Good thing he didn't put his hand on the deputy!keepsmiling7 wrote:Loved when little Max used his powers and the phone line went dead......

Let's see what else they're up to.....
CHAPTER NINE
September 18, 1989, 1 a.m.
Roswell Memorial Hospital
Brivari gazed at the unfamiliar machine in front of him, a behemoth with a large circular opening in the middle of which sat a bed of some sort. "What is this?" he asked Marie. "And why do you need it?"
"It's a CAT scanner," Marie repeated. "Computerized Axial Tomography. You remember x-rays, don't you?"
"Of course I remember x-rays," Brivari said. "They were the bane of my existence at Eagle Rock."
"This is a much more advanced x-ray machine," Marie said. "In a nutshell, it takes lots of 2-D scans and puts them all together to make a 3-D picture. I'm surprised to find one in such a small hospital. They're very expensive."
Brivari circled the machine slowly. "So this is an imager?"
"A very sophisticated imager," Marie corrected.
"By your standards," Brivari murmured, missing Malik all over again. No wonder he hadn't recognized it. An x-ray was the equivalent of a flint knife, a crude precursor to real imaging. Which made this a somewhat nicer flint knife, but a flint knife all the same.
"Yes, 'by my standards'," Marie replied, sounding a bit put out. "I realize this may look simple to you, but we're very lucky to find it. I—"
"I think you're both missing the point," Dee interrupted. "Which is how we found it in the first place. They led us here. Which means they understood us."
"Understood what?" Brivari asked.
"I asked Yvonne—I mean, Marie—if she was going to do a physical," Dee explained, "and she said she needed to do more than that, that she needed to 'see inside them'. She specifically said that she needed an x-ray machine.....and lo and behold, they led us right to an x-ray machine."
"She's right," Marie nodded. "They got up and walked out right after I said that. But how could they have known this was here? It's not even finished."
"There was a sign on the way in to Emergency," Dee replied. "Something about donating to the hospital for some kind of expansion, and donors get their names on a wall somewhere. They had pictures, and I'm pretty sure one of those pictures was of a machine just like this."
"So....they saw the picture," Brivari said. "But how did they know where to find it?"
"There was a whole bunch of text on that sign," Dee said. "I didn't stop to read it, and we only walked by it for a few seconds, but...."
Her voice trailed off as all of them stared at the two small figures standing beside the CAT scanner.
"They can read," Marie said faintly.
"And they can read fast," Dee noted. "And they didn't just read it, they understood what they'd read and connected it to what you said you needed."
"And then they led me here," Marie said. "We know what at least the boy does when he feels threatened, so he must not consider us a threat."
Marie and Dee continued their analysis, but Brivari wasn't listening. He wouldn't have admitted it to anyone, but back at the police station, Dee had made a veiled accusation which had hit uncomfortably close to home: That he might abandon the hybrids. The truth was he had considered doing just that. What with them emerging so late, so young, and so unaware, it had crossed his mind that he might have to declare the entire endeavor a failure, an exceptionally bitter pill to swallow after so long and so much loss. Now, for the first time in decades, he felt a surge of hope. Heating the bath water had been instinct. Affecting the phone lines and the power at the police station had been instinct. This latest feat, however, required assimilating information in an unfamiliar language on an unfamiliar planet and putting it to good use, not to mention choosing allies he could trust. The one thing Zan had always been good at was deciding who to trust. You're in there, he thought, fastening his eyes on the dark-haired boy. Somewhere, somehow, his Ward was in that small human shell.
"Is that something you can do?" Marie was asking him. "Can you read that quickly?"
"Yes," Brivari answered, never taking his eyes off the boy. "We can scan written information in seconds, store it in our brains, and access it immediately or later, much the same way one of your 'computers' operates."
"Wow," Dee murmured. "Where were you when I was in school and memorizing all that case law?"
"And they can do that too?" Marie asked.
"So it would appear," Brivari replied. "It's clear that at least the boy can access higher human brain functions, those your species have not yet evolved enough to use. That part of this experiment worked."
"But what about the girl?" Dee asked. "Why hasn't she done anything yet?"
"Probably because she hasn't had to," Brivari said. "The fact that she hasn't demonstrated higher abilities doesn't mean she doesn't have them. If they have any concept of who they really are, she would defer to her brother. She is merely adopting the same position she held on Antar, where he was the monarch and she mere ornament."
"Then....that means they know who they are?" Marie ventured.
"Perhaps," Brivari allowed. "On some level, at least."
"Then why won't they talk to you?" Dee asked. "Are they doing it on purpose? Is it.....is it possible they blame you for what happened?"
Marie shook her head. "I don't think they're processing at that level. Frankly, I'm not sure they're capable of......" She paused. "But I'm getting ahead of myself. This suite is obviously still under construction. The scanner's been installed; let's check the computers that crunch the data, and see how far they've gotten."
Not far enough, Brivari thought as they stepped over rolls of carpeting and cans of paint in what looked like a future waiting area toward a long windowed room off to the right where rows of bulky computer monitors sat on a long counter, some with keyboards in front. "This one looks like it's connected," Marie murmured, pushing a power switch. The screen blinked on, and rows of text began to appear. Marie studied it for several minutes.
"Well," she said at length, "the good news is that they've installed the software that talks to the scanner."
"And the bad news?" Dee asked.
"They haven't hooked up the scanner to the computer. They were probably planning on doing that after they had all the computers up and running."
"So we can't use it after all," Dee sighed.
Brivari bent over Marie's shoulder, studying the screen. "What do you need these devices to do?"
"I need this computer to read the data coming from that scanner so that I can see it on the screen," Marie answered. "That's what these big cables are for. Otherwise—"
Brivari promptly reached down and picked up one of the cables. "You're familiar with computers?" Marie asked.
"At the risk of offending you once again, these are extremely simple machines," Brivari answered. "If someone presented you with a glass of water and an empty glass, and asked you to move the water from one glass to another, would you know how to do it?"
Marie and Dee exchanged startled glances. "This is a task of similar complexity for me," Brivari continued when neither answered him. "Get the hybrids ready. We need to obtain all the information we can before they're missed. We can analyze it later."
"All right," Marie said, watching him fit the heavy cable to the computer with a degree of skepticism. "Come on then, kids. Time to see what you're made of."
The boy and girl followed promptly, further proof of their growing grasp of language, and both climbed onto the table Marie patted with one hand, their own hands still clasped. "Oh," she said doubtfully. "Well....you're small. I suppose I can do you both at once. I need you to lay.....down," she finished as they beat her to it, stretching out side by side on the narrow table, their fingers intertwined.
"I'll be right in there," Marie said gently to the children, pointing to the windows. "The machine will make noise, but that's okay. That means it's working."
"Shouldn't someone stay in here with them?" Dee asked doubtfully. "What if they get scared?"
Brivari eyed the children lying calmly on the table. "They're not frightened. Perhaps they want to know what they are every bit as much as we do. Proceed."
******************************************************
7:30 a.m.
First National Bank of Santa Fe
Hunched down in his rented car, his collar pulled up to hide his face, Daniel Pierce waited outside the First National Bank, set to open in a half hour. He had a dim recollection of Agent Del Bianco telling him there was a safe deposit box in his name here, supposedly full of worthless family heirlooms from parents he'd never met. He'd never actually verified that, of course. Why trek all the way out here to fondle some stranger's watches and cuff links? He'd been far too busy living under the equivalent of a witness protection program and working his butt off to be accepted by the Bureau when the time finally came that it would consider him.
Unfortunately it was that very Bureau he was now working mightily to avoid, using the very skills it had taught him, skills which told him that nothing of import could be in the little box in this building that the FBI wouldn't have found way back when they were first looking for whatever his birth father had successfully kept from them. Skills which had been tested last night in a way no classroom ever could when he'd played cat and mouse with Darth Suit at the airport, buying a last minute plane ticket to Chicago with his credit card and another to Santa Fe with cash. An identically dressed Brian had switched places with him as he'd waited to board the plane to Chicago, and Darth Suit had fallen for it, probably not realizing he'd been thrown off the trail until he'd actually reached the Windy City. That sort of deception wouldn't work a second time now that the Bureau knew he was actively avoiding them, and he'd been on pins and needles since arriving in Santa Fe under an assumed name. It was amazing how pervasive paranoia could be, causing you to see ghosts at every turn, hear things that weren't there, suspect every single person who came close to you, however innocently. The sooner he got inside the bank, the sooner he'd breathe easier.
Bingo, Pierce thought as a car pulled up to the side of the building just as he was checking his watch for the third time in as many minutes. He climbed out of his car at the same time the other car's occupant emerged, a man dressed in a suit and topcoat who looked up in surprise when Pierce approached.
"Good morning," Pierce said. "I'm here to view the contents of a safe deposit box."
"Of course, sir," the man said, extending a hand. "I'm Victor Alexander, manager of this branch. We'll be open at 8 a.m., and I'd be happy to assist you then."
"May I wait inside?" Pierce asked.
"I'm sorry, sir, but the bank won't be open until 8 a.m."
"I realize that, but...." Pierce hesitated, not wanting to spend even one more second out in the open. "I'm in something of a hurry....plane to catch, you understand.....and I'd like to be able to view my box just as soon as possible. I have my key," he added, holding up the little gold key, more brown, really, that had become his on his twenty-first birthday. "If you could tell me what paperwork I'll need, or....what?"
Victor Alexander was gazing at the key Pierce held aloft with undisguised interest. "That's an old key," he said. "All our boxes were fitted with new locks years ago.....except the ones whose owners we couldn't locate. Where did you get this?"
Pierce smiled. "Let me wait inside, and I'll tell you."
A minute later he was in the lobby, having followed the bank manager through a side door. "It's all right," Alexander said to a security guard whose eyebrows rose when he saw Pierce. "I'll be in the back."
"Yes, sir," the guard said as Pierce walked by as quickly as possible.
"The back" turned out to be a vault, the massive, circular door already opened. Inside was a locked grill which Alexander opened with a key, beyond which was a high-ceilinged room with walls pockmarked floor to ceiling by the keyholes of safe deposit boxes of various sizes. Rolling ladders allowed access to the higher boxes, all of which were made of a burnished metal which complemented the brass light fixtures and polished wood accents. The First National Bank certainly knew how to keep their safe deposit boxes in style.
"What number is on your key?" Alexander asked, slipping off his coat and depositing both it and his briefcase in a chair beside the room's one desk, a modern piece of furniture which looked every bit as out of place as the computer it held.
"157," Pierce answered.
"A one hundred series," Alexander said, impressed. "Those are among the oldest boxes." He tapped on the keyboard, then looked up in surprise. "That box hasn't been accessed since July of 1959, the same year it was purchased."
Right before I was born, Pierce thought. "Sounds about right," he said out loud. "I inherited it from my father, and I'd like to see it."
"I'll need identification," Alexander announced.
Pierce reached into his breast pocket with hands that threatened to shake. He hadn't been Daniel Pierce since he'd left Quantico, but he had to be Daniel Pierce now. There hadn't been so much as a whiff of pursuit since boarding that plane for New Mexico, but it was still unnerving to hand over his real driver's license. He hadn't felt this naked since his last physical.
"Very well then, Mr. Pierce," Alexander said briskly, handing back his license. "Let's find your box."
Alexander unlocked the desk and pulled out a ring of keys, one of which opened a metal door in the wall beside the desk, and behind which was a cabinet full of.....keys.
"Two keys are required to open each box," he explained when Pierce looked baffled. "You have one, the bank has the other. This ensures that the bank cannot access a customer's box without their knowledge. According to the computer," he continued, scanning the rows of keys with one finger, "your box was one of the ones for which we couldn't locate the owner, hence it was never re-keyed. Which means our key is likely as old as yours. And so it is," he said, removing a dingy looking key. "Shall we?"
Pierce followed along behind Alexander, who squatted down beside the bottom row of boxes in the far corner of the vault. "Right here," he said, inserting his key into one keyhole of a small box and turning it. "Now you put your key in."
Pierce did, having to muscle the key around as the mechanism protested. "It's been decades since this was opened," Alexander said apologetically. "Anything mechanical gets a bit cranky if it hasn't been used for that long. May I?"
Pierce stepped back as Alexander successfully coaxed the door open and withdrew a long metal box. "Follow me," he instructed, holding the box in front of him as though it contained the crown jewels. Pierce trailed along obediently, out of the vault and into one of several small rooms directly outside, elegantly appointed in wood and leather. "I'll give you your privacy," Alexander announced, setting the box on the room's one table and closing the door behind him.
Pierce sank slowly into one of the four chairs arranged around the table, gazing at the box in fascination. Was this it? Was this his legacy, whatever it was that would make him the most powerful man in law enforcement? Hard to believe that such a small box could hold something that momentous, but then the old adage about the best things coming in small packages had been around so long for a very good reason. His hands trembled as he lifted the lid.
The first thing that caught his eye was a watch. The second was the requisite pair of cuff links. Various other pieces of jewelry followed, including a military service medal and several pieces of women's jewelry. By the time he was on his fourth pair of earrings, he grew impatient and pawed through the pile, finally tipping the box upside down. Everything clinked onto the mahogany table, topped by a legal-sized envelope which contained a single sheet of paper covered with a masculine scrawl.
To Whom It May Concern,
Whoever you are, no doubt you're looking for my serum. Sorry to disappoint you—no, actually that's not true, I'm delighted to disappoint you—but it's not here. The serum is mine, perhaps my crowning achievement, although I would certainly like to think I've reached greater heights since then. Regardless, no stifling government that blocked me every step of the way, forcing me to work in secret because of their supposedly lofty morals, will ever get their hands on that formula.
My wife is currently pregnant with my first child, a son. Should I predecease him, my son will inherit the formula for my serum at the age of 30, by which time he will hopefully have sown his wild oats and gained sufficient maturity to know how to use it to his best advantage. The means by which this will occur are untraceable, having not been divulged to anyone or recorded in any legal document. A full accounting of the reason for this subterfuge will accompany the formula when it is delivered to him, along with my notes regarding dosage, strength, and the affect of same on each test subject. Invaluable information, that, and very hard to reproduce without killing the subject, so if I were you, I would remain in my son's good offices. I would also safeguard his welfare carefully, because should he die before the age of 30, the serum will never be delivered and will be lost forever.
I have most likely ruined your day and, hopefully, your career. Nothing personal, you understand; it's just the way the game is played, and no one plays that game better than I do. Remember that as you enjoy the wait.
Sincerely,
Daniel Pierce, M.D.
Blinking slowly, Pierce read the letter a second time. Then a third time. Then a fourth. Finally he turned the letter over, examining it carefully, ran his hands inside first the envelope, then the box, then through the pile of family heirlooms. Finally he sat back in his chair, both hands to his mouth, trying to decide if this was good news or bad. On the plus side, it appeared he stood to inherit some kind of medical formula, the "serum" his birth father had referenced. But there was no formula here, just the useless family junk he'd always been told this box contained. The letter itself was interesting, probably the very missive which had started the whole merry-go-round running, but the fact remained that it told him little that both he and the FBI didn't already know: That he was set to inherit something someone wanted badly at the age of 30. Other than that, he was right back where he'd started.
Damn it, Pierce thought fiercely. Why had the old man sent him here? Was this another test to see if he could arrive in one piece without being followed? But how would he know if he'd passed? Was the old man here, watching him? He did seem awfully spry for such a fossil.....
Knock, knock.
"Come in," Pierce said impatiently.
It was Mr. Alexander. "How is everything coming along?" he asked, politely averting his eyes as Pierce unceremoniously began jamming the contents of the box back inside.
"Just peachy," Pierce muttered.
"So glad to hear that," Mr. Alexander said. "Did you wish to view your second box?"
Pierce paused, his hands full of jewelry.
"My 'second' box?"
******************************************************
Roswell Memorial Hospital
*There you are,* Dee said, pausing in the doorway. *This was the last place I expected to find you.*
*Which was the point,* Brivari said. *To be alone.*
*You've been alone for hours now. Isn't it time for some company?*
Receiving no answer, Dee let the chapel door close gently behind her. It was small and simple, its most notable feature being a stained glass window which let in the morning light. A small table at the front was covered with a plain white cloth, in the middle of which sat a wooden cross and a Star of David, the only religious symbols in the room.
*Nice little place,* Dee commented, taking a seat beside Brivari.
*Odd little place,* Brivari countered. *But then most places of worship are.*
*How so?*
*Take for example, the object on the left,* Brivari said. *I am given to understand it was used as an instrument of torture by one of the most powerful monarchies to grace this planet.*
*Actually, it was an empire, and before that, a republic,* Dee corrected. *And yes, the cross was used as a method of execution. Christians believe the son of God was executed on a cross.*
*Forgive my ignorance, but how does one execute a deity?*
Dee smiled faintly. *You don't. The child of the deity allowed himself to be executed in order to free us from our sins, thereby elevating the cross from a symbol of death to a symbol of self-sacrifice and redemption.*
Brivari shook his head. *I stand corrected: Not only places of worship, but worship itself is odd by definition.*'
*So you came in here to ponder the great philosophical questions of the universe?*
*No,* Brivari sighed. *I came in here to ponder the practical questions of this small corner of the universe, the one for which I'm responsible. Are they still asleep?*
*Yes. And still holding hands. I wouldn't knock it,* she added when Brivari gave a soft snort. *One way or another, they're going to need each other.* She paused, choosing between the many questions which had been kicking around her brain all night. *If he really is Zan....and he remembers what his sister did.....what will he do?*
*He will forgive her. That's what he always did.*
*You mean she caused trouble before?*
*I mean he has a blind spot where his sister is concerned,* Brivari clarified. *Where anyone he cares for is concerned.*
*How very human,* Dee murmured.
*How very foolish,* Brivari muttered.
Dee gave him an appraising look. *Is it bothering you that he's responding to her and not you?*
*Don't be ridiculous,* Brivari said irritably. *They're hybrids, and not even half formed hybrids at that. These specks of awareness we're seeing could be nothing more than echoes.*
Bullshit, Dee thought blandly, the waves of resentment rolling off him almost palpable. He was put out that after all he'd done, all he'd been through, his Ward not only didn't recognize him but was clinging to the one person who had instigated this whole mess in the first place.
*Marie got the attending physician on the morning shift to sign off on the medical exams,* Dee went on, changing the subject. *She said shift change was one of the busiest times of the day, and he was all too happy to just rubber stamp her notes. There still doesn't seem to be anyone who missed them last night when they were gone. Everyone was too busy with your 'power failure'.*
*Which was the idea,* Brivari said.
*She also said she should be done going over all the tests soon,* Dee continued. *We were lucky to have had all that time and space to ourselves. And now I know what an 'EEG' machine looks like,* she added with a chuckle. *Who knew I'd be nicking medical equipment?*
*We didn't 'nick' anything,* Brivari said. *Everything was returned when we were done with it.* He paused. *Have you spoken with your father?*
*Yes,* Dee answered, *and still no luck finding Rath....yet. But they're still looking. He and Anthony are going back out to the ranch today—"
*He won't be there. He would have moved on, looking for food and shelter. Assuming he's not dead, that is.*
*You don't believe that,* Dee said. *Just like you don't believe that your king isn't really somewhere inside that little boy.*
They sat in silence for several minutes. Twice the door opened behind them; visiting hours had begun, and traffic in the little makeshift chapel increased. Not that that would affect their conversation. Telepathic conversation was mercifully private.
*You asked me a question downstairs,* Brivari said at length, *one I never answered.*
*I asked you lots of questions. Which one?*
Brivari hesitated. *You asked me if it was possible that he blames me for what happened.*
*And?*
*And....I'd never even considered that,* he answered, sounding deeply disturbed. *I haven't considered much of anything because I'd convinced myself this meeting would likely never take place. I expected to be dead before his emergence, my role in all this reduced to safeguarding his hiding place. And even if I were wrong, I would have expected a fully functioning adult, not a child hybrid whose mental state is uncertain.* He paused. *This experiment has always been viewed as either succeeding or failing; the possibility of something in between had not occurred to me. I never expected to face something like this.*
*Given that we haven't seen you in decades, I'm guessing he wasn't the only one you hadn't planned on facing,* Dee said dryly.
*Do you have any idea how difficult it is for me to watch all of you change?* Brivari demanded. *Your mother can barely walk sometimes. Your father's hands shake, and one of his eyes is impaired. When I saw him out there in the desert.....*
An awkward silence filled in the rest of that sentence. *Daddy has a cataract in one eye,* Dee explained. *He's going to have the lens replaced. Mama has arthritis, has had for years. But they're in their seventies, so all that's to be expected.*
* 'Expected',* Brivari said bitterly. *Yes. Although its being 'expected' makes it no easier to watch.*
*No, I don't suppose it does,* Dee agreed. *But it happens, and there's nothing we can do about it, just like there's nothing you can do about this. They're here. You weren't expecting them, and they're not like you expected, but they're here. And you'll have to deal with that just as we have to deal with growing old, whether we like it or not.*
The chapel door opened and closed again, once, twice, three times. Dee paid it no mind until someone sat down directly behind them.
"I'm done," a soft voice said.
It was Marie. Everyone else in the chapel had left. "And?" Dee asked eagerly when Brivari said nothing, still staring straight ahead.
"And....they're human," Marie said. "Physically, at least, they're almost one hundred percent human. Their bone structure, their organs, even their brains are all normal for five to six year-old human children. Nothing unusual on the EEG, even, although I wouldn't expect it to show anything unless they were actually doing something magical."
"But?" Brivari murmured.
"But the one thing that's different is their blood. Their blood samples contain cells I've never seen before, not even in you and Jaddo. And they're all like that, no human cells at all and no cells like yours. It's like they're a completely different species."
"Because they are," Brivari answered. "A hybrid, by definition, is a new species, and these are the very first Antarian-human hybrids."
"It's the damnedest thing I've ever seen," Marie said, shaking her head in wonderment. "They have human bodies made of non-human cells. The good news is that x-rays or CAT scans won't trip them up. The bad news is that cell samples will, whether it's blood, bone marrow, or tissue, like for a biopsy. You'll have to be careful about that."
"Children rarely have blood drawn unless they're injured or sick," Dee noted. "That might not be as much of a problem as it would be for an adult."
"Is there any indication," Brivari said slowly, "—any at all—that they know who they are?"
"I'm sorry, I don't have any way to test for that," Marie answered. "I can tell you this; their brains are only as developed as a human six year-old's, which is to say not very developed at all. It might be best if they don't know who they are just yet. I don't know what they'd do with that information."
Brivari half turned in his chair. "What do you mean?"
Marie hesitated, then shook her head. "I'm not sure. I just question whether such a young brain would be able to process a much older personality. Have you run into this in the past when you've made other hybrids?"
"No," Brivari said heavily. "A transfer of essence always occurs between two bodies of the same age and rate of development."
"Then we're all in uncharted territory," Marie said, rifling through a stack of papers on her lap. "I have all their genuine test results if you'd like to see them, and I constructed replacements for their charts. I also filled out all the Social Services paperwork because it would have looked weird if I hadn't; they'll be coming for them today, and if they're still here....they'll take them away."
She paused, her eyes shifting from Brivari to Dee and back again.
"Are you going to let Social Services take them?"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I'll post Chapter 10 next Sunday.
