Mysterious Cairo

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Mysterious Cairo Page 14

by Edited By Ed Stark


  "Tell me how to replenish the device and I'll at least kill you quickly. No pain." Fink's breathing was becoming heavy, and he chuckled between words. "Tell me or I'll skin you alive."

  Philip had nowhere to go. The wall of flying sand was inches from his nose. He turned his head and moaned. Terror kept any comprehensible words from his lips.

  "You're making it tough on both of us," Fink intoned. "But I'll still find out how it works. I'll have to pay off some researchers, but they'll take the belt apart and analyze the sand and eventually I'll have your secrets. The only thing you gain by defying me is a slow, lingering death."

  Philip whimpered again.

  "This is your last chance! Tell me how it works!"

  As afraid as he was of dying in so grisly and painful a fashion, something in Philip's conscience would not let him give away the last vestiges of honor.

  White pain shot across Philip's face as the first grains of the shield tore through and carried away the outermost layer of his cheek. The pain focussed his chaotic thoughts of life, death, honor and .

  Courage? Bravery?

  Philip suddenly, and very clearly, realized that he had had those all along. He just didn't show it the same way Bob and the others did. His was the courage to follow his friends into situations he was unable to cope with because they might need his expertise, his brain. His was the honor that would not surrender to petty little men like Lester Fink, even in the face of certain death.

  It dawned on Philip that he was heroic. Not because he ran around solving mysteries and fighting crimes like the others, but because he stayed in his lab and did all the technical work that made the adventuring successful.

  From deep in his being a warmth spread over Philip. And with the warmth came strength and determination the likes of which he had never known. And with the strength came the realization that he had better use his vaunted intelligence and creativity to find a way out of this situation. Otherwise his new found heroism would be short lived indeed.

  The second and third layers of skin were being torn away now. The pain was worse, much worse. But Philip somehow found it easier to bear.

  He had to find some weapon to deflect the whirling sands. Reaching his arm out blindly, Philip grabbed the first thing his fingers touched. He brought it to his chest and prepared to press the attack with the bulk of this . seltzer bottle.

  Seltzer bottle? he thought. Through the haze of pain Philip's eyes suddenly shone with realization. He knew how to defeat this monster he had created.

  Instead of swinging the bottle as a bludgeon, he pointed the nozzle at the wall of sand and pulled the trigger. Carbonated water sprayed out onto the shield, some of it even getting through to hit Lester Fink in the face. Fink sputtered to clear his nose and stepped back a few paces.

  Already it was possible to see the difference in the shield. Fink's body was much easier to find in the center as wet sand fell to the floor in small clumps.

  "What do you think you are doing? This isn't some slapstick routine! Give me that!" whined Fink.

  "Yes," said Philip sharply. "Do have it."

  He again pulled the trigger and this time emptied the bottle on the shield. Great gobs of muddy sand flew off the bubble in random directions. Now it was possible to see Fink's features through the wall. His head and shoulders were soaked through with soda water. His eyes were swollen with fury as he wiped the hair out of them.

  As amusing a sight as this was, Philip had to be cautious. The shield was down to half strength, but it could still do him serious damage as well as defend Fink from a fair amount of punishment. He had to find some way to take out the rest of the field quickly before the little man remembered that he was still holding a gun.

  As surreptitiously as possible, he grabbed an ice bucket from the bar and plunged it into the sink half filled with ice and its melted leftovers. He came out with a bucket filled half with water, half with frozen cubes and doused Fink with it.

  The would-be villain shrieked at the temperature.

  Philip quickly repeated the process twice more while Fink stood there in shock. The remnants of his once mighty shield clung to his skin and clothing in soggy patches.

  "You can't do this to me!" he told Philip in his petulant whine. "This was my big break. I was finally going to be somebody. And then you go and ruin it with your seltzer and your ice water! I'll ... I'll kill you!"

  The image was so comical Philip would have laughed endlessly if not for the fact that his friend lay nearby injured and perhaps dying.

  He walked up to the fuming Fink and grinned toothily.

  "What are you smiling about, you idiot?"

  "I'm thinking about how good this is going to feel," Philip answered. Then he drew back his fist and knocked Lester Fink cold with one punch.

  "Ow." On impact, Philip felt a twinge in his wrist, but he was correct. It had felt good anyway.

  "We're going to have to work on your form," said a familiar voice from further down the bar, "but no one can argue with your results."

  Philip was speechless. There stood Bob with a deep gash on the side of his head, but fully awake and not at all in immediate danger of death. He picked up a towel from the bar and pressed it over the wound.

  "Good job. You can be my sidekick anytime" the costumed man said with a smile.

  "Thanks all the same, but I think I'll stay in the lab. It's where I do my best work."

  Bob put his arm around Philip's shoulders.

  "Well, at least let me buy you a pot of Darjeeling."

  "Actually" Philip said as they walked out the door, "I could rather stand an ale."

  Back at The Watering Hole, I was treated to several rounds of drinks. Don't fret, Mother, only the first three were alcoholic. I was also treated to unending choruses of "We knew you could do it" and "You make a fine hero" and "Bob's damned lucky to have had a stud like you there to save his tail."

  I think perhaps my friends miss the point. I always knew what was inside me. I just never assessed its value properly. And having discovered the worth of my talents, I don't intend to change my habits one whit. I'll simply appreciate them more.

  Perhaps the difference between a hero and a bystander is only his feelings of self worth. His feeling that somehow, in his own meager way, he can make a difference. And so he tries. All my love, Philip

  Cry Havoc

  John Terra

  "Two engines gone, and the third one doesn't look too healthy," Corey Jones yelled. "Fuel line's ruptured, the right wing looks like confetti, and we're plummeting like a stone." The young woman yanked back on the controls of the Ford Tri-Motor as hard as she could, hoping to pull the plane into at least a decent glide pattern.

  "It's no use," she shouted to her co-pilot. "Daremo, flying through storms I can handle. A perforated plane on fire is another. Know any hi-tech flying tricks that might save our bacon?"

  Her co-pilot, a Japanese man clad in black jeans, turtleneck, and leather jacket, gave a curt nod and took the controls. "I cannot perform miracles, but at least I do have a few tricks I can try. Why don't you check on our friends, advise them to strap themselves in and perhaps to make peace with their gods?"

  "You just had to throw that last line in there, didn't you?" Corey barked as she left the cockpit and entered what was left of the passenger area. In the cabin, an intense-looking young man with a bowl-shaped haircut and clad in GWI Armor of God clutched his now inert electronic rosary beads and read from a Core Earth Catholic Bible.

  "Marcel, we're going down fast," Corey said quickly. "Strap in and pray hard. How's Kayla doing?"

  In response, the former Hospitaller gestured over his shoulder and shrugged, though his face betrayed his concern. Kayla, a muscular brunette clad in leather, rocked to and fro in her seat, her hands grasping her bare knees. "I do not like these flying machines. I do not like these flying machines," she murmured as her eyes stared at the floor.

  Corey felt sorry for the Ayslish barbarian. In the few short weeks
that this foursome had been working together, she had witnessed Kayla performing some truly gutsy things, including facing down a Draconis Teutonica alone and leading a charge into a group of GodLight-armed Hospitallers. But to have the barbarian put herself at the mercy of modern technology, that was another matter entirely.

  "Kayla, secure yourself into your seat, the plane is going dow ... er, we are about to land in a very rough way," Corey hastily amended her words.

  Salvaging as much dignity as possible, Kayla locked her steely blue eyes on Corey. "We are facing death, are we not, Corey Jones?" she asked evenly. Corey nodded, averting her eyes. "This is a pity. Death is not something I fear. I but wish that I could have had more control over how it came. Dying in a burning metal animal is not a good death."

  "I ... I have to go back and see if Daremo needs some help," Corey answered, anxious to end the exchange. As she went back to the cockpit, she wondered how things could have degenerated to this point.

  The Possibility Wars were only nine months old when these four unlikely people volunteered their services to NATO authorities in Italy: Corey Jones, New York correspondent for International Cable News; Daremo, a self-described "corporate troubleshooter" who had left the employ of the Kanawa Corporation; Marcel Berge, former Hospitaller for the Cyberpapacy; and Kayla, a barbarian from Aysle. The ensuing three weeks were a blur of dangerous assignments, and, though there were not many opportunities to socialize, the foursome's respect, trust, and affection for each other grew.

  A few days back, fragments of a ham radio message originating from Cairo were intercepted by a NATO listening post in Sicily. Mobius' weird scientists routinely jammed radio messages, but a few words were decipherable: "Mobius ... big ... sphinx ... Sinai ... control and conquest . secret weapon . Cairo ." The words were enough justification for NATO to send Corey and her friends off to Cairo. The foursome were supposed to meet a local Storm Knight, code-named Havoc, at a small secret airstrip 10 miles due west of the city.

  Remarkably, the flight across the Mediterranean and into the Nile storm front was uneventful. Once the plane crossed into what Corey understood was called "the Pure Zone," however, things disintegrated fast. She knew that there would be trouble when her digital watch, cassette recorder, and video camera all stopped working at the precise same moment. Marcel's cybernetic enhancements became inert, and Daremo found himself unable to recall how to achieve the proper mindset to perform his martial arts.

  No sooner had the group realized these limitations, when Mobius' ground-based anti-aircraft batteries opened up on the plane. A few lucky hits and the plane was afire and .

  "Going down," Daremo announced evenly, his teeth tight together. "Sorry, Corey, I tried everything I could. I managed to coax the plane into some minor glide patterns, slowing our descent, but all that it did was to delay the inevitable. A pity, too. We should be close to our landing zone."

  Corey took her cockpit seat and peered out the window, trying to see through the smoke produced by the burning nose engine. "Oh, good Lord, I think I see our strip!"

  Daremo squinted in the direction the newswoman was pointing. "Well, it looks long enough to be a small runway. I'll try and steer the plane towards it. Now buckle in, for whatever the end result, I can guarantee a rough landing."

  "Everyone hold on back there!" Corey shouted over her shoulder, "We're about to make a real rough landing!"

  "Angels and ministers of grace defend us," Marcel called back. That made Corey smile despite the circumstances. The two books that Marcel carried with him everywhere were the Holy Bible and the Complete Works of William Shakespeare, two books that Marcel felt represented the best that Core Earth had to offer. Apparently, Magna Verita never had a Shakespeare. Now, Marcel quoted The Bard every chance he got.

  The dark rectangular strip loomed closer as the heat in the cockpit increased, courtesy of the fires on the overhead wing. Summoning every bit of his skill, Daremo pulled back on the stick and extended the air brake flaps.

  Everyone's stomachs rose and fell as the landing gear hit the dirt. With a horrendous shriek of metal, the landing struts buckled, causing the nose of the plane to plunge into the soil. "This is no runway," Corey yelled over the roaring and grinding sounds of the plane plowing a furrow through the dirt, "this is some farmer's field!!!"

  Indeed, large chunks of unidentifiable vegetation bounced off the cockpit window. Corey hazarded a glance to her right, in time to see that half of the wing shear off in a spray of sparks.

  At last, the plane lurched to a halt, and everything was quiet except for the soft crackling noises of several small fires on the Tri-Motor's fuselage. "I don't believe it! We're alive! Daremo, you did it!" Corey shouted. "Hey, is everyone okay back there?"

  "No wounds here. We are both unharmed," Marcel called back.

  "Indeed, the only one who is bleeding is the metal monster," Kayla added, regaining some of her old spunk.

  "The plane is bleeding?" Daremo looked at Corey. They both stared at each other for about three seconds, mouthing her words, trying to divine their meaning. Suddenly, both pairs of eyes went wide with comprehension and fear.

  "Fuel leak!" both shouted together.

  Corey turned around to the passenger cabin. "Fuel leak! Everybody out! Quick!"

  Since many areas of the plane were driven into the ground, only one door could still be opened. Marcel tried in vain to open it.

  "What's wrong?" Daremo came over to see what was keeping the evacuation.

  "Yon door is stuck," Marcel replied.

  Daremo clicked his tongue in annoyance. "The flak must have wedged it shut."

  "But you're supposed to be stronger than a normal man," Corey shot back, panic edging into her voice.

  "The very land works against me, dost thou not remember? All of my cybernetics have failed me," the Hospitaller explained grimly.

  Daremo's mind raced. Who was the next strongest? Kayla. The ninja turned to the barbarian. "Kayla, we are trapped in the belly of this iron beast. We will all burn with the fire of many fireballs unless we can get this door open."

  That was all Kayla needed to hear. With a loud cry, interspersed with Ayslish swear words and curses directed at the plane, she threw herself at the door. The barbarian's great strength and momentum tore the door off its hinges.

  As the four Knights leaped out the doorway, the plane's fuel caught fire and exploded with a bright flash and a tremendous roar. The fiery hot air slammed into their necks and backs while they were in mid-air, the force of the explosion hurling the Knights dozens of feet across the field, at last bringing them to rest face down in the furrowed dirt.

  Corey spat out a mouthful of soil. It had a bitter, rotten taste, a taste that seemed familiar but she could not place it. She noticed a smooth white patch of something sticking out of the ground. She brushed away the dirt, and gasped at the grisly human skull which stared back at her with all living eyes. Suddenly a pair of vine-covered skeletal arms shot from the dirt and seized the newswoman by the shoulders, as more figures erupted from the ground around her.

  "Gospog!" she screamed, as she managed to unholster her sidearm and pump four rounds into the grinning skull. The creature loosed it grip and Corey leapt to her feet, only to find that her friends had made the exact same discovery, and were fighting for their lives against a shambling horde of dozens of the blasphemies.

  "A gospog field," she yelled as she squeezed off two more shots at an advancing abomination, then began reloading her pistol. "Of all places, we had to land in a gospog field!"

  "This is wonderful!" Kayla shouted as she swung her broadsword and clove four gospog in half at the waist. "This is the sort of danger I can strike back against!"

  "Oh, yes, truly wonderful," Daremo mumbled as he swung his katana at a pair of the undead horrors. Marcel, who was back to back with the ninja, wielded a .45 automatic in one hand, and his power sword, no longer electronic but still keeping a sharp edge, in the other.

  Eventually, the four f
riends established a defensive circle. Though they were making remarkable progress, the Knights were clearly outnumbered, and growing weaker.

  "Well, barring a miracle, I can't see how we're gonna get out of this one," Corey announced as she fired her last bullet, which hit her target, but failed to slow it down. The horror grabbed Corey's throat and began to squeeze with its cold dead hands. As the newswoman struggled, the stench of rotting vegetation and corpses washed over her. Through her blurring vision, she could see that Daremo was being overwhelmed by four gospog. "Oh, God, this is it," she thought to herself as the cold fingers tightened around her throat.

  A pair of loud booms filled the air, and Corey felt her assailant's hands loosen as the back of the gospog's head exploded. The creature's face showed what appeared to be surprise as it collapsed to the ground. Four more loud booms and Daremo was free, and back in the fight.

  Corey looked beyond the dead gospog, and drew in her breath. Standing on a small mound was a man clad in a black suit, with a black wide-brimmed hat. He wore a voluminous black cloak, which billowed heroically behind him. In each black-gloved hand, the stranger held a smoking .45 automatic. "This way!" he boomed in a commanding voice.

  The four Knights, with renewed hope and vigor at seeing help, redoubled their attacks and broke out of the gospog encirclement, racing for the hill. The black-clad stranger kept calmly firing his automatics at the hordes of gospog.

  As the four friends closed range, they noticed that the man's eyes were covered with a black mask, and that his suit was a double-breasted style out of the 1930's. "Follow me," he ordered, "I have a waiting roadster." Without seeing if his words were heeded, he turned with a flourish of his cape, and headed down the hill, where a large automobile was parked.

  "Who ... who are you?" Corey asked.

  "The name's Major Havoc," the ebon-clad stranger said as he calmly shot two straggling gospog, clearing a path to the roadster. "I believe I am supposed to meet you somewhere in this area."

 

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