“That’s the outfit Jennifer’s husband is associated with, isn’t it?”
“The same,” said Smith. “Turns out Doctor Westerland picked ten of us, you and me included, Liz, for a special sort of mission in life.”
“What are you talking about? I don’t remember anything like that.”
“Exactly.” Smith went on and explained things to her.
When he concluded, Liz said, “I’m disappointed. In Doctor Westerland, I mean. To use us like that and not even-”
“He was killed, remember, before he could do much of anything about-”
“Jared, you don’t believe he ever would’ve told us, do you?”
“I guess not, no.”
Liz said, “Are you taking me back to the Mission or do you still intend to turn me over to-”
“I intend to try and save our lives.”
“Remember, my dear,” added Saint, “that, as Smith told you, the Syndek operatives are not above killing you Horizon alumni once they’ve siphoned off what you know.”
She folded her hands. “Poor Hal Larzon.”
“What I want to do is get you to a safe hideaway,” Smith said, frowning at the control dash. “Oscar Ruiz is already there, Winiarsky should be soon. We’re in a position to make a deal with Triplan, since we’ve been used as carriers for this information without ever being asked about it.”
“I’m not sure I exactly want compensation, although I don’t fancy being hunted. And I suppose with money I could help the Mission to accomplish a lot of…what’s wrong, Jared?”
“The controls seem to have locked on me,” he said as he struggled with the drivestick and pushed at the buttons on the dash. “Saint, can you-”
“I’ve been trying to use my telek powers on them for the past couple of minutes, old boy,” he said. “Having, I fear, deuced bad luck thus far.”
“Shit, somebody’s planted a parasite controlbox under our car.” Smith kept trying to regain control of the skycar. “We’re being flown to somebody else’s destination.”
CHAPTER 22
“Jove, one is sorry this wasn’t mentioned earlier.”
“You certain you can’t?”
Saint, face dotted with perspiration, nodded abjectly. “I’m not affected by being up in this skycar, old man, yet to go outside there and crawl under the ship…”
“Okay, can’t be helped.” Smith snatched the small toolkit off the cabin wall. “I’ll swing down there and-”
“Why can’t Saint use his telek gift to get rid of that parasite control gadget?” Liz asked.
“Alas, I can’t teleport anything I haven’t first seen,” he explained forlornly. “And severe vertigo makes it impossible, even in this desperate instance, for one to-”
“Take the driveseat,” Smith told him, moving to the door. “When I get rid of the damn box, be ready to get us back on our own course.”
“Yes, to be sure.”
The skycar was flying south, heading for the edge of the night city.
“Be careful,” said Liz.
“Intend to.” Even though he opened the door carefully, the rush of air outside yanked the handle from his grasp.
Giving an annoyed shake of his head, Smith stepped out onto the wing. He had the small toolkit tucked into his waistband.
The wind pushed and tugged at him. He took one wobbly step, unexpectedly sat down, and slid toward the car wing’s front edge.
His legs shot out into the darkness beyond.
Smith twisted his body, catching the edge of the wing as he fell by.
As he dangled there the wind did an even more enthusiastic job of shoving at him.
He inched closer to the body of the skycar. Then he stretched, and grabbed at the rigid landing gear.
Smith managed to catch hold just above a fender and brought his other hand over. Now he was hanging beneath the belly of the flying machine.
Down below the city was ending, few lights showed and they seemed to be flying over forest country.
Smith took a few slow, deep breaths before swinging his legs up and locking them around the axle. Turning and twisting, he pulled himself up and inched out until he was sitting, hunched, on the thing.
The skycar seemed to be losing altitude now that it had left the city behind.
From the kit Smith extracted a small palmlight. Clicking it on, he swept the underside of the machine with a thin beam of light.
“C’mon, c’mon,” he said aloud. “Where are you?”
He didn’t spot the coinsized parasite control box until he made his second sweep. The little gadget was attached to the fuselage above the other wheel.
Smith bumped his backside along the axle until he was directly under the damn thing.
The car was whizzing along just above the treetops. Smith played the light on the box. Since it was a magnetic model, all he had to do was…
Glancing down, he saw a rectangle of light rushing toward them.
A landing field, lit by two long rows of ground spots. A domed barn at the far side of the field. And standing in front of that barn, smiling up into the night, was Deac Constiner of the Trinidad Law Bureau.
Smith caught hold of the parasite, tugging at it. For a few seconds it wouldn’t budge. Then it came free in his hand.
He teetered on the axle, regained his balance, tossed the gadget away.
“Take us up!” he shouted.
Constiner ducked to his left as the parasite came whistling down at him.
The skycar started climbing, up and away from the field and the waiting lawman.
“Now,” said Smith, “let’s see if I can get myself back inside.”
Cruz gritted his teeth a moment after he’d turned off the highway onto the sideroad leading to Pastoral Estates. The road was rutted and cracked, causing his newly acquired landvan to bounce and rattle.
The giant plaz cockroach atop the roof creaked, shimmied.
On each side of the pale green vehicle were the words Sonic Bros., Bugkillers Deluxe in glowing twists of neon.
As Cruz drove through the rusted weedy gateway of the decaying housing development a shaggy goat broke free of the cluster of green nomads camped on the nearest overgrown lawn. It ran, bleating, almost into the path of his landvan. Swerving, Cruz nearly drove up onto the opposite curve.
That action scattered the small band of looters, mostly ragged catmen, who were carrying off the shutters and patio brix from another of the forlorn houses.
Getting himself back on course, Cruz drove along Sylvan Lane to Shady Glen and turned left.
Halfway up the next block a dumpy lizardwoman in a polkadot housecoat leaped in front of his landvan.
Cruz whapped the brake button. The van shuddered, and stopped about four feet short of smacking her. The giant cockroach made a protesting noise.
After activating the window-lowering toggle, Cruz put his head out into the gathering darkness. “What is the meaning of this rash act, madam?”
She held her thumb an inch and a half from her forefinger. “About this long,” she said, shuffling around to his side of the cab. “A disgusting scummy shade of brown. Stunted little wings and a bunch of teenie weenie googly eyes. What is it?”
“You nearly get yourself plowed under just to ask me riddles?”
“Whatever it is…I got me ten thousand of the rascals crawling all over my kitchen,” she explained. “We’re one of the few decent families left in this sinkhole of a community. Now, as if we didn’t have enough to bear with nomads barbecuing goats on our lawns and looters and mewts and welfs and…now we’ve been cursed with a blight of disgusting slimy brown things. Oh, and they eat linoleum.”
“I happen to be en route to a home with an even more momentous problem.” Cruz reached behind him. “However, spray this on the beggars and it’ll work wonders until I can get back to you.” He grabbed up a spraygun, tossed it out into the oncoming night to her.