The Independent Worlds (The Sixteen Galaxies Book 2) Read online

Page 19


  “Well,” Mandy said, “I’m looking for a young man by the name of John Crabtree; he served in the army with my son.”

  The woman’s face clouded over. She took a step back and folded her arms across her chest. “Oh yeah? What you want with the Crabtree boy?”

  Mandy had a story all worked out. After all, stories were her life. “My son passed away two and a half months back.” She turned and stared out the window. “I hardly knew him after he came back from overseas. It was like some part inside of him were missing. He wouldn’t talk to me, and he wouldn’t get help.” She raised her eyes to meet the other woman’s. She saw the stony face had softened. “It was me that found him,” Mandy whispered.

  “Oh my dear,” the woman said. “I’m so sorry.”

  “I was hoping,” Mandy continued, “to get an idea of what he went through over there; why he did what he did. I guess it would give me some closure.”

  The woman shook her head. “I hate to tell you this, but you’re out of luck, I’m afraid.”

  Mandy’s heart fell. “Oh? Why’s that?”

  “John disappeared about six months back. Him and his two brothers ain’t been seen or heard of since the government took over their property round about then. I Reckon they got themselves in a whole pile of trouble and they been arrested. They were always up to no good, those three. John should’ve stayed in the army.”

  “Oh,” Mandy said, “what a shame. Goodness, I wonder what the government wants their land for.”

  The lady shrugged. “Probably just decided to take it back.”

  “Take it back?”

  “It used to be one of them missile silos from the cold war days. John and his brothers bought it ten years ago. Probably preparing for the zombie apocalypse, knowing them three.”

  Mandy thanked the woman and took her leave. She headed up the road to the train station.

  *****

  Global News Update

  “…US president Michael Maitland announced at a press conference today that a special referendum will be held in just two weeks’ time to get the public’s opinion on the matter of global integration. ‘It’s time to decide, America. Enough blood has already been shed. Let’s get this decision over and done with.’ President Maitland called on all nations to make their minds up on where they stood on globalization. ‘There is unrest and protest the world over,’ he said, ‘And all country’s leaders must take responsibility before the situation degrades even further.’ Both the Japanese prime minister and the French president have already publicly agreed with President Maitland on the need for referendums in their countries. It is expected many more will follow suit.”

  *****

  Kestil’s base

  John Crabtree scowled at the map of the base. “Our defenses are negligible, Kestil. Assault rifles, a couple of heavy machine guns, and a few SAM launchers. If they get any kind of attack vehicle, like a Bradley, or a troop carrier, near this place…”

  Kestil waved a hand. “They won’t, John. My AI has the place covered by satellite 24/7. No vehicle could get near this place. Besides, it can simply shut their vehicle down via it’s CPU.”

  John tapped a finger on the map. “Some vehicles don’t have CPU’s, in case of an EMP attack. But what about an airborne assault?”

  Kestil laughed. “How do they keep an aircraft aloft without electronics?” He patted John on the back. “Relax, John. They can’t even find the place without accessing the human network. I’m sure we have enough firepower for any group that managed to get this far. Besides, Maitland assured me he could supply aircraft for any serious threat.”

  John rubbed his forehead. “Alright. I’m headed upstairs. Me and Barney are going to walk the perimeter; make sure of no unwelcome visitors.”

  Kestil nodded. “You go ahead and do that, John. I can assure you, though; there is no risk of an attack.”

  *****

  Western Queensland

  Mandy sat with Nuthros, Ron and Jack. She hadn’t acknowledged Jack’s presence in any way since she returned two hours ago, and he took it on the chin. They pored over the survey maps Mandy had brought back with her. She had circled John’s base in red pen. There were only three old missile silos anywhere near Cutlass Creek. Two were still privately owned, and the other had been resumed by the federal government seven months ago; it was a no-brainer.

  Ron pointed to the ridges that ran either side of the base. “We need a look from either of those ridges. The old realty photos from when John bought it show virtually nothing.”

  A hologram of the entire base suddenly appeared on the tabletop. “What the hell?” Mandy said. “I busted my ass to get those photos and maps, and you had details the whole time, Truly?”

  “No, I did not, Mandy. I had no location for the base until you arrived with the maps. Once I had the location, I used a satellite feed and some other information to construct that schematic. I have just completed planning for David’s recovery.”

  Nuthros sat bolt upright. “You accessed a satellite?! How could you do that without an attack from Kestil’s AI?”

  “Because, Nuthros my man,” Garth said from the doorway, “my buddy Noddy is the most badass hacker you ever will meet.”

  They all stared dumbfounded at Garth. He laughed. “What, you think me, Noddy and the others just been hanging out playing video games while you guys try to save the world? Come on! We have, with a little help from Truly, well, a lot of help from Truly, built a rockin’ monster PC hooked up to some seriously off-the-planet hardware that gives us a way in undetected.” He warded off Mandy’s warning glare with upraised hands. “Even I don’t know all the details; only Truly does. Noddy got us into the K-band satellite internet. We also got into a few other satellites, including the one Truly used.”

  Ron clapped his hands. “Right, then. Well done Garth, and thank the other boys, too. Okay, Truly, run us through it, please.”

  Truly increased the size of the hologram, and manipulated it as she spoke. “From what I have been able to glean,” Truly began, “Kestil’s base is a refurbished Atlas F missile silo. However, they have made some changes. The Only access to the base itself is through the silo; a huge vertical shaft. It is 52 feet in diameter and 180 feet deep. It has two concrete doors at the top, which are closed hydraulically from the control center, here, near the surface. The control center is heavily guarded, and we shall avoid the need to access it. The doors at the top of the shaft are always open, but they have been made fully operational, and will doubtless be closed at the first sign of an attack. Ron and Jack will have to drop into the silo before those doors close. The real issue, though, is the heavy steel blast door they have installed at the very bottom of the shaft. The blast door is opened from the area immediately inside the new complex, and is guarded around the clock by a team of at least six armed men.”

  Ron frowned. “How could you tell all that from a satellite image?”

  “The US government took over security and maintenance for the complex seven months ago, Ron. The maintenance contractors installed all the upgrades and, naturally, stored all the measurements and specifications off-site. Graeme hacked their database just over an hour ago. I now know as much as anyone about this place.”

  “I told ya,” Garth said, “Noddy’s one badass hacker, man.” He lost his broad grin as they all stared at him. “Sorry,” he mumbled, “I guess I’ll go back and hang out with the other guys.” He shuffled off down the corridor.

  “They have constructed an entire separate facility at the bottom of the shaft,” Truly continued, “and that is where David will be held. There is an elevator built into the side of the shaft to get to this area, but that will be deactivated as soon as the alarm sounds. The new part of the facility is four levels deep, and the laboratory and computer areas are on the bottom level.”

  “Naturally,” Jack sighed.

  “There is a stairwell in the south-west corner, and that is the only way down to the lower levels. Once you get through th
e blast door at the bottom of the shaft, you will go straight to the stairwell.”

  Ron shook his head. “This gets to be more fun by the minute.”

  “The entire complex is powered by three large generators, which are on the third level down and towards the north-west corner. You shall not need to access these to offline the power, though.”

  “Well,” Jack said, “it all looks perfectly impossible and we’re all going to die. I take it you have all these problems covered, Truly?”

  “I have developed a plan, Jack, yes. I have fabricated the necessary equipment to get through the blast door and turn off the power. The weapons you require are in the locker room, along with a rucksack each.”

  “Right then,” Jack replied, “let’s tool up and get ourselves to Oklahoma, shall we?”

  “Actually, Jack,” Truly said, “you and Ron are off to Arizona. The rest are staying here.”

  Ron and Jack looked at each other. “Arizona?!” Jack said. “What’s the deal with that, Truly?”

  “You will see when you get there, Jack. You will be portaled there in just under two hours.”

  “Why do we have to wait two hours?” Ron asked.

  “To avoid detection from satellites, Ron,” Truly replied.

  Jack frowned. “What are we supposed to do for two hours?”

  “I don’t know what Ron’s going to do,” Mandy said, “but you’re coming for a walk with me.”

  17

  Kestil’s base

  David’s mind was on fire. The pain was easily ignored; he could simply shut down any noisy pain receptors and feel nothing. It was the constant probes that Kestil’s AI sent that ate away at him. Relentless pinpricks of test code designed to capture fragments of the matrix that guarded his brain; to understand and interpret the ever-shifting structure and resolve a key to unlock the algorithms and gain access.

  He knew it would succeed in the time frame he had predicted for Kestil. There’d been no need to lie about it. Either the plan he and Truly put in place months ago worked, and he was freed, or the AI got in and extracted all the data it needed to rebuild itself yet again; this time based on David’s brain structure. The architecture of David’s mind made a quantum computer look like a child’s toy abacus. But even such advanced design would cave in eventually to the constant bombardment it currently endured. He and Truly knew the risk they were taking. If Kestil’s AI succeeded and rebuilt itself again, they would lose the Earth, and mankind with it.

  *****

  Western Queensland

  Mandy and Jack sat opposite one another at a table adjacent to the pool. Neither spoke for a while. Both had spent enough time around Nuthros to become accustomed to periods of silence before conversation.

  Eventually Mandy took a deep breath. “I will ask you this just once, Jack. You can either give me an honest answer here and now, or refuse. If you refuse, I will never ask you again. I will assume you did kill them, and I will spend the rest of my life attempting to make you pay for what you did. I don’t know how, but you will have to kill me to stop me. Do you understand?”

  Jack nodded. Mandy’s heart pounded; she had waited so long for this moment; ever since Kestil told her Jack had murdered her parents. She gave an involuntary shiver. “Right; a simple yes or no. Did you kill my parents?”

  Jack looked up and held her gaze. “No. I did not kill your parents, Mandy.”

  Mandy’s head spun. She felt an immense weight lifted off her shoulders. “Then why did Kestil-”

  Jack grabbed her hands in his. “I did not kill them Mandy, but I was sent to.”

  *****

  Chicago, Illinois, 2005

  He watched the fire start; a perfect set. With the match still in his hand, he ran for the back door, where his exit was interrupted by a right fist to his face.

  Karl Winters reeled back, with blood flowing freely from a broken nose. He reached behind him and whipped out a combat knife, all too conscious of the warmth from the blaze that rapidly grew behind him. He sized up the man who blocked his path and apprehension washed over him. This chap was slightly crouched and up on the balls of his feet; every inch a pro. Karl saw that the bloke was soaked through; water dripped off him, but Karl couldn’t remember it raining outside. He shoved that aside in his mind as irrelevant. Winters knew he was sent as a backup, when the first operative failed to complete the mission. He couldn’t be sure the man that blocked his path was the original operative, but that would be his best guess. If it was, then he’d had a change of heart.

  Karl felt the heat on his back, and he fought back a cough as tendrils of smoke curled around him. He feinted a sweep with the knife, then snaked the blade around and drove it in a straightforward lunge at his opponent’s chest. His thrust was sidestepped, and he stumbled forward slightly. He kept going, then turned and swept the knife in a sideways slash. The laser-sharpened blade sliced through cloth and connected with flesh. His opponent grunted in pain. Karl shifted his weight and put a sidekick into the wounded man’s ribs. He was rewarded with a satisfying crack. The other man gasped and staggered back. The heat was intense, and the first smoke alarm went off.

  Desperate to end the fight and get out, Karl lunged at the throat, but his opponent’s haphazard steps backwards were a ruse. Karl tried desperately to pull back as the man stepped sideways and grabbed his knife hand. A tight twist and a hard squeeze on the carpal tunnel released the knife, which the man then grabbed and drove into Karl’s chest with all his strength. Karl’s legs buckled under him and he went down. The light around him dimmed, and he knew he was done for.

  Justin Blake pulled the knife from the dying man’s chest, and quickly searched him for the USB drives. He found and pocketed them, then bent down near the floor and took a deep breath. Justin plunged headlong into the flames without the slightest hesitation. The stairs were ablaze but he made it up them; his hair singed and clothes smoking. The minutes he’d lost drenching himself with the garden hose outside were well worth it. He went for the daughter first; he knew that’s what Peter Somers would want. The alarm had obviously roused the girl, but the smoke had overcome her before she could get out. He found her unconscious on the bedroom floor.

  Justin swept her up and kicked out the window. He cleared as much glass as he could with his boot before he pushed Mandy through. He followed her out and they both went for an untidy tumble down the portico roof outside. Broken glass cut into them both, but the alternative was much worse. He could hear cries from next door and sirens in the distance. They both landed heavily on the outdoor setting below. He checked Mandy; she was still out cold, with cuts and bruises all over, but she’d live. He dragged her clear of the belching smoke, and out onto the back lawn. Justin threw a quick glance inside the house, but the place was an inferno; the parents were goners. He staggered out to the back fence and somehow got himself over it.

  He lay on the other side for a moment to catch his breath, but he could hear people everywhere, now. He got up and ran for his car, which was parked on the other side of the little park he was in. As he drove away, the area was a sea of flashing red and blue lights.

  *****

  Western Queensland, Present Day

  Mandy gently pulled her hands out of Jack’s grip and sat back. It dawned on her that she hadn’t tried to free them the whole time he’d talked. Jack sat and stared into space. His mind was still back in the flames and blood of that murderous night. He’d unloaded a burden with the weight of twelve years on it, Mandy realized. But she knew he had many more years of secrets bottled up inside him.

  She gazed at him; this man she hadn’t really known at all for twelve years. What did it do to you, she wondered, when you discovered that all the dark acts you performed for years of your life were nothing more than the worst of crimes? In another era, he’d be a hero; an unsung legend, a defender of the crown. But this wasn’t those times. What did good and bad even mean anymore?

  Her mind turned to the people that sent him. Those that honed an
d sharpened him into a weapon of hell-bent destruction. This Hilary woman, her department, even the British government itself; what gave them the right to decide who lived, and who died? And what did their victims die for? To cover the tracks of some greedy, aristocratic low-life who wouldn’t hesitate to spit on a man like Jack if he felt so inclined.

  A question came to Mandy’s mind. It was a good question, she thought. “Why all the years since then, Jack?”

  Jack roused himself from his reverie. “Hmm?”

  “Why spend all those years with me?”

  He looked down at his hands. “I…I had to save something out of the wreckage, I guess. I had to do what I could to atone for the wrongs of the past.” He sat back, but still held her gaze. “I couldn’t bring your parents back to you, and I’ve lived with that every day since. But, at least I could save you. I decided to stay as close as I could, so I took an identity and a job that would keep me as close as I could get.”

  Mandy shook her head. “What about the oil company? What about your department? You could have used the flash drives and brought the whole thing down around yourself.”

  He gave her a bitter smile. “That’s not how it works, Mandy. All I would have brought down was me.” He looked away. “And those around me, most likely. I worked in the dirty end of town, Mandy. That’s where the bad guys always win.”

  “No, I don’t believe that,” Mandy replied. “You should have exposed them; finished my Dad’s work. Why have you just kept yourself hidden all these years?”

  “You don’t understand how powerful and determined these people are, Mandy. They have dozens of guys like me, and they can always get more. They’d just keep sending them until we were dead.”

  “That doesn’t make it right to do nothing,” she retorted. She felt the heat rise in her forehead. She knew it was unfair, but she couldn’t stop herself. “You always told me the kill was worth the fight; they were your words, dammit. Time and again you told me that. Whenever I wanted to quit, whenever it got too tough. And the whole time, you were too gutless to-”