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If they didn't know who I was, who would? Who was P But the question I kept asking myself was who the h.e.l.l were they?
'Then a real doctor arrived who checked me over, giving me a thorough physical before I was allowed up on my feet. I supposed I was lucky that I hadn't at first been able to talk even if I'd wanted to. The whole experience had struck me dumb. But then it dawned on me that they really didn't have any idea who I was. So why should I tell them?
'I kept quiet, told them nothing, didn't even speak.
'But Trask... he knew I wasn't on the level. Right from square one I could see that he was more than curious, positively suspicious about me. I suppose he had every right to be; I know now that the place I - er, emerged into? "Harry's Room?" - is highly significant to the Branch. More than that, though, Trask knew I was lying. Even without me saying a word, he knew I wasn't telling the truth, knew I was hiding something. 'Well, of course I was! Wherever I'd "escaped" to, anywhere had to be better than the vermin-infested slaughte rhouse i n Turin that I'd escaped from! And yes, I had already made up my mind that as soon as this weird crowd gave me room to breathe, I'd likewise be escaping from here - wherever "here"
was!
'Finally, instead of asking me stuff and getting no satisfactory answers, no answers at all, Trask said, "You're in the headquarters of a branch of government, a very off-limits establishment, Mr ... whoever you are. You shouldn't be here, and the penalty for trespa.s.s is a high one. But I'm really interested in you, in how you arrived - especially where you arrived - and I'd very much like you to start explaining. If you don't, I'll have to a.s.sume you're a common criminal and deal with you on that basis ..."
'But then he got a certain look in his eye, like he'd suddenly stumbled across the truth - maybe a truth even I didn't know - and quickly went on, "Or maybe an uncommon criminal? In which case we might just be getting somewhere."
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'Some of Trask's people had gun s and there didn't seem too much point in trying to break out of there, not at present. So I just had to keep playing along.
'Finally, I was escorted to the HQ Ops Room.' Jake glanced at Liz. 'Do you know the place? I take it you've been there.' He waited for her nod, the one word that summed up her own feelings the first time she'd seen the Ops Room. 'Awesome ...'
'Yes, awesome,' he agreed. 'I don't know about ghosts, but E- Branch certainly has the gadgets! Anyway, as soon as we entered - before anyone could stop me - I stepped to a window and yanked the blinds. It was night but there were plenty of street lights. There could be no mistaking where I was; the very sight of it set me reeling. That skyline, that city.
Impossible, but it was Westminster! London! The centre of b.l.o.o.d.y London!
'And grabbing me, looking at me with those all-seeing eyes of his, Trask said, "Surprise, surprise! So where did you think you were, Mr n.o.body?"
'By then a lot of other people had arrived. They'd got the place up and running. It was the middle of the night after all, and my being there was just as big - maybe a bigger - shock to them as it was to me.
But they must have a good emergency call-in; the place was fully operative in no time at all. And every man-jack and woman of them wide-eyed, whispering, curious ... maybe even awestruck? But why? What was so special about me? 'Anyway, things were happening at a rapid pace. ' "Prison clothing,"
Trask said. "At a guess, continental. Very well, get fingerprints, mug shots - do it now. Then get a link to Interpol, see if we can get a match. But let's not get carried away, not yet. Let's not think the unthinkable, or the incredible? Check the security system and see if it recorded a physical break-in. And let's have a check on all doors and windows, and the elevator. Then get me the Duty Officer. Didn't I hear him saying something about not being able to get into Harry's Room because the door was locked? Now why would Mr n.o.body here first break in, then lock himself in?
And how could he do it anyway without a key ... a.s.suming he broke in at all?"
'Trask said all of these things, if not in the same words. And he probably said a lot more that I can't remember before he finished up with: "Answers, people, I want all the answers.
And I do mean tonight..."
'I had been fingerprinted and photographed by the time two ne w agents entered the Ops Room. Trask greet ed them with, "Current Affairs, and Tomorrow's Affairs. And not before time, you two."'
Liz nodded, said, 'Millicent Cleary and lan Goodly. Millicent is a telepath, but she's also an expert in current affairs. She has that kind of memory. You want to know what's gone down in the last ten years, ask Millicent. And lan Goodly-'
'-A precog,' Jake said. 'Yes, I know that now. But then - I couldn't make head nor tail of their conv ersation. Trask wanted to know why Goodly hadn't "seen"
anything, an d he asked the woman if she was "getting" anything. That was the way he talked to everyone around him. It all seemed pretty esoteric to me!'
'Espers have an almost different tongue,' Liz answered. 'It takes some getting used to.' 'Anyway, lan Goodly was at a loss to explain his lapse. And the woman, Millicent Cleary? She stared hard at me, frowned and said there was a lot of confusion. d.a.m.n, right there was!'
'The confusion was in you,' Liz told him.
'Looking back on it, you're dead right,' he said. And after a moment: 'By then all the wall screens were up and working - people processing my pictures and feeding them into machines, computer keyboards tap, tap, tapping away - but I was a little less the centre of attention. I saw my chance, s.n.a.t.c.hed a gun from a man who was m omentarily distracted, grabbed hold of Goodly. I had the gun to his neck, his arm up behind his back.
'For a moment I thought Trask and the others might rush me.
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But then Goodly said, "It's okay, Ben. Everything will be fine.
Just let us go, and be sure we'll be back."
'I told him, "Do you want to bet?" But now ... I'm glad he didn't! I'll cut a long story short. I got Goodly out of there and into the elevator. He used his card without argument. Then we were out in the street. Which was when he turned the tables on me. How? Well, I suppose he saw the future, knew I wouldn't shoot him. Or maybe he saw that I couldn't?
'Anyway, he just twisted round to face me, grabbed the gun and started wrestling me for it. I was so surprised... I just let go of the thing! And the fact was I couldn't have shot him anyway, not an innocent man. But I couldn't say the same thing for him, now could I? And there he was, crouching down, aiming the gun at me!'
The vehicle was nosing down a slight decline. As they came round a shallow bend, Jake saw campfires and started to brake.
Then a man stepped out onto the crumbling tarmac and made signals, directing them into a makeshift roadside parking area.
As they slowed to a standstill, Liz sat still, said, 'Finish it.' And Jake thought, Why not? Except there's nothing left to tell! Or if there was he couldn't possibly explain it. But he could at least try. 'It's already finished/ he said. 'When I thought Goodly was going to shoot me, I made a dive for cover. I mean, I knew I was diving to safety... but that wasn't possible. How could there be any cover, any safety, out there in the middle of the street?' 'There couldn't be,' she said.
'No,' Jake answered huskily, pale in the flickering firelight. 'There couldn't be. Not out theje in the street. But it wasn't me who reacted to the perceived danger, Liz. Not me but someone in my head. Someone or something that reckoned I would be safer .
.. that I'd be safer-'
But Liz, reading it clearly in his mind, came to his aid and finished it for him:'-That you'd be much safer back in Harry's Room, yes/ she sighed.
He shook his head, frowned and said, 'But safe from what?
From Goodly, who didn't intend to harm me in the first place?'
She made no answer but thought: No, just safe - period.
Maybe lan Goodly's gun hadn't triggered the thing at all; maybe it simply hadn't wanted Jake out there on his own, on the streets. For whatever it was, this thing had been new to him at that time. Still very strong in him - and having only recently found him - it hadn't been about to let him escape.
Not without first exploring him, and not until Jake had explored its possibilities, its potential.
Such were Liz's thoughts. But bringing them back to earth: 'We're there/ said Jake. 'So are we going to sit here all night? Me, I'd like a mug of coffee and a bite to eat...'
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CHAPTER SEVEN.
More Gadgets And Ghosts As Liz and Jake got out of their vehicle, Trask came over and checked it for damage: a few scratches to the paintwork, some small dents in the hood, and the missing windscreen, of course.
'Did you have this attended to?'
Liz knew what he was concerned about: not the damage itself but rather its origin, and any possible contamination that might have been left behind. She nodd ed.
'Back at the Old Mine gas station. A squad sprayed her down, cleaned up the mess.'
'I worry, that's all,' Trask explained. 'But having seen some of the measures the Travellers take on Sunside, I suppose that's only natural.' He shrugged. 'I don't know... maybe I'm too cautious.' His reference to Sunside flew over Jake's head, but he was getting used to that kind of thing.
'I didn't see you taking too much care of yourself,' Jake told him. 'Back there, I mean. You and the old man, Lardis? It was as if you didn't give a d.a.m.n between you.' No nose-plugs or combat gear. No gas masks. No precautions.'
Trask looked at him. 'A paradox? Is that what you're saying? Do as I sa y, not as I do? Not really. Maybe one day I'll tell you my story.
But couldn't it simply be that some of us have less to lose?' And before he could be asked to elaborate: 'As for Lardis Lidesci, he's been doing his own thing all his life. Perhaps there's a partial immunity among the Szgany, I can't
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say. But even so I watch him, just as he keeps his eye on everyone else. And the day he gets rid of his silver bells, or starts shrinking from the sun ...' Trask let it go at that.
'Maybe I haven't been listening very much,' Jake said. 'In fact I'm sure I haven't. There's been too much happening - not only to me but all around me - for my tiny brain to accept it all at once. But what if I start listening as of now? Am I asking too much that we sit down some time so you can fill me in, put me fully in the picture about E-Branch? I mean, if I'm to work for you, isn't it only right I should know something of what's going on?'
'So you've finally decided you'll work for us?' Jake pulled a wry face. 'Actually, I thought you had!' And the three of them walked together towards one of the campfires.
The rest of the vehicles were arriving and lining up on the road before being allocated parking areas. Making himself heard over the revving motors, Trask shouted a few instructions, then answered Jake. 'Oh, I think there's work for you. But there are still a few things I need to clear up. If I'm to control you, I need to know w hat I'm controlling.' He looked at the other, his gaze seeming to pierce the younger man through and through, and with a wry smile continued, Tve got to be sure you won't just cut and run - like maybe in a crisis, when you're most needed. After all, you do still have your own agenda.'
'Don't you ever trust anybody?' Jake growled, knowing that indeed Trask had seen right through him.
But, enigmatic as ever, Trask wasn't buying it. 'In my time with the Branch,' he said, 'I've seen what trust can do ... and what it's done to some of my favourite people.'
They sat by the fire with one or two other agents, most of them keeping to themselves, lost in their own thoughts now that the night's work was done. It was a night they'd been building up to for some time. The Old Lidesci dished out food - steaks, and steaming stew from a container on a military shallow- trench back-burner, and man-sized chunks of bread fresh from the burner's oven - but with the exception of Lardis himself no 97 one was much interested in eating. Maybe it was the back- burner's roar, the way it sounded so much like a flame- thrower ...
By the time the three had done eating, and washed the food down with mugs of coffee, the big articulated truck was in situ and lan Goodly had gone to check on incoming messages. By then, too, the rest of the agents had sat down to eat, and the atmosphere wasn't quite so heavy.
Liz had been yawning for some time, and though she swore she would never sleep, still she'd gone off to seek out a bivouac for herself. Watching her go, Jake put down his empty mug and said to Trask, 'Me, I'm not tired either. In fact my mind is going every which way. So, all misgivings aside, I'm asking you to tell me what I've got myself involved with, how it all began, and how you think I can fit in.'
Trask stood up and for a moment looked as if he might say something. But just then lan Goodly came striding from the direction of the Ops vehicle. On top of the first trailer, in fact the mobile Ops Roo m, a cl.u.s.ter of antennae and radio dishes had poked up, locked into position, and aimed themselves at the sky... also at several communication satellites.
'Ben/ Goodly called in his piping voice. 'David Chung is on the wire from London. You can get him on-screen if you want. He got your message, and he appears to be rather excited.' But as Trask headed for the Ops truck, Goodly had second thoughts; at least he made it seem that way. 'Oh, and Ben! Er, maybe you should take Jake with you? Introduce him to David ... ?'
The two of them looked at each other in pa.s.sing, and Jake could swear some sort of silent exchange took place. Then Trask called back to him, 'Jake, if you'd still like to know how you might fit in, perhaps you should come along with me.'
In the Ops Room, the Duty Officer and one other were on listening duty within the oval desk. The D.O. got out of the way when Trask lifted a flap in the desk, walked through and parked himself in the command chair. Jake followed and
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stood close behind him. Trask looked at the D.O. and said, 'Chung?'