Caleb gripped the shrouded Spear in both hands, hefting it, feeling the rough rounded edge, just enough of a hilt-like handle, wishing he had a long staff to fit on it to truly make it a lance-like weapon instead of what it was now: a glorified dagger. He thought of his last vision, that of Alexander about to be attacked by Isaac.
"They're hardly out of danger."
"I know." She shot him a quick look. "And I'm sorry. I wasn't there, I didn't know."
"We'll get there in time," Caleb said, staring ahead, seeing the dark shape approaching. "We'll get there."
"Now that's some confidence even I don't have." Nina slowed, seeing two smaller shapes peel away from the building. "Especially since we've got company."
"Of course they've guarded the back." Caleb unraveled the Spear point. "But they're woefully unprepared."
"No idea what's going to hit them."
The men, visible now in the brutal maelstrom, raised their guns.
Caleb responded, raising the Spear, pointing it at them through the windshield. "Confident or not, I have no idea how this works."
Nina shrugged. "Then I'd suggest ducking."
The windshield cracked just as Nina lowered her head and peeked around the steering wheel, aiming for the pair of defenders. But Caleb merely sat still, Spear held out before him like a narrow shield. Two more cracks in the windshield. A bullet whizzed past and then—SLAM—one of the guards went flying over the roof, while the other just managed to dodge out of the way.
"No chance to shut him up," Nina said, sitting upright. "They know we're here, but with any luck, they think we've got a whole army with us to go along with the air support. We've still got some element of surprise and distraction. Time to use it."
The Jeep picked up speed as the building loomed in their view. Two double doors were no match for the head on greeting they provided at eighty miles an hour. The Jeep smashed through a metal railing and launched down into the warehouse floor. It slid and then Nina braked hard and spun it in a one-eighty, slamming Caleb's side into two more astonished guards and pinning them against a rack of steel replacement girders.
One, still alive, managed to raise his MP5 and before Nina could recover and reach for her Beretta, he fired.
But Caleb was directly in his path. He instinctively held out the Spear tip and closed his eyes. Heard the gunshots, then what sounded like his own cut-off scream, but felt no pain.
"Holy crap," came Nina's voice. Caleb blinked and opened his eyes, registering the fate of the shooter: the MP5 had exploded as it fired, sending shrapnel backwards; his face was blackened and bloody, and the ruined gun fell from his limp fingers.
"I guess no instruction manual needed," Nina commented as she unhooked her belt and withdrew her Beretta. "Now let's move. Out my side, on three."
Caleb looked past her, seeing several dark-clad forms running from shelter and hiding behind crates and piles of equipment.
She counted to three, kicked open the door and went out low, rolling, then shooting at two guards who came charging out of cover. By the time Caleb was out, she had fired three more times, and there were four bodies on the floor.
She ran to the edge of a stack of piping, aimed through it and fired again, taking out someone hiding on the other side. Reloading, she glanced back. "Move it, darling. Or else just stroll out there and draw their fire. We'll see how well it protects you."
Caleb crouched and moved to her side. "I think I'll err on the side of caution for now."
Nina shrugged. "You know, anything happens to you, I promise to take the Spear and do what has to be done."
"I appreciate that. Just come back and give me a proper burial after you save the world."
"No problem."
Caleb winced as gunfire erupted from the back of the warehouse, and impacts ripped through the canisters and sparked off the floor. He looked to where the dead guard's operable MP5 had fallen beside the broken one.
"Just the same, I'm adding to my arsenal." He slid the spear point-down under his belt, hooking an edge, then scampered back for the weapon.
When he returned, keeping his head low in the barrage of incoming fire, Nina said: "You, a gun? Ever actually use one?"
"Yes."
"Other than a BB gun?"
"Yes, one of these in fact."
Nina gave him a disbelieving look after another burst of gunfire, which she answered. "And did you actually hit anything?"
Caleb peered around the edge, sighting. "Now you're just being mean."
"Oh just pull the trigger and aim that way." She nodded to the left as she crouched and took off to the right.
Darting out of cover, he aimed and fired. A momentary panic as two black-clad guards stood up and leveled guns at him from twenty yards away, but then red splotches exploded on their foreheads and they went down, just as fast.
Caleb held down the trigger, struggling to maintain control against the recoil. He sent a long burst that took out lights, shattered crates and ricocheted off metal girders and frames. Two screams as the bullets punched through soft cover, and another as a guard took off and Caleb's uncontrolled sweep happened to catch him in the shoulder.
Three more guard-soldiers ran out, charging him. Two fell to Nina's expert marksmanship before they could take aim, the third ducked for cover. Caleb could hear him slinking around the side of a massive crate. He aimed for the far side, then saw a flash in his mind.
Behind his position: men had circled around outside. A team of six, guns drawn, running fast.
Crap! He thought. No time. He dropped to his knees, spun and let loose a screaming volley of fire out the open doors into the swirling snow that obscured the men running inside. All four, bunched together, caught the slugs square on and spun back, falling. One made it inside only a few steps before the last few rounds stopped his progress.
Now he'd hit something, Caleb thought. But he knew it was all for nothing. The last soldier, hiding behind the crate, would have sensed his opportunity. He's out, aiming, and Nina's not in position.
Caleb dropped the gun and reached for the spear the instant he heard the gunshot. He winced and dropped into a ball. The bullet sailed overhead, striking the pillar beside him. Then he turned, raising the Spear point as another gunshot went off. The Spear shook in his grasp, and then lit up as if struck by lightning. Electric charges crackled along its outline and darted outward.
The guard froze, so mesmerized by the light show that he didn't see the sleek form pulling out of the shadows behind him; the figure that raised then lowered something at his head. A thwump and he went down, out cold.
"Quit screwing around," Nina quipped. "We're almost out of time. And reinforcements are coming."
More bullets. More chunks of debris exploding around them. Caleb cringed and rushed to her side, where her back was up against a large section of concrete piping. "Do you have another option?"
She grinned as she leaned across him and squeezed off two shots. "Honey, you must know better than to ask that. Don't forget, Montross obsessed about this facility for half his life. He and I went through a hundred different scenarios of how we could get in here. Studied every diagram, blueprint and schematic of this place. Someone takes a shit on level two, I can tell you which pipe flushes it out."
Caleb made a face. "I'll keep that in mind. So, anything that will actually help us?"
She fired again, then turned back around and shot straight ahead, seemingly at the wall. Sparks flew as the bullet impacted metal; then she grabbed Caleb's arm. "Come on. Air duct, ventilation shaft 24B. It'll take us right through to the central weaponry lab."
She hauled him forward toward the broken grate that was now swinging open.
Caleb had to shake his head. "I'm suitably impressed."
Just inside the grate, after closing it behind them and retreating into the shadows, Nina turned him around and planted a firm kiss on his lips.
This time he didn't fight it, except a quick pullback to ask, "Now what? I have not
hing else to show you."
She locked her eyes on his. "No, but there's something I've held back that you need to see."
"Really, we don't have the time."
"Just take a sec." And she pulled him close, closed her eyes and as soon as their lips touched, he saw it.
A jungle in Mexico, a touristy hacienda at the edge of a cliff overlooking a jungle of trees and vines. Inside: a young girl, auburn hair, green eyes, maybe nine years old. Sitting on a floor of blood amidst two decapitated bodies: a man and a woman. Staring, numb and unable to cry, as the two drug hitmen sling her parents' heads into the bag and prepare the ransom letter.
A flash: and she's escaping, darting out a window while one of the hitmen chokes on his own blood, a dinner knife stuck through his trachea. She runs...
...arriving at the American embassy the next morning, where she promptly draws them a map, and includes sketches not only of the remaining killer, but his boss. And the location of the drug kingpin's hideout.
The DEA agents brought in to interview her ask how she got her information, if she ever left the hacienda, but she merely replies: "I just saw it."
And then, after the operation concludes and the kingpin and his henchmen are dead, their supply confiscated, the agent makes a call. When he hangs up, he sees what the little girl has drawn now.
It's the symbol of the CIA: the Eagle and the Star. Only, she wrote the word 'Stargate' underneath.
Smiling for the first time in a week, she asks when they'll be flying back to Washington.
Caleb rocked out of the vision to find that the kiss had ended, and Nina, with but a somber nod back to him, was crawling ahead. "Now you know," she whispered. "We've always had a lot more in common than you'd figured."
Wordlessly, he followed.
11.
Alexander, crouching over Montross, trying to protect him from the two goons with guns pointed at his body, had few options left.
Calderon, kneeling on the floor, seemed to have gone into a trance; and for a moment it looked like something wispy, spectral and green passed out of his body, hurtling toward the chair where Alexander had seen that brief outline of Montross at the controls.
Then, he had to keep an eye on his 'brothers'. Jacob and Isaac had taken up flanking positions on either side of Calderon, defending him. The sword-cane, previously at the senator's knees, had been snapped up again by Isaac, who was glaring back at Alexander now, almost urging him to try something.
Helpless, Alexander turned toward the chair again, wishing he could see what was happening. Whatever it was, it had to happen soon. Calderon had been told he only had thirty seconds, or else their plan was finished.
At least knowing what question to ask, Alexander was poised to try to see if remote-viewing could see into the astral dimension; but his regular vision first snagged on an air vent at ground level twenty feet away. And his heart leapt in surprise.
Two faces inside, an unlikely pair. But definitely his father, a finger to his lips.
#
"Take out the guards," Caleb whispered, pointing to the two over Montross.
"I could," Nina said, "but there are six more at the back. In the shadows."
Caleb looked. "Damn. Good eyes." He sighed, watching his son, sizing up Jacob and Isaac, Montross bleeding and lying still; and then Calderon. And finally, the chair and the power unit.
The Emerald Tablet!
He closed his eyes and projected outward, willing to see...
Calderon was there, a blur like a green-tinged ghost. Arms out, reaching for Montross, sitting like a statue in the chair, like a man possessed or in a deep slumber. Xavier's eyelids flickered and his lips moved as if voicing commands in an alien tongue.
Calderon launched himself and wrapped his hands around Montross' throat. Sparks flew, the machine shuddered.
And Xavier's mortal body rocked with convulsions just as his astral body thrashed under Calderon's vicious assault.
"No time to wait," Caleb shouted, kicking out the grate. "We're going now!"
"Damn it!" Nina hissed, and her Beretta spat fire twice, knocking back both guards over Montross.
Staying in the grate was suicide, so she launched herself out, somersaulting and firing back toward the wall, even as shots came back at her.
But Caleb was there, holding the Spear aloft in both hands. Bullets slammed into something and for a moment a nearly invisible curved aperture appeared. The bullets struck and then evaporated like water droplets on a hot pan.
Caleb moved ahead and reached out for Alexander, to encase him in the shield as well. Nina's shots apparently still went through from this side, as another grunt of pain sounded and another guard fell.
The machine continued to spark and rumble. The conduits shook, wires exploded. More guards appeared, now from above on the landing.
Caleb shouted out a warning, but too late. Nina had rolled to the side and from behind, a shot found its mark. She spun around, blood spurting from her thigh. On the ground, she aimed up, squeezed off two shots and then rolled around to fire two more at those at the bottom level. Behind her, two bodies slumped over the rail and hit the floor.
"Mom!" Jacob ran to her side, and for a moment, the gunfire stopped as the soldiers couldn't get a clear shot. And in the respite, Caleb turned to the machine. Saw the slot on the right arm holding the Tablet.
Now or never.
He raised the spear. Briefly considered stabbing Calderon in the back, but apart from the moral disgust at the thought of attacking a defenseless human, no matter how evil, he knew the target was straight ahead. And he only had one shot at it.
Stepping around Calderon, he brought his arm back. Three steps, that was all, and strike!
But a chilling voice made him freeze.
"Stop or Alexander dies!"
Caleb turned, and saw the boy, Isaac, standing behind Alexander. Just like his vision. Isaac had him gripped by the hair, the sword tip of the cane pointed right at his son's skull.
#
Montross gagged, choking for a breath. He never imagined such non-local sensations of agony could be experienced even without a body. Couldn't even defend himself, couldn't move his arms or else the procedure wouldn't finish.
He was almost there. Interfacing with the machine had been surprisingly easy in this form. It was just as Calderon had expected. The Emerald Tablet was of both worlds and when he had 'sat' in the chair and reached through the slot, it fit like a glove. A glove that tightened and sent immediate sensations flooding through his consciousness. Numbers and equations, distances and measurements, a river of calculations. Weights and compositions of everything from massive stars to the smallest particle. It was too much, sifting through all the data. Took too long to focus, discard and graciously decline any more knowledge—things that he knew would be fleeting anyway, should he return to his body. Knowledge a physical brain just couldn't retain and would only fade like the details of a complex dream.
So he focused. On Mars. On trajectories and lines of sight, traversing vast expanse of space, plotting a course, and then he focused on charging the power of this facility. Channeling it, building up the power levels.
It was taking too long. Taking all of his focus. He hadn't even kept tabs on the players in the room, assuming no one could see him. Especially if they weren't looking. His dying body was the perfect distraction.
And dying he was. He knew this here was a one way trip. Never imagined he'd be a martyr, but at the same time, he had also never seen a way to survive this day. Could he live with being the only one not to live through it?
So be it.
He thought fleetingly of Diana, and for a brief moment, he was back at the Grand Canyon, soaring over the sandstone monuments on a hang glider, with her clutching to his back in fear and excitement. And then he peeked in on her again, and there she was, piloting some unbelievable orb-like contraption, like something out of a Spielberg movie.
I'll miss you.
He pulled his a
ttention away momentarily, as the machine rumbled and throbbed and the arrays were charging. Glanced at his body. Alexander leaning over it, sobbing.
Then he focused again and his world turned green, blasted with more scrolling lines of data, binary codes and more formulaic text, symbols of every language, numbers and code, all whizzing past in a blur.
And the power multiplied exponentially.
And surged through the conduits and roared up through the thousands of arrays. Still building in intensity. Can't release it all at once. Start small, then rising, each pulse a little stronger. Another minute, and the full strength will be reached. Full strength to pound the Cydonia surface. And goodbye escape route.
Sorry Calderon. Sorry—
But then the icy hands of the senator's astral form locked around his throat, interrupting the sequence and jumbling the equations.
Montross struggled, resisting the option to remove the symbiotic connection to the Tablet. His viewpoint shifted from Calderon's wild and crazed visage, to beyond: to see Isaac with a blade point an inch from Alexander's skull; Nina on the floor, bleeding, and Caleb...
Caleb standing there, indecisive. In his hands, something glowing intensely bright. A long triangular object that shone like the sun emerging from an eclipse.
The Spear. The Lance. You've got it... Now use it!
Montross was fading, couldn't hold it any longer.
The gambit's failed. Cydonia will survive.
He wrenched his arm free, breaking the connection. Like ripping off a Band-Aid and losing your arm in the process.
But it doesn't mean this son of a bitch gets to see it.
Montross swung his fist as hard as he could, sitting up at the same time for leverage.
#
Calderon rocked back and loosened his hold. Another punch came at him like a wrecking ball. He staggered, leaned forward and caught a blur of green descending from the chair just before an uppercut launched into his midriff and lifted him three feet in the air.
The Cydonia Objective (Morpheus Initiative 03) Page 27