Chapter 10
Cassiopia could not sleep. She lay
in bed staring at the ceiling with
Markman’s arm sprawled over her
stomach. In contrast, he was deep in
slumber, even on the verge of snoring.
She stared at the shadows from the
nightlight on the wall, and tried to find
a niche in her father’s disappearance.
There was no starting point. No place
to build a reasoning that would point to
where he was. She turned under the
limp arm and tried again on her side.
Then the other side. Then back again.
The shadows from the nightlight began
to give way to glow from the rising sun.
If she had slept at all, it had only been
in five or ten minute intervals. The
clock on the night stand read 5:00 A.M.
That was good enough. She shook
Markman into semi-consciousness as
gently as possible. It was time to go in
to work. With a groggy Markman in
tow, punctuated by a few awkward
moments, Cassiopia drove Core to the
lab.
She expected to wait there for John
Paul’s arrival. To her surprise, he was
already at work in the sensesuit lab.
“Has there been anything at all?”
John Paul seemed to be having
trouble shaking off sleep. He rubbed his
face. “I haven’t made it to breakfast
yet. Let’s regroup in the commissary.”
They found their way to the
serving counter then took seats at the
nearest table. Though Markman’s body
was present, his mind was not yet
engaged.
“I am in constant touch with them,
Cassiopia. They are still closing. I do
not think it will be long.”
“How can you be in constant
contact? I’ve never even seen you on a
cell phone.”
John Paul smiled, sipped his tea,
and smacked his lips. “My implant is
much more sophisticated than yours,
Cassiopia.”
Cassiopia looked at him with her
analytical machine running full. “You
receive communication through an
implant?”
John Paul nodded and sipped.
“But how…?” Cassiopia started to
ask but caught herself. Perhaps
acquiring even more knowledge of John
Paul’s organization was not necessarily
a good thing.
“You should coax Scott into
drinking his coffee. We need him to
join us at some point.” John Paul
laughed under his breath.
Markman stared blankly ahead and
made no acknowledgment.
Cassiopia pushed back, went to the
serving counter and returned with a
plate of eggs and toast. She slid it
under Markman’s nose and the glaze in
his eyes suddenly receded. He stared
down at the plate, picked up a fork, and
dove into the food.
“Have you come up with any
additional search keywords, Cassiopia?”
“I’m sorry. I could not
concentrate.”
“We have a long list for Scott to
try today, if the two of you agree.”
“But what haven’t we already
tried? There just seems to be no
history at all of Salantians or of
vortport technology.”
“Yes. It is worrisome. It supports
your suggestion that the Salantian
invasion of Crillia was never recorded
within the sensesuit computer. We
know a terrible invasion did take place.
It was extremely harmful to the Crillian
race. This cannot be a different people
because we are using a sensesuit
computer that came from their domain.
This is a very perplexing case.”
“I have a new search item,” said
Markman, and he looked up from his
eggs.
“Ah, glad you could finally join us,
Scott. Very good. What is it you have?”
“Tunnels.”
Cassiopia did not understand.
“Tunnels?”
“Yeah, tunnels. The Salantians
worship tunnels. It’s their favorite
place. We haven’t searched the Crillian
database for tunnels.”
John Paul looked impressed. “I will
add it to the list, Scott. Well done.”
Markman rubbed his eyes, sat up
and took a deep breath. He looked
around and squinted them the rest of
the way open. “John Paul, did you
follow along on all of the talking in
there yesterday?”
“Of course, and we get printouts of
the telepathy.”
“The Crillian people do not not
really seem to consider themselves to
be computer programs. I mean I know
that’s what they seemed to say
previously, but something just doesn’t
jive.”
“Yes. It’s a curious duality.”
“Something doesn’t seem right to
me about this.”
“Scott, it is likely that if you struck
at one of those people with enough
force, we believe your hand would go
through the image. Do not try that, of
course. You might be injured.”
“But couldn’t that also happen with
a creature from another dimension?”
“I’m afraid I must admit that it
could.”
“So am I correct in thinking that
we can’t be absolutely sure these
people aren’t real?”
“Scott, such a deep subject for so
early in the morning.”
Cassiopia folded her arms on the
table and looked at Markman. “Scott,
you are really stuck on this aren’t
you?”
“It’s just that when I’m in there I
feel like I’m actually the only one who
isn’t real-–the one who doesn’t belong.”
“I will consider your dilemma,”
said John Paul. “In the meantime,
we’ve got to solve the mystery of the
Salantian invasion. The danger to us
increases by the day. I assume the two
of you are here early so that we can
get a head start on today’s research.”
Cassiopia and John Paul looked at
Markman. He stopped chewing his
English muffin, raised his eyebrows,
and hurried another sip of coffee.
Thirty minutes later, Markman
stood suited in the sensesuit test area.
With a nod from Cassiopia, he pulled
the helmet down over his head. A click,
hiss and flash of light later he found
himself back within the confines of the
Centrex Pyramid of Aurora City, Trill
standing loyally by, awaiting his
commands.
“An honor to see you always, my
lord,” said Trill.
“Trill, how is it you are always
here when I arrive?”
“Sir, I am notified in advance of
your entry into the system. I transport
here ahead of you. It is my required
duty, one I enjoy performing.”
Before Markman could reply, the
ground began to shake and a low
rumble echoed within the pyramid. The
tremor lasted longer than the others
and had an edge to it.
“The Terran quakes are nearly
over, sir. Unfortunately, as they near
their end, they become quite a bit
stronger. We remain assured that no
harm will come from them.”
“Trill, I will be visiting the library
again. I’ll use the transporter to save
time. Where will I come out?”
“Sir, you will emerge from a
transport tube adjacent to the tube
rider loading zone that you previously
used.”
“I need my cloak. Would you get it
for me?”
“Sir, you are wearing it. You were
in it when you disengaged last time.”
Markman looked down and
realized he was wearing the floor
length cloak. He shrugged in
embarrassment, then found himself
wondering why. With a final nod to
Trill, he went to the transporter tube
and stepped inside. Trill motioned a
ready sign.
“Aurora Library.” The familiar flash
of blinding light came and went.
Markman found himself standing in an
opaque transporter tube, a
concealment required to maintain
proper public protocol. The door to the
tube slid open. Markman raised his
hood and stepped outside.
The second Crillian sun had just
cleared the horizon. People were
passing by on moving sidewalks. Others
were strolling along the city walk
talking without speaking. An occasional
passenger-vehicle floated by. Markman
started in the direction of the library
when the ground-shaking suddenly
began again. This one did not take time
to build. It was strong immediately.
Markman had to bend at the knees to
stay up. He worked his way alongside
the tube rider station barrier and
leaned against it for support. At first,
people everywhere just stopped and
waited, expecting the tremor to
subside. It did not. As it worsened, they
began to show fear.
Markman held on. Farther down
the street someone yelled fearfully.
Small objects began falling from above
and breaking up on the street. The
quake filled the air with a low growling
sound, accentuating its intimidation.
People scrambled to find support. A few
fell to their hands and knees. More
small debris rained down. A woman
grasping a wall for dear life near
Markman began to cry. The quake did
not let up. It worsened.
Markman strained to see
overhead, fearing something large
would crash down on him. Crowds
began streaming out of the buildings
into the street, yelling and screaming.
The loud, low frequency rumble from
the quake seemed to sharpen suddenly.
Far above, a giant statue of the same
winged horse Markman had played with
in the library was teetering on the
narrow steeple that supported it. The
street below was packed with panicking
people.
Before Markman had time to fear
it would fall, it did. The giant winged
horse rocked back and forth too far and
pitched over toward the street below.
For a second or two it actually
appeared to fly as a winged horse
would, nosing down head first, wings
spread, turning about a point. Markman
yanked back his hood and took two
stumbling steps toward the street.
Pointing upward he screamed, “Run!”.
Instead of fleeing, most of the
crowd stopped and looked up. Markman
opened his mouth to scream again, but
there was no time. Instinct took over.
He threw open his cloak and jerked an
open hand toward the falling statue. In
response, it snapped around and began
falling in a tighter spiral. He raised
both hands and thrust them at the
horse. Tensed and concentrating with
all his might, he could feel the object
finally begin to slow. It descended
toward the stunned crowd but abruptly
jerked to a stop in mid air, turning in
place, tipping and drifting. Markman
strained to focus. A wind gust blasted
around him. More tremors shook the
ground. A few people in the crowd
came to their senses and began
running away screaming. It shook
others out of the paralysis so that they
too ran in every direction, some falling
in the rush. Surging away from the
sinister shadow of the huge, hovering
sculpture, people charged like an angry
mob down both sides of the street.
When a large enough clearing had
formed, Markman gently lowered the
giant down. It settled in the street, and
crashed over onto one side, the head
and face staring menacingly at the
retreating masses. Almost in
consolation, the tremors stopped.
People continued to flow from the
buildings, leaving the street still filled
with panic and turmoil. Strangely
shaped, bright orange emergency
vehicles suddenly began to race into
the scene. Rescue personnel in orange
uniforms merged into the crowds.
Markman hastily closed up his cloak
and pulled on the hood. People
standing nearby were staring at him.
With a quick look around, he hurried
back to the transport tube and closed
himself in.
“Terra Nova Castle, Overlook
Chamber.” One bright light later,
Markman emerged with a sigh of relief
into the Overlook room.
The place was deserted and quiet.
No fire burned in the fireplace.
Markman went to the overlook balcony.
People were busy in the courtyard,
running to and fro, picking up displaced
items, and standing up others that had
fallen. There did not seem to be any
major damage. Markman removed his
cloak and sat in his lounge control seat.
He called up the view screen and went
directly to the library records. There,
he shook off the tension of the past few
minutes and began his search of the
new list of hopefuls.
To Markman’s surprise, DuMont
did not come, no doubt caught up in
problems from the tremors. It allowed
Markman to search in peace, though
once again two hours of sub searches
brought only dead ends. Another hour
of intuitively related subjects also
yielded nothing. Markman looked
around, wishing for a glass of simulated
water. Finally he tapped at the button
for DuMont and returned to his
searching. There was just one last
item. Tunnels. The term brought a long
list of related subjects. Power,
irrigation, consumables, service ways,
elevators, disposal systems, and many
others. He was rifling through them
when DuMont came bursting through
the door.
“My lord, my deepest apologies for
not attending this chamber sooner. We
experienced the largest Terra tremor
ever recorded earlier. There has been
no serious damage but the clean up is
extensive, otherwise staff would have
been here.”
“It’s okay, DuMont. I understand.
When someone is available, would you
have some water sent up?”
“Right away, my lord. Do you
require anything else?”
“DuMont, let me ask you, what is
the oldest building in Aurora?”
“Why, the library, my lord. It has
been preserved and expanded since the
beginning.”
“The beginning of what?”
“Of the settlement of Aurora, sir.”
“Is Aurora the oldest city on
Crillia?”
“It is the oldest settlement on
Crillia, sir.”
“So the library is the oldest
building in the oldest city on Crillia?”
“Yes, my lord.”
“Thank you, DuMont.”
“Sir, again my deepest apologies
for our delinquency. It will not happen
again.”
“DuMont, you’re doing a great job.
It’s okay.”
“You are too kind, sir. Water, right
away.”
Markman began searching for
records about the library. The search
results were just as long as the tunnel
list. A disparaging thought crept in.
What if all of the Crillian sensesuit
computer records really were from
before the invasion of the Salantians?
That was what Cassiopia had
suggested. It would make perfect
sense. The invasion begins. Chaos
breaks out. No additional records are
downloaded into the sensesuit
computer system, so no records of the
Salantians or their invasion. Why
hadn’t John Paul or Cassiopia
considered that more seriously? It was
a disheartening idea. That would mean
there would probably be no help at all
from the sensesuit computer system.
Markman searched his memory. There
was something way back. It seemed
like on his original trip inside the
sensesuit computer Trill had made a
reference to the Salantians being the
current operator of the system. But,
perhaps that was the only reference to
them in the system. That was not a
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