Artemis Fowl and the Eternity Code

‘Are you sure this is a good idea, Foaly?’

 

 

‘I wish we had time for discussion, Holly, but every second costs our old friend a couple of brain cells. I’m going to talk you through it. The first thing we need to do is to take a look at the wound.’

 

Holly peeled off several cold packs, unzipping the foil suit. The entry wound was small and black, hidden in the centre of a pool of blood, like a flower’s bud.

 

‘He never had a chance. Right under the heart. I’m going to zoom in.’

 

Holly closed her visor, using the helmet’s filters to magnify Butler’s wound.

 

‘There are fibres trapped in there. Kevlar, I’d say.’

 

Foaly groaned over the speakers. ‘That’s all we need. Complications.’

 

‘What difference do fibres make? And this really is not the time for jargon. I need plain Gnommish.’

 

‘OK. Surgery for morons it is. If you poke your fingers into that wound, the magic will reproduce Butler’s cells, complete with their new strands of Kevlar. He’ll be dead, but completely bulletproof.’

 

Holly could feel the tension creeping up her back.

 

‘So, I need to do what?’

 

‘You need to make a new wound, and let the magic spread from there.’

 

Oh great, thought Holly, a new wound. Just slice open an old friend.

 

‘But he’s as hard as rock.’

 

‘Well then, you’re going to have to melt him down a little. Use your Neutrino 2000, low setting, but not too much. If that brain wakes up before we want it to, he’s finished.’

 

Holly drew her Neutrino, adjusting the output to minimum.

 

‘Where do you suggest I melt?’

 

‘The other pectoral. Be ready to heal; that heat is going to spread rapidly. Butler needs to be healed before oxygen gets to his brain.’

 

Holly pointed the laser at the bodyguard’s chest.

 

‘Just say the word.’

 

‘In a bit closer. Fifteen centimetres approximately. A two-second burst.’

 

Holly raised her visor, taking several deep breaths. A Neutrino 2000 being used as a medical instrument. Who would have thought it?

 

Holly pulled her trigger to the first click. One more click would activate the laser.

 

‘Two seconds.’

 

‘OK. Go.’

 

Click. An orange beam of concentrated heat spilled from the Neutrino’s snout, blossoming across Butler’s chest. Had the bodyguard been awake, he would have been knocked unconscious. A neat circle of ice evaporated, rising to condense on the surgery’s ceiling.

 

‘Now,’ said Foaly, his voice high-pitched with urgency. ‘Narrow the beam and focus it.’

 

Holly manipulated the gun controls expertly with her thumb. Narrowing the beam would intensify its power, but the laser would have to be focused at a certain range to avoid slicing right through Butler’s body.

 

‘I’m setting it for fifteen centimetres.’

 

‘Good, but hurry; that heat is spreading.’

 

The colour had returned to Butler’s chest and the ice was melting across his body. Holly pulled the trigger again, this time carving a crescent-shaped slit in Butler’s flesh. A single drop of blood oozed from between the wound’s edges.

 

‘No steady flow,’ said Foaly. ‘That’s good.’

 

Holly holstered her weapon. ‘Now what?’

 

‘Now get your hands in deep, and give it every drop of magic you’ve got. Don’t just let it flow; push the magic out.’

 

Holly grimaced. She never liked this bit. No matter how many healings she performed, she could never get used to sticking her fingers into other people’s insides. She lined her thumbs up, back to back, and slid them into the incision.

 

‘Heal,’ she breathed, and the magic scurried down her fingers. Blue sparks hovered over Butler’s wound, then disappeared inside, like shooting stars diving behind the horizon.

 

‘More, Holly,’ urged Foaly. ‘Another shot.’

 

Holly pushed again, harder. The flow was thick at first, a roiling mass of blue streaks; then, as her magic ebbed, the flow grew weaker.

 

‘That’s it,’ she panted. ‘I have barely enough left to shield on the way home.’

 

‘Well then,’ said Foaly, ‘stand back until I tell you, because all hell is about to break loose.’

 

Holly backed up to the wall. Nothing much happened for several moments, then Butler’s back arched, throwing his chest into the air. Holly heard a couple of vertebrae groaning.

 

‘That’s the heart started,’ noted Foaly. ‘The easy bit.’

 

Butler flopped back into the pod, blood flowing from his most recent wound. The magical sparks knitted together, forming a vibrating lattice over the bodyguard’s torso. Butler bounced on the trolley, like a bead in a rattle, as the magic reshaped his atoms. His pores vented mist as toxins were expelled from his system. The coating of ice around him dissolved instantly, causing clouds of steam and then rain, as the water particles condensed on the metal ceiling. Cold packs popped like balloons, sending crystals ricocheting around the surgery. It was like being in the centre of a multicoloured storm.

 

‘You need to get in there now!’ said Foaly in Holly’s ear.

 

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