Read Nightmares & Dreams: A Science Fantasy Space Western: Eydulan Series Book 2 Online
Authors: Mark Brandon Powell
The smile fades as she turns her attention to the man holding Kat on the left, 201. The girl holds out her index finger, a small yellow light shines at the end of it, only to wrap under and over his arm. She curls her finger, and the arm falls to the ground. 201 screams, and Kat’s feet touch the ground again. Light radiates out of the little girls back like butterfly wings as she turns her attention to 204, who was already backing away pleading for his life. The light fades, and her smile returns.
The girl says, “Leave.”
204 grabs his single armed brother 201, looking back toward 202 before running out of the cafeteria.
The girl walks close to Kat, and says, “Are you alright?” offering her hand.
“I am, thank you.”
“My name’s Terra. I like you, you have a voice inside your head like I do.”
Kat was startled and took a minute to say, “Yes, well, my name is Katrice. It’s nice to meet you too.”
Alarms sound off as bulkhead doors slam to the ground. Forty or so heavily armored men and women enter the room surrounding both Kat and Terra.
Terra says to Kat, “I’m sorry about this.”
Kat gives Terra a quizzical look before seeing each of the armored guards had spells on the ready, and guns on hand. Kat didn’t know what was going on. She hadn’t even been inside this building for more than five minutes and has already caused a full tactical squad to be called in. Terra lowers her head, her smile was gone, and turns to the armored guards in defeat.
Celeste walks though the guards a few moments later and up to Terra.
She kneels down, placing a hand on her shoulder. “Terra, I thought we talked about this. No using your powers or we can’t let you out. I know you don’t want to be cooped up down there.”
“But they were going to hurt her. I like her.”
Celeste glares a death stare over at Kat who shrugs. Celeste cuts off the death beams turning back to Terra. “You still broke the rule, we have to take you back now.”
Terra lets out a huff. “I thought I did a good thing. Why am I being punished.”
Celeste hugs Terra and says softly, “You did, but I have to enforce the rules around here. Since you broke the rule, you have to go back, but since it was for something good it will only be for one day.”
“Ok.” Terra says in a soft tone, and looks up to Kat, “It was nice to meet you.”
Celeste stands and guides Terra to a guard who takes her over to the elevator. She turns back to Kat, her death glare back at full power.
She says, “I’m not sure why Terra just did that for you, but you don’t deserve it. Prisoner 1215, If you cause that little girl any more trouble than you just did, you’re going to have me to deal with. Something I am sure you don’t want. Now get out of my face before I find a reason to throw you in solitary.”
With a little bit of luck, the rest of the day went by without anything else exciting happening. Which was great, besides the fact Kat was hoping she would have found someone who knew Hanna. But she didn’t. After what happened with Terra no one would talk to her. It was actually worse than that, not only would they not talk to her, they wouldn’t even let Kat get close enough to them to talk at any normal distance to ask questions like that. Everyone seemed to be frightened by Terra, and Kat could understand that. She did just take apart two men with a single finger each and it didn’t even seem to phase her. Which means she’s done it before, or she was so confident in her magic powers that it was nothing to her.
It was something Kat didn’t want to test one way or the other. Then there was the whole Terra knowing about Whisper thing that unsettled her too. All things to worry about later, right now she needed to find Hanna. It was almost time for exercise, which couldn’t get here any sooner. Prison was boring. Kat was about to go stir crazy and it had only been one day. It didn’t help that the rooms were designed so that the occupants can’t talk to each other. There are no windows, and only the one door. A toilet folds up into the wall, as does the bed, a table, and a chair. The only thing that kept her aware of what was going on, was a small single display inside the door. It never told what time it was, just what was coming up next and how long that activity was.
Luckily for Kat, Whisper was keeping her sane. Whisper had downloaded a few hundred novels since she’s been in existence and started to read them to Kat in order from worse to best. Normally these romance novels were something she wouldn’t ever consider listen too. Since they were the really graphic romance novels, almost too much so. But with the limited options of letting her mind race about what to do next while being trapped in a tiny space or listen to a romance novel. It wasn’t much of a choice. All she had to do was hold on till she found Hanna, then she can let Whisper do her thing inside the computer system and Gravan will be there to pick them up, hopefully within a short amount of time. It was hell not having Gravan around. She never realized just how much she had gotten used to having him around. The missing weight of her necklace draws her hand to where it usually rests, and she wonders if she will ever get it back.
A large boom sound echoes from all sides. The lights switch off, and the monitor on the door switches to a faint red x. The faint sounds of alarms comes from her door.
Whisper?
Kat asks,
What was that?
“I’m not sure, but it looks like the main power is off.”
Another boom echoes even louder than before and this time the monitor shuts off completely, as does the air that was blowing into the room. Kat stands up out of the chair that she was in to go lean up against the door. She takes a step toward the door when an earthquake shakes her to the ground.
She says, “Ow.” Falling into the door face first.
Rubbing her face she leans up against the door waiting for the earth to stop shaking. It doesn’t take long, and she presses herself back to standing. Placing her ear to the door she doesn’t hear anything from the other side. It could be that the door was padded or it could mean that there was no sounds coming from the other side of the door. With it being a prison, there was always the chance that someone would try to escape. This was a prison filled with mages, so earthquakes and loud booms though soundproof doors couldn’t be too far from possible. It was magic after all. Right?
Kat says, “Whisper, lets bust out of here and see if we can find Hanna. If someone is trying to break out of here, now would be a good time to look.”
“If you say so. I’ll come back out onto your wrist.”
Kat watches as Whisper forms back into her old self. The bangle on her wrist was something she missed and didn’t know it. There was a familiar weight to it, and it comforted her. She felt like there was a small weight lifted from her body, as if she took off a weighted suit. Kat realizes it has to be her not being in pain anymore from having Whisper inside her.
Kat says with a relaxed breath, “Alright Whisper, lets open the door.”
She shoves her wrist toward the door. Nothing happens.
Looking at the bangle she says, “Uhh, Whisper. Door.”
Whisper replies sarcastically, “How do you expect me to open it? The power is out, so I can connect up with any computers. I am also fairly certain that I can’t cut though it either. It would burn up too much of my nanites, and take too much of a toll on me when we still need to find Hanna and get a message to that ape of yours in space.”
“Right. Didn’t think about that. Do you have any ideas?”
“…I do, but I’m not quite sure how you’er going to react.”
Whisper goes through a plan on how to use a very
very
small portion of the explosive that is still in Kat’s arms to blow the door open. Kat is beside herself as to why that was left inside her in the first place. Whisper tries to explain it was nothing to worry about, and she never asked to have it taken out.
Kat says, “I still can believe that you didn’t remove those.”
“They were inert, so much so that the scanners they put you though on the space station above Ragnarok didn’t pick up anything.”
“It’s just the idea of it.” Kat shivers, “I could have taken out everything I loved and never known it was my fault.”
“Quit being so melodramatic. You monkeys and your emotions. Just place your hand on the wall near where the lock should be and I will do the rest.”
“Alright,” Kat follows Whispers orders, placing her hand on the right side of the door.
Whisper says, “Good. Now don’t move. This might take me some time.”
She stands there for a good five minutes as hundreds of little pin pricks shoot out of her palm and fingers. Her hand was numb with pain. There was never any one point that hurt more than another, it was just the overall ache and shooting pain that made it horrible. It was a new kind of torture that she didn’t want to repeat ever again. She was going to call it Whisper demolition torture when she gets to tell Gravan about the trip. Laughing to herself her mind drifts back to the negative, thinking if she gets to tell him.
Whisper finally says, “Alright we’re done.”
Kat lets out a sigh of relief and pulls back her hand flexing it a few times into a fist. There was a dull burning where the thousand needles were. It vaguely feels like when her foot would go to sleep, only way more painful.
Whisper says, “Step back Kat, I’m going to set it off.”
“Should I get behind something?”
Before Whisper could answer the door explodes. Kat was looking at the door when it went off, and can’t see or hear. Everything was ringing. Her sight was nothing but bright white with vibrating lines of gray horizontally across her vision. The lines were slowly traveling upward with new ones replacing the old.
Whisper’s voice sounds crisp and clear in contrast to the ringing as she asks, “Kat are you ok?”
Kat couldn’t answer, she was still too disoriented from the blast. She blinks a few times trying to get her mind to form a thought but her mind wouldn’t answer her.
Whisper cuts through the fog in her mind again as she says, “Kat I know you can hear me, that wasn’t our explosive, it was someone else’s. You need to get up and run.”
She stumbles to her feet, using the wall as a crutch while rubbing her eyes hoping that it would take away the blinding whiteness. Her cybernetic eye switches though different fields of vision; x-ray, ultraviolet, gamma, thermal. All of which she didn’t know she had. It finally settles on night vision.
Whisper says, “Ok that should help with your vision. Lets move. Now.”
The first few steps were wobbly. Her inner ear was still out of balance from the blast, and looking at everything through a night vision filter was disorienting. Her other eye was slowly recovering from the flash, but still nothing she could work with. Poking her head out of the room, there was no one around. Up, down, left and right. No one. The floors were some type of clear material, allowing her to see though them. There was a total of five floors see could see. Two above her and two below. The other rooms on her level were also opened and they all seem to have had explosives in them. The immediate floor above and below her she couldn’t really tell, and chooses just to focus on what she can get to.
Peaking into the room on her right, there is a dead man on the ground. It was no surprise that he was wearing the white suit. It was numbered 215. He looked young, no older that his early twenties. His blond hair was covered in his own blood, and his eyes were closed. There was nothing different from her own room. What surprised her was the large white triangle piece embedded in the middle of his face. It was sharp around the edges, and when Kat looked back at the door, there was a triangle piece missing.
It was the same scene in the room to left as well, only it was a woman and her triangle piece was in the side of her head. Her number was 414, and she was an older woman, her hair was thin, brown, and wavy. Again the triangle came from the door. Kat goes back to her room and finds the triangle piece embedded in the ceiling. If Whisper didn’t place that explosive when they did, she might be like all the rest on this floor. Still more fuel for her nightmares, she thinks, if she’s lucky enough to live through this.
She leaves her room again, heading toward the elevator. They may not be on but they do connect the whole facility together. If there was some way to get the door open they could go find Hanna and get the hell out.
Kat asks, “Whisper, did you know about the explosive and shrapnel in the door?”
“No I didn’t.”
“Then we’re both really lucky.”
“I would have been attached to a corpse for the rest of my electronic existence. It would have been dreadful.”
“No concern or care for the corpse?”
“Why would I, you’d be a corpse? Now yes I would have missed teasing you, but beyond that not much.”
Trying to ignore the obvious snideness, she turns her focus back to the search and rescue. Everything was still near pitch black by the time they reach the elevator. The only light coming from splotches of oddly spaced faint orange emergency lights. It was enough that she could see with her cybernetic eye but the one she was born with didn’t offer much in this low light setting.
Running her hands over the door and edges showed there was no way to open the door easily. She might be able to get Whisper to cut it, but that might use up too much power and with all the tasks that Whisper still had to do it would be best to save her for those. The buttons for the elevator are on the wall next to the door. As far as she can see, there aren’t any stairwells. Out of frustration she presses the down button a few times to call for the elevator, knowing it wasn’t going to answer.
Kat paces back and forth trying to figure out what to do. She has to find out where Hanna is, and send a signal to Felicity so Gravan knows to come get them. With the power out, there really isn’t much she can do. Her best chance just went down the drain, and it’s looking like she’s going to get stuck in this prison. The dread of that thought begins to sink and Kat slumps to the ground. This was never supposed to be her ending. She curses the whole idea of ever coming to this forsaken planet in search of someone she barely knew. There was always the chance that it would fail, but she never really thought it would happen. Kat lets her grief and fear take over, curling her knees up to her chin, wrapping her arms around her legs.