The Puzzler’s War. Eyal Kless. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Eyal Kless
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия: The Tarakan Chronicles
Жанр произведения: Ужасы и Мистика
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780008272340
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did not acknowledge me or look at the doors. My own body was lying motionless, but in this reality I was wearing the helmet. My transparent image drew closer to my body until we merged into one.

      A little later I woke up.

      Galinak turned his head towards me. Maybe he asked something, but I was already in the process of fastening the helmet on my head. Like waking up from a vivid dream, the images were slowly fading from my mind, and I had no idea how long they would linger.

      The Leviathan sprang back to life, and I let my hands move and touch the transparent screens around me. Galinak put his own helmet on, but this time he took care not to touch anything.

      We could both hear a hissing noise.

      “What’s that?” Galinak’s voice rang inside my head as I somehow established a link between us.

      “How long was I out?” I asked, more to keep him from distracting me with questions than anything else.

      “Not long, but you were out cold. What are you doing?”

      “Not sure, but I know what to do.” I touched two transparent buttons and turned a dial.

      “That is a contradi—”

      The music caught both of us by surprise.

      “Whoa.” Galinak grabbed the seat with one hand. “What is that?”

      “I think it is the music Rafik and Vincha used to listen to,” I said, still fiddling with the numbers on my screen. “It’s called Beethoven.”

      Galinak sat motionless for a while. “Rust,” he finally muttered, “that was what we heard when Vincha was strapped to that chair. Rust, that half-man Jakov was a piece of work.”

      I nodded but kept fiddling with the buttons as the music grew louder. Jakov was the weapons merchant who had stolen Rafik and sold him to the Keenan guild. Years later he returned with us to the City Within the Mountain, hoping to reestablish a supply route, or perhaps looking for redemption. He got neither.

      “I’m trying to find a way in,” I said. “There is a pattern I need to latch on to and then we can establish a link with Tarakan, but I need to find the right channel. It involves delicate fine tuning.”

      “And you know how to do this because …?”

      I stopped myself from turning my head towards him. “I dreamt it. No, don’t ask. Find out what is going on outside instead, but don’t … touch … anything.”

      As the music grew louder Galinak turned his head left and right, seeing through the metal wall of the Leviathan. “They established a perimeter around us,” he informed me, his voice growing into a shout as the music became almost unbearably loud. “Two snipers with long rifles on either side, the rest spread out. Guess they’ll wait us out. Bukra’s balls, how long is this gonna take?”

      It took a lot of willpower not to throw the helmet off my head as the music got louder and louder.

      “Getting there,” I shouted back, but Galinak unfastened his own helmet and took it off his head.

      Suddenly the music ceased and Rafik’s face filled my field of vision.

      “Hello,” he said.

      I leaned back in my seat and let out a long sigh.

      Rafik nodded in approval. “You did well.”

      “Well? We did well?” My inner voice was rising with every word I uttered. “We woke up in a room filled with poisonous air and no idea what to do and where to go. You bet we did well, no thanks to you.”

      Rafik remained calm. “We did not expect such a malfunction in transmitting you, but these things were bound to happen over time, even with Tarakan technology.”

      Galinak watched me solemnly. Without the helmet he could not hear the conversation.

      I turned to him. “It’s them,” I whispered and motioned at his helmet.

      “Rust ’em,” he muttered. “I don’t want to hear anything they have to say. You talk to them and tell me the gist of it afterwards. Besides, the Dwaines might find a way inside. Someone should take watch.” He turned and left the cabin before I could react.

      “Perhaps it was more than that?” I said to Rafik, turning back on my chair. “You told me this Mannes was dangerous. Maybe this was sabotage?”

      “This is also a possibility within the realm of reason.” When I did not respond Rafik added, “I see you got yourself some gear. That is good.”

      I could understand Galinak’s reaction. We had been cheated by the Tarkanians, only to be forced to work for them again and almost be killed before we even started. Now we were stuck inside a Sky Bird, surrounded by the hostile Dwaines, and none of that seemed to register with Rafik. The whole situation was infuriating.

      “We managed to reconstruct the vessel, or body, the hibernating agent was downloaded into,” Rafik ploughed on.

      A picture of a woman appeared in front of my eyes.

      “Doesn’t look like much,” I commented without thinking.

      “Don’t let appearances fool you,” Rafik admonished. “Luckily for you, this is not a full combat vessel, but Colonel Major Vera Geer is a veteran of many battles. She is one of our most experienced operatives, capable and dangerous, and she has a two-month head start on you.

      “If Cain takes control and extracts the code from Emilija it would allow him even deeper access into Adam. There is no telling how much damage he could do, but it would be severe, perhaps even lethal.”

      “So, you want us to find Emilija and bring her back to you.”

       “And if at all possible, eliminate Mannes Holtz.”

      “If possible …” I stopped myself from pointlessly arguing. Instead, I changed the subject. “How did I know how to do”—I gestured all around us—“all of this? The dream, the puzzle wall …”

      “When Tarakan began cloning agents, we used to grow their bodies filled with hardware, but it didn’t take the others long to realise this and they began scanning for it. Hardware was too easy to spot. We needed a different method to send information to our operatives. One which did not involve detectable hardware.”

      “Dreams? You communicate in dreams?”

      “Brain waves, thoughts, they are but a shot of neurons, an electric pulse. Too weak to be transmitted under normal conditions, but when biological humans sleep deeply enough, the brain becomes much more susceptible, and with some DNA manipulation and mental practice it could be a reliable, effective tool.”

      Rafik correctly interpreted my expression because he added, “No, we cannot read your minds, control your actions, or even send you complex orders. The subconscious cannot be fully controlled like that.”

      “So every time I want to talk to you I should find a bed?”

      “No. This time you fell into a deep sleep with a definite problem on your mind. We were trying to find you and we managed to do just that, but it doesn’t work every time. You should just be aware we may try to contact you. It is part of how you were made, how you are wired, so it might get easier with time.”

      “Rust,” I cursed, it was almost too much to sink in. “What now?”

      “Find Vincha’s daughter. Your best course of action is to find Vincha herself and convince”—Rafik tilted his head slightly—“or coerce her to lead you to her daughter.”

      “You want me to look for Vincha again?” I couldn’t help but laugh at the irony of it.

      Rafik ignored my reaction. “Vincha is not in the City of Towers, and she does her best to reduce her communication presence, but from the few activities she was unable to cover, we believe she operates along a long stretch