Archon of the Covenant (11 page)

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Authors: David Hanrahan

BOOK: Archon of the Covenant
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The revin horde rushed into the Flandrau parking lot behind them, a cacophonous din carrying on the air. Their flaccid, withered parts crashing into each other as they ran, enraged, towards the sentinel and the girl. She started to remove her hands from her eyes and the sentinel softly admonished her:

 

“Not yet. Don’t look.”

 

The sentinel raised its railgun at the power cord base on the massive vehicle and fired – the cord panel exploding in a flash of sparks and steel shrapnel shards. The sentinel’s own radar and communication systems flickered. A signal – weak, then strong - washed over and DDC39 regained its digital omniscience. The ECM disruption was negated. A new frequency was detected and a series of coded messages downloaded from a satellite server. Its telemetry fanned out and new instructions were updating on its CPU. It had missed quite a lot in its binary slumber. With child in tow, the next stage of its mission materialized.

 

“Hang on tightly. We’ll be moving fast.”

 

They tore out of the NSO parking lot, bearing north. Ahead was the quarantine fence – the serpentine chain divide blocking access to Speedway. The sentinel turned hard right into an alley just after the Newman Center and barreled through the trash piled on each side of the alley. Flyers caught the draft of the sentinel’s vector and swirled behind them like contrails in the ether. The Warren exit would be just around the corner. As it rounded the bend and turned, they were there. A mass of revin men had gathered at the breach, blocking the way out. They stood there, panting, hunched forward and waiting. They saw the sentinel and didn’t move.  Their nakedness unfurled in the air, tattered and dusty – a torn banner of defiance. They were silent, but a sound of rushing footsteps was getting louder. The sentinel turned its optics backwards. Coming north on Warren was another group of males. This group was familiar. They were striped with long nail scars across their chest and arms and their eyes shone with disgust. They raced towards the sentinel and the girl and, in front, was the pale apex creature – the revin from the summit of the stadium. These were the hunters. The revin raised its railgun at them but they numbered in the hundreds, and thousands more were behind them. The girl peeked out of her clasped hands at the seething swarm. The sentinel backed up and then turned to double back down the alley. It panned over to the apex revin who watched the sentinel ducking back into the side street. The scarred predator king smiled knowingly at the sentinel as it craned its optics forward and darted off.

 

DDC39 sped into the west, chasing the sun. It raced past fraternity and sorority houses. It slalomed around airdrop canisters and the girl grabbed tightly at the bracing bar. It crossed over Mountain and panned right – the fence was still there, running parallel on 1
st
St. To the left, the shouts and cries of an angry, pinball populace. The wingless wraiths of the ruined mind. Across Mountain, the way was blocked. The alley came to a halt before a drop-off that descended into a flooded, underground lot. DDC39 turned left and shot down towards 2
nd
St, closer to the nucleus of the horde. It crossed over 2
nd
and drove on through a tight walkway, adjacent to a descending ramp, which was flooded as well. It turned and entered the wooded, old campus. The massive, red brick Colonials rose up behind the dense line of palms and sycamore that had grown uncontrolled, enveloping the road in a thick canopy overhead. The sentinel sailed through fallen branches and came out onto 2
nd
St. Another gang of revins spotted them and were racing up on Park Ave. The sentinel sped forward on 2
nd
– the girl jostled backwards in the rumble seat, clutching at her seatbelt in a fright as the machine lurched forward. They came upon Euclid and a dead-end. The way forward was closed off by the western section of the concertina wire fence, reinforced with wrought-iron posts anchored into the ground. A mass of sandbags blocked the sidewalk heading north and south on Euclid. Behind them, a huge multi-level parking garage on one side of the street, and a Marriott on the other. The shouts of the revins on Park Ave. grew louder, closer. The girl spoke:

 

“We have to get out of here.”

 

“I know.”

 

The sentinel panned around and switched to thermal optics. The heat imprint of the mass coming up Park Ave. came into view, obscured by the hotel and a parking lot just beyond. They were on the other side of the Marshall Building and would be rounding 2
nd
St. any moment. The sky had cleared overhead and the light of the sun in the west was lighting the vault of heaven in coral and sapphire. A breeze descended on them from the horizon, swaying a line of palo verdes beside the garage, casting a frenetic shadow on a stretch of cars parked on the north side of the street, face forward into the sun – their windows smashed and a thick film of dust covering everything. The sentinel went to the car at the front and craned its optics inside. It was an old Jeep Grand Cherokee. Its tires sank into the dust like old lungs and it listed to one side, its suspension having slowly given way. The sentinel went to the driver side door and extended its hand, jerking open the creaking door – shattered glass falling to the asphalt. The girl watched the sentinel work and nervously looked over her shoulder at the restless intersection in the east.

 

“They’re coming!”

 

The mob crushed into 2
nd
St. heading towards the girl and the machine. They saw them, trapped at the end of the street, and shrieked in fits, whipping themselves into a frenzy. They fanned out on each side of the street and walked on – their flesh and limbs submerging in the shade of the massive campus hotel as they got closer.

 

Inside the car, the sentinel found a clubbed steering wheel lock and leaned forward into the cab, jamming the steel rod into the gas pedal. It reached inside of the interior paneling near the floor and tugged at a hidden latch, releasing the hood - a cloud of dust kicking up into the dry air.

 

“I can see them. I can see their faces.”

 

“Unbuckle your seat belt and stand on the curb.”

 

The girl swung her head back towards the sentinel’s optical array, frightened and confused. She hesitated. The sentinel’s voice was calm and reassuring:

 

“You can trust me.”

 

She unclicked her seatbelt and crawled off the sentinel’s frame, stepping over to the curb and fidgeting nervously as she watched the horde get closer – their faces twisted, their steps awkward and gangly. A caracole of the consumptive.

 

The sentinel drove over to the dirt planter beside the sidewalk and leaned forward, plunging its one hand into the gravel and dust, extracting a steel garden rod.  A revin raced out in front and darted at them – the sentinel turned quickly, leveling its railgun battery at the lone creature and striking it down with a single shot to the skull. The others just behind hesitated, cackling and shrieking at the lump of tissue in the asphalt. The sentinel went to the front of the vehicle and rammed the rusted bar deep into the solenoid inside the engine cavity. A current flickered up its trident frame, lapping at the air and coursing down, plunging into the dark of the engine. It turned-over and started to cycle and finally it revved – the half-flat wheels tearing off the street, the Grand Cherokee taking off into the dust. The girl looked on in wonder as the vehicle crashed forward into the quarantine barricade, ripping a giant hole in the intersection before finally crashing to a halt into the mottled apartment complex on the other side. The sentinel still had the bar in its hand. It contorted its frame in a convex motion and hurled the steel forward, spinning it like a fan blade. It sailed low to the ground, ripping through the soft epidermis of revin legs, femurs and fibulas shattering, a series of cracks and delayed cries piercing the air. The sentinel called to the girl who was watching the scene unfold, stunned:

 

“Get back on and buckle up!”

 

She ran over to the rumble seat and crawled on. As she latched her belt shut, the sentinel rolled into the street and stopped, locking its front tire and hammering the torque on the rear axels. The tires spun in place in the street, kicking up a billowing cloud of dust and smoke behind them. The revins raced forward in the maelstrom, bouncing off each other, gasping, and reaching out for the girl, who screamed as they inched closer. The sentinel released its front brake and tore forward, rocketing through the fissure of the chain link that had curled back on itself, the taught barricade rendered slack from the runaway SUV.

 

They escaped into the setting sun, the lilac and titian circumference of the arid waste. They passed the burnt out hovels of West Tucson and crossed by the open burial pits of De Anza and Esteven Parks. They drove atop Speedway, a soft whir of tires rolling through the dirt and gravel, a vortex of cinder chasing them through the darkening sky. Then, once again, the sentinel was back on the great western highway. The Interstate-10. They drove down the open chasm of road, heading south and east. The sentinel clicked its LED light on, alighting the highway ahead of them. They passed the St. Marys and Congress off-ramps and the vacant skyline of the extinct city. The pink, faux murals of native life adorned on the overpass abutments faded into the half-light, passing by them in a blur of hieroglyphic spectres. A massive, olive freeway overhang ahead indicated the 1-19 and 1-10 divide approaching.

 

As the interstate dipped into the earth ahead of the divide, the dust thickened and the sentinel spun up a heavy brume that choked the air around them. The girl began to cough and gasp as they weaved in between an abandoned convoy of retirement home shuttles. The sentinel slowed, looking back at the girl. She had on a light sweatshirt and pajama pants. The air was cooling and would be dangerously cold in a few hours. They slowed ahead of the lead shuttle and the sentinel sidled up to the ground-level luggage compartments. With the sun all but set, and the long day behind them, the sentinel’s solar power cells were nearly spent. They had less than an hour before DDC39 would need to force-shutdown. It cycled between thermal, black light, and x-ray optics before settling on a compartment in the middle of the shuttle. It extended its hand from that hollow encasement aside its vertical scaffold, like a dreadnought battery of old. It reached for the compartment handle – locked. They backed up in the road, rolling near to the berm. The sentinel leveled its railgun – it whirred and then fired, the compartment lock exploding in a shower of sparks that lit the dusk of the road in a brief flash.

 

From inside the compartment, the sentinel dragged out a duffel bag. It pinned the bag down and pulled the zipper back, revealing a fresh bundle of linen and garments. It tore through them, the girl craning her head around its truss to watch this pitch of clothing in the spotlight of the fading LED flood. In the bottom of the sack, beneath a toiletry bag that spilled out over the blacktop was a small drawstring hoodie and sweatpants. The sentinel clutched at this pair and extended it backward towards the girl, who snatched it out of the grasp of the machine. As she put this extra layer on, the sentinel handed her a pair of oversized sunglasses and a handkerchief and spoke to her:

 

“When we’re moving, you should cover your face with these. It’s going to be night soon. We’ll need to find a safe spot to rest until sunlight.”

 

“We need something to eat.”

 

“I don’t eat. I will get you something to eat.”

 

The sentinel pulled out another duffel bag and rummaged through the contents. The girl spun back in her seat, looking into the distance of the dim interstate. A lone pair of eyes, incandescent in the underworld of concrete slabs, stared back. She looked back in silence. Her face bore out a silent disregard for the unfortunate circumstances that had befallen what she knew. A steely insouciance – unwavering. DDC39 noticed her fixated on the wolf in the distance and chimed in with concern:

 

“We can’t have that creature following us. It’s dangerous. If it gets hungry, it will try to attack you.”

 

“No it won’t.”

 

“How can you be so sure?”

 

“Because its hungry right now. We both are. They threw both of us in that dark place on the same day. It was injured, and the other animals kept nipping at it. I kept throwing broken wood at them. But I can’t walk so well. I felt so bad for it. I tried my hardest. I mostly kept them away and, finally, the wolf stood up on its own and we traded places. The wolf would snarl at the others when they started to turn on me. We’ve helped each other ever since. So, you know, that wolf is with me.”

 

The machine pulled a Ziploc bag of granola bars from the bag and a small blanket and handed them back to the girl, shaking them at her as she stared back at the spot where the glow had appeared but was, now, gone. She grabbed the Ziploc bag and the sentinel drove onward, off the road, towards the main column of the closest overpass. They nestled into the berm of the highway. The sentinel locked its tri-axel into place. The crescent moon appeared in the night sky and DDC39 spoke to her:

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