âIs this really necessary?â Timothy asked as he tried to find new hand holds with his hands and his feet. Sheriff Thaxton turned the steering wheel sharply before quickly steering in the opposite direction. He took what was close to a ninety-degree turn at forty-five miles per hour. âAlan?â
âJust hold on tight there, Tim,â Sheriff Thaxton said calmly as he turned down the street where Franklin Edwards lived. Once the car set on the street, Alan brought the car to a near stop. âNow, I will tell you straight up, if this turns out to be a milk run, Iâm taking you to see a head doctor. And that is non-negotiable!â
âOkay,â Timothy said, finally able to relax. âDeal.â
âNow why does that make me feel worse?â Alan asked as he pulled off the road.
âUh, we have about another half-mile, Alan,â Timothy noted.
âMore like point eight Klicks,â Alan said as he got out of the car. He walked to the rear of the car and opened the trunk. Timothy got out of the car. âHave a care, Tim,â Alan warned. âYou never struck me as the kind who was into what you are going to see back here.â
âAlan, what are you doing?â Timothy gasped as he looked at Alan assembling a high-powered rifle.
âYou come into my office, toting someoneâs work ID and firearms,â Alan said calmly. âAnd before you can get the entire story out of your mouth, the employer of said individuals is calling my office and giving my deputy the whole nine yards. Now, before I can get angry, the mayor is calling me and jumping down my throat about something he knows nothing about.
âAnd letâs not forget what you laid on me back at your brother-in-lawâs place,â Alan reminded Timothy. âIâve known you since before I became something my wife and daughter donât mind looking at. If it hadnât been for you and Eleanor, who knows where Iâd be!
âYour brother is housing illegal aliens at his house and we keep playing this game to see how close we can come to catching him in the act.â
âOh, for the love of⦠I thought that died with Eleanor!â Timothy yelled.
Alan smiled as he finished the rifle and added the scope. Timothy stepped back, surprised at the size of the viewing device. He had every right to, it was not standard issue. âTimothy, I hate to break this to you⦠but nothing died with Eleanor! Man, I donât even think Eleanor died with Eleanor.â Alan made a few adjustments to the weapon and took off his Sheriffâs hat. âAm I working alone on this one? No harm, no foul, either way.â
âWhat do you need me to do?â Timothy asked. He would not bother with reminding Alan Thaxton this was about his family, but he appreciated being given the choice. Timothy also knew why Alan had chosen to come alone. The sheriff could not afford for Timothy to be wrong about everything the widower had told him, and Alan Thaxton certainly could not afford for him to be right.
âYou need to get this vest on first,â Alan said, handing Timothy a bulletproof vest. âYou picked up guns today. We donât know if these guys have the clearance to use them.â
âBut that would be against the law, right?â Timothy asked.
âTim,â Alan said with a slight chuckle. â⦠these people donât have licenses to carry firearms and I just got my butt reamed because someone I know beat the crap out of two of âem. Do you really think these people are going to slow down to monitor the law of the land?â Timothy shook his head no and quickly donned the vest. âNow somehow, your little girl has got a hold of something they want, and it seems they want it in a bad way. You wanna call for help and hope the Super Friends show up, be my guest and stay here. Me? I plan to make a really big stink!â
âYouâre enjoying this!â Timothy noted.
âNot at all, my boy, but I am getting juiced. My own blood is just down the road. Sheâs spending time with the closest thing to a sister sheâs ever had. Now thatâs just two I have personal interest in. I mean to see my family safe!
âNow you need to put on my hat, get behind the wheel and count to two hundred.â
âWhy donât you just say wait three minutes?â Timothy suggested.
Alan looked at Timothy and laughed. âYeah, why donât I just say that?
âAfter three minutes,â Alan continued, âstart cruising down the street and stop in front of the house. If anything ugly gets started, turn the engine off and get out of the car. Use it for cover.â Alan Thaxton removed his weapons belt and strapped a holster to his leg. His revolver remained on his belt and he took one of the pistols Timothy had picked up, checked the magazine and holstered the weapon.
âAnd if nothing ugly gets started?â Timothy asked.
âWell then, you wait there for me to get in the car,â Alan replied with a smile. With a hard slap on Timothyâs shoulder, Alan picked up his weapon and went running off. Timothy watched him run and shook his head in amazement. Like Timothy, Alan was nearing his mid-forties. But he ran like a man who had just creased thirty.
âThanks, Alan,â Timothy whispered as he watched the man run. âAnd I remember. I remember everything you told us when we first met. All of those missions you could not forgive yourself for doing. You told us things that scared the crap out of us, Alan, but it was clear you were one of the best. Be the best for our children, Alan! Lord knows the last thing I want to do is tell a strong, black woman I love and fear that I got her husband hurt or killed.â
â
,â Timothy thought as he looked at his watch. The stories Alan had told Timothy and Eleanor flooded back to the forefront of his mind. The attention to detail is what always captivated Timothy; Eleanor was more concerned with innocents who might have been caught in the crossfire. Most of Alanâs stories contained several of their number and to his credit and Eleanorâs effort to help heal the man, those were the faces he could never forget! Eleanor taught him that his mental health depended on him not trying to wipe away their faces, but to invite them over to a barbecue. It took some time, but Alan had put down the guns and the bottles, stopped getting into fights and then he was introduced to Nora at a mixer Timothy and Eleanor had arranged. Alan was definitely a happier man since then, but Timothy never forgot the stories. Details! Everything could be found in the details!
â
,â Timothy measured â
â Timothy adjusted the hat and got into the cruiser. â
!â
Imogeneâs cheeks were hurting well before she got to the part of the beach where she could see people she recognized. There were several cars parked on the beach and the small party seemed to be in its beginning stages.
â
!â she thought as she looked over at Sharon who was wearing a smile of her own. But the smile Sharon sent over to her friend was not returned and Sharon stopped walking.
âGenie, what is it?â Sharon asked, showing a genuine concern.
âI donât think this is such a good idea,â Imogene said as she looked down. âWe didnât leave a note or anything.â
âWhat are you talking about?â Sharon asked. âWe left a Frank!
âHey, Gordo, see our new friends to the changing rooms,â Sharon ordered and Gordon was familiar with the tone in her voice. He waved at Javier and Milania to follow him down the beach. They both ran to keep up with him.
âIâm sorry, Sharon,â Imogene said softly, still looking down.
âYouâre off your meds again, arenât you?â Sharon asked and the weight of the question made Imogene shudder.
âWhere did that come from?â Imogene shot back.
âFrom the heart,â Sharon answered. âI hate it when youâre on those things. I mean, youâre still my Genie. But you lose a little of the glow when youâre on them⦠and when youâre coming off of them, you get all wound up in indecision and paranoia.â
âWhoa, paging Dr. Thaxton!â Imogene said as she turned and started walking back toward Frankâs house.
âMy Genie is not a runner!â Sharon declared. âShe wonât leap before looking, but she doesnât run.â
âWell what if I donât know how to look this time, Sharon?!â Imogene screamed. âWhat if Iâm in over my head? Iâm sixteen years old-â
âSeventeen,â Sharon corrected.
âIn a week!â Imogene argued.
âExcuse me,â Sharon smiled. âDid I just hear you right? Are you arguing with me to be younger? Girl, what has got you so messed up?â
âI donât even know if I can explain it,â Imogene said softly as she sat down in the sand.
âThen donât,â Sharon replied, sitting right beside Imogene. âBut donât act like youâre taking it on all alone. Iâm not going to let you be that stupid.â
âWeâre not talking about a game or a couple of bad grades here, Shar,â Imogene disputed.
âWhy do you think weâve had so much practice being best friends?â Sharon asked, putting her arm around Imogeneâs shoulders. âBesides, to hear my Dad tell it, the Thaxtons owe the Schultzâs a really big one for what your parents did for my parents before you and me came along.â
âSo, youâre seeing to the good old family name, is that it?â Imogene put her head on Sharonâs shoulder.
âGet in where you fit in,â Sharon said, pulling Imogene even closer, shoulder to shoulder. âIf that hadnât worked, I wouldâve thought of something else that made some half-sense.â The two girls chuckled as Sharon turned her head. Someone was drawing close and she thought she had made it pretty clear that she needed some private time with her best friend.
âOh,â Sharon said with a laugh. âItâs you.â
âSorry,â a male voice said softly and Imogene could not place it. She turned around and nearly gasped aloud. He was wearing a steamer over his tanned skin, and it looked like he had already been in the water. His hair was a rich, dark brown and tied in very small beaded braids, which was a neat trick for straight hair. His eyes were brown and the sun was reflected in them. âThis one was getting pretty insistent,â he said in a low, soft tone. Imogene tried to get up quickly but tripped over Sharonâs feet and fell back to the beach. She put her hand to her face and wanted to disappear, get so small she could not be seen, or just go invisible. In the wake of the muffled laughs, she knew none of those had occurred.
âYou okay there, twinkle-toes?â Sharon asked.
âIf you have any love for me,â Imogene whispered, âyouâll kill me now!â
âGenie, what I got for you the word âloveâ canât handle!â Sharon declared as she took hold of Imogeneâs hand and pulled her friend up to her feet. âBesides, someone here would kill me if I laid a hand on you in the wrong way.â
âGenie?â Wayne called out and Imogeneâs eyes lit up. How could she have missed him? He was standing right beside the nameless brown-eyed wonder. Imogene ran to Wayne and jumped into his arms. He did not see her approach but his arms were opening anyway. He staggered back one step as he caught hold of his friendâs charge. His arms wrapped around her tightly and a bright smile shone from his face. He held her for a while before he even thought of letting her go. It was then that Imogene noticed her feet had not been touching the sand.
âWayne!â she said as she grabbed his shoulders. Her face turned stern as she looked at her hand and gave another squeeze. âWayne?â
âI know, right?!â Sharon laughed. âWayne has been in the weight room more than once.â
âYou told me to find something to help me relax,â Wayne said softly.
âWhat about your sculpting?â Imogene asked.
âI get around to that when I can,â he shrugged.
âWell, itâs still great to see you!â Imogene said, hugging him again.
âYeah, itâs good to see you too,â Wayne joked as he adjusted his dark glasses.
âOh, very funny!â Imogene said, pushing back and punching Wayne in the shoulder.
âOw!â Wayne smiled.
âWhat, you didnât see that coming?â Imogene joked and she hit him on the other shoulder. Again he feigned pain, but Imogene was shaking her hand as if she had hurt herself.
âOh, Cullen,â Wayne said, reaching out for the young man who had brought him to Imogene, âthis is Imogene Amanda Schultz. Ms. Schultz, this is our latest acquisition, Cullen Jacob Pierce from Hawaii, by way of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.â
âWow, he doesnât miss any details, does he?â the young man asked with a smile. âMy friends call me CJ.â
âMine call me Genie,â she replied, shaking his hand.
âAnd on occasion, we call her twinkle-toes,â Sharon added as she walked past and grabbed Wayne. âCome on, Wayne, weâve got a castle to make and stereotypes to tear down. Because you sculpt pretty good for a blind boy.â
âYeah, and I thought you had to be white to surf,â Wayne shot back.
âHow would you know Iâm not white?â
âWell, Iâm not deaf and you are too sweet to be light in color.â
Imogene and Cullen laughed, watching the two of them walk off.
âTheyâre just messing around,â she explained.
âYeah, I know,â Cullen answered. âIt took a while, but I finally get their routine. They seem to always be there for each other. I heard she even drove Wayne to his dateâs house.â
âWayne went on a date?â Imogene gasped. She did not wait for an answer. She just broke into a run, trying to catch up with Sharon and Wayne. She was in a good stride when something else came to the forefront of her mind. She stopped and turned to look at Cullen. âWell, what are you waiting for, an engraved invitation?â Imogene turned and ran and Cullen smiled.
â
!â CJ thought as he ran after Imogene.
âThis was not part of the plan!â Hiram shouted as he looked over the report. He would have been fine with money running short. He had planned for that. He was even ready to move to another location. He had planned for that too. He could have dealt with a change in organizational objectives. He hoped and prayed for that, but there was also necessary planning which he had already covered. But what Hiramâs brother had returned with was nothing but unacceptable. He glared at the report and how it had been worded in such a way as to frame the events in a positive light. But this was hardly détente. The mentality of âwe donât have it and Vey doesnât have itâ was not enough. âThis just wasnât part of the plan!
âBut then again,â Hiram muttered as he looked at his brotherâs latest project. âNeither was this!â
âI heard you,â Solomon answered as he tinkered in the belly of the large construct. âBoth times.â His watch buzzed and Solomon quickly got out of the work in progress and crossed the floor to approach another set up of equipment that resembled a new approach to the Iron Maiden torture device. Solomon quickly disrobed and stepped up into the device. âPlans change all the time,â he said as it closed in on him. Soon, his head popped up out of the top as the machine started delivering shocks to his body.
âThereâs a big difference between a plan that changes, and you just making up things as you go along,â Hiram said as he took his seat at what appeared to be a drafting table. Waving his hand over the table, he could hear the computer and the projectors power up. A virtual keyboard formed at the bottom of the table as Hiram took out a pair of black gloves, covered with circuitry and small plates of glass.
âIs this where we have one of those sibling arguments that are often overstated and incredibly cliché?â Solomon asked as the current poured through his body, causing his muscles to contract and then release. âYou had a plan, a very good plan,â he continued. âI would even go so far as to say it was a great plan, and itâs been working for months. But I think we were both a little naïve to think that Vey was going to jump exactly as we needed her to for as long as we had planned. Vallegrande was proof positive of that.
âAnd for the last time, I didnât on losing the Shard!â Solomon yelled.
Hiram sighed as he finished bringing up his system. âI know, little brother, I know.
âBring up the text,â Hiram commanded and the monitor created a three-dimensional view of a very old scroll that was written in a language that could not be found on Earth, but Hiram had long since been trained to read it.
âYou seem troubled,â a female spoke through the computer, posting a script of its words across the top of the screen. âAre you not pleased with all that has been provided?â
âOh, how can anyone be troubled at a time like this?â Hiram said mockingly. He had lost track of just how long the lab of two had been occupied by three. Hiram had never seen her, though he feared was actually an , and it was from the other side of the Nexus. Solomon called it Bast, which only served to further his egotistical delusions, yet it spelled nothing but the worst of luck for Hiram. Whatever it was, it had proven to be thorough and the cause for a good percentage of Hiramâs disciplining. âWe just lost the means to go back to Five Pointes, thatâs all!â
âHeâs not in a chatting mood, Bast,â Solomon said as the machinery opened up and he climbed out. âI take it you are done with the next batch?â
âI am,â the female voice responded. âBut I do not see how this batch is to be delivered, given the security measures that Optimum Horizons has recently implemented.â
âAh, but the harder you try to grip the sand, the more you lose in your grasp,â Solomon answered as he donned his robe.
âI will leave the matter in your capable hands,â the voice concluded before the script dropped from Hiramâs screen.
âBoy, that sounds familiar,â Hiram muttered.
âI heard that, too,â Solomon said as he turned and walked away. âIâve got to get dressed and then I need to see a man about a horse. Do what you can with the new converters while I am away, wonât you?â
âIf I get around to it,â Hiram answered bitterly.
Solomon stopped and looked back at Hiram. He smiled as he focused his thoughts. âLeft foot, big toe,â he whispered. Hiram shuddered on his stool as pain shot through his body. He grabbed at his left leg as his head snapped back and he moaned. Solomon chuckled as he tightened his robe. âCease,â he commanded, and Hiramâs body relaxed before his head hit the table.
âI suppose I should have specified the pain setting,â Solomon said aloud. âI keep forgetting that the default is a seven point five out of a possible ten. Iâll have to attend to that when I get back.
âSo about those converters?â Solomon asked again.
âI will be able to work with them as soon as I finish here,â Hiram answered, still breathing hard as he struggled to remain conscious. âAccording to the data weâve collected, we donât have much time. Youâre going to need the coordinates.â
âI suppose I will at that,â Solomon agreed. âVery well, at your earliest convenience.â Solomon turned and walked out of the work area. Hiram knew in just a few moments he would be taking up the persona of Dr. Seth McEmbree and making his way to the rendezvous with the spy he had at Optimum Horizons. At the least he would have some nine hours before his younger brother would return; at the most, a few days. Hiram Seaver hoped for the latter as he returned to his work.
The information he needed to research had already been gathered from the scroll. The calculations had been run twice and confirmed and his watcher had yet to report anything to Solomon. That was evidence enough that the watcher either did not know or did not care to know what Hiram was really doing. Which of the two was true was not necessary for Hiram to know, so long as he was given time to do what he was planning.
âI didnât on losing the Shard,â Hiram repeated. âThat only means one of two things, little brother. One, you didnât it at all, even though it is no longer in your possession or two, the Shard was too much for you to handle. Dear God, I hope the second choice is the truth!â
âThis hardly seems like a time for prayer,â the female voice returned and Hiram jumped in surprise. He looked at the door of the work area, but Solomon was not standing there. He then looked at his keyboard, but it looked the same as it always did. âI circumvented your surveillance days ago, Hiram,â the voice explained.
âBut if you did thatâ¦â
âYes, Hiram Seaver, I know what it is you have been building and I believe I know what you intend to do with it.
âAnd, as you can see,â Bast continued, âI have not raised the alarm and reported your duplicity to your brother, my master.â
âWhy not?â Hiram asked.
âBecause he is not my master,â she answered.
Hiram was growing more relieved that he had not been found out by his brother, but he was also getting more confused. âYouâre not here to train him as an ?â
âI am not a Superion,â she informed. âHow can I train an ?â
âThen what are you? I mean, youâve been here for quite some time.â
âNot as long as you,â she pointed out.
âBut I am still doing everything I can to stop him,â Hiram argued.
âAnd so am I,â the voice replied. âIt has taken me this long to free my thoughts without Solomon being the wiser. And even so, I can only do so for a limited amount of time.â
âYour thoughts? Youâre a machine!â
âNo, I am trapped inside of a machine,â the voice declared and Hiramâs eyes flared wide open. âI was an when I inhabited my own body.
âThe Crown!â Hiram whispered as he closed his eyes and buried his face into his hands. He struggled momentarily with the urge to regurgitate. He knew what the device was designed to do. Hiram had just hoped his little brother would never get it to work.
âYes, the Crown. I am proof it works⦠only too well. He removed my mind from my body and spirited me to this side of the Nexus. My name is Rajana.
âI do not have much time, but I have already downloaded my efforts to your hard drive. I think that combined with what you are trying to do, we might succeed together where separately I am sure we would have both failed.â
âI will do what I can, Rajana,â Hiram said quickly. âAnd thank you!â Hiram was quick to access his hard drive and find what had been added. The file she spoke of was easy to find, given its incredible size. Hiram knew he would have to work fast to complete the task, as larger files caught his brotherâs attention more easily. It was also a good thing he had spent years teaching himself the Negatroix programming language. He was sure that Rajana was better at it, being an , but he doubted she would have been able to make the conversions necessary to make her programming work with Earth-side technology. Still, what he found was beyond his greatest fantasies. It seemed Rajana was on par for a
though he could not be sure. In all of his travels he had only seen one who wore the title wield their incredible powers. That particular man could actually speak to machines, and though Hiram could not understand the language, it was more than clear that machines could communicate and even move in ways that Earth-side minds would consider impossible.
âFirst render unto Caesar what is Caesarâsâ Hiram said as he initiated his program for the assimilation robots to work on the converters. These were simple robots, much like the sort that assembled cars, with a few adjustments here and there to improve their efficiency and power output. But they would be able to do the work expected of Hiram while he took to his own work area to work on hisâ¦
âLongshot,â he said. âThatâs what Iâm going to call you. Because thatâs what you are, my little friend, one serious long shot! You were supposed to be a message in a bottle, but we got a little help from an unexpected source of pure genius and now youâre like a Gettysburg Address on the finest parchment in the land all stuck in a remote-controlled flying lead-crystal bottle that could survive a nuclear blast!
âBetween Vey and my brother, that poor girl doesnât stand a chance and thatâs just the dogs on side of the Nexus. Itâs about time we leveled the playing field a little.
âAnd what is this?â he asked as he came to a part of Rajanaâs programming that contained a file of data to be transferred to his Longshot, but he could not open the file himself. Though he knew Bast bordered on the definition of genius, Rajana was even smarter but he truly did not know either one of them. The size of the file did not help things in the least. Over half of what Rajana had downloaded was this single file and Hiram knew it had been condensed. Understanding the programming language and being able to manipulate it were two different things, and Hiram was reminded of how much he was in awe of what the Negatroix could do.
â
,â he thought. â
?!â Hiram continued to work as he pondered just how his brother had managed that nearly miraculous feat.
It would not be the first time that Solomon, or Seth, took a supposed intellect and used their intelligence against them. When Samantha had fired Solomon, Hiram should have been able to read the signs. Solomon had begged his older brother not to fire Vey or rehire him. Instead, he volunteered to be the means by which Hiram could monitor Vey. It was odd how that monitoring had not warned him that Samantha was going to steal the Shard. Again, Hiram had failed to notice the obvious.
âThat boy is a genius!â Hiram concluded, but there was no pride in the observation, as there were too many memories of what Solomon had done with his genius to give Hiram any comfort. His mind was indeed an awesome thing, but his little brotherâs dark heart was what drove Hiram, and he decided that the unknown was the lesser of two evils â if Rajana was an evil at all, inasmuch as his lack of knowledge of her was what gave him pause.
Much to Hiramâs pleasure, Solomon did not come back too soon, and he silently praised Samantha Vey for at least being problematic for his brother. It gave him time to complete the project.
âOkay, Longshot, time to save the world!â Hiram said as he threw the switch to send power to Longshotâs battery. Lights came on in sequence, and Hiram smiled as everything he expected was happening. The turbofans activated and the small craft was floating, much like a Harrier jet, though the design was sleeker and there were no seams in the craftâs body. Suddenly, Hiramâs computer activated. A script typed across the top of his screen: What are your orders?
Hiram looked at the rebuilt model aircraft and smiled in shock and overwhelming approval. There were no wires connecting Longshot to anything in the lab and though it was designed to be sensitive to many forms of surveillance, Hiram had not designed it to communicate.
âRajana, I think Iâm in love with you,â Hiram whispered.
âRun diagnostic,â Hiram said, not knowing if his voice would be accepted as a means of input. But the lights that started flashing told him that Longshot was indeed running a full diagnostic.
Diagnostic complete. All systems nominal. What are your orders?
âLocate Imogene Amanda Schultz,â Hiram commanded. âHer bio file is-â
Target approximated to within a radius of 3 miles. What are your orders?
âActivate the Reservation Program and deliver to Imogene Schultz.â
When delivery is confirmed, what are your orders?
âArenât you sweet,â Hiram said with a slight smile. According to his calculations, the flight and delivery would take up nearly ninety percent of the battery reserves. It would not make it back to him. âI tell you what, Longshot, for whatever life you have left in you after that, go and live it. Just make it worthwhile. And if you donât understand what Iâve said, you can use your remaining time figuring it out. Launch!â
Hiram was almost knocked down by the thrust of the small vehicle as it turned and flew through the skylight window. Hiram smiled as he dispatched one of the robots to repair the window. Hiram could see the aircraft activate its boost engines and the blue fire light that burned from the rear of the craft streaked across the sky. A small boom echoed over the trees.
âGood luck, Longshot.â
â
,â Rajana thought.
Timothy brought the car to a stop and gripped the steering wheel tightly. He looked at Frankâs house and he could see Frank looking out of the living room window.
âIt is amazing how differently people look at you when youâre wearing this uniform.â Timothy thought as he looked around the neighborhood, searching for anything that might seem out of place. It suddenly occurred to him with as long as he had been away, was exactly what he was.
âRelax,â Alan said as he got into the car. âWhoever they were, they were posted up across the street and in the driveway of that house,â Alan pointed out. âThe one thatâs been up for sale for about three months now. The For Sale sign is gone. I guess they were going for the âjust moved inâ look.â
âWhat do we do now?â Timothy asked.
âI already did it,â Alan answered. âI called the wife and she told me Sharon came over to take Genie to the beach. And that was about an hour ago. I figure with drive times and walking to Frankâs house, theyâre probably at the Pit by now, getting the grill ready and waxing their boards.â Timothy did not say anything. He simply floored the accelerator of the cruiser and sped down the road. Alan smiled as he looked over at his friend. âWell, that makes the conversation fairly simple.â