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46. Know the enemy

Moving in on the Spiral Dust supplier, The Dustman, the group are back in Ruk.  Knowing that information is power, the group have started finding out what they can about Ur-Dust and his company, Whole Body Grafts.

**********************************************************************************

They quickly collected the names of the six heads of departments and likely red ring wearers.

Security Chief –

Mu-Duggan

R&D Chiefs –

Pra-Qatum

Ipqu-Adad

Iphur-Kishi

Dram-Shara

Bel-Tamar

“So, what first?”  

“What are their specialities?”Algernon asked as the group lazily walked around town as to not draw attention to themselves. 

“Can’t we just go?” Bruce was walking around like a soldier waiting for the whistle to go ‘over the top’.  He took out his crowbar, smacked it nervously into the palm of his hand before putting it away again, aware of the stares.

“Why are you in such a rush?” Tobias asked, dropping out of his search of the Allsong to confront Bruce, “You’re usually the by-the-book sort.”

“We know who we’re here to see and where they are, let’s go!” The crowbar appeared again.

“We have this one chance,” Tobias put a hand on the crowbar, and it was quickly put away again, “If we screw this up, he’s gone, and we won’t know where. We’ll be worse than back to scratch because now he’ll know we’re onto him.”

With bad grace, Bruce did control himself and allow Algernon and Tobias to search for information.  Whole Body Grafts was a wholly-owned company of the Zal group and not just an associated company.  Though there was nothing on Ur-Dust, there was a  lot to be found on each of the heads. 

All five had worked for Zal corporations their entire working careers, moving up from one position to another through the group.  Iphur-Kishi was head of Robotics and Cybernetics, Dram-Shara’s speciality was biochemistry.  Surgical technologies was Ipqu-Adad forte, and Pra-Qatum was in charge of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering.  The one they couldn’t find listed anywhere was Bel-Tamar. 

“What if I search for research papers, public articles Bel-Tamar may have written?” Thought  Algernon.

“Yes, no one is taken seriously without a few published papers,” Peggy agreed from her own hard experience, “And just because his current speciality is secret doesn’t mean it always was.”

As he had been doing, Tobias charged Algernon with The Strange and sent him into the Allsong. Again, his search came back successful.

“Here’s one, ‘Improving the cloning process for venom troopers…’ and another on cloning vats.”
“Why would they want another specialist on cloning? They have Pra-Qatum,” Tobias asked, more to himself.

“Maybe we should ask, why does a nice civilian company want a specialist in making venom troopers?” Bruce replied.

“Maybe this will answer your questions,” Algernon  interrupted, “Bel-Tamar is also into exotic biological materials.”
“Spiral dust would qualify,” Peggy said.

Tobias was more interested in thechiefs as people.  Socially, all the heads of the R&D Departments were well off, living within gated communities around Harmonious (addresses found and noted) and seemingly without vice or fault.  Iphur-Kishi was well known for collecting unusually formed pieces from the Scar, an innocent but interesting fact.  Then Algernon discovered a query about the welfare of Dram-Shara dated a few days ago.

“Here’s a lead. We can say we’re investigators looking into Dram-Shara’s disappearance. “ Tobias offered as a possible step forward. 

“Hold on,” Algernon stopped the group and focused his search on one question for the Allsong. 

Is Dram-Shara still alive? 

Yes,  Came an emphatic reply.

Is Dram-Shara on Ruk?  

Somewhat. He shared his discovery with the others.

“Could she be tripping on Spiral Dust or Bywandine?” Bruce asked, “You know, physically here but off on The Strange?”

“I can answer that one,” Peggy said with confidence and closed her eyes to help link her to The Strange.
What is the current state of Dram-Shara? 

Trapped, Her voice replied from The Strange.

“I think that confirms it. Let’s try Dram-Shara’s home first,” Tobias nodded, bringing up the listed address for Dram-Shara.

The Research and Development Chief of Biochemistry for Whole Body Grafts lived in an apartment building with external passcode security and a staffed concierge on the ground floor foyer.  It was modern, sleek and Algernon had no problem remotely accessing the gate security.

“What if she’s home? You know, out on The Strange.”
“Then we’ll see if we can convince her to help us,” Tobias said with absolute confidence.

“Before or after we break into her home?” Bruce asked, unconvinced.

“Or we can just kill her,” Algernon mused.

“What?!” Both Bruce and Tobias turned on their young companion.

“Did I say that out loud?” 

“Unless I’ve learnt to mind-read,” Tobias cajoled his friend, “Open the gate and follow my lead.”

The gate opened, and Tobias led the way through the foyer to the lifts.

“Um…excuse me, are you here to see someone?” Asked the concierge politely, stepping out from behind their counter.

“Yes, thanks!” Tobias smiled, waved and stepped into the waiting lift.  

Several hundred floors above Harmonious’ streets, the lift deposited the group in a carpeted foyer facing one of several doors.  Algernon once more had no problem remotely breaking into the smart home system of the apartment, and the door opened.  As he added their images to the smart home system access whitelist, the others spread out through the small apartment, looking for clues.   Two bedrooms (one a study),an ensuite , a lounge, and a small kitchen later, they realised that it was empty.  The bed had been neatly made, and no personal items lay on bedside tables.

“You know, if something permanent has happened to Dram-Shara, we’d have a nice new base here,” Algernon commented, locking the front door behind him.

“You’re not to make something more permanent happen for a nice new base,” Bruce commented before following Peggy into the study.

Thinking as a mad (and paranoid) scientist she was, Peggy, the floating metal box, looked for panic rooms or hidden spaces where secrets would be safe. Behind the computer table, behind a wall panel made to open on a push in the right corner, Peggy found a tablet computer.  

“Well, look at this…” She said as her tiny metal claws extracted the tablet from its hiding place.  

ZAPP! And the high pitch squeal of an android followed Peggy across the room, clattering to the floor unconscious.

“Are you okay?” Bruce said, scrambling over to her unresponsive form.

“She just got a zap. We’ve seen this before,” Tobias picked up the box that held Peggy’s consciousness.

Algernon had other ideas, “Is she lying around again.  Maybe she’s dead.  Oh well, nothing for it then,” Opening a disposal chute, he grabbed hold of the box.

“Let go, you homicidal maniac,” Tobias fought back, and Peggy became the centre of a tug of war.

ZAAAP!  She awoke, blasting them both with the static, “No touching!” The boys tussle broke apart with matching yelps and peggy floated free.

“Ur…does this thing still work?” Bruce picked up the tablet, its case scorched by the trap on the hidden compartment.

Once feeling had returned to his hands, Algernon took the tablet, “No, its power supply fried. I think the memory was safe, but we can’t get access to it without parts.”

“No problem,” Once more, the tiny metallic claws picked up the tablet, this time drawing it into Peggy’s metal box body.

Bruce wandered away to the kitchen and living areas of the apartment.  Several takeaway containers were in the disposal unit showing several days of deliveries.  A check of the smart system confirmed a food delivery the night before the last recording.  The living area was sparse, with nothing in it to personalise the space.  There were no images of family or loved ones, no art and no books.  It was as if Dram-Shara never existed.

At the workstation in the study, Algernon found a link to the Whole Body Graft network and hacked in.  Dram-Shara’s speciality was Biochemistry, a topic that Algernon was very familiar. He was soon explained articles on slow-release caffeine systems to Bruce and Tobias as Peggy took screenshots.

“I wonder…” Peggy hovered over to the Smart Home interface and brought up images of Dram-Shara from the security feed. Then, making a composite 3D image, Peggy projected a hologram of the missing scientist.

“This could be useful. I can impersonate Dram-Shara at Whole Body Grafts,”

Tobias looked at the hologram, he had to admit the image was convincing, but there was more to impersonation than looking like someone.

“You know almost nothing about her. How does she speak? How does she treat her inferiors and superiors? Who is she friendly with, and who does she avoid?”

“Okay, say I’m an emergency system that went live after Dram-Shara failed to log in ,” Peggy replied, not willing to give up her new persona, “It would explain any gaps in memory or lack of social knowledge.”

“Okay,” He replied unconvinced, “From what you’ve seen, what sort of person is she?”

Peggy scanned through her memory banks for the security images of Dram-Shara. Unfortunately, watching and paying attention to people was not Peggy’s strong point, so she took a moment to think about what she saw before answering.

“Quiet.  Meticulous.  A little touchy, she likes things her way.”

“Okay, so maybe you could impersonate Dram-Shara if you practise moderating yourself,” Tobias said dryly.  Peggy was many things, but aware of her behaviour and how it affected others was not one of her skills.  He was about to say as much so when Algernon caught both their attention.

“I’ve found the security for Whole Body Grafts, including the ring system,” 

The group huddled around as Algernon requested the whereabouts of Dram-Shara.  A map of the Whole Body graft tower appeared on the screen.  On floor 199, a faint red glowing point appeared.  Beside it, Algernon brought up an image of the tower from the Allsong that included the floorplan for the different departments.  Floor 199 was one of four floors unmarked.

“How about Mu-Duggan and the other chiefs,” Tobias asked, and one by one, Algernon requested their locations.  Mu-Duggan was on floor 191, one of two floors marked as Sales.  Iphur-Kishi, Ipqu-Adad and Pra-Qatum were all noted as being on the Research and Development floors between 195 and 196.  Bel-Tamar, the venom trooper, exotic biological materials enthusiast, was also on floor 199.  All the other markers were bright and clearly defined in comparison to Dram-Shara’s weak signal. 

It was time to go.  Algernon powered down the workstation, and the group left the apartment almost as they’d found it.  As they once more walked through the foyer towards the door.  The concierge, as sharp as ever, came out to intercept the group.

“Did you find what you were looking for?” 

“Yes, thank you.  Have a good day,” Tobias maneuvered around and out the doors, politely disregarding the concierge.  The rest followed suit, and soon they were lost among the crowds out on the streets of Harmonious once more.

Parts for the tablet were not hard to come by for Algernon, the native and Peggy quickly found a quiet spot to repair the tablet.  The screen lit up and requested a passcode. Peggy handed the tablet back to Algernon. He bypassed the small computer’s security with a few deft movements and opened the first of many entries.

Reading over his shoulders, the group saw the tablet was a personal diary.  Dram-Shara outlined what she knew about the activity surrounding what she called the Nakarand Project conducted in the four unmarked floors of Whole Body Grafts.

“Nakarand…that sounds familiar,” Peggy mused, and Tobias rolled his eyes.

“Oh, Peggy.” And pulled out his current mind map of Nakarand, The Dustman and the movement of Spiral dust.

“…being of immense size and unexplained powers…?” Bruce read out loud.

“…provide venom troopers to Ur-Dust in exchange for tissue samples…”  Algernon pointed out, “Explains Bel-Tamar.”
“…already a source of inspiration for several inventions…” Peggy added as her mind wandered to what those inventions may be.

“She seems to be getting more curious about Nakarand; I wonder if that’s why she’s trapped on floor 199?” Tobias added, reflecting on the scientific mind of Dram-Shara drawn into the puzzle of Nakarand.

Sure enough, after a short entry about investigating further, the entries end.

They had found what they were looking for.  Now it was time to act.

Together the group built an illusion of a company on the Allsong called Strange Cybernetics.  Essentially, a start-up specialising in computers, engineering and fabrication, they were cutting edge and eager to make their presence felt.  Algernon set up the background of a company, legal status and web presence. Tobias filled in the details of the company, staff and affiliations. Peggy and Algernon were the CEO brother and sister duo, Alga-Nune and Peg – Margret.  Tobias added himself as Public Relations and Social Media Manager, Tabish-Va.  Bruce was Security, Bar-Karow. 

The website was taking shape.  Each of the senior staff had their own page with ficticious background information. In addition, a short article regarding an industrial accident was spread through news sites.  The co-owner of Strange Cybernetics had died in an unfortunate industrial accident, but that her mind and memories were currently loaded to a crystalline drone.

“Just the price that sometimes needs to be paid to be on the bleeding edge of future technologies.” The article quoted Alga-Nune after confirming that his sister was back at work.

 Even metadata was manipulated to show the site and articles had been up for months instead of just a few hours. Contact details led directly to a link that Tobias managed.  Using it, he booked a meeting with Whole Body Grafts for the following day. As Algernon was skimming through the site checking for errors, he noticed another name had been added to the staff list.

“Ven-Taru, Tech Support?  I didn’t add that.  Ven-Taru is familiar, though,” Algenon pointed out the name, and Bruce started remembering with clarity the last time they’d heard of her.

“That’s the woman!  The amazing fighter that came to Ni-Challan’s rescue.”

“Interesting,” Tobias said and was already drafting an email to Ven-Taru using the email listed.  

To be continued….

34. The creation of a family

The group split.  Rain returned to Earth with the Martins and their oversized triplet sons.  Bruce, Algernon and Peggy return to the capital of Ruk, Harmonious, to go through the information they’ve gathered and prepare for the arrival of the triplets.

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John and Athena stepped out of the brightly lit portal into the dark cold winter’s night.  As soon as their feet touched the cold, wet ground, the portal blinked out and plunged them all into darkness. The couple clung to each other as they looked around them wide-eyed, shying away from even the most familiar of sight and sounds. John had no shoes and started stepping quickly from one foot to the other.  A cold wind howled through the station underpass bringing with it the familiar smell of the Mississippi. They recognised the bones of the city, the sweep of the road, the clatter of the streetcars as they rolled passed.  But, the street lamps were a brighter white from the yellow incandescent they were used to, a walk sign flashed greenly at them created by dozens of LEDs and the few people out at that time were too absorbed in hand-held devices to notice the spectacle unfolding about them.  

And there certainly was a spectacle.

On the ground, clutching clumsily at each other were three naked boys, none older than mid-teens and one as young as seven.  They mewed and gawped like newborns, though they were long-limbed and well-formed.  The man who called himself Rain bustled back from a conversation with station security, his arms full of lost and cast-off clothing.  He quickly dressed each boy, like one would a baby, first putting his own arm through a sleeve leg, then pulling through their corresponding limb.  It didn’t always work as a stronger than average limb would kick or swing-out wildly.  Rain just dodged the blows cheerily, made a joke and continued with his task.

“Oh, and for you, John.  Not exactly cutting style but they will do in a pinch,” Rain placed a pair of flip-flops (an odd pair, though of a similar enough size) in front of John who quickly slipped them on thankfully, “Could I impose on one or both of you to help me get these boys under some shelter until our lift arrives?”

The question, so civilised amid chaos and confusion, acted more like a command to the couple who quickly complied.  John copied Rain as he pulled a long arm over his shoulders and grabbed the waist of one of the older boys.  Athena took the younger child, awkwardly cradling him in her arms.  The boy’s head found her shoulder and snuggled into her soft warmth.  It was an action, so like that of her daughters that Athena stumbled to a halt, absorbed in the sensation.

“That’s it Thomas, one foot forward now the next foot…Mrs Martin?” She heard Rain’s voice, and it broke her train of thought, “If Harold there is too much for you just put him down. I’ll come back and get him once we have Thomas and Richard settled.”

“No, it’s fine.” She replied more confidently than she felt and followed Rain and her husband to a strip of parkland dominated by a heavy-limbed old-man oak.  Here on a bench seat, the three boys were propped up against each other, then Rain offered the remaining space to the Martins.  Though still cold and wet, under the grey moss-covered bows of the oak, Athena felt more at home and more sure of herself.

“ Transport has been called, but in the meantime why don’t we get to know each other?” Rain now turned his charm on the Martins.  They stared back at him, shocked and dumbfounded. “Probably best if I just answer your questions.”

“What happened to us?  I remember…” Athena turned to her husband for confirmation, “coming home on the streetcar.  We had to pick up Margarita from school…”

“…we had theatre tickets…to see Twelfth Night…” John added and Athena smiled, always the theatre nerd.

Rain listened nodding until they’d finished sharing, “From what I’ve gathered from Pe…Margarita, twenty years ago you were abducted from that tram station,” He looked back the way they’d come, “by a very talented but twisted scientist who had kept you in a cryogenic stasis.”

“Twenty years…? But…why? How?” Athena asked again, each question making her feel more confident and able to assert herself.

“She wanted servants with human DNA that would be able to infiltrate anywhere. The result of which you see before you,” He now gestured to the three boys who now sat silently watching, taking in every movement and gesture, “As to the how of it, there are those better qualified to explain the science, your daughter among them. However, we did use the same portal technology to get back.”

“What are you saying?  What are these boys to us?” Athena asked now looking at the three boys closely for the first time.  As she noticed similarities between them in her husband and her late father, she realised the answer to her question before Rain could reply.

“They are you, biological sons,” Rain thought a moment then continued, “Do you remember the room where you woke up?  The three glass cylinders along one wall?”

John nodded, captivated by the story, while Athena only looked on the boys in shock and pity.

“They were…grown in those cylinders from your DNA.  Pegg…Margarita had released them only moments before.”  

“But why are they…like that?” This time John asked as the three boys in unison turned to watch him with large guileless eyes.

“Ah,” Rain turned to look at the boys and smile fondly at them, “That is because they are only a few hours old. They are by all intents and purposes, newborns.  There are others, my friend Algernon who helped save you and another called Mortimer.  They are both highly intelligent and talented young men.  These three will go back with me to Ruk tomorrow where Peg…Margarita is preparing a program to help them.”

“And what about Margarita and Simon, where are they?”

At this Rain’s cheery demeanour sobered, “Simon is fine,  He was a young man when you disappeared, and he didn’t keep in touch with Peg…Margarita.  Margarita though was raised under the…cool authority of your mother, Mrs Martin.” He said simply, and Athena knew her mother well enough to know what that meant, and her soul cried for her lost daughter.

 “I am sorry to say she did not have a happy childhood.  But she was bright, worked her way through college and university and did her master’s thesis in anthropology.  She is the brains of my small group, and she never stopped looking for you.” Rain said with such pride and sincerity that it silenced the couple, giving Rain a moment to check on the boys.

The youngest, and seeming more precocious, had wriggled off the bench seat and was now part crawling and part walking towards the road.  

“Harold.  Back here, mate.” Rain dashed out and hauled the disgruntled seven-year-old baby back. The movement and excitement inspired Thomas and Richard, who also rolled or slithered off the bench seat and started moving off in random directions.  Now running between the three, Rain brought them together in a circle hand in hand and started singing nursery rhymes and songs.  In the dark of a New Orleans winter’s night they bopped on their feet like toddlers to the music keeping them amused until a black van rolled up and Estate agents identified themselves.  

The agents arranged a safe house and a little babysitting duty for the night as questions were asked and received.  It was very late when the Martin’s ran out of questions that Rain could answer and he went to check on the triplets.  Beautiful while asleep, awake the trio were more of a handful. Like colts, they learnt to use their limbs quickly. They wandered around following whatever caught their interest.  Rain and the Estate agents caught snatches of sleep between the last boy dropping off to sleep and the first waking and inevitably disturbing his brothers.  

In one quiet moment, Rain pulled out Mortimer’s tablet computer.  Out in Ruk Rain couldn’t plug in a toaster, but back on Earth, he felt his old ability to see past the passwords and firewalls that people place in front of their information return to him.  In a moment, he had cracked Mortimer’s password and was into the files on the tablet.  There were several textbooks on particle physics with attached homework.  It seemed, though physically more adept than Algernon, Mortimer wasn’t doing as well with physics.  Flicking through the electronic pages, Rain caught a splash of colour and flicked back through the dull texts.  Embedded between the files of academic level science were brightly coloured pictorial scenes of action heroes all running, flying or fighting.  Smuggled in from the Allsong, a collection of comic books had been renamed to blend into his studies.  Rain recognised some of the heroes and realised that even a few Earth comic books had made it into the mix.  With a smile, he now recognised the boy inside the sociopath who had helped invade Ni’Challan’s home. Rain gestured to one of the agents, taking over his duties looking after the triplets and sent him out to buy a section of superhero comic books for the trip back to Ruk.

One last task.  Rain found pen and paper and wrote a note for Noel:

It was with a very grateful sigh that the estate agents left the next morning to take the Martin’s to the Airport. With them, Rain sent Noel’s letter knowing that one way or another, the Estate would get it to him on time.

The Martin’s understood they would be debriefed and medically examined by people who knew what they’d gone through and how to deal with any trauma.  In return, Rain promised to be back in a few days with their daughter, their son Algernon and the three triplets made whole. 

A half-hour later, however, he wasn’t so sure.

He tried positioning them once more in a circle, using his songs to get them to stay and dance while one or more wandered off. The boys were getting bored. Their wandering became more hunts for something to stick in their mouths than general explorations of the previous evening.  They became fussy and uncooperative settling for crying in the middle of the room instead of joining in the dance when curtailing their freedoms.  By some miracle, Rain gathered all three, sitting on the ground and facing each other with him holding some portion of each.  Part of one hand, a toe, another hand and knee.  It wasn’t ideal, but unless he waited until they all fell asleep again, which seemed unlikely, he had to try.

Rain had only led one translation, and then with Celia who had aided in the process. Now, as he settled himself down and focused on Ruk, he felt the boys still, as if they recognised something important was about to begin.  He felt himself dissolve into the movement of the Strange, motes on a breeze and the boys follow along in his wake.  But, without the will of Peggy or Algernon keeping them on course or the protective effect of Bruce, it Rain felt exposed and alone. 

As their mind’s entered Ruk, for a moment Rain was sure he saw the organza rock formation of the Doctor’s ex-secret base before they were jarred sideways and deposited with a shock on the hard surface of the city plaza in Harmonious.  Rain shook his head now thankful for the smooth entries Bruce provided.  

As the city came into focus around him, he realised he was standing alone.  Panic was instant.  He searched the plaza and quickly spied all three boys wandering off in different directions.  

I’m here, little help!  He called to Algernon via the Allsong before starting once more to gather the boys in his own effective, if dramatic way.  People started paying attention to the well-dressed man singing and dancing with three boys whose behaviour didn’t seem in keeping with their ages.  

“Ladies and gentleman, our second show will be in half an hour, please give generously,” Rain announced to the crowd as he spotted five officers of the Myriad marching towards him and his knot of boys. Rain sent a small curse to whatever divine being looked down on Ruk and faced the Myriad with a smile.

“Officers, how good to see you, what can I help you with?”

Skimming over the ordered land and suburbs of Harmonious, their clandestine mission complete, Algernon, Bruce and Peggy were resting as Jidarus, their pilot, safely brought them back.  Algernon loaded the footage of the mountain explosion from one of his surveillance cameras to his computer. He was reliving the moment over again, watching the flyer enter the base and then a few moments later…devastation!  It was a very satisfactory feeling of achievement.  He was looking forward to sharing the moment with Rain.  Just as he was reliving the expansion of the mountain, just before the shockwave knocked the camera from his hand, he heard a very Rukian swear from Jidarus and his senses matched the footage.

“By all the deficient primes!” Peggy and Bruce also turned at the expletive, as the view through the cockpit window angled wildly to the left to avoid another flyer.  It was heading out on the same flight lanes as they were heading in on, directly out to the organza rock pile that was once a mountain.  The sudden roll to the left sent everything in the cabin flying.   Peggy stayed orientated to the rolling floor, supported by her magnetic propulsion, but Bruce and Algernon weren’t strapped in and were catapulted from their seats.  The sudden roll also dislodged the poorly latched cabin door which flew open with a roar.  Algernon caught hold of a seat as he flew passed.  Bruce was closer to the door with no available seats to latch hold.  He rolled out the door, only missing the door frame as he passed, by the skin of his fingers.

“Bruce!” Peggy screamed just in time for Algernon to see Bruce’s fingers disappear out the door.  Pushing off the chair, he flung himself towards the door, catching hold of hand support, he scanned the sky for Bruce.  Below, already growing impossibly small against the landscape of Harmonious was the tumbling figure of Bruce.  One hand holding him firmly to the flyer, Algernon stretched out his other, sending out his levitating force to catch the falling Bruce.  Suddenly the tumbling ceased. Jidarus righted the flyer and carefully descended to match Bruce’s elevation.  From the windows and doorway of the flyer, Peggy, Algernon and Jidarus could all see Bruce, now confident he was no longer falling, strike a superhero flying pose and smile boldly back at the flyer. Bruce yelled something, but his words were lost to the sky.  Peggy and Algernon could just make out their meaning by reading his lips.

“Way to go, kid!”

“Of all the…you guys are crazy,” Jidarus said, shaking his head, before calling in the near-miss and requesting landing instructions.

The rest of their day was uneventful.  The group met with Tabaseth and Giqabee, handing over the information obtained from Doctor Strangelove and debriefing about the mission.  The Quiet Cabal seemed delighted with the results, primarily that no security footage or eye witness accounts led back to them.

“Yes, we knew something was up when our sources told us that the Karum were in a panic, “Tabaseth informed them with some satisfaction, “It was their flyer that flew out to the lab site.”

“We are going to need several days to go through the information you found,” Giqabee said, not looking up from her scrolling datapad, “Will you want to participate, Dr Martin?”

“Participating, I expect to lead it!” Said Peggy.

“Me too, you’re not putting anything in my head that I haven’t looked over first,” Algernon said at the same time.

“Ur…very well, do you know when we should expect the other specimens?”

The three of them looked at each other.  With Rain? Who knew?

After the debrief had concluded, Bruce quietly took himself off to find Mortimer’s room.  It wasn’t hard. It was the only room with a guard standing outside of it.  Bruce identified himself to the guard and brandished his first aid kit as a right of passage.  The guard called in the request and unlocked the door.

Inside the room was spartan.  A bed,  a desk and a chair. It reminded Bruce of the boy’s bedroom back at the secret laboratory.  Lounging on top of the neatly folded bedclothes, Mortimer was sitting staring at the wall opposite, a silvery wound dressing on his shoulder peeked from under a loose shirt. He turned his head, watching, like a captive raptor, waiting for its chance to make a strike.  Bruce entered and closed the door.

“I’m Bruce. Good day, Mortimer.  ” Bruce said, stepping close to the bed and reaching for the chair.  Mortimer watched every move, “That’s right, isn’t it?”

“What, that it’s a good day,  that my name is Mortimer or that your’s Bruce?”

Bruce said nothing but huffed and sat down.  It was like talking to Algernon, but less playful and more predacious, “I’ve come to see how your wounds are healing.  Have they been treating you well here?”

“I suspect my wounds treat me as well as they can.”

“I meant the staff here.  Have they been looking after you? Feeding you?”

“I have no complaints,” The dead-eyed stare bored into Bruce and made him feel uncomfortable.

“May I look at your wounds?”

“I don’t know, can you?  I would think you could do whatever you wished.” 

“I could get the guard in here, hell I could probably get a few to hold you down while I examine you,” Bruce bit back, then caught himself.  He wasn’t the victim here, “I would rather have your permission, but I won’t force it.”

The boy’s head cocked to one side, very much like the predatory bird he brought to mind.  Without another word, he swung his long legs over the edge of the bed and opened his shirt. The sight of the three gunshot wounds gave Bruce pause.  He’d given Mortimer those wounds.  Quickly he distracted himself with the poultices and gadgets of his first aid kit.

One by one, he pulled the bandages and checked each wound. As with Algernon, Mortimer healed much quicker than expected, and there seemed no sign of infection.  With a practised hand, he rebandaged the boy and helped him back into a comfortable position. He started packing his first aid kit.

“You were tough,” Bruce said, barely looking up from his task to watch the kid experimentally flex his arms.

“I think I’m still tough,” Mortimer replied, his swagger diminished only by his prone position. 

“Tough. And fast too!”

“Thanks to the glorious Doctor Strangelove who design me.” He boasted, and it sounded like a fanatical believer, but the eyes did not express the save fervour of fanaticism.  He wasn’t a true believer, just a kid who didn’t know any better.

Bruce put aside his first aid kit. Nothing in it was going to help him now.

“Look, I came here to say I’m sorry I shot ya, kid,” His eyes flicked from his folded empty hands to Mortimer’s face, “I’m not looking for forgiveness, just my honest regret, for what that worth.”

Mortimer’s head tilted sideways as if trying to catch the real Bruce from a different angle.

“You were my enemy; it was expected.”

“I’d rather not be your enemy.”

“Can you?”

“Can I what?”

“Not be my enemy?”

“If it’s within my power.”

“Is it?” At this, Mortimer sat up on his bed and once more swung around to face  Bruce, “Before you asked for my permission. Can you choose?”

The shame Bruce felt at shooting the kid flared up once more.  The boy had never had a choice in his life.

“Yes, I can,” He replied, his throat tight with feeling, “ And so will you soon enough,” He went to leave when the kid grabbed his arm, the grip firm but not combative.

“Can I ask you a question?”

“I don’t know, can you?” Bruce quipped back and was given a surly blank-eyed stare in reply, “Sure.”

“Why am I here?”

“Two reasons, I gave you first aid, and I didn’t want to see that work wasted.”

“But why save my life?  I was your enemy.  I tried to kill you.”

The kid had been a formidable enemy.  Strong and fast physically, but also strategic and as smart with computer systems as Algernon on a good day. 

 Bruce nodded.  “You were unconscious. You weren’t my enemy anymore.”

“Just like that.” 

“Not quite, but I had the chance to choose and did.”

“I wasn’t your enemy because you chose?” Mortimer shook his head in disbelief, “That doesn’t make sense.”

“I know kid, that’s the second reason.” Mortimer’s hand dropped, and Bruce now turned for the door. 

“Thank you.”  Bruce heard and looked back at Mortimer, sitting alone on the edge of the bed.  He could still see the confusion in the kid’s eyes, the doubt and scepticism built in over brainwashing and months in the company of only the Doctor.

“No, thank you,”  Bruce replied and knocked to be let out.

Approximately 24 hours later, Algernon received a message from Rain.

I’m here, little help!  And Algernon smiled, looking forward to seeing his friend once more. Besides visiting with Mortimer, Bruce had made use of the Quiet Cabal’s health facilities and the firing range. Peggy had was wholly absorbed, teasing out the required programming from the brainwashing Doctor Strangelove had inflicted upon Algernon and Mortimer.  Algernon had kept busy adding elements to the programs, but life was undoubtedly duller without Rain around.

Leaving the Quiet Cabal tower, he headed to the plaza at a brusque pace ready to help wrangle the surprisingly more active triplets.  He saw the five Myriad officers before they saw him and quickly ducked aside to watch from a distance as Rain handled the boys and ‘the law’.

“Officers, how good to see you, what can I help you with?” Rain beamed his attention, moving from one Myriad to another until a senior officer spoke up.

“What’s going on?” The voice, officious and lifeless, made more so by the mechanical voice box of the Myriad power armour, and by contrast with Rain’s own.

“You would imagine a simple task,” Rain started, snatching at the arm of a once more escaping teen baby, “I am to transport these three over to the Quiet Cabal, their guardian is expecting them.” He couldn’t lie to the Myriad, even his skills of persuasion were insufficient to overcome the insightful abilities of Ruk’s police force. 

Algernon watched as the five Myriad seemed to confer amongst themselves for a moment before accepting Rain’s story.

“We shall accompany you to the tower,” Said the senior officer and Rain bounced on his heels with delight.

“Excellent!  This is Thomas” He took the hands of the larger boys and thrust them towards two of the silent Myriad, “And you can take Richard, I’ll keep Harold, he’s a bit of a handful if you don’t know what to look for.”

The Myriad officers now charged with their teen babies saw the issue with the three young men and accepted the hands reluctantly.  

“Ready when you are, officers.”  Rain gestured for the Myriad to lead the way and the group fell in around him and the three boys.

Algernon didn’t know what to do.  He didn’t want the attention of the Myriad, a life dodging around the law saw to that.  But as they were heading to the Quiet Cabal, he guessed that he could just hang back and follow them in.  Not wanting to lose sight of the group, Algernon failed to look around him before stepping out of his hiding place and walked right into a man ladened down with parcels and bags.  Boxes crashed to the ground, and the man yelled in surprise and shockat the young man who suddenly appeared in front of him.  The Myriad as one turned to investigate the disturbance.

Now with an angry man yelling at him, the Myriad’s eyes on him and the whole plaza suddenly aware of his presence, Algernon panicked.  Dropping the boxes he had been able to save, Algernon just turned and started walking briskly away.  He’d seen somewhere that whistling was good in moments like these.  He tried and failed, having never picked up the knack and tried humming a tuneless something instead.

Across the plaza, Rain was facepalming.

Oh, Brother.

Silently two of the Myriad peeled off from accompanying duty and brought their weapons to bear.  People in the plaza got out of their way as wide barreled cannons faced the escaping suspect and fired. Two globs of white foam rocketed across the plaza hitting Algernon in the back and pushing him into a nearby wall.  The foam quickly expanded, sticking to arms and legs so even if he could pry himself from the wall, he wouldn’t be able to run far.  The Myriad walked up, surrounding him.

“Why are you following us?  Explain yourself?” Said one holding his cannon arm up to Algernon’s face making it very clear what he would get if he didn’t comply.

“I wasn’t, I was following him-” He gestured with his head, currently the only free part of his body, back at Rain and the babies.

“And you were hiding, why?”

“Because you were there,” Algernon replied truthfully.

“Why are you worried about us?”

“Authority figures,”

Across the plaza, Rain had caught the attention of the senior officer,

“Officers, I’m afraid he’s also with me,” He dragged Harold around to face the officer, “I’m sure you can see the resemblance with these three.”

The officer acknowledged the information and sent a third up to where Algernon hung on the wall like a tiny insect caught in tree sap.

“He’s to come too,” The third Myriad said when he arrived at the wall, and all three officers entered a code on their weaponised arms and jets of liquid sprayed out dissolving the foam. “You are under arrest. Resistance will be countered with force and will count against you in front of the magistrates…”

A few moments later, a sopping wet and bound Algernon still trailing globs of dissolving foam and his three Myriad joined Rain and the triplets.

“Hi Rain, “ Algernon said casually as if not surrounded by five enormous power armoured individuals.   

“Hi,” Rain smiled wanly, ”When I called you to come and help…”  The Myriad started moving out again, and Rain pulled Harold around so he could walk beside Algernon.

“Well…” Was Algernon’s only response.

“Yeah…” The only required reply.

Entry in the Tower of the Quiet Cabal took longer than it would normally.  First Rain’s story was checked and quickly verified with Tazaquth, the rotund head of security.  Qiqabee expected him and the three boys in the Labs. Then, they checked Algernon’s story.  Tazaquth, who had his suspicions about the boy since suspecting him of hacking into the Quiet Cabal’s files, took a particular interest in the Myriad’s report.

“He is with the Earthlings…” He hesitated, “You say he tried to hide from you?  Why?”
“The suspect confessed to having a fear of authority figures.  Maybe some sort of phobia or psychosis,” Replied the officer.

“I will need to take this to Tabaseth,” Tazaquth decided and kept the whole group waiting in the foyer while he conferred with his superior.  It gave Rain and Algernon a chance to talk under the guise of looking after the boys.

All three quickened,  Rain informed Algernon about the translation back. It was as if they knew something important was happening but didn’t know how to interact with it.

Interesting, I wonder if she brought that on, Algernon mused both of them knowing full well who she was.  Rain quickly replied emotion colouring his message.

She never gave you boys anything. The words came through so forceful their force brought tears to Algernon’s eyes. She only ever took.  Took your families, your childhoods, your memories…

How about our particle physics knowledge, He countered Rain’s emotional response with reason.

Not even that, you worked hard for what you know, And Rain’s demeanour changed, Ha, I broke into Mortimer’s tablet, he never made more than a D- on any of his physics homework.

Really?  Now Algernon was pleased, I at least made D+.

Tabaseth eventually came down and took personal responsibility for Algernon and his continued good behaviour. He was needed in the labs.

Peggy and Bruce were deep into discussions when all five were delivered.

“Are you so sure it’s a great idea to let him stick whatever he likes into his head?” Bruce asked as Peggy glanced and incomprehensible strings of data and nodded.

“Do you think there’s a problem?” She replied unconcerned.

What have you been up to?  Rain glanced at Algernon whose whole body language shifted as if he’d been caught once more by the Myriad.

Nothing.

Look, you put whatever you want into your own head.  It’s the whole point of all this, the right to choose.  But give the boys the same break.

Whatever do you mean? It was apparent Algernon had added to the programming not just for himself but also for the triplets.  Rain was about to criticise Algernon for wanting to play with other minds like Doctor Strangelove when he overheard Peggy continue her conversation with Bruce.

“Regardless, the young ones are going to need a good mental map, a framework on which to build their personalities and memories.  I thought we could use a scan of your brain,  Bruce as that foundational groundwork.”

“No problems, Doc.” Bruce agreed, pleased to be part of the program to help the boys, “Hey, that’d make me their Godfather”.

“No, “ Rain butted in all smiles and waving hands, “You can’t use Bruce’s brain as a basis of the program for the boys.”

“Why not, he’s the best example of a stable human male we have.  He has a decent, ethical base and has good judgement.”

“Ah, but he wasn’t, was he.  After the battle in the space station.  He was depressed.  His thoughts were spiralling, and he wasn’t listening to rational argument,” Rain caught Bruce’s eye.  He could see that what he was saying was getting nowhere with Bruce who’d always had the uncanny ability to see through his deceptions.

“Yes, he’d just shot a kid, he was having a tough time coping at the moment.” She looked at Bruce, “But he’s much improved now, aren’t you, Bruce?”

“Yep, even had a chat with Mortimer yesterday, cleared up a few things.” Bruce nodded. He certainly seemed more himself, “And then, of course, I know you always have my back, so I don’t see what I have to worry about.”

There it was.  Rain hadn’t imagined it before, the phrase he’d seeded in Bruce’s mind. 

“Ah, Peggy.  I wonder if I…I could have a word with y…you in private,” He stuttered and could feel Bruce’s accusing eyes on him, “If you don’t mind.”

“Oh, very well.” Peggy’s metal box floated out of the lab and Rain followed after wondering how he was going to explain this one. 

“So, why can’t we use Bruce?”

“As I said, Bruce was depressed. I didn’t know if he was going to be okay to take on the secret lab and we had such a short time frame.”

“Yes,” 

“And he wasn’t listening.  And I felt the Strange just there, ready for me to use and so I…pushed him.”

“You what?”
“I pushed him using the Strange,”

“So?  You pushed Algernon into answering your questions. It had no permanent effect. I would think that Bruce would be…”

“No, it wasn’t the same,” Now Rain struggled for words.  Bruce’s shadow fell over the doorway and Rain quickly lowered his voice, “It wasn’t a suggestion… a command to do a certain action.  This was a fundamental and core belief.  I implanted a phrase and somehow changed the way he thinks.”

Now Peggy was concerned, “And what was this phrase?”
Rain winced, it was almost painful to express it now, “That I always have his back.”

“Oh,”

“Yes!” Rain exclaimed and had to physically restrain himself and put both hands in front of his mouth, “Bruce himself seems to be doing okay, but what if that got into the boys, with no knowledge or experience to balance it out?”

“But are you sure it’s still affecting him?”

“You just heard him say it.  It’s still in there.”

Peggy whirled for a moment, internal mechanisms contemplating the next Rational move.

“We’ll just have to break him of the programming.  You will have to confess what you did.”

“I had intended to…eventually when we were back on Earth… and there was professional help.”

“Well, we’ll just have to see what we can do right now.”  And Peggy glided back up the hall and returned to the labs.

Taking a long shuddering breath, Rain followed.

“Bruce, I want you to think ..:” Peggy was already talking as Rain slunk in behind her, “Is there anything you wouldn’t trust Rain with?”
“Well I wouldn’t trust him to lie straight in bed, but he’s always had my back,” Bruce replied glancing from Peggy back to Rain hoping one of them would explain what’s going on.  

“But surely there’s been a time when you couldn’t trust him?”

“Look Doc, he’s a self-serving liar, but when things are tough, I know he’s always got my back.”

“Oh the gods, I’ve broken Bruce!” Wailed Rain who crumbled into a pile on the floor, his head in his hands.

“What’s this about, Doc?” Bruce now asked, trying to understand what the problem.

“I think you’re blind to Rain’s faults.  I wonder, please repeat the following line; Rain will help if he can,”
“Rain will help if he can because he always has my back.”

Peggy sighed, Rain whimpered, and Algernon just watched once more stunned by the stupidity of humans.

“Rain, “ Bruce sat in a nearby chair so he could get down to the same level, “Tell me, what did you do that was so bad?”

“You were so broken after the battle.  I didn’t know if you’d be able to tackle the lab with us. I was scared.  So, I used the Strange to push the idea that I will always have your back into your mind.”

“Huh.” Bruce thought for a moment, “You did that, in the conversation we had here…”

“Before going out to the lab, yes.”

“Huh,” Bruce said again.

Rain looked up to see  Bruce just staring into space. Rain didn’t dare do or say anything; he just sat and watched as his friend mulled over the phrase in his mind.  It was like he sounded out each thought to see if they rang true.

“I think…it’s gone.” Bruce finally said.

“It’s gone?”

“The thing is, I really do believe you’ve got my back.”

Rain’s head sank back onto his knees with a groan.

“But I’ve thought that for a while.” Bruce continued, “Like, you gave the idea words, but I’ve thought that well before the conversation, probably since Dreamland.”

Rain shook his head, the concept that anyone would trust him, trust him with their lives even was incomprehensible.  In the end, he let go a deep breath and picked himself off the floor.

“We’ll talk about this later,”  Bruce said sternly before getting up himself.

“Yes, Dad,” Rain replied with a wavering smile.

“And…thank you.” Bruce put his strong hand on his friend’s thin shoulder. Speechless, Rain found a corner to contemplate Bruce’s words as the work of creating the mind patches began in earnest.  

First, Bruce was wired up to the brain scanners used on Algernon and asked a series of questions that helped draw out his core beliefs, ethical base and general knowledge.  The scans recorded and saved as programmable data.

Next, they made two different overlays.  One for Algernon and Mortimer who had fully integrated minds and memories but needed the mind blocks removed.  Mortimer also had a lot of brainwashing that needed removing. In contrast, Algernon had spectacularly removed his own, at least in part, in an electro-magnetic pulse a few days before.  The triplets, on the other hand, needed a leg up to bring their minds into sync with their bodies.  Bruce’s base would provide the foundational knowledge for them to build upon while not restraining their own growing personalities.

It was as she scanned once more through the triplets patches that she noticed the first of Algernon’s additions.  Buried deep in the programming were sets of passwords, override commands.  What the passwords were linked to she couldn’t tell.  So, instead of removing all the codes, she simply changed the passwords.  Now that she knew what she was looking for, the next pass, she found another set and changed those passwords as well.  

But not before she flew across the room and slapped him in the back of the head with an extendable metal rod.

“You are banned from anything to do with the coding for the triplets.  Add what you like to your own brain but do not tinker with others without express permission.” And she smacked him again for good measure.

Algernon went to protest when he heard Rain in his head.

Accept you were sprung and move on. Just as Rain got Peggy’s attention.

“Speaking of which, has anyone asked Mortimer if he accepts the treatment?”

They’d all been so busy working out if they could rewrite all the boys that no one had thought to ask Mortimer if they should.

“I should probably lead that discussion,” Peggy volunteered, taking everyone by surprise, “Are you coming Rain?”

Pulling up a bundle of colourful pamphlets, he followed.

Mortimer was exercising in the limited space of his room when Peggy and Rain entered.  He quickly stood by his bed, like a soldier on Bootcamp and awaited orders.  Peggy took a position opposite the bed and gestured for him to take a seat.  Mortimer glanced once at Rain, who now took the only chair and sat down, cradling a bundle of paper.  Mortimer obvious didn’t consider either a threat and sat down.

“I feel I should introduce myself.  My name is Doctor Margarita Athena Portaculis Martin.”

“That should mean what to me?”  He rotated his shoulder, flexing the joint.  Peggy and Rain could both see the dressing on that shoulder.

“Nothing, we are quite aware that Doctor Strangelove did not trust you with her secrets.”

Mortimer’s eyes flicked from Rain to Peggy and back again, his head jerked up as he suddenly realised who sat before him.

“You were at the fight.  I saw you, running and hiding behind others,” He pointed at Rain who bowed and mimed doffing a hat in confirmation, “And you too, but you were…different.  Not this drone, you were…like a trooper of some sort.” He flicked back to Peggy, and she too nodded.  “You opposed the Glory of Doctor Strangelove?”

You could almost see the hackles raise.  Mortimer couldn’t stand because that would put him closer to Peggy, but he widenedthe position of his feet,  his back straightened and his hands gripped the bed, ready to launch himself into an attack.

“That makes up enemies.”
“Not necessarily, “ Peggy replied coolly giving no energy to the conversation, “You see, I know very little about the Glory of Strangelove…”

“How could you not know!” Mortimer interrupted, astounded to hear that anyone could be so ignorant.

“I do, however, know how she made you.  The technology.  The science behind it.” Peggy continued as if Mortimer hadn’t cut in.

Rain growled something about “…stripping the life…” but didn’t join in the conversation.

“It was suitably glorious from my point of view.” The boast seemed a mechanical thing with no passion behind it.  Just something learnt like please, thank you and pardon me.  It was ignored, and Peggy continued.

“Genetically we are very similar, you and I.”

The head cocked again, unable to make sense of where Peggy’s statement was going.

“Our DNA is a match.” Peggy simplified, but still, the importance of her message was lost.

“Can you explain that less cryptically?” Mortimer relaxed a little, more curious than concerned about these two enemies in his room.

Peggy sighed, an achievement for a floating box and hologram.

“I’m trying.  We share genetic material. I am not a clone, and neither are you.  We are both children of the same two people from Earth.”

It came as something of a surprise to the Mortimer, who, like Algernon, had probably assumed himself to be a clone of Doctor Strangelove.

“We are the same material from very different backgrounds.  I was born and raised naturally on Earth. You were grown in a laboratory.  But, that connection exists, and it creates an obligation for me.  An obligation to protect and help you.”

“Help me how?” He replied quickly, seeing an opportunity where before had only been enemies.

“To offer you the opportunity to make choices unaffected by Doctor Strangelove or me.  To enable you to have free will without influence.”

“What influence?” 

“Doctor Strangelove.”

“What has the Doctor got to do with it?  She’s not here.”  

Peggy looked to Rain for help.  He just smiled and gestured for her to continue.  She turned back to Mortimer.

“You are not Doctor Strangelove, are you?” She asked, changing tack.

Mortimer searched both Peggy and Rain, looking for a clue to where this was going.

“No,”
“No, of course not.  You are not Doctor Strangelove, and it is correct that you should have different ideas, thoughts and points of view from her.”

He looked at her as if she’d spoken some sort of treason. At the same time, he was thinking, taking it in.

“Is this acceptable?” Peggy asked as if her illustration explained everything.

“I don’t understand,” And it looked like he wanted to, looked like this was something that had been preying on his mind.

Peggy had run out of words.  She turned once more, this time pleading for help.

“Rain?” 

Rain leaned in, now full attention centred on the boy.  The body language didn’t seem threatening to the boy, but neither was it friendly.

“Peggy wants to help you in a way Doctor Strangelove would never have.  To Strangelove, you were one of her many pets, her toys that she threw into the world to see what they could find out.”

“Pet?  An unusual turn of phrase…” He tried to dismiss the metaphor as some weird joke, but Rain would not be put off.

“Pets, I said.  You saw Algernon.  He fought you, remember?  He was Strangelove’s toy before you. And before him was one called Horatio and before him, another called Balthazar.  Balthazar only lasted three years in her service before he died.  This was going to be your fate, as well.  This was what your glorious mistress made you for, nothing more.  Now Peggy wants to give you more, the chance to choose your own fate, not be thrown around by the machinations of one person, no matter how glorious.”

Something clicked. Something between Mortimer’s experience and what they said made sense and suddenly a passion appeared in his eyes.

“I want that.  I want to make choices, I accept…” He said before his eyelids fluttered closed and Mortimer pitched forward in a dead faint.  Rain was ready and grabbed him before he hit the ground.

“And there it is.” He said, gently cradling the boys head as he leaned him back on his mattress.

“Good, we’ll start preparations immediately.” Peggy started moving back towards the door.

“Good work Peggy, well-argued,” Rain said, putting the chair back at the small table.

“I…I didn’t know what to say but logic and reason.” She stuttered, uncomfortable under the praise as usual, “You seemed to say more with fewer words.”

“Sometimes, I think reason and logic are underrated.  I could probably do with a little less emotion, at times” He shrugged as Mortimer stirred from his faint.

“Wha…?”
“Something that won’t be happening in the future.  Here, for you.” Rain smiled and handed the stack of pamphlets over to Mortimer.  Slowly, Mortimer took the stack and flicked through them, their colourful superhero in action poses, their titles shouting in bold block print each hero’s name.

“But…how did you know?” He looked at Rain now, not with the dead eyes of a sociopath but with child-like innocence and surprise.

“Don’t you know, “ Rain said, following Peggy out the door, “All Earth kids love comic books.”

The programs were checked and rechecked by Peggy and Qiqabee.  The first and simplest from a programming perspective, the triplets were brought in one by one.  As their programs loaded into their minds, Algernon, Rain and Bruce stood to one side and trying to not get in the way.

“So you changed the passwords then?” Algernon asked in seeming innocence.  Rain gave him a look, sensing the duplicity.  So did Peggy who swooped passed, slapping him in the back of the head again.

“And no reading my mind!” She barked, and Algernon slumped back against the wall, confirming all their suspicions.

“Say, these guys are going to need names,” Rain said, deflecting the attention from his wayward brother, “I’ve been calling them Thomas, Richard and Harold, but they could probably do better. I’d love to suggest Bruce Willis, but Bruce, of course, is already taken.”  He looked at Bruce.

“There can always be more Bruces in the world.” Bruce replied, “I won’t mind sharing.”

“Possibly the boys themselves can choose?” Peggy asked, and everyone seemed happy to wait until they were ready to decide for themselves.  

When the programming was deemed a success, the three boys were asked what they would like to be called.  The taller two were happy with Thomas and Richard that Rain had been calling them since they could remember, but Harold wasn’t so sure.

“Of course he isn’t, the pipsqueak is never satisfied,” Rain taunted, and ex-Harold took the bait.

“I am not short!”

“You’re shorter than me.  Finally, I have someone to look down on.”

“Oh yeah,” The boy went chest to chest with Rain and stood on tiptoes to look him in the eye.  Impressed, Rain looked down to see the boy wasn’t touching the ground, but floating several inches above the carpet.  He glanced over at Algernon, who smiled sweetly in return.

“Oh, I see, ganging up on me now.  Okay then, munchkin, what would you like your name to be?”

“Maybe something French, like Pierre?”  Bruce chimed in.

“Peter?  Do you want to be known as a rock?” Rain 

“His father’s name is John, possibly Jean?” Peggy suggested, and the boy seemed to like the sound.

“Or Jean-Luc?” Algernon smiled, and the boy instantly fell for the new combination.

“Yes, I want to be Jean-Luc.”

And so it was that Thomas, Richard and Jean-Luc Martin were born officially, in the lab of the Quiet Cabal Tower of Harmonious, Ruk.

Mortimer and Algernon’s programming was shorter, only affecting the blocks and programming already established.  

“I…do feel different…like there are possibilities, opportunities,” Mortimer said excitedly to the group.  Algernon did not volunteer any feelings, but after all their efforts, Rain wasn’t going to let him get away without at least one test before returning to Earth.

“Algernon, tell me what you know about plantvores, please?” He said and watched for any sign of blanking on the question or fainting altogether.

“Oh terrible things, they tear and gobble up whole planets and stuff like that,” Algernon replied without any side-effects.  If anything, he seemed to take joy in the description of the destruction.

So it was all seven translated back to Peggy’s lab at the Estate, in Seattle on a winter’s morning.  John and Athena were on the campus, and Rain was keen to bring the whole family together for the first time. As the group expected, Peggy tried to sneak off as they started walking across the commons to the visitors centre.  Without a word, Rain came up beside Peggy and looped an arm through hers.  

“You know you’re going to have to meet your parents someday, why not today with all the excitement of the boys to distract from you?” Rain asked as Peggy tried vainly to break free.

“Yeah, why don’t you want to meet them?” Bruce added, also having spotted the escape and stood on her the other side.

Boxed in, with no place to go, Peggy’s usual hard shell dissolved.  She shrank physically against her two companions, and her voice became small and timid.

“They were gone.” 

“They could do nothing about that, “ Rain replied, unsure where this new timid Peggy had come from, “They would have come back if they could, you know that.”

“Exactly, I”m not the same.” Peggy was almost in tears, and all Rain could do was laugh.

“They know that. I don’t say it won’t be a shock, but your parents know how brilliant you are and how hard you tried to find them.”

“Didn’t,” She confessed brokenly, and the tears rolled down her face, unchecked, “I tried to find the Rockwheelers, not them.  They were gone.”

“Ah Peggy, “ He came in tight and hugged her arm, not a move he would normally try for fear of grave physical injury, “What a mess we are.  Be thankful they’re back, they’re here, and they love you.”

“How can they, they don’t know me,” The ugly balling began in earnest and Rain looked up to Bruce for the right thing to say.

“Because they’re your parents.  Family, right?”

Rain nodded and slowly between her two friends, behind the entourage of her new brothers, Peggy went to see her mother and father for the first time in twenty years.

“You know the best thing about all this is?” Bruce asked later as they whole group chatted and got to know each other, “Algernon doesn’t have an excuse for calling me dad anymore.”

“Ah, but I always will,” Rain smiled and held out his arms for a hug, which Bruce ignored.

Over the next few weeks, the group were busy settling the Martins into their new lives in Seattle.  With a little goading by Rain, the Estate set up John and Athena in Seattle’s suburbs where they could raise Thomas, Richard and Jean-Luc to fit into human society.  Mortimer was put on probation with the Estate itself.  His mix of skills and intellect were highly prized, but he needed to prove his loyalty first.  He seemed keen to make good on this first big break and was already carving a niche for himself within the latest crop of recruits. 

A note for Peggy arrived from Noel sometime the first week.  He was sorry to hear that business got in the way of them meeting up, but that he understood.  He would be out on operations for the next few weeks but would be back within the month, and maybe they could meet up then.  Rain took this as a good sign, which Peggy seemingly ignored.

Rain also sent a note to Horatio, the eldest of the Doctor Strangelove experiments,  in Jir via the Quiet Cabal.

Horatio,

Condolences on your loss.  

I want you to know that you are not alone, but one of many brilliant young men who are now making lives for themselves.  I hope you may be able to do the same.

If you wish to get in touch with them, please forward any correspondence through the Quiet Cabal.

A Friend.

Rain had one more task.  It was time to face up to himself.  Catching a quiet moment with Bruce, he guided them both towards the hospital and psychology unit.

“Let’s go to the councillor, you and me.” 

Bruce looked down at his smaller friend, a perplexed smile, making him look more relaxed, younger and happier than he had since they’d met.

“I’m right, better than new.”

Rain nodded, realising the truth, “That’s great.  Because I’m not, ” He sighed deeply and the weight of his anxieties hampered his steps. He ground to a halt, “I haven’t been for a while.”

“Okay, let go.”  And the two men walked side by side through the weak winter light towards what they both hoped would be a better new year. 

29. The secret deeds of Doctor Strangelove

Harmonious, the Glistening City and jewel of Ruk.  Our group have received an invitation to talk to a representative from the Quiet Cabal, an important faction in Harmonious.  Though outwardly the Quiet Cabal is on good relations with the Estate, Algernon’s own experiences with Ruk life have the whole group questioning their intentions with them in general and specifically with their wayward enemy operative.

*********************************************************************

The Quiet Cabal headquarters building was a marvel of architecture.  Tall and incredibly thin it made a pure needle-like projection into the skyline of Harmonious.  As the group walked up the front gates, noting the people scanning holographic passes and walking through, Algernon asked a question of the Allsong.

Is Doctor Strangelove on the way or at the Graveyard of the machine god?

Yes, Came the definite reply.

Now he knew where Doctor Strangelove had taken herself in such a hurry. He also suspected he knew why she’d taken this time to go. Peggy determined a beacon had been placed there.  Keeping this information to himself, he followed Bruce and the others into the foyer of the building and up to the front desk.

“Holograms out!  Holograms out!” An officious security guard called from behind the desk to the respectably dressed office and other technical workers as they filed past, “Yes, what do you want?”  

Without Rain’s soothing frontman persona, Bruce had taken the lead into the building.  Reluctantly, he stepped up to the counter as the guard caught his eye.

“We’ve been invited to see someone…” He started confidently enough but realised he had no idea who had arranged the meeting.

“We are here to see Tabaseth,” Rain supplied smoothly, stepping back to allow Bruce to continue.

“Yes, him,”  Bruce added.

“A moment please, “ The guard put through a call via an internal network.  The group could see his lips move as he spoke, but no sound was made.  For those who could read lips, it was a perfunctory conversation confirming they had arrived that lasted no more than a few minutes.  

“Tabaseth will be with you shortly,” The guard returned to Bruce, just a little more respectfully this time now they were guests of the management.

Tabaseth did not keep them waiting and was soon bustling towards them, a respectable member of a respectable organisation.

“Greetings, you say you’re from The Estate?” Tabaseth moved from face to face until Bruce spoke up for the party.

“We are,” He replied simply.  The response seemed inadequate and Bruce was sure he could hear Rain in  back of his mind say “…thank you for seeing us at such short notice…” or “ …apologies for the abruptness of our arrival…”

“Please, follow me.” Tabaseth didn’t seem to mind though and led the group into lifts that took them up several floors into the heart of the building.  Here a small conference room had put aside for their meeting and Bruce looked to Rain to see if he would take up the task of communicating to Tabaseth.

“Our mission, “ Rain started without preamble, “for some time has been following the trail of Spiral Dust users and dealers on Earth and off. Recently, this mission has been hampered by a memory block on this one.” He gestured to Algernon who suddenly looked awkward being the centre of attention.

“We believe that the memory tampering was done by a Doctor Strangelove, a Ruk scientist,” Bruce added.

“…allegedly,”  Rain interjected, still a stickler for diplomatic language use.

“Doctor Strangelove of the Karum?” Tabaseth asked, confirming Bruce’s information from the Allsong.

“Yes.”

Now Tabaseth turned his attention to Algernon as if sizing up an interesting if not dangerous specimen.

“You are one of her creations?” Algernon nondded. “Amazing you didn’t set off our security when you arrived.” He said, not to Algernon but more to himself, “Well, we shall soon look into this, “ To the group as a whole he now turned, “The Quiet Cabal would be happy to help you with this problem,”

“Yeah, gives them a chance to poke around with the competition’s technology,” Peggy mumbled to no one in particular.

“Have you a scientist that can oversee the testing?” Tabaseth and the group almost as one gestured to the floating box.  Peggy projected her hologram and nodded to the Quiet Cabal representative.

“This is Peggy.  She is considered one of The Estates leading minds.”

At the sight of Peggy, Tabaseth was taken aback and spent a moment or two taking in this new form of life.  The distraction gave Algernon a moment to slip back from the conference table and towards the door.  It was only Tabaseth’s gesture toward’s a security button that sent him back to the conference table.  Rain took Algernon’s hand in his.

“About Doctor Strangelove, couldn’t we get the police to arrest her?” Bruce asked, bringing the conversation back around to the real culprit.

“I’m afraid that it’s not that easy.  The law can not touch her.”

“She controls the law?” Bruce was horrified.

“She has a lot of political influence, I’m afraid while on Ruk we can’t touch her.

“But while she’s off-world, would that be something you would consider?” Rain asked matter of factly.

“Yes, we had heard she put together a raiding party of venom troops, but our information didn’t tell us where she was going.”

Now that all the party had been in Ruk for a while and experienced the Allsong, they had seen the advertisements put up by the Zal Corporation for their latest and greatest clone shock troops.  The lineage between the Venom troops and the vat rejects was obvious for those looking, and showed how much power the individual factions wielded in Ruk.

But, just where the elusive Doctor Strangelove had gone was a mystery, to most.

“What if she took those Vemon troopers back to the Estate?” Bruce asked, saying what everyone was thinking.  Both Rain and Algernon shook their heads.

“The majority of Earth do not know about Ruk.  Would she be so reckless as to destroy that advantage for one strategic strike?”  Rain turned to look at Tabaseth.

“Besides, the venom troops would have to follow Earth laws once they got there, their weird science advantage would be lost.”

“Peggy’s old house?”

“Why? There’s nothing there, and why now, it’s been abandoned almost a year.”

The group started going through beacon location and an alarm set off in Rain’s logic pathways.

Brother, is there a beacon at the Graveyard of the machine god?  He asked Algernon via their link. 

Yes, that’s where she’d gone. Algernon replied the same way.  

Rain turned to Bruce, “We need to leave, we need to leave now.” Rain said with such conviction that it bordered on panic.

“Before we’ve had a chance to examine your friend?” Tabaseth asked oblivious to the communication going on around him.

“Just a moment, sir,” Bruce interjected, “This is the most emotion I’ve seen out of this one since we got here.”  He turned to Rain, “ Can it wait until we sort Algernon out?”

The imperative to leave now and to protect Ni’Challan, was overridden by the need of the Bloodbrother.  Algernon’s abilities would be important for any rescue attempt.  His importance had been further reinforced by the reciprocation of the blood pact Algernon had made when establishing the link between the two of them.  They were in Ruk to help Algernon, nothing worthwhile could be achieved until that was done.  To the logic-driven Rain, Algernon’s needs at that moment were more important than one old man.

“Yes,” Rain finally said and fell silent, letting the discussion of Algernon’s testing to flow around him.

“Well then, follow me and I will introduce you to Giqabee,” Tabaseth said with an air of pride as he led the group of the conference room and up several more floors to what was a laboratory wing.  Here they were introduced to two individuals, Giqabee a stout woman of middle age and a tall thin man by the name of Torquel.  Together they would run a number of tests to determine Algernon’s origins and what had been done to him

“Now please, for the sake of Algernon I’d like you to clearly tell him what you will be doing,” Bruce said remembering the many awful snippets Algernon had told them of his life on Ruk, “ Full disclosure and you will do nothing without permission, is that acceptable?” He turned to both the two scientists and Algernon, all who agreed, the scientists a little more heartily than Algernon.

“Yes, Mr Bruce.”

“Well I’ll get started with a simple DNA analysis, find out what our young friend here didn’t trip our security, “ Giqabee laughed in an attempt to lighten the mood.  It didn’t work, “While that’s happening we’ll do a brain scan, non-intrusive, of course, while Torquel will run a psych evaluation.”
“Oh, I can pass those,” Algernon responded planning to get at least one over the scientists.

“We’re all sure you can fool the test, Algernon,” Bruce said staying clear of the bustling scientists around the young man, “In this case it may be better to answer truthfully.”

“They’re more diagnostic than for determining aptitude, “ Torquel added, “It will tell us what’s going on in that brain of yours.  I must say,” Torquel now turned his attention to  Algernon as Tabaseth had, like examining something very rare and not a person at all, “If he is a clone, he’s a very high fidelity one.  I don’t think I examined such a clearly defined personality before.” 

Algernon took the psychologist’s statement as a compliment.  The rest of the group could not say the same.  It led Bruce to ask Tabaseth a few questions. 

“Tell me, what would you normally do if you found such a clone?”

“You must understand that we do have clone infiltrations from the Karum on occasion. Unlike your companion, they come in covertly with none of your party’s goodwill and honesty.  If a clone was found and it was not one of ours, we would interrogate and dispose of them, naturally.”  Tabaseth explained clearly, seemingly having some understanding about the Earthlings squeamishness around the rights of clones.

“He is a highly regarded member of this group,” Rain interjected as if putting a stamp of ownership on this wayward clone.

Now having inserted himself into the conversation, Rain turned it towards topics closer to their mission.

“Tabaseth, we have information that shows that Earth has been set up as a beacon to a being in The Strange.  We have reason to believe that this being to be a planetovore.  Knowing your people’s history with such a being, this one would be interested in learning what you know.”

“Indeed, could I look at your information on this?” 

Rain pulled out his mind map, the summary of everything they knew on Spiral Dust and its link to the potential planet eater.  As he stepped aside with Tabaseth to work through the details, a message came through from Algernon over their connected link, 

Don’t tell them too much, I don’t trust them.

Understood, Came the simple reply as the logical mind sorted the essential information from the personal and left with Tabaseth to another room.

Now that the Quiet Cabal scientists were starting their testing. Algernon’s thought literally focused on the lead scientist who was taking a blood sample for DNA testing.

Such an intriguing specimen, I wonder how it got past our security?  I didn’t realise Strangelove was this good…can’t wait to get to work.

Something in Algernon’s demeanour at that point prompted Peggy to ask,

“For safety, would you like to mind link?”

“No!” 

“Really, after all this time?” Her genuine offer of comfort rebuffed, Peggy took offence, “Have I ever invaded your privacy, or experimented without express permission?”

“You’ve been very subtle that way.” Algernon responded, his inbuilt distrust of Doctor’s being revealed, “Doctor Peggy, in  the documentaries, when the older apologies to the younger, one usually dies.” He then added, “Usually the older.”

“Well, then you’re safe,” Peggy scoffed, on the assumption that his visual age of fourteen was his true one.

“Are you okay, Doctor Peggy?”

“Death is a natural part of life and to be expected.” She sighed, and let the Ruk scientists maneuver Algernon into a scanner.  Looking much like much like an x-ray, the scanner showed live images of brain activity.  As Algernon moved his telepathic link from Giqabee to her offsider, Torquel, an area in his frontal lobes flared and startled the psychologist.

“Is it always so active?” Torquel asked no one in particular.

“Yes, except when it’s like this,” Algernon replied and let go his focus on the psychologist’s thoughts.  The lights at the front of the brain faded.

“Oh, that is intriguing,” Torquel added and made a note.

Torquel brought up a set of questions on his datapad and started running Algernon through them, noting the parts of the brain that responded.  Nervous at the Ruk scientific attention, when Giqabee made a start at something she had discovered in the DNA, his telepathic link automatically asserted itself to find out what the issue was.  That made Torquel start once more.

“You’ll find that’s an involuntary defence mechanism, “Peggy bluffed, sure she knew what was setting off the flares in the brain scan.  Even Bruce figured out the link.

“If you’re doing stuff right now, you may want to let it go, “ Bruce said cryptically to Algernon nodded back.

“Yes, sir.”

“You do seem a little jittery,” Torquel said to Algernon, “What can I do to help you relax?”

“Send me back to Earth, “ Algernon responded instantly.

“With a world eater coming?” Peggy asked, “Wouldn’t here be safer?”

“We can go anywhere from Earth,”

“And from here too, ten more minutes,” Peggy soothed

As the testing progressed, more exclamation of excitement came from the two doctors. 

What if we translated, right now? Algernon sent to Rain over their private link.

Patience, brother. Was the terse reply.

Rain was patiently discussing the end of the Earth with Tabaseth as Algernon was experimented on floors away and  Doctor Strangelove edge closer to Ni’Challan.  Even in his current partitioned self, Rain was having a tough time focusing his thoughts.

“Making the whole Earth a beacon, like the one you suggest, is ingenious, “ Tabaseth mused theoretically, “But, why go to all that trouble.  Doctor Strangelove is a leading figure in high energy particle physics.  Sabotaging your Hadron Collider would be easy for someone such as her.”

“So, you believe the Doctor would use more direct methods?” Rain thought for a moment, “Our investigations have shown a clear link to Crows Hollow and we would indeed be there now if not for Algernon’s condition.”

Tabaseth shook his head slowly, “We know of no links to Crows Hollow, you are certainly more advanced on this investigation that we are.”

“And the Karum, it is not their usual M.O. to work through third parties, such as Crows Hollow?”

“Not to our knowledge, no.”

What had seemed so obvious when the group arrived in Ruk, now seemed far fetched.  Though the Karum faction would love to see Earth destroyed, the elaborateness of the plan didn’t seem to fit with their usual way of working.  At least as far as Tabaseth was concerned.  Rain did not feel that Tabaseth was lying, but was he providing the whole truth, and if so, for what purpose would they hide that information from an ally.

The logical mind flipped to the next subject on his list of enquiries, 

“Sir, I would be interested in viewing any information you have on planetovores, possibly there is something that will help.”

Again, Tabaseth seemed more than pleased to offer the information.

“We did share quite a bit of this information with the Estate early on.” He said, offering a loaded datapad of information.  As he said, it was the same information Algeron had found originally and forgotten.  The very same notes, Rain had found later testing him in the library. 

Rain thought about the next question he wished to pose.  The need to discover Doctor Strangelove’s interest in the Graveyard of the machine god was high, but Algernon had suggested caution.  The location of Ni’challan’s home and collection was not information that Rain was willing to share, but perhaps there were other reasons for the Doctor’s interest in that location.

“One more question, do you know of any reason Doctor Strangelove would be interested in the Graveyard of the machine god?” He asked Tabaseth.

“Odd place,” He thought a moment then shook his head, “Is that where she’s gone?”
“We have intelligence that leads us to believe she had an interest in that location.”

“Nothing that we know of, why do you ask?”

  All his options had been whittled away.  It seemed that Doctor Strangelove had some interest in Ni’Challan or his collection, spurred on by the beacon left by Algernon. If Rain could have sighed he would have. Instead, he shared the information he’d discovered with Algernon.

Ask him to send out the troops to the Grave of the machine god, Algernon suggested, before something happened at his end and connection was lost.

Brother…?

Back in the lab, all of Algernon’s attention was focused on the exploding and smoking brain scanner in front of him.  Everyone’s attention was.

“Oh my god, are you okay?” Peggy asked, checking Algernon for any contact burns or signs of shock.  Without a word, Algernon reached out and touched her on the arm, establishing a mind link.

What’s going on?

I resisted it,  Algernon said through their link to his complete astonishment, I sent Rain a message suggesting a course of action that will put Doctor Strange in danger…and did not pass out!

 Peggy looked Algernon over, as she listened to his revelation. He was sweating and breathing hard as if he’d just come back from a run, but there were no other physical signs of trauma.

I think your brain sent out an EMP and fried the scanner, Peggy suggested just as Torquel reclaimed his voice.

“What just happened?” He asked, gingerly checking the still smoking scanner.

“Your machine broke and smoke came out,” Algernon replied looking at the scanner as if he had nothing to do with it.

I directly put Doctor Strangelove’s life in danger,  He confessed, and light of triumph lit his features.

“Well, I did see some definite signs of deep reprogramming, “ Torquel noted on his datapad, oblivious to the revelation happening in front of him.

Peggy pushed Algernon aside as she had a look at the scanner to see if there was anything she could do with it.  While Peggy and Torquel were busy, Bruce, pulled Algernon aside,

“What did you do to fry the machine?” He asked knowing very well what was behind the mystery malfunction, “It would be very helpful to know what.”

“A passing thought triggered a cascade effect,” Peggy said as Bruce’s conversation wasn’t as private as her’s and Algernon’s had been, “Maybe we could recreate the thought pattern?”

“I’d suggest we’ve hit a deep safeguard, something Doctor Strangelove has put in place to stop just this sort of thing, “ Torquel added as Peggy removed the burnt-out component and started rewiring the scanner. “I’m afraid that means I will need the original notes from Doctor Strangelove herself if we want to break the programming.”

Peggy flicked a switch and the scanner started rebooting again.

“I told you she was good, “ Bruce crowed as Peggy raised an arm in victory

“Feel free to bow now.”

“The defences sent out a very strong signal, “Torquel surmised as the last of the scanner’s readings were revealed, “Impressive.”

“Excuse me, Doctor?” Algernon now got the attention of Giqabee watching fascinated from her counter, “If the Quiet Cabal knew the location of Doctor Strangelove’s secret lab, what would they do?”

I don’t want to go, He confessed to Peggy over the mind link, but if we had an army…

Can you pass that information on, maybe through the link?

Only thing is I don’t know, or I don’t know that I know. He said and shrugged apologetically.

“We’d certainly pass on that information to Tabaseth, “ Giqabee replied to Algernon’s question, “Why, do you have something you want to share?”

Bruce had not idle this whole time.  Not being aware of the extent of the Allsong he was unsure of its capabilities, but he knew enough about Earth tech to come up with the makings of a plan.

“I was wondering,” He now said, gaining his party’s attention, “Is it at all possible to track Algernon’s movements through the Allsong?  Maybe those records can at least show an area to start looking for this secret base.

Algernon searched the Allsong for the information that Bruce suggested.  Nothing…well, almost nothing.  Records from twelve months before showed Algernon moving in and out of the Scar (to hide the wings he assumed) and nothing else.  Someone had deliberately wiped the records and left that small scrap behind.  Did that clue get left intentionally so he would go searching for the wings on a return visit? Was it left by accident because the record manipulator did not know to look there for a record to expunge?  Regardless, Algernon let the others know what he’d found.

Have you left beacons here in Ruk? Peggy suggested.  None had been found in her previous searches.

I haven’t left any beacons anywhere! Algernon replied and then furrowed his brow.  But he had been, hadn’t he.  His fingers went instinctively to a spot on his left wrist.

“Okay, let’s think about this,” Peggy started circling Algernon paying attention to the smallest details of his clothing starting at his head and working down, “We know that when we re-enter a recursion we have previously visited we pick up the ‘skins’ that belong with that recursion just as we left them…”

“Do we…?” Bruce asked.  This was news to him. 

“…so anything on Algernon right now may give us clues to where he went then.” She got to his shoes, a black zip-up style boot and noticed a pale grey substance clinging to the side.   It flaked off looking very much like a fine dried mud with a slight metallic sheen.  A sheen of some clear liquid had also dried along the edge of the boot and up his pants leg..  Grabbing two glass slides and scalpel from Giqabee’s counter, she scrapped the grey substance off the boot onto one and the clear residue onto another. 

“Well, what have you got there, Sherlock?” Bruce stood by bemused as Peggy transferred the grey mud slide to Giqabee’s scanners.

A few moments later and the samples was identified.  The first was a Ruk substance called organema, a living metal and one of the byproducts of the Ruk biotechnology.  Organema’s structure was disorganised and unsuitable for use but was found in a number of places outside of Harmonious, especially in the Veritax.  

“The Vertiax is a system of underground tunnels, a labyrinth that has never been fully explored,” Giqabee supplied, totally engrossed in the investigation now underway.

“And we know the secret base is underground, “ Bruce added, a clue he’d discovered while searching the Allsong.

The second sample was even more telling.  It was an artificial embryonic fluid used exclusively in the cloning industry.  The two samples together screamed Vertiax underground lab.

“Great, pull up a map, what do we know of the Vertiax?”

Brother…?

Rain’s connection with Algernon went dead and for a moment the little man swayed in indecision, to continue the conversation with Tabaseth as suggested by Algernon or run back to the lab and find out what was going on.  In the end, the decision was taken from him,

“Are you okay?” Tabaseth asked, looking curiously at Rain.  Rain knew he was being scrutinised, it would not do to have the representative of the Quiet Cabal think badly of the group because of his poor performance.

“A thought has occurred to this one,” He stated as clearly as possible as the contradictory demands of secrecy and finding aid clashed in his mind, “If you knew where Doctor Strangelove has gone, would you send troops to pick her up while she’s out of the jurisdiction of Ruk?”

“Possibly, “ Tabaseth hedged, he wanted more information. “I assume it’s somewhere in the Graveyard of the machine god otherwise you would not have asked.  You have a location in mind?”

“This one would need to know your intentions before handing over…senitive material,” Rain replied and once more felt Tabaseth scrutiny on him, “The location is of a third party that values their privacy.”

“Curious. Do you think we’d hurt them?”

What did he think?  The logical mind did not have enough information.  He did not know Ni’Challan’s relations with Ruk or what items in his collection could have originated from there. He had to respond, Tabaseth’s eyes were on him.

“You and your factions intentions to this individual are unknown. Taking into consideration your response to Algernon I would suggest no, “ He replied honestly, “But, he is alone and his interest in rare and unique items from all over the Strange could theoretically make him a target.  Does this sound like something that may interest the Doctor?”

At this Tabaseth took a keener interest himself.

“Are you concerned for their safety?” He asked and something within Rain leapt.

“Yes.” It was a simple word, said with such finality that Tabaseth could only nod.

“I will order a contingent of Venom troopers, will you go with them?”

The part of Rain partitioned off wanted to go.  Say yes and immediately with no thought for the others.  This one logic suppressed the thought.

“My group are here to see to the welfare of Algernon.  I would suggest if you are to send troops then we would go with them. I will need to confer to determine the correct course of action.”

“Of course, I will prepare them nonetheless for when you’ve made your decision.”

In the labs, the organema had been narrowed down to an area south-east of Harmonious.  When asked, Algernon, as usual,  had no recollection of the area.  Even when Peggy used the scanner to determine if parts of his brain were subconsciously triggered by the location on the map, nothing appeared.

“How about doors, passageways in and out of the lab?” Bruce asked as Peggy continued to look for more samples.

“I was never conscious, I just found myself outside,” Algeron confessed and he noted the expression of sympathy pass over Bruces faces. In shame, Algernon looked away, disliking the feeling.   It was then that Rain returned and Algernon instantly re-established the link.  

Brother. Rain responds was immediate. In the only way he had presently to show how pleased he was to see Algernon well, Rain shared his entire conversation with Tabaseth. 

The rest of the room was focused on Giqabee and Torquel who had finished their deliberations and were ready to present their findings.

“The subject in question certainly has fascinating DNA, “ Giqabee started, noted the sour faces to her use of the word ‘subject’ and continued, “…uh…I’m not quite sure what…Algernon is, but I can confirm he is not a clone.”

This was a surprise to all including Algernon who asked for confirmation.

“Oh yes, that much is clear.  Clones are of only a limited pool of DNA samples and are easily identified.  Besides which there are two other features of your makeup that definitely rules out you being a clone.”

She brought up an image of Algernon’s DNA, the double helix looking like any other to most in the room.

“In fact, it explains why you did not set off our alarms, your DNA does not read as either clone or for that matter, of Ruk.  You are human, or at least your DNA identifies you as being of Earth.”

Peggy scanned the image in front of the group and pointed out a section of the DNA.

“The telomeres are short, this would identify Algernon as being a clone, wouldn’t it?”

“Well spotted, yes the telomeres identify that quite a bit of modification has gone on, and I suggest that it…he was not born naturally.”

“A mother and father?” Algernon asked, astounded.

“Oh yes, there are two unique individuals expressed in your DNA, another marker showing that you are not a clone.”

“So a natural egg, modified and with accelerated growth?”  Peggy ask Giqabee

“My report will suggest artificial fertilisation and vat-grown,” Giqabee nodded, more comfortable discussing this with a fellow scientist than the subject of the testing.

Bloodbrother…  Rain sent via the link, once more reaffirming the connection.

“Can I suggest, “Algernon interrupted, “That some alteration may not show in a simple blood test.”  And he started to list his noted abilities.

“I am unaffected by alcoholic drinks, though caffeine has a stimulant effect.  I have this…” And he exposed his left wrist.  Bending his hand back, a small slot in the skin just above the wrist gapped like a tiny mouth.

“What’s suppose to happen?” Bruce asked as Algernon moved his hand once more.

“Something comes out,” Algernon replied, allowing Peggy to examine the area.

“Like Spiderman?”

“Just like that.”

“Cool.”  Bruce looked impressed, “One of the beacons?”

Algernon nodded. 

Try as they might they could not release a disc. Though scans revealed two glans just inside the radius and ulna that made the two halves of the bone beacons, none was seen or made.

“Would you let us take a sample of the gland?” Peggy asked probing at the slit to see if there was access that way.

“Would it be damaged?”

“It could be, nothing is guaranteed”

“No,” Algernon made his decision final by withdrawing his hand.

While the scientist discussed the new discovery, Rain quietly turned to Bruce.

“Doctor Strangelove is in the Graveyard of the machine god.”

“Yes….oh shit!” His expression moved from interested to deep concern as the implications sunk in.  

“I concur,” Rain replied simply as he shared this conversation with Algernon via the link.

“What are we going to do?”

“Tabaseth is organising troops who await our decision.  We will do what is best.”

“What is best for Ruk?  For us?  For Earth?  For Ni’Challan?” Queried Bruce.

“Yes.”

If we don’t go at all, he won’t know it was us, Algernon said over the link images of a stern-faced Ni’Challan and the discs giving context to the words, I do not want to go to the Graveyard.

Rain struggled with an appropriate response.  In the end, he shrugged, He made me.  Inadequate description of magnitude.

And you don’t resent him? Algernon seemed astounded that a creator figure could be appreciated or even admired, his experience tainting his opinion.

No. Came the adamant reply.

Aware of some of the communication via her mind link with Algernon, Peggy asked out loud, 

“Would you want to stay here and look for the lab?” 

“Yes, “ Was Algernon’s simple reply.  With a group of troopers, he felt equal to the task, especially as the Doctor was not at home.

“Then this one will also stay and find the labs.” Rain said blandly from beside Bruce, though it was clear to the group it was not a decision that sat well with him, “It is inefficient to split the group, we are more effective together.”  Rain’s shoulder’s sagged and his eyes drifted to the ground as he accepted the inevitable decision, to find the lab and clear Algernon’s mind.

Algernon looked to the scar on his left hand, not the slit in his wrist made by the Doctor, but the slice through his palm that Rain had made as they translated into Ruk.  He knew the little man’s thoughts at that moment, he was still linked and saw the conflict of Ni’Challan’s safety and the mission.  Out loud, he asked,

“Rain, do you need me?”

The response was immediate and unequivocally, both out loud and over their link,

“Yes.”

…always.

Algernon took a breath, “Then we’ll go to the Graveyard.”

Things moved rapidly after that.  The group were taken to the top floor of the tower where transport was waiting.

“I sent a message to Jir, “ Tabaseth said as they travelled through the building, ‘Troops and equipment will be waiting for you when you arrive.  The whole trip should take two days.”

“And this the fastest transport?” Rain asked.  She had two days head start, Doctor Strange was already in the Graveyard and could already be at Ni’Challan’s Spacestation.

“Yes, it’s a two day trip by troop carrier.”
“If we were to translate, “ In Rain’s hand, his black puzzlebox appeared for the first time in a while.  He opened the second compartment and withdrew the card, “This one can leave a key.”

“If it takes Strangelove a day or two, we can get there ahead of her.” Bruce realised, but his hopes were quickly dashed by Peggy and Algernon.

“The venom troopers are clones,” She said.

“They can’t translate,” Algernon added.

“I have an idea, “Tabaseth excused himself a moment, before returning with two identical cyphers, “Drop these in appropriate spots and they will make gates that the troopers will be able to come through directly.”

Bruce took the cyphers, “Could they be set up with a dead man switch?” Bruce suggested, “ You know, if we’re captured immediately it will still drop and create the gate?”

“You couldn’t hold it through translation,” Peggy reminded him and put the second cyphers carefully in her bag.

With Peggy leading translation, the group formed up.  Rain took one of Peggy’s hands and she felt her senses tingle as a blast of Strange energy passed from him to her.  She felt her whole body glow with the power as she focused her thoughts on that small room overlooking the derelict space station on the edge of the Strange.

In an instant, they were there.  Peggy once more her cyborg self, Rain glowing with a yellow light with Bruce and Algernon looking oddly the same. Outside the thick perspex window, a new ship hovered alongside the station.  Black scorch marks around an access way showed that entry had been made by force.   

 A blue haze of smoke hovered overall giving the image an ominous feel. 

Rain did not wait but ran from the room into the hallway leading into the Ni’Challan’s collection. Algernon, stopping to turn on a shield, was soon racing behind him.

Peggy pulled her cypher out of her bag to set it off in the tiny study.

“Not here, we need to get one of those gate cyphers to that ship,” Bruce said to her, ‘We can take their ship and stop them from leaving, here is too far from the action.”

From the doorway, the sound of three blaster shots echoed through the exhibit room and up the hallway.

“Well, let’s get close then,” She gestured and ran out the door.  

Now fully in his full mind, adrenaline-fueled Rain ran through the hallways, every nerve on edge.  As he approached an archway leading to the first of the large exhibit chambers, he instinctively fell to the ground as two guns were aimed in his direction.  Two bright bolts of energy left Vemon troopers weapons and streaked across the intervening space to scorch the wall behind.  A third trooper continued its efforts to disable an automated turret that was keeping the three of them pinned behind artefact force fields.

“Ni’Challan!” Rain yelled from the ground as Peggy and Algernon made a more careful approach to the archway.  Bruce saw the shots hit the wall and pulled out the first of his handgun Glock 40s. Glancing into the room, he spotted his three opponents and started shooting.  From everyone else’s view, Bruce simply stepped into the archway and shot the three venom troopers, ending at Rain’s side. From Bruce’s perspective, the world slowed to a crawl as he smoothly went through what he’d practice hour after hour in the firing range.  First, the two who had fired on Rain, clouds of red misting through the air behind each one.  Then, carefully aimed for the third, the heavy calibre bullet knocking him off his feet. 

Algernon took the momentary lull to peek out further and saw a larger than average Venom trooper smashing away at a large metal door, guarded by another two troopers.  He turned back to the first group, who were still reeling from Bruce’s attack. Raising a hand in a focusing gesture, Algernon pointed to one standing near an exhibit containing a sphere of clear fluid suspended by Ni’challan’s force fields.  With a thought, the liquid ignited.  It blasted out of the force field covering the venom trooper in liquid fire.

With the devastation that was Bruce and the spectacle that Algernon wrought, the two remaining troopers had forgotten the wall turret.  One stepped too far out to avoid his friend on fire and was gunned down.  Beside him, damaged by Bruce but untouched by the fire, the trooper flicked out an arm blade and advanced on Rain as the one on fire ran at Bruce.  

Rain rolled and Bruce dodged as both escaped the damage meant for them. Peggy, just inside the archway, put down the first portal. A dark hole in space tore through the hallway and the first troopers from the Quiet Cabal started through. 

Though he had clutched his ears as Bruce’s handgun thundered through the exhibition chamber, Rain now brought them down in front of him and formed a sphere of light. The yellow light that suffused him gathered and focused before he threw it at the arm bladed trooper above him.  The blast sent the trooper reeling backwards, not with force but with raw, gut-wrenching fear.  The trooper’s eyes bulged in their sockets as Rain stood becoming all his nightmares at once.  It gave Rain a chance to looked around, taking in the large trooper and his two companions at the locked door.  

No sign of Doctor Strangelove and it was unsure of no sign of Ni’Challan was a good or bad thing.

With the arrival of their reinforcements, Bruce and Algernon were now free to turn their attentions to the second group.  Watching from around a corner, Bruce noted the siege specialist, their armour, how they held themself and how their body moved. He saw weaknesses in the joints of the armour and where chitinous panels met and then stepped out firing once more. His shots hit true, finding an especially weak point on the big guy who was making fast work of the door.  The siege specialist sags under the impact of Bruce’s shot and the door finally gave way.  Behind the troopers at the door,  Algernon had seen another exhibition space. Taking careful aim with his crossbow, he shot the burning trooper dead before making a dash for the door.  

The two venom troopers defending the specialist turned their weapons on Bruce.  They both fire, but he ducked smartly back around the corner in time for the bullets to hit the metal of the wall.  Rain was focused on the trooper frightened by him.  The trooper hesitates for a moment, the fear taking hold.  Suddenly his breeding and conditioning kicked in and he roared a bloody scream and leapt into a charge for Rain.  Slipping past the deadly arm blade, Rain dodged the trooper, leaving him for the Quiet Cabal reinforcement to mop up.  As he passed Bruce he placed his hand on the big man’s back and let the Strange flow.  As the energy hit, Bruce shuddered and he gave an involuntary gasp, every nerve seemed to crackle with black fire.  Having done what he could, Rain ran after Algernon, toward the broken doorway.

The siege specialist was no longer interested in what’s beyond the door, he’d found an enemy.  Turning his huge cannon of an energy blaster on Bruce, he fired.  The recoil made the shot go high and over Bruce’s head.  Buzzing from the Strange, Bruce slowed the world once more, took careful aim and shot all three troopers at the door as Algernon and Rain ran past.  The two regular troopers hit the ground, dead.  The big guy took another devastating blow breaking through his armour at the knee join and his leg was shot away from underneath him.

Algernon was just ahead of Rain as they lept past the three at the door. He felt the tickle of the Strange and reached out with his mind to tap into it. With a grin of sheer abandon, he focused the energy into movement. It surged towards him, propelling him forward as if he’d been hit by a wave.  From behind, Rain saw Algernon make a gesture and blink ahead, past the next doorway filled with another set of troopers and into a third exhibition space.

All around Peggy, the allied troopers were coming under fire. Though more were on their way, the first group were currently pinned by a well placed Vemon trooper.  Peggy pulled up her arm cannon, swinging around the wall she shot, her projectile on target for the troopers head.  Most of the trooper slumped to the ground as Peggy and the allied troopers swarmed out after Algernon and Rain.

Inside the second exhibition space, Rain stopped when he saw a group of Venom troopers held down by turret fire.  The turret swung to add him to its blacklist.   Rain held his hands up for the turret operator if any was there to see,

“N’Challan, it’s Tobias!” He called and the turrets stopped, repositioned back on the original attackers and continued firing.

Peggy walked up beside Rain taking a breath from the action when the body of a Venom trooper ragdolled through the exhibition space and smashed into Peggy.  In a second broken doorway, a massive automaton made of clay swung around to face another venom trooper.  One of Ni’Challan’s many trinkets had backhanded the trooper across the exhibition hall.  Rain lent down and gave Peggy his hand.

“Unnecessary!” She complained, her backwards legs and cyborg exoskeleton making it difficult to stand.

“Very necessary!” Rain pointed to the golem making a paste out of the second venom trooper.

“It hit me!” She protested and for the first time in days, Rain smiled.

“Dodge faster,” As he let the Strange flow through their grasp.

As she stood, from behind Rain another two troopers appeared, guns up ready to shoot.  Her cannon brought to bear, she blasted both, their smouldering carapaces falling to the ground dead.

Bruce ran into the second space, once more finding targets for every one of his three shots.  With three rounds left in his magazine, the room was theirs and their allied troopers were mopping up the last of the resistance.

Alone, Algernon examined the third exhibition space, the battle petering out far behind him. There was no sign of Ni’Challan, but thankfully there is also no sign of Doctor Strangelove.

To the empty room, he asked, “Well, where to next?”