Arms Dealer
A Sonic the Hedgehog Story
by Tristan Palmgren
Sonic the Hedgehog, Tails, and Robotnik are properties of SEGA
inc. Sally,
Bunnie, Uncle Chuck, Nicole, Antoine, Rotor, Griff,
Lupe, Cat, and Snively are the
properties of DiC Productions.
Julayla and Geoffrey St. John are the properties of Archie
Comics.
The characters Bookshire Draftwood and Sandra Nightweaver were
created by
and are the properties of David Pistone. Neophyte and
Anacharis were created by and are
the properties of Allison
Fleury, and are used with permission. The character Epos Nix is
the
property of Tristan Palmgren.
You are free to do anything you want
with this story, especially distribute it, so
long as you A) Don't
change my work in any way, B) Don't try to pass it off as your
own,
or C) Don't make money off of my work.
Author's notes: Over the length of this story I give information
about the
numerous weapons that is most likely highly inaccurate
and should under no
circumstances be taken as representative their
counterparts in our world, especially on
details such as clip size
and rate of fire. The author's explanation for these inaccuracies
is
the numerous modifications Epos Nix has made to the weapons,
including fooling around
with the safety switches and lengthening
the weapon's barrel for higher accuracy.
Feel free to send comments, questions, or flames to the author at
Episode 9: Sonic Boom
Outside one of the many pollution-blackened buildings of
Robotropolis, the sound
barrier was on the verge of being broken.
The source only pushed the laws of physics to
the very edge of a
sonic boom; he never actually created the sound, as that would set
off a
multitude of nearby alarms.
"I'm comin', Cat,"
he said breathlessly to himself. A trail of dust marked his
passage
up one of the building's walls and into an open air duct.
He raced
down a corridor, moving past row after row of empty prison
cells.
Eleven years ago, this building had held a number of
Mobotropolis's citizens, storing them
like so much cargo as they
awaited the roboticizer. Now, the prison had been abandoned
since
the coup, and was only used occasionally to lock up captured Freedom
Fighters or
other refugees.
Sonic skidded to a halt outside a
cell. Shadows obscured the cell's corners, but
otherwise it
appeared empty. He felt his heart sink.
"Cat!" he
whispered frantically. "Cat!" There was no answer from the
shadows.
Sonic hung his head, knowing what had happened. He had
been too late.
"Cat!" he tried one last time, futilely.
There was a hum from the opposite end of
the corridor, a bright
flash, and dust kicked up near his feet. SWATbot boots were
audible
clanking against the floor. Robotnik had been prepared for Sonic's
return.
Sonic tossed one last, despairing glance toward the empty
cell. Then he looked
towards the approaching 'bots, face lit
brightly with anger.
He disappeared in a streak of blue.
"This one's for Cat!" the face on the video monitor
exclaimed. It was exultant and
mournful at the same time, but most
of all, it was enraged. Behind the hedgehog,
Robotropolis was
alight in the fiery glow of the four StealthBots that had just
exploded.
The image flickered, and then dissolved into static.
Ivo
Robotnik's metal fist slammed the side of his chair. The room
reverberated
violently with the impact. "Snively!"
Snively
tried unsuccessfully to stifle a little squeak of fear.
"What
went wrong, Snively?" the obese man demanded, quaking with
rage.
"I don't know, sir!" Snively burst out. He fussed
with his computer, although only
to make a display of trying to do
something. "We lost control of the StealthBots, and then
they
exploded! The rebels must have sabotaged them, sir!"
"Scramble
another squadron of hover units! Pursue the hedgehog!"
Snively
obeyed, although he knew it was too late. By the time he managed to
get
another Spy Orb over to where the Freedom Fighters had been,
they were already gone.
Robotnik's fist slammed into the closest
available surface: Snively's computer.
Snively jumped; he hadn't
realized that his uncle had been standing so close. Robotnik's
eyes
were blazing with anger. Snively had seen that look before. It meant
that Robotnik
was looking for someone to blame. His eyes stopped
at Snively, and narrowed.
"Sir!" Snively squealed
instinctively, before anything else could happen. "May I
point
out that the day hasn't been a complete loss! We did capture that
Freedom Fighter
in the air ducts!"
Some of the anger
disappeared.
Robotnik turned away, and strolled purposefully
towards his chair. Snively heaved
a sigh of relief: his body had
been beaten bloody too many times by Robotnik's roboticized
left
hand.
"Where is the prisoner now?" he asked, forcibly
calm.
"Being held in the cells below, sir." After the
hedgehog had tried breaking out his
friend the first time,
Robotnik had ordered him moved to another cell, in this
building.
"Prepare the roboticizer!"
A glass tube lowered itself around Cat, trapping him completely in
the roboticizer.
The machinery above began to shift, and hum with
the sinister energies that had enslaved
so many before.
"This
is it, old boy. The offer still stands. Tell me the location of
Knothole, and
you have my word that you won't be roboticized."
Cat
rolled his eyes.
"I'm feeling very gracious today, you little
mongrel," Robotnik growled. "I'll give
you one last
chance. If you won't discuss Knothole… then you can tell me
all you know
about Lupe and the Wolf Pack."
Cat's look of
surprise told Robotnik everything he needed to know.
"The
name means something to you, yes?"
Cat's mouth was agape in
shock. He had put on a great show of strength, until
now. Robotnik
had hit him somewhere vulnerable.. "You mean, she… she's
alive?"
Robotnik didn't answer. He thrummed his fingers
across the table, waiting for
something else.
Cat's eyes
suddenly hardened. Whatever soft spot he had been hit in was gone.
He
seemed… strengthened, somehow. "If she's still alive,
then she's still fighting you,
Robotnik. I hope her dagger is the
last thing you ever see."
Robotnik sighed. "Clearly,
this animal doesn't wish to live. Activate the
roboticizer,
Snively."
"Yes, sir," Snively said dolefully. He
pulled the lever.
Three days after the events in "Cry of the Wolf"
Day
One
"I dunno, Sal. I just don't trust him."
Usually, this
went the other way around. Usually, it was the Princess who
insisted
on caution whenever the Freedom Fighters met someone who
claimed to be an ally. This
was far from the usual.
"Hold
on, Sonic Hedgehog" Sally protested. "I never said I
trusted him. I just
said that we might be able to deal with
him."
"Just one look at the guy and you can tell that
he's only out for himself."
Sally only shrugged. "Has
there ever been any other kind of trader? Or at least, a
successful
trader?"
Sonic made a face. He hated it when Sally got like
this. "Be careful with your
wording, Sal. 'Trader' and
'Traitor' sound a lot alike."
Sally wasn't the only thing
getting on Sonic's nerves. He, the Princess, and Bunnie
Rabbot
were walking down an small dirt trail that lead through the Great
Forest.
Walking. Although he typically enjoyed the role of the
braggart, for once he found
himself wishing that Sally and Bunnie
had been gifted with his speed, as well. At least
then, he
wouldn't have to keep waiting for them.
"Ah don't like him,
either," Bunnie said, "But if he says he can help the
Freedom
Fighters, Ah'm willin' to give him a chance."
"Look
it this way, Sonic," Sally continued. "At least we're
meeting him away from
Knothole. If he does betray us, he won't be
able to give Robotnik Knothole's location."
"Yeah,"
Sonic shot back sarcastically. "All he can do is lead us into a
trap and get
us killed or roboticized. What was I worrying about?"
Still, he kept moving, however
reluctantly.
"Sonic…"
Sally said, voice tauntingly alluring. "Are you saying that you
won't be
able to save us if that does happen?"
Sonic found
himself backed into a trap. He shook his head frantically. "Of
course,
not, Sal. I'm the Hedgehog. I can do anything!"
"So
what are you worrying about?" Sonic didn't answer her. More
than
walking, he hated when Sally outsmarted him. Sally and Bunnie
exchanged a quick smile.
"Boys!" Sally shook her head,
and kept walking.
The clearing their enigmatic contact had agreed to meet them at
was a smallish
one. All three freedom fighters knew where it was,
and could recognize it instantly: it was
near a shortcut that lead
directly back to Knothole. Sonic had insisted on this place,
because
it meant that if anything went wrong, he could juice back to the
hidden village.
He fought an instinctive urge to do exactly that
as they neared the clearing. An
earsplitting rat-a-tat-tat filled
the air momentarily, echoing off of nearby hillsides, and
sounding
for all the world like miniature bursts of thunder. But this spring
morning had
nothing but sunshine and clear skies.
The blasts
were spaced evenly apart, within maybe a quarter a second of
each
other. Sonic counted twenty separate spurts within five
seconds.
"What the hoo-hah was that?" Bunnie said
apprehensively as the last echoes faded
away. The fur on her
non-roboticized limbs stood on end.
"I don't know,"
Sally responded. "I've never heard anything like it."
"Neither
have I," Sonic said, still resisting the urge to grab the other
two and dash
as far away as possible. "Maybe Robuttnik has
something to do with it!"
Sally unclipped a palm-sized
computer from the top of her boot. "Nicole,
analysis
please."
"CHEMICAL EXPLOSION, SALLY."
"Can
she tell us anything else, Sally-girl?" Bunnie asked. Nicole
answered her
directly, and in the negative.
Sally frowned, and
slid the computer back into her boot. She continued
walking
forward.
"Uh, Sal," Sonic said from behind
her. "Not that I'm nervous, or anything, but
don't you think
that just a little caution would be a cool thing right now?"
Bunnie
unsuccessfully stifled a chuckle. "Caution? The Sugar-hog? Now
those
are two things that've never gone together before."
Sally
slowed her pace, then stopped. "You're right," she relented
finally. "But we
can't pass up this opportunity, either.
Whatever it is, though, may not indicate anything
dangerous.
Remember Uncle Chuck's message said something about some strange
noises
just before he found Nix in the first place?"
"Yeah,"
Sonic said reluctantly, knowing where Sally was going with this train
of
thought. As soon his Uncle had reported finding the strange
human, he and Sally had
gone to Robotropolis to meet him as soon
as possible. Then, Nix had been pretty much
empty-handed. They had
promised to meet Nix again, here, after he got his hands on what
he
called 'cargo'. He cut her off before she could continue. "I
usually hate to say this, but
let's approach the clearing slowly.
And from cover."
"Agreed," Sally and Bunnie both
said, almost in unison. Bunnie added, "Ah can't
guarantee
that I can keep mah metal legs from making too much noise in the
underbrush,
though."
The three Freedom Fighters ducked off
the small path they were walking on, and
into the tall vegetation
of the Great Forest. It didn't take them long to reach the
agreed-
upon clearing.
Despite the foreboding thunderclap
noises, there was no sign of any trouble in the
clearing. A single
tent had been set up nearby, painted in the mottled gray-green of
jungle
camouflage. Insect netting, likely placed across the tent's
two entrances at night, were
unfolded and rested in a pile to one
side of the camp. Their contact was busy rummaging
through
something inside the tent.
Epos Nix was no ordinary human. Judging
from his clothing, he wasn't from any
Overlander or Nomad clan
that Sally could name. His face seemed far too…
irregular,
somehow. His manner wasn't odd by itself, but it still
wasn't something that she had seen
from any human in her lifetime.
Nix moved slowly, and with a slight limp, and he seemed
to be
losing whatever fur – hair, Sally reminded herself – that
had crowned his head in the
first place. Perhaps he was, like
Doctor Robotnik's nephew Snively, a mutation.
Somehow, Sally
doubted that.
It wasn't long before Nix noticed something, and
stood up deliberately. Bunnie's
legs, despite their strength, were
sometimes clumsy to move, and had given them away
after all.
"Ah'm
sorry, fellas," she said, wishing for the thousandth time that
she had never
been partially roboticized.
"No need, no
need," Epos Nix said quickly. His voice had a peculiar
inflection
that, like so many other things about Nix, Sally had
never heard before. She didn't pay
attention to that, though,
having long grown used to various regional dialects. Between
Bunnie's
sweet-mouthed twang and Antoine's scattered French, Knothole itself
seemed
home to at least 30 different accents. "You can come
out into the open, Princess. I have
fulfilled my end of the
bargain."
The trio stepped out into the clearing. Sally tried
to catch a glimpse of what Nix
had been sorting through in his
tent, but saw nothing but shadow.
"You never told us what all
the bargain was, in the first place," she said
cautiously.
During their one and only meeting in Robotropolis,
Epos Nix had only said that he had
something of immense value to
offer to the Freedom Fighters, and hadn't elaborated.
"I can
show you now, then." Nix turned back to the tent, and again
began sorting
through the items resting inside. For a moment,
Sally thought she saw several large
crates. "Straight down to
business," he said as he continued moving boxes aside.
Finally,
he selected one and dragged it out into the sunlight.
The
box wasn't a wooden supply crate, as she had first suspected.
Instead, it was a
flimsy cardboard, dull brown except for a single
logo on the side: "ENJOY COCA-
COLA".
"Coca-cola?"
Sonic asked skeptically. "Sounds like a narcotic."
Nix
laughed briefly. "It's not a drug, hedgehog. Relax. I just use
old boxes to
carry my junk."
As if to prove his point, he
grabbed something from within the box that was
definitely not a
computer. It was shaped… almost like one of Robotnik's laser
rifles. But
the design was all wrong. First of all, the barrel was
too wide, and too short and stubby.
As Sally looked at it, she saw
that the barrel's nozzle didn't have a focusing crystal near the
end.
A crystal was essential to direct the laser's energies into a true
blast; otherwise, it
would just produce a random stream of intense
light.
The thing was obviously a weapon, however. Sights were
mounted on the top of
the barrel. A long handle protruding
downwards from the end of the stubby weapon
shielded a trigger. As
Sally watched, Nix pulled a canister from his pocket and snapped
it
on to the underside of the gun, giving it the appearance of
having two handles.
Sally waited for Sonic's typical boastful
commentary, such as "The only weapon I'll
ever need is my
sneakers and a Spin!". She was grateful when it didn't happen,
but could
tell that he was thinking it.
"Like any good
salesman, I'll begin with a product demonstration," Nix
said
confidently. "Pick a tree."
When Sally didn't
immediately respond, Sonic jabbed a finger towards a towering
maple
on the other side of the clearing. "That one."
"No
problem." With that, Nix thumbed a switch and leveled the stubby
weapon
towards the indicated tree. The gun was almost small enough
to be a pistol instead of a
rifle, and that was how the human held
it: with only one hand on the gun, holding onto the
trigger. Nix
squeezed it.
The rifle spat fire, and the forest around them
immediately echoed with the same
thunderous rat-a-tat-tat that had
haunted them minutes ago. Bunnie flinched at the noise.
A bright
yellow flame blossomed into being and flickered continually a few
inches from
the lip of the barrel.
If anything, the claps of
thunder seemed spaced closer together this time. Sally
couldn't
count the number of booms in one second.
For a moment, Sally
thought that was the extent of the rifle's power, that it was
just
a short-range flame-thrower. Then she looked over at the tree. In
correspondence
with each bellow from the gun, the tree's bark
cracked and splintered. Chips of wood flew
in every direction.
Dents quickly appeared. As each round struck the tree, the holes
they
bore grew deeper and deeper.
Finally, the gun whirred to a
stop with a series of empty clicks. Nix released his
hold on the
trigger. Dust settled around the target, and to her great surprise,
Sally found
that over half the thick trunk had been chewed away. A
laser rifle would have only
accomplished a quarter in such a short
period of time.
As there was no way that a laser rifle could fire
as fast as this weapon.
Sally found that, like Bunnie earlier, the
fur on her back and arms was standing on
end. She shivered, trying
not to show her uneasiness.
"That was incredible," she
said at last.
"How'd you do that?" Sonic asked. "I
didn't see anything move from the barrel of
your gun to that tree.
No laser or anything."
"That's because this doesn't use
lasers. Or a fusion burst."
"Then how does it work?"
he asked anxiously.
Nix ripped off the canister he had plugged
into the bottom of the gun and tossed it
absently into the grass.
"Sonic, have you ever had a slingshot as a kid?"
Sonic
laughed boisterously. "The best shot in all of Knothole!"
he proclaimed.
Nix nodded, disinterested. He was searching through
his pockets for something.
Finally, he pulled out a canister
identical to one he had just removed from the underside of
his
rifle. He extracted a small pellet from it.
"This gun
operates on the same basic principle. It fires a projectile, a
bullet, out of
the barrel towards a target." Sally examined
the pellet more closely. It was a small, box-
like chunk of lead
that tapered down to a smooth point at one end. The lead was
coated
in copper, as well. "This is just a… a more
advanced model."
"No way," Sonic objected. "I
would've seen it." With any weapon that Sally had
ever seen,
there was usually some kind of projectile or energy burst visible
between the
gun and its target. There had appeared to be just…
air between this gun and the tree. As
if Nix had just planted
little explosive charges in the trunk itself, and the devastation
had
nothing to do with the hand-held weapon.
Bunnie nodded in
affirmation. "There was nothin' but clear air between your
gun
and the tree."
"Wrong," Nix corrected in a
smug tone that Sally had heard her mentor Julayla use
during
lessons. "This weapon fires the bullets too fast for the eye to
see. But they're
there, all the same." He grinned. "They
can move faster than you can, hedgehog."
"Faster than
moi?" Sonic said doubtfully, but he didn't press the issue. All
three
Freedom Fighters wanted to see more of the weapon.
"Where
does this… unusual device come from?" Sally asked
anxiously.
"I'm afraid I can't answer that one, Princess."
Nix's voice was quite firm. "But I
can tell you how it
works."
He flipped the weapon onto its side, holding it
between his arms at an angle. With
a finger, he indicated a switch
on the side of the weapon that Sally had not noticed before.
"Ever
since I managed to obtain these weapons, I've been slowly and
methodically
upgrading them to perform better in this environment.
This switch is one of the things
that I've modified: it's the
safety catch. I changed it from just a simple 'on/off' switch.
The
safety actually switches between three different firing modes."
Bunnie looked at
Sally, confused, and Epos Nix could tell that he
wasn't getting his point across. He sighed
disparagingly, and then
tried again. "Let me show you: if it's is toggled into this
position,"
he flipped the switch to its uppermost position,
"then the gun won't fire."
Sally nodded appreciatively.
Ever since seeing the weapon, she had begun
worrying about the
danger of a kid like Tails accidentally getting a hold of it. The
safety
catch helped allay her fears.
Nix flipped the switch
again, moving it to the bottom position. "This is full
automatic
mode. This is what I had switched on when I showed you the weapon a
few
moments ago; it fires at around four bullets per second."
He sighed. "Ordinarily, it would
be a lot faster, but I
manually reduced it to increase accuracy. Although the weapon
is
extremely effective in full automatic mode, the accuracy
suffers. It tends to pull up, and to
the right."
He
flipped the safety catch to the middle position. "This is a
firing mode I installed
myself. It only allows the weapon to fire
two bullets per second, but the accuracy of the
weapon is
increased dramatically. This is actually an idea I stole from the
AK-47…most
effective for long ranges; especially for
bringing down Robotnik's hover patrols."
"Hold on a
minute," Sonic said, crossing his arms. "A laser rifle
won't even
bring down a hover patrol, and it can fire at the same
speed as your middle setting. And a
laser rifle's shot is
individually a lot more powerful than one of your bullets." This
much
was true. Each bullet that Sally had seen impact the tree had
only been a puff of dust
compared to the explosion that laser
rifles were capable of inflicting. The bullets' strength
there had
been their numbers. Eliminate that, and it didn't look like this
'advanced
slingshot' could offer much in the way of competition to
a laser rifle.
"You're jumping too far ahead in this
demonstration," Nix said. He slung his
unique weapon over his
shoulder, on a strap, and made his way over to his tent in
the
clearing. Again, he began rummaging through shadowy boxes.
When he emerged again,
he held two pieces of armor in his
hand.
One was the cold gray color of SWATbot armor. The other was
the pale green of
Robotnik's egg-shaped hover units. They were
both no more than half an inch thick, and
six inches wide.
Without
speaking, Nix propped up both pieces of metal up against a log on
the
other side of the clearing, and made his way back over to the
three Freedom Fighters. He
pulled the weapon off his back, and
thumbed the safety catch to its middle setting. Nix
took careful
aim at the log, both hands holding on to the gun…
BLAM!
Plink! The two noises happened simultaneously, and the SWATbot
armor
tipped over.
BLAM! Plink! The hover unit's armor flopped into the
grass.
Nix walked over to the log, and picked up the SWATbot
armor, holding it so that
the Freedom Fighters could see it
clearly. A ragged hole several times larger than a bullet
had been
torn in it. When he held up the hover unit armor, a hole the size of
a fist had
been punched clean through it.
Bunnie let out a low
whistle. Had that been a laser rifle that had fired on that
armor,
it wouldn't have done anywhere near so much damage.
"No way!"
Sonic shouted. "That's gotta be fake!"
"Inspect the
metal yourself," Nix offered. "It's armor taken," he
grinned, "directly
from their owners. Genuine, in other
words."
Sally walked over to broken pieces of armor. Nix
gladly presented the metal taken
from the hull of the hover unit.
The metal itself, although thick, was surprisingly
lightweight.
Sally
tried to recall everything Julayla had taught her about metallurgy.
None of
what she knew could explain this right immediately.
"It's
how the armor itself is built. Your world -" Nix stopped
himself, as if he had
said too much. "Your culture, unlike my
own, never put too much of its scientific
research capacity into
developing new kinds of weaponry. Instead of creating newer
and
better kinds of bullet weapons, you stuck to creating laser
weapons, and then only when
you needed to."
Sally nodded.
"Killing never concerned us much. At least, not until the
Great
War."
Nix looked at her gravely. "You had
better things to do with your time, instead of
spending it on
warfare. I envy you that."
Again, Sally frowned, looking
inquisitively at Nix's chiseled face. As far as she had
heard,
there no human Overlord clans wracked with as much strife as Nix had
implied his
was. Where did this human come from?
But Epos Nix
had already turned back to his weapon, and the destroyed armor.
"That
also means, however, that your culture designed its armor in order to
ward off laser
weapons. Not bullets." He picked up the hover
unit armor, and tossed it in the air several
times. "This
armor was designed to dissipate the energy from laser weapons. It
takes the
excess heat and destructive force of a laser bolt and
spreads it across as wide an area as
possible, to minimize the
damage. To do this, the metal has to be highly conductive."
Sonic
sighed. Sally suspected that Nix had lost him minutes
ago.
"Unfortunately for Robotnik, the metal he chose to build
his hover units from,
although highly conductive, has a poor
tensile strength. It's almost the bare minimum to
keep the hover
unit afloat. That's how physical things like bullets are able to
punch
through it so easily."
"In English, please!"
Sonic muttered, a complaint usually reserved for Nicole.
Nix
rolled his eyes. "That means that, because Robotnik designed his
hover units
and SWATbots to ward off laser weapons only, they're
especially vulnerable to other
things, like bullet weapons."
Sally
had understood every word that Nix had said. Her eyes were bright
with
excitement. Sonic was still looking at him through a haze of
confusion and frustration.
Nix wasn't finished talking. He turned
to Bunnie. "Have you ever used your
roboticized limbs to hack
through Robotnik's SWATbots?" he asked bluntly.
Bunnie looked
at Sonic and Sally. After all these years, talking about her
half-
mechanical body still made her uncomfortable. "'Course
I have. They're not good for
much else." In her days as a
Freedom Fighter, Bunnie had literally torn apart dozens, if
not
hundreds, of SWATbots.
Nix's face softened, as if he realized that
he had touched on a sensitive topic. "And
how easy is it to
kill them?"
"Pretty easy, sugar. My arm goes through 'em
like a knife through butter."
Nix continued, although he had
already more than proven his point to Sally. "You,
Sonic.
I've heard about you. How easy is it to destroy hover units by luring
them into a
wall?"
Sonic swelled with pride. "Very
easy. You just have to get the slow things to nick
against a
corner or something, and they start breaking apart."
"That's
because they were built with a low tensile strength," Nix said.
Sonic
suddenly appeared to understand what Nix had said
earlier.
"Oh," Sonic said. Then his face lit up. "Oh!
I gotcha. Cool."
"Now, I warned you earlier that
sometimes this weapon's accuracy suffers a little.
It's usually
good only at short ranges, but I managed to modify it." Nix
said, changing
subjects. He slid his hand along the weapon's
barrel. As Sally examined it closer, she saw
that the barrel was
made of a different material than the rest of the gun, and was
longer
than it should have been. "I lengthened the barrel on
all my stock myself. It should be
accurate now to over 200 meters
on the safety catch's middle setting."
"You have a
deal," Sally said immediately. "These could be an immense
boon in
the war against Robotnik." Even Sonic couldn't argue
with that. "How much do you
want for them?"
"Before
we discuss a price, let's discuss what you'll get. For each unit
you'll buy, I
can give you one of these weapons, modified to
behave like this one, and five of my own
special clips. Each clip
can hold about fifty bullets. That's two hundred and fifty
bullets
per weapon."
"Okay."
"Right now,
I only have a dozen units available. Sorry, but I only had time
to
modify so many."
"Check. We'll take all twelve."
Sally's face froze; she realized how immeasurably
valuable these
weapons would be to the Freedom Fighters. A merchant like Nix
would
likely realize that, and try to take full advantage of it.
"Keep in mind, we're a pretty
loosely organized group, so we
don't have much to barter with you…"
"I have no
wish to barter. I want hard Mobian currency. Gold coins."
Of
all the things that Nix could have demanded, that was the thing that
Sally had
been least expecting.
Robotnik's coup ten years ago
had not only disrupted Mobius's economy, but in
fact completely
destroyed it. Mobian coins had become worthless. Whatever
trade
existed between the scattered groups and towns that had
survived the coming of Ivo
Robotnik was now mostly conducted
through simple barter. However many gold coins
Epos Nix got his
hands on, he wouldn't be able to buy much. From anybody.
Even
somebody like Sandra Nightweaver, who was as tight-fisted when it
came to
trade as the hardest merchant, never accepted any Mobian
currency, no matter how high
the gold content.
"But,
Mobian coins are -" Sally started.
"Worthless?" Nix
cut her off, smiling thinly. "Maybe to everybody else on
this
planet. But not to me."
Sally shook her head. She
knew she had to get these weapons to the Freedom
Fighters, and
decided she would do so, no matter how strange Nix's demands
were.
Knothole even had its own little supply of Mobian coins,
even if Bookshire kept most of
them in his storage shed and let
them gather dust. "Five hundred gold coins per unit?"
she
asked, hopefully.
Nix scoffed. "Hardly. Try two
thousand."
"Out of the question," Sally protested.
She tried reading Nix's face, but could find
nothing in his
expression. The man was a trader, all right, and a good one.
"Eight
hundred."
"One thousand five
hundred."
"Ten thousand for all twelve," Sally
said.
"Try fifteen thousand for all twelve."
"Twelve
thousand."
"Thirteen thousand gold coins for all dozen
weapons. And I'll personally train
everyone who receives a
weapon," Nix said, an odd note of finality in his
voice.
"Sold."
Epos Nix smiled. "A very wise
choice, Princess. When do you want the weapons
delivered?"
All
three Freedom Fighters looked at one another. Sally decided that she
still
didn't trust Nix anywhere near Knothole. "We'll take
them now, if that's all right."
"Of course. I think I
can trust the infamous Knothole Freedom Fighters to deliver
the
currency as promised." Nix went into his tent, and retrieved a
crate. He set it down in
front of Sally, then went back in to grab
another one. Sally checked the crate he had
pulled out: it was
full of the bullet weapons and ammunition clips.
"Just be
sure to pay up by tomorrow evening," Nix said, carrying out
another box.
"I'll be staying right here, in this clearing,
until then."
"No problem," Sally said. Her mind was
already racing. She didn't know how
much currency Bookshire had,
but he certainly didn't have thirteen thousand coins. But
the
Freedom Fighters could hardly afford to pass up this opportunity.
They would find the
money, somehow.
Sonic picked up one of the
crates, and revved up his legs. "I can't wait to show
these
to everybody! I'll be back to help you guys out. Juice and jam
time!"
A sonic boom echoed throughout the forest.
Epos Nix
brought out one final crate, and set it in front of Bunnie. Sally
looked
curiously at him again. "One last thing?" she
asked tentatively.
"Shoot," Nix said.
Sally was about
to ask him where he was from, then thought better of it. If he
didn't
want her to know, then he wasn't going to tell her. "What would
you like us to call
these weapons? The Nix rifle?"
Epos
Nix laughed unexpectedly, as if he had heard the punch-line to a joke
that
only he would ever get. "Of course, not, Princess. Call
it by its real name." He spoke a
word that Sally had never
heard before.
Sally stumbled over the word, feeling as clumsy as
Antoine in pronunciation. "An
Ooo-zee?"
Nix laughed
again, and spelled it out for her.
"Uzi."
"Thirteen thousand!" Bookshire scoffed. "Princess,
I doubt that we have more
than two thousand at all in
Knothole."
The leaders of the Freedom Fighter group were
gathered around a dingy old
conference table that Sally had
dragged into her hut. As a meeting hall, it was the only
thing the
poorly supplied Freedom Fighters could get their hands on. It served
its
purpose, though. Just minutes ago, Sally had told them all
about Epos Nix and his bullet
weapons.
"Yes, and zat is if
we are being lucky," Antoine said.
Antoine's accent seemed to
darken Geoffrey St. John's mood. He had put up quite
a protest
when the other Freedom Fighters began allowing Antoine to sit in on
these
meetings. For once and only once, he and Sonic agreed on
something. "Look, Princess,
this isn't exactly a lawful
society anymore. No one's going to arrest us if we reneg on a
deal.
Why can't we just give this Nix bastard two thousand and be done with
it?"
Even Sonic understood the logical fallacies of
Geoffrey's position. He scoffed
louder than Bookshire had. "No,
Geoff! Do you think this Nix is gonna sell us any more
weapons if
we back out like that?"
"What difference does it make if
we can't afford the things?" Geoffrey shot back.
Sally
interrupted. "We won't back out of this deal, not yet. We'll pay
Nix,
somehow. We do owe him."
The Aussie skunk scowled.
Sally ignored him, and continued.
"Besides, the coins aren't
really of value to anybody now. If we can just find
enough of them
to give to Nix, we won't ever miss them once they're gone." That
much
could never have been true of the barter that the Freedom
Fighters were used to.
"That still leaves us with a mondo
problem, Sal," Sonic said. "Where do we get
the
coins?"
"We'll have to dig around Knothole for every
last piece of old Mobian currency we
can find. Sonic, can you
scout out around the outlying suburbs of Robotropolis? There
may
be a few abandoned banks still intact there."
"I doubt
it, but yeah, sure. Why not?"
Sally folded her arms, stilling
planning out their next steps. "We may have to ask
some of
the other Freedom Fighter groups for help, too. Maybe even Griff from
Under
Mobius, but I don't think he'll be willing to give away
much." She frowned. It had only
been three days ago that they
had found another Freedom Fighter group: the Wolf Pack.
The
Eastern and Southern groups were just starting to communicate with
them, via Uncle
Chuck's carrier birds. There was no way they could
get anything from the Eastern and
Southern groups before tomorrow
evening's deadline. But the Wolf Pack…
Sally turned to
Rotor. "Rotor, Lupe is scheduled to travel to Knothole
tomorrow,
correct?"
The walrus nodded. "Right."
Lupe had agreed to travel on her first visit to
Knothole,
tomorrow. Sally had planned to initiate a joint raid between the two
groups,
but now it seemed that that would have to wait.
"Send
a messenger bird down to the Wolf Pack. Tell Lupe to bring with
her
however much Mobian currency she can manage."
"And
what'll we do if that still doesn't work, hon?" Bunnie asked. It
was the
question on everybody's mind.
"We might even have
to raid Robotropolis's old warehouses."
Geoffrey sighed
melodramatically. "Risk our lives to amuse this Nix
character?"
"I hope it doesn't come to that." Sally
looked around, and checked the old-style
timepiece hanging on her
hut's wall. It was late. "I think that's all we can do
tonight.
Everyone get a good night's rest. We all need it."
The
Freedom Fighters grumbled their agreement, and all filed out of
Sally's hut,
with the exception of Bookshire and Bunnie. Bunnie
had stayed to help Sally remove the
weather-beaten conference
table back to the storage shed, Bookshire to talk. As he was
there,
though, he helped the two lift the table.
Bunnie was able to talk
much more easily than the other two could; lifting the
heavy
length of wood hardly strained her roboticized muscles. "We'll
find some way git
the money, Sally-girl. We always figure out a
way, especially when its for somethin' big,
like this."
Sally
let that go unanswered. "Was there something you wanted to talk
about,
Bookshire?"
"Yes," the raccoon wheezed.
The table wasn't being very kind to his bad leg.
"Worst-case
scenarios."
"Oh, those are always fun."
Bookshire
didn't respond to the sarcasm. "I'm not sure whatever medical
supplies
we have are ready to treat bullet wounds. I'll have to
brush up on some of my old medical
textbooks myself."
Sally
nodded soberly. If worst did come to worst, and the Freedom Fighters
found
themselves facing the wrong end of one of Nix's Uzis…
"As
near as I can figure from what you described, it should be similar to
treating
someone who's been hit by a piece of metal shrapnel. A
bullet would create a much
deeper wound, though. It's…
almost an entirely new phenomenon for me, or any doctor
still
alive out there. I should be able to treat it with the right
equipment… which I don't
think we have."
This was
too much to worry about. Typical for the Freedom Fighters. "We'll
just
have to make do with what we've got, Booky."
Bunnie
opened the door of the storage shed with her non-roboticized limb,
and the
three of them tossed the conference table roughly into the
pile. Bookshire exhaled
sharply, glad to be free of the
burden.
"See y'all tomorrow, then," Bunnie said, and
disappeared off into the darkness.
Sally and Bookshire were
alone.
"How many gold coins do you think you can scrounge up
from your hut's
basement?" Sally asked.
"No more than
a thousand. I don't even know why I kept them, but I'm glad
that
they're finding some use now."
"Hell's bells,"
Sally muttered. She didn't curse often, but was hardly aware of
it
now. "Let's hope that Lupe pulls through for us, or we
will have to invade
Robotropolis's warehouses."
"Goodnight,
Princess," Bookshire said, and then was gone.
"G'night,
Booky," she said to the darkness, and went back to her hut. Her
sleep
that night was fitful. She was constantly disturbed by a
recurring nightmare: either herself
or Sonic or Tails being gunned
down by a hidden stranger with an Uzi. When she awoke,
she
couldn't help but feel that, as much help as the Uzi would be to the
Freedom Fighters,
it had somehow introduced something evil,
something tainted, to her world.
Day Two
The morning's weather had started foul, and had never improved.
The usual
streams of sunlight that filtered through the Great
Forest's canopy of leaves was gone,
blocked by a dark gray
overcast sky. Instead, a fetid acid rain drizzled down from
the
stormy skies. In the clearing that Epos Nix had set up his
camp, there were no trees to
deflect the downpour, and it fell
that much harder.
Lupe shivered, shaking out her fur. It
immediately became drenched again.
Ordinarily, she would have been
happy to see a thing like rain again; such things were rare
in the
desert of the Great Unknown, where she and her kin camped. But the
pollution
from Robotropolis's industrial factories had
intermingled with the rain, making it
unbearable to even
feel.
"Okay, Reynard, we can set it down here." Lupe
guided the wooden chest
carefully to the ground, and was glad to
be free of the burden. She, Reynard, and Canus
had traveled to
Knothole bearing the strange cargo, as Princess Sally had asked.
There
was a heavy thump behind her as Reynard let his drop to the
ground. His fur bristled with
irritation: even with the aid of
stolen hover pads, it had been a long walk, and they had
never
been clued in as to why the Knothole group needed Mobian currency so
badly.
Lupe sighed. She could tell already that this would
interfere with her original plan
for the trip. The Wolf Pack and
the Knothole groups had agreed to meet to discuss a joint
raid on
Robotropolis, but now it looked as if everybody had other things on
their minds.
Sally never gave Reynard a chance to complain. She
was in the clearing, as were
several others from the Knothole
group. Lupe recognized Sonic and the anxious French
coyote, but
she had never seen the half roboticized rabbit or the human
before.
"You pulled through!" Sally exclaimed after the
Wolf Pack made their presence
known. When Lupe had first spotted
her, she had appeared more wearied than anything
else. Now she was
ecstatic.
"Yes, although I confess I don't know why. Mobian
coins have been worthless for
over a decade."
"How
much?" Sally asked. Although Lupe didn't know Sally or any of
the
Knothole Freedom Fighters very well, she gave them the benefit
of the doubt and assumed
that this was important.
"Twelve
thousand. Like you asked." When Sally's eyes widened, Lupe
offered an
explanation. "There are many old treasuries hidden
in the mountains that Robotnik never
found out about, or never
bothered to raid."
The human broke out into a wide grin. An
uncomfortable number of teeth flashed
in the morning light. It
made Lupe feel vaguely uneasy.
"It appears that I was correct
in trusting you, Princess," the human said. He
trotted over
and grabbed the crate that Lupe had dropped, as if it were his own.
He lifted
it easily back to his tent.
Lupe glowered at Nix, and
then at Sally. "What is all this?" her irritation got
the
better of her.
Sally opened her mouth to speak, but Nix
interrupted her. "I assumed that you
were with the Knothole
group. You're not?"
"No."
"My apologizes.
My name is Epos Nix, and I'm an arms dealer. Who're you?"
"None
of your concern, Overlander!" Canus snarled. Lupe held up a
hand, and
Canus stopped.
Sally sighed. "Epos Nix, this is
Lupe, leader of the Wolf Pack Freedom Fighters.
Lupe, Epos Nix."
Nix raised his eyebrow.
"Arms dealer?" Lupe asked, her
curiosity piqued. "Is this man the reason you
asked for
Mobian currency?"
"I'm afraid so." In a brief
summary, Sally and Nix filled the Wolf Pack in on the
bullet
weapons. Sonic tapped his foot impatiently; he had heard all this
before.
"It sounds impressive," Lupe admitted at last.
"But can I ask why you desire
worthless Mobian coins?"
Nix
stared at her, emotionlessly. "No. You may not."
Lupe
turned to face the Freedom Fighters. "Have you field-tested
these
weapons?"
Bunnie shook her head. "Well, Ah took
a couple out last night and emptied a clip
into some trees, just
to make sure they worked. But if y'all mean tested against
Robotnik,
no, we haven't had the time."
"There's a
weapons trial I would enjoy taking part in," Reynard said.
Despite his
earlier frustration, he had been quite taken by
Sally's description of the bullet weapons.
"We may get the
chance," Sally said. "Epos Nix has offered to train several
people
from Knothole in the use of the Uzi, personally. I have a
few of my own people picked
out. Would you three like Uzis of your
own?"
"That would be excellent."
Sally smiled.
"It looks like we may have a joint raid to plan, after all."
Epos Nix said he wanted to get done with training the Freedom
Fighters as soon as
possible, so within hours all twelve Freedom
Fighters were present, and quickly learning
how to handle the
Uzis.
Lupe and the other two from the Wolf Pack were there, of
course, as were Sonic,
Sally, and Bunnie. Sally had introduced
Lupe to the others from Knothole that were to
receive Nix's
weapons.
At last, that loud rat-a-tat-tat reports of gunfire faded
into the wilderness. Nix had
proclaimed training over.
Lupe
snapped the clip off the bottom of her own Uzi's barrel, and wiped
the sweat
from her brow fur. Keeping control over the Uzi had been
more difficult than anybody
anticipated; all around, there was
heavy breathing and collective exhaustion. Lupe had
been waiting
to ask this question all afternoon, in fact ever since she had first
seen the
Freedom Fighters, but now the question was caught in her
throat. "Princess Acorn?"
"Just Sally, please,
Lupe," Sally answered.
Lupe was going through the motions of
cleaning the Uzi, exactly as Nix had
taught. "There's
something I have to ask you. I wanted to… earlier, when we
first met in
the Great Unknown, but… events
interfered."
"Sure. We all owe you one."
"More
than one," Canus grumbled from nearby. Lupe ignored him.
"Over
the past few years, I've heard some rumors about the Knothole
Freedom
Fighters. There was someone I knew, once. I heard he was
with you."
Sally nodded. "The coup split up more than
one family. Someone related to you?"
"I was hoping he
would be, once. His name is Cat."
Epos Nix was leaning
against a nearby tree, casually eavesdropping. Rumors and
information
were often more valuable to his clientele than actual material goods.
He saw
Sally's face fall at the mention of the name Cat. Nix
continued going through the motions
of helping Antoine dissemble
his weapon. Had he been anything but human, though, the
immediate
perking up of his ears would have given away his eavesdropping.
Lupe
couldn't see Sally's expression from her angle. She only saw her
shoulders
tense at the mention of the name. There was a moment's
pause.
"You do know him?" she asked eagerly.
When
Sally turned around, her face told Lupe everything.
"Oh,
Lupe, I'm so sorry…"
Sonic dumped the crate just outside the storage shed, and kicked
it the rest of the
way in. The Uzis inside rattled.
"Aw,
come on, Sonic," Tails moaned behind him. "I'll be good,
you know that!"
Sonic smiled. "Sorry, big guy. But you
know that Sal would freak out if she saw
you playing with these
things." He clipped a padlock in place on the shed's door and
spun
the dial. "Besides, I'm not all that comfortable with
you and these guns myself."
It was late evening in Knothole.
He had carried Sally and Bunnie back home
himself, but Lupe and
her wolf pack insisted on walking the rest of the way and had
only
arrived in Knothole an hour ago. After giving her a quick
tour, Sally and Lupe had
disappeared into the dining hall for the
rest of the evening.
"But I'm training to be a Freedom
Fighter now. I thought you and Sally trusted
me."
Sonic
didn't have an answer for that; he just ruffled the fur on Tail's
head, which
only made the fox angrier. Over the past few months,
he had taken exception to being
treated as just a child. After
last winter, he had even insisted that Sally stop reading aloud
to
him every night, a tradition which until then had gone unbroken ever
since the day Tails
had come to Knothole.
"Hey,"
Sonic said, trying to change the subject. "I'll race you back to
the dining
hall?"
That seemed to brighten the fox cub.
"Okay." He wound up his two tails. His
voice was
near-perfect mockery of Sonic's usual catch phrase. "Time to
juice and cut it
loose!"
A flash of blue and orange shot
through Knothole. A combination of speed and
darkness reduced
Sonic's visibility as he raced through town, and once he
thought
something brushed his leg and grunted, but he couldn't see
what. He beat Tails to the
entrance of the dining hall by over a
second. When Tails did come in, he was laughing.
"You're
lagging behind, big guy. What took so long?"
Tails couldn't
stop laughing. At the dining table a cluster of Freedom Fighters
had
gathered around Sally and Lupe. They all looked up at two new
arrivals.
"You knocked Geoff right off his feet," Tails
managed at last to sputter. He broke
out into another laughing
fit. "He fell right into the mud!"
Somewhere off in the
distance a distinctly Aussie accent cursed and grumbled.
Sonic
grinned, and exchanged a quick high-five with Tails. "Score, the
hedgehog."
Inside the dining hall, Sally shook her head.
"Charming, boys. Very charming."
"Zat Geoffrey
deserves eet," Antoine mumbled to himself.
Sonic grabbed a
chair. "So what's going in here? You like Knothole so
far,
Lupe?"
"Um, yes. This is a very hospitable
town," Lupe relented.
"We were just exchanging stories,"
Sally cut in, "and waiting for you to get here.
You're slow,"
she jibed. Sonic tried his best to ignore her.
"So we're
going to field-test these Uzis tomorrow, against Robotnik?"
"That's
right, and that's also another part of the meeting you were too slow
to be
here for. We've already decided on a target."
Sonic
felt his cheeks burning at Sally's continuing jabs to his ego. He
shrugged it
off. "Most boring part of any raid. I'm glad I
missed it. But what are we going to hit?"
Until this point,
Nicole had been resting idly in Sally's hands. She flipped the
tiny
computer open. "Nicole, display targets one and
two."
Without a word, Nicole's circuitry buzzed with life,
and a two-dimensional
hologram map of Robotropolis flickered into
existence at the center of the table. Red
circles centered
themselves on two buildings a city block apart.
"Target one
is right here, a large hover unit patrol that continually passes
by
Robotnik's massive Doomsday machine. Every two minutes, a
patrol of at least ten
different hover units fly a circling guard
pattern across this street. We think that a small
team on the
ground, lead by Lupe, can take down enough of them and mix things
up
enough to create some confusion.
"Once that's been
accomplished, it should be easy enough to get a larger team, in
a
stolen hover craft, past what's left of the air guard and into
Doomsday itself. Doomsday is
our number two target."
"Whoa,
there. Just because we have Uzis, that doesn't mean we can take
a
monstrosity like Doomsday off-line that simply. Even with me on
the team. There's too
many SWATbutts," Sonic said.
"I
never said we could destroy Doomsday. But I think we can get into one
of the
pod manufacturing plants and blow it up. There will be
SWATbots, yes, but I think we
can at least get into one of the
closer pod factories. The SWATbots shouldn't be any
match for
Nix's bullet weapons." Sally clicked Nicole shut, and the
hologram wavered
into nothingness.
"Sounds like a plan,
Sal."
Bunnie chimed in. "Well, it is a change from what
we're used to. Usually, on
missions like these, we jus' sneak into
whatever we want to destroy, and blow it up
without another sound.
But now we just go in with guns blazin'."
"Yeah,"
Sonic agreed. "It does sound kinda military."
Sally
sighed, as if she regretted that. "Well, we're no longer just a
group of a
couple dozen teenagers holed up here in Knothole,
alone. We've made contact with three
other Freedom Fighter groups
now, and have a global network set up to fight Robotnik.
We're not
in the shadows anymore. We can't afford to keep silent now."
"I
know Reynard and Canus would be eager to help. If we're going to
attack
tomorrow, though, I won't have time to call for
reinforcements from the Wolf Pack camp
in the Great Unknown,"
Lupe said.
Sally nodded. "I think that we can get in and get
out without much more help,
though. Let's remember that this is
just going to be a field test, so we're not going to do
too much
damage, or be there for very long. Is that it for tonight?"
There
was a collective nod.
"All right. Let's get ready to hike out
to Robotropolis first thing in the morning."
With that, the
Freedom Fighters dispersed. Some of them left for the night, others
stayed
behind to grab a late dinner. Sonic stopped Sally as she
was about to step out the door.
"A thought just struck the
ol' brain, Sal. I thought that Epos didn't leave us with
too much
ammunition. Only 250 shots per gun, and if we fire on full automatic,
we'll use
it up pretty quickly. If this is just a field test, why
waste so many bullets?"
"Another part of the meeting you
missed," Sally explained. "The twelve thousand
coins
that Lupe brought up from the Great Unknown weren't the only ones
down there.
She told us that there were still old treasuries
dotting the landscape. Bringing up more
coins to Knothole
shouldn't be too much of a problem. Using those, we can pay Nix
for
more ammunition clips and rifles."
"I still think
that we should talk with Rote about this. See if he can make
duplicate
the clips for the Uzis."
Sally smiled. "You
are slow tonight. We're one step ahead of you. Rotor
doesn't think
he can make his own bullets, though. There's just not enough raw
materials
floating around."
"Hmmmmm," Sonic
frowned.
"Not only that, but he said that he's never seen the
like of the explosive compound
that propels the bullets. He can't
even identify the compound itself, let alone recreate it."
"So
we're completely dependent on this Nix for our bullets," the
hedgehog mused.
"For the time being. He seems trustworthy,
though. Goodnight, Sonic." The two
left together.
Across
the dining hall, Antoine grumbled to himself. He had been left on
kitchen
detail for the night. He gathered used plates from several
tables, and dumped them
unceremoniously in the sink.
A spot of
chili dripped off of Tails's plate and slipped past Antoine's apron,
staining
his Mobian Royal Guard uniform. He grumbled some more,
and filled the sink with sudsy
water.
"Hey, Antoine!"
Bunnie called from one of the tables. He turned around, grateful
for
the distraction. "Git over here for a second, would ya?"
She, Bookshire, and Lupe
were still seated at the
table.
Appreciative, Antoine slipped off the apron and joined took
a seat next to Bunnie.
"How may I be of assistance?" he
asked.
"Ant, you remember Cat, don'tcha?" Bunnie
asked.
Any Freedom Fighter who had been killed or roboticized was
a sore point at
Knothole, and Cat especially. He had been among
the older Freedom Fighters, 36-years-
old, and had been with them
for over five years. Cat had very much been a loner at
Knothole,
but he occasionally agreed to come along on raids to Robotropolis.
His age
had evened earned him a nickname - 'old boy' - from
Robotnik, who usually just addressed
every Freedom Fighter as
'Rodent'.
"Of course," Antoine nodded. "Who eez
asking about Cat?"
"I am," Lupe said.
Bookshire
looked at her and Antoine uncomfortably. "Lupe and Cat knew
each
other before the war. They were, uh, planning to get
married."
Antoine's ears perked. "A member of the Wolf
Pack? But I thought -"
Lupe interrupted. "This was
something I was willing to leave the Pack for. Our
traditions have
never looked down kindly on inter-species marriages. I had planned
to
take exile. But… the coup interfered, and after my
father was roboticized, I stayed with
the Pack. I couldn't find
out what happened to Cat."
"I zee. I am sorry to be
hearing zis. You and Cat must have been close."
"Don't
be sorry, Antoine. At least, now I know that he evaded capture for a
few
years. I know for sure what happened."
Bookshire
nodded. "We've been telling Lupe everything that we can
remember
about Cat while he was with us. We were wondering if you
had a few stories to share, as
well."
"Of course,
Loopy, I will be most happy to. I remember ze first time I saw Cat
in
action…" Antoine paused, as if remembering details,
or inventing them. "Zere I was,
surrounded by SWATbots at
both my sides, and nothing but my bare hands as weapons…
but
I was not afraid! Zen I saw Cat, coming…"
Day Three
Yesterday's rain hadn't yet given up; a new system was quickly
moving through the
Great Forest right on the heels of the last
one. Although the clouds were thick over the
forest, in
Robotropolis they were invisible through the seemingly-permanent
layer of
smog. A thin drizzle of polluted acid rain was the only
sign of any change in the weather.
Once again, the rain seeped
through Lupe's fur, irritating the skin underneath. The
tainted
industrial smog was much thicker over Robotropolis than it had been
in the
clearing, and it only made the polluted rain that much more
insufferable. Lupe futility
shook out her coat.
"Two
minutes," Rotor announced, never taking his eyes off his
wristwatch. His
hands were clenched around his Uzi's barrel,
knuckles bleached white.
Lupe, Canus, Reynard, Rotor, and Geoffrey
St. John were all clustered together
under the poor shelter of
trash heap on one of Robotropolis's empty boulevards. Each had
an
Uzi held tightly in their hands.
The communicator clipped to
Lupe's belt echoed Rotor. "Two minutes," Sonic's
voice
said.
The towering spire of Robotnik's monstrous Doomsday machine
loomed
menacingly over them.
Lupe double-checked her weapon's
banana clip, making sure that it was fastened
on to the bottom
exactly as Nix had showed her. She flipped the safety catch into
the
middle position. A series of echoing clicks indicated that the
others were following suit.
"Remember, we're only running
interference, here. Our job is to attack the patrol
units
surrounding Doomsday and mix it up enough to let the others sneak in.
Once that's
accomplished, we run, and we run fast. No heroics,"
she said, mostly for Canus's benefit.
The wolf scowled.
"Yes,
ma'am," Canus chided.
The seconds ticked down. Lupe decided
that she couldn't stand the silence.
"Nobody blow straight
through their ammunition, either; remember, it's
expensive,"
she ordered, just for the sake of breaking the quiet. "Keep your
rate of fire on
the middle setting unless it's absolutely
necessary to switch to full automatic. Aim for the
front window of
any hover units, as well. One well-aimed shot can punch through
the
windshield and hit the pilot."
"Shaddup!"
Geoffrey hissed. "We get it!"
Rotor glared at Geoff,
silencing him. Geoffrey was taken aback by the sudden
ferocity of
Rotor's eyes. Rotor turned to Lupe. "Is something… wrong?
You seem
nervous."
Lupe sighed. "It's been a while
since I've seen Robotropolis. Usually, the Wolf
Pack only disrupts
the operations of the fringes of Robotnik's territory, so -"
"I
said shaddup!" Geoffrey came close to yelling.
Reynard
appeared ready to shoot the skunk then and there. "What is wrong
with-"
Geoff cut him off again. "We just missed the
countdown!"
Lupe checked her watch. The timer had reached 0
quite a few seconds ago, while
she was talking, and was now
counting upwards. Angry at herself for missing it, she
raised her
hand, and waved the group out into the street. Showtime.
"Honestly!"
Geoffrey grumbled beside them. "Every bloody time I speak,
people
always assume I'm just mouthing off! Not this time, damn
it!"
Five figures walked calmly, if not fearlessly, down one of
Robotropolis's camera-
infested main boulevards. Whatever street
lights were still functional cast a gloomy light
down through the
rain, silhouetting them against the depreciated muddy-brown
buildings.
It wasn't long before they were spotted.
Distant
sirens began to blare.
The cameras effortlessly relayed their
information to Robotropolis's traffic control
computer, which was
immediately put into effect an alert. The nearest available patrol,
a
group of six hover units flying a circular pattern around
Doomsday, was rerouted to deal
with the Freedom Fighters.
Lupe
could hear the whine of their approaching engines. "Everybody
ready?" she
said aloud. "Weapons to standby." She
hoisted the Uzi, and pointed it down the
boulevard towards the
still-invisible hover units.
Six blobs appeared through the smog
and rain, racing perilously towards them.
Their front mounted
laser cannons were aglow with energy ready to fire.
"FREEZE
FREEDOM FIGHTERS," mechanical voices said in unison. "YOU
ARE
UNDER ARREST."
Lupe lined up her sights.
"Now we get
to find out whether this was worth lugging those coins around,"
Canus
said under his breath. Lupe could see his barrel from the corner of
her eye: it was
facing the lead hover unit.
"Fire,"
she ordered.
Five weapons barked, and something smashed through
the lead hover unit's
windshield. Sparks flew up inside, and Lupe
saw a brief glimpse of a fire. The bullets had
smashed through the
hover unit's armor like it was plate glass.
The hover unit
actually recoiled backwards, lost momentum, and smashed itself
into
fiery pieces on the ground. The sound of the explosion echoed
throughout
Robotropolis.
The second hover unit loomed forward.
"Fire," Lupe quickly said.
Again, all five Uzis spat out
a burst of fire. The windshield shattered, and the
forward-mounted
laser cannon's focusing crystal flew apart. Ragged holes tore
into
existence on the air ship's hull, but this one remained
afloat after the first round of bullets.
"Fire."
It
didn't last past the second wave of bullets, through, and crashed
through the
ceiling of a nearby building. Lupe didn't see what
happened to it, other than a streak of
fire shooting skyward from
the impact point.
The remaining hover units returned fire. A laser
bolt as thick as Lupe's arm split
the ground in front of her feet,
kicking up a blast of dust. She ignored it, and trained her
Uzi on
another patrol unit.
"Fire."
"Construction status!" Snively barked, doing his best
imitation of his uncle's
furious demeanor.
To his
disappointment, but not to his surprise, the worker bot on the
display screen
didn't waver at his tone at all. Not even a
critique of his acting. "Skeletal framework was
completed 3.2
hours ago. A fusion generator was fused into place 2.6 hours ago, and
is
now operating at 75 capacity. Thrusters and weapons systems are
online, and are
operating at full capacity."
"How
long until the new Test Pod is completed?" he demanded, still
trying to
mimic Robotnik.
"Another nine hours, sir,"
the worker bot responded in its infuriatingly aloof
monotone.
Snively
decided to try a tactic Robotnik had used on him more than once.
His
voice became very calm. "Oh, no, worker, I can assure you
that you'll have it done sooner
than that."
"We are
already working at full capacity, sir."
Snively's eyes
narrowed. He had even begun to take down notes after
Robotnik's
yelling fits. "You will have the Test Pod
completed in six hours. Is that understood?"
"No, sir,"
the worker bot said flatly.
Snively sighed, and decided to give
up. He punched the comm channel clear.
He was alone the Doomsday
control room. The lights were dim – he preferred it
that
way. Occasionally, his hand rubbed tenderly across the fresh bruise
that still
blossomed across his bulbous forehead.
After
arriving in the Great Unknown five days ago, and finding Snively tied
to the
chair of his command unit and the Doomsday Test Pod
destroyed, Robotnik had been
very… upset. He had ordered
the construction of a new Test Pod, and told Snively that
he had
two days to build it. Three days had now passed, and Snively had not
heard a
word come from the fat man since the day he had returned.
He was getting worried.
Even in his worst moods, even when he was
on the verge of being pointlessly
violent, Robotnik had always
stayed in close contact with Snively, had always been there
to
look over his shoulder. Suddenly he was nowhere to be found.
Perhaps
the fat man had had a heart attack and died in bed, Snively
mused
devilishly.
No, he decided finally, nothing like that had
occurred. For Robotnik to die would
mean that a good thing had
happened to Snively, and Snively had learned by now that
good
things never happened to him.
Alone in the dark, he eyed the
small, red oval door perched out of the way in the
Doomsday
control room. He watched it carefully for a moment, as if expecting
it to open,
and then turned back to the communications panel and
called for another worker bot.
Within moments, one trundled into
the room.
"Yes, sir?" the bot asked in the same superior
tone all worker robots seemed to
possess. Snively scowled.
"I
want you to install an elevator in the floor of this room. One that
leads to an
underground escape hatch," Snively ordered.
"But
sir," the worker bot protested, pointing towards the red door.
"This room is
already equipped with an escape vehicle, in
case of emergency."
Snively cracked a smile. "I know.
Install it anyway."
"Yes, sir." The bot obediently
rolled out of the room, in the general direction of
the closest
supply shed.
Snively continued smiling to himself, and kicked his
feet up on the control panel,
and rested. With Robotnik nowhere
near, and the worker bots taking care of his work for
him, he
could afford to relax -
For a moment, Snively thought his feet had
accidentally kicked an important
button, for an alarm started
blaring in the distance. He realized quickly enough that the
blaring
klaxon had nothing to do with him: it was the tone of Robotropolis's
intruder
alarm.
Almost at random, he flicked a switch on his
communication channel, and came
face to face with a SWATbot
somewhere in the city. "Report!" Snively bellowed.
"Freedom
Fighters, sir. Hover unit patrol nine has been scrambled to intercept
and
arrest."
Snively growled. With his uncle gone missing
over the last several days, he found
it easier and easier to let
his anger get the better of him. "Has Robotnik been alerted?"
he
asked.
"Negative."
That meant Snively would
have to inform Robotnik himself. He grunted under his
breath,
braced himself, and hit the button on his communication panel marked
only
"ROBOTNIK". There was a momentary pause as
Robotropolis's computers searched the
city for him, and another
pause as it waited for Robotnik to respond to the
communication.
The
computer beeped, and informed Snively that it had found Robotnik. He
was
hidden inside the underused facility used to create robot
replicants of real people -- it had
been used only once, to create
a robot clone of Princess Sally. The replicant hadn't lasted
long,
and the facility had gone unused ever since. Robotnik's fat, angry
face winked into
existence on the screen.
The only hair on his
face, a pair of plucky orange whiskers, were unkempt and
disheveled.
Robotnik never kept them disheveled. "What is it?" Robotnik
snapped.
"Er," Snively stuttered, "Freedom
Fighters, sir. Attacking near the Doomsday
tower."
A hiss
of malice escaped Robotnik's lips. "The hedgehog?"
Snively
checked another computer monitor, which was rapidly ticking off
data
about the intruders. The computer had already identified
them. "No, sir, though it seems
that two of his friends, the
skunk and the walrus, are with them. The others are from the
Wolf
Pack."
"The wolves?" Robotnik narrowed his eyes.
"Don't bother to capture them,
Snively. Kill them."
"Y-Yes,
sir," Snively said, surprised. "But, sir, usually you lead
the counter-
assault yourself! I don't think I can -"
"You
will take care of it, Snively, by yourself!" Robotnik's next
words shocked
him even more. "I'm too busy to bother with the
Freedom Fighters right now!" He
clicked off.
Too busy to
deal with the Freedom Fighters? Even when they were perilously
close
to the Doomsday project? Snively shrugged -- perhaps his uncle was
finally showing
him some gratitude by giving him some
self-autonomy.
Yeah, sure. That'd be the day.
Snively keyed his
communications panel into the Robotropolis security mainframe.
"Patch
me into the camera closest to the Freedom Fighters," he ordered.
"I want to watch
the fight."
The computer monitor
blinked yet again. Snively saw the silhouettes of five
Freedom
Fighters proceed down the dirt boulevard. The ground was so soaked
with rain
as to become a sticky mud. Snively was glad he wasn't
out there himself.
The six hover units were approaching from the
south end of the street. Snively
watched with interest as the
intruders hoisted some sort of compact rifle, all pointing it
towards
the lead air car. If they thought that hand-held weapons were any
kind of match
for an armored hover unit -
The Freedom Fighters
snapped off several shots, and curiously loud booms echoed
across
Robotropolis. The lead hover unit crashed to the ground. A second
soon
followed.
Snively grunted. He should've known that the
Freedom Fighters were not to be
underestimated. "Return
fire!" he bellowed.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then
Snively remembered that he actually had
to be patched into the
hover units themselves to issue orders. He did so sheepishly.
"Return
fire!" he ordered again.
Laser fire rained down on the
boulevard. And from there, the ordered fight
degenerated into a
fray. Dust was kicked up, obscuring the camera's view. Snively
saw
one of the Freedom Fighters take a hit from a hover unit's
laser and crumple, but he
couldn't tell which one. The remaining
intruders scattered.
Several more of the loud 'boom' noises
reverberated across the polluted streets.
Snively listened to it,
and frowned. The noise was… almost familiar.
Something
ancient, something he hadn't thought about in years resurfaced
and
jogged his memory. "That's a sound I haven't heard
since…" he trailed off. Suddenly, the
sound and the
weapons clicked into place in his head.
His eyes popped. "It
can't be! All available hover units, reinforce patrol nine!
Kill
those Freedom Fighters!"
The stolen hover unit shook for a moment. The air outside rumbled
with a heavy
noise; for a moment, Sally thought that it was
thunder from the storm over Robotropolis.
Then she looked out the
windshield, and saw a bright yellow flame lick upwards from a
street
near the Doomsday machine.
Sonic grinned. "Looks like Lupe's
doing her job."
A familiar frantic voice came to life through
the hover unit's radio. "All available
hover units, reinforce
patrol nine! Kill those Freedom Fighters!" it commanded.
The
message had been sent to every hover unit within a five
kilometer radius of Robotropolis.
"Nothin' doin', Snidely.
Sorry to disappoint you."
"It's working, Sally,"
Bookshire interrupted, taking his eyes off the pilot's panel for
an
instant to look at the glowing radar screen. "Every hover unit
in the area is scrambling.
Normal traffic routines are a complete
mess, now. We should be able to slip into the
Doomsday tower
without anybody noticing."
Sally waved at the hideous,
half-completed metal tower. "Take us in, then." She
turned
to the back of the hover unit. "Everybody ready?"
The
other Freedom Fighters, crammed like sardines into the back of
the
claustrophobic hover unit, grunted or waved some sort of
affirmation. "Sure, sugar, just
git us out of here." The
hover units weren't equipped with air conditioning units, and
a
hour's worth of body heat was trapped inside the metal walls.
The heat was sweltering.
"Yes, it is not to be smelling too
good back here," Antoine added, wrinkling his
nose and
looking pointedly at Sonic.
"Hey, you're not exactly
stink-free yourself, Ant," Sonic shot back irritably.
The
hover unit coasted easily over to the Doomsday tower, drawing no
attention
from any nearby patrols or guards. Bookshire guided the
craft to a gentle landing on an
empty docking platform. He peered
out the windshield, carefully checking for any
SWATbots, before he
opened the circular door. A gust of cool, if not fresh, air poured
in.
Sirens were audible in the distance.
Sonic's feet hit the
deck first with the quiet slap of his sneakers on metal, followed
by
Bunnie's metallic legs hitting the surface with a jarring thud. Sally
landed lightly next to
her. No SWATbots immediately rushed out to
them.
Sally took a deep, welcome breath. Even the smoggy,
ozone-filled air of
Robotropolis was better than what had been
stench of the hover unit. And it was cool
out here.
Neophyte
and Anacharis, the other two Freedom Fighters who had each
received
one of the dozen Uzis, were out next. Antoine came out
last, holding his own Uzi in
shaking fingers. Sonic's words to
Sally on the subject of Antoine still burned in her ears:
"Come
on, Sal, I would sooner trust Tails with a weapon like that. Not
Ant."
Nevertheless, Sally had chosen Antoine as one of the
Freedom Fighters to have the
weapons, although right now the
reason escaped her.
Bookshire remained inside, his own Uzi resting
on the computer console. His bad
leg had reduced him to the role
of pilot; he would only hold the other Freedom Fighters
back once
inside. "Don't forget, Booky," Sally reminded him, "if
the 'bots find you, just
leave. We'll find our own way out of the
city if that happens." Bookshire nodded gravely,
and slid the
hover unit's door shut. The plan was for him to remain there until
the others
returned.
"I don't know how he can stand it in
there," Bunnie said. "It's just too darn hot."
None
of the others answered. "Check your Uzis," Sally ordered.
"Make sure the
clip is loaded properly."
The raiders
checked the undersides of their Uzis, and nodded. "Let's
go."
Sonic crept quietly over to the door leading into the
interior of the Doomsday
machine, and opened it carefully. There
was nothing but a dim, empty corridor beyond.
The six raiders
moved cautiously through the hallway, making as little noise
as
possible. Even Bunnie somehow managed to force her clunky
roboticized feet to tiptoe.
"Too easy," Sonic said under
his breath. "There's no way Robotnik would leave a
place like
the Doomsday machine so unguarded!"
"That's right,"
a very familiar, very nasal voice said from a unseen speaker
nearby.
Sally gaped in surprise. "Robotnik uses mostly
cameras and hidden surveillance
equipment to alert him to
intruders. Quite effective if I do say so myself."
Doors to
either side of the Freedom Fighters slammed down from the
ceiling,
trapping them in a small section of the corridor.
"A
trap!" Antoine whispered unnecessarily. "We are
doom-ed!"
"After all," Snively continued, still
talking from a speaker that remained veiled.
The voice seemed to
be coming from the metal walls themselves. "Why trust
SWATbots
that have proven so fallible in the past, when a simple
provision of motion and heat
sensors can alert you to anything out
of order, hmmmm?"
Neophyte snarled. "I should've killed
you when I had the chance."
"Maybe you should have,"
Snively agreed. "Oh, well, too late now. I can assure
you
that you won't be getting any second opportunities."
Sonic
hated traps. He hated being trapped. Between the door secure
doors,
there was maybe as much space for the six Freedom Fighters
as there had been in the
hover car. He leveled a finger at one of
the walls, just for something to point at.
"Anything you
throw at us, Sniv, we can take on. You won't get us."
"But
I already have you," Snively said. A metallic sigh echoed across
the narrow
space. "Never mind. I have a proposal for you
Freedom Fighters."
"A what?" Sonic spat.
"A
proposal. If you tell me something, I'll let you go ahead and do
whatever you
were planning to do to Doomsday. I won't stop you. I
don't care what happens to this
place."
Sally rolled her
eyes. "I suppose, then, that you want to know the location
of
Knothole? You know we'd die first."
A short, harried
laugh echoed through the chamber. "Knothole? Your little
village
doesn't matter to me. Go, frolic in the trees for all I
care."
"We're supposed to believe you? After everything
you've done for Robotnik?"
Neophyte yelled to the
walls.
Snively was suddenly irate. "In case you haven't
noticed, I'm not on good terms
with the obese bastard! Can't you
see this - no, I suppose you can't see it, you don't have
a video
link on your end… this damned bruise! It covers half my face!
And that was one
of his light beatings!"
Before Neo could
shout back, Sally stopped her. "What do you want, in
exchange
for letting us go?"
"Tell me where you got
the guns that you're holding."
Sally was taken aback. "The
Uzis?"
"Of course, that's what they're called. I
remember now. Your friends outside are
using them to create quite
an impression on the SWATbots. Tell me about them,"
Snively
said.
Sally wasn't about to betray Epos Nix to either
Robotnik or Snively. "A village, a
hidden village, camped out
in the Great Unknown has been manufacturing them for the
past
several years," she lied. "The Wolf Pack have known them
for quite some time."
"I know that's a lie, Princess,"
Snively reprimanded. "Let me rephrase my
question. I know
exactly where you got the Uzis. What I want to know is how you
got
them."
"Huh?"
"Do I have to spell it out
for you? How did you find the Eherth?" Snively burst
out.
Like the name Uzi, the 'Eherth' was a word that Sally had never heard
before.
"Eherth!" Snively insisted again, then he
sighed. "E-A-R-T-H. Earth!"
"I have no idea what
you're talking about," Sally said.
"I'm sure you do,"
Snively said coldly. "The simple fact of the matter is, if
you
don't tell me, I will have to order the SWATbots to kill you.
All of you. And your friend
sitting out on the air ship dock,
too."
"Go ahead, Snidely," Sonic taunted. "Try.
You won't be able to."
"Don't tempt me,
hedgehog."
Neophyte interrupted. "What if we do tell you
something? What happens then?
You kill us anyway?"
"No,
no, I won't kill you. I'll simply let you go, with one simple
provision. When
you're done doing whatever you're doing to
Doomsday, I want to come with you."
Snively's voice became
uncharacteristically vulnerable. "I want you to take me away
from
here, from this damned world. I want you to take me home.
Earth."
That caught the Freedom Fighters by surprise. "Home?"
Sally exclaimed. "I
thought Robotropolis was your
home."
Snively gave a quiet, bitter chuckle. "Robotropolis
could never be my home,
Princess. Please, take me to Earth, and I
swear I won't bother you anymore. I'll even tell
you everything I
know about Robotnik's armies."
"We still can't help you,
Snively. None of us have any idea what an 'Earth' is."
Sniv's
tone darkened. "You will tell me. I wasn't joking when I
threatened you. I
can kill you all."
"Then I guess
that's your only option, needlenose!" Sonic jabbed.
"I
urge you to reconsider. I have fifty SWATbots moving to your position
right
now. Most of them are already outside the door. Tell me how
you found the Earth, and
I'll call them off."
Sonic
shrugged nonchalantly, and grinned. He shook his head.
"Please."
Snively said. His voice was weak. "Of anything I've ever wanted,
I've
ever needed, out of my wretched life, this is it. I'll do
anything."
"We can't help you," Sally said coldly.
"We don't know anything."
Snively's voice hardened. "I'm
sorry you feel that way. At least I might be able to
get some
answers from your corpses." With a click, Snively's voice was
gone.
"All SWATbots!" Snively's voice barked again, this
time not only in the little
section of corridor that Sonic and the
others were trapped in, but throughout the entire
Doomsday
complex. "Proceed to Section 7, Yellow corridor. Override
Priority One
Hedgehog orders; do not attempt to capture him or his
friends. Instead, kill the
intruders."
Sally felt a chill
shiver along her spine. "Let's hope that was worth it.
Everyone
switch your Uzis to full automatic. This could get
rough."
"Could?" Neophyte snorted, as she deftly
flipped the Uzi's safety catch to its
bottom position.
"So
what now, Sal?" Sonic asked, a little anxious. The doors
trapping them in the
hallway hadn't moved since Snively's voice
left them.
"Now, we wait for the SWATbots to come, and try
and blow through them. We
might have to scratch our original plan
of destroying the Doomsday Pod manufacturing
site. If we see an
exit, we have to use it."
Several empty seconds ticked by.
Sonic tapped his foot in impatience, then looked
at Antoine and
sighed melodramatically.
"No, Ant, the switch goes into the
bottom position! Sheesh! And try not to
accidentally shoot any of
us, huh?" Antoine's own Uzi was shaking in his trembling
hands.
"We are doom-ed!" he whispered again.
The
security doors sealing them in the hallway whisked open. Sally didn't
even
wait to see any of the SWATbots before she shouted,
"Fire!"
Six Uzis, in full automatic mode, spat fire into
the numerous 'bots lined up outside.
Head and chest armor
shattered instantly. Beyond a stream of yellow muzzle-fire and
shards
of flying metal, Sally couldn't see anything. Apparently, neither
could the
SWATbots - several laser blasts went streaming past her,
none of them passing anywhere
close. She just aimed her own Uzi
down the corridor, and kept the trigger pressed.
Nothing above the
deafening reports of the Uzi's chemical explosions was audible.
The
rat-a-tat-tat sound of bullet weapons simply overwhelmed any other
sound.
The barrel, streaming bullets, tried to move away from her.
What was it Nix had
said? On full automatic mode, the Uzi tended
to recoil up and to the right. Sally forced
her arm to
compensate.
Antoine had his eyes clenched shut as he
fired.
Gradually, there seemed to be fewer and fewer lasers
ricocheting off the walls near
them, and fewer pieces of metal
armor flying into the air. Finally, Sally could see clearly.
There
were only a few SWATbots left. Sally only noticed that her Uzi had
run out of
bullets when the weapon stopped trying to recoil and
fight her arm. The chamber clicked
dry. Within a few instants, the
other Freedom Fighters had drained their clips, too.
Moving with a
speed to rival Sonic's, Neophyte pulled another clip from her
belt
and slammed it onto the underside of her Uzi. Her shots
finished off the remainder of the
SWATbot armada. The last metal
carcasses fell to the floor and lay motionless.
Sonic cheered.
Neophyte grinned. The other Freedom Fighters merely exchanged
heavy
glances. "Definitely worth paying Nix!" Sonic shouted.
"That was too fun!"
The sound of more metal boots echoed
throughout the corridor. More bots were
on their way.
"Well,
Sal, what's it gonna be? Do we head back to the hover unit and get
out of
here? Or do we risk everything and keep moving towards the
Pod factory?"
Sally looked at the piles of metal bodies on
the floor, and the Uzi in her hand.
Then she looked at the
corridor ahead, thumping with the sound of approaching
SWATbots.
"No
question," she said, snapping a fresh clip into her Uzi. "We
keep going."
"I was gonna keep going anyway," Sonic
grinned, and waved the group forward.
Within a matter of moments,
all the Uzis were launching bullets again.
Whatever scattered SWATbots had remained in the corridors were
quickly
dispatched by the rain of bullet fire. Nicole lead them
unwaveringly through the twisted
hallways to the first Pod
manufacturing plant. By design, it had only been a short
distance
from the docking pad Bookshire had landed at. Neophyte
was already on her third clip.
When the door wouldn't open, Sonic
blasted the locking mechanism with a single
bullet. The entrance
remained stubbornly shut. Finally, Bunnie kicked it down with
a
single punt from her roboticized leg. It fell, and landed on the
other side with a jarring
thud that echoed off far-away walls.
The
factory was cavernous in scope. Walls stretched out and away from the
door,
fading into the midnight darkness not far away. Machinery,
conveyer belts, and control
panels were scattered throughout the
room. So were SWATbots.
There was another short exchange of
bullets and laser fire. A very short exchange.
"Ow,"
Sonic said, gently rubbing a patch of singed quills. "One of
their laser shots
actually came close this time."
Sally
looked around, sluggishly trying to recall the functions of the
machinery
around her. She had learned from experience that the
schematics of a room and its actual
reality often looked very
different; what was very simple on paper was could be
very
complicated in truth.
That pit, right there, at the center
of the room… Sally focused on it… if
Doomsday were
operational, that pit would be full of roboticized worker bots,
assembling
the metal skeletal framework for the pods. That
machine, there, looked as if it produced
parts for the engine that
drove the pods. Coolant tubes. There, lying dissembled in a box,
were
pieces that looked as if they belonged on the massive laser cannon
perched below the
Doomsday pods.
Down a massive conveyer belt,
the factory led into rooms beyond Sally's field of
vision,
presumably there to equip the half-assembled pods with their
impenetrable hulls,
and the supplies that allowed the pods to
destroy acres of forest and life per second.
"Let's torch
it!" Sonic proclaimed. He reached down into his backpack, and
pulled
out a small remote explosive. The last time he had used one
was when the Freedom
Fighters had tried to crush the test pod
under a rockslide in the Great Unknown. Holding
it like a grenade,
he threw it into the framework assembly pit. Then he took out
the
remote that controlled the explosive.
"Adios!"
The
ground shook, and fire spewed from the floor. Whatever alarms they
hadn't
triggered in their mad dash through the corridors of the
Doomsday tower went off now,
adding to the cacophony of light and
sound.
"Here, Sal, catch!" he said, taking two more
charges from his satchel and tossing
one of them to Sally. She
tossed hers down the central conveyer belt, and heard it rattle
out
of sight. Sonic threw his into a faraway bank of computers, and
pulled out the
detonator remote again.
Fire, thunder, and more
than a little debris spilled across the ground in front of
the
Freedom Fighters. Neophyte cheered. Antoine screamed.
"Can
it, Ant!" Sonic shouted before whipping out another batch of
explosives.
Again, tossing one to Sally, he whipped his down the
array of factory equipment. Sally
threw hers towards the weapon
component bin. Sonic's remote control beeped at his
button
presses, and with a moment the explosives went off again. The pod
factory was
falling apart.
Antoine never stopped screaming.
Sonic's remote control continued to beep,
though Sally couldn't
think of a reason why.
Sonic pulled another explosive out his
backpack. He had brought along quite a
few. The remote continued
to make the blipping sound, louder than it had before. The
beeps
took on a regular pattern, sounding somewhat familiar, though Sally
couldn't place
the noise.
"Sonic, would you stop pressing
buttons on that machine?" Sally snapped.
Sonic looked at her,
wide-eyed. "It's not my remote, Sal!" He had to raise
his
voice to be heard above Antoine's unbroken shriek.
"Then
what-"
Sally suddenly fit the noise in her memory, and
instantly spun around. She saw
why Antoine was screaming, and felt
like following his lead.
The last time she had heard that
particular pattern of beeping had been in the Great
Unknown, five
days ago, coming from Robotnik's Doomsday pod.
A massive skeleton
of an air ship loomed in the shadows, creeping closer and
closer,
emitting the beeping noises.
"I don't believe it!" Sonic
exclaimed.
"You really didn't think we were going to build
just one Test Pod, did you?"
Snively's voice boomed from the
shadows. "After you Freedom Fighters destroyed the
first one
in the Great Unknown, Robotnik became very angry. He charged me
with
building another one."
The metal goliath floated out
of the shadows. It was half-completed - a mere
skeletal framework
built in the shape of a Test Pod. Where, on the first Test Pod,
Sally
had seen an unbreakable shiny hull, now there was only a
gridwork of iron frames and
bars. It looked ridiculously like a
child's puzzle, or a sculpture made of toothpicks.
The engines and
computer drive of the Test Pod had barely been installed, yet
both
seemed functional. White-hot thrust boosters kept the device
lifted off the ground, and
propelled it inexorably towards the
Freedom Fighters. More important, however, was the
fact that the
enormous laser cannon had been installed on Pod's underside, and it
was
directed at the Freedom Fighters. Sally imagined a straight
red line leading straight from
the barrel of the cannon to a spot
on her forehead.
"This is your last chance, Princess,"
Snively's voice hissed. "Tell me what I want
to know!"
Sonic
hurled the last explosive at the new Test Pod, and detonated it.
The
eruption was closer this time: a shock wave of compressed air
slammed into the six
Freedom Fighters. An invisible arm threw
Sally's lithe frame to the ground.
The charge had fallen right
between the pod's metal frame, and had detonated from
the inside.
The structure of the unfinished Test Pod was surprisingly strong, and
managed
to somehow stay in one piece. But it shook the pod
harshly, and, for an instant, disrupted
the laser cannon's aim. A
shot seared through the air above Sally's prone form, and
slammed
into the ceiling to release a shower of sparks.
"Book it!"
Sonic shouted, grabbing Sally with one hand and Antoine with
the
other. He dashed for the corridor entrance, followed closely
by Bunnie, Anacharis, and
Neophyte, who slammed the door shut
behind her.
In the corridor, Sally managed to get back on her
feet. "Thank you," she stuttered,
still trying to catch
her breath. The concussion had knocked the air out of her lungs.
"No
prob," Sonic said, egotism coming easily. "That Doomsday
Pod won't be able
to follow us down the corridor; it's too large
to fit through the doorway. Should we jam
back to Knothole?"
"No
question," Sally repeated herself, fully aware of the irony. "We
run."
They ran.
The wake of the stolen hover unit's thrusters drew a white streak
across the sky,
shooting away from the gridwork of the unfinished
Doomsday tower like a comet. Three
of Robotropolis's hover units
immediately fell behind in pursuit. Laser fire from the
trailing
airships streamed across the sky.
Two hundred meters above the
gritty and blackened Robotropolian streets,
Bookshire opened the
port-side doors of the craft, and Bunnie fell out. Her legs
were
secured to the floor of the hover unit, jerking her body
back. She hung suspended upside-
down, half-way outside the hover
unit. Soot-filled alleyways and factories became the
sky, and the
ever-present smog became the distant ground. Disorientation
became
permanent, and would have overwhelmed her had she not been
prepared for it. Blood
rushed to her head.
Laser fire burned
through the air around her. Her robotic left hand tightened
around
the rifle-like form of Nix's bullet weapons. Although Bookshire tried
his best to
keep the airship steady, the craft still shook with
turbulence. It was why this was Bunnie's
task.
Unconsciously,
almost mathematically, compensating for the bumps and jars of
the
flight, her roboticized arm took aim at the closest hover
unit. Internal servos and balances
guaranteed a steady aim. Bunnie
let loose a single bullet.
With precise marksmanship, the bullet
slammed through the windshield of the
pursuing craft and through
the SWATbot pilot's red-tinted front visor. The airship
simply
dropped, falling almost gracefully to the city below.
The
other two hover units, operating under Snively's orders, peeled away.
Bunnie
pulled herself up and back into the hover unit, grateful
when the doors slid shut again, and
blocked out the deafening
wind.
"Nice shootin', Tex!" Neophyte grinned
wolfishly.
"Ah don't understand. Why did the others leave us
alone?" Bunnie asked.
Bookshire jabbed a finger at the rear
camera monitor. "That's why!"
On Doomsday, a launch bay
at the pinnacle of the tower had opened. The metal
skeleton of the
half-completed Test Pod slid out, moving inexorably towards the
stolen
hover unit. The bottom-mounted laser cannon was trained
directly at them. Fusion
engines burned with energy
"Oh
mah stars!"
The hover unit raced towards the Great Forest,
outrunning the Test Pod. When it
finally lost sight its quarry,
the pod slid to a reluctant halt, and hovered in the air. A
thought
ran through the mind of its pilot.
"You'll be seeing this Pod
again. Do worry. This time, there won't be any
lightning
storms."
Doomsday Test Pod #2 slid silently back towards
Robotropolis.
Snively grumbled to himself, and pressed the button on his console
labeled
"ROBOTNIK". This wasn't going to be easy. After
a momentary pause, the monitor
flickered, and connected to the
underused replicant lab.
Whatever room the computer had found
Robotnik in was completely dark. There
was no immediate trace of
the obese human. Nothing was visible on the monitors except a
few
indistinct shadows, cast as if by a single computer display. Snively
waited.
"I'm afraid I'm going to have to insist upon payment
in advance," a distant man,
sound distorted by the background
static of radio transmission, said.
"Oh?" a deep,
unmistakably metallic voice rumbled. "Why is that?"
"Doctor
Robotnik, sir?" Snively ventured. The conversation ceased.
An
almost completely spherical, red-draped body became visible, blocking
some of
the background. "What is it, Snively?" he
growled. A disheveled orange mustache
twitched angrily in the
sparse light.
"An update on the Freedom Fighters, sir."
"How
many have you eliminated, Snively? Go on."
"Well, sir…
one. I think."
"One? You think?" Robotnik's voice
became deathly calm.
"One of the hover units managed to shoot
one of the attackers. Before we could
do anything else, though,
one of the other rebels dragged the body off. We can't be sure
of
what happened to it!"
"They dragged… Snively, are
you trying to tell me that the others escaped?"
"Yes,
sir," Snively squeaked.
Robotnik's metal arm trembled
momentarily, and he sucked in a breath through his
teeth.
Snively
had to force the next words out of his quivering lips. "There's
more, sir.
While we were occupied on the streets, another group of
the freedom fighters somehow
managed to steal inside the Doomsday
machine and sabotage one of the pod
manufacturing
plants."
Robotnik was motionless, which was all the more
unnerving.
"I managed to use the new Test Pod to frighten
them away, sir, but not after they
caused considerable damage. I
can't finish building the Test Pod until we repair
the
tower."
Robotnik remained silent. His massive chest
rose and fell with the sound of his
breath.
"It wasn't my
fault, sir!" Snively burst out, fearing for his life. "They
had some
new kind of weapon! The SWATbots were useless!"
There
was only the sound of Robotnik's breathing for several
moments.
Somewhere, in an area that Snively couldn't see, a third
person chuckled softly, then fell
silent.
"Will this
affect Doomsday's projected completion date?" Robotnik asked
calmly.
"Uh, no, sir," Snively stammered.
"Then
it is no matter." The monitor switched itself off.
Snively
was left staring at the communications panel, slack-jawed and
still
trembling, anticipating the blows that would never come.
Rotor had learned a long time ago how easy it was to lose pursuit
in the scrap
yards on the fringe of Robotnik's city. He had lead
the others through it, either hiding
from or blowing through
SWATbots who stood in their way. From there, getting back to
Knothole
had been almost routine. Rotor saw the stolen hover unit parked on
the edges
of the town, and knew that the others had returned
first.
"Bookshire!" he called, as soon as he was within
shouting distance of Knothole.
"Get Bookshire out here! We
need some help!"
Reynard could barely move, now. With one arm
draped around Geoffrey and the
other around Lupe, his feet had
stopped trying to make the effort of supporting
themselves long
ago and now just dragged limply against the ground. The hover
unit's
laser blast had hit his midsection full center, but at
least some of it had at least been
deflected by an arm Reynard had
cast upwards as soon as he had seen the blast coming.
His stomach,
sides, and arm were bloodied.
Bookshire dashed towards the group
and cursed softly when he saw Reynard.
"Get him to my hut,"
he said quickly, helping Lupe and Geoff support the wounded
wolf.
Arms full, he kicked open the door to his hut, which doubled
as Knothole's infirmary. All
three of them set Reynard gently down
on the closest bed.
"There's been a lot of blood loss,"
Bookshire said, tearing open a drawer and
pulling out the largest
strip of sterilized cloth he could find, and fastening it to the
wound.
"He's losing consciousness."
"There
wasn't any time to make a makeshift bandage," Rotor burst
out.
Sally rushed into the hut, wide eyes looking down at
Reynard.
"Third degree burns at the wound itself,"
Bookshire said, rattling off symptoms.
"Fortunately the heat
cauterized some of the arteries; otherwise the blood loss would
have
killed him. His breathing is erratic. You," he pointed
at Canus, "go get me some
sedatives. Closet at the end of the
hallway."
Canus nodded, and dashed down the hall.
"There's
been major intestinal damage. Arterial flooding and
blockage."
"What'll happen to him?" Lupe asked
urgently.
"He'll live," Bookshire answered, then added,
"I think. But he'll be lucky if his
circulation and digestive
systems aren't permanently shot." Canus returned with
the
sedatives. Draftwood pumped the liquid into a syringe, and
stuck it into Reynard's arm.
The wolf's breathing became
regular.
"Let's clear out of here," Sally suggested
softly, "and give Bookshire some room."
Reluctantly,
they all left just as Reynard lapsed into unconsciousness.
That night, Sally dreamt again of Epos Nix and his bullet weapons.
She saw an
army of shaded figures advancing, armed with bullet
weapons, massacring her planet's
future…
Day Five
The sun rose and fell twice more before Reynard had come to again.
That had
been early this morning, the last time Tails had been in
Knothole. It was mid-afternoon,
now.
As much as he had begged
to be allowed to do this, as much as he wanted to be a
Freedom
Fighter, there were times that Tails hated sentry duty. It was
unbearably hot.
Nothing ever happened. What was worse, was that
when things were happening back at
Knothole or in Robotropolis, he
couldn't be part of it if he were out here.
But Sonic had said
that this was the kind of thing that Freedom Fighters had to
do,
and Tails had made up his mind a long time ago to become a Freedom
Fighter. Like
Aunt Bunnie always said, when you really wanted
something, you had to put that much
effort into getting it.
The
sun was high enough to be beating its rays directly down on top of
the
lookout platform. The canopy provided absolutely no shade now,
and to make matters
worse, Tails had been late in shedding his
winter fur. Under the sun's tenacious rays, Tails
could feel his
body's biorhythms slowly grinding down. He was strongly tempted
to
stretch out on the platform, use his two tails as pillows, and
just doze off. He had seen
Antoine do it countless times.
Tails
shook his head in a definite 'no'. Just because Antoine did something
bad,
that didn't mean that he should do it, too. In fact, that was
more of a deterrent than
anything else. He pulled out his pair of
binoculars, and scanned across the horizon for
what seemed like
the hundredth time.
And for the hundredth time, all he saw were
trees. Discouraged, he pulled the
binoculars down, but then saw
something move out of the corner of the binoc's field of
view.
Tails scanned for it.
There! A figure moving! Tails trained the
binoculars on it and let the auto-focus
kick in. It was a person,
a cougar, limping slowly down a small dirt trail. It was hurt.
Tails
refocused on the face, and frowned. The cougar was hurt very badly.
It
moved its right leg like it was dead weight. The left arm was
twisted into a position that
just seemed wrong. A red liquid,
blood, Tails realized, dribbled down the cougar's brow
and face.
The fur crowning its head was matted down with dried blood. Tails
made a
face; he hadn't seen anything this gross since the others
had dragged Reynard into town
two days ago.
Yet, despite these
ailments, the cougar was hauntingly familiar.
Both of Tails' tails
shot straight into the air.
Immediately, he darted over to the
small radio the others had given him. "Aunt
Bunnie?" he
asked, holding down the 'transmit' button.
He let go, and waited
through a moment of static.
"Yes, sugar?" came the
muffled reply. "What is it?"
"You're not going to
believe who I just saw. Is Sonic there?"
"Sorry, 'e's
out in Robotropolis right now. What's wrong, Tails? Who'd ya
see?"
"Just get someone out here now. Hurry, Aunt
Bunnie."
"I'm on my way, sugar." The radio clicked
off.
The figure stomped down the trail, creating as much noise and
commotion as
possible. His breath came out in ragged gasps that
could have been heard from quite some
distance away.
He
stopped. Something was moving through the underbrush ahead,
creating
almost as much noise as he was. Something large and
heavy.
"Hello?" he coughed weakly.
The something
sounded quite heavier than anything humanoid could manage. He
could
hear large branches snapping in the distance, ordinary forest litter
being trampled.
The cougar growled and backed away, ready to fend
off a large predator.
Bunnie burst through the trees, and stopped
dead in her tracks.
The cougar relaxed. It had been her metal legs
tearing through the forest that he
had heard. Definitely heavier
than a normal humanoid.
"Cat!" She held a paw up to her
mouth. "Oh mah stars!"
Cat choose that moment to
collapse, trying to suck breath into his lungs. Bunnie
caught him
easily with her robotic arm, but in a moment he struggled to his feet
again.
"Good to see you again," he gasped.
"What
'appened to you?" she asked urgently. Tails flew in and landed
behind her,
eyes wide but saying nothing.
"Better than
roboticization. Please, I need to get to Knothole. Now."
"But
- but… we thought you were dead, or roboticized for shore!
How'd you
escape?"
"No time!" he snapped. A thin
trickle of blood fell from between his lips; he wiped
it away.
"There's something I have to tell the others."
"Of
course, sugar!" Bunnie hoisted Cat up, draping his arm around
her metallic
left shoulder. "Tails, go fly ahead and tell the
others. Tell Bookshire to have a medical kit
ready." Tails
was off, and soon disappeared over the forest's canopy.
Both
Bunnie and Cat tried to move in opposite directions. Bunnie stopped
him.
"No, no, it's this way. Don'tcha remember where Knothole
is?"
Cat shook his head sadly.
Bunnie looked closely at
him, and saw an ugly series of incision marks under his
scalp. "Oh
mah stars… what have they done to you, sugar?"
"Not again!" Bookshire groaned. For the second time in
three days, a Freedom
Fighter just barely holding onto life was
being brought into Knothole. Minutes ago, Tails
had torn into
Bookshire's hut, waking Reynard. He had just shouted something about
an
injured person and blood, then had left just as quickly, off to
find Sally.
Bunnie's two metal legs carried her as fast as
possible into Knothole and towards
the infirmary. She held Cat's
pliant form clutched limply between her organic and robotic
arms;
he had simply collapsed, unable to continue any further, two
kilometers back. But
he was still breathing, although
raggedly.
Blood now oozed openly from Cat's mouth. Occasionally,
he coughed and hacked
up a great deal more.
Bookshire's mouth
dropped as he recognized the face.
"Booky, git over here! I
think he's got internal bleeding!" Bunnie shouted,
having
breached the borders of panic.
Sally dashed out of her
hut. A hand flew to her mouth. "Oh my gosh!" Instantly,
she
was running across town right behind Bookshire. Together, the three
of them carried
Cat's prone body into the infirmary, and onto the
bed next to Reynard.
"How can it be?" Sally exploded.
"He was roboticized over a year ago!"
Bookshire ignored
her. "You were right, Bunnie. I can tell that there's
massive
internal bleeding even without checking. His lungs have
been punctured; he's coughing up
blood. There's been a blunt
trauma to the head. "
"Can you save him?" Bunnie
asked anxiously.
Bookshire looked up. "I'm not even sure how
he survived this long."
Cat coughed once more, and groaned.
He looked up, eyes unfocused and cloudy.
"Princess? Is that
you?"
Bookshire gently laid his head back down on the cot.
"Stay still."
Sally took Cat's hand. He gripped it, and
let his fingers brush across her small,
regal palm. "It is
you," he smiled.
"Just relax, stay still, Cat," she
said, repeating Bookshire. "You're home, now.
You're in
Knothole."
"Warn you…" Cat coughed again.
"Robotnik knows where the Southern Freedom
Fighter group is
hidden. He knows where their base is."
Sally's eyes widened.
"What?"
"He knows where the Southern Freedom
Fighter group is camped," Cat repeated.
"He's preparing
to attack…" he trailed off.
Bookshire pounded the
vitals monitors, and began furiously flipping through a
medical
textbook. Sally had never seen him resort to that before.
"He'll
kill them all. Today," Cat sputtered. "Had to break free.
Warn you."
Bookshire took Bunnie aside. "Is 'e going to
be okay?" Bunnie asked anxiously.
Bookshire's eyes glistened.
He only shook his head.
Bunnie gasped. "No… not after
returning, after all this time! Not this close!"
Bookshire
looked back at Cat. "I can't do anything about it."
"No!"
"Is
Lupe still in Knothole, or has she left already?" Bookshire
asked quietly.
"Ah think she's still here…"
"Go
get her. Run. This'll be her last chance."
The infirmary door flew open, slamming against the wall opposite
the hinges.
Lupe ran in, ignoring it. Her gaze fell on Reynard,
again laying unconscious on the
infirmary's first bed. She saw the
others, Sally and Bookshire, bent over another table,
with another
body on it. The vitals monitor was giving off a slow, irregular
beat.
Sally looked up upon Lupe's entrance. Her face was
crestfallen. She stood aside,
letting Lupe get a good look at the
cougar on the table.
Lupe didn't say anything. She only walked
slowly forward, taking each step
carefully as if afraid that
coming too close would shatter this reality and reveal it as
a
dream.
There was no sound other than Cat's soft, erratic
breathing, and the irregular beat
of the vitals monitor.
This
wasn't the Cat she remembered. His arm was twisted. The once-rich,
brown
fur was tousled, and stained with age and blood. The muscles
had shriveled since the last
time she had seen him, they had grown
weaker and frail. His arm was twisted. A
patchwork of scars
twisted their way across his forehead and skull, obviously the result
of
a bizarre surgical procedure.
Lupe's upper lip curled
backward. "What have they done to you?" she whispered
under
her breath. Her hand ran brushed tenderly across Cat's unmoving
face.
Cat opened his eyes again, slowly, fighting for every
movement, every twitch. His
corneas were white and milky…
Lupe doubted that he could see anything at all.
"Sally?"
he asked hopefully, feeling the soft touch.
"No. It's
Lupe."
Cat blinked for a moment, and for a terrifying instant
Lupe thought that Cat hadn't
recognized that name. "I must be
hallucinating," Cat said, voice ragged. "I thought I was
in
Knothole."
"You are."
"Of course…
the Freedom Fighters have joined together. That's why I'm here…
to
warn you." Cat tried to give a little shrug, but his shoulders
only twitched. "Robotnik
must've messed up my memory worse
than I thought."
"He's the one who did this to you?"
Lupe asked, brushing her fingers across the
scars on Cat's
head.
"Know anyone else that megalomaniacal?"
Lupe
caught herself trembling. This was incredibly frustrating…
they hadn't seen
each other in over a decade, and Cat seemed to
want to just make small talk. He seemed
uncertain. Cat had never
been uncertain. He seemed so… changed… like he didn't
want
to talk because he was afraid of something.
"You've
changed over the decade," Lupe said softly.
"It's been
that long?" Cat smiled. "I can remember you like I can
yesterday…"
"Tell me what you remember,"
Lupe asked hopefully.
Cat's eyes rolled back, and he didn't
answer. Couldn't answer. The muscles in his
face relaxed as he
collapsed back into unconsciousness. His head fell limp.
Lupe
found herself unable to do anything but sit there and hold Cat's hand
until the
end came.
Epos Nix lounged back in his army cot, listening to the radio unit
he had set up
softly play the conversation to him. His ears
remained perked, listening for any salient
information.
"It
can't be," Bunnie's voice said, dispirited. It was distorted by
the static crackle
of the radio. "'e came all this way…
'e came so close… Ah've never seen anything so
anticlimactic
before."
There was the rustling of a sheet of cloth, perhaps
a blanket, in the background.
Nix had detected Lupe's footsteps
several minutes ago; she had already left the infirmary,
and left
quickly, as if unable to contain herself after the sound of the
vitals monitor had
become a continuous tone. Sally, Bunnie, and
Bookshire were alone in the room.
Reynard was there, too, but had
remained unconscious through the entire ordeal.
"It just
ain't right," Bunnie repeated herself for the twelfth time.
A
small desktop computer, set up in one corner of Nix's small tent,
made a small
beeping noise. Nix stirred a small, steaming cup of a
caffeinated brown beverage. A
small, white paper packet lay
discarded nearby. It was labeled "FOLGER'S
INSTANT
COFFEE".
"Death is never right,"
Bookshire mumbled. "We all know what you mean,
though. To
think for a year that he's dead, or worse, roboticized, then to learn
that he's
alive again, only to have him die moments later…
it's all too much."
"Poor Lupe…" Sally's
voice said. She sighed. "This is our fault. This is my
fault.
I should've checked. I should've made sure…" she broke
off with a groan.
Nix's computer beeped again. It was doing its
job. Just a few more seconds…
Sally's feet hit the ground.
Nix guessed that until then, she had been sitting.
Without any
video feed from his bug, it was impossible to tell. "The
Southern Freedom
Fighters," she said suddenly. "Cat said
that Robotnik knew where the Southern Freedom
Fighters are."
Nix
rolled his eyes. "Impressive wit, Princess," he mumbled
dryly.
"Do you know when Sonic's supposed to be back from
Robotropolis?" Sally
asked.
"'E and Rotor were jus'
out makin' a supply run. 'E should be back in a couple
minutes,"
Bunnie answered.
"Good. We'll need him to take us down to the
Southern group's base. We need to
evacuate them before Robotnik
gets there."
Epos Nix smirked to himself.
"We have to
run out and get everyone who received an Uzi ready to go. We
might
need to defend them while they evacuate."
"Ah'll
git right on it, Sally-girl."
"So will I. I wish we
could've prevented Cat's death, but all the same, I won't let
him
die in vain."
A door opened and shut, and there was silence
in the infirmary. The computer
beeped one last time. Nix leaned
over and switched the radio unit off.
Grunting as he got up, Nix
shuffled around in his cluttered tent until he reached the
desktop
computer. Crouching, he grabbed the keyboard and looked at the
monitor.
"TRIANGULATION SUCCESSFUL. RADIO SIGNAL POINT OF
ORIGIN
HAS BEEN TRACED. COORDINATES TO FOLLOW:"
Below
that, the screen printed out a series of precise latitude and
longitude digits.
Nix hit a button, and watched as the data
printed out onto a hard-copy. He had gotten his
bug inside
Knothole, and used it and a triangulation algorithm to ascertain
Knothole's
exact location. The sheet of numbers in his hand would
tell any cartographer where the
Freedom Fighters' village was.
Nix
felt his cheeks split upwards in a wide grin. Now, all he had to do
would be to
find the highest bidder, and he could stand to make an
incredible profit on this piece of
information.
It was very
obvious who that highest bidder would be.
Sally charged up to Epos Nix's tent, and heard a voice inside.
"Now, how shall we
conduct this bargain? I'm afraid this
one's going to be quite expensive," Nix was saying.
Bunnie's
metal legs clomped through the grass behind her. Again, they gave
away
the Freedom Fighters.
"Sorry, I'm going to have to
call you back," Nix said, and switched something off.
He
emerged from his tent.
"Princess? I'm afraid I wasn't
expecting you."
"Who was that?" Sonic asked. After
returning from Robotropolis, Sonic had been
quickly filled in on
what had happened. He seemed disappointed that he had missed
Cat's
return, and was determined to make up for it by providing
extra-fast transportation for the
other Freedom Fighters.
"A
village up in the northern mountains. A collection of survivors of
the coup,
actually; their power generator blew, and I'm the only
person with a spare." He eyed the
three rebels. "So what
do I owe the pleasure of this visit? An opportunity to make
more
money, perhaps?"
"Perhaps," Sally said. "We
think that Robotnik might send an assault force to
annihilate some
friends of ours. Would you have any weapons more powerful than
the
Uzi that you'd be willing to sell?"
"Several, but
they're not cheap. Wait here." Nix vanished behind the flap of
his
tent, and when he re-emerged, was carrying another large
crate. He dropped it
unceremoniously on the ground.
Sally eyed
the crate curiously. It had several symbols that she had never
seen
before painted onto the sides. One looked like a box, maybe a
flag, with white and red
stripes along most of it, and a
blue-and-white-speckled smaller box in the upper left-hand
corner.
The other was a circle with a star in it.
The end of the crate was
marked with several words: "UNITED STATES
ARMED FORCES".
Sally raised an eyebrow.
"'United States'? What's that?"
Nix
looked at her critically, and mimicked her expression by raising a
single
eyebrow. Otherwise, he didn't answer.
He tore open the
crate, revealing several long, black weapons of almost the
same
design as the Uzi he had already sold to the Freedom
Fighters. These weapons were
sleeker, though, longer, long enough
to be a rifle.
"This is what's called an AK-47 assault rifle.
Very similar to the Uzi, and operates
on the same basic
principles. These guns, though, pack more of a whallop per bullet,
and
will be able to punch through armor a little cleaner. They're
also a lot more accurate at
long ranges; something you'll want if
you have to fend off a distant assault force." Nix
reached
further into the crate, and pulled out a thinner, simpler looking
gun. The barrel
was long. "This is a 30.06 sniper rifle. Very
effective at long ranges, though absolutely
worthless at medium to
close range. Of all the weapons you've seen so far, this one's
bullet
is the most powerful." He grinned as he stared at it. "It
can tear a person's head
right off their shoulders."
"Charming,"
Sonic said dryly.
"These are all fresh imports - I only got
my hands on them this morning. I'll sell
these at two and a half
thousand coins per weapon. No haggling this time."
"We'll
consider them. We might be going up against some heavier armor. Do
you
have anything explosive?" Sally asked.
"Hmmmmm.
You mean like a missile or rocket launcher?"
"Perhaps.
What've you got?"
"Absolutely nothing, I'm afraid.
You're out of luck there." Nix was sounded so
confident that
Sally was sure that he was lying. She didn't press the issue.
"We'll
buy six of those… aahkay 47s." Sally had sound out the
word again.
Nix wore an amused smile. "No, no, it's an
acronym. Spelled exactly the way it
sounds. AK-47."
"Whatever.
We'll take them."
"What about payment?" Nix asked
carefully. He sighed. "Since you're in a hurry,
I'm assuming
that you'll want to take these on credit again."
"Please."
"You've
got yourself a deal, Princess." Within moments, Nix had grabbed
another
pair of crates from his cluttered tent. Each one held
three AK-47s, and several pairs of
clips. "This gun operates
essentially the same way that that the Uzi does - three
setting
safety, banana-clip ammunition… you shouldn't have
any trouble using it."
"Thank you, Epos."
Sonic
took Sally by the arm. "C'mon, Sal, let's jam back to
Knothole."
Bunnie hoisted the two crates easily with her
metal arm, then latched herself onto
Sonic's back. Nix heard a
sound like a motor revving, and a blue blur tore through the
woods.
All three Freedom Fighters were gone.
Nix cupped a hand to his
cheek. "I'll expect payment by midnight tomorrow!"
he
called after them. His voice was drowned out by a sonic boom.
Bunnie threw the crates into the stolen hover unit. The contents
rattled violently.
She didn't care.
"What're those?"
Bookshire asked.
"Ah'll explain when we're in the air, sugar.
Just git ready to go."
Sally quickly surveyed the Freedom
Fighters gathered outside the hover unit. It
was going to be an
even tighter squeeze than last time, and for a longer trip, too.
Besides
herself, Bookshire, Bunnie, and Sonic, most of the others
who had originally been given
the Uzis were there as well: Rotor,
Antoine, Geoff, Neophyte, and Anacharis were all
waiting
impatiently. Reynard was gone, of course, as was Canus. Canus had
left for the
Wolf Pack's camp in the Great Unknown hours ago.
"Are
we ready yet?" Sonic asked, tapping his foot. He would
occasionally glance
at a nonexistent wristwatch.
"Just
about," Sally said. "How're the fuel levels, Booky?"
"Doing
fine. We're ready to go." His head poked out of the hover unit's
doorway,
and got a good look at the Freedom Fighters gathered
outside. He smiled wickedly.
"Everybody pile in!"
"This
is gonna be fun," Neophyte grumbled, jumping heavily into the
back array of
seats. Antoine followed her in, pointedly taking a
deep breath first. The others reluctantly
filled up the empty
seats until there were no more. Bunnie had to squat on the
floor.
Sally waited, trying to be the last one in. The air inside
was already hot and
musty. "Hell's bells," she
cursed.
Sonic rolled his eyes from inside. "Have to make
sacrifices for freedom, right,
Sal?"
Sally heard footsteps
squelch in the mud behind her. She turned, grateful for
the
distraction. Lupe was standing there, Uzi hanging by her
side.
"Room for one more?" she asked quietly. Her eyes
were stained red with emotion,
but her expression was otherwise
stoic, and characteristically unreadable.
Sally frowned, and felt
her gaze slip involuntarily to the door of the infirmary.
Cat's
corpse lay just beyond that wall, wide-open still staring at the
ceiling. Only two
hours had come and gone since his passing.
Lupe
followed her gaze, and interrupted her before she could say anything.
"I
am coming, Princess." Her voice had an odd ring of
finality.
Sally nodded, and let Lupe climb into back of the hover
unit. Sally followed her
in, and shut the door behind her.
The
hover unit's engines roared, and Knothole was left far behind.
The Doomsday tower was hauntingly silent. Snively's footsteps
echoed up and
down the deserted corridors, crunching on pieces of
metal debris. Every once in a while,
he kicked a larger chunk of
rubble, like a SWATbot's head, a few feet, treasuring the
empty
noises it made.
Once, he had been frightened by solitude. That had
been before the coup… before
Julian Kintobor had become
Robotnik. Now, Snively enjoyed every moment of it he could
find,
for surely loneliness or even death eternal were better than spending
a single minute
with his uncle. The dark bruise welling up on his
forehead had not faded in the past two
days, and still
occasionally shot a spike of pain through Snively's consciousness.
He
brushed aside the pieces of robotic wreckage absently. Snively had
never sent
the worker bots through the Doomsday tower to clean it
since the Freedom Fighters' raid.
He had left the trash littered
on the ground. Occasionally, once or twice every day, he
would
come up here, and mull on what the Freedom Fighters had obviously
discovered.
Home.
Snively stopped as he approached the prone
body of a fallen SWATbot. This one
had fallen after only one or
two of the bullets had hit it, but they had hit it were it
counted.
The red-tinted helmet visor had been smashed to pieces. A
ragged hole, torn like a fist
through a sheet of paper, covered
most of its chest.
Snively bent down and reached into the
SWATbot's helmet, ignoring the painful
pinpricks and cuts the
shards of glass gave him. He extracted a single lead pellet, a
bullet.
It had been fired from the barrel of the Freedom Fighters'
Uzis. It was crumpled, nearly
shorn in half from the strength of
the impact with the robot's body. But it was still
recognizable.
This
bullet had never been manufactured on Mobius, Snively knew. He
was
holding a piece of refined ore that had come from the surface
of a place he hadn't seen in
over two-and-a-half decades. A place
that, until two days ago, he had given up all hope of
ever seeing
again.
He would do anything to get back there again. He would
murder Robotnik
himself if he thought he could get away with it.
He would betray his future, betray his
Uncle, betray whatever
power he had in Robotropolis itself just to…
"Snively..."
a deep voice intoned testily.
Snively jumped and gave a
high-pitched squeal. He turned and saw his uncle
Robotnik's
frowning face on a nearby computer monitor. For an instant, Snively
thought
that if his uncle could catch him off guard like that, he
might have been able to read
Snively's mind, too. If Robotnik had
heard his thoughts just a moment ago, it surely
would've been a
quick execution.
"Y-Yes, sir?" he wheezed. Snively was
unconsciously tracking the pace of his
heart beats. The rate was
far too fast to be healthy.
Despite his surliness just a moment
ago, Snively could tell that his uncle was
fighting to suppress a
smile.
"I have a task for you, Snively," Robotnik said,
and the grin he had been struggling
to keep down broke out across
his face. His large, square teeth gleamed in the artificial
light.
This was atypical behavior, to say the least. Snively hid his
confusion.
"Of course, sir."
The last time he had
seen Robotnik, he had been heading out to the southern
reaches of
the wilderness surrounding Robotropolis, with an armada of airships
at his side.
Doomsday Pod #2 was with him as well. Robotnik had
said something about a Southern
encampment of rebels.
"I'm
returning to Robotropolis in my command ship right now. I've still
got a task
force of warships and foot soldiers headed towards the
hidey-hole of the Southern
Freedom Fighters." So that was it,
the fat man had somehow managed to find the location
of the
Southern group. Those Freedom Fighters had bothered Robotnik's
shipping
operations in the past, but they certainly weren't as
much a thorn in the obese bastard's
side as the hedgehog and
Knothole Freedom Fighters had been.
"Yes, sir. I hope the
battle goes well, sir."
"So do I, Snively. That's why I
called you. I've giving you the command of the
task
force."
Snively gasped. "M-Me? Sir?"
"Yes,
you, Snively."
"But, sir! They're Freedom Fighters!
Usually, you attack them yourself, sir!"
Robotnik insisted on
leading every military strike against the Freedom Fighters
himself.
Now he was handing over the command of a large strike
force, posed to eliminate a major
threat, to his lackey! For a
moment, Snively wondered if the Robotnik he was talking to
was
real, or a replicant. Than he shook his head.
"There are more
important matters Snively. I'm making a grab for
Knothole."
Robotnik's metal hand made a fist.
"But
-"
"No more buts, Snively! You will take command of the
assault force, and you will
bring me their heads on a pike! There
are more momentous things afoot today!"
Robotnik's image
vanished.
Snively gulped. His world was coming apart around him.
He made a mad dash for
the Doomsday communication hub, and tripped
over the wreckage of a SWATbot.
Bookshire set the stolen hover unit down just outside the
perimeter of the
Southern Freedom Fighters' town. It could have
hardly been called a town, Sally
reflected. The closest word was
hidey-hole. Shanty village, perhaps. Whatever she called
it, it
wasn't pretty.
Five days ago, Lupe had managed to send messages
out to the Southern and
Eastern groups, asking them to join a
network dedicated to fighting Robotnik. Both
groups had instantly
agreed, via messages sent by carrier pigeon.
Sally had decided
early that they couldn't risk trying to communicate by radio.
It
would be all too easy for their messages to be intercepted in
Robotropolis. The only way
they had managed to communicate was by
short, hand-written notes that Uncle Chuck's
trained carrier birds
had to carry back and forth. Whatever messages had been sent
were
crude, and oft-times difficult to understand. Games like that
had been playing for several
days now. Only the Wolf Pack and
Knothole resistances had actually seen each other
face-to-face so
far.
Sally had never seen the Southern group's base before, and
had never heard it
described in any of their messages, either. It
was a crowded collection of six to several
ramshackle huts
clustered together in a small clearing. Whoever had built them
didn't
know too much about wilderness survival; the walls and
roofs were littered with half-
repaired holes. Structural defects
abounded.
At least there won't be much to evacuate, Sally thought
to herself, feeling a touch
of almost professional pride in the
fact that Knothole looked so much better.
The hover unit landed
with a slight thump, and Sally opened the doors without
hesitation.
A blast of cool air hit her face, letting the sweltering atmosphere
of the hover
unit slowly leak out. She heard Sonic breathe a sigh
of relief behind her.
She looked around at the huts. There was no
sign of life. Had they gone already?
The barrel of a laser rifle
was leveled at the interior of the hover unit, from point
blank
range. The end of the barrel was actually inside the airship. Sally
forced a sharp
intake of air into her lungs; she hadn't seen
anyone approach. Without hesitation,
Neophyte snapped her Uzi into
the air, and leveled it at the source. Her trigger finger
twitched,
ready to pull.
Gradually, the rifle relaxed. "Princess?"
someone asked. A rhino stepped into the
light. "What're you
doing here? And in one of Robotnik's airships?" Neo slowly
lowered
her own weapon.
Sally had to let out a breath she just
then realized she was holding. "You're from
the Southern
Freedom Fighters?"
The rhino nodded. He had a sash strapped
around his left shoulder. Sally stared at
it, and said, "You're
Apollo, aren't you?"
"That's right. Leader of the
Southern resistance. It's good to see you at last, but I
wish you
could have come at a better time."
Sally hopped gingerly to
the ground, and cautiously shook Apollo's hand. "Good
to see
you, at last, too. I'm sorry I didn't warn you about our arrival, but
we have to tell
you something. Robotnik's found you. He's
coming."
Apollo nodded gravely. "We already know. We
detected his airship armada
coming towards us half-an-hour ago. I
thought you were a scout from them."
Sally blinked. "You
already know?" she asked, suddenly feeling worthless.
"Yes.
It pays sometimes to have some decent radar equipment. We just got
it,
too."
"Oh. Can we help?"
Apollo smiled.
"Of course. We still need to get our people and equipment out
of
here safely; we've been working on a razor-thin margin so far.
We could use all the spare
hands we can get."
Sonic
practically fell out of the hover unit, gratefully sucking in the
fresh air. He
patted his Uzi. "You need to buy some extra
time?" he grinned. "We can distract
Robuttnik for
ya!"
Apollo eyed the Uzi carefully. "What kind of weapon
is that?"
"When will Robotnik's forces get here?"
Sally asked.
"Twenty minutes."
"Then I'll have
that long to show you." She motioned for the others to come
out
of the hover unit. "Everybody get that? We need to buy
the Southern Freedom Fighters
some time to clear out. Let's set up
our first firing line over there…"
"Estimated time of arrival in forty seconds, sir," the
SWATbot droned.
"Excellent!" Snively sat in Robotnik's
unused throne in the Doomsday command
center. He kicked against a
nearby console, and spun the chair around, once. After
getting
over his initial shock, he had found that this kind of power felt…
very good.
"Full thrust! Charge all laser cannons!" he
screamed, delighted.
The green dots on Snively's radar screen got
closer and closer to the single,
motionless red dot. "Give me
a visual," he demanded.
A monitor blinked, and gave a camera
view from one of the lead hover units.
Snively saw a clearing in
the trees approaching ahead… the Southern Freedom
Fighters'
base.
He grinned, feeling uncomfortably like his
uncle. Wasn't this how the fat fool
acted whenever something was
about to go his way? Oh, well… "Reduce altitude.
Prepare
to fire!"
The trees slowly peeled back, and Snively saw the
first of the huts he was charged
with destroying. He saw the
Mobians dashing around the huts, running into the trees. He
saw…
The
grin dropped off his face. He saw Sonic, and the Princess, lined up
with
several of the other Knothole Freedom Fighters just before
the huts. All of them were
carrying some form of the bullet
weapons that had trashed the Doomsday security forces.
Impossibly,
at this distance, he saw Sonic wink.
Then there was a burst of
gunfire, and the video feed turned to static. Snively
hissed, and
shouted an obscenity at fate. How had the hedgehog known?
A crazy
thought struck him. Now this was how his uncle acted when he
got
mad…
Snively punched himself out.
Hover unit after hover unit crashed to the ground. Flaming pieces
of metal landed
at Sonic's feet. He held an Uzi with one hand, and
an AK-47 with the other, and was
firing them both into the air at
full automatic.
Wave after wave of hover units fell without so
much as a reaction from any of the
others. They kept coming.
Snively crawled to the base of the throne, wondering what had
possessed him to
hit himself.
He had been trying to act like
Robotnik. Whenever Robotnik got angry, he always
used Snively as a
scapegoat… that meant hitting. Snively hauled himself up to
the throne,
reminded once again why he hated his uncle.
He saw
over half the hover unit armada crash to the ground. Sluggish after
the
self-induced concussion, Snively's mind raced. "Scatter!"
he ordered.
The hover units dove, and headed in opposite
directions. Through one of the
remaining airship's cameras, he saw
the Freedom Fighters cheer and shout. Not one of
them had been
knocked down, because Snively had never given the order to
fire.
Snively cursed himself, cursed his life, and cursed his
stupidity. Then he brought
up the military communications grid
again, and issued another order. Hover units hadn't
been the only
thing Robotnik had originally included in his air force
armada.
"Bring Doomsday Test Pod #2 forward."
Apollo cheered, letting the AK-47 rest at his side. It had only
taken him a couple
minutes to catch on to how to use the weapon.
"That was incredible!" he hollered.
Someone Sally didn't
know, a member of the Southern group, dashed up to
Apollo. He cast
a quick, wary glance at the Princess, then turned back to Apollo.
"We
just got all the equipment out. We're moving it down the
river to our secondary camp."
"Very good," Apollo
grinned. The other Freedom Fighter never heard him; he had
already
raced away. "I've got to hand it to you guys. Without that
distraction, we
would've only had enough time to save our people,
and not our supplies. You just saved
us a lot of time."
"No
prob," Sonic grinned, looking for all the world like he had done
it himself,
without help.
"If you're all set to leave, we
should get ready to go," Sally said. Antoine shrieked
in the
background. "It was good to help. Cat didn't die in
vain."
"Who?"
"Never mind. You sure you're
going to be all right?"
"We'll be fine. You all go. I'll
send a messenger bird to Knothole later tonight."
"Oh
mah stars!" Bunnie shouted suddenly, waving a metallic finger at
the sky.
"Sally-girl!"
Sally's gaze followed Bunnie's
finger skyward, until she saw the oblong metal
skeleton. The
gridwork of cold, solid metal beams and laser cannons coasted
silently
towards the Southern Freedom Fighters' encampment.
"What
in the holy Hells is that thing?"
Sally looked at Apollo.
"That's a half-finished Doomsday Test Pod!"
Sonic, still
holding both an Uzi and an AK-47, pointed both weapons upward
and
began firing. Yellow fire spewed forth from both gun barrels,
and bullets flew high.
Whatever bullets actually managed to hit
the pod's framework impacted
ineffectually, sending only one or
two sparks away from the Test Pod. It never flinched or
trembled.
Sally would've bet that, knowing how strong a metal the Doomsday pods
were
made of, the bullets barely left anything more than a
scratch.
Sonic's Uzi clip clicked dry first, then the AK-47. He
finally lowered the weapons.
The Test Pod's laser cannon fired
brilliant red wedge of fire at the ground,
smashing the trees
below it. Fire roared up from below. The Test Pod continued
moving
towards the encampment, dragging the fiery swath of
destruction with it.
"Get out of here!" Apollo shouted
one last sentence at Sally, and then made a run
for it. He and the
Knothole Freedom Fighters sprinted for Bookshire's stolen hover
unit,
and piled inside. In an instant, they were off, and flying
above the Doomsday pod.
The fire consumed the clearing that the
huts had been in. Sally near got to see
them collapse; the pod had
leveled them in the blink of an eye. It was as if they had
never
existed.
"Such destruction…" Apollo
mumbled.
The Test Pod turned its attentions towards the stolen
hover unit. Bookshire rolled
the airship sharply to port just as a
blast of laser fire seared through the air where they had
been. He
curved the hover unit around in a graceful arc, and fired engines at
full blast
towards the Great Forest.
"Get them!" Snively shouted. "Get them!"
Test
Pod #2 fired again, and missed. The laser burst came just short of
the hover
unit's stern. Snively could see that the hover unit was
outrunning the slow, unfinished
engines of the Doomsday pod.
A
third laser burned through the air, missing by a wider margin. After
a fourth and
fifth blast, the hover unit had gone out of sight.
Test Pod #2 ground to a halt, and
hovered in the air.
Snively
screamed, and thumped his head down on the throne's arm rest.
Robotnik
was going to be very, very upset with him.
Best to
tell him from a distance. Like from across the city. Maybe not even
today,
maybe wait until tomorrow.
Snively hated pain.
The chilly night air blew into Knothole's only guest hut, a small,
underused one-
room affair. Lupe closed the window and cut the
draft off.
She stood there late into the night, facing out the
window. In all that time her eyes
never left the distant lights
that flickered in the window of Bookshire Draftwood's hut
and
infirmary.
Eventually even those lights turned off, leaving
nothing but moonlit shadow and
darkness, but Lupe's gaze never
wandered. The only things she saw were her wounded
companion,
Reynard, and her dead fiancée, Cat.
Then, eventually, she
stopped seeing even them, and her thoughts became more
and more
abstract. She saw sorrow. Then she saw nothing but anger, and a
burning
desire for vengeance.
Then she fell silently to her
cot, and slept. She dreamt, of course, of Cat, but also
saw Epos
Nix's bullet weapons in her dreams, slaughtering her companions,
almost like a
nightmarish vision of things to come…
Day Six
A cold, gray sky had blown in with the wind last night, and had
remained until
morning. It cast a gritty, disconsolate shadow
across everything it touched, and even
made the distance smog over
Robotropolis seem more desolate than it ever had before.
To match
the sky, a chilly wind had been blowing all day, and now it fluttered
across the
meadow like a lost orphan child. An appropriate day for
a burial.
Sally had offered to let Lupe take the cadaver back to
the Great Unknown, where
the Wolf Pack's numerous burial sites
lay. Lupe had refused to do so; when she looked at
Sally after she
had tentatively made the offer, she had the oddest expression Sally
had ever
seen.
"No," she had said solemnly. "Knothole
will be forever Cat's place."
Only hours after returning from
the demolished encampment last night, the
Freedom Fighters had
begun digging Cat's grave. Lupe had insisted that the burial
be
today, and despite her always-neutral tone, Sally got the
impression that Lupe simply
couldn't bear to think about Cat just
lying there, untended, in Bookshire's infirmary.
Now Cat lay just
inside his shallow grave, eyes closed and arms crossed around
his
chest. Bookshire had cleaned the body this morning, wiping
away the blood and dressing
the cougar's numerous wounds. They
were mostly gone, now, but here and there on Cat's
body there were
still visible the tell-tale signs of abuse. Some of the dried blood
had been
impossible to rinse away. There was no coffin, Knothole's
builders lacked the time and
raw materials to make one, and Cat's
back rested limply against the dirt bottom of the
grave.
The
Freedom Fighters were lined up in a double row around Cat. Even
Apollo,
who had not left Knothole since tagging along in the
stolen hover unit, was there. Sonic
was standing at the head of
the grave, a shovel packed full of dirt in his hands.
The last
time Sally had seen Sonic shed a tear over anything was when his
uncle
had lost his will to Robotnik's roboticizer. That had been
over a year ago. He looked like
he was coming very close now,
though.
"That's three times I screwed up," Sonic said,
aloud. "A year ago, I wasn't fast
enough to save you. When I
saw your empty prison cell, I thought for sure that you were
dead,
or worse. I was wrong. I didn't check. Instead, we let Robuttnik have
you for over
a year. He did this to you, while all I did was sit
back and think that you were already
dead."
Sally noticed
the 'I's' appearing often in Sonic's speech. He blamed himself.
The
downside of his egotism was when something went wrong, he
often forgot that making
mistakes was sometimes a group
effort.
"Then, yesterday, when you came back, I was gone. I
should've been there, maybe
to get you back to Knothole faster.
Bookshire might have been able to do something if I'd
been there.
Instead, I was out in Robotropolis, raiding a decade-old chili dog
vending
machine." Sonic shook his head bitterly. "I sure
got my priorities straight, huh?"
"I don't know what to
say, what to promise. I could just vow to avenge you, vow
to kill
Robuttnik. That's what I had planned to do, today. But… just
looking down there,
looking at your face, it all sounds so empty.
Like killing Robotnik just won't have any
meaning, not today."
Sonic's gaze fell upon Cat's corpse. "And I guess it doesn't.
Killing
him can't undo this, can't bring back any of the
dead."
Sonic let the shovel's contents fall gently into the
grave, wincing as the dirt hit
Cat's unmoving chest. He thrust the
shovel into a nearby pile of dirt, and stepped down.
Sally stepped
up the head of the grave, where Sonic had been, and grabbed
the
shovel's handle. For as long as Sally could remember, burials
like this had been an Acorn
family tradition, one that she had
carried with her to Knothole. The deceased's grave was
dug only by
family and close friends, oft-times by hand. The following day, each
of them
would come to the grave, give their respects, and they
would all fill the grave in together.
The Princess glanced around
the meadow. She had long since lost count of how
many times she
had been out here, how many shallow graves she had stood over, just
like
this one. Occasionally, they would find Mobians laying in the
Robotropolis's scrap yards,
victims of Robotnik's fury. Sally
insisted that each and every body they recovered, no
matter
whether it was a Freedom Fighter, a civilian, or even a hated foe,
receive a proper
burial. Other times, Sally had stood outside the
graves of people who had once been her
closest friends and
companions.
Sally let her gaze wander freely, feeling it slip
unconsciously towards the grave of
the person who had been her
childhood mentor, Julayla. Her body rested underneath that
one
mound of dirt as it had for the past half-decade, yet Sally could
remember her as if she
had just seen her yesterday. Her eyes
drifted again, and came upon the symbolic graves
she had laid out
for her mother and father when she had been seven. She hadn't
removed
either of them, even when she had found out that her
father still lived, trapped permanently
within the Void.
Her
eyes fell back to the living still standing around Cat's open grave.
She saw
Sonic doing nothing but look at his feet. For the moment,
the fight had been extinguished
from even him; his eyes were as
dead as Cat's.
"I had a speech planned, too, but as I stand
here I know I can't give it. It all seems
so… worthless,
now. Everything we've done."
"I know in my heart that
what we're doing here, what the Freedom Fighters exist
for is
right. I know that we can defeat Robotnik, if we try. I still hope we
can… yet,
now, I can't do anything but stand here and feel
like a failure. No matter how well things
go from now on, now
matter how or when we succeed, nothing can bring back the dead.
Even
if we were to defeat Robotnik an hour from now, and restore the free
wills of every
Mobian on the planet, nothing we could do would
bring people like Cat back. Nothing
can help the dead."
Sally
couldn't take her eyes away from Cat's face, and the wounds that
still marred
his forehead. "Oh, Cat…"
That was
all she could manage. She tipped the shovel sideways, and watched
as
more dirt piled atop the corpse. Then she stood down.
They
all went up there, one by one, each giving little speeches, and
pouring more
dirt into Cat's grave. Sally stopped listening after
Bunnie's tearful goodbye; she just
couldn't take her attention
away from the slowly filling grave.
Lupe was the last one to stand
before Cat's grave. She took the shovel, and stood
there, just
looking at the mound of dirt that concealed the sweetheart from her
past.
She stood there and waited, noting moving a muscle, not
saying any words.
Seconds turned to minutes. Lupe remained
motionless, except for a single tear that slid
down the scar on
cheek.
At last, she poured the last shovel-full of dirt onto the
grave. Lupe stood there just
as motionless as Cat, waiting in
front of the grave long after the others had left.
Day Seven
By the next day's morning, the cold gray clouds of the day before
he parted,
leaving only a smattering of feathery white clouds to
block the sun's rays.
Sally, Bunnie, Rotor, and Bookshire were
alone in Knothole's small dining hall.
Most of the others had
either choked down Antoine's breakfast hours ago, or skipped
it
entirely. Lupe was there, too, but was staying out of their
conversation. She was leaning
against the wall, her expression the
pinnacle of apathy.
The topic of discussion had once again shifted
to Cat.
"We don't even know what Robotnik did to him. We
don't even know how he
survived," Bookshire said. He looked
at Lupe warily, but she didn't give any sign that she
had even
heard him.
"Yeah," Rotor added. He, too, glanced at
Lupe. When he spoke again, it was in a
quieter voice. "I
thought for sure that iron-lips had turned him into just another
worker
bot."
"No, he kept Cat alive and conscious,
but we don't know for what." Sally sighed
disparagingly. "It
just doesn't seem like something Robotnik would do."
"Well,
'e was suffering from some sort of memory impairment when Ah
found
him," Bunnie pointed out. "Poor thing couldn't
even remember where Knothole was.
Maybe ol' Robuttnik was usin'
Cat for some kind of surgical experiment? Just to see what
happens
when he pokes this part of 'is brain?"
"Gruesome,"
Rotor mumbled.
Sally shook his head. "I don't think he
would've kept Cat alive for over a year."
She buried her face
in her hands. This conversation was uncomfortable for her, to say
the
least.
Bookshire rubbed his hand thoughtfully across his
chin. "Maybe Robotnik did turn
him into a worker bot, after
all."
"Say again, Booky?" Sally asked.
Bookshire
leaned across the table. "We know already that Robotnik has
a
functional deroboticizer close to his throne room. Say he did
use it for some reason, to
deroboticize Cat?"
"It
just don't make sense. Why would Robotnik do that?" Bunnie
said.
Bookshire shook his head, and shrugged. "I don't know.
Maybe he thought that
Cat might finally give away Knothole's
location."
"Now, we all know that Cat would never have
done anything like that!" Sally
exclaimed. "And Robotnik
knows it, too."
"Then we just don't know what Cat was
doing alive. He… didn't survive long
enough to tell us."
"I
think we can still find out, though." Sally ran a hand down the
side of her face,
an idea forming. "Can you hack into
Robotropolis's mainframe computer, Booky? Track
down anything
about Cat?"
"Not from Knothole. I'd need to find a
direct terminal in Robotropolis to link to if
I wanted to find
anything at all."
Sally nodded. "As grisly as it sounds,
we need to find out how and why Cat
survived, and why he was so
injured when he came to Knothole."
Bookshire nodded grimly.
"If I take the stolen hover unit, I can be in Robotropolis
in
inside half-an-hour."
Lupe suddenly spoke. The other Freedom
Fighters jumped. "I'm coming with
you, Bookshire."
"Lupe!"
Sally said, surprised. "I didn't think you could…"
"Hear
you?" Lupe finished for her. Both her expression and her tone
were exactly
as disinterested as they had been moments ago. "I'm
a wolf, Princess, an offshoot of basic
canine genealogy. My
hearing's sharp, even for my species." Her eyes drifted
to
Bookshire. "I'll be ready to leave in five minutes."
Lupe
left.
A fresh bruise had replaced the old one on Snively's forehead. The
two practically
overlapped each other.
He rubbed them tenderly,
and grumbled. At least there had been no broken bones,
this time.
Snively had no idea why, though… the obese bastard had only
given him a few
heavy-handed slaps after hearing the news about
the Southern Freedom Fighters, and had
left him alone,
disappearing to one of his many hidey-holes in Robotropolis.
Snively
hadn't heard from him since.
And Snively had actually
been looking forward to spending a few quiet days with
the medical
robots. He had been expecting a thrashing.
Maybe, Snively mused,
just maybe, Robotnik was getting soft in his old age.
Maybe he no
longer saw a point to beating his only nephew.
Snively shook his
head, and was struck by an altogether more terrifying thought.
Maybe
losing the Southern Freedom Fighters had been the straw that had
broken
the camel's back. Maybe Robotnik was finally preparing to
do away with Snively.
A single laser blast to the head, point
blank, and Sniv's little old brains would go
scattered across the
floor…
Snively shook his head again, more violently. That
did it. He had to find out why
the stupid bastard had been acting
so strangely over the past few days.
"Computer!" he
snapped. "Give me a report of everything that Ivo Robotnik
has
been doing over the past week! Now!"
With a burst from the ion thruster jets, Bookshire's hover unit
took to the air, and
was quickly out of sight. Sally waited until
the whine of the engines was no longer
discernible through the
forest.
Antoine was leaning against the infirmary walls. "And
where are they to be
going?" he asked
suspiciously.
"Robotropolis. Bookshire thinks he can get some
information off of Robotnik's
database."
Antoine grumbled
something.
"What did you say?"
"Eh…
forgive me, my Prinzess," Antoine fumbled. "I was making ze
comment
about Robotnik, and Cat."
"What about them,
Antoine?" Sally asked innocently.
"I did not want to be
saying anyzing earlier, but zis whole business, it, uh, makes
ze
fur on my hackles raise. It is not seeming right?"
Sally
began moving back towards Knothole's dining hall, Antoine in tow.
"None
of us are comfortable with Cat's death," she said
softly. "It's something we all have to deal
with, by
ourselves."
"Eh?" Antoine looked surprised. "No,
no, no, zat was not what I was talking
about."
"Then
what?"
"I'm am talking about zee perfect timing of zis
whole affair. Cat, he went missing
over a year ago, n'est pas? We
all knew he was as good as roboticized."
Sally nodded sadly.
"Unfortunately, we were all wrong. And it cost Cat his
life."
"Think about zis, my Prinzess. We had just
found-ed ze Wolf Pack Freedom
Fighters five days ago when Cat
first came here."
Sally saw where Antoine was going. She
hated it already. "Yes…"
"And only two days
had pass-ed since we learn-ed zat Lupe knew Cat from before
ze
war. I am just saying zat zis is all very convenient timing. Cat
shows up, running out
of ze woods just days after all of
zis."
Sally didn't want to think about any of this. "Are
you saying that there's a
conspiracy behind Cat's return to
Knothole."
"I am not to be saying anything, my Prinzess.
Just suggesting."
Sally frowned. Every cell in her body,
every fiber of her being, wanted to scream
at Antoine that he was
wrong. Cat had been a good Freedom Fighter, damn it. He
had
sacrificed himself once to save her once, and then sacrificed
himself again to save the
Southern Freedom Fighters.
Yet…
at the same time, Antoine had actually raised a valid point. Which
was rare
for him.
"I'll think about it, Antoine," she
said. Ant nodded proudly. Sally slipped through
the doorway into
the dining hall, and shut it before Antoine could follow her.
Apollo
was in the dining hall, sitting alone with a single scrap of paper.
He looked
up on Sally's entrance. "Heya, Princess."
She
nodded curtly, mind still focused on Antoine. "Any news from
your Freedom
Fighters?" she asked. Apollo had grown
increasingly harried over the past few days; no
news had come from
the south. She could tell that he was fretting about them,
worrying
whether the Doomsday pod had caught them or not. She was
starting to grow concerned,
as well.
Apollo grinned, and held
up the note long enough for Sally to see several lines of
scrawled
writing on it. "Fresh from the messenger bird. They've managed
to finish setting
up a couple of ramshackle huts and shacks at our
secondary encampment site. Thank god
I insisted we work out those
evacuation plans in advance, huh?"
Sally nodded, feeling
guilty. Knothole had no such evacuation plans… as Bunnie
had
put it one time, if Robotnik found Knothole, their only plans were to
run, and run fast.
"Good foresight, Apollo," she
complimented.
"Still, we wouldn't have made it out if it
weren't for you and that radar equipment,"
Apollo said. "We
owe you Knothole Freedom Fighters one."
Sally smiled. "That
radar equipment… I wanted to ask you about that earlier.
Did
you scavenge it from Robotnik's scrap heaps, or did you
actually break into a tech center
and steal it?"
Apollo
copied her smile, nodding. "Nothing quite so simple. We had to
pay quite
dearly to get our hands on it."
"Oh?
How?"
"Some merchant traveling through town sold us it a
couple months ago. In fact,
he practically insisted that we buy
it. Said we would need it really soon." Apollo grunted
to
himself. "I guess he was right, too."
"Merchant…"
the word rolled off Sally's tongue, and froze there.
"Yeah,"
Apollo confirmed. He frowned, as if trying to recall something
concealed
deep in his memory. "I think he said his name was
Epos Nix."
Bookshire's stolen hover unit flew straight through Robotropolis's
city limits; the
airship had been stolen in secret, and quite
recently, and Robotnik's defenses hadn't been
programmed to
recognize it as an enemy aircraft. The traffic computers saw just
another
patrol unit moving through the city. Still, Bookshire
breathed an audible sigh of relief as
he passed the city's
anti-air defenses unscathed.
Lupe silently sat in the chair next
to him. Bookshire got the impression that she
was
smoldering.
Bookshire easily set the hover unit down to a smooth
landing on the outside ledge
of what had once been King Acorn's
majestic castle. Robotnik had converted it to an
ugly, metal
egg-shaped building that served as the central building of
nightmarish
Robotropolis. The Doomsday tower loomed menacingly in
the distance.
"We don't even need to get out of the damn
ship," Bookshire said. He tapped a
few buttons on the hover
unit's computer console, and a small prod unfolded from the
exterior
of the parked airship. It was an electronic jack. With another quick
wrist
movement, Bookshire guided it into a nearby outlet.
The
computer gave a single beep, and a menu unfolded on the monitor
under
Bookshire's palm. He moved his hand out of the way, showing
the monitor to Lupe.
"Bingo. Instant network access." He
sighed happily, and looked at his wolf
passenger. "So much
better than when I was a kid."
"It says it needs a
password," Lupe read.
"Right. Computer," he
addressed the console in front of him. "Activate
cryptosmasher
software, and get me through that firewall."
The screen
changed displays several times, and all of them were
incomprehensible
to Lupe. She saw several numbers ticking down.
Finally the screen blinked, and revealed
Robotropolis's mainframe
computer.
"Very, very good," Bookshire grinned. With his
bad leg, he had never managed to
get away from Knothole much. When
he did, however, he was always determined to
enjoy it as much as
possible. He could see why Sonic enjoyed outwitting his
arch-nemesis
so much… it was just plain fun. "I want
you to access prisoner records. Give me all files
about a Freedom
Fighter named Cat."
"ACCESS TO THAT INFORMATION IS
RESTRICTED," the monitor bluntly
informed him.
"FORTY-CHARACTER LOGON KEY REQUIRED FOR ACCESS."
"Activate
cryptosmasher software."
Another set of ticking numbers and
incomprehensible screens flashed by.
"ACCESS GRANTED."
"This
is too easy," Bookshire cooed. "Display the records."
Lupe
could only watch as Bookshire's eyes quickly scanned through
several
screens worth of file names and hexadecimal digits.
Finally, his eyes lighted upon a single
file, and he opened
it.
"PRISONER #4325041," the monitor reported back
silently. "PRISONER
CAPTURED 3/21/35. THE PRISONER DID NOT
RESPOND TO INTERROGATION.
ROBOTICIZED BY ORDER OF ROBOTNIK
3/22/35."
Lupe looked at Bookshire, eyes wide.
Bookshire
frowned. "So he was roboticized, and then later deroboticized. I
was
right. Continue, computer."
"WORKER BOT #4325041
ASSIGNED TO SWATBOT MANUFACTORING
DIVISION, PLANT #2 3/22/35.
RELEASED FROM ASSIGNMENT BY ORDER OF
ROBOTNIK 7/15/36."
Bookshire
arched an eyebrow. "The fifteenth? That was four days ago…
two
days before he found us." He turned to Lupe.
Lupe
looked back at him, expression characteristically unreadable. Her
gaze
turned back to the egg-shaped castle outside. Lupe's eyes had
acquired a hard, murderous
glint.
"Give me more
information, computer. Why was Cat released from his assignment
on
the fifteenth?"
"ACCESS TO THAT INFORMATION IS
RESTRICTED, BY ORDER OF
ROBOTNIK. ENCRYPTION KEY REQUIRED FOR
ACCESS."
Bookshire muttered a quiet curse. "Activate
cryptosmasher software."
Another set of numbers and illegible
screens. They flashed for several moments
before finally
quitting.
Bookshire's curled fist slammed against his console.
"Damn it. I can't
cryptosmash that lock."
Lupe
muttered several choice words that made Bookshire blush. He glanced
up.
"That was unnecessary."
"So is
roboticization, but that never stopped Robotnik."
"I
guess not." Bookshire felt his hand make a fist again. "Damn
it, we have to find
a way to break through this lock!"
Snively was jarred out of his contemplative daze by the droning of
the intruder
alarm system. He gave a little squeak, and almost
fell out of his chair. His arms flailed
and scrambled to keep
balance.
He had gotten as far as to just outside the surveillance
tape records when he
stopped. Surely, any attempt by him to hack
into the tapes would be recorded. He would
be caught. Robotnik
would surely have him executed.
He had just left his computer
screen there, unwilling to go any further. He had
been caught
between his desire to know what had held Robotnik so enraptured over
the
past several days, and his self-preservation instinct. He
hadn't known what to do.
"Report!" he barked.
A
SWATbot appeared on the screen. "An intruder, flying a stolen
hover unit,
attempted to hack through Robotropolis security, sir.
A failed attempt at password
cracking triggered a silent
alarm."
Snively rubbed his bird-like chin, and wished again
that he could just grow a beard,
or at least some stubble. He had
never shaved a day in his life; had never needed to.
"What
section did they attempt to access?" he demanded.
"Records
on a Freedom Fighter, sir. A 'Cat'. Those records are
partially
contained in Robotnik's secure personal files."
Snively
nodded. Robotnik's personal files were exactly the kind of software
he
was debating whether or not to hack through. Perhaps…
"Shall
I cut off their connection and dispatch the closest hover
units?"
"Uh, no, soldier. Go about your normal business.
I'll take care of those fetid
Freedom Fighters."
The
SWATbot nodded, never questioning the orders it received. Its face
vanished
from the comm channel.
Oh, yes, this was too perfect.
Snively would let the Freedom Fighters into
Robotropolis's
mainframe, and make it look like they were the ones doing the
hacking,
not he. They would be his key into Robotnik's files…
while they did the hacking, he
would be there in the background,
taking what he needed and leaving. His uncle, when he
checked the
logs, would think it was the Freedom Fighters hacking, and not
stupid,
worthless Snively…
He would find out what
Robotnik was up to, after all. Snively punched clear the
firewall
protecting Robotnik's personal files, and let the Freedom Fighters
in.
Bookshire blinked. "ACCESS GRANTED," the monitor beeped
at him.
Lupe glanced sharply in his direction. "I thought you
said you couldn't
cryptosmash the lock."
"I couldn't.
Something happened to the firewall, from the inside."
Bookshire
tapped a few buttons, and the monitor layout changed.
"It's like somebody decided to let
us in."
The fur on
Lupe's arms rippled, raising straight up. "I don't like
this."
"Neither do I. But we're inside." Bookshire
looked at Lupe. "Keep an eye out for
approaching hover units,
huh? This feels too much like a trap."
"I've been doing
that ever since you landed us here."
"Good."
Bookshire turned his attentions to the computer. "So, computer,
tell us
then, what happened to Cat?"
"BY ORDER OF
ROBOTNIK, WORKER BOT #4325041 WAS BROUGHT TO FACILITY R12, AND
THEN
RELEASED."
"What's facility R12?" Bookshire
queried.
"UNSPECIFIED."
Lupe held up her paw for
Bookshire to stop. "Computer, what do you mean Cat
was
released after being brought to this facility."
"THE
WORKER BOT WAS RELEASED TO ITS NORMAL DUTIES 7/16/36."
Bookshire
and Lupe exchanged a glance. "But something went wrong, and
the
worker bot escaped, correct?"
"NO."
"Then
what happened to him?" Bookshire asked, exasperated.
"AS
OF THIS MINUTE, WORKER BOT #4325041 IS STILL WORKING THE
ASSEMBLY
LINE AT SWATBOT FACTORY #2."
Snively was working with a similarly snobby computer. He leaned
his frail body
back in the chair, and buried his head in his
hands.
"So where is Robotnik right now?" he asked
it.
"DOCTOR ROBOTNIK IS CURRENTLY IN HIS THRONE ROOM."
"And
what's he doing?"
"ENGAGING IN LONG-RANGE
COMMUNICATION."
"With whom, might I ask?"
"A
HUMAN WHO REFERS TO HIMSELF AS 'EPOS NIX'"
"Nix?"
Snively massaged his bruises. The name meant nothing to him. But
the
fact that this Nix was a human did… could he be from
Earth? Could this Nix be the link
he was seeking? "Tell me,
computer, would it be possible for me to listen in on
Robotnik's
communication?"
"YES, SIR."
"Without being
seen or detected?"
"YES, SIR."
"Then do it.
Patch me in to Robotnik's channel. I want to listen."
"ONE
MOMENT, SIR."
Snively hand moved down his forehead, from his
bruises to his needle-thin nose.
He scratched it absently. A
thought struck him. "The Freedom Fighters I allowed
entrance?"
he asked. "Where are they?"
"STILL OUTSIDE THE
CAPITOL BUILDING."
"No, no, I meant what files are they
trying to access?"
"THEY ARE STILL SEEKING INFORMATION
ABOUT THE FREEDOM FIGHTER NAMED CAT."
Snively frowned. "Run
a quick search, computer. Does the name 'Cat' go
mentioned
anywhere in Robotnik's personal files? Especially the recent ones,
say,
anywhere within now and a week ago."
"SEVERAL
TIMES, SIR."
"Is this Cat in any way connected with this
Epos Nix character? Any correlation at
all?"
"YES."
"Hmmmmmm."
Snively was suddenly overcome by one of the strangest, most
dangerous
impulses he had ever had. He didn't know why… he cared little
for the
Freedom Fighters, and would gladly kill the hedgehog if he
got the chance…
"Computer, send the Freedom Fighters a
little message. Patch them into this
communication, too. I want
them to hear what Robotnik has to say."
"YES, SIR."
"Now
let me listen to Robotnik."
Snively leaned back, and watched
the video on his monitor unfold.
Bookshire was frantic, now. "Search for any references in the
Robotropolis
database for an R12 facility. Do it now," he
said, before the computer could interrupt
him. "I don't care
how long it takes."
Lupe's face was sunken, and pale. Her
eyes burned with the multiple fires of
conflicting emotions, but
otherwise she had not said a word. She looked as if she had
just
found out that her reality was nothing more real than a
child's imagination.
Bookshire thumped his head on the console.
None of this was making sense. It
had to be a trick. But how did
Robotnik know that they were coming?
Cat, the same Cat that
Bookshire had seen die with his own eyes, was still listed as
alive
and well on the Robotropolis database. He was supposed to be a
roboticized drone,
and nothing more.
"REFERENCE FOUND,"
the computer reported back quickly.
Bookshire snapped his fingers.
"Give it to me."
"R12 FACILITY," the monitor
reported. "ALSO KNOWN AS REPLICANT
FACTORY. USED 5/17/35, BY
ORDER OF ROBOTNIK, TO CREATE ROBOTIC DUPLICATE OF THE PRINCESS
SALLY
ACORN."
Bookshire's mouth dropped. He remembered that robot;
it had been designed to
quickly infiltrate Knothole and expose its
location to Robotnik. For some reason, though,
it hadn't, and
Sonic had later destroyed it in Robotropolis. Everybody in Knothole
had
been fooled by it.
"No," Lupe managed to sputter.
"No!"
Bookshire grabbed the console with both hands. His
knuckles were white. "Tell
me, computer, when was the last
time the replicant factory was used. Keep in mind
that I have full
access to Robotnik's files!"
"THE R12 FACILITY WAS USED
LAST ON 6/17/36, BY ORDER OF ROBOTNIK, TO CREATE
A ROBOTIC
DUPLICATE OF THE FREEDOM FIGHTER KNOWN AS 'CAT'."
"No!"
Bookshire screamed. He pounded furiously on the console, to no avail.
His
ears burned; he knew they had been fooled, all of them. It
couldn't be true.
"Damn it, damn it, damn it! I didn't
check!" Bookshire almost cut off the network
connection. "I
should've checked, should've done an autopsy, something, found out
it
wasn't-"
Bookshire cut himself off, staring at Lupe.
Her face was twisted… it was the
most emotion he had ever
seen anyone, especially Lupe, display. It was only one, simple,
pure
passion: anger. Her lips were curled upwards, her teeth bared and
grinding against
one another. Lupe had made fists so tight that
her nails cut deep, bloody wells into her
palms.
Her eyes were
pure flames, shooting hate and loathing stronger than a
bullet
towards the computer monitor. Bookshire was immediately
surprised that the monitor
itself didn't shatter under the assault
of Lupe's wrath.
"I'm a goddamn doctor, and I can't even tell
whether or not a patient's real…"
"Shut up,
Bookshire," Lupe snarled.
"But we -"
"Shut
UP!"
Before either of them could blink, the monitor
flickered, and conveyed Snively's
relayed surveillance camera
image. The first thing Bookshire saw was Ivo Robotnik, red
cape
fluttering in the air, staring at a communications monitor.
The
second thing Bookshire saw was the person on the communications
monitor.
Epos Nix.
Lupe tore open the hover unit's doors, and
threw herself to the ground outside.
She roared her fury to the
polluted skies.
Bookshire looked at the hover unit's own
communication panel, and decided to
risk an open-air radio
transmission to Knothole. He had to warn them.
"Is it a deal, then?" Robotnik's less-than-amused voice
rumbled.
"Twelve hundred thousand gold coins for Knothole's
location?" Epos Nix rolled
his eyes. "It seems to me
that Knothole would be worth a lot more to you…"
"How
MUCH more?"
"When I sold you the location of the
Southern Freedom Fighters' encampment, you
were much more willing
to sacrifice what you had, Robotnik. You even let me use
your
treasured replicant factory at long last. I want to see some
similar transactions this time."
Robotnik had his arms
crossed. Epos Nix knew that he give anything, absolutely
anything,
to buy Knothole's location, and was taking full advantage of that.
Robotnik was
going to get shattered in the cross-bargaining.
"Like
what?" his metallic vocal cords growled.
Nix gave a little
smile. "How much is the Doomsday device worth to you?"
He
may as well have been committing blasphemy as far as Robotnik
was corcerned.
"NEVER!"
"Very well. I don't
desire your plaything, anyway." Nix sighed. "I can sense
my
time here on Mobius is short. I want only Mobian gold coins,
now."
On the other side of a forgotten surveillance camera, Snively
practically jumped
out of his chair. "My time here on Mobius
is short," he had said. He was an outsider.
Snively had seen
it in his manner the instant he had spied Epos Nix's form: this man
was
from Earth. His Earth!
Home.
"Find that man's
location," he ordered the computer.
Robotnik cracked a smile. Mobian gold coins in exchange for
Knothole… Epos
Nix would receive something absolutely
worthless, while he would receive something of
inestimable value…
what a delicious idea!
"Now, that sounds like an bargain,"
Robotnik said. "How much?"
"You're the major power
on Mobius, Julian," Nix jabbed, making a point of
using
Robotnik's old name. The obese man scowled darkly. "You
have more power than
anyone else on this planet. We're talking in
the millions, here."
"Impossible! Do you actually think
that I keep track of where all of
Mobotropolis's old treasuries
are?" Robotnik said. It was an art, that; telling a lie
where
technically he was only asking a question. He had kept track
of where all of
Mobotropolis's old banks were. "They're
absolutely worthless to me!"
Nix saw right through it.
"Twenty million gold coins. Nothing less for
Knothole's
location."
"Ten million," Robotnik
countered.
"Twenty."
"Fifteen!"
"Twenty."
"Seventeen!"
"Twenty."
Robotnik
sighed melodramatically. He knew full well that he had gotten the
better
end of the bargain… Knothole for coins. "Very
well, twenty million gold coins."
"Have your cargo
freighters drop it off in the usual place, Julian. I'll be
watching."
"The coins are already on their way,
Nix."
Nix glowered at him. "One false move, and you'll
never find Knothole, Robotnik."
Robotnik held up his hands
innocently. "Relax, Mr. Nix. I already learned my
lesson
earlier this week. I won't double-cross you again."
"Good."
As
the seconds ticked by, Robotnik found himself unable to contain his
grin. The
devilish smile burst out into his cheeks, spreading into
a quiet, rumbling laughter.
"Knothole mean that much to you?"
Nix asked dryly.
"Oh, yes, yes indeed." Robotnik
chortled. He hissed out more laughter.
He saw the hedgehog and his
two-tailed companion laying on the ground, dead
and bloody. He saw
the Princess, standing before him, roboticized. He saw his
SWATbots
burn the remaining Freedom Fighters to the ground…
"Tell
me one thing, won't you, Epos?" Robotnik asked, suddenly
feeling
marvelous.
Nix shrugged. "Depends on what it
is."
"How did you do it? How did you find the Freedom
Fighters?"
"I did what you never could. I actually
thought about it."
Robotnik's grin disappeared for a
moment.
"It was the replicant, you fool, the replicant you
agreed to build for me in
exchange for the location of the
Southern Freedom Fighters. Didn't you even wonder why
I asked for
it as payment in the first place?"
Robotnik waved his hand
dismissively. "Of course I know it was the replicant.
But
I've tried that before. It never works; they always figure out that
the replicant isn't
real."
"I know that would happen
with this replicant, too. So I programmed it to die
once they had
brought it inside Knothole. It was the long-lost lover of one of the
other
Freedom Fighters, too, one of their leaders, and nobody
would ever doubt her word."
"Delicious," Robotnik
licked his lips.
"From there, it was a simple matter to use a
tracker inside the replicant to
triangulate Knothole's position."
Snively watched the conversation unfold with growing concern. He
had long since
found the location of Epos Nix's little tent out in
the Great Forest; Robotnik had left the
coordinates sitting in one
of his files.
Now the only question was how deep his betrayal of
his uncle would go.
Minutes ago, he had sent an order to the
Doomsday tower to power up Test Pod
#2. The Doomsday pod was now
moving somewhere above the Great Forest, making a
beeline for Epos
Nix's camp. It answered only to Snively, now; not even uncle
Julian
could override the thing.
He was still inside Robotnik's
systems: the computer thought that Snively was
Robotnik. He had
full access to every one of Robotnik's files, every one of his
machines.
He could cut off the communication with Nix at a
moment's notice.
Snively felt himself tremble. He hadn't set out
to do any of this when he had first
hacked into Robotnik's files
only minutes ago. He had just been conspiring against his
uncle,
in his own little way, nothing more. But now it was too late; he was
set to betray
Robotnik, betray whatever future he had in
Robotropolis, betray everything for a single
shot at getting back
to home.
Snively had a creeping feeling that today was the day he
was going to die..
"I can see your barges landing now,
Julian," Epos Nix was saying to Robotnik.
"Very good."
He snickered. "I see that finding the coins wasn't as difficult
as you
professed."
Robotnik glowered. "You have the
coins. Now give me Knothole!"
Bookshire gasped, frantically punching buttons. There was nothing
he could do.
He couldn't cut the transmission, couldn't interrupt,
couldn't do anything that would stop
Epos Nix from handing
Knothole's location over to Robotnik.
Snively pouted.
"I'll wait until your airships leave,
thank you," Epos Nix snapped back.
Snively had, as he saw it,
two choices. This was one of the few terminals in
Robotropolis
capable of interfering with the communications grid. He could let
his
bastard uncle have Knothole and all its inhabitants easily.
In
the background, Snively heard the whine of the airships' ion
thrusters. They
were lifting off.
But what would letting
Robotnik have Knothole serve? Despite Snively's hatred
for that
damnable hedgehog, he couldn't care less about any of the other
inhabitants. The
only person in Robotropolis who did care about
them was Robotnik himself; and he
wanted nothing less senseless
then their complete annihilation.
Nix nodded in satisfaction as
the airships disappeared beyond the canopy of the
Great
Forest.
Snively decided that it really didn't matter a damn to him
what happened to
Knothole, just so long as he got home. Why not
let the fat bastard be happy? Let him kill
Knothole. It might
distract him from Snively's backstabbing.
Epos Nix grinned. Ivo
Robotnik smiled wider, massive square teeth gleaming in
the light.
Nix cleared his throat. "You ready for this, Robotnik?
Knothole's coordinates
are as follows: degrees to the north
longitude, twenty-seven-"
Snively's hand punched down on the
"cut-off" button. Epos Nix disappeared from
view,
replaced by a "TRANSMISSION INTERFERENCE" error
message.
Snively shrugged. The Freedom Fighters irritated his
uncle. That by itself was a
plus. And besides… Snively
decided that if he were to die today, he wanted someone left
behind
capable of destroying his fat uncle.
Robotnik's cry of outrage
echoed throughout the castle. Snively snickered.
"Ol' Epos Nix sold you guys your radar equipment, huh?"
Sonic asked,
skeptically.
He, Sally, and Apollo were standing
out in the graveyard meadow. Sally's eyes
kept drifting to her
father's symbolic gravestone.
"I didn't know he was this
popular around Mobius," Apollo said. "He sold his
little
trinkets to Knothole, too?"
Sally nodded. "He's
the one who sold us the AK-47 and Uzi."
Apollo's brow shot
up. "He definitely didn't have any equipment like that when
he
traveled through our camp."
Sally blew empty air out
through her lips, and looked skyward. Unlike the day of
Cat's
burial, the sky was clear blue most of the way to the horizon. It was
beautiful out; as
a kid, this was the kind of weather that Sally
lived for. Yet, despite the picturesque
climate, Sally felt an
underlying tension crackling through the air, almost like
electricity. It
was intangible, and none of the others seemed to
feel it. Yet, it made her feel nervous and
fidgety, like she was
in a video game that had at last reached its final act.
"This
is quite a coincidence," Sally said, mostly to herself. "Epos
Nix appears in
your camp, practically forces radar equipment on
you. Only weeks later, the your lives are
saved by it."
Sonic's
arms were akimbo. "I think its time we had a little chat with
our
Overlander buddy, don't you, Sal?"
Sally felt her head
shake imperceptibly. "I don't know, Sonic… let's not
forget
how much Nix has done for us. He sold us the bullet weapons
we need. We couldn't have
gotten through Doomsday without
them."
"Like I said before, Sal," Sonic prodded, "I
just don't trust the guy."
Antoine charged into the meadow,
almost tripping himself as he tried to skid to a
stop just before
Sally. "I'm afraid it is getting much worse, my Prinzess,"
he panted.
"Bookshire has been a-calling us on ze radio
transmitter. 'E keeps babbling something
about Epoz Nixes and
Robotnik. It is sounding very bad."
"Oh my gosh!"
This is it; somehow, Sally had known something like this would
happen
today. The air virtually cracked with tension ready to be released.
"I have to talk
to him!"
Sonic let the beginnings of
a grin slip onto his features. "Told 'ya, so, Sal."
He
grabbed Sally, and a blue and brown blur sped off towards
Knothole.
Apollo looked at Antoine, and then at the rapidly
disappearing hedgehog.
"Well, now what?" Apollo
asked.
"Well, I am not to be knowing about you, but I, for
one, am staying right 'ere!"
Antoine declared. "I do not
care what zey say. Zere is something going to happen today,
something
big, I can feel it."
"So you're just going to stay here,
then? Stay out of the action? Out of the way?"
Apollo burst
out, incredulous.
"Zat is ze plan, yes. Ze Prinzess and ze
hedgehog will take care of any troubles, be
certain of zat."
"I
guess I'm used to giving orders, and doing things like being in the
battle. I'm
out of here!" Apollo said. He grunted.
"Go
on, zen! Be a feul! But know zat ze hedgehog will beat you to eet,
and
probably make fun of you while doing so."
Apollo
didn't charge forward.
Antoine raised a triumphant eyebrow. "Ah,
I am glad you are coming to my
senses, n'est pas? Eet is bad to
place yourself at risk with stupid…" Antoine turned,
and
trailed off.
Apollo was on the ground, unmoving, blood
puddled around a black wound in his
skull. He groaned, trying one
last time to get up, but fell limp at last.
Cat was standing over
him, dead eyes boring straight into Antoine. His shallow
grave now
looked like an empty hole. Someone had crawled out of it.
Some of
Apollo's blood had spattered onto Cat's left arm and fist, which
the
walking cadaver still held clenched. It swung limply at his
side like a club.
Antoine couldn't even find the courage to
scream. He only managed to barely
duck the first blow Cat sent his
way. The second connected with Antoine's skull.
The corpse stood
over Antoine's motionless form. Then his dead gaze fell to the
Great
Forest, and in the direction that he knew led to Epos Nix's
camp.
Thought fragment: PRIORITY ONE: DEFEND EPOS NIX.
Moving
with speed that should have been impossible to such a fragile body,
Cat's
replicant charged into the trees.
"No, no, Bookshire, that can't be right!"
"Princess,"
came the static-crackled reply, "I saw him with my own eyes.
Nix
came this close to giving Knothole's position away."
"But,
Cat? A replicant?"
"Yes, Princess! I've seen those
records. A replicant controlled by Nix. He used
to lure us into
taking it back to Knothole, so Nix could track its location."
Sonic
eyes burned with righteous anger. "I told 'ya so, Sal!" he
repeated. "Nix's a
double-crosser! A cheat!"
Sally's
eyes softened. "Where's Lupe, Bookshire?"
"She, uh,
she seems to have disappeared. I can't find her anywhere."
"When
did this happen?"
"When we discovered that Cat was a
replicant. She looked angry."
Sally sighed. "Are you
sure that it was Nix, Booky?"
"Princess, I've got
photo-identification. There's no way that it could not
be
Nix."
"Hell's bells!" Sonic grabbed the
radio, and nearly threw it to the ground. "Sally,
do you
realize what this means? We've been played for fools all
along."
Bunnie's eyes widened. "Cat, the Southern
Freedom Fighters, the Uzis… it's all
just some kinda
bizarre game!"
"And the grand prize is us," Sonic
added angrily.
"Sounds worse than Robotnik!" Rotor
chimed in.
"I knew we should've never paid him,"
Geoffrey St. John grumbled. "Doesn't ever
bother any of you
how I'm always right?"
"Can it, stinky!" Sonic
jabbed.
"C'mere and say that, pincushion," Geoff
challenged.
"Never mind you," Sonic said. "I'm
gonna go out and teach Epos Nix a lesson.
Sal, you with me?"
"Of
course."
"Ah'm coming, too," Bunnie said.
"Grab
on, then! Time's short!" Sally and Bunnie each grabbed one of
his arms. A
blue streak tore through Knothole, leaving nothing but
footprints and wind behind it, and
they were gone.
"Sonic!" Sally shouted, struggling to be heard above the
wind whipping past the
hedgehog. "We have to turn around! We
need to arm ourselves."
"Not with any of Nix's Uzis, we
won't."
"We don't know what kind of hidden surprises Nix
has at his camp!"
"That's why I'm hoping to catch him by
surprise." He tossed a quick glance back
at Sally. "Besides,
when you're fast enough to dodge bullets, who needs
weapons?"
"Remember six days ago, Sonic? When we first
met Nix? He said his weapon's
bullets could move faster than
you!"
"Well, we'll just see about that." As if to
prove his point, Sonic began moving
even faster.
Sonic arrived inside Nix's camp even before the sonic boom
shock-wave hit, giving
anybody there absolutely no warning that he
was coming. Dizzy from the ride, Sally and
Bunnie hopped
off.
Sonic threw aside the flap of Epos Nix's tent. "Gotcha!"
he shouted triumphantly.
Then he scratched his head, and threw the
tent flap all the way back. There was no one
inside.
"Aw,
nuts," he cursed disparagingly.
The campsite was devoid of
life. Other than a still-smoking campfire and an
overabundance of
wooden crates in the tent, there was no other sign of recent
human
habitation.
"Where else could 'e be?" Bunnie
wondered aloud.
Sally sighed. "Well, we'll have to start
searching the brush and the trees."
Sonic tossed his hands
into the air. "Great… now we'll never find him."
Picking
her way through the underbrush, Sally checked the dirt closely for
any sign
of the human. "Be on the lookout for footprints,
especially," she said. Except for the
snapping of twigs and
dried leaves, the clearing was silent for the next few minutes.
"He's
not here, Sal!" Sonic shouted finally. Whatever little patience
he possessed
had been worn to its breaking point. "He's not
in the campsite, he's not anywhere around
it, and he's picked up
whatever clues he left behind of his leaving. No footprints,
no
nothing." His arms went akimbo again. "Somebody
tipped him off."
"I know, I know. He's gotten away,"
she grimaced. "But I don't think anyone
tipped him off."
"Oh,
yeah? How'd he know to be gone, and when to leave no trail?"
"No,
Sonic. No one at Knothole is a traitor. I refuse to believe
it."
"Whoa, whoa, I never said anyone at Knothole! I
just said that someone tipped
him off that we were coming."
"Then
who?"
Bunnie burst in. "Sally, behind you!"
"I'm
afraid the tipster was me, Princess," a scratchy, horribly
familiar voice said
from behind Sally. She gasped, and
ducked.
Something swung through the air just above her head.
Something large, heavy,
and above all, fast.
Sally rolled
forward just in time to avoid the second strike. She landed on her
rear,
looking face up into "Cat's" impossibly dead eyes.
His body was just as twisted and
deformed as it had been when he
had been dragged into Bookshire's infirmary. The
broken arm and
leg moved an grace that should've been altogether impossible. Sally
saw
that Cat was using the broken arm as a club, and that club was
coming down towards her
head. She couldn't move out of the way in
time.
Bunnie's metallic leg kicked out, and struck Cat on the side
of the face. His
balance was disrupted; he looked for a moment
like he would fall. When he turned his
head back towards Sally,
she could see that Bunnie's kick had torn off the top layer of
flesh,
reveling the dark metal skeletal structure that lay underneath. One
of Cat's eyes was
missing, leaving only a metal socket and a
glowing, red light.
Sonic revved up his legs and did several
complete circles around Cat, hoping to
confuse it as he had
Sally's replicant a year earlier. "Fight me, why don'cha, tin
head?"
he taunted.
Cat stuck out his arm and let Sonic's
momentum carry his face into it. Sonic fell
down, stunned.
"Predictable," the robot chided.
Bunnie's metal arm shot
out to land another strike on Cat's face. He took the blow
hard,
but this time used Bunnie's own strength against her. When his
shoulder flew
around in response to the impact, he held out his
right arm and clubbed the rabbit in the
side of the head. She
stumbled backwards.
Cat spoke again. "This is private
property, Freedom Fighters. You are no longer
welcome on Epos
Nix's land."
Sally had managed to scramble to her feet. Cat
turned towards her, and began
advancing. She knew that if she
survived this, his scarred, half-metal, half-false-flesh face
would
become the stuff of nightmares. He readied his left arm again.
A
burst of light tore through the clearing, and Cat collapsed in a
shower of sparks.
The powerful laser beam tore straight through
his chest. Smoke poured forth from the
replicant.
Sally let out
a breath she hadn't realized she was holding. She glanced upwards,
at
the direction the laser blast had come from, and felt her heart
stop beating.
The massive metal framework of the second Doomsday
Test Pod hovered impassively
overheard.
"Oh, no,"
Sonic breathed quickly. Sally's muscles were frozen. She could
only
look up into the test pod's downward-trained laser cannon.
So
this is what death looks like…
"You can relax, Freedom
Fighters," Snively's voice said from a speaker hidden
somewhere
in the Test Pod's skeleton. "Believe it or not, I'm not here to
kill you."
"I'll take not," Sonic said.
"Oh,
you're just a riot, aren't you, hedgehog? No - the only reason I'm
here is to
Epos Nix, and to find the Earth. Nix knows the way, I'm
sure of it."
"And we're supposed to believe you? Again?
Why?"
"Quite frankly, I really don't care whether or not
you believe me. I just won't
shoot you. Not yet, anyway."
Sniv's voice paused. "What's this? Aha - the Test Pod's
scanners
are reading a heat signature that matches the human species four
hundred meters
north - northeast. Nix…"
"I bet
we can beat'cha there, Snidely," Sonic taunted.
"Hmmmmm.
I bet you could, too. Just so long as you don't kill him, I don't
care."
The speaker clicked off, and the half-finished
Doomsday pod coasted over the Great
Forest.
The Test Pod, remote-piloted by Snively, actually arrived at the
same time as
Sonic and the other Freedom Fighters.
Epos Nix was
standing, along with several extremely large wooden boxes and
metal
cargo crates, on a circular gray-metal platform that had a surface
that gleamed like
freshly polished glass. He was keying in
commands to a small computer console that
rested just off of the
platform.
"Just stop right there, Nix!" Snively's voice
boomed. "Step away from the
computer!"
Epos Nix
looked up at the Doomsday pod and Freedom Fighters, grinning like
a
maniac. He did as he was ordered.
"You have more than a
couple questions to answer, Overlander," Sonic
spoke
angrily.
Nix ignored the hedgehog, and glanced up towards
the Doomsday pod. He
squinted against the midday sun. "I know
that voice. You're Robotnik's little lackey,
aren't you?"
Snively
growled. "Not for much longer. I said step away from the
console!"
Nix raised his hands, stepping back. "It was a
beautiful game, this time, wasn't it?"
he smiled cheerfully.
He leaned against one of the numerous metal crates in the
background.
"I just love sending the pawns off to do battle with each
other."
"Shut up!" Sniv yelled.
"I imagine
the good doctor is quite upset," Nix commented casually. "Is
that why
he sent you?"
Snively growled. It was an unusual
sound coming from a voice so high and nasal
as his. "Robotnik
didn't send me. I'm here of my own volition."
"Oh?"
"I
know where you're from. The Earth."
Nix chuckled. "Ah,
yes. What about it?"
"I want you to take me there."
Nix
began to giggle. "What, are you homesick?"
Snively
didn't answer.
The grin fell off of Nix's face suddenly. "Okay,
I think we still have time to
bargain. What's it worth to
you?"
"You're charging a price?" Snively asked, as
if surprised.
"But of course. What're you willing to
pay."
Back in Robotropolis, Snively considered his options.
He opened his mouth, ready
to say anything, promise anything, and
grovel, when he remembered his situation.
Showing weakness hadn't
exactly gotten him anywhere in the corridors of the Doomsday
tower
days ago. He wasn't about to make the same mistake again.
After
all, Snively told himself, he had all the advantages here.
The
Test Pod's laser cannon retrained itself on Nix's forehead. "It's
worth your
life."
Nix was unimpressed. He shook his head.
"Sorry, doesn't sound like a good deal
to me. I don't give
free rides."
Snively sputtered.
"Hey, Snidely, let us
take a question, huh?" Sonic shouted up to the oblong
metal
skeleton.
Epos Nix looked down, and arched his eyebrows
as if noticing the three Freedom
Fighters for the very first time.
"Ah, Princess, I believe you still owe me fifteen
thousand
coins. AK-47s aren't cheap, after all."
Sonic
blinked. "Wha-? Wait! We're here to arrest you!"
"Why,
Freedom Fighters, I thought we had a deal. Gold for bullet weapons.
Are
you voiding it?" Epos Nix exclaimed, his tone serious but
the corners of his lips working
their way into just a sliver of a
smile.
The hedgehog recovered. "Go to hell!"
"Tut
tut, Princess. I thought I could trust you enough to give you my
weapons in
advance. I guess I was wrong."
"Consider
it partial payment for what you tried to pull on us with Cat,"
Sonic shot
back.
"The replicant was simply a part of
another transaction. This is how the business
world works, and it
certainly doesn't give you the right to reneg on our contract."
"You
son of bitch!" Sonic revved up his legs, preparing to enter a
spin. Sally held
him back.
"Why?" she shouted. "Why
do all this?"
Nix arched an eyebrow. "You still haven't
figured it out?"
"No. Why stage battle after battle just
for those worthless coins? What's the
point?"
"These
coins may be worthless here, Princess," Nix said, patting a
crate full of
coins, "but not on my home world. Back there, I
can melt all these down and make a very
nice profit on the gold.
It's surprisingly rare there. I'll completely smash the
world's
commodity market."
"The Earth…"
Snively huffed, finally able to speak again. "Tell me how to
get
there. Now!"
Epos Nix stared at the Test Pod
defiantly. "No."
"Make a profit?" Sally
repeated, more inquisitive than anything.
Nix chuckled. "Yes,
that's basically my goal in life. I have goods and information
to
sell, and buyers to take them. So what if I play both sides of a war
against each other
to make a buck? That's what any good arms
dealer will do."
"But… why? That's it? That's all
there is to your life?"
"Princess, my world has a very
complex economic system that creates people like
me. You Mobians
should really try it sometime. It's called 'capitalism'."
Suddenly,
as if Nix had detected something that the others had yet to see,
Nix's
face darkened, and he moved back towards the computer
console.
"Hey!" Snively barked. "I said step
away!"
Epos Nix ignored him, and keyed in a series of
buttons. The surface of the entire
twenty-meter disk began to glow
with a hideous white energy.
"Step away! Get down!"
Snively screamed.
Nix, his body partially transparent, glanced
sharply across the clearing at
something that had just burst into
it… Sally whirled around.
Lupe charged into the clearing,
shoving a banana clip into the bottom socket of an
AK-47 assault
rifle. Her eyes burned with hatred, a malevolence so intense that
Sally
wished she would never see anything like it ever
again.
Before Sally could shout anything, Lupe's AK-47 was in full
automatic mode, and
unloading dozens of bullets into Epos Nix's
body. Sally could've sworn she actually saw
the bullets launch
from the weapon, soar through the air towards Epos Nix….
…and
go through Epos Nix, as if his body were a ghost, or hologram. Nix
just
stood there in the warm glow of metal pad underneath him,
form fading away entirely.
Sally knew that he just wasn't there
anymore…
Epos Nix, the cargo crates, and the disk itself
winked out of existence unscathed
and untouched by any of Lupe's
bullets. Nix had activated the teleportation sequence just
in time
to avoid them.
Lupe fell to the ground, sobbing. It was the first
time Sally had ever seen an
emotional display that powerful from
the Wolf Pack leader. The butt of the AK-47 hit the
ground next to
her, and it fell limply to the soil.
"NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"
Snively's voice cried desperately. "He CAN'T be
gone! IT
can't be gone!" Even the metal pad that had apparently
teleported Nix away
from Mobius had disappeared, gone where the
arms dealer was.
"Yo, Sal, let's get out of here!"
"I
was ready to DO anything for…" Snively's voice broke off,
and he realized that
he was stuck here, on Mobius, for good, now.
He was stuck with Robotnik. "I'll KILL
you all!" he
screamed.
"What? But I thought you said that…"
"It's
YOUR fault!" Snively shrieked. He sounded like he was on the
verge of
tears. "YOUR fault he got away! Kill you ALL!"
The
laser cannon was leveled downward. Sally looked upwards, stunned.
No
place to run. No place to hide.
A white streak shot skyward
from the tent that had been Epos Nix's, and slammed
into Test Pod
#2. A blinding light hit Sally's eye, and it was all she could do to
keep from
being blinded. A shock wave of compressed air slammed
her to the ground.
The Test Pod, although only an incomplete
framework skeleton, was strong.
When the fire faded, it was still
afloat. Sparks flew forth from the interior of the metal
rods.
The
Test Pod wobbled for a moment, and more fire spewed forth from the
center
of it. The force of the explosion had tilted it to the
side, and the engines hadn't corrected
for the angle. They
couldn't correct for the angle, Sally saw. She looked up into
the
pod's exposed core and saw that several of the pod's thrusters
had been melted to slag.
The pod shook for one last moment, and
the remaining engines whined in protest,
sounding like a last,
tortured scream. The Doomsday Pod slid almost smoothly to the
ground
only fifty meters away. It smashed itself to pieces on the ground,
shooting flames
skyward.
Before she could breathe, she heard
Epos Nix's voice. It was a recording. "So I
lied. I did have
some missile weapons with me after all. That was a missile on a
time-
delay launch, Freedom Fighters."
Face ashen, Sonic
grabbed Sally, Bunnie, and Lupe's prone form and ran without
saying
another word.
Nix's recorded voice chuckled, echoing through the
trees behind him. "I guess
that one was for free."
Day Eight
He lay, he floated, in a state of eternal nothingness, insensate,
just barely on the
border of achieving conscious thought. What
scraps of his mind worked now wished to
remain this way, forever,
yet they knew that even the attempt to fight the inevitable
would
only bring about its more assured arrival.
'Am I finally
dead?' Snively's pseudo-conscious mind thought wonderingly. A
bitter
taste of hope lingered.
Feeling gradually returned to his body,
like the tainted caress of a long repressed
memory… it
summoned images of his uncle to the disorganized morass of his wits.
God,
if Julian had found out…
Snively cracked an eyelid
open. The unblinking red glare of a medical bot's gaze
bored into
sensitive pupils. He blinked it off, and forced his head to turn
away. Pain
rippled down his spine.
The bot's gaze followed him,
still shining its stare straight into his face. A groan
escaped
Snively's lips, and he shut his eyes again. He tried to focus on
unconsciousness,
returning to that state of death-like bliss once
more, until he saw, still burned into his
retina underneath his
eyelids, the bright white glare of the teleportation pad that had
taken
Epos Nix off this planet.
After losing contact with the
second Test Pod, Snively had rushed several hover
units and Spy
Orbs over to Epos Nix's campsite. Everything was gone: Nix, the pad
that
had taken him, the Freedom Fighters; the only thing that
remained was a desolate and
useless tent. Just to add insult to
injury, a tag had still been visible on the tent's side. It
had
read "Manufactured in the USA." The last thing Nix had left
on the planet.
Snively had worked frantically to hide his
treachery from his uncle. Judging by the
fact that he was still
alive, it had worked, too. Robotnik had known that someone had
hacked
into his personal files, and that same person had cut off his
communication with
Epos Nix at the last moment. What he didn't
know, though, was that it had been Snively
who had done that.
Snively's earlier gambit had worked: Robotnik thought that it
had
been the Freedom Fighters parked outside his castle who had
done all that. He had never
bothered to fully check his log
files.
What Robotnik did know, however, was that Doomsday Test Pod
#2 had been
destroyed, and that Snively was at fault. The last
thing Snively remembered had been
Robotnik's metal left arm
sweeping down towards his frail body.
Resisting the temptation to
roll over on the bed, Snively cracked his eye open, and
felt his
gaze meet the impassive stare of the medical bot. "How bad is
it?" he asked,
disgusted at how squeaky his voice sounded. It
hurt to breathe.
"Two fractured ribs, several strained
vertebrae," the medibot intoned. "Fractured
right arm.
Mild concussion and cranial contusion. Internal damage to digestive
organs."
"Which ones?"
"Intestinal and
kidney damage. Surgeries to correct the problems have been
been
conducted during the patient's length of
unconsciousness."
Snively moaned. He could feel the
after-effects of the bots' surgical procedures on
his stomach.
They never used enough anesthetic. God, it felt like a piece of ice
lodged in
his stomach cavity.
"Recovery time?"
"Another
two days observation has been recommended. However, you are to
be
released to your duties in three hours, by order of
Robotnik."
"Three hours?" Snively protested. "Does
he really think I'll be ready to return to
duty in three hours?
After what he did to me?"
"By order of Robotnik,"
the bot repeated.
Well, at least that meant that Robotnik still
had not caught on to his betrayal. A
smile curled up the corners
of Snively's mouth. If only Robotnik knew that if it hadn't
been
for Snively, he would have Knothole in the palm of his
fist…
Snively's eyelids fluttered shut. If his uncle had
entitled him to only three hours of
rest, he was determined to
make the most of it.
'Epos Nix may have gotten away', Snively
thought to himself as the dream state
returned, 'but now I know
that the Earth is still out there. I can get back home. I will
find
it. Not even Uncle Julian will stand in my way…'
Evening's twilight fist tightened around Knothole village. A
crackling fire roared
in the pit of the dining hall's fireplace,
spewing smoke out the chimney and into the
darkening night sky.
The day's last few rays of sunlight had disappeared beneath
the
canopy of the Great Forest over an hour ago, leaving the
dining hall bathed in firelight.
The artificial glow of the light
bulbs powered by Knothole's water wheel only managed to
accent the
illumination provided by the blaze.
A day earlier, Lupe, together
with Canus and a freshly recovered Reynard, had
journeyed back to
the wolves' camp out in the Great Unknown. Apollo had been moved
from
Bookshire's infirmary to the Southern Freedom Fighter's new
encampment. The
other Freedom Fighters had insisted that their
doctor was more aptly trained in treating
concussions, and
Bookshire had reluctantly agreed. Antoine was still recovering
from
Cat's blow to his skull, resting in Bookshire's tent.
Even
Geoffrey St. John was gone, having left to continue working with the
Rebel
Underground. With Antoine and Geoff, two of Knothole's
noisiest inhabitants,
temporarily out of the way, Sonic was
overjoyed to find that Knothole was… quiet
tonight.
Sonic
and Sally were alone in the dining room, nestled together in one of
the larger
chairs facing the fireplace. Sally's arm was draped
across his shoulder; occasionally, her
index finger would idly
twirl one of the quills on his back.
'Mondo sappy,' he thought to
himself. He knew that he should be repulsed by a
moment like this.
He knew that he would promptly die of embarrassment if anybody
else
came walking through the dining room's door. Yet… he
couldn't break away from this.
Sonic was almost mortified to find
himself enjoying something he had otherwise never
derived any
pleasure from: a slow moment.
Still, the hedgehog genes itched to
break the silence. "I told ya' so, Sal," he said at
last.
"Am I always right, or what?"
"No. But it helps
that I have no idea what you're talking about."
"Epos
Nix. I was right. We shouldn't have trusted the guy."
"You
were right, Sonic," Sally relented.
He cupped a hand to his
ear. "I'm sorry, I didn't quite catch that."
Sally
sighed, an elaborate gesture of mock defeat. "You were right,
Sonic."
"And don't forget it."
Sally flashed a
knowing smile, a smile that said to Sonic that she knew more than
he
did, and that he had just set himself up to be the target of a joke.
He hated that smile.
"Of course, that would mean that
Geoffrey was right, too. More right than you, actually."
"Huh?"
"If
had known eight days ago what I know now, I would've listened to
Geoff
when he suggested that we just not pay Nix at all."
"Uh,
yeah, same here, I guess. I wouldn't have met him at all."
"But
then you actually argued against Geoff," Sally pointed out. "You
insisted
that we pay him."
"What? Sal, stop it,
you're givin' me another headache!"
"Face it, Sonic.
Geoff was right… and you were wrong."
"Guh? No!
But we didn't know then what we know now!"
Sally nodded.
"Exactly. I think that, given the choices and the information
we
had, we all made the correct decisions. So neither of us were
either right or wrong.
Right?"
Sonic stared at her
blankly. "But I was right!"
"Careful, Sonic.
Remember that if you admit that you were right, than Geoffrey
was
more correct in the end then you were."
Sonic's eyes were
horrified. "Sal, that's cheating! I was right!"
Sally
gave him a light slap to the chest. "Just be quiet, you big
dope," she chided
mockingly.
Sonic, eyes still swimming
with confusion, decided that it would be safest to obey.
Sally
gave a triumphant giggle, and let silence fall across the dining
room. Staring
into the fireplace for several minutes, her eyes
grew more serious.
"We still don't know all the details,"
she said, breaking the silence again. "About
Nix, I mean.
Where did he come from? How did he fool us so well?"
Sonic
rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "I'm still not quite sure what his
motives
were."
Sally frowned. "Well, as soon as
Antoine finishes his recovery, I'm going to send
Bookshire out to
Robotropolis again. We need to more information… if Robotnik
can
take advantage of us like that again, he might actually get
his hands on Knothole." She
shuddered, thinking about
Bookshire's report on Nix's last transmission to Robotropolis.
How
close he'd come.
"Good thinkin', Sal."
"We do
know a little, though. Nicole and I have projected that Nix was the
one
who sold the location of the Southern Freedom Fighters'
encampment to Robotnik."
"I had that much figured out,
you know. The guy's just plain evil."
"That much I'm not
sure of."
"What?" Sonic shot up. "Sal, you've
got to be kidding me! He came close to
handing Knothole's location
to Robuttnik!"
Sally sighed. "I know, I know… it
would be too easy to believe that he's but our
sworn enemy. But…
Nix saved our lives back at his tent, too. He destroyed
Snively's
Doomsday pod, and for the life of me I don't know
why."
Sonic frowned.
"Even though Nix betrayed
Apollo's group, he was also the one who sold them the
radar
equipment they needed to detect Robotnik's armada. They would never
have gotten
the early warning without it. Nix knew that Robotnik
would be coming, because he gave
away their location, but he saved
their lives anyway."
"That's because the bastard just
wanted to make a profit," Sonic said darkly.
"Don't
forget what he tried to pull with Cat. He deliberately messed with
our emotions,
and use them and Lupe as a wedge to find
Knothole."
Sally's head came down to rest on her knees. "I
haven't forgotten that, Sonic."
She sighed. "Nix must
have heard Lupe talking about Cat while we were still training at
his
camp. But Cat's replicant, presumably operating under Nix's orders,
was also the one
who warned us about Robotnik's attack on the
Southern Freedom Fighters. Nix didn't
need to do that, but he did
anyway. Why?"
Sonic glowered. "So are you saying that if
Nix shows up again, we thank him for
all his kind work?"
"Of
course not!"
The fireplace crackled and spat sparks for
several silent moments.
"I just… don't know. Not about
Nix, not about the weapons… nothing…"
Sally
relented.
"Well, I do know one thing, Sal,"
Sonic said, staring into the roaring fire. The
dancing light
formed an odd reflection in his eyes. Sally would have said that
they
flickered with anger. "Epos Nix isn't gone. He's
probably back at that 'Earth' place
Snively was whining about, but
I know that he'll be back. He has the means to do it, and
he has
Knothole's coordinates, still up for sale. If we see him again, I
won't hesitate to
kill him."
Sally looked at him, and
reluctantly agreed with Sonic. The Freedom Fighters had
sworn that
they would never allow anything to endanger Knothole, and each of
them was
willing to either die or kill to ensure its safety.
The
fire provided the only commentary for the next several moments,
filling the
dining hall with a blissful silence.
Until the
unmistakable thunderclap roar of an Uzi, firing at full
automatic,
shattered the peace. The rat-a-tat-tat echoed through
the distant forest canopy. Sally shot
straight up in her seat.
Before she knew it, she and Sonic had burst out of the dining
hall.
They weren't alone: doors all across the village were thrown
open, and the curious and
frightful were peering out into the
night. Bunnie and Bookshire stood out in the open
"What the
hoo-hah is that?" Bunnie asked, raising her voice in panic. The
Uzi was
still firing in the distance.
Sonic's head swiveled
around, listening carefully to the weapons fire. "It's
coming
from the power ring pool!"
The Uzi finally fell
silent. Sally had counted the number of shots; whoever was
firing
had unloaded an entire clip.
Sonic and Sally ran breathlessly
towards the pond, stopping only when they
reached the shore.
Nobody was immediately visible, but Sally heard heavy breathing in
the
nearby foliage, and burst through the bushes. She stopped dead
in her tracks.
Tails was standing alone in between the trees, legs
trembling. His arms were
hugged around himself. An Uzi lay on the
ground at his feet.
"Oh my gosh…"
Tails looked
up, startled. His eyes were brimming with tears. "Aunt Sally!
I
didn't mean…" his gaze fell back to the Uzi. "It
was an accident!"
Sonic arrived behind Sally. "Oh, man!"
He instantly figured out what happened.
"I just wanted to
look at it!" Tails burst out. "Then it went off… I
couldn't stop
it!"
"Are you okay?" Sonic asked.
Tails nodded soberly. "I thought I told you to stay
away from
these things!"
"I know… I just wanted to see how
they worked…" Tails trailed off, biting his lip.
He
was on the verge of sobbing. Sally's face had changed. Instead of an
expression of
concern and surprise, she now wore a mask of
resolute determination. "Aunt S-Sally,
please don't be
mad…"
Sally took the fox cub by the hand. The touch
alone seemed to reassure him.
"We'll have to talk about this
later, Tails. Right now, I'm just glad that you're not hurt."
Tails
sniffled, and rubbed his free hand against his nose.
"Sonic,
can you take Tails back to his hut? There's something I have to do
right
now."
Sonic nodded. "Of course. C'mon, big guy.
Let's go." The two disappeared into
the foliage, heading in
Knothole's direction.
Sally waited until they were far out of
earshot, then she swore. She spoke words
that Tails wouldn't have
understood, and that would've made Sonic leap backwards in
surprise.
She reached down, and picked up the Uzi.
Her gaze ran down the
weapon's smooth barrel, eyeing it carefully like it were a
snake
feigning death. Moments later, she found herself back in Knothole,
knuckles
rapping lightly on the door to Rotor's hut.
The door
slid open, and the walrus peered out. He saw Sally. "Is
everything all
right?"
"I need two things, Rotor.
Think you can help me out?"
"Well, sure. Got nothing
better to do. What?"
"I need you to scour the village
and the storage areas, and collect every last bullet
weapon, and
every clip of ammunition for either the Uzis or the AK-47s."
"No
problem. What for?"
"That's the second thing…"
An
hour later, all of Knothole's AK-47s and Uzis lay in a small hole dug
into the
soil on the fringes of Knothole village. The huts that
comprised the town were just barely
visible in the evening's
moonlight.
Sally added another layer of wood planks to the pile.
The stack had been put
together in the quickest, most slipshod
manner, but it would suit her purposes.
"Are you sure you
want to do this, Princess?" Rotor asked solemnly.
"Yes,"
she answered simply. The mask of determination hadn't left her face
since
encountering Tails. She added one last stick of wood onto
the pile. "That should do it."
Rotor looked longingly at
the stack of timber. The metal and plastic pieces of
Nix's bullet
weapons occasionally broke the surface of the pile. "But…
these can be
useful tools, Sally. Just think about how much damage
they did to Robotnik while we had
them."
"Just think
about how much damage they've done, and could do, to us. To
the
entire planet."
"I know Epos Nix just isn't right
in the head. But just because we got these
weapons from him
doesn't mean that we have to destroy them," Rotor protested
quietly.
Sally's expression never softened. "We have to. But
not because of Nix."
"Then…" Rotor stopped.
He could see that arguing would be pointless. He
issued a
reluctant sigh.
"Light the fire, Rotor."
Minutes
later, Sally stood at a distance, watching the flames of the
impromptu
bonfire lick skywards. The plastic pieces of the Uzis
and AK-47s had already melted, and
the fire was beginning to work
its charms on the metal components. Occasionally, the fire
would
tremble or burst outward, becoming a different color momentarily.
Sally only
stared at the bits of green fire that occasionally
fought against the prominent orange-hued
blaze. The chemicals in
the ammunition especially had an odd way of burning…
As the
fire wore on, Sally stopped seeing the bright flares of exploding
chemicals
and the white-hot glow of melting metal. She stood
shock-still, as though in a dream-
state, and saw her planet's
future, free of Nix's bullet weapons. Memories of the past
week's
dreams and nightmares vanished… it was as if some dark burden
had been lifted
from Mobius itself, cleansed in the flames that
flickered throughout the night.
Day Fifteen
"ACCESS TO THAT SYSTEM IS RESTRICTED," the stolen hover
craft's
monitor blinked.
"Activate cryptosmasher
software," Bookshire ordered. Lupe leaned over his
shoulder,
eyes intent on the ticking numbers and computer jargon flashing
past.
"ACCESS GRANTED."
Bookshire's hover unit
rested, unnoticed, on a ledge outside one of the numerous
security
towers on the outskirts of Robotropolis. A cable led from the hover
unit to a
small network port on the side of the docking ledge. It
was early morning; a thick smog
choked the streets and skies over
the city.
In the hazy distance, the unfinished Doomsday tower
loomed over the dark city.
Ever since Robotnik had lost his chance
at finding Knothole, construction on the terrible
machine had been
ordered to move faster, and security was tighter than ever
before.
Specks just visible in the haze marked the numerous new
hover unit patrols that
continually circled it. That meant that
security had been lightened in other areas to
provide the extra
SWATbot forces that Robotnik demanded, and Bookshire and Lupe
were
here to take full advantage of that.
"Tap into the record
files of SWATbot factory #2. Give me the current status of
worker
bot #4325041." Bookshire said.
"WORKER BOT #4325041 IS
CURRENTLY OPERATING ASSEMBLY-LINE
POSITION 32B ON SWATBOT FACTORY
#2."
Lupe frowned, and addressed the computer. "Are
there any cameras nearby?"
"YES."
"Show us
one of them. Make sure it displays the worker bot."
The
monitor blinked again, and displayed a video image. There was no
sound.
For several long, sad moments, the hover unit was
silent.
Bookshire nodded despondently. "Yeah. That's Cat, all
right."
"I know," Lupe said mournfully.
On the
monitor a roboticized cougar stood next to one of the conveyer
belts,
surrounded by his other robot brethren. Dull red eyes
stared straight ahead. His hands
moved mindlessly across the metal
parts before him in a rigid pattern. He was assembling
bolts that
would later fit into the leg of a SWATbot.
"That's been his
world," Bookshire frowned, "for over a year. He's been
trapped
here, like that, ever since we lost him a year ago."
Lupe
stared forlornly at the glowing crimson eyes.
"I've…
I've pieced together how Epos Nix did it," Bookshire continued.
"He
probably had Robotnik made a replicant of Cat in exchange
for something else, probably
in exchange for something like the
coordinates of the Southern Freedom Fighters. That
was the only
day Cat's been away from his post in this factory: when Robotnik
brought
him to the replicant facility, so he could scan in his
form and make a robotic copy."
Lupe was silent. Her face was
again unreadable.
"So we were all along…
unfortunately. Robotnik did roboticize Cat the day he
caught him,
over a year ago. All because of a stupid robot in the air
ducts…"
Bookshire, too, fell silent. Cat continued
moving his metal paws in the rhythm of
machine assembly, oblivious
to his distant observers.
Lupe finally spoke.
"One day,
Cat… one day, we'll finish the deroboticizer. You'll be the
first one I
come for, I swear it…" her fingers brushed
across the computer monitor. She ignored the
occasional snap of
static electricity that attacked her fur.
To Bookshire, a year ago
it had all seemed too easy. Cat had just been one of
many fallen
fighters, seemingly doomed to eternal metallic slavery. He had shared
the fate
of countless others. A year ago, Bookshire had mourned
the loss of one of Knothole's
own, but he hadn't really felt it.
He realized that somewhere, deep in his consciousness,
he had
thought of Cat only as a bit player, a character who existed in a
story for the sole
purpose of being roboticized at the end. He had
never given it much more thought.
Cat had been more than that,
though. Lupe's next words struck him as being a
more appropriate
title than anything he had ever remembered Cat as while Knothole
had
still been mourning his passing.