Read Camp Alien Online

Authors: Gini Koch

Camp Alien (34 page)

CHAPTER 63

F
LASHLIGHT OR NO
flashlight, visibility was close to nil. We were back to inky blackness that swallowed light, meaning even though I was being extra-cautious, I could easily miss something.

However, I made it all the way down without issue. We were in a short corridor that appeared to be made of cement. It was decently wide, though the ceiling was low, but not so low that White had to hunch.

We walked about fifty feet with no incident and reached a door. It had an old-fashioned door handle, one where you had to push down on a lever with your thumb to open it.

I handed the flashlight to White and touched the handle lightly and quickly. Nothing happened. Took the handle in my hand. No electroshock. So far, so good. Then I pushed the lever down. The door didn't open.

Heaved a sigh. “I think it's locked. Adriana, who's faster at lock picking, you or me?”

“Me.” She stepped forward, pulled something out of her backpack, and got to work. Heard the click of the lock opening. Adriana stepped back. “You have the gun, you go first.”

“You didn't bring a gun?”

“I brought a rocket launcher.”

“Good point.” Took the flashlight back from White, made sure the safety was off on my Glock, then nodded to Adriana. She opened the door.

Another dark corridor. Went down it cautiously. No traps, or if there were, we didn't trigger them. Reached heavy black drapes. Moved one part of them slowly aside.
And turned off the flashlight. Because it was well lit in here. Lit with fluorescent lights.

As we stepped into the room my music finally changed. “All the Right Friends” by R.E.M. came on.

This was definitely a Secret Lab/Villain's Lair combo, but I had to hand it to Stephanie—she certainly had her own style.

First off, it was one gigantic room, with some circular walls that I was pretty positive were encircling the tree trunks. Oh, sure, there were lots and lots of various kinds of equipment with lights merrily flashing, a few big servers, also very active, and all the other Mad Scientist Lab bells and whistles. There was what looked like a throne at the far end. Either that or it was a super-duper massage chair. Really couldn't tell from this distance.

There were other rooms within this room, but they were all glass or Plexiglas. These rooms were scattered throughout—some were for medical, based on their equipment and things like hospital beds, some were for the Business of World Domination, based on their computers and phones and other items.

It was easy to see into everything. Meaning it was easy to see where Joe and Randy were. They were in their own rooms, next to each other, lying on hospital beds, next to other hospital beds that had what certainly looked like android innards on them. The guys were naked, except for a small towel to provide some modesty, and tightly strapped down. Each of the beds was hooked up to what looked like a big light board but what I was pretty sure was a computer of some kind.

The guys had thin tubes inserted into them in various places—elbow joints, knee joints, belly button, and nipples, with five tubes going into their heads. The tubes were very thin—so thin that it was unlikely that a mark would be left if they were removed. And I definitely wanted to remove them.

“Wait,” White grabbed me before I could take off running. “Be sure it's them, be sure it's not a trap.”

“Good point.” We walked over. Took a lot of effort to walk, but we did it. Reached Joe's room first. The glass door slid open when we stood in front of it. Looked for traps. Saw none. Went inside.

Joe appeared to be unconscious but he still looked alive. Touched his wrist. Felt a pulse, but he didn't react. His breathing was shallow.

“Joe,” I said quietly. “Joe, it's me, it's Kitty.” No response. Shook him. Nothing. “We need a doctor, Tito, Melanie, Emily, Lorraine, and Claudia for preference.”

Lizzie nudged me. “There are phones here.”

“Duh, and good catch. You and Adriana go see if they work. Call your dad, tell him what's going on.”

She nodded and the two of them trotted off to a clear room a couple away from where we were.

“Mister White, any guesses for how we wake Joe up?”

“None yet. I suggest we see if Randy responds better.”

We went to his room. Same thing. There was a pulse and he was breathing shallowly, all his tubes were inserted into the same places Joe's were, but he gave no response. “We need to see if Camilla and the princesses are here.”

White nodded and zipped off. Because I could see hyperspeed I was able to watch him for the most part. He was back quickly. “No, only Joe and Randy are in this room.”

Lizzie and Adriana came back. “The phones require a code to dial out,” Adriana said. “We tried several obvious ones, but they didn't work.”

Resisted the urge to really curse a lot. “Fine. That means we need to do something, and there's no one we can ask for help.” Considered the situation. It sucked. Forced myself to think. “Why did Stephanie go back to Drax? She had the helicarrier, she had a nice android army starting, and she had people she was going to turn into androids who would easily infiltrate our defenses.” And cause heartbreak, but I didn't say that out loud. “So, why go back to him?”

“He had something she needed to do the transfer,” White suggested.

“Yeah. And she didn't get it, or if she did, it's incarcerated along with her or still at Drax's place. So are the guys brain-dead yet, or are they still themselves?”

White studied the computer walls. “If I assume the lights on these boards are similar to what we use in the isolation chambers, then their brains are still active.”

Lizzie stepped closer to the boards and examined them. “The uncles used to say that even the most complicated computer in the world has an off switch.”

“But if we turn the machines off, the guys may die.”

“Or they may wake up.” Lizzie looked at me. “We have to do something.”

Before I could reply, the walkie crackled. “Kitty, we have a situation, over.” Abigail sounded tense.

Lizzie handed me the walkie. “So do we, what's your sitch? Over.”

“Several of the hostages aren't doing well. They need water and medical treatment. As in, we have to get them to a hospital pronto. Over.”

“She lives here,” I said, not into the walkie but to the others with me. “That means she has food and water here. Maybe first aid stuff, I mean, there's enough medical here. The androids don't need any of that, but Stephanie does. Scatter. See what you can find.” Went back to Abigail as the others took off. “Searching to see if we can find anything helpful. Over.”

“What's your situation? Over.”

“Um . . . we've found Joe and Randy.” Gave her a fast update. “So, I don't know if we turn off the machines or what. Over.”

While I waited for Abigail to respond, I tried to focus. I could ask ACE what to do, but Jamie would be awake and that meant I'd be asking my little girl to make a life or death decision for two men she loved whose children were her friends. Out of the question. Naomi couldn't really intervene here—she was being watched by the Superconsciousness Police, and taking direct action here would be something they'd really hurt her, and probably us, over.

“I don't know, either,” Abigail said finally. “I just know we need to do something. Over.”

“Yeah. I'll keep you posted. Out.”

Went back to thinking. Algar was already helping me, probably as much as he was willing to, which had been an amazing amount, really. We wouldn't have found the flyboys and Field agents without his musical clues. But as I thought this I realized that my music had stopped once the R.E.M. song had finished. Checked my phone. It had turned off. Now wasn't a great time to run out of battery.

The others arrived, laden with water. “We found her stash,” Lizzie said. “She has tonnages of water and food and supplies.”

“It's definitely a bunker here,” Adriana agreed.

“Great. You guys get that water to the others. Don't argue—we have people who are in terrible shape. Let's not lose the people we came here to save. I'll be fine down here. Just, you know, come back as soon as you can.”

White didn't look happy, but logic won out. Adriana emptied her backpack and they filled it with water bottles. Lizzie ran off and came back with a box of food bars and another case of water. White put the backpack on and took the case of water in one hand, Adriana took the box of food bars from Lizzie, then she took one of Lizzie's hands while White took the other.

“We'll be right back,” he said. “Try not to cause me to regret having to do this.” And with that they took off.

Did a fast run through the entire giant room. Realized I was thirsty as well as stressed, so I grabbed a water bottle and drank it down.

Tried to wake Joe and Randy up again. Didn't work. Tried to make myself unplug their computers from the walls. Couldn't do it. Contemplated turning on my iPod but figured I might need it later and if my phone had run out of juice, it wasn't unlikely that my iPod would, too.

Took a look at my iPod, though, just in case. It was on. And the song that was playing on repeat was Oingo Boingo's “Return of the Dead Man 2.”

CHAPTER 64

“A
LL PRAISE
the Great God Algar,” I said under my breath. “And yes, I'm kidding. But only sort of.”

Didn't need to hear the song, it was an instrumental. It was clear what Algar was telling me, based on the title. Took a deep breath, focused on the Inner Me, then took a look at the light boards behind Joe and Randy.

The lights meant nothing to me, but I ignored that. Instead I looked for patterns, to see if there was something different happening. As far as I could tell there wasn't.

This meant that I just needed to either try harder or think right. Per ACE I always thought right. So, without the assistance of our benevolent observer and with only one musical clue to go on, had to determine the right course of action to bring my two dead men back.

White, Lizzie, and Adriana returned. “We need to bring more supplies to the others,” White shared. “I'm pleased to see that you haven't done anything rash in our brief absence.”

“Don't expect that to last. Um, do you need Lizzie for the next run?”

“Why?” Adriana asked.

“I think I need help here.”

“With what?” Lizzie sounded confused, not that I could blame her.

“With waking Joe and Randy up.”

The others exchanged the “oh dear” look. “Are you sure you should try?” Adriana asked gently.

“Yes, I am. Look, I just want someone to bounce ideas off of, and Richard has to provide the hyperspeed. And, in
this case, I think Lizzie will help me more than you, that's all.”

White nodded slowly. “Just remember that your choices will have ramifications.”

“They always do.”

He gave me a quick hug, then he and Adriana went off to get more water and such and I turned back to the guys.

“They look dead,” Lizzie said quietly.

“Yeah, but they really aren't. They're sleeping like it, though. So, maybe we look at this as how do you wake someone up from a hibernation sleep?”

“No clue.”

“Tito knows how. He got Malcolm out of a sleep like this. Dammit, I wish we could get a call out.”

“I have no bars in here. I can try more number predials to see if we can get the phone system to work.”

“No, I'm sure the predial is long and complex, because to an A-C, having to punch in twenty numbers before you dial the real number you want isn't that big a deal.”

“At least they don't look sick,” Lizzie said, clearly trying for the optimistic spin. “The other people we've found don't, either. I mean, they look like crap, but they don't look like they have the Alien Flu.”

“Yeah, if they did we could keep them going with adrenaline.” Jerked. “Oh, wow. Think it could be that easy?”

“Well, if you have adrenaline and you want to give it to them, maybe?” Lizzie sounded doubtful. “But what if it hurts them?”

“I don't think it will.” Dug around in my purse to find the container I always carried with me—the case that held adrenaline in case I needed to slam a needle full of it into Jeff's chest. Happily, I hadn't had to do that for a while, but the possibility was always there, and so I was always prepared. And I'd filled it up just the other day, because when it came to adrenaline, I lived the Boy Scout Motto. This stuff had saved the day during Operation Epidemic and I saw no reason why it wouldn't save the day here and now as well.

“Choose who we try first,” I said to Lizzie.

“Huh? Why?”

“Because these guys are married to two of my best friends, and if I'm wrong, I want to be able to say that I didn't make the choice.”

“So you want me to be the one who picks who might die? Thanks for that.”

“Oh. Good point. Never mind.”

“You're in front of one more than the other, so that's the guy to choose.”

I was more in front of Joe. Okay, Joe would go first then. And I prayed I was right and wouldn't have to tell Lorraine that her husband was never coming home.

We went inside his glass room and took a closer look at things. “I think we want to unplug the android parts,” Lizzie said finally. “Just in case.”

“I agree.” The wires ran into the computer board. I ripped them out and that side of the board seemed to turn off. “Can you go do the same for Randy?”

“Sure.” She trotted off to take care of this and I readied my needle. White and Adriana returned again, but I ignored them. This was either going to work or it wasn't, and any more delays helped no one.

Waited one more moment—in case the Various Powers That Be decided to send me some kind of sign to stop. There was no such sign. So, I did what I'd gotten really good at over the years—I slammed the needle into Joe's heart.

Results were immediate.

His eyes flew open. “What the hell?” he shouted. Then he blinked several times and I saw him focus on me. “Kitty? Kitty, is that really you?”

“God, am I glad you're not dead. Yes, it's really me. Hang on.” Ran out of the room. “Mister White, get Joe unstrapped and unplugged.” Pulled out another needle, ensured that Lizzie had Randy's android innards wires ripped out of the computer board, then slammed the needle into his heart.

Results were again immediate as Randy did pretty much the exact same thing as Joe had. Managed not to cry with relief, but it was a close thing.

White had Joe unstrapped and sitting up and came in and did the same with Randy. “I haven't removed the wires,” he told me quietly. “I believe we want to be careful doing that.”

“I agree.”

“Where are my clothes?” Randy asked. “I mean that seriously.”

“No idea honestly.”

“I think I found them.” Adriana trotted in with what
looked like the uniforms the flyboys wore when they were in the air on a mission, which would be what they'd have been wearing when Drax captured them. “They were in what I think is the room where she does the finishing touches on the androids.”

“I don't want to know, do I?” Randy asked. He went pale. “Am I . . . am I still fully human?”

“Yeah, I think you and Joe both are.”

“Only just.” Lizzie pointed to the android innards lying on the bed next to Randy's.

He shuddered. “Thanks, kid.”

“Oh, right, you haven't met her. This is Lizzie.” Gave him and Joe, who was holding the tiny towel around him while White helped him into this room, the quick update on Lizzie though I left out what else was going on. They both seemed disoriented, not a shocker, and I figured they should take in all the happenings slowly right now.

Both of them still had the wires in them, too, but they didn't mention it. “These are our clothes,” Joe said, sounding relieved. He looked around. “Where are the others?”

“Jerry, Matt, and Chip are with the others we've rescued. We don't know where Camilla and the princesses are.”

“On the ship,” Randy said. “The helicarrier. They were hard for our captors to control, and I remember seeing them in stasis. The last thing I remember is hearing someone say they were leaving them there because they didn't want to risk letting them escape.”

“I heard that, too,” Joe confirmed, “and it was a woman talking.”

“Stephanie.”

They both nodded. “Probably,” Joe said. “So, uh, can we get dressed?”

“Oh! Yeah, sorry. We'll turn around.” We all did. The glass was reflective. “And close our eyes. We'll all close our eyes.”

“You've already seen them naked before anyway,” White said, sarcasm knob set to eleven.

“Blah, blah, blah. But that does bring up a good question. Um, guys? Can you confirm that you, ah, have all your important man parts?”

“I do
not
want to know why you're asking that,” Randy said, sounding freaked out. “But yes, I do. Thank God.”

“Same here,” Joe added. “Should we assume we were about to lose those?”

“No, because you were supposed to infiltrate us and you couldn't have done that if you took your pants off in front of your wives. But under the circumstances, just felt it was wise to check.” Cracked an eyelid. They had their underpants on. Good enough. Turned around. “Sorry about the bruising on your chests, by the way.”

“I'll take it,” Joe said. He looked around and, like Randy, shuddered. “How long have we been here?”

“Probably about a week. Finish getting dressed. We need to formulate a plan for how we rescue the last of our team.”

“Wait to get dressed,” Lizzie said, sounding urgent.

The guys looked at me. “Okay, hold on,” I said, as Lizzie tugged at my hand and pulled me into Joe's room.

“What's up?”

“Tito has that thing that proves if someone's fully human, right?” she asked in a low voice.

“Right, the OVS. It determines organic from inorganic.”

“Yeah. I don't think these two guys are as organic as they were a week ago.”

“How do you mean?”

“I don't think the stuff we thought were plugs actually are plugs. They didn't unplug when I pulled them out of the board—they ripped.”

“So? I'm not following you.”

“It's not plugs or needles or tubes, going into them. What's in them are wires. Thin wires, like landlines use.”

“You know what the internal workings of landlines look like?”

“Yeah, most of the infrastructure out there is landline based, and the uncles wanted to be sure I knew how to tap a phone line from a distance.”

“Gotcha. And it's a great skill. But I don't see how these wires being thin wires like old phones use is relevant.”

She heaved an impatient teenaged sigh. “I don't think this board is a computer so much as it's a transference device. I think that the wires from the android side were being inserted into the human side.”

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