“Not a thing?” The one-to-one isn’t good with nuance. But Linehan’s surprise is coming through loud and clear anyway.
“How was I supposed to get them past customs?”
“I’m stunned Control didn’t set you up.”
“Control’s hacking isn’t foolproof. Which is probably why we’re in the fix we are. I take it you’re carrying?”
“Of course I am, Spencer. Concealing weapons is a lot easier than concealing identity.”
“The specs you gave Control showed none.”
“So I lied.”
“So this is what you were going to use on us at Cornwall?”
“This is what I’m gonna use on anybody who gets in my way. Right now those guys behind you are top of my list. How certain are you as to that thing’s timing?”
“Very.”
“Meaning three seconds,” says Linehan.
“Try two,” says Spencer.
“One,” replies Linehan.
But Spencer’s already gone: wireless entry into wireless data-ports, barriers collapsing all around—and suddenly he’s at home once more. It’s been so long. It’s been just a moment. That’s what the zone does: makes him remember that everything that occurs between those immersions is nothing but a dream that’s scarcely worth the effort. But this is a slice of zone he’s never seen before. It seems to be endless. It ends almost at his feet—the very edge of universe that he recognizes as border. He’s making haste upon that border in a chariot wrought from light.
But only for a moment. Suddenly lightning streams in from every direction: shatters that chariot, hurls him from the zone to find Linehan’s legs scissoring past him as the mech leaps from his seat, onto Spencer’s armrests—and from there onto the seat’s back, whereupon he proceeds to use the seat backs behind that one as stepping-stones in a sudden lightning run. He takes it in a low crouch, his head ducked just shy of the ceiling, his boots just missing people’s faces. There’s barely time for them to protest before he reaches the men he’s making for. His targets see him coming. They’re leaping to their feet.
All the lights go off.
The train’s still at cruising velocity. Its momentum is affected not in the slightest. Most of the passengers have enough optical enhancements to be able to see each other. But the unexplained darkness is still unwelcome—all the more so given that all video and audio channels that the train’s routing to them just went out. The fact that the first thing that most people are seeing as they switch to infrared is three men fighting doesn’t help matters.
Linehan throws himself down onto the first man, pulls him into the aisle, putting the man between him and his colleague while he pulls a loop of plastic wire around the man’s neck. A moment ago, it was one strand on Linehan’s shorn hairline. Now it’s become one with his victim’s jugular. Blood gushes everywhere. The second man already has a pistol out—and Linehan hurls his comrade’s body at him, rushes in behind it, and dives at the floor as the man starts firing through that dead flesh. People are screaming now. But Linehan pays them no heed: he’s tackling his assailant at the knees, knocking him off his feet—and then jumping to his own, kicking the gun away, bringing his boot down on the man’s face—and diving after the weapon, grabbing it, whirling around, firing a single shot at the man who’s pulling himself upward again—but who now grunts and slides back to the floor.
“No one fucking move,” shouts Linehan.
People were starting to. But now they’re stopping. Linehan gestures at Spencer, who steps into the aisle. As he does so, Linehan tosses him the pistol.
“Cover them,” he says on the one-on-one.
Spencer does. Linehan grabs the first man he killed by his shirt. He grabs the man’s pistol, shoves it into his belt. He pulls the corpse up onto a seat, shoves it up against the wall—and then seizes it by the back of its neck, starts smashing its head against that wall. He keeps on smashing until the skull cracks, breaks open like an overripe melon. The contents of the brainpan spill everywhere. Linehan starts rooting through them.
“What the hell are you doing?” yells Spencer on the one-on-one. He’s backed against the opposite wall, is using it as a vantage point from which to cover the passengers. The height of the seats means that they can’t see what Linehan is doing. Which doesn’t mean they can’t hear it.
“Software,” snarls Linehan. “Take the software from the head, find out who they work for. Find out what their fucking
“We already know what their goddamn brand is,” yells Spencer. “I told you already. They’re federals.”
“How long have you been in the States, Spencer? Huh? How fucking long?” Linehan’s fingers are covered with blood and brain matter. His fists close on chips. “
“Presumably whichever one you split from,” screams Spencer. “When you stole whatever they’d found out about Autumn Rain. You’ve sold out your own kind, Linehan. And now you’re going to die at their hand. Tell me I’m wrong, Linehan. Go on.
“Gonna tell you right now you don’t know what the fuck you’re talking about,” hisses Linehan, and for one sentence he’s both broadcasting and speaking. People around him whimper. “My country’s in deadly peril. My run’s the highest service I can offer her. And the last thing I need is holier-than-thou shit thrust in my face by some
“Sure,” says Spencer, “I’m reading you.”
“So tell me how your hack went.”
“I don’t have control. I’m not sure anybody does. My guess is that this train’s been stripped down to its basic locomotion and emergency fail-safes.”
“Monitors?”
“Almost certainly gone.”
“Christ, let’s hope so.”
“What do you suggest we do next?” says Spencer. And even as he does so he’s reaching down, kneeling on the floor, reaching inside the shattered head.
“You’re lucky I didn’t clean him out,” sneers Linehan.
“Answer my goddamn question,” says Spencer.
“I suggest you do exactly what I say,” says Linehan. “We’ve got feds in both directions, and God knows how close they are. But I’ve got a plan. You’re not going to like it. The sheep around us are going to like it even less. But I can guess what Control’s orders were, Spencer. Get me to London. No matter the cost. Got it?”
“So what’s the plan?” says Spencer.
“Start racking up cost,” says Linehan.
B ail out,” Haskell says.
“We can’t,” Marlowe replies. “He’ll blow us to pieces. We need to wait for reentry.”
“But
“Close the cockpit doors. Lock them.”
While she does that, he’s pulling himself down onto the floor of the cockpit, crawling beneath the instrument panels, finding the trapdoor that’s situated where floor meets sloping wall. He opens it—and finds himself looking down into the narrow chute that leads to the escape hatch. He descends within. He reaches the airlock at the bottom and hauls it open.
Now he’s in something that’s more of a closet than a chamber. Another airlock sits adjacent to him. He knows better than to try to open that one. He rigs that door with devices from his belt: sensors, mini-charges, more sensors. Then he pulls himself back through into the chute. He closes the interior airlock—rigs still more devices, clambers back up.
Haskell’s sitting there. She’s rigged wires from her head to the control panels. She wears a dazed expression on her face.
