"Oh, God," she said.
The T-X passed the wreckage of the H-K that Kate had shot down. She was in the corridor just above them.
Connor looked up at the last minute and saw what Kate was seeing. He entered one more command on the computer keyboard, grabbed his gun, and headed for the accelerator tunnel entrance, Kate right behind him.
The big machinery was powering up with a tremendous noise. Super-cooled magnets were being hit with liquid nitrogen, power circuits were coming up, and powerful vacuum pumps were eliminating the air from the accelerator tube itself. It was like being inside someone's insane idea of a factory gone mad.
Over that noise they could hear the T-X in the tunnel behind them.
Connor turned in time to see her less than thirty feet away, her outstretched right hand surrounded in a blue plasma glow.
There was no way that they could outrun her.
No way. He was sure of it.
CRS
Connor and Kate ducked behind one of the outcropping electromagnets as the T-X's plasma weapon fired, the intense blue beam missing them by inches.
The noise in the tunnel was increasing in volume and pitch as the coils around each of the toroidal magnets were cooled by liquid nitrogen. The closer to absolute zero the wiring got, the more electric current it could pass and the stronger the magnetic field became. It was building exponentially now.
Red warning lights began to flash as Connor charged his AK-47 and stepped around the magnet to fire at the oncoming T-X.
A klaxon began to blare, blotting out even the powerful noise of the vacuum pumps and the hum of the magnets.
The T-X was less than twenty feet away. The blue glow at the transmission head of her plasma weapon was so bright it was almost impossible to look at with the naked
Connor lined up on her head and started to pull off
a round when the AK-47 was ripped from his hands. It smashed into one of the electromagnets with a resounding metallic clang and held fast.
Connor looked from the T-X to his weapon. He stepped back a pace. "It's working," he shouted to Kate.
The T-X raised her weapon arm directly at Connor, but it was jerked violently to the left, dragging her to one of the magnets.
She looked at Connor, and then tried to pull her arm free, the metal shell around the accelerator tube distorting under the pressure she was putting on it
But she was caught fast, and as the magnetic field intensified her entire body was drawn to the tube, stretched out as if she were on some medieval torture
rack.
Even the T-X's tremendous power was not sufficient to free her, and as the field continued to build, her features began to distort, her mouth and eyes sliding to impossible angles, her entire body flowing toward the core of the magnet.
Her endoskeleton began to vibrate like a horribly stretched violin string, shrieking and squealing, as the artificial liquid steel that was used to lubricate her mechanical joints was slowly forced through her body and into the center of the magnetic field.
Still, the T-X continued to fight with every gram of her strength, her programming forcing her to continue up to the very point of her own destruction. She had no
other option.
'
Her mouth opened, and as if she were a human being
in pain and anguish at being burned to death at the stake, she emitted a powerful scream.
Kate stepped out from behind the magnet, and stood behind Connor, watching what was happening to the monster.
"Just die," she screeched, not able to take any more. "You bitch!"
Connor lingered for just a moment longer, fascinated by what was happening to the T-X, but then he turned and with Kate raced down the tunnel in search of the way up to the flight line in front of the hangars.
Most of what could be thought of as Terminator's artificial intelligence, his main CPU circuits, were intact As were ninety-five percent of his subroutines.
But the rest of his functions, mental as well as physical, operated as if he were in a fog. As if he were a human trying to wake up after a particularly deep sleep, or an alcoholic whose functions were impaired.
His motivational programs had been especially affected. Much like a schizophrenic who realizes that what he is experiencing is not real, and yet can do nothing about his fantasies, Terminator understood that he had been altered by the T-X.
But there was nothing he could do about it
Terminator slowly raised his hands to his cranial case, which he lifted into place on the three support strut ball joints, and snapped them back into place.
Able to sit up now and hold his head upright, he got to his feet where he remained for several moments, his head cocked to one side as if he were trying to figure out where he was, what had happened to him, and what he was supposed to do next.
He didn't feel as if he were under the direct control of the T-X, but he couldn't be certain.
A small hole had been drilled into the temple of his cranial case, and it crackled with blue plasma energy, but he could feel no pain in the human sense, only the dull fog obscuring a portion of his motivational programming.
He headed to the nearest emergency exit, his movements jerky at first but smoothing out as if he was learning all over again how to move and function.
limeter by millimeter the blade edged against the wall of the accelerator tube.
At first nothing seemed to happen as the saw made contact, but then a long streak of sparks shot away, and
seconds later all the air in the tunnel seemed to be focused in a hurricane-strength gale past T-X's saw hand, and into the breach of the accelerator tube's vacuum chamber.
An impossibly loud whistle rose from the widening gap, and the powerful hum of the electromagnets immediately began to wind down as the entire system went into its automatic shutdown mode.
T-X slid down from the tube, her features beginning to coalesce into their normal shapes, her strength and ability to function returning as the magnetic field rapidly died off.
T-X was fully cognizant of all her neural paths. Her body was bound to the electromagnet by a force that by sheer dint of strength she could not break. But she was not unconscious, in the machine sense of being on standby, nor was she without her reasoning powers and her still considerable abilities.
Slowly she was able to morph her plasma weapon back into its containment field, and just as slowly morph the diamond-tipped cutting saw into place.
Her mental acuity was up to speed, but her electromechanical functions were sluggish.
The saw came to life with an angry whine, and mil-
Something had gone wrong. The accelerator was turning itself off. Somehow the T-X had managed to wreck something.
The placard at the base of the shaft read emergency
EXITWARNING AN ALARM WILL SOUND.
Connor pulled down the access ladder, slung the musette bag of explosives and fuses over his shoulder, and started up first A siren suddenly began blaring in his ears.
There was no telling what they would find when they got to the surface. The diagram he'd studied in General Brewster's office showed that this shaft opened behind one
of the hangars across from the west wing of the main R&D building.
They'd seen what the T-l robots and the H-Ks had done, and it was more than likely that they were still up there searching for live humans to exterminate. He didn't want Kate poking her head up into a maelstrom.
Steel rungs rose up the inside of the shaft. At the top was a steel hatch, with a locking lever.
Connor looked back to make sure Kate was okay. She gave him a reassuring nod, and he slid the latch to the left, freeing the hatch.
Girding himself, he eased the hatch open just enough so that he could see outside. There were wrecked cars and trucks on fire. A couple of helicopters and a military transport were also damaged, and bodies were scattered everywhere.