“Dad,” she said. “I have something I want you to see.”
An hour later, Sandra got bored and went to take a shower. Her father had become totally engrossed in the data, running it through all kinds of mathematical analysis engines. The vocabulary he used to describe what he was attempting might as well have been a different language, for all she could understand it. By the time he started mumbling under his breath about M-brane manifolds and preserved supersymmetries, she had lost patience.
Clean, she put the same dusty uniform back on, not expecting to have time to get back to her own apartment for a fresh one. Her father was still in the kitchen, staring at the data. “Look at this,” he said. “We’ve been assuming the seats traveled in roughly straight lines, as viewed from above. Simple parabolic arcs, at any rate, from their point of origin.”
She sat down next to him, and he shared his eyejack view with her, so she could see the same thing he was looking at. She made his view a transparent overlay on her vision, so she could still see him and the room around her. “How else would they travel?” she said. “Without energy added mid-flight…” She trailed off. “Of course. If multiple blasts went off at slightly different times.”
“That’s one possibility.” Her father was still working with the data, causing equations to fly across her vision in dizzying variety. “But I’m not finding any multiple-source solutions that work for all these paths.”
A thought struck her, like doors unlocking and swinging wide. “Not any three-dimensional ones, anyway.”
“Yes, that’s where I’m thinking, too.” Her father gave her an approving nod, a gesture that had usually been reserved for Alex. Sandra felt a small thrill of approval.
Her father attacked the data furiously, shifting and expanding it with flicks of his eyes as he applied new sets of equations. Then he stopped. “Here we are,” he said, his voice soft and awed. “Supergravity, in ten dimensions.”
Something like a vortex appeared in her vision. The globe view of Philadelphia was now twisted and wrapped in on itself. The lines connecting the seats from their points of origin were now complex curves forming a multi-dimensional tornado.
“It wasn’t multiple blasts after all,” her father said. “Just one simple equation.”
Sandra didn’t think “simple” was probably the right word. “Does this mean the seats traveled out of normal space before landing back in our normal three dimensions?”
Her father shook his head. “The other dimensions are paper-thin. It’s not as much that the chairs themselves travel through other dimensions, as that the energies do, bending the lines of force to blast the chairs in unexpected directions.”
Sandra let that go. Ultimately, she didn’t care about multiple dimensions or how they worked. What she cared about was that this destruction had come from a single source, but not a traditional one.
“Could a person have done this?” she asked. “Or a government?”
Her father raised his hands in an expansive shrug. “Not with any technology I’ve ever heard of.”
“But it’s possible?”
“Anything is possible.”
They traded looks, both of them thinking the same thing but unwilling to say it. As if by speaking the word varcolac out loud, they would conjure it into the house and repeat the horror of fifteen years ago. As horrible as this act was, it had been better when she could think of it simply as the result of human ingenuity and hatred.
She nodded. “I have to show this to my lieutenant.”
“Of course you do.”
“You should come with me.” Her father started to shake his head, but she pressed on. “I’m not sure I can explain it, or that they’ll believe me even if I can. I need your credentials to back me up.”
“I can’t, sweetheart. I need to stay here.” His manner was odd. Evasive.
“Why? I don’t understand.”
“Your mother needs me to stay. I can’t just run off again, after she came so close to losing me.”
He was lying. Sandra didn’t know why, but she knew he was. She studied his face, trying to decide whether to call him on it. “I need you,” she said.
He sighed. “Look. There’s something else here, something I need to study. It’s going to take me a while, but it’s important. Can you come back this evening?”
“I have an all-night shift.”
“Tomorrow, then. Come back here to sleep again, and I’ll tell you everything when you wake up. I’ll make sure Alex comes, too; it affects her as well.”
“Alex won’t come if she knows I’m here.”
“She will if I insist.”
Sandra narrowed her eyes. “Why wait? Why don’t you come along with me now, and you can tell me in the car?”
“I have to do some research first. Confirm what we’re looking at here.” His eyes slid to the left, then purposefully came up and caught her gaze. “You can handle this. After all, you thought of the multiple dimensions angle. I’m proud of you, Alex.”
He must have seen the scowl on her face, because he backtracked immediately. “Sandra, I mean. Come on, darling; it was a slip of the tongue. Forgive an old man some scrambled brain cells.”
“Fine,” she said. “Just stay, then. I’ll do it myself.”
“Sandra, I meant it. I’m proud of you. You’re just as bright as—”
“I’m going to be late for work.” Sandra stood and collected her phone and purse. “Goodbye, Dad. I’m glad you’re safe.”
CHAPTER 6
Alex ran out of the warehouse, adrenaline lighting up her senses, making everything seem bright and crisp and much too fast. She was in her car and fumbling for the keys before she could remember running to the parking lot, and driving away at high speed before she could think about where she was going. She could feel the raw power of the gun thundering in her hands, could see the bullets tearing through Secretary Falk’s chest. Her own blood roared in her ears.
Who could she go to for help? Her father came immediately to mind, but, of course, that would be one of the first places the police would look. Sean was in Poland. Claire was in California. Sandra lived close by, but she was a cop herself. Alex couldn’t put her in that position.
She needed a safe place. Her own apartment was obviously out, as was her parents’ house, or the home of anyone she knew. She stopped at an ATM and withdrew $1000 in cash—the machine’s limit—not expecting to be able to do so again anytime soon. They could track her through her bank access. She wouldn’t be able to use a hotel, either, for the same reason. The enormity of trying to evade capture was overwhelming; she would need a false identification, which she had no idea how to get. She might even have to leave the country.
Or she could turn herself in. That would be the easiest thing, maybe the right thing. But there was a varcolac loose in the world again, and there were precious few people who knew what that meant. She had to call her father. He might not know what to do either, but at least he would believe her. At least he would know what she was talking about.
Her mother answered the phone.
“Mom,” she said. “Is Dad there?”
“Alex…” she said, and trailed off into silence. After a moment, she realized her mother was softly crying on the other end of the line.
“Mom? What’s going on? Did they already call you?”
Her mother took a shaky breath. “Did who call?”
“Never mind. What’s wrong?”
“Your father’s gone.”
“What do you mean? You don’t know where he is?”
“He was in the kitchen staring at some data that Sandra gave him, drinking his coffee. Sandra left for work, and five minutes later, he was gone. I came back, and his coffee mug was still there, but he wasn’t.” Her voice started to shake again. “One moment he was there; the next he was gone.”