Sunday, July 11, 2083. 8:00 a.m.
Marcie walked briskly along the Promenade feeling a little at a loss
for what to do. Robbie had given her an order to sleep in and take
it easy. She’d been pushing herself hard; working all day on the
training of the Eastdown team and then all evening on programming,
barely getting seven hours sleep before she started the whole process
again, but she wasn’t weary. She took the time because she wanted
to think. She knew she was still not totally committed to this
enterprise, still not sure she was doing the right thing. Despite
all the years of karate, violence was not in her nature. She watched
the citizens of Origin go about their business as she walked. What
do I really have in common with these people anyway?
She went to the Flip Side for a late breakfast. As she arrived, she
found it busy, but she was able to snag a table on the patio. She’d
never really taken the time to watch Origin life as it happened,
relying heavily on the early Reels scanned quickly over breakfast, or
moments witnessed in passing as she hurried from one class to
another. She sighed and sat back. Her waitress brought her coffee
right away. Good lass!
She sipped her coffee and looked out. No one was running but, unlike
a sapiens city, these people all moved with a purpose. Small
stalls were opening all along the other side of the street, and
beautiful shops they were. A textile shop was displaying richly
coloured materials. Next door, a sculptor showed his wares while
working on his current piece. Somewhere, perhaps on a balcony above,
someone was playing the violin. Despite the parochial nature of life
here at Origin, its citizens were obviously artistic, well-educated,
and eloquent; aware of the world outside and participating, in their
own way, in Outside ideas and trends. In short, for a community of
only fifteen thousand people, Marcie didn’t feel like she was
living in the middle of nowhere with a bunch of hicks. A high
percentage of people living in Origin were artists: painters,
potters, sculptors, and weavers and, as a result, many of the finer
things in life didn’t have to be imported. They could be had
straight from the artists’ shops on the Promenade.
Her breakfast came. Marcie tended to order the special and, though
she had no idea what many of the dishes were, she was rarely
disappointed. This morning, the dish was a plate of light crepes
rolled with a kind of humus paste and eggs inside. Very tasty.
Marcie loved food in Origin. They didn’t eat much red meat, mostly
due to the fuss and mess of keeping that many cattle and sheep and,
as an extra plus, the cooking was influenced by eastern traditions.
There was no pot roast to be found and no Yorkshire pudding. Robbie,
who liked his beef, was trying not to complain too much, and Marcie
was trying not to gorge herself too much, at least when he was
around. Today, this was not a problem. She was just cleaning her
plate when a young girl came up to her table.
“Excuse me, Ms. Noel. I was wondering if you would write a note in
my scrapbook.”
Marcie looked at her, surprised. The girl still had that coltish
awkwardness of a young teenager. She offered a large keepsake book,
stuffed with photos, leaves, and other mementos. Marcie took the
book and felt a wave of nostalgia. She’d had something similar
when she was a girl.
“Call me Marcie.” The girl looked thrilled. “What would you
like me to say?”
“Whatever comes to mind, Marcie. I’d appreciate it.”
“What’s your name?”
“Kim.”
“Okay, Kim.”
Marcie looked over and saw the girl’s parents watching from another
table, obviously proud of their daughter’s pluck. Marcie had no
idea that anyone needed any pluck to approach her. She blinked. She
took up the pen and looked down. Staring back at her was a blank
page of homemade paper that had bits of glitter in it, very similar
to the paper she had made for her own keepsake book so many years
ago. She paused and thought for a moment, and then she wrote:
‘Dear Kim: I’ve been in Origin now for only a few days and I
find it a beautiful place, full of happy and interesting people. I
wish you just that: beauty, happiness, and interesting people and
things in your life. Good luck to you. Marcie Noel.’
Marcie handed back the pen and the book. Kim thanked her and moved
away without even reading the message. She sat down with her
parents, looking a little flushed and pleased.
Marcie had never been a celebrity, certainly never a role model. She
suddenly realized that her connection to these people was profound.
She would have said that it was almost ironic that she was here: a
wolf amongst the lambs, a pretender to the birthright. But these
people believed in her. Believed she could lead them. Believed
somehow she could save them.
She finished her breakfast and nodded to Kim on her way out, wishing
the whole family a good day. She walked down the Promenade slowly,
fingering silks, inspecting pots. She wasn’t really much of a
shopper. She didn’t want anything but a good pair of socks, which
she found, but she was actually more interested in watching people
and how they interacted. These were polite and soft-spoken folk, who
were quick to laugh. But soon, Marcie realized her very presence was
having an effect on their behaviour. Once they recognized her, she
was treated with an extra deference and respect. It dawned on her
that this walk down the Promenade was being recorded and would be in
the Reels.
So, she gave up on the Promenade and walked to the parkland
surrounding the Sports Complex. Robbie had made her swear that she
wouldn’t go near the place, but she wanted to find a tree, sit
under it, and think. She settled down cross-legged in the perfect
spot on some grass just off the Promenade, with a good view of the
traffic on the main road, and watched the world, as small as it was
here, go by.
Very soon, a little child came up to her with a card in his hand.
His mother wasn’t far away and he ran back to her the moment Marcie
accepted the offering. The front of the card was decorated with
stick figures and inside were scribbles incomprehensible to Marcie,
but she smiled warmly and waved when the boy peeked at her from
behind his mum.
Word must have got out. Maybe she was already in the Reels? Soon
there was a line up, mostly of children, but of some adults too.
Some carried little tokens and notepads. Some simply wanted to have
a word with her. Perhaps it was the personal nature of the Reels but
all of them acted like they knew her, like she was part of their
family, like they could be open with her. Marcie didn’t know
whether to feel embarrassed or honoured. She chose to accept each
offering for what it was: a gift. She was late for her call at
noon.
Tuesday, July 13, 2083. 6:28 p.m.
A few days later, Marcie toyed with the enter key as she assessed the
program she’d written. It looked solid; it was time to let it
loose on an unsuspecting Internet.
The last week had been hard work. The program was much more complex
than she’d first imagined; in part, because she had to synchronize
the time of the attack and she couldn’t rely on the settings on the
host computers. So, the program had its own internal clock that
confirmed time with Greenwich Mean immediately upon download and this
was a lot riskier – quite a few virus scanners monitored systems
for that kind of activity. But there were ways and ways around
everything. The program was just a little bit bigger than she’d
previously thought it would be, and the project a little more
difficult. Well, that’s how opening your mouth got you in trouble,
as her mum would say.
Luckily, the Comm Team was fantastic. Lee, Talla, Carmen, and Brett
all seemed to understand her intentions quickly, and all seemed to
enjoy working out their own solutions to their problems. Marcie was
used to having to come up with the answers herself. It was
gratifying to have a team that she could rely on, a team she could
leave alone. Just like at the office. Hey, Tracy has auburn
hair. Just how many of us are there?
She hit enter and sat back. The email was away. She’d listed the
‘from’ as the very generic name of John and she included a really
good joke in the body of the email. This email was sent to a list of
a million viable email addresses and would be delivered in less than
an hour. Who knew what percentage would forward the joke to their
friends but, certainly, it would take a few days to infect enough
computers. She took a moment to set up a tracer that would follow
the email as it travelled around the world and keep track of the
number of computers infected. She started the tracer and then she
got up and left the room. She’d check back in a few hours.
She went down to one of the lecture halls they had commandeered in
the Sports Complex for the duration of Project Eastdown. Stellan was
there talking to the team leaders. They all turned and looked at her
expectantly when she entered the room.
“It’s away,” she said simply.
“Fine, so we go in forty-eight hours,” said Stellan.
“No,” she replied. “We hit in forty-eight hours.”
Stellan looked a bit sheepish. “Yes. I see.”
Marcie turned to the team leaders. “We all need a good night’s
sleep tonight. Then, tomorrow, review and light exercises. Another
good night’s sleep and we get ready to go. All right?” Nods all
around. “Karen, your teams will be under the most stress during
this time. Do you feel you’re all ready?”
“Absolutely.” Marcie was impressed. Karen seemed certain.
“All right. Of course, just shout if you need more people.
Questions? None? Okay, good night, all. Robbie, can you wait up a
moment?”
“Sure.”
“Dr. Stellan, just one question. How many of us are there
outside?”
Stellan paused and thought for a moment. “Well, people have been
leaving Origin for about a fifty years. There may be thousands of us
out there.”
“Right. Most in North America?”
“I would assume so, but who knows? By definition, these people are
rolling stones.”
“Okay, thanks.”
“Are you worried that we’ll go up against some of our own?”
“Not really. But if they’re out there and on the other side,
it’ll make our job more difficult because we won’t have the
natural edge we have over sapiens. I’d be surprised to meet
many of us defending the complex, though.”
“I would, too. We are a peaceful people.”
“All right, good night, Doctor.”
“Good night.” Stellan nodded and left. Marcie turned back and
smiled at Robbie. “What’s up, sugar?”
“Want some dinner?”
“Sure.”
They decided on an Indian-style place. They sat near the back, away
from the activity on The Promenade. After ordering, the waitress
took their menus and left. Robbie turned to look squarely at Marcie.
“Okay, what’s up, sugar?”
Marcie smiled. “What? Is it written on my forehead?”
“Well, as a matter of fact, it is. So shoot.”
“All right. It doesn’t make any sense that I’m the one leading
this team. I don’t have any strike force experience. Really, I
don’t know what I’m doing.”
“No, you don’t. You’re right. You’re not qualified to lead
the strike force. That’s why I’m leading the strike force and
you’re in charge of the communication. That’s how we always play
it.”
“I would be happier if….”
“Well, I won’t do this any other way. You can’t go in with us,
Marcie, no matter how hard you try and if you do try, the whole thing
will fail because I won’t be going in either; I’ll be sitting on
you.”
Marcie was silent. She hadn’t realized until he spoke that she
really did want to be on the team going into the Eastdown complex.
She wanted to have the satisfaction of physically rescuing those
people and she knew she would’ve been a real asset to the strike
team, but she accepted his opinion. He wouldn’t hold her back
unless he had good reason. She changed the subject and they chatted
while they ate their meal. Robbie was in good form, telling her a
story about one of the recruits trying to figure out what to do with
a jock strap – athletes in Origin practice and compete in the nude
– especially since the recruit was a girl. The food was fantastic
and Marcie had a good time. It almost made her forget the whole
business.
When she got back to the suite, she decided she needed to meditate
for a while. She had to be certain that she would sleep and sleep
well. She changed into a light shift and sat cross-legged on the
floor beside her bed. The décor in the room was spartan and Marcie
had done nothing to pretty it up because she simply hadn’t the
time. So, she was able to stare at a blank wall and really clear her
mind. She adjusted her breathing and worked through her relaxation
exercises. Fifteen minutes later, she was completely relaxed and
ready for sleep. She crawled into bed, fell asleep immediately, and
didn’t wake until morning.
Wednesday, July 14, 2083. 6:45 a.m.
Norman Li walked down the main corridor at Eastdown. He liked the
place early in the morning because it was still quiet. The only
doctor usually in at this time was Ryan, and it had been Li’s
custom to have a cup of coffee with Ryan every few days – a great
time for a meeting – but, today, he didn’t go to the
Administrator's Office. He had a message to relay. He went down the
back halls to the kitchen.
In stark contrast to the rest of the complex, the kitchen was all
hustle and bustle. Norman fingered the small slip of paper, like a
fortune from a fortune cookie, hidden in his pocket. It was destined
for Helen Pearce. He planned to slip it in her porridge as he
inspected food trays. This standard inspection was a remarkable
opportunity to pass information on, something he would never have
dreamed of doing even a few weeks ago.
He walked into the serving area in the kitchen and did his usual
checks. He pulled out five trays, seemingly at random, and used a
fork to push the food around. During this process, he managed to
slip the paper onto Pearce’s bowl and then continue with the
inspection. A few moments later, Li noticed that the kitchen had
gone uncharacteristically quiet. He straightened up slowly, leaving
his hands in clear view. He had to be careful. He turned around.
The kitchen staff had disappeared and in their place was Dr. Ryan
standing by a prep table with two security personnel Li didn’t
recognise and that thug, Welsh. The security men were training hand
pistols at him. Li wasn’t worried. He wasn’t planning to run.
Welsh had such a satisfied look on his face that it gave Norman
pause. Oh, he’s going to get my job. God help these people.
Norman raised his hands slowly to show that he would not fight. He
didn’t want the world to think him a traitor. Instead, he wanted
the world to know what was going on in Eastdown, and he would use the
court martial as an opportunity to tell his story. Command would
believe him, or they wouldn’t, and if they did, something might get
done about this place.
“Norman, Norman.” Ryan was shaking his head.
Ryan looked shocked, numbed by Norman’s betrayal, and Norman felt
bad. He’d really liked Ryan in the early days. Ryan was a hard
worker, just like himself, and he was respectful of security
procedures and concerns. He didn’t mess with the staff or breach
security protocols when it was convenient. Lawrence and Norman had
been friends. Coffee at seven every few days.
“Sir.”
“Come on, Norman. Let’s see what you put in that woman’s bowl,
hmmmm?”
Norman stepped back to allow Ryan access. Ryan pulled Helen’s tray
out of the warming cart himself, wincing a little at the heat. He
placed the tray on the counter, picked up a knife that was handy. He
pushed the porridge around. The note was easy to find.
“Norman, Norman.”
Norman looked at Ryan. Ryan’s face was ashen, his head down, his
eyes glazed. Norman was surprised at how disappointed Ryan seemed.
Ryan looked rocked to the core.
“Why, Norman?”
“You have to stop all this torture, Dr. Ryan. These people have
suffered enough.”
“You have forgotten our mission, Norman.”
“No.”
“You forget what’s at stake.”
“No.”
“Humankind will not lose to a group of upstart,
genetically-engineered monsters.”
“If you continue with what you’re doing, humankind will lose
because we will have lost our humanity.”
“Ah. Nobility, Norman. How quaint.”
He will never stop this insanity. Norman sighed. The betrayal
of Ryan had been difficult for him because he considered the man to
be his friend. He was trying to help the Subjects, yes, but he’d
also wanted to save his friend from himself.
“You’re going to have to tell me everything, Norman.”
“I want a lawyer.”
“Oh, Norman. Bring him.”
They went back to the main corridor and turned down the hallway
leading to the testing rooms. Ryan led them to Testing Room 8 and
disappeared through the doorway.
Wednesday, July 14, 2083. 7:10 a.m.
Helen Pearce pushed her body up from the floor. One fifty-eight, one
fifty-nine. She pushed up again. The workouts were doing her some
good. At the very least, she no longer felt dull and logy anymore.
She’d started to feel invigorated, more like her old self before
she came to this place, but she wished that the reason she’d begun
the exercise sessions didn’t exist. A few weeks earlier, the
intensity of testing had picked up and so, too, had the screams and
cries of pain and discomfort from the testing rooms. At first, the
noise had made her pace her cell, as if her body wanted her to go to
the aid of the victims. Later, feeling as if she were going insane,
she had begun to exercise. Suddenly, she heard a gut-wrenching
scream. Man, they started early this morning. And then, another
yell from down the hall. There was anger in these cries. The
Subject hadn’t broken yet. Just keep counting: One sixty-one, one
sixty-two.
She was startled from her concentration by banging on the door. She
hopped up to her feet and stood waiting. Why do they bother
knocking? Since there was a security camera on her at all times
with no allowance for privacy, the guards may as well have just
walked in without warning.
Two men came into her cell, grabbed her roughly by the arms, and
dragged her out of her cell, like some life-sized rag doll. She’d
begun to think of this whole exercise as a game, a charade, as a way
for the guards to show their superiors, watching on the cameras, that
they were doing their jobs. Helen Pearce didn’t really matter –
they would have treated anyone the same. But there lay the conundrum
of the place. In order to survive, these men had to run around
pretending not to care. When did their inhumane ‘act’ become
reality? At what point did they stop caring about anything but
themselves?
The guards half dragged her down the hallway to the testing rooms.
What am I in for today? They stopped at one of the Psych rooms, but
she no longer viewed these rooms as havens. They were just as bad as
any of the others. The guards opened the door and pushed her in.
She stumbled as she crossed the threshold because of the shove from
behind, but she righted herself quickly hoping that, at least, she
could maintain her dignity. She looked up. Oh, great. Dr. Lawrence
Ryan, her worst nightmare, was standing behind a small table, mask
firmly in place, his eyes in shadow from the one overhead light, the
rest of the room in darkness. She walked over to the table and saw
it was bare except for a little piece of paper that looked like a
fortune from a fortune cookie. Helen’s heart sank. She wondered
if, at least, he’d let her read it. He gestured that she should
sit. Helen had no choice. She sat down.
“You can leave us alone.”
The two guards left the room and shut the door behind them.
“Surveillance off,” said Ryan clearly.
Ryan sat down. He looked at her with those hard, hazel eyes for a
long while. Helen kept her face passive, her back straight, her
hands folded demurely on her lap. Finally, Ryan moved. He lifted
his hand and Helen almost flinched, but instead of doing anything to
her, he pulled away his mask.
He was not unattractive. He had a strong jaw and a thin nose.
“Your friends are coming for you, Ms. Pearce.” He pushed the
little paper toward her. Helen stayed silent, but she looked hard at
the paper to see what it said: ‘Fear not. We come.’
Ryan continued in a matter-of-fact voice that Helen found chilling.
“But they will fail. However, just in case, I’ve decided to
evacuate key staff for a few days and to be doubly sure I’ve
requested military backup: two platoons of Canada’s finest. So,
your friends don’t know what’s going to hit them. On the odd
chance their attack is successful, I can’t have them taking you, so
you will come with me along with one other key prisoner. Not that
I’m worried. They won’t be prepared for professional soldiers
and most of them will die except the few who will tell me where their
base is.”
He pushed his chair back, stood, and started to walk around the
table. His tone changed: “Sad, really, isn’t it? And it’s
all because they found out about you. Now what about you would
motivate them, hmmmm? Your obvious charms, perhaps?” He stopped
behind her and gently touched her head. Helen shied slightly and
relaxed as soon as she understood he wasn’t hurting her, but she
was too late. She had betrayed her fear. Ryan smiled coldly. Then,
he tapped his neck under his right ear and spoke: “Jake. Send in
our friend, would you?”
Ryan stepped around Helen and suddenly crouched beside her chair,
trying to catch her gaze, but she kept her eyes straight ahead, not
looking at him.
“Do you know why you’re here, Helen? May I call you Helen?”
He waited, but she refused to answer. “You’re here because
you’re not human, well, not homo sapiens at any rate.” He
waited again, but she did her best to control herself. Not homo
sapiens? “And, even amongst your own kind, you’re
unique.” What is he talking about? Still, she refused to
look at him. “You make a correct guess ninety-seven percent of the
time. Ninety-seven. That’s practically always. Your species, on
average, guesses things right more often than sapiens, about
sixty percent of the time, but you, you guess the right answer almost
all the time. I would call it a miracle, but I can’t. And
apparently, your friends can’t either. They know what you can do,
and they want you to perform your tricks for them. So, don’t think
you’re special because somebody out there loves you. You’re
nothing without this ability. They would’ve let you rot in here,
like they left a few hundred others, if you were just an average
member of your species. They are cowards. Nothing. I can’t leave
you in the hands of those people.”
He stood and walked back to the other side of the table. “So, you
won’t be here when they come, because my guess is they’re coming
for you. And after we slaughter most of them, we will find out from
one of the survivors where their base is.” Helen could see her
knuckles were white; she was gripping the chair so hard. She forced
herself to relax her hands. She said nothing. What is this?
Some kind of sick test? She heard the door open behind her and
heard the footfalls of people walking into the room, but she did not
turn to look. “You, my lucky one, will come with me, to my own
home, where we’ll wait out the attack. And, where you’ll begin
to learn that there is no one you can trust more than me. No one.
And then you’ll begin to help me with what I need to do.”
It was time to speak. “I will never help you.” She was
surprised how even her voice sounded.
“Oh, I think you will.” He gestured for someone to come forward.
And, suddenly, there was Greg. He looked a little worn out, but
otherwise fine. He was nodding slightly as he always did when he was
trying to reassure her. She felt a surge of emotion welling up from
her chest, but almost immediately, she began to control it. Too
late. Ryan was smiling. He knew he had her.
“So, let’s start, shall we?” Helen looked at him. “I want
you to just answer naturally, like you do with the cards. Don’t
think too much about it.”
Helen looked at Greg. He shook his head, ever so slightly. She held
his eyes, but she couldn’t do as he wanted. Greg didn’t know
what he was up against. She did. Ryan was right in one way. She
already trusted him, his cruelty at least. She looked back to Ryan
and nodded. He smiled.
“Will they attack or try to sneak you out?”
“Attack.”
“Will they come today or tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow.”
“Good. We’ll certainly be ready for them.” He turned away
abruptly, done with her for the time being. “Transport them to the
facility at my residence immediately.”
He pulled his facemask on once more and strode from the room. Helen
watched him go silently. She decided she liked him better with his
mask on.
Thursday, July 15, 2083. 1:00 p.m.
About a half hour to take off, the team assembled in the various
barns of the old farm on the surface above Origin. Marcie finally
came up after tying up some loose ends and having performed a last
minute check on her virus. Over the previous day and a half, it had
spread, slowly at first, and then picked up speed at an amazing pace.
Her tracker reported that the virus had infected a few hundred
million computers in approximately forty hours. By the time they got
to Newmarket, that figure could double. Perfect.
When Marcie was ready to go, there were few vehicles left. The
supply team had started leaving as much as twenty-four hours before
to obtain all the materials they would need and the strike team had
been leaving all day. Marcie stood beside Robbie as they waited for
a few PAs to back out of the barn.
“Look at that, sugar.”
She turned to him and saw that he was staring at the ceiling.
“What’s up, Robbie?”
“Ha, ha.” They were silent for a moment, looking at beams of
light streaming through chinks in the barn boards. “It’s the
sun, creepin’ through the cracks. It’s something you don’t get
down below, huh? Something they never see.”
Marcie smiled. Robbie the Philosopher. “No, they never do.”
“It always finds a way in, though.”
“What’s that?”
“The light.” He smiled. He was being reassuring. She smiled
back at him but wasn’t sure she shared his optimism. Something was
bothering her. Something was still missing from the puzzle and,
though essentially she trusted Stellan, he was still a politician.
It was their turn to go.
Robbie and Marcie hopped in their assigned PA, drove out of the barn,
and Robbie took off without clearance from Control. He executed the
first of what would be a series of untraceable short hops to Chicago,
where Robbie would power down, reset, and restart. Then, they would
run through a standard clearance procedure and make the final jump to
Toronto; Origin’s location couldn’t be traced. They flew for
hours on the slower local height streams. Marcie actually enjoyed
the ride – no steep climbs or descents – but as they approached
Chicago, they put the PA down in a remote suburb, re-adjusted the
start-up to automatic, shut down, and then re-booted the PA. He said
the word ‘Toronto’ clearly and the PA took over, guided both by
its own systems and Control.
While the PA flew itself, they sat back and chatted about nothing.
They arrived without incident two hours later and set down on a
public landing pad just long enough to power down, reset and reboot
the PA, and then do a manual merge into the slow lanes flying north.
They came down in the borough of Newmarket after about fifteen
minutes of flight. Even without the auto-nav, they found the
rendezvous warehouse relatively easily because a huge blue cross had
been painted on the roof. This warehouse was as large as a jetball
field, but this stat wasn’t impressive; the building looked like
many others in the area. Robbie landed the PA on the pad on the roof
and they took the service elevator down to the ground floor.
As the elevator descended, Marcie surveyed the small fleet. Four PAs
would carry two crew each, drop a bomb on cue at the beginning of the
attack, defend as necessary during the attack, and pick up soldiers
or freed prisoners at the end. Three vehicle carriers would
transport the frontal assault team. Each carrier had a crew of four
and held one attack humvee and with ten infantry besides. Each
humvee had a crew of two. These thirty-six people would launch the
dummy frontal assault. There was also one troop carrier that would
hold the whole of the twelve members of the Release team, the two
members of the Computer team, as well as two medical staff and four
beds for ill prisoners. And, last but not least, the Command Vehicle
with two pilots, four staff, and Marcie. A total of seventy-nine
people on the Strike Team, not including the few hundred staff both
in Ontario and in Origin who had made the preparations for the Strike
and were readying for the return of the prisoners.
The warehouse was a hive of activity, but without the general buzz of
conversation that Marcie was used to in large groups of sapiens.
They were greeted at the elevator by one of Karen’s team who
directed them to a large changing area. They checked in at a table
and were each given a pack with their names on it. There was one
changeroom for both the men and the women, so Marcie and Robbie sat
down to dress together.
“Warriors all, I guess.”
“Yeah,” replied Robbie. “You could prance about here in the
altogether right now and I probably wouldn’t notice.”
“Oh, thanks.”
Robbie laughed.
Marcie’s kit was small, just some clothes and some electronics.
Robbie’s pack was extensive, however: automatic rifle; machine
gun; small laser pistol, the latest in personal weapons; some hand
grenades; including three Automatic Detonation Bombs, or ADBs, that
could be programmed to go off at various times in three different
striation modes; clothes, helmet, watch, canteen and more.
“How will you carry all that stuff?”
Robbie gave a wry smile. “That’s always the question, isn’t
it?” And then, Robbie pulled out the only piece of equipment that
the two shared: A communication headset. “This is my umbilical to
you, sugar. You’re gonna show me the way.”
Marcie smiled. She didn’t really understand what she did next, but
she did it and she meant it. She held his face in both of her hands,
and then she kissed him hard on the lips. She pulled away quickly
and shook out the green shirt she’d been issued, trying not to
think about what she’d just done.
“Maybe I should insult you more often.”
She smiled, but felt her cheeks heat with embarrassment. They should
have their minds on other things except, of course, this was the only
thing that really mattered. She decided to ignore him, shucked off
her shirt, and pulled on the green turtleneck she’d been issued.
They dressed in silence. Marcie was done first and helped Robbie
with his belt pack and the crossband that carried extra ammunition,
grenades, and ADBs.
They left the changing area together. Marcie could see the command
centre as they got to the aisle. She turned to go to it, but stopped
because Robbie grabbed her hand. He switched off his head commset to
make sure they had privacy. She did the same.
“If it all goes wrong, sugar, if everything goes bad, give the word
and go. Don’t worry about me, okay?” Is something bothering
him, too?
“I’m responsible for all those under my command, you or anyone.
I wouldn’t just abandon you.” She believed it. Every word.
He smiled and then he let her hand go and turned away. Marcie
couldn’t watch him go. She switched on her comm unit immediately
and turned away herself. She wanted to get into the command vehicle
to confirm the time and check on the status of the virus that she’d
sent out a few nights before.
The command vehicle was a vacation RV designed for a family of four.
Not so big to be alarming and not too small either. Karen’s team
had gutted it and re-installed all the necessary equipment including
an extensive arsenal and four battle stations – turret rooms,
they’d begun to call them. The command centre was laid out exactly
as they had planned it. Marcie knew where her seat was without
anyone telling her.
“Hello, all.” She said, as she stepped into the plane. She kept
her tone light.
“Ma’am,” came the formal reply from around her. She was going
to have to talk to these people about calling her ma’am, but she
would wait until after they returned.
She sat down and powered up the three computers and six vidscreens
she would be using personally. From her ops computer, she logged
onto the Internet immediately. As it was making the connection, she
also logged onto the two other computers that would act primarily as
external monitors.
At her ops machine, she called up the tracer program after first
checking for a tracer on the tracer. Was anyone watching?
Apparently not. The tracer reported that the virus had been more
successful than she had originally hoped – a half billion machines
infected – and that the virus continued to spread at an exponential
rate. By the time they struck, only minutes away, the total could
possibly be a billion. Marcie sat back and wondered, for a moment,
just how many personal computers there were out there. At any rate,
it would be enough for what she needed to do. She checked her watch
and went to pour herself a cup of fresh coffee. She returned to her
chair and tried to relax while she printed out a timeline, four maps,
a list of local comm codes, and the master checklist. She logged
onto a military site to confirm Greenwich Mean to which she
synchronized her command computer. Then, she ran through a
systematic check of all her vidscreens, remote cams, and other
periphery equipment.
She took care with her radio set up. She had three states:
pre-attack, when all channels were open to all; attack, when every
team and subteam – eighteen in all – had their own isolated
channel; and emergency, on which Marcie could also monitor the radio
traffic of the local law enforcement agencies. All was working. She
had eight minutes to spare. She spent two minutes setting three
alarms: Deployment, Attack, and Bug Out. Then, she downed her
coffee, went to the bathroom, and poured herself another on the way
back. At the appointed time, she started her global check sequence.
“All team leaders check in, please.”
“Topaz Leader, here.”
As each leader confirmed attendance and readiness, Marcie checked
them off manually on a paper list. Quaint, yes, but also foolproof –
at least for Marcie.
“Team leaders, confirm staff, please.”
Again, as the team leaders confirmed that their group ready to go,
Marcie checked them off. There was a small problem with Hephaestus
(the frontal assault) Team, but they were able to confirm readiness
by the time she cycled back to them. Marcie continued down the
global checklist until it was done.
“Time to deployment: six minutes. Please start vehicles and idle.
Gold Leader, initiate Launch Doors, please.”
“Initiating,” came the immediate response. Marcie was feeling
confident in their plan and their team. Every member had the
timeline memorized. She could rely on each to do his or her part
without her having to order it. This was freedom.
From above, Marcie could hear the low level grinding of gears and
hydraulics as a large hatch opened in the roof. The launch
sequence was set; all Marcie had to do was give the go ahead. Marcie
watched the clock. She shifted her view to the overhead cams on the
RV, so she could monitor the lift off and then she spent the
intervening few minutes breathing deeply to settle her nerves. At
exactly six twenty-five, her ops computer beeped its first alarm and
Marcie gave the command to go.
The PAs went first. They rose and hovered like bees and then
disappeared through the launch doors seemingly at random, although
Marcie knew that their flight plans were locked in. Next, the
medium-sized vehicles: the command centre and the one troop carrier
flew a little more slowly out of the warehouse. As they emerged into
a sunny evening, Marcie checked her undercams and watched the three
vehicle carriers as they lifted off as scheduled, following them out.
“Local forces?” Marcie was asking Talla, her external
communications monitor, if their lift-off had been noticed.
“As expected. No mention.” Talla’s voice was certain. No
forces alerted or dispatched.
Good. “All clear as of lift-off,” she informed the rest. “All
clear.”
Marcie sat back and waited. The flight to Eastdown was less than
five minutes due south. Though the sky was clear and everything was
moving as it should, Marcie suddenly felt anxious. She started
checking the various cams and monitors at her disposal including her
proximity alert, scanning the skies for any sign of pursuit.
Nothing. So, what is bothering me? Her job, up to and including the
Attack Point, was to call off the operation, if necessary, and she
was feeling edgy and worried. She was looking for any excuse to call
an Abort.
Nothing happened as they advanced on Eastdown. Marcie could see no
reason to call off the operation, but she couldn’t shake the
feeling that she should. She must act. She made a decision.
“Hephaestus, be wary, no indications. All teams: Condition
Yellow. Repeat Condition Yellow.” She was sure something was
wrong; she just didn’t know what it was and she may as well let
everybody in on her hunch. Under this condition, anyone, including
the guy who rolled bandages, could sound an Abort – the rationale
being that a counter-indication could come from the most unlikely of
sources.
They were flying well, not in formation but clearly together. They
looked like an extended family group on vacation. The skies were
clear of other traffic. There was nothing to fear. So, why? Her
computer beeped. She quickly double-checked the time and their
location.
“Attack Point reached. Go ahead. Attack Point reached. We are
going ahead.”
Thursday, July 15, 2083. 6:30 p.m.
The clock ticked over ten-thirty p.m. Greenwich Mean Time and well
over a half billion computers attacked the Eastdown security system,
all at once. Because of Internet traffic congestion and the
restraints of the cables going into the complex only a few million a
second got through, but it was enough to shut down the internal
workings of the Eastdown computers completely as the system dropped
everything to defend itself. Nothing would be apparent to security
staff, however, unless they tried to change something: Like raising
the parking lot barrier, switching out lights, or shifting security
readiness from daytime to night time.
At six thirty, the evening shift should have taken over, with the day
staff long gone. According to their intelligence, and this is what
the Origin force expected, a company of twelve civilian security
guards patrolled the facility in the evening, relying heavily on
early warnings from the intricate surveillance system that watched
every square inch of the compound, both inside and out. Of course,
this evening, the system would be otherwise occupied.
About thirty seconds after the computer attacks began, four Origin
vehicles landed on the Eastdown grounds. Three carriers landed on
the lawns at the front of the building and three humvees emerged
immediately with the troop compliments in their wake. The troop
carrier touched down in the gardens, spoiling the central flowerbeds,
and the Release Team came out in a tight group that moved quickly
toward the side door. No alarm sounded and there was no obvious
response from the building. The virus is working.
“No alarm. Bombs drop, go.” Marcie felt like she was watching
twenty vidscreens at once, but at least she could see and assess just
about everything. Her voice was clear and confident. She was in her
element. In response to her command, seven vehicles dropped
low-level explosives, more boom than bite, onto the grounds at
Eastdown and one AP dropped the large bomb, all bite, that would
destroy the power plant.
Marcie saw both the frontal attack and release team ground troops
reach their marks. The frontal group was taking up position near the
main entrance of the building. The release team was approaching the
side entrance to the building through the gardens.
Just as Robbie placed a small bomb on the door mechanism, the power
plant blew. Marcie wasn’t expecting the force of the blast. Even
the command vehicle shuddered with the explosion. She could see that
a few of the soldiers on the ground had fallen. She switched to
Robbie’s channel to check all was well. Robbie was calling to his
novice fighting force to get them on their feet.
“Blow the door, Robbie. Time, time.” Marcie stole a glance at
the countdown to Bug Out. Only four minutes left. She turned back
to her vidscreens and saw a small blast and the door pop open. Her
force would be inside in seconds. The fake frontal assault had
begun, with soldiers lobbing low-level ADBs and firing wildly at the
building. Marcie hoped there were enough diversions to keep most of
her people alive. There was no sign of response yet. She didn’t
know if that was a bad sign, or good.
Robbie disappeared into the building with his team. Marcie could no
longer easily see what was happening though the soldiers all had
cameras on their helmets. In combat, the pictures were usually too
jerky for a co-ordinator to make head nor tail of. What did help
Marcie were the sensors built into the watches and clothing of the
soldiers. Data was constantly streaming in and was being processed
by Brett, a computer whiz working on her team. Brett was already
running programs to graphically represent the data, so Marcie could
understand what she was looking at. The graphs were displayed on her
vidscreens almost immediately. She could see her team as green dots
showing on a map of the complex. There was a cluster of dots outside
by the front door and some moving in the humvees. She could see the
Release team moving in the building. Other bodies, enemy forces or
prisoners, identified only by body heat sensors, would show up as red
dots. Marcie scanned the map for red dots. Nothing yet. The team
needed to be closer for their scanners to pick up the information.
Hephaestus Team split into three groups as they entered the building.
The Computer Group went to the administrative offices to steal hard
drives. The Release Group, led by Robbie, would get as many victims
out as possible. A Patrol Group of two soldiers took up a position
at the intersection of two main corridors to watch out for opposing
forces and defend as necessary.
“Release Group, I have three people in cells but about twenty warm
bodies down at the end of the cell corridor in the larger room –
some kind of holding cell? Start there.”
“Got it.”
Marcie noticed two red dots moving quickly down the corridor toward
the release team. “Robbie as you come around that corner….”
“On it.” Robbie’s voice had changed a little. He sounded
harder, more focused than she’d ever heard him. There were two
short bursts of gunfire. The two red dots stopped moving.
Marcie could see more warm bodies in the offices. “Computer Group,
you have company waiting in the outer office. Two targets.”
“Two. Okay,” said Trent Poole. A few moments later, he
whispered: “Computer group calling door check.”
“Correct door,” Marcie said.
Marcie kept her channels open, so she could monitor what was going
on. Trent was talking, or rather whispering, to Drew Carter, his
partner.
“They’re right there waiting for us. If we go in, we’ll get
shot.”
“What about a flash ADB?” Drew sounded uncertain of himself.
“Would that work? It won’t do too much damage and it’ll leave
them blind.”
“Great idea.”
A few seconds later, Marcie heard the sound of a muffled explosion
and Trent was saying, “Go, go, go.” Then, some sounds of
gunfire. Marcie could barely sit in her seat.
“Office, clear.” Trent was sounding subdued. Marcie started
breathing again.
She watched her screens intently. A few seconds later, the Release
Group arrived at the holding cell.
“Release calling Door check.” Robbie’s voice was terse.
“Correct door,” Marcie said clearly.
“Sure?” came the answer back. “The door doesn’t seem to be
locked.”
A trap! Marcie yelled “Get out!” just as a massive amount
of gunfire sounded.
Robbie was shouting: “Fallback! Fallback!”
Before her eyes, Marcie could see members of her team scattering and
some dying. Marcie got a hold of herself and said clearly “Bug out.
Repeat: Bug Out. All teams leave immediately. Bug Out.” She
watched as the red dots in the holding cell, at first, surged forward
and out into the hallway after her retreating force, and then,
stopped moving one by one. She watched the dots in the other cells
carefully, but none emerged – these were probably actual prisoners.
Some curses came back. She heard Trent on the Computer team yell
“Okay take whole box, let’s go.”
Marcie was relieved to hear Robbie’s voice: “I need a check on
Helen Pearce.” One of their primary goals was to release Helen
Pearce. Stellan had not been clear why, but he had made it plain
that it was not only because the girl was his niece. Marcie checked
her cell.
“Someone’s in her cell, Robbie, but who?”
“I’ll go see.”
“It’s Bug Out, Robbie.”
“Don’t worry sugar, it’s on my way.”
A few moments passed in which Marcie studied her troop screen
carefully. Four were dead. If any were hurt, Marcie couldn’t tell
from the readings.
“Door check.” Robbie again.
“Correct door.” She heard the door blow immediately.
“Come on, come on.” Robbie was talking to someone else. “Sugar,
one occupant, male. Could be one of us; so we’re bringing him
along. Bugging out.” Well, maybe we saved one guy, anyway.
Then, Marcie noticed a surge of new red dots, soldiers probably,
coming up from a lower level. A large compliment moved toward the
front of the building and a group of twenty dots headed toward the
back. As she scanned her external cams, she also saw a force of ten
jeeps coming in from the road. Too many. She spoke
immediately.
“Bug out Manoeuvre C. Manoeuvre Charlie. Charlie Bug Out. Enemy
re-enforcements on their way, from inside and outside. Gold group
lay down covering fire to block the front entrance. Keep those
troops inside the building. Silver group take out the jeeps coming
in from the north. Ground troops, I repeat: bug out Charlie.”
The external scenes became battle zones, with ADBs dropping
everywhere. The advance of the jeep force was slowed significantly
and the troops attempting to come out of the building were stopped at
the doors. On the inside monitors, Marcie watched as her people
immediately turned away from the predetermined exit and headed
instead for the closest doors. “Gold and Silver, they’re coming
out. Break off and pick up.” Marcie switched back to her many
cams and watched the Computer Team burst out a crash door into the
gardens. Seconds later, she saw Robbie and his teammates come out
another crash door on the other side of the building, with one man
Marcie did not recognize but who could have been Robbie’s brother,
they looked so much alike – the freed prisoner. PAs started diving
in to pick people up.
The Frontal assault team was trying to fall back but with the lack of
covering fire, the enemy troops were making this difficult. An ADB
exploded over the heads of a group of five of their force and three
of the team died, just as the vehicle carriers touched down to pick
up whoever was left.
Seven members of the original twelve on the Release Team were still
moving. Of those seven, only six made it into a plane, including the
Computer Team who hopped into the back of a hovering PA, throwing an
armful of equipment as they went. Two humvees made it back to the
vehicle carriers and then turned and laid out covering fire for the
retreating troops. One humvee was cut off by four enemy jeeps and
was fighting to get to its carrier. The frontal assault forces took
a beating as they fell back, covering fire or no. Well over half of
them were down by the time they got to their carriers.
“Marcie,” Robbie voice was hoarse and he was breathing heavily.
“Charlie Bug Out means you go too. Go now. You can’t do
anything.”
“One sec. Talla, target sector four, with a tight but full blast
ADB.” She wanted to help that stranded humvee.
“Targetted.”
“Fire.” The bomb dropped and exploded a few seconds later,
hopefully disabling a few jeeps and giving the humvee a fighting
chance, but Marcie did not wait around to see. She switched channels
and said, “Away, Howard,” to the pilot of her van. The vehicle
surged up and out just in time for Marcie to see a small cloud of
military vehicles approaching from the east on her forward monitor.
Damn!
“Incoming. Incoming,” said Marcie. “Delta Bug Out. Delta.
Delta Bug Out.”
Delta Bug Out required that all vehicles move whether they had all
their passengers or not. The four vehicles on the ground lifted
immediately. Only the one humvee was left stranded. Marcie watched
in horror as the humvee came to a screeching halt where the vehicle
carrier used to be.
“Control to Ground Bronze, hang in. We’re coming to get you.”
“Ground Bronze to Control. Don’t try. You’re too late.”
“No, wait. We can….”
“Ma’am, Kal and I agreed. We do not want to be taken. Go. You
can’t save us.”
Marcie watched as enemy soldiers tentatively approached the humvee,
confused by its lack of motion and lack of defence.
“Wes!” Marcie was struggling to figure out a solution when the
humvee exploded, killing its occupants and some of the enemy forces
as well.
Marcie fought back tears and forced herself turn her attention to the
military planes on their way. Most were carriers of some
description, but her proximity monitor identified two as attack jets.
Extremely fast. We can’t outrun them. Marcie toyed with
scattering the fleet, but she knew that, against jets, they were
stronger together. If even one of them were captured, the risk of
exposing Origin was too great. They would have to fight.
“Dog fight. Dog fight. Bronze flight group defensive formation,
please. Command Centre, battlestations, please. Battlestations.”
Every vehicle had been modified to include defences, but the Command
Centre had a large arsenal. They would take the first shot. The
rest of the fleet pulled away, while the command vehicle and two PAs,
all equipped with laser and ADB rifles, took a defensive stance
against the jets hurtling toward them. Marcie was sure that if they
weren’t able to take at least one of those jets down, the hopes of
the fleet were sunk.
Marcie ran to her battle station in the cockpit of the aircraft. She
slipped into the pilot’s chair beside Howard.
“Relinquishing control,” barked Howard.
“Got it,” said Marcie as she grabbed the stick control. She
almost smiled. If Robbie were here, he would find the fact that she
was piloting ironic to say the least. She plugged her comset into
the port by the pilot’s chair and hoped she could ignore her
stomach. Howard disappeared down the companionway, to take his
position in turret room three. Marcie assessed the oncoming jets.
They were travelling around three hundred miles per hour and would be
here in seconds.
“Fire at will. Here they come.”
Marcie enabled the automatic defences and grabbed the controller
stick with both hands. She strained to see the oncoming jets, tiny
dots in the distance, but the dots grew amazingly quickly and the
jets were on them almost before she knew it. They arrived deploying
a forward sweep laser that Marcie only barely avoided with a sharp
bank to the south. Oh my stomach. The automatic defence
system went nuts as did the four human fighters in the ‘turrets’.
Marcie could barely follow the jets as they went past. She was
struggling to keep control of the vehicle while at the same time
performing more crazy tricks to avoid their fire. She heard, but
didn’t see one of the jets explode.
“Got it!” That was Talla in turret room two. She was almost
laughing with relief.
“Single target approaching,” Marcie said into her radio.
“Warning fleet. Go on the attack. Warning fleet.”
“Fleet warned,” came Robbie’s voice. Marcie watched her radar
screen closely as she executed a tight turn to take them back to the
fleet. She set the vehicle on a pursuit course, but she knew they
were too slow to be of any help. It would be over one way or another
long before the command vehicle got there.
Marcie switched radio channels to check on the local police forces.
They were being alerted and mobilizing. Her team had to get out of
here. Okay, one thing at a time. She followed the two PAs in
pursuit of the lone jet.
“Civilian forces on their way. We have no quarrel with them.
Let’s dispatch this fighter and get out of here, people.”
The radar showed the fighter jet arriving at the fleet and circling.
It managed to shoot down one PA before exploding under their combined
fire.
“Fleet: drop and scatter. Rendezvous when you can.”
The remaining planes dropped low, out of radar range, so they would
be difficult to track and took off in various directions.
Eventually, they would all end up at a small base that had been set
up just north of Algonquin Park, in Ontario’s wilderness. Assuming
all went well, most of the fleet would arrive in about an hour.
There, they would change planes and slip back into the stream of
traffic crossing the borders.
“Sugar?” Robbie. Marcie felt a flood of relief to hear his
voice. She hadn’t known which PA had been shot down. “Isolate,
channel three.”
“Isolating.” The radio clicked as the two switched over. “Okay,
what’s the bad news?”
“Sugar, we lost about half. Considering they were ready and
gunning for us, I’d say we’re all lucky to be alive.”
“Your released prisoner, are you sure he’s of us?”
“Sure.”
“Search him anyway. Strip him down, give him some fresh clothes
and chuck everything else he was wearing out a hatch. They could put
homing equipment in it as a matter of course.”
“Will do.”
Marcie turned back to her readouts and sucked in her breath. “I
just lost Henderson and Pall off my monitor. They must have been
left behind.”
“Damn. At least they’re still alive.”
“We have to go back for them.”
“Sugar, there’s no way. It’s suicide.” Marcie knew he was
right. She sat silently for a moment staring at the vidscreen.
“There is nothing you can do, sugar. We have to get the rest of
these people home.”
“You’re right,” she said finally. “Switching over, Robbie.”
“Switching over.”
Marcie changed back to general channels, and listened carefully to
the civilian emergency channels. Fire and rescue vehicles were being
dispatched to the Eastdown location, but no call for pursuit had been
made.
About fifteen minutes later, Marcie’s radio came to life: “Home
to Control. Home to Control.” Stellan’s voice over scrambled
channel. The call she was dreading.
“Control here.”
“Report.”
As neutrally as possible, Marcie recounted the losses. They had come
away with only two administrative computers and managed to free only
a single prisoner. Unless they could get some key information out of
the boxes or the prisoner, the whole mission was a disaster. They
knew we were coming, sir,” Marcie finished.
“The only explanation. We have a traitor?”
Marcie shrugged. “Possibly.” But Marcie was certain that
Stellan wasn’t telling her everything. She planned to have it out
with him when she got back. It was a trait she’d learned from her
years with sapiens. Occasionally, even for a fortunatus,
it was good to yell.
“Origin exposure?”
“Origin is likely to be completely exposed, sir. If even one of
the two captured soldiers survives, I hazard a guess that they’ll
stop at nothing to find out who and where we are.” Yeah, and
who the fuck is Helen Pearce? Marcie schooled her breathing.
Now wasn’t the time.
Almost twenty-four hours later, Marcie and Robbie arrived back at the
farm in a family-sized PA that looked like it had seen a little wind
and rain. They parked the vehicle and made their way down the
elevators toward Stellan’s office. As they arrived, Les greeted
them.
“He’s not here, Marcie. He’s down in the labs.”
Marcie nodded and turned back toward the central elevators. She was
feeling ashamed. She’d hoped to help these people, her people, and
had returned horribly defeated. To get to the research centre, she
would have to go through the Promenade. She wasn’t looking forward
to the walk.
But when they arrived at the Promenade level and started the walk
toward the research labs, she was deeply surprised by the response
from the people of Origin. Instead of shying away or confronting
her, people stopped and nodded in sympathy and understanding, many
even gently touched her arm or shoulder as she walked past. By the
time she walked the length of the Promenade she was crying, but
working hard to keep her face as impassive as possible. She had
never felt so understood or so supported.
They arrived at the elevator and stepped inside. As they turned back
on the Promenade, there seemed nothing out of the ordinary. Robbie
said clearly: “Level twelve.” The doors closed and Marcie wiped
her eyes. Perhaps, she would not go after Stellan. Perhaps, she’d
do it the Origin way and ask him a lot of questions.
As they arrived at the lab, the door was standing open. Marcie
walked in first. She saw Stellan standing over a computer with
Trent, one of Origin’s computer gurus. Stellan met her eyes. He
was horrified. His face was ashen and his mouth was hanging open.
“What? What is it?”
“Trent found a series of deleted backups that stop abruptly about a
week ago. Maybe Ryan had a change of staff? Anyway, Trent restored
these files and he’s been working on them all the way home. He
found something. I’m stunned. Am I reading this right?”
Marcie looked at Trent who was shaking his head slowly. She walked
around the back of the bench and looked at the screen. There were
two windows open on Stellan’s computer. The first window was a lab
report on the employees of Eastdown. Every employee, apparently, had
had to submit to a genetic analysis in order to determine his or her
species. A wise precaution on their part because one employee was,
in fact, identified as fortunatus. Employee #D285. Marcie
looked at the second window, the employee log file. She scanned down
the list looking for employee #D285. She found the entry. She felt
her jaw go slack and she raised her eyes to look at Robbie.
“What, sugar?”
“Dr. Lawrence Ryan is fortunatus. He is one of us.”
Friday, July 16, 2083. 7:33 p.m.
Robbie sat down hard on lab stool. He shook his head as he tried to
understand the implications of this information. The one man
installed by sapiens to study fortunatus, the man who
was performing horrible experiments, the man who was ignoring any
pretence of human rights and dignity was, in fact, a fortunatus
himself.
“Is it a secret or does the government know?” Marcie’s mind
was already ticking away at the possibilities.
“They’re so paranoid about us, I can’t believe they know,”
said Stellan. “I certainly can’t believe that they would install
a fortunatus in a position of that much power.”
“I don’t think so either. So, it’s his dirty, little secret,
huh? What do you think the government will do when they find out? I
don’t think he’ll get to keep his job, do you? Worse, he has
nowhere to run. Do you think anyone in Origin would be interested in
housing him?”
Stellan looked at her. “Doubtful. His name’s become synonymous
with evil around here, the kind of name parents invoke along with the
bogey-man.”
Marcie nodded. “So, the only way for him to survive is to keep his
ancestry a secret and keep on doing what he’s doing.”
Robbie sighed heavily. “Until it tears him apart.”
Marcie nodded slowly. “The situation will get worse before it gets
better. He’ll be after us with a vengeance, especially if he
thinks we know his secret. Stellan, you need to evacuate Origin.”
It was Stellan’s turn to sigh. “You’re right. But most people
won’t go, Marcie. Yesterday, as soon as we understood the possible
exposure, a team of twenty families left to set up a surface
community. They’re posing as religious zealots. We gave them a
lot of money. They’ll flourish.”
“Twenty families? About a hundred people?”
“Basically.”
“What about the other fifteen thousand?”
“I told you, Marcie. Most of us won’t go.”
He won’t leave either? She schooled her voice and changed
the subject. “I wanted to ask you about Helen Pearce.”
Stellan sat back and waited. He looked like he knew this was coming.
“What can I tell you about her?”
“Why is she so special, Stellan?”
Stellan didn’t even pause to consider his answer. “Every species
has its abilities, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Every individual within that species will likely represent that
species’ general tendencies or not, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Some individuals may be the exceptions that prove the rule, like
yourself and Mr. McLean, but some individuals may embody those
abilities so absolutely as to be the pinnacle of that species’
achievement.”
“Helen Pearce.”
“Yes. We don’t know everything, but we do know that she’s
capable of some amazing feats. For example, she can guess the right
answer almost one hundred percent of the time.”
“That’s an edge.”
“Yes.”
Great. “And Ryan knows her abilities.”
“Yes. Well, he was the one who found out, or rather, one of his
researchers. If it weren’t for our spy, we would never have
known.”
“Then, I bet you he also has Greg Pearce,” Robbie said. Marcie
was nodding. Robbie continued. “Ryan will use Greg to force Helen
to work her magic for him.”
Stellan’s brow furrowed. “We’re in trouble.”
“Yes, we are.”
Jacqui Burke is a freelance director, writer, and theatrical teacher living in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She is currently directing Wrong for Each Other for Encore Productions opening in April, Kidsplay 2012: The Mayan Prediction opening in June, and The Last Five Years for TOKL Productions opening in July. She is, also, serializing The Pretender, her first novel, online at http://thepretender-amarcienoelnovel.blogspot.ca/. She is preparing for two Shakespeare is Boffo! summer camp sessions for 2012.
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Jacqui Burke
Artistic Director
Jaybird Productions
talk/text: 647-292-0210
twitter: @jaybird01
skype: Jacquiburkecell, jacqui.burke
www.wordsnimages.com
www.jaybirdproductions.ca
www.shakespeareisboffo.ca
http://jacquiburke.blogspot.ca
http://thepretender-amarcienoelnovel.blogspot.ca/
http://jaybirdproductions.blogspot.ca/
Ask me about Shakespeare is Boffo! Premium Summer Camps for Kids. Two installments in 2012: The Homeschoolers` Version: 11:00 am – 3:30 pm, August 13-17, 2012 for only $125. Premium Full Day Summer Camp: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm, July 16-20, 2012 for only $155. Both prices hold until May 15th, 2012. Spots are going fast. Register, now at www.shakespeareisboffo.ca
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