Lights flicked on along the twisting cavern. He piloted toward a makeshift dock at the far end.
Leila spoke up in a friendly tone, her voice reverberated oddly off the rocky walls.
“Mi nombre es Leila, Senor. iComo se llama usted?”
The Mexican snorted. “Perez.”
Leila smiled. “iHabla usted ingles, Perez?”
Perez gave her a quirky sort of smile. It made his scar wrinkle. “Doctor Dandridge no habla espanol, so he picks people who are at least familiar with English. I speak the best.” He added, “You speak Spanish better than a tourist.”
“Thank you. But this is not my idea of a summer cruise.”
Perez laughed heartily as he brought the boat to a thumping halt by the wooden dock. This far up the inlet, the unbearable stench assaulted their nostrils like a punch to the face. Johnny tried to breath without using his
nose. Leila acted as if she were a guest at the Ritz. He could tell that she was trying to butter up their captor.
On the dock stood a small console with a telephone built into it. Perez lifted the receiver and waited a moment. Then he said, “Doctor Dandridge, we have the boy and the woman.” He listened to his instructions, then said, “Yes, yes.” He placed the receiver back into its cradle.
Stepping back into the boat to undo their shackles, he said, “I will not handcuff you for our walk, but I will stay behind you with a gun to the boy’s spine. Please do only what I ask.”
“Certainly,” Leila said as neutrally as possible, communicating neither defiance nor submission, merely agreement.
Johnny, rage building up inside him at the powerless nature of their situation, felt less threatened by the weapon at his back than he felt insulted at being used to keep the woman under control. His ears burned red at the humiliation, as if Perez expected some sort of maternal instinct of Weir’s to prevent her from striking back.
Worse, that was exactly the case.
The trio marched through a dripping wet and twisting cavern aided only by the flashlight in Perez’s left hand.
“You know Dandridge is turning your people into electronic zombies,” she said conversationally.
Perez sneered out a smile. “You think because we are the same race I should feel kinship with them? People are bound together by interest, not race. My interest is in being on the winning side.”
“What does Dandridge want you to do with us?” Johnny asked.
“Oh, just hold on to you. Hostages. He needs that to control your friends.”
Leila shook her head, undulating her jet-black hair. “It won’t work. Captain Anger doesn’t pay blackmail.”
Perez shrugged. “Then Dr. Dandridge makes his zombie operation on you. Believe me, he still needs plenty of practice.”
Chapter Eighteen
Consciousness Razing
“You heard him,” Dandridge said. “Put me down. Or the boy and girl are dead.”
“It doesn’t work that way,” Captain Anger said, refusing to release his captive. “You see, I don’t accept moral responsibility for your actions. And my aides know it. If your henchmen harm Leila or Johnny”—he tightened his grip—“well, I’ve got my own methods.”
“Then let’s talk.” Dandridge’s voice barely squeaked out of his constricting throat.
Cap’s grip increased. “No—let’s act. ”
“My assistant can blow up this entire island at my command. Campbell!
Campbell’s voice bellowed over the loudspeaker. “My finger’s on the switch! Better let him go!”
Cap’s teeth glinted beneath his grin. His eyes—nearly all pupil in the low light of the operating room—looked like dark, unfathomable pools from which could issue unexpected fury. He held his grip around Dandridge’s throat.
“Then I guess we’ll have to see whose fear of death is greater— and who can deal better with the prospect of eternity.”
Dandridge took a deep, rasping breath and cried, “Do it, Campbell!
Code Eighty-Six!”
Something made a chunking sound in the walls. The ventilators hissed.
“Gas!” Cap shouted, releasing Dandridge to reach into his cargo pocket. The other three men did likewise, though Rock withdrew a nothing more than a silicone rubber mouthpiece and some fiber fluff—the microbots had devoured all the metal parts of his pocket-sized gas mask.
“Aw, nuts,” he muttered in perfect American.
Dandridge stayed on the floor where he had fallen, smiling a wild, furious smile of triumph.
“Idiots!” he cried. “Masks won’t do any good against nerve gas!”
Cap slipped his mask on anyway and reached down for the doctor.
“Then it can’t be fatal or you wouldn’t be.”
Before his fingers could close around the grinning scientist’s neck, Cap’s
vision blurred. Those dark, penetrating eyes grew unfocused, glassy. Dandridge closed his eyes, head lolling to the side on the floor. Cap took a step forward, steadied himself, then turned to gaze at his partners. In the scintillating, kaleidoscopic numbness that enveloped him, he saw them collapse to the floor. Then his own vision blackened under the power of the void, and he felt himself fall into night.
He awakened to the sound of drilling.
The room was brightly lit, immaculately clean, and filled with surgical and electronic equipment.
Cap fought the pounding in his head, suppressed the pain using yogic techniques he had learned as a child and practiced all through life, and tried to rise from his supine position.
He lay strapped to an operating table. Testing the restraints, he found them resistant to what strength he had so far regained. He turned his head toward the source of the squealing sound.
Campbell—Dandridge’s weasely assistant, whose thin and frizzy light-brown hair exploded wildly from his head like mold on old bread—worked feverishly with a drill, installing extra shackles for the captives. Sun Ra and Tex already lay bolted to the metal floor with straps; Campbell knelt over Rock, drilling a hole in the thick plating for the manacle on the captive’s left wrist. His other arm and his legs lay pinned to the ground. Campbell had stripped the shirts off all of them. The bulletproof, gadget-laden clothes lay piled in a heap in the corner of the operating room. Their pistols were nowhere in sight.
All three of his crew still dozed in a chemical-induced slumber. Rock snored with loud, snarfling gulps of air and louder whistle-grunt exhalations. Cap craned his head to scan the room. On the far side lay Dandridge on a large cot, head on a soft pillow, sleeping off the nerve gas in relative comfort.
Quietly, Cap flexed his wrists, pulling at the straps’ weak point: the grommetted holes through which half-inch steel bolts passed, fastening the restraints to the table.
Campbell used an electric impact driver to torque down the self-tapping bolt. Rock groggily awoke just as Campbell tightened the last turn.
“Hey!” Rock bellowed. “Shto takoi?”
Campbell dropped the bolt driver with a start and jumped away. When he overcame his surprise, he watched Rock struggle futilely and laughed.
It was a nervous, vicious laugh that rattled sharply around the room.
“Go on, tough guy,” Campbell said gleefully. “Be a big brainless tough guy. Tough guys don’t fare well against the guys with the brains.”
“Look at Captain Anger,” Rock growled. “He is tough guy with brains and you won’t fare well against him!”
Campbell smiled. “Have so far.” He padded over to Dandridge to inject an antidote for the nerve gas. Within seconds, the evil genius’s eyes opened and he sat upright, staring at his captives.