Ure Infectus (Imperium Cicernus Book 4) (30 page)

Masozi looked down the face of the building, but before she
could say anything there was an explosion above them and her body was forced
downward a few feet by the power of the blast.

When she looked up she saw that the corner penthouse they
had just been in was now a smoking ruin, and Eve said, “We’d better climb down
outta here, bakeshop. We’re so exposed out here without the secondary systems
online that we’d make a porn star blush.”

Masozi actually agreed with Eve’s assessment, so she slid
her right hand down the wall before doing likewise with her left. After a few
repetitions she thought she had the hang of it, and she began to descend to the
street below.

“That-a-girl,” Eve approved. “Now, at this rate of descent…I
should be able to get the secondaries online just before we get to the ground.”

The minutes ticked by as Masozi’s pace improved, and she
found herself standing on a small, squat structure she took for a maintenance
shed which was attached to the main building.

“A little extra wattage here…” Eve said as her digital
fingers flew this way and that, rearranging the minimized icons in a seemingly
random fashion, “…and a little less draw there…and we’re done!”

“What do you mean, ‘we’re done’?” Masozi pressed. Her legs
quivered from the descent, since even though she had barely used them she found
that her muscles had all clenched tightly during the descent.

“Take a look for
yourself
,” Eve
urged proudly as she folded her arms over her chest.

Masozi looked around and saw nothing different, but then she
did notice something and she waved her hand before her face to confirm what she
had suspected. “I’m invisible?!” she blurted in amazement. She had heard of
stealth systems that could bend light around a custom made suit, but the
reality of being in one was enough to appeal to the little girl in her that had
once wished for super powers.

“Well…technically, no,” Eve replied belatedly, “but it would
take someone looking straight at us to see more than a warble of light. More
importantly, this suit’s based on an Imperial Infiltrator design so it’s
unlikely that anything we run into will detect us—nothing except a pair of
focused eyeballs, that is.”

“So…where do we go?” Masozi pressed, knowing the time had
finally come for her to do what she had come to do. She was still uncertain how
she was to accomplish the mission, but she actually did trust that Jericho had
devised a plan that was far superior to anything she could come up with.

“Hop on the A-11,” Eve said, and an overlay of the nearby
streets appeared beneath Masozi’s visor section. A vehicle appeared to be
moving toward their position, and it was indeed marked ‘A-11.’ “Just hitch a
ride across town and I’ll tell you when to get off.”

“Ok,” Masozi said, moving to the edge of the building and
seeing the mass transit vehicle approaching quickly—too quickly, in her
estimation. “It’s moving too fast.”

“It’s all just energy, honey pie,” Eve said, cracking her
digital knuckles in anticipation. “This suit’s secondary systems are online so
it won’t be a problem. Just take another ‘leap of faith,’ girlfriend,” she said
with a wink.

As the conveyance approached, Masozi took a deep breath and
leapt from the roof of the maintenance shed. Her armored body sailed through
the air toward the approaching maglev train, and just before she impacted on
its fuselage Masozi reached out to shield herself from the impact.

But a strange sensation overcame her body and it was almost
like she had struck a soft, invisible cushion surrounding the train—or, more
likely, it had surrounded her armored body. The deceleration was dampened such
that she was able to grab onto the rail which ran the length of the vehicle’s
roof with both hands, and she hauled herself up on top of the vehicle before
regaining control of her breathing.

“Now just lie flat and relax,” Eve instructed. “This will
take a while.”

Chapter
XXV: Disappointment vs. Endurance

Jericho sat in the maximum security detainment cell and
looked around as he carefully processed recent events.

He had learned decades earlier that regret—or even what most
people thought of as nothing more than ‘retrospect’—would kill a person’s soul
as fast as a knife to the brainstem would kill a person’s body. But even so, he
was unable to keep from replaying every interaction between himself and Masozi
in an effort to glean where he may have possibly gone wrong.

Everything had been going according to plan up to the
fateful moment in the tavern. She had sympathized with, and even offered verbal
support on several occasions for, the Timent Electorum and its function in the
Sector’s society. He had constructed and vetted her psych profile personally,
and had even had the other experts on H.E. One confirm his findings before
proposing his plan to Director Hadden.

The Director had always placed a great deal of trust in
Jericho, and it was a trust which Jericho dearly hoped he had not squandered.
But locked away in his current cell, he was unable to make any necessary
corrections—at least not until he left the facility.

The door to the cell opened and Jericho was torn from his
thoughts as a short, muscular figure wearing an all-black bodyglove stepped
into the room. There was a single, red light above the doorway which suggested
that the man’s entry was not an authorized one.

“Adjuster Jericho Bronson,” the man’s familiar,
perfectly-pitched voice said into the shadows as he closed the door behind
himself, “I must say I’m disappointed.”

“Agent Stiglitz,” Jericho said grimly, knowing that the
restraints he had been placed in would prohibit him from putting up an adequate
defense—not that there was much that a ‘normal’ human could do against a
heavily-augmented operative like Stiglitz—assuming that was even his name. “I’m
sorry I failed to live up to your expectations.”

“As am I,” Stiglitz said as he approached the bed on which
Jericho was seated. The agent pulled up the only chair in the room and swung it
easily around in front of Jericho before sitting down and leaning across the
chair’s back. His eyes snapped up and down Jericho’s shackled form and he shook
his head before sighing, “I suppose you know why I’m here?”

Jericho nodded. Ever since his capture at the hands of the
police quad he had known it would only be a matter of time before Stiglitz
would arrive—and for better or worse, he had done so almost precisely on
Jericho’s presumed schedule. “You were overseeing Governor Keno’s security,” he
said, and Agent Stiglitz nodded approvingly, “but once the only real threat to
your assignment was confirmed as being captured, you decided to perform the
interrogation personally. You couldn’t risk whatever information he might have
getting out in the open.”

Stiglitz sighed again, this time in bitter disappointment.
“Such a keen mind,” he said wistfully. “It will almost be a shame to dissect
it…you could have been so much more. You know that, yes?”

“I’d prefer if we get down to business,” Jericho said,
meaning every word. He knew that Stiglitz had the ability, opportunity, and
motive to kill him in that cell, and Jericho wasn’t going to beg for mercy in
what may actually be his final hours of life.

“As you wish,” Stiglitz agreed as he stood from the chair.
“I assume physical coercion will prove less than fruitful with you as a primary
interrogative measure. And I cannot risk the possibility of hidden failsafe
chemicals built into your body which would react…” his lips twisted in a dark
smirk, “undesirably with truth serums.”

“So far, so good,” Jericho said evenly.

Agent Stiglitz picked up the chair easily and carried it to
the far side of the room, where he placed it neatly in the corner. “Of course,
I don’t have time for the standard psychological breakdown methods,” he
continued easily as he assessed the room with a critical eye, “and neither do I
have the required materials to conduct direct nervous stimulation without
running the risk of damaging you irreparably prior to my extraction of whatever
might be locked away in that beautiful brain of yours.”

“Keep going, Stiglitz,” Jericho said smugly, “it sounds like
you’ve got it all worked out.”

Stiglitz gave Jericho a feigned look of having been wounded.
“My dear Adjuster, what do we have if we abandon the social pleasantries?”

Jericho grimaced as the other man approached, removing his
black gloves as he did so to reveal unnaturally pale hands. “I think that would
be ‘meaningful exchanges of information’,” he replied evenly. He very much did
not look forward to what was about to happen, but he knew he had no choice but
to endure it.

Stiglitz sighed again before shaking his head. “Very well,”
he tossed the gloves onto the bed beside Jericho and reached down to place a
hand on either side of Jericho’s face. He seemed to search Jericho’s eyes for
several moments, while Jericho met his gaze evenly as he fought to keep his
breathing under control. “Nothing but prey,” Agent Stiglitz said with a
genuinely crestfallen look.

Jericho’s entire body was wracked with a violent spasm that
was so powerful he actually blacked out—the first time that had happened since
he was a boy—and when he came to he was lying on the cold, stone floor of the
cell with his face in a puddle of what he assumed was his own vomit.

“But don’t worry,” Stiglitz said as he wiped his pale hands
on Jericho’s jacket, “a true hunter never makes its prey suffer unnecessarily.”

Jericho felt a cold sensation on his leg but before he could
realize what it was his body was wracked with another overpowering jolt of electricity,
and once again he blacked out.

 

“Adjuster?”
Jericho heard
Stiglitz’s voice at the edge of his awareness, and shook his head to clear the
cobwebs. He became aware that he was seated on the chair which Stiglitz had
placed in the corner, and he rolled his head around until he saw with no small
measure of relief that the bed was still in its original location.

“I’m sorry,” Jericho said
,
his
words coming sluggishly as he fought to work his jaw up and down, “could you
repeat the question?”

Agent Stiglitz chuckled lightly. “Twelve rounds of directed
neural-interference charges and your prefrontal cortex is still firing on all
synapses,” he said with a note of genuine respect. “I’m impressed,
Adjuster…it’s a pity we can’t donate the remains of your nervous system to
science. You’ve likely got some unique anatomical structures in place.”

Jericho focused on Stiglitz and saw that he was holding a
small blade in one hand and rolling something between the fingers of his other
hand which seemed to have drawn his absolute attention. As Jericho’s eyes
slowly locked in on the object, he realized it was a disembodied finger.

He unnecessarily looked down at his left hand and saw that
his index finger was now missing, but there was surprisingly little blood
around the wound.

“You didn’t even scream,” Stiglitz said with open
appreciation before tossing the finger off to the side of the room like an
unwanted snack wrapper. “I must say I am impressed with you, Jericho Bronson—if
that is even your name.”

Jericho chuckled as he closed his eyes and lolled his head
back. But before he could even relax his neck, Stiglitz’s hand was behind his
head and the Agent forced Jericho’s face forward to meet his eyes. After a
moment Jericho nodded, “That’s my name, all right.”

“We’ll discover the truth of that—and much more—soon
enough,” the Agent promised. Jericho glanced up to the wall above the door and
saw that the light was still red. Stiglitz’s eyes tracked with Jericho’s and he
snickered softly. “You’re the most dangerous criminal in the Sector, and they
only posted three guards between the lobby and your cell,” he said as he took
Jericho’s mutilated left hand in his own and gently isolated the thumb.
“Unfortunately for them, it’s a mistake for which they can longer atone.”

Jericho’s left thumb erupted in pain and by the time he
looked down he saw Stiglitz’s delicate-looking fingers had crushed the first
knuckle and blood was oozing out of his skin. With a slight adjustment of his
grip, Agent Stiglitz crushed the nerve bundle between the now-ruined thumb and
the first metacarpal, and Jericho was bathed in an unremitting wave of nausea
and vertigo. He was vaguely aware of something hot being pressed against his
thumb, and when his vision returned he saw that his thumb was also missing but,
surprisingly, there was very little blood.

“Remarkable,” Stiglitz said ecstatically. “Not even one
sound of protest,” he mused as he examined Jericho’s thumb thoughtfully, “are
you sure you’re human?”

Jericho would have quipped something in reply, but he was
still fighting the nausea which threatened to empty his stomach once again.

“It’s no matter,” the Agent said before Jericho heard a
muffled thunk, which he assumed was his thumb hitting the floor, “we’ll unlock
your secrets soon enough.” Stiglitz took a hold of Jericho’s ring finger, and
his grip was almost delicate as he caressed the back of Jericho’s hand and
said, “I’ve got all night.”

 

Masozi clung to the top of the maglev train as it sped
across the sprawling city. It stopped every five minutes or so, and going by
her helmet’s displayed chronometer nearly an hour had passed.

“Coming up on our stop, babe,” Eve said as her image
re-appeared after a lengthy absence—an absence which Masozi had considered a
mixed blessing. “Get ready to hop off on the L-street junction; we’ll reach it
in ten seconds.”

“Can you please cut with the ‘babe,’ ‘sweetie,’ and
‘bakeshop’ crap?” Masozi snapped. “It’s really demeaning.”

“No can do, sugar,” Eve replied promptly. “It’s just the way
I am. Besides, it wouldn’t be any fun talking the way you do,” she quipped.
“Three…two…one…jump!”

Masozi saw the L-street junction and leapt from the maglev
toward a nearby alley. Her body hurtled toward the far wall of the alley some
forty feet above ground level, but once again her impact was dulled
significantly by some sort of invisible field. Her hands locked onto the
building’s surface just like they had done on the apartment building, and after
taking a moment to catch her breath she crawled down to the street level below.

“Good work,” Eve said approvingly as a small, three
dimensional
map
appeared with a route already plotted
out. “Head to the sewer junction three hundred meters from our location and
I’ll open the lock. Step inside and we’ll be one step away from laying an epic
smack down on Ms. High-And-Mighty Governor.”

“The sewer?”
Masozi repeated as she
stepped warily out onto the sidewalk. There was bustling foot traffic just
thirty meters away as people appeared to be filing more or less uniformly
toward the city’s center. She was amazed that no one saw her, and nearly jumped
out of her suit when a man and woman walked past her. They had come within two
meters of touching her but neither had made any indication they had seen her.

“My mission packet says we’ll gain access to our final
protocols once we’ve reached the point at the end of Waste Removal Tunnel B-5,”
Eve explained. “I can’t wait to see what other toys this baby’s got in store
for us.”

Masozi steeled her nerves and, after looking both ways,
crossed the street. Weaving through the horde of foot traffic became difficult
when it was necessary to cross the seemingly endless flow of people, and Masozi
muttered, “Where are they all going?”

“The Governor’s having a concert,” Eve replied
matter-of-factly. “All seventy thousand tickets sold out in twelve minutes when
they were made available just over a year ago. Off-world critics rate her music
anywhere from ‘offensively bad’ to ‘a public health hazard’,” Eve added with
obvious sarcasm, “but the people here just eat it up.”

Masozi looked down the L-street after weaving her way
through the press of bodies—thankfully avoiding physical contact as she did
so—and saw a massive coliseum with the words ‘Keno Live!’ emblazoned on what
looked to be a permanent display built into the facility’s structure.

When she found the sewer access hatch, Masozi waited for a
trio of passersby to round the corner before kneeling beside it and asking,
“How do we open this?”

“Just put your right arm down next to it and I’ll crack it open
wirelessly,” Eve replied confidently. Masozi did as Eve suggested and a series
of images swirled around Eve’s digital avatar in the helmet’s display system.
Eve manipulated the images almost too quickly to see, and as she did so her
face scrunched with what looked to be annoyance. After a few seconds the hatch
popped open, and Eve mimed dusting off her hands, prompting Masozi to lift the
lid and descend the ladder into the dark tunnel below.

As soon as she had cleared the hatch, it closed behind her
and its locking bolts reengaged.
“How far from here, Eve?”
Masozi asked, thankful that the suit prevented her from smelling whatever might
have otherwise been wafting into her nostrils.

“This plan involves taking the Governor backstage between
sets,” Eve replied as they reached the bottom of the ladder and Masozi’s HUD
showed a relatively straight path to their destination. “With the coliseum
about a kilometer from here, we should be in position in ten minutes.”

Masozi wound her way through the sewer tunnels, glad to find
that the city’s sewage appeared to be confined to a large pipe running down
each tunnel. Running while wearing the suit required considerably less effort
than she had expected, and she actually suspected it was less draining than
moving without it.

Before long she came to the end of their route and Masozi
looked up to see a ladder which looked nearly identical to the one which she
had descended eight minutes earlier.

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