Operation: Minerva
It could only be trouble.
And it was that fact, more than anything
else, that diverted Magenta's attention from his worry over Ochre and the situation
up there on the mountain, as well as from the general mad he'd had going
over the happenstances that had left Rich in that particular tight and
hazardous corner.
Magenta liked his colleagues; for the most part
he always had. But they were his co-workers and comrades-in-arms and there were
few enough of them that he really considered friends. Ochre was at the
top of that particular list, something that had come as a surprise to everyone
back in the early days. Those that had known his background had welcomed him in
despite it, but never wholly trusted him, not at first, not for a long time.
Most of them had tried, but none of them had come from the streets; they
couldn't even help the total disconnect of empathy and understanding they had
for what destitution really meant.
Except for Rich - who hadn't come from the
streets himself, but who'd spent enough time there to learn the meaning, and
who knew that most of the things he'd done in a previous life had not
been done out of choice, but out of desperation. It had, plain and simple, been
a matter of survival.
Something that Rich had just finished fighting
for himself.
There was no point in chewing Scarlet out over
it, not just for being as human as the rest of them. Scarlet never knowingly put
any of his colleagues at risk. Scarlet was very much more often than not in
harm's way himself and he was there deliberately covering for the rest of them
whenever he was.
Human nature, he thought. The Mysterons know us
better than we think they do.
He might well have forgotten about the dog himself, had his position
and Scarlet's been reversed. There had been numerous times throughout his
larcenous past, when the success of any particular endeavor had actually hinged
on human failing. Some things never changed. Human behavior was one of
them.
Right now, Captain Magenta knew where he was
going, despite the fact that he'd only been there at Demeter for a few hours,
and had spent the better part of that time staring at a vid screen. A vid
screen that had been showing him the layout of the place, and in particular the
very corridors that were their immediate destination.
He'd been doing the homework Scarlet had
assigned him.
"Just so you know---" he called over
his shoulder at Scarlet there behind him as they pelted through the wide
hallway and into the stairwell that would take them to ground level,
"---it looks like Weller did make a foray or two upstairs from the
office - the security records were access locked. Weller's authorization. The second
trip was bang-on in the time-frame you were talking about."
"Why am I not surprised?" Scarlet
breathed the rhetorical question, then spoke rapidly into his cap mike,
overriding the patch-through to Cloudbase, going to local broadcast.
"Teal, Roan---we have a security breach in the Residency. Weller's quarters - repeat - Weller's
quarters -we're on our way - get there!
Taylor - keep the staff corralled in Admin - we don't want any of
them involved in an incident. Get
Sanchez and a crew to the main entrances, keep those accesses secure. No one
goes outside! Status reports!"
A chorus of responses flooded back.
"We're moving, sir!" Teal was the
first on the line.
"S.I.G., Captain. I've got Admin,"
Taylor acknowledged her orders.
"Teams are on their way, sir!" Sanchez
reported before Taylor had signed off.
Magenta stopped worrying about all of them - he
rounded the stairwell railing at ground level without slowing, kept moving
down, going for the underground corridor that linked Demeter Admin to the
Residency - a route faster and more secure than trying to cross the intervening
distance between the two buildings outside in the dark and the storm.
Because somebody was already out there. Maybe
more than one somebody.
Somebodies that hadn't managed to trip the
perimeter alarms. Somebodies that had targeted the same, perhaps the one and
only area of mutual interest that might have been left at Demeter.
"Betcha it's them!”Magenta
yelled as he reached the sealed fire-doors to the wide and brightly lit
passageway, skidding to a halt and keying in the code that unlocked them.
Scarlet drew level with him. "Gambling
again?"
"Sure bet---how much?" Magenta shoved the double doors wide,
gathering momentum to sprint the length of that hallway, already eyeing the
security panel on the wall at the far end, his next scheduled pit-stop.
"I'll pass. You're far too likely to
win." Scarlet was pulling a gun from his side as he ran alongside.
"Who do we know that can teleport?"
"Damn short list."
Black and Carey, Magenta was thinking. Past the
perimeter and messing around in Andrew Weller's quarters. Where Weller - the
Mysteronized Weller - may well have left something for the miscreants to find.
Something that they thought important. Something worth the trouble.
Scarlet's hunch about the security systems had
been right. Those systems had been disabled, not just once, but twice.
The first time by the human Doctor Weller. The second time by the Mysteron -
who would have known whatever it was that the original had been doing there
that first time. Or at anytime.
Maybe they would find out what it was
themselves. Maybe not.
They cleared the second set of fire doors as
quickly as the first, and were then pelting up another stairwell into the main
corridor of the Residency, into an area that could have been mistaken for the
lobby of a posh hotel. Weller's suite of rooms was on the main floor, first
hallway to the left of the lobby-like space. Magenta and Scarlet split to
either side of that door when they arrived, weapons drawn.
"You can go first." Magenta breathed,
nodding once at his colleague. "In case they have guns. In case they're
still here." Though he thought
that highly unlikely.
"If you insist." Without question or hesitation,
Scarlet raised his pistol, took aim and fired once at the door's lockset, a
stock-standard device not at all of security-grade manufacture, and it
shattered under the very first discharge.
Magenta kicked the door inwards and Scarlet
charged through---
Ice cold air hit Scarlet's face as he swung
into the open doorway with Magenta right behind him. Inside, there was a window
wide open to the blizzard, and snow already drifting across the carpet beneath
it. The darkened room was deserted. Not daring the lights, not wanting to make
himself an easily visible target, Scarlet crossed to that window, quickly and
cautiously, as Magenta checked the adjoining set of chambers, finding and
reporting them likewise empty.
But not untouched.
"Smash and grab!" Magenta called back
through the door, as Teal and Roan arrived. "We've got some vandalism by
the look of it!"
"The culprits appear to have fled,"
Scarlet cursed. "And the evidence is melting fast." Scarlet had his
hand torch out, examining the snow and the wet carpet. "One set of boot
prints inside," he reported as Magenta crossed back into that part of the
suite. "And we're going to lose
whatever's outside in no time."
"Don't disturb the crime
scene." Magenta said, sounding uncannily like Ochre might have if he'd
been there. Magenta moved for the adjacent window, motioning Teal toward
Scarlet and Roan to his own side. "They're long gone by now - it'll all be
circumstantial now." Magenta unlocked and threw that second window wide,
letting in twice the amount of storm. "Roan and I are going out to count
footprints," he announced.
"Carefully." Scarlet acknowledged,
getting on his cap mike and alerting the security team in the hangar that there
was trouble on the loose.
A potential problem there, Scarlet realized. If
the Mysterons went after the helijet - at the moment, their only
helijet, then Ochre and Godzilla were in more trouble than they all knew. He wanted to keep it in one piece long
enough to take the two-minute trip up the mountain and practice an airlift
rescue or two.
Just as soon as the weather permitted. And
before any wanna-be extreme weather hikers got there first.
Another blast of glacial air snatched his
breath away as he watched Magenta ease through the opening and drop into two
feet of snow with Roan right behind him. Scarlet leaned out his own window,
peering into the thick darkness, and finally turned on his hand torch to sweep
the grounds immediately beneath.
Deep depressions in the drift there, rapidly
filling in with more blown snow, but there and evident and numerous
enough to tell them how many sets of feet had made them.
"Two intruders." Magenta confirmed
from up close. "They approached from the left and retreated straight out.
"We're going to lose this trail fast."
Scarlet slung his legs over the sill and slid
out the window into the storm to examine the receding sets of tracks for
himself. They would have to outfit and gather gear, and no matter how fast they
moved now, the trail would be gone, lost to the storm.
Roan was already talking about going, already
looking frozen, already shivering in the snow without jacket or parka or
anything appropriate for this sort of pursuit. His own fingers were already
aching with the biting cold, body heat snatched from breath and skin by a wind
as cold and as bitter as he'd experienced once at the north pole---
Scarlet could go himself, just as he
was, let the others gather gear and follow. He could handle a bit of
frostbite, he could take that risk and hope to catch up with Carey and
Black.....
He'd taken no more than three tentative steps
that direction, and his shoulder epaulettes began to flash a rapid, urgent
white, vivid and distracting in the darkness.
He had missed the beginning.
In fact, he'd missed the whole of the Cabin
episode, and was coming into the middle of the Intruder one.
Colonel White had been Lower Decks, on his way
to the main hangar, going to personally greet Shelley Carey, whose SPJ had just
touched down only a few moments ago and whose presence he had belatedly requested
for an in-depth interview. He did not want to call it an interrogation - he did
not interrogate recent and grieving widows - but he'd had a deeply nagging
hunch that they'd been missing something important all along, and he'd wanted
to talk to the woman. Himself.
His planned Q & A session with Todd Carey's
widow would have been low-key but thorough, had it not been interrupted by not
just one, but two unexpected incidents down at Demeter.
Incidents that had occurred in the middle of the
night, in the middle of a raging snowstorm.
He'd listened in on live com, such as he could
on the express ride back up to the Control Room, having immediately turned the
widow Carey's arrival and escort to Sickbay over to Russet and Vermilion via
his cap radio, Doctor Fawn also having been as abruptly diverted from the same
task as he had been.
Lieutenant Green already had the com logs
auto-transcripted and running on scrolling display on his console monitor by
the time he arrived. He scanned them quickly, disturbed not just by the
succession of events, but by the evident concurrance of them.
His hunches were coalescing.
Belatedly.
Colonel White leaned forward and put his elbows
on the console, laced his fingers and then dropped his chin onto them, listening
without interruption as the reports from Demeter took shape.
The board is set-up now, he thought. The pieces are in
place. And the timing----
Even the time remaining was laid out. Now it
was very much a matter of when Spectrum itself would make its next move.
And every single possible move and option that
came to his mind looked bad.
Timing.
Timing, he thought again. It's been in the timing
all along. They gave us time to find Minerva. Timed their diversionary actions
for Carey to elude us. They gave Weller time to misdirect us, time to clear out
Demeter. They chose the time they wanted us to move Arthur Prince, chose the
time to frighten Doctor McLaine to her senses, timed what she spilled and when.
Gave me the time to mull over the possibilities. They timed, in precise
calculation, when to kill Weller and Prince. Timed, with the same sort of
accuracy how and when to panic the woman, and make her jump on cue the very
direction they wanted her to go. Timed it such that Spectrum was scattered and
ineffective. Timed it so that the very same storm we wanted to protect us
simply trapped us exactly and precisely where they wanted us to be.
Timed when and how to use the dog.
Timed this last move.
For he was convinced now that it was the
last move from the Mysterons, this round.
The ball was now in Spectrum's court.
"...we'll go, sir. Right now, before they
can---"
He heard the suggestion on the open line, knew
it was Roan, investigating outside in that blizzard with Magenta and Scarlet
too, advocating what could only become a self-lethal action if undertaken.
Colonel White snapped out of contemplation, unlaced his fingers and hit the
toggle that gave him all-stations broadcast through to Demeter.
"Negative on that action, Lieutenant Roan.
Spectrum is Red. Do not pursue. I repeat, do not pursue. That's an
order. Captain Scarlet, get everyone back inside. I want all color-rank
personnel in Demeter site-command for briefing - you have ten minutes."
As he'd suspected, Scarlet's instincts were
leaning the same way as Roan's. "But, Colonel White, sir---" Scarlet
protested, even as the wind whipped across the mike and garbled the words.
"But Colonel, they just can't have gone very far----"
"Which was precisely what we'd thought
earlier, when Ochre went off after Tylan McLaine, and we were wrong,
Captain. That was an order, Captain Scarlet. Move! You now have less
than ten minutes, and I want a report on just what Carey and Black were looking
for in Weller's quarters in the first place."
"Spectrum is Green, Colonel." Scarlet capitulated. Unhappily. "Scarlet
out."
Various other voices chimed in, signing off one
after another, and the colored lights on the board winked out in the same
sequence. Colonel White reached into the narrow filing drawer under the console
to retrieve the folder that was there. "Lieutenant Green - I need Doctor
Fawn up here - have him bring Blue and Grey with him if they're still in the
Infirmary. And Shelley Carey too, if he
hasn't already given her a sedative.. Page Indigo, as well. We'll need him to
escort Mrs. Carey back to guest quarters - we won't need to question her for
long. Give them twelve minutes."
"S.I.G., sir."
Which was more than enough time for him to open
the file, and find the piece of information he was looking for, even before
Scarlet reported back, eight and a half minutes later.
"Captain Scarlet, establish a
patch-through to Captain Ochre. He's going to be a key part of this briefing.
Ensure that it's a secure channel, Captain.
This entire communication is going to be level-one encrypted.
Understood?"
"Yes, sir. Stand-by."
Indigo arrived next, coming into the Control
Room from the portside doorway as he shunted the com to one-way, outbound
transmission, holding all incoming com temporarily. Only a half a moment later,
the Sickbay group filed in, Doctor Fawn escorting a bewildered widow and
trailed by Blue and Grey, both out of uniform, silent, attentive and alert, if
a trifle pale. Professionals, the two of them, senior staff, who guessed that
something was up.
White rose to his feet, moving to greet Shelley
Carey at last. "Mrs. Carey," he said gently. "Thank you for
coming. I realize it's been a long and trying week for you. My condolences,
Mrs. Carey. My apologies for the necessity. I have just one or two questions
for you, and then we can let you go back to quarters to rest. Please, sit
down."
Fawn indicated one of the stools, and Shelley
Carey sank onto it, co-operative and nodding as White resumed his own seat
behind the control desk, picking up and placing the file immediately before him
on the console. "I have a file here, Mrs. Carey, that tells me your
husband was academically very accomplished. He had both Bachelor and Masters
degrees in Science and Business Administration. Is that correct?"
The woman nodded again. "Yes, Colonel
White," she confirmed. "He did."
"And he was continuing his studies."
"He was working on his Doctorate."
"May I ask what field of study? And what
his thesis was?"
She blinked, wondering, no doubt, why it
mattered anymore. "It was Psychology," she replied. "He was
writing a paper on the Psychology of Genius."
That was it. The key, to the
entire Mysteron threat and Operation Minerva.
"A very narrow field, I'm sure. Was he blind-studying
his subjects?"
She shrugged. "I would imagine so. Or the
results would be skewed. He only told me recently what his theme was - he was
almost done." Shelley Carey's lips pressed into a tight, thin line, shaken
and trying to maintain composure. Still understandably distraught. "It
won't ever be finished now."
"Thank you, Mrs. Carey," he said
quietly. "You've been most helpful and co-operative. I think that's all we need to know for now.
Lieutenant Indigo will escort you back to quarters and standby, should you
require anything."
She nodded mutely, and left with Indigo, upset
and trying not to let it show. Colonel White waited until the door had closed,
and motioned everyone left standing to sit down as he released the lock on
incoming transmissions on the console.
"Captain Scarlet?" he queried. "Captain Ochre? Did everyone catch that conversation clearly?"
Unlike the other indicators, the yellow button
on the console flickered unsteadily. Ochre's line was static-filled, but his
voice clearly audible, despite the poor signal. “Yeah,” Ochre said,
short and worried. "We caught it."
"Demeter, S.I.G.," Scarlet replied. "That's an
affirmative, sir. And based on what I just heard, I think we've perhaps
underestimated and misconstrued Todd Carey's true role throughout the course of
this whole Operation."
"Doctor McLaine?"
There was a brief silence, followed by an
explosive "Dammit!" and
then another silence.
Colonel White sighed. "A sentiment we can
all share, I'm sure, but I was hoping for some commentary just a little more
useful than that, Doctor."
"Like what? Like it's a good thing I'm a
scientist who understands what the hell a blind study is? I'm sure Todd would
have let us read it when it was finished and we wouldn't have cared. Andy would
have been beside himself in hysterics because he never really considered
himself a genius. Personally, I'm flattered. I can tell you that Arthur would
have been. But I don't think any of that's especially useful."
"Nor do I, Doctor. However---"
"However what? How about I just state the
obvious? I've been maneuvered and manipulated!"
"We've all been maneuvered and
manipulated - so you're in very good company, Doctor McLaine." The woman was going to work herself into
another state. Colonel White kept his voice calm. "However---"
"Are you telling me that they killed Andy
and Arthur just to
make me run?!" Her voice rose in panic again, that was where it was
going. "I shouldn't be here!"
He abandoned the level tone, and raised his own
voice, wanting to secure her attention. "Trust that I'm very well aware of
that, Doctor! And I'm thinking that it's well past high time to make everyone
aware of the reason for it! I need you to be listening carefully to
Scarlet's upcoming report, Doctor, as you may just be the only person left
alive on the face of this planet that can advise us of the possible
significance behind it. What you're very likely not to be aware of at
the moment, is that we've had a very serious breach of security at Demeter.
Coordinated a little too conveniently with your own difficulties up
there at the cabin for my liking and I, for one, most certainly do not happen
to believe that any of it is pure coincidence!"
Another short silence ensued. Captain Ochre
broke it. "Go ahead, sir. We're both listening."
Colonel White drew breath. "Captain
Scarlet," he said. "May we now have your report on the situation at
Demeter, please?"
"As a 'report', sir, I'm afraid it's
liable to somewhat incomplete." Captain Scarlet replied, when he heard
Colonel White's request. "And wide open to interpretation. Everyone please
feel free to make comments and conjectures. Colonel White is correct insofar as
we've had a significant breach of security here, despite the fact that our
perimeter alarms failed to detect the evident presence of at least two persons
at large within the vicinity of Demeter R & D. The records show nothing
other than normal flux in the perimeter's sensor arrays, even with enhancements
allowing for the conditions outside. They should have tripped if the line had
been crossed. They didn't; therefore our first indication that anything was
amiss was the intruder alert that sounded when the Residency - specifically
Doctor Weller's personal quarters - was broken into and vandalized, shortly
after midnight, local time.
"Our initial investigation revealed that
two persons approached the building from the northeast on foot. Only one
entered the premises and then both retreated again, proceeding in a westerly
direction---"
"Heading this way, that means." Ochre observed, uneasily.
"Just advising the facts, Captain."
Scarlet said neutrally. It still rankled with him, just sitting there at
Demeter, orders or no, and doing nothing about it. "Pursuit
was...interdicted and we remained on-scene. We found that a concealed security
vault in Doctor Weller's quarters had been opened and we presume - though we
have no way to verify it - something was removed from that vault before the
intruder exited the premises prior to our arrival from Administration. Nothing
else in the suite seems to have been disturbed. We removed all remaining
articles from the compartment for further investigation. We're just sorting
through them now." Scarlet paused for air, watching across the work table
in the communications room as Teal and Roan methodically removed those objects
from inside the pillowcase that they'd used to bring that haul back with them
from the Residency.
"Were you aware, Doctor McLaine, that
Weller had a vault in his quarters?" Colonel White asked in the brief interlude. "Do
you have any idea what he kept there?"
"I knew there was a safe - but I don't
know what Andy kept in it. I wouldn't think it would be anything especially
important - not if it was vandalized that quickly and easily."
"Did Todd Carey know about it?" Scarlet
asked after that, glancing over to where Magenta was re-engaged at his previous
workstation, pursuing another important line of inquiry. "The Mysteron
could well have left it open for Carey, if he'd known Carey was coming."
"I knew about it. I know Arthur did. I
would have to think Todd must have...there wasn't much Andy kept from Todd.
They had a good working relationship. But I don't know that for sure. What was
left behind?"
"We'll get to that in a minute - we did
find one rather anomalous object in the room. And we think it was left there
deliberately. Magenta - what have you got?"
Magenta pulled down his cap mike, coming
directly online. "The first thing we ran across was a set of car keys
lying on the floor in Weller's quarters - the ID tag attached indicates they
belong to a vehicle from a rental agency based in Prince George - the nearest
major population center that's road-accessible to Demeter - or about as
road-accessible as far as any road towards here goes. I've managed to contact
the local authorities in Prince George - they're currently chasing down the
agency manager to see specifically who it was that rented the vehicle and when.
I've asked them to contact Lieutenant Green when they have that information,
though I think we all pretty much can guess who it was. I've also contacted the
vehicle manufacturer's sat-com center - all rental vehicles have onboard GPS
transponders installed in case of emergency, theft or abandonment. They've pinged
the car - and I have the grid-reference co-ordinates back from them."
Colonel White spoke grimly. “Go on,
Captain."
"The car is stationary - apparently parked
at the end of the road inbound, just the far side of the rockslide that blocked
ground access several years ago. And that's only fourteen kilometers upstream
of Demeter R & D, sir."
"Puts them slap-bang in the
neighborhood...." Ochre
muttered with a curse. "That's great."
"And likely they drove in under cover of
the advancing storm - just as soon as we withdrew the Angels when we lost
visibility," Colonel White concluded darkly. "A
matter of very careful timing, it would seem."
"A long and grueling hike in these
conditions," Scarlet murmured.
"They're Mysterons, Captain, and I hardly
have to tell you that they'll stop at nothing short of achieving their
objective. As we're only too well aware. Thank you for that information,
Captain Magenta." Colonel
White said. "We'll advise all personnel as soon as Green has any
further news to report. Captain Scarlet - what did you find left in Weller's
vault?"
"A variety of things, by the look of it,
sir." Scarlet cast his glance over the assortment of objects and papers
that had come out of the sack. "A stack of data disks – " he picked
them up and passed them to Magenta at his workstation. "Captain Magenta is
going to try to see what's on them for us. There are a few file folders – but
not much in them." Scarlet flipped the first open, finding only a few
sheets of hand-scrawled notes and figures. "There's a paper
airplane," he said, taking that out and carefully unfolding it.
"Andy kept that?" Godzilla seemed surprised. "He
would, I suppose…." she finished with her voice tight, as if she had a
sudden lump in her throat. "It's the original proposal," she
offered, after that. "For Minerva. Not much information in that."
Scarlet scanned it anyway – if it was about
Minerva, he was interested. He read aloud: "Memo To: Andrew Douglas
Weller, BSc., MSc., PhD, M.D., O.F. - O.F. – what's that designation?"
Scarlet asked, when his brain failed to identify the acronym.
"Uh…term of affection," she replied, hesitantly. She cleared
her throat, embarrassed. "Irrelevant."
"I'm tired of secrets, Doctor
McLaine," Scarlet snapped in response. "If you don't mind."
Godzilla bit right back. Sarcastic, deadpan and
very annoyed. "It's shorthand for 'Old Fart' – how's that for
relevancy, Captain?"
"I'll sleep better at night for knowing
it, thank you, Doctor." Scarlet rolled his eyes, and did not allow himself
to be distracted by the humor of that inside joke. If it struck anyone else
present as funny, they kept it to themselves, taking his own non-response as
cue, and said nothing aloud.
Colonel White was the only one that reacted at
all. "Don't anyone get any ideas," he muttered tersely,
because the Colonel knew that he was himself already affectionately
referred to on Cloudbase as the Old Man, even if he never heard it
directly to his face. And certainly never would have seen it in print.
Scarlet simply continued to read: "From: T. McLaine, BSc., MSc., D.V.M., G.," for Godzilla,
Scarlet didn't doubt, and didn't ask. "Date: Groundhog Day, 2067."
That pegged Minerva at just over three years old
– conception to present. "Have had a few
thoughts about Arthur's think-tank. As
follows:
1. Biochips don't work in neural nets.
2. Computers are only as good as their programs.
3. AI is therefore a bust because that means it’s still stupid.
And so:
Question # 1: How do you make Artificial Intelligence smart?
Answer # 1: You don't. You
just use Real Intelligence instead."
"Arthur said that." Blue interjected suddenly. "Almost verbatim. Vermillion had asked him about AI – and Arthur said: 'You don't
want intelligence that's artificial. You want intelligence that's real.'."
Blue quoted from memory. "We
thought it was just a put-off. That's how it came across."
Scarlet
frowned. A real answer from Arthur? Framed and presented as something
innocuously contrary? "The
handwriting changes here – the next bit says:
Question
# 2: How?"
"That
was Andy's reply. And I answered that one,"
Godzilla said. "That plane
flew across the office a few times."
"Go on, Captain," Colonel White prompted.
"It replies: Answer # 2 : you build a real neural net. And then goes on to
another Question # 3:
How?
And an
Answer
# 3: Rabies."
Scarlet turned the paper over, but the other side of it was blank. "That appears to be it, Colonel."
"That's
it." Doctor McLaine confirmed. "End of
Proposal."
"That's a project proposal?"
"It sufficed."
"Not much there, Doctor." Scarlet refolded the paper and put it back in the file.
"Which
is exactly what I told you in the first place!" Godzilla was irritated. "Stay still, Och! What else did Andy
have stashed?"
"A manual for a hand-gun." Scarlet picked up the small booklet. It answered where Weller had found the weapon, one small mystery solved. "Did you know he had one?"
"No. Andy didn't like guns." She answered it as if she was truly surprised.
"Small caliber," he commented. Not a serious weapon, in his opinion. Personal protection only. Though the Mysteron had certainly managed to do enough damage with it earlier that day. "There are two security cards here…one for Doctor Weller and another one for Mr. Prince. Silver, each with two black stripes and their names embossed. No other markings."
"I
have one of those too," she admitted,
uneasily. "There should be one for Todd."
Scarlet looked over, and Roan reached into the sack one more time, rummaging at the bottom, and shook his head.
"Negative, Doctor McLaine. Nothing for Mr. Carey. What are they for? And how likely is that to be our missing item?" He asked the question, though he suspected he already knew the answer.
There was silence. Uncomfortable and prolonged.
Ochre
responded, when she didn't. "Hers opened the cabin, Captain. She said
Carey didn't have any reason to take his to Africa. And she said Weller knew
where it was."
That as good as clinched it in Scarlet's books. "I'd say that Mr. Carey got what he came for then," Scarlet concluded, watching as Roan drew some final object from the pillowcase and dropped the empty sack to the tabletop. "And I can't say as I'm liking the direction this is going, either…" Scarlet's voice trailed to inaudibility when he looked over and suddenly recognized the thing in Roan's hand. "Was that in the vault?!" he demanded, all sharp and suspicious and surprised.
"Yes, sir, it was." The Lieutenant's expression went quizzical at the harsh tone. Roan exchanged a nervous glance with Teal, likely wondering what he'd done wrong this time, and passed the thing across the table, dropping it into Scarlet's upturned palm.
"Captain
Scarlet?" Colonel White was the first to query
him about his abrupt change of tone and topic. "What have you found,
Captain?"
"I'm really not too sure now, sir." Scarlet said, lifting his hand, bringing the object up and turning towards the nearest overhead light fixture with it, watching as the central mass within caught and refracted the light into his eyes, a back-lit, silver-gold illumination. "But yesterday Doctor Weller told me it was only a paperweight---"
The whole of Ochre's left arm had gone numb, and his brain, he figured, with whatever bits of it were still working, wasn't very far behind in that department.
The first aid kit was probably the best equipped he'd ever seen, due, no doubt, to having belonged to and likely been stocked and maintained by a professional MD. There was also little doubt in Ochre's mind either, that the dispensation and administration of that stock was being handled by a professional. That much was obvious.
The medical emergency in which he found himself front and center had served to steady Zil McLaine, occupying both her mind and her hands, a smaller but more immediate crisis that fell within her realm of expertise. It kept her from thinking about the root cause behind it, and made it easier for her to ignore the dead Mysteron on the floor there in the kitchen with them.
Once she'd managed to stop the worst of the bleeding with the tightly wrapped towel, and recovered her med-kit from wherever it had been, Zil had set about seeing to his wounds with a crisp, focused alacrity, even before Fawn had gotten involved. She'd wrapped him in one of the dry and unused blankets that had been by the hearth, a welcome and effective treatment for the trauma-induced cold-shakes. She'd rinsed his blood off of her hands with water from the jug and then scrubbed as best she could with some antiseptic she'd retrieved from the kit before turning a renewed and latex-gloved attention to poking around under the towel again, looking as if she knew what she was going about as she did so.
It was ugly under there. One short glimpse was enough to convince Ochre that he didn't want a second.
"Looks worse than it is," she'd murmured, seeing how he'd gone another shade paler than he'd already been; he'd felt it as the blood had gone from his face. "You stay out of there, Och - you've had more than enough shock for one day."
"No problem..." He simply sat there and stared at the opposite wall as she'd tied an awkward tourniquet around the top of his arm to reduce blood flow to the area she planned to stitch.
"It's gonna be okay. I'm not seeing any permanent damage here, Och. But this next bit's gonna hurt."
That 'bit' had been the alcohol and iodine wipe...a cold, quick swabbing that had stung and burned like acid in his wounds and made him decide in the next wobbly, about-to-pass-out-again moment that she'd lied about the additional shock he wasn't supposed to be getting any more of for the rest of the day.
A day that was scarcely a half an hour old and wasn't shaping up to be a good one.
She'd had the longest of the two lacerations closed and had started in on the second when the Colonel had pulled them back into radio-conference for the rest of the bad news.
Trouble at Demeter. Trouble that had skipped through and was evidently heading their way. A couple of Mysteron agents going mountain climbing in the Blizzard of the Century.
They are masochists, he decided. Dammit. Hope they don't have nerve gas and heat-seeking missiles with them....
That news had focused his attention very quickly. But it had slipped away again, back into a pained haze almost as fast. He winced and grimaced as Zil worked, not completely numb after all. He thought he'd just heard Scarlet say something about some stupid desk ornament.
Zil had been quiet, ever since word of the security cards. Spooked, through and through. But she answered Scarlet again - dismissively.
"Oh,"
she said. "That thing. It's just a paperweight."
Scarlet wasn't
buying it. "I don't think so, Doctor McLaine." Scarlet replied
curtly. "Last night Weller locked it up almost immediately after I'd
asked him what it was, and he went to some considerable trouble disabling the
security systems to do it without our knowledge. We've checked the records and
we know the timeframes. I don't think 'just a paperweight' would warrant
anything like that sort of attention."
It was hard to argue with that logic. Zil placed another stitch, paying attention to that task, evading an immediate reply, avoiding eye contact with him at that moment. Ochre was about to prod her to answer when she let out a heavy sigh of resignation and responded voluntarily.
"It's the first successful outcome of the initial feasibility study. Andy had it preserved. The scrappy-looking thing inside is a silicon-based filament that mimics a rat brain's reticular formation."
"Can
you be more specific?" Scarlet pressed for
more details, after a brief silence of his own. "Weller said something
like that."
"That was specific, Captain. I'm sure Andy would've told you exactly what it was. It'll be in the data. And it's still just a paperweight."
"Is
there a password on these files, Doctor McLaine?" Scarlet asked next, frustrated, but evidently deciding not to pursue
it any further, giving her the last word on the matter. "One that you
might know?"
"Yes, there's probably a password. No, I'm sorry, I don't know it. I'd tell you if I knew." Zil completed one more stitch. "I think those files have only the most difficult processes zipped down and stored on them. He wouldn't have kept the data on the more routine stuff."
"What
sort of 'stuff', Doctor?" Scarlet pressed for
more information, now that she'd started talking.
"The sort of stuff that tells you how to build a Minerva module, Captain, which is a complete and total waste of time to go into right now!" She stonewalled the line of inquiry as quickly as Scarlet had brought it up.
"Speaking
of which---" Scarlet seized on the mention of
the Mysteron's objective. "Where is the Minerva module, Doctor
McLaine?" The question was asked in a tone that was clipped and
demanding, Scarlet in what was probably his finest short-tempered,
interrogative form. Not, Ochre thought
distantly, that it was going to get Scarlet anywhere with Zil McLaine on the
receiving end of it. "Please do be precise."
She paused in what she was doing, dabbing at a slow dribble of blood with a bit of gauze before closing her eyes, letting out another pent breath, far more annoyed than intimidated. "It's here, Captain. Here at the