“—from four days ago, shows the three mechanical remote devices which the Australian government claims emerged from a disguised spacecraft. The government says these devices have communicated with their scientists.”
The video of the silvery gourds and van was replaced by a typical press conference scene, with a slender, thirtyish man in a brown suit standing behind a clear plastic podium, reading a prepared statement: “We have communicated with these objects, and we can now affirm that they are not living creatures, but robots, representing the builders of the spacecraft — it is now confirmed to be a spacecraft — buried within the rock. While the actual communications are still being analyzed and will not be released immediately, the substance of the information supplied was positive, that is, not threatening or alarming in any fashion.”
“Jesus bloody Christ,” Hicks said.
The image of the hovering gourds returned. “They’re flying,” Hicks said. “What’s holding them up? Come on, you bastards. Do your job and say what the bloody hell’s going on.”
“Commentary from world leaders, including the Pope, after these messages—”
Hicks flung his arms out and swore, kicked the cabinet holding the television, and punched the set off. He could spend another three hundred dollars chasing rumors across all the networks and bulletin boards in the world, or—
Or he could stop being a novelist wallah and start being a journalist again by finding the news behind the news. Certainly not in Australia. The Great Victoria Desert, by now, had representatives of the media three-deep, trying to interview every grain of sand.
A faint memory of some obligation suddenly flared into consciousness. He had had an appointment this morning. “Damn.” That single word, said almost happily, adequately expressed his slight irritation at having forgotten the local television interview. He should have been at the studio five hours ago. It hardly seemed to matter. He was on to something.
The “Furnace”…Where in hell would that be? Somewhere near Vandenberg, apparently. He had visited Vandenberg seven times in his career, twice covering important combined civilian-military shuttle launches to polar orbit. Hicks pulled out his pocket compact disk player from a suitcase and hooked it into the computer. He indexed the World Atlas sector on his reference disk and searched through the F’s in the gazetteer. “Furnace, furnace, furnace—”
He quickly found several Furnaces, the first in Argyll County, Scotland. There was also Furnace, Kentucky, and Furnace L (“What is L, lake?”) in County Mayo, Ireland. Furnace, Massachusetts…And Furnace Creek, California. He entered the map number and coordinates. In less than two seconds, he had a detailed color map of an area a hundred kilometers square. A flashing icon in the lower left-hand corner indicated a comparative satellite photograph was available. His eye searched the map until an arrow appeared, flashing next to a tiny dot.
“Furnace Creek,” he said, smiling. “On the edge of Death Valley proper, not far from Nevada actually…” But not very close to Vandenberg — across the state from it, in fact. He switched disks and keyed in a request for Automobile Club of Southern California information. The computer found a year-old listing. “1995L Brief: Furnace Creek Inn. 67 units. Golf, riding. Long-established, picturesque location overlooking Death Valley. Three stars.”
Hicks thought for a moment, very much aware that the facts were not coming together perfectly. Operating solely on instinct, he picked up the phone, punched a button for an outside line, and requested the area code for Furnace Creek. It was the same as San Diego’s although it was hundreds of miles north-northeast. Shaking his head, he called information and asked for the number of Furnace Creek Inn. A mechanical voice informed him, and he jotted it down, whistling.
The phone rang three times. A sleepy-voiced, young-sounding girl answered. Hicks checked his watch again, for the fourth time in ten minutes. For the first time, he actually paid attention to the dials. One-fifteen p.m. He hadn’t slept all night. “Reservations, please.”
“That’s me,” the girl said;
“I’d like to book a room for tomorrow.”
“I’m sorry, sir, we can’t do that. We’re completely full.”
“Can I make a reservation for your dining room, then?”
“The inn is closed for the next few days, sir.”
“Big traveling party?” Hicks asked, his smile broadening. “Special reservations?”
“I can’t tell you that, sir.”
“Why not?”
“I’m not allowed to give out that information now.”
Hicks could almost see the girl biting her lip. “Thank you.” He hung up and fell back on the bed, suddenly’ exhausted.
Who else would have tracked this down?
“Can’t sleep,” he resolved, sitting up again. He called room service and asked for coffee and a substantial breakfast — ham, eggs, whatever they had. The clerk offered a three-egg concoction with ham and bell peppers mixed in — a Denver omelet, as if pigs and peppers might be special to that city. He agreed, held down the button, and called the downstairs travel agency listed in the hotel directory.
The agent, an efficient-sounding woman, informed him that there was a private airstrip near Furnace Creek, but the closest he could fly in commercially would be Las Vegas.
“I’ll take a seat on the next flight out,” he said. She gave him the flight number and departure time — about an hour from now, cutting it close — and the gate number at Lindbergh Field, and asked if he would need a rental car.
“Yes, indeed. Unless I can fly directly in.”
“No, sir. Only small airfields out that way, no commuter flight service. The drive between Vegas and Furnace Creek will take about two or three hours,” she said, adding, “if you’re like everybody else who drives on the desert.”
“Madmen all, eh?” he asked.
“Madwomen, too,” the agent said briskly.
“Mad, all mad,” Hicks said. “I’d like a hotel room for the night, as well. Quiet. No gambling.” It would be late afternoon by the time he arrived in Las Vegas, and he would not be able to make it to Death Valley before dark. • Best to get a good night’s sleep, he thought, and start out in the morning.
“Let me confirm your reservations, sir. I’ll need your credit card number. You’re a guest at the Inter-Continental?”
“I am. Trevor Hicks.” He spelled the name and gave his American Express number.
“Mr. Trevor Hicks. The writer?” the agent asked.
“Yes, indeed, bless you,” he said.
“I heard you on the radio yesterday.”
He pictured the travel agent as a well-tanned blond beach bunny. Perhaps he had been unfair to KGB-FM. “Oh, indeed?”
“Yes. Very interesting. You said you’d take an alien home to meet your mum. Your mother. Even now?”
“Yes, even now,” he said. “Feeling very friendly toward extraterrestrials, aren’t we all?”
The agent laughed nervously. “Actually, it frightens me.” “Me, too, dear,” Hicks said. Delicious, lovely fright.
8—
Harry stood before the glass, hands in his pockets, staring at the Guest. Arthur conferred with two officers at the rear of the room, discussing how the first physical examination was going to be conducted. “We won’t be entering the room this time,” he said. “We have your photographs and…tissue samples from the first day. They’ll keep us busy.”
Harry felt a small flush of anger. “Idiots,” he said under his breath. The Guest, as usual, was curled beneath the blankets on the low platform, only a “foot” and “hand” sticking out from the covers.
“Beg pardon, sir?” asked the current duty officer, a tall, muscular Nordic-looking fellow of about thirty.
“I said ‘idiots,’” Harry repeated. “Tissue samples.”