called it
entertainment!
Anger, disgust and
murderous hatred raced briefly through
him. He tried to shield Kitt from it,
but failed to do so completely.
<_Karr�.. Kitt
reached out and hugged him. <_I
don�t think of you as a killer and you
know it.
Karr regarded him from
a distance. His emotions alone
told him what he was capable of, and
his memories showed him what he had
done. Time and again, what he had
done.
<_You did it to
save Nick, Kitt whispered through
the haze of memories.
<_I might be
able to do it again
<_Never
against innocents
Karr gazed at
him. <_Who decides who is
lost?
Kitt
faltered a bit.
<_Karr�.
<_Could
you have done it? Could
you have killed them?
<_Maybe.
I don�t know. I wasn�t
in the situation�..
Not
then at least. He
had been in such a
situation before,
he had felt the
negative flood of
emotions, and he had
nearly killed
someone.
But only nearly.
Karr
sighed and shook
his head. <_It
will stay with
me. Forever.
<_I�ll
be there, too,
Kitt reminded
him, gently
reaching
out.
The
darker AI
hesitated,
then
acknowledged
the touch.
<_Thank you
Kitt
sent a smile,
holding on to
him.
<_How�s
Nick?
<_Slipped
from
unconsciousness
into sleep
<_We
will come by
later today
<_Thank
you
Karr
retreated from
the close
connection and
concentrated
on his
sleeping
partner again.
* * *
There was something about being watched
like a hawk by
a tall, dark clad man with equally dark eyes that never
wavered from what
you did. Christa D�Angelo calmly conducted her
examination of Nick�s reflexes,
asked him questions and generally ignored the other
presence in the room
as much as possible. She had been slightly taken off
guard when Michael
had told her who the man was. While she had met Kitt
once or twice in the
past years, she had never thought of Karr as an android.
Now he sat watching
her, his eyes telling Christa that one wrong move would
get her a whole
lot of trouble. It didn�t really faze her, but it gave
the relationship
she had seen develop in the past decade a whole new
edge.
Nick had regained consciousness this
morning and though
he was tired, he had lasted through her examination
quite well. Looking
into his dull blue eyes, she knew there was more than
physical discomfort
hurting his soul. A sprained wrist, broken ribs and
countless cuts and
abrasions were nothing compared to the loss of the
implant connection to
his partner. Christa had known Nick for too long now
to simply discard
it as a minor detail. This was major. Without the
link, those two individuals
would die. If not physically then at least mentally.
�So, what�s the verdict?� Nick asked
as she stood back.
�You�ll live,� the woman remarked
dryly.
Nick grimaced, then winced as it
hurt assorted bruises
all over his face.
�Seriously, Nick, everything
looks good from my point
of view, but I want to run a head CT next to
be certain.�
�Be my guest.�
She smiled. She knew that
his cooperation stemmed from
the sole need to get the implant back
online. Nick hated hospitals and
he hated examinations.
�I�ll inform the doctor.
Don�t go anywhere.�
�Very funny, Doc.�
The moment she had
left, Nick turned to look at his
partner.
Karr was leaning against the wall
next to the window, arms crossed in
front
of his chest, gray eyes dark and
unreadable. Nearly unreadable. Nick
felt
weak and ready to sleep for a week.
He knew his body was trying to
recover
from the ordeal, but his mind was
insisting he needed to get out of
here
and soon. The only things that kept
him were Karr, who wouldn�t leave
the
room for a minute, and Christa, who
was doing her best to assess the
damage
to the link.
The link. The
implant. He shivered as he thought
about
it, hands involuntarily clenching
into fists. The darkness had
stopped
growing, but it had become colder,
more malevolent, and it was hard
not
to give in to it. Just slip inside
the blackness and be done with it.
Never
hurt again. Nick swallowed and
briefly closed his eyes, dragging
his thoughts
away from the beckoning relief.
This was far different from the
cuff or
anything else. This was complete
emptiness and the threat of never
feeling
his partner�s presence again. They
had been able to deal with
interruptions
of the bond before, but this time,
the very real chance of a
permanent
loss hung over them like a
thundercloud.
Opening his eyes,
Nick was surprised to see Karr
standing
right next to the bed. Gray eyes
met blue ones and there was a
brief smile
visible on Karr�s lips. There
were no assurances that they
would get through
this. No encouragement that this
was only temporary. Both
partners knew
the facts and neither dared to
hope or dream. Karr silently sat
down once
more; his guardian for the time.
* * *
�Gentlemen,� Christa greeted Michael and
Kitt as she stepped
into the private waiting room. �Dr. Christopher.� She
nodded at Alex. �I�ve
finished my examination and tests, and I have the
results. I suspect you
know the basics of how EMP works?�
Kitt nodded, Michael shrugged and Alex
made a vague gesture
that she had an idea but no real knowledge.
�The EMP effect, the electromagnetic
pulse, can result
in irreversible damage to a wide range of electrical
and electronic equipment,
particularly computers and radio or radar receivers.
Depending on the electromagnetic
hardness of the electronics, the equipment's
resilience to this effect,
and the intensity of the field produced by the
weapon, the equipment can
be irreversibly damaged or in effect electrically
destroyed. The damage
inflicted is not unlike that experienced through
exposure to close proximity
lightning strikes. Usually, stricken equipment
requires complete replacement
or at least substantial portions thereof.�
Fear crossed Alex�s features and
Michael valiantly tried
to hide his growing concern. Christa gave them a
reassuring smile.
�Wounded devices may still
function, but their reliability
will be seriously impaired. I ran several
neurological checks on Nick and
the tested the implant for circuitry damage as
well as transmission and
reactions. There is no tissue damage around the
chip, which is good. Transmission
of signals is almost unhindered and what I saw
in the CT scans gives me
a lot of hope. Looks like the signals were only
scrambled, but the electronics
still work. I suspect that the tissue
surrounding the implant prevented
the worst. The chip has been inside Nick�s head
for such a long time now
that the body grew a kind of protective layer
around it. It�s unusual for
EMP not to destroy what it hits, but I wouldn�t
question such good fortune.
I suspect the attack wasn�t very focused. As far
as I was told, the aim
of the attackers had been to force the
helicopter to land.�
�So� the link will come back?�
Michael asked, not yet
daring to really hope.
�Yes, I believe so. It will
take a while for the implant
to sort itself out, but I think we can rest
assured that Nick�s side of
the link will recover fully.�
Michael felt himself release
a breath he hadn�t been
aware of holding. A slow grin spread
across his lips. Kitt was smiling
broadly and Alex was simply clutching her
hands in front of her face, close
to tears.
�How long?� Michael wanted
to know.
�I can�t say. I think
little impulses are already arriving,
but the interpretation is still not
working.� Christa smiled as well.
�Give
him some time and a lot of rest. I
asked Karr not to push it. It has to
come naturally.�
�This is the best news
I heard all day,� Michael sighed,
running a hand through his unruly
hair.
The neurologist
nodded. �I bet. If you need me,
I�m at
the Towers&Arms hotel. I�m
staying for another two days, just
in case.�
�Thanks, Doc.�
She nodded and
left them alone. Michael sank
back into
the waiting room couch,
briefly closing his eyes.
//You talking
to him?// he asked Kitt.
//Only
checking, Karr�s too
preoccupied to actually
acknowledge
me much// There was a
smile in Kitt�s voice.
Michael
chuckled and turned his
head. He opened his eyes
and looked at his
partner. //Trying to
keep Nick in bed?//
Kitt
mirrored the mental
grin. //Currently
threatening
to tie him down and
sit on him if he
doesn�t cooperate//
Michael
laughed out loud.
Alex
shot him a
questioning look
and he grinned.
�Nick�s
not behaving
himself,� he told
her.
Alex,
eyes bright with
unshed tears,
chuckled and
rose.
�I think I�ll
help Karr keep
him in place.�
Michael
just chuckled.
Nick would
really have to
bring
out the heavy
artillery to
get through
the two most
important and
very
stubborn
individuals in
his life.
* * *
The warehouse was peacefully silent in
the early morning
hours. Michael was still asleep, as was Kitt, and with
no traffic passing
outside, except for the faraway freight ships, it was
nice to just lie
back and close your eyes. Nick was currently doing that,
lying on the couch,
eyes closed, body propped up slightly to help his ribs
heal. One arm lay
protectively over his stomach, the other was flung over
his head. He concentrated
on the point inside his head that connected him to Karr.
Two weeks had
passed since the ordeal in the remote lodge. Two long
weeks spent in hospitals
or under close scrutiny.
Two weeks without having any contact at
all to his partner.
If it hadn�t been for the simple fact that Karr was
visibly present, Nick
would long since have lost it completely. As it was,
Karr�s presence was
the only thing that was keeping him sane. His partner
was never far from
where Nick was, be it in the kitchen, on the couch, or
outside the warehouse.
Or, for one day, at the funeral of Leonard Devereaux.
Still, the presence
in his mind was gone and it ate at him. Rather badly,
too. Michael had
more than once been at the receiving end of a very bad
tempered Nick and
like Kitt, he was treading carefully now. Phone calls
to Alex had increased
and Karr had initiated a few of them on his own, just
to calm down his
partner.
Karr himself was dealing with Nick�s
absence in another
manner. He was shutting his self off from Kitt. His
brother was having
a bad time reaching him through the private link and
he barely allowed
him any closer contact than what was necessary. He
couldn�t handle the
reminder of what he had lost with Nick. Kitt was
calm about it, but it
was getting to him as well, mostly because he was
unable to do anything
to help.
Lately, Nick had felt impulses
coming from there, little
blips and jolts, and he knew the EMP�s damage was
slowly healing. He wasn�t
about to whoop in joy yet; not his style. But he
had settled a bit, his
temper had mellowed, and he was more accessible.
He reached out for the other side
and thought he felt
Karr react. It was vague, almost like a memory,
but Nick was sure it was
real. He opened his eyes and found himself
looking up into a stormy gray
sea of barely suppressed emotions.
�You felt it, too,� he managed.
Karr nodded wordlessly. Nick
tried to reach again and
this time, he noticed that something on the
other side reached back. Their
virtual fingers touched, then Nick had to
stop, the strain resulting in
a vicious streak of pain through his mind.
He hissed, clenched his teeth,
and rode out the sudden attack of a
miniature migraine.
Someone touched his arm
gently and he felt a weight settle
on the couch. Karr gazed at his prone
driver, smiling slightly. �Don�t
force it. We know it�s coming back. It�s
enough for now.�
Nick smiled slightly, then
sat up with an effort, biting
back a moan as his healing ribs
protested.
�You found out why yet?�
he then asked, trying to get
his mind off the injuries.
Karr nodded slowly.
�Kitt and I checked the lines
leading
out of the compound and found some
old tapes. It appears that there
were
multiple satellite lines going out,
broadcasting the events from the
game
to various receivers all over the
world. I�m still tracking them
down,�
he added when Nick shot him an
inquisitive look. �It�s difficult.
I�ve
only run into dead ends and
reroutings so far. I doubt we will
ever find
out who exactly was watching, but
whoever it was, they paid a lot of
money.�
There had been
account statements in the
computer. Karr
had sat over the data for hours,
checking each single payment,
whether
it was a withdrawal or a deposit.
Most were deposits from
untraceable sources.
One had had a name to it, but it
had been a dummy. The account had
been
with a Czechoslovakian bank and
had been cleared and canceled a
long time
ago. Before the actual payment.
Still, Karr was running his search
programs.
If there was even the slightest
chance that he could get a name,
he would
follow it. Kitt was busy with the
satellite links. Like the
accounts, they
led nowhere in particular, but he
had traced most of the users to
Japan,
Russia, South Africa and
Australia. The leads mostly
dissipated into nothingness
then, but Kitt was doggedly
staying on the trail, as faint as
it was.
Nick nodded
slowly. He had expected it.
Whoever had run
the game, he had covered his
tracks. He touched the implant
link again
and Karr reacted, wincing in
surprise. Nick smiled slyly.
�Getting better,
hm?�
A smile
flickered over the handsome
features of the android.
�Any ID on the
boss or the victims?� Nick
asked, interlacing
his fingers.
Karr nodded.
�The man�s name was Julian
Kosar. I checked
him. The police suspect
him to be the head of a
major porn video ring.
He sold world wide and
whatever the customer
wanted.� Disgust shone in
the words. �They could
never pin anything on him,
so he walked free.�
Nick�s
face was expressionless.
�We also
found some records on
who they abducted,�
Karr
went on, trying to
keep his voice
neutral. �Kitt and
Michael are still
checking the names,
but a few were already
found on the Missing
Persons
list.�
�Shit,�
Nick muttered.
�We
also found the
name of a missing
Russian agent.
Dimitri
Yurikov. I think
you know him.�
His
head came up. Of
course he knew
the man. They
had
gone up against
each other
several times,
until the end of
the Cold War,
and Dimitri had
proven to be a
worthy opponent
and later a good
contact.
�Shit!� Nick
intoned again.
He closed his
eyes. �Anything
else?�
�The
RCMP is
investigating
the case. The
Foundation has
stepped in as
well and we
will keep an
eye on the
proceedings.�
�Good.�
He gazed at
the ceiling,
eyes holding a
faraway
expression.
Karr knew that
Nick didn�t
like the
meager facts
they had
gathered,
but there was
no helping it.
�So,�
his driver
said after a
period of
mutual
silence,
�another
question: why
are you still
in a body that
you really
don�t like
all that
much?� A faint
smile played
over his lips
and he
attempted to
rise. He
swallowed a
curse as his
broken ribs
protested.
�That�s
why,� Karr
remarked dryly
and pushed him
gently
back onto the
couch. �Stay.�
Nick
glared at him
but it didn�t
faze Karr at
all. He
was used to
it.
�I
will stay in
this accursed
bipedal form
as long as
it takes,�
Karr informed
him.
�As
long as what
takes?�
A
nasty smile
graced the
android�s lips
and he walked
off. Nick
glared daggers
and sent a
dark thought
toward the
implant, but
he doubted it
would go
through.
Actually, it did. Karr laughed silently and shook his
head. Some things never changed. |