Sol swiveled in his chair and nodded at the chamber below. “Any idea what that is?”
“You’re adding to the building and haven’t finished this level yet?”
Blade guessed.
“Wrong,” Sol said.
Blade shrugged. “From up here, it looks like a giant rat maze,” he speculated, partially in jest.
“How astute of you,” Sol complimented him. “Yes, it is a maze.”
Blade’s levity vanished. He stared at the network of walls, his forehead furrowing, disturbed by the implications.
“If you’ll notice,” Sol went on, “we are able to view the entire maze from up here. We have ringside seats, so to speak.”
“For what?”
“Take a close look at those walls,” Sol suggested. “Tell me what you see.”
Blade moved over to the table and peered at the maze. He’d assumed the walls were wooden; now he realized the outer surface of each wall was covered with a dull brown material unlike any other he knew. “What is that?”
“A fireproof fabric we use to protect the inner metal walls,” Sol divulged.
“Fireproof?”
“Yes,” Sol said, leaning back in his chair and smiling smugly. “Perhaps I should explain. Do you see the two doors?”
Blade surveyed the chamber, discovering a door in the middle of the wall on the far right and another door in a corresponding position on the left. “Yeah.”
“Those doors allow our players to enter the maze,” Sol detailed.
“This is some sort of game?” Blade asked.
“Yes. A game of life and death,” Sol said.
Blade glanced at Diekrick.
“We’ve decided to put on a demonstration in your honor,” Sol stated.
“Don’t put yourselves out on my account,” Blade commented.
“It’s no bother, I assure you,” Sol said.
“Let’s begin the show,” Clinton Brigg suggested.
“What’s the rush?” Sol responded. “We have all night. And we want to be here when our other guests arrive.”
“I wish we had some popcorn,” Eldred Morley remarked.
Sol looked at the giant. “Let’s introduce the players for tonight.” He rose and walked to the gigantic glass pane, stopping next to a control panel on the right-hand wall at the junction with the pane.
“I hope the Terminators don’t end it too quickly,” Lilith mentioned.
“Come here,” Sol said, beckoning the Warrior.
Blade moved around the table to the glass pane, to the left of Diekrick.
He gazed at the maze, dreading the worst.
“An old friend of yours is one of the participants,” Sol said. His right hand reached out and he pressed a red button on the control panel.
Blade saw one of the doors in the maze, the one on the far right, open by sliding into a recessed slot. And there, shuffling into the maze, being prodded by two Storm Police with blackjacks, was the hobo, Glisson.
“It’s your buddy,” Sol stated sarcastically.
“What do you plan to do to him?” Blade queried.
“We won’t do a thing,” Sol replied. “You will.”
“Me?”
“Yes. I’ll elucidate after I present the opposing players.” Sol depressed an orange button on the panel, and the door on the left side of the maze promptly opened.
Blade’s abdominal muscles tensed.
Four figures attired in shining silver outfits strolled into sight. The head and neck of each was covered by unique headgear with dark, tinted eyepieces. Strapped to the back of each was a trio of thin tanks, and clutched in the hands of each was a flared, gunlike nozzle.
“A Terminator squad,” Sol said. “Perhaps you’re familiar with the reputation our Terminators have? A richly deserved reputation, I might add. Their Fryers are extremely lethal.”
Blade did not respond. He glanced from the Terminators, waiting patiently near the left-hand door, to Glisson, who was wringing his hands nervously in front of the right-hand entrance.
“You can’t see it from here, but there is a yellow light affixed to the wall above this glass pane,” Sol advised. “If I press this brown button,”—and he indicated the appropriate button on the control panel—“the yellow light will come on and the festivities will commence.”
Blade still said nothing.
“The rules are very simple,” Sol explained. “The Terminators enter the maze from the left, and your friend enters the maze from the right. If your friend manages to negotiate the maze and reaches the door on the left, he wins the most valuable prize imaginable: his life.” Sol paused. “If, however, the Terminators find Glisson before he reaches the opposite side of the chamber, then they will fry him on the spot. Simple enough, don’t you think?”
“You bastard.”
“Spare me your juvenile insults,” Sol stated.
“Glisson doesn’t stand a chance,” Blade remarked bitterly.
“On the contrary, he does,” Sol said. “Believe it or not, some players have reached the other side safely. The Terminators do not possess an unfair advantage. They do not have the maze memorized, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
“The odds are four to one,” Blade protested. “And the Terminators are armed with flamethrowers. You call that fair?”
Sol shrugged. “As fair as his type deserves.”
Blade glared at the Peer.
“There is always the possibility Glisson will be spared,” Sol said. “We could call the whole thing off.”
“What does Glisson have to do?” Blade asked.
“Him? Not a thing,” Sol said. “Whether he plays our little game or not is up to you.”
“Me?”
“You,” Sol reiterated, his tone lowering. “I want information. I want to know all about you: your name, where you are from, the reason you’re in Atlanta, everything. If you supply this information, Glisson gets free.”
The Warrior gazed at the aged tramp.
“You were eager to find Llewellyn Snow. I want to know why,” Sol declared. “Llewellyn Snow is under constant surveillance while we debate whether to consign her to a Sleep Chamber. Her brother, Richard, published The Atlanta Tribune until recently. We were forced to eradicate him.”
“What did he do?” Blade inquired.
“The fool intended to publish an editorial critical of us.”
Sol snapped. “We exercise creative authority over all the media in the city—”
“You censor them,” Blade interrupted.
“—and all editorials must be officially sanctioned prior to publication,” Sol continued, unfazed. “Snow planned to slip one into his paper without our knowledge, but fortunately one of his staff blew the whistle.”
“So you had him killed over an editorial?”
“You should have seen it!” Sol said. “Snow accused us of being arbitrary and despotic. After twelve years as publisher, after receiving favored status, he turned on us.”
“Why?”
Sol made a snorting sound. “Over the merest trifle. His parents were consigned to the Sleep Chambers five months ago, after they turned sixty-six. According to our law, that’s the cut-off age. All those over sixty-six are rated as past their prime, burdens on society, and incapable of producing enough to justify the expense of extending their life span.”
“Snow turned against you after his parents were murdered,” Blade commented sarcastically. “How could he be so ungrateful?”
“His wife attempted to flee the city with their only child, a girl,” Sol said. “The Terminators caught the mother, thanks to a tip from Llewellyn.”
Blade was shocked. “Llewellyn Snow betrayed her sister-in-law?”
“Llewellyn knew her life was in jeopardy because of her brother’s treachery. To prove her worth, she notified us of Leslie Snow’s plans,” Sol answered. “We sent a Terminator squad after her. The mother was fried, but the child escaped. The Terminators searched and searched, but the child eluded them.” He sighed. “Hopefully, the girl perished in the wilderness. The Snow bloodline is genetically inferior and deserves to be eradicated.”