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CHAPTER FIVE

Geosynchronous earth orbit

May 18, 2123

Two inches shy of the red thruster button, excruciating pain short-circuited Dr. Rind’s bodily control, and forced him to relent.

Moving his arm overhead, to the side, in any other direction wasn’t a problem; it was just that direction, as if someone—or something—was telling him “No!”

Perhaps the puppetmasters had put something inside his head? While he was anesthetized, while they were surgically connecting him to the flight chair’s plumbing, they could have implanted some kind of control device. But if they had done that, why would they use it to keep him from firing the thruster? Why would they want him to burn up before the mission was completed? The simple answer was: they wouldn’t. Whatever was causing his terrible pain, logic told him it had nothing to do with the monsters on the dark side of the moon.

He was thirteen kilometers from atmospheric contact and the satellite’s orbital decay continued to accelerate. In short order, friction would turn the tiny spacecraft into a fireball and inside it, he’d be reduced to a glowing, golf ball-sized cinder. Dr. Rind was afraid, not only of his own impending unpleasant death, but of what it would mean for Miss Vicky. If he hadn’t made sufficient number of passes around the earth, if he hadn’t gathered enough data to satisfy the puppetmasters, they would do the unthinkable to her. There was no rush at their end, either—at the moment they had their hands full with global conquest. But a thousand years from now they could run across a sticky note that said: “Erase Dr. Victoria Campion.”

And they could just pop back in time and make it so.

A new sound—a low, steady hum—broke his train of thought. Until that moment he had been streaking around the planet in eerie silence. He could hear the noise through his bubble helmet, and feel its faint vibration through the base of the chair, through the fabric of his pressurized suit.

Lights began to flash on the command console, warning him that he was five kilometers from re-rentry. Earth’s gravity now had a firm grip on the tiny craft. As five kilometers became four, and four became three, the hum grew in volume, louder and louder until it was a steady roar, like a jet aircraft bearing down.

There was no jet.

The noise and the vibration were a result of a solid object meeting resistance, of the satellite hurtling through the upper fringe of atmosphere. The shaking made it difficult for him to keep objects in sharp focus—everything around him seemed to blur.

Showers of golden sparks swept past the tiny viewport—a sputtering firework fountain that partially obscured his view of the planet below. The craft’s heat shield was holding for the moment, but he knew it wouldn’t last long with an uncontrolled angle of re-entry. Inside his space suit, he was already beginning to perspire. His armpits felt damp, and rivulets of sweat peeled down the sides of his round, brown face.

Reacting to his rising body temperature, the flight chair’s pumps shifted into high gear, forcing even more of the tri-colored fluids into and out of his torso. The same machinery that had warmed him in the frigidity of space could also keep him cool and hydrated, but its capacity to compensate had limits. When the heat shield failed, the orbiter’s skin would melt away around him; long before that happened, like a live lobster tossed into a cold pot of water and left on a burner to boil, he was going to steam-cook inside his silver suit.

The rapid shaking of the capsule turned the thruster button into a vertical smear of red. He knew if he could just initiate the manuevering rockets, there was still time to break away from gravity’s pull. Regaining a stable orbit would only delay the inevitable as far as he was concerned, but that delay could save his beloved from obliteration. His life and hers depended on his action, yet he hesitated. The memory of his last attempt to fire the thrusters lingered, like a grievous open wound—the harder he’d tried to reach the button, the more it hurt. Until the hurt became unbearable.

As the satellite plunged into Earth’s atmosphere, the character of the vibration changed: instead of a cheap motel bed’s “magic fingers” running amok, it was like driving over a deeply rutted, washboard road—a series of juddering body slams. The intense, violent buffeting made the ship tremble and quake like it was going to fly apart at the seams.

It was now or never.

Dr. Rind summoned all of his strength, and lurching from the chair, reached out for the button.

This time the “No!” was like an ax blow to the top of his unprotected head—a crushing, downward impact that split his skull to point of his chin and beyond, down his throat, all the way to the center of his breastbone.

This time the agony was accompanied by a command: Wrong way!

He didn’t hear it with his ears; he couldn’t have—the roar of re-entry was deafening. The shout was inside his mind. With it came a tidal wave of images, memories, and feelings he did not recognize: an alien intrusion, a violation that penetrated so deeply into who and what he was that had there been anything in his bladder or bowels at that instant, he would have soiled himself. Spectacularly.

Dr. Rind found himself in a pitched battle, trying to squeeze out the trespasser, struggling to keep breathing as the buffeting pounded the air from his lungs, and aware that there was something in his chest that hadn’t been there before—like an over-revving engine, pushing aside his own heart. Adrenalin flooded his veins—he realized with a start that he was dying.

I’m dying and I’m going crazy, he thought.

You’re not crazy.

The voice again. Like a near-miss lightning strike it overloaded, whited-out his mind’s eye. And assurances to the contrary, it confirmed his fear that he had indeed gone mad.

Clawing gloved fingers into the chair’s armrests, he beat down the wave of panic. His scientific training told him there had to be an explanation for what he was experiencing. The voice had a unique identity; it had a source; it had to be coming from somewhere outside of him. Even as he struggled to think past the obvious contradiction—that he was alone in the tiny capsule—his gaze turned to the gray box on the console, whose unblinking cyclops’ eye jolted as he jolted. The E-GF unit contained the only other living brain, the only other “consciousness” in millions upon millions of square miles. Was there a human soul trapped inside it? A poor soul trying to communicate? Deductive reasoning had led him full circle, back to the starting point: he had gone insane.

We don’t have to die.

“Oh, my God!” he said with a groan. “This can’t be happening …”

At that moment the bottom dropped out of this stomach. He’d had no sense of falling before, no sense of any motion. Now like it felt like he was in an elevator plummeting from a towering height. When the buffeting resumed, his helmet’s impacts against the headrest made him see fields of stars.

Close your mouth or you’ll bite off your tongue.

He closed his mouth. Sweat was streaming out of him, pooling under the small of his back. To his left, the viewport glowed a flickering, yellow-orange; it was like staring into an open blast furnace. Even over the roar of re-entry, he could hear a crackling, popping noise as layers of the heat shield crisped and peeled away.

His body went rigid as icy fingers probed inside his skull, dug into the base of his brain, then traced the length of his spine, vertebra by vertebra. In the seconds it took for the sensation to reach his tailbone, his galloping heartbeat slowed. His breathing regained its rhythm. Despite what was happening to him, despite the terror he felt, he was calming down—as if the connection between his mind and his body had been severed. The nerves in his limbs fired seemingly at random, contracting, relaxing the muscles. And the capper, he was getting a monumental erection. Dr. Rind was no expert in human physiology, but he knew enough to conclude that something was tinkering with his autonomic nervous system.

“What are you doing to me?!” he cried. Saying the word “you” aloud made him cringe, but he couldn’t stop himself. “Who are you?! What are you?!”

You know all you need to know: I’m the brain in the box. The box you created. We’re in this mess together.

“You hurt me. Why did you hurt me?”

If you fired the thrusters to regain altitude, we wouldn’t have enough power to maneuver our re-entry.

“‘Re-entry’?!” he exclaimed. “No, that is impossible.”

We can return to earth. We can land this craft.

“Hey, I can’t even fly a kite. We’ll burn up in the atmosphere, for sure. Good grief, is there even a parachute on this pile of junk?!”

If we work together we can do it. I’m linked to main computer’s sensor array and data base, but not to the flight controls. I can guide you through the re-entry and landing, but you have to let me move your hands. Can you do that?

“This goes way beyond crazy,” he said. “Whoever you are, whatever you are, if you don’t zap me again, I might be able to regain a stable orbit.”

Too late for that. We’re going down, one way or another.

“Then it’s all over.”

You can still be a hero.

“I’m not a hero.”

You’re wrong.

“In a minute or two what I’m going to be is a pile of ashes—and Miss Vicky will never have been born.”

Only if you give up. Let me have control of your hands.

Dr. Rind’s forearms began twitching, his fingers jerked spastically.

It won’t work unless you cooperate. Just let it happen, don’t resist me.

The illogical was the only logical choice. With nothing left to lose, no other hope, he surrendered to insanity. The sensation of being overtaken—the voice pulling on his skin and bones like tight-fitting, shoulder-length gloves—was unimaginably unpleasant, but the process was quick. And when it was complete he had turned into an observer, looking down as his hands darted to the console—a marionette’s hands, only the strings were hidden within, and he could feel them moving. His fingers precisely adjusted the angles of the thrusters, tapping in the commands at blinding speed. When his thumb jammed down the red button, the rocket engines squealed, lifting the nose of the capsule; and the acceleration pushed his backside deeper into the chair. Almost instantly the buffeting lessened and blast furnace outside dwindled to intermittent showers of sparks. For the next three or four minutes his hands were in constant motion, tweaking the thrusters to maintain the proper re-entry angle.

Then the rocket engines ran out of fuel.

With no power to hold the flight angle, the buffeting and withering heat returned with a vengeance. Dr. Rind assumed the end had finally come, but after a few moments the buffeting vanished, as did the roaring and the envelope of flame. In silence, the capsule began to tumble rapidly, end over end. Even though he was centrifuged into the chair, his fingers somehow continued to dance over the controls.

Servomotors whirred in the walls on either side of him. And gradually the tumbling slowed. He guessed the craft had retractable wings, stabilizers of some sort. Not big enough for flight in the atmosphere, but sufficient to establish a glide path.

Out the viewport, earth grew larger and larger, a world in shadow except for an arc of blue ocean on the distant horizon. Given the proportion of water to land, it occurred to Dr. Rind there was a chance he might make it safely to the surface only to drown.

I have that covered.

Without warning an explosive charge deployed the re-entry chute. It opened with a whoooomp! and a spine-snapping jolt.

As the capsule descended, it yawed back and forth on the parachute’s long cords. This made the landscape through the viewport pitch so wildly that Rind could make out no details, other than it was green and coming up far too quickly for comfort.

The crash landing knocked him unconscious.

When Dr. Rind came to, he was gasping for air and blinded—the inside of his helmet had fogged with moisture. As he fumbled with the release clamps on the base of his helmet, he realized that he had control of his own body again. He cast the helmet aside and sucked down a deep breath, only to choke on the caustic smoke. Sunlight streamed in through the satellite’s popped-open exit hatch. On the top of the console, the E-GF unit had acquired a nervous tic: its screen flickered on and off.

Something was missing, he realized. The so-familiar Glug. Pause. Glug. of the flight chair’s pumps had been silenced. When he looked down, he saw he was sitting on a heap of twisted metal, a ruin to which he was still firmly attached. Inside the connecting tubes, the green, yellow, purple fluids that had kept him alive were rapidly turning black. He felt a powerful urge to rip the tubes from his body—but that would have left openings the size of firehoses in both sides of his torso. He had no clue what the puppetmasters had done to him, how they had prepped him for the space mission. He didn’t even know where the tubes led.

“I’m trapped,” he moaned. “I can’t get out.”

I can help you.

“How?” he said to the blinking eye. “You’re just a brain in a box.”

You have to trust me. Really trust me.

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