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Nothing happened for a brief moment, but then the liquid metal skin retracted from the finger, and a 1.6 mm titanium alloy drill bit emerged from the fingertip and

cut into the keypad's cover plate like a hot knife through soft butter, but with a high-pitched, almost inaudible whine. A narrow blue aura of the same angstrom length as emitted by the Continuum Transporter flowed through the tiny drill bit into the gate and security system.

T-X transferred a stream of data into the system, then withdrew her hand and the gate opened.

"Tammy, shut the stupid dog off, would you?" Bill asked.

She looked up as headlights flashed across the windows from the driveway below.

Bill jumped off the couch, his heart in his throat. "Shit, my mom's home. Hide the beer!"

He switched off the television as Tammy grabbed the half-dozen beer cans from the coffee table and started stashing them under the long sectional.

Out in the hall he checked the mirror to make sure he didn't look too guilty, at the same moment he heard high heels coming up the sidewalk. About twice a week his mom either forgot the garage door opener or forgot how to use it or was too drunk to care, so she left the Mercedes in the front and rang the doorbell.

This was one of those times.

Bill touched the alarm keypad but the system was already off, and the front door opened without the lock release delay.

A slender blond woman, in a sharp-looking leather suit and high-heeled boots, stood in the glow of the front

light, a killer smile on her narrow face. She wasn't half bad for an older woman. A Lexus convertible was parked in the driveway.

"Um... you must be looking for my mom. She's out—"

"Elizabeth and William Anderson?" T-X asked politely.

Bill glanced over his shoulder. Tammy had come to the hall. He turned back. "I'm Bill, my sister's upstairs. Are you from the school, or something—?" He was confused. This wasn't making sense.

The smile left T-X's face at the same moment she slammed the heel of her hand into Bill's solar plexus, shoving him violently off his feet back into the hall.

Tammy stepped back, her hand to her mouth, not completely sure of what she was witnessing. But it was bad.

T-X pulled the Sig-Sauer from her pocket and fired three shots into Bill's chest as he started to rise, killing him instantly.

Tammy screamed, turned on her heel, and raced for the back of the house.

T-X let her go. The young woman was not in the mission program.

She stepped over Bill's corpse, and turned left up the stairs to the upper floor. Music came from a room at the end of the corridor. T-X followed the sounds to their source, opening the door into a girl's bedroom.

Elizabeth Anderson, Liz to her friends, looked up from the video game she was beating on her television.

She was a cute girl, round face, innocent eyes. She cocked her head quizzically. "Who are you?"

T-X raised the Sig-Sauer and put one round precisely into the lower left center of the girl's chest, the heavy 9mm bullet shattering the heart.

The Valley

The pager beeped at 5:06 a.m. as text crossed the tiny screen.

Kate opened her eyes. It was still dark The pager lying on the nightstand on her side of the bed was beeping. Her eyes went to the luminous numbers on the alarm clock. It was practically the middle of the night. The best part. The last hour of sleep before she had to get up to go to work.

But it was Saturday. "Dammit," she muttered under her breath.

She grabbed the pager and squinted at the illuminated screen. The message: a.n.i.m.a.l... e.m.e.r.g.e.n.c.y. scrolled across the display, repeating the same two words. The alarm system at the clinic was keyed to noise. If the animals got upset and started to make a racket it might mean that something was seriously wrong with one of them. And Kate was nothing if not a conscientious animal doctor.

She shut off the pager and got out of bed. Scott stirred and reached out a hand to her.

"What's going on?" he mumbled, still mostly asleep.

"I've got to go to the clinic," Kate said, pulling underwear out of the dresser. "It's an emergency."

She pulled off her nightshirt and hurriedly put on bra and panties, then got a shirt and slacks from the closet.

Scott got up on one elbow and looked at the clock. "It's five in the morning."

"I'll be back before you're up," Kate said, pulling on her slacks and tucking in her shirt. She stepped into her shoes and half stumbled, half hopped over to the bed. She leaned down and gave him a kiss.

Scott lay back, then turned over and was sound asleep by the time Kate grabbed a light jacket and headed out the door.

Early morning work traffic had already started to pick up as Kate drove the two miles over to the clinic, but it took her only a few minutes.

She'd gotten rid of her lime green VW bug six months ago when Scott moved in, so when she was on animal business she used the clinic's Toyota Tundra pickup with its tan cap and the Emery logo on the side. It was the only sensible solution because she sometimes made commercial calls, mostly to pet stores, and a few times to farms outside the valley.

It was satisfying work, most of the time. Animals were a lot more straightforward than people. They might be

vicious sometimes, but they were always honest and up front. Especially the dogs. You always knew where you stood with them.

She parked in front and as soon as she got out of the truck she could hear the racket in the kennel, and her gut tightened. The last time this happened some junkie had broken into the place looking for drugs. The cops had shown up just ahead of Kate and had found the guy passed out in the reception area. Stoned on something. The dogs had gone wild.

She should have called the cops, but she had her cell phone and if need be 911 would dispatch a unit out here within minutes.

Kate let herself in through the front door, locking it behind her. She flipped on the lights and headed to the back. The dogs were barking like mad.

"Cool it, guys, it's just me," Kate said, heading down the hall to the supply room and kennel.

She pushed through the frosted glass doors, flipped on the lights, and tossed her keys and cell phone atop the file cabinet Turning, she spotted the jimmied supply cabinet that had obviously been rummaged.

"Great. Junkies," she said, walking over to check out what was missing. An empty Torbutrol bottle was lying on the floor. She bent down to pick it up and spotted a splash of blood.

A trail of blood led across the room to the shadows in a corner. Surgical supplies were laid out on top of a box, bloody gauze on the floor, an empty suture set bag discarded.

Kate straightened up and stepped back, a little quea-siness roiling in her stomach. Whoever it was had probably cut themselves breaking in.

She turned and reached for her cell phone as a man about her own age, but beat-up, like he'd been in some kind of an accident, limped out from behind a stack of dog food boxes.

"Please don't do that," Connor said, his voice a little slurred.

Kate's fear evaporated, changing into anger. "I suppose you're the asshole who ripped us off last week."

"No. That'd be some other asshole."

Kate edged nearer to the file cabinet and reached for her cell phone, but Connor pulled a pistol from his jacket and pointed it at her. His hand was unsteady and his eyes were bleary. Kate figured it was the Torbutrol.

"I can't let you call the cops," he said. "Sorry."

Kate stepped back from the file cabinet, and gave Connor a closer scrutiny. He looked as if he hadn't had a decent meal or a decent night's sleep in a long time. His eyes had a—she searched for a word. He looked haunted.

"It was an accident," he explained. "I just—needed medicine."

"There's an emergency clinic a half mile—"