MONDAY, MAY 2, 2033 THE PACIFIC OCEAN, SOMEWHERE NEAR GUAM The ship officially had no name; it was merely referred to on the rolls of the corporation that owned as "GENOM Corporation Deep Ocean Survey Ship No. 7", a designation reflected in its voice- and data-communications callsign, "Survey Seven". In the Company's declaration of seaborne assets, Survey 7 was listed as a deep ocean exploration and survey vessel of the Ballard class, tasked with "location, identification, and preparation for exploitation of deep ocean resources". And, indeed, GENOM did own a small fleet of Ballard-class exploration vessel which plied the oceans of the world from the Company's seaport bases in Tokyo, Los Angeles, and Rome. Occasionally, one of those ships would report to the Tokyo or Los Angeles base, its proud numeral 7 showing on its rakish funnel, to take on fuel and supplies. That ship, however, was not Survey 7; it was Survey 1, its identifying marks changed offshore, under cover of darkness, the night before. The world's oceans were busy places; no one ever noticed that Surveys 1 and 7 were never in port at the same time. While Survey 1 was playing its masquerade, the real Survey 7 lurked offshore, as she lurked perpetually offshore, never seen by unauthorized eyes - perhaps the greatest secret held by a company which held a great many. To the three men and twelve boomers who made up the crew of Survey 7, their ship went by another name except when they were on the datalinks to their shoreside masters. On board, the ship still went by its original name: Arkhangelsk. In 2025, the Russian Federation, chronically strapped for cash, began retiring several obsolete classes of nuclear-powered submarines, starting with those most expensive to operate. Unable to bear the costs of properly dismantling the nuclear-powered boats, but unable to afford the worldwide approbation that would result in just pitching the old reactors and other atomic waste into the Arctic Ocean as had been standard Soviet operating procedure, the Russians took the only available course: they contracted the jobs out to any corporation or entity willing to scrap the subs and keep what remained, under the watchful eye of a United Nations inspectorate determined to keep nuclear reactors and warheads out of the hands of the undeserving. The United States Navy expressed little interest in obsolete submarines which had been inferior to their own when new; they took a couple of the old Delta IV-class missile submarines, scrapped their reactors, and let their Seawolf-class SSN skippers have a grand old time torpedoing Russian boomers, as they had spent their whole careers wanting, but unable, to do. Other than providing stress relief for the Navy, this exercise was of dubious value. A small British corporation, Armstech International, acquired another antiquated Russian SSBN and followed all approved procedures in disposing of its reactor and warheads. Shortly thereafter, they began selling a new, inexpensive missile system eerily similar to the SS-N-26 Seahawk II. The Russians made a lot of grumbling noises, but in the end, nothing was done. Several smaller nations expressed interest in the various attack boats on offer, but the UN did a good deal of throat-clearing and most withdrew their requests. One small Middle Eastern nation which shall remain nameless, but whose four-letter name begins with 'I', persisted until it was eventually given an Akula-class attack submarine; two years later the boat's reactor had not yet been scrapped and the UN informed the country that -it- would take the submarine off their hands, RIGHT NOW. After a show of force at the border, the sub was surrendered, its local markings hastily scrubbed off, by a sheepish local navy. The one class the Russians had no trouble ridding themselves of were the Alfa-class SSNs; their titanium hulls made them the only boats on offer materially worth the trouble and expense of scrapping. Their single-use reactors were at the end of their operational lives and could not be refueled, so there was little danger of those subs being used for nefarious purposes. GENOM Corporation won the bid for the disposal of the largest subs in need of dismantling - indeed, the largest subs in the world: the forty-five-year-old Typhoon-class missile submarines. In 2026, they took delivery of all six Typhoons and the two even larger Typhoon IIs at their extensive port facility at Los Angeles, California. There the eight submarines disappeared into a massive drydock facility where they were, with much righteous bustling and many public-relations and press tours, dismantled. Their reactors were carefully removed, counted and tagged by the UN inspectors, and, all sixteen accounted for, disposed of in an approved manner. The weapons were meticulously dismantled, their dismembered parts offered up to the inspectors for their satisfaction. What remained was cut down and the materials recycled into GENOM's highly successful line of heavy construction equipment. Swords into plowshares, indeed. Except that two years after it was all over, with public attention focused firmly elsewhere, one of the Typhoon IIs slipped quietly out of the facility and disappeared undetected into the Pacific, undismantled, unmelted, and quite undisarmed. The two reactors supposed to have come from this sub were quite real; they had been near the end of their operational lives anyway, and GENOM had therefore been quite willing to haul them out and parade them in front of the inspectors. They'd have had to come out anyway. As for the weapons, well - ballistic missiles and torpedoes were not hard to come by, it was only the warheads that were tricky; and those which had been shown, "already dismantled", to the inspectors were fakes. Some of GENOM's own stock of fissionable materials had been sacrificed for the sake of the ruse, while the real warheads remained snugly in their launch tubes aboard the former Russian missile submarine Arkhangelsk. In the two years since the salvage project's "completion", GENOM's engineers had revamped the Typhoon II from end to end, modernizing systems, installing advanced automation equipment anywhere it could be placed, and streamlining operations. By the time they were done, the ship was powered by a single, highly automatic fusion reactor - the first of its kind ever installed on a ship - and direct electric drive. Its torpedo loading systems had been roboticized. Its diving, valve and trim systems had been automated and slaved to an expert system. Automatic maintenance and repair facilities were installed. By the time the engineers were done, the ship's crew requirements had been cut to seven personnel per shift: an officer of the watch, a helmsman, a weapons officer, a sensor observer, a communication specialist, and two engineers. So it was that, in the spring of 2029, the Arkhangelsk began its new life as GENOM Survey 7, prowling the oceans of the world. Its crew consisted of three men, all ultra-loyal, specially trained members of the GENOM Corporate Security Force, and twelve Bu-33/S sexaroid boomers. The men acted as officers, one in overall command and a first and second officer, each taking a shift as OOW; the replicants would rotate in two twelve-hour shifts to perform the crew functions, as well as, in the grand 33/S tradition, servicing the needs of the officers. For the men, assignment to Survey 7 was a very high honor; it was also a dream assignment. The submarine had never been called upon to do anything, and everyone within GENOM knew it was unlikely ever to -be- called upon to do anything. It existed in the company's inventory solely because Quincy liked the idea of owning a nuclear ballistic missile submarine and being able to call on it if he had a greatly pressing need for it. It was one of his toys. In reality, this most serious and honored posting within CorpSecForce was a six-month tour of air conditioning, good food, all the books you could read, all the ice cream you could eat and all the replicants you could screw, while the rest of CorpSec stood at attention in the lobbies of the branch offices for eight hours a day, or greased tank bogeys at the Armored Response Center, or froze their asses off guarding the Antarctic Oil Station. Life was good aboard the Arkhangelsk, at least for the officers; and no one ever asked the crew their opinions, for boomers, the corporate wisdom insisted, did not -have- opinions, however much it sometimes seemed like they did. Only programming, the manual said, to make them seem more human, to put their human masters at ease. Pay it no mind, said the manual, and so the officers paid it no mind. First Engineer Lyudmilla 104-Tereshkova (someone had thought it would be cute if the crew-boomers on Survey 7 had Russian names) had opinions, the manual be damned (and that, indeed, was one of them); and at the present moment, her foremost opinion was that they would all be better served if she were allowed to disconnect the automatic lubrication pump for Main Drive Motor No. 1 and eject it through the trash tube. Repairing the pump was proving to be more work than just keeping the motor shaft oiled manually would be. Milla (as the others called her) loved the Arkhangelsk as a ship's engineer should, but that one lube pump was the focus of all her enmity. Well, all right, not -all- of it; a good deal of it had to be reserved for the Second Shift Officer of the Watch, Lieutenant Joshua Pemberton, who had unfortunately taken a fancy to her from Day 1 and had a regrettable fondness for games like "I'm the Warden, You're the Convict Caught Trying to Escape". As the number-two lube-oil feed line burst free from the pump casing and sprayed foul-smelling greenish-blue lube oil all over the compartment and the Engineer, she found herself wondering if she'd let it happen on purpose in hopes that the oil's stench and disgusting viscosity might keep Pemberton's hands off her that particular night once their watches ended. Ruefully, she decided it probably wouldn't work anyway, and set to reconnecting the hose. TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2033 WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS In the small brick house at 22 Lee Street in Worcester (which was just far enough west of North America's BosWash Corridor metropolitan sprawl to have remained a small city unto itself in an era of ever-merging metroplexes), the day was just beginning, though it was around noon. This was hardly unusual; the people who inhabited the place were college students, and classes being over for the summer, they had little enough to do, and savings enough to go perhaps another month before they were forced to find work. One of the people inhabiting the house was not a student, but he was on an extended vacation, so there was nothing to get him up before noon either. Eventually he did rise, yawn, and shuffle off to the bathroom to, as Archie Goodwin might put it, cleanse and drape the form. Ben Hutchins, known to his friends as "Gryphon", spent half an hour at that critical task before heading downstairs to see if anyone was up and interested in food. Apartment 1 was quiet, and for a moment Gryphon thought he'd be out of luck; then he heard the sound of typing from the back bedroom and realized that Android was up or, more likely, had never retired the evening before. He stuck his head in to see the dark-haired, bearded gweep at the console of his five-year-old but reliable Cray DD-442 workstation, intent on the screen. Android caught the movement out of the corner of his eye and looked toward the door. "Good morning," he said. "I've found something very interesting on those discs your friend gave you." Gryphon hadn't told Android the full story behind his acquisition of the several optical discs Dana O'Neill had left behind in his car. Specifically, he had left out the parts about Dana disappearing in a dimensional rift at the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, and all the information he'd found about her during her brief time with him having vanished from the computer systems of the world as she disappeared off the face of the Earth. Not only didn't he feel like explaining such a thing to anybody, he didn't feel much like thinking about it too often himself. Nevertheless, he was interested in the data on those discs, since, according to Dana and one of the mercenaries hired by GENOM Corporation to get them and kill her, it had to do with a new series of humanoid infiltration droids being developed by GENOM or a subsidiary, and GENOM's plans for same. Dana had seemed to think that the corporation planned to use them for political intrigues, maybe even assassinations. Gryphon wanted more information, but the discs had proven unreadable to the systems in his car, so he'd turned them over to Android for analysis. The first thing that had come off the encrypted discs was a list of personnel involved in the project, in a dozen different divisions and subsidiaries of GENOM. The Knight Sabers had come over to help capture and interrogate two of them, Eiji Takamura of GENOM Boston and Madison Carter of the Providence division of Universal Business Machines. The operations hadn't gone flawlessly; Carter had been shot full of holes by his own Corporate Security officers, but they'd at last grabbed the data about the new series' AI from his computer. Satisfied that they'd put a big enough dent in the project (Carter was probably dead, his data stolen and erased, and Takamura couldn't remember anything about the three days he'd been missing) to hold it up for at least six months, the Knight Sabers had returned to Japan and another, higher-priority project. Gryphon had stayed behind in an attempt to complete his vacation and get a bit more work on the new-series project in the process, and Android had kept digging at the data on Dana's discs. "Most of the data on these discs was garbled by signal loss before being encrypted," Android was saying, "which makes untangling it even tougher. I've figured out most of what's on which disc, but actually getting at the information is another story. I haven't even tackled most of the tech data yet, but I've found a few memos. One of them mentions the subsidiary where project coordination is being run out of." Gryphon cocked an eyebrow. "It's not GENOM's Chicago office? That's where Dana said the database she hit was." "Chicago is Central Project Accounting," Android replied. "The project office for Project 2608 is at GPCC up in Bangor." "Bangor, Maine?" Gryphon wondered. "Second largest city in New England," said Android. "What?!" Gryphon blurted. /* John Linnell "Maine" _State Songs_ */ Eyrie Productions, Unlimited in association with Real Job Time Management Services presents A Private Sector Production Of a Much-Delayed Film Benjamin D. Hutchins Reika Chang HOPELESSLY LOST CALM BEFORE with Nene Romanova Gryphon's Interceptor provided by Bell Motors, Unlimited Livermore, California GRF-series power armor by Don Griffin Accommodations by Motel 6 (the official motel of Eyrie Productions, Unlimited) Theme song by John Linnell and the Statesmen (_State Songs_, Zoe/Rounder Records 01143-1005-2) Written by Benjamin D. Hutchins (c) 2000 Eyrie Productions, Unlimited When he was yanked out of his accustomed place in the space-time continuum and catapulted 40 years ahead into a parallel future, Gryphon was required to make a number of uncomfortable adjustments. He had to become accustomed to the fact that, in the early 2030s, cybernetic enhancement and robotics technologies were advancing beyond anyone's control. He had to get used to higher levels of urban violence and corporate abuses of power than were predicted by even the gloomiest of the 1990s' pundits. Since he arrived in Tokyo, he had to get used to speaking Japanese. He had to learn to handle the strange truth that this was a parallel future, one in which he had apparently not existed - no trace of his family had ever been found. Stranger, his friends from college -did- exist, were the same age as the versions Gryphon remembered from his home plane where the year had been 1992, and, strangest of all, -they remembered him- from college, although that was clearly impossible. On the whole, the adjustments hadn't been too hard; the last one, with its bizarre cross-time implications, had been the toughest. After all that, it was ironic to him that the biggest shock he'd yet received was what had become of Bangor, Maine, which in his memory had been a small city of about 30,000 on the northern side of central Maine, the seat of Penobscot County, and, coincidentally, the city where he'd been born. Five hours hour north of Boston, Gryphon was therefore amazed to discover that small, sleepy Bangor had somehow become a city, a full-fledged metropolis, complete with towers, alleys, gangs, rogue robots, an oppressive megacorp, and two and a quarter million residents. It was small compared to Mega Tokyo, but set against the Megalo City itself, any other human settlement would seem small. I-95 through the city and the I-395 spur across the Penobscot River to Brewer were both eight lanes wide now, and supplemented by I-895, a ring highway encircling the Twin Cities and saving those bound for points north or south the trouble of driving right smack through the middle of town. The city looked completely different, but the exits on I-95 were about where Gryphon remembered them. He got off at the Union Street exit, wondering if the surface streets would be as familiar. They were - in fact, down here at the roots of the towering city, a lot of the buildings were even recognizable, wedged between or tucked under the towers. He followed the directions he'd been given to the corporate headquarters of GPCC. It was decent-looking as megacorp subsidiary HQs go; a modest two-dozen-story office tower with a pleasant brick plaza, complete with decorative fountain, out front. Gryphon parked in one of the visitor slots and went into the lobby, which could have been described as palatial had anyone ever built a palace made primarily of brass, chrome and greenish glass. At the reception desk, there was a Buma. No, he corrected himself - it's phoneticized differently in English; when in North America, call them boomers. Personally, Gryphon thought "Boomer" was a better name for a large, friendly dog - say a Labrador retriever - than the class of humanoid automatons, but he wasn't the marketing division of a multinational megacorporation, for which he regularly thanked the gods. Anyway, the boomer at the desk, who looked like a pretty raven-haired girl except for her dead-white plasticene skin and the silver pickup caps where her ears belonged, asked if she could help him. "No, thank you," he said. "I don't suppose you can. I just wanted to come in and have a look around." He turned for the exit. "Thank you and come again," the receptionist said. Gryphon marveled inwardly at the way the service robots of the world always sounded more sincere when they thanked you or wished you a pleasant day than the humans remaining in the service industries. He went back downtown and sought out the library. It was much larger than he remembered, like everything else in town, but there was some familiarity there: the structure he remembered as the library entire was here something like a vestibule, the entryway at the front of the building. Apparently it had been added onto so many times that the additions by far dwarfed the original structure. The library was staffed by boomers too, pleasant-looking humanoid ones with robotic features like the ubiquitous silver-cap ears blended cleverly into their appearances to comply with the visual-differentiation laws (robots which were outwardly indistinguishable from humans being illegal worldwide). Gryphon declined their offers of help and shut himself up in the archive room, where a networked terminal provided him with access to digital copies of all Bangor Daily News numbers since 1987. Over the next four hours, a picture of Bangor's change came into focus. In 1999, the city had been just as Gryphon remembered it from home, sleepy and stolid, its population hovering around 30,000. Then the General Products and Cybernetics Corporation had sprung up in an industrial park near the airport and begun doing good business. That business attracted other businesses. The city fathers, showing surprising good sense, altered the local tax structure to encourage even further business. Bangor had grown to a city of 100,000, most of them working for GPCC's aerospace and consumer-electronics divisions, and in 2022, GENOM Corporation had acquired GPCC and reinforced it further by diversifying its product lines. Then the Great Kanto Earthquake had leveled Tokyo in 2026, and GENOM had been ready with its industrial automation product line to aid in the cleanup and rebuilding. The robots proved their worth in the rapid reconstruction of Tokyo, and the Boomer Revolution had begun. GPCC succeeded in proportion to its gargantuan parent, and as it grew meteorically, other industries appeared. Transorbital air travel had rendered Bangor's distance from the sea and the major population centers of Maine irrelevant to its success, and just as GPCC boomed in proportion with GENOM, Bangor boomed in proportion with Tokyo, reaching 2.2 million by 2032. As Gryphon pushed his chair back from the research terminal, it struck him that the history he had just read was more than a little weird. Tokyo's destiny intertwined with that of Bangor, Maine? River City becoming a post-cyberindustrial megaplex?! He groaned and rubbed at the bridge of his nose. It was too much to believe. One of the robot librarians poked her head into the room and inquired if he was all right. "No," he replied, "but I expect I'll feel better after I get something to eat." The librarian offered several dinner suggestions. Gryphon thanked her, switched off the research terminal and went back to his car. He sat in it for several minutes, tapping his fingers testily against the steering wheel and trying to make sense of what he'd just read. After a few minutes he gave it up and drove north. Though it was much larger and lacked the original's incongruous converted-from-a-steakhouse decor, there was still a Chinese restaurant called the Oriental Jade right where he'd left it. He parked the car around the back of the restaurant, shut down the turbine, and opened a scrambled satellite comm session on the dashboard computer. From there, he got onto the Knight Sabers mainframe and activated one of his false identities. Closing out his comm session, Gryphon thumb-keyed open the car's center console, then retina-scanned the hidden compartment below the false bottom open. He removed his wallet from his pocket, selected another from the row of them ranked neatly in the secret compartment, transferred the cash, and put the new one in his pocket before locking it all back up. Then he did a quick visual scan of the area. Noting no one around, he tabbed a couple of controls on the car's instrument panel. In the dark, it would have been hard for any outside observer to see that the car had just changed color even if there had been anyone there to see it. The venetian-blind-like change of the license plate from a California tag to a Maine one would have been a little more eye-catching. Reaching behind his seat, Gryphon pulled a small duffel bag onto his lap and zipped it open. He stashed his main wallet, the one with all his real IDs in it, in a niche next to his tube of toothpaste. Satisfied, Gryphon locked up the Camaro and went to have dinner. After a meal, he felt a bit better, but still at odds with everything around him. He drove the now-dark streets of the city aimlessly, as he had done many times in the quieter streets of the Bangor of his youth. He'd actually grown up in Millinocket, sixty miles to the north, but there hadn't even been a movie theater in Millinocket, so driving to Bangor was the first thing anybody with a driver's license got used to doing first. The fact that this was a city bolstered by a subsidiary of GENOM was not lost on him; much of the signage and graffiti he saw was in mangled but recognizable Japanese, as though the city recognized its karmic bond with MegaTokyo and sought to acknowledge the same in its visual style. At around midnight, he found himself back at the GPCC building. He pulled off to the side, parked the Interceptor, climbed out and walked over by the fountain. Arms folded, Gryphon looked around at his surroundings. The plaza was brightly lit and pleasantly cool in the May evening; the fountain's merry splashing drowned out much of the noise of the city and sprayed a fine mist of cool water on the back of his head and neck. Small spotlights, arranged behind a neatly trimmed hedge so that they weren't visible from the plaza, cast a silvery glow up the mirrored flanks of the tower itself. Since the streets around the plaza and the back of the building were only accessible from the driveways on the streets fore and aft, no traffic passed through. The low buildings surrounding the tower appeared to belong to GPCC too; Gryphon wondered if they were shops, warehouses, further offices, or what. Next to one of those buildings, a nondescript articulated cargo truck was parked and idling, its driver perhaps catching some sleep in this well-lit, secure area. Gryphon looked up at the tower. Only a few office lights were on at this hour, but the lobby was still bright and inviting behind its glass doors. From out here, with the lights inside much brighter, he could see clear past the reception desk to the elevators. As he stood gazing thoughtfully at this building, which he knew he would have to invade electronically or physically to find what he wanted, one of the elevators arrived and discharged four suited men. Two of them were talking animatedly and cheerfully. They looked like executives who had just finished a long night's negotiations and were pleased with themselves. The other two were silent and wore sunglasses even at this hour - Gryphon made them for bodyguards, probably boomers. He wondered if they would hassle him if he just stood by the fountain watching them leave the office in the middle of the night. The plaza was private property, after all. At that thought, he wondered why the truck driver hadn't been bothered by GPCC Security yet himself, and wondered how long the truck had been there. He glanced at it as the four men emerged from the front doors of the GPCC tower. It shivered, twitched, and then burst, the trailer splitting at the seams like a can of Poppin' Fresh biscuit dough, as a large mecha, some kind of walker tank, stood to a full twenty-five feet tall and walked away from the wrecked truck with a scuttling crab-like gait. Gryphon blinked. The machine looked maddeningly familiar, yet he could swear he'd never laid eyes on its like before. He frowned and searched his mental Rolodex. "Well, there's something you don't see every day," he remarked to himself as the crab mecha moved with considerable speed across the courtyard toward the four men, who were now near the bottom of the steps. The two men in shades looked without apparent emotion at the crab-tank, then quivered and burst out of their clothes as their opponent had burst from the truck. As Gryphon had suspected, they were 55-series security boomers. What he hadn't expected, however, was the fact that the two men he'd taken for executives were, too. That seemed to take the crab aback as well; it paused in its charge, drawing back on its suspension with an almost animal hesitation. One of the four 55s fired its particle cannon; the beam splashed off the crab's armor without any visible damage, but the attack seemed to make the crab's mind up. It backpedaled, turned, and headed for the exit. That, naturally, was a cue for the situation to get even weirder. Gryphon had just pieced together the supposition that what he'd just seen was an assassination attempt, failed because anticipated by GPCC, who had substituted security boomers for the targets. A bell rang in the back of his head - there had been a similar incident in Texas about a month before he'd left Japan on this vacation. Was that where he remembered the crab from? No, he didn't think so. He scowled at himself as the memory refused to come. This attempt was interrupted by the situation getting weirder, to wit: the walls of the low outbuildings surrounding the square crumbling to permit six armored vehicles hidden within them to enter the square and engage the crab, one of them rolling right over the remains of the semi truck to do it. Gryphon blinked again. A minute ago he'd been standing here admiring the GPCC Tower, and suddenly he was witnessing a pitched battle between a crab mecha and a half-dozen M1A4 Abrams MBTs. He ought to have run for cover, of course: either over to his car, which was parked, hopefully out of harm's way, out of the courtyard alongside the GPCC building itself, or possibly into the building lobby. Instead, he merely stood next to the fountain, hands in pockets, too caught up in the absurdity of the situation to think of his own safety. What the hell was going on here?! The crab had the advantage over the tanks in terms of agility, but it was hemmed in by the buildings and the tanks' 120mm guns, being mounted on swivel turrets, could track it pretty much wherever it tried to go. For such a big mecha, its weapons load was fairly light. It appeared to have little more than a laser cannon and some pipsqueak General Purpose missiles, handy for dealing with light armor and combat boomers but useless against the armor of a main battle tank. Gryphon stood with his hands in his trouser pockets and watched in bemusement as this weird battle unfolded before him. The expression on his face never changed from one of what might almost be called polite curiosity. It was almost like some bizarre kind of new sporting event: the crab-tank, the conventional armor, the four boomers - ooh! Make that three boomers - darting about putting in their two cents' worth with their particle cannons whenever possible. A curious detachment stole over him. Without changing his expression or stance, he shuffled around a little as the battle passed to the right of him, turning in place to watch it go by and work its way up the steps of the GPCC building. The crab-tank wasn't faring well; though it had destroyed two of the boomers by this time and immobilized one of the tanks with a lucky laser hit to the drive wheels, it was sporting some major dents and blast burns and one of its missile launchers had been disabled. Having reached the GPCC tower, it reared up and became more spider than crab, climbing the building with claw-like grippers built into its feet. The M1A4s crowded around the base of the building, then backed away so they could elevate their guns enough to get a bead on their quarry. For a moment, it looked as if the crab might escape. It was climbing fast, and the tanks, their guns at maximum elevation, were running out of room to back up. Gryphon stepped nonchalantly aside as one backed through where he had been and ran over the fountain. He wasn't sure who the parties in this battle were, but because of a combination of his inherent dislike for GENOM and its subsidiaries and his natural fondness for underdogs, he found himself rooting for the crab. Then a pair of Soviet-built Hailstorm attack helicopters whipped across the plaza from the southeast, their cannons raking the crab and the general area of the GPCC building around it. The crab shuddered under the attack, shifted in its stance, and lashed out with its laser again, neatly shearing off the tail section of one of the choppers. Deprived of its torque-balancing tail-tip thrust duct, the Hailstorm spun out of control and smashed into one of the side buildings that had hidden the tanks, its fireball casting a pleasant orange glow across the proceedings. The other chopper jinked to the left and let fly with an anti-armor missile that took the crab high on the right side and relieved it of its starboard legs. Unbalanced, it broke free from the wall and plummeted a good fifteen stories to the steps of the GPCC building, then tumbled down and came to a smoking halt in the plaza. Gryphon frowned. The trump-card arrival of the aircraft struck him as unfair. He trotted, completely unnoticed, across the plaza to his car. The crab's battered dorsal armor blew off and two human (or at least humanoid) operators scrambled from seats behind darkened controls. They wore blue and white jumpsuits and matching helmets that made it impossible to see their faces, though it was clear from their body lines that one was a man and the other a woman. The tanks crowded around; the two boomers moved in as well. The remaining Hailstorm hovered overhead, its cannon trained. The commander's hatch on one of the M1A4s opened and a man's head and shoulders appeared. He spoke into a boom microphone on his helmet and his amplified voice boomed from speakers on the tank: "There's no escape!" The crab's erstwhile crewman looked at the woman; then they both turned back to their opponents, tense, unwilling to give up despite the hopelessness of the situation. The lead tank's commander smiled and adjusted his cupola machinegun. He was under no orders to take these two alive, and he could always find out who they were later on. It had been too long since he'd had the chance to shoot at live targets. The mingled roar and shriek of a fusion turbine interrupted his train of thought, and to his infinite astonishment, a sleek gray sports car suddenly dove through the gap between his tank and the next one over, then slewed to a halt with its passenger side presented to the crab-tank's crew, passenger door popping open. "Come with me if you want to live!" Gryphon shouted to the two jumpsuited figures. The woman hesistated, then was shoved by the man toward the door. "GO!" said the man; the woman piled into the back. The man was almost there when the lead tank's commander raked the car's driver's side, facing him, with machinegun fire. The bullets failed to scratch the car, but two or three passed over the low-slung vehicle and struck the man, who went down with a strangled cry. "Kou!" the woman shouted; Kou's helmeted head looked up at her shout, and he feebly waved a hand. The woman tried to climb back out and help him aboard as another burst of fire, this from one of the other tanks with a slightly better angle, spattered the ground near the fallen man. He waved her back furiously, the anger putting some strength back into his limbs. "Go!" Kou repeated, his voice strained. He flipped his visor up, revealing dark, almond-shaped eyes full of pain and frustration, and locked them on Gryphon's face. "I'll have to trust you - GO!" The last word trailed off into a kind of gurgling rasp as the tank's commander put a bullet through the back of his helmet; he collapsed face-down, a puddle of crimson liquid slowly spreading beneath his head. /* The Propellerheads "Spybreak!" _Decksandrumsandrockandroll_ */ Gryphon had seen enough to know the man was dead. His mouth set in a grim line, he keyed the passenger door shut and stepped on the throttle, setting the concrete screaming with the bite of the Camaro's plasteel tires as he gathered speed, shot the gap between two other tanks, and aimed the car for the street outside the plaza. In the rearview mirror, he saw the tanks breaking formation and turning to pursue - a hopeless task, but he admired them for trying - and the boomers kicking into hover-flight mode, which had a better chance. No doubt the Hailstorm was tracking him, too, and that was the biggest threat he had to contend with. He glanced over his shoulder at the woman in the back seat. She was sitting rock-still, her hands trembling, either with shock, fear, or rage; Gryphon couldn't be sure, because her face was invisible behind her helmet's mask. "Hang on back there," said Gryphon. "We're not out of this yet." "Who are you?" the woman asked in a tightly controlled voice. "Later," said Gryphon through his teeth, slinging the Interceptor to the right around the exit to the plaza and down the street. He consulted the rearview mirror and the center-VDU map in quick succession, then tabbed the keys that would switch the map into the HUD projected into his field of view by his mirrorshades. Cannon fire stitched the street next to the Camaro; Gryphon eased it a little to the right as the chopper's gunner tried to correct his aim, then dove down the next side street. A missile failed to correct for the turn and blew away the green depository mailbox on the corner. "Tsk," said Gryphon. "That's a federal crime." He took the next left, crossed over three blocks, and turned right. The Interstate ought to be around here someplace. He scowled. He was doing a hundred miles an hour easily, with two boomers and a Soviet combat helicopter on his tail, and was there a a single cop in sight? Of course not. One would think this kind of thing happened all the time in Bangor. On the other hand, he mused, what cop in his right mind would want to get involved in any situation involving a Soviet combat helicopter? A weapons-fire warning howled in his ear. He gritted his teeth and flung the car to the left. There was no cover here; the street was completely exposed. No place to turn off, either. Gryphon had realized that he'd be vulnerable if he took this course, but it was the fastest way to the Interstate, so he'd taken the chance. He put the accelerator to the floor, waited a half-second for the missile, and juked to the right. The missile slammed into the asphalt just to the left of and behind the car's left rear corner. The shockwave threw the car into the air. Gryphon cursed, his passenger made a noise of sudden shock, and the car tumbled side over side and end over end in a complex motion, hurling Gryphon against his straps and bouncing his passenger around painfully in the back. Then it was all over, and the car was somehow on its wheels. Gryphon didn't argue; he just put the throttle down, swung the car through a bootleg turn and made for the highway, wondering how damn many missiles that chopper had. The car's handling felt a little funny; the computer was reporting a broken strut in the right front. He ground his molars and kept driving. Ahead, the gray line of the elevated Interstate appeared. A ramp approached on the right, then vanished behind as Gryphon completely ignored it. Instead, he continued for another block, using the breathing room he'd gained by making the chopper dodge I-95 to make it another block. A block and a half up was the similarly elevated deck of the Bangor Mass Transit monorail, which ran through the center of the city, roughly paralleling I-95. The space underneath the tracks was paved and kept clear to provide space for maintenance equipment and a quick route for emergency vehicles in case of accidents on the trains; with the obvious exceptions of the spots where the train line's course crossed surface streets, travel there was illegal. Gryphon threw the Camaro into a slide to the right, corrected its course with a nudge of the throttle, and dove off the street into the maintenance lane. A blinking red warning appeared in the corner of the navigation screen, alerting him to the illegality of his course. The main reason travel on the BMT maintenanceway was illegal was its narrowness: it averaged slightly less than a regulation traffic lane wide. The concrete pillars holding up the monorail tracks whipped past on either side of the Interceptor at an alarming clip as Gryphon drove the needle of the speedometer up into the yellow zone, his face a mask of concentration. The lateness of the hour - it seemed Bangor, even with two and a quarter million people, still rolled up its sidewalks pretty early - kept traffic on the cross streets low, but he had to stay alert; it wouldn't do to T-bone some hapless citizen at 150 miles an hour. He wasn't sure this was a good idea. On the one hand, the monorail deck above and the regularity of the pillars would keep the chopper off their backs. On the other, he wasn't sure where this thing came out, and being wedged in between the two rows of pillars gave him very little room to maneuver when it came down to it. "You'd better get strapped in," he said out of the side of his mouth to his passenger. "And keep that helmet on, you might need it. Who the fuck are you, anyway? No, forget it, save that. I should learn not to ask questions when I'm busy." The woman climbed into the front, belted herself in, and made no reply. Her fists were clenched, but other than that, she was taking the crisis with admirable calm. Gryphon suspected he might like her for that, if nothing else offered itself. Something flickered in the rearview mirror, and Gryphon snarled at it. He'd hoped that he'd lost the boomers by now, but there they were, and just as he'd feared, he'd locked himself into a perfect line of fire for them. He hit the smoke generators. The boomers had more than just optical sensors, of course, but the cool, thick mist was good at confusing IR too, and it would at least make an attempt at interfering with the beams of their energy weapons. The car twitched and an alarm screamed as a particle beam licked at the aft armor, blowing out the right taillight and a chunk of the fender. Another beam flashed overhead and blasted a piece off one of the support pillars. A third slashed across the back window, not penetrating it, but carving out an ugly burn scar. Up ahead, Gryphon could dimly make out a line of flickering blue lights; the police had finally decided to get in on the action, and had set up a roadblock across the BMT maintenance lane. Gryphon made a quick guess as to how many cross streets away they were, watched three intersections tick past, tried not to notice as another particle blast splashed against the rear window and shattered the thin, overtaxed klaster panel into hundreds of glittering hot fragments. All it would take now was one lucky blast through the inside of the car and his head could be vaporized right on his shoulders, or his passenger's head, or both of them if the luck went -exactly- wrong. He snarled again, touched the brakes, and hurled the car between two of the pillars to the left. The broken right front suspension betrayed him, making that wheel grab unpredictably and pull the nose of the car a bit further than he'd wanted it to come; the right rear fender banged against a pillar, sending a wrenching impact through the car and making something catch in the left rear suspension. Down to two powered wheels on opposite corners of the car, Gryphon kept his teeth gritted and his foot down, willing the car to make the three-block dash back to the Interstate, knowing that he was presenting his broadside to his pursuers for all the time it would take them to get there. For a moment, he almost thought they were going to make it. Then a missile plunged into the right rear of the car, just behind the wheelwell. The skin of the Interceptor was half-inch Valiant Lamellor Mark IV composite plating, very sturdy stuff for its weight: it could stop a 105mm discarding-sabot penetrator. The armor on the right rear was already compromised, though, having been penetrated and deformed by an oblique energy-weapon hit. It did its best against the anti-armor missile's AP-tipped high-explosive warhead, but its best wasn't good enough. The impact jarred the car to the left, wrenching it hopelessly out of its driver's control as the right rear suspension fragmented, the wheel flew off, and the damaged drivetrain to the left side was shattered. The rear of the car became an inferno. Gryphon yelled an incoherent curse as the burning car skidded across the road, hitting the corner of the Interstate overpass abutment squarely in the middle of the driver's door. It rebounded halfway across the road without losing much speed, glanced off a support in the median, spun, and plowed nose-first into the opposite abutment, only a couple of feet inside the far edge of the underpass. The moment right after a severe crash is usually eerily silent, broken only by the light tinkling of broken glass and plastic falling to the ground and perhaps the gush or hiss of spilled fluids. This aftermath was still pretty noisy; the impact of the crash had cut in a safety system that automatically shut down the car's fusion turbine, but several of the alarms that had come on in the last few seconds kept screaming, and the fire was burning merrily with a sound like a blowtorch. Gryphon was only out for a fraction of a second, if that; the crash-protection systems of the Interceptor had again done their job. He got his bearings quickly, reaching for the door handle. It was a futile effort; the door was bent and hopelessly jammed. Growling, he punched a pair of adjacent keys on the dash; the roof panels above his seat and the passenger seat blew off with a dull crump. He thumbed open the buckle of his harness and turned to his passenger. She was slumped limply in her seat. He made a quick inventory and found a flat spot on the right side of her helmet where it had been thrown against the window. Thinking it fortunate that he'd suggested she keep that helmet on, he parted her harness as well. The growing roaring sound outside told him he only had a few seconds before their pursuers arrived on the scene. Reaching behind his seat, he extracted the small duffel bag, then slung the bag and the unconscious woman over his shoulder and beat it. There was no point trying to get his armor case; it was back in the cargo compartment, entombed by twisted metal and engulfed in flames. The suit itself was probably badly damaged - powered down, it lacked the forcefields that gave the activated suit most of its strength and resilience. Besides, there was no time - he barely cleared the Jersey barrier at the exit to the overpass before the Hailstorm roared over the Interstate, hovered briefly, and set down not far from the Interceptor's burning wreckage. Gryphon arranged his unconscious passenger out of sight, then crept to the barrier and peered over it. The Hailstorm was parked on the street, rotors clutched out but turbines still running. Its pilot had climbed out and was walking toward the Interceptor, sidearm in hand. The two boomers were also there, approaching the wreck at a quicker pace, unconcerned about the fire. "No one here," he heard one of them say. "Search the area," said the chopper pilot, "they can't have gotten far. And do it quick, the cops will be here any second." Gryphon's thumb pressed a stud on the side of his watch. As he had hoped, the car's engine systems were still in, if not perfect, at least operable condition; the turbine turned over and started without protest. The pilot drew back a half-step, then peered curiously at the car. "What the - ?" he wondered. "Must be a short," one of the boomers observed. Gryphon turned the bezel of his wristwatch first one way, then the other, as if he were dialing a combination safe. After four twists, he felt it vibrate under his hand. The turbine started running faster, then faster still, its whine becoming a banshee wail. The two boomers and the chopper pilot stood there in confusion, then started to edge backward. "Better get out of here," the pilot observed. "It might be getting ready to blow!" Truer words, Gryphon mused to himself, have never been spoken. He ducked back behind the barrier and thumbed the stud again. The Interceptor's fusion turbine self-destructed with a dull WHUMP that shoved the Jersey barrier and the man behind it back a couple of feet and a burst of heat Gryphon felt even from behind cover. The device had been designed to destroy the car so completely that none of its components could teach an investigator anything - no mean task, given the toughness of some of those components. Gryphon heard the crash of the Hailstorm overturning with some small satisfaction. The blast ensured not only that nothing recognizable would remain of the car, but also that whatever remained of the Iron Man suit would be completely destroyed. Deactivated and probably already damaged, it was sure to be vaporized by such a hot explosion. He slung the woman back over his shoulder, picked up the bag, turned his back and walked away from the now-much-larger fire without a backward glance. She had the worst headache she'd ever had in her life. This was the first and, for several minutes, only fact that came to her attention upon regaining some semblance of consciousness. The second was that she seemed to be lying on a couch. She struggled to put her identity back together again. What was she doing on a couch? Wasn't there an operation tonight? They were... yes, they were in Bangor. The GPCC assault was on tonight. Headache or no, she shouldn't be lying around; she should be getting ready, going over the attack plan with... ... Kou... ! She sat up, winced as the sudden movement made her head throb to three times its previous size before settling down again, and looked wildly around. She was in a smallish, pleasantly furnished living room that gave her the impression it was part of a house rather than an apartment. Beige carpet covered the floor. Her helmet sat nearby, discarded carelessly on its side, a large dent showing. The lights were off except for one small lamp on a dark wooden endtable. At the other side of the room, a large dark shape sat in a straight-backed chair next to what looked like a desk, speaking on the telephone. She started to get up, but the shape waved her back, and without really knowing why, she subsided. "In the woods," the shape was saying, in a low, rumbling voice. "Listen, I need a favor. The Paul Morrow ID is dead as far as GPCC are concerned. Be alert - when the flags go up from the investigation, close out everything neatly. I don't want them to smell anything funny about it and keep digging. Odds are they wouldn't get anything, but I want them confident that he was a random local with a hot car and an adventurous streak, and that he's dead." He listened for a moment, then: "No, I'm all right," he said. "I'll continue as myself for the time being, I've still got my primary IDs. Got a few things I need to do. I'll be in touch." Another pause. "I will. See you." He hung up the telephone, turned to her, and said softly, "Hello, Vision." She gasped. "I couldn't remember where I'd seen your mecha before," he said. "My memory must be getting soft. Edison warned me that would happen, but that's not important now. It all came back to me when I took your helmet off." He didn't really seem to be talking to her. She stared hard at him, mind racing. How much did he know? It wasn't unthinkable that he'd recognized her face; she was fairly famous, even if her usual stage makeup did alter her appearance a bit. But who was he? What did he want? She vocalized those two questions, and his silhouetted head cocked thoughtfully. "My friends call me Gryphon," he said. "If you've heard of the MegaTokyo Roadmaster, that's me - or it was until I lost my car." He sighed sadly, as if at the loss of a friend. "As for what I want, I've been wondering about that a lot myself lately. For now, I want to stay alive, and keep you alive, if I can." She got to her feet and winced as the pain in her head spiked again. "My head is killing me," she observed. "You don't have a concussion," he replied. "How do you know?" "I'm a doctor." He got to his feet, and a slash of streetlight coming in through the blinds lit up his eyes. They were blue and tired-looking, and Vision thought they were kind in a way. "Whose house is this?" she asked. "I don't know," he replied. He rubbed at the bridge of his nose and then put on a pair of wire-framed, octagonal eyeglasses. "Come on," he said, picking up the duffel bag sitting next to the chair he'd been in. "We're not out of this yet." They left the small house by a side window, crossed a couple of darkened yards and emerged onto a quiet residential street. The sidewalks were fairly well-lit, giving Vision a better look at her companion. He was a somewhat short man, thickset but with a quick and easy gait that surprised her. He wore black work boots, too-long jeans with the cuffs rolled up, and a dark trenchcoat that obscured whatever else he might be wearing. His hands were shoved deep into his trouser pockets, the slouching stance making him seem shorter still, and the duffel bag on his shoulder strap bumped against his leg with each stride. His face was round and pleasant, but set in a scowl that detracted from it, and it had been more presentable; he hadn't shaved in a couple of days and his blue eyes were starting to develop dark rings. He had long, straight brown hair that was tied into a ponytail; it swished back and forth across his broad back as he walked. Vision, her head still spinning (and pounding), wondered if he were angry at her. In fact, he wasn't - he often scowled when deep in thought, and right now he was trying to figure out what to do next. They emerged from the residential neighborhood onto Stillwater Avenue, and Gryphon absently turned north. A few blocks later, the Interstate appeared in the distance, and just before it glowed the sign of the Nite Owl convenience store. They went into the store; he bought a couple of sodas and some extra-strength Tylenol. They must, Gryphon reflected, have made a strange couple - the scruffy, rumpled man in the trenchcoat and the gorgeous, exotic woman who looked like she'd been in a motorcycle accident - but the night manager didn't bat an eye. A bit further down the street, they sat on the ground behind the roadside barrier by the highway overpass so as not to be spotted by passing cops, took some Tylenol, drank their sodas, and felt sorry for themselves. "I'm sorry about your friend," Gryphon observed after a few quiet minutes. She gazed morosely at the top of her can. "He always said he would die to protect me," she said in a small voice. Gryphon nodded. Vision seemed like she might be about to cry. He drained his can, crumpled it in his hand and tossed it away, then got up and dusted off his pants. "Come on. We have to get out of town." By the time they reached their destination, twenty minutes further down Stillwater Avenue, Vision was starting to become unsteady on her feet from fatigue. Gryphon had been lost in his musings the entire time. The only sounds were the scrapes of their shoes on the pavement and the occasional swish of a passing car. This quiet denouement to an evening of frantic, disjointed activity had an almost hypnotic effect on the exhausted woman; to keep herself going she'd locked her eyes on Gryphon's broad back and trudged mechanically after him, oblivious to her surroundings. When Gryphon stopped suddenly, she almost walked into him, and in stopping she felt her balance flicker and stumbled against him. "I'm sorry," he said softly, holding her up with one arm. "Only a few more minutes, then you can sleep. I promise." Vision nodded, head down, and held onto his arm. He was like a rock, solid and unmoving under the black coat. She put her forehead against his shoulder for a moment, then steadied herself and stepped away. She looked around, awakened enough by the near-collision to get her bearings again; they were in the courtyard of a small strip mall. He smiled at her, patted her shoulder, and went to a nearby pay phone. There he screwed some small device onto the mouthpiece of the phone, then dialed a long sequence of numbers. "It's me," he said. "How'd you like to do something totally illegal?" "Sounds like fun to me," Nene Romanova replied cheerfully. Inwardly, she was concerned, and had been ever since the last call from him almost an hour before. Gryphon sounded all right, tired but steady, and though she took heart from that, she knew the destruction of his car must have been a terrible blow. Now he was sneaking around a foreign city, a maybe-fugitive with an injured, hunted woman in tow. He still seemed to be in fairly good spirits, though, and far be it from Nene to bring him down. "I'm on Stillwater Avenue in Bangor, near the Bangor Mall," Gryphon's voice came in her headset. "I need transportation." "No problem," said Nene. "Stand by," she told him, cracking her knuckles and getting to work. She pulled his location from the pay phone's transponder, looked up the nearest automobile dealers and rental agencies to his location, and then started compromising their inventory systems looking for something suitable. In five minutes, she grinned. "Gotcha," she murmured, and keyed her mic open again. "About a mile from your location is Bangor Ford on the Hogan Road. Know it?" "I know it," Gryphon replied. "They handle the fleet orders for the City of Bangor. Around the back you'll find a couple dozen official vehicles. The ones on the left, if you're facing away from Hogan Road, are new, not yet in service. The ones on the right are retirees that the dealership hasn't sent out for auction yet. They've been known to sell the less worn ones outright. Take the black and white Crown Victoria, third from the end in the back row on the right. It'll have the number 23 on the roof. I'm flagging it sold and delivered yesterday." Gryphon grinned, though she couldn't see him. "Nene, you're indispensible." "No sweat. You want to reg it to your genuine ID?" "Only one I've got left," he said. "Could be dangerous." He shrugged. "It's a matter of record that I'm from around here and in the area," he said. "There's nothing to connect me to what happened downtown tonight. It's a chance I'll have to take." "OK," said Nene. She turned to a second terminal and busied herself with the slightly more complex process of attacking the Maine Department of Motor Vehicles mainframe. A slightly more complex process, but a much more serious crime: the Maine DMV might have been a minor agency of a minor government, but it was still a government agency. Circumventing the intrusion-detection systems represented the first real challenge Nene had faced in weeks. She knew as she defeated the system that she wouldn't be able to get the grin off her face for hours. "It's all yours," she told Gryphon five minutes later, after squaring things with both databases and covering her tracks. "Can you do anything with the physical security?" he inquired. "I've set the keybox to open for your thumbprint and looped the lot security cameras. Passing human eyes, I can't do anything about." "Well, that's OK," he replied. "Thanks a million. I can't imagine how fugitives who don't have you to count on do it." He sounded so tired that Nene couldn't remain totally upbeat any longer. "Are you really all right?" she asked, letting her concern bleed into her voice. "I'm fine," he said. "Thanks for asking, though. I'll call you when the details shake out. Bye." Nene looked at the disconnect message on her phone's display window and sighed sadly. The thrill of the hack was already tarnishing. She couldn't really enjoy it not knowing whether her friend, so far away, was in over his head. She turned back to her main workstation and started another attack. Six thousand miles away or not, he wouldn't have to fight his battle alone... Gryphon hung up the phone, looked up Stillwater Avenue to the gleaming green and red lights of the traffic signals at the intersection with the Hogan Road, just within sight. Then he turned to look at Vision. She had sat down on the sidewalk at the front of the strip mall and fallen asleep leaning over against one of the steel posts that held up the open-air walkway's roof. He smiled a little to himself, then slung his bag on his shoulder again so that both of his arms would be free to carry her. There was one sticky moment as they approached the bottom of the long hill with the dark, closed bulk of the Bangor Mall on their right; up ahead, a police car drove up to the corner of Stillwater and Hogan and paused at the green light. Gryphon cursed mentally. He could almost feel the cops' eyes on him, wondering what he was carrying, what he was up to. "Go away," he muttered through his teeth, staring at the cruiser, knowing it was about to turn left and drive down to make his life difficult. It turned right and slowly cruised away. "That was close," he muttered to Vision as soon as the police taillights had vanished from his sight. Vision stirred at the sound of his voice and nodded her agreement even though she hadn't really heard him and wouldn't have known what he was talking about if she had. She frowned as she realized that she wasn't standing. "Why are you holding me?" she asked him. "You fell asleep," he replied, striking out for the Hogan Road intersection again. "You're going to fall asleep again in a minute." "No," she replied, stirring a little. "Put me down, this is ridiculous. I can walk the rest of the way." "Nope," he replied calmly. "You're tired and I don't mind carrying you. Go back to sleep." She might have put up a fight - after all, she was a grown woman, and a fairly strong one, and not accustomed to being cradled in the arms of total strangers and conveyed about the streets of darkened, sleeping American cities in such a fashion - but he was warm and his upper arm had a reassuring solidity against her ear where her head rested against it. His manner was so absolutely non-threatening that she had to concentrate in order to summon up any worry at all over his intentions, and while she was pondering that, she went back to sleep. Gryphon smiled privately at her sleeping face and kept walking. The rows of cars behind Bangor Ford were just as Nene had described them, and Gryphon found Retired Unit 23 without difficulty. The keybox hanging on the driver's door opened to his thumb as Nene had promised, and he used the remote control attached to the key to disarm the car's alarm and unlock the doors. He walked around the unit, elbowed the passenger door open, and deposited his sleeping bundle on the passenger seat, taking the time to strap her in before closing the door gently and stepping back to look at the car. He hadn't paid much attention to the cars of this era. Living in the depths of urban Japan, he'd had little to pay attention to other than the innumerable tiny plastic electroboxes used for in-city commuting. Few people in MegaTokyo owned cars that could be called interesting, and even fewer of those were of American manufacture. Besides, even in the US he'd discovered that almost all modern American cars looked alike - boring blobs of aerodynamic paneling. Chrome had died in the early 1980s and apparently never been resurrected, and interesting body shapes had about gone by 1999. The 2030 Ford Crown Victoria wasn't anything too special to look at, but it had a squareness and solidity that appealed to Gryphon. They gave it a certain character that the blobby sleekness of other modern American cars he'd seen had sorely lacked. As police and cabdrivers faced Ford with their immutable need for a car with more strength, interior room, and power than the minimum sizes that could be foisted on the civilian public nowadays, the Crown Vic seemed to have devolved a bit, reacquiring its plain, square-cornered bulk somewhere along the line. The car could be nothing other than what it was, a decommissioned police cruiser. It had the large metal push bars in front, their connection to the car's front frame members hidden behind the chrome teeth of the grille, and the small remote-operated spotlights just forward of the front doors. The distinctive black-and-white paint scheme was a giveaway, too, and on the doors, front fenders, and the rear of the decklid the faded outlines of the Bangor city seal and the car's official lettering was still visible. The roof numbers hadn't been removed, though the light bar had, leaving behind a dirty stripe where it had been mounted. Gryphon tossed his bag into the back seat, slid behind the wheel, adjusted his seat, and got the mirrors situated. The interior was plain and built for durability in black vinyl; the mounting brackets for the police radio still hung below the center of the dash. The barrier between the front and rear seats had been removed. Yes, Gryphon though, this will do nicely. He put the key in the ignition and twisted; the car came to life with a rumble that brought a small grin to Gryphon's lips. It was rare for a car in this day and age to have an internal-combustion engine of any sort, let alone a V8. Apparently the Police Interceptor package meant something in 2030. Gryphon backed out of the line, glad the most suitable car hadn't been blocked into the middle row, and then eased the cruiser out of the lot without lights. He didn't turn those on until they were out, unobserved, onto the Hogan Road. In seconds they were on I-95 heading north. He set the cruise control. He wouldn't need stimulants this evening if he kept himself occupied, so he switched on the radio with the volume down low and found a classical station that was playing a block of eighty-year-old rock songs. /* Frankie and the Teenagers "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?" */ Vision stirred and murmured, but didn't awaken, so he took his hand away from the volume knob. Taking occasional glances at the empty road, he drove almost on autopilot for a few minutes, looking at the pleasant lines of her sleeping face. What a fascinating woman, he thought. Oh, sure, Ben, he told himself irritably. That's just what you need, get hung up on another woman. You're not even over the last one yet, let alone the one before her. Who you've left hanging half a world away. Why don't you at least call her up and break it off? Well, she never said she'd wait for me. Maybe she's gone her own way by now. That's what it's really all about, isn't it? You don't want to be the one to say "this didn't work," so you're going to wait until she does it and absolves you of your failure. Yeah. You're a big, tough man. He shook his head, disgusted with himself all over again, and drove. The Crown Vic was a good, solid car; it held a line well, drove very smoothly, and the seats were comfortable. The engine was the most powerful piston engine still available on the market, and gave the car excellent acceleration for its size. It maintained a steady seventy-five miles per hour in near-silence save for the radio. North of the Bangor-Brewer sprawl, everything looked just about as Gryphon remembered it, though it was admittedly hard to tell for sure in the dark. There were certainly no more megaplexes. He passed Exit 56, for Medway, East Millinocket, and Millinocket, without slowing; the local version of his old hometown held no attractions for him. It was still too civilized for his needs. A bit further north he got off I-95 and onto State Route 11, a winding two-lane stretch that led into the woods of Aroostook County. He took increasing heart in the familiarity of the small towns they passed through along this route; Sherman and Patten were still sleepy little towns, completely shut down and closed up at this hour. Car 23 cruised through them in silence, tackling the hilly country north of Patten with aplomb. The Knowles Corner plow turnaround flashed past. Gryphon kept an eye on the ultrasonic system that was supposed to keep wildlife from wandering into their path; moose strikes were tragically common on this stretch of Route 11 in his memory. Midway between Knowles Corner and the tiny village of Masardis, Gryphon slowed Car 23 and took a left onto an even narrower road, too minor to have even a state route number. He drove through the twisting woods lane for a couple of minutes with a look of mixed anticipation and anxiety growing on his face, but the anxiety faded away as they rounded a turn and were faced by a long, straight stretch of road. Ahead of the car, a pitch-black swell in the horizon indicated they were approaching a hill, the long upgrade marking the town limits of Oxbow Plantation, population (when Gryphon last knew it) sixty-five. Though it was incorporated and had town officers, Oxbow wasn't really a town. It had no shops, no town center, in fact no streets. All the homes and the town's three businesses (two seasonal hunting lodges and a Christmas-wreath shop) were along this road, obviously named the Oxbow Road. There was a post office, a small and homey affair in the front room of the residence of a pleasant woman who was Gryphon's cousin on his mother's side. There were street addresses, but only so the 9-1-1 emergency call system in Ashland, the nearest proper town, could have some way of indicating where calls were coming from. When Gryphon was growing up in his world, his paternal grandparents had lived in Oxbow, his father had grown up there. He loved the place more than any other he could think of. Oxbow was magic, it was healing and regrouping and spiritual resurrection. Even though his grandparents had apparently never been in this world, he held out hope that, after everything else had failed to make sense to him, Oxbow could save him. He drove for another few minutes, up and down the hills, past farms, one of the lodges, stands of trees, and the dirt path leading down to the loop in the Aroostook River from which the town took its name. He passed the white bulk of the non-denominational, seldom-used but well-maintained Oxbow Church on his left. On his right was a dark, wooded place that in daylight would prove to be a tangled stand of spruce trees, their curiously ordered rows among the wildly growing underbrush betraying that they had once been the citizens of an abandoned tree farm. Here, on the left, was the place he sought most of all. It was a three-story, turn-of-the-previous-century house, a large and rambling one with dormers on the third floor, a single-story apartment added to the back, a large dining room added to one side, and a barn-like garage standing next to it. Gryphon pulled into the gravel driveway, got out of the idling Crown Vic, and stood looking up at its familiar dark bulk against the starry, moonless sky. No lights were on, no cars in the driveway. In the patch of grass between the front porch and the road, he could see the familiar shape of a real-estate sign. Gryphon went up to the sign and illuminated it with his penlight. That was what it was, all right; For Sale, by a real estate agent in Ashland. He smiled as a thought came to him, switched off the light, put it away, and sat down on the steps for a few minutes. For a man who had had such a bad night, he mused to himself, he was sure doing a lot of smiling. The notion made him do it again. Then he got up, walked back to the Ford and drove another twenty miles north to Ashland. Dawn was pinkening the eastern sky as he checked into Chris's Motel. With a room key in his pocket, he drove the car around to the room, carried the sleeping Vision inside, went back for his armor case and then chained and bolted the door. He surveyed Vision, stretched out on one of the twin beds, for a moment, then decided that he couldn't leave her for hours in that dirty, constrictive jumpsuit. Fortunately, he was dead tired himself, so it was with clinical detachment that he stripped her out of it and got her installed between the covers of her bed. Then, after double-checking the locks and the 'do not disturb' sign one more time, he got out of his own clothes and fell gratefully into bed. Gryphon rose at two in the afternoon. Vision, he found, was still out cold, which was fine; she'd had a busy night. He showered, shaved, and put on his single change of clothes. Then he walked down Main Street to the modest center of Ashland and sought out the office of the realtor whose sign he had seen in front of the big, vacant house in Oxbow. He didn't recognize the name "Maurice Tierney" or the balding middle-aged man who introduced himself by that name, but that didn't mean anything; his knowledge of the people and habits of Ashland had never been as encyclopedic as his grandparents' had been. Gryphon thought that the name sounded vaguely like the sort of name whose owner was always running for selectman, or state senator, or possibly governor in particularly ambitious years. He liked the man's smile and the way he shook hands, though. Without much in the way of preamble, Gryphon asked Maurice Tierney what the asking price for the Oxbow Lodge was. Tierney gave him a number that sounded reasonably fair for a huge old house in an out-of-the-way place with some business potential. "Done," said Gryphon. "Will an electronic funds transfer be acceptable, or should I call my bank to have a certified check expressed?" "Wh - done?" said Maurice Tierney. "Just like that?" "Just like that, Mr. Tierney," Gryphon replied with a smile. Tierney grinned. "Anybody who buys a house that big without haggling at all gets to call me 'Mo'," he said. "'Mo'?" Gryphon replied, cocking an eyebrow. "Forgive my saying, but you don't look like a Mo." Tierney's grin widened. "Didn't hit like him, either. My parents named me for Mo Vaughn." Gryphon grinned back. When he got back to the motel, he did a careless thing. Coming in without looking around, he turned to lock and chain the door again, and only then did he turn to look into the room. Vision wasn't in his field of view. Something moved in the corner of his peripheral vision. Gryphon reacted without thinking. He dropped the shopping bag in his hand, took a jumping step to his right and pivoted as his left hand dove under his trenchcoat and yanked his Browning Hi-Power automatic from its place under his right arm. He straight-armed the gun toward the movement before his eyes had time to properly focus on it. It was Vision, tousled and angry-looking, a Colt .32 automatic in her hand. Gryphon's jump placed them about the door's width apart on either side of the door, their outstretched arms crossing at the wrists. Her jumpsuit was still draped over the back of the room's one straight-backed chair, so she was wearing very little, but he couldn't spare himself the time or attention to really take in the appealing vista before him. The gun held most of his attention, and the angry brown eyes that looked over its sights at his. "Take it easy," he said softly. "I'm not your enemy." "Who the hell are you, then?" she demanded. "I want answers. Don't think I don't know how to use this." Gryphon nodded. "I don't." The .32 was his; she must have dug it out of his duffel bag. It had been careless of him to leave it behind, but he hadn't expected her to awaken before he returned, or to be this suspicious of him. She'd seemed to accept his harmlessness toward her last night; but that might have just been exhaustion and shock dulling her wits and making her trust, childlike, in anyone with warm hands and a calm voice. He kicked himself for not anticipating a reaction like this after a full night's sleep and some time to consider the previous day's events. "Then tell me what I want to know," Vision said to him. He nodded again. "I'll answer any question you ask. Will you put the gun down, please?" "You first," she said. Carefully, he let the Browning's hammer down with his thumb; then he crouched and laid the weapon on the floor. Straightening, he held out his empty hands in front of him, not in surrender, but simply showing her that he had disarmed himself. "Now?" he asked, keeping his tone gentle. She stared hard at him for a couple of seconds, then bent and put the .32 on the floor. He went to the chair, took her jumpsuit off it and tossed it to her, spun the chair on its legs and sat down backward on it with his arms folded across the top. She looked at the jumpsuit for a moment as if she'd never seen it before, then threw it away and sat on the edge of the bed near the door, where he'd slept that morning. The arrangement put her between him and both guns, but he didn't mind that; it was why he'd sat where he had. Gryphon spread his hands. "Ask," he said. "Who are you?" "My name is Ben Hutchins," he told her. "Your real name?" "The one I was born with," he said. "My friends call me Gryphon." "You said you were the MegaTokyo Roadmaster." "I was. I'm not any more. My partner was killed last night." She looked puzzled, realized he was talking about the car, and said angrily, "So was mine, and he was a friend." He nodded solemnly. "I know. I meant no disrespect. In its way, my car was a friend too." "How did you know who I am?" she asked. "You wouldn't believe me." "Tell me. You said you'd answer any question." "All right, fine. I'm from a parallel dimension where you and several other notable people of this world are fictional characters. I've seen the video series you're all in. This world is its setting. I came here through a transfictional rift caused by a multiversal crisis." She gaped at him. "I told you you wouldn't believe me," he said mildly. "You're right," she said when she found her voice. Her eyes had a look of mild unease mixed in with the anger and suspicion now. Before, she had suspected him of being a mercenary or criminal of some kind; now she was beginning to wonder if he might be a nut. "It's the truth. If I still had my car, I'd show you what was under the hood, but... " He shrugged, then looked thoughtful. "It's funny, but I had a hard time remembering. I knew I'd seen your mecha before, but I couldn't think where. It didn't come together for me until I got your helmet off and saw your face, and even then I could only remember your stage name. Can I ask -you- a question?" She looked a challenge at him. "Go ahead. I won't promise to answer it." "How's your head?" She looked aback at the question, having been expecting something more personal. She blinked, then shook her head. "I'm fine." "Well, I'm hungry," Gryphon replied, reaching behind him to pluck the telephone off the desk next to the TV. "The last time I was in town, there was a decent pizza place back on the corner." Vision began edging toward the door and the weapons that still lay on the floor on either side of it. "Are you going to tell me how you knew me, or not?" "I already did," he replied, unconcerned. "You don't want to believe me, that's your problem." "How can you -expect- me to believe you?" she demanded. "Well, first of all, Sam Waterston sends the spy guy in the Piper Cub over to Russia, to the restaurant with the bad service - oh, sit down, for Pete's sake!" he barked as she got up and started heading for the .32. She froze in her tracks at the crack of his voice and turned to look at him. He pointed at the bed. "Sit," he declared. She sat. "Look," he said. "If you're not prepared to believe it, then I -can't- convince you. It's not exactly something I can prove. Anyway, if I meant you harm, I'd have harmed you by now." "Give me the phone," Vision said. "I have to call some friends." "You mean your buddies in the Hou Bang? No way. We can't trust them." She paused, narrowing her eyes at you. "You think you know everything, don't you?" "Did you think they just -guessed- you were going to show up last night?" he wondered. "Or maybe GPCC just sends boomers dressed like executives walking out of the building in the middle of the night every night, and has tanks and helicopters stationed in the area just for laughs." He shook his head. "Nope. They knew you were coming, and they knew you were coming -last night-. Somebody in your confidence set you up. Until we get this straightened out, we can't trust any of them." "But I can trust you?" She sounded skeptical. "Right now I'm all you've got," Gryphon said. He got up, walked around her, picked up the guns, and put the Browning away. Vision watched him do it, but didn't try to stop him. She wasn't sure why not. Gryphon checked the .32, set the safety, and surprised Vision immensely by handing it back to her butt-first. "You might need this," he said. "These are dangerous people we're up against." She took the gun, looked at it thoughtfully, and then turned her eyes up to Gryphon as if she had no idea what to make of him. He smiled at her and then turned to the door. "What size clothes do you wear? You need something more presentable than that," he said, cocking a thumb at the jumpsuit crumpled in the corner. She gave him that puzzled look for a few more seconds, then told him. "I bought you a toothbrush and the like." He indicated the shopping bag he'd dropped by the door. "Wash up if you want to. Don't call your friends while I'm gone," he said. "It could get us both killed." Then he left. She looked at the gun in her hand, then the telephone, and then the door where he had gone. "What a strange man," she observed softly to herself. He came back two hours later with a large shopping bag, then went back to the car for another. One more trip produced a set of decent luggage. He tossed one of the suitcases and two of the bags onto the bed Vision had slept in. "Make any calls?" he inquired as he began taking clothes from the shopping bag he'd retained. "No," she replied, regarding the bags he'd tossed onto her bed. "Good," he said. He started removing tags from the new articles of clothing, refolding them, and packing them into the suitcase he had kept. "I hope you don't mind the sorts of things I got you. I'm not much on women's fashions, so I tried to err toward plain." "That's fine," she said abstractedly. "What do you expect to do next?" "Pack the car," he said, not looking up from his work inside the suitcase. "Get some dinner. Go open up my new house. Plot our next move." "'Our'?" He shut the suitcase and regarded her with exasperation over the top of it. "OK, look. You and I are up against basically the same thing. I thought we could try and work together on it, two heads being better than one and all that. You don't want to do that, fine, I'm not holding you prisoner here. Take your stuff and go do what you want. You can keep the .32. Mail it back to me if your pals don't kill you when they see you." She scowled at him. "Fine," she said. She picked out fresh clothes and underwear, then went into the bathroom. Gryphon kept packing, listening with half an ear as the water ran for some time. When she came out, she had put on a pair of jeans and a gray sweatshirt. The .32 was out of sight; Gryphon supposed she had stuck it in the back of her waistband. She stuffed the tank top and underpants she'd been wearing into her suitcase, then put on the sneakers he'd bought for her and went to the door. As she reached for the knob, he said, "You know what your problem is?" She stopped, turned, and said in a tone of cold anger, "What?" "Your rage is unfocused," he told her, zipping up his suitcase and garment bag. "I can understand why you want to hurt GENOM for what they did to your sister, but killing researchers and executives won't accomplish anything. They can be replaced. It's the -company- you've got to hurt." "Is that so." "That's so," he said, turning and sitting down on the bed's edge. "Say you go back to the Hou Bang and I'm wrong, nobody there set you up, it was just dumb luck for GPCC that they nailed you last night. Say they don't get anything out of the wreckage of that crab-thingy. Will you just dust off the emergency backup crab and go raid another corporate office? It won't get you anything. They're onto that tactic, and I don't care how much money the Chang Group has, the corps've got more firepower than you do. Eventually they'll either kill you in combat or figure out who you are and assassinate you." "You think you know so much," she snarled. "Well, I didn't ask you to save me! What you did last night doesn't give you a license to preach to me! You can't understand what I'm trying to accomplish." "Sure I can," he replied. "You're a spoiled little brat lashing out. You seem like a smart girl. If you stopped and thought about it for a moment, you'd realize that there are a lot better ways to get your revenge than beating your fists against a brick wall." He stood up and spread his empty hands. "I'm offering you a chance to make a -real- difference." She glared at him in cold fury, turned on her heel and put her hand on the doorknob. Gryphon felt her slipping away from him and knew he had only one more card to play. Fortunately, it was his best one. "I knew Irene," Gryphon said. She froze, then whirled again. "What?" "I knew Irene," Gryphon repeated. "Did she ever tell you about a friend of hers called Linna, Linna Yamazaki?" Vision nodded. "What about her?" "She... used to be my girlfriend," Gryphon said. "We went to dinner with Irene a few times. She was a nice girl. It tore us all up when she was killed. We tried to help her, but, well... There's no way to dress it up. We blew it." Vision stared at him, uncertain whether to believe this, the latest in a series of fantastic stories to come out of the mouth of this strange man. Then she realized that she knew him. He had been in one of the pictures of a party Irene had sent in her last letter - the bulky fellow with the ponytail at the very edge of one frame, next to the dark-haired girl named Linna. She hadn't realized it was him when she saw him for real; the situation was too unexpected, and she hadn't seen him as he had been in the photo, laughing and happy. "Who are you?" she whispered again. He grinned at her. "A strange visitor from another world," he replied. He held out his hand to her. She looked at his eyes for a few seconds, at his hand for a few more, and then took it in her own. Over the next week, Vision watched as Gryphon slipped happily out of grim intensity and into a handyman persona. He opened up the old house, fixed what needed fixing (which was surprisingly little given that the place had been shut up for five years), updated some of the facilities equipment, had utilities and telecom services reconnected, then fitted out the Lodge with elaborate, mostly concealed security measures, monitoring systems and entry-prevention equipment. He bought a second-hand pickup truck from an ad in the County edition of the Bangor Daily News and they went on trips to Ashland and Presque Isle for furniture and supplies. The apartment attached to the rear of the kitchen area had presumably been added for some previous lodgekeeper to live in, so that the big Lodge could be shut up for winter to save on fuel costs. Gryphon didn't give a damn about fuel costs, so he set up his living quarters on the ground floor and part of the second floor, cleaning and dusting the furniture in the front rooms and moving the guest beds out of the second-floor left front bedroom (Room #3) to make way for a big old brass bed he found on a sweep of Presque Isle's Salvation Army thrift store. Vision, given her choice of the remaining rooms, selected the one behind his, #2, separated by his room and the second-floor porch from the road. For the first day or so, Vision just watched him work, puzzled and a little annoyed that he would choose this moment to buy and refurbish an old house in the woods. After all his big talk about helping her make a difference against the corporations, he'd gone and turned handyman on her, what the hell was that about? Still, she was neither lazy nor ungrateful for the help he had given her, whatever her doubts about his character or sanity. By day three she was pitching in. Between them, they washed all the floors and walls; aired the linens for the lodge's numerous beds; checked the seals and locks on all the windows and doors; fixed a couple of minor problems with the oil furnace in the basement; built some sturdy bookshelves for the study; installed a pair of chest freezers in the pantry and stocked them; checked the roof for leaks and, happily, found none; and performed a thousand other minor repairs and maintenance tasks. As she first watched, then helped Gryphon with the mundane but rewarding task of refitting the old house for service, Vision found her skepticism about him fading. She wasn't sure she believed that he was a visitor from another dimension, but as the week passed she was at least beginning to believe that he didn't mean her harm. It seemed absurd that a rival syndicate or megacorp would go to so much trouble to lull her into a sense of security when they possessed the firepower and strength of numbers to simply take her. The idea had occurred to her that he might be some kind of nut, like the deranged fans she had sometimes had to deal with during her singing career. His behavior wasn't consistent with it, though. He was friendly and polite, but he didn't pay slavish attention to her or impose himself upon her when she sought time alone. He seemed pleased that she'd stayed on with him, but wasn't making a big deal of it. And she certainly wasn't a prisoner; she had a key to the house and to the pickup, and on the first day she'd gone to the makeshift shooting range some previous owner of the lodge had built in the backyard and determined that the .32 did indeed work. Just as her opinion of Gryphon had changed, he himself had changed since they arrived at the lodge. The night of the incident in Bangor, he'd been tense and restless, tight-lipped and angry, and no wonder - he'd been thrown into a situation he had only a partial understanding of, and his car had been destroyed into the bargain. Later that night, though, on the long walk to wherever he'd got that retired police car, she'd seen a different side of him. He'd shown something almost like tenderness toward her when she'd been overcome by exhaustion and he'd had to carry her. His touch had been gentle and entirely chaste. Working on the lodge - just being -at- the lodge - brought something like that side of him out again, calmed him and made him more cheerful and more serene at the same time. His love for the place and joy in having it and working on it were apparent. Vision, who appreciated peace and beauty in things herself, found it his most sympathetic trait. Later, when she thought about it, she would trace her warming to him back to her realization that he genuinely loved the old house and the remote patch of Maine it was located in. On Thursday, May 12, nine days after Vision's abortive attack on the GPCC building in Bangor, she rose at nine in the morning, yawned, stretched, and looked around the bedroom. She'd been in it long enough now that it was familiar to her on awakening, its dark-stained pine paneling, square-beamed bedframe and plain wooden bureau friendly sights. The mortice lock on the old-fashioned door worked, but she'd stopped locking it after the third day; the key was sitting on top of the bureau. Gryphon had never disturbed her at night, and by day four she'd stopped expecting that he might try. She put on the fuzzy blue bathrobe she'd bought in Presque Isle, slipped her feet into her slippers and went to the second floor's communal bathroom at the back of the house. The room was warm and the window and mirror still faintly steamed over; Gryphon had already risen, then. Half an hour later, she arrived in the kitchen. No one was there, but there were several rashers of bacon and a couple of waffles sitting on the griddle, which was set to 'warm'. A plate, fork, knife and glass were in the drying rack next to the sink. Life in the Oxbow Lodge had already developed a certain domestic rhythm. Vision smiled to herself as she got a glass of milk and sat down to eat her breakfast. After washing up her dishes and putting them in the drying rack next to Gryphon's, she went looking for him. He was in the large room off the back of the kitchen which had been a three-room apartment until he'd removed the partitions. Vision hadn't been sure what he was converting it to, and hadn't asked; now, as she entered it through the short hallway from the kitchen, she had her answer. Gryphon was standing in the middle of the room wearing a pair of loose-fitting gray sweatpants (spattered with white paint from some touch-up work on the kitchen walls) and a gray t-shirt emblazoned with the F3600 Anti-Gravity Racing League's logo. He was barefoot and had a sweatband keeping his hair out of his face where it escaped from his ponytail. He didn't see Vision enter because he was too busy kicking the hell out of somebody who wasn't there. She folded her arms and watched him, trying to identify the martial art he was using. It looked a bit like kung fu, but the movements were more fluid, less percussive than she'd been taught. Maybe it was Japanese kempo; she'd heard that was related to kung fu, but had evolved away from it. He was, she considered, remarkably graceful considering his stocky build. He wasn't in perfect shape, either; he carried some extra weight, mostly around the middle, but it didn't seem to slow him down. There was hard muscle under that layer of padding - there had to be, because even with that padding, he was fast and sure. He spun through a punch combination, turned, and saw her there watching him. He seemed slightly taken aback. It was hard to tell, since his face was already a bit flushed with the exertion, but it could have been that he even blushed a little bit. He finished the turn, drew himself up, and bowed to her. "Good morning, Vision," he said. She smiled a little wryly. He hadn't called her by her real name once, though he certainly knew it. It was as if he thought that using her real name would be presumptuous. If the multitude of fans of Vision, the international rock star, could see her now, she doubted they would recognize her. She'd learned from experience that, without her flamboyant stage dress, carefully applied makeup, and the green stripe in her hair, people generally didn't recognize her. Today, in already-fading jeans and a man's button-front flannel shirt with the tails knotted across her midriff, with her hair in a kerchief, she suspected the members of her own -band- wouldn't recognize her. She returned his bow. "What form was that?" she wondered. "Shaolin kung fu," he replied, mopping at his face with a towel. She frowned thoughtfully. "Really? It didn't look like the kung fu I studied." "You've studied kung fu?" he asked. Vision nodded. "My grandfather thought it was necessary that I learn to defend myself. He said I wouldn't always be able to rely on Kou." A shadow passed over her features. "I guess he was right." Gryphon nodded. "Kept up with it?" he asked. "Off and on. I've been very busy lately." He grinned. "I know the feeling. I've actually been trying to deny my training... part of a little identity problem I've been having lately. See, I learned it in a time-dilation construct." Vision blinked. "A pocket dimension where time flows faster inside than out in the real world," he elaborated. "I spent five years training with a Shaolin master named Caine, and when I came back out my subjective age reset itself to conform to the outside timestream, where only five minutes had gone by. The end result is that I have all the skills, and I can call up individual memories of any incident that happened during my time there, but the experience as a whole doesn't seem to have taken more than five minutes." He shook his head. "It's very confusing if you think about it too much." "I can imagine," said Vision wryly. "For a while I thought that the best way to get my head around it would be just to ignore it, not use the skills, and try to forget it ever happened, but this morning I woke up and realized that was stupid. I -enjoy- kung fu. I'm proud that I was able to learn as much of it as I did. Why should I toss that up just because the way in which I learned it makes me feel a little strange? So I came down early and started dusting off my technique." He struck a stance. "Care to spar a bit?" "No thanks," she said, reflecting that if it was a come-on, it was at least a fairly original one. "I'm not really dressed for it." "You're supposed to be ready to defend yourself no matter what you're wearing," he said, and another shadow flickered across her face as his manner reminded her of Kou; then he broke the illusion by grinning and continuing cheerfully, "But hey, it's not like I'm your keeper." He released his hair from the ponytail, went into the bathroom adjoining the apartment, and sluiced water over his head from the tub faucet, then scrubbed at it with the towel. "I'm glad to see you're dressed for work, though," he said, raking a comb through his wet hair before refastening it into its ponytail. "Today we tackle the barn." The man door on the side of the barn creaked a bit as he swung it open and stepped inside its familiarly musty confines with Vision on his heels. He reached to the side of the door and flipped the light switch, wondering if the bulbs still worked after five or more years of dormancy. Many of those in the Lodge hadn't. Several failed, but several also survived, casting enough light to get around by. The garage was as dusty as the house had been. A workbench stood along one wall with a few dirty, slightly rusty tools sitting on it or hanging on the wall behind it. One of the two bays was empty except for a bit of haphazardly stacked lumber. The other had a rusty table saw, a lawn mower, and a snowblower. The two of them cleaned the garage up as they had the house, sweeping, dusting, scrubbing surfaces, and leaving the tools in a derusting bath overnight. There wasn't much conversation - only comfortable quiet and talk relevant to the work at hand. It was an hour or so before dark when they finished with the ground floor of the barn. They stood in the open door of one of the bays for a couple of minutes, looking across the road at the former tree farm, lost in their own private thoughts; then Gryphon looked at Vision and in doing so caught her eye. "You want to take a look in the loft," he asked, "or the shed next?" Vision considered for a moment, then said, "The shed." Gryphon grinned and led the way to the smaller building, which sat at the edge of the driveway opposite the house, at right angles to the barn. It was too big to be a proper shed and had a solid, swing-up garage door on the driveway side. In Gryphon's "home" reality, it had been his grandfather's fur shed, where the trapping supplies and pelts had been stored. Before that, Gryphon's father had used it as an automotive workshop. Gryphon had to unscrew the hasp of a padlock to get the shed open, which gave him a furtive feeling even though it was his own property he was breaking into. He pushed up the garage door and squinted into the dusty gloom. The shed had only one small window on the opposite wall, and that was so grimy that it wasn't of much use. There were benches along two walls and large wooden shelves on the third, a man door coming in from the side cornering on the garage. The middle of the concrete-floored rectangular room was dominated by a large, bulky shape under a dingy sheet. A hint of gasoline tickled at Gryphon's nose. Gryphon pulled back the sheet carefully, so as not to send up a huge cloud of dust, and then laughed aloud with pleasure at the sight of what was underneath it. Vision cocked her head inquisitively at the automobile he'd uncovered and asked, "What is it?" "Somebody's Sunday-go-to-meeting car, I guess," he replied. "Hasn't been out of here in at least ten years, maybe more." Gryphon walked slowly around the car, taking it in from different angles, smiling to himself. It might not have been the biggest car Vision had ever seen; her family was rich and powerful, and she herself was a successful pop musician, so she'd seen and ridden in a lot of limousines. This car, though, won out in the "aesthetic mass" category - where most of the limos Vision had seen were very large versions of regular cars, this car was huge and looked as if it had never been anything but. Its dull, faded paint had once been pink; its chrome was tarnished and pitted, which was a shame, because there was a lot of it. It sat on the concrete floor of the shed on its rims; the crumbling remains of whitewall tires lay scattered around the wheels. There was a defect eerily resembling a bullet hole in the middle of the windshield, with a spiderweb of cracks radiating out from it and obscuring most of the driver's side. At least one of the side windows was either rolled down or missing altogether. Gryphon went to the driver's door and opened it, releasing a small cloud of dust. Vision stepped up behind him and peered over his shoulder as he bent to look into the car. The interior was in similarly sad shape; though the seats still had their upholstery, it was streaked and grimy. A hole in the dash marked where some enterprising soul had removed the radio. The gauges on the dash were all analog, and two of them were missing their needles. The mechanical odometer showed 78,493 miles. The steering wheel was huge, in scale with the rest of the car, but its spokes and rim were narrower than those on modern cars. "Where's the airbag?" Vision wondered, pointing to the small, round cap in the center of the steering wheel. Gryphon chuckled. "This car was built in 1957," he said. "Decades before airbags. Back then, -seat belts- were an option." Vision frowned. "Are you serious?" Gryphon pointed to the seat. "Kids today," he said to himself. "No regard for history." "I think I'm older than you are." "I was born in 1973," Gryphon told her. "Oh. Right." She stepped back and regarded the decrepit hulk. "Then to you, this car's not so old." "Not quite," Gryphon admitted, stepping back himself. He didn't look at her. He knelt down and tapped at the metal behind the front wheel, his face thoughtful, as he continued as though talking to himself, "Not quite, but old enough. These things were classics where I come from too... and I've always wanted one. Hell, I took my street nick from them," he went on as he moved to the back, knocking gently on the car's body panels below the driver's side door and around the rear wheel. "How's that?" Vision wondered. He looked back over his shoulder and grinned at her. "Look at the decklid." She went around the back of the car, running a hand idly along the top of the tailfin as she did so, took a step back, and saw the chrome letters mounted on the back of the curved decklid: R O A D M A S T E R She laughed. "Oh." Gryphon worked his way around the fin, then got down on his back and slid underneath the back of the car. Vision heard him banging lightly on metal underneath there; then there came a hollow thump and the sound of small particles, like sand or fine gravel, being poured on the floor. "Damn," Gryphon said. He slid out, brushing at the smear of red-orange dust on his chest and down his left side. He rapped on the lower edge of the decklid and the massive rear bumper, then gave a satisfied nod and worked his way up the other side of the car to the front. Vision met him back at the front of the Buick, giving him a hand up off the floor. He dusted off his hands and scratched at the back of his neck as he regarded the old car. "Well, the interior needs work, the wiring's probably shot, and the gas tank's rusted out, probably because it wasn't sealed properly when the car was put away and condensation formed inside it... but the body is as solid as they come, and the frame looks good." He grinned at her. "Be a shame to leave it here to rot." It took them three weeks to restore the Buick to reliable running order, but neither seemed to mind. Resurrecting the Lodge had started Gryphon toward a peace with himself and the world he found himself in, and working on this old car seemed to complete the process. It, like the Oxbow Lodge, drew him back toward his roots, the things he had loved and believed in before he ever came to this world. Vision had never worked on an automobile, but she was a fast learner, and it surprised her that she found the subject as interesting as she did. In the course of her brief career as a terrorist, she'd used mecha much more complex than this old Buick, but she hadn't done the maintenance or repair work; the DG-42 had had with it a whole squadron of engineers, techs and maintenance men who had kept it in top condition. Vision had never had any interest in their work; she was too busy improving her piloting skills and sharpening her tactical and self-defense abilities. There had been too much to do with all of that for her to get involved in anything as mundane as maintenance and repair. Now the situation was different. It had become obvious to her during the house's rehabilitation that working on things was Gryphon's way of thinking things over, and that they weren't going to move on anything until he was satisfied that he'd put everything here in order. She knew him well enough by now to realize that the gears turning in his head as he worked were pondering more than just the piston rings and brake drums. If she had thought about it, she would also have realized that she was thinking of them in the plural in terms of the impending "operation" without even noticing it. He was planning something, and she took it for granted that she would be part of it when it came; and with that, she was content. As for Gryphon, he no longer caught himself wishing that he didn't have the skills he had, or that he could leave this world. He wondered if all that would unravel if he left Aroostook County. Would he have to stay here, in the woods, far away from the dark, dirty urban sprawls and their inevitable corrosion of the human spirit? And would that be so bad? The temptation to run away from it all and spend the rest of his life in Oxbow was strong, but he knew even as he considered it that it wasn't really an option for him. He was too loyal. He felt guilty about abandoning his friends to their lonely quest for as long as he had; making the abandonment permanent would have weighed on him too heavily. No, this was very pleasant, and he had no intention of giving it up completely once this job was over; but he was in Maine right now to do a job, however much the joys of rediscovering Oxbow had obscured his remembrance of that for a while, and after that he would have to go home to Tokyo. Oxbow was still the refuge for his spirit, but Tokyo, he finally concluded, was home. His mind made up, Gryphon spent an evening making a number of very large online orders. Delivery trucks flowed steadily to the Lodge for two weeks thereafter, and then all traffic to the old house ceased. In the basement below what had been the Oxbow Lodge's main dining room for the Sunday afternoon smorgasbords, Gryphon had re-created the Knight Sabers' mechanical fabrication shop. In some cases he'd actually improved over it, installing more modern examples of some of the equipment to be found in the Cave and a couple of devices not to be found there at all. Here he would forge a new weapon to replace Iron Man. It took twelve hours for Nene to upload all the accumulated technical information on the Knight Sabers' hardsuits and their underlying technologies to the new Super Cray via an illegal encrypted satellite downlink channel, and another two for the Super Cray to decrypt and archive for production all the Iron Man data from the Stark Enterprises data module Gryphon always kept near to hand. He spent most of that time asleep, gathering his strength and refining his new vision in dreams. The next day, he arose, showered, put on a clean pair of sweats and a t-shirt, and began to create. What he designed was not entirely new. It was based in appearance and general configuration on the suit of powered armor originally developed by one of his earliest transfictional avatars, a fellow by the name of Don Griffin who lived in an alternate Marvel Super-Heroes universe, of all things. At the beginning of his career as a costumed adventurer, even before he'd discovered his alien heritage and with it the full range of his skills, Don had been inspired by a popular future-combat game to design and build an armored battlesuit for himself. The look he'd chosen for the suit was inspired by one of the battle machines in that game, with which he'd happened to share a name. Battletech's Griffin had stood thirty meters tall and weighed in at 55 tons. Don's original version stood a mere six feet and tipped the scales at a paltry 400 pounds. One of the reasons Don had chosen the Griffin for the model for his armored suit, aside from the pleasing synchrony of names, was the fact that the Griffin was one of the most anthropomorphic of all BattleMechs; it had two hands, properly articulated limbs, and a correctly positioned head. It was one of the few 'Mechs that could be adapted to a battlesuit without changing its visual configuration at all, with the result that only scale would betray the outward differences between the 55-ton GRF-1N medium attack BattleMech and the 400-pound Griffin Mk.1 armored combat suit. A divergent Griffin series had turned up in the Undocumented Features universe as well, -also- transfictionally based on Don Griffin's original designs. The future technology available to the UF version had been beyond what Gryphon himself had to work with here, but then, UF-Gryphon hadn't had access to the accumulated notes and insights of Anthony Stark. After his first transfic jump, Gryphon had tried to build a Griffin suit of his own, but the tech of the only-slightly-altered world he lived in then hadn't allowed for it. Now, he thought he was ready to create his own variation on the theme. For the visual configuration of his version, Gryphon went back to the source, the original line drawing accompanying the entry for the GRF-1N Griffin medium BattleMech in the Battletech 3025 Technical Readout. From there he smoothed its lines only slightly, rearranging a few minor details. Still, its profile made its inspiration readily apparent to any fan of the game even in this newest model. It had the same sturdy-looking metallic solidity, and it was still composed almost exclusively of flat surfaces angled so as to please the eye and help deflect fire. It head was a rounded metal bowl that fit directly onto the shoulder plating without an exposed 'neck'; the front half of the bowl was made of transparent duraplast, tinted so as to be impossible to see through from outside. The tall armored flanges on the suit's shoulders looked like they ought to obstruct peripheral vision, and indeed they would have, had not the suit been fitted with a holographic virtual environment system inside the helmet that 'scrubbed' the flanges from the suit operator's field of vision. Slowly, slowly, the working design underneath the styled armor shell took shape. Gryphon worked at it patiently and methodically, gradually fusing together elements of Stark technology, Sylia's proven methods, Don Griffin's own notes (provided to him on a field trip to Don's home universe with Edison years before), and original innovations that came to him in flash upon flash of inspiration into a coherent whole. It was sometimes frustrating work. Several times he got halfway through the design of some system before realizing it had gone wrong or he had failed to account for something. Often he had to throw the half-completed design out and start again. Occasionally he gave up entirely, turning away in disgust to play "Soul Reaver" on his antique PlayStation for a few hours, then sat bolt upright in the beanbag chair with a gasp, dropping the controller and scrambling to the Super Cray's console. Poor Raziel spent hours stranded on the Spirit Plane, patiently waiting for a chance to resume his mission of spectral vengeance. Vision had learned enough of his moods by this time to realize that it wasn't a good idea to interrupt him in the throes of creation; it rather reminded her of herself when she'd had an idea for a song. She lurked in the background for the better part of four days. What she saw in her occasional glimpses of the screens around him, usually when bringing him something to drink, she didn't understand at all, but that didn't bother her too much. He probably wouldn't have understood her scoring notes for 'Say Yes' either. After the design was mostly completed, the actual construction began, and this too was a trouble-fraught process. Some of the alien technologies which had been difficult to synthesize in his head or the CAD system proved even more recalcitrant in physical practice. Others had to be extensively re-worked, completely re-thought, or scrapped entirely. The final product was a compromise, to be sure; any project as complicated and detailed as a custom-designed powersuit was bound to be. It was a compromise its creator was happy with, though, as he stood over its gleaming length sprawled on a worktable, surrounded by the implements of the modern armorsmith's trade. To Gryphon, it was beautiful, its lines oozing power and strength. He could close his eyes and see every circuit trace, every cable path, from the photonic computer systems to the power delivery core for the suit's finely crafted main gun. With the suit itself completed, Gryphon took three days off, finished "Soul Reaver", started "Soul Reaver II", and made a few minor modifications to the Buick. Then he started the most physically and mentally demanding part of the process: designing, fabricating and calibrating the armor transference matrix. At six feet, two inches and five hundred thirty pounds of solid armor plating and reinforced systemry, the Griffin No.4 Mk.1 Armored Combat Powersuit was much too bulky and heavy to carry around in an attache case like the Iron Man suit, even with the gravity-defying Hermes coils in the shoulder and knee flanges that reduced its practical operating weight to a mere eighty pounds. It would have required a large, wheeled coffin to transport, and took nearly five minutes to put on piece-by-piece. Don Griffin had run into this problem too, when he'd constructed the original version. The answer, which presented itself from Don's skills in the fields of temporal and dimensional engineering, was the ATM, the armor transference matrix. It took Gryphon two weeks of intensive study of Don's notes and reference materials provided on the subject through an improvised satellite link with Don himself to grasp the fine points of ATM technology. Essentially, the matrix had two parts. The slave unit, installed in the suit itself, mapped the suit's physical structure onto a trans-quantum meta-dimensional shunt. This was a dimensionally transcendent space contained within the three-dimensional physical structure of the master unit. When activated by the master unit, the slave unit would project the suit into the MD-space within the master unit, where it would be suspended outside normal time and space until recalled. Gryphon understood this all in an abstract manner. He grasped the principles behind it and could conceptually imagine how they functioned. He had learned and applied similar but much simpler meta-dimensional techniques in several of the suit's other systems, including its faster-than-light photonic computer core, its force-field generation system, and its Hermes coils, but those components were much simpler than an MD unit-pair. Fortunately, with the detailed instructions and diagrams at his disposal, Gryphon didn't have to understand precisely how the device worked to build a working example. Testing it was a bit nervous-making, since an error or malfunction would probably result in something rather like the gratuitous 'transporter accident' scene in "Star Trek: The Motionless Picture"; but all went well, and the end result was that the fully completed powersuit could be carried on a chip secreted inside Gryphon's wristwatch, and summoned in an instant when needed. Satisfied, he strapped on that watch, shut down his workshop, and emerged from the Cave of Creation into the brightly lit outside world again. "Sorry about that," he said to Vision at dinner that night, "I'm afraid I've been a rotten host. The Muse was upon me... " She nodded. "I understand. Now that you're finished, though... what now?" "Well, I've been thinking. How'd you like to steal $750 million worth of illegal equipment from a GENOM subsidiary and put it to a use that will benefit society?" HOPELESSLY LOST WILL RETURN in REDUCED VISIBILITY (hopefully in less than six years this time)