by Greg Cox
This sort of commando raid was less subtle than Seven’s usual methods, but, under the circumstances, that couldn’t be helped; a top-secret military base at the South Pole did not exactly lend itself to more covert infiltration. Thankfully, the hoods, goggles, and greasy facial masks that he and Noon wore effectively concealed their identities, eliminating the need for any further disguise.
Although frigid winds now entered the laboratory through both the punctured roof and open doorway, Seven was intensely conscious of how much warmer the room was than the refrigerated environment outside. Already he was sweating heavily beneath his parka. He shifted position to place himself directly below the gap in the ceiling. The falling snow and icy wind offered some relief from the heat, but he was still extremely overdressed for the occasion. Too bad we couldn’t transport directly into this building, he thought, but there were too many unknown variables.
Massive computer banks covered nearly every wall of the antarctic laboratory. Seven chose to ignore the hardware for the moment, while he concentrated on his reluctant hostages. He searched the faces of the assembled scientists and technicians, looking for the specific individual whom he knew to be in charge of Da Vinci Base’s hazardous experiments. His eyes quickly located the person he wanted: a fit-looking older man, in his late forties, with neatly trimmed silver hair and cool, intelligent eyes. An olive-green turtleneck sweater kept him warm, along with his trousers and boots. Unlike many of his younger colleagues, he did not look overly anxious or alarmed by Seven’s surprise visit to the remote outpost; instead he watched the invaders attentively, waiting cautiously to see how the drama [295] unfolded. Not an excitable individual, Seven concluded. Good. That should make matters less complicated.
He approached the elder scientist, who neither flinched from Seven’s gaze nor attempted to hide behind his frightened staff. “Dr. Wilson Evergreen, I presume,” Seven stated calmly. The silver-haired man nodded, confirming his identity. “We have much to talk about, Doctor,” Seven continued, “but first”—a sweep of his hand encompassed the rest of the hostages—“is there somewhere nearby where these people can be kept safe and warm?”
Evergreen called Seven’s attention to a staircase at the rear of the lab, leading downward. “A tunnel connects the lower level of this structure with the adjacent huts,” he explained in a flat mid-Atlantic accent, which struck Seven as subtly but distinctly artificial. He couldn’t place Evergreen’s origins, though; the renowned scientist had done too good a job of burying his linguistic roots beneath a deliberately neutral diction. I wonder what he’s trying to hide? Seven wondered. “There is a heated storage facility, approximately fifty yards to east, that should suit your purposes.”
“Very good,” Seven agreed. The fewer witnesses to his discussion with Evergreen, the better, but he could hardly expose these innocent bystanders to the glacial weather outdoors. “Agent Singh,” he instructed, “please escort these ladies and gentlemen to the storage area Dr. Evergreen described.” Given that “Singh” was the Indian equivalent of “Smith,” he saw no harm in addressing the young man by name. “Make sure that they are all properly ‘calmed,’ then return here promptly.”
“Understood,” Noon acknowledged, aware that Seven wanted him to tranquilize the rest of the hostages once they were securely stowed away Keeping his servo pointed at the whispering bystanders, he herded them down the stairs and out of sight, leaving only Evergreen and the pacified soldier behind. Seven put his business with the elder scientist on hold until the departing hostages’ footsteps faded from hearing.
“There,” Evergreen said brusquely. He held a mug of steaming coffee in one hand and a pocket calculator in the other. “My staff and that guard are gone. What do you want from me?”
[296] “I’m interested in your work, Doctor,” Seven replied. The heat of the parka was becoming unbearable, but he needed Noon to return before he could risk rumbling with his outer garments. “I found your articles on artificial weather engineering quite ahead of their time, at least until you mysteriously fell silent over two years ago.”
“My work is classified these days,” Evergreen said, “as you are obviously aware.” He eyed Seven appraisingly, no doubt trying to gauge the intruder’s motives and potential for violence. “How much do you already know?”
“I know about the hole in Earth’s ozone layer,” Seven declared confidently, noting the startled expression in Evergreen’s clear blue eyes, “located directly above us. I also know that you intend to do something about that hole, something involving a so-called weather satellite which the space shuttle Discovery placed in a geostationary orbit above the South Pole less than two months ago.”
Evergreen looked surprised by the extent of Seven’s knowledge. “How?” he asked, sounding more intrigued than dismayed. “The very existence of the hole hasn’t even been made public yet.”
“I have my sources,” Seven said cryptically. There was no reason Evergreen—or Noon either, for that matter—needed to know that a wise and benevolent alien had chosen, for her own reasons, to live among Earth’s human population. He respected Guinan’s privacy, just as he did her advice.
Rapid footsteps upon the stairs presaged Noon’s return. “The prisoners are taken care of,” he reported proudly. His hood had slipped off his head, revealing a greased face gleaming with perspiration. “The soldier attempted to surprise me,” he declared, raising a clenched fist, “but his strength was no match for mine.”
Seven thought Noon sounded a little too enthusiastic about his victory, but, then again, he was only fourteen. Time enough to teach him humility and restraint later on, he decided. Preferably not in the middle of a vital mission. “Fine,” he commented. “Why don’t you close the door, for Dr. Evergreen’s sake, then shed that heavy parka?”
“With pleasure!” Noon announced, crossing the wooden floor of the laboratory with astonishing speed. He slammed the painted red [297] door shut, cutting off the howling antarctic wind, and hurriedly wriggled out of his parka, which he let fall carelessly to the floor. He lowered his goggles as well, counting on the black grease to obscure his less than celebrated features. “That’s better! I was suffocating in that monstrous jacket.”
His triumphant tussle with the guard had definitely elevated Noon’s spirits. Something to watch out for, Seven thought with concern. We wouldn’t want him to develop a taste for physical violence. He frowned at the ceremonial silver dagger tucked into Noon’s belt, visible now that the young man had shucked his outdoor gear. Seven disapproved of the weapon’s presence on this mission, but knew that male Sikhs were required by their faith to carry such blades at all times. Granted, Noon didn’t strike Seven as overly religious, yet he could hardly ask the young man to disregard the centuries-old traditions of his people—at least not without good reason.
“I’m glad you’re more comfortable,” he stated, removing his own goggles. “Now cover the doctor while I dispose of my own excess layers.”
Evergreen sipped thoughtfully from his coffee while Seven efficiently discarded his parka. Overheated limbs gratefully welcomed their sudden lack of confinement. “I assume you appreciate the significance of the hole?” Evergreen challenged him, fiddling with his calculator as he did so.
Seven knew exactly what the hole meant. “It’s alarming proof that humanity’s widespread use of chlorofluorocarbons is having a serious effect on Earth’s upper atmosphere. Furthermore—”
A moan from the tranquilized guard interrupted Seven, who glanced quickly at the prone figure to make certain that the guard was not reviving prematurely. Noon’s servo, he recalled, was locked at a very low setting; still, the pacified soldier should have remained insensate for another half hour or so. Probably a false alarm, Seven guessed, even as Noon turned toward the guard as well.
Evergreen took advantage of the distraction to hurl the contents of his coffee cup at Seven’s face, while simultaneously pointing his handheld calculator at Noon. Bizarrely, a dart fired explosively fro
m the [298] top of the calculator, trailing a thin metal wire behind it. The missile struck the surprised teenager in the shoulder, causing him to jerk suddenly, as though receiving a powerful electric shock. His servo flew from his twitching fingers, landing on the floor several yards away. A wordless cry of pain and anger erupted from Noon’s lips.
At the same time, Seven staggered backward, caught off guard by the splash of hot coffee in his face. The greasy ointment on his face protected him from any serious burns, but the shock left him momentarily vulnerable to further attacks. Seizing his opportunity, Evergreen tossed aside his exotically equipped calculator and closed the distance between them, cracking Seven on the side of the head with the empty coffee mug, then grabbing on to Seven’s wrist with unexpected strength. Blinking and sputtering, Seven struggled to hang on to his servo even as Evergreen shoved Seven’s trigger arm up and away from his own body. “I don’t know who you are,” the scientist boasted, his face only inches away from Seven’s, “but you’d be surprised how many spies and assassins have tried to get the better of me!” With his free hand, he slugged Seven viciously in the kidneys. “I’ve outlasted them all.”
Wincing in pain at Evergreen’s repeated blows, Seven grappled with the renowned researcher, who was clearly no stranger to hand-to-hand combat. Blast it! he thought, cursing himself for his carelessness. The whole mission is falling apart. But how was he supposed to have known that a respected scientist, stationed thousands of miles from any possible threat, would be carrying a concealed taser weapon?
Ironically, it now appeared that the nameless guard, whose ill-timed utterance had distracted Seven in the first place, had merely been talking in his sleep. Peering over Evergreen’s shoulder, the last of the coffee trickling away from his eyes, Seven saw the tranquilized soldier contentedly roll over and slip back to dreamland. And thank the Aegis for small favors, he thought, blocking one of Evergreen’s left-handed punches to his midsection. I’m having enough trouble with the man the soldier was supposed to be guarding!
Evergreen was proving to be a formidable opponent, but Seven’s superior strength, produced by generations of selective breeding on an [299] alien world, gradually began to prevail. Recovering from the older man’s earlier attacks, Seven succeeded in grabbing on to the scientist’s free hand, even as they continued to wrestle for control of the servo. Seven’s weapon arm slowly lowered, pushing back against Evergreen’s strenuous resistance, while the combative older man stumbled backward involuntarily, losing ground. Seven did not want to have to render Evergreen unconscious with the servo—he still needed to confront the man regarding his potentially destabilizing experiment—but realized that might be the only way to subdue the resourceful scientist. His thumb hovered above the servo’s touch-sensitive controls. “We don’t need to battle like this, Doctor,” he tried to convince his opponent. “I just want to—”
His urgent appeal to reason was drowned out by a vengeful war cry from Noon. “Villainous cur!” Rotating both himself and his foe clockwise, so that he saw the quaking teenager over Evergreen’s shoulder, Seven watched as Noon violently yanked the electrified dart from his shoulder, then reached for his knife, his face contorted by murderous rage. “You’ll pay for that, old man!”
“Noon! No!” Seven shouted, horrified at the disaster he saw unfolding before his eyes. “Don’t!”
But he was too late. The furious youth hurled the unsheathed blade with all his superhuman strength and accuracy. Seven felt the impact of the dagger as it struck Evergreen squarely in the back. The stabbed researcher stiffened abruptly and fell against Seven, who hastily grabbed on to the man’s body to keep him from falling. Bright arterial blood trickled from Evergreen’s lips while his eyes widened in shock. He tried to speak, but only a faint gurgle emerged from his throat. Seven watched in agony and dismay as the brilliant scientist took his last, dying breaths. This can’t be happening! he thought.
As gently as he could, he lowered Evergreen’s body to the floor, laying him carefully on his side. The gleaming silver handle of Noon’s dagger, buried in the man’s back all the way up to its hilt, was the center of a spreading crimson stain soaking through Evergreen’s thick woolen sweater. A hasty inspection of the injury confirmed Seven’s worst fears—the wound was clearly mortal. Although Noon had [300] missed, barely, his target’s spine, the dagger had instantly pierced Evergreen’s heart from behind. He was beyond saving.
Sickened and appalled, Seven put away his servo and plucked the bloodstained knife from between Evergreen’s shoulder blades. He mournfully contemplated the fatal weapon, then rose from the murdered man’s side to face the young warrior he had so foolishly brought to the South Pole. “What have you done?”
To his credit, Noon himself looked a bit shaken by what had just occurred. Now that his deadly fury had claimed its victim, he stared at Evergreen’s lifeless body with the aghast expression of someone who had obviously never killed a man before. “Is he ... ?” he asked Seven hesitantly.
“Yes.” Seven massaged his forehead, smearing the oily grease above his brow. Now what do I do? he pondered hopelessly. An icy chill even more numbing than Antarctica’s glacial deep-freeze radiated outward from his heart. About the mission and Noon? “He’s dead.”
Panic flickered briefly in the young Sikh’s brown eyes, only to be quickly replaced by a look of cold defiance. His expression hardened, along with the rest of his body language, as Noon’s adolescent pride overcame whatever guilt he might have felt. “He struck the first blow,” the youth asserted boldly, crossing his arms atop his broad chest. Spotting the discarded taser-calculator on the floor, he strode toward the offending weapon, then crushed it beneath the heel of his boot. “He chose his fate.” He shrugged his shoulders with as much worldly indifference as a fourteen-year-old could muster. “Such are the fortunes of war.”
“This wasn’t a war!” Seven said sharply. “Our mission is to prevent wars, not create still more needless bloodshed.” Despite his stern tone, he blamed himself more than Noon. I should have never brought him on such a precarious mission. He is too young, too violent. Evergreen’s blood dripped down the length of the silver blade, turning the hilt wet and sticky within Seven’s grasp, and staining his own fingers scarlet. This is an unmitigated catastrophe. For all of us.
Noon stubbornly refused to admit any error or regret. “You were under attack. I removed the threat.” Leaving behind the smashed [301] remains of Evergreen’s well-armed calculator, he crossed the floor to retrieve his fallen servo. “You should be grateful, not indignant.”
I could have handled Evergreen myself, Seven thought bitterly, and without killing him! “There were other ways,” he began, hoping that, at the very least, he could still somehow force Noon to confront the magnitude of what had transpired. “There are always alternatives to murder. ...”
A harsh, choking cough from the floor startled Seven, cutting him off abruptly He looked down in amazement to see Evergreen stirring restlessly upon the wooden timbers. The stricken man was pale and gasping, his face grimacing in pain, but he was clearly, impossibly alive. Moreover, he appeared to be recovering from what should have been a fatal injury at an incredibly accelerated rate. Even the flow of blood had evidently halted from the gash in his back, judging from the way the crimson stain had stopped spreading. The sound of his laboring lungs echoed within the confines of the arctic lab, defying probability with every sharp intake of breath.
“You said he was dead!” Noon accused, his rebellious pose collapsing in the face of Evergreen’s astounding resurrection. The teenager stared at the quaking target of his wrath, his blackened face torn between astonishment and relief.
He should be relieved, Seven thought, grateful that at least some part of Noon was glad to see his victim return to life. That wound would have killed even Noon or myself instantly; there was no way an ordinary human being could have survived. Unless. ...
When Evergreen, still trembling and gasping, attempted to lift his body fr
om the floor, Seven was so taken aback by the sheer unlikeliness of this event that he almost forgot to offer the injured man any assistance. At the last minute, he remembered to lend Evergreen a hand, carefully helping the man back onto his feet. The scientist groaned loudly, taking a second to regain his balance, then reached back over his shoulder, groping for the site of his injury. “Where?” he mumbled, looking genuinely surprised to find the knife missing. Spotting the blood-smeared weapon in Seven’s hand, he cautiously backed away from his recent opponent, then cast a wary glance at Noon, who [302] stood several years[1] away, himself more than a little confused. “Damn,” Evergreen muttered gloomily. He acted more like a criminal caught in the act than a man who had just escaped death by the thinnest of margins.
“You needn’t fear us,” Seven insisted. “No one is going to attack you again.” He dropped the dagger onto the floor, then gave it a kick in Noon’s direction. He raised his hands slowly to show that he was no longer armed. “What happened was a mistake.”
“One hell of a mistake,” Evergreen grunted, scowling at Seven while rubbing his palms together to restore his circulation. Already the color was coming back into his face, rendering him remarkably hale and hearty for a man who had just been stabbed in the heart. “I suppose you’re wondering why I’m still alive.”
Seven had his suspicions. “You’re an immortal, aren’t you?”
Now it was Evergreen’s turn to look surprised. His head jerked backwards as he stared at Seven with startled eyes. “How the devil do you know that?”
“It’s the only logical explanation,” Seven replied. Although it was incalculably rare, he had encountered this unique human mutation before. “I assume your injured flesh has already regenerated?”
“Something like that,” admitted Evergreen, whose name, Seven now presumed, was something of a private joke. “If there’s a way to kill me for good, I haven’t found it yet.”