Blackjack Villain

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Blackjack Villain Page 30

by Ben Bequer


  “You should see this guy, man. He’s sitting there, watching some weird holo thing with the alien. He’s watching the alien that almost fucked us up.”

  “The same one?” I asked and Cool nodded.

  “For sure. Shit was on the same planet we went to.”

  “Callisto is a moon,” Haha corrected.

  “Whatever,” Cool shot back.

  “Ricky was always a bit over-dedicated,” Ed admitted.

  “Fucking clean the guy then,” Cool spat, disgusted with what he had seen. “Shit, if you’re going to take care of your friend, take care of him.”

  “I came here to say goodbye to him, not to take care of him.”

  Cool dug into his pockets and pulled out a note, in the same style of envelope that Dr. Retcon had left for Apogee and I in the hotel room a few days before.

  “Then give him this when you say goodbye, and we can be on our way. The guy fucking smells.”

  Ed opened and read the note. It was a series of numbers, in typical Retcon cryptic fashion, along with a date and time. The date corresponded to two days from now.

  “We will be ‘on our way’ momentarily,” Haha interceded, “But Blackjack has made an interesting discovery.”

  “Then be fast, man,” Cool Hand snapped as he thrust his hands into his pockets in frustration. “I don’t have all day.”

  I could feel Zundergrub’s eyes boring into me, but I didn’t want to look at him know, even to acknowledge his existence. Instead, I turned back to the Tesla/Retcon device and put my hand into the cradle, pressing down the contacts in the circular construction. It was spring loaded, with arms like a spider converging on a central axis from the inner edge of a circular hub. The arms were independent, and as well as retractable due to the springs, they had several copper contacts along their edge. As I pressed down on it, I surmised that the contacts would all connect as each segment of the individual arms extended fully, almost like a failsafe while putting something into the cradle.

  But whatever went there couldn’t be a power source, as it was tied into the Tesla unipower generator. The cradle and its attending structure and cabling were an add-on with Retcon’s fingerprints all over it, so it had to be a crucial component.

  “What could be so important about a pile of metal and shit?” Cool Hand whined, his impatience reaching a boiling point.

  “Well,” Ed explained. “This machine is what caused us to...you know…” he paused, trying to find the right words.

  “No, I don’t know,” Cool snapped. “Just fucking say it.”

  “It was an accident,” Ed said. “At least that’s how Alec explained it to us afterwards. It was an accident.”

  Then it hit me, the size of the cradle was awfully similar to something I had seen a few days before. “Haha, doesn’t this cradle look like it could fit that red gem we had? The first thing we stole?”

  I looked over at Ed, but his face divulged nothing.

  “Perhaps,” Haha said. “The diameters are quite similar, yes.”

  “Damn it!” I raged and leaned back away from the machine.

  “What?” Apogee asked.

  “Yeah,” Cool Hand added. “What is it?”

  “The red gem,” I said, sighing in defeat. “The one we stole in L.A. It goes here, on this machine. And we gave it to Retcon.”

  “Who gave it to Retcon?” Haha asked.

  “Well, I assumed...” I managed but the rabbit robot pulled the gem out of his chest compartment.

  Haha handed it to me and I held it in my hands like a child holding an egg. I looked at Haha, as if looking for permission to put the gem in the cradle. He nodded and Cool Hand waved his arms impatiently for me to carry on. Zundergrub narrowed his eyes.

  “I don’t think we should-” Apogee managed, but I was already placing the gem onto the cradle. As I had surmised, the individual arms slowly extended, the contacts in their joints one by one coming online. The gem fit exact and I was slow and deliberate as each of the contacts clicked.

  The final set of hinges opened, a split-second from connecting their contacts, when I saw movement out of the corner of my eye, and looking up, I noticed Ed Waters, scurrying backwards, and almost in slow motion, waving ‘bye’ at me.

  When the contacts were all in place, the machine groaned and hummed to life with a sudden electrical torrent that erupted from the two towers. Charged air and lightning surrounded us, except for Ed, who was now almost a dozen paces away, and Nostromo, even farther in his perch.

  The electricity enveloped us, growing from a small vortex, to a fully encompassing storm, and in a flash, we were gone.

  The final explosion of light still lingered in our eyes, like the memory of a camera’s flash endures, but one by one our eyes adjusted, and we realized what the Tesla/Retcon machine was.

  A teleportation device.

  We were atop a tall, flat-topped mountain of dry rock, with sparse shrubbery and grass. At the edges of this mountain, the world fell off, with nothing on the horizon save a whirlwind curtain of angry red, orange and black, like if someone had stretched a living Van Gough painting across the sky.

  I could breathe and so could the others, but it was Zundergrub who looked up first, and saw where we were. It was as if being inside a nebula, with what appeared like an exploded planet in its midst, primal and volcanic, torn asunder as if by godly forces. Surrounding it were dozens, even hundreds of small mountains and island shards, much like ours, like slices of worlds torn off and set to hover as satellites would around the destroyed world.

  “Fuck,” Cool Hand spat. “Why does it always have to be an alien planet?”

  Part Four

  CALM SEA AND PROSPEROUS VOYAGE

  Chapter 18

  We soon learned that our mountain top was actually just an island, a splinter of a planet, no greater than a few hundred yards in each direction, floating around the central destroyed world. Some distance beneath us lay another shard of land that dwarfed ours, floating in a swirling abyss of thermals and cross-currents, like a large drifting peninsula. Despite the distance, we could discern a bustling mountain top village denoting some sort of civilization, and even a large lake where small sailing ships crisscrossed the landscape. There also were larger creatures flying through the swirling skies. Great creatures that resembled floating whales, or soaring swarm of jellyfish-like creatures some many miles long that soared in the breeze, high above and beyond.

  How we could breathe or the reason for the high oxygen and nitrogen content within the gas cloud, I couldn’t explain. Nor could I find a plausible justification to how there existed gravity that kept us planted to the ground on the island. There was enough of the damaged and volcanic central planetoid to have a substantial gravitational pull on the island shards that surrounded it. By all rights, we should be plunging to a molten death, liquefied by pressure. Instead we sat on the grass, buffeted by a mild breeze.

  This place followed none of the rules of physics or science and it was disconcerting to all of us. Apogee slumped to the ground, head hung low in despair, mumbling over and over, “fucking idiot,” which I’m sure she directed at me. Zundergrub laughed at first, cursing my name in his language, and flailing wildly at the strange swirling skies. Later, he realized his demonic imps had not made the trip he grew despondent, walking off on his own. Cool’s emotions wavered from ebullient to dispirited, sometimes within the same sentence, screaming and shouting so many obscenities that I feared he’d draw the attention of one of those floating beasties. Some of them were big enough to eat our island whole within their vast mouths.

  It was here that Mr. Haha showed his true colors. While the rest of us were overwhelmed with emotion to some degree or other, the robot set to work, trying to organize us behind a simple purpose: getting to the larger peninsula below. He also did something quite peculiar, gathering samples of everything we’d encounter, from a blade of grass to a bit of dirt. I was sure his internal storage would soon burst from all the crap he was stori
ng, but he seemed unaffected.

  Haha reconnoitered our new home, and was the one to discover a way to the larger island below by going over the side. He descended with the skill of a Himalayan mountain climber, producing thick synthetic rope from within his folds, and securing it to the rocky wall with pitons and carabineers. Our shard of land looked as if someone had ripped a slice out of a planet and it trailed off bits of rock and debris beneath us for almost a mile. It turned out to be shaped like a ragged ice cream cone, tapering to a point. I had to squelch a bitter smile as I thought of us as sprinkles on a scoop of rocky road.

  I peered over the side, expecting Haha to stop or even come back, but the robot continued until he was far beyond audible range, and when he looked up and saw me, waved for me to follow.

  “I’m not going down there,” Cool Hand said drawing my attention back to the group. Zundergrub was walking casually in the distance, kicking up dirt, while Apogee still sat on the dirt, shaking her head when my our eyes met.

  Below, Haha had made remarkable progress, already halfway down the rock face. He left a trail of pitons and rope wherever he went. The length of rope required to reach the bottom, plus going down from there to the peninsula below, would be close to two miles, and far exceeded anything Haha could be carrying onboard his storage compartment. Baffling as it might seem, he had to be manufacturing equipment from his components, or perhaps from the materials he was gathering. The theory of transmuting and refining the material made me want to unplug my brain. Haha’s abilities were endless.

  I tested the rope, dangling from the nearest piton and it held well enough. It was strong, and slightly flexible. His idea, I suppose, was to lower a long rope, perhaps a mile or more, from our floating island to the much larger one below, but the winds were too strong and I couldn’t see a secure way to traverse the distance between the floating islands.

  “Cool,” I started, waiting for the explosion, “I’m going to head down with Haha.”

  “You’re crazy!” Cool protested, throwing his arms wide as if the air supported his assertion.

  “We can’t stay here, Cool, and I think rabbit head is onto something.”

  “Dude, it’s Haha’s fault were here!”

  “I doubt that,” Apogee spat, favoring me with a look that could crack diamonds.

  I looked back down to Haha, so far down and moving so fast I couldn’t imagine catching up to him.

  “Well, you can either come with me, or you can stay here with him,” I motioned towards Zundergrub and swung over, following the Haha down the proverbial rabbit hole.

  * * *

  The first thing to know about climbing is that it’s real hard, especially if you’ve never done it before and in particular, if you’re going down in a reverse decline, where you would find footing was farther inside, or at an angle away from where you had your hands. The natural tendency is to slip back and as an absolute rookie, I almost fell a few more times.

  Haha’s rope, which I discovered was elastic webbing surrounding a metal wire, was what kept me from falling to my death more than once. I could have used gloves and spikes on my boots to keep my sweaty hands and feet from slipping.

  Looking down, Haha had reached the farthest point of rock that was still attached to the main face, with dozens of massive boulders trailing off behind it like floating satellites.

  It took me twice as long to reach Haha as it took him to get down there in the first place, and it wasn’t until I was within earshot of him that we were attacked.

  A massive creature swung close, interested by my movement against the rock wall, looking for a quick meal at my expense. I never realized the danger; my attention was on not slipping, and keeping my grip on Haha’s rope. Then he yelled something unintelligible in the distance and wind between us, and opened fire with his plasma weapon.

  I gripped tight and turned away from the wall to my horror.

  The monster was the size of a city block and looked like what you would get if you crossed a manta ray and an amoeba, with the wide wingspan trailing pseudopods behind. Its eyes were about my size, atop its head, and stared at me as if trying to comprehend what I was. When it decided I was edible, the creature split open its cavernous mouth revealing a great maw, wide enough to fit a dozen men my size standing side to side, lined with thousands of ten foot tall, rear-hooked teeth.

  I had nothing to defend myself with, or anywhere to go. I could let go, but then death would be a slow descent into an endless abyss. There was a boulder, a few feet from me, jutting outward and almost self-contained. It was a different material, some sort of granite instead of the rock around it, stuck to the rock face. If I could reach it, and pull it out, the boulder would make a decent weapon. But it was too far, I had no time.

  Haha’s plasma bolts and machine gun fire bothered the beast, but it still carried its forward momentum toward me, the mouth widening at the prospect of an easy meal.

  Then something dropped from atop it. I couldn’t tell what, as all I could see were teeth and pink flesh, and that reeking smell of imminent death. But the beast recoiled violently, turning away with quickness I didn’t think it had. A figure lay atop the beast, beating on one of its eyes with a magnesium softball bat.

  Cool Hand.

  But the beast still had some tricks up his sleeve, reaching forward with its trailing pseudo pods to pull Cool Hand off its back. I yelled a warning, but Cool Hand couldn’t hear me.

  Instead, I released the rope, and climbed over to the massive boulder next to me. I tried shifting it, but I had no leverage, so I climbed above it and stamped my feet to loosen it. Suddenly, the beast turned back towards me, crashing into the rock face above me and shaking the ground like an earthquake. I lost my balance and fell, grabbing the boulder I was trying to free from the rock face. Dirt, rocks and more boulders fell all around me, as the creature’s impact caused a mini-avalanche. More importantly, I felt the boulder I was grabbing start to give way fast, rotating outward thanks to my weight. I hurried, climbing up the rock with what few handholds I could find. The rock dropped suddenly as I reached the pinnacle, and a widening gap opened up between the boulder and the churned up rock wall behind it. I got an idea and hopped over into the dark pit behind the rock. I braced myself on the back wall and pressed my chest against the boulder, which was slowly rolling out. I waited for the right moment, when the boulder was mostly free of the wall, but hadn’t yet begun to fall, and pushed with all my might. It was like the combination of a military press and a shot-put, but with a rock that probably weighed ten tons.

  Amazed at my own strength, and that it had even worked, the rock raced away from me towards the beast. The creature saw it, and twisted to avoid the boulder to no avail. Cool Hand ran like an Olympic gymnast across the beast’s length, up a raised wing and hurled himself towards my location. He bounced off the boulder as it flew at the huge monster, and landed next to me in the huge open pit. His time-warping power kept him still from falling out until he found his hold. The boulder struck the beast dead on, and the beast recoiled in pain, darting away to find an easier meal.

  “Pretty cool,” I said, covered in dirt and mud.

  He looked over with a wide smile on his face. “You know it!”

  * * *

  Cool and I made our way back to Haha’s rope line as Apogee and Dr. Zundergrub neared. They had decided that following me and an insane robot was a smarter idea than dying of hunger and dehydration atop a barren mountain.

  “What was that thing?” Apogee asked.

  “I don’t know but it almost ate B here,” Cool said, motioning to me.

  I punched him in the shoulder as thanks.

  “Surprising that it would want to eat something that smells so foul,” she half joked.

  “You know you like my man smell,” I said, drawing a smile from her and a chuckle from Cool. Zundergrub’s expression didn’t change and his face was in a permanent sneer.

  I ignored him and started down, leading the others towards
Haha. The going was easier now, as the angle between the handhold and footholds was less extreme and we were able to make good time towards Mr. Haha.

  “There’s always a bigger, badder monster out there,” Haha said as I neared the rocky ledge where he stood.

  “Good plan, Haha. Now what?”

  “Now comes the suicidal part,” he said as the others came up to us.

  “Let me guess,” I said. “You tie a rope to my ankle and dangle me down. Hope I can get to the other island.”

  I looked back at Apogee, who showed true concern when I revealed the plan.

  “No, no, no. I’m sure there’ll be plenty of random opportunities for you to get yourself killed on this adventure,” Haha said. “But not this time.”

  The robot asked us to grab a good hand hold, and recalled the rope he had laid out, all mile or so of it, into his chest. Behind him were anchored a series of pitons in a circular pattern. Each was part of a circular anchor rig holding fast a central loose-pivoting six-inch carabineer. It was all attached to Haha’s chest by two thick ropes, about twice the diameter of the rope we had used to climb down here.

  “You’re the craziest sonofabitch I’ve ever met, Haha,” Cool Hand said, seeing what the rabbit robot had in mind.

  “It’s actually a pretty sound plan,” the robot countered. “I hope the winds aren’t so strong that I can’t ride them across.”

  “As long as it’s you and not me, whatever,” Cool said.

  “You do understand that if he makes it across, we have to follow him, right?”

  Cool raised one eyebrow at Apogee’s revelation.

  “You serious?”

  Haha cocked his head and shrugged.

  Apogee laughed, “if only one of us could fly…”

  “It was either a flyer guy or Blackjack here,” Mr. Haha said. “And Retcon went with smelly and hairy as opposed to a fellow with more utility.”

  His humor was lost on Cool Hand, though. “Hey, can’t you fly, Apogee?”

 

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