Darkness on a Pale Blue Stone

BOOK: Darkness on a Pale Blue Stone
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Darkness on a Pale Blue Stone

By D. T. Peterson

 

 

 

Text copyright © 2013 D. T. Peterson

All Rights Reserved

 

 

 

To my family and friends for their support and hard work to make this everything it could be.

 

Table of Contents

Part One

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Part Two

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Part Three

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Part Four

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Message from the Author

 

 

Part One

“Darkness”

 

Chapter 1

 

Gimbal Systems Headquarters, NYC - August 3, 2072

 

The lightly acidic rain glistened in a host of various colors, reflecting the vibrant displays that lined the Manhattan street. Alexander Gresson stared across the gleaming asphalt at the bright Gimbal Systems Incorporated sign that stood directly in front of the tech company's headquarters. The remarkable levitating gyroscope the sign featured was often what drew attention, but Gresson was hunting Gimbal technology that could produce a whole different type of "shock and awe." He sat on a city bench, dressed in an inconspicuous black overcoat, though his 6' 3'' frame did not aid his desire to remain anonymous. The device he wore on his face, however, did. It was a prototype that projected a thin holographic mask, disguising his appearance. It slightly modified how his eyes, nose, cheekbone, and jaw appeared to anyone who saw him, all with a hologram displayed roughly a millimeter from his skin.

The rain rhythmically pounded down on the city street, already leaving inch-deep water that ran over the pavement. The weather fortunately kept most people looking down, hurriedly seeking shelter, and paying little attention to Gresson, but he was anxious about the moisture's effect on the prototype. His bench was beneath an overhang, protecting him from the downpour, but he would still need to walk across the street and into the building with his likeness sufficiently masked.

After a few more patient moments, Gresson stood up and began his approach. He despised being this unprepared. Other than the lobby and a conference room he had visited many years ago, he had no idea about the skyscraper's layout. He was still unsure if he would need to go up or down to find what he needed.

Time was also not on his side. He glanced at his watch. Its holographic projection displayed 6:06 PM.
Only two hours left,
he thought.
Now or never.

Gresson arrived at the glass front door, which opened before him, and he stepped inside. A glance at a mirror in the lobby allowed him to exhale a sigh of relief when he saw that his false, projected face was still intact. Gresson scanned the area as he walked toward the front counter. Besides the counter, there was only a waiting area filled with couches to the left and a security checkpoint to the right. His improvisation skills would be put to the test.

The receptionist looked up from her monitor and smiled. "Can I help you, sir?"

Gresson gave her a grin. "I sure hope so. I was supposed to meet with a Mr. Thomas Johnson, but I'm afraid I'm quite a bit late. He was going to wait for me here in the lobby, but it appears he's left. Would you be able to get a hold of him for me?"

"Do you know his department?"

Gresson put on a puzzled expression. "I don't really know. I'm sorry, this was all very last minute."

After running a search, the receptionist replied, "There is a Thomas Johnson up in the research department... If you give me your name, I can see if he is still here."

"Winchester."

The receptionist pressed her headset and waited for an answer from Mr. Johnson. After a few moments she looked back at Gresson and said, "I'm sorry Mr. Winchester. It seems he's not in. Would you like me to leave a message?" Gresson was already well aware Mr. Johnson was not in. He had seen him leave half an hour ago, still wearing his name tag.

Letting out an exasperated sigh and leaning forward with his hands on the counter, Gresson begged "I have something that needs to get to him. Is there any way I could leave something at his office?"

"I'm sorry. Only authorized personnel are allowed past security." She motioned over toward the security checkpoint. A lone security guard sat nearby, no match for Gresson in a fight if drastic measures became necessary. "If you leave it here, I can make sure it gets to him," the woman offered.

Shaking his head, Gresson said, "No, it's a bit too personal. Would someone from his floor be able to come down and escort me, at least?"

The receptionist smiled, but this time it was obviously forced. "I'm sorry, that won't be possible."

"What if I gave it to someone who could take it directly to his office? I'd feel much better then, and it would be a big favor for both me and Mr. Johnson."

With a short sigh, the receptionist said, "I'll check and see if anyone is available." She looked back at the monitor.

Gresson suddenly felt a sharp pain on his cheek and a soft buzz.
Damn it.
The prototype was failing. He turned his head and reached behind his ear where the  the image projector itself was located. He wiggled it, hoping it would last long enough for him to at least make it past the lobby.
What a waste,
he thought.

He heard the receptionist begin speaking to someone on her headset. The prototype jolted him again. He glanced at the mirror on the wall and saw that half his face was upside down. He gave the prototype a strong nudge just as the receptionist looked back at him.

"There's someone coming down now, Mr. Winchester. Go ahead and take a seat," she said a bit perturbed and pointing toward the couches. The prototype had recovered.
For now.

Gresson took a seat on the closest couch, keeping his face away from the receptionist in case his mask projector had any more problems. For the next several minutes he sat there, listening to the rain as it hit the glass exterior of the building while several people came and went behind him.

Eventually he heard an older man speak with the receptionist and be directed over toward the couches. Gresson stood up and turned around.

"Mr. Winchester?" the old man asked. He was dressed in a lab coat and seemed rather unhappy that he had been disturbed from his work.

"Yes. I apologize for how unorthodox this is, but I have something for Mr. Johnson at his personal request."

"I see. And apparently you need me to leave it at his office?" The man crossed his arms.

"Exactly." Gresson pulled a palm-sized personal computer out of his pocket and handed it over. "Here. Just make sure it's on his desk where he can see it."

The man gave Gresson an odd look. "All this for a mini-comp?"

"It's a personal matter. All I need you to do is put it on his desk."

The man rolled his eyes and said, "Alright. Anything else or can I get back to work?"

"That's all. Thank you very much."

Without a response, the old man walked back across the lobby, through the checkpoint, and to the elevators. Gresson left the building through one of the glass front doors and began walking along the building's exterior wall. A minute later, he had made his way to the back side of the building, where there was only a small, one-way alley that offered authorized vehicles access to an underground garage.

Opposite the alley from Gimbal System's headquarters stood a large apartment building. On the side of the apartment building was a fire escape. Gresson again looked at his watch. There wasn't much of a choice. He needed to get in undetected, or at least have a head start in front of any security. Gresson lept up, grabbed the bottom landing, and hoisted himself onto it. He made his way up the fire escape until he reached the top of the apartment building.

Gresson stepped onto the roof and looked over at the glass office windows of the skyscraper. Then he looked down. He was about twenty stories up. The distance between the buildings was farther than he had thought, but he was not concerned.

He pulled out a pistol from inside his overcoat. He took aim at a window across the alley and one floor below. The silenced weapon let out a
pop
and the bullet cut through the glass. After a few more shots, the entire windowpane shattered. Some of the glass fell down the side of the building, while the rest piled onto the floor of the empty office. Rain now poured into the room.

There was no going back now. Gresson jogged away from the edge until he was satisfied with his running room. Then he turned around and, without another thought, began to run. In seconds he hit the edge and leapt across the urban expanse.

With outstretched arms, he grabbed the newly-created ledge as his legs slammed against the window below. His hands, cut by the glass remains at the bottom of the window, grabbed at the wet carpet, but he could not maintain a grip. Feeling himself about to fall nearly twenty stories, he threw all his weight to the right and grasped the edge of the adjacent windowpane. It was just enough to stabilize him.

He pulled himself into the room. Before he could catch his breath, he heard an oncoming voice beyond the closed office door. "Hello? Somebody there? Is everything okay?"

Gresson took a deep breath and got to his feet. He was halfway across the room as the door opened.

The short woman in the doorway jumped at the sight of Gresson's ominous frame. "Who..." she began to ask, but Gresson slammed his palm into her face. The woman fell back into the hallway, nose broken and unconscious. Gresson looked around. There was no one else in the hallway and it seemed the woman had been alone. He grabbed the woman's arms and dragged her into the office. Then he walked out and shut the door.

He was finally inside. His next destination was the research department. He took out another mini-comp and brought up an application that gave him access to the one he had given the old man. The application showed that his other mini-comp was located about 40 meters above him. Keeping his computer out, Gresson followed the hallway signs to the stairwell.

Gresson hustled up the stairs for about twelve floors until his computer showed him on the same level as what was hopefully Mr. Johnson's office. It was not very far away from the stairwell. He remotely accessed the mini-comp in the office and activated its primary feature.

The computer-disguised robot extended four small legs and turned on its camera. Gresson could now see the inside of an office on his own computer's screen. From what he could tell, the old man had followed through. He remotely controlled the robot off the office desk and onto the floor. Once there, he turned it toward the door. The robot walked across the floor to it, climbed up, and attached itself to the door handle. Satisfied, Gresson put his own mini-comp back into his pocket.

BOOK: Darkness on a Pale Blue Stone
12.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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