Mari behind him, David opened the
door, holding the broom handle in one hand.
As if that’s
going to do anything… Besides, what could he do? Try and beat up a woman
after sneaking into her…
Secret
base?
Business?
Whatever. And there she
was, standing in front of David, wearing a stylish business suit,
shoulder-length red hair framing a smiling face. She was wearing glasses, and
by her feet, the spider prowled, looking up at them and making little wiggling
motions with its metallic frame.
Then it looked at the broom handle and growled.
Holy shit. David
carefully put the broom handle up against the wall. “Nice…”
“See, O12, they’re not
hostile, you just scared them.”
The spider looked up at the woman and then wiggled again.
“Is that going to… eat
us?” Mari asked, coming out from behind David, pressing her body into the wall.
She was staring at the spider, face pale.
Mari really hated
spiders.
“Eat you? O12? No, O12
is a good spider,
aren’t you…” She put her hand out. The
spider looked up at her…
And then flopped over on its back, all eight limbs in the air.
The woman put her hand down and rubbed the bottom, the robot wiggling in…
“Is she giving a robot a belly rub?” Mari asked.
“Of course I am! Now
go to your house, you’re scaring Mommy’s guests.” The robot rolled back over,
hopped up, and made a squeak-barking sound in David and Mari’s direction and
then turned around and ran off down the hallway.
David was suddenly aware that Mari had a death grip on his right
arm.
“That’s a…”
“Advanced robot—well,
not completely a robot, but close enough.”
She looked at the two. “Wilma Grayson, and you helped me win a bet.”
“What?”
“Antonio thought that
you’d take at least another week before you got your courage up. I figured you’d
be here a few days ago, and since I got closer…”
“Wait a minute.” David
shook his head. “You knew we were coming?”
“You saw the aether.” Wilma looked at them over her glasses. “Most
people who see that don’t tend to leave things alone. But c’mon, I think we’ll
save time if we meet Antonio and go over all this at once.”
“Wait a minute, you left,” Mari said.
“Of course we did. How
else could we leave the door open for you?”
Wilma smirked at them. “See, David, you’re… well, you’re kinda right.
The cameras weren’t installed. That was because we didn’t need those big, bulky
things. Actually, the entire street is wired.”
“So you…”
“Knew you were coming.
Good stunt with the garage, but you know what they say about old age and
treachery… Still, great for your first audition.”
David turned to look at Mari.
She mouthed “audition?”
at him.
David shrugged. I have no
fucking idea…
But on the other hand, if they had cameras, they had them
walking into someone’s
property and going through the stuff.
“I really screwed up…”
David muttered.
“Nah, you had an adventure!” Wilma said. “Complete with a robot monster! Now, c’mon, Antonio is
waiting.” With that, she turned and walked towards the other end of the hall.
David looked at Mari. Mari shrugged her shoulders. “I guess we’ll find out…” She gestured around her, the
motion taking in the entire building.
“Yeah,” David said. “I
guess we will.”
With that, the two teens followed the woman down the hallway.
###
No. Mari hated
spiders. Even the supposedly cutesy music videos just gave her the creeps. So when she almost got eaten by a giant robot
spider…
Pardon me
for being a little creeped out! Mari kept one hand on David’s arm and tried to keep an eye out for any other abominations that might be running
around.
Because it was still a spider, a giant robot spider, even if it
had acted like an overeager puppy. And then they were back in the lab, with the
other PIB, Antonio, sitting at a desk with…
Greg’s
Takeout? Mari blinked. Antonio,
now that she saw him in good light and wasn’t
worried about the local fairytale murdering her brother, was tall and good
looking.
Okay, he looked like a bit of a hunk, even if he was at least
thirty.
“So, you eaten yet?” he gestured. “I have chicken and rice, and
there’s diet and regular cola in the fridge.
“Um…” David looked
over at Mari. “Right…”
“I’ll have diet,” Mari
said.
“Good choice,” Wilma
said and walked over to the refrigerator and pulled out some cans. “You?”
“Um… regular, please.”
David stared at the woman as she came over, holding some drinks.
“Okay,” Antonio said,
pushing some of the food across to them. He gestured at the chairs. “Sit down
and let’s eat. You’ve had a little bit of a shock.”
“What—” Mari took a
deep breath. “What was that m—robot?”
“An autonomous robotic
support unit,” Antonio said as he dished some rice out to Wilma.
Mari stared at her rice and chicken. What if it’s poison? What if they… Mari took a deep breath and
grabbed the plastic fork and nibbled at some rice.
Nope. Tasted like Greg’s
Takeout.
“And you knew we were
here from the start?” David asked.
“Uh-huh. I mean, you
didn’t do anything wrong,” Antonio said. He took a bite of food, chewed, then washed
it down before he leaned back and gestured with the fork. Mari found herself
focusing on a ring he wore, the metal gleaming against his dark skin. “But… The
thing is, Hollywood really doesn’t know what it’s talking about, because good
security is really,
really hard to breach, at least not without some help on the inside.”
“Which you gave us,”
David said. “Did you do that so that you could say we had broken in?”
“We wanted to see what
you would do. High points for taking the opportunity… Some deduction for not
having an exit route,” Wilma said. “Call it a B.”
I’m
talking to a pair of PIBs, and we’re eating Greg’s Takeout, and they’re grading
us on breaking and entering. Mari took a deep breath. A deep, calming
breath.
“So, got some
questions?” Antonio asked.
Mari nodded. “Yes.
What’s an AE, and why would it ‘become realized due to psychological
interaction with a local mythology-tale?’”
“How did…” Antonio tilted his head, “figure that out?”
“You mean that wasn’t
part—” I’m so
stupid. Mari had assumed that they’d
been watching them for the entire thing. “When we were in here, you didn’t see
us?”
“No. The sensors said
you weren’t doing any damage, and we’d secured the computers. We were going to review the video later.”
Wilma smiled. “Remember, we were getting takeout.”
“But I am…” Antonio
said.
“We took a rubbing,”
David burst out.
Mari glanced over at him. He’s
trying to distract them. What if that paper had something they really
weren’t supposed to know…
“My notes. You took a
rubbing of my notes.” Wilma glanced over at Antonio and smiled. “Okay, upgraded
to A minus. We didn’t think of that. Nothing you can’t know, but still, we didn’t
think of that.” She turned to stare at
David and Mari.
For a moment, Mari felt nervous. There was something about the
way Wilma looked at her, especially given those violet eyes…
Then Wilma nodded. “Fine.
Time to see what’s behind the curtain, kids.” She gestured around the room. “Have
either of you ever heard of the theory of aether?”
Mari frowned, then shook her head. A moment later and David did
the same.
“Good. We don’t have
to go through the ‘my science teacher told me that was impossible’ stage.
Right, there’s a… substrate of the universe, that depending on who you ask is
called the aetheric plane, the aether, or ‘that shit we don’t know a lot about’.” She held up her arm, the sleeve falling back
to reveal a wristband with some kind of control system on it. Wilma touched a
few buttons, and moments later, there was a glowing ball floating in the room.
“Sh—” Mari bit the
word off.
“Okay, you can make
light,” David said. “But what does that…”
“Oh, that’s the
technological way of doing things. Aether can be… compelled for form into just
about anything. Flesh, steel, fire—it looks, feels, and acts just like it, but
it isn’t.”
“The bags,” Mari said.
“They just healed…”
“Yep, not cloth—aether
formed to look like it. See, aether reacts to thought, images… belief, and when
there’s a breach, the aether that comes through is really malleable.
Malleable enough that two kids coming out on a dare can cause it to take the
form of their dare…”
“So… this is like the
reason for ghost stories?” Mari asked.
“Some. And legends of
wizards, and for all we know, saints and devils…” Antonio said. He leaned
forward and gestured at Mari with a fork. “And it explains why there aren’t any
lands of magic. Maybe someone stumbled across a breach, had the right thoughts,
and got oh, a demon or angel serving them, but then the breach goes away, and
their “magic” goes away.”
And so
everyone thought it was just a fake… Mari remembered one program
with a skeptic talking about how every time a psychic showed up for testing,
nothing happened. But if they only had ‘powers’
because of a breach… “How
long do they last?”
“Not long. Most
breaches used to be transitory, maybe up the aether in the area, but they went
away pretty fast.”
“Used to be.” David
stared at them. “Not now?”
“Yeah…” Wilma looked
around, and Antonio looked embarrassed. “You know how humans have a thing about
poking things they shouldn’t? See, there was some work on the aether back in
the 1970s. Blue sky stuff, but it was
the oil embargo, and the aether can be anything—including
electricity—electricity with no smog attached.”
“The problem was,”
Antonio filled in, “that without being able to control the breach, you couldn’t
use it. So some of our geniuses figured out that if you used the right amount
of power, directed in the right way, you could punch a hole through the um,
barrier and create a permanent breach. So they used one of the bombs in the
Arbor test-shot series.”
“And it went horribly
wrong,” Mari said. She’d seen the
movies, after all.
“Yeah. The entire area
around the test area was hyper-charged with aetheric energy. Nightmares took
human form, yadda-yadda, and there was much screaming.
Then the breach sealed, and all the shafts were filled in with cement, and
everyone wrote it off.” Wilma
smiled at Mari. “Real horror movie fodder.”
“But it didn’t stay
written off,” David said.
“Bingo,” Wilma said,
and now she wasn’t smiling. “Throw a brick through a window, and you don’t just
get a hole, you get cracks. Good news, nothing like the events of 1974, bad
news, not going away anytime soon.”
“I…” David looked
around. “You’re kidding. Why isn’t—why aren’t you telling people about this?”
“Telling them that
more or less random breaches can open up, which are harmless unless the right
set of circumstances hits, at which point they might conjure the nightmare or
dream of your life?” Antonio raised his
eyebrows. “Oh, and there’s the
possibility of gaining great power from these things?”
“And we can’t know for
certain, but there’s some evidence that actively trying to access a breach
makes it longer-lasting, more severe.” Wilma looked at the two teens. “So tell
me, Mari, David, any kids at your school who would go ‘great!’ if you told them
there might be a way to get magic powers?”
Some would… Mari
realized. There were kids at school who risked getting in trouble to get the
newest game. This? But… She
stared at Antonio and Wilma, then looked around the lab. “There’s something
special about Allendale, isn’t there?
You have a car, and that means that you can’t like, go to the other end
of the state.”
“Breaches can come in
clusters, and the aetheric count in this area has been going up.”
“So, why do all of
this with us?” Mari asked. “Why not just bring in more PIBs?”
“PIBs?” Antonio asked.
“Persons in Black,”
David said, rolling his eyes.
“I am so using that
for our next report,” Wilma said.
“You like to live more
dangerously than I do,” Antonio replied. “But to answer your question, without
getting into the classified stuff that would require us to shoot you, how many
of us do you think there are? I’ll give you a clue, the California department
isn’t much bigger than your police department.”
I… Mari didn’t say anything, then looked back at Wilma. “You’re kidding.”
“Hey, secrecy and
thousands and thousands of people don’t mix well. We don’t have any magic memory-erasing gadget to make our lives
easier.”
“But you’d have to
train us…” David said. “And you said we could see aether.”
“Better than us. We’ve
had training, treatments and equipment—but you saw it without any of that. You’re
exactly who we need, and we pay very well…” Wilma nodded at Mari. “Enough so that maybe someone doesn’t
have to go to community college for two years?”
“And before you say
no,” Antonio added, “there’s another thing to consider. You can see the aether,
and from our testing, it turns out that the aether, and the things from it, can
see you as well, and there’s a higher-than-normal rate of breaches around people
who are capable of perceiving the aether.”
“So even if we don’t
work for you, we’ll still have monsters dropping in on us,” Mari said, folding
her arms across her chest.
“Yap, pretty much,”
Wilma said. She didn’t sound unhappy at all about it.
###
“We
need to talk,” David said. “Can you give us a minute?”
“Certainly, take ten,”
Antonio said.
Walking to the far end of the room, David glanced at the two,
then turned back to Mari. They’re
probably recording everything we say, but…
“What do you think?”
Mari asked. “I mean, this is spooky, and they have a spider-dog, but do you
think they’re telling the truth about these things hunting us?”
“I…” David ran his
hand through his hair and then pulled it back. “I dunno, but you heard what
they said about your community college?”
“Yeah, I—” Mari
snapped her mouth shut. “How did they know that?”
“You keep your journal
on the computer, don’t you?”
“Yeah, but it’s
password—oh, those—” Mari glared down at the floor for a few moments.
“Or maybe they’ve been
listening in more. They know a lot about us.”
“So should we?” Mari
asked. “I mean, we’re getting in deep but…”
“But what?”
“They’re not going to
stop watching us just because we say no. All saying no means is that we can’t
watch them.”
“Yeah.” David nodded. She’s right.
“And we can’t get
paid,” Mari added in a deadpan voice.
“Really?”
“Hey, if I’m going to
risk getting eaten by the product of someone’s bad dream, I wanna get paid!”
David stared at his friend. Mari was looking up at him, her eyes
determined. Then she looked around. “And…
I really want to find out about this. I mean, how many people our age get asked
to do stuff like this?”
She’s
got a point.
“Yeah. And like you
said, we’ll get paid.”
“Presuming our parents
agree,” Mari said.
“I think Mom will…”
“And all I have to
point out is the self-discipline a job will give me.” Mari grinned. “Okay, let’s
go tell’em we’re agreeing to be a part of their secret conspiracy.”
“Right,” David said. “By
the way, whose fault is it if everything ends up on fire?”
“Well, it can’t be
mine, so that leaves only one possibility,” Mari replied with a grin.
“Kado?”
Mari snorted. “Okay,
that was good, and given that it was his dare that got us into this… Yeah, we’re
blaming it all on Kado.” With that,
David and Mari turned to walk back to Wilma and Antonio.
When they were standing in front of them, David glanced at Mari and nodded. She returned the nod. “You’ll have to ask our families, but yeah—we’re willing.”
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