"Look who decided to join the party," McKendry quipped.
"What are you jerks trying to do?" Keene said. "Wreck the thing?"
Finally Ray could see again. He focused on the workbench and saw the device jittering around as if in an earthquake, only the floor was still. And one of the pieces-Simon"s, no Peta"s, he thought-was smoking. The fumes stung Ray"s nostrils.
"Something"s wrong!" Frik yelled.
"How about telling us something we don"t know," Keene said.
The smoking piece twisted and took off, hurtling across the room to shatter against the far wall.
Frik and McKendry hurried over to check out the fragments. McKendry, who had been closest to them, got there first.
"Nice work, Van Alman," Keene said, his tone verging on a snarl. "You must"ve put it together wrong."
"I couldn"t have," Frik said. "The way they"re shaped, there"s only one way those pieces can interlock.
I-".
"Face it, man," Keene said, keeping up the pressure. "You blew it. Whatever you did triggered an eject b.u.t.ton."
"More like a reject b.u.t.ton," McKendry said, picking up a handful of fragments. "This piece was bogus, guys. The device spat it out."
"Peta!" Frik said, doing his best to ball his good fist within the heavy glove and pounding it on the table.
"d.a.m.n her! She gave me a fake! When she gets here-"
"Watch out!" Ray"s gaze had been fixed on the device. "It"s up to something!"They all watched as the device began to glow and a blue light enveloped it and its stand. The glow brightened and seemed to thicken-not a term Ray would normally apply to light, but the best he could come up with at the moment-and obscure the device within it.
Suddenly a beam of bright blue shot out, thick as a man"s wrist and laser focused. It barely missed Keene"s head as it lanced toward a spot on the wall just to the left of the door. Keene stared at it a moment before stepping through into the great room. "Get in here, guys. You"ve got to see this."
Ray led the way but stopped dead in the doorway when he saw what Keene was talking about.
McKendry plowed into his back, propelling him into the room.
The beam of light had pierced the wall without damaging it-no hole, no burn marks. As far the beam was concerned, the wall didn"t seem to exist. It traveled with undiminished brightness across the great room, through the outer wall, and into the night.
"Look," McKendry said, pointing. "It"s moving, almost as if it"s tracking something."
At that moment Ray became aware of a pulsating thrum.
"Do you hear that?" Frik said.
Ray nodded. He knew the sound. "That," he said, "would be Peta"s helicopter heading this way."
42.
"There it is," Peta said, pointing through the helicopter"s bubble window.
Arthur grinned. "You"re sure?" He sat to her left at the helm of the sprightly little Chief-8, his right hand firm on the stick. He winked at her. "It"s so hard to tell Ray"s casino from the others."
The wink said it all. Even among the gallimaufry of brightly lit, high-concept, high-rise casinos lining the Las Vegas Strip, ferro-concrete behemoths in drag watching the endless parade of tourists, Ray"s wedged-shaped Daredevil Casino stood out. Maybe it was its shape, apex aimed like a spearhead at the sidewalk. Or maybe it was the s.p.a.ce shuttle that appeared to be launching from the right side. Or perhaps it was the realistic G.o.dzilla-like creature, with animatronic head and arms, bursting through the left wall.
She noticed a crowd beginning to gather around the monster and glanced at her watch; almost half past eleven. Ray"s stuntmen-c.u.m-actors must be about to begin their a.s.sault on the giant fire-breathing lizard.
"Anything wrong?" The flight had been glide smooth until a moment ago, when she"d noticed a little pitch and roll.
"Some strange updrafts around the casino."
The Daredevil"s rooftop helipad loomed before them. Peta dug into her shoulder bag. She found what she was looking for but didn"t remove it. "I want you to see something before we land," she said. "I didn"t want to be the only one in on the secret."
"Maybe it should wait till after we land." Arthur kept his eyes straight ahead.
"I really think you"ll want to see this now."
She opened her hand and held the piece up where he wouldn"t have to turn his head too far to see it.After a quick first glance he stiffened and took another look.
"What in the world?"
"It"s my piece, the one you gave me."
"But I thought-"
"I had Ralphie make a phony-and he did a masterful job. That"s what I gave Frik."
"So he thinks he"s got three but he"s only got two. I love it! Doesn"t Ray know-?"
"Uh-uh. At the time I wasn"t quite sure about Ray. I mean, whether or not he had something to do with your, um, death, or if he and Frikkie were in cahoots. So I didn"t tell him. I"ve learned the truth, but I haven"t exactly had time to call him."
"So you and I will be the only ones who know." He grinned. "How do you want to work it? We can let them a.s.semble it with the fake, and when nothing happens, pull out the real things and say, "See if this works better." Or we can-"
The interior of the cabin filled with a bright blue light. The helicopter dipped. Arthur fought the stick.
"Oh, G.o.d!" Peta cried. The light had centered on the piece in her hand, but it was coming from outside.
When she looked through the window, she could follow a tightly focused beam straight back to Ray"s penthouse atop the casino. "What are they trying to do to us?"
She saw four figures rush out onto the helipad. The one she recognized as Ray began waving at her. Was he warning her off or telling her to hurry in?
The chopper was bucking like a wild stallion. Arthur forced it into a stuttering descent toward the helipad. "It"s that thing, that piece you"ve got there. Somehow it"s set off something below that"s affecting the controls."
"Should I toss it out?" Peta said.
"h.e.l.l no! We"re not out of control, just having some difficulty is all."
"How much difficulty?"
A tight grin. "Oh, I"d say something akin to flying through a Midwest supercell."
"With or without tornadoes?"
"Without. But that could change any moment." He glanced at her. "Look. An actual touchdown might be too dicey with these controls the way they are. But I can get low enough so that you can toss the piece onto the pad."
"And then what?"
"Then we see what happens. If I get the helm back, we"ll land. If not, we"ll fly off and look for a place in the desert to put down. Either way, we"ll know the piece will be safe with Ray until we make it back to the casino."
"Bring her down as low as you can," Peta said. "These pieces seem to be indestructible, but let"s not take any chances."Arthur fought the Chief-8 downward. When the landing runners wobbled between eight and ten feet above the helipad, Peta pushed her door open. Noise and wind swirled through the cabin. Looking below, she saw Ray, Keene, and McKendry backed against the wall of the penthouse.
Frik stood at the edge of the landing circle, where the tornadic downwash whipped his hair and clothing.
Peta saw his face, his tight, angry posture. He knows, she thought. He must have tried to a.s.semble the device with the fake piece.
Was that why the chopper was acting crazy?
She cataloged her options. Fast. The way she did during emergency surgery. She could toss out the real fragment, surrendering it to Frik, or keep it in the chopper and risk a crash. Or- "Hold her steady!" She unclasped her seat harness.
"What are you doing?"
She tucked her piece of the device into her bra. The beam followed it, making her chest glow with the same eerie blue light. "See you below," she said.
Swiveling onto her belly, she slipped her legs through the door.
"Peta!" Arthur shouted, panic wild in his face. "Get back in here! You"ll break your neck!"
Feeling nothing except the need to take action, Peta continued her outward slide. The vortex from the whirling blades tore at her skirt, whipping it above her knees. She wished she"d worn jeans-she"d have a better view of her feet. Inching down, she kicked back and forth until her boots found the landing runner. She hooked her heels on the steel tubing, reached down and grabbed it with her left hand, then her right. Finally she kicked her feet free and swung down to hang with her boot soles only three or four feet above the helipad. She was about to release her grip when the chopper suddenly veered up and away from the roof.
The beam of blue light followed her, targeted like a laser on her chest. She repressed a scream as she looked down through hundreds of feet of empty air at the top of the giant lizard monster"s head. On the ground below, people in the gathering crowd began to look up and point. She wanted to shout, I"m not part of the d.a.m.n Daredevil show! This is the real thing!
She felt her fingers slipping and tightened her grip, envisioning herself splattered on the pavement below while the onlookers applauded the realistic gore effects. The little chopper began to angle back down toward the roof. The parapet hove within reach, the chopper dipped, and Peta saw the upper edge of the wall rushing at her.
She cried out and nearly lost her grip as her right hip and thigh slammed against the concrete.
The chopper wobbled away and back again, ramming the small of her back against the edge of the parapet, twisting her body and tearing her right hand free of the runner. Clinging by one hand, she felt wind catch her skirt and wrench her back and forth.
With her free hand, Peta tore open the skirt"s hook and loop closure, and the skirt dropped away.
Arthur must have regained a modic.u.m of control because the chopper lifted and angled back over the helipad, bringing her shoes to within a yard or so of the surface.
That was more than good enough for Peta. She released her grip and dropped onto the hard concrete surface.The relief of feeling something solid beneath her gave way to a blast of pain as her right ankle buckled.
Instinctively she rolled as she fell, and felt the piece slip from her bra and tumble away...
...to land at Frik"s feet...almost as if it wanted to be there.
He s.n.a.t.c.hed it up and raised it above his head. The beam of light focused on the piece, making it look like he held a blue sun against the night sky.
"You gave me a bad moment there, Peta!" Frik said, shouting over the noise of the chopper. "I thought we were going to lose this!"
He ran toward the penthouse, brushing past Ray, McKendry, and Keene, who were hurrying forward to help Peta. She struggled to her feet. Her ankle blazed with gut-wrenching agony. She glanced up and saw that Arthur had full control of the chopper now. Removing the piece had worked. She gave him a thumbs-up. He nodded gravely through the bubble.
She turned back to the other men and pointed toward Frik"s retreating back. "Stop him!"
Her shout was lost in the wind and the engine noise, and she doubted McKendry and Keene would have been much use anyway. They stood frozen on the helipad, eyes fixed on the chopper, gaping at Arthur.
She saw Keene grab Ray by his shirt and point to the chopper, shouting something she couldn"t hear, doubtless something about a dead man piloting an aircraft.
No help there. Ignoring the stab of pain each step sent up her leg, she hobbled after Frik on her own. He had all of the pieces now. If she didn"t do something right away, he would a.s.semble the artifact and take possession of it. Too many people had died because of his obsession. She couldn"t let him have control of it.
She stepped through the sliding gla.s.s door into the great room and stopped. Frik was nowhere to be seen. He had what he wanted. Could he already have gone?
A bright blue glow from the rear doorway answered her. She reached the lab and found Frik hovering over the four a.s.sembled pieces, guiding hers-the fifth and last-toward its position.
Her piece clicked into place. Immediately, the glow disappeared. The device sat cold and dark and apparently inert on the workbench, looking for all the world like nothing more than an oddly mottled Easter egg with an extra nodule on one side.
It was as if Frik had turned off a light.
He turned to face her. "What is this, Peta? Another G.o.dd.a.m.n fake?" He pulled over a metallic briefcase that sat open on the lab table. "I"ll just have to take this back to my own labs and figure it out." He extended his scarred left hand toward the object.
She lunged, reaching for it with both hands. Though she did not yet fully understand why she felt so pa.s.sionately about it, every instinct told her to stop Frik from removing the device. He grabbed her arms.
She struggled to release herself from his grasp.
Suddenly, time seemed to slow down. She watched as if through a heat mirage as a ripple ran over the surface of the spheroid, followed by another and another, blurring the edges of the separate pieces.
Fusing them into a single object.
At its center, a tiny spot of bright white began to glow, and then light was everywhere, blasting through Peta like a storm wind through a screen door, engulfing her in heat like the heart of the sun. Consumingher and everything around her.
43.
When the white light faded and she began to recover her senses, Peta thought for a moment that the world had been turned on end. But the problem wasn"t the world. She was the one who was upside down, lying on the floor of Ray"s penthouse lab, staring up at the underside of the main table and the solid gray line of the ceiling beyond it.
Reoriented, she jumped to her feet. Her body responded at once, but she felt weightless, as if she had floated to a standing position in a flying dream.
On the table, the artifact had returned to a state she could only think of as dormant. It looked like nothing more than a chunk of rutilated quartz from somewhere in Arizona, or a pretty colored rock that some collector had picked up on Montserrat to remind himself that a sleeping volcano could look like any other mountain until it erupted.