OUTNUMB3RED:
The Brotherhood
*A
Sentinel-Numb3rs Crossover by Freya-Kendra, with chapters by Crowswork and Katfairy1
Re-edited
with thanks to Bardicfaerie,
Bonnie and TAE.
Time-Frame:
mid-2007, Numb3rs Season 3. When Cascade's Sentinel is outnumbered in LA and a
lone Sandburg becomes Guide to too many, how do the Eppes
brothers figure into the equation?
Author's
Note:
This story was spawned from a challenge posted by Crowswork. After the first chapter was posted by Crowswork, I took the bait and wrote the second one in the
hope the story would become a round-robin. However, after the third chapter was
posted by Katfairy, I ended up running with the rest.
This story's
Theme Song ="Count on Me" by Default
Chorus:
You can count on me
Cause' I will carry you till you
carry on
Anytime you need someone
Somebody strong to lean on
Well you can count on me
To hold you till the healing is
done
And every time you fall apart
Well you can hide here in my arms
And you can count on me
To hold you till that feeling is
gone
Verse 1:
I know that life ain't always good to you.
I've seen exactly what it's put
you through
Thrown you around and turned you
upside down and so you
You got to thinking there was no
way out
You started sinking and it pulled
you down
It may be tough you've to get
back up
Because you know that life ain't over yet
I'm here for you so don't forget
[chorus]
Verse 2:
I wonder why nobody's waiting on
you
I'd like to be the one to pull
you through your darkest times
I'd love to be the light that
finds you
I see a silver lining on your
cloud
I'll pick you up whenever you
fall down
Just take my hand and I will help
you stand
Because you know that life ain't over yet
I'm here for you so don't forget [chorus]
OUTNUMB3RED
Chapter
1
by Crowswork
Don Eppes paced the hospital room as he studied the still
figure on the bed. Only the tiny strips of tape holding his eyes closed spoiled
the illusion that the tall man was sleeping. Both muscular and handsome in a
quarter-back, GI Joe sort of way, the guy was a perfect specimen of humanity.
Under normal circumstances, he looked capable of twisting someone's head half
off. Of course, this circumstance was far from normal.
To put it
simply, the man was an enigma. They’d found him in this unconscious, not quite
comatose state lying in a farmhouse amongst the dead bodies of a half dozen
terrorists, most of whom had died of bullet wounds, although two had broken
necks. And yet aside from the nearly raw mess someone had made of his fingertips,
probably with some form of acid, this one man lying among six corpses didn't
have a mark on him.
Was
this John Doe another terrorist? For some reason Don did not think that to be
the case, but so far they’d had no luck identifying him. Although fingerprints
might eventually reveal something, the doctors were still assessing the damage,
which Don had been warned might prove to have irreparably erased the epidermal
ridges. Meanwhile, Don had an irritating, maddening notion that he'd
seen the man's picture somewhere. Charlie and some of the whizzes at
headquarters were matching the stranger's face against published photos using a
recognition algorithm or something... when Charlie said the word algorithm more
than once, Don tended to tune him out.
"Agent Eppes?"
Don turned to
see an older man with stern aquiline features stepping through the door.
"I'm
William Ellison."
"Yes, sir?"
The
man looked down at the still figure, his expression shifting briefly to
surprise and then despair before returning to a more schooled visage. "This
is my son, Jim," He announced. "Detective James
Ellison."
Don
frowned at the cool aristocratic tone. He tried to visualize his own father
under these circumstances, then shook off the image.
"He's a police officer?"
"Cascade
PD." The man touched the stubbled cheek of the
unconscious man. His shaking fingers belied his seeming calm. "Jimmy and
his partner vanished six months ago. They were on assignment... some sort of
undercover thing. You'll have to contact Captain Banks for the details."
"Why
are you here, sir?" Don realized how that sounded. "I mean, why
didn't his captain contact us?"
"I've
had a number of people keeping tabs on every unidentified body... every John
Doe that turned up.... in hopes of finding my son. I gave him up for dead once
but never again..." The elder Ellison pulled himself together,
straightened and studied Don. "Captain Banks and his officers kept
searching but the powers-that-be in Cascade made it clear that they thought Jim
and Blair were dead."
"Blair?
His partner?"
"Oh
yes... foolish of me..." William Ellison pulled a photo from his inside
jacket pocket and handed it to Don. Two men were holding a fish and grinning.
One of the men was clearly the unconscious man on the bed; the other was
younger and shorter. Even though there wasn't really a resemblance, the curly
hair and bright eyes reminded Don of his brother Charlie. "His name is
Blair Sandburg,” Ellison said.
"He
was a detective too?"
"Blair
is … was ….” He shook his head. “He’s a college professor, actually, and a
consultant to the police department. But
more than a partner; more like a younger brother to Jimmy. I'm afraid he might
not have survived."
Don
looked at the patient with a new sense of kinship. If Charlie ever got hurt
while helping him on a case he might just lie down and
give up too.
Chapter
2
by Freya-Kendra
Blair Sandburg
stared into his mug of tea as though the rising steam could show him that Jim
was okay. But all he saw were clouds of desert dust.
"Is
it too hot for you?" Mick Shofield asked,
seeming genuinely concerned. "There's ice in the fridge if you like."
Blair
looked at the other man, stunned yet again by his duplicitous behavior. At one
moment the white-haired, former Marine was a cruel and ambitious leader, and
then he would become the kind, grandfatherly soul Blair saw now.
"I
did what you asked." Shofield said, apparently
recognizing Blair’s focus had nothing to do with tea. "I kept him
alive."
"Alive?"
Blair shot back. "You tortured him until he completely zoned out, and then
you left him for dead."
"I
did what I needed to do to protect the brotherhood. And he does have a chance.
I thought you would find that better than the alternative."
The brotherhood. Blair had come to despise that word. What Shofield was creating was more of an army than a
brotherhood. It was an elite fighting force made up entirely of sentinels, each
one carefully and expertly recruited.
Setting
his untouched mug onto the room's tiny desk, Blair shot his kindly captor an
angry glare. "You deprived the brotherhood of one of its primary members,
and eliminated its security force altogether." Blair could still see the
men falling under a hail of bullets. They died simply because they were not
sentinels. Once again fighting the raw feeling the memory left in his stomach,
Blair pressed on with his reproach. "How is that protecting it?"
"I
eliminated a member who refused to give his full allegiance. And the security
force was no longer needed." In an instant Grandfather Mick vanished. It
was time for General Shofield to take control.
"The brothers are fully trained--."
"Thanks
to Jim Ellison," Blair spat icily despite the general's tendency to punish
insubordination -- severely.
Shofield met Blair's interruption with nothing more than a
tilt of his head. "So be it. He served his purpose. As for the others, the
only protection the brothers will need from here on out is the kind that you
are quite capable of providing."
Blair
met the old man's unwavering gaze with an even stronger one of his own.
"No," He said with calm determination.
Surprisingly,
Shofield smiled. "I thought you might get
defiant once Ellison was no longer an issue. No matter. There are others."
Blair's
blood went cold. "What others?"
"Innocents,
Mr. Sandburg. Women. Children.
The people of this city will earn our protection or our wrath. It's all up to
you now. If you do fulfill your duty to the brotherhood, then all will be in
harmony and we will become this city's saviors until it is time for us to pursue
justice and honor elsewhere. If you do not...." Shofield
shrugged. "Then good people will die until your allegiance becomes far
more complete than your ex-partner's ever could."
Chapter
3
by Katfairy1
Henri Brown
didn't so much as glance at the two desks anymore. He
didn't need to; he knew they were empty, and he knew they would stay that way
for a while. But he also knew this would not last. There wasn't a single member
of Major Crimes -- and damned few in Central Precinct -- who didn't believe soul-deep
that one day Ellison and Sandburg would be back. Water was wet, grass was
green, and Ellison and Sandburg always came through. It was simply how the
world worked.
The
day when they had been told to drop the case had already become legendary.
Everyone knew Captain Banks had a temper, that it was particularly volatile
when his men were being misused, and that it was at its worst when those men
were Ellison and Sandburg. Everyone knew that the rest of Major Crimes would
back him up, too. What nobody had expected was that
It
started with Simon Banks telling Chief of Police Warren very quietly that the
last he had heard, it took more than a few weeks to declare somebody legally
dead without a body. That the last he had heard, it was their job to solve all
cases, no matter how long it took. That the last he had heard, James Ellison
and Blair Sandburg were his men, and that he was damned if he was going to let
some paper-pusher whose only loyalties were to whoever signed his check sell
two good men down the river because he didn't have the balls to do the work.
While Simon was backing
H
did glance at Rafe, as he always did when remembering
that moment. Like Jim, Valentijn Rafe
was the son of a rich man. Unlike Jim, he didn't bother hiding it. Not that he
said anything about it; he just lived his life the way he saw fit and people
either accepted it or didn't. It was one of the reasons H liked him so much,
this casual acceptance of who he was and his willingness to let others be who
they were. Which was what made his threat so shocking -- Rafe
just didn't throw around his status like that. Rafe's
cousin was on the city council. On that legendary day, confronting his own
boss’s boss, Rafe had mentioned his cousin by name,
explicitly stating that he'd be having dinner with her and her family that very
night, and that he did hope he wouldn't have any bad news to report to her.
Never
forgetting that Jim Ellison had once saved her life, with Blair Sandburg
providing his usual invaluable assistance, she had been keeping tabs on the
investigation into their disappearance; she would not be happy if someone
decided the case wasn't worth pursuing. And she was married to the Mayor's
cousin. The connections within connections got even more confusing after that,
but what it all boiled down to was that if
The
case was still open. It wasn't anybody's primary case, not anymore; but nobody except
Warren and his cronies was willing to let it slide completely. Any lead was
still followed, frequently on the detective’s own time.
H
suspected that IA was looking the other way on several aspects of the case. He
knew Joel thought so, too, but except for one brief exchange, they didn't
discuss it.
He
glanced at Rafe again, but this time because his
partner had made an odd hissing noise. The feral look on the man's face was as
unnerving as his threat to
Val, my boy-
Just got a message from
Bill. Says your system needs a plumber. Bill wants to know if you've
heard anything about the Jags re-upping an old member?
Nobody dogging his steps, though. Pity- the man gets a
little too into himself when left alone.
Well, got to run, son. Call me when you
can- I still say you'll need help on that home-improvement project.
Tot ziens.
H
froze, hoping he'd read that right, while also hoping he'd read it wrong.
"Rafe?" He said quietly.
"William
Ellison found Jim, but not Blair, and Jim's zoned. Dad will give us whatever
help he can, if we can't do this through official channels." Rafe's grin wasn't pleasant. "Living in
H
wasn't going to argue that. The partners shared a silent exchange, then rose
and entered Simon's office without knocking. Their Captain didn't bother
yelling when he saw their faces.
"Right,"
Simon Banks said, looking as dangerous as he had that day with
They
left the office without saying a word and returned to their desks. Connor,
Taggart, and Rhonda were already at work. One by one, they called up files on
their computers, printed them, and left copies in their desk drawers. One by
one, they cleaned up their desks, took a long look around, and walked out.
Chapter
4
by Freya-Kendra
Charlie Eppes enjoyed his walks along the campus quad, taking in
the southern
Now
as he walked with Amita he could feel his heart
beginning to race in response to her prodding glances. He cleared his throat
and turned his gaze toward a delivery van pulling up alongside the student
center building.
"Don
asked me about another case he's working on," He said. "He seems to
think I can help him find a useful pattern every time he hits a dead-end. He
doesn't get it that sometimes there are just too many variables, too many
unknowns."
"What
are the variables?" Amita asked, clearly taking
his cue to avoid discussing the obvious chemistry between them. Math was always
the way to go. Chemistry was far too dangerous.
But
Charlie's attention had become focused on some sort of disturbance at the
student center.
"What's
going on over there?" He heard Amita ask him.
Instead
of answering, especially when he had no answers to provide, Charlie started
running toward the chaos. Something important was happening. He did not know
what, and he certainly did not know why, but he felt he needed to find out as
quickly as possible. Apparently, Amita felt the same
way -- or perhaps she was just curious about Charlie's own sense of urgency,
because she did not hesitate to follow him.
When
Charlie realized that everyone else seemed to be running away from the building
he had chosen to run toward, he slowed but did not stop. Then his eye caught
movement in the delivery van. He was sure he saw something drop from a window.
"Go
back!" Someone shouted at him. "They said there's a bomb."
His
mind struggling to make sense of the confusing signals, Charlie noticed the
delivery van speed off with a raspy roar of its engine as a puff of black smoke
spewed the scent of diesel fuel into the air. An instant later, a much more
impressive roar erased every other sound around him. He turned to Amita and saw rather than heard her screams. And then he
felt himself propelled toward her by a sudden rush of hot wind.
* *
*
Someone
was squeezing Charlie's shoulder and nudging him. His ears were ringing; it was
a loud, unnerving sound, making him feel almost as though he was trapped in a
bell tower -- or that he was the bell tower. He felt heavy, leaden bells
peeling right into his brain. Still worse, he could not breathe.
"Charlie?"
The
sound pressed itself into his consciousness like a shout under water.
"Charlie?"
Finally
he gasped, choking down a lungful of air.
"Charlie?"
Amita's voice registered clearly now. He coughed as he
tried to sit up.
"Maybe
you shouldn't--"
He
waved her off. "I'm okay." The words were a challenge for him to
utter; but at least he understood why. "Just got the wind," He took a
shaky breath, "knocked out of me." Another breath.
"I'm fine."
Amita's gaze said that she was not convinced.
"Really." He smiled.
As
a blast of sirens began to converge on the campus, Charlie realized that he may
be fine, but things around him were far from it. He saw then that Amita was bleeding from a cut on her forehead. He reached
up, but stopped short of touching it.
"What
about you?" He asked, suddenly concerned.
She
shrugged. "I'm just trying to make sense of what's happening."
As
her gaze moved to the student center, Charlie dropped his hand and turned to
look there as well. What he saw was disturbing, and more than a little
frightening. A small part of the wall facing them had collapsed into rubble.
Most of the crowd that had gathered was standing, but several people were
kneeling over a handful of others who were lying on the ground.
"This
just might be one of Don's unknown variables," Charlie said.
"Why's
that?"
"Because his case has to do with the murder of six known
terrorists."
Amita's lips parted in a muted show of surprise, the impact
of this new thought clearly lessened by the greater shock of the bombing.
As
Charlie cautiously pushed himself to his feet, he could not help but gasp at a
painful twinge in his shoulder. He also noticed that his knees seemed weak and
his chest felt heavy. When his cell phone began ringing, he had to pause as
though to get his bearings before answering.
"Yeah,"
He said in a breathy voice without even bothering to check the caller ID.
"Charlie?"
Don's voice called out from the other end of the line. "What's wrong? Were
you there? Were you hurt?"
"I'm
fine. We weren't ...." What was he supposed to say? He couldn't say they
weren't there, because obviously they were -- at least they were close
enough to be thrown by the blast. "In the building," he finally
added.
"You
don't sound fine to me."
"What
happened, Don?" Charlie chose to ignore his brother's concern. "Was a
bomb threat called in?"
"All
I know is someone called 911 saying a masked gunman warned people to get out of
the building. Are you there now? Can you tell if anyone was still inside when
it blew?"
Charlie
watched a fire truck disperse its crew, the first to arrive. "I hope
not," He answered honestly.
Chapter
5
LAX had gone to a
heightened alert level by the time Simon Banks and his team arrived, but the
detectives from Cascade were unable to determine why until they hit the road in
a rented minivan, the only vehicle they could get on such short notice, and
found an all-news radio station.
"The FBI
reports that no terrorist groups have claimed responsibility for today's
bombing at the university campus just outside of Los Angeles," A
female reporter said amidst the static from the AM signal. "Eight
students were hurt in the blast, two critically."
When the station
went to a commercial, Joel Taggart switched off the radio and glanced worriedly
at Simon, who had insisted on driving. "That sounds like an awfully big
coincidence. You don't think--"
"I don't
think anything yet," Simon shot back. Then he sighed. "We'll know
more as soon as we check in with this Special Agent Eppes."
"He's
there," Rafe added from his seat behind Joel. He
shoved his cell phone back into his pocket and leaned forward. "I just got
off the phone with him. He's at the university now."
"How do we
get there?" Simon asked.
"Sorry,
Captain. He sounded pissed; said we weren't to go anywhere near there. He wants
to meet us at LA General in a couple of hours."
"But what
if there's a connection?" Connor asked from the seat beside him.
"Joel's right. This sounds too coincidental. Jim was found with dead
terrorists.
"I hate to
say it, but Jim needs us, too," Henri Brown said from the rear-most seat,
where he could stretch his legs out into the floor space between Rafe and Connor.
"I'm not
saying we should abandon Jim," Connor answered. "I'm just suggesting
we stop at the uni first. We can introduce ourselves
to this Agent Eppes and have a look 'round."
* *
*
By the time
Simon pulled onto the campus, he'd already had his fill of LA driving. He
tossed the keys to Joel. "You're up next." Then he flashed his badge
to an approaching uniformed officer and asked for Special Agent Don Eppes.
They were
directed to the blast site, where a disheveled, curly-haired Einstein was
talking to a group of glassy-eyed listeners in FBI jackets about angles and
trajectories and other things Simon tuned out completely. The young man's
passion and apparent brilliance were painful reminders of their own missing
team member.
"We're
looking for Agent Eppes," Simon barked
authoritatively. It bothered him to be so ... well, bothered by the
young man standing before him. Still, he let the annoyance build an edge into
his voice. He even believed it helped to give him a degree of control -- until
the young man stopped and turned to face him. There was something disturbing in
his eyes, a look of hurt and loss that provided yet another reminder of
Sandburg. Simon felt guilty without even knowing why.
"I'm Eppes." Another dark-haired man pulled away from the
group of listeners. This one definitely fit the bill of an FBI agent, from his
take-no-prisoners attitude right down to the glare in his eyes. "Who are
you?"
"Captain
Simon Banks, of the--"
"I thought
I told you people to wait at the--"
"We thought
we could be of better use h--"
"This is a federal
crime sce--"
Suddenly it
seemed as though everyone was talking over everyone else, but Joel Taggart
pulled away as his eye caught something red and metallic in the debris. He
moved toward it and knelt to get a better look. It was a Swiss army knife.
"We think
it was dropped by one of the bombers," The young man said from behind him.
"Why's
that?" Taggart asked.
"I saw it
happen," The young man answered. "I was in the quad, over
there." He nodded with his chin. "Something caught my eye. I saw it
drop from a rear window of the van. It means something, I just can't quite
figure out what yet."
Taggart
straightened. "It means this bombing is directly linked with that John Doe
in your hospital."
"How could
you possibly--"
"The John
Doe's name is Jim Ellison. Detective James Ellison, to be
more precise. And unless this is one gigantic coincidence, that Swiss
army knife belongs to his missing partner, Blair Sandburg."
It seemed almost
as though those words, although spoken softly, were enough to bring an end to
the quarrelling. Joel noticed a sudden, disturbing silence and decided to break
it by introducing himself to the young man.
"I'm Joel
Taggart," He said, extending his hand. "I work with both Jim and
Blair."
"Charles Eppes," The young man said, taking Joel's hand. Joel
saw Charles wince, as though extending his arm had caused him some degree of
pain.
The detective
realized this man had been as much victim as witness; still he was there,
working side by side with federal agents to help determine what had happened,
if not why just yet.
"Eppes?" Joel wondered then. "Any relation
to--"
Charles nodded,
giving a small, almost shy smile. "We're brothers."
From what little
Joel could tell the two Eppes men seemed to be about
as alike as, well, Jim Ellison and Blair Sandburg. Nonetheless, the younger
brother was obviously part of the agent's team.
"Let's get
that knife tagged and bagged," Don Eppes
demanded then. "We need to know who's handled it, where it's been and
anything else it can tell us. Chuck, you're with me."
Joel was
impressed by the agent's take-charge approach. There was something about Eppes that reminded Joel of Jim Ellison. Actually, it was a
shame Eppes wasn't more like Jim. If the agent had
Jim's sentinel abilities he would not have to delegate the task of examining
Sandburg's knife -- he might even be able to determine whether Blair was still
alive.
"The
hospital," Eppes added, apparently answering a
question from his brother. "You're getting checked out before you get any
more involved in all this."
The older Eppes brother shot Joel a look that was clearly intended to
be hard as steel, but Joel saw it differently. There was something else in
Agent Eppes' eyes, something more compassionate than
cruel.
"Your team
can follow Special Agent Sinclair back to headquarters," Eppes said to Taggart. "We've got a lot of--"
"Not
yet," Simon Banks interrupted. "First, we see Jim. Detective
Ellison," he corrected immediately.
Though Eppes stopped dead in his tracks and turned slowly, he did
not erupt into the kind of tirade Joel and the rest of Cascade's Major Crimes'
crew had come to expect from feds.
"Right,"
The agent said instead. "Of course." A
moment later, he added, "You can follow me if you like."
His gaze
softened, but it was his brother, Charles who gave Joel a sympathetic smile.
Chapter
6
Ten years ago, a Chopek warrior from the jungles of
What'd he say? Blair had asked
his partner and friend.
Earth
music.
Yeah, Blair
remembered now. Earth music invoked the sounds of tribal passion that fed the
ritualistic practices meant to bring or restore balance to their world.
Blair had been
drawn to such sounds through his own natural curiosity. He had introduced Jim
to them as well, to help the sentinel restore balance within himself. But now,
suddenly, there was no balance, none at all. The music echoing through the
spaces of a musty, old warehouse in an abandoned corridor of Los Angeles was
out of place. Strangely, it did more now to unravel Blair's nerves than to
soothe them.
He gazed out at
the ten men seated cross-legged before him, each with eyes closed, ears tuned
to the music, thoughts turned inward. Blair himself had taught them how to
meditate like that. It had proved to be a far easier task than he had imagined
it would. In fact, all of these men had been better students than Jim ever had.
From the moment Blair was introduced to them so many months ago, they had
welcomed his suggestions.
Before Blair had
even been made aware of the existence of Shofield's
Brotherhood, they had studied Blair's notes, accessed illegally from
Blair had even
been a willing teacher, back then, all those months ago. By agreeing to teach Shofield's sentinels, Blair had helped to persuade the
leader that both he and Jim were far more concerned about refining the skills
of sentinels than they were about the city of
At least, Blair
had tried to believe Shofield had been persuaded. In
truth, neither Blair nor Jim had ever earned the man's trust. And Shofield had blindsided Blair completely when he set out to
prove that Jim, and not Blair himself, was expendable.
"Your own
words teach the importance of meditation." Mick Shofield's
voice at his back brought sudden chills to Blair's spine. "To
find balance and to renew the spirit."
Blair tensed but
fought to prevent himself from recoiling as Shofield's
hand landed softly on his shoulder.
"Son,"
Shofield said in his best, grandfatherly tone,
"you should join them."
His jaw locked
so tightly he could almost imagine his teeth beginning to shatter, Blair found
it impossible to reply.
"Look at
you," Shofield said tenderly. "You're all
in knots."
Blair cringed as
the old man began to rub his shoulders. He endured the tortuous massage for
less than a minute, and then sprang to his feet, shivering as though he had
just brushed away a deadly insect.
"Don't
touch me," Blair said. "Don't you ever, ever touch me again."
The old man
smiled. The sight made Blair want to vomit.
"You have
so much hatred in you, son. You yourself should know that hatred is a useless
and wasted emotion."
The man never
ceased to surprise him. Dumbfounded, Blair stumbled against words that simply
could not be made strong enough. "You ... you blew up a building full of
innocent people. How ... how the hell do you think I'm going to respond to
you?"
Shofield's smile did not
fade. "We gave them a warning."
"Not enough
of one! Eight people were hurt. You heard the report. Eight
students. And two of them might not survive. A
warning? I can't believe you. Sentinels are ... they're about protecting
the tribe. Protecting," Blair emphasized. "Not murdering."
Still the man
wore that smug, deadly smile. "Our chosen tribe, for the moment anyway, is
"What
enemy? Those were students -- defenseless, unarmed students, not
warriors."
"Listen,"
Shofield said then, his gaze drawn upwards, his eyes
focused on nothing. "Listen to that so-called 'earth music' of yours. What
do you hear?"
"What?"
Blair asked, confused and confounded.
"The
sounds of the earth. The sounds of your own inner
spirit. What do you hear?"
"You're
insane."
"What is
your greatest enemy? Who is your own, true enemy?" Shofield continued to prod.
"You
are," Blair said icily.
Shofield's smile grew
wider. He shook his head. "No, son. Not at all." He rose, moving closer to Blair, who could
not help but back away.
"Don't you
see?" The man pointed toward Blair's bandaged hand.
"It's you,
son. Your own inner beast is your true enemy. You raised your own hand against
yourself. You bled yourself on the ridiculous belief that someone out there
would even care that you're still alive. Don't you see? I didn't strike out at
students. I struck out against your inner beast. That is the enemy we
need to defeat. And then...."
Shofield turned his
attention to the meditating sentinels. He pulled his hands behind his back and
raised his chin, giving Blair the sense that the man believed he was General
Patton urging his troops to victory. "And then, my son, we will assume
full control. And nothing -- and no one -- will stand in our way."
Still backing
away, still shaking in fear and repulsion, Blair's heel jammed against the
electrical cord feeding the small stereo. He tripped and threw out his bandaged
hand before landing on his butt on the hard concrete floor. The earth sounds
died as he gasped against the sting of his reopened wound, where he had sliced
his palm with his Swiss army knife before dropping it as proof that he had been
there, on that campus, with the bombers.
Proof
of what?
He wondered then. Proof of life?
This was no
life, no way to live. He had to get away; but more importantly, he had to stop Shofield and his army of sentinels. But how could he even
hope to do that without Jim? And how was Jim anyway? Was he even alive?
"Yes!"
Blair said aloud, forcing himself to believe it. Jim, man, you've got to
help me out here.
Suddenly, Blair
had a real, solid reason to try meditating. He plugged the cord for the stereo
back into the power strip, restarting the music.
"Sorry
about that," He said to the two sentinels who had been roused and were now
gazing at him curiously.
Then, ignoring Shofield, Blair crossed his legs, assuming his own version
of the lotus position, closed his eyes, and tried awakening his inner beast.
Surely the wolf would seek out its companion spirit.
Chapter
7
Jim had tumbled
into a vast jungle. Its colors muted and gray, it was like something not quite
dead, yet not even close to alive. He was surrounded by silence and
nothingness. He was out of synch in a timeless wasteland. And he was utterly
alone -- until he caught the scent of a faintly familiar mustiness. On all
fours, one with the spirit of the black jaguar that had claimed him, Jim raced
past trees that may as well have been plastic for the cold, non-life they
represented. He jumped over logs that fell like boulders in his path, and then
landed nimbly on fragile straw grass; its blades shattered like glass despite
the light touch of his lithe paws.
As he drew nearer,
the scent grew stronger, unmistakable. Soon, another grayness
approached him, a grayness that separated itself from that of the undead
jungle. This new grayness shimmered with something new and exquisite -- it
shimmered with life.
With scent and
sight restored, Jim called out to his approaching companion, his voice raw and jagged,
and soft -- too soft. Still, it was
enough, and soon the welcome cry of a lonely and desperate wolf opened his
ears.
"
The voice was
strange, feminine. It did not belong in the wolf.
"We have
his knife; you know, that Swiss army thing he always
carries around. There was blood on it --
Blood? '
"Jim, I
don't know what happened to you out there," The female voice continued,
"but whatever it was, it could still be happening to
The wolf howled
plaintively -- and then it was gone. In an instant, it vanished,
gray melting into gray, leaving Jim alone once again with the plastic, the
cold, and the hollow emptiness.
"Jim,
I--" The female voice returned, riding a wisp of warm, sterile air, though
it, too, seemed to get pulled away.
"No,"
she said then. "At least while I'm here I feel like I'm doing something. But
some coffee would be lovely, thank you."
Coffee? Jim could smell
it then, a smooth, almost nutty aroma.
"You're an
angel," the female voice -- Megan? -- continued.
"Don't let
word get out on that," A man's voice added. "Might
ruin my reputation."
H? Henri Brown?
Suddenly Jim
could hear other sounds around him: a variety of beeps from monitors; the soft
buzzing sounds of florescent lights working hard to chase away a different kind
of grayness; the electronic tones of telephones ringing in the distance.
He was in a
hospital. He could even smell it, those distinct hospital scents mixing body
odors with medicines and sanitizing cleansers.
But he could not
open his eyes.
"Jim?"
Brown called out. "Hey, Jim. You hear me in
there?"
He felt a soft
pressure on his forehead, on his temples; and then a tugging on his eyelids. There
was a small ripping sound as something was pulled away.
Jim blinked into
the brightness.
"Jim!"
Megan sounded surprised. "You're back. See? I knew you would. I knew he
would, didn't I, H?"
Her dark curls
began to swim out of a brilliant fog.
"Welcome
back, Jim," Henri Brown added.
Jim saw a shadowy
blur reach his shoulder. There was a light squeeze, though he never felt
Brown's hand actually touch him.
"It's good
to see you," H continued. "You had us going there. Hey, Megan, I'd
better call Simon."
Jim tried to
blink Henri into focus, even as he watched the large man recede into the
distance. Henri stopped at the door, and then turned to point toward Jim.
"Now don't
you go anywhere before I get back."
Jim tried to
answer, but all he managed was a groan.
Chapter
8
Special Agent Don
Eppes sat back in his chair and sighed deeply as he
rubbed his eyes.
"I don't
believe this," Don heard his brother complain from his chair beside him at
the conference table. "The government actually bought into this Shofield's scheme to create an army of ... of
supermen?"
Don leaned
forward and touched Charlie's wrist, silently asking him to stay quiet. After
all, Charlie was a civilian. He was a civilian with special clearances, but a
civilian nonetheless; and those clearances could get pulled in an instant if
someone at the right level was angry enough to make it happen. The man who was
currently briefing them was definitely at the right level.
"Whether or
not his army was made of what you call 'supermen,' Mr. Eppes," The white-haired, dark-suited man replied,
making a point to emphasize the civilian title, "has no bearing on the
fact that Shofield is a dangerous man with a
dangerous following. The undercover work performed by Detective Ellison and Mr.
Sandburg, with the cooperation of the Cascade, Washington Police Department
proved invaluable. It helped us to determine the full extent of that danger. We
were also on the brink of gathering sufficient evidence to justify the warrants
we needed to eradicate that danger."
"Since when
did suspected terrorists regain their rights to things like warrants?"
"Hold on,
Charlie," Don scolded softly before trying to redirect the discussion to
more current and more pertinent issues. "Okay, so what happened to the
operation? You lost contact with these men six months ago. And
what? Shofield just disappeared?"
"He learned
he was under investigation, so he went into hiding. We figured Ellison and
Sandburg were already dead--"
"So you
abandoned them," Captain Simon Banks angrily interjected.
"We had no
leads, no information, nothing we could follow up on. We issued alerts against Shofield and those of his men Ellison's reports had
identified, and we waited."
"Your
waiting could cost two students their lives," Charlie argued. "Wasn't
this exactly the kind of thing Homeland Security and the Patriot Act were supposed
to prevent? It was this kind of non-communication that enabled the 9-11
terrorists to--"
Don grabbed his
brother's arm. Then, hoping to avoid the eruption he could see simmering, he
excused himself and dragged Charlie out of the room.
"What's
gotten into you?" He demanded once they reached the corridor.
Charlie pulled
away from Don's grip and started pacing while he tried to work out the kinks in
his sore shoulder. "It's just ... it's the whole idea of our government
acknowledging things like psychics and supermen."
"Wait a
minute. Psychics? Is this about Kraft?"
Charlie stopped
moving long enough to glare at his brother. "Like I said
then: it's intangible; improvable; no better than throwing darts."
"Come on,
Charlie. Without Kraft's help we might never have found that girl alive. You
know that."
Charlie's glare
intensified. "What I know is they screwed up. They gave a terrorist group
six months to get their act together, and now two students could die."
"This isn't
about the students."
Charlie went
silent and still.
"Go home,
Charlie," Don said softly. "Whether you admit it or not, you are
still in shock from the bombing. ou need time to unwind. Believe
me; I know what I'm talking about here." He smiled, hoping to lighten the
mood.
"Amita was hit by shrapnel, Don. In the
head. Can you imagine how bad it could have been for her? She only
needed a couple of stitches, but....
Shrapnel, Don. At the university. That is not
supposed to happen."
"No. It's
not." Don reached out and gently squeezed his brother's good shoulder.
"Let me take you home. They'll be fine in there without me for a
while."
After a moment,
Charlie shook his head. "No. You just ... you figure out what we need to
do to catch these guys."
Don studied his
brother's eyes and then nodded once. "Okay. But you go home, take those
pain pills the doctor gave you and get some rest so you're ready to do your
part when I call you."
"You sure
you don't want to call Kraft?"
Seeing that
Charlie was actually smiling, Don's own smile grew warmer, reaching his eyes. "You
could kick his ass any day."
"Considering
I'm about thirty years younger than he is, the odds would be in my favor."
Yet there was
something about Charlie's eyes as he turned away. Charlie was feeling
vulnerable. He was coping far better than he had a year ago, after a close call
with a shooter in FBI headquarters left him afraid of "being afraid
again," as Charlie had confessed to their father. Perhaps that close call had helped to prepare
him for this one. Still, Charlie had never been trained to deal with close
calls. Period. Why should he? He had always had Don and
their father to protect him. Now Don wanted nothing more than to just glue
himself to his brother's side, to not only take him home but stay there with
him, watching over him until he knew he'd be okay.
Sighing, Don accepted
that was not an option. There was a group of lunatics who thought they were
supermen loose in the city, and someone Captain Banks said was a lot like
Charlie had been their captive for the last six months.
Don reached for
the conference room door unaware of the fact that the scope of conversations on
the other side of the glass wall had shifted. By the time he stepped inside,
the meeting was ending. Captain Banks had received notification that Detective
Ellison was awake. It was time to get answers from the best source they could
hope to find.
Chapter
9
Simon Banks was
approaching the door to Jim's hospital room when he heard the welcome sound of
a familiar voice complaining in a particularly non-welcoming manner.
"I
understand all that," Jim Ellison said more loudly than he probably should
have. "Just give me the damn form and let me sign it."
Simon was
smiling by the time he reached the room. It was good to hear Jim, even if it
was a cantankerous Jim he was hearing. But when he looked inside, Simon's smile
vanished. Jim was having difficulty
maneuvering the pen in his hand.
"Dammit," The detective complained as the pen slipped
from his fingers.
Simon watched
Jim struggle to grasp the thin object with his noticeably raw fingers.
The nurse beside
Jim was watching as well. "How about if I--" She offered after a
long, uncomfortable moment.
"I've got
it," Jim cut her off; it sounded like a warning.
After another
long, uncomfortable moment, the form was signed, although Simon felt reasonably
sure the words must look more like chicken scratch than Jim's usually clean
writing. The nurse slipped past Simon without giving the police captain a
second glance while Jim struggled to finish fastening the belt on his pants, a
task that was apparently no easier than signing his name had been.
"Jim,"
Simon said, realizing Jim had not yet noticed his presence.
When his friend
looked up at him, Simon saw Jim's anger shift quickly to something that looked
like relief, and then to pure frustration.
"Simon,"
Jim said. The word came out like a sigh.
"It's good
to see you."
"Yeah." His expression
as mixed as it had been a moment before, Jim now seemed to be caught between
relief and despair. "You, too."
Both men spent
the next few seconds alternately looking toward and away from one another. Simon
could almost hear Blair Sandburg at his ear explaining how fascinating it was
to observe such human behaviors in action. In contemporary social settings such
as this, men are supposed to mask their emotional reactions. The police captain
smiled sadly as he caught himself thinking like the younger man, and then he
strode purposefully into the room. He put his hand on Jim's shoulder and
squeezed.
"I'm glad
you're okay."
Jim gazed back
at him, but offered only a small, terse nod in return. He still seemed distant
-- too distant -- so Simon did what he had rarely done to any man aside from
his own, grown son; he wrapped his arms around his friend, drawing Jim into a
warm embrace.
A moment later,
after Simon pulled away, he caught a momentary glimpse of fluid in Jim's eyes
even as he felt something similar in his own. The captain sniffed as Jim
blinked the moisture away.
"Simon,
I...," Jim paused briefly, perhaps to gather his thoughts. "We need
to find Sandburg," He finished in a rush.
"I
know."
"This Shofield, he's as dangerous as they come."
"I
know."
Jim hesitated,
finally seeming to notice that Simon might have information beyond what he knew
himself. "What is it?"
"Someone
set off a bomb at a student center building at the local university." Simon
waited until he caught Jim's searching gaze in his own. "Sandburg's Swiss
army knife was left behind."
"Shofield wouldn't do that."
"What? The bombing?"
"The
message.
Blair must have been there. He must have dropped it himself." The hint of
a smile formed briefly on Jim's face. "He's still alive."
Letting his
relief peek through with a small smile of his own,
Simon nodded. "We'll find him."
Jim started
struggling again with his buckle. "They'll have found a new hiding place. It
will be inside
"Jim,"
Simon interrupted, holding up his hand. "We're not alone in this."
Now it was Jim's
turn to be confused. "What do you mean?"
"A local
FBI team has been fully briefed--"
Jim bristled,
his jaw going taut.
"Hold on,
Jim. We can't do this alone. First, we don't have any actual authority here. Second...."
Simon paused, shaking his head incredulously. "This isn't like any group of
feds we've ever worked with. I think I might even have convinced them that
Sandburg is actually on our side."
Seeing the anger
simmer in Jim's eyes, Simon did not give his friend an opportunity to speak
until he added, "They might not be as anxious as we are to extract Blair,
but they are definitely motivated to stop Shofield
sooner rather than later."
Jim's
questioning gaze silently encouraged Simon to continue.
"The team lead, Special Agent Don Eppes,"
The captain continued. "He has a brother, Charlie. Seems he's a professor
at the university that was bombed."
That caught
Jim's interest. "Was he injured?"
"Bruised
up a bit, but nothing serious. And Jim...." Simon paused as he
let a new smile creep back into place, lightening his demeanor. "This
agent's brother, the professor, apparently he is often called in to consult
with Eppes' team."
"You're not
going to tell me he's an anthropologist."
Simon shook his
head. "Mathematician."
A tiny smile
curled the edges of Jim's mouth -- but it disappeared in an instant when his
fumbling attempts simply could not get his belt buckled.
"You sure
you ought to leave here?" Simon asked.
"You're
damned right, I'm sure," Jim barked in response.
"Look, Jim,
I--"
"They're
numb, Simon." Jim held his hands up in front of him as he shouted back at
his friend, who stifled a shudder at the red, raw looking tips of Jim's
fingers. "I can't feel a damn thing."
"Judging
by the look of things, that's probably good, Jim. But I'm sure
the medication will wear off s--"
"It's not
medication." Jim sighed. "At least, I don't think it's the result of
any medication." He shook his head in frustration. "It's not just my
hands. It's everything. My sense of touch, it's ... it's almost
non-existent."
"Jim, you
were in an extended zone-out, as Sandburg would call it, for five days. It'll
probably take some time to readjust."
"Maybe, but
I .... I don't
know, Simon."
"What about
your other senses? Did you really not notice me in the
doorway?"
Jim shook his head
and then took a deep breath. "I just, I wasn't paying attention. No, I think
everything else is okay. It's just my sense of touch."
"Good. 'Cause Jim? We can't catch these guys without your
senses."
Chapter
10
Charlie Eppes did not know whether he was angry or relieved when he
learned that Detective Ellison had already briefed the FBI on the strange
little army Shofield was attempting to create. Don had not bothered to invite his brother to
attend. Was he trying to protect Charlie, or just to keep him off the case? Charlie
figured it was probably a little of both; after all, he was still having
difficulty dealing with the bombing at the university -- and he was still
stunned by the FBI's casual acceptance of the concept of sentinels. Not only
had they already found published articles completely discrediting a thesis
about sentinels written by Ellison's missing partner, Blair Sandburg, the
mathematical probabilities of even one man having the kind of heightened senses
reported in Ellison's case file were less than anyone's likelihood of winning
the lottery. Yet here was a man who had supposedly amassed an army of not one,
but eleven of these so-called sentinels. And Don was already accepting
Ellison's word on the entire matter as fact.
"Hey,
Charlie," His dad greeted as Charlie came through the front door. "Amita called, looking for you. She said you missed a
meeting at the university."
Charlie found
himself glancing down at the floor and realized he must look like a teenager
caught in a lie. He tried to straighten his back, and then nodded once. "I,
ah, took a walk."
"A
walk?
You missed a meeting for a walk?"
Shutting the
door behind him, Charlie hurried past his father and headed toward the kitchen.
"I just needed some air. And the meeting ... it wasn't important."
"Well, it
was important enough for Amita to try to find out
where you were."
Though he could
not see his father's gaze, Charlie felt it on his back. It pulled at him like a
magnet, preventing him from crossing the kitchen's threshold.
"She's
worried about you," Alan Eppes continued. "She
thinks you might be avoiding the campus."
Charlie turned.
He sighed heavily in defeat, knowing it was useless to hide. "I just ... I
keep seeing ... I keep hearing that explosion. And I keep seeing ... people ...
bodies ... and ... and Amita with all that blood on
her face."
"She's
okay, Charlie. You know that."
"Yeah. But not
everyone was that lucky."
Alan moved
closer to his son and placed his hand on Charlie's shoulder. After a moment, he
said, "Why don't you talk with that counselor Donny recommended? It's
nothing to be ashamed of. What you experienced, it was a terrible thing."
Charlie shrugged
away from his father's grip and escaped to the refrigerator.
"The FBI,
they hire these counselors for a reason," Alan continued.
"I
know."
"People
need help dealing with things like that."
"Yes, I
know. But--"
"Even
Don."
Charlie closed
his eyes. And then he closed the refrigerator door and leaned into it, pressing
his forehead against the cool surface. "The only thing I need help
understanding is how everyone can be so ... rational ... about it. How is it
that even Amita is able to get back to normal, as
though it never happened?"
He heard his
father sigh behind him. "People deal with bad things in their own ways,
Charlie. And in their own time. Some people focus hard
on getting back to normal. A little too hard, sometimes, but that's their way
of coping. But Charlie, you're not coping. You're not even being ...
Charlie."
Confused, he
turned around to face his father.
"Usually
when something upsets you, you're out there filling chalk boards and memo
boards and every scrap of paper you can find with equations and formulas. You
try solving unsolvable problems, or you calculate out whatever problem gets
into your head. You told me one time, you remember when Don tried to pull you
off that case awhile back to keep you from getting targeted? You told me you
couldn't just drop it. You said the numbers were in your head anyway, so you might
as well write them down. But Charlie, you're not doing any of that now."
What could he
say? How could he respond? His father was right. Charlie wasn't even sure who
'Charlie' was anymore.
"Frankly,"
His dad continued, "I think Amita's right to be
worried. I'm worried, too."
"I'm fine. I'll
be ... fine."
"Sure. You
will be fine. Eventually. But not until you admit that
you're not fine now, and you start getting some help."
A long moment
passed. Neither seemed to know what to say next, where to go
with this conversation, or even how to end it. Then Alan clapped his son
-- a little too hard -- on Charlie's sore shoulder. "Okay. We can start
small. How about I make us some lunch? You go out there, turn on the TV, read
the paper, just relax. Okay?"
Sighing heavily,
feeling lighter somehow, Charlie walked away. He soon found himself flipping
through television channels aimlessly, mindlessly, until he landed on the local
news and a story about an odd string of thefts from the night before. And then
it was as though someone had flicked a switch in his head. The numbers were
coming back.
He jumped out of
his chair and grabbed the newspaper, looking for statistics the TV had not
reported. Minutes later, leaving pages scattered across both the table and the
floor, he was back at his board, calculating something that just might help Don
track down his missing army of so-called sentinels.
* *
*
For the first
time in months, Blair was treated like a true prisoner. He was locked into a
back room of the warehouse with nothing more than an old steel desk and a
stained office chair that sat slightly askew on wheels that no longer moved in
synch. The walls and floor were coated with black grime, presumably from the
emissions of fork-lifts from the warehouse's former life. And the only window
was at least twenty feet over his head.
It barely even let in a ray of sunlight; grime covered it as well.
Yet, somehow,
Blair was relieved. Spending so much time never knowing whether Shofield would congratulate or punish him had left him
permanently on edge. At least now he knew with a degree of certainty where he
stood in Shofield's eyes.
"You have
done everything I could hope for, Mr. Sandburg," Shofield
had told him the night before. "Even more. Tonight's
triumphs prove that my men are now fully trained. Each and every one of them is
ready to fulfill his calling -- and mine."
Blair's stomach
had churned painfully at that statement. It wasn't until Shofield
began discussing his own theory about guides and sentinels that Blair's fear
gave way to his own call for action.
"Guides are
teachers," Shofield had said. "You,
yourself have proved that. But, Mr. Sandburg, there must come a time in
everyone's education when the student becomes his own master. The
guide/sentinel partnership that you have spouted off about for so long -- it's
a myth. One created most likely from your own desires."
"What?"
Blair had shouted without thinking. "You've read
"Yes,
yes," Shofield interrupted, chuckling in
amusement. "You're thinking of course about Ms. Barnes. But my men are
well aware they must stay clear of temples and mystical grottos -- neither of
which are likely to turn up in
"There's
more to it than that. You know there is."
"What I
know, Mr. Sandburg, is that my men proved themselves tonight. And they did it
on their own, without your guidance. Until or unless I see otherwise, I believe
your services are no longer required."
And so Blair was
locked in this damp, grimy cell. If one of Shofield's
sentinels did not have a major zone-out soon, this could be the end of the line
for Blair Sandburg. Exactly what that might mean for his own health -- his own
life -- remained an unknown he did not particularly relish pondering. Nonetheless,
the stress of the past months seemed to have finally reached a pinnacle.
Everything else would be downhill from here. Such thoughts gave Blair a sense of peace he had come to believe he
would never know again.
"Jim,"
He whispered to the room's stilled echoes as he closed his eyes to reach
elsewhere, to a place where the trees were lush and green and the ways of the
shaman remained unspoiled. He had no idea whether Jim was still out there,
whether he was even alive. Blair had only a feeling, a sense that their link
had not been severed, that it perhaps had suddenly grown stronger. "It's
over," He said to that link, to that feeling. "I think it's finally
over. I'm sorry it had to come this far, sorry that our partnership wasn't
strong enough to overcome these odds. And the fact that Shofield
won, that he actually succeeded in poisoning such a profound legacy -- I can't
even define for myself how sick it makes me feel inside. But...." He took a deep breath and then felt it flow
back out of him, taking with it a heavy burden. He could finally, truly
breathe. "It's okay," He continued. "At least ... it's
over."
Blair knew Jim
could not hear him, not physically anyway. He also knew there were others
present, ten others to be exact, who probably could hear him. It didn't
matter. Not one of those others would care.
No, not a single
one -- two, on the other hand did
care. And soon those two would convince even more. The guide/sentinel bond was
strong, after all -- perhaps far stronger than Shofield
himself could ever understand.
Chapter
11
Don Eppes looked at the map Charlie had put up in the
conference room, and -- not for the first time -- he felt a strong sense of
pride and amazement at the kind of things his brother could accomplish just by
connecting with numbers. This time, Charlie might well have given them their
first real, tangible lead. Even Jim Ellison appeared to be impressed.
"How is it
you came to think these robberies might be connected with Shofield?"
The detective asked, referring to an odd crime spree that had been reported
from the night before.
Charlie's
animosity toward Ellison seemed to be softening, or maybe it was just that
Charlie's math gave him the support he needed whenever he was forced to face
something no equation could really explain -- something like the idea of
sentinels. Whatever the reason, Charlie responded to Ellison's question no
differently than he would have if Don himself had raised it.
"They all
took place in a single, two hour time period, between midnight and two a.m. This
factor alone could allow for the possibility of coincidence. However, when you
also consider that not a trace of evidence was found at any of the crime
scenes, and in every case security systems were compromised without causing any
visible damage, the probabilities change dramatically. We're looking at ten
crimes and ten crime scenes, none of which fits the common patterns for a
typical break-in. I'm sure you would all agree these crimes were committed by
professionals, or at least by people who were well trained."
Animated now, Charlie
turned back to the map. "Although there was no direct connection between
any of the targets, each and every one was just beyond the city limits. You can
see here that when we look at the locations all together, they actually form a
pattern, encircling the city. All I needed to do was calculate a single point
of origin, based on constraints such as time and transportation to and from
each crime scene. Ultimately, those calculations lead us right here, to this
warehouse district on the Boyle Heights, East LA border."
Cascade's
Captain Banks appeared to be confused. "But how did you link any of this
to Shofield?"
Charlie smiled.
"There were ten robberies. Based on the two hour period during which each
one occurred and the meticulous nature of the break-ins, the odds of even two
of them being perpetrated by the same person are--"
"Spare us the numbers, Charlie," Don cut in. "Just tell
us it would be virtually impossible."
"Okay."
Charlie shrugged. "That's pretty much correct. But 'never,' 'always' and
'impossible' are words I would not necessarily use in describing calculations
associated with odds. Let's just say it would be extremely improbable."
"Ten
robberies," Banks concluded, "and ten sentinels."
The expression
on Charlie's face turned then, if only for a moment. His jaw tightened. His
gaze moved downward. An instant later, he offered up a brief nod without fully
raising his head. "Exactly." He acknowledged
finally, though his smile was gone.
"And based
on what Detective Ellison said about ..." Charlie paused to clear his
throat and then looked back to the map. "About these sentinels...,"
He over-emphasized the word. There was a sudden twitch in his shoulders, as
though his entire body struggled against accepting the concept of living,
breathing sentinels. "About how we could expect them to be territorial, it
all fit into a pattern. We could expect them to strike anywhere except
within city limits."
Megan Reeves
turned to the detective seated across from her after Charlie was finished
speaking. "Detective Ellison, based on the capabilities you've been
telling us these men possess, does it make sense to you that they could have
been involved with crimes of this nature?"
Ellison nodded. "Absolutely. Professor Eppes
is dead on target with all of this." He spoke with what appeared to be
genuine respect. "Last night was a test. Shofield's
ready to make a move, and it won't be small. We've got to bring him down. And
we'd better do it now."
Smiling, Megan
turned to Don's brother. "You have no idea what you've just done, Charlie.
But you have actually pinpointed the exact same area Detective Ellison
recommended to us just a little while ago, based on his experience with Shofield. Good job."
Charlie gave her
a quick, small smile. But then he seemed to close back in on himself. His
explanation complete, he had suddenly lost his crutch. Mathematical
probabilities and sentinels, to him, must be like oil and water. Or maybe
American football in a European stadium might provide a better analogy; they
simply could not coexist.
* * *
Jim Ellison
could tell Professor Eppes was having difficulty
accepting his sentinel capabilities. It didn't matter. The kid knew his stuff. His
calculations would allow Agent Eppes and his team to
authorize a stake-out -- an official one anyway, unlike the one Cascade's crew
had already set up. This might even enable Don's team to get a warrant once
they identified a specific location.
Jim was prepared
to approach the young mathematician to express his appreciation when the jazzy
tones emanating from Simon's cell phone drew Jim's full attention.
"Connor,"
Simon answered. "What have you got?"
"Bodies,
Captain," Jim could hear Megan Connor reply. "What we've got are
bodies."
* *
*
The revolt began
somewhere around dawn.
Blair could see
a pale light seeping through the dirty windows above him as the blackness of
night began to fade. Despite his discomfort from the cold, hard floor beneath
him, he had managed to fall into a deep sleep after coming to accept that his
work with Shofield was finished. This tiny sliver of not-quite-sunlight was
not enough to have interrupted that sleep. He lay quietly, unmoving, and
listened for a sound, any sound, something to let him know why he had been
roused; but he heard nothing, not even the approach of the man whose hand then
closed around Blair's mouth.
For a moment,
instinct caused Blair to struggle. Then hope caused him to go still as a soft
voice -- scarcely even a whisper -- blew hot, moist air into his ear. "We're
getting you out of here," Was all it said. It was enough.
Jim? Blair wondered
briefly, until his brain reminded him there were others. Like Jim, this man was
a familiar presence, a sentinel under Blair's own guidance. Unlike Jim, this
man had never become a true partner, and certainly not a friend.
The recognition
gave Blair little comfort as he allowed the man he'd only known as Delta 7 to
lead him through the remaining darkness to the large room's
only door. They stopped at the entry for a count of twenty staccato heartbeats,
and then slid into a black corridor -- at least Blair had considered it black
until he saw an even darker blackness pull away from the far wall. Blair gasped
and the frenzied, tribal drummer in his chest began playing an impossible
tempo, one that threatened to begin echoing throughout the warehouse, maybe
even throughout the city.
A strange,
sudden smile crossed his face as Blair considered his heart might even be
beating loudly enough to alarm his own, real sentinel.
An instant later
the smile vanished as the black mountain moving toward him took hold of his
upper arm. Alpha 9, Blair realized. This mountain was the largest,
deadliest of all Shofield's sentinels. Could it
really be possible he was there to help Blair?
Saying nothing,
Alpha 9 gazed toward Delta 7 and gave a small nod, one only made visible by the
thin reflection of light in his eyes, and then Blair was given over to the
larger man's care.
They had moved
only a few steps when a door opened up at the far end of the corridor, spilling
a wash of gray light across the shadows. Had that been the work of Delta 7? The
tightening of Alpha 9's grip as Blair was forced against the wall suggested it
was not.
"Gentlemen,"
Shofield's honeyed, disembodied voice called in. "Does
one, small guide truly bear so much more value to you than all of the
Brotherhood?"
The grip on
Blair's arm increased yet again.
"You
disappoint me." Shofield's voice continued. "But
you must realize you can never surprise me. Traitors cannot possibly succeed in
this, special Brotherhood. We are one for all, or we are nothing. And you,
gentlemen, have proved you are each for one, and therefore you are nothing. We
shall oblige you of that fate now."
Alpha 9's grip
went slack. Blair felt more than saw the large man's arm raise toward his head.
And then the man was on his knees, crying out against an agony that was
mirrored by another just a few feet away, yet still caught in darkness: Delta
7.
"What are
you doing to them?" Blair shouted as he pulled himself out of the cover of
the remaining night. "Stop it. Turn it off."
When the light
from beyond the outer door became diffused, Blair turned to find a group of men
advancing toward him. Sound canceling headphones on each of them could almost
have marked them as humanoid aliens, if Blair had not already been so certain
they were what remained of the Brotherhood. The small figure at their center
could only be Shofield.
Blair regarded
him with disgust, and then knelt beside Alpha 9. He placed his hand on the
man's shoulder. Bending close to his ear, "Dial it down," he prodded.
"Remember your dials. You can do this. You have to dial it down."
But it appeared
to be no use. Alpha 9 began rocking back and forth, his hands locked firmly
against his ears.
"Do you
see?" Shofield said.
His voice was
close, too close, as he came to stand directly behind Blair. Blair stiffened,
but ignored him.
"Your
services are no longer required," Shofield
continued. "Your value has been spent.
It is all in the hands of the Brotherhood now."
Another beefy
hand grabbed hold of Blair's arm and pulled him to his feet until he was
face-to-face with an overly smug Shofield.
The self-appointed
general smiled. "You will be--"
But something
unseen and unheard clearly interrupted the old man's thoughts. His eyes went
wide as he gasped. And then he sank to the floor, collapsing in a heap.
The new grip on
Blair's arm loosened, as, for a brief second, the crowd of sentinels seemed
caught in a state of shock and bewilderment. In that instant, Blair looked to
the man at his feet. Shofield had, literally, been
stabbed in the back.
When time
started up again, Blair Sandburg came to witness the total collapse of the
Brotherhood as sentinel attacked sentinel. He could do nothing except watch and
wonder whether he, himself, would be able to survive the battle.
Chapter
12
As he stepped
into the abandoned warehouse behind Don Eppes' team,
Jim was beyond the point of being on edge. He could already feel Sandburg's
recent presence. He could equally feel his partner's current absence. Blair had
been there, maybe as recently as an hour ago. But Jim was too late. Although
Megan and Taggart had spent the past several hours parked barely a block away,
they had all been too late.
Still, there
were other reasons for Jim's edginess. Other sentinels had been there as well --
had been there and gone. Only half of Shofield's army
remained where Jim could find them. Though they were dead, Jim could still
sense them, could still recognize fragments of what they had been, fragments
that toyed with his senses like sentient dust motes sent to mock him. Jim's
entire body tingled from the touch of those fragments, almost to the point of
pain. Perhaps there would have been pain if Jim's skin hadn't been numb since
he'd awakened in the hospital. The lack of pain was probably the only thing
that kept Jim sane when his gaze landed on the lifeless body of Mick Shofield.
"Jim?"
Connor called out to him from deeper inside the building.
He could not
bring himself to turn his gaze from Shofield. Jim
could feel his jaw locking shut while his hands curled into fists at his sides.
He wanted to -- needed to bend down and beat Shofield's
face into a bloody pulp. The only thing that stopped him was the fact that the
self-appointed general was already dead. Jim would have to find another outlet
for his vengeance.
"Jim?"
Connor said again a moment later, this time from right beside him.
He stiffened
further as her hand landed gently on his arm.
"I'm sorry,
Jim. But you know, there wasn't a sound, not a single
thing to cue us in to what was happening here. When we saw the white van pull
away, we called Henri and Rafe to get them on it.
Then we came in here, and--" She stopped, her own focus given back to the
grim discovery. "I'm sorry, Jim," She repeated then. "We should
have gone after the van, but what if
Jim placed his
other hand over hers and finally allowed himself to meet her gaze. "You
did exactly what you should have done. That the van got past Rafe and H only shows they know the area better than any of
us. If Eppes' team had been here instead, then
maybe--"
"We were close,"
Don Eppes interrupted. "We almost had that
warrant. They just keep getting two steps ahead of us."
"Not your
fault, either," Jim said. But his gaze had gone blank; his entire being
felt numb within a shell of wary tingling.
"I need a
medic over here," The other Megan, Megan Reeves called out from where
she'd been examining the dead sentinels. "This one's alive."
No, Jim
realized, though he chose to remain silent. Maybe that one had been alive, but
not anymore. Jim had sensed the change, had felt his tenseness ease up ever so
slightly. One more sentinel had left this world, giving Jim one less enemy to
stand in the way of finding Blair Sandburg.
"He grabbed
my wrist," Reeves said as the medics confirmed Jim's diagnosis." And
he said something."
"What'd he
say?" Don asked.
"Ninety-seven
... nine ... twenty-four."
"That's it?
Just a series of numbers?"
"That's
it."
"It's a
code," Jim said, locking his eyes on the peaceful, empty gaze of the young
Japanese man at his feet. Bravo 6, Shofield
had called him. But as the youngest member of this deadly brotherhood, he had
been the most talkative, the least shielded of any of them; and Jim had come to
know him as Shinji. Jim had even dared to believe he might be able to lead
Shinji away from Shofield's pull. But that had been
before -- before Shofield had chosen to cut and run,
leaving Jim for dead in a rotting barn and severing any hope Jim might have had
for Shinji, and maybe also for Blair Sandburg.
"Detective?"
Jim felt a
strong hand land on his shoulder. He shook his head, drew a deep breath and
then looked toward the concerned gaze of Don Eppes.
"You said
it was a code. What did you mean by that?" Eppes
asked. "What kind of code?"
"Shofield created new codes for them to learn every other
week. He could have cut it down to every week by now; it's hard to say."
"So what
did he mean by ninety-seven, nine and twenty-four?" Eppes
was looking down at Shinji.
"I don't
know," Jim answered frankly. "I was always kept out of the loop. Even
when he pretended to trust me, Shofield only gave me
part of the latest codes."
"That's all
right," Megan Reeves interrupted. "If anyone can break a code of
numbers, Charlie can. Why don't you head back to FBI headquarters and see what
the two of you can come up with?"
Her tone was
light, casual; but Jim knew she was playing him. As a profiler, Reeves was a
trained observer. Surely she had noted the tight set of Jim's shoulders, the
darkness in his eyes. She wanted Jim away from there. She wanted him in a
controlled setting, in a place where his link with Sandburg would not be
challenged, where his desperation for vengeance would not be tempted.
Jim could almost
agree with her, but he couldn't leave, not yet, not as long as the tingling
continued. And in the instant Reeves mentioned Don's Eppes'
brother, that tingling even seemed to intensify. Jim felt the touch of ice
along his neck. He then felt a soundless calling from behind him and spun about
to see a coyote standing near the door. Its mouth opened in a mocking smile,
the animal's gaze was locked on Shinji, the newly deceased sentinel. And then
its eyes were drawn to Jim.
When it turned
and ran outside, Jim sprinted after it. His feet skidded on loose gravel as he
slid across the threshold. Raising a hand to shield his eyes from the onslaught
of the bright, LA sun, he scanned the horizon for the coyote. Instead, he saw a
dark sedan peeling onto the main road nearly a mile away. A cloud of dust
trailed behind it as it exited the industrial complex. Following the sedan
would be useless; it was already too far away. Whatever sentinel had been
driving had not needed to be close to hear what was being said inside the
warehouse. And there were no license plates, no markings of any kind to help Eppes' team track him down.
"Damn
it," Jim shouted. He turned around aimlessly, kicking at gravel as anger
and frustration roiled inside him. And then he threw everything he had into a
wild punch at the warehouse's steel door.
"Whoa,
whoa, whoa," Don Eppes soothed. "Beating
yourself up is not going to help us find your partner."
"You said
it yourself," Jim yelled back. "They're always two damn steps ahead
of us."
"Now,
maybe," Eppes answered. "But
not always. We'll catch up. And the sooner you and Charlie can solve
that code, the faster we can get them. You up to doing that,
Detective?"
Jim closed his
eyes and tried to force oxygen into his lungs. A moment later, he nodded.
"Good."
Eppes acknowledged the subtle gesture. "Now let
me see your hand."
Jim's right hand
was already swelling. His knuckles were red, raw. Blood trickled along his
fingers. He didn't feel any of it.
Chapter
13
Uncomfortably
balanced on a stack of wooden pallets, Blair kept his eyes closed as the van
bounced along uneven roadways. He tried to center himself, tried to move past
the throbbing in his head, the taste of bile in his throat, as he wondered yet
again whether or not he should be grateful to the men who had tossed him into
the back of Shofield's delivery van after the
sentinels' little civil war had come to a brutal end.
Fully half of Shofield's army was now dead, including the general
himself. Delta 7 had been quickly and efficiently killed with a blade drawn
across his jugular while he struggled against the agonizingly piercing sound
waves Shofield had ordered to be broadcast. Alpha 9,
however, had survived. Blair might even have helped him to stay alive by
guiding him to his inner dials. But who had he really helped? And to what purpose?
Opening
his eyes, Blair studied the man seated across from him.
"How's
the hearing?" He asked.
Alpha 9 inclined
his head to silently acknowledge that his hearing was fine. "How's your
head?" The larger man asked then in return.
"Fine,"
Blair answered quickly. In fact, his head hurt like hell. Whatever had
connected with it had dropped him like a rock, and the way his ears were
ringing and his stomach was churning, he was pretty confident he had a minor
concussion.
"You held
your own back there," Alpha 9 said then. "Long
enough to survive, at least."
Blair could not
stop himself from providing a sarcastic reply. "Yeah, well, I did witness
six months' worth of Shofield's training exercises.
Even if I didn't participate, I'd be a pretty lousy anthropologist if I didn't
learn something along the way."
Surprisingly,
Alpha 9 smiled. It was a small upward turning of his lips, but a smile
nonetheless.
"It's over
now, right?" Blair decided to ask.
Another small
nod indicated something was, indeed, over.
Still, Blair
felt hesitant. "You can let me off anywhere. I don't care if it's in the
middle of frickin' nowhere so I couldn't possibly
recognize where any of you were headed, just as long as I'm finally left on my
own."
Alpha 9 did
nothing but stare at him. After a moment, the man even closed his eyes.
"You are
going to let me off, right?"
There was no
reply.
Blair turned to
the other man also riding in the back of the van. He might as well have not
even existed.
"It's over,
man," Blair insisted. "Over. You don't need
me anymore."
"You're
wrong," Alpha 9 said finally.
"What? What
could you possibly need me for?"
There was that
hint of a smile again. "Shofield showed us what
we were capable of. You can show us who we are, and why we are this
way."
"How? How could I
possibly do that?"
"You are
the only man living who knows exactly where sentinels originated; the only one
who can guide us through the grotto."
"What? No
way. You know what happened to Alex Barnes. It's way too dangerous."
"That's why
we need you. You can guide us past the dangers and help us to connect with what
we are meant to be."
"And if I
refuse?"
Alpha 9
continued smiling.
Blair's stomach
churned more fiercely than before.
* *
*
Night had fallen
and they were no closer to solving the code. Still, Charlie Eppes
showed no signs of slowing down. Three memo-boards and multiple pieces of paper
were filled with notes, and the conference room walls were covered in maps
showing every location Shofield had been known to
occupy in and around
The farm where
Jim had been abandoned was not excluded as a point of reference. Jim stared at
the red circle marking it and envisioned himself punching a hole through it,
right down into the hay he could almost smell. It seemed ironic to see his hand
already bandaged.
"Jim?"
Simon's voice pulled him out of such useless thoughts. "We're headed down
to meet Eppes and his team for a bite to eat. Why
don't you and Charlie join us?"
Charlie didn't
even seem to be paying attention. The way his hand was moving across the
memo-board writing symbols and numbers made Jim think of a manic artist--or of
his own partner's incessant talking as new ideas began to form. Considering the
obvious, lingering pain in Charlie's shoulder--the only thing that came even close
to slowing him down--it was amazing to watch Charlie Eppes
at work.
"Thanks,
Simon," Jim said, keeping his eyes on the mathematician. "But I'd
rather not walk away from this. We're close. We have to be." It was a lie,
but a worthwhile lie nonetheless. Maybe a little positive thinking would
somehow give them an edge.
Simon cast an
extended glance toward the professor. "It looks impressive, anyway."
He smiled and shook his head. "We'll bring you something back."
When Simon shut
the door behind him, Jim finally turned his gaze to watch his captain walk
away. He could almost envision the bullpen back at Cascade's Major Crimes. That
was where they should be--all of them, including Sandburg.
"This makes
no sense," Charlie complained then. He threw the marker he'd been using
onto the table so hard it jumped back up and ultimately landed on the floor.
"Are you sure you told me everything?" He said to Jim, wincing as he
tried to loosen up the stiffness in his shoulder. "I mean everything;
every place you know Shofield either occupied,
visited or even just talked about?"
"Yes,"
Jim answered flatly.
Charlie focused
his attention on the three numbers Megan had heard Shinji say. "The codes Shofield used were simple. Based on the few examples you
were able to give me, it's clear he used common elements such as GPS
coordinates and times from different time zones. Even though he shifted the
basis of the codes, he held to those two elements in each example. I'm guessing
his primary purpose was to develop a code his men could remember without too
much difficulty. Clearly he wasn't too concerned about preventing spy agencies
from cracking them, because they should be relatively simple."
"Should
be?" Jim asked.
Charlie seemed
surprised when he turned back around to face Jim. Had he forgotten Jim was
there?
"Yes,"
Charlie said then. "Yes, they should be simple. But every time I try to
put it together, I come up with a location that has absolutely nothing to do
with anything we've referenced here."
"What
location?"
"Somewhere
in the middle of a jungle, in the middle of
Jim went cold.
"Call your brother. Call Don. Now."
"What?
Why?"
"Tell him
to check the airports, especially charters."
"What? You
think they're on their way to
"I know
that's where they're headed."
Charlie's look
went from confused to disturbed. "What haven't you told me?"
But before Jim
could answer, he felt a familiar chill along the back of his neck. He focused
his sense of hearing as he turned to scan the empty offices beyond the
glass-walled conference room, but there were too many papers blocking his
view.
"Get
down," He said softly to the young man behind him.
"What? What
do you mean 'get down'? I still need to know why they would be on their way to
"They're
not, not yet."
"But you just
said--"
"I said,
'get down'." Jim rushed toward Charlie and pulled him to the floor just as
a bullet pierced the glass wall in front of them. It punched a hole in the
middle of the farm Jim had been haunted by, and embedded itself into the
memo-board where Charlie had been working.
"They
haven't left yet because one of them is right here," Jim whispered to the
stunned mathematician, "and none of them is the self-sacrificing type. Now
call you brother. And whatever you do, stay down."
"What,"
Charlie said shakily, "what are you going to do?"
Two more bullets
sprayed bits of glass and paper across the room.
"Whatever I
can to see that we both survive this," Jim answered as he reached toward
the room's rear door. His fingers were still too numb to turn the doorknob.
"Sorry,
professor," Jim said then. "But it looks like you're going to have to
come with me; and you're going to have to do everything I say. When I say
'move,' you move. Got that?"
Charlie studied
him for a moment before giving a small nod.
"Good. Now
open this door, and move." Sensing they had run out of time for
stealth, Jim shouted that last word and pushed Charlie out the door an instant
before the intruder burst into the room from the other side.
Chapter
14
Simon Banks and
the rest of the Cascade contingent were still barely a
block away from FBI headquarters when Don Eppes
phoned Rafe, whose number had been the first one
programmed into the agent's speed dial.
"I just got
a strange call from Charlie," Eppes said.
"Something's going down at headquarters. We're on our way back now."
"What's
happening?" Rafe asked. "It was quiet when
we left there no more than ten minutes ago." He shifted the phone away
from his mouth and told the rest of the van's occupants, "We need to go
back."
"It's not good,
whatever it is," Came the agent's answer on the
other end of the line. "There may have been shots fired. Security's
checking it out."
By the time they
returned to the building, it was being evacuated. Simon was able to catch
pieces of conversations among evacuees discussing rumors about the cause. Some
might even have gotten it right. At least it sounded credible that a gunman had
taken over an entire floor and was holding a couple of hostages.
It didn't sound
good, but it did sound credible.
Two
hostages. Simon repeated
silently before adding under his breath, "Jim and Charlie Eppes." Then he shouted to a guard who was refusing
his team entry, "Ellison's one of ours. We need to get up there."
Unfortunately,
Simon's stated need was not clearly enough evident to the federal people taking
charge of the situation. No matter how authoritative or sincere he presented
himself to be, it wasn't until Don Eppes arrived that
the proper clearances were granted. By then, Simon's pacing had practically
worn trenches in the concrete.
* *
*
"Echo
1-0," the intruder shouted playfully. "What is your position?"
He laughed. "Come on, Detective Ellison. You know it doesn't matter
where you go, where you try to hide. I can hear you. Hell, I can smell you. Mr. Professor over there, too. It's not even a game of cat
and mouse. I could shoot you both, right now, just like fish in a barrel. These
bullets can go right through that steel desk, and smack dab into Einstein's
brain."
Jim recognized
him by his accent: Foxtrot 3, a Texan suffering from an overactive sense of
entitlement.
"Then why
don't you?" Jim asked.
Charlie's eyes
widened. Jim could smell the younger man's fear, could feel as well as hear the
erratic beat of his heart. Raising his good hand -- or at least his better
hand -- Jim put one finger to his own lips and nodded before raising his other
fingers in the universal gesture for "wait." The intent was to get
the mathematician to understand there was no way Jim was going to let him get
shot. Whether or not the message actually got through as intended was a
question he had no time to consider as Foxtrot continued his tirade.
"You really
expect me to believe Mr. Save-the-World doesn't care whether or not the
professor dies here today?"
"No,"
Jim answered, still studying Charlie. "I just asked what's stopping you
from shooting us both."
"Stand
up," The intruder ordered. "I want to see the super sentinel."
"Why?"
"I have an
offer to make you. I'd like to make it face-to-face."
Jim hesitated.
"Come on.
You already know I'm not ready to shoot you. If I was going to, I would have
done it by now."
Knowing full
well that not ready didn't necessarily mean won't, Jim glanced at
Charlie. Could this particular professor be anywhere near as quick-thinking as
Sandburg? Blair Sandburg could always be counted on to back Jim up. Half the
time it was almost as though Blair was reading Jim's mind; the other half just
proved that Blair was damn good at improvising. He would use whatever tools
were at hand to throw or push or drop onto a perp
while keeping himself protected.
But that was
Blair. This man here was Charlie Eppes, a stranger to
sentinels and especially to sentinel ways of thinking. Jim had no way of
knowing how Charlie would react. Would he do something stupid to put himself unwittingly
in danger if Jim left his side? Or would the mathematician's history in dealing
with FBI protocols have sufficiently grounded him to deal with the stresses
inherent in life-threatening situations?
Taking a gamble
on the later scenario, Jim signed for Charlie to stay down, while he, himself,
rose to face his challenger.
"Okay,"
Jim said, keeping his voice lowered to a conversational tone despite the nearly
thirty foot gap that separated him from the other sentinel. "You've got my
attention. But before we talk, why don't you let the professor go? He's not
part of this."
The tall, blonde
man on the other side of the room smiled with a show of brilliantly white
teeth. "Not a chance. He broke the code."
"So?"
Jim shrugged. "If he hadn't done it, someone else would have. You probably
even heard him mention how simple it was."
"Doesn't
matter.
It's protocol. He broke the code. Have to take him out before he shares the intel."
"Don't be
stupid. The information has already been compromised; had been from the moment
Shinji gave us those numbers."
"Not my
problem."
"You're in
an FBI building for Christ’s sake, and you can count on the fact that this
kid's brother is right outside, already waiting for a chance to take you out.
All you'll end up doing is signing your own death warrant."
"You see,
that's where you're wrong. We can beat 'em. We can
always beat 'em." Foxtrot pointed to a camera in
the ceiling. "Their eyes and ears are based on wires and gizmos; we fried
'em in no time at all. They're all blind, deaf and
dumb."
We? Jim thought.
Did that mean they were all here, somewhere -- all of them, including Sandburg?
"But ours,"
Foxtrot pointed to his ear, "ours are the genu-ine
thing, a true miracle of nature." He made an exaggerated show of sniffing
at the air. "Smell that? The sweet, sweet smell of
superiority. Shofield had it all wrong."
"If he had
it all wrong, why are you so concerned about following his protocols?"
Foxtrot laughed.
"You think you're so smart. But you never even once considered how far you
could take this, did you? We weren't meant to be no army at someone's beck and
call. We can be gods. That's what I wanted to talk to you about. We're goin' to that ol' grotto of
yours. I'm giving you the chance to come with us."
"Why would
I?"
Foxtrot shrugged
and scratched his head. "Thought maybe you'd like a
little reunion with that runt guide of yours."
* *
*
Charlie saw
Detective Ellison go rigid. The intruder had clearly struck a nerve. But what
could Ellison do? The detective had one broken hand and another that was still
so raw and numb he couldn't even open a door on his own. Using a gun was out of
the question. Facing down a gunman from thirty feet away without any means of
defense -- well, useless described the whole situation quite well. Maybe Ellison
could keep the man talking long enough to enable Don to do something. Or maybe not. Charlie took a deep breath realizing this new
thought seemed to offer as much hope as Ellison providing any real defense. The
probabilities were just too strong on the other side of the equation.
For a moment
Charlie began calculating likely trajectories for when the bullets did start
flying again, but such numbers did nothing to make him feel any less tense. He
had to do something. He couldn't just cower behind a desk while Ellison tried
to talk them to freedom. The odds of talking down a gunman who had been
determined enough in the first place to try to shoot someone in the middle of
FBI headquarters in the middle of
Charlie took
another deep breath and decided to focus on a more optimistic series of
equations, like the odds of him being able to reach the rear exit while Ellison
kept the gunman occupied. The only problem with that option was while it might
help Charlie to get free, it would leave Ellison completely on his own. On the
other hand, the gunman had seemed far more interested in shooting Charlie than
Ellison, so Ellison seemed to be at less of a risk than Charlie was himself.
He decided to go
for it. All he needed to do was stay at ground level. The angles would keep him
completely invisible from the perspective of the gunman. As long as he didn't
bang into something to draw the man's attention, he should be fine. It was also
highly likely that agents were already posted at that rear door, so all Charlie
had to do was get there. It should be no problem at all.
"Don't do
it!" Ellison yelled.
Charlie stopped
cold, thinking the detective had aimed the words at him. But seeing that
Ellison's focus remained on the gunman, he gave himself a moment to calm his
racing heart, and then started crawling forward once more.
"You shoot
him," Ellison continued, "I swear I’ll tear you apart; and the only
reason I'll keep you alive is so his brother can finish the job."
"I told him
not to move!" The gunman shouted back. "You think I can't hear you
moving, Mr. Professor? You think I can't tell exactly where you are?"
The gun fired.
An explosion of metal shards from the desk beside Charlie pelted him with tiny
fragments of shrapnel, a piece of which buried itself in his eyebrow. How the hell could the gunman have known he
moved? There was no way he could have seen Charlie. The angles were all in
Charlie's favor, and there wasn't a single reflective surface Charlie could see
that could have given his position away.
"You're
already on borrowed time, Professor," The gunman said. "Do that
again, and next time I promise you I will kill you."
Charlie froze.
He was afraid even to breathe.
But Ellison
moved. The detective started forward, toward the gunman.
"You won't
get a next time, you son of a bitch," He said, his tone low and menacing.
"Why don't you put that gun down and end this with me right now,
one-on-one?"
"Come on,
man. What do you care? He's nothing, nobody. He's not like us. We are the
future, Ellison. Come with us to
"And you're
no better to them. Worse. You're a piece of crap stuck
on Don Eppes' shoe."
"You
mother--"
"Get out of
here, Charlie!" Ellison surged forward.
Charlie didn't
hesitate. He took Ellison's cue and ran toward the rear door. When he heard
more gunfire behind him, he found himself wondering if he would feel anything
at all, or if the world would just go black.
* *
*
The gunfire spurred
David Sinclair and Joel Taggart into action. They burst through the rear door
to find Charlie running toward them. Sinclair grabbed him and ushered him into
the stairwell. The agent gave Don's brother a quick once over, disturbed to see
traces of blood on his face and his left arm, but relieved to note no serious
injuries. Then, entrusting Charlie into the care of another agent, Sinclair set
his team to work.
But the work had
already been done. The gunman was on the ground, out cold. Ellison, kneeling
beside him, had his broken hand cradled in the crook of his left arm. The
detective looked up at Sinclair and nodded once, his chest heaving as he
struggled to catch him breath.
Then the
detective's eyes were on Taggart. The heaving stopped. A relieved gaze became a
determined glare. Ellison held his left hand to his lips, and Taggart knew
without having to be told: the rest of the sentinels were here, somewhere. And
if they were here, Sandburg must be as well.
Chapter
15
The security
cameras in both the building and the parking garage had been disabled, but
Blair knew it would only be a quick, temporary problem. Though the sentinels
had been trained well enough to be able to compromise the FBI's security
systems, they lacked the resources to either destroy the systems entirely or
maintain any sort of position in the area. They had to hit and run. And now it
was time to run. That meant obtaining a new vehicle that would neither be
recognized nor stopped upon exiting, despite the fact that any vehicle
attempting to leave would be considered suspect under the current lock-down
conditions.
The sentinels
were stealthy and capable, but they were not an army. Since the morning's
revolt, they were even less of an army now than they had been. And they were
minus yet another member, if Blair was reading the soundless signals from his
captors accurately.
Blair would have
smiled if the duct tape across his mouth would have allowed him that luxury. Of
course Foxtrot had not been a match for Jim. None of these goons were, or could
ever be. They lacked Jim's motivation as well as his discipline. They were too
self centered, all of them. And they had listened to the wrong man when their
abilities were first formally recognized: Mick Shofield.
Tango 2 laced
his hands through Blair's hair and yanked his head backwards. The barrel of the
man's gun pressed more firmly into the base of Blair's skull. Blair grunted
reflexively, not knowing whether the renewed level of violence was meant to
tell him he was moving too fast or not fast enough.
Apparently,
grunting was no more allowed than speaking. The pressure from the barrel
disappeared. An instant later the side of the gun connected with the side of
Blair's head. Hard.
Closing his eyes
as a new round of black spots collided with stars in his head, Blair told
himself, It's okay. Just hang on. Jim's out
there somewhere, listening.
Each and every
one of these goons knew it, too. Even if the security cameras weren't on line,
Jim was. That thought alone was enough to keep Blair from thinking every step
he took moved him further away from the life he was so anxious to regain. He
was going to make it home. Soon.
Another shove at
his back propelled him forward, and, surprisingly, toward an exit. The pale
orange lighting of the parking structure was giving way to the red and blue
flashes of emergency vehicles. Blair could smell the freshness of the cool,
night air. It felt good in his lungs, soothing his nausea. At the same time it
nearly stopped his heart cold. He could not help but imagine they were en route
to a showdown. In his mind he replayed the last scene in the Newman and
* *
*
Jim could feel
everything. His sense of touch was as strong as it had ever been, possibly even
stronger. He could feel every nuance of the fractured bones in his right hand,
and the resonating pain of his still raw fingertips. But more than that, he
could feel the presence of more sentinels, and somewhere among them, his own
guide, Blair Sandburg.
He cued in his
hearing as he hurried down the stairs, ignoring the string of questions from
Don Eppes following behind him. Simon and Joel would
provide whatever answers they needed. All Jim needed to do was focus.
As he reached
the lobby, he heard a sound that disturbed him. There was a grunt, followed by
a sickening thud and several quick, harsh breaths. He froze and focused more
heavily out into the night, beyond the building, toward the parking garage. He
piggybacked his hearing with his sense of smell. And he found himself zeroing
in on Blair Sandburg.
"Outside,"
He shouted, not caring who heard him or who followed.
As the cleared
the outer doors, Don Eppes' worried voice called out
to another agent somewhere behind. "I thought you told me Charlie was
okay."
"He
is," David Sinclair answered.
"Then why's
he getting into an ambulance?"
But Jim already
knew why. Those men were not EMT's. And there, sandwiched between them, was
Sandburg.
* *
*
The EMT had
barely finished putting a bandage across Charlie's eyebrow when someone grabbed
the medic and bodily threw him aside. Charlie jumped up, feeling a surge of
adrenalin that urged him to run. But running would not be an option. A gun
stopped him. It was pointed mere inches from his face.
Part of him had
seen enough of guns for one day. Charlie wanted to ignore this one, to just go
ahead and get out of there. Logic, however, kept him rooted to where he stood.
If this gunman was anything like the last one, Charlie's life could too easily
be forfeit. No matter how he figured it, he could never outrun a bullet. He was
only just beginning to accept that sentinels were real. No one was ever going
to convince him that Superman was as well.
Although this
new gunman said nothing to him, gestures made it clear that Charlie was
supposed to get inside the ambulance.
"You -- you
don't need me," He tried.
His only reply
was to have the barrel of the gun pressed directly against his forehead.
"Okay.
Okay. Look, I just ... I need to turn around so I can at least see where I'm
going." Charlie hesitated until the gun was pulled away far enough to let
him move. And then, his heart sinking, he did was he was told.
An instant
later, someone else was tossed in beside him, someone who was bound and gagged
with duct tape.
* *
*
Blair stumbled
as they pushed him toward the ambulance. When someone lifted him up and threw
him onto the gurney inside, the black spots across his vision grew more
pronounced. He started to lose focus. Confusion quickly followed. Was he
finally getting help? Then why were his hands still bound? And his mouth ...
there was still tape covering his mouth. Someone had better remove it soon;
Blair was fairly confident he was going to be sick.
* *
*
Don's instincts
were starting to war with his training. He needed to get to Charlie, needed to
get his brother away from what remained of Shofield's
army of terrorist sentinels. Everything inside him told him to advance on that
ambulance, giving no thought to the fact that bullets would inevitably begin
flying and he would be putting himself directly in the line of fire -- not to
mention what any of that might mean to the health and well being of his
brother.
But he had to
ignore all of those instincts, all of those feelings. He had to take charge of
the situation -- a situation that was rapidly getting far too out of control.
Don looked to
Ellison, the sentinel detective, the FBI's best link to ending the crime spree Shofield had initiated -- and apparently also a magnet that
both tended to draw Shofield's sentinels together as
well as drive them apart. Ellison's visage could have been a mirror of his own.
Charlie was not the only hostage in that ambulance. Blair Sandburg was in there
as well. And clearly the detective was driven by the same sort of protective
instincts that Don felt for his brother. Sandburg was both a partner and a
pseudo-brother to Jim Ellison, and a college professor as well. Those
similarities suddenly filled Don with a sense of brotherhood toward Ellison.
But, brotherhood
or not, Simon Banks was wrong to give Ellison a gun. And Ellison was wrong to raise
that gun now with trembling, damaged hands. Don watched the detective aim
toward the passenger's window of the ambulance. It was an impossible shot. They
were too far away, it was too dark and Ellison was clearly in a great deal of
pain. All he would succeed in doing would be to antagonize the other sentinels.
The driver, unharmed, would race away, taking Charlie and Blair Sandburg
completely out of reach. Add that to the probability that a gun battle would
ensue, one that would do more harm than good and was all too likely to result
in the deaths of both of their 'brothers.'
"No!" Don
shouted, running toward Ellison.
He was already
too late. Two shots were fired in rapid succession.
Time stopped.
The world went silent. Don froze, his focus directed completely onto the
ambulance. For a long while, nothing happened. Then, finally, there was
movement inside the cab. The passenger door was opened.
An army of
agents now had guns trained on the figure moving about the cab of the
ambulance. The dead passenger, successfully taken out by one of Ellison's
improbable shots, was pushed out the door.
Don raised his
weapon, as ready to shoot as the rest of his men -- until he saw the profile of
the figure that was about to fall under their fire.
"Don't
shoot!" His shout was an echo of Ellison's, both of which were repeated
several times until trigger fingers eased back and the imminent gunfire was
avoided.
Only then did
Don allow himself to breathe, knowing now that the figure inside the cab was
none other than his own brother, Charlie Eppes.
Chapter
16
Charlie was
concerned about his fellow hostage. The man was barely conscious and his color
was not at all good.
"You should
remove the tape," He said.
The suggestion
was not well received. Both of the gunmen accompanying him in the back of the
ambulance pointed their weapons at Charlie. The larger one, a black man with
wisdom in his gaze, held a finger to his lips. The message was clear. No
talking.
Still, Charlie
had to address his concerns. He struggled with his silence for only a moment
before blurting out, "He could drown on his own vomit."
The smaller
gunman grabbed Charlie's chin and put his gun directly against Charlie's mouth.
A heartbeat
later -- though it could have been an eternity -- the larger man intervened. He
placed a hand on the other's arm, gently pushing him away, and then repeated
the gesture for silence to Charlie. Finally, he reached down, removed the tape
from Sandburg's mouth, and nodded toward the younger Eppes.
Surprised and
appreciative, Charlie was about to nod back when shock stilled him. An
explosion of gunfire broke the enforced silence, and was immediately followed
by the sound of shattering glass. Though Charlie ducked instinctively, it soon
became evident neither he nor his companions in the rear of the ambulance had
been the target of that fire. The two who had settled in the cab, however, were
not as lucky. Both were dead. Just like that.
It was an
amazing and terrifying testament to the effectiveness of Don and his fellow
agents. Help was right outside. In mere seconds, Charlie's captors had been
reduced from four to two. Unfortunately, the two who remained were sitting
right beside him.
An agonizingly
long period of seconds passed as the remaining gunmen silently considered their
options. Then, without a word ever being said, the smaller one grabbed Charlie
by the arm and began pushing him toward the cab. The gestures he made with his
gun made his intentions clear. Charlie was supposed to get rid of the bodies.
He shook his
head, tried to refuse. Not even the gun aimed at him could effectively force
him to so callously handle two bodies that had been living, breathing human
beings only seconds before. But when the larger man held the barrel of his gun
to the forehead of the other hostage, Charlie knew he had no choice.
* *
*
Alpha 9 was
still seated in the back of the ambulance with a metal wall and a distance of a
dozen meters separating him from Jim Ellison. He also had no radio or other
communication device. Nonetheless, he initiated a conversation with the world's
premier, modern-day sentinel.
"Okay,
Ellison," The large gunman said softly, "here's the deal. This isn't
about Shofield anymore. It's not even about
"You know
it's not that simple," Ellison replied.
"What?"
Don Eppes asked behind him. "Who are you talking
to?"
"It's as
simple as life and death," Alpha 9 said. "You have already proved how
tenuous the difference can be. I can prove it right back to you, starting with
Sandburg. Why don't you share my request with Agent Eppes,
and let him know that once Sandburg goes, his brother is next in line?"
When Jim relayed
the conversation to Don Eppes, the agent was
skeptical.
"How
-- how could you possibly hold a conversation with him, this far back? It's
impossible."
Jim just stared
at him, while Simon Banks shook his head.
"You still
have no idea how strong their senses are, do
you?" Simon said. "He wouldn't lie about this."
Eppes hesitated,
looking back and forth between Ellison and the ambulance. "Okay. Assuming
you're right, how could we possibly trust anything Alpha 9 is saying?"
"He can
hear you," Ellison said casually. "Why don't you direct your
questions to him?"
Shaking his
head, Eppes muttered, "This is unreal." He
turned toward the ambulance, and then could not help but shout, "Okay, how
can we--"
"He heard
you the first time," Ellison interrupted. "And you don't have to
shout. His answer is that we have no choice." Jim cocked his head briefly,
listening, and then added, "We either trust them to let Sandburg and your
brother go at a location to be disclosed later, or we trust them to drop them
both right here, right now."
Eppes stiffened. "They
do that, and they'll end up dead too. You hear me?" He yelled toward the
ambulance. "You will not leave here alive."
"It doesn't
matter." Jim said.
"What?"
Eppes swung back to face him. "What? It doesn't
matter? How can that not matter?"
"They
figure they're at the end of the line. It's all or nothing."
"No. It's
not nothing. It's my brother and your partner. And
they're not getting away with this. It ends here. It ends now."
Jim nodded. "Agreed."
"What? Who
agrees? What do we tell them?"
"Nothing. They already
know."
With that said,
the back doors of the ambulance flew open. A body was tossed outside. Though it
was clearly that of Blair Sandburg, Jim did not flinch, did not move at all.
Only the flexing of his jaw proved he had not turned to cold, hard stone. He
held his position even while a single gunshot resounded from the vehicle,
hitting the ground not six feet beyond Sandburg. It sent a spray of dirt and
gravel flying across Sandburg's still, seemingly lifeless form.
"What the
hell--" Eppes began.
Jim held out his
hand to silence the agent beside him. Then he turned to face Don Eppes. Nodding, he mouthed the words, 'Hold fire.' Though
he wanted to add, 'It's all under control; just go with it,' Jim could only
hope his gestures sent that message as well.
Even so, how
could he even begin to hope that Eppes would believe
him? The agent had to be able to see his brother, now seated in the passenger
side of the ambulance. And though Eppes couldn't see
the gun currently pointed at his brother's head, he had to know it was there.
In Don Eppes' gaze Jim could recognize a mix of
confusion, concern and doubt. Yet, somehow, Eppes
accepted Jim's position. He turned back to watch after his brother, and waited
for the next move.
It was not a
long wait.
Another shot was
fired, this one concentrated inside the ambulance. With his own eyes focused
again on the vehicle, Jim could only imagine the color draining from Eppes' face. But Charlie was fine, as Jim knew he would be.
With Tango 2 now dead in the driver's seat, Jim watched Don Eppes'
brother turn to face the last of Shofield's
sentinels, still situated in the back of the ambulance. And then, cautiously,
his gaze obviously still riveted to the gunman behind him, Charlie Eppes opened the passenger door and fell backwards to the
ground. He tripped over the body he, himself had been
forced to push out of the vehicle, and then scrambled back toward Don and
safety.
An instant
later, Alpha 9 threw his gun out of the rear door and stepped outside, both
hands raised in surrender.
It was over. It
was finally over.
* *
*
While Don Eppes ensured himself that his brother really was okay, Jim
approached the last living member of an army that should never have been
formed.
"Thank
you," Jim offered, despite a deep desire to kill the man right where he
stood.
"Don't
thank me yet," Alpha 9 replied. "Sandburg suffered at least 2 hard
blows to the head. He needs medical attention."
And then Alpha 9
was led away.
Shouts for
medics resounded around Jim Ellison, helping him to accept that the entire Shofield incident really had reached an end. Still, at that
moment, only one sound gave him any sense of peace at all: the slow, worrisome
but very real sound of his guide's heartbeat.
Jim closed his
eyes, caught his breath, and then dropped to his knees beside the man he had
feared he would never see alive again.
"How'd you
know?" Don Eppes asked a few minutes later,
after the medics had arrived to tend to Sandburg.
"He never
said he'd kill them," Jim answered softly. "He was careful to use
words that were ambiguous."
"Good
catch, detective," Megan Reeves said then. "That's not something most
people would pick up on."
"Blair
would." Jim focused on the EMTs at work. "I've learned a few things
from him over the years." He smiled briefly, and then turned to watch
agents loading Alpha 9 into a police car. His gaze grew dark. "And I spent
six months with that sentinel. I could tell a thing or two about his
character."
"Like
what?" Reeves asked.
"Like the
fact that he has a stronger sense of right and wrong than any of the rest of
them did." Jim then gave his full attention to Eppes.
"But that doesn't mean you can ever let your guard down on him. He's a
dangerous man."
"A
dangerous man with a conscience?"
"Count on
it."
When Jim stepped
into the ambulance to accompany Sandburg and eventually see about having his
own broken hand re-set, he found himself struck with a strange sensation. He
glanced out the window to the squad car, and to the back where Alpha 9 should
be seated.
It was empty.
Chapter
17
Alan Eppes was not typically a worrier. His boys were grown,
and, being grown, they were generally pretty good at taking care of themselves.
Still, the nature of Don's job was never truly absent in Alan's thoughts.
Though he refused to dwell on the possibility that one day he might receive the
type of call no federal agent's, police officer's, or other service member's
family ever wanted to receive, he knew that possibility existed. But to receive
such a call about Charlie was simply unthinkable.
"Dad,
Charlie's fine," Don had insisted. "Just a little banged up. You know, cuts and bruises.
That did not
define 'fine' to Alan. "He was already 'a little banged up' from the
university bombing. How much more banged up can he be to still qualify as
'fine'?"
"Okay,
you're right. He's definitely got bruises on top of bruises. And there was some
shock. But Dad, there is nothing wrong with him that an IV and a little rest
and relaxation won't cure."
"IV? Donny, do me a
favor and work on your vocabulary. Charlie is clearly not fine."
Forty five
minutes later, the elder Eppes found himself at the
hospital arguing with an administrator about the whereabouts of his youngest
son when a tired looking gentleman approached him.
"I think
you want bed number 7, around the corner over there. They haven't determined
yet whether or not they want to keep him overnight."
"Thank
you," Alan answered, stunned by the intervention. He held out his hand,
"Doctor...?"
The other man
smiled sadly and shook Alan's hand. "Ellison," He answered. "But
I'm not a doctor. Just another concerned father."
"Oh? Your
son's in there, too?"
He nodded,
looking back toward the section of the emergency room he had pointed out to
Alan. "But the stubborn fool won't let anyone touch him until he knows his
friend's getting the care he needs. It's okay, though. I've already seen to
that. They'll both get the best care this hospital can provide; and, if necessary,
the best care any hospital can provide. Your son, too."
"My
son?
What? You know Charlie?" Alan finally made the connection. "Wait a
minute. Ellison. You're the father of
that detective, from up near
Another
nod.
"Cascade, actually."
"Right. Well, why don't
we walk back together?" Alan patted the man on the arm and indicated the
ER with a tilt of his head. "See how our sons are doing."
This time,
Ellison shook his head. "No. I've done enough. All I can."
The answer
confused Alan. "It's not about doing anything; it's just about being
there."
"It's too
late for that."
Alan smiled,
still confused. "What? What are you talking about, 'too la'--" Then
his face went white. "Oh my god; too late?"
"No, no.
That's not what I meant. He'll be fine. They all will. Listen, I have to leave.
You go on now, take care of your son."
As Ellison
walked away, Alan watched after him, dumbfounded. Then he went straight toward
bed number 7, where he heard Charlie's voice telling someone he was fine.
"Didn't you
boys learn anything about the English language?" He started by way of
greeting. "Let me tell you the definition of the word 'fine'...."
* *
*
By morning, both
Sandburg and Charlie were assigned to rooms -- though Don continued to stress
to his father that Charlie was fine. The younger Eppes
had simply experienced too much, too fast. He wasn't programmed to deal with
the kinds of things Don had been trained to handle.
"Charlie
wasn't meant to lead your life, Donny," Alan had said.
"Yeah, I
know." He took a deep breath and shook his head. "I like working with
him though, you know? It makes me proud to see him do the things he does to
help us out with cases." He smiled. "I mean, it blows people away to
see what he can come up with. Even Homeland Security wants a piece of him half
the time." Then his smile faded, and his gaze grew introspective.
"But at the same time, I don't want him anywhere near what I do. I want to
see him safely tucked away behind those university walls."
"You can't
have it both ways," Alan answered. "And even those university walls
aren't always so safe these days. And I don't just mean the bombing. Look at
what happened in
"Yeah."
"It's his
decision, regardless. We don't have to like it, but we do have to accept
whatever he chooses to do."
The idea of
losing Charlie's help over these recent events suddenly hit Don. "You
don't really think he'll want to quit over this, do you? I mean, stop the
consulting?"
"Nah. If there's math
involved, he won't be able to refuse. But...." Alan shrugged. "It's
probably going to take a while for him to adjust; you know, to deal with all
he's been through. You really should get him to see that counselor of
yours."
"Yeah."
But Don knew he
would never be able force his brother to bare his soul like that. It wasn't
until Don finally had a long, casual conversation with Jim Ellison in the
hospital cafeteria that he began to feel a true sense of optimism for his
brother's emotional healing.
"Introduce
him to Sandburg," Ellison had told him. "They're very different
people, but you can't deny there are strong similarities between them. And
Blair ... he has a way of centering people. He's been through a lot himself
over the past several months, and he's going to need to do some serious
centering of his own. If we could get them to talk things out together, it
could help them both. I'd ask you to bring him up to Cascade, though. Blair's
been ... we've been away for too long. It's time to go home."
Don could
recognize the detective's sincerity, and he knew right then and there that he
would take Ellison up on his offer. But Don could see something else in
Ellison's gaze and the set of his shoulders. The man was exhausted, both
emotionally and physically.
"How's he
doing?" Don asked then.
Ellison set down
the cup of coffee he'd been struggling to hold, and sat back in his chair.
"Doctors called it an epidural hematoma, bleeding on the brain. They had
to drill a hole in his head. A small hole, but a hole, for Christ’s
sake." He sighed. "Now we just have to wait and see. But he'll
be okay."
"The
prognosis is good?"
The detective
gave him a small, weary smile. "The doctors say their timing was good.
There wasn't as much blood gathered as there could have been. But as to a
prognosis, all they'll say is we have to wait and
see."
"Well, it
sounded like your dad made sure those doctors were the best they could be. I'm
sure he's in good hands."
"My
dad?"
Ellison's focus intensified, but Don wasn't quite sure whether he saw hope or
disappointment in his gaze.
"He talked
to my father back in the ER."
"He was
here." It was more a statement than a question, an affirmation of some
kind.
"Yeah. But I didn't
get the chance to see him. I guess he was in a hurry to get somewhere."
Ellison did not
reply.
"You'd
better try to get some rest while you're waiting," Don said to break the
silence, "or you're going to start feeling like you've got a hole in your
head, too. Can I take you back to the hotel?"
The detective
shook his head. "No. I'd just as soon be here when he wakes up."
"I kind of
figured you'd say that. How about I walk you back up there?"
As they stepped
off the elevator to the ICU, Ellison turned toward Don.
"Eppes?" He said. "Thank you."
Chapter
18
Jim stared down
at his friend and partner -- his 'brother,' as Don Eppes
had described him -- and marveled yet again at the younger man's resilience.
The doctors had indicated that Blair would most likely need a respirator to
assist him with breathing until the injury to his brain began to heal. Instead,
all he needed was a little extra oxygen, provided via a small breathing tube
unobtrusively affixed beneath his nose. That had to be a good sign; it had to
mean Sandburg was already on his way to a full and speedy recovery.
It was good to
be optimistic, Jim told himself. It was also good to be appreciative. But when
he sank down into the therapeutic recliner someone had managed to set at
Blair's bedside, Jim had no idea who to thank for that particular prize.
Curious but too tired to investigate, he just closed
his eyes and silently sent out a general note of gratitude to the cosmos
themselves. And then he dreamed.
Seemingly within
seconds, the hospital faded into nothingness and the cosmos came together in
the guise of an ethereal jungle. The panther was on alert, standing over the slumbering
wolf, when another presence began to make itself known. A giant anaconda
slithered across the jungle floor, far from the river that gave it life.
"You do not
belong here."
At the sound of Incacha's voice, the panther turned its head to see the shaman
while maintaining a wary eye on the snake.
"This is
not your place," the ghostly image went on.
"Am I not
also a sentinel?" The snake replied as it rose into the air and took the
form of the man known as Alpha 9.
"A sentinel
protects the tribe," Incacha said.
"I have no
tribe, except for these two men. Today, I chose to protect them both."
Bristling at the
man's statement, Jim took his place where the panther had been. "We are
not your tribe."
"You are
all that remains."
"Why is
that?" Jim asked. "Why did you encourage the others to go after me
and Charlie Eppes? You had to know there would be no
way out of that building."
Alpha 9
shrugged. "I was curious. They were all self-serving hypocrites. I
wondered if they could still function as a team when it came down to the
end."
"You were a
part of that team."
"Only until
it was time to go my own way."
"How does
that make you any less self-serving than they were?"
"I am more
than they were, more than they could ever be."
"Self-serving
and arrogant," Jim observed.
"What you
consider arrogance is simple honesty. I am a sentinel. And I am a student. I
study people, much like our guide."
"Our
guide?
You're nothing like Sandburg; and you have no right to claim him as your
guide."
"You are
the first sentinel of this age." Alpha 9 lowered his head slightly, as
though in respect. "Sandburg is the first guide. You both have a duty to
those who would follow."
"My only
duty is to Sandburg, and to our tribe, the city of
Alpha 9 smiled.
"Your tribe is wherever you are. Yesterday, it was the Chopec.
Today, it's
"Our tribe
is Cascade." Jim repeated. "And you are a fugitive. Cascade can never
be your place."
"You are
the first," Alpha 9 repeated. "But I am the second. And my place is
wherever I choose to be. Today, I stand with you. So today you are my
tribe."
"And where
will you stand tomorrow?"
"Remember
what I've already said about tomorrow." Another shrug.
"Who really ever knows where tomorrow will take us?"
As the snake
slithered back toward the great river, Jim shivered from a sudden chill. He
opened his eyes to find himself back in the ICU, in the path of an air
conditioning vent he had not noticed before. That should have satisfied him,
should have been enough to assure him that his senses were responding to
nothing more than a cool breeze. Yet he could not shake the feeling that Alpha
9 was closer than the jungle vision had suggested.
* *
*
"Jim?"
The voice
brought him back from a void. Nearly an hour after experiencing the vision, Jim
had lost his battle against sleep. Fortunately, Alpha 9 had not intruded.
Instead, Jim had found himself floating in nothingness. He slept more deeply
than he had in a very long time.
"Jim?"
The voice called again. It was weak, yet soothingly familiar, and it pulled
Jim's attention to the man in the bed beside him.
Blair Sandburg
was awake.
"Hey,
Chief."
Pushing himself out of the recliner, Jim hurriedly put his hand on Sandburg's
arm, eager for the connection.
"Wha ...." Blair paused to swallow. "What
ha....?" He tried again, but the rest of the question went unspoken. He
closed his eyes tightly, perhaps trying to shut out his confusion.
Blair was not
alone. Jim also wanted to shut something away. He struggled to cut himself off
from his memories of the vision, tried to ignore his feelings about Alpha 9's
lingering presence.
"It's over,
partner," He said. "Shofield, the rest of
them, they're all gone. It's just back to you and me, Chief."
Blair tried to
look at him but seemed to find it difficult to focus. "Over?"
"You
bet." Jim smiled. "We're going home, Sandburg. Think you can handle
that?"
Returning the
hint of a smile, Blair's eyelids slid shut once more. "Tired."
"It's okay, Blair. I'd say you've earned the chance to rest
for a while."
"I'd say
you both have," Simon's voice called softly from behind.
But Jim waited
for Blair's breaths to grow slow and steady before he turned his attention
away.
"I thought
you had to go back to Cascade," Jim said then. "'Mend some fences,' I
believe is what you said."
"Got a
little help from the feds on that one," Simon answered. He shook his head
incredulously and then chuckled. "I still find it hard to believe I can
honestly say that."
"Eppes helped to clear things with Chief Warren?"
"Whatever
he did, he more than cleared things. The chief obviously had no idea how
valuable the feds consider both you and Sandburg these days. It still surprises
me sometimes. Would you believe we actually got an official apology, and
both you and Sandburg are up for commendations?"
"Actually? No, sir. I would not believe that."
"Well,
you'd better start. It's all true."
"I'll be
damned."
Simon's
expression turned serious. "Look, Jim; now that you know Blair's coming
out of it and I'm here for when he wakes up again, why don't you find a bed and
get some real sleep?"
"I'm okay,
Simon. Thanks." And Jim realized how true his statement really was. The
prickly feeling he'd had about Alpha 9 was suddenly, inexplicably gone. Perhaps
it was simply because he and Sandburg had finally been reunited. Not only that,
home was finally starting to seem within reach. It was almost as though Simon's
presence provided him the grounding he'd needed at that moment.
Jim smiled the
first real smile he'd had both the opportunity and the desire to express since
he and Blair had left Cascade.
"In
fact…." He took a long, refreshing breath before continuing, "I feel
better than I have in months."
Epilogue
Jim Ellison
stepped out onto his balcony and filled his lungs with the cooling, soothing
air of Cascade. It had been two full
months since he and Sandburg had returned, and it still surprised him to
realize how good it felt. Part of him never wanted to leave again. Like a great
sequoia, he wanted to plant his roots so firmly into the ground no one would
ever again have the strength -- of arms or words -- to make him budge.
A more rational
part knew he could plant nothing more permanent than an anchor.
Whether he liked
it or not, Jim was rare in this world -- rare, but not alone. It was obvious
now there were others out there like him. He could no more ignore that fact
than the FBI could, thanks to Shofield's efforts and
Alpha 9's disappearance. If Shofield could recruit
sentinels, someone else could as well. Jim and Blair both knew that fact alone
meant they would have no choice but to get involved in a different kind of
recruiting effort, one that would result in true sentinels, men and women who
understood what it meant to be responsible for the tribe they would protect.
"You are
the first sentinel of this age," Alpha 9 had told him in his vision. "Sandburg
is the first guide. You both have a duty to those who would follow."
As much as he
was bothered by his thoughts of Alpha 9, Jim knew the man's words had been
true. Still, he tensed as his sentinel instincts were awakened. He reached
outward. Like a night watchman on patrol, he scanned his city's streets until a
shrill scream drew him toward a neighboring building.
"Daddy,
daddy!"
A child called out. "There's a monster under my bed!"
All else was
quiet. Jim's tribe was safe. Smiling, he pulled away to give the child and
father the privacy they deserved, and then he settled into a chair to simply
enjoy being home. Part of that enjoyment caused him to open a channel between
him and the loft next door, where his guide, partner and friend had set his own
anchor a few years before.
"Face
it, Jim," Sandburg had said at the time. "We both feel the
need to stay close, to stay connected. But you need your space, and, Jim, man
... buddy ... I really need mine."
He was right, of
course. Though Jim hated to admit it openly, Blair Sandburg had an incredible
batting average when it came to being right. He had good instincts -- or
perhaps it was some sort of shamanistic intuition. Whatever it was, Jim trusted
Blair's judgment. He also respected his partner's privacy -- unless, of course,
he had good reason to suspect Sandburg's health or safety could be at risk.
There were definitely some circumstances under which Jim would never even
consider invading that privacy by tuning in. Usually those circumstances
involved Blair inviting someone else into his personal space. But Blair's guest
tonight was as unique as their own sentinel-guide relationship; and Jim was
just too curious to completely shut them out.
* *
*
Blair watched in
fascination as Charlie Eppes scribbled hurriedly in a
notebook, writing as many symbols and numbers as words.
"You think
you can really use math for this?"
Charlie stopped
working, but did not set down his pen. "It's just a matter of creating the
right algorithm and applying it to search the right databases -- in this case,
I would suggest student records at colleges and universities, particularly
those with a focus on anthropological, psychological and sociological
studies."
"You might
also want to consider parapsychology," Blair suggested. "I don't
think that should be the only focus, probably not even the primary one, but it
still might help in assessing candidates. I've found that there are certain
aspects about being a guide that seem to be more intuitive than anything
else."
It didn't take
intuition to recognize the change in Charlie's posture or the frustrated
expression in his eyes. "I knew this was too good to be true," He
said softly.
"What do
you mean?"
"This whole
'sentinels are real,' thing. Between you and Ellison, my brother, Megan Reeves,
and even Larry Fleinhardt, you've all finally got me
convinced that there is a scientific basis for the existence of sentinels. I've
even been able to start working on the algorithm to help in locating people
with those particular abilities. But ...." He shook his head. "Parapsychology? There is absolutely no proof .... I mean, I'm ... I'm not even sure how that can
classify as a legitimate science."
"What do
you mean 'no proof'? There's plenty of proof out there. There've been studies
done under tightly controlled conditions--"
"You mean,
'what kind of card' am I holding up?' Those kinds of studies?
Results of those studies have never been conclusive. The number of right
answers can easily be explained by--"
"What about
psychics who've helped solve cases?" Blair interrupted. "There have
been documented incidents in which victims have been found and murderers have
been caught based exclusively on the details psychics have been able to
provide. I wouldn't be surprised if your brother had--"
"Okay,"
Charlie gave in. "Okay. Look, I'll add it to the list. This isn't about
what I believe, anyway. It's just about creating an algorithm."
"Hey, man,
I'm sorry. I didn't mean to upset you." Blair smiled. "Actually, I've
always found it kind of fun to debate about that. And you have to admit there
are still so many things we don't even understand yet about the capabilities of
the human brain." He refused to voice the silly thought that was floating
through his mind about a particular, first-rate psychic who happened to share
this mathematician's name, Naomi’s friend,
Charlie Eppes' own smile seemed forced.
"You and Larry would get along great."
"Larry?"
Still struggling to separate the two Charlies in his
mind, Blair now tried to block out the image of a Barbary ape.
"A friend
of mine," Charlie answered. "Actually, he's a ... a physicist, but he
constantly finds it necessary to remind me how difficult it is to factor in
human tendencies with pure logic-based equations."
"Smart
man," Blair offered.
"Yeah. Usually."
"Not
always?"
The
mathematician took a deep breath. "Sometimes he just accepts too much, too
easily."
"Like
psychics?"
"Maybe it's
not so much that he accepts them as it is he doesn't discount them."
"Why would
that be a problem? You have to admit that everything we now know to be
scientifically true was originally nothing more than a theory until someone
could back it up with facts."
"Well, when
someone can show me clear and undeniable facts about the existence of psychic
capabilities, then...." He cleared his throat rather than finish the
statement. "But until then, I just can't buy in to the whole
concept."
"Of
course!"
Blair blurted out excitedly. "You're a mathematician. You see patterns in
everything, right?"
Clearly unsure
where Blair was going, Charlie nodded hesitantly.
"There is a
distinct order to everything you deal with, everything you experience."
"Absolutely."
"It's the
same with the people, the cultures I deal with in my work."
Charlie started
to shake his head. "I don't think--"
"No. Hear
me out, here. It's true. Cultures work within established patterns just like
people do. I mean we all have our individual patterns, right? It's like our
routines. We get up every day at a certain time, have a cup of coffee, take a
shower ... it all comes together to form a pattern."
"Of course,
but--"
"Tribal
cultures also have their patterns. In fact, their patterns might be even clearer
than ours. Shamanistic rituals, for example, are based around maintaining a
very distinct balance between the world we know and the unseen world that we
don't. You might say it's between the physical and the spiritual. In psychology
it could be the balance between the id and the ego, or between eros and thanatos.
In physics you say for every action there is an equal and opposite
reaction."
Blair paused and
Charlie studied him, expecting more. When it seemed as though Blair had no
intention of continuing, Charlie shook his head again. "How does any of
that have anything to do with whether or not psychics exist?"
"You know
how your friend Larry tries to get you to see that human tendencies can defy
logic?"
Charlie shrugged
and then nodded.
"What about
your experiences, both with the bombing at the university and the gunman in the
FBI offices; didn't those seem to defy logic, to defy any attempt you might
have made to find the underlying patterns?" Blair watched his guest grow
tense.
"It still
bothers you, doesn't it?" Blair went on then. "You still can't find
the perfect pattern that could explain Tango 2's attempt on your life, can
you?"
Charlie's jaw
went taut; his eyes grew dark. "What exactly is your point?"
"It still
bothers me, man. Everything those sentinels did, from the moment they
attacked Shofield to the moment I woke up in that
hospital. None of it made any sense. It was as though they all suffered some
sort of mass psychosis or something. It bothers the heck out of me that I can't
see the right pattern in any of it, and I'm not even close to being a
mathematician. I still get nightmares about it."
There was a
spark of recognition in Charlie's eyes.
"I'll bet
you do, too," Blair said. "And I'll bet neither of us would have
nightmares anymore if we could just find a logical pattern behind it
all."
Suddenly it all
started to fall into place. Blair could actually see it coming into focus.
"But there is, man," He said. "There is a pattern. We've just
been looking at it wrong. We have to think about it from that physics angle,
the one with every action having an equal and opposite reaction. The reaction
is what the sentinels did, but it's the action we've been missing."
"What --
what action?" Charlie asked, clearly intrigued.
For a moment,
Blair felt as though his guest was hoping he might throw out a lifeline. Maybe
he was.
"Alpha
9," Blair said. "He influenced all of them. I've been thinking all
this time that he was just riding the tide, seeing where it would take him. But
he created that tide, man. He was the cause behind the mass psychosis, the
action behind the reaction."
"You ...
you're saying that he told them to go after me?"
"No."
Blair shook his head. "Not at all. He just planted
a seed and then waited to see what would grow from it. It's all a matter of
psychology. I'm sure your agent Reeves would explain it much better, but think
of it like this. He gave them a mental push to see how they would react.
Whether that was achieved by words or body language or ... or something else,
we can't say. That's the unseen action, the one we
know exists only because we have seen the reaction that it caused."
"The
missing variable," Charlie offered, perhaps in an attempt to grab Blair's
lifeline.
"Exactly. And if you ever
work with a psychic, you can see the reaction in the details they uncover, but
you can't see the action, the missing variable."
Charlie gazed at
him thoughtfully.
"But that
doesn't mean it's not there," Blair went on. "It only means we
haven't seen it; we haven't yet managed to clearly record it for credible and
indisputable scientific analysis."
There were a few
moments of thoughtful silence before Charlie drew a deep breath and blew it out
in a heavy sigh. "I'll admit you give a good argument for not entirely
discounting the possibility that psychic phenomena might exist in some
capacity."
Blair's smile
broadened. "All I'm asking you to do is open your mind to the
possibility."
This time
Charlie smiled back. "It's as open as it could ever be ... but ...."
"What?"
Charlie sighed
again. "But your argument isn't going to help me sleep any better at
night."
"Why? Because you still can't see a precise pattern?"
"It's more
because there's a dangerous fugitive out there who very nearly had me
killed."
"Oh,"
Blair answered, stunned by the unexpected answer. "But, no, you shouldn't
worry about that. Not really. I don't think he poses a danger to you."
"Why
not?
He almost had me killed once. How can we really know for sure he won't try it
again?"
"Because
none of that was ever about you. It was about the other sentinels. It
was his screwed up way of studying them."
"So my
being a target was not a fixed variable. Is that supposed to make me feel
better?"
"Well, yes.
No. I don't know. Look, I only know that the likelihood of Alpha 9 going after
you again is--"
"I could
calculate it out." Charlie held up his hand, effectively stopping Blair
from babbling. "But I can imagine the probability would prove to be too
small to be a cause for concern. On the other hand ...."
Charlie's gaze
shifted to Blair and away again. It looked very much like he was hiding
something -- or at least trying to hold something back.
"What?"
Blair asked finally.
"I .. ah ... imagine the results
would change significantly if ... um ...." He cleared his throat again. "If I were to base the calculations on Ellison or ...
you." His eyes finally held firm to Blair's. They seemed to reflect
real concern.
"Yeah,"
Blair said slowly. He nodded. "We've already pretty much determined that.
But, hey." He smiled, "Jim's like ... he's like an early-warning
system, you know?"
Charlie shook
his head, clearly confused.
"Jim can
sense other sentinels. He would know if Alpha 9 was nearby."
"How?"
"That's the
unseen action, man. He just reacts to it."
Charlie studied
him for a moment longer. "That's ... that's good."
Blair paused,
watching Charlie’s mix of expressions from confusion to pure disbelief.
"I know
this is all a lot for you to take in," Blair said a moment later.
"But there really is more to being a sentinel than simply having
heightened senses. It involves a … a connection for lack of a better word. A connection to the world around him, a connection to something
that links him with other sentinels, and a connection to his guide."
"And that
would be you," Charlie played along.
Blair nodded.
"Every sentinel needs a guide; and it has to be a one-to-one ratio. When Shofield failed to accept that fact, collapse was
inevitable."
"What kind
of connections does a guide have? Is that where the parapsychology comes
in?" Charlie asked.
Blair gave him a
soft smile, recognizing the challenge Charlie was having in processing concepts
that defied mathematical logic -- or for which mathematical logic simply had
not yet been able to address.
"A guide,"
He began, "has to be able to ground the sentinel in both this world and
that unseen one. That’s what I do for Jim. I ground him, both from a physical
perspective and a spiritual one. In order to be able to do that, I have to be
open to … to ideas, to things that your numbers haven’t yet been able to
quantify."
Charlie’s gaze
was incredulous. "I’m sorry. This is all just…" He shook his head.
"Everything can be quantified. It’s just a matter of finding the right
variables."
"Then let’s
work together to figure out what those variables should be," Blair said.
Smiling, Charlie
cocked his head slightly and then gave a small nod.
"But
later," Blair added as he jumped up from his chair. "I’m starved. Shouldn't
your brother be done with his meeting about now? What do you say we get Jim and
then go meet Don for dinner? I'm dying to find out how Cascade's FBI branch
reacted to the whole Sentinel project idea.”
“Project Falcon,
you mean,” Charlie corrected.
Blair shook his
head. “Why do they always have to be so cryptic about these things? I mean,
Project Bluebook was about UFOs. And Project Stargate
wasn’t about gates to the stars; it was about psychic--" Stopping himself,
Blair gazed sheepishly at Charlie. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to bring that up
again.”
"No problem.
Anyway, as to the naming conventions, cryptic is the whole idea. It’s all about
confidentiality.”
“Don’t get me
started about confidentiality.” Blair grabbed his jacket and keys, and started
making his way to the door. "It’s exactly that kind of secrecy that leads
to conspiracy theories. Although for Jim’s sake I can accept the whole idea of
secrecy. That’s a bridge I’d rather not cross more than once."
Blair opened the
door to the hallway to find Jim already standing there.
“Hey, Jim,” He
said with a little too much enthusiasm as he tried to cover for touching on a
subject that had long been declared taboo.
But Jim didn’t
seem to care about old wounds. Instead he smiled back at Blair.
It’s about
friendship,
Blair said in his thoughts. But he knew it was far more than that. It’s
about brotherhood, He corrected; the real thing, not Shofield’s
kind. Jim was no less a brother to Blair than Don was to Charlie. Alpha 9 might
still be out there; but Jim was right here. At least for that moment in time,
the universe was in perfect balance.
<end>