Flightsuit (24 page)

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Authors: Tom Deaderick

BOOK: Flightsuit
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Epilogue

Hack spent the next four days in interrogation.  The rest of his team, save Sowyer, were released after three days.  Hack began to believe that he might not be released at all.  Just about every level above him had sent someone to badger and question him.  They asked the same questions and left with the same answers.  Hack held nothing back.  He took full blame for the relaxed security procedures that enabled Sowyer to steal the artifact.  The fact that his team was directly responsible was, for him, no excuse and he never offered it to anyone else. 

The surprising thing to Hack was that although the interrogators and supervisors spoke as if frustrated, it wasn't hard to pick up that they were more excited than upset.  They'd had the artifact for years and had exhausted every useful avenue the research team had proposed.  Very little new information was left to learn from the artifact. 

By enlisting Taylor, Hack flushed out several new developments. 

They'd collected dozens of Taylor's acquaintances and all his written and computer files.  There was a team assigned to uncover Taylor's involvement and his motivations as well as the incredible transformation he'd made from consultant to government think tank with numerous and diverse patents. 

There was the old man, Ethan Abram, that all witnesses to what they referred to as the "Bumpas Cove Event" claimed had stopped bullets in midair and caused a tree to fall down by pointing at it.  A separate team was assigned
to Abram.  The original carbon-dating results from the tree had already come back and pieces were subsequently sent to three additional labs for corroboration.  They'd isolated miles of forest between the river and the abandoned mines.  Getting adequate surveillance equipment into the region required three days.  Some on the search teams felt this delay had probably allowed Abram and the boy to escape, but given the potential for new information or artifacts in the abandoned houses and mines and decades of secret waste disposal, the government was willing to spend whatever might be required to ensure every possible artifact or lead was discovered.  Local newspapers joked that the government was grooming "Area 52".  The NSA refused to comment, fueling the conspiracy in the same way the FBI had long ago guaranteed no one would forget Roswell, New Mexico.

Abrams was identified by documents found in his cabin.  By all accounts, he was in vigorous health for an eighty-three year old.  Possibly, the man in the clearing had assumed the old man's identity at some point, although this theory had some holes.  Abrams
' bank account held $602,450, from which he drew, on average, between $35 and $60 a month.  Most identity thieves would have cleared out the account long ago and moved on.  Living on such a small amount, even with the meager amenities and expenses they'd discovered at the cabin, would be challenging.  They'd found bags of dog food, but no dog so far. 

But the suit, and its amazing defensive capabilities, was the main attraction.  Inter-Agency leaks filled the Tennessee Mountains with agents from the FBI, CIA, NSA, Homeland Defense, NASA and the Defense Depa
rtment.  The trout-fishing proved, over the following years to be excellent.

Hack was released from interrogation.  The NSA released a cover story that Hack had uncovered a terrorist camp with the captured terrorists safely removed to
Guantanamo Bay.  He was a hero again.  The NSA agreed to let him keep his security staff, with broad orders to track down the suit.  They had a hundred and twenty other agents with the same mission on a larger scale, but didn't see any harm in allowing Hack to pursue it on a smaller parallel track.  It was an inexpensive and easy way to keep him compliant.  They didn't expect Hack to find the suit before the large team did.  

A few weeks after his release, Hack was briefing his small team on his plan to track and capture the two and acquire the suit.  The phone rang.  He was told to come to the interrogation facility for a meeting with Sowyer.  Apparently, Sowyer had specifically asked for him.

Sowyer's erratic actions in Bumpas Cove drew attention.  The links between Sowyer and Taylor were discovered.  There would be an espionage trial followed by permanent incarceration.  Sowyer's obvious guilt and sullen behavior following the Event helped absolve Hack and the rest of the team.  He fared poorly during the interrogations, but even more so when left in isolation.  Hack was the first person from the team permitted to see him.  The interaction was closely monitored.  Interrogators hoped allowing Sowyer to meet with him would result in some new insight.

Sowyer's cell contained only the essentials
, toilet, steel frame bed, thin sealed-seam mattress and sink.  The mirror was a small square of polished stainless steel.  A recessed shelf was formed into the wall behind the bed.  It had a single book on it.  Hack decided it was a Bible.

Sowyer was already standing when the guards let Hack inside.  He was barefoot.  Both of the slippers lay on the "guest" side of the small room, where he'd thrown them the day before.  Sowyer hadn't shaved since the Event and smelled like showers hadn't been too frequent either.  When he left, he would ask if Sowyer was being treated humanely.  He'd given his country eight years of service and Hack thought he deserved better.

Hack sat in a steel chair, leaned forward and smiled.  The chair was bolted to the floor four feet from the bars.

A tentative smile flicked across Sowyer's face, "Hello, Major."

"Hello Charlie, are you alright?"

"Not really," Sowyer replied with a quick hint of anger.  "I'm not really alright, but it doesn't matter."

"It still matters to me, Charlie.  There are a lot of people that care about you, regardless of what has happened."

Sowyer nodded.  "If I cooperate," he looked through the bars at his slipper as he spoke, "they will let my wife in to see me.  Assuming that she wants to."  His eyes glistened.

Sowyer stepped to the bars, as close as he could get.  Hack clamped down on his natural reaction to lean back.  He'd spent years working with Sowyer, and he wanted Sowyer to know he remembered the man he had been before Taylor corrupted him.

Sowyer met his eyes for an instant before casting his stare off to the side. 

"Are you going after it?  The suit, I mean.  I guess you're leading the team to catch them and get the suit." 

Hack paused, "I can't talk about any of that, Charlie.  You know I can't do that.  It's not your concern anymore."

Sowyer's eyes flashed up to meet Hack's for a second before looking again at the floor.  "Not mine.  No.  Not my concern."

"Leave that to me.  All you have to do at this point is get better
.  You just need to get better, so you can make the best choices going forward.  You still have your family Charlie and your boys.  They'll need you as they grow up.  You can make a difference in their lives, even if…"

"I'm not getting out," Sowyer said without breaking his stare from the floor.  "I'm never getting out.  The cops, the helicopter crew…  They'll add those to my sentence.  I lost the most important discovery in mankind's history
.  They are mad as bees about that."

"How are you feeling, any better?"

Sowyer's eyes lifted again, "Better today.  Better when people visit.  When it's just me…"  Sowyer cleared the sob from his throat.  "When it's just me, I can't stand it.  I wish my head would crack open so the pressure would be gone.  It's the worst headache you can imagine, like all the headaches I ever had mashed together in a vise.  When someone talks to me, it takes my mind off of it, I guess, or distracts me, but whatever it is, I don't care, it just feels better.  I'm glad to talk with the psychologists and whomever nowadays, funny, huh?"

Hack smiled, the idea that anyone would enjoy an interrogation didn't bode well for their sanity.  "Yeah Charlie, that is funny.  Nobody likes those guys."

"Is there anything I can do for you?  Anything I can do that might possibly help you get better?  They said that you asked for me."

"I just wanted to see someone familiar, Hack.  Since you know everything about their stupid Event, I figured they would let you come.  Nothing I can leak to you that you don't already know.  Just wanted to see someone familiar, who didn't hate me and think I was the worst traitor in history."  Sowyer stopped and looked up at Hack, "It's unreal Hack.  I can't make myself see everything that's happened as real.  It happened so fast
, and now everything is gone.  I'm not saying I was perfect, I did things I'm ashamed of, but now everyone in the world's going to think "traitor" any time they hear my name."

"I went through something similar Charlie," I know what you mean.  "It gets too big for you, too big to manage, to wrestle back into the bottle.  Everyone thinks they know me from Cane Creek and the other captures, but all it does is keep them from ever really knowing anything about me – the person.  I understand what you're going through Charlie."

"Except you're a national hero and people spit my name out like its poison."

Short of lying
, Hack realized,
there's nothing I can say to encourage him.  He's right.

"Can I get you anything Charlie?  Anything they'll let me do I mean."

"No.  Nothing they'd let you do."

Hack stood up slowly to avoid an appearance that he was eager to leave.

"Is, uh," Sowyer started, "is Walker ok?  And the others, I mean.  Is everyone ok?"

"She's fine Charlie.  Everyone's ok out here, just worried about you.  I'm sure they'll let you talk with other people soon
, and you can try to move on from here."

Sowyer made no reply, just stared at Hack's feet. 

"Catch them."

Hack wasn't sure he'd heard Sowyer, "What?"

"Catch them Hack.  Get the suit back.  It's not theirs.  It doesn't belong to them."

"I will Charlie.  I'll catch them.  The suit belongs to everyone, I agree."

"Just catch them, and get the suit, ok?  You can promise me you're going to be the one that catches them and gets the suit back, can't you?"

"Yeah," Hack replied, "I promise I'm going to try."

A curtain of relief fell onto Sowyer's face and his brooding eyebrows lifted slightly.  He met Hack's eyes once more and smiled. 

"It's going to be ok Charlie."

Sowyer nodded, keeping eye contact and smiled.  "Thanks for coming Hack."

"It's ok.  I'm glad
to, if it helps you."

The sun outside was too bright after the fluorescents of the interrogation facility.  Hack squinted his eyes, shielding them as his pupils reacted. 
So many people already killed and ruined
, he thought. 
How many more before we get the suit back?  How many people will be killed by the weapons we make from it when we find it?  Who knows, maybe the government will be more interested in the neutrino mills and virtually free energy for everyone?  Yeah, right – that's going to happen.

He was getting a headache.

 

 

 

 

 

THE END

 

ENJOY THIS BOOK?

If you enjoyed "Flightsuit", please rate it on Amazon and write a review.  The rating/review system helps encourage others to join us as we move forward to the sequel, "Flightpack".  Just visit
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00H1TC8C6
.

 

WANT MORE?

Now that you've finished the first book, you might enjoy a visit to the series web site at
http://www.FlightsuitBook.com
, where you will find:

  • Background & photographs of the Lost Cove and Bumpas Cove
  • Hand-drawn and Google Earth
    (with artifact discovery site) maps of the sites
  • Themes and spoilers
  • Updates on "Flightpack"
  • A "Follow Flightsuit" button to receive email updates

 

THANK YOU

I sincerely appreciate my interaction with other readers and look forward to connecting with you.  The book's response has been a great gift.

 

Sincerely yours,

Tom Deaderick

Map of "Flightsuit" settings by Tom Deaderick

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