Hi everybody. Here's the 14th installment of the Harrison Chapters. Enjoy... jimv@ucrmath.ucr.edu - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Copyright 1992 by Jim Vassilakos. All Rights Reserved. Permission is hereby granted by the copyright holder to copy and freely redistribute copies of this work, such that no commercial or barter consideration is obtained in exchange for such copies. Fourteen "Well?" Vlep crossed the front room again. The flat was still in chaos, furniture and personal belongings scattered haphazardly, but he was sure it was not because of the quarry. Sule stood in the doorway, sharp eyes transfixed upon her servant as soft, blue rays of pre-dawn light fell silently along her icy, white mane. Vlep ignored her while she stood there contaminating the mental space with frustration. Frustration, definitely, and yet there was something underneath it. "Nothing?!" He shook his head, "It is as I told you before." "You ran us into a dead end, before." Vlep turned, cautiously. Her patience was like a strip of rubber ready to snap. "Is it my fault that your quarry decided to go to the Runyaelin during the ceremony of sacrifice? How am I supposed to trace him from such a place of death?" "No excuses, psyche. I need information now." He shrugged. She understood very little about the second sight. Explaining the difficulties would earn few favors. He decided to shovel out the few answers he had rather than bank on her dwindling hope. "I will be plain Sule. I don't think this mess was caused by the quarry." "You said Harrison was here." "He was. I am certain of it. But I don't believe he did this." "Why didn't you tell me this before. "I was not sure before," he lied. "Beside, would you have believed me?" "Come here, Vlep... closer." She smacked the sheepish grin off his face before he even noticed her hand in motion. By the sting it left, he guessed that there would be blisters. "When you have permission to think, I'll let you know. Until then you do as you're told. Clear?" "Ah, very," he replied, surprised that he hadn't seen it coming. "Who is this person who is with Harrison?" "I don't know. A man, I think." "And he didn't follow Harrison to the Runyaelin?" Vlep shook his head, "I'm not sure. I was keying on Harrison only." "Get me answers," Sule commanded, stepping back from the doorway. Vlep rubbed the side of his face, looking again around the flat. "He was looking for something." "Obviously. Did he find it?" Vlep stepped into the hallway, crossing the threshold into the bedroom. The impressions were mixed and strong as before. "The girl Harrison was with... it is difficult to see past her." Red twill hung silent in the still morning air. Somewhere up above, a bird was singing. "Try harder, Vlep." He put his hand on the window sill. A mixture of anxiety upon anxiety, fresh and unpolluted. Vlep crossed back to the front door, this time almost running. "What is it?" Outside, the sidewalk lay empty except for the clutter of dead leaves and the white, government car. "What is it, Vlep?" "He sees something, yet it isn't there." "What does he see?" He descended the steps, looking at the pavement directly in front of the flat. From the corner of his eye, he could see an alley cat cross the sidewalk and hide underneath the car, its two occupants oblivious to the intrusion, and in the back of his mind he heard the whine of a chemical engine. "Vlep!" Vlep felt his arm extending to point down the street, "He was running from something." "Get in the car. You're going to take us where he went." "No. I have to be on foot." "Okay. Come people! Vlep's taking us for a walk." * * * Soft voices crossed within the fog like knotted strands of hair, pulling taut and then snapping as they spiraled and blurred beyond recognition. The lumpy terrain seemed familiar, but the wispy, white haze swirled his recollection into a befuddled mass of disarranged static. Below, a small girl with long, sandy hair and wide, hazel eyes stood screaming, her voice lost within the vacant space between. Then the old city rose cautiously to its feet, a museum of looming statues, gargantuan and hollow, all abandoned except for the rush of tattered echoes, voices of bogeymen, or so he was told. He'd occasionally see them, their skin drab and mottled. They kept a distance, eyes webbed with curiosity, daring to look but not to touch as he snapped images like a tourist at the zoo. Sometimes he pretended to be some famous archeologist searching for relics of the past, sneaking home later to bury his trophies before anyone should discovered his absence. The bogey-people didn't seem to mind. They would sometimes even leave him gifts which he would collect with a gravitic net and boil before handling. They had only become angry once, and then they poured out enough anger to sate the frustration of an entire lifetime. Mobs of them had stormed the Naval Hospital, the one safe place in the old city or barrens as it became known. The underground routes to the suburbs were caved-in, and the overland barriers were laced with mines. After the battle, the hospital stood alone, the buildings around it reduced to rubble by explosive detonations. Hours were counted within by the number of corpses incinerated on the 40th floor. Volunteers, they were called. "Put on the slickersuit, or you'll be next," his father had warned. Mike spent a week just learning how to secure the plastic helmet. Righty-tighty... clip, tighten, tie... swivel, clip, tighten, tie, check. Or was it tighten, clip? "My son, the space cadet." He accepted his father's recognition with a sense of accomplishment, holding the memory with a youthful pride which bordered on the pompous. A year would pass before he learned that the comment wasn't meant as a compliment. He cheeks wore a rosy hue that day, somewhat brighter than the burnt brown of the doctor's whose thick, blue veins and patchy tufts of white hair blew back and forth in the ventilating stink. Dirty beads of perspiration glistened on his brows, flowing in trickles from the wrinkles between his eyes, as he stacked small metallic cylinders into the small, silver box. "Here boy," he offered in a soft but desperate voice. "Take this to your mother. And watch yourself while you're out there. Lei got away; crafty, little runt." Outside, sunbeams bathed the asphalt in a bellowing heat, and the dust of the dead fell about him like a summer shower, clogging the filter as he unfastened the helmet and gulped for air. The buildings stood about him in various states of disrepair, the tall communications tower rising like a lone palm tree amidst a rocky and deserted beach. Memories of her running along the flat, wet sands sparked to mind. She'd been crying. Her brother destroyed the house she'd built for the small, white, kitten crabs. He couldn't remember why. Somewhere in the distance he heard her voice, sweat accumulating in his eyebrows as he searched the hillside. She stood near the top beside the old cathedral, its tall, stained glass windows once polished and beautiful before people came and painted graffiti on the saints. Now, instead of reading from scrolls, they played long violins and wore red and black headbands. The big guy in the dome window no longer smiled, and his chalice and loaf were replaced with a straight-backed snake and a bulging phallus. They'd visited it several times. The few who attended sat in sparse clusters, their moods somber and suspicious. She'd once gone wandering, greeting people as they came in. His father grabbed her by the shoulder and put her over his knee. Later she asked him why, but he wouldn't explain. He just looked up at the dome, muttering something under his breath. "Does Jesus sing, Daddy?" "He snaps the sticks, sweetheart. Can you hear him?" They never went back after that, but his mother told them stories about how people used to pray there, especially after what had happened. He didn't understand what she meant by praying, but it seemed like a serious business. It had something to do with the guys in the windows. She often showed him her favorite. "Michael!?" She started running down the hill, her bony legs quaking with each hop until a moist patch suddenly gave way and she blundered into the thickets, her legs falling away from underneath, hurtling her into the dense brush below. He felt a cold lump of cotton form in his throat, stealing his voice. Then she crawled out, tears streaming down her cheeks as patches of blood showed through the knees of her white stockings. "Mike, don't leave me. I'm afraid." A shaft of stark red cascaded from the dome, its bright, pulsing heat joining with the perspiration in his brows. Together, they splashed into his eyes, blinding him within in a warm veil of brine. For a moment he was aware only of the sun's broad cymbals clashing on his skull and of his pounding heartbeat and the sprinting sound of his feet touching the ground and leaving again in quick succession. "Michael!" The pounding grew louder, like a sledgehammer crushing a block of marble, all the splinters shattering in all different directions, jumping out at people, bodies imploding in a maelstrom of hydrogen and fire, and then the blurry ground rising as he skidded and slid down the loamy slope, skipping over brambles and thrush as large stones protruded from the path to strike him. A dew-laden carpet of grass and twigs lay before his feet, the small, crooked trees emerging sporadically from the dense brush as birds scattered from their branches, the squashing noise of his sprint splashing dirty water toward either side. He'd dropped the metal box somewhere far behind and kept running until her wails were only a thin whisper in the distance, the sound reverberating against the walls of his conscience, a texture soft and familiar but which he could never seem to reach. "Namarie, nilimo, ve firnuvan hior." And then it faded until it was too quiet to distinguish as more than random noise. "Mike..." His whole body tingled, a fluttering sensation as though he were chopped into pieces and frozen. He tried to move his fingers, yet his hands couldn't find them, nor could his arms find his hands, and so forth, all the way to his spirit, unshackled and floating free, ready to draw away with the gentle barrens wind. "Son of a bitch is giving up... five more cee-cees." "C'mon Mike, pull out..." A thin man stood over him, watching Mike as though he were some spectacle at a freak show. Mike imagined the tall spokes jutting from his skull to be the long fronds of a palm, it's stalk swaying in the coastal wind. Thin, brown eyebrows danced like frolicking caterpillars, the soft eyes beneath shimmering a placid blue. "Did you hear me? Five more!" "Got it..." With the sudden jolt in pulse-rate, Mike's fingers gripped at the null field for something to squeeze. "Well... that worked..." Johanes pulled back the syringe as the convulsions began, a rattling of bones against flesh all suspended in air. "Is he gonna make it?" "Of course he will... although..." "Although?" "What's left when he gets back...." Spokes shrugged his shoulders apathetically, "Unhook him." Beneath a canopy of skull, thin fibers pulled taunt and disappeared, the throbbing hum echoing into the silence of an invisible rhyme. Johanes quickly cleaned the connections before replacing their caps, and Spokes bent over Mike, checking the pupil reflex with a bright penlight. "How ya feeling, Harrison?" Mike felt the grid solidify as he involuntarily rotated toward the cheery voice. His eyes overcompensated for the distance making the figured blur in and out of focus, and he could hear a steady pounding in his head. Spokes slapped him on the cheek and watched as the sensation tingled slowly across the gatherer's face. "Huh?" "You need to talk to me, Harrison. How many fingers do I have up?" "Uh... three." "Excellent. You don't mind if I check out a few reflexes, do you?" A crisp bolt of electricity arced from somewhere above, its touch like icy fire upon his forehead. Mike winced at the shock. "Good. Now, try saying something intelligent for us." Mike paused, finally blurting out the first thing that came to mind: "Where am I?" Spokes beamed, apparently impressed. "Tyberian compound. How much do you remember?" Mike pictured Vilya sitting under the ventilation shaft, her dark hair shuffling gently in the damp current. From the corner of his vision he could barely discern the outline of her shadow amidst the yellow rays of sunshine which scattered evenly through an open doorway and onto the cold cement floor. All the while Spokes kept trying to make conversation, threatening to test a few more reflexes if Mike didn't mumble a response every so often. "You folding up on me, Harrison?" Mike yanked his head to the side but the field re-solidified, closing him within a tight bubble of gravitational force. Spokes, looking vaguely apologetic, readjusted the controls as the field gently settled Mike to the floor. The shadow and a pair of legs crossed the chamber in synchronous step, finally meeting like twin V's at a pair of quagga-hide loafers beside the bio-monitor's tall, metallic frame. Mike watched his own pulse rate in the electronic display for several seconds before he realized that it matched the faint pounding noise in his head. A pair of electronic pinchers still wavered carelessly in the gravitic null. The densest objects were always the last to fall due to over-compensation on the part of the computer. Johanes snatched them on their slow descent as he watched Spokes unplug the inertial modules. Then he looked toward Mike, his sweaty face the color of a rotten egg. "Anybody home in there?" Mike considered the question carefully, but Johanes seemed impatient for a response. "What's the matter? Can't he understand?" "Of course he understands; he's just a little whomped." Spokes finished stowing the equipment and turned around, a white plastic tube in one hand and a pair of silicon adapters in the other. He knelt down beside Mike, cautiously extracting a thread of optifiber from the tube and uncapping two of the jack's on Mike's skull. "This is going to feel sorta funny, but we figure it's better to zap you while you're still dead to the world." Spokes worked both ends of the thread into the adapters, finally plugging them into Mike's skull so that the optifiber seemed to emerge at one point and sink back at another. Mike felt a tingling sensation within his joints which spread along his skin as Spokes sat back to admire his handiwork. The tingling slowly grew into a strange, blazing sort of itch, as though hundreds of electrical spiders were crawling within his stomach, head, and limbs. Spokes and Johanes held him down as the floor seemed to wrap itself around his body in a vain attempt to extinguish the fire. Johanes was talking in a worried tone, but Spokes kept shaking his head as if everything was normal. Mike listened to the sound of the voices, finally accepting the burning sensation which swept back and forth along his spine and through his legs like the icy Aeluin on the gentle, sloping shores beside Erfalas. Then, it slowly began to transform itself into a numbing, almost paralytic massage, the tingling returning, and the entire series of sensations beginning anew and repeating, over and over. After more iterations than he cared to count, Mike noticed that the familiar hands which held him down during the burning periods had mysteriously disappeared. He waited for awhile to see if they would return, finally observing that the yellow rays were also gone, and the room was bathed in dim blue and pink, most of it generated by the bio-monitor's video display and small glowbeads scattered about the walls. Reaching to his head almost instinctively, he carefully unscrewed the adapters, allowing the sensations to leave him like a decent lover: sweaty, sore and thirsty. A sluice-stick lay conscientiously beside him on the floor, and he chewed it open and sucked out the syrupy contents while righting himself into a sitting position. Something sharp bumped into his head, and he crouched back down, squinting toward the ceiling. A flimsi-leaf seemed to dangle in mid-air, "try me" scrawled across it in dim, glowing pink. Mike tugged it free from two long black cords which hung from one of the many ceiling cables, curling it and himself into a tight ball. The cold cement felt strangely comforting, the wet, sticky sluice still coating his numb lips as he watched the cords swing gently back and forth, beckoning in the dim light. He reached toward them, propping himself up with one elbow as he tugged himself back into a sitting position. Mike examined them, cautiously, the dim pink light changing in intensity as the flimsi slowly stretched itself out. The cords ended in adapters not unlike those he had recently unscrewed. Shrugging, he screwed the new ones into where they seemed to fit. At first he could just hear voices, but from the shadows around him, ghosts seemed to emerge. "Well look who's here." "Hey, Harrison. How ya feeling?" "Who is he?" "Must be a novice. He doesn't seem to be very talkative." Mike felt a sudden jolt of static like an electric slap across his senses. "Hey, cut it out. He's my guest." "Sorry." "Hey Mike. That was pretty quick. You okay?" "Spokes?" Mike gulped down, blinking his eyes to refocus. It didn't seem to matter whether his eyes were open or closed. They were still there, all the same. "Yeah, it's me. Cecil's here too." "Hi there, little one." Cecil's image seemed to have yellow eyes, shining faintly through an acidic smog like the sun on Tyber. Mike nodded, still contemplating whether or not to tear the twin cords from his skull. "You seem a little uneasy." Mike shrugged, "I've having a weird day." "I zapped him after we installed his output," Spokes explained. "So soon?!" The yellow eyes flared brightly. "Easy Cecil. Johanes said they were in a hurry." The eyes dulled and tilted slightly. "So how did you like the jitters, Michael?" Mike frowned, "What's he talking about?" "Technical stuff. In order to stick in the outputs, we have to go all the way to the amygdala, and that means that we have to get close to the hippocampus." "The butcher speaks." It was a voice from the crowd. "Shut-up; I didn't do him," Spokes retaliated. "I'm lost," Mike confessed. "Whenever you go that deep, anything can happen. The mind has a tendency to flip-out sometimes. We talked about it before the operation." "We did?" "Yeah. You don't remember, but we did. That's another problem with getting too close to the hippocampus. It tends to scramble short-term memory." "The last thing I can remember it talking to Johanes." "He brought you in this morning. We took you to the doc." Yellow eyes seemed to dance in circles. "The doc?" "The butcher," Cecil interrupted. "I felt that I still owed you a favor." "Some favor," Mike mumbled, except that his voice carried across the ether loud and clear, much to the amusement of several electronic loiterers. Even Spokes seemed to get a good snort out of it. Then he turned serious, as though perfectly able to jump from one emotion to the other without crossing the intervening space. "It was time to join the club, Mike." "Is that why you're helping me now? Because you wanted a new member for your sick society?" "No, actually I'm getting paid." "Johanes?" "Yep." "So where's he been while I've been twitching on the floor all day?" Mike heard a few more snorts, exact replicas of the earlier ones, except this time some vague maniacal laughter seemed to hover in the distance, yellow eyes swirling excitedly. "You can stop talking with your mouth now, Harrison. Everybody can hear you. Use your head. Just look at me and focus." "Like this?!" "Hey...." "What were you doing to me today, Spokes?!" "What are you talking about?" "I'm talking about the funny feeling you said I'd have. Can you see how much I'm laughing?!" Mike felt an on-rush of static block the way between them. Cecil stopped laughing and stared intently. "What are you two fighting about?" "He's pissed 'cause I zapped him," Spokes confided. The yellow eyes nodded, knowingly. "It had to happen eventually, old friend. Spokes let your mind get to know itself. Auto-feedback was all it was. The pathways have to build-up mental calluses, and you have to learn to deal with pain. Spokes here is surprised you came out as quickly as you did. For many people, it takes much longer." Mike straightened, "I don't understand." "Johanes wants you to go into the dodec," Spokes interrupted. "If it tries to nail you in any way, the only chance you're going to have is if you have some resistance. You understand?" "No." "Well don't worry about it. It was for your own good." "Where is Johanes, and where is the dodec?" "He went back to the Arien Mansion. He took the dodec with him, Mike." "Shit. Where are you?" "At the Sintrivani." "You mean you guys got done with me and just left me here to rot?" Spokes sort of shook his head and nodded at the same time, "Johanes said that ISIS has some psyche bloodhound sniffing your trail but hard. He went for help to smear the scent, but neither of us are yearning to be around you right now. Is that so hard to understand?" "I've heard enough." "Johanes said he'd be coming back for you, so don't go any..." Mike unscrewed the cords from his jacks and watched the electric apparitions evaporate into darkness as graciously as they had appeared. Outside, a chilly breeze flapped across the streets, lifting loose dirt and leaves into the sky and inducing the hairs on his bare chest to prickle and tense in rows. With a fuzzy warm ambience enshrouding his senses, he ambled along the side of the road, waving down a taxi before the main gates. "Where to?" The driver was middle-aged, his sparse, greying hair combed straight back, eyes sunken and tired in the rear-view mirror. Mike dipped his hands into his pockets, the emptiness sparking an image of Cecil's money in a pool of blood. Sighing, he mumbled an apology and shuffled himself out of the car. "Is okay. Where you want to go?" "I'm broke." "Get in." The driver opened the front door to prove his sincerity, and Mike climbed in, unsure whether to thank him or just do as he was told, and the driver looked sympathetic. "You know where you're going?" "Erfalas." Mike felt his back and shoulders affix themselves to the plastic seat covers, a sticky noise resulting every time the car hit a bump in the road. The driver either didn't notice, didn't mind, or was just being polite. "So what the name of you?" "Michael; my friends call me Mike. You?" "Pateras; my friends call me Pat," he qualified with a smirk. "Why the charity?" "You look like you need it. You know the output of you bleeds?" Mike reached to his skull, withdrawing a smear of pasty orange puss. "Here, use this." "A towel?" "Hitch-hiker must never forget it." Mike draped it over his head, catching the ullage as it tried to drip down his neck. The rest began to dry into a sticky crust. "The daughter of me was a chiphead. She tell me which is input and which is output. That all I know." "She was a chiphead? What is she now?" The man half smiled, half winced. He dug out his wallet and extracted the image plate. Mike leafed through those in memory, several of his little girl, first as a baby and finally as a teenager with all the years in between. The last one showed a bald kid in a hospital bed. "They burn out head of her, you know. She not know which way was up." Mike handed back the plate. Erfalas was cold and windy, and the driver offered him the towel. "What have I need of it? Is blood of you. You clean, yes?" "Yeah. Thanks for the ride." He stood, watching, as the tail-lights ebbed into the distance. The beach was soft and sandy, and moonlight sparked along the watery horizon, however, the hooks on the cliffs were no longer to be seen. Only rarely would one emerge from the pounding waves, and then it would sparkle like a diamond across the dim, lavender seaside. Mike winced as the cold water stung his scalp and the bleeding renewed. Though he couldn't smell any salt, the nerves around the wound told him that some was there. He finally staggered out of the water, throwing the towel around his body as he curled up between two tall rocks. The cold breeze continued to blow airy waves of fine white dust over his still form. Sticking to his skin, the tiny particles bonded together in the darkness and slowly dried until he found himself wearing clothing made of sand that cracked and flaked away when he shifted in half-slumber. Faint violet rays warily peeked over the eastern horizon, glinting across the smooth, narrow stretch of sand which teased the incoming waves. Beneath the noise of water grasping toward shore, Mike heard the distant gurgle of a chemical engine. At first, he thought it was the final illusory fragment of a dream, but the sound grew steadily, until it resided at the top of the cliff where Vilya had shown him the eyehooks and so splendidly demonstrated their use. Several people were climbing out of a white, government car, each peering toward the dim violet horizon. Half-buried by the sand, Mike watched them from his shadowy lair between the two tall rocks. He tried to make out their features in the faint, shifting light, but it was difficult even to count them. Then he glimpsed the white mane, its owner allowing the breeze's gentle tendrils to reshuffle her hair to its own liking, and for a silent moment his eyes widened with fear. _ /| \`o_O' Jim Vassilakos ( ) <--- jimv@ucrmath.ucr.edu U ucsd!ucrmath!jimv (uucp) Aachk! Phft! Ftp!