Ryan entered the room, feeling the soft dust stirring under his feet. He wondered where so much dust had come from. None of the other gateways had had so much. The others followed. There was the familiar double armored door on the far side, which would probably open onto a large, wide corridor. If it was like the other redoubts...
J. B. Dix looked back at the mat-trans chamber. "Sure is a shame we can't control that bastard," he said musingly. "Be good to try and get back."
"Back?" Ryan echoed. "Back where?"
"To War Wag One. Back to Cohn an' Hovak. O'Mara, Lint, Hooley, Loz, Cathy... Where are they now? Dead or living?"
Ryan shook his head. "Actually, I guess only a few weeks have passed since we left 'em. But they could be anywhere now."
"We can't go back," Doc said. "I told you. The controls are random if you don't know the codes. We could try making jumps for years and never find the right gateway. And we'd probably hit on one that's damaged, and I swear I don't know what that would mean."
"If we got to a chamber that no longer existed, you figure we wouldn't exist either, Doc?" Krysty asked.
The old man shrugged his narrow shoulders.
"Somebody must know how they work." Finnegan muttered. "Just gotta keep asking, I guess."
The green lever on the outer portal was depressed to the closed position. Ryan moved across, eyeing the banks of disks and chattering contacts. There was a vaguely unpleasant, sticky smear on one of the consoles, as though some piece of fruit had been left there at the time of the evacuation and had rotted silently away into nothingness.
"They leave books of rules if in hurry, Doc?" Lori asked.
"I fear not, my dearest child," the old man replied. "I rather believe that there is no way anyone will ever be able to use the gateways as they were intended. And that may be no bad thing."
"What's this? Like a radio? Mike and speaker. Couldn't we try to raise War Wag One?"
"It's about a thousand miles out of range, Finn," the Armorer said.
Finnegan poked at a row of buttons and switches, one of which brought a startling howl of feedback that made everyone jump. Ryan was about to yell at Finn to leave it alone when the howling stopped, replaced by a faint crackling. And in among the tumbling static, it sounded almost as if there were words. Finnegan shouted in delight.
"Fucking sheep shit on a stick! You hear that? There's someone out there."
"Tune it in, if you can, Finn," Ryan called out, joining the others around the radio. "That dial there. Turn it real slow and easy."
The crackling came and went as though a directional antenna was turning. The words were sporadic and indistinct. There was an eerie quality to it that made the short hairs rise at the back of Ryan Cawdor's neck. He half turned and saw that Krysty's beautiful angular face was blanked with doubt.
"Something's not right, lover," she whispered to him.
He could feel it. He didn't have her power of seeing but there had been times that his life had been saved by some sort of second sight. A feeling for danger. A kind of prescience.
And he felt it now.
"...signal... help... tuned... to... willing... help... frequency... follow... north... fall..."
"Doesn't make sense," Jak Lauren spat. "Load garbage. Waste time."
Suddenly Finn's seeking fingers found precisely the right spot on the radio dial. The voice was clear, the message ungarbled.
"Anyone receiving this message who requires any assistance in any matter of science or the study of past technical developments will be aided. Bring all your information and follow this signal where you will be given help. Stay tuned to this frequency." It began to fade. "North of Ginnsburg Falls where... receiving... matter of..."
It was gone, though Finnegan frantically kept twisting the dial. The banshee howl of the static faded away, and the set was silent.
"Equipment malfunction," J. B. Dix said. "Probably not used in a hundred years. Burned out."
"But the message. North of Ginnsburg Falls. Where that paper came from. We follow it and mebbe pick it up again. Fuck it!" He banged his hand against the table, making the lights flicker. "Just another couple of minutes. We could of talked back to 'em."
"Loop-tape, Finn," Ryan said quietly. "Could have been set on automatic fifty years back. Mebbe even programmed with its own generator before the Big Wars."
"They offered scientific help," the Armorer said, rubbing a finger across his stubbled chin. "They might know how the gateways work. Couldn't they, Doc?"
"It's a possibility, Mr. Dix. I would concede that to you. But..."
His voice trailed away like the radio broadcast.
Ryan was tempted to hope. Was there someone who still had the skill and knowledge to operate the gateways properly? Or was it a voice from the tomb?
He couldn't even decide which he'd prefer — to find some place of long-dead science, or to find that scientists were still practicing their murderous skills.
The lever that opened the main doors into the gateway complex was stiff. At first Ryan couldn't get it to move at all, then he threw all his strength against it and it grated upward. There was the sound of hissing hydraulics and gears meshing, somewhere buried deep within the reinforced walls.
As the doors began to move, Ryan turned to give the usual reminder to his group about taking all possible care. He was aware of the widening gap out of the corner of his eye with someone standing in the narrow corridor beyond.
Someone standing in...
Someone...
He swung around, his H&K swinging with him. A small man, in furs, face swarthy. Blaster of some sort at his hip, muzzle like the mouth of a bell. Too slow, too late.
Ryan started to say, "Fuck," which wouldn't have meant much in the pantheon of famous last words.
The boom of a gun, deafening him.
A scream, shrill and terrified.
And a heavy blow that spun him around so that he banged the side of his head against the wall.
Ryan was oddly grateful to reach and embrace the swimming blackness.
Chapter Three
"Turn, turn to the rain and the wind."
The mournful dirge was the first thing that Ryan Cawdor heard as he fought his way up out of the slimy-walled pit of unconsciousness.
He raised a cautious hand, touching the side of his head, finding a great bruise that felt soggy to his probing fingers. He gasped, opened his eye and looked around.
He was back in the room with the chattering electronic consoles. Ryan noticed that the heavy door was shut again.
"Better, lover?" Krysty asked. She was kneeling at his side.
"Yeah. Who hit me?"
"There was a mutie outside. You saw him?"
"Little bastard. In furs? Got a gun with a bell muzzle on it, bigger'n Finn's belly?"
"Yeah. Blunderbuss. Old homemade piece. If'n he'd squeezed off on it, he'd have blown you from here to tomorrow. But he didn't."
"I heard..."
"Me," Lori said proudly, but with a faint note of doubt.
"You shot him?"
Krysty grinned. "She's a tad worried because she realized afterward that her bullet must have missed you by about this much." She held her finger and thumb an inch apart.
"That's far enough, Lori. Thanks."
"It was more than that," she protested. "More like this." Her finger and thumb were at least two inches apart.
"But who in the long chill laid me out?"
"Sorry, Ryan. Had no choice."
"Jak?"
"Yeah."
"How?" Ryan found it hard to believe that the skinny little kid had sent him flying so easily.