Полная версия
The Writer
"For crying out loud!" exclaimed the fat guy shocked. "So, we really did blow it up."
"Arenât you pleased? When we were with the nerd it seemed to be the most important thing in the world to you."
âWell, yes.... of course, ... But, now, deep down, Iâm a little sorry."
âIncredible... Iâd never have thought there was a heart under all that fat."
"Oh, leave off with all this crap," said the big guy with a contrite air. "Put your foot down and let's get back to base."
Planet Kerion â The tragic discovery
"The (|) container has just left the intercommunication tunnel,â announced the tiny Kerian in charge of coordinating manoeuvres. "It will reach the docking point in 0.1 cens."
"I want it brought here immediately to check its contents and analyse the memorised data,â Supervisor RTY ordered his subordinate.
The strange egg-shaped object, from almost sixty-five light years away, had been intercepted by a sort of containment field that grabbed it out of the planetâs orbit and quickly dragged it down in the direction of a large opening in the immense, completely metallic structure, that stretched for nearly two hundred square kilometres along Kerionâs equator.
"Container (|) almost in position," said the coordinator.
"Hurry up and get it brought here," shouted RTY. "We absolutely must find out what happened on /\".
As soon as the casing reached the docking point it was immediately taken into custody by two Kerians with decidedly unusual shapes. One was very similar to a sort of trailer without wheels, while the other was more comparable to a huge crab with six claws. The crab gently grabbed the container and deposited it inside the Kerian/trailer which, after receiving confirmation it had been successfully loaded, without a single sound, set off at an incredible speed in the direction of the laboratories.
"Container (|) has arrived," exclaimed the coordinator. "Inspection team, carry out a full analysis of the content."
Four Kerians, also of somewhat bizarre shape, rushed over to the object and, after immersing it in a small docking area containing an ammonia-based solution, began scanning it internally. Only a few minutes had passed when the smallest Kerian of the four announced, "Nine-hundred and ninety souls present, all in perfect condition. I am sending the log of the events recorded by the capsule to the central system."
"On screen,â ordered RTY peremptorily.
The images showed the surface of the moon rapidly moving away while a large, perfectly spherical object approached the area of underground laboratory /\. After a few moments, a blinding glare almost saturated the footage and immediately afterwards, there was nothing. The whole area was as if it had been hit by a giant hammer. The images showed only a huge flat area of lunar soil, incredibly smooth and polished. The recording continued for some instants showing the satellite increasingly distant, then it was interrupted.
"The laboratory," exclaimed RTY amazed. "It was completely destroyed."
"Thereâs nothing else," commented the coordinator bitterly. "The recording is finished."
"This is a brazen and deliberate attack on our outpost. I knew we shouldnât have trusted that alien species."
"Do you think that spherical weapon was built by them?"
"There are only two inhabited planets in that solar system and there are beings of that species on both. We should not have established our base there."
"Itâs an appalling tragedy," said the Kerian coordinator sadly. âThere were almost ten million souls in the laboratory ready to be transferred. Only the nine-hundred and ninety that managed to escape the disaster through capsule (|) were saved."
"I still can't believe it," exclaimed RTY astonished. "We must immediately notify the Supreme TYK."
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The footage
Petri and his three other friends had meanwhile moved inside Dr. Hunterâs laboratory tent.
"Now I really am curious," said Azakis nervously. "I really want to see what didnât work on your hook system."
"No, my dear friend. Youâll see that things are slightly different," answered Petri as he made a three-dimensional hologram appear, about half a meter off the ground.
"This thing you do always amazes me," exclaimed Jack as he observed the images that were forming right in the middle of the tent.
"Now Iâll go back a little," said Petri as he busied himself with a strange instrument and the scenes were reproduced the other way around. "This is the moment when we took General Campbell, Senator Preston and those two funny characters that attacked us when we were trying to retrieve the cargo, back to Area 51."
âYes, yes. I remember that very well," commented Azakis.
"Now Iâll show you something," and the hologram showed the fat guy approaching Azakis threateningly, then giving him a light shove with his shoulder.
"He thought he could frighten me," said the Alien captain. "He didnât move me even one millimetre. But whatâs this got to do with the loss of the remote control?"
âWait a minute. Let me just enlarge this detail... What youâre seeing is the fat manâs hand as, with great skill, he slips the device off your belt."
"Incredible," exclaimed the Colonel. "A manoeuvre worthy of the best pickpockets who prowl around on the underground."
"With the excuse of giving you a shove he took the opportunity to steal your remote control," added Elisa. "Itâs an old technique that shoplifters hand down from generation to generation."
"He stole it from me?" asked Azakis astonished.
"Precisely, old chap," confirmed Petri.
"And how on earth did he reactivate it and run the self-destruct command? You had even disabled it completely if Iâm not mistaken?"
"Yes Zak. The device had been deactivated. Probably, after they were freed, he and his crony must have started searching amongst the countless information we left the terrestrials and found the way to get around the blocking system."
"Those two destroyed our spacecraft and prevented us from returning home,â blurted out Azakis, angrier than heâd ever been before. "When I get my hands on them, Iâll make them sorry they ever came into this world, I promise."
"Calm down my friend. Whatâs done is done now. We canât do anything anymore. Instead, what we should do, is track down those two lowlifes and get back what they stole from us before they also discover its other functions."
"Why, what else does it do?" asked Elisa intrigued.
"Never mind for the time being. Itâs best you donât know."
"Blimey, so many secrets," replied the doctor a little upset.
"Certainly, if theyâve managed to find out how to activate the self-destruct, they might also discover the rest," said Azakis worried.
"But shouldnât you be thinking about a way to get back home first?" asked the Colonel. "This doesnât seem such an urgent matter to me."
"You're right Jack, but that thing, in the wrong hands, could be very dangerous."
"And those are definitely the wrong hands," added Elisa.
"There may just be a way," said Petri almost in a whisper.
"Well? Talk? Do I have to get down on my knees and beg you?" exclaimed Azakis annoyed.
"That device is equipped with a special power supply system. If we were still on the Theos I could make a device that would be able to identify the trail of emissions it leaves behind."
"And youâve only just remembered that?" Azakis was decidedly angry. "Couldn't you have done it as soon as we found out it had disappeared?"
"Iâm sorry but this search system only works if the object is in motion and weâd taken it for granted that youâd dropped it somewhere."
"Now calm down boys," said the Colonel, reinforcing his words with sweeping hand gestures. "Anyway, from what Iâve understood, you canât do anything without the Theos, right?"
"Well, perhaps I could organise something, all the same," said Petri scratching his head.
"Forgive the outburst, my friend," said the Captain contritely. "I know itâs not your fault. This really is a bad time for both of us." Then, laying a hand on his shoulder, he added, "See what you can do. I think itâs very important to retrieve that object as soon as possible."
"Don't worry Zak. Itâs not a problem. Iâll try to think of something, making do with the few things we have left."
"Only you can do that. Weâre in your hands."
"Iâm off,â and, without saying any more, the Expert left the laboratory tent leaving behind only a few small clouds of dust.
"Will he manage to do it?" asked Jack hesitantly.
âOf course. I donât have any doubts whatsoever. Petri has incredible skills. More than once Iâve seen him make things that not even a team of the best Craftsmen would have been able to do. Heâs an exceptional person. Iâm sorry I was a little too rude to him. Iâm incredibly fond of him and Iâd willingly give my life for him at any moment."
"Donât worry Zak," said Elisa in a very sweet little voice. "Heâs well aware of that. Itâs a difficult time, but weâll get through it without problems. I donât have any doubts whatsoever."
âThank you, Elisa. I really hope so with all my heart."
Pasadena, California â The hideout
As soon as he opened the door, the decidedly overweight man was hit by a pleasant blast of fresh air. The roomâs air conditioner, left running since the previous evening, had done an excellent job.
"Thatâs wonderful," he exclaimed. "I couldnât stand that suffocating heat any longer."
"Perhaps if you decided to go on a serious diet and got rid of all that fat youâre carrying around; the heat wouldnât bother you so much."
âWhy are you always so negative about my reserves?"
"Call them reserves. You could safely spend an entire month without eating," exclaimed the thin guy, breaking into a peal of laughter immediately afterwards.
"Iâll pretend not to have heard that."
The décor in the small apartment that the two were using as a base was decidedly spartan. In the main room there was only a simple, light-coloured wooden table with four chairs of the same colour and a heavy dark grey sofa with worn seats and armrests. In the corner near the French window that looked out onto a dismal inner courtyard, a brown plastic pot contained the remains of a small Washingtonia filifera that despite its great resistance to dry climates, had died several weeks earlier due to lack of water. The tiny bathroom also showed evident signs of neglect. Several tiles had fallen off and large dark spots on the discoloured ceiling were evidence of unrepaired water infiltration. Two shabby bedrooms, each with a single bed and a cheap bedside table, together with a kitchenette with a cabinet that was at least twenty years old, completed the furnishings of that anything but pleasant apartment.
"Well one thingâs sure, in terms of taste in the choice of our hideouts, you really are great, huh?" commented the tall skinny guy.
"Why? Whatâs wrong with this place?"
"Itâs a dump. Thatâs whatâs wrong. Here we are always talking about making loads of money but, in the end, we always end up in these damned dumps."
"Oh, you're always complaining," replied the big one. "Letâs try and clinch this deal then youâll see, weâll be able to settle down once and for all."
"If you say so.... Iâm not all that convinced really."
"Come on, pass me the laptop and Iâll show you something."
The thin guy pulled a black bag with a shoulder strap out from behind the sofa and took out a dark grey notebook. He looked at it for a moment then passed it to his crony who placed it on the table and turned it on. They both sat still for a while, looking at the screen as the system completed its start-up procedure until, at a certain point, the thin guy blurted out, "I canât stand these things any longer. I spend hours watching progress bars, hourglasses spinning, miscellaneous updates... Why canât they just make a computer that works like a television? Press the button and it turns on."
"Yeah, that really would be nice. Instead, what I hate most, is when youâve finished using it and want to turn it off to go home, it presents you with a nice little message that says "Do not turn computer off. Installing update 1 of 325..." and you have to wait half an hour while it does what it wants. I mean couldnât it just do its stupid updates earlier? Must it really wait for me to be ready to leave?"
"Huh, thatâs âITâ for you. The programmers who design these systems probably enjoy seeing us poor mortals as we become more and more irritated when faced with their âcreationsâ."
"Are you saying they do it on purpose?"
"If you think that nowadays, just to write a letter, we need a computer with a processing power billions of times larger than the Apollo missions used to send a man to the moon, I suppose something must have gone badly wrong in technological progress."
"Well, you're the expert," commented the thin guy. "For sure, they make us waste a lot of time, but we wouldnât even be able to go to the loo without these gadgets now."
"Letâs just leave it at that shall we, itâs better. Look instead at what Iâve discovered during my sleepless nights."
The overweight man pulled a series of images up on the screen that he must have taken from some archive that wasnât exactly public. He scrolled through a few then he said "Here we are. I think what you're seeing are a series of combinations of cuneiform characters, that are able to activate additional functions on this little device."
"And where did you get those?" asked the thin guy in amazement.
"If I were to tell you, then Iâd have to kill you," answered the big guy with a very serious air.
For a moment, the tall thin guy remained as if paralysed, then he realised that his crony had obviously made a wisecrack and, after clouting him, exclaimed "What an idiot. Come on, let me see this ineffable discovery."
"Wait, first let me see what the nerd gave us," and he plugged the USB stick theyâd extorted from the boy into the PC. He rapidly scanned through a series of files, occasionally opening one at random, until his attention fell on an image heâd already seen. "Look at this," he exclaimed.
âWhat is it?â
"Itâs a character sequence I know."
"I donât understand."
"You really are a dotard. This is the combination that activated the self-destruct command of the spacecraft and Iâm sure Iâve already seen it in my personal research."
To avoid being reproached again, the skinny guy just mumbled something.
"Here it is," said the big guy again, showing the same series of images they had been looking at before, but highlighting one of them with the mouse. âItâs this one."
"Yes, so what?"
"So, if this sequence has already worked, then the others indicated here are probably also active."
"Your reasoning makes sense."
âHow about trying one?â
"But wonât it be dangerous? I think weâve already done enough damage."
"You're just a coward," said the big guy. "In the worst-case scenario, weâll simply blow up another one of their damn spacecrafts."
"And what if we were to blow ourselves up instead? We donât know anything about that thing."
"Come on letâs try it," exclaimed the fat guy, with the expression of a little boy about to set off a firecracker under his grandfatherâs deck chair while heâs happily sleeping.
"You do it. Iâm going to hide behind there."
"You are brave, arenât you? Donât worry, Iâll do it, you little sissy."
Then, after waiting for his crony to go and hide in the adjacent bedroom, the big guy took a deep breath and using his thick index finger, traced the first sequence shown on the monitor onto the objectâs surface. Immediately afterwards, he tossed the device onto the sofa and threw himself to the ground with his hands above his head. He waited several seconds without moving, but nothing happened. He stayed there a little longer lying on the floor and only after having definitively established that there didnât appear to be any imminent danger, he lifted his head slightly. The remote control was still lying on the seat of the sofa and didnât seem to be working.
"So? Whatâs happened?" asked his crony, peeping cautiously around the semi-closed door.
"Absolutely nothing."
"Perhaps you made a mistake typing the sequence?"
"I donât think so. I think I did everything correctly," said the big guy as, very carefully, he stood up and approached the alien object again.
"Go on, try again. Iâll stay here."
âThanks for the help. What would I do without you?â
This time, the fat guy decided he wouldnât throw himself to the floor again and composed the sequence simply sitting on the chair. He repeated the operation several times, but there didnât seem to be any reaction at all from the object.
"Absolutely nothing," added the big guy.
"Perhaps weâre destroying all their spacecraft," commented the tall thin guy as he peeped round the door again.
âDonât talk rubbish. The nerd said this thing only has a range of a few hundred thousand kilometres. Who knows where Nibiru has got to by now. Instead, I simply think this sequence isnât operational."
"So, letâs try another, no?"
"Letâs try another? Iâd say itâs only me doing all the âtryingâ."
"Oh, donât nit-pick. After all, whoâs the more technologically-minded between the two of us?"
"Okay, okay. Iâll try the second one now."
The big guy spent the next ten minutes composing almost all the combinations that had been displayed on the computer screen, one after the other, but nothing strange happened.
Meanwhile, as the situation seemed anything but dangerous, even his crony had joined him, and they were making conjectures and assumptions of all sorts together.
"Perhaps the images are the wrong way around," said the thin one at a certain point.
"No. The cuneiform characters on the remote control are in the same order as those on the screen."
"Then your amazing âsourcesâ must have dried up."
"Thatâs not possible. It has to work. Iâm sure of that."
"Thereâs only two left to try. If they donât work either, weâll throw this thing in the bin and go and have a nice cool drink."
The big guy snorted and, without adding anything, composed the penultimate sequence, without much conviction. As soon as heâd touched the last symbol, he sensed a very slight shudder and an instant later, a sort of unnatural glow was released from the front of the device. There was a slight cracking noise and, a new, perfectly circular window, of about half a metre in diameter, opened up in the blank wall in front of them.
"What the hell..." exclaimed the thin guy with his eyes wide-open.
"For crying out loud..." added his friend equally amazed.
With their legs still trembling with fright, they stood up and cautiously approached the hole in the wall. It was the taller one who, having stuck his head inside the opening, exclaimed "Thatâs incredible! The wallâs gone, and weâve even made a hole in that big advertising billboard for cars over there. It must be at least a hundred metres from here!"
Planet Kerion - The Supreme TYK
"Supreme TYK,â announced RTY in the internal communication system of the planetâs equatorial structure. "Unfortunately, I am the bearer of terrible news."
"RTY, my trusted friend. Fear not, nothing can disturb my serenity and that of our people."
The Supreme TYK was, in actual fact, the largest and oldest exoskeleton of all Kerion where, thousands of years earlier, the soul of the one who had ruled the planet in the pre-machine period had been transferred. With time, his physical structure had become immense. His current extension approached two square kilometres with a height that, in some points, exceeded five hundred metres. TYK was a multi-purpose technological agglomerate with the peculiarities and efficiency of a million Japanese factories all joined together.
"Iâm afraid that, this time, whatâs happened is truly atrocious," continued the Kerian in charge.
"Speak, whatâs happened?"
"Laboratory /\ was attacked and destroyed. Ten million souls were annihilated. Only nine-hundred and ninety launched through container (|), a few instants before the explosion, were saved."
"Explosion? What are you talking about? Who was it?" TYKâs voice, always calm and relaxed, had now taken on a decidedly much altered tone.
âYou can view what was recorded by the capsule as it moved away from the satellite, directly on the central system, reference |^|."
TYK remained silent for a long time as he repeatedly watched the images captured by the container, then he turned off the view and said, "That spherical bomb was designed by that alien race that inhabits the blue planet called |o|.â
"Or by the inhabitants of the other planet that belongs to the same solar system," added the one in charge.
"It was an attack brought without mercy by that primitive species on our race. Millions of our brothers were annihilated before they could transfer. Why?"
"Weâve always thought that those beings didnât represent a danger to us, even if I have always opposed the creation of /\ on their satellite."
"Whatâs this other planet you spoke of?"
"We call it |O|. Itâs very similar to |o|. But its orbit is considerably larger. It performs one complete revolution around the sun every 3600 revolutions of |o| and its inhabitants are of very similar origin. Indeed, according to studies carried out some time ago, it would appear that the inhabitants of |O| genetically modified certain species that lived on |o| to make them similar to them."
"So, we can say that they belong to the same race and are even more evolved?"
âYes, Iâd say so,â replied the Supervisor. "I would also add that, in this period, |O| has intersected the orbit of |o| passing really close to it."
"Therefore, the inhabitants of the two planets have seized this opportunity to form an alliance and attack our structure. It cannot be otherwise. What I still do not understand is why."
Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.
Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».
Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.
Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.