Koontz, Dean R. - Strangers

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Koontz, Dean R. - Strangers Page 89

by Strangers(Lit)


  the fence all around the facility. It's a web of wires-sealed in thin

  plastic-that carry a low-voltage current. It's designed so the

  connections of some of the wires will be broken and the current

  interrupted if anything above a certain weight-oh, say fifty

  pounds-steps on them. The weight of the snow doesn't affect it because

  that's evenly distributed. It reacts to localized pressure-like a

  footstep."

  "Even I weigh more than fifty pounds," Ginger said. "How wide's this

  alarm grid?"

  "At least eight or ten feet," Jack said. "They want to be sure that if

  someone immensely clever like me should come along and detect the

  system, it'll be impossible just to jump across it."

  "I don't know about you," Dom said, "but I can'tfly across."

  "I'm not so sure you can't," Jack said. "I mean, if you had time to

  explore that power Of yours . . . If you can levitate chairs, why

  couldn't you levitate yourself?" He saw this suggestion had startled

  Dom. "But you haven't time to learn to control your power, so we'll

  have to rely on what's gotten us this far."

  "What's that?" Ginger asked.

  "My genius," Jack said with a grin. "Here's what we'll do. We'll walk

  along the perimeter, staying in the safe ground between the fence and

  the alarm grid, until we find a place where there's a big sturdy tree

  standing twenty or thirty feet deeper in the meadow, well beyond the

  width of the grid."

  "Then?" Dom asked.

  "You'll see."

  "What if we don't find a tree?" Ginger asked.

  "Doc," Jack said, "I had you pegged as a go-getting optimist. If I say

  we need a tree, I'd expect you to tell me we'll find a forest and have a

  thousand to choose from."

  They found the tree only three hundred yards down the slope toward the

  valley floor. It was a huge pine of such age and character that it

  offered the thick and widely separated limbs that Jack required. It

  towered eighty feet or higher, a snow-dusted monolith looming out of the

  storm, and it was thirty or thirty-five feet back from the fence, well

  beyond the farther edge of the alarm grid.

  Using the Star Tron again, Jack studied the massive pine until he found

  exactly the right branch. It had to be sturdy, yet not much higher than

  the fence, with which it would form the opposing stanchions of a rope

  bridge. He put the Star Tron away again.

  From one of the rucksacks, he removed the four-pronged grappling hook

  that had been one of the many items on Ginger's and Faye's shopping list

  when they had visited Elko earlier in the day. Tied to the hook was a

  hundred-foot length of hawser-laid nylon rope, five-sixteenths of an

  inch in diameter, the kind made for serious climbers and capable not

  only of holding one of them but of supporting all their weight at the

  same time.

  He tested the knot where the line tied to the hook, though he had tested

  it a dozen times before. He arranged the coil of rope at his feet,

  stepping on the loose end to prevent the entire length from being

  carried away when he pitched the grappling hook, but leaving most of it

  free to pay out. "Stand aside," he said. Dangling the hook from his

  right hand on two feet of line, he began to swing it around and around,

  faster, faster, until the whoosh of it cutting the air was even louder

  than the storm wind. When he felt the velocity was right, he let go

  with his right hand, and the rope slipped loosely through his left hand,

  trailing after the grapple. The hook arced up and out into the storm.

  Though it had sufficient mass and momentum to be unbothered by the wind,

  it fell short of its target by about three feet.

  Jack reeled it back through the snow, churning the virgin mantle. He

  had to jerk on it a few times and then patiently finesse it when it got

  caught on something. He was not concerned about dragging it across the

  buried pressure-sensitive grid, for it was not nearly heavy enough to

  trigger that alarm. In a minute or two he had it in hand again. Without

  having been told what to do, Dom had knelt and coiled the rope once more

  as it came in. Now Jack was ready to try again.

  His second pitch landed just where he wanted it. The hook firmly snared

  the target branch.

  With the grapple securely planted, he took the other end of the rope to

  the nearest fence post. He slipped it through the chainlink about seven

  feet off the ground, wrapped it around the post, threaded it through the

  chainlink on the other side, and all the way around the post again. He

  pulled on it with all his strength, until the line between the post and

  the distant tree was taut. Then he enlisted Dom's and Ginger's help to

  keep it taut while he knotted it tightly to the post.

  As a result, they had a rope bridge that was seven feet off the ground

  where it began at the fence, angling up to a height of about nine feet

  at the tree. That slight incline, even over a mere thirty-five feet,

  would make the crossing more difficult, but it was as near to level as

  Jack could make it.

  He jumped high, grabbed the line with both hands, swung his body back

  and forth a few times to get momentum, then kicked up and threw his legs

  over the rope, crossing his ankles atop it. Like a playful koala bear

  clinging to the underside of a horizontal branch, he hung with his face

  turned skyward and his back parallel to the ground. By extending his

  arms behind him and pulling himself on the line and by alternately

  scrunching his legs up and extending them while keeping his ankles

  locked, he could inchworm along with no danger of touching the ground.

  He demonstrated the technique for Dom and Ginger. Before he reached the

  danger zone defined by the pressure-sensitive alarm grid, he let go

  first with his feet, then with his hands, and dropped to the ground.

  Dom tried getting onto the line. He attained a handgrip with his first

  jump. But he needed a full minute to swing his legs up and over, though

  he did it, then dropped back to the ground.

  Ginger, only five-two, had to be given a boost to get a proper handgrip.

  But to Jack's surprise she required no assistance to kick up and wrap

  her legs over the line without delay.

  "You're in pretty good shape," Jack told her.

  "Yes, well," she said, swinging back to the ground, "that's because

  every Tuesday, on my day off, I eat buckets of vareniki, several pounds

  of graham cracker cake, and enough blintzes to sink a ship. Diet, Jack.

  That's the key to fitness."

  Shrugging his arms through the straps on one of the rucksacks and

  buckling it in place on his back, Jack said, "Okay, now, I'll cross the

  rope bridge first with the two heaviest bags, which leaves one sack for

  each of you. Ginger, you'll come second. Dom, you'll bring up the

  rear. When you come across, the rope will sag more the closer you get

  to the center of the span, even as taut as we've made it, but don't

  worry. It won't droop far enough to put you in contact with the ground

  and set off the alarm. Keep your feet locked around the line, and for

  God's sake don't accidental
ly let go with both hands at the same time as

  you're pulling yourself along. Try to make it all the way to the tree,

  just to be safe. But if your arms and legs give out, you can come down

  ten or twelve feet this side of the pine if you must, which'Il probably

  be past the other end of the alarm grid."

  "We'll make it all the way," Ginger said confidently. "It's only thirty

  or thirty-five feet.."

  "In just ten feet," Jack said, fastening the second rucksack to his

  chest, "you'll feel as if your arms are coming out of their sockets. In

  fifteen feet, you'll feel as if they have come out of their sockets."

  Something about Brendan Cronin's reaction to his rector's death had

  jolted Leland Falkirk. When the young priest demanded to be given time

  and privacy to deliver the last rights to Stefan Wycazik, there had been

  a fierce fire of indignation in his eyes and such hot grief in his voice

  that his humanity could not be in doubt.

  Leland's fear of alien possession was voracious, eating him alive. He

  had seen-and others had discovered-strange things inside that starship,

  enough to justify his fear if not his total paranoia. But even he found

  it difficult to believe that Cronin's anguish was the clever play-acting

  of an inhuman intelligence in disguise.

  Yet. Cronin, with his bizarre powers, was one of two prime suspects,

  one of the two witnesses most likely to have been taken over, the other

  being Dominick Corvaisis. Where did the healing and telekinesis come

  from if not from an alien puppet-master living within the man's body?

  Leland was confused.

  With powdery snow pluming up around his feet, he walked away from the

  kneeling priest, then stopped and shook his head and tried to clear his

  thoughts. He saw the other six witnesses by Jack Twist's Cherokee,

  still under guard. He saw his soldiers caught between the need to do

  their duty as they were told and a confusion worse than Leland's own. He

  saw the stranger who had been with Wycazik-now up and moving around,

  miraculously whole. That healing seemed wonderful, an event calling for

  celebration, not fear; a blessing, not a curse. But Leland knew what

  lay inside Thunder Hill. That dark knowledge put things in a different

  perspective. The healing was a ruse, clever misdirection to make him

  think the benefits of cooperation with the enemy were too great to

  justify resistance. They were offering an end to pain. And perhaps an

  end to all death other than that too sudden to be avoided. But Leland

  knew the very essence of life was pain. It was dangerous to believe

  escape from suffering was possible. Dangerous, because such hopes were

  routinely destroyed. And the pain following in the wake of shattered

  hopes was far worse than it would have been if you had just faced it and

  endured it in the first place. Leland believed that pain-physical,

  mental, emotional-was the core of the human condition, that survival and

  sanity depended upon embracing pain rather than resisting it or dreaming

  of escape. You had to thrive on pain to avoid being defeated by it, and

  anyone who came along with an offer of transcendence must be greeted

  with disbelief, contempt, and deep distrust.

  Leland was no longer confused.

  The big Army truck-Jorja supposed it was a troop transport-had hard

  metal benches along both sides and also against the forward wall that

  separated the driver's compartment from the rear. Dangling leather

  loops, riveted to the walls at regular intervals, provided those on the

  benches with something to hang on to when the ride got rough or steep.

  Father Wycazik's corpse had been laid on the forward bench and secured

  with lines that tied under the seat and then to the wall straps, forming

  a rope basket to restrain the body's movement. Everyone else-Jorja,

  Marcie, Brendan, Ernie, Faye, Sandy, Ned, and Parker-sat on the side

  benches. Usually, the rear doors were held shut only by the interior

  latch, allowing soldiers to get out quickly in case of an accident or

  other emergency. But this time Colonel Falkirk himself slid the bolt

  into place on the outside. The sound of it made Jorja think of prison

  cells and dungeons, and filled her with despair. A fluorescent light

  was set in the ceiling, but Falkirk did not order it lit; they were

  forced to ride in darkness.

  Although Ernie Block had endured the night remarkably well thus far,

  everyone had expected him to come apart when he was locked in the

  pitch-black bay of the truck. But he sat beside Faye, holding her hand,

  and coped. He had periodic bouts of anxiety marked only by spells of

  hyperventilation, which he quickly overcame. "I'm beginning to remember

  the jets Dom spoke of," Ernie said soon after they got in the truck,

  before it started to move. "There were at least four, swooping low, two

  very low . . . and then something else happened I can't recall . . .

  but after that, I remember getting in the motel van and driving like

  hell down toward I-80 ... out toward the special place along the

  highway that means so much to Sandy, too. That's all so far. But the

  more I remember . . . the less afraid I am of the dark."

  The colonel put no guards in with them. He seemed to think it would be

  dangerous for even two or three heavily armed soldiers to ride in their

  company.

  Before herding them into the truck, the colonel had seemed on the brink

  of ordering their execution, right there along Vista Valley Road.

  Jorja's stomach had knotted painfully with fear. Finally Falkirk calmed

  down, though Jorja was not convinced he would let them live once they

  arrived wherever they were going.

  He had demanded to know where Ginger, Dom, and Jack had gone. At first,

  no one would respond, which infuriated him. He placed his hand on

  Marcie's head and quietly told them what pain he would put the child

  through if they continued to be difficult. Ernie had spoken at once,

  cursing Falkirk as a disgrace to his uniform-and reluctantly revealing

  that Ginger, Dom, and Jack had gone west from the Tranquility, heading

  for Battle Mountain, Winnemucca, and ultimately Reno. "We were afraid

  all the routes to Elko would be watched," Ernie said. "We didn't want

  to put all our eggs in one basket." It was a lie, of course. For a

  moment Jorja wanted to scream at Ernie not to jeopardize her daughter's

  life with transparent lies, but she realized Falkirk had no way of

  knowing for sure that it was a phony story. The colonel was suspicious.

  But Ernie provided more details of the route Jack was supposedly

  following, and at last Falkirk sent four of his men to check it out.

  Now, as the truck rumbled and jolted through the windy night toward a

  destination Falkirk had not shared with them, Jorja hung on to a strap

  with one hand and held Marcie with her free arm. The girl made things

  easier by clinging fiercely to Jorja. Her semicatatonic limpness had

  given way to a strong need for affection and contact, though she was

  still by no means connected with reality. But her sudden need to hug

  and be hugged seemed, to Jorja, a hopeful sign that she would find her

>   way back from the dark domain into which she had retreated.

  Jorja would not have believed that anything could distract her entirely

  from her intense concern about her daughter. But a couple of minutes

  after the truck started to move, Parker Faine began to tell them why he

  and Father Wycazik had been making that risky cross-country trek through

  the snowswept night. The news he related was so momentous that it

  pushed everything else from Jorja's mind and held her, rapt. He told

  them about Calvin Sharkle, about how Brendan had passed on his power to

  Emmy Halbourg and Winton Tolk. "And now . . . perhaps . . . to

  me," Parker said with such wonder in his voice that it was communicated

  instantly to Jorja and caused gooseflesh to break out all over her.

  Parker spoke of the CISG. And he told them what they must have seen on

  that long-lost summer night in July: Something had come down. something

  had come down from the sky, and the world would never be the same again.

  Something had come down.

  As that amazing news was revealed, the darkness in the truck was filled

  with an excited babble of voices. Reactions from Faye's initial stunned

  disbelief to Sandy's instant and enthusiastic acceptance.

  Not only did Sandy accept, but she abruptly remembered large pieces of

  the forbidden night, as if Parker's revelation had been a sledge that

  had struck a wrecking blow upon her memory block. "The jets came over,

  and the fourth one blew across the roof of the motel, so low it almost

  took the top off the building, and by that time we were all out of the

  diner, people were coming over from the motel, but the shaking was still

  going on. The ground vibrating just like in a quake. The air vibrating

  too." Her tone of voice was a peculiar mix of delight and trepidation,

 

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