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131.
'Huh! My point exactly.'
'But/ Trask countered, 'if he does have such a right, why doesn't he already know? If he's been denied access, it must be for a reason. In which case, what right have I to give him access now?'
McGilchrist shook his head, frowned again. 'Well, doubtless ye ken well enough what ye're on about, but Ah'm as much in the dark as Jake here! Can ye no gi' me a startin' point?'
'Oh, yes,' Trask answered. 'That I can do. Just a week ago Jake was in jail in Italy, Turin, when-' 'Undercover?' the hypnotist cut in.
'Er, no/ said Trask, and the big Scot sat back and scratched at his beard musingly. 'Anyway/ Trask went on, 'Jake escaped from the prison, barely.
But it's the way he escaped that interests us. And it's where he escaped to .. / 'Eh?' said McGilchrist. 'Escaped to ... ?' 'To Harry's Room, Grahame/ Trask told him. 'You'll remember Harry's Room, at E-Branch HQ?'
'Ah!' The other stopped scratching on the instant, staredhard at Trask, and harder still at Jake. 'He escaped there, ye say?'
'Arrived there/ said Tr ask. 'But the question is, was he brought there, or did he come of his own volition ... or was he sent? And if the latter, by whom was he sent?' And again: 'AW.' said McGilchrist. 'Verra well, then that'll be our st artin' point: the prison, the escape/ He unb.u.t.toned a tartan s.h.i.+rt pocket, took out a small vial and uncorked it, gave it to Jake and said, 'Sit down here and swally that/ Jake sat, looked at the colourless liquid in the vial suspiciously. 'Do what?' he said.
'It's only a wee drug/ McGilchrist was completely matter-of-fact about it. 'We've had truth drugs a long time now, stuff ye had tae inject. But we've come a ways since then. This isnae a truth drug, but it does open the mind ... it lets ye see more clearly intae yere own past. Aye, and it lets ye talk about it! Oh, and one other thing: it enhances mah power over ye/ 'Your power over me?' Jake didn't like the sound of that, especially since he'd already poured the draught down his gullet.
'It simply means that unless there's a verra strong post-hypnotic block on yere mind, yell gi' me all the a.s.sistance Ah require. Ye willnae hold anythin' back.'
'And if there is a post-hypnotic block? Will that mean I've been hypnotized before?'
'Well, if no hypnotized, ye'll have been got at, certainly/ 'And you'll be able to clear it?'
'Man, Ah cannae make ye that kind o' promise/ McGilchrist was honest about it.
'As Ben here will tell ye, there's hypnotists ... and then there's hypnotists. And if what he fears has been here first.. / He shrugged.
'I understand/ said Jake, though in fact he didn't.
'Now, that's a fast-actin' drug that's in ye/ McGilchrist continued, 'so Ah'd best be tellin' ye one or two things. Ye're tae sit verra still and upright in yere chair; oh, dinnae fret, Ah wouldnae let ye topple over. And ye're tae look at me, at mah eyes. Verra big and black, mah eyes, are they no?'
They were very big and black, and Jake's head was beginning to spin oh so slowly, languidly at first, but gradually getting faster; as if he were drunk, flat on his back on a bed, and the room spinning around him but without th e sick feeling.
'And here's me bringin' mah eyes closer, lookin' at ye, and lookin intae ye/ McGilchrist's voice was so very low now, like the growl of a great wolf. So low, so dark, and so close. 'Ah'm lookin' intae ye, and ye're lookin'
intae mah eyes, or is it ma h eye? For see, there's only one o' they now! The two have merged intae one, like a wee swirly black hole in mah face.
Or maybe a big black hole? And it's suckin' at ye, Jake, suckin' at ye .. / It was indeed. That blackest of black holes, spinning faster and faster. And Jake felt its lure, its attraction. G.o.d, if he could back out of this now he would! But he couldn't. And: 'Dinnae fight it, laddie/ said a voice that burned in his head.
Just let it go, and come to me. Open up to Grahame/ And then: 132.
133.
The black hole had him! He was sucked in and whirled like a bug down a plughole. It was as quick as thought; it had happened before he could even cry out, if he had been able to ...!
Paolo has slid a length of rubber tubing over the links of the chain to deaden its clanking. Now he looks at me, gives me the nod, and I cup my bands far him.
He steps into my hands, and I can smell his groin ... he smells of fear, and I imagine I do, too. Thank Cod there's no moon!
He's up on my shoulders now, swinging the chain. I hear it swish through the dark night air... hear it clatter, too, just the once but enough to make me grit my teeth. And now there's a sc.r.a.ping sound as Paolo hauls on the chain, fattening the roll of barbed wire to the top of the wall. But he's done it! Paolo is on his way up the chain!
I look up; his head and shoulders are silhouetted against the black horizon of the wall. He clings to the chain with his right hand, takes the blanket from around his neck and lobs it up and over. The wire is covered. d.a.m.n.' The man's a genius!
Now he's balanced up there with one leg over the wall, and he's reaching down for me. My heart is thudding, hammering away in my chest, but at last I'm on the chain. Up I go, and I reach for Paolo's hand. But what? What? He withdraws it!
I don't believe it! (But I do, I do! I just knew it was too b.l.o.o.d.y easy!) And I cling to the chain and look up at him, look into his eyes that are looking down into mine. Except now they look beyond me, into the night.
And dangling there, I glance over my shoulder and see them: prison guards, armed and taking aim across the exercise yard. I look up at Paolo, and his sweat falls on me like rain.
He gives a shrug, says: 'I sorry, Jake, but they promise me ...'
And then he jerks and I hear the shot. And now Paolo's blood splashes me as his right eye turns black.
He's falling, taking me with him ... we hit the ground like a ton of bricks! Paolo's body is on top of me, w hich is just as well, because I can feel it jerking, shuddering to the sound of more gunshots. I struggle under his dead we ight, somehow manage to throw him off and rise into a crouch.
But G.o.d, I'm a dead man - I have to be! Fat white sparks light the night like angry fireflies where bullets ricochet off the wall and spit concrete splinters at me. But now- -Now there's a spark that... that isn't a spark! 1 don't understand it, haven't the time to understand it. But it hovers there like a golden dart, level with my eyes, only twelve inches away, seeming to follow my movements as I dodge bullets.
And now it moves, too. And I know that it has to be a bullft after all, because it smacks me right between the eyes!
And I fall face first, but I can't feel it when I hit the ground. Of course I can't feel it, because you don't feel anything when you're dead.
Dead and weightless and rus.h.i.+ng somewhere, rus.h.i.+ng out of my body, I suppose.
Rus.h.i.+ng to heaven or h.e.l.l, if I believed. I wish I had believed now ... and I'll bet I'm not the first man who thought that! But Jesus, I'm not going out without a fight... not Jake Cutter! I struggle and twist and tumble. But this can't be right, because I can feel myself. I'm not dead yet!
And now I see a light in the darkness. I rush towards it, fall into it... No, I fall out of the darkness!
My head! G.o.d, I'm sick, dizzy, and my head ...!
But I'm not dead yet.
I'm not dead yet.
Not dead yet.
Not dead.
Not.
No. i 'It's been an hour/ said McGilchrist's voice. 'Ye ought tae be comin' out o' it now, Jake mah lad.'
Jake remembered where he was and would have jerked erect, but since he was already erect - sitting upright in his chair, just as the 'doctor' had ordered - instead he became aware of incredible cramps in all his limbs, whose pain was physical and of course far worse than the imagined thump on the head that he had 'experienced' for the second time around just a few moments ago.
He opened his eyes, tried to reach up and touch his head, maybe cradle it in his trembling hands, but even the slightest movement caused violent shooting pains in his arms and shoulders, freezing him in position. And: 134.
'35.
'G-G.o.d Almighty!' he groaned, his throat dry as kindling.
McGilchrist dropped two white pills into a gla.s.s of water, swirled them and watched them dissolve. 'These'll do ye a power o' good/ he said.
'And I ... I should believe you?' said Jake, blinking rapidly as his eyes grew accustomed to the full dawn light.
'Eh? But they're only wee aspirins, man.'' McGilchrist told him.
'For yere headache, ye ken? Which is a side effect o' that draught o' mine. What, d'ye really think Ah'd poison ye?'
Slowly, Jake allowed himself to slump in his chair. And as his blood began to circulate and pins and needles t ook over from the true pain, so he took the gla.s.s and drank. And then he remembered not only what had gone before, but also something of his regression.
Again he straightened up, but much more carefully now, and said, 'That dart. A golden dart or splinter. I seem to remember it... it entered my head?'
'Just like you told me,' Liz Merrick sighed from where she sat close to him. 'Except you didn't call it a dart.'
Jake carefully turned to squint at her through the tent's luminous air. And Ben Trask said, 'I think that's all we needed to know. It makes any further questions I might have academic, conjectural, meaningless. For the time being, anyway.' He, too, was seated - looked like he needed to be - and his voice was trembling to match Jake's limbs.
'Great,' said Jake, unsteadily. 'Fine. So now that all of your questions are answered, how about mine?'
'Yours?' said Trask, stopped dead in his tracks. And: 'Ah, well!
We'll deal with those shortly, yes. And Jake, I'm really, really very sorry about that - I mean, that I had to be so secretive.
I'm sure you'll understand when you know it all.'
'But for the next few minutes/ said McGilchrist, with his ma.s.sive hand on Jake's shoulder, 'ye're tae take it easy, until ye're back o n yere feet. And then ye should stop worryin' about wh at's happened tae ye. Ye're in the verra best o' hands, after a'.'
136.
The stiffness was draining from Jake's limbs and his headache was in recession. 'Did I do okay?' he said, looking at Ben Trask. 'Did you get all you wanted? It was that dart, right? It was that dart that I thought was a bullet. What in h.e.l.l was the thing?'
But while Jake was beginning to feel okay, Trask was still shaken. 'It's not so much what it was,' he replied, 'as what it is, but definitely. And what that makes you.'
'Makes me?' Sensing something of Trask's quandary, perhaps his reluctance to accept whatever he was having to accept, Jake had stopped feeling okay on the instant. Now, frowning, he said 'How do you mean, what it makes me? What I am is plain: a fugit iv e from so-called justice, hiding out under the protection of E- Branch. Unless you've changed your mind, that is. Is that it?
Did you learn something that makes you want to throw me ba ck to the wolves? Am I in fact the sick, psychotic killer that people have been made to believe I am?' And perhaps Trask would have started to tell him there and then, but at that moment lan Goodly's piping, excited voice was heard from across the clearing: 'Ben, Ben!' the precog was calling. 'Those serials. I know which ones are missing. And I think we're in a lot of trouble!'
'Think?' Trask called from the open door of his tent.
'I know we are,' Goodly was closer now, and his voice commensur-ately less strident. 'I've seen it coming, Ben,' he said, heading towards Trask's tent at a fast, agitated lope.
'Trouble with a capital "T", yes. So whatever it is you're doing, put it aside for now. This is just as important - maybe more so - and I think you need to hear me out'
As Trask ducked out under the tent's awning, Liz took hold of Jake's hand and said, 'No one thinks badly of you Jake. What you told us when you were under only serves to corroborate what Ben Trask has been hoping all along. But that's for him to tell you, not me. And as for throwing you to the wolves ... au contrain, Jake Cutter: on the contrary. But it could be his intention to throw you at them ..
Ten minutes later, Trask had called his small nucleus of Branch people to him. And at the last moment he'd invited Liz and Jake into the briefing. Everyone was crowded into his tent.
Wasting no time, when all of his people had arrived, Trask said, 'I won't make a meal of this and as soon as we're through here I want you to start packing up. I'd like to be out of here A.S.A.P. Ops truck and vehicles: strip them of everything important to us because we're leaving them behind. Our next target is too far away that we can simply drive to it. It was possible we might have stayed just as we are now, but something has come up. Our Aussie friends will have to follow on behind us, but as the brains behind the brawn, as it were, time is a luxury we've just run out of. So ... what's the big hurry, eh?
'Well, you all know about our Mr Miller. But you don't know all about him. To recap: Miller's some kind of nut who believes in friendly aliens, and despite that he's seen the enemy pretty close up he thinks that we are the butchers! He thinks the work we did last night was a totally unjustified pre-emptive strike against a landing party of explorers from outer s.p.a.ce, and that they only turned nasty in order to survive. He has even written books on the etiquette of first contact. So obviously, in Miller's warped perceptions, we're sadly lacking in manners.
'It doesn't matter that our "aliens" are stinking, murderous vampires from a parallel world; Miller's mania would never accept that. He doesn't believe a word I've said to him - probably doesn't even believe they're vampires - but he does think he can talk to them ...
'Well, that in itself wouldn't be a problem. His own people can look after him, lock him up or do whatever they deem necessary to make him look like an idiot - which he is - if Miller should start babbling his "crazy stories" about our work to the press or other sensationalist outlets. So when I found out that he'd made a run for it, in a way I was pleased. At least he was out of my hair. Yes, but that was before I discovered what he'd taken with him.
'People, last night our locators at London HQ, headed up by David Chung, found us a new target: they detected a hitherto unsuspected patch of mindsmog on the other side of the Australian continent. It was only there for a moment - someone's mental s.h.i.+eld slipped, sha ll we say? - but it was the real thing, the unmistakable signature of a Lord of the Wamphyri.
I'm talking about a Lord, yes. And what we have to remember is that the Thing we went up against last night, Bruce Trennier, that was a mere l ieutenant - someone in thrall to a Lord - left behind by his maker and master for whatever reason.
'Okay, this mindsmog: it was detected at the same time - I mean precisely the same time - as we were dealing with Trennier. Now, we know that many of the Wamphyri had the power of telepathic contact with their thralls even over great distances, so it's possible, indeed probable, that Trennier's unknown master "felt" his lieutenant's death, and it so surprised or startled him that he let his guard down, if only for a moment. He might even have done it deliberatel y, tried to establish better contact with Trennier to find out what was happening. As for our people in London, they were lucky; someone happened to be looking in the right place at the right time, and that's when they detected the evil "aura" of a Great Vampire.
'Of course Chung forwarded this information to me, only to have it intercepted by Peter b.l.o.o.d.y Miller! And now I couldn't give a d.a.m.n about him speaking to the media or anyone else for that matter. But I do care that he might be on his way to deliver a warning to one of the worst threats our world has ever faced ...
'... A warning that we are on our way to destroy it!'
138.
139.
CHAPTER.
TEN The Vampire File When everyone with the exception of Jake and Liz was clear of Trask's tent, he opened his briefcase and plumped a thin file down on the tabje.
'Read it/ he told Jake. 'It will give you something to do for a while, for we may be here a little longer than I antic.i.p.ated. I was forgetting that we'd have to fly Grahame back home again.
Even though he's on his way now, it will still be three to three and a half hours before the chopper gets back. But on the other hand, and since I'd like E-Branch to move as a unit, that's probably just as well; it gives us more time to get our act together - our thoughts, too - for which I'm grateful. I hate sta rting something without being able to think i t through first/ He looked pointedly at Jake. 'That file is your chance to think things through, too. You see, I don't want anyone in the Branch who doesn't fit or doesn't want to be here. However, in the event you do decide to move on, you needn't worry about my handing you over to the law. That's not my way. I would simply wash my hands of you. But if you stay, then you're with us all the way. I have no time for quitters, and in that case I would a.s.sist the law in any way possible/ 'Huh!1 Jake answered. 'And just when I thought you'd begun to appreciate me. Okay, do you want my answer right now?' 'Read the file first/ said Trask curtly, 'then ask Lardis to tell 140.
you about Sunside/Starside. After that I'll fill you in on some of our history, bring you up to date on the current situation, and how we got here, and generally try to explain where you fit in the grand scheme of things. Oh, you'll find it lots of fun, Jake, I can guarantee that.' But despite his guarantee, Trask's words were dry as dust; he was deadly serious, his face utterly devoid of humour ...
'Oh, good!' said the other, just as drily and se emin gly unimpressed. 'I can't wait.'
'G.o.d, why him?' Trask asked under his breath, of no one in particular, as he went stamping from the tent. It was a question he would be asking himself for quite some time to come ...
'So why arejyow still here?'
Jake asked Liz.
'Because I'm good company,' she answered testily . 'Or maybe I'm maintaining some kind of balance: my good and pleasant aura versus your miserable, messed-up, self- pitying-'
'-I don't pity myself/ Jake cut in, scowling.