"FYclass="underline" your friend Holdstock and what's left of his cult have moved their clubhouse to number seven Starfisher Lane in Ocean Beach, New Jersey. You might want to come down and take a peek. It's weirder than you can imagine."
Jack was on the move as soon as the message ended. Superman's pal, Jimmy Olsen, had come though. Ocean Beach. He knew where it was. No need to pause to arm up. Had enough firepower. What he needed was time.
The Russian lady had said the Unity would cause war, hate, death, fear, pain, and destruction. If that was what they liked, that was what they were going to get.
17
Sandy sat in his car, out of the soggy salt wind at last, and wondered what to do. Almost two hours now since the celebratory outburst in the bungalow, and not another sound since. No movement either, other than to refill a soft drink or have another cracker or piece of cheese.
Bored did not even approach how he felt. He wondered if the Savior had picked up his message; and if so, was he on his way down. Sandy didn't want to miss that.
A flash of light on the neighboring street grabbed his attention. Headlamps, moving toward the cult bungalow. Immediately Sandy was out and heading that way. He arrived in time to see two women stepping up to the front door. It opened as they reached it. He ducked around to his old vantage point and peered through the window.
Of the two late arrivals, Sandy had seen the brunette before at the cult hum session, but the blonde was a newbie. They greeted her like a prodigal daughter, each taking a turn hugging her—and still not one damn word!
Finally they settled down, seating themselves in the circle of chairs. When only the blonde newcomer was still standing, everyone suddenly froze and stared at her. And she in turn was staring at something in her hand.
When Sandy recognized it he damn near jumped through the window. He'd seen that tiny pistol before.
18
Where did you get the pistol, Kate?
I don't know. I've never seen it before.
Kate stares at the silvery object in her palm. When she bent to place her shoulder bag under her chair she felt something in her pocket dig into her thigh. This is what she pulled out. So small, almost too small to be real, but it's made of steel and too heavy to be a toy.
Why did you bring it here?
I didn't even know I had it.
It must belong to your brother. He's a very dangerous man. But after tonight he will no longer matter. Put the gun down and take your seat.
She does as instructed, placing the pistol next to a half-empty bowl of potato chips.
Yes, it must be Jack's. He has so many pistols—she saw them herself. But how on earth did this one find its way into her pocket? She's glad the One Who Was Jeanette took her far away from her brother where he can't find her and break her communion with the Unity again.
Kate is only hours away from full integration, and that's close enough for her to aid us in the Great Leap that will lead to the Great Inevitability.
Kate knows now that the Unity was worried that the loss of the One Who Was Ellen would impair the transformation. Apparently a certain critical mass of viral-infected brain cells is necessary for collective consciousness, and an even larger mass to implement the mutation.
Imagine… a virus able to will its own mutation. Such a possibility was never even hinted at in virology texts. They'll have to be rewritten…
No, not rewritten. Tossed in the garbage. For no medical texts will be necessary when the Unity achieves the Great Inevitability. Disease will be a thing of the past. The Unity will brook no invaders—bacteria and competing viruses will be recognized upon entry into a body and killed off immediately. Under the Unity's direction all damaged cells or mutant cells starting tumors will be replaced with healthy ones. Genetic diseases will be a memory, for all defective genes will be repaired—a simple matter of replacing incorrect DNA base sequences with correct ones. Arteries will be swept clean, bones will be kept strong and, like all tissues in the body, will mend more quickly when injured.
The Great Inevitability will translate to a golden age of health and longevity for the human race.
Kate can hardly wait.
But first, the Great Leap.
She seats herself and joins hands with the One Who Was Jeanette to her left, and with the One Who Was Charles on her right, and the sense of Oneness overcomes her. She is important, she is part of something so much greater than herself, something that will transform this world into a paradise and she is here at ground zero, integral to the transformation that will make it all possible.
The air glows. Kate closes her eyes but the glow remains, for it comes from within, and she feels a giddy vertiginous whirl as her consciousness expands to the molecular level where she can feel the base pairs of the virus's RNA rearranging into new sequences that will allow it to seek new hosts, an ever-widening array of new members, through the air.
This is an ecstasy beyond anything she has ever experienced—
And then it is cruelly broken by a loud crash, like a door being kicked open, and a voice—
"Kate!"
And a rough hand on her shoulder, shaking her—
And now she's looking at herself through the eyes of the Unity, seated with her back to the door and there's a man standing over her—Jack.
A bolt of alarm—hers as well as the Unity's—shoots through her. Jack! He shouldn't be here! She has to get him out of here. He'll ruin the transformation…
And there's another terribly important reason he mustn't be here, but she can't quite recall it.
"Kate!"
And now Jack is breaking her grip on the One Who Was Jeanette, and the vision changes as her contact with the One Who Was Charles is severed—
"Kate, do you hear me?"
She opens her eyes and turns. "What are you doing here, Jack?"
His eyes are ablaze, his jaw set, his lips barely parted over clenched teeth. "Do I really have to tell you?" He grips her forearm and pulls her toward the door. "Come on, we're getting out of here."
"NO!"
Not just Kate's voice—a chorus, in her head and in her ears. The Unity is on its feet, hands raised in protest.
Jack pulls a pistol from behind his back, large and dark with sharp angles. He points it past Kate toward the members of the Unity.
"Who wants it first?"
The sight of the gun gives Kate an idea.
The little pistol!
Yes, Kate! Yes!
Guided by the Unity, she twists free from Jack's grasp and snatches the tiny pistol off the table. As she lifts it the voice roars in her head.
Shoot him! Destroy him!
Someone in the Unity knows guns and of its own accord Kate's left hand slides back the top of the pistol and lets it slide forward.
Point it at him and pull the trigger!
But Kate can't do that. Won't do that.
No. She's turning toward him. I've never shot a gun and if I try I may miss.
Shoot!
And if I miss he'll take it from me and we'll have no options.
SHOOT!
She faces him now and her arm raises the pistol toward Jack, but Kate bends it toward herself, jamming the muzzle against her throat.
No, Kate!
"Kate, what are you doing?" Jack cries, his face blanching.
The Unity tries to make her lower the gun but a more powerful force, a surge of strength from some well deep within the maze of protective instincts in the most primitive regions of her brain flows into her arm and bolsters its position.
Let me speak! I can make him leave!
Suddenly her voice is her own.
"Leave, Jack! Please."
"No." His eyes are fixed on her throat, on the spot where his little pistol presses into her flesh. His voice is a hoarse croak. "Not without you."