From: aa811@cleveland.freenet.edu (Terri M. Librande) Newsgroups: alt.ql.creative Subject: No Escape from Reality Part 6 Date: 1 Apr 1993 01:03:32 GMT Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (USA) Lines: 104 Message-Id: <1pdf14$ort@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> Nntp-Posting-Host: slc5.ins.cwru.edu Part 6 Admiral Albert Calavicci tore through the rooms of the Project, his rage apparent to the other personnel scattering out of his furious path. He entered the Control Room, facing Gooshie withone of the blistering looks normally reserved for stuffy Pentagon types who hadn't learned the lay of the land. "I got your message," he growled. "What do you mean by 'he's gone'?" The little programmer moved behind the panel in a vain attempt to protect himself from the Admiral's wrath. "We've been doing routine checks through the usual pathways and there's no sign of Dr. Beckett's implant signal. Ziggy..." "Ziggy." Al turned to face the ceiling, and the bluish monitor that softly hummed with power. "Where's Sam?" I CANNOT FIND HIM, ADMIRAL. THIS IS THE LONGEST HE'S GONE WITHOUT LEAPING INTO A SPECIFIC TIME. I'VE BEEN DOING THE SYSTEM CHECKS AND HE'S SIMPLY DISAPPEARED. THERE IS NO INDICATION THAT HE EXISTS IN ANY TIMELINE, ANYWHERE. THERE WAS A FLUX IN THE FLOW A WEEK AGO, AND I ACCERTAINED THAT IT WAS NOT ABNORMAL, BUT NOTHING SINCE THEN. I MAY HAVE MADE A WRONG DECISION, AND NOW HE IS GONE. The computer's voice took on a very worried tone. USUALLY, DR. BECKETT'S ESSENCE IS PRESENT IN FIVE TO SIX DAYS, SOMEWHERE IN HIS OWN LIFETIME. SO STRANGE THIS TIME, THAT HE HAS NOT APPEARED, NOR IS HIS IMPLANT DETECTABLE. "Can you track Dr. Beckett between leaps?" IS THIS A TRICK QUESTION? I CAN TELL YOU THAT I CAN TO A DEGREE. THERE IS ALWAYS A MARGINAL SIGNAL, BUT NOW, NOTHING. I AM VERY CONCERNED, ADMIRAL. "So am I, Ziggy, so am I." Al brushed his hand through his short, curly hair, avoiding the wide blue eyes of Gooshie looking to him for answers. He turned to the programmer, knowing anger and demands would get him nowhere. "Is there something I can do to assist? We have to find the kid, Goosh." "I've been doing all the checks, everything that usually works. The entire Project is on it. All we can dois check again and wait another twenty-four hours. If there's nothing after this one..." His mustache drooped as his expression darkened. "We might assume that Dr. Beckett has..." "Don't say it," Al snapped. "Damn it, I'm not going to let taht bastard take him, not yet." His temper got the best of him. "Find him, or I'm going to take this place apart until we do." ADMIRAL, I DON'T BELIEVE THAT WOULD ASSIST DR. BECKETT... "Starting with this damn computer!" He stormed out of the room, wishing he could slam the door behind him. Instead he stalked out of the Project to the break area; tables, hot wind blowing off the desert, a place he went when he wanted out and away. Damn it, Sam Beckett couldn't die, not this way. He lit a cigar, not soothing his nerves or energy a bit. They hadn't even said goodbye, not really. "I heard there was a thunderstorm passing through." Al glanced behind him. Verbena, of course, always on his butt when he lost his temper. "Not a cloud in the sky." "I meant _you_." "What happened?" he asked, turning his back to her. "Gooshie tattle again?" "He's doing his best, Al." The attractive psychiatrist rubbed the Admiral's rock hard shoulders, feeling the tension there. "You need to relax and realize that things like this will happen. Before too long you'll be complaining about that long elevator ride down to the Imaging Chamber and all the ensuing madness that another Leap brings us. Maybe he's even on his way home." "No." Al shook his head, shrugging away from her comforting hands. "This feels...strange. Not normal, not this time. I've got this feeling, and it's biting my butt. He's in trouble, and we can't do a thing about it. I even went down to the Imaging Chamber to see if I could center on him and there was nothing in there but a whole lot of white. I hate that place." "I'll buy you some dinner, a really good steak, and maybe a drink or two." The dark eyes softened, tempted by her offer. "Thanks, but no thanks, 'Bena. I don't want to leave. If he should come home he'll want me here. I can't take a chance that I'll miss that." The psychiatrist nodded in agreement. "I'll be here if you need to talk." "Thanks, and I might take you up on that--later." Al sat at the table, staring across the expanse of desert, not really seeing it. He heard the door shut behind Beeks and sighed. She tried her best with him, but, at times, he must frustrate the hellout of her patient soul. All he really wanted now was to see Sam Beckett across this table, like so many years before, looking pensive and preoccupied, but here, and alive. Damn it all, he wanted him home. more to come--happy birthday, Marsh! -- "Girls who have glasses have lots & lots of energy!" Al--Single Drop of Rain Terri Librande aa811@cleveland.Freenet.edu--Assistant Sysop The Science Fiction and Fantasy Sig--Go SCIFI