“Why?” Blade responded.
“I’m having trouble with the computer.”
“What kind of trouble?” Blade probed.
Eleanor gazed at the terminal, clearly mystified. “The Central Directory does list a Llewellyn Snow as being a resident of Atlanta—”
“Damn,” Glisson grumbled.
“But I can’t access the information in her life,” Eleanor detailed. “I fed in the proper codes again and again, and each time the computer denied my request.”
“Is that normal?” Blade asked.
“No,” Eleanor answered. “We rarely have a glitch, and I’ve never seen anything like this. It’s strange.”
“So I’m stuck?”
Eleanor reflected for a moment. “Maybe not. We can always use the old-fashioned approach and let our fingers do the walking.”
Blade gazed at his hands, baffled. “How do you mean?”
She reached under the counter and withdrew a thick book. “We look in the phone book. If she doesn’t have an unlisted number, we could be in luck.”
Glisson heard the office door open and looked back.
“Let me see,” Eleanor said, flipping the pages. “H. M. R. S. Here we go.”
She turned the pages slowly. “I hope she’s listed.”
“You and me both,” Blade concurred.
Glisson tapped the giant on the right shoulder.
“Not now,” Blade stated, concentrating on the Escort.
Eleanor stopped on one of the pages and bent forward. “There are eight or nine Snows listed.” She paused. “And here she is. Llewellyn Snow.”
The old-timer was trying to drill his fingers into the Warrior’s shoulder.
“Not now,” Blade said testily. “What’s the address?”
“Forget the address,” Glisson said. “This is more important.”
Blade turned, annoyed. “What could be so important?” he snapped, and then he saw the Storm Police. One stood in the doorway, and five or six more were visible in the corridor.
“Hello,” said the man in the doorway. “I’m Captain Weis.”
Blade straightened warily.
“Is something wrong, Captain?” Eleanor asked.
Everyone in the Visitors Bureau was staring at the officer.
“Someone in this office has been attempting to access information on Llewellyn Snow,” Captain Weis declared.
“I was,” Eleanor informed him.
“Why?” the officer demanded bluntly.
Eleanor indicated Blade with a nod of her head. “This man wants to contact her. She is a relative of his.”
“Is that so?” Captain Weis said with a smile. He gazed at the giant.
“What relation is she?”
“My cousin,” Blade replied.
“Care to try again?” Captain Weis queried.
“I don’t follow you,” Blade declared, his right hand tucked against his pants leg, the blackjack ready for use.
“Yes, you do,” Captain Weis corrected the giant. “Llewellyn Snow doesn’t have a cousin. She had a brother, Richard, and a sister-in-law, Leslie, but they’re both dead. And her parents were consigned to the Sleep Chambers five months ago.” He paused. “So you see, the jig is up.”
“Your files could be mistaken,” Blade said.
“Our files are never in error,” Captain Weis claimed.
Blade knew he was trapped, but he wasn’t about to surrender without a struggle. He opted to stall, hoping an opening would present itself. “Then I guess there’s no need for this pretense any longer.” He smiled. “I’m impressed. How did you know the lady was trying to access the information?”
“Llewellyn Snow is under surveillance,” Captain Weis explained. “We have put a lock on her file. If someone tries to gain entry, an alarm sounds at Storm Police headquarters. A second after this Escort tried to obtain the data, we were tracing the request. HQ immediately alerted all patrols in the area, and since we were already in the vicinity searching for a big guy with a lot of muscles and a bum, we responded. And who should we find!”
“We’re dead meat,” Glisson mentioned morosely.
“So we’ve killed two birds with one stone,” Captain Weis declared contentedly. “Now we will conduct you to our headquarters.”
“Where is your headquarters?” Blade inquired.
“On the third floor of the Community Directorate,” Captain Weis revealed. He stepped to one side and pointed at the door. “After you.”
Blade frowned as he took a stride toward the doorway. He’d gone from the frying pan into the fire in short order. The likelihood of contacting Llewellyn Snow was becoming dimmer by the moment. In fact, if he didn’t get his act together, the likelihood of rejoining Hickok and Rikki was even slimmer. He glanced at the Storm Police waiting outside of the office, then grinned at the officer.
“I’m glad you’re taking this so well,” Captain Weis remarked. “I was told you might give us trouble.”
“Whoever told you that was right,” Blade said, and whipped the blackjack into the startled officer’s jaw.
Captain Weis went stumbling backwards and toppled over.
One of the women in the Visitors Bureau screamed.
And Blade was in motion, bounding through the doorway into the troopers. To his consternation, he found there were over a half dozen in the hallway. In fact, there were more like 20, and they swarmed upon him with the intent of overpowering him by sheer force of numbers. The Warrior flailed away with all of his prodigious might, striking down trooper after trooper, feeling their blackjacks pound on his arms, chest, neck, and shoulders. He successfully warded off their blows to his face, with his extraordinary height working to hinder them and limit the effectiveness of their head strikes.
“Stay behind me!” the Warrior bellowed for Glisson’s benefit, hoping the tramp was with him.
“Get him!” one of the Storm Police was shouting, his voice rising and bordering on hysteria. “Get him!”
Blade slugged a trooper on the nose, then spun and delivered a rock-hard punch to the chin of yet another. Between the blackjack and his left fist he was making good headway, but the tide of battle would definitely shift in his favor if he could reach his Bowies.
The Storm Police, however, were doggedly determined to bring the giant down. One hit him low, around the ankles, in an effort to tackle the Warrior.
Blade tottered, unable to take another step, and shook his legs in an attempt to dislodge the trooper.
Seeing their adversary temporarily impeded, the rest of the Storm Police piled on him.
Blade was gripped by the wrists on both arms, but he managed to free his right arm by slamming the two troopers holding him into the wall. The respite was fleeting, as three aditional policemen took their place and clamped onto his arm for dear life. With both arms and legs rendered ineffectual, he could do nothing but utter a cry of defiance as he was buried under a milling mass of blue uniforms. “No!” he thundered, exerting his Herculean strength until the veins on his temples bulged.
Four troopers were sent flying, but then two others struck him on the forehead with their blackjacks and the world dissolved into a galaxy of spiraling stars.
Chapter Fourteen
Hickok snapped off a hasty shot as the mutant plummeted from the rim, and before he could fire again the creature was on him. The gunman dodged to the left, evading the falling beast, although the deviate did manage to lash out with its right arm and connect with a glancing blow to the Warrior’s jaw.
Chastity was shrieking in sheer terror.
The gunfighter whirled as the mutant landed upright, swiveling the M-16 barrel at the brute’s midsection.
Hissing like a viper, the mutant grabbed the barrel and tore the weapon from the gunman’s hands.