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48. See Each Other Plain

In the literal guts of the worm Nakarand, the group are torn by what to do next?  With Uentaru in tow, do the group try destroying the worm from where they are now or continue and see how far the hole leads?

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“Guys, do what you can on the outside if you like,” Tobias stopped struggling against Algernon’s telekinesis and turned to his companions, “Best to get rid of that part of Nakarand in Ruk anyway.  But isn’t it obvious that there’s more to Nakarand than a slimy fat worm? Look where we are.”

He gestured to the space around the now twenty metres wide and increasing in size, many times larger than the worm on Floor 199.  The soft blue glow emanated from the walls themselves, so everything was lit by the dull blue light. The bubbles of pale blue liquid were starting to increase in numbers, and they were becoming increasingly more difficult to dodge.  Now Tobias has stopped trying to pull away, Algernon used his telekinesis to push bubbles away.

“Thank you, Algernon.  Nakarand is an intelligence and a place, and that’s where I want to go.”

“I think we’re there,” Algernon replied as a bubble he moved crashed into another and burst over Bruce’s arm.  The armour silently steamed.

“This is Nakarand!” Bruce protested, pointing to the pockmarks.  He glided over to the slowly pulsating walls and mimed the wall sucking him in, “Look, it’s eating me.” 

Behind him, the wall secreted more blue liquid.  As he shimmied unawares, the bubble burst, splashing him with more of the liquid.  He yelped as exposed skin at his neck started burning and turned to see something metallic leave the wall.  A warm bronzy coloured cylinder only about as wide as his hand slithered out to hang in space in front of him. Looking at it carefully, he recognised the item as a cypher and pocketed the very useful electrical null field.

“Can we please finish playing with this creature’s digestive tract and find out what’s at the other end?” Tobias complained, before Bruce pulled one of his Glocks, “Nothing personal, Bruce!”

“I just want to try something,” Bruce replied and levelled the gun at the oozing wall in front of him.  

Blam. Blam. The sound of the gunfire was oddly muffled.  A small chunk of the wall broke away, exposing raw tissue with more secreted white fluid now dribbling out.

“Algernon, stick a bubble in the hole,” Bruce pointed with his gun, and Algernon shrugged and did as he was asked.  The bubble broke and splattered on the surface.  The hole started closing up and healing before their eyes.

“Are you quite finished making stomach ulcers?” Tobias complained petulantly.  He brushed blue dust off his clothes and hair, only to have half a dozen other bubbles make more burning patches somewhere else.

“We can burn away at this thing!” Bruce crowed his short-lived triumph at the creature.

“Yes, you could kill it…really slowly.  In the meantime, you’re digested.” 

As Bruce and Tobias bickered, the wall started producing more bubbles of fluid in response to the contact.  Another cypher tough enough to survive inside the walls of Nakarand slithered out, and once more, Bruce grabbed it.  A purple blob of nutrition gel, three days worth of food for an average person. Knowing where it had come from, it was unlikely anyone present would want to use that particular cypher.

Algernon pulled Bruce away from the wall as bubbles popped against bubbles sending a shower of blue fluid in their direction.

“It’s making more bubbles,” Bruce noted quizzically, fascinated with the natural process going on in front of them.

“Yes, they have food in their stomach. Let’s not stick around to become tomorrow’s waste!” Tobias complained, annoyed by the situation and Bruce’s preoccupation with the basic biology of the place.

Bruce pulled out his crowbar.  He was desperate for an obvious enemy to smack.  When it was clear none were going to appear and that the wall was virtually impervious to what mere mortals could do to it, he floated away and started following Tobias and the others down the worm tunnel.

The walls were starting to close in on the group with no sight of any ‘place’ or ‘being’.  Tobias searched for signs of other individuals passing that way.  They knew hundreds of Venom workers and troopers had been sent into Nakarand from Ruk alone.  But, it seemed floating bodies made little impression on the systems of a giant worm, and he found nothing.

“People aren’t passing through Nakarand,” Bruce quipped, pleased to see the cocky Tobias struggle, “ Nakarand is passing them.”
“Hey, however it works, man,” Grumbled Tobias and continued.

The walls continued to contract until they were no more than twelve metres apart.  Around a corner, a new landscape opened up, a field of what looked like yellow ferns. The fronds stretched out into the tunnel from all walls, floor and ceiling, filling the passage and making it unpassable without touching.

“What do you think it is, some sort of trap?” Algernon took out a piece of random equipment and pushed it into one of the ferns. The fronds recoiled and withdrew into a node on the wall. “Maybe it’s like a Venus flytrap. You have to touch a few times for it to spring.”

Bruce now pulled out his crowbar and started tapping fronds.  They all shied away, hiding in the walls of the tunnel.

“I wonder if the metal is what they don’t like,” Tobias pulled out one of his silk scarves and wafted it towards a frond. Where it touched, the frond moved away, avoiding contact. 

“Ha! Whack a mole,” Bruce laughed and started bopping fronds to make a path through the tunnel for the group.

“I wonder,” Peggy said out loud and allowed her metal body to glance off one of the ferns. As expected, the frond recoiled, but not before giving Peggy a boost, a jolt of vitality that sent shivers down her frame, “Oh! What a buzz!” She tried again to get a sample, this time, she did not feel the jolt, and the frond sample, once taken, withered and browned in her test vial.

“Hey, be careful,” Bruce said.  When he saw her response, he stretched out a finger to touch the nearest frond.  Algernon and Tobias themselves stooding clear of the reaching fronds , but did not try to stop him.

“Aren’t you going to do anything?” Bruce asked, sure that someone should.

“Hey man, you do you,” Tobias replied, surrendering Bruce to his fate.

“Bruce, what if they control your mind,” Algernon added as the frond made contact with Bruce’s finger.  He shivered as the jolt course through him.

“That was gooood!” He said and tried again with another finger.  This time, as with Peggy, the jolt did not come.  He looked disappointedly at his fingers, wondering what he’d done differently.

“Would you like me to chop your finger off for examination at a later date?” Peggy asked, her scalpel ready.

“Not really. I’m very attached to it.”

“Shame,” The scalpel retracted.

Tobias, too did his experimentation as the group drifted along the tunnel .  He had thought them out in The Strange unconnected to any recursion except possible that of Nakarand themselves.  If that was true, why were they still in the same forms they took in Ruk?  Was the worm an inapposite gate?  He reached out and could hear the Allsong, a constant hubbub of information in the back of his mind.  That meant they were still technically in Ruk.  He tried to discover the undoing of Nakarand from the inside, using what he saw around him as a reference to his query.  All he got back was a cryptic answer, more at home in one of Peggy’s questions to the Strange, Nothing more than me.  A world within.

Yes, He thought to himself, the physical world of Nakarand.  I’m thoroughly sick of it. Can we continue to the recursion of Nakarand?

They continued down the ever constricting passage .  The ferns started to thin and eventually gave way completely. As it narrowed, the group became aware of a current as the bubbles were being pulled along.  It wasn’t strong, and they could hold their position against it with ease, though it meant suffered the wrath of bubbles coming up from behind.  Up ahead, the tunnel pinched in tight, and the bubbles formed a roiled spinning vortex down some unseen plughole ahead.  Down the centre a clear passage of air, the eye of the storm.  Bruce went to hold his crowbar against the flow, hoping to disturb the spin enough for everyone to pass.  Before he could, Tobias lept passed, spinning effortlessly through the centre to the far side, without touching a bubble.  

Seeing Tobias graceful attempt, he followed, not quite as gracefully, but in a workman-like fashion.  Peggy had pulled a rope in an attempt to tie one end to Bruce so he could pull her through.  Having lost her chance she offered the rope end to Algernon.

“That doesn’t look easy,” She said, the rope unmentioned between them.

“Allow me to help,” He replied, and with his telekinesis, threw her through the Vortex.  Rope trailing behind and completely out of control, she plowed into the wall of bubbles.  She made it through to Tobias and Bruce more pitted than when she started, but mostly whole.  Algernon jumped through next, relying on his levitate and his balancing skills in flight.  Unfortunately, it all did him no good as he slipped sideways into the vortex was churned around like a rag in a washing machine.  Spat out the other end,  Algernon steamed from chemical burns, and his head spinning from the battering against the walls of the tunnel.  To add insult to injury, Peggy zapped him with her spark from her probe.

“Youch!  I’m not feeling so well,” He said as Peggy took the opportunity of a stationary  Algernon to take a few tissue samples.  She then tried to scrape a few off her own metal shell, tearing a hole in one side where the metal had grown thin.  A small piece of duck tape was applied to the hole, and Peggy was ready to move on. 

“I think,” Tobias said quietly to Algernon as Peggy patch herself up, “the scariest thing in all the recursions is Peggy.” 

And to that, Algernon had to agree.

The last to ride the vortex was Uentaru.  She aimed and flung herself through the tunnel with impressive grace.  Bruce rolled his eyes, mumbling something about showing off.  Tobias sighed in admiration.

From the vortex, the tunnel started widening again appreciably.  Within metres, it had expanded from three to fifty metres wide and was still expanding. Suddenly, after what felt like hours in the confining tunnels, the passage opened up into a massive vault stretching away for kilometres in all directions.  Seemingly below them, a small blue and white mottled planetoid approximately 2 kilometres in diameter sat comfortably in the space.  From a wall over their left shoulders, a long umbilical cord sinuously stretched out into the void. Where the cord touched the planetoid, a blocky metal building sat, looking oddly out of place amongst all the organic skin and organs. 

Tobias basked in his own cleverness.  This, or something like it, was what he’d been looking for. The centre of the being the reason for everything, and he couldn’t wait to see what was down on the surface.  Popping out his wings for the first time that trip, he soared around the open space taking it all in. Bruce stood just inside chasm, gawping, his crowbar slack in his hands.  The faint gravity, merely a suggestion of weight, tugged innocently at the group, and Bruce scrambled back for the entrance.

“I can’t fly!  How am I going to get down.” He said, staring dumbfounded at the small world below.

“What do you mean you can’t fly? You’ve been doing it for hours,” Algernon protested, zooming past the entrance.

“Not for much longer, though, when that thing starts pulling me down!”

“You could climb down the umbilical if you want,” Algernon suggested, pointing out the twenty-metre wide rope attached to both the wall and planet.

“That makes sense,” Bruce agreed and floated over, without hindrance from gravity.  

It was what you expect from a planet-sized umbilical cord.  Thick sinew and other tissues made up the body of the cord.  Translucent villi carried creamy blue bubbles not towards but away from the planet.  It seemed Nakarand was feeding off whatever was down on that planetoid.  Peggy was sure this massive structure was natural to the creature that was Nakarand, though the shiny metal building certainly was out of place in the organic surroundings.

“If we break the umbilical cord away from the planet, can we starve Nakarand to death, do you think?” Algernon surmised after Peggy had shared her findings.

“Probably, but too slowly for our purposes,” She replied, turning to their quiet companion, “Uentaru, what do you think?”

What Uentaru thought was never heard as their view of the surface became clearer. Besides the small metal building, every piece of the planetoid was covered in bodies.  Around the planet, like veins, pipes pumped the creamy blue fluid around and between the bodies.  Sometimes the bodies floated in the liquid. Sometimes they were mottled, the natural skin colour disappearing as the fluid replaced it.  Some bodies were blue statues of solid minerals. Venom workers moved through the bodies, pulling out the solid blue, leaving any mottled bodies behind.  Like the bodies, the workers were also mottled blue, also being digested by Nakarand.

“It’s people.  Spiral Dust is people,” Peggy whispered, shocked at the magnitude of what she was witnessing.

Considering the size of the planetoid and the average surface area of a person, she and Algernon guesstimated that there could be as many as thirteen million people on the planetoid, and that was if the bodies were only one layer deep.

Almost none of this got through to Tobias, who had ceased flying and hung petrified above the surface.  He didn’t see the planetoid, the umbilical cord and the warehouse building as memories of another time flooded back in a nauseous wave of sensation.  

Choking white dust covered a pit of bodies, mottling their skins, turning them slowly into white statues.  All around him, a broiling river of bodies silently waited.  He tried to swim towards land, but arms, heads and torsos engulfed him. It turned him around until he didn’t know which was up or down. The bodies slithered against each other, threatening to crush him.  Everywhere he moved his head, there were faces, armpits, legs and torsos. And it was getting hard to breathe.  He grasped limbs slick with blood, sweat, and worse and pulled himself back up to the surface. Breaking through, he took a breath of clean air before slipping and falling back again into the darkness surrounded by death. 

A shout from the shore, “Hier! Ik zag iets bewegen. Kijken!”

“O mijn God! Er leeft nog iemand daarbinnen!” Another voice, closer, “Help me daar beneden!”

“Je gaat toch niet naar binnen?”

“Heb je een ander idee?”

The river moved.  Ripples left the shore. It made the bodies slither and settle against each other. A body rolled over, pinning him in place.  Stuck fast, he couldn’t reach the surface again.

“Zwaai met je hand! Maak een beweging zodat ik je kan vinden!”

He didn’t understand the words, but they sounded compelling, urgent. Standing on the back of someone below, he stretched as tall as he could and drove his hand through the river to the surface.

“O mijn God! O mijn God! Zie je het?”

Now he could hear as well as feel the movement.  A grunting, spitting retching as someone swam out to him, riding the wave of bodies towards him.

“Geef mij je hand…Geef mij je hand…” A voice, choking and panting said over and over again.

A rough, heavy hand took his and pulled him forward.

“Je hebt ons hier gebracht. Je gaat!”

“Give me your hand, Rain,” Said another voice, tinny and metallic but full of calm compassion.

“You hear me, Rain!  You brought us here. You’re going!”

“Don’t, Bruce…he’s…we’ll be along…”

“Oh no.  This is what he wanted. Here it is!”

Tobias clasped his fingers around the metal claw, the fingers turning white with the pressure.

“Hier ben ik…” He whispered under his breath.  

“I said leave it, Bruce! He just needs a moment.”

Tobias blinked…and blinked again. Peggy and Bruce were beside him, Peggy’s gentle metal claw holding his left hand, Bruce pulling at his right.  When the planetoid came back into focus he instinctually, pulled away from both before realising finally what had to be done.  

“Just…find a place…to land…” He gasped, exhaling and inhaled greedy gulps of air. Closing his eyes, he let the giddy relief suffuse him. He relaxed, and between Bruce and Peggy, they guided Tobias down to the warehouse.

Inside, a dozen venom workers filtered in and out, stacking up bodies like planks of wood at one end of the warehouse.  Others were processing the stiff blue statues, breaking them into smaller lumps and shovelling them into piles. If there had been any doubt over the origins of Spiral Dust, the proof was collected in large piles all around the warehouse. Venting pent up anger at what he was seeing, Bruce swung away on one of the statues nearby, and it smashed into dust and chunks before his eyes.

“Is this why you brought us here?” He rounded on Tobias, who had sunk to his knees trying to breathe, “Do you want more of this stuff?”

“No,” He sobbed. Melissa Romero and all the other people lost to Spiral Dust. No, this was far from what he’d wanted.

From off the left, behind piles of blue rock, a movement caught Bruce, Peggy and Algernon’s attention.  Slinking around, trying not to be seen, a woman covered in blue dust hid from the venom workers. In one sudden movement, Bruce was on her, his crowbar held high. He threatened the woman who could do nothing but cower.

“Who are you?!” He demanded before noticing the red ring on her hand.  The missing Whole Body Grafts scientist, Dram-Shara, in whose footsteps they’d been following.  Peggy projected the hologram she’d made of Dram-Shara off the security footage from Dram-Shara’s apartment.  Apart from the layer of blue dust, she was the same woman.

“You know what’s happening here? Your company was part of all this.  What’s going on?” 

“Please, believe me, very few of us knew what was going on in the Nakarand project,” The woman put up her hands in surrender.

“What did you think was going on?” Peggy asked, floating beside Bruce.

“Ur-Dust paid the company well, no questions asked.  But the tissue samples, so radically different from anything we’d seen.  I had to know.”

“How long has the company been studying the creature?”

“I think only Bel-Tamar knew about the creature.  I didn’t until I went and looked for myself.  As for how long, I couldn’t say…years.”  There was a resignation to her gestures, “And now I’m stuck down here with no way back.”

“You could translate out,” Algernon suggested, and she shook her head.

“I’ve tried.  I even brought a cypher down here to create a portal back to Ruk. The only thing is I think we’re still in Ruk..somehow.”

“Do you want to stop it?” Bruce asked, getting back on task.

“If it means getting out of here, count me in!” Dram-Shara replied adamantly.

“So, how do they get people out of here?”

“Ur-Dust comes every once in a while and translates out with broken up bodies and dust.”
“And you’re okay with that?”

“No, but what am I supposed to do?”
“What about the cannon?” Peggy suggested, gesturing to a wall almost two kilometres away.

“Great toy, but a one-shot.  Let’s face it. It won’t kill this thing.”

Just as Bruce lamented the flaws in the Stranger Killer, he noticed Uentaru stiffen and draw her weapon. She turned, sweeping a wide arch until she stopped at a darker shadow, a purple haze that shifted as the group drew their attention to it.

“Uentaru, have you brought these intruders to my stomach for us to destroy together?” Whispered a voice in all their minds.  Without hesitation, Uentaru shot at the shadow, but it merely moved on unharmed.

“We weren’t forced to come. We came to learn and understand,” Peggy called out to the shadow, but the voice ignored her, focusing it on Uen-Taru.

“We have worked together a while, have we not, Uentaru?  In all that time I watched your plans and schemes. You searched The Strange for a thousand-year until you finally found the progenitor, Earth and the Aleph component buried deep in its crust.  I admit, for much of that time, I had no idea what you were up to.  If I had known, I would have stopped you sooner…”
“Liar!” Uentaru shouted, firing her gun a second time.  The dust just moved away as before.

Algernon, forgotten in the background of the drama swirling through the warehouse, tried to read the surface thoughts of Uentaru.  Instead of the jumble of thoughts and impressions, Uentaru was blank. Either there were no thoughts to read, or she was better at covering them up than most.

“The Aleph component,” The voice seemed to direct its attention to the group now, “Is what makes Earth special.  It is part of the machine that first created the Strange billions of years ago.  When it crashed into your barely formed proto world, it formed the moon, all the quickened and all the recursions. So you can see it is not such a small thing.”

“Show yourself, Dust, so I can finally rid the universe of you and your murderous plots,” Uentaru yelled out into the warehouse.  Turning to Peggy, Bruce and Algernon, she argued her defence, “ Nakarand is the vile worm of a thing that eats humans. It would do anything to keep control over that resource.”

“Now, now Uentaru.  Have you not told them about your tragic past?  The loss of your Mycaeum to a planetvoir? She knows that if she can power the component, she can create a recursion in the likeness of that world, isn’t that right?” The voice of the Dustman insinuated, “I finally realised why you wanted to help me so badly, my dust, spread all over the Earth, awakening the minds of millions.”  

“But why?” Tobias croaked, shakily standing to address the voice or maybe Uentaru, “Why go to all the trouble with the dust? Why save us in the graveyard?” His thoughts came out a jumble of ideas that made little sense that confused his friends.

“That’s how it eats, Rain. The dust translates them here,” Peggy explained quietly.

Tobias shook his head and looked up at Uentaru for the first time since entering this cavern. He saw worry, that was to be expected, but he saw surprise and…betrayal.  She was surprised that Nakarand had worked it out.  He rethought her words, her actions since the shadow of the Dustman appeared and realised she’d been vamping, scrambling to recover what she saw as a betrayal by Nakarand.  She’d done a marvellous job of convincing them…him, of her sincerity.  Did he ever question her motive?  One healing cypher in the middle of a battle, and he’d been blinded.

Looking up, Tobias signed to Algernon to read his mind.  Misinterpreting, Algernon signed back he’d tried but couldn’t get through.  Tobias shook his head sadly and repeated, Mind link, me.  This Algernon nodded, and as simply as he could, Tobias laid out his deductions.  Algernon nodded and confronted Uentaru.

“Uentaru, what I don’t understand is why the network?  Why did Nakarand have the spiral dust sellers spread out all over the world in a pattern?”
“What network?  I don’t know what you’re talking about?” Uentaru replied, but by that time, it was hard to believe anything she was saying.  Tobias walked over to Peggy and touched her metal box, sharing with her what he’d discovered.

Of course, Nakarand had the answer, “Yes, Uentaru, that confused me for a long while too.  But the dust does more than feed me, drawing users to me. All those minds alive and connected to the Strange all over the Earth.  They would also power the Aleph component, wouldn’t they Uentaru.”

With his back to Uentaru, Tobias faced Bruce and quietly told him what he’d worked out.

“Yeah, I figured,” Bruce replied, not taking his eyes offUentaru.

“Will you shoot her with the cannon?” Tobias asked resignedly.

Bruce shook his head, “We made a promise to use it on the Dustman.”

Three metres away, the shadow settled and started to thicken, coalescing into a shape.  Once more, the voice of Nakarand appealed to the group.  Peggy withdrew the battery rod they’d recovered from Gwendyn Wurtz’ home. Bruce palmed the electrical null field, and Algernon did the same with a small force field projector.

“I suggest a new proposal, humans.  The Aleph component is already waking. I don’t know if it will give Uentaru the power over reality to resurrect her world. But I know one thing. When it is triggered to do her bidding, the Earth and its recursions will shatter. Of course, these are my hunting grounds, I don’t want to see Earth and the recursion destroyed.  If you or someone in your organisation can reach the Aleph component buried beneath the Earth’s mantle, I have something that might shut it down. Though, of course,  it may already be past the point of no return.”

The body of the Dustman formed and shaped before them. Bruce stepped up, watching as Uentaru levelled her gun.  As the arc of time-space energy left the muzzle, Bruce shot the Dustman with the Stranger Killer and ran in, Crowbar held high.  The Dustman recoiled, his form wavering from the impact.  From deep in his form, a purple light glowed. The light intensified as the Dustman held out his hands, and an object, the size and shape of a football, appeared.  He held out the object to Bruce.  Uentaru sent out another shot hitting the Dustman, his essence scattered.  The purple ball dropped into Bruce’s outstretched arms.  

The Dustman seemingly gone, Algernon’s armour bristles with ice crystals ready for the fight. Instead, he saw the determined look Uentaru’s face as she raised her gun again, this time on Bruce.  Algernon threw the cypher in his hand between Uentaru and Bruce.  Uentaru jumped in surprise as the light shield formed itself in front of Bruce and the object.

“Drop it! You don’t know what it is!” She yelled, looking down her gun at Bruce.  So intent on Bruce, she did not sense Peggy floating up behind her.  Down plunged the battery rod like a dagger in Uentaru’s back.  Uentaru yelled, her arms thrust wide in surprise and shock.  Bruce ran around the shield, passed off the item to  Algernon before swinging at Uentaru.  Even with the battery draining her energy, Uentaru was still faster than Bruce and dodged away from his attack.  

She stepped back from Bruce’s swing, brought up her gun to shoot him at point-blank range. But the unwieldiness of her long rifle made it hard to bring to bear, and Bruce dodged the shot.  Peggy stabbed again, siphoning off even more energy.

Behind them all, Tobias pulled out a cypher he’d kept for just this moment.  Drawing the power of The Strange trapped in the device, he focused his thoughts on one word.  In that word, he weaved the power of The Strange, and reached out to touch the mind of Uentaru.

“Help,” He said as the cypher disintegrated to dust and blew away, “Help me.”

All the external fight went out of Uentaru as she fought an internal battle to control her mind.  

“Help me save my world.  Help me create your world, but not at the expense of all the lives on Earth and in the shoals, please, Uentaru.”

Taking his chance, Bruce swung up to hit Uentaru.  Tobias smoothly stepped between them and looked up at Bruce. Bruce’s swing went wide as he tried to miss Tobias, and the crowbar failed to connect.

“She has to pay!  She would have, still could, destroy the world.  She can’t kill billions because of her sorrow, Rain!” Bruce yelled in frustration, but Tobias stood his ground, ready to take the next blow. It never came.  Bruce lowered his Crowbar, still fuming and snatched Uentaru’s gun from her hands.  

“We can’t live in the past, Uentaru,” Tobias said over his shoulder as Uentaru finally succumbed to the word of command, “I appreciate you wanting to rebuild your world, but not at the expense of other’s futures.”

“Why are we talking to her!  Humanity is not a plaything for these people!” Bruce continued his rant at Tobias, who said nothing but accepted his friend’s anger.

“You can save your world,” Uentaru said through gritted teeth, gesturing to Algernon and the device, “That’s an Entropic seed, a computational singularity that can splinter the rules of a recursion.  If used on a prime world like Earth, it will splinter reality on all its linked recursions as well.”

“But it could be used to remove your…thing from the Earth,” Bruce asked.

“Possibly…yes.” Uentaru agreed grudgingly, and all that remained was a deep sorrow as all her dreams and plans crumbled like the dust at her feet.

A few strides away behind the force field, Algernon examined the purple glowing object.  He’d heard of such things, almost legendary devices that could bend reality to a user’s will.  It seemed Nakarand had spoken the truth, they had a device that could save the Earth.  Or it could destroy the Earth and all the recursions with it.  

“How can we save the Earth?” Peggy said, realising the enormity of the task, “Even if we have a magical wish device, how are we going to get to this Aleph component in the Earth’s mantle?  What sort of transport could go through solid rock?”

The image of Hertzfeld and his phasing invention appeared in everyone’s mind at the same time.

“Didn’t Hertzfeld say he only needed an energy source for his contraption?” Tobias asked, pointing at the battery in Peggy’s hands. 

“Oh yes!” She exclaimed, “I can charge this thing up on the umbilical cord!”

Now that the umbilical cord had been drawn to their attention, Bruce discovered a new recipient for his righteous anger.  As soon as Peggy had filled the battery, he started hacking away at the cord with his crowbar.

“Hey, little help here,” He called, and Algernon turned to Uentaru.

“Can you help us break this connection?” 

Uentaru picked up her forgotten rifle with a silent nod and started blasting a line through the cord.  

He watched the duo slice and hack through the umbilical cord as the blue -white liquid continued to find other channels to Nakarand. Regardless what they did here, Nakarand would find a way of fixing the damage and contine on as usual. His biochemical training led Algernon down a well trodden path to poison.

Poison…No, I don’t know what would be poisonous to a giant space worm. Acid…better… delivered directly into the digestive system. He looked around the planetoid and his mind boggled at the enormity of the task.

“I think I can help too,” Algernon contemplated a moment, “I can change the laws of this place and replace the white fluid with acid.” 

“You can do that? ” Tobias asked incredulous, “A whole inter-spacial parasite?”

“I was thinking of starting smaller; with a planetoid,” Algernon replied more casually than he felt.

He had an idea what the chemical structure of the blue fluid was, he’d seen Peggy’s tests on Sprial Dust and knew it affects while fresh. In his mind he saw the chemical structures, the molecules and their base elements. He pulled a few a part like Lego pieces and put them back together forming a new chemical, a highly reactive and crossive acid.

In his mind, he dropped his first molecule back into the streams and rivers of digestive fluid that flowed all over the planetoid. From far behind him, a hole into Strange space appeared. Engery flowed from fractal space , through him and into the the molecule of acid. Like a nuclear chain reaction, all the other molecules around it exploded, setting off still others. The atoms reformed into the acid and slowly started replacing the digestive liquid.

Outside the reaction, veins on the surface of the planetoid turned from creamy blue to a sickly yellow-green.  The colour change was soon picked up by the umbilical cord and sent up into Nakarand itself.  Along with the colour change, there was a deep rumble from the planetoid as the ground began to buckle and crack.  Where the acid rose through the umbilical cord, it shrivelled and twisted.

Good, now just to turn off the power, He thought to himself as he focused his efforts on closing the passage to the Strange. Creating the chemical to destroy Nakarand had been a simple mind exercise in comparrison to fighting the force of the Strange. Like flood gates, the Strange poured through him, washing away his resolve and drowning his sense of self. With a mental push that would have sent Bruce flying into the nearest wall a kilometre away, he slamed the shut the doors on reality.

“Anyone for getting out of here?” He heard Peggy say as the ground beneath them shuddered. Algernon couldn’t tell if it was the ground or him that was shaking. He wanted to run and hide and rest somewhere safe.

“We can’t go now. We’re having an effect!” Bruce swung at the umbilical cord.  It was cutting, though slowly.  A fissure opened up under Bruce’s feet. He stepped away quickly, avoid the fall and doubled his efforts on the umbilical.

“I have a grenade?” Algernon offered groggily, reaching into his backpack without thought.

“Algernon, do you still have your dynamite?” Tobias asked.

“Oh yeah!” He replied with genuine surprise and returned to his backpack, pulling out the stack of six sticks.

As everyone pulled back from the planetoid’s surface, Bruce hacked holes, and Algernon laid his dynamite.  Those waiting could see the walls of the chamber were shrinking in on the planetoid.  Brown mottled patches showed where the acid had reached the body of Nakarand.  Algernon was last to leave the planetoid, and for a moment, he floated and watched with the others as the whole surface withered under the influence of his power.

“With great power comes great responsibility, “ Tobias whispered to Algernon, awed at the destruction his friend had wrought.

“Spiderman, right?  I remember those documentaries.” Algernon replied.

“And you.”

“And me, “ He acknowledged, as he realised he was the scary one. He threw the grenade and with the last of his will, guided it to where the explosives lay.  A pop was quickly followed by a larger bang!  A cloud of blue dust and the umbilical cord whipped away from the surface out into the cavern.  A roar of triumph rose from Bruce.  Forgetting gravity for the moment, he spun in the air, elated with the defeat of the worm.  Meanwhile, the cavern was still shrinking.  Convulsions rippled through the walls setting everything, even the air, to shiver.

“Time to go,” Tobias touched Peggy and sent the last of The Strange flowing through her. The group, including Dram-Shara and Uen-Taru, formed a circle, and Peggy led the translation. As the others waited for Peggy to make the connection, the other watched the walls collapse in. They pressed around the planetoid, crushing it like a rotten walnut and driving them closer to the same oblivion. As the walls reached them, the translation took hold, and they were all swept away, the walls falling in on the space they had occupied.

They returned to Peggy’s lab, where Hertzfeld was pacing, seemingly waiting for them.

“Thank goodness you’re back. Something is coming out of the Earth crust!” Then he saw Dram-Shara and Uen-Taru, the latter having her rifled once more confiscated by Bruce. “Who have you brought back this time?”

“Hello Hertzfeld, yes we know.  Can you get some security down here?” She pointed to Uen-Taru, “This one needs to be searched and restrained. She’s trying to destroy the world. The other needs an escort back to Ruk.”

Hertzfeld did a double-take but quickly called for security.  As the guards restrained and took Uentaru away, Bruce thought to look at her through his glasses.

Name: Uentaru

Origin: Mycaeum (lost to plantvoir)

Occupation:  Chaos Templar (founder).  A group of survivors from shattered prime worlds. In response, pledge themselves to the killing of planetvoirs.

“Peggy, what is going on?”  Hertzfeld asked as the guard’s left with Uentaru. 

“There’s a device in the mantle of the planet.  With it, she intended to reseed her own lost world. The only thing is, it would have destroyed the Earth and any connected recursion with it.  It still may if we don’t do something about it.”

“I’ve been working on my transport. It still needs an energy source and a time to plan…”

“Energy source we have, time we don’t.  Show me your lab.” Peggy displayed the fully charged battery rod and followed Hertzfeld out of her lab.

Tobias hadn’t moved from where he’d watched the guard take Uentaru away.  Bruce now saw this as his opportunity.

“What were you thinking!  I don’t care who she is. Grief is no excuse for evil, and what she planned was evil of the worst degree.”

Coated in blue dust, streaked where sweat and tears had washed it away, Tobias looked tiredly up at his noble friend, ”I’m glad you can take the high moral ground.”

“What? Don’t say you empathise with her?  You’ve had more than your reason to hurt people with your grief, but you haven’t.”

“Haven’t I?  I guess not since meeting you.  I don’t know Bruce,” He wiped his face, and the exhaustion was drawn through the lines on his face, “ I can’t shake the feeling that if I’d known part of what she did…had the opportunity she did… I just can’t see everything as black and white as you.”

“Hey, I’ve got a lot of ‘grey’ for those who were just caught up with the wrong circumstance.  They just need options and a nudge.  We all need nudges and reminders to keep us working towards betterment.  Where it’s not intrinsic to the being’s very purpose and existence, well… judge the sin not the sinner.”

Algernon, too hadn’t moved. He still held the Entropic seed in his arms like a precious newborn. And precious it was.  With it, they hoped to save a planet or doomed it, the recursions and themselves to oblivion.

No pressure.

33. Once and future

The near-empty secret base of Doctor Strangelove is almost complete.  Not having found the Martins or the research notes is concerning as the party moved back into the passageways for the last few rooms.

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

From the Powerplant, the party headed back to the fork in the passage and took the path leading to the living quarters. As they travelled, Rain was growing concerned they would ever find the two objectives for the mission:  the Doctor’s notes and the Martins. Clearing his thought of nothing but the Allsong, he asked it a simple question, 

Are Doctor Strangelove’s notes here?  

Where the research notes were, so would the subjects of her experiments.  

 Yes, Came back the emphatic reply.  He let the others know what he’d found out.

Peggy silently asked a question of the Strange,

Where are John and Athena Martin? She waited, but either because of the chaotic matrix of organic metal around them or because of her own fragmented thoughts, the Strange did not reply.

Up ahead, a locked door marked the start of the living spaces in the facility.  As the party walked the path to the door, Algernon’s memory became clearer of what lay beyond.  He could visualise the short hallway containing two more doors.  Off to the left, a door led to what used to be his room.  Straight ahead, the other to Doctor Strangelove’s private chambers.  He remembered once sneaking through the second door to a lounge space and kitchen area before getting caught and marched back to his room.  Only one biometric locked door stood between him and that past now. 

Raising his hand, he discovered it rimmed in black cracking energy that matched his mood of trepidation.

That’s new, Rain said spotting the startling effect sizzling across Algernon’s palm, What is it?

Algernon consciously brushed aside his fears, and the black energy disappeared, I don’t know, He replied, determined to find out at the first chance.

He pressed his now normal-looking hand against the pad, unsure the scanner would still respond to him. 

*Click* the lock opened. Taking point, Bruce steps in first, followed by the floating Peggy.  Rain followed and looked back to see Algernon peering around the corner of the doorframe.

“Lend us a hand, kid,” Called Bruce, gesturing to another palm scanner, “Get it.”

“This is a trap,” Algernon murmured before stepping into the hallway himself.

*Click* All three doors locked and everyone could hear hissing from vents above their heads.

“See, I told you it was a trap.”

Floated up to the vent, Peggy tried to stop the thick white gas at the source. Without a cutting implement she couldn’t get access. The gas rolled down out of the vent in white waterfalls, quickly filling the room.  Now Algernon’s black energy appeared on command around both his hands,. He placed them against the door that was once his room and instantly the material that made the door began turning to dust. He brushed his hands over the surface to create a hole the approximate size of a human (or at least one his size) and lept through the hole.  Inside it was as he remembered, a bed, a wardrobe and a small desk.  Rain followed quickly after, and the two of them stripped the bed of the mattress, as Bruce struggled through the hole too small for his large frame.  Immune to the gas, Peggy alone stayed outside and tried to work out how to shut it off.  As soon as Bruce was safely in the room, the mattress was unceremoniously stuffed in the hole, blocking the worst effects of the gas.

What sort of gas do you think it is? Rain asked Algernon and then started searching the Allsong for options based on the colour and its qualities.

I’m not sure…Algernon started searching as well before hearing clicking and then the arc of electricity as it formed a spark.

MOVE! He grabbed Rain and dragged him out of the way of the doorway.

*WHOMP!* The sound and the shockwave hit at once, propelling the mattress across the room to hit the wall on the far side. A gout of flame followed, incinerating everything in its path.  Rain was smacked in the back of the head by the mattress, but otherwise unscathed.  Thankful he wasn’t burnt alive by the fireball he turned to face Algernon,

Thanks, He blinked as Algernon checked the room and realised a person missing.

“Doctor Peggy?”

Bruce, who escaped the projectile mattress and fireball by inches, scrambled out the door and started searching for Peggy in the debris.  He returned moments later with the dented Peggy-box.  It sparked and sizzled randomly,  her voice only just identifiable over the static of her tinny speaker.

“Ow! You’re poking me!

He knocked on the metal casing, “Do you need any assistance?” He grinned mischievously

“Yes, ow! ”

‘Sorry, I don’t usually heal machines.  What seems to be the injury,”  Bruce placed her on the still smouldering study desk in Algernon’s old room.

“Ow, you moron, I can’t move just yet,” Peggy grumbled as she assessed her mechanical injuries,” Did you really need to shake me up quite so much?”

“It worked, didn’t it?” Bruce chuckled, backhandedly trying to cheer up his awkward patient.

As Bruce and Peggy traded insults, Rain looked around the room.  If this had once been Algernon’s room presumably, it would now belong to the new kid.  Maybe there was something personal that would give a hint to his name and personality.  Sure enough, as soon as Rain opened the bedside table, he found a metal scroll.  Unrolling it, a flexible screen lit up asking for a password.

Yours or his? He asked Algernon who picked up the scroll and flipped it over.  Algernon had owned a tablet computer much like this when he lived here, one of his very few personal possessions. When he read the serial number on the back, the numbers didn’t match his memory.  This was the usurper’s.  He handed it back to Rain with a shake of his head.

His.

Now sure it belonged to the still-unnamed kid, Rain pocketed the scroll for later unlocking and viewing.  

As Rain and Algernon spent a few moments searching the tiny room,  Peggy regained control of her motor functions and followed Bruce back out into the hallway.  Here, he was checking the next door and found it similar to the first.  He was about to attack it with his crowbar when Peggy’s voice sparked over the speaker,

“You’ll not make much of a dent in that door, I can see the metal plates where the locking pins are going into the floor,” She pointed out with a laser pointer from inside her box.

“I know what I’m doing,” Bruce boasted with a cocky grin, “I’m a specialist in smashing!” And, finding a place to wedge his crowbar, started straining against the door.  As Peggy had predicted, the door didn’t budge.

But this time Algernon and Rain had given up on the room and were watching Bruce’s attempt at the door.  He stepped back to gain another view of the obstruction as Rain reached out and touched him on the shoulder,

“A simple door will not stop you, Bruce,” He said quietly as he pushed the Strange into Bruce,” I believe in you.”
“Bruce jolted and stepped up to the door once more.  He braced the crowbar further down the floor, gaining the advantage of pulling it up as well as across the doorway.  Getting a good grip, he strained.  Veins bulged along his forehead, neck and arms as the mechanical work of his muscles were augmented by the Strange.  Bruce roared with the effort; at the same time, the door also groaned.  The end was short and abrupt, and something finally gave way.  There was a sharp snapping sound, and the door pushed aside revealing the next room.  

Bruce turned to face Rain with a manic grin on his face, “I know you have my back, Rain.” He said panting from the exertion.

Rain nodded and shivered as he heard his own words echoed back to him. It wasn’t the sentiment that was at fault, so much as it wasn’t Bruce’s sentiment.

“Er…yeah,” He replied and quickly followed Bruce into the room.

As Bruce stepped through the threshold of the room a piece of metal as wide as Rain’s wrist slipped out a hole in the doorframe and fell to the floor with a clang.  Picking it up, Bruce looked back to the doorway and saw a similar pin sheered off at floor level.  He stared from one to the other solid metal pins in shock, then flexed in front of the other, revelling in his own power.

Throwing the pin aside, he strode into a well-appointed lounge room complete with a wall-sized monitor in front of a comfortable form-fitting chair.  The decor was simple and elegant, the intellectuals inner sanctum.  Off to one side, a small kitchenette with microwave-like device and fridge stood ready to provide a ready supply of tasty meals. Off the lounge, another door seemed to head to a bedroom.

 Rain was still a little woozy from the explosion. He plopped down into the chair and searched for a remote.  He found another scrolling tablet computer, locked with a password.  Pocketing that little find, he settled down for a rest as the others searched the lounge and kitchen for clues about where to go next.  

Peggy was floated in the kitchen staring at a blank piece of wall.  It seemed odd to her, an empty portion of wall in a small carefully thought out kitchen.  At least it should have a handle.  She pointed it out to Algernon. They considered the idea of a secret door and Algernon started pulling the panel off a hand scanner to get to the computer systems inside.

“I can help with that,” Bruce said and grabbed the sensor and yanked it off the wall.  The cavity popped and sizzled as an anti-tamper trigger set off a small explosion.  Black smoke started pouring from the hole. 

“I think I’ll stick to doors,” He said and headed over to the bedroom.

This door wasn’t as hard as the first. Bruce quickly broke through into the very comfortable bedroom of Doctor Strangelove.  After the barren little quarters of her minion outside, the comfort was ostentatious, but only by comparison. Rain wandered in after Bruce and checked the space for notes. There were none.  It seemed to him that this space was for rest and not work and that they would have to look further if they were to find her research.  

But there was nowhere else, except the blank piece of wall.  

“She would have a control mechanism, a computer or tablet that she opened the secret door with,” Algernon mused, looking around the sparse space for just such a device.  That was when Rain remembered the scroll tablet he’d found on the chair and handed it over.

Algernon looked at the tablet and recognised it as the same model as his own.  He fiddled with the tablet a moment, remembering a back door into this series of devices and the tablet unlocked.  Icons were organised under several subjects: science journals, building status alerts (it seemed all the icons were blinking under that heading) and Office Access:  Locked.

Algernon pushed the last, and the black piece of wall slid aside to reveal a set of stairs going down. 

Peggy flew through the hole and down into darkness.  Bruce, holding his crowbar ready against attack, followed.  Algernon and Rain found things to wedge under the door to keep it open before also following down into the darkness.

The stairs circled around and down, emptying into a D-shaped room dominated by a semicircular control panel and chair. An array of monitors their screens blank and empty.  A door stood opposite the stairs.

“Algernon, get down here!” Peggy yelled up the stairwell.

“Yes, yes…” Came the exasperated reply as Algernon trudged down the stairs to face a very familiar set up.  

He had no memory of being here before.  Everything past the metal door was new to him, but the technology was familiar.  He soon had the control panel booting and displaying a series of document files.

Complex information

Beacon Network

Log of specimens:

1. Balthazar

2. Horatio

3. Algernon

4.  Mortimer

5.  New Candidates

“Look, the kid’s name is Mortimer, “Rain read over Algernon’s shoulder, “And another Balthazar.” Referring to Algernon’s middle name.  Algernon only nodded and sat down in the chair facing the monitor.  Beside his hand was a headband that he knew was the equivalent of a VR headset.  Picking it up, he placed it on his head and chose Balthazar.

Balthazar:

Genetic makeup

Physical

Date of service

Date of death

The genetic makeup information was as suspected, the result of a male and female kidnapped from Earth.  She suspected that agents with human genetic markers would pass through security with ease.  She’d selected the two individuals for their intellect. There was no mention of them being quickened.   Sadly, the difference in the date of service and date of death was only three years.  His death was only two years before Algernon’s memories began.

Algernon flipped next to Horatio’s who seemed to start in service a week after Balthazar’s death and was surprisingly still alive and working in Jir. He was more intelligent than Balthazar and had become something of a steward for Doctor Lovelace, managing her affairs when she wasn’t around.  He was transferred to Jir a week before Algernon’s service date.

He opened his own file and saw his date of service two years before.  As smart as Horatio with the added feature of “…not always being away that he was working for me…”, an innovative feature for a spy.  The program that had modified his memory was saved here.  Creating a private space in the Allsong, Algernon started uploading every file he found.  

One note described how she’d staged a lab accident so she could smuggle him to Earth without the other Ruk factions finding out. Her last message in his file was regarding the beacons, “…transmitting useful information, significant success…”

He opened the Mortimer file and saw the Date of Service was during his first week on Earth. While they hunted out Spiral Dust sellers, Mortimer was coming online.  He had been through a similar process to Algernon and would be sent out in six to twelve months to an unknown location.

In the last folder were only two entries:  Two fully mature, in stasis.

One currently growing.  

From what he could determine, Algernon believed the third specimen was the equivalent to an eight or nine years old child.

He next moved to the Beacon Network folder and entered.  There he found several entries under his and Balthazar’s names.

Balthazar:

1.  This was a first-person view of a metal-walled hallway as someone was running down it, and hiding in a small alcove where he started talking.

“ I’m on a large spacecraft.  I heard that it has an impressive main weapon that can destroy whole planets.  They call it a Death Star.  This could be useful, Mistress.”  

The voice sounded young and scared and alone.  Algernon quickly flicked to the second file.

2.  The view was inside a wooden shack.  The beacon picked up light from outside filtered through the cracks in the wood panelling and the rapid breathing of someone terrified.

“I’m scared Mistress.  This place is full of zombie creatures, and mad-man has captured me…I think he’s going to kill me…” There was a creaking sound and the camera angle shifted to the door.  A silhouette of a man now stands in the open door, a machete also clearly silhouetted.  The voice screams out for its mistress and then, silence.

Algernon shuddered, he had seen Balthazar’s death first-hand, almost felt it.  She had watched this. She had watched him die and just went and made another minion as if it didn’t matter.  Shakily, he reached out for the three files under his name.

Algernon:

1.  Algernon found himself back in the garage of Peggy’s house outside New Orleans.  It was exactly as it had been back then.  The machine, a jumble of monitors and scrounged computers and other scientific equipment arrayed around the space.  It was odd, as he’d seen that same equipment in the centre of Peggy’s lab only a few days ago.  Stepping out, he checked the next file.

2.  And just like that he was back at the Estate amongst the lab tables and equipment of Peggy’s lab, the machine just where he remembered it.  Stepping out, he knew where the third would lead.

3.  Sure enough, he was amongst the force-fielded exhibits of Ni’Challan’s collection in the Graveyard of the Machine god.  He looked around, unsure how the Doctor had discovered the fragment of a planetvore here as it was nowhere.  He shrugged, assuming she’d sent a probe to investigate later and left the memory.

It was a very sober Algernon who relayed all he’d found in the Beacons archive, including the death of Balthazar. Checking all the files were saved to the Allsong, Algernon now opened the last folder headed Complex Information.

A full schematic of the secret base appeared including information on each room and what they contained.  The metal-clad creatures in the mud were called Wailing diggers and were something of pets to Doctor Strangelove.  They were intelligent and were useful for simple retrieval missions.  The Doctor had sent them to  Earth via an inapposite gate to abduct the two donors for her grand experiment. 

“They’re Peggy’s Rockwheelers!” Rain exclaimed, making Peggy jump.

“Really?” She said surprised, “I never really believed that I’d find the actual creatures behind my parents’ kidnapping.” 

Below the complex, a series of tanks and piping were simply labelled, Gas plant.  Lines of piping led from the main tank throughout the complex including in the Powerplant, the High Energy Lab and the hallway to the living quarters.  Algernon surmised this was where the explosive gas was made and distributed throughout the complex.  A ready-made bomb placed for them to set off.  He showed the others and together concocted the final escape.  Failing the one-way valves set up for safety in piping, he set the triggers on a timer.  Several hours from leaving the base, the whole landscape of the wastelands was going to have a bad day.

He found the security system for the complex, and with a little help from Rain, on the Allsong, they found a suitable image of someone mooning a camera.  This became the last and only image that the security of Doctor Strangelove’s security system recorded as it set on a loop for every camera.  Now feeling a little more secure, Algernon directed his attention to the room beyond the door in this control centre.  Here the three boys were kept as well as two large sarcophagus shaped structures just labeled Donor 1 and Donor 2.  

Algernon entered the program to open the door and found it once more passworded.  Even here, in the secret of secrets, the Doctor still kept things locked away.  His first attempt to override the password failed.  He paused to contemplate what she would have used to protect her life’s work.  A hand touched his back, and a jolt of energy course through him. His questing thoughts became action as his mind searched for the correct combination, and found it.  

A click and the last door unlocked.

Everyone leapt to individual tasks.  Peggy floated straight into the room and to the two sarcophagi.  Through thickly frosted windows, she could make out her parents faces, just as she remembered them, more than twenty years previous.  She gasped and floated back realising that right now and in this place, she was not ready for them to see her.  Unable or unwilling to think about a reunion, she focused her efforts on understanding the cryogenic sarcophagus and how to release them.

Rain walked in behind her, taking in the enormity of the task.  Two parents trapped in time, three nearly fully grown adult infants. 

“Do we try to save the specimens?” Algernon asked from the control room.

“I tend to leave those questions to Rain,” Bruce replied, and called through the door, “What do you say?”

Rain spun slowly around, watching as the two young men and boy floated unawares in their liquid-filled chambers.  When he reached the door, Bruce was waiting expectantly for his decision.

“Please,” Rain said simply, “We have to try.”

“Okay then,” Bruce set off up the stairs looking for clothing and other useful items while Algernon started shutting down the incubator chambers and releasing the boys.

Peggy’s own penchant for mad science was coming in handy as she worked her way through the complicated steps and procedures required to open the sarcophagus safely.  With a self-satisfied beep and a hiss of escaping gas, the two sarcophagi began to open and start the re-animation process.  Instantly Peggy’s hologram flickered and died.

“I don’t want to face them…yet,” She said and turned away to oversee the boy’s ‘birth’.

“Don’t worry, I’ll give them a friendly face,” Rain stepped up between the two sarcophagi.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” 

“ ‘Hi I’m your robot daughter, Peggy, that you haven’t seen in twenty years.’” He smirked watching as the life support systems disconnected one by one, “ I’ve got this.”

Slowly and carefully the birth and the reanimation of both parents and children progressed.  Bruce returned with clothing for the two Martins but couldn’t find anything suitable for the boys.  What was also becoming very apparent was the complete blank slate the three boys were.  As each emerged from their cylinders, they were as uncoordinated and helpless and the newborns they were.  Limbs fully grown and muscled had no idea how to work together to stand or walk.  They had no experience with which to interpret the world and would either flail about knocking equipment or party members, or curl up in a foetal position.

The Martins were in much better condition, which led to more issues for Rain as they tried to make sense of their surroundings after decades on ice. 

“Where are we?  Who are you?” Athena asked as she climbed out of the sarcophagus with the help of Rain and accepted the clothes Bruce had provided.

“Hi, my name is…Rain, I’m a friend of P…Margarita’s.”  He said without thinking and received a jolt of electricity from the pointy end of Peggy’s probe

“Escape now, chat later.”  She murmured so only Rain heard.
“Margarita?  Aren’t you a little old to be one of Margarita’s friends?” She said as she took in her surroundings.

“Yelp!  Yes, lots of explaining to come, but right now I Suggest you come quietly with us.” And he pushed the thought first into Athena’s mind and then into John’s.  Without protest, the couple dressed and followed Rain as he led them up and into the Doctor’s living quarters.

“What are we going to do with these near-adult babies?” Bruce asked, hefting one over his shoulder and the smaller one in his arms.

“What if we all translate back to Earth from here?” Peggy suggested as she floated up the stairs following her parents.

“I’ve uploaded the program used by the Doctor,” Algernon replied, picking up the third brother, almost as big as himself, with leveitation “But we’ll need to do the procedure here on Ruk, we can’t help them back on Earth.”

“Besides, Algernon and Mortimer also need their heads examined, it was the whole point of coming here in the first place,” Bruce added as he helfted his two burdens up the stairs.  

Algernon made a face, clearly stating what he thought of the latter idea and continued with the discussion,” Doctor Strangelove used an inapposite gate to kidnap the Martins.  The artefact used was discharged, but we could probably charge it up again in the Powerplant.”

They reached the kitchen still discussing what to do with the family when Rain chimed in.

“I was thinking about Peggy taking the Martin’s back to Earth.  They’ve had more than enough of Ruk, and she could do with the chance to reunite with her parents.  But, she couldn’t use an anaposite gate in her current state.  Earth wouldn’t know what to do with a weird-science floating robot.”

“Besides she’s needed on Ruk.  Her medical knowledge is going to be needed to reprogram the babies,” Algernon added.

“I think it’s going to have to be you, Rain,” Bruce finally said to Rain’s surprise, “Sorry, you’re the only one free.”

Rain turned to the Peggy-box.  She made no protest or suggestion, and with her hologram hidden, he couldn’t get a read of what she was thinking.  He watched Algernon, who was concentrating on slowly spinning his baby brother in the air.

I wanted to be there…for your procedure, He thought, and Algernon caught his eye.

Then you better hurry back before they change my mind.

Ha!  Look after your brother, Mortimer.  Save him and yourself.

Oh, yes.  He could be a valuable asset. Algernon quipped back with a grin on his face.

Slowly a smile of his own appeared on Rain’s face as returned to Bruce, “Sure, I’ll smooth the path when we get there, answer a few of the Martin’s questions before setting them on a flight for Seattle, and…” His smile broadened, “I’ll finally get to New Orleans.”

Bruce laughed, a generous and open laugh, not like his usual sardonic self.

“You know even in another recursion I’m not leaving you?” Rain asked.

“Yeah, sure no problem, you’ve got my back.” The words again were like a slap.

“You won’t get to see much of New Orleans.  One underpass,” Peggy said, now the decision was made.

“I’ll cherish every moment. Anything for Noel?  You were meant to meet him in Berkley.”

The Peggy-box spun on the spot, and Rain decided that this was the Peggy-box thinking mischievious thoughts. 

“Tell him, ‘See how nice it is to be left behind?’” She replied, floating out of the Doctor’s private quarters, “Oh, and you’ll have to take the babies to Earth with you.” 

“Pardon?!”

It was soon apparent that the boys could not stay behind with the saboteur group.  Bruce was already overburdened with two squirming bodies, and Algernon was concentrating on not to drop his brother. If it came to running, the oversized babies could be injured or killed and would undoubtedly slow down the party.  In the end, it was clear that for the safety of both the boys and the party, they would need to go through the inapposite gate as well.

As they travelled back through the complex, Algernon set up their traps to trigger as soon as someone approached. He rigged the genetics lab, the hallway and Powerplant.  He found the artifact that had created the original anaposite gate in storage and brought that, along with an energy cypher, to the Powerplant.  There under the malevolent blue glow of the lightning elemental Algernon and Peggy connected the artefact using the cypher as a bridge.  The artefact glowed and hummed as the inapposite gate formed in front of them. 

Bruce went through first, taking the boys through.  Peggy flew through briefly to report to the Estate and arrange a van to pick them up.  Rain walked through with the Martin’s in tow.  Silent, but wide-eyed with awe and delight at the scientific marvels around them, John and Athena Martin returned to a disused underpass, on Earth.

“That’s it, time to move out!” Bruce said as the anaposite gate flickered out and died.  

Algernon gave the lightning creature a cheery wave farewell and blew out his cheeks on the forcefield surrounding its prison.

Walking back through the dock the party decided to take out one of the two flyers.  Leaving the one they sabotaged earlier, Peggy connected into the flight computer and took them safely out of the base and towards the rendezvous location. As promised the flyer and pilot were waiting under the cover of  the malformed rock features of the landscape.  As they left the flyer, Bruce heard the sound of an engine in the far distance.  High above and losing altitude fast was another flyer.  And it was making straight for the secret base.

“Do you want to get out of here, sir?” The pilot asked Bruce who had pointed out what could only be Doctor Strangelove returning ahead of schedule.

“Wait until she’s out of sight, then get out as fast as you can.” He replied not taking his eyes of the flyer as it slowed and angled towards the small cave entrance.  As soon as it disappeared inside the mountain, the pilot powered up and took off, putting as much air between them and the mountain as possible. 

Bruce, Peggy and Algernon lined up against the windows of the flyer, expectantly.  When the end came, it was sudden and violent.  First a flash as the gas ignited and lit the inside of the mountain with fire. Next, a dramatic roaring scream as the whole mountain lifted into the sky on the cushion of superheated gas.  the whole world shook as the shockwave, rippled out like an expanding glass dome.  It hit the flyer causing it to dip and pitch violently. The spectators were thrown about the flyer’s cabin and lost sight on the mountain.  The pilot, forewarned, was ready and soon stabilised the craft and when they returned to the window, the cloud had formed a familiar mushroom shape and where the mountain had once been, was now a crater.

Is Doctor Strange love still alive? Algernon tentatively asked the Allsong as their flyer sped them safely away.

No. Came the reply.

31. War and Consequences

The group have fought floor to floor clearing of Dr Strangelove’s Venom Troopers out of Ni’Challan’s space station in the Graveyard of the gods.  Aiding the enemy is a brother to Algernon, a powerful fighter and brilliant infiltrator on par with Algernon himself.  It is a battle of wits and brawn as the opposing sides regroup for one last push.

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

Rain, Peggy, Uentaru and their four remaining venom troopers burst out of the elevator and started running around the exhibition space walkway.  They were most of a room and a hallway away, frustratingly far from a gunfight they could hear in the distance.  As they ran, Rain reached out and stimulated Peggy knowing that she was the faster of the two of them. He hoped she would get there in time.

Closer to the fighting, Bruce and Algernon huddled either side of the doorway leading to a large room already in the midst of battle. The room was flanked by a window looking out into space and felt more ultilatarian than the rest of the station they had seen.  As they dodged the cannon fire of two Brute Venom Troopers, a second wave of allied troopers poured out of a gate in the hallway behind them and started returning fire.

Algernon took some time scanning the room.  This place was lacking the forcefields and exhibits of the other areas and seemed to contain more crates for storage with computers for the management of the rest of the complex.  Behind a group of enemy troopers, he could just see a control panel in a wall beside the long window. Out of the corner of his eye, a movement and a small cylinder flew through the air towards him.  His counterpart had thrown another cypher.  Algernon dodged aside and let the cylinder skitter around the hallway before levitating it back into the battle.  From experience, his counterpart was too hard a target, so he directed the canister towards the group of venom troopers closest to the control panel. Before it had a chance to reach the ground, the canister exploded creating a blue dome of energy that quickly dissolved leaving three frozen troopers, caught in the moment of the detonation.

Weapon’s fire to the right of their doorway drew the boys attention to another room and a fight with more of the enemy.  It seemed there were more allies in the space station fighting back against the invaders.  In contrast, outside the long window, Strangelove’s ship loomed.  Two small dots ejected from the body of the vessel and silently grew larger.

Bruce wanted the little pipsqueak that was causing them so much grief, but that individual had disappeared in the chaos of battle.  Instead, he consoled himself with shooting the two Brutes. Both shots went wide, one lost in the battle, the other, through one end of the long window.   In morbid fascination, Bruce could do nothing but stare as spider-web cracking appeared around the small projectile hole, beyond it, nothing but the vaccum of space.

In the T-Rex exhibition space, Uentaru sprinted keeping up with the group as Peggy raced ahead on her bird-like cyborg legs.  In a few strides, she was down the hallway where the boys held their position.  Between them, the shimmer of the frozen force field still held.  Pushing her speed as fast it would go, she raced through the force field, feeling the bite of the bitter cold for only a moment before she was out the other side and with Algernon and Bruce. 

Venom troopers, having dealt with the turret now turned their attentions on the invaders from behind, two shooting at Bruce and one on Algernon.  From the cover of bulkheads, the boys were safe from their attacks.  One stepped out further than the rest to get a better shot and exposed itself in the process.  An orange beam of light streaked out from the room to the right and destroyed the reckless Venom Trooper.  The cavalry arrived in the form of the clay golem as it lumbered into the room, but no sign of the orange laser wielder.

Out of the midst of the enemy lines the doppelganger lurked, a large energy rifle aimed at Bruce. Blue bolt shot through the chaos, hitting Bruce. Crackling electricity crawled across his armour sparking at exposed skin but doing little but drawing attention to the shooter.  Now Bruce knew where the pipsqueak had gone, and he drew a bead on his target.

Algernon was still thinking.  He watched as the two dots in the widow grew large,  rectangular and ominous.  He watched the troops trying to take control of the space.

What does Doctor Strangelove want here that she’s investing so much?  If we found it first, could we make them come to us?

Second thought lets not do that.

And with that idea in mind, he raced across the battleground behind the Venom troopers frozen in time and closer to the control panel.

There was no mistaking them now, two troop carriers were lining themselves up to clamp to the side of the space station, directly onto the room they were currently fighting.

“Incoming troop landers, quick!” Bruce yelled as he fired his gun, one each on the two Brutes still dominating the centre of the room and one of the pipsqueak. The first shot hit, making the Brute rock, but the other two miss their targets, the human once more disappearing into the battle.

With troop carriers positioning themselves to deliver their cargo, Peggy went to work getting rid of the last of the old Venom troopers left in the battle.  The three frozen in time became her main interest as she started blasting away at them with her hand cannon. Powering up she hoped to blast them all away with one hit. Unfortunately tough exoskeletons meant that when the smoke cleared, two of the three figures were still standing.  The third lay in pieces all around.

Rain reached the ice wall with the allied troopers and Uentaru.  Laying down his hand of light, he made a small gap in the ice field that he quickly slipped through. The venom troopers just ran through without regard to their safety, and one died, frozen in the field.  The three remaining joined their comrades from the second portal to lay down a stream of covering fire.  Uentaru walked through, her shields taking the brunt of the cold damage.  She winced as she stepped out, ready for the next phase of the battle.

As the golem menaced the last remaining burnt venom troopers, the doppelganger threw another cypher into the midst of battle.  It fell to the floor with a thud, spewing thick cloud from both ends, obscuring vision throughout the whole room.

What’s he up to now? Algernon thought as the cloud obscured what he was up to as well.  Carefully, he moved a crate closer to the control panel and opened the door, exposing the computer systems inside.

In the fog, only sound told the tale. A heavy thug coinciding with the crack of an exoskeleton informed them the golem had found his target.  Clunk! Clunk!  The room shook as the troop carriers connected to the station’s hull.

Bruce gave up his range attacks and pulled out his crowbar.  Leaping into the fray he dodged a number of attacks on him before he found his prey. In the smoke, he found the youth that had evaded him throughout the battle and slugged him hard with the crowbar.  He should have gone down under the blow, many larger enemies had, but the boy just turned in surprise and looked up at Bruce.

“Now lie down and stay down!” Bruce bellowed into his face.

Across the room, Peggy was still trying to destroy the frozen venom troopers.  Shooting again, one shattered into thousands of tiny shards, only one more to go.  Darting in ahead of her, Rain made straight for where he last saw Algernon before the smoke obscured everything.  Reaching his brother’s side, he used a cypher to create a mind-link between the two of them.  The communication passed in a flash of thought.

I have options for you. Strangelove may appear at any moment.  You can have a boost like that in the exhibition space, or if you think she may have some voice control over you, I can suggest that whatever she says sounds like nonsense to you.  

Okay.  Why?

You understand the enemy better than me and…I want to give you the choice.

Okay, I like the second idea very much.

Rain nodded and turned his attention to the battle around them.

The battle was at its peak.  Fighting from the northern room was now spilling into the control centre.  Blue outlines marked where lasers cut entrances for the troop carriers’ were forming.  Uentaru entered the battlefield blowing away the last of the frozen venom troopers in front of Peggy.  The doppelganger slipped away from Bruce and ran towards the other room as his counterpart used a cypher to boost his intellect and started the most crucial data dive of his life.

Schematics of the space station.  

Where are they going?

What does she want?

The two thoughts lead his search as he worked through lists of collected items.  In a separate file marked, Private Collection  he found one exhibit that drew his attention, 

Fragment of a planetvore collected in destroyed recursion…

Through the mind-link, he passed the information onto Rain who groaned at the implications.  In the smoke, the Golem was unseen, but not unheard as another venom trooper was crushed under its massive fist.  Above their heads, a small bullet hole into space whistled and expanded.   Rain peered through the smoke to see a person dart out of the room to the north to a central control centre, shooting a venom trooper as he passed.

Ni’Challan!

Relief and happiness made Rain’s light bloom in the fog.  Drawing it together, he formed a tower shield and placed it between the Ni’Challan and a group of troopers following him, two Brutes and a new group of Venom troopers.  Uentaru ran across the battlefield and wedged herself in behind Ni’Challan.  Using the hard-light tower shield as cover, she shot at the latest wave of Venom troopers that had followed Ni’Challan.

Amid the fighting, Bruce was surrounded by the two Brutes that had dominated the battle only moments ago.  One tackled Bruce, pinning him to the ground as the other swung a metal-clad foot back and tried kicking him.  Though prone, he was able to move and wriggled aside as the boot clanged off his armour harmlessly.  Peggy seeing Bruce’s predicament called out,
“Deep breath!” and inserted a cypher into her cannon.  The cypher, canister ammunition shot out over the three struggling figures and exploded, forming a thick cloud of hallucinogenic gas.  The two Brutes instantly stopped fighting Bruce, the one holding him lay down beside him, hugging him like a favourite teddy, the other found the spider-web like crack in the window fascinating.  Bruce swung out with his crowbar at the one holding him, but the bear hug was restrictive, and he didn’t connect with the blow.

Blind to almost everything happening around him, Algernon continued to search the computers for a strategic solution to their problem.  In a fight of attrition, they were going to lose, so they needed to change the battlefield in their favour, use the environment to gain an advantage.  He found the life support systems and the gravity for the station.  Isolating just the battle room, he went to work setting up a delay while letting Rain know what he was doing.  Through the link, he felt Rain nodd and give thanks before moving to put the plan into action.

Through the bullet hole, the smoke slowly vented into space.  The battlefield cleared.  The golem charged the two Brutes in the doorway to the second room as Uentaru shot the Venom Troopers. Across the way, the new openings fell from the bulkheads revealing two new Brutes and half a dozen further Venom Troopers reinforcements. 

Bruce hits the Brute still cuddling him and wriggled free as Rain ran across the space, replenishing the light shield on Ni’Challan and yelling,

“Get ready to run!” He yelled, pointed at the other room, its doorway currently filled by two Brutes their troops and the Golem.

Bruce climbed out of the snuggle of Brutes to see the cracks in the window, now across its full width.  He’d heard the cry to leave but wasn’t ready to flee the fight just yet.  Instead, he threw himself into the melee at the door, swinging his crowbar at one of the Brutes.  As Rain ran passed, a touch and a one-word message, “Run!” As the energy of the Strange flowed through Bruce.

Peggy heard the call and fired a plasma arc at the two Brutes as she charged the doorway.  Electricity sizzled above her head as she ran between them. Troopers’ force bolts hit her metal body, but not before she’s able to make it through the group at the door and into the next room.  Here, Doctor Strange’s deputy in the battle was tinkering once more at another control panel.  With only one enemy in her sights, Peggy ran across the room charging the doppelganger where he worked.  Even distracted, he was quicker and moved out of the way, but her actions had forced him to stop his work. He glared at her with anger that Peggy had never seen on Algernon’s face. Abandoning his work, the doppelganger swung a punch at Peggy that clanged off her metal armour.

Algernon set his delayed disaster to go and ran across the room through Vemon trooper fire from both sides.  Allied and enemy alike fell into the crossfire between the two sides as one by one Peggy, Rain, Algernon, Ni’Challan and Uentaru ran for the doorway.  In the fight between the golem and the two Brutes, Ni’Challan shot one as the Golem pounded the face of the other.  The Brute tried punching back but miss as across the battlefield fresh troops carriers opened fire on the escaping enemy.  Algernon, Uentaru and Rain all dodge and weaved their respective force bolts not finding their targets.

Algernon, the last through the door, looked back on the scene of battle.  The doors would close at any second, and the two Brutes were still inside.  Levitating one of the many crates that filled this room, he threw it at the Brute fighting Bruce.  It was enough to push it through the door as the gravity of the battle room switched, and Venom trooper, crates and broken turret fell towards the compromised window. He had the satisfaction of seeing the window explode out into space, and everything sucked out into the void before the doors shut before him.

The golem brought its two clay hands together on the head of the last Brute and crushed it into its body.  The Brute slumped to the floor.  That left the remaining enemy, Algernon’s look-a-like, fighting Peggy across the room.  Peggy sent a plasma arc towards the youth who once more dodged it with his preternatural speed.  Now bereft of enemies, Bruce once more pulled out his gun, took careful aim and shot the distracted youth.  Able to dodge a lone enemy, the doppelganger could not avoid two enemies at once, and the bullet passed through his shielding and struck.  He collapsed into a small heap in the corner, and the battle was finally over.  Outside the window Doctor Strangelove’s ship turned and started moving away from the space station, its army of clones destroyed.

Rain was oblivious to the battle in the corner as he ran to Ni’Challan, ready to embrace the man before realising it would be unappreciated and quickly brought his arms down to his side.  

“Good to see you well, sir.” He said, stiffly as Ni’Challan checked the health of his home through a control panel.

“Hm…yes. Who are these people?”

“Venom troopers from Ruk, Algernon has deduced they’re here for a remnant of a planetvore in your collection.”

Ni’Challan’s  face grew serious as he focused on the task before him, “That’s serious, indeed.”

The fight in the corner won, Algernon walked over and pulled out his crossbow aiming it at the unconscious figure.

“Algernon?” Peggy said, unsure what she should do next and concerned by the look on Algernon’s face.  She sat staring up at her companion as Bruce put away his gun and started walking over.

It can’t be allowed to live, Filtered through the mind-link to Rain who until that point had not been paying attention to the fight or its outcome.

Don’t you dare, He replied mentally.  Torn now between checking in with Ni’Challan and the big trouble brewing just a few metres away, he guiltily stayed by Ni’Challan feeling like a small child by its parent’s side while his friends fought.  It is then that Bruce arrived and saw the boy was still alive. 

For the first time in the battle, he saw the look -a-like not as an adversary, but as a human kid, at least by Earth standards.  Giving a fleeting thought to Algernon as he ‘stood guard’, Bruce quietly knelt between the boy and Algernon’s crossbow and pulled out his first aid kit.  His fingers numb and shaking, he couldn’t seem to concentrate on what he was doing. Silently, Peggy’s hands took the medical supplies and started applying them to the boy’s wounds as Bruce just sat back and watched.

Algernon froze. His whole life and experience told him that the creature was dangerous and would only cause him and his family harm.  Like cancer, it should be quickly cut out for the good of the whole.  And yet, here was Bruce and Peggy healing the thing, and Rain telling him, not asking him, to stop.  The wavering point of the bolt dropped, and Algernon could do nothing but walk away.

The air whistled through the internal door to the control centre, reminding everyone that beyond its meagre seal, the vacuum of space lay.

“Is there somewhere safer than here?” Rain prompted Ni’Challan who flicked a few switches and all around the party the sound solid metal crashed down.  Blast shields in place, there was no place safer in the whole broken space station.

“He’ll be out for a day or two,” Peggy finally announced once she finished patching up the boy as best he could.  Beside her lay the boy’s possessions, a few cyphers that she now took an interest in as Bruce stumbled away.  Amongst the lot was an item of very rare engineering.  Meant to sit on a belt it created permanent shields, much like the one that Algernon himself generated.  As a tech-based solution, it could be used indefinitely.  Peggy carefully put away the cyphers and the field generator and headed over the Ni’Challan to asking him a question.

“Hey kid, “ Bruce said his voice raspy as he came up beside Algernon. Algernon lay, curled up in the opposite corner from his look-a-like, his crossbow resting his arms.

“Did I miss something? What was the crossbow for?”

“We don’t leave enemies alive, Mr Bruce.” Algernon words came out forced and hard between clenched teeth, “We just don’t.”

“But, he’s just a kid, “ Bruce’s eyes drift across to where the boy lay silent and still, “ I shot him three times, I don’t shoot kids.”

“You should have made it four,” Algernon replied now sitting up to see Bruce better.  Bruce looked haunted, a look of horror and guilt came over his face every time he looked at the boy across the way.

Algernon made an exasperated sound at the emotions on display. “He…we were never kids, Mr Bruce,” Algernon confessed before laying back down, curling up and eventually falling asleep.

“Do you have a lab onboard?” Peggy asked Ni’Challan, joining the group at the computer console.  

“A small one, why?”

“Can I use it, I just want to run a little comparative DNA analysis.”

“I afraid the lab is not that advanced.”

Thoughts of Peggy’s lab reminded Rain of the beacons, particularly the one that led to the Graveyard. Suddenly all the guilt for the death and destruction lay heavily on him and needed confessing.

“Ni’Challan, I need to tell you something. We inadvertently left a bug last time we were here. It’s what led the ship to you.”

“How do you inadvertently leave a bug?” Ni’Challan’s blue eye now cold turned on Rain, and he felt their sting.  Peggy pointed at the sleeping Algernon.

“Him,”

“We didn’t know we were leaving them until a few days ago and then we didn’t make the connection to you until we found out a party we were investigating had left suddenly about the same time.  Algernon made the connection to you.  We can as soon as we knew.”

“Huh, I’ll keep an eye out, give a description and I’ll set my scanners to look for them”  He replied perfunctorily and went back to his work.

“Sir, Ruk knows about you now. The one we followed here, we will be dealing with, but the ones that helped us with support…” Rain let the sentence hang, having no idea was the Quiet Cabal would do with someone like Ni’Challan, “Is that going to be a problem?”

“We shall see, I suspect,” Ni’Challan replied stoically and gave no clue to Rain about how he thought on the subject.  

Rain sighed.  He’d forgotten Ni’Challan was almost a stranger.  Only to him did the relationship of a few hours mean so much.  Even the leaving of the card was the planting of a seed that he never took any care in tending.  Rain had so much he wanted to say, but all seemed so out of place amongst the ruins of the man’s home.  Knowing that Ni’Challan was still alive would have to be enough for now.  Excusing himself, Rain left Ni’Challan and Uentaru to talk to Bruce.

Bruce by this time had returned to the kid’s side, just staring.  The stillness from the usually active and vital Bruce was disconcerting.  Rain walked up and crouched beside him,

“Tell me what you’re thinking?”

“Wha?” The far away looked quickly flickered to Bruce’s sharp-eye angry stare and Rain had to sit down to stop for backing away.

“I’m…very angry at you,” 

“Okay,” He had no idea what he’d done wrong now, but better a Bruce angry at him for some slight than silent brooding Bruce, “So, hit me with it.”

“You…bonded to that naive kid, force yourself on him like…” Bruce searched for a hard enough word and found it, “…like you raped him.”

In reference to the Bloodbrother bond Rain had initiated as they translated into Ruk, It was a slap in the face to Rain. Hadn’t he wanted to do the best for Algernon? Indeed, Algernon himself had accepted the bloodbrother pact well, creating a similar link between the two of them through the Allsong. No rape was the wrong word… rape was the stealing of innocence and safety from the other person.  The gesture had meant the complete opposite,  physical sign of the security there was between them.  He glanced at Algernon in the corner; good intentions had a way of really messing you up.

“Harsh, but I see your position,” He replied finally, “At the time I didn’t think I had a choice, things were moving too fast for me and I needed Algernon to know he wasn’t alone.”

Bruce expression drifted away from Rain as his attention slipped back to the new kid.  Good intentions once again were finding a way to messing up Bruce too. Rain could think of no words.  Instead, he kneeled beside Bruce and hugged him.  The response was swift and final.

“Urgh! Get off me!” Exclaimed Bruce and elbowed Rain in a response more akin to a kid being kissed than an adult brushing off unwanted attention.  Still injured from the blast by the cannon, the elbow made contact with injured ribs.  Pain lanced through Rain, freezing the breath in his lungs.  The corners of his vision greyed as he fell away from Bruce and into a dead faint.

Hours later Rain awoke still lying beside Bruce and Peggy.  He felt better for the long rest.  It seemed he hadn’t slept in days and the extended rest had chased away the last of the cobwebs.  Opposite, his arms wrapped around his legs, Algernon just stared at the three of them. 

“We should have just killed him,” Algernon said, it didn’t need spelling out who he meant.

“I would have been like killing you?” Rain replied quietly as not to disturb the others.

“What? Like killing myself?”

Rain nodded, surprised by the turn of phrase, “Something like that.”

“He could be just mind-controlled, he doesn’t know any better, he’s just a kid,” Bruce replied, seemingly not as asleep as Rain had thought.

“Every enemy left is an enemy at our back,” Algernon countered, a cynical statement from a life of battle.

“Every enemy spared is a potential ally,” Rain replied, also from a lifetime of experience, “And what an ally he can be.  Smart, knowledgeable, fast and ruthless. Just like you.”

“He’s just a kid,” Bruce repeated, the fact now haunting them all as it haunted him.

“He’s not a kid, and neither am I,” Algernon said with the first notes of loss Rain had ever heard from his friend, “I know I say I’m just a kid, but I’m not. I watch documentaries. I know what kids are meant to be. We’re something different.  I don’t know what we are.”

“What, no childhood memories?” It was Peggy now also awake a listening.  Rain sat up to watch his friends.

Algernon was thinking back on his life, a probably more demanding task than he had trying to workout out how to destroy a roomful of enemy soldiers.  

“My…memories are…fragments…going back maybe two years.  I remember helping Doctor Strangelove in the lab and then… out fighting.”  He thought again, and Rain longed to look in on the process of Algernon sifting through his splintered life.  Eventually, he shook his head, giving up, “I was never a baby, never a little kid.”

“Never?” 

“That I remember.”

Peggy fell silent and looked pensive.  She’d always known there was something odd about the boy.  Eventually, she too nodded her head and accepted the truth.

A few hours later, after giving their goodbyes to Ni’Challan, the group translated back, the unconscious boy specifically placed between Peggy and Bruce in the circle.

They returned directly to the labs of the Quiet Cabal who were pleased to see them and had made preparations for their return.  They had found the location of the secret lab and had prepared transport for the party to get out to the site.  They quickly found a room to put the still unconscious kid while the group cleaned up, ate and relaxed before preparing to head back out to find the Doctor Strangelove’s lab.

Peggy, as usual, found her relaxation in the lab.  A simple DNA comparison between Algernon and the new boy.  When Rain caught wind of her testing, he offered up a suggestion,

“Test your DNA as well,” He said and realised she was in her holographic robot form.  Not even cyborg here with some human to test with, this version of Peggy as all synthetic and had nothing with which to experiment.

“Why in God’s name would I do that?” She asked, curious as to the purpose of this endeavour.

“Nevermind, I would have liked to have seen a comparison between the boys and a fully grown human. You keep going on about telemites being short…or something. ” He lied smoothly. 

“Telomeres,” Peggy corrected, “Oh, alright. I have my DNA sequence memorised.”

Peggy sent up the DNA testing for Algernon and the still unknown boy as Rain and Algernon hung around watching.  When the results came through she set up two DNA sequences side by side and pointed out the features.

“Now, see here, the ends of the DNA sequences are shortened, we think that was because they were artificially made from the parents’ DNA.  As to the parents, the DNA sequence both hold enough evidence to prove they both had one of each and that they happened to be the same individuals. It’s not surprising.”

She then pulled up a third sequence that to Rain’s eyes looked identical to the other two, 

“Now this is the sequence of a fully grown adult, female with undamaged telomeres and…” She stopped talking for a moment as her holographic hand moved from one sequence to the other two.  Rain silently watched as the hologram glitched and faltered.  The box that held the intelligence of Doctor Peggy Martin fell out of the air and bounced once on the floor. Rain picked it up, pleased that one of his conspiracy theories had been proven right.

“What just happened to Doctor Peggy?” Algernon asked, coming over to see the results for himself.

“You’d be able to tell me better than I can tell you, but I believe she’s just gone from stepmother to sister,” Rain smirked, pleased with himself.

Algernon took no time to confirm the fact.  As incredible as it may seem, each of the individuals on display were related and had the same two parents.

“You knew, how did you work it out?”

Rain’s self-satisfied smirk faulted a little at this point.

“Well, I would exactly say worked it out…more of a hunch.  Quickened are rare and yet here we are all four of us, you two being particularly interesting being both listed as the Paradox type, at least by the literature I’ve read.”

  “If you are fifteen years old, and I must admit that is looking unlikely now, it fitted in with the time of Peggy’s parents’ disappearance being approximately twenty years ago.  You are human, and we don’t know of too many abducted humans, though again I admit that there are probably many other abducted people they could have been.”

  “Peggy has always been adamant that the Rockwheelers lived underground and the lab is underground. I don’t know where the water comes in, maybe a trip to the labs will answer that one too.”

  “I guess, what it comes down to is that Peggy made a Strange machine to look for her parents.  Not just a weird machine, but a machine that uses the Strange.  She longed to find her lost family, and the first time she turned on the machine…it found you.” He gestured to Algernon, “You being dragged to Earth was not a mistake, just not intentional.”

“What sort of people were Doctor Peggy’s parents that they could make three quickened children?” Algernon finally asked after working through Rain’s convoluted thinking.

“I would suspect, very gifted ones.”

Bruce hadn’t left the kids side.  

Rain took the Peggy box to see him in his contemplation.  When first he saw the silent box, Bruce couldn’t help but ask,

“What happened to her?”

“She found out they’re related,” Rain gestured to the figure on the bed.

“Not Algernon and…” He gestured to the bed as well.

“That too.  All three.  Siblings.”  Happy to share his confirmed theory again, he sat down in a nearby seat and shared the story of the DNA results.

“So she went into a Robo-coma?” Bruce asked once all the story was out to Rain’s satisfaction.

“It was a lot for her to take in,” He tapped the metal body making an empty ringing sound, “I thought you could relate to Peggy right now.”

Either the tapping on her metal body or saying her name did the trick as soon as Rain finished his sentence, Peggy’s box floated back up to usually operational height and started flying away.

“I have to leave…” Her tinny voice coming through even more distracted than usual.

“And not save your parents?” Rain said over his shoulder and was rewarded by another clang as Peggy once more fell to the ground.  He went and picked her up.

“Don’t go to Earth Peggy. There’s nothing for you there.”  He said gently, bringing her back into the sick room and sitting down.

“Wha…what about my family?” She asked, referring to her brother and grandmother, whose lives seemed to go along quite happily without her.

“Your family is here on Ruk,” He soothed, “Your brothers, us…your parents.”

The box shuddered and fell silent once more. Rain sighed.  

Two broken souls here and one lost one up in the labs, He thought and wondered if Algernon heard.  It didn’t matter.  They’d been there for him, and he’d be there for them.  Rocking the Peggy box, he sat in silence with Bruce while keeping his Allsong link open for Algernon.

In Rain’s world, things were looking up.

30. Brothers at Arms

 After discovering that Doctor Strangelove was on her way to Ni’Challan’s home, the party leapt into action. From Ruk, they translated directly there, bringing the fight with them in the form of two cypher portals linked to squads of Ruk Venom troopers.  Fighting through two rooms of enemy Venom troopers, the party now find themselves in a moment of peace, with a choice of two paths.

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The sounds of battle in the first two rooms petering out far behind him, Algernon investigated this third space alone. It was another exhibition space, rare items from recursions all over the Strange protected and confined behind  Ni’challan’s unique force fields.  At the far end beside an exhibit of ancient metal armour, a set of stairs led up to the next level.  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?”

As if in response, a yellow glow appeared on the other side of the stairs from the armours.  The force field on the armours also flickered and died.  The armours as one came to attention with a snap of metal.  Wielding crystal blue blades, the armours stepped down and clattered towards Algernon. 

Rain and Peggy were in the large room near the ruins of the dead brute Vemon trooper.  Their attention was pulled first towards the clay golem fighting two venom troopers, and then to the exhibition area, Algernon had raced.  Either way could be the most direct to Ni’Challan.  There was no way of telling.  Movement in the broken doorway in front of them revealed Algernon stepping back in defence of some new threat.  Moulding his yellow light into a large hand, Rain ran in beside Algernon and faced the two animated armours, their swords now burning with blue light.  Peggy lined up one of the two Venom troopers with her cannon and shot it square in the back.  Having aided the golem, she then turned and followed Rain to face what Algernon had found.

The yellow glow in the corner was resolving itself into a human form, a figure wearing a high collared trench coat and long-bodied gun cradled in its arms. As the party readied for an attack, the person pulled up their arm cannon and aimed it straight down the room towards them.  Algernon didn’t know if the figure had anything to do with it, but he didn’t think the force-field cutting out was an accident.

In unison, the armour charged across the room one arcing its sword towards Algernon, the other slashing out at Rain.  Rain dodge aside, making the armour overreach and unbalance, Algernon could not move as fast, but his shields held and kept the blow from striking him.  Peggy, in her cyborg persona, interposed herself between Rain and the armour.  From inside her metal frame, the whirl of electrical motors fans and gears foreshadowed Peggy preparing to unleash on the two armours. Two bolts of plasma streaked from her cannon. The bolts ricocheted off the breastplates of both, leaving dents and a cracking field of energy, but not doing the damage she’d expected.  Frowning, Peggy held her ground preparing for the returning blow.

In the previous room, Bruce watched the golem as it received a bladed blow from a Venom trooper, leaving a jagged scar across its fired clay body.  From behind, a squad of six allied troopers ran through from the previous fight and started firing on the enemy.  Bruce could see nothing behind the golem, the room beyond was full of thick smoke, making viewing impossible.  Lifting his gun, Bruce shot twice, one on each enemy.  One missed, having dodged the golem’s blow at the right time, the other bullet found its mark and killed it.

The troops opened fire only half hitting the enemy Venom trooper, as the golems earthenware fist smashed into its face.  With the last round in his gun, Bruce shot and killed the creature, putting it out of its misery.  Returning his first gun to its holster, he drew his second and looked up at the blank face of the golem,

“That’s it, right?” 

The golem bowed its head solemnly towards him as a sign of respect and turned, entering the smoke and disappearing out of sight.  The sound of more fighting within the smoke told a tale of more enemies.  As the squad moved to follow the bulk of the party into the other room, Bruce called three over, and they followed the golem into the smoke.

In the armour room, the figure was most definitely a woman and with her weapon fully transported she fired, shooting an armour from behind. With her front-row position, Peggy realised the gun was projecting weaponised coherent space-time.

“It’s not Strangelove,” Algernon said out loud as he levitated the armour attacking him.  Floating up and back to where it had come, the armour could do nothing but flail wildly, it’s legs trying to run but getting nowhere.  Algernon moved forward, directing the armour back into its case as Rain brought around his large hand made of light and put it between him and the armour still fighting Peggy.  The armour struck at the hand, dissipating some of its energy, but the hand held.

Unsure and wary of the individual with the space-time gun, Peggy shot at the woman before moving to protect Algernon.  The bolt hit, but dispersed harmlessly off a shield, a few inches away from her body.  The woman gave a disappointed shrug and once more shot the armour on the ground.  It shattered into its many parts, clattering and bonging randomly across the room.  The two armours now seemingly under control, Rain touched Algernon, pushing the energy of the Strange through him before running for the stairs and up to the next level.

With a shiver, Algernon focused the energy on the job at hand.  He wanted to return to armour to its case, to do that he needed to reestablish the forcefield.  The timing was critical. Letting go of the armour, he trained his thoughts and the Strange on the mechanism that controlled the forcefield.  It should have been hard, but Algernon found the right connections and reestablished energy flow.  The forcefield sprung into life between him and the armour just as it was maneuvering to attack once more.  Instead, the armour stopped, inverted its sword to point down and stood at attention.

“Impressive, “ Said the woman reloading her weapon and overlooking Algernon’s handiwork.

“Who are you?” Peggy asked, her sharp tone sounding even harsher in her cyborg form.

“Uentaru,” She replied, pushing past Peggy, “I’m a friend of Ni’Challan.”
“Are you one of his ‘found’?” The note of disdain was clear.  The group had met one of Ni’Challan’s Found Gentlemen last visit.  An unsavoury slaver from Railsea called Rondat tu Vin.

“No, he looks after a few things for me.  When he called for help, I teleported over.”

Somewhere above, the whoomp of a large energy weapon discharging followed by the blunt smack of a body hitting a  metal wall.  

“We should help your friend,” She cradled her gun and followed Peggy up the stairs.

In the smoke-filled exhibition space, Bruce could barely see a few metres ahead of him.  Following the sounds of a massive battle,  he found the golem trading blows with a Venom trooper Brute.  The Brute was trying to bring its cannon to bear on the golem, but the close combat was hindering.  In one corner, Bruce could just see the source of the smoke, a machine of some kind spewing billowing noxious clouds into the air.  None of it phased Bruce.  His mind was on the kill as he raised his new gun and shot the Brute.  A chunk of cloned flesh flew from the left shoulder, and the arm dropped uselessly to its side.

Now it was a slugfest between the golem and the Brute.  The golem swung a king hit on the Brute.  In return, the Brute brought his fist up between them for an uppercut, smashing the golem.  Blood and pottery shard flew everywhere as the three troopers awaited Bruce’s orders.

“Shoot the Brute!” He yelled, dropping his gun to pull out his faithful crowbar.  The allied troopers provided cover fire, as Bruce ran in, swinging in with his full might and skill.  His crowbar connected in a jarring blow cracked the skull of the Brute.  The giant sank to its knees, finally keeling over, dead.

Bruce and his three troopers had finished the enemy threat on this floor.  He took a moment to enjoy the rush of power, a unique feeling for the once construction worker.  Looking around, he could now see the burning machine.  A full-size working tie-fighter, straight out of Star Wars had been the innocent victim of a stray blaster bolt.  Giddily, not from the smoke but his success, he wandered the room until he found glass hand grenades filled with a gel that purported to be fire extinguishers.  Lobbing a few of those as the seat of the smoke seemed to do the trick, and the station’s environmental systems soon started clearing the smoke from the air.

The golem, its job done, now returned to a large plinth beside a doorway.  Bruce wandered over and looked through the archway as the golem ceramic joints ground and settled back into place.  Inside was an elevator with floor markers going up.  There were a few scorch marks, a few stray shots had made their mark, but the mechanism seemed clear.  There didn’t seem to be anything to do now but head back and find the others.  Calling over his three troopers, they all trotted out and after Algernon.

Rain blindly ran up the stairs into the next room, expecting the automated weapon systems of the space station to turn aside for him like the ones downstairs.  In this long narrow room, he spotted four of the regular wall-mounted turrets, as well as a large turret on a pop-up stand at the far end of the room. He had a moment’s realisation that a panel in a nearby wall had been opened and tampered with before the large turret fired.  The plasma bolts caught him in the chest, picked him up and threw him into the back wall.  Winded and dazed as his clothes smoked and smouldered, Rain could little but lay there and wait for the turret to find him again.

  Peggy was first at his side and assessing the situation.  With deft hands, she provided first aid and got him sitting up behind an exhibit for protection. Something in his side ground disturbingly as he moved.  A rib? Something worse? He couldn’t tell.  As shock settled in and he began to slide into a passive state of being injured, Uentaru appeared and silently handed him a healing cypher.

“Er…thank you.” He choked-out and accepted the gift from the stranger. 

From the stairs, Algernon called, “What did it?”

“Cannon…someone’s tampered,” Rain replied and with a shaking hand pointed out the open panel on the wall.

Algernon scanned the room and judged the threat.  It seemed that only the cannon had been tampered with as none of the four turrets had fired. Pulling out a cypher he carefully moved from exhibit to exhibit until he was in position, then placed the cypher on the floor.  Instantly, a clear, indestructible shield rose between the panel and the cannon.  Now protected, Algernon felt brave enough to defy the machine that had hurt his friend.  Standing close to the shield, he pressed his lips up to its transparent surface and blew out his cheeks, a sign of defiance and childish bravado.  The cannon fired, its bolt dispersing harmlessly against the shield.  Unfortunately, now the four turrets fired.  Two could not get through the defences of shield and exhibition force fields, but two behind Algernon shot him in the back.  His armour took the damage, but he was rocked forward, chastened and ducked back undercover within reach of the panel.

Seeing Algernon take a hit, Peggy pulled out a shrapnel grenade, she’d picked up at The Scar, and bowled it underarm under the large turret.  The grenade damaged the turret but didn’t stop it from firing again at Algernon behind the shield.  The shield took the blow, flickered and held as Algernon got to work on the panel.

It was curious. The more Algernon looked at the sabotage done to the control panel, the more he realised it was exactly what he would have done.  He returned the circuitry to its original configuration and stood, the cannon remained silent. So did he, about his small mysterious nugget of information.

Now feeling a little more together after Peggy’s first aid and the healing cypher, Rain spent the moments Algernon worked on the panel to talk to Uentaru, his mysterious benefactor.

“Where did you come from?”

“Oh, I have a small home in the middle of The Strange.  I heard Ni’Challan was under attack and teleported across.  I assume you did something similar.” She said in a friendly, efficient way that reminded Rain of a military officer.  Neat, efficient and respectable.

“Something like that,’ He thought, of the beacons, their group had left for Doctor Strange to follow.  A point in their story well worth leaving out.

“Sorry for attacking you,” Peggy’s metallic voice joined the conversation as if fearful of being left out, “Weren’t sure if you were friend or foe.”

“Well, “ Uentaru looked sidelong at Peggy, almost dismissively, “You weren’t much of a threat, so you’re forgiven.”

Peggy fumed, and in this cyborg form, it was a physical effect as steam rose from her metal body.

“Er… I for one am pleased to know that Ni’Challan has such good and adept neighbours,” Rain dragged the conversation back to something more civil as Algernon stood, still focused on the panel.  The turrets were silent.

Algernon was now wondering, looking at the control panel in front of him.  He pondered what mischief he could get up to with such access and by inference, what the tamperer would likely have done. Certainly interfering with the power supply to the force-fields was within control of this panel.  He thought about what he would have done in their place.  His usual process was to add a remote connection so he could control the systems here from wherever he went.  With that thought in mind, he easily found a remote coupler tucked into the wiring.  He pulled it out, only pausing a moment wondering if doing so would tip his hand to the coupler’s owner.

Bruce with six Venom troops in tow now stomped up their stairs and took in the room. 

“No time to sit and smoke Rain.” He joked before spotting Uentaru with his friends, “Who are you?”

“Uentaru, a friend of Ni’Challan’s, “ She replied as simply as Bruce’s blunt question, 

“She teleported across when she heard Ni’Challan was under attack, “ Rain added context and Bruce’s eyebrow raised,

“What? Into the middle of a firefight?”

“Yes, she’s been amazing,” Rain exalted before catching Peggy’s part human part cyborg red eyes glaring down.  He shrugged as Uentaru and Bruce continued their conversation.

“Can you get us out to that ship outside?” He asked. He was determined to capture the Strangelove ship.

“First, find Ni’Challan,” She said, their mission set, Rain nodded in enthusiastic agreement.

“There’s a lift on the other side, where does it go?”

“Observation level for the specimen pens.”

The revelation was met with mixed reactions as the party wondered what sort of living creatures would Ni’Challan had thought to collect.  The group picked Rain up and continued past the floor turret and into the next room.

It was smaller than most rooms they’d been in so far.  Nearest the group a double force field denoted by yellow safety holograms filled a gap into a massive double-height room full of forest plants, cycads and vines.  At the other end, elevator doors stood closed but ready to take viewers up to a mezzanine level high above the canopy.

“Oh, this would be the T-Rex exhibition space,” Uentaru mentioned offhandedly as the force field flickered.

Bruce looked through the dense foliage as everyone else looked up to a metal walkway above the forest. He saw the thick, scaly hide, the muscular legs and a plate-sized staring eye above height level. Algernon and Rain saw a figure, tinkering with another control panel on the far side of the room.  Both did a double-take, then turned to look at each other.

“You did try to tell us,” Rain said, shrugging his shoulders.

“Tell you what?” Algernon asked as the forcefield flickered again and died leaving a large six-metre tall gap into the forest enclosure

“That we may end up fighting you someday,” The figure looked precisely like Algernon himself.  The moment was lost to a more pressing problem.

“You know Jurassic Park?” Bruce said, gesturing to the huge beast now pushing its way through the forest to the gap.  He turned to Uentaru now pointing to the metal walkway where the figure did his best to murder them all via dinosaur “How do we get up there?”

“Elevator,” She replied as if it were obvious. Raising her gun, she shot a round into the forest, the beast roared.  The six troopers took up positions in the gap and started firing at what they could see of the T-Rex through the thick forest.

The second Algernon started at the noise and looked down to see the party below.  Concentrating on the Strange, one minute Algernon was by Rain’s side, the next he was up on the walkway beside Algernon2.  The mix of his Atomic Dash and Levitate surprising the saboteur.  Up close, Algernon could see that his doppelganger was not a complete copy, with a different mix of the same facial features.  It was more like looking at a brother than a twin or clone.

“That’s weird,” Commented Bruce and he raised his gun and trained it on the Algernon2, “Algernon never jumps into combat like that.”  The bullet flew true, but the other Algernon was faster and dodged the bullet swinging his body out of its path in a blur of speed.

“Ah, I’m having second thoughts!” Algernon said so the rest of the party below.  

Back on the ground, the fight with the Tyrannosaurus Rex was on in earnest.  Both Peggy and Rain shot at the creature and missed; Peggy with her arm cannon and Rain with his fear laidened Hard-light blast.  The troopers did better as did Uentaru, but the beast was massive, the bolts barely scratching its heavy hide. 

 On the walkway high above, Algernon2 sprung up from the ground and tried to connect with a roundhouse kick to Algernon’s head.  Algernon stepped back, and the kick missed.  His reflection in this eerie dance rebalanced and was ready to defend in a moment.  Algernon used Mind link to pick up his doppelganger’s surface thoughts.

Why does this guy look familiar?  Nevermind, he’s hostile! Along with the thought came the idea to push the hostile away and over the railing back into the dinosaur enclosure.

On the ground, the T-Rex was showing what it would do if it got jaws on Algernon.  One bite and first one trooper, then another disappeared.  Humanoids were a mere mouthful for this monster.  Peggy shot and hit the T-Rex as Rain gave up trying to scare the creature with his blast.  Instead, he created another hand of light and waggled it in front of the T-Rex’s nose as a distraction.  A trooper and Uentaru both shot the T-Rex as the creature took the bait.  Between jaws that could crush a car, the T-Rex snagged the hand, flailing it back and forth like the biggest rubber chew toy.  Rain and Peggy both ran for the elevator doors.

“Disperse into the forest!” Bruce told the troopers as he used the noise and action to sneak past the T-Rex’s attention, and started climbing the metal infrastructure holding up the walkway.  Grabbing a support, hand over hand he climbed a triangular support to the edge of the walkway.  Grabbing the walkway from underneath with both hands, he swung himself up and rolled his body onto the walkway. 

 Now across the walkway from Algernon, Bruce watched as the figure crouched low and swung his fist up in a deadly uppercut.  Even knowing it was happening, Algernon couldn’t match his twin for speed and the hit connected.  He flew up and over the railing and fell through the forest canopy and back into the enclosure.  Rolling back to his feet, Algernon attacked, focused on the reality around Algernon2. The space around him warped and shifted sickeningly. Algernon2 swayed drunkenly in place, an easy target for the sharpshooter waiting his chance.

Bruce didn’t hessitate.  A shimmering field of energy around the figure slowed the bullet’s velocity, but could not stop it.   Bruce saw blood blossom on the shoulder of the person that could have been Algernon.  he grinned at getting past the enemies shielding and moved up ready to shoot again.

From the lift door, Peggy tried shooting the T-Rex as it swung back into the forest, chewing the hand. Her shot went wide and hit a trooper.  The hand finally took as much abuse as it could stand and disappeared with a pop.  The look of surprise on the dinosaur’s face would have been comical if it didn’t hold quite so many dagger-sharp teeth.  It turned to find prey further in its jungle, in the location of fresh blood.

“Algernon, get out of there, brother! The T-Rex is coming!” Rain called out to Algernon somewhere across the enclosure deep in the undergrowth.  Hearing Rain, the spark of the Strange still found Algernon and the old familiar feeling of competence filled him.

Above, Algernon2 had also had enough.  Tinkering with the control panel once more, he opened a door beside him and made his escape. Through the mind link, Algernon knew he was going for help.  More like himself?  No, others.  Levitating up, Algernon joined Bruce on the walkway, and together they followed Algernon2 around the corner.

On the ground, Rain was frustrated by the slowness of the elevator.  Even when the doors finally opened, Uentaru and Peggy took two last parting shots at the T-Rex.  Uentaru gravely injured the beast, but it was Peggy’s shot that finally killed it.  As its hulking body collapsed to the ground making the room shudder, she had a moment to consider her actions.

“I’ve done a terrible thing,” She said as Rain impatiently held the door for the four remaining troopers now returned from the forests.   With a shudder, Rain made another hand and put it up between himself and his Venom trooper allies.

Now too far away for Mind Link, Algernon and Bruce chased Algernon2 down a long hallway from the T-Rex room. Dropping something as he passed, Algernon2 ducked in a doorway and out of sight.  The thing sprang to life, another forcefield that shimmered blue.  As they moved closer, Bruce could feel the bitter cold emitted by the shield and slowed.  Algernon did not.  Instead, he Atomic Dashed through hoping the speed would mitigate most of the cold damage.  The frost field bit deep into his shield, and it snuffed out of existence.  The cold did not touch him, however, his speed made him lose grip on the icy floor.  Sliding out of control, he slammed face-first into the wall opposite. Running through at a more careful pace, Bruce kept his footing.  He reached the corner in time to see Algernon2 run to the side of two Venom Trooper Brutes.  

In a large room past the force-field, a shooting battle had been raging for some time.  The two brutes had their backs to Bruce and Algernon as they shot from behind a makeshift barricade.  Two more squads of three Venom troopers were further ahead trading shots with a wall turret.  Algernon2 said something to the Brutes before disappearing into the fight.  The Brutes together turn to face the door, Bruce and Algernon.

Algernon scanned the area for flammables, found one and ignited it, a canister filled with a swirling gas. With a violent explosion, Venom troopers scattered to the floor, and the battle was now on two fronts.  Bruce stood back and set down the second of the two gates cyphers.  Instantly a tear in reality, let their troopers into the fray as the two Brutes shot the doorframes inches from both the companions.

When they looked again, they could just see the doppelganger organising the second group of Venom troopers to concentrate fire on the wall turret.  It would not last long under the torrent of damage.

Two rooms away Rain, Peggy and companions burst out of the elevator and started running around the exhibition space walkway.  They were most of a room and a hallway away, frustratingly far from a gunfight they could hear was happening.  As they ran, Rain reached out and Stimulated Peggy knowing that she was the faster of the two of them. He hoped she would get there in time.

To be continued…

27: But, I don’t want to

Using the invitation found in Rain’s puzzlebox the group travelled to the Graveyard of the Machine God and the collection of Ni’Challan.  Here the group learnt a number of truths, Bruce’s father’s fate in the Fero Navy of Railsea and Rain’s tragic past. They left the facility with more than just information as Algernon, unknown to even him, has taken something back to Earth.

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

Translating into Peggy’s lab the four companions broke away with nothing to say to each other, all cocooned in their own thoughts.  Rain was the first to stumble upstairs and away to who knew where.  Bruce went straight to the firing range for a few hours where he set up three targets and shot them all in quick succession.  Algernon was at a loose end.  He had surveillance equipment and thought to set it up to watch Keaton, his supervisor, then thought better of it.  He thought back to his studies into human psychology and brain chemistry in an attempt to solve the problem of his memory loss and blackouts.  The more he studied, the more he realised that the information was only for human minds and didn’t equate to his experience.  He knew if he really wanted to do something about it, he’d have to go home. But, that was the last place he wanted to be.  

In the end, no wiser, he made his way to the mess for an evening meal. Bruce, having finished his gun practice and was also sitting down to a meal and waved Algernon over.

“Bruce, you use to work in construction, did you ever knock things down?” Algernon asked as he brought his meal over to Bruce’s table.

“Oh yeah, it was good fun.  You don’t have to be so careful, and if you can find the right spot you can bring down a wall in a blow, very satisfying.”
“So there’s a science to it?”
“Absolutely, and an art.  The quality of the construction and materials, the formation of the load-bearing structures…all play their part”

“Could you knock a building down in one hit?”

“No, I imagine you could take out a load-bearer, but that won’t make the building fall down, just sag a little.”  Bruce put down his cutlery now paying more attention to his young friend’s line of questioning, “Why?  What is this all about?”

“Just curious,” Algernon tried to deflect Bruce’s interest.

“Come on, what’s on your mind?”

“Well, for example, it could have been useful to have the warehouse collapse as we escaped Celaphais.”

“Couldn’t have done it, not in the time we had.”

They ate in silence for a moment or two as Algernon digested his thoughts and meal.

“Kid, how’s your head?” Bruce asked and Algernon responded by making sure it was still in place, “I mean, you learnt some difficult stuff.”

“Difficult?”

“Someone’s been messing with your mind.” Bruce gave up on his meal and focused on Algernon squirming under the attention, “You know we’re here for you, you’re safe with us.”

“Safe?”

“Well, we’ll keep Peggy from more of her extreme experimentation.”

A look came over Algernon’s features, a resolve, “It’s pretty obvious who it is…” He said before passing out again.  When he came to it was to Bruce crouched beside his chair, concern turning to relief as Algernon sat back up, wiping the remains of his meal off his face.

“I didn’t know you could do that to yourself,” Bruce said once he was sure his young friend was fine and sat back down.

“Do what?”

“You fainted again.”

“Oh,” Algernon said, now making sense of the mess, “Do we need to fix it, Mr Bruce?”

“Don’t you want this out of your head?”

“Not if it results in blowing my head off.” 

“I don’t think that will happen.”

A steely look flashed through Algernon’s expression, “I think you’re naive then.”

“I think, if it was to happen, it would have happened already.”

Peggy had spent the evening thinking over the cyborg augmentations she had acquired in the Graveyard of the Machine God.  She found it pleasant thinking about how she should incorporate such augmentations into her current form as she freshened up from the trip and grabbed some food before heading back to her lab.  However, passed her passcode, over the electrified floor and around motion sensors that were a staple of her lab, she found Rain, curled up in a corner drinking straight from her once hidden bottle of Burbon.  Without a word, she moved aside a chair at a large office desk revealing an alcove.  The space was lined with an old mattress and blankets.  Detailed technical drawings of engines from Railsea with breakdowns of the engine and gearing from The Limness were tacked to the wood all around. It was where Peggy had taken to sleeping most nights and the place she went to when she needed to think.  Rain crawled into the offered ‘safe space’ taking the bottle with him. 

Inside, a flash of metal caught his eye. Stuck to the underside of the table with a wad of chewing gum was a disk, no larger than two dimes stacked.  Shaking fingers peeled the device away from the table to reveal a tiny blue LED that had been hidden against the edge of the draw.  As Peggy busied herself around the lab, Rain silently pulled out his puzzlebox and dropped the disc in a compartment, before asking a question.

“Peggy, do you remember when you lost your parents?”

The question stopped Peggy in her tracks.

“Of course,” She said in her most matter of fact voice she could muster.

“What was it like?”

Where the first question had rocked her, the second had stung.  No longer able to keep up a facade of detachment she turned to Rain curled up under her desk.

“It was awful, what do you think?  They didn’t die or even go anywhere, they just ceased to be. “

She took her seat beside the table and reached for the bourbon just as it was offered up, “There’s CCTV footage of them going into a tunnel in their car, but they never came out the other side.  People looked, I’ve looked but there’s nothing to show what happened to them.”  She tilted the bottle to her lips and in a practised action drank down two quick mouthfuls.

“I use to tell myself fairytales. My family would be safe, I could find them if I just…I thought…knowing would make a difference, that I could put the ghosts to rest.” Rain said taking back the bottle as it was past down, “But it doesn’t, it just….why does it hurt?”

“Because they’re gone and they’re probably not coming back,” Peggy replied to Rain’s question from her own fractured childhood, “Mind you,” She sniffed, surprising herself with the tears now running freely down her face, “After Noel, I don’t know what to think.”  She brushed the tears away as Rain once more pulled out his puzzlebox and withdrew the metal disk.

“Wha…”

Holding a finger to his lips he handed her the disc and pointed to where he’d found it, before leaning back onto the mattress and falling into a drunken sleep.

Without a word, she examined the disc.  It had no timpani or other device for converting sound waves to electrical impulses so she assumed it was not an audio bug.  Under a microscope, she could see the surface that looked metallic was actually bone, grown and not machine-made. The density of the material showed it had been formed from mammalian bone, but without DNA testing she could not narrow down her search.

 Slowly she pulled the item apart found that its components identified it as a beacon, one that used and broadcast across the Strange to another recursion. A beacon on a stationary item?  Lifting her head from her work she yelled out, 

“Hertzfeld, you have some ‘splaining to do!”

Hertzfeld, now use to this sort of communication from his protege, soon sauntered down the stairs to Peggy’s lab.

“What’s this about?”

“I can understand listening devices in my lab, but a beacon?” She gestured to the disk now pulled apart into components on a tray beside her.

“Why do you have a beacon?” He asked dumbfounded as he too realised what the disc was.

“Good question,” Peggy quipped back eagerly, as the excitement for the hunt replaced all maudlin feelings, “Come and help me answer it.”

Hertzfeld and Peggy worked side by side teasing the details out of the device.  He was fascinated to discover how it used the Dark Network to power and signal and was able to find a way of switching it off.

“I believe if we can find a way of tapping into the signal we would probably find others just like it.”  He said as Peggy eagerly stepped up to the task.  The night wore on and they kept at their allotted task oblivious to the rising sun the next day.

Algernon and Bruce were keeping themselves busy in the absence of the rest of the party.  Algernon took to the library and sat researching demolition techniques through his VR headset oblivious to the bustling Hertzfeld as he too looked for information pertaining to the signals through the Strange.  Bruce warmed up with a set in the gym, then put on his new armour and redid the workout again.  

Peggy had not left her lab.  She was close to a breakthrough on the beacon, she could feel it but it eluded her every search parameter.  Stepping back from the counter she rubbed her eyes with the palms of her hands and allowed herself to feel the exhaustion she had been keeping at bay all night.  Her eyes alighted to her bed where Rain still lay, the bourbon bottle now empty beside him.  

Subtle. It was how Bruce had described Rain’s abilities when they were first discovering they were quickened.  It was a good word, it described the beacons too.  How they subtly used the chaotic patterns of the Strange to project their signal.

And then she saw it.  She could see it in her mind, how the beacons worked and how to follow the signal not just to other beacons but back to their source.  Putting her inspiration into action she traced the signal through the Strange to five other beacons.  With all six beacons locations, she sent a signal through the network. The beacons all pointed to Ruk, the technology recursion, as their point of origin.

With a whoop and a victorious scream, Peggy leapt from the counter.  The sudden noise woke Rain with a start who cracked his head on the underside of the table making the desk jump.  

“Arrrrrh..” Was the inarticulate groan from the hidey-hole as Rain once more curled up adding the physical pain and hangover to his other woes.

Peggy had no thought for his pains.  In quick succession, she identified the other five beacon locations.

One on Earth, disturbingly outside New Orleans at her old home in the swamp.

One in Halloween, at the home of Hazel Jenkins

One in the Graveyard of the Machine Gods

One in a Zombie Apocalypse and the last in a Space Opera style recursion that the group had not been to.  

Taking careful note, she stood back and let the information sink in.  It still didn’t tell them who had planted the beacons in the first place.  She looked to the heap of misery under her table as Hertzfeld returned and she let him in on her discovery and voiced her concerns.

“This is a high-security facility, my lab is pin coded, covered by CCTV and equipt with an electrified floor.  I can’t imagine anyone but one of my group who could have  brought it in.”

“The other lab graduates make it a point of honour to put bugs in your lab.”

Peggy waved away the suggestion, pointing to a box of broken bugs of various kinds, “I find those.”

“But, your own team?” Hertzfeld said, also glancing at Rain thinking about the security risk of having him in the lab.

“It has to be.  Bruce could have been blackmailed to put it there, he has a family to protect,” She said, but shook her head just as quickly.  Bruce was far too honourable and practical to allow himself to be blackmailed, wasn’t he? “Algernon had blackouts.  Something is influencing him but…” She had to admit she found this thought very unsettling and she had considered Algernon a future collaborator and someone to whom she could trust.

“And…” Hertzfeld inclined his head to Rain who seemed to be snoring once more, but who could tell.

Peggy had to shrug her doubts over Rain.  He had found the beacon, but he could have just as easily placed it.  What did they really know about his convoluted past?

 “There will have to be an investigation.”

“I can’t run it,” Peggy confessed, “I don’t want to bring up the whole trust issues with them again.  You’ll have to run it and it has to be done now.”

Hertzfeld nodded and started with the first and most conveniently placed of the party.

A rap on the top of the table solicited a response of sorts.

“The number you have called is unattended, please leave a message after the beep.” Came a muffled voice, but no beep.

“Rain, I need to ask you a few questions,” Hertzfeld said in his best managerial voice. As chief of the Estate, he’d had practice and Rain turned to face Hertzfeld.

“How often do you come to Peggy’s lab?”

Rain’s brow started to wrinkle in thought, and then his eyes drifted out of focus. He made an effort to answer and eventually gave up shrugging.  “I came in a few days ago with the invitation… and then last night…was it last night?”  He looked at Peggy.

“He’s often here, they all are.” She agreed and Hertzfeld changed his question.

“Why were you here last night?”

At this Rain became decidedly shifty and looked back to Peggy, “Can you tell him it’s not relevant?”

“I don’t know what’s relevant and what’s not,” Peggy replied genuinely and Rain moaned.

“I couldn’t break into Keaton’s office for his stash,” He gestured to the now empty bottle of bourbon.  Keaton silently took that information on board and continued.

“Have you seen this before?” He showed the disc and Rain spent a moment trying to get his eyes to focus.

“Yeah, I found it up there,” He pointed to the blob of chewing gum still in place.  

Peggy reached for a Petrie dish and scalpel realising that this too could be analysed for clues. As she started her testing, Hertzfeld asked one last question.

“Have you seen anything like it before?”

“No.” Rain shook his head, discovered too late his mistake and sunk back down to the mattress, his eyes squeezed shut. 

Hertzfeld set to work looking for the rest of the party.  He found Bruce first just finishing his training and asked for a private word.  

“I need you to answer my questions as truthfully as possible.,” He said showing Bruce the disc, “Have you seen this before?”

Bruce picked it up and examined the disc before replying, “No, new to me.” He said adamantly.

“Tell me about your group’s usual movement patterns in the lab?”

Bruce’s eyebrow raised in question, but he kept it to himself and gave Hertzfeld a rundown on their usual routines.  

“Outside of the mess it’s the place we meet most often.  We always leave from there whenever we translate and if we’re looking for Peggy it’s the most obvious place to look.”

“So you would say you and the rest of the party freely move through the space, gain access when you please?”

“Yes, is that a problem, sir?”
“Not before now, no.” Hertzfeld considered his next question, “ Do you know where I could find Algernon?”

At that moment, Algernon was looking for Rain.  He sent an SMS.

Where are you?

Peggy’s lab.

Oh.

Something’s up.

Should I go there? He replied and started heading in that direction.

Hertzfeld will find you.

Should I hide? He stopped and found a convenient dark space to wait for Rain’s reply.

There was a pause, longer than he expected, Probably in your best interests to talk to him.

Feeling the heat of the interrogation lamp already upon him, Algernon did what came naturally, he hid. Slowly he made his way to Peggy’s lab, skirting around the CCTV as he and Rain usually did he looked through the partially open door.  Inside Peggy was busy working on something, oblivious to the slight movement of her door.  Across the way, Algernon could see Rain, for some reason, hiding under a desk but nothing more. 

Pulling out his surveillance gear, he carefully placed a camera just inside the door and then stepped away to a storage cupboard across the way and locked himself inside.  From his phone, he watched as Peggy extracted white strands of DNA from a pink piece of some pliable plastic.  He had just settled down to watch as his phone rang, the Mission Impossible theme tune loud in the small space.  He answered it quickly.

“Yes?”

“Algernon, Hertzfeld here.  I’d like to…” Algernon could clearly hear Hertzfeld just outside the door to the storage room talking on his phone.  There was a pause, “…are you in the storage cupboard?”

“Well done sir, you win.” Algernon bluffed, wishing Rain wasn’t there to help.

“What?”

“The….game.”

“Right,” Hertzfeld usually intimidated Algernon just because of his position as the Chief of Science.  Now his voice held a more serious tone that Algernon had ever heard. 

“Would you like to come in?” He offered and the door handle turned, the door opened.  Hertzfeld, seeing Algernon crouched on the ground, took a cleaner’s bucket, turned it upside down and sat on it.  He closed the door behind him.

“Have you seen one of these before?” Hertzfeld showed Algernon the disc.

Algernon’s heart sank into his chest.  He knew what the disc was.  Schooling his expression he replied, “No sir. What is it?”

“Some sort of beacon.  Do you know where we found it?”

“Peggy’s lab, “He slowly showed Hertzfeld the feed from the camera, “Under a desk, I assume.”  He pointed to Rain now making the connection.

Hertzfeld blinked and watched the feed as Peggy moved back to the desk scalpel in hand to try and take a second sample of the gum.

“Why do you have that?”

“I didn’t want to be blind-sided,” Algernon confessed, there was really no point in lies now.

“Who told you I was looking for you?”

Or maybe there was, “A big avian told me.” He thought that was how the saying went.

“Did you plant this?” Hertzfeld returned to the subject at hand and gestured once more to the disk.

“No. “

“And the CCTV?”

“I just put it there.”

“When?”

“Five minutes ago.”

“Why?”

“I hoped to see you interviewing Bruce.”

“Why?”

“So I knew what I was in for?”

Hertzfeld paused, looking down on the young man, his knees up to his chest in the corner.  

“You know how this looks.”  It wasn’t a question.

“How does it look, sir?”

“Very suspicious indeed.”

“You think I did it?”

“As soon as you found out I was asking questions, you put up a camera in Peggy’s lab and hid in a storeroom.  I also know about your blackouts, that you are being affected by something outside of yourself.”

“But I’m just a kid!” Algernon wailed. Hertzfeld signed,  ignored the theatrics and continued with his questions.

“Do you have any idea how something like this would have got there?”

“Do you know, sir?” Algernon deflected.

“No that’s why I’m conducting this investigation.”

“How was it affixed?” Algernon asked.

“With chewing gum.”

“Someone who chews gum.”

“ Who do you think that could be?” 

“I don’t know, I’m just a boy.” Algernon tried again, but it was gaining no traction and he knew it, “Am I the prime suspect?”
“Well, yes,” Hertzfeld said simply as he ticked off mentally motive, access and capability.

Algernon put away his phone and held up his hands for handcuffs, “Best take me in, sir.”

Hertzfeld blinked again, “I… don’t have  handcuffs.”

“I do, “ Algernon offered, retrieving his own set he’d requisitions when capturing The Cowboy. He helpfully handed the out to Hertzfeld.

Hertzfeld looked at the handcuffs with distaste, “Come with me, I trust I don’t need handcuffs.”

Hertzfeld led Algernon across to security where they took one of the interrogation rooms. For several hours Hertzfeld questioned Algernon about his movements and about the beacon. Over and over they went through the same questions, all the time Hertzfeld was trying to find the lies in his statement. He was getting nowhere.

For Algernon’s part, he was finding the whole process thrilling.  It was like being part of one of his documentaries and he had to refrain from offering suggestions on how best to question the witness.

“It might be time to use the phone book, sir.” Algernon said enthusiastically.

Hertzfeld’s eyes bulged behind his glasses, “We don’t do that here,” He replied hesitantly, “Do we?”

With a screech of his chair, Hertzfeld stood and excused himself from the interview. Outside, Bruce and Rain were sitting on chairs in the hallway.  Bruce stood when he saw Hertzfeld appear.

“Bruce, what can you tell me about these blackouts?  What is their source? Do they have a trigger?”  

Bruce shared what the group knew which wasn’t much, “We were just deciding what to do about it.”

“I’d suggest you may need to go back to the source, have you thought about going back to his home world?” Hertzfeld suggested.

“He’s terrified of the thought,” Bruce replied but had to agree that this was an obvious way to get to the root of the problem.

“Do we know where he comes from?”

Bruce shook his head, “He keeps that stuff pretty close to his chest.”

Hertzfeld sat down in an empty chair looking every inch as tired as he was.  For a moment he just sat there, his head in his hands and the other two could do nothing but look on.

“Well, right now he’s a security risk.  Unless you can take him home and sort out these blackouts, I have no choice but to bar him from future work for the Estate. Your team have done good work, I’d hate to see that happen.”

Bruce nodded sagely as Rain twitched agitated beside him.

“He deserves better from us than to be cast aside.”

At that Rain reacted, jumping to his feet in what he saw as defence of his friend.  To the others, he was a dishevelled mess of a creature that was barely in control of himself.

“You do that and we’re gone, you hear me.  I’ll take him and we’re off through the millions of recursions that make up this universe and you’ll never find us.”

“Rain, don’t be melodramatic,” Bruce replied pulling Rain back into his seat, “They don’t treat people like that.”
“No?” Rain would not be put off, “How about Kamn Sharn?  All she’d wanted was to work on cars. And Leroy Caine?  Where did he go?  What does the Estate do with its little embarrassments?” Taking Bruce’s hand off his arm, Rain walked out, his coattails flying.

Hertzfeld excused himself once more and let himself back into the interview room.

“If you plan on exterminating me I will not go without a fight.” Algernon said as Hertzfeld reappeared.  Obviously he had heard the outburst in the hall.

“The Estate does not exterminate,” He sat back down his hands clasped in front of him, “Especially not good agents who are in need of help.  You are in need of help, even if you don’t realise it.  I’m referring to your memory loss issue, of course.”

“I have a problem with my memory?”

“You do.” Hertzfeld said with a finality that seemed to make the problem more real and present, “The best course is for your team to take you home and find out what is causing it.”

During the hours they had been talking, Hertzfeld had seen Algernon lie, obfuscate, plea his youth and deflect his questions.  Never had he seen Algernon pale until that moment.  
“I’m sure we should be finding Bruce’s father.” He suggested.  Another deflection, another distraction.

“It has something to do with your memory loss?” Hertzfeld asked wondering where this thought would lead.

“There are strange occurrences, Noel’s appearance, Bruce’s Dad’s journal. All clues to side missions.  I‘m sure in those I can find something….” Clutching at the straws of an idea, he vainly tried to persuade Hertzfeld.

“You’re afraid of your home recursion?”

“Aren’t you?” Algernon replied automatically, “No, I guess not.”

“Was something done to you?”

“I don’t dwell on it.  It’s not my home.”

“But you see, it has left its mark.”

Peggy had been working now for twenty-four non-stop. The DNA results were tantalising, but inconclusive.  She’d clearly found DNA, but the telomeres or terminals of each strand of DNA were shorter than expected.  This person was either very old so that their DNA was starting to break down, or they were a clone, or both.

Unfortunately, exhaustion was getting the best of her and an unattended beaker overflowed starting a fire. It destroying much of her equipment and all of the sample she’d been able to gather.  She was in the process of bashing her head on her lab desk when Hertzfeld walked in directly from his Interview with Algernon.

“Not good news?” He asked, trying to make sense of the chaos that was Peggy’s normally organised workspace.
“The DNA was so frustratingly interesting for a moment, and then I had a fire and I lost the lot.” Peggy lamented, she looked to her desk and to the now-empty hidey-hole.

“When did you last sleep?”

“Sleep?!  I have to clean up here, get replacement equipment, possibly run a DNA test on the bone of the beacon itself…” Peggy listed off her task.

“No, you sleep.  I’ll clean up here.” Hertzfeld said gently and pushed her towards her bed under the table.

“There another thing, what does short telomere mean to you?”

“Short telomere? We have a very old spy or someone genetically altered?  A clone, perhaps.”

Peggy nodded, swaying on her feet,  “ You’ll clean up my mess?”

“It’s my job, go.” He ordered, and this time Peggy did not argue but collapsed onto the mattress and was soon fast asleep.

When Rain had left security he had gone straight back to the lab and found the two recursion keys from Railsea.  It hadn’t been hard, Peggy had been distracted and he knew where they were kept. For a while, he’d walked around the campus common, trying to clear his mind. 

Under the green light of a large maple, he stood and listened to the wind through the boughs, the distant conversations of Estate agents and the even more distant sound of cars thudding across the nearby bridge. Each time his thoughts would swirl back in and chase around his head, clashing and interrupting each other until there was only a cacophony of thought.  The alcohol had made him sleep, but it had not been restful. All night he had dreamt and it had been exhausting. And now, in summer light the spinning of his thoughts was a physical thing that he couldn’t ignore. 

He just wanted to scoop out his thoughts and put them aside for a while.  Put them in a jar and look at them from the outside.  He just needed to get out of his head, but he no longer seemed able. Since the final opening of the puzzlebox, it no longer seemed to help calm his thoughts. Not Pandora’s box,  but Tobias’ box was open and all the woes of the world were loose inside his mind. 

In the end, he took off his coat and hung it carefully from one of the lower branches of the tree.  Then he started running.  A circuit didn’t take him long, so he went around again, and again, and again.    He didn’t count, just paid attention to the strides, the breaths in and out his racing heart. Each time a thought intruded into the simple mechanics of running he would go faster. He kept running until what was left in his stomach wouldn’t let him and he was sick behind the maple. When there was nothing left, he tidies himself at the garden tap, replaced his coat, now far too hot, and slowly made his way to security.

Bruce was talking with Algernon in the interview room when Rain stalked back.  Without interrupting he watched the two of them from the hallway.

“Bruce, I didn’t think I’d see you again,” Algernon said, all puppy-dog sweetness.  You couldn’t help but fall for the guy.

“I know, me too.” Bruce replied matter of factly, “You know we really need to fix this.”

“We really need to find your dad,” Algernon replied in the same practical tone. 

“It will be in your head forever.”

“It’s the safest course”

“I really don’t think you’re taking this seriously, kid. They’re talking about you like you’re a security risk.”

“Well, “ Algernon stiffened a little, his voice became just that little more steely, “The way I see this play out, Bruce, is that we all go and I’m the only one that comes back.”

“Why? We’re a pretty good team, we’ve got each other’s backs.  Can you tell me why this place would be any worse than where we’ve been already?”

“What if you were forced to fight me as well?”

Bruce paused at this for a moment, it was not a contingency he’d wanted to contemplate.

“Well then, I guess I’d knock you out.”

‘You see Bruce, I’m good.” Algernon replied not taking his eyes off Bruce’s.

Bruce’s grinned, “Yeah, but I’m better.  Want to take this to the gym?”

“I’m all good,” Algernon spoke and it no longer sounded like the puppy, but something knowing and formidable.

Bruce leaned back on the plastic chair making it creak.  The small room echoed with the noise.

“The idea of me losing all of you doesn’t feel…nice,” Algernon spoke, breaking the silence.

“Because we’re family, it’s the same for us, “ Bruce grasped at the truth at the heart of both their arguments, “We don’t want to lose you, and we’ll do whatever we have to, to keep you.  You’ve got to admit it would have to be something pretty extraordinary that you’d come back and the rest of us wouldn’t.”

Algernon leaned forward across the table between them, thinking through each word carefully, “It is not a place that is gentle on people.”

Bruce was starting to get tired of the cryptic answers, “Look someone is in your head that needs taking out.”

“Maybe my head needs taking off.”

“Quit it!  I’m not willing to go there.”

“Can I suggest, sir.  I am only a danger to the Estate, in the Estate.”

“You’re a danger to yourself, Algernon.  Someone can ask you a question and you’ll blackouts.  Who is it that’s controlling you?”

Algernon leaned back in his chair and thought for a moment.  

He’s trying to tell us. Rain thought, but could not have said what Algernon was trying to say.  

Eventually, Algernon shook his head and seemed to make a decision, “This seems like a distraction sir, let’s get moving.”

“Where do you want to go?”

“I want to meet your dad.”

“He’s not important.  He’s not part of the mission.”

“It’s a clue.”

It’s a clue.  Rain thought and he wanted it to be true.  Dad, Father, maker, creator?  His head spun with all the information and he was finding it hard to stand up.

“My dad disappeared years ago, he is not the task at hand.” Bruce continued oblivious to the chaos in the hallway.

“London then?”

“Also not a mission, they have nothing to do with the spiral dust.”

“Crows Hollow?”

“Goddammit, Algernon.” Bruce swore and only just held back from thumping the metal table, “Someone is influencing you, that has to be fixed before it endangers the mission.”

“It hasn’t affected the mission yet.”
“Hasn’t it?”

There it is. Rain winced.  They had been skirting around the issue the whole day, but only Hertzfeld called it for what it was.  A problem with security.  A problem of trust.  He didn’t know if he wanted to hear any more and started to move away just as he heard his name spoken by Algernon.

“Are you hungry?” Algernon asked in his usual conversational tone.
“I guess it is that time.” Bruce agreed with a heavy sound to his voice.

“I want some coffee.  Where’s Rain?”

“Floating around.”

“They took my phone, do you think I can have it back?”
“Not yet, you can use mine.” 

“Not the same,” Algernon said but a few moments later a message silently came through from Bruce’s phone asking him to join them in the mess.

Just as silently, Rain left security,  walked the campus one more time before joining them both at the mess.

When he arrived the mood of the two friends had changed.  There was a quality of reminiscence to Algernon’s conversation.

“There are some things I miss.” He said as Rain got his own cup of coffee and joined them at the table.

“Like what?” Bruce asked.  The party had very little details about the world that Algernon came from, every scrap was noted and discussed between the other three.  Maybe it was his own mood, but Algernon’s calm acceptance felt like that of a prisoner on death row facing their imminent death.

“The information.  None of this,” Algernon mimed typing on a keyboard and swiping screens.

“What, it just comes to you?”

“Sort of.” 

“Like your own memories?”

“No, more deliberate.”

“What else is really good about home?”

This took Algernon a while to think.

“They don’t have bacon like we do,”

“Any people?”

“No,” He shook his head emphatically, his face scrunched up in disgust.

“We’ll get you  sorted out and then we’ll get my dad.”

“Peggy knows where the beacons are coming from.” Rain dropped on to the group as the conversation lulled, “We’re going, it’s a done thing.”   Now if Algernon was facing his death, it felt like he’d released the blade on the guillotine.

“I don’t want to lose any more family.” Rain reached across the table trying to bridge whatever gap existed between them.

“Same here, “ Bruce agreed with a gusto that jarred with Rain’s mental state.

“I feel the same,” Algernon added, looking Rain back with his steady gaze.

“I have a way of getting out, “Rain confessed, “If things go wrong.  There’s a whole universe of recursion to explore.”

“That sounds good, let’s do that.”
“But we can’t unless we know what we’re running from.”
“I can tell you.”
“But you can’t, can you. You haven’t been able to.”

“When we come upon it, I can.”

“But…” But what?  Rain couldn’t get his thoughts straight.

“Rain, you’re not making a lot of sense.” 

“I know…I…know…” 

That evening the boys collected in the dormitory as usual.  What was not usual was Hertzfeld and a contingent of security to lock them in for the night.  Algernon was given back his phone and once he was behind the locked door he quickly sent a message to Peggy.

Say the beacons come from Railsea

But they aren’t from Railsea, She replied just as quickly, They’re transmitting to Ruk.

But we really don’t want to go there.

But that’s where it is.

The next morning Rain was awoken by Bruce’s new daily routine.  For a moment he sat watching, taking note that the exercises were tailored for speed and agility instead of his usual strength routine.  Eventually, the brain kicked in and drove him to the showers as the door was unlocked and Algernon left for breakfast.

Peggy was already eating and lifted her head from her usual notes to spot Algernon piling his plate with Bacon.

“So, why don’t you want to go to Ruk?” She asked washing her last mouthful down with black coffee.

“Because of the….” He started to explain before falling away in a dead faint.  Peggy picked a glass of water off the table and threw it in his face.  Algernon spluttered awake now wet and covered in bacon fat.

“They’re monitoring my spaces and I want to know why.”  She said as he went back and piled another plate high with crispy strips.

When Bruce and eventually Rain joined the table she explained the beacons and how they were all reporting back to the major recursion of Ruk. As she talked she took out three vials and one by one took a hair from Algernon and Bruce.  

“You’re not taking my hair, I don’t know if there’s male pattern baldness in my family, “ Rain protested, holding his hand out for the vial.  Peggy gave him the vial and he spent a moment or two filling it with spit.

“How are we getting there?” Algernon asked, sensing a change in the course of the party’s plans.

“You could take us there,”  Bruce suggested and a gleam came into Algernon’s eye.

“Sure,” He said, just as he’d heard Rain say many times before.  

“I’ve requisitioned a key, “ Peggy tapped several forms in front of her, “My lab is ruined, I needed new equipment so I asked for the key at the same time.”

After breakfast, a small random piece of Ruk tech in her hand, Peggy initiated the translation.  Connecting to the Strange was, as usual, the pull of the swirl fractals drawing their consciousness out of Earth influence.  Peggy had trouble focusing through the key and the path through the recursions would not open to her at first.  With a force of will, she pushed through the obstruction and set the course to Ruk.

Musing 14: White flowers

The afternoon crowds through Celephais had thinned considerably from the time we’d slunk through with Mr…no...Lightfeather in a ‘crate’. Knowing that Theo was probably still about looking for his boss, I didn’t want to be out in public too long. We’d won a big victory for us by taking …Lightfeather,  I didn’t want to mess it up by being caught only hours later.  Besides, I wasn’t feeling so great after the day’s adventures, Theo had really rattled my loaf.

But there are things sometimes more important than a little discomfort. Traditions give us purpose and meaning, especially when they’re my traditions.

I remembered seeing a flower seller not far from the stalls full of fresh fruit and vegetables and hoped they hadn’t sold out or left for the day.  I slipped through the crowd as if I belonged, and after two days I was almost indistinguishable from the locals around me.  I didn’t draw attention to myself and only nod to those who recognised me and waved.  I was on a mission and would not be distracted.

As remembered, the stall was there, but due to the lateness of the day, they have precious little on offer.  Not that I’m particularly fussy. Over the years I have taken roses, poppies and even strawberry flowers.  One grim year I reluctantly picked onion weed growing in an unkempt corner of a city cemetery.  As long as the petals are white and the centre is green, or close enough.  Unfortunately, Celephais’ flowers, like their people, were a riot of colours that would brighten any home, but were not suitable for my purposes.  

“Excuse me mother, “ I called to the stallkeeper, an elderly woman packing up her last remaining blooms with the help of a strapping young grandson, “I find myself in need to a particular flower, do you know where I could find it?”  I described the flower and watched her expression change from late-in-the-day irritation, to interest to…sympathy?

“I see your need, young man.  Death does not wait for our convenience.” She gestured to the flowers around her and being loaded into a handcard, “But as you see, my blooms are for the living, I keep none for the dead, not in the Eternal city.  You should try the gentler slopes of Mount Aran,” And she pointed over my shoulder to an imposing snow-clad mountain that rose above the shining brass spires of the city, “That land is…inspired by another place I think.  There you will find the flowers you seek.”

I turned to look up at the mountain.  Its snowy peaks were menacingly steep, and the lower slopes were treeless and craggy.  It was not a friendly sight so late on a very long and exhausting day.  But there was no help for it.  I asked for advice for the best places to look from the old women and thanked her with a small gem before cutting across town to the nearest gate to the mountain.

Through an immaculately whitewashed city arch, a path of broken chalk lead up and around the mountain’s lower slopes in the direction of the sea.  At first, I only focused on the task at hand, I didn’t notice the landscape around me as I slipped further and further away from civilisation. Eventually, my mind wandered and I became aware of the white chalk giving away to grey spines of granite.  The sound of waves crashing around algae encrusted outcroppings, that protecting white sandy beaches could be heard before seen over the edge of a steep cliff and slowly I became aware that I knew this place. 

Thousands of miles and decades in the past, I walked slopes just like these on a rare trip to the sea for the foster children of the Morris household.  Without a thought,  I found my box in my hand, the compartment open and the shell I had found on that trip in my right hand. A small, now white scallop shell that had survived the decades and miles by being once hidden away in a puzzle box by a small boy.  

On a nearby rock, I found a seat and took in the view as the sun slowly sank into the waves, the moon following.  This was the Cornwall of my childhood, or a small slice of it, transplanted into an alien recursion.  The mix of past and present was dizzying (probably exacerbated by a knock to the head earlier) and for a moment, I could do nothing but take in the view, my mind focused on the moment.

That day, so many years ago had been a very good memory.  There had been a lot of darkness in between, much of it embodied in Lightfeather himself.  Today, right now was another good day and as I breathed out I felt the release of …a knot of tension, a burden I didn’t know I’d been carrying.  It left me to swirl around in the sea air before being carried off by the freshening off-shore breeze.

Eventually, like waking up, I took another breath and noticed a patch of ox-eyed daisies just like the ones we’d made daisy chains out of on that trip.  Placing the scallop shell down on the rock,  I slowly stood and took seven of the best blooms.  One I held up to the breeze letting it slowly slip from my fingers before it too was carried out over the cliff edge to the rocks below.

“In remembrance,” I whispered, the words even lost to me as a gust swept past and took those as well. 

The sun was low now, the moon dominated the darkening sky as I realised I was cold.  Carefully, I wrapped the other six bloom in a handkerchief and started the walk back to town. The path back was faster, as these things often are, and I was soon back at the warehouse, comforted by Bruce’s lecture about leaving the group.

“You didn’t even say where you were going?  Theo or Caw Eh Carve’s  men could have found you and we would have been none the wiser.”

I must admit I’d forgotten about Caw Eh Carve, he just didn’t seem to matter in the enormity of the day’s events.  I didn’t answer Bruce, just smiled and placed a bloom in a buttonhole of his tunic.

“What’s this?” He looked down at the flower suspiciously.

“When I looked at my notes this morning, I realised that today was 11th July.”

“What of it?”

“Well,” I took a breath, but the usual bittersweet tightness I usually felt at this question was not present, “I celebrate the 11 July as my birthday.”

“I thought you didn’t know…” Algernon said, having sidled over to hear my explanation.  I pulled another flower out and tucked it behind his ear.  

“I don’t,” I replied knowing that he’d look it up at his earliest convenience.

“Er…Thanks.”  Bruce fingering the flower as he felt the weight of the gesture, “But don’t go out alone again.”

I shook my head, “I just follow the path, Bruce. But I know I don’t follow it alone.”  

I found Peggy watching Eldin as he stirred in his bonds. The old thrill of fear was still there, but it was muted as if coming from far away.  I got Peggy’s attention before I started to place a flower in her dark curls.  She stiffened, and with a silent smile, I placed it in her hand instead.  

“You went out for this?”  She picked up the flower by the stem and spun it between her fingers.

I nodded.

“Why?”

I hunted a moment for the right words.  Falling back on that feeling of release, I answered, “Somethings need remembering, but they don’t need to be remembered with pain and…” I looked at Eldin, under our control, “they don’t need to define us.”

A small smile slipped out the side of her mouth as she placed the flower in her own hair.

“Happy Birthday.” She said.

Fairy tales are more than true — not because they tell us dragons existbut because they tell us dragons can be beaten.”

Neil Gaiman, Coraline