Terminator's sensors evaluated her size. Her short denim skirt, boots, and fringed blouse might fit him, but his head-up display read inappropriate.
A much smaller, younger redhead, nearer at hand, looked Terminator's body up and down, her eyes lingering on his anatomically correct groin area, a lascivious grin on her narrow face. She was mostly inebriated. "Need a date?" she asked.
Other women had spotted him now, and they were jumping to their feet, applauding and giving catcalls and whistles. If this was a part of the show, it was the best part, most of them were thinking.
A loud, super-rhythmic song suddenly blared from
the speakers. Terminator correctly identified it as a piece called "Macho Man," performed by the Village People.
A tall, huskily built male stripper bounced out onto the stage. He was dressed in a cap, a red scarf around his neck, and biker boots and leathers.
Terminator turned to look at the man. His head-up display instantly evaluated a match. He strode through the crowd of cheering women to the stage.
"Take your clothes off," he told the stripper, who shot him an interested smile, but shook his head.
"Patience, honey."
Terminator climbed onto the stage, and the women, still believing that this was part of the show, went wild; cheering louder than before, whistling their encouragement.
"Whoa, bitch, wait your turn!" the stripper said. He was already into his act, swaying his hips and shoulders. Terminator was nice, but just now he was nothing but competition. Irritating.
"Your clothes," Terminator repeated adamantly.
The stripper stuck a hand directly in Terminator's face. "Talk to the hand," he suggested, and he turned away.
Terminator grabbed the stripper's hand, the wrist crunching like a Shredded Wheat biscuit. "Now."
The stripper screamed in pain and fear, stumbling back a step as Terminator let go. This was far worse than competition. The son of a bitch didn't have an ounce of decency. He was probably on something. The stripper hurriedly pulled off his cap and kerchief, then the jacket,
awkwardly because his wrist was dislocated or maybe broken. But his blood was pumping with raw terror so he wasn't feeling much.
The women were on their feet, crazier than ever. This was by far the very best show that any of them had ever seen. It looked so real!
Terminator donned the stripper's clothing, the boots a little tight, then turned without another word, strode across the stage and through the curtain to a back storage area that had been converted into a dressing room for the acts.
A few of the strippers did a double take, realizing that the man in Larry's outfit was definitely not Larry. He didn't have the walk.
"Macho Man" was still playing, and the women were still screaming, as Terminator stepped out the back door into the parking lot.
The heavyset blonde from the audience came right behind him. "Hey, you!" she shouted drunkenly.
Terminator turned to regard her, but he said nothing.
"Will you be back?" the woman demanded.
He looked at her for a long moment, then turned and scanned the parking lot, almost immediately spotting a big-wheeled Dodge pickup truck, an NRA sticker on the rear bumper, a shotgun in a rear window rack.
He headed directly for it, but caught his reflection in the window of a car. He stopped and looked at his image, bringing up one of the memories that John Connor had supplied of what T-800 had looked like twelve years ago. He took off the stripper's star-shaped sunglasses and tossed
them aside. He did the same with the cap and red bandanna. His current image now nearly matched the previous overlay.
He walked to the truck and without hesitation poked his fist through the driver's side window, opened the door, and climbed into the cab. The truck's alarm system shrieked and the lights flashed. Ignoring them, Terminator casually ripped the ignition switch from the steering column, which silenced the alarm, and hot-wired the start and run systems.
The truck's engine roared to life. Terminator's eyes lit on a pair of sunglasses on the dash. He put them on, dropped the truck into gear, and hammered the gas pedal.
The truck shot out of the parking lot, spewing a rooster tail of gravel behind it.
As Terminator bumped up onto the highway and headed west, toward Los Angeles, he looked in the rear-view mirror in time to see the bouncer in the broad-brimmed cowboy hat running after him, a fist raised in the air.
Westwood
Luring the police officer Barnes away from his duties and killing him had been ridiculously easy, though T-X could not think of the act in such terms. It was simply a minor extension of her main mission plan.
She had unbuttoned her shirt and lifted her bra. "Do you like these?"
The cop's eyes had widened, and he nodded stupidly. "Yeah, nice. What do you have in mind?"
She smiled. "Follow me," she said, and the cop had followed her into a dark corner of a hardware store parking lot
T-X glanced at the Sig-Sauer lying on the passenger seat. It was a well-crafted, efficient weapon for this era. There was only the one magazine of ammunition, which gave her fifteen rounds. But it would be more than sufficient for her mission.
The machine-generated voice of the GPS navigational unit in the Lexus advised, "Left turn ahead."
T-X glanced at the in-dash screen on which a map of the upscale Westwood area of Los Angeles was displayed.
She had entered one of the addresses from her program. This first one was for a number on a side street in the foothills above Santa Monica Boulevard, four blocks away, according to the nav system.
Except for the good sex, BUI Anderson decided that he was starting to get real tired of Tammy Triggs, his current love interest. But then at seventeen who had to be choosy? St. Ed's was loaded with hot girls, and even his twelve-year-old sister, Liz, once admitted that her brother was a chick magnet.
He got up from the couch in the den where he and Tammy had gone to be alone and watch TV. "Want another beer?" He was tall, with a lean build that stood him well on the basketball court. With his blond hair and blue eyes he was one hundred percent California.
"Sure," Tammy said distractedly. She had found Liz's stupid robot dog, Aibo, and had been playing with it for the past hour. Instead of making out.
Bill went into the palatial, burnished aluminum and Mexican tile kitchen, grabbed a couple of Buds from the fridge, and headed back to the den.
Dad was in New York on business. Mom was at a Botox party somewhere in Beverly Hills, and Liz was upstairs in her room doing homework.
Which should have left him Tammy, whose parents were both out of town.
He stopped in the Italianate marble hall that ran the
width of the upscale twenty-two-room house on an acre and a half of prime real estate and glanced at Tammy's reflection in the big mirror across from the den. She was down on all fours, coaxing the plastic dog with the remote control unit
The television was acting up again. Lines of ones and zeroes crossed the wavering images. A newscaster was saying something about a super virus.
"... widespread outages in the global digital network have prompted rumors of a new computer super virus."
Bill figured it was probably some loser in Covina or down in La Puente, bored out of his skull with no prospects, hacking the system.
He brought the beers into the den and set them on the coffee table as CNN continued the late breaking story.
"Wall Street analysts are confident, however, that high tech issues will"
Bill switched channels to the war of the Battlebots. Then flipped again, and again. He had to admit that he was bored out of his skull too.
The number on the steel security gate matched the head-up display T-X was reading. She pulled to a stop at the security keypad and reached to it with the index finger of her left hand.