40 - Lunar Caustic (2) [August 11th, Age 14]
Sokaiseva
We took the road up to the factory in silence. We had no plans for secrecyâBell was going to knock on the front door, and whoever answered it was going to take us to the leader of that facility, and then weâd move from there.
I had absolute faith in us. Nothing could possibly go wrong. To even think of something not going exactly the way we wanted was blasphemy. Between the two of us, we had enough power to take the whole facility head-on.
We were invincible.
Bell had left the car about half a mile away from the factory, and we made that walk in silence. I spent a good portion of it looking up at the stars. It was sort of odd to say that I didnât get to see the stars very often, despite the fact that I lived in a fairly rural area, but being indoors almost all the time in a windowless room will do that.
There were just so many of them, and theyâd always be there, no matter what.
We walked right up to the front door. They were expecting us. There was no need for secrecy.
There was a little box with a button on it, hastily wired to some unknown system inside the building. Bell pushed it, and I heard the faint echo of the doorbell through the wooden strut-crossed door theyâd harvested from some old farmhouse to use as an entrance.
I never thought much of design when it came to hideouts like that, but I guess it was nice to know that somebody did.
After a minuteâand some eager shifting from Bell, who was grappling with whether or not she should push the button againâthe door opened a crack.
âWho are you people?â the voice in the dark said. If I had to guess Iâd say there was just a hallway back there that theyâd shut the lights off in to give an illusion of secrecy, but the ambient moonlightâand distant external floodlightsâcast just enough glow through the doorway to let me see that our greeter had a silver key around his neck, inlaid with a square crystal I assumed was bismuth.
Earth keys seemed to be pretty common around these parts.
Bell paused for half a second.
âMy name is Ophelia,â Bell said. âProchazka sent me.â
âNobody named Ophelia works for Prochazka,â the man said. âYouâre not on the list. Whoâs that?â
He pointed at me, careful to keep his finger indoors.
âThatâs Erika,â Bell said.
âHanover?â
âThe one and only.â
âWell, youâre probably Bell, then,â the man said.
She blinked. âYeah.â
âWe literally have a list of Unit 6 people,â he said. âI have it right here.â
He fluttered a sheet of standard A4 paper in the doorway. âWhy did you even bother trying to give me a fake name?â
Bell took it in stride, to her credit. âForce of habit. You have a prisoner?â
âWhy is Erika here?â he asked.
Bell shrugged. âBetter safe than sorry, hmm? I like having a bodyguard on missions like this.â
She punctuated it with a smile.
The man grimaced. âWell, normally Iâd call in reinforcements right now, but since Erikaâs here, itâs pretty safe to assume you are who you say you are. Unless youâre some comically powerful telepath whoâs enslaved Erika and somehow stolen her out of the Radiantâs compound without us hearing about it, in which case Iâd be both, a, dead already and, b, very impressed.â
He opened the door wider, wide enough to cast light on him, revealing a small, thin wire of a man with long dark hair who I totally wouldâve mistaken for a woman if I didnât hear his voice before seeing him. He was the sort of person who looked perpetually unamused, despite his jovial tone. But he had a cool lizard tattooed on his upper left arm, so I decided I was going to try and like him.
He extended a hand to Bell. âRandall,â he said. âI go by Randy.â
Bell took his hand, shook it once. Said, âBell.â
Randyâs smile took on an odd frozen quality, and he hesitated a bit too long before extending a hand in my direction. I knew the reaction well enough, and my patience for it had long since withered away.
I quickly revised my decision to be friendly.
Just before I took his hand, I froze the ambient moisture on my hand, just to watch him wince from the sudden cold as soon as our palms touched.
I had no plans to be doubted.
âErika,â I said.
Randy withdrew his hand from me faster than he did from Bell. He turned behind him, shouted back, âDave, hit the lights!â, and gestured for us to come inside.
The lights buzzed to life, flooding the hallway whiteâI winced for half a second, and took a quick glance at Bell, who was unfazed.
Randy started off down the hall, with the implication that we were followingâBell waited for half a second before doing so, and I waited another half second beyond that to tail them.
âThe prisoner,â Bell said. No interest in waiting around, or taking in the sceneryânot that there was all that much to take in. We were in a white-walled hall, stained by dirt and time, and at the end of the hall was a pair of doors that presumably led to what wouldâve been the main floor, and off to each side were other, lightly-rusted white-painted metal doors that led to some other portion of the building I couldnât quite imagine.
And above us, the cold floodlights.
âRight,â Randy replied. âWe scooped him up creeping around the building, ahâ¦what time is it right now?â
If you spot this narrative on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.
âTen oâclock,â Bell said, toneless.
âSo, thirty-seven hours ago,â Randy finished.
âWhy didnât you just say yesterday morning?â
The question made Randyâs brain short-circuit for a second; he spluttered for just a bit too long before responding, âI donât know. Why does that matter?â
Bell shrugged, said nothing.
He frowned and kept on. âBasically, he was hiding in the bushes out front. Really, justâhiding in the bushes, like we donât have cameras around the whole damn building or something. We sent a guy out there to tap him on the shoulder and say, âLook, youâre coming in with us,â and he came quietly. Since then he hasnât talked, but we honestly havenât tried all that much. The fact that he was so poorly hidden gave us all the willies.â
Hearing a grown man say âgave us the williesâ must have tripped some kind of condition in my head, because I started giggling uncontrollably and could not stop for the life of me.
Randy shot me an oddly concerned look, and it was only after letting that lightly disdainful stare burn into my skull for a few moments that I could calm down again.
Bell ignored it.
We all stopped in front of the doors at the end of the hallâbig frosted-glass-set doors that were hooked up to a button that opened them automatically in the event of something large needing to come in or out.
âAnyway,â he said, drawing out the first syllable, âWe assumed this was some kind of a bait to divert our attention. Weâre pretty short-staffed out here, so having a prisoner keeps a bunch of heads occupied.â
âHow short is short-staffed?â Bell asked.
âThereâs fifteen of us in the whole building,â Randy said.
âOnly fifteen,â Bell echoed. âHuh.â
âLike I said,â he went on, âShort-staffed. So we were all on edge that some huge army was gonna storm the place and bowl us over. But that hasnât happened yet, soâ¦half the reason we phoned Jan in the first place was because weâd, ah, also like to have some backup in case they decide to invade tonight, since they didnât last night, and maybe theyâd think weâd let our guard down after twenty-four hours.â
Bell shrugged. âThat sounds reasonable to me.â
âPrisonerâs downstairs,â Randy said. âThrough here and off to the left. Iâll walk you there.â
âThanks, but I think we can find our own way if thatâs all there is.â Bell had kept all her responses terse and dry. I could only begin to imagine what conclusions she was already drawing about the place.
What I wouldâve given to be a telepath!
âI mean, itâs a bit more complicated than that,â Randy said. âYouâll need a code to get in the door to the stairs.â
âIâm listening.â
Randy snorted. âIâm not going to tell you the code. That would be hilariously insecure.â
Bell took a second too long to respond. She was deciding something, but I couldnât figure out what it was. In the end, she just shrugged and said, âWhatever.â
Randy pursed his lips for a second. âLook, Bell, I get that youâre numero uno over at the Radiant, but Iâd appreciate it if you could at least pretend to respect what we do here. Okay?â
âWhat exactly is it that you do here?â Bell said. âProchazka never explained it to me, and I havenât figured it out yet.â
âPretty much exactly what you guys do, but for lower-profile cases around here. Weâve got a lot of petty magical crime out here and it tends to be really easy to find.â
âOkay.â
âSo we donât have any big guns, so to speak,â Randy said. âOur strongest key is Wyatt, and heâs stuck here running the place most of the time. If we got invaded, weâd probably all just die.â
âYouâre the police in a rich town, basically,â Bell said. âRemind me again what youâve done to earn our respect?â
Randy, at some point during Bellâs response, made the decision to just let all of Bellâs slights roll off him. I figured that was probably a good plan.
âLetâs head inside,â Randy said, smacking the button to the right of the door with his open palm.
The doors swung inwardâthey appeared to be able to go both inward and outward depending on which side they were opened from, which was a cool piece of tech, I guessâand Randy immediately banked a left toward a small door in the corner of the floor.
The floor itself was a vast open space filled with basically nothing at all. There were a couple of lone cubicle walls standing on an enormous concrete floor like boulders in a desertâdistantly I could hear a few voices and the light clicking of someone typing.
It was so much space for so little anything.
I gawked at it for a bit before I realized I couldnât really see anything on the furthest wall. There was a sign there, with some text on it, big red block letters that blurred together into a red-streaked smear.
My heart shriveled up and I looked away.
Randy brought us to a door on the left-hand wall, about halfway down the room. He poked in the code on a keypad mounted next to it, using his free hand to obscure what he was doing from the strongest flesh-key in the world.
I wondered if Bell had x-ray vision like that. It wouldnât surprise me.
The lock behind the door clicked open. Randy said, âWe donât have real jail cells, so we just locked the guy in a storage area in the basement. Itâs a pretty big space, but thereâs nothing in it but dust, and heâs not an earth-key so I donât think weâve got anything to worry about.â
âDuly noted,â Bell said. âWe can take this from here. Is there only one storage room?â
âNo, but itâs also locked,â he said, fishing a key out of his pocket. âHere. First door on the right.â
Bell took it without a word, then gestured to me, and I followed her down, shooting Randy a quick look that I figured passed for apologetic. He was a little mean to me earlier, but a lot of people were like that, and I knew I certainly didnât want to be on the receiving end of Bellâs sass.
Randy looked back at me and shrugged.
0 0 0
We closed the door behind us and started down the steps, walking slowly, eyes focused on the landing.
The unearthly silence, Bellâs demeanor, and the low light of that basement had me dead-to-rights locked and convinced we were about to be ambushed. I was so prepared for it that Iâd drawn a bit of water out of the bottle I held and sharpened it into a dart, just in case.
But when we got to the bottom, nobody was there.
Bell said nothing; she walked all the way to the end of the hall and stopped. There were ten storage chambers in total, but we only had a key for the first one on the right labeled â2â. The key itself had a matching number on it, so it wasnât possible to mess that up somehow.
Standing in front of rusted metal door #10, a good thirty or forty feet down the hall from the room we had a key for, Bell said, âThis is a bit more complicated than I thought it would be.â
âRandy seems okay,â I said.
âAt first, I thought he was compromised by a telepath,â Bell said, âAnd I got concerned, because that wouldâve made bringing you along an extremely bad idea. But then he talked some more, and I realized that I was rightâhe was compromisedâbut his reactions to me were very natural.â
I was a bit lost. âSoâ¦â
âWe missed it,â Bell said. âWeâre too late.â
âHow?â
âLoybol beat us here,â she replied. âEveryone in this facility is dead.â
My reaction to that was limited to a confused âOh.â
âAt least,â Bell said slowly, âI think so. But that wouldnât explain why we were called here. They want us to do something, which meansâ¦â
She frowned, resting her chin in her palm and holding her elbow with her free hand. âThe prisoner is way more powerful than we thought.â
Bell looked down at the floor for a moment, deep in thought. I made a point of not disturbing her with anything like questions or requests for explanations.
âThis doesnât add up,â she said, after a moment.
âNothing does,â I agreed.
âSoâthis guyâs been here since yesterday morning. Nobodyâs gotten anything out of him. We got the call to come helpâ¦this morning. I donât believe for a second that everyoneâs just sat around and done nothing for forty hours.
Bell grimaced. âI think the call was genuine. They honestly did want help with the prisoner. And then Loybolâs team got here before we did. Or the call was fabricated by Loybol to get us here for something. Or the prisoner is one of Loybolâs people, and then a powerful telepath arrived and took control of a couple key people here, and this was the trap we thought it was, and we should still nuke them from orbit.â
She took a breath.
âWe need to see Wyatt,â she said.
âWhy?â
âBecause I need to see what kind of compromised he is,â she said, âbefore I figure out what to do.â
She walked past me back toward the steps.
âShould we split up?â I asked her.
âWhy?â Bell turned her head back to me.
âI could talk to the prisoner,â I said.
Bell snorted. âNot a chance. Weâre sticking together.â
She went up the steps, and all I could really do was follow.