Adam Christopher - The Age Atomic
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- Название:The Age Atomic
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They were in Grand Central, back on the main concourse. It looked the same, although there were features not present in Carson’s version — a big, long kiosk not quite in the center of the space, and signs with arrows. Grand Central in New York City was clearly in full use.
The middle of the space seemed to be sectioned off by police tape reaching right to the wide sweeping stairs that rose up on either side of the concourse. Beyond the tape more cops corralled people — lots of people, in hats and coats, holding newspapers and briefcases and umbrellas; people talking to each other, talking to cops who shook their heads, people craning to look and see what the commotion was; men and woman and children holding hands.
Then Rad closed his eyes and let himself hang between the cops, the sensory overload threatening to pummel him into unconsciousness again.
He could guess what had happened. He and Jennifer had popped into existence right in the middle of the concourse, right in the middle of all the people who were now crowding around the police line.
That would have been quite a surprise for the good people of Manhattan.
“Hey, hey,” said a voice. Rad opened his eyes and found a scowling policeman clicking his fingers in his face. Rad flinched, each snap like being hit on the back of the head with a rubber mallet.
The officer backed away, and one of his colleagues leaned in for a pow-wow.
“Are they drunk?”
“Or worse.”
“Call said they’d just appeared out of thin air.”
“Call also said my mother is the Queen of England. Come on.”
Rad opened his eyes. The police reapplied their grip, and he was on his feet.
“And her.”
Rad struggled to stay alert. He watched as more cops tiptoed towards Jennifer, each of them with one hand on his gun. After shaking her gingerly, satisfied that she wasn’t going to leap up and knife them, they holstered their weapons and rolled her over.
“ Jesus H Christ !” said the first officer. The second just shook his head, and put his hands on his hips. Then he shook his head again and waved over the scowling cop.
“What the hell?”
The scowling cop reached for Jennifer, but then Jennifer moved. In one quick motion she was on her feet, and she spun around, the long split tail of her winter coat spiraling out around her like a fancy ball gown. She turned, and looked left and right and all around, her golden metal face bright in the lights of Grand Central, her gloved hands out on each side, fingers splayed, ready for a fight.
The cops were fast too, forming a circle, a dozen guns pointed at her, a dozen voices commanding her to stand still, to give up, to lie down, to get down, to not move lady, to freeze right there. The circle moved, expanding outwards, the cops circling, not sure what they were dealing with.
Then Jennifer seemed to see Rad and she stopped turning and moved towards him, causing another round of shouting. The cops holding Rad up dragged him back a step, and then someone took the initiative and tackled Jennifer from behind. She fell with a cry, her metal face connecting with the hard floor with a surprisingly loud and bright sound, and then a cop put his knee in the small of her back and she was handcuffed and Rad passed out.
When Rad woke again he felt better, although his throat was as dry as sandpaper and his nostrils were filled with the scent of old urine and damp concrete. The surface below him was still hard but Rad could feel slats underneath the naked skin of his head. He was on a narrow wooden bench in a small room.
He swung himself over the edge, his head pounding but bearable, mostly. The buzzing behind his eyeballs flared with the sudden movement but quickly reduced to a constant pressure rather than a panic-inducing pain.
Rad looked around. He was in a cell, and he was on his own.
“Rad?”
Rad jerked around at the voice. There was a grill high in the wall behind him. He stood on the bench, which creaked beneath his weight, and looked through.
“Gah!” Rad pulled back and nearly fell off the bench, and then he gripped the edge of the window with his fingers and pulled himself back up. Jennifer’s golden face was six inches from his behind four thick grey metal bars.
“You’re OK,” she said, and there was relief in her voice even if her artificial face was unable to show emotion.
“We’re in New York,” said Rad.
“I noticed.”
Jennifer’s mask tilted a little, quizzical. “ Are you feeling OK?”
“Apart from a sore head and a little difficulty breathing, just fine and dandy, thanks. But last I remember that damn fool Carson was shooting at me with the honking big ray gun of yours.”
Jennifer chuckled. “‘Ray gun.’ I like it.”
Rad waved his hand. “Whatever. You’re holding something back on that thing. The only time I saw you use it was when you shot at that silver robot, the one that called itself Elektro. Blew half of it away, as I recall.”
Jennifer shook her head. “Only because I missed. I borrowed the gun from the Empire State Building when everything went crazy.”
“Borrowed?” said Rad.
“Borrowed.”
“Go on,” said Rad.
“It’s the same kind of technology used by Nimrod’s Department here in New York to send agents across the Fissure, but while out in the field. Only modified. Improved.”
Rad frowned. “To be used as a weapon?”
“Kinda,” said Jennifer. “It sends the target through the Fissure, but not necessarily to New York.”
“Where else is there?”
“Oh, nowhere in particular. That’s the point.”
“Ah,” said Rad as the penny dropped. “Neat. And I assume Carson made his own adjustment when he fixed it, to make sure it sent us here and not into the hereafter.”
“Worked, didn’t it?”
Rad rubbed the back of his neck. The effort of talking was bringing his headache back.
“Yeah, worked all right. Don’t suppose you have an aspirin? How do you feel?”
Jennifer shrugged, and stepped back a little on her own bench. “Never better. I was out for the count, but I feel like I could take on an army right now.”
Rad frowned. He wondered what the King of 125th Street — the real king, her own brother, masquerading as the King’s robotic servant, the Corsair — had done to her that made her immune to the effects of being in an incompatible universe. He decided not to go there.
“Must be the mask,” he said.
Jennifer nodded. “Must be.” Then she turned quickly to face the door, and said in a low whisper: “Someone’s coming.”
Rad turned towards his own door.
“I don’t hear-”
There was a heavy clank as his cell door was unlocked, and then it swung open on big hinges, oiled and silent. Two uniformed police stood in the corridor outside. They glanced at Rad standing on the bench, then up at the grill that connected the two cells. Then one of them scowled — it might have been the bad-tempered one from Grand Central, Rad couldn’t be sure — and entered the cell.
“Time to talk, pal,” he said, lifting his hand to reveal a set of cuffs.
Rad sighed. He hopped off the bed, holding out his wrists.
“Take me to your leader,” he said, but the cop didn’t get the joke.
“What kind of a name,” asked the plainclothes cop, “is ‘Rad’, anyway?”
Rad sighed and drummed his fingers on the table. The interrogation was going nowhere and fast, for the both of them.
The cop took a drag on his cigarette and then squinted down at the paper on the table like he was changing a child’s diaper. Periodically his eyes flicked up to Rad’s, the expression unchanging. Another cop, also in a suit but without a cigarette, sat next to the first and didn’t take his eyes off Rad.
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