VIRTUAL SEASONS EPISODES |
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PROLOGUE
As
the Leaper's senses began to stir out of the Quantum mist, he was acutely
aware of a deep roaring sound. This
he heard even before his Leap-in was fully complete and the veil of
Quantum energy was still blanketing his other senses.
As the flux continued, he felt a vibration that to him could only
mean that he was traveling in some kind of vehicle.
'A train, perhaps?' his befuddled mind theorized. The
next to be uncloaked was his sense of smell.
Wherever he was, it was hot; the air around him was desiccated and
smelt of animals. The only
moisture he could feel came from his own hot and naked flesh. "N—nak—ed! No not again!" he murmured quietly as he felt at the
flimsy material, the only thing covering his… nudity.
'Where the hell am I?' he
demanded of himself and in tandem he speculated why his vision hadn't
improved any. The
sound he'd heard earlier now resonated and vibrated to his very bones and
he shifted slightly from his encumbered position.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw a red glow and instinctively
his head turned towards it. 'Least,
now I know that wherever and whenever I am, it's almost 5 a.m.,' he
empathized out of the gloom. Vague
outlines started to assemble themselves together; all touched with a faint
red glow and lended themselves eerily into the darkness.
He then began to realize that he wasn't traveling anywhere but
reclining on a bed and the sound that was deafening him was being
discharged from someone, and that someone was lying next
to him. Doctor
Beckett gasped inwardly when he realized that the explosive din couldn't
possibly be that made by a female. "Ooo…"
the Leaper started to mutter but the heap next to him shifted, making him
bounce very close to the edge and Sam froze in anticipation. '…oohhh boooooy!' he finished off silently. "You
awake, 'gorge'?" the bulk aside him voiced gruffly in his sleep then
a smack of lips as he rearranged his mouth. As
the man beside him began to settle, the strident snorts and braying
wheezes kicked off afresh. Sam
turned slightly to view his bed mate but all he received was a lungful of
sweet but putrid breath of stale alcohol.
The Leaper nearly choked on the stench and turned away abruptly but
his movement stirred his unwanted companion, causing him to flop an arm
heavily across his naked torso. Again,
Sam froze in fear of the unexpected and awaited his partner to settle once
more. The limb dead weighted
across his chest and he could feel the sticky heat being vitiated onto his
flesh, disgusting him. Sam
needed to get away, but to where? He
couldn't even make out the outline to the room, never mind see where the
door was, it was so dark even with the faint glow of red. The
man shifted again and his hand started to encroach along Sam's chest, down
his ribs and then further. Sam
cringed and stiffened when his hand reached past the top of his hip and
resumed its constant trespass. "Ooooohhhh
n-noooo!" Doctor Beckett uttered silently. PART ONE "Knickers!"
the lout snarled, snapping the elastic onto the Leaper's flesh and made
him whine. "Not again,
not already? Now git to
sleep! I'm s'pposed to be workin' in the mornin'!" the gruff
voice called out at him and again wafted the sickening smell in Doctor
Beckett's direction. "If
yer goin' to the carzy then git,
and stop faffing about." He
hauled himself over and bounced several times before grunting, "Git!"
He then smacked his lips again before sighing.
"I
can't see," Sam grumbled, stating the obvious.
"Can I—will you turn the light on?" he asked quickly,
not knowing where the light switch could be found. "No!"
came the opulent reply, making Doctor Beckett jump. "But…" "If
yer don't know yer way by now, then there's no hope for yer—just git yer
arse outta here, now!" he growled coarsely, cutting off Sam's words. Doctor
Beckett slinked out of the bed, feeling his way to the bottom and once
there didn't know which way to turn for the door.
"Ouch! Arghh!"
he feigned, fabricating a stubbed toe, in the hope that his supine partner
would assist and turn on the light. "Of
all the darnedest, stupidest cripples in this world—I end up with
you!" he bawled out caustically as he jostled himself upright.
"If you ain't leaping over furniture and injuring yersel' then
yer usin' that trap of yours, why the hell can't you keep that trap o'
yours shut? You can't do anything. The
place is like a pigsty!" he fumed and then grunted manically as he
strained to reach for the bedside light. 'Cripple?' Sam
thought as he squinted in the half-light that the feeble light bulb threw
out and glanced forbearingly at his intolerant bedfellow, and saw the
red-faced bully glaring back at him, his eyes red, glazed and bulging from
the alcohol he'd consumed. As
his eyes adjusted, the doctor in him then saw the typical signs of
pellagra, the dark red pigmentation of the skin around the chest and
throat, and the profusion of perspiration beading his whole body.
'Alcoholism?' Sam professed, remembering the sickening stench of
breath. 'I think I'm gonna have to tread very
carefully here,' he conjectured without too much forethought. "Okay,
I'm going—I'm going," Sam said, not wanting to stay a minute longer
than he had to and he hurried towards the door. "I
see yer back ain't hurtin' yer n'more, 'gorge', or is that just one of yer
ruses, yer gitting too good yer know… lover!" he hurled out after
Sam as he closed the door quietly behind him. 'Am
I supposed to be a cripple?' he thought as his eyes closed, somewhat
relieved at getting away from that dreadful ogre in one piece.
He had a bizarre feeling in his gut, one that he didn't want to
readily admit to. Sam leaned
against the framework and breathed in deeply.
'Gorge?
There goes that reference again, could this be the name of my
host?' Sam felt confused and bewildered and tried to think up names
that would fit but couldn't come up with any. Opening
his eyes, the Leaper once again found himself in complete darkness.
He fumbled about the surrounding area of the door to find a light
switch and finding several between the one door he'd just left and the
framework of another immediately adjacent.
Guessing which one, he flipped a switch and was instantly
confronted by a blaze of bright luminosity. He
looked about, a room, a spacious, long, rectangular room confronted him,
three large draped windows faced him and to his right a vaulted staircase
complete with balcony. To his left another small flight of stairs and a door leading
off to who knows where? Every
inch of available wall housed various kinds of reptilian creatures, some
Sam recognized and some he didn't but each held him in fascination as he
stepped towards one of the windows. He
pulled one of the drapes aside and for the first time saw his host's hazy
reflection painted against the backdrop of an ebony sky. Yes,
he was definitely a she this time and promptly drew the curtain closed again when he saw
that her shadowy outline was as naked as himself, apart from a pair of
skimpy panties. "Sorry,"
he mumbled, embarrassed and as he looked down at his own skimpy underwear,
a smile touched at his lips. "Al,
if you come in here now, I swear, I'll kill you!" Not
daring to return to the room for a robe, Doctor Beckett decided to seek
out the bathroom, there was bound to be something there he could wrap
about him. First,
Doctor Beckett tried the other door that was opposite the windows and when
he opened it, a little black and white blur whizzed past him.
His gaze followed in the direction, which the animal scuttled but
like a flash of lightening, it disappeared down the fight of stairs. Sam shrugged and continued to enter but found it to be an
office of some kind, so he closed the door and subsequently tiptoed past
the various vivariums, he started to climb the short flight of steps.
Again, he fumbled for a light switch and again he was disappointed
that he'd not found the bathroom but he wasn't disappointed for long. "WOW!"
he gasped as the enormity of the room devoured him into its midst, turning
about in sheer wonder at its structure and whooping as his eyes reached
the domed ceiling. Oak beams
spanned spider like into its elaborately engraved marble center, depicting
the head of an oxen and between each exquisitely preserved beam were
infills of intricately carved mahogany.
Even the carpeting underfoot felt to be at least a foot deep and
centering the room so magnificently stood a full sized snooker table.
Catching his breath, Sam spotted two sets of double doors leading
off to the right, almost concealed within their oak paneled surroundings
only the brass door knobs giving away their existence.
Doctor Beckett backed around the table in awe as cottage windows
winked at him from every angle, their leaded lites slightly askew, showing
their age. Exiting
the room from the nearest of the double doors, Doctor Beckett was aghast
again at what greeted him there. He
was standing atop a gallery and looking down into a great hall.
On the opposing side, he could see the other entrance which led
back into the domed game room, this too having an identical elliptical
balcony, both of which convened at the far end to form a balustrade that
adorned each side of a well defined staircase which fell away to the floor
below. Several
rooms led off from each of the balconies and Sam had a difficult decision
in which to choose first. Sam
padded along the open gallery and opened the first door as he came to it.
Another bedroom, he nodded as he closed the door and he moved
toward the next. This time he
was in luck, though it didn't look as though it was the regular bathroom,
it was too sparse, too clinically clean. Sam
turned on the light as he entered and shrugged.
'What was it that jerk had said? A
pigsty? No way do any of the
rooms I have visited so far, resemble a pigsty. Everything, as far as I can see, is where it should be, neat
'n tidy and clean. What is it
with this guy? It must be the
booze talking,' Sam decided. The
marble floor tiles struck icy cold on Sam's bare feet and he noticed that
this part of the house was much cooler than that which he'd left.
Finding several towels in the closet, he proceeded in removing two,
one for washing and the other, a larger one, to wrap about him once he'd
finished. Now
shivering, he splashed tepid water about his torso in order to rid himself
of the stench from the bohemian. Lathering
up the soap to an invigorating mass of suds, he washed and quickly rinsed
down, then rubbed at his flesh vigorously to warm himself up as well as to
stimulate his senses. The
fresh towel felt warm against his skin as he snuggled into its softness
and reluctantly he started on his return journey, though he doubted that
he would sleep. Doctor
Beckett stopped unabated and stared at the full-length mirror to the side
of the door. Sam's brow
creased as he saw his host's reflection clearly, and wasn't fogged by the
blackened backdrop, as the window had reflected earlier.
There, aghast at what he saw, his chin dropped a mile. "My
God!" Sam muttered; cringing visibly at the bruises that blotched the
front of is host's chest and arms. He
dropped the towel and swallowed hard when he saw the enormity of the
crimson and purple but yellowing patch that blemished the flesh around her
tummy and also the tops of her thighs.
He touched at the blotch hesitantly and winced. Sam
glared towards the door. "No
need for Al to tell me what I'm here to do this time!" he seethed
loudly, hoping that his words would travel past the door and reach the
joker in the other part of the house. No
sooner were his words out, when he heard the familiar sound of the Imaging
Chamber door opening up behind him. "Uh-oh!"
Al vocalized as Sam retrieved the towel to cover himself. "Can't
you give me some kinda warning or somethin'?" Sam vindicated.
"Why do you always charge in at the most inappropriate
moments?" "You
want that I should wear a cowbell? Though
I doubt you'd even hear that in time," the observer pouted, tongue in
cheek. Sam
frowned. "Where am I,
Al?" Al
pressed the button on the handlink. "You're
smack dab in the middle of England Sam, though exactly where, Ziggy can't
pinpoint," he said as he slapped a hand into the handlink when Ziggy
didn't show up. "Darn it
Stephen, I thought you'd fixed this!" he yelled, looking up at
nothing above him. "What
is it now?" Sam asked, looking at his friend, puzzled. "Darned
circuitry!" Al said as he again bashed at the implement.
"Stephen said he'd had problems connecting the conduits and…
erm… thingies err, those limpet nodes," he continued to slap at the
device. "…he used
bubble gum the first time. But
the trouble is when…"—slap—"…it dries out… the
circuits get all un…"—wallop—"…attached again.
I think Stephen will have to work on it some more." Doctor
Beckett shook his head and tutted, giving his friend a glare that told him
that he wasn't helping matters by mistreating a delicate instrument
especially if the connections were as fragile as his friend said they
were. "I wish I could
help Al, but…" he said as he deliberately swiped a hand through the
hologram and redressed himself quirkily. "I
know but he's a bright kid, reminds me a helluva lot of you when you were
his—ahem, hmmm." Al closed his mouth with a snap when he realized
he'd said too much. "I think we need old faithful yet another time—I'll
just go and fetch…" "Al!"
Sam snapped, not taking in the implications of his friend's last slip, he
was more worried about being left alone.
"Before you go, Al. Who
am I?" he glanced back at the mirror.
"I know I'm a woman but what's her name?" "We're
not sure yet, I've not had the chance to talk with our visitor, she's in
some kinda deep sleep and Verbena can't seem to wake her," Al said
with a shake of his head and then his eyes widened.
"Maybe she's awake now, I'll ask when I fetch the other
handlink—I won't be a tick." "He
referred to me twice as 'gorge', Al but it could be his drunken slur. But
I can't figure it out, maybe her name's Georgina?" Sam grimaced when
he saw further bruises on his host's back. "Oh,
so there's a he involved?" Al chimed as he once again pressed the single
button to open up the Imaging Chamber. "Look
at her Al, she's covered from top to toe in bruises," Sam said
mournfully. "You
forget Sam, I see you as you—her as you." Al started to laugh but
held it back when he saw the look on his friend's face.
He stepped closer to the mirror and was horrified at what he saw.
"Okay, okay, I'm on to it, heck Sam, I'll find out," Al pressed
his thumb down hard onto the solitary button.
"As soon as Ziggy decides to open this goddamn door!" he
yelled up again at nothing. "Ziggy!" Al screwed up his face and started whimpering pitifully,
"What the hell is going on!" Al
hated being confined and the Leaper knew it.
Even in the vast expanse of the Imaging Chamber Al felt trapped.
Ever since Vietnam, he'd hated it when he couldn't go somewhere
where he wanted to be and right now he wanted to be in the Control Room. "Ziggy!"
Al whimpered again. "She'll
know," Sam said soberly. "Who?"
whined Al. "Ziggy,
she'll know and she'll let you out as soon as she realizes what's
happening," Sam explained. "You'll
just have to be patient." "Patient?" "Yeah,
like in: 'everything comes to those who wait'," Sam empathized. "Wait?
Patience? Yeah, I've
had a lot of practice at both of those," Al said more perkily. "Do
you know the date where I'm at, Al?" Sam asked changing the subject. "Hmmm,"
Al thought; the strain showing on his face as he lowered his head.
"Ziggy did say but in the hubbub, I've sorta forgot," he
said awkwardly, looking up at Sam sheepishly. The
Imaging Chamber door whizzed open behind him and Sam gave him a look that
said, 'told you so.' Al beamed. "I
think it's 19—98—7, Sam, No—vember I think," Al said as he
stepped into the bright light. "But don't quote me on that," he
continued to say as the door collapsed and Doctor Beckett was left alone
again in the sparse bathroom. He
pulled the towel closer around his now chilled body, clutching it tightly
as he opened the door and stepped out onto the balcony.
The rich carpeting felt warm to his feet and Doctor Beckett wiggled
his frozen toes to absorb some of the heat.
Then he felt something hairy rub against his legs and as he looked
down, he recognized the now clearly portrayed black and white blur that
had so recently zoomed past him. "Hello
there, how did you get here?" Sam said as he bent down to pet at the
dog. "And what's your
name, huh?" he felt around the dog's neck for a collar, "hmm, no
collar either, huh?" he frowned.
"I thought at least you'd have a nametag." The
dog whined in answer and looked at Doctor Beckett quizzically, head tilted
and ears pricked. Sam
crouched down even further, almost sitting on the deep pile of the carpet
and stroked at the dog's head. "I
know this is kinda strange for you boy," he said after checking the
dog's gender. "I still find it sorta strange myself… tell you what,
I'll tell you my name if you'll tell me yours." Doctor
Beckett waited as if in response for an answer, he then continued,
"Hmmm, so you're not telling, huh?
Don't blame you, I can't tell anyone my name either.
Can you keep a secret?" again Sam paused and this time the dog
yawned out a reaction. "Okay
boy, my name's Sam, but you mustn't tell a soul, it's a secret." The
dog licked at Doctor Beckett's hand and pawed gently but impatiently at
his legs. "Time
to go, eh? Come on then, I
s'pose we'd better be getting back," Sam said as he stood. Nervously,
he retraced his steps, the little dog faithfully following.
He headed back into the game room and once there, he noticed more
of its contents. From this
perspective, there were three other gaming tables and he wondered why he
hadn't noticed them before, perhaps it was the enormity and the central
position of the table that had distracted him.
In the far right corner, stood a pool table and as with the snooker
table, all of the balls were positioned ready for play. On
the right, a green baized, horseshoe shaped card table with a centralized
opening and chairs positioned around its circumference. In
the near left corner and canopied beneath an elaborately carved oak
gazebo, a roulette table was positioned.
To the side a stairway spiraled up and around, leading to the
platformed roof which overhung about a fifth of the way into the room. Stepping
back, Sam looked upward and saw the ornamental encasement surrounding a
seated area. Shaking
his head in wonder, Doctor Beckett suddenly realized that maybe, he might
be missed and he hurriedly padded across the room and to the door where
the little dog sat waiting patiently.
As he pulled it open, a blast of hot air hit him full in the face,
almost taking his breath away. The aridness made his mouth and throat instantaneously dry. Sam
coughed as the heat rasped at his lungs, making him dizzy and he had to
hold onto the banister as he descended the few stairs to the lower level.
The door swung automatically closed behind him and slammed on
impact, startling the Leaper into jumping the remainder of the small
flight, and into landing awkwardly. "Damn!"
Sam cursed as he sat on the bottom step and nursed at a sore ankle. "Looks
like you're in the wars now pal," Al said as the Imaging Chamber door
whooshed closed. "This
place is like—like unreal, Al," Sam said indicatively, looking up
at his friend. "He's
not—not done anything untoward, has he Sam?" Al asked, quickly
glancing about him for another presence, he then saw the little dog, his
head cocked, looking Al up and down inquisitively.
He greeted the little dog with a hurried wave from his hand. "No,
he's totally out of if. Can't
you hear him, Al?" Sam
frowned, flapping a hand towards the bedroom door. Al
stood motionless and listened. "That's…
human?" he garbled in stupefaction.
"He sounds like a power-driven sawmill," he joked. "What
did you find out? Who the
hell am I and who's he?" Sam
once again waved his arms toward the door. "Well…
you're name's not Georgina, that's for sure," Al said provocatively. Sam
glared at his friend requesting a more positive answer, when one wasn't
forthcoming, he started to stand and winced at the pain in his ankle, he
grabbed hold of the banister, letting loose the towel. "Nice
undies," Al mocked with a snicker. Sam
repeated his frozen glare for a few moments before retrieving the towel. PART TWO "Hmmm,"
Al sighed negatively with a shrug. "We
couldn't get anything out of our visitor so; Zig ran a check on the
address. From the British
census records, we've found out that you're name's Joanna Suzman, you're a
43 year old housewife—hey, but that's not all Sam, you're a college
student and taking a degree in Computer Science at the local
university." Doctor
Beckett raised his brow. "Impressive. But…" he started to say but before he could say any
more his friend interrupted. "And
there's more…" Al tweaked the handlink with a stubborn thud from
his cigar-laden hand and scattered ash into the oblivion of the next
century. "According to Ziggy, seven years ago she was two months away
from getting her medical doctorate but had to give it all up on account
of…" "Don't
tell me," Sam said as he nodded his head towards the closed bedroom
door. "I already know that's
the reason and it's making more racket than a train pulling into
Washington's Grand Central." Al
raised his eyebrows and at the same time frowned but he didn't say a word. "Okay
Al, you've got me. What am I
here to do? Not that I don't
know already from what I've seen of Joanna." "Hang
on Sam; it'll be through in a second or so.
Ziggy's having trouble interfacing with the computers over here and
they still haven’t updated their systems yet for the Millennium
bug," Al explained, thudding the handlink in order to get the
information through faster. Clutching
the towel around his midriff, Doctor Beckett tried again to stand, rising
slowly he tested the weight on his sore ankle.
He looked about him and saw a small alcove that lead off from the
banisters. He patiently made
his way over to it whilst his friend was waiting to retrieve the
information needed from the handlink. Al
followed a few paces behind, looking in each of the glass cases as he past
them by. One in particular
grabbed his attention. "That's one mean looking son of a gun!" Al gasped
as he saw the longest snake he'd ever seen, he then immediately shot back
as the snake started to uncoil. "What's
that?" Sam inquired as he about turned and retraced his steps.
"Tywan Beauty?" he recited quizzically as he stooped down
to read from the label in the bottom right hand corner. "Geeze
Sam, he's a big one!" Al exclaimed with a shudder.
"Don't get too close—'cos he looks like he has the strength
to break through that glass." "He
is a she, Al, says so right here," Sam said, looking up at Al and
pointing to the description tag. "Fifteen
foot on the last measuring." Returning
his hands to his knees, Sam's body swayed in amusement and when he saw the
gaunt expression on his friend's face, he smiled mockingly.
He couldn't help it, but he was ashamed to admit that he quite
enjoyed seeing his friend squirm. "You
mean they actually measure those darned things… they
actually take em out and measure em… by…
hand?" "S'pose
they must do," Sam said with an amused lick of his lips. "Horrid,
slimy critters," Al shuddered at the thought. "That
is a misconception that the majority of people make, when in fact they're
warm and silky to the touch," Sam said as he tapped lightly on the
glass, just to annoy Al. Al
shuddered again and was relieved when the handlink squealed for attention.
A split second after, the resonance of police sirens blared out. Doctor
Beckett looked at his friend in surprise.
"I thought you said we were in England, Al, those sirens are
American." "We
are, least that's where Ziggy says we are," Al said with uncertainty
as his fingers flittered across the keys on the handlink. Amidst
the sirens, gunshots blasted out over the steady hum drumming of the
heating and ventilating system for the vivariums.
Both friends turned to each other and with one mind they mutually
uttered, "Television!" "He's
awake, Sam!" Al warned. Limping
slightly, Sam started heading towards the bedroom door.
"He must have that thing turned up full blast, if it's that
loud in here. Whatever will
the neighbors think?" "Okay…
I'll add inconsiderate to the list too, shall I?" Al said, biting at
his lower lip. Sam
shot back in surprise and almost let go of the towel when the door to the
bedroom started to open. "Gorge,
I've had a little accident," a pitiful and almost childlike voice
wafted in from the bedroom. Sam
ignored the remark and Al looked at his friend in amazement.
"You should really go in and see what he's done," Al
stipulated. "Alcoholics
can do the most amazing—stupid things and I should know," he
laughed as a remembrance popped to the surface of his memory.
"Ya know, once I was so stupefied I couldn't even remember
where I'd parked my darned car. And
I know what you're gonna say here Sam," he conjectured, "you're
gonna say that I shouldn't have been driving anyways, right?" "You're
wrong there!" Sam stipulated. "I wasn't thinking about saying
that at all. I was thinking
that it was a good thing that you couldn't remember where you parked your
car, 'cos you'd have driven it home— 'anyways'." "Gorge,
I need some help," the voice said, evermore pitifully.
"GORGEOUS!!"
he bellowed when Joanna didn't immediately run to his aid. Al
sucked at his teeth and frowned. "Same
thing… in my book." "No
it isn't," Sam said just before he pushed the bedroom door open a
little wider. "GORGE!!"
the lout yelled even louder. "Gor—g—eous?"
his tone now whimpering sorrowfully. Doctor
Beckett sighed deeply and pushed the door open wide, he stood in the
doorway but didn't enter. "What
have you done this time?" he supplicated, taking the man's use of
words and tone as being: 'This wasn't the first time this has happened.'
Sam gulped inwardly when he saw the man flaunting his nakedness
before him. It was not a
pretty sight. "I've
wet the bed," he whined babyishly as he stood looking down at a
yellowing wet patch that was spreading out against the whiteness of the
sheet. "HA—HA!!"
Al laughed candidly from outside, not wanting to disguise his joviality at
what the man had said. "I
remember that one too… though it's not a fond one."
He shook is head as he joined Sam in the doorway. "I
got the wrong bottle and didn't know it."
Sniveling, he held up a plastic milk bottle, full to the brim of
yellowish fluid. Doctor
Beckett squirmed as the gross mutation held out the bottle for Sam to
take. At once, he felt filthy
again as he remembered the dampness of his skin just after his Leap-in, he
shuddered at the thought… no, it couldn't be… no… could it?
But his flesh began to crawl all the same.
He shook his head trying to clear his thoughts.
He felt the pit of his stomach begin to rise.
Al's voice calmed him somewhat when he realized he wasn't the only
one who was disgusted at what he was seeing. "Though
I don't think I was as bad at that to resort to… Yuck, is that
disgusting." Al wrinkled his nose and almost choked at what he was seeing,
beside the bed was another half-empty bottle, containing the same yellow
fluid. "This is so
Gawddamed awful I could barf and look at that gut—it's almost as
if…" "Al!"
Doctor Beckett reprimanded his friend aloud and then immediately regretted
it. "I—I'll," Sam renounced retrospectively when the
man looked at him suspiciously. "I'll
go and get some clean linen," he said, refusing the bottle offered
and backed out of the door. "Who
the hell is this guy, Al?" Sam whispered when he'd closed the door. Al
glanced down at the handlink and snickered.
"According to Ziggy his name's Geoffrey Peterson but…" "I
thought you said that I'm Joanna Suzman, how come she hasn't taken his
name?" Sam butted in. "Well,
if you'd let me finish I was just about to say that he's also known as
Peter Jerryson, Derek Copestake, Gerald Suzman, Barry Holmes, and gawd
knows how many other aliases, perhaps even Homer Simpson at some
point." Al laughed but it turned into a sheepish grin when he saw
that Sam was not at all amused, he cleared his throat.
"But from the data, Ziggy is adamant that Geoffrey is his real
name," Al said, letting the handlink drop down to his side. "So
Al, WHAT do I call him?"
Sam asked indignantly. "Well,
for starters and seeing that your—her—Joanna's name's Suzman, try
Gerald." In his frustration, Al hit out at the handlink.
"Hey! It looks
like he's taken a lot of people on a merry dance, including his mother, he
took—takes her for a pretty penny too." "When
is that?" Sam asked. "Ah,
that's… not for a couple of years, your time, Sam," Al said
gleaning more information from Ziggy.
"He gets so out of it in later years that other women won't
look at him twice and he has to resort to his family to bail him out.
Sam, it's one thing tricking strangers out of their money but when
it come to family, well, darn it, that's not right, not right at
all." "How
can someone…" Sam said, indicating to the bedroom, "get away
with the same thing over and over and for so long without getting
caught?" "A
devious mind, always plotting something or other, clever too by the looks
of it and combined with the gift of the gab." "How
come? He's so groggy and unstable." "You
wait Sam, in a couple 'o hours he'll be a different man, you'll not
recognize him." "I
don't believe that," Sam exacted. "Believe
me Sam, I should know." The
door to the bedroom opened suddenly.
"You might as well take this with you!" the naked Gerald
grunted as he threw the soiled sheet into Doctor Beckett's face. The
little dog cowered and a growl started to grow in his throat when he saw
exactly who it was that was standing in the doorway. "And
stop dawdling!" Gerald snapped as he looked about him somewhat
secretively. "Who are
you talking to anyway? I
thought I heard voices." The
growl turned into a snarl and Gerald's eyes fell on the small canine. "Sam!"
Jerry trilled joyously. Sam
shot back in astonishment, giving his friend an astute glare.
Al replied with a shrug of his shoulders. "Sammy?
Where the hell have you been all night?" he exacted and
pointed a derisory finger into the bedroom. The
little dog shrank away but after a second or two, he obeyed and skulked
towards the bedroom where a cumbersome foot made his journey that bit
quicker. Sam
stepped forward after seeing the outlandish display towards the dumb
animal. "Sam!"
Al warned. "Careful,
Sam, don't do anything you'll regret later."
Al could see that his friend was seething inside and he would have
done the exact same thing, if he was in Sam's position, but he wasn't.
But he was in a position where he could see where this might lead. Wisely,
Sam backed off and turned tail. He
headed for the alcove he'd seen earlier but as he drew closer, he found
that was all it was, an alcove and so instead, he retreated back towards
the stairwell and started his descent. He
didn't know where he was going but instinct told him that downstairs was
the best place to be. The lower his footfalls took him, the colder the air became
and he envisioned that other
part of the house where he'd found the air much colder.
This part of the house was not so grand in its decoration and soon
he would find out why. As
he reached the bottom of the stairwell, Doctor Beckett once again was in
darkness. Feeling sticky from
the damp sheet, he shivered and looked about him for something to tell him
where he could go next. Even
the faint glow from the bright lights above didn't penetrate where he
stood. And so he lingered,
patiently waiting for his eyes to become accustomed to the darkness.
After what seemed like an age, not even the shadows made themselves
apparent, everything remained pitch black. A
scuttling noise told Sam that he was not alone in his present
surroundings. It was not a
sound he recognized, it was unfamiliar to his ears, making him feel
jittery. He regretted his
haste in getting away and he wished now that he'd had the foresight to
turn on the light before running away.
'Yes!' he scolded
himself, 'Yup, running away again,
as I always do.' "Al?"
the Leaper's voice sounded uncannily abnormal and the scuttling noise
seemed to grow and scurry all around him, giving him double the jitters. He
looked warily up to whence he'd come, the brightness was exceedingly
alluring. Sam's first
instinct was to go back up the stairs but another voice in his head told
him that it wasn't such a good idea. "Al?
Come out, come out, wherever you are," Sam whispered
anxiously. He swallowed the
mass of nerves that had accumulated in his throat but it didn't make him
feel any better. His heart
fluttered as the nagging sound that he couldn't quite make out, began to
stir again at the reverberation of his whispered utterance. "What
the hell… is it?" he said louder than he had intended, and was then
taken swiftly unawares at yet another sound coming from his right.
A clatter, a gentle flapping as something weightless wisped onto
the surface of the floor, followed in quick succession by a further,
similar rattle. Doctor
Beckett found himself pressed against icy coldness, his fingers firmly
groping at the painted wooden wall. The
towel and the sodden sheet forgotten as a momentary fit of terror seized
every muscle taught. "Aaarrrrgh!"
he vocalized at the suddenness of the dazzling whiteness that blinded and
stung at his eyes. Even
before his vision returned, he could hear the stomping of heavy feet on
the stairs as they hurried downward. "Outta
my way, bitch!" the oaf, Gerald growled shoving Sam to one side. "Now
hang on, wait a minute…" Sam caught a hold of Gerald's trailing
arm, stopping him in his tracks. "What
gives you the right to talk to and treat me this way?" Doctor
Beckett's grip on his arm tightened.
"And not just me—every woman you talk to just lately
is—is…" Sam couldn't think of the right words, he was still
astounded that he should be saying this
much. "You're sick—you need to see someone about the effects
your drinking is having on…" "And
what gives you the RIGHT to interfere in my getting ready for work?"
Gerald demanded, glaring directly into Doctor Beckett's eyes.
The lout's face took on the features of an evil goblin as his face
began to redden. A
full fifteen stone of man fat slammed Sam back into the wall.
The sweet, sickly breath swamping Doctor Beckett almost into subservience. "Bitch—you
stink, take a bath, I need my vittles
'afore I tackle this bitch of a day," he growled suggestively
into Sam's ear as he pressed his weight further into him.
"Gear it up – so to speak," he sneered, insinuatingly. Doctor
Beckett's chin was almost in his chest as he tried to avoid the torrid
stench and the unremitting gaze of what he—Joanna was being subjected
to. He couldn't understand
why she had or was putting up with this man's infractions, though a little
of Joanna did happen to filter through now and then and one of those times
was now. '...to love,
honor
and obey, for richer or for poorer, for better or for worse, in sickness
and in health.' 'Sweet, delusional, Joanna,'
Sam thought, 'she is taking her
wedding vows all too literally. Time
she woke up to who it is she's married and to the vows that he had taken
too. Wasn't it "love,
honor and cherish" that went along with everything else?
Surely, he had broken his vows first and so making the contract
null and void? Least, that's
the way I see…’ He also had a sense of déjà vu as though he'd
gone through this scenario before. Sam's
thoughts were cut off midstream when he felt a roughly skinned hand slide
to the inside of his thighs. PART THREE "N-n-no!"
Sam said assertively and slid down the wall, out of the way of the
ruffian's lecherous grasp. Or
so he thought. "After what you've said, you don't deserve any…" Doctor
Beckett shivered with cold disbelief as lecher's knee swiftly plunged into
his abdomen, pinning him even tighter into the corner of the wall and
floor. "Deserve
WHAT!" the enraged Gerald pronounced.
"My RIGHTS? I DEMAND my RIGHTS as your husband!" "You
gave up your rights as a husband when you…" Gerald's
knee pandered deeper into Sam's gut making him gasp.
"When I—when I WHAT? Don't
you mean your clumsiness? You
can't hold me responsible for your little
accidents." Gerald's
searing gaze burned intensely into Doctor Beckett's subconscious, bringing
forth another of Joanna's filtrations.
"Accidents my foot! Accidents
by your hand, your fists, your doing!
Whatever has Joanna done to deserve you?
And why she stays with you I'll never know!" Gerald's
features turned into a twisted snarl.
"Now I know you've lost it bitch!
An out'uv body experience, is it?
Well, you'll know soon enough what it's like to be out of body as
well as out of mind, cos you're heading straight for the funny farm." "Not
as long as I have a breath in my body, I won't!" Sam promised. "You?!!"
Gerald's twisted scowl broadened, revealing an iniquitous, one toothed
sneer. His mirth spurted
forth in a flume of cascading saliva. Sam's
head lurched backward as the foul dribble jettisoned into his face and he
muted a groan when his head smashed against the hardness of the wall
behind him. Stunned
for a few moments, Doctor Beckett blinked away the fuzziness that had made
his ears ring and his head pound, and, as his focus returned, the still
cruel mouth spat out hysterically, "Scared are ya?
You should be!" "No,
Jerry," Sam breathed his response as he looked past his assailant.
"I pity you." Quizzically,
Jerry looked at the woman beneath him and for a split second, he saw
someone else and not his frightened, brown eyed temptress.
Doctor Beckett's steely glare looked straight through him and he
felt somewhat disturbed. Momentarily
distracted, he leaned back on his haunches and stared into Joanna's face
and she smiled scornfully back at him. Sam
didn't waste the opportunity and fervently pushed the lout away from him,
causing Gerald to roll over backwards.
At
that moment, the Imaging Chamber door opened, and as Al stepped out, they
collided. Gerald, not
realizing that he was skidding his way through the twenty-first century,
growled in alarm. Seeing
the encroaching Gerald, Al instinctively jumped out of the way.
"Nozzle!" Al grouched as his eyes followed Gerald's journey into
his time and then back out. He
then turned to Sam and was alarmed to see him hunched over in the corner.
"What the hell?
What is it Sam, you're not even
dressed yet?" he queried as he raised an eyebrow, a quirky grin
spreading across his face. Sam
struggled to his feet, all of the time keeping a distrustful eye on Jerry. "What
the hell happened, Sam?" the Observer repeated when he saw Sam flinch
as his friend gingerly touched at his abdomen.
"You do get yourself into some unlikely predicaments." The
bewildered Gerald looked to Joanna in surprise. "Wish
I could lock him in here for you, buddy," he said quickly before the
Imaging Chamber door closed down. "Pity
he's not the Leapee, we could have some real fun with him
in the Waiting Room." "Ha!"
Sam directed at the Observer. "H-how…
did you do that?" the stunned Gerald asked as his dazes eyes looked
about him. The cages behind
him were a hive of activity and for the first time, Doctor Beckett saw
what it was that had made that awful noise which had filled him so full of
dread. Al
saw them too. "Rats!" he squawked louder than the screeching
rodents. "That's it Sam,
I'm outta here!" Al said anxiously, poising a finger over the
handlink. "What
did you come back for?" Sam asked Al, unthinking. But
before the Observer could answer, Gerald spoke up. "T-to fetch the
p-post," he grunted with the exertion of heaving his bulk from the
dusty ground and started to make his way towards the heap of multicolored
envelopes. "That's
what I came to tell you Sam!" Al pointed down at the pile of letters
that were scattered across the floor.
"You've got to get to the mail before that—that, nozzle
does!" Doctor
Beckett turned his head to the direction in which his friend's finger
indicated. "Now,
Sam! Now!" Al supplicated as Gerald began to scoop up the
letters one by one. "He's
been keeping all of Joanna's mail from her.
She has no idea that he's been doing it but Ziggy, she's found out
what he's up to and it's not nice, Sam, not nice at all." "Junk,
as usual," Jerry pronounced with a wheeze of exhaled breath.
"Nothin' to worry yersel' about." "The
maggot's trying to wriggle out of it—the worm.
Bait him, Sam!" Al asserted aggressively. Despite
his pain and the still groggy sensation in his head, Doctor Beckett dashed
for the door. There was
nothing the stunned Gerald could do as the Leaper slammed his body into
his and once more knocked the unsuspecting Gerald off balance. "What
the f…!" the disorientated lout cursed as he yet again, found
himself on the grimy floor, covered in sawdust. "I'll
take those, if you don't mind," Sam firmly declared as he seized the
crumpled letters from Gerald's clutches. Gerald
reached out to retrieve one communiqué of particular interest but Sam
stomped a firm foot upon the hand just as Gerald picked up one corner of
the manila envelope. "That
one too, thank you," Sam said as he picked up the packet that Gerald
was so interested in. "I
think now is the time—that it's my turn to decide what is junk and what
isn't—don't you?" Gerald
didn't know what had hit him, and twice at that.
Joanna had always been so submissive before, that's how he could
get away with what he'd been doing all of these years.
He could handle Joanna
but now, he didn't know what had come over her, he hadn't seen this side
of her before and he knew then that he'd have to put a stop to it, once
and for all. Otherwise, she
could get out-of-hand. "Give
that one back—that one's mine!" Gerald growled as loud as his
constricted lungs would allow. Sam
twisted the bulky envelope around, read the name, and address through the
transparent window. "Since when has your name been Mrs. Joanna Suzman?" "'Tis
mine I tell yer! They've made
a mistake with the name!" Gerald yowled in protest as Doctor Beckett
began to tear it open. "If
it is yours, then I'll apologize," Sam said as he slid out the wad of
papers and unfolded them. As
Sam read the heading aloud he looked in Al's direction whilst Al entered
the data into the handlink. "Croft,
Blakely and Brent, Solicitors," Al repeated, the handlink squawked
almost immediately with an answer. "That's
the name of Joanna's solicitors Sam!" "Thought
so, a mistake, huh? This is a
letter confirming the sale of the property, namely Sheepbridge
House." Gerald
gasped and shakily, he shrank away. But
what Doctor Beckett didn't notice or realize, was that the man wasn't
shaking with fear, but with anger as his rage inside began to build in its
intensity. "Hang
on Sam, something else is coming through," Al waited for the
information as it trickled across the tiny screen.
"As I thought, the rat
has sold Joanna's home without her knowledge.
It was in her sole name Sam, bought and paid for, years before she
even met this nozzle." "So…
it's a mistake is it? You've
sold this house… Jo—my home from under me?
When were you gonna tell me that I'd have to move out?" Sam
asked with a glare of satisfaction. "I-I
hadn't th-thought that f-far ahead," Gerald continued with his
subterfuge then grunting, he began to stand. "Watch
him Sam, this animal's capable of anything!" Al forewarned. Doctor
Beckett acknowledged his friend with a single nod of his head. Even
before he was upright, Gerald grasped at Sam's lower legs and forced him
to the ground. Sam lay winded
with Gerald's mass atop him, his hot breath belching onto Sam's naked
chest. With
one almighty push, Doctor Beckett heaved him away but the brute wasn't
about to give in. Gerald
grappled for each of Sam's wrists and held onto them in a vice-like grip.
Tussling and tousled, Sam fought back but Gerald's strength was as
inhuman as his irrevocable lunacy. Doctor
Beckett searched every nook and cranny of his subconscious for some small
remnant that his host could have left behind.
Anything would do, even the minutest detail would suffice, anything
he could use to startle Gerald into losing his concentration, even if it
was only for a split second. Throughout
the tussling and jousting, Al shrieked out commands but Sam's
concentration was needed elsewhere and so the Admirals advice fell upon
deaf ears. At
last and catching Sam's eye, Al yelled out, "Listen to me, will
ya?" He was taken aback when Doctor Beckett's eyes rested on him
pleadingly. "That's
better, now do I have your full attention, Sam?" Doctor
Beckett nodded slightly, unable to do anything else as the ruffian's
forearm pressed against his windpipe. Al
grimaced. "Ziggy's come
up with something new. Ask him about Carla, Sam!" Sam's
expression, for an instant, changed to puzzlement. Unconsciously,
the Observer's cheek twitched. "There's too much involved and there
isn't enough time for me to go into all of the details—just ask butthead
here why Carla's grandmother's house is mortgaged to the hilt!" he
said without taking a single breath. "Carla?
Who's Carla?" Sam repeated quietly but it was just loud enough
for Gerald to hear. It was
precisely the opening Sam needed to smash his own forearm across Gerald's
jaw. The
oaf yowled like a stuck pig before toppling backwards. "YAYHEY,
Sam!" Al danced, both arms raised, stabbing the air in triumph.
"Whooohooo!" "Nahhhggg!"
Doctor Beckett followed through, he had barely enough strength left to
finish the job and knock out the now catatonic Gerald. Breathing
heavily, Sam leaned on his hands as he bent over the silent but heaving
figure. "He's the husband from Hell, Al!" "You
don't have to tell me that." Al said as he warily made his way over
to his friend's side but stopped short and looked down at the prone form
as a strange gurgling sound came from the ruffian's throat.
"Something's wrong here, Sam!" Sam
was already on it, hoisting Gerald's body onto its side.
"He's choking to death, Al!
But I swear; I didn't hit him that hard!" "Glass
jaw, I've seen it before. He
maybe as strong as an ox but if that's where his frailty lies then you
could've knocked him out with a feather.
Not your fault, Sam so don't go sayin' it was." As
Sam rolled him over, his head followed shortly after, and with an immense
rush, blood and saliva gushed from his mouth but Gerald's breathing didn't
improve any. "What?"
Sam implored. "There
must be something else restricting his airway!"
And so Sam opened his mouth and gingerly felt inside. Sure
enough, there was something, lodged way back against his epiglottis.
Doctor Beckett scooped it out with two fingers but lost his grip
amidst the slime and it chinked onto the dusty floor.
Gerald's breathing instantly relieved. "Da
dummy be a gummi!" Al remarked with a snicker when he saw Gerald's
tooth slither across the grimy floor. Sam
wasn't in the mood for any of Al's sarcastic remarks but on this occasion
even Sam couldn’t suppress a smile. But he did manage to turn it into a
frown of disbelief. "Sorry
Sam, couldn't resist that one," Al apologized
with an exaggerated grimace. "I
know Al," Sam said sadly, as he wiped his hands on Jerry's grubby and
torn shirt. "I know it's only you being you," he said, equally
as sadly but with the tiniest hint of sarcasm. "You can't help it,
being the way you are." Al
glared at his friend momentarily but his expression soon changed when the
handlink squealed as a reminder. "Dunno
why you're bothering though, Sam," Al said, changing the subject
slightly when he read the data on the handlink.
"He's a two-timing, no good bigamist; he's still married but
not to you—erm, er—Joanna, though she doesn't know that yet." "When
does she find out, Al?" Sam asked, astonished. "She
doesn't, Sam… you—Joanna, dies in less than two hours," Al said
somberly. "She
dies? How? He's…"
Sam waved a hand over the recumbent Jerry.
"…out cold." "Drowning…" "He
kills her?" Sam queried, almost stopping dead whilst he mopped up the
mess around Gerald's mouth with his shirttail. "Never
proven though, Sam," the Observer retrieved the data from the
handlink. "Joanna's
autopsy report says that she slipped and fell in the bathtub and…
Sam—get this, it looks as if it's happened before; and the last time he
wasn't married to the poor kid either.
This other autopsy report says that Carla died in a car accident.
She lost everything too Sam, man, this guy—sure is a real
sleezeball. He's nothing but
a two bit hustler; who feeds on women who have property or a little money,
a philanderer." He
egoistically kicked an unwavering foot through Gerald's form. Something
wasn't sitting right; there was also something in Al's tone that wasn't
sounding quite as it should be. "Then,
who else is he married to, if it's not Carla or me?" "Her
name is…" the Observer paused whilst the information was fed
through. "…Deborah
Peterson, no divorce papers are ever filed but then again he doesn't need
to. Twelve years from now he
dies, sclerosis of the liver." "Figures,"
Sam said unexcitedly, and satisfied that Gerald was out of danger he stood
slowly. Pacing towards his
friend, he turned back. "Though
judging by the way he's bleeding, I doubt he'll last that long.
That's the trouble with alcohol, when abused over time, it destroys
the clotting ability of the blood, hence the sclerosis. Usually the liver can regenerate itself but with
alcohol abuse," Sam shook his head, not knowing if it was Joanna's
thoughts that were filtering through or his own.
"That ability is no longer factual." "You
don't have to tell me that Sam," Al said sadly.
"Though I doubt I wasn't a fraction as bad as this…
nozzle." Sam
raised his brow, "No Al, you weren't but you could have been if you'd
carried on," he sighed as he looked at the prone Gerald.
"I think I should phone the police, before…" "No
Sam!" the Observer iterated, making Sam jump half out of his skin.
"You can't do that, that's what Joanna did the last time
and…" "Why
not?" Sam asked, confused. "Ziggy,
just gave me the lowdown on the police report.
You're not gonna believe this Sam, they took his
word over hers, in fact between them, they ridiculed her and threatened to
arrest her for knocking out this noggin's teeth." "Joanna
knocked out his tooth as well?"
Sam was now even more confused. "Yup,"
the Observer nodded. "It
seems as though you are repeating history… you haven't changed anything
yet, Sam." Sam's
brow creased, he didn't know how to explain it but ever since this Leap
had started, he felt as though he wasn't in control. The
Observer raised his eyebrows as Gerald groaned.
"Uh-ho!"
Al uttered when he saw that Gerald had begun to stir. "He's coming to; if I were you, I'd make myself
scarce." "I'll
go and take that much needed bath, I think," Sam said as he headed
for the stairs. "Not
yet, Sam!" the Observer stipulated.
"You can't do that, that's where, Joanna… erm… you know…
er…" Al made a slashing motion across his throat. Sam
turned to face the Observer just as his friend completed the gesture.
"Al, I can always lock the door!" "You
think that'll keep this buffoon out?" "Maybe
you're right but where else? Al,
I don't know where else to go." "Remember
who you are Sam, you're not some helpless female who has to hide in a
closet, you're Sam Beckett, right!" "But
you've just told me to get the hell outta here so, ahhh, Al, what
is it you want me to do?" Sam slumped his arms down in defeat. "Okay,
okay, it's the natural thing for Joanna to do and as you're her—aw God,
this is confusing. You do
what you think is best. I'll
keep lookout here and I'll come and find you if this nozzle does anything
out of the ordinary. Ha!" Al laughed.
"As if this creep will ever
do anything— ordinary!" Doctor
Beckett glanced down at the now conscious Gerald and sighed, shrugging his
shoulders. "If
you're goin', do it now, afore this cretin regains all of his
senses," Al urged, shooing his friend away. Again, he laughed at his
thoughts but didn't add to them. Sam
charged up the stairs, taking them three steps at a time. "Gorge?"
Gerald questioned, slurring and slurping as he sat himself upright and
rubbed at his aching chin. "What
happened here, Gorge?" "As
if you don't already know! You
slob, you sad old bucket of lardy bones!" Al growled, keeping a close
eye on his every movement. Gerald
stumbled to his feet and blinking, he patted at his mouth.
"What the—hell?" he pause to full up his lungs. "Wait
for it!" Al commented as he watched on and cringed as he waited for
the yelling to start. "GORGE!!"
Gerald howled at the top of his lungs. "All
I can say pal, is that I'm glad I'm a hologram, otherwise you'd 'uv been
hanging on meat hook in a butcher's freezer by now!" "I've
had another accident Gorge!" he shouted a little more subdued.
"Help me find my tooth, Gorge?
I can't manage without my tooth."
He crouched down and on his hands and knees he crawled about the
floor, rummaging amongst the sawdust to find his tooth.
The blood that dribbled from his mouth didn't seem to bother him in
the least; he just wiped it away as if it were a common occurrence,
undoing the cleaning process that Doctor Beckett had performed. "There
you are, you little bugger," he said as he picked out the slimy tooth
from a heap of dust, blowing off most the grime, he pushed it back into
its recently vacated socket. "Sheesh!"
Al grimaced as he looked on. Even
the squelching sound it made as Gerald bit down made Al's skin crawl.
"Disgusting!" he finished with a shake of his head. Looking
towards the stairs, Gerald's brow creased and as he turned towards the
door, he shrugged, just as if he couldn’t actually remember what had
taken place. "I've
seen that look before," Al said unmitigatingly, thinking of his
friend upstairs.
"Confusing
ain't it, memory loss? Though
I think Sam has a more substantial reason than you do—air brain." "I'm
going to work now, Gorge. Do
I get a kiss goodbye?" he said and paused by the open doorway for a
reply. "What!"
Al's eyes widened, and then closed into narrow slits. "Not on your Nellie, you parasitic, fork tongued,
cretin!" "Ahhh,"
Gerald sighed and as he wiped at his mouth again he was out of the door. "What!
You're not gonna clean up first?" Al queried, wincing with
revulsion. "No, I take
that back, Sam's upstairs so don't you dare go bothering him.
You hear me?" Al
followed him just to make sure, reappearing on the outer wall, he watched
as the inane figure fumbled for his keys to unlock a beige colored van. Though
he knew he shouldn't, the Observer couldn’t suppress a chuckle as Gerald
grunted, bending down several times to retrieve the keys before
successfully unlocking and opening the van door.
Al suddenly had a thought; the laws in England were much the same
where drink driving was concerned, now if he could get the registration
details as he drove off then maybe…
As the vehicle kangarooed for fifty yards, he then knew he was
right and he memorized the registration before it sped off around the next
corner. With a thrilled
shrug, he forwarded the number to Ziggy. "Is
it possible, using that latest gismo installed…" Al asked into the
handlink. "…you can keep a lock on that nozzle's position?" he
posed to the hybrid computer. "Damn!"
Al cursed when he read Ziggy's reply.
"…but it is ready? That's
great Zig! Have Stephen meet me with it, pronto!" Al grinned and
along with a gleam of satisfaction he raised a fist in victory.
"Gotcha… butthead!" *~*~*~*~*~* Breathing
heavily, Sam leaned his back onto the now closed bathroom door.
He pressed a hand to his racing heart and breathed in deeply trying
desperately to suppress his anxiety. 'What
is it with me?' he asked himself as a wave of nausea swept over him.
Quickly, he raced over to the toilet and emptied the contents of
his stomach. Sweating
profusely he remained still, waiting for the buzzing in his ears to stop.
He could feel the sweat trickling down his back and along his
fevered brow, down his nose and cheeks, and dripping into the basin
beneath. All of the time the
words 'lock the door, must lock the
door,' ran through his confused thoughts. Shakily,
he pushed himself up from his knees but remained for a few more moments
leaning, whilst his hands pressed firmly against the bowl to steady
himself. Then finally, when
he felt he was ready, he gingerly moved over to the washbasin, turned on
the tap and splashed his face and head with cold water. Through
the dribbles of water, the eyes of a frightened rabbit stared back at him,
a look that he had seen before, a terrified living thing that had been
caught in the bright headlights of an oncoming car ~ nowhere to go and
nowhere to hide. Then
it dawned on him, he was hearing
Joanna's thoughts and feeling
her emotions. No wonder he
felt as he did, wanting to run away—no, get
away at every opportune moment. He
realized it
now, she was one tough lady but
reoccurring events had worn her down, forging a sense of insecurity and
breaking down her self-confidence. "Oh
Joanna… you don't deserve this," Sam whispered sadly to the
rippling reflection, he then looked up into the mirror and smiling, he
reached out a faltering hand towards her.
"I promise… as long as I'm here, he won't lay another finger
on you." The
Leaper was so lost in Joanna's thoughts that he didn't hear the Imaging
Chamber door open. "Sam!"
the Observer echoed, making Sam almost jump out of his skin. Doctor
Beckett gasped and looked into the mirror.
On seeing no other reflection he abruptly spun around and glared
fiercely at the Admiral. "Hell Al, I thought you were him!" "Sorry,
you'll just have to make do with little ol' me," the Observer
apologized and stuffed his hands into his pockets.
"But you and Joanna are safe for now, he's gone." "Gone?"
Sam looked about nervously. "Gone
where?" "To
work, apparently," Al shrugged, dismissing his thoughts lightly. His
friend would be so pleased when he got around to telling him what it was
that he and Ziggy had planned. "In
that condition?" "Guess
so, and Ziggy's keeping a lock on him so that we'll know where he is and
when he returns." "Thank
God, Al!" Sam sighed, genuinely relieved. "So
I guess you can take that bath after all." Al
waved a hand at the gleaming white bathtub.
He then looked around; everything seemed to be brand new,
unused, and even down to the whiteness and glossiness of the floor tiles. "Thanks
Al, I need one after the mauling that degenerate has given me," Sam
said and shuddered as he turned on the faucet.
"Take a look at these papers Al," Sam requested, when
something reminded him that Al was in charge of the finance and
administration at the Project. "Hmmm,
these should make for interesting reading," the Observer mumbled.
He reached a hand into his inside pocket and retrieved a pair of
gold-framed spectacles. Doctor
Beckett straightened out the papers on the toilet seat and atop of the
cistern whilst the Observer perched his glasses onto the bridge of his
nose. "Look
at this one, a bank statement; all the money from the sale of the house
has gone into this—Joanna's account— now, why would he do that?
And this one," Sam hurriedly pointed Al attention to a letter
regarding the title deeds: "they're now in Barry Holmes' name, one of
Gerald's aliases." Al
stooped down and ran his finger close to the long list of numbers.
"There's some hefty withdrawals here Sam and all done by
banker draft into another account. This
guy is clever. Looks to me as
if he's making out Joanna has sold the house to this Barry Holmes and
Joanna has collected the money. When
all the time… he's sold the house to himself, and is milking off the
proceeds. We need some way we
can compare the signatures and that's gonna be hardest part.
We need the details of this other
account too. Is there
anything amongst the other letters?" Sam
shook his head. "There's
only these three, like Gerald said, it's mostly junk mail." "He
must keep his papers somewhere Sam," Al said, stroking his chin.
"Is anything of Joanna filtering through?" "Yeah,
some, but nothing to do with this, remember Al, she knows nothing about
any of this." "A
check card or credit card, something with Joanna's signature on it?"
Al shook his head even before Sam answered; his friend's vacant
expression spoke multitudinous volumes, even when he didn't say a word.
Al knew him so well. "What?!"
Sam asked incredulously, when he saw the Observers iniquitous grin and he
immediately knew that Al was dying to tell him something. "There
is
something else you can do Sam," Al said as he followed Sam to a
cupboard. "I've gotten
his vehicle registration and if you telephone the police, I'm sure they'd
lock him up for drunk driving." "Yeah
they might, but wouldn't that just be delaying the inevitable?
He'd probably get a hefty fine and lose his licence.
What after that? Wouldn't
he be madder than hell and take it all out on Joanna?
I can't stay around forever you know," Sam quibbled
and strode back to the bathtub. He
added a hefty globule of bubble bath after finding it in one of the
cupboards along with a fresh towel, which he hung on a ring next to the
bath. "I
thought you'd be pleased but I guess I didn't think of it that way, sorry,
Sam," Al fidgeted. Sam
twizzled his hand at Al and the Observe turned his back so that Sam could
remove the tinzie garment before
stepping into the tub. "They
need to catch him out on a more extensive charge," Sam necessitated
as he submerged his aching body into the overly foamy pleasure of its
deepness. "Ahhh… What
can Ziggy dig up?" On
hearing Sam's sigh of elation, the Admiral turned to face Sam and produced
the advanced version of Stephen's handlink and Sam marvelled at the
contraption. He had a vague
memory of its existence but something was telling him that the device
wasn't up to scratch. The
Admiral saw his friend's look of consternation and attempted to reassure
him immediately. "It's
okay Sam; it's the new improved version, Mark II.
Stephen's completely remodelled it and he's pretty sure that it'll
work perfectly now." "Only
pretty sure, huh?
That's very reassuring, Al!" Sam said, disgruntled. "Where's
your oomph, Sam?" the beleaguered Al digressed, looking down at the
new handlink and turning it's smoothness around in his hand. "My!...
My oomph as you call it is soaking in this bathtub along with Joanna's
self esteem, that's where my oomph
is!" "My,
aren't we tetchy!" Al said nonchalantly. 'Three buttons?' the Observer thought when he saw that there had
been more buttons added to Stephen's device. "Why
are you tetchy, Al?" Sam
said quirkily, then leaned back and proceeded to scrub away the morning's
stench. "Me?
I'm not tetchy," Al said vaguely
as he attempted to
figure out which of the three buttons to press to summon the infamous
Ziggy. "Oh you mean the
'we' bit?
That was just a figure of speech, Sam; I'm not in the least bit
tetchy," he said as cantankerously he buffeted the handlink.
"Which one Sam," Al asked as he thrust the device under
Sam's nose. "What'd
ya mean, which one?" Sam asked mystified as to what it was he was
looking for. "Which
one, to summon Zig, which button?" Al
repeated, getting more irate. "Which
did you use before?" Sam asked with a frown. "This
one I think… or this one, maybe even this one, I don't know there was
only one before, dunno what the hell the others do." Sam
raised his brow and looked from the handlink to his friend.
"Didn't you think to ask?" "I
didn't know then that there would be more," Al confessed. "Al,
you're so…" "Useless!"
Al finished. "Now,
I didn't say that, Al!" Sam tossed in. "Didn't
say that you did, that's my contribution, the way I feel when you're
thrown into these bad situations and I can't do a damn thing to
help," the Observer revealed, his
voice full of consternation. "Why
haven't you said anything before?" Sam posed, concerned with his
friend's feelings. "I
couldn't, you have enough to contend with, without me burdening you with
my little gripes, least I have Beth to alleviate my grievances.
Who do you have, huh?" "You,"
Sam countermanded as he reached up for the towel. "And you know, Al, I wouldn't change that for the
world." Al
looked at his friend childishly then turned around to give Sam some
privacy. He wondered how this
all could have transpired. 'Surely, Gerald must've made mistakes somewhere along the line, so how
come
no one had ever spotted
it?'
He thought hard. 'How
could Gerald possibly profit from buying the house himself?
Even if he was taking the money out of Joanna's bank account, he
wasn't gaining anything by it, only breaking even. Though he did now own
the property, the only way he could really gain was if he sold it on.'
He was confused. 'Why not sell the
property on in the first place? What
was this Gerald really up to?' Sam
began to rub himself down. "Try
the first button and if that doesn't work try the others – I doubt
Stephen would put anything in there that would cause a catastrophe." Al
depressed the first in the row of three oblique buttons, the corner of one
being on the horizontal to the opposing corner of the other.
'Fancy,' the Admiral
mentally noted. Ziggy's
matrix uncoiled into an upside-down umbrella-shaped prism before the full
milieu trickled into effect. As
Sam looked over the Admiral's shoulder he couldn't help but blink in
wonder as Ziggy's form materialized before his very eyes. "That's…
definitely different," Al commented as he too was awestruck by the
hologram's dramatic entrance. "Good
morning, Doctor," Ziggy's dulcet tones infused. "It's
still morning?" Doctor Beckett once again blinked but this time in
disbelief. "I feel as
though half a day has gone." "In
your time Doctor, it is seven, thirty-five and twenty-eight seconds, to be
precise. Hmmm, nice pecs
Doctor." Ziggy quipped,
her eyes flashed as she cocked her head to one side. Doctor
Beckett coughed shyly and instinctively gift wrapped his torso with the
towel, clasping it around his midriff. "You
shouldn't be looking!" the Observer growled at the hologram. "Hard
not to," Ziggy replied, peeking coercively. "It could be the direction in which you are pointing my
matrix, Admiral." "I
thought you didn't possess a sense of humour Ziggy," Sam spurted,
slightly embarrassed. "I
am
learning, Doctor, after all you did program me to adapt my encoding at
every propitious moment." Again
her eyes probed indicatively. "Time
for some clothes I think," Sam said with a hint of trepidation in his
voice. Not wanting to mark
the pristine floor, he strategically placed one corner of the towel on the
floor before proceeding to step out of the tub. Before
he could remove the plug to drain the water from the bathtub, Doctor
Beckett heard a noise outside. "Al
did you hear that?" Sam whispered and proceeded to knot the towel
securely about his waist. "Sure
did pal," Al said turning a quizzical gaze towards the door.
"But you're safe for now, right?" "Heck
Al!" Sam gulped as he too quickly swivelled his body full circle
toward the entrance. "I've
been so caught up; I don't think I actually got around to locking the damn thing! "Ziggy?
You could have given me at least four
minute's warning!" Sam stressed. "Ziggy,
where is klutz-head?" the Admiral asked the laconic hologram as Sam
charged headlong towards the unlocked door. Halfway
there, a startled Sam skidded across the slippery surface and losing
traction he skidded the rest of the way awkwardly, sliding feet first en
route to an open doorway and a seething Gerald. "Jerry?"
Sam gasped faintly as he looked up into the soured, ruddy face; Gerald's
eyes were wide with rage and as bloodshot as the broken vessels on his
sagging jowls. "Thought
you were keeping a track of this Rotweiler's
location?" the Observer grilled a befuddled Ziggy. PART FOUR "I
was—am, I do not understand it, Admiral; this person should not
be here. According to…" "Bitch!"
the oaf's voice thundered over Ziggy's.
"I was 'alf way to work afore I found
out what you'd done!" "…he
should be five miles away," the hybrid computer concluded. “Get
the hell outta here! You cretinous sack of blubba!” the Observer yelled. "Press
the middle button Admiral!" Ziggy ordered edgily.
The Observer complied with her instructions and Ziggy's image
transformed into that of a local map.
A blip flashed out in the upper right quadrant of the projected
hologram. "See, that's
where he should be!" Ziggy countered. The
Observer gazed incredulously at the diffused illustration; sure enough the
blinking blimp was miles away from their centrifugal position.
"So why's he here?" Awkwardly,
Ziggy fell silent. Gerald
reached down and grabbed roughly at one of Doctor Beckett's wrists and
proceeded to haul him along the slickness of the tiled flooring.
Sam struggled continually, trying to find his feet but each time he
thought that he'd gained a foothold, the formidable strength of the brute
lugged him over yet again. "S—Sa—am!"
the Observer yelled. "It's
happening, and now, Sam!" As
much as Doctor Beckett resisted, Gerald's determination was evermore
overwhelming. "3.9
minutes Admiral," Ziggy's voice hummed so that only the Observer
could hear. "Naaahhhgggg!"
Sam grunted as his foot slipped on the accumulated condensation and he
landed yet again on his hip, he could feel Joanna's contusions further
erupting on his own flesh and he wondered how on earth Joanna could have
endured so much for so long. "Let
him go! You—you turd faced
toad!" the Observer snarled. The
harder Doctor Beckett resisted and fought back, the more forceful Gerald
grew. Sam couldn't believe
the strength of this brute, he took everything that the Leaper lashed out
at him, doggedly avoiding Sam's relentless blows to his face. Al
couldn't believe it either. "I
can't understand it Sam, this nincompoop must be totally impervious to
pain!" "Shaddap,
bitch!" Gerald barked as he tugged and twisted on Joanna's arm,
dragging her nearer to the bath and in the struggle, black rubber scuff
marks spoiled the polished surface of the floor tiles. "Your
only chance is—is if you get to your feet, Sam!" the Admiral
empathized iniquitously. "Whatever
you do, you've gotta get to your feet!
Come on Sam, you can do better than this!" "I'm
trying, dammit!" Sam snapped, answering both men. "Not
hard enough! Now keep your
damn mouth shut," Gerald demanded as a hefty steel-toed boot swung
through and glanced Joanna sideways across her jaw. "Arrrrggggghhhhh,"
Sam cried out in agony. He
instinctively raised his free hand to his chin and dabbed away the blood.
He looked up at his friend and mumbled through his pain, "What
did you find out?" Through
his squirming, the Observer shrugged, "Nothin', Beeks can't get
through to her and Beth's wondering if Joanna's taken some kind of
medication. She's running
some blood tests now." "That
you don't appreciate anything I do for you," Gerald answered Sam and
twisted his arm further into his back. "Ahhh!"
Sam groaned but something in his subconscious was triggered by his
friend's words and as he looked up to the sniggering Gerald, he asked,
"You drugged me! Why?" "Only
your usual medication, lover, though I did slip in a few extra to that
late night drink I made you, considerate ain't I?
Thought you might like a good night's sleep. But I didn't expect you waking so early.
I had it all planned, right down to the timing and you spoiled it
all." "Morphine,
Doctor." Ziggy informed Sam. "I've
just accessed Mrs. Suzman's medical records, she was prescribed morphine
but she did have an adverse reaction and so her medication was
changed." "Morphine?"
Sam looked quizzically towards Ziggy.
"But I threw that bottle away last month," Sam said as
another of Joanna's filtrations flickered into Doctor Beckett's subliminal
memory. "Sam,
get the hell up from there and clobber this joker," infused the
Admiral and unawares he clenched his fists tightly, as if this action
alone would help his friend overcome the slipperiness of the floor and the
daunting strength of his friend's adversary. "I've
enlightened Doctor Calavicci and she's administering a remedy as we
speak," the hologram informed. "So
you did," Gerald snarled as he gabbed at Joanna's hair and forced her
head back over the edge of the bathtub. "W-what
a-about work? I-I thought you
went to w-work?" Sam asked with difficulty, his back arched and his
neck taught and strained against Gerald's relentless tugging. "That's
what you were s'pposed to think, lover.
I took the van into the garage for that tune up you've been nagging
me about and Billy met me there—that was all arranged. And as planned, I asked him to bring me back here, told him
I'd some urgent phone calls to make." "Zig?
Were you tracking the van or this nozzle?" Al asked staunchly. Ziggy's
hologram pirouetted from within the map.
"If the van is the vehicle in question, then yes Admiral, I
was tracking the van and not its occupant," she said bluntly and
without emotion. "If
I'd 'uv known that, I would've stuck with him myself!" the Admiral
shot harshly at the iridescent image.
"Least then I could have warned Sam of this sleezball's
arrival." "And…
how was I to know that he would be leaving his vehicle?" Ziggy
returned forcefully. She then
pouted ruefully which promptly turned to concern when she saw that Gerald
had now taken her father by the scruff of his neck and was forcibly
bending him backwards over the bath. "I'm sorry Admiral, but I can't
stay and witness such an act," Ziggy apologized tersely. Al
watched on in dismay as the hybrid computer made her impromptu departure.
"Chicken!" he voiced derisively.
"Sam, do something! Anything!
You just can't let this nozzle get the better of you!" "Arrrrgggghhhh!"
Sam yelled out as his back reluctantly arched beyond endurance.
He was gripping onto the side of the bath with one hand and using
all of his strength to stop the savage from dunking his head under the
water. "I can't stop slipping!" he cried out when his feet
wouldn't stay connected to the floor. "Imagine
my surprise when you chose these
tiles for the bathroom, Gorge. They
are exactly as I'd hoped, nice and slippery," Gerald sneered close
into Joanna's ear. "Remind me next time to get carpeting," Sam said light-heartedly, even though the tediousness of the unending frustration was really beginning to annoy him. Arms
and fingers desperately throbbing from the relentless struggle, and the
agony from his overly extended spine, Sam just couldn't hang on and his
fingers finally lost their grip. "S-Sa—am! No Sam!" He
heard Al shout out as the now cooling water sloshed over his head and
submerged him beneath the diminishing bubbles.
He felt the top his head bump against the other side of the bath
and he could see the bubbles rise as his breath left his lungs.
The foamy water tidal waved over the edge and onto the floor, and
the struggle ensued into a frenzied deluge. Doctor
Beckett earned a slight reprieve when Gerald eased off the pressure to
straddle Joanna's struggling body to get a firmer grip. "Now,
Sam! Now!" Doctor
Beckett heeded his friend's cries of urgency. The
soggy towel had wrapped itself tightly about his legs, weighting him down
and he tussled with it furiously before he could finally free himself.
Looking through the miasma of foamy water, he could barely make out
where Gerald was standing but he readied a foot all the same.
He knew he had to do it soon, he couldn't hold his breath much
longer. His lungs were
already aching for precious oxygen and felt as though they were about to
burst. Doctor
Beckett reached up with his arms and at the same time raised a knee up to
his chest. He then clasped
his fingers about Gerald's neck and wrenched him down suddenly.
The air turned blue with profanities as Gerald's squeals were cut
short when Sam's knee made contact with the goon's throat.
Water gushed everywhere as the Leaper emerged gasping for breath. Sam
was taken aback, he had intended his aim to reach Gerald's weak spot, his
glass jaw, as Al had called it, and now Sam felt a little unnerved when he
heard the ogre's breath gurgle beneath the surface. "Leave
him Sam; I'm sure they'd understand it was self-defense," Al said as
he watched Sam removed the plug from the bath and the little water that
remained flowed freely down the plughole.
"I mean they've only to look at Joanna for the evidence." "I-I
can't do th-that Al," Sam disputed as he looked at the Observer
cynically. Quickly the Leaper removed Gerald's shirt and tore off the
sleeves. "N-not
when th-there's a cha-nce of sa-ving h-him."
Sam tied up his hands and feet using the torn remnants and stood
back. Doctor Beckett was
panting desperately from his exertions when he hauled Gerald's body over
the edge of the bathtub, leaving him to dangle and drain. Al
laughed, "You'd have more of a chance of converting the devil to Christianity." "Okay…
Al… if I—Joanna phones… the police now… what happens?" Sam
asked breathlessly as he began to step out of the tub. "Careful
Sam! That floor is slippery," the Observer commented,
unthinking. Sam
lowered his head and guardedly looked up and around at his friend, feeling
disparaged and literally taking Al's words as sarcasm.
"Al! I know the
darned floor is slippery. I've
spent the last half-hour slithering around on it." "25.2
minutes, to be precise Doctor," Ziggy's voice infused as she
rematerialized. "Feels
longer!" Sam exacted as he cautiously placed a foot to the floor.
He literally dribbled his way over to the cupboard to obtain
another towel and embarked on the task of vigorously rubbing at his hair.
"Well?" "Gerald
Suzman—aka Geoffrey Peterson is…" Al started. "…is
arrested and tried for actual bodily harm, falsifying legal documents
along with forgery, embezzlement and identity fraud."
Ziggy contritely cut in. "But
he is only sentenced to a six month term for ABH, with an added term of
six months for obtaining credentials illegally and misusing the identity
of a deceased person." Doctor
Beckett looked over at the slumped figure and sighed.
"What I can't understand is… why couldn't I tackle this
lout? I mean, I've done it before but this time I felt as though I
had the strength of a baby." "In
my absence, I made good use of the time and have been reconciling Mrs.
Suzman's hospital records." Ziggy
glanced about the room as though searching for something.
"The possibility could be the fact that you are experiencing
more than just her thoughts, Doctor.
I have completed a scan of the whole building and I cannot find
Mrs. Suzman's medication anywhere." "What
medication?" the Admiral and Leaper voiced together. "In
1982, Mrs. Suzman underwent a thyroidectomy and has been prescribed
thyroxine ever since," Ziggy entrusted to the two listeners.
"In my assumption and I must add that I do not think that I am
wrong: it seems that her so-called husband has been depriving her of all
medication but the weakest analgesia." "Of
all the lowdown tricks to play!" the Observer denoted. Sam
virtually ran to the mirror and looked once again at Joanna's image: There
as sure as Monday followed Sunday, was the necklace scar on her throat.
Doctor Beckett's face became studious for a few moments. "That really does explain the weakness and the feeling
of inertia but it doesn't explain her weight, she's almost skeletal.
Myxoedemal patients are invariably over weight and…" "That
could be a combination of things Doctor, stress, anxiety, and the
inability to eat because of the culmination of both anxiety and stress.
From what I have been reading she has a lot to be anxious about." I'll
go with you on that one Zig!" the Admiral admitted. "The
morphine she was prescribed was for an injury she sustained on August 9, her
records say that she fell down the stairs but a note in the margin says
that: 'the injuries were inconsistent with a fall, chronic distortion of
all but one of the five lumbar vertebrae.
An indication that a heavy implement, such as a foot or other such
force was responsible. The
patient insists that she fell down stairs but that insistence is in the
presence of her partner who refused to leave his wife and became violent
when asked to do so.'" Ziggy finished and watched the two men in her
presence. The
Admiral started up on his usual pacing routine, whilst Doctor Beckett
wiped a shaking hand over his face. "So
that's how come she couldn't fight back," Sam stated as he pressed
his hand into the small of his aching and bruised back.
"Drugged up to the eyes and that back breaking incident over
the bathtub must've exacerbated her injuries furth…" The
Observer cut in, "Lucky for Joanna, that you took the brunt of that
last attack." "She's
a very lucky young lady," Ziggy notated. "I
agree there Sam although Joanna doesn't get her home back Sam, but at
least she's still alive and that butthead nozzle is outta the picture.
He doesn't get convicted and stopped for embezzlement though—the
legal beagles can't even untangle the web he's woven and Joanna can't
prove anything either. It can
never be determined that he's forged all of those documents, he gets away
with it Sam!" the Observer asserted, almost in one breath and as he
paused to pant, he gasped inwardly. "Get
ready to leap, you're outta here, Sam!" the Observer enthused.
Sam
stood and waited expectantly, poised ready for the familiar tingle to
envelop him and whisk him away to his next assignment. Al
looked at him assiduously. And
still Doctor Beckett waited. "Al?
Nothing's happening!" Sam shrugged and made his way to the
open door. "Maybe I
should get dressed, the least I can do is to make this body presentable
for Joanna's return," he said with a smile of frustration. "The
fact that you are not Leaping, Doctor, could be because it is you
that has uncovered the deceit that this Gerald person has been involved
with. In my hypothesis, it is
more than likely that you need to be at the Court hearing to prevent
Gerald's circumvention of the British legal system." The
Admiral's brow tweaked. "It's
not like you to play guessing games Zig, what's with the
assumptions?" Ziggy
didn't answer. Sam
paused in his distraction. "That
could take months, or even years!" he exacerbated his dilemma.
"I can't hang around for that length of time!" "You're
exaggerating Sam; surely it can't take that long, can it?"
The Observer pursued Sam as he started out of the bathroom. "It
is true; the British legal system is indeed slow." Ziggy iterated.
"It is tied up with red tape and bureaucracy.
It wouldn't surprise me in the least if the trial date isn't set
for another three years." "Hang
on Ziggy; answer me this time, will ya?" the Observer rubbed a stubby
hand across his mouth. "Why
are you talking speculation
here?" "Filling
in time Admiral," Ziggy's mouth mimicked an impatient whistle.
"It takes an absolute age to download the necessary data.
As I told you before Admiral, British technology is antiquated
compared to ours plus the fact that I'm having difficulties
integrating." Sam
listened, as patiently as ever as he limped slowly through the game room,
he knew better than to interrupt the two holograms when they were in
direct confrontation and he started to ponder to fill in his
time. 'In
all of my long years of Leaping, have I once known of a time when either
of them would back down? No!
Usually, Al remains resolute and Ziggy clams up in a huff and
refuses to negotiate further. But
what of this new Ziggy? She
is definitely experimenting with her newfound personage, is she also
conducting experimenting with her fresh new
feelings? She had certainly
indicated on that possibility earlier.' Doctor
Beckett halted briefly as he abandoned his deliberation before opening the
door to the 'animal' room and prepared himself for the expected humidity
change. "Have
you received that information yet?" the Leaper heard his friend say. "It
is—sizzle—fizzle—spitz— "coming—hiss—sizzle—spitz— "through
now Ad—m—ir—Al," Ziggy's voice sounded like it was losing
momentum. "What
is it Zig? You sound like an
old gramophone that needs winding up," the Admiral supplicated. Doctor
Beckett looked back and saw Ziggy's wavering image hovering unsteadily
above the handlink. "Do—not—know—I—am—lo—osing—po—ow—er,"
her voice drawled lethargically. "Al
what's happening?!" Sam looked between his friend and the rapidly
flickering particles that made up Ziggy's image. "I
wa—splutter— "about—sizzle— "o
ask you—crackle— "same—spit— "thing." The Observer’s hologram buzzed in and out of view. "Al,
is something wrong at the project?" Sam asked anxiously as he felt an
unfamiliar prickle of what he assumed was the beginnings of a new and very
different Leap. But he wasn't
sure if what was happening at the project was affecting him in the same
way. "I—splutter— "smell
some—sizzle— "trange—spit— "getting
very hot—crackle— "here,
Sam!" "Al!"
Sam shouted out to his friend who somehow looked to be getting further and
further away. "I'm
feeling something too and I don't think that I'm Leaping.
Is something happening at the project, Al?" "I—splutter— "hardly
hear—fizzle— "Sam!
There's so much noise—fizzle— "smoke—crackle— "don't
know if—hiss— "can
stay—sizzle— "longer,
can—crackle— "hardly
breathe—spit—." Sam
combated away the Leap only to see his friend fade away into oblivion. "Al?"
he spoke out to the empty space where his friend had once existed.
In his mind's eye, he could see him still standing there, slapping
his hand into the uncooperative handlink with that quintessential
expression on his face. Fighting
back the prickle that continued its incessant and escalating engulfment,
he awaited Al's return. He
didn't know how long he waited; the time seemed to be interminable until
he could no longer suppress the tugging. "Noooo,
you can't take me away. What
about Al and besides, I'm not finished here!" he screamed gritting
his teeth in frustration. Finally,
the incarcerating draw overwhelmed his need to stay and his surroundings
were obliterated in a blast of dark obscurity. Stallion's
Gate, New Mexico June
6, 2005: 11:03am Pitch
back. Choking,
fetid blackness. A
hot, dusty gust of wind tousled his hair and drove dirt particles into his
eyes, causing his eyeballs to sting and his nostril burn.
Doctor Beckett turned his back into the breeze and he blinked
copiously to cleanse his smarting eyes.
Tears flowed freely down his cheeks and he coughed uncontrollably.
When the flurrying breeze changed direction, Sam also changed his,
optimally keeping his back into the wind.
As his eyes cleared so did the space around him, now just a grey,
dusty cloud and as he remained, the clearer the air became.
Sam wiped at his eyes and a dirt streaked face gazed heavenward. "Where
on earth have you landed me this time?" he asked, tuning around
beneath the grey clouds of dust but there came no reply.
As he lowered his gaze, a plume of black smoke spiraled upward and
a sense of dread encased his chest in an iron grip.
He gasped inwardly but his breath had no room to expand.
His restricted lungs halted his breath in an instant. A
pile of unrecognizable smoldering rubble lay stretched out before him and
as he looked into the distance it seemed to go on for miles.
The air was now still, not even the slightest breeze.
Silence was all around him except for the crackling of burning
timber. Doctor
Beckett whirled around as something to his right exploded.
Then he saw it, the only durable section of the building that had
remained standing. Sam
recognized it immediately. On
impulse, he fell to his knees. What
he was seeing was the ravaged ruins of the East Tower of his beloved
Project: Quantum Leap. He
was totally stunned and he gulped brusquely, "Oh boy!" TO BE CONTINUED
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