Wormhole

Deep in her drug-induced dreams, Jennifer found herself at the McFarland breakfast table, seated beside Mark and Heather as Mrs. McFarland set the platter, stacked high with her golden-brown pancakes, at the table’s center. She recognized the scene. It was the morning after she and Mark had shared Heather’s dream about the Rag Man. She watched it unfold around her, a disembodied ghost, unable to make herself known to any of the participants. With a pang of regret, Jennifer knew those days were gone forever.

 

The dream shifted to another morning at the McFarland table. Her other self glanced at Heather, who seemed unusually distracted this morning.

 

“What’s up with Heather?” she heard herself think.

 

Heather lifted her gaze to Jennifer’s. “What was that?”

 

It was as if Heather had heard her, even though she hadn’t said the thought aloud.

 

Again the dream shifted, this time to the night she’d run from her room to meet Mark at the top of the stairs. Heather had called out to them in pain and terror, her thoughts reaching into their minds as she’d been carried off by the Rag Man. And her thoughts had guided Mark through that dark night to find her.

 

These experiences were completely different from Jennifer’s ability to read and influence people’s emotions. She, Mark, and Heather had been able to share their thoughts. And they’d done it without wearing the alien headsets. How? And why hadn’t they managed to do that same thing on demand?

 

Her questions focused her thoughts, pushing back the drug haze as she called upon her brain for answers. She felt a chill run down her spine. Finding the answers to those questions suddenly acquired an importance that drove her to an ever-tighter level of concentration.

 

Jennifer shoved the drug haze aside, isolating its effects to a small portion of her mind as she called upon the full extent of her analytical abilities. The alien headsets were the key. She was sure of it.

 

The first time she’d stood inside the Bandolier Ship and felt the headset establish a link between her brain and the ship’s computer, she’d felt it alter her brain, not exactly rewiring the connections, but forcing activity across the entire structure. Neural connections that had been so weak that they were dormant had come to life, able to be accessed and put to work in ways that had previously been impossible.

 

When she, Mark, and Heather put on the headsets, they could share thoughts. In fact, if they weren’t careful, the others could penetrate into private areas, accessing thoughts and feelings not meant for sharing. Jennifer thought about that. The headset picked up the thoughts from their minds, transferring the impulses to the Bandolier Ship via a subspace link. But how had they occasionally managed to establish a similar link between themselves without the headsets?

 

Distances weren’t the same in subspace. It wasn’t the same as the way gravitational effects warped the space-time fabric. Instead, subspace had its own wave transmission speed, and that relationship between time and distance defined their meaning just as the speed of light did in our universe.

 

Jennifer had seen it for herself, had used it to hack into remote networks, accessing their data through the subspace receiver-transmitters or SRTs. In the case of the computer hack, the system hadn’t required a physical device at the far end to achieve a tap.

 

A sudden excitement coursed through Jennifer’s nerves, presaging a great discovery that nudged the corner of her awareness. She only had to relax and let down the wall that held it back. The answer was right there, so frustratingly close she could almost reach out and touch it.

 

Why did the computer subspace hack work? You focused the SRT on an exact coordinate and then scanned for computer signals in the vicinity. Since all signals leaked a small fraction of their energy into subspace, it became a matter of efficient tuning and filtering to pick out the desired information from the background noise.

 

But the headsets provided the powerful alien computer with a target for its subspace probe, providing exact coordinates for the link, as well as a unique personal encryption key that tagged each of the starship’s crewmen, akin to credentials for a secure wireless network connection.

 

Once the link had been established, the Bandolier Ship’s computer remembered it, recognizing that crewman’s signal whenever it encountered its subspace signature. But did the computer really need the headset to make contact after that?

 

At the edge of her awareness, Jennifer felt a new surge of drugs enter her bloodstream, and although she shifted her attention to try to wall off its effects, a warm wave of foam swept her up, swirling her away from the answer that bobbed just beyond her grasp.

 

 

 

 

 

The cuffs bit into Mark’s wrists and ankles like a gnawing dog, stretching his naked body tight on the board, tilted down at a twenty-seven-degree angle. Water ran off the board in streams, yet clung tightly to the shammy-like cloth sack that covered his head. The air that struggled through the wet sack with each breath pressed the cloth tightly against his nose and mouth, the restricted air flow so damp that it felt as if he breathed in liquid water.

 

Inside the hood Mark smiled and relaxed, letting his heart rate fall from its normal forty-three beats per minute to thirty-five as he moved into midlevel meditation. He didn’t know where Heather and Jennifer were being held, but he knew his role. His captors expected him to be the leader of the group, the tough guy. Mark didn’t intend to disappoint them. The best thing he could do right now was to give the bad guys a target to focus on, something so interesting it might draw part of their attention away from the girls.

 

A hand struck him across the face, a stinging, openhanded slap that rolled his head to the side, bringing the copper taste of blood to his tongue. A deep voice snarled close to his left ear.

 

“How long do you think you’re gonna hold out, kid? I’ve got all the time in the world.”

 

Mark felt a fresh gush of ice-cold water pour down onto his face and chest, temporarily shutting off all airflow through the sack. Then the voice next to his ear was back.

 

“You might as well face it. Sooner or later you’re going to tell me everything I want to know. The quicker that happens, the easier it’ll go for you. So what’s it gonna be?”

 

Inside the hood, Mark’s smile returned. He lay in green grass beside a gurgling mountain stream. Surrounding the sunlit meadow, snowcapped peaks rose up to carve a cloudless blue sky. He smelled the sweet scent of flowers, heard the buzz of a hummingbird, felt the gentle breeze press damp grass against his face.

 

Tied to the dripping board in the frigid cell, Mark felt his heart rate fall another five beats per minute.

 

 

 

 

 

“You watching this?”

 

Harlan Redding’s voice held an edge Channing Grail had never heard before. Shifting his view from the image on the video monitor to the readout of Mark Smythe’s vitals, he felt a sudden chill.

 

The kid hadn’t eaten in three days. He’d been chained to a high ring in the center of the frigid concrete cell, a position that gave him two choices, remain standing or dangle by his manacled wrists. A single drain in the floor below him served as his toilet. By now, sleep deprivation alone would have driven most men into a hallucinatory dream state somewhere between waking and sleep. But not Mark Smythe. He had remained standing as if it took no more effort than lying in a feather bed.

 

The decision to proceed to waterboarding had received reluctant approval from the higher-ups, but based upon the results of the last four hours, Channing was beginning to think they might as well not have bothered.

 

“Jesus.”

 

“Resting like a baby.”

 

“Never seen anything like it.”

 

“Not an ounce of fat on that body either. From the look of him, I’d say he could win the Olympic decathlon.” Harlan nodded at the computer display. “Based on those readings, his mental control’s completely off the charts.”

 

“Gregory trained him.”

 

“Yes. But it’s more than that.” Harlan pointed a thick finger at the video monitor. “Down in that cell, we have one hell of a specimen.”

 

“Yeah,” Channing replied. “Too bad he doesn’t work for us.”

 

 

 

 

 

Tall Bear watched as the thirteen tribal chiefs emerged from the largest sweat lodge on the Santa Clara Reservation, sweat dripping from their bodies onto the hard-packed dirt just outside the mud lodge. They passed him without a word, slight nods in his direction the only acknowledgment of what had just happened inside.

 

Very few outsiders understood native ceremonies, especially the yuppies that paid self-professed shamans to conduct purification ceremonies. The US government showed even less interest and understanding of their importance. That combination of ambivalence and naiveté made a native sweat lodge an excellent place to discuss matters of a sensitive nature.

 

Tall Bear wasn’t sure how he’d assumed his role as the unofficial leader of the Native People’s Alliance. It had started with the rebellious act of helping Jack and Janet escape their federal pursuers. Then, like a desert arroyo suddenly filled with a distant storm’s roiling floodwater, anger at the unbridled power of the central government had filled his soul. The abuse of that power, illustrated so clearly in the way the government had framed Jack and his team, had burst the dam holding back Tall Bear’s rage at the injustice dealt his own people. Not just the Navajo people.

 

Many tribes had suffered genocide. Oddly, that didn’t bother Tall Bear as much as the systematic theft of his people’s dignity. The great American government, with its spirit of free enterprise, had imposed communism on the Native Peoples, and like the system the Bolsheviks had imposed on the Soviet Union, it had yielded the same harvest. The once-proud native people learned to accept government handouts, then to rely upon them. The subsequent loss of pride, self-reliance, and initiative led inevitably to the current plague of alcoholism, obesity, and hopelessness infecting modern tribal societies.

 

His thoughts turned to the football game he’d been invited to last fall, the New Orleans Saints at the Arizona Cardinals. With the domed stadium filled with Arizona’s red-clad fans and the Cardinals driving, the words that sent a shiver down Tall Bear’s spine thundered through the huge stadium’s public address system.

 

“Rise up Red Sea!”

 

As Tall Bear watched the tribal leaders climb into their pickups and cars, fire up the ignitions, and drive off down the dirt road, spewing plumes of light brown dust in their wake, his jaw clenched in determination.

 

Rise up Red Sea!

 

 

 

 

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