Mandi watched Cade leave the room and wondered how such people came to
be. She'd met a few others somewhat like him since her arrival on Earth and her
involvement with the NIA. None of them had talked much and few had been as
smilingly sociable with her as Cade.
She paused by the door to help the
two men who were working to angle the long commo equipment trunk through the
narrow hallway to the corridor.
One guy grousingly asked, "How the hell
did they get it in here in the first place?"
Grasping the top strap in
her right hand, Mandi lifted it out of their hands and said, "I'll hold it. You
guide it."
After a moment of staring, the men steered the trunk through
the door frame and into the corridor, where Mandi put it down on end for a guy
with a two-wheeled dolly.
One of the guys marveled at the way the
leather-and-metal handgrip on top had been deformed by her grip and said he was
going to replace it just to have this one as a souvenir.
When John saw
Mandi at the door of 835, he excused himself from the two women who'd been
hostages and went to her, leading her a short distance away from everyone else.
"Mandi," John enthused, "I just wanted to say that I've never seen anything
like that in my life. It was amazing. I can't tell you how happy we are to have
you aboard."
"Thanks, John. Can you tell me why you wouldn't let me go in
there alone?"
Expecting her to simply accept his words, Mandi's question
appeared to take him somewhat aback, but he recovered and said, "No. I'm sorry,
but I can't."
"Can you at least tell me whether it was your idea or
someone else's?"
He shook his head. "No, Mandi. I'm sorry, but..." A
thought seemed to occur to him and he asked, "Where's Cade? He hasn't been
debriefed yet."
For some reason, it gave Mandi a twinge of pleasure to
say, "I believe he went to see about some dinner, John. Besides, what debriefing
is really necessary? You have it on tape."
John regarded her thoughtfully
for a moment.
As he was about to say something else, Mandi asked, "Was he
'debriefed' after what happened earlier today? From what I've heard, he just
filed a police report and left."
"You know about that, huh?"
"Yes," she said flatly. "Ringer told me why the car blew up. What's going on,
John? Why all the secrecy?"
Looking pained, John said, "Look, Mandi,
talking could cost me my job. Give me a break, okay?" After a short sigh, he
added, "Here's some good news. We think we may have all the copies of the
pictures sold to WNN. The risk at the moment is that someone who had a set may
have posted them on the internet. Nobody's admitted to that, but the only way to
know for sure is to wait and see."
Thumbing over her shoulder at room
835, Mandi asked, "What about the tape of what happened in there?"
In a
firm tone, John said, "It goes into an NIA vault. One copy goes to Washington.
That's it."
"Does Washington get copies of all your incident tapes?"
"Well, no, but this one's not exactly routine and I've been ordered to supply
a copy."
Altogether unenthused, Mandi muttered, "Uh, huh. Is there
anything else, John? I have to go do some things."
He shook his head and
said, "No, nothing else that I can think of. Thanks again, Mandi."
Nodding, she said, "You're welcome. See you later, John."
Heading back
past 835, Mandi refocused her vision and began looking inside the trunks, bags,
and boxes that were lined up for removal along the wall.
She saw the
outlines of all sorts of objects, electronic components, and weapons, but no
tapes. Glancing around slowly, she let her vision sweep the interiors of nearby
rooms from 835 to 831, but saw no videocassettes of any type.
Then she
realized that the large trunk was missing from the equipment lineup. Lifting
slightly from the floor, Mandi flew toward the elevator alcove, arriving just as
the doors opened for the two guys who'd taken the trunk on the dolly.
Landing and smiling as she approached, Mandi said, "Hi, guys. Need another hand
with it?"
One grinned at her as they stood the dolly upright in the
elevator and said, "No, ma'am. I think we've got it this time."
Mandi
boarded the elevator and pretended to examine the damage she'd done to the
handle as she scanned the trunk and chatted with the guys.
She saw three
cassettes in the trunk and used her heat vision to melt the fragile tape within
each cassette. They whoever 'they' happened to be would realize the damage
hadn't happened by accident, of course. The damaged tapes were Mandi's message
to them: "No pictures."
Would it really do any good? Or would her action
simply piss somebody off enough to leak the other pictures? Mandi sighed,
knowing that her exposure was inevitable, anyway, but she vowed to stave it off
as long as possible. Privacy was just too damned hard to come by.
There
wasn't really any way to pressure the authorities. She couldn't in good
conscience refuse to help in matters of life and death. On the other hand, she
could let them know that quite a number of their other hopes and plans involving
the cooperation of a superwoman would become null and void the moment any
pictures were found or even suspected to have leaked from any government
offices.
Mandi mentally studied her list of agency... 'acquaintances'.
That was the best that she could call them, really, even after two weeks of
working with them. Most of them were more than a little in awe of her and some
even seemed to fear her.
John Cooke, who was nominally in charge of this
NIA op, but seemed unable to let even his star players know who was really
running the show.
Alan Vosier, who reported to and took his orders from
John.
Karen Phillips, who liaisoned between John and someone else,
probably the nameless entity controlling the op.
Ed Cade, who called
himself semi-retired, appeared to work directly with John, and... And what? She
realized that she knew almost nothing else about him. Nothing at all.
Mandi suddenly also realized that Cade had so far seemed to come and go like a
cat, disdaining such formalities as 'debriefings', although he'd filed a police
report after the first incident of the day because he'd used his gun.
He
definitely hadn't seemed either in awe or afraid of her. Instead of asking her
dozens of questions about herself, he'd simply asked her to validate his own
conclusions.
Or had he? Yes. Once, at least; in asking whether her
language teacher had been human or machine. In all else, he'd simply stated his
conclusions about her, and they'd been right.
Furthermore, although she
and Cade hadn't discussed possibilities or been issued a plan of action, when
Cade had pounced on Marjeel, he'd done so with apparently no doubt at all that
she could and would deal with the other two terrorists.
How could he have
had such implicit faith in her?
Mandi couldn't really envision any of the
other agency people she'd met attempting much of anything without a thoroughly
pre-discussed plan that had been specifically approved by someone up the chain;
a plan that would cover all contingencies and especially peoples' asses after
any fuckups.
That line of thinking led her back to the question of why
she hadn't been allowed to go in alone. Those of consequence within the NIA knew
her capabilities from demonstrations of her speed and strength at White Sands on
two occasions.
The elevator doors opening at the second floor roused
Mandi from her contemplations. Two men and a woman stepped aboard and moved to
one side, then the doors closed and the elevator descended.
When the
doors opened again, Mandi nodded goodbye to the two men with the trunk and
strode out of the elevator at almost a march step, in keeping with her mood, but
had no particular destination in mind.
The lobby of the Rivage Hotel
seemed crowded with people in various costumes. Mandi asked a nearby woman in an
alien costume what was going on and was informed that preliminaries for the
first costume contest of the convention were about to be filmed for the local
six o'clock news.
Someone heralded the arrival of a camera crew and
equipment and shepherded them to one side of the doors to a ballroom, where they
began setting up their lights, reflectors, and other gear. Two hotel employees
wheeled a big-screen TV to the same area and plugged it in, then left.
Oh, great. If John's people had missed even one copy of the pictures or failed
to properly intimidate even one news hound, she could be in the middle of this
crowd when some talking head said, "This footage just arrived..." and everybody
saw her airlifting a taxi on that huge damned screen.
Would they do that
after being contacted by the NIA? Oh, hell, yes, they would, even if it meant
having someone 'anonymously' send the pics to several news outfits at once so
they could cover their asses later.
Mandi spun on her heel and again
at a march step, but this time with a destination in mind headed for the
walkway where she'd made her Atlanta debut.
Disdaining the revolving
door, she used the left side door in a manner that made the mechanism ring and
clatter and continued down the walkway with a glance at the spot where the
explosive taxi had been.
At the bottom of the ramp she had to wait for
the light at the corner to interrupt the flow of traffic. Looking around, Mandi
saw the faint remains of a stain on the nearby sidewalk and spotted glitterings
of overlooked shards of glass in the shrubbery by the wall. Glancing up, she saw
that the cafe's window had already been replaced.
When the crossing guard
stepped into the street and waved to people on the sidewalks, Mandi's march
continued against the flow of more costumed people on their way to the contest
preliminaries.
Across the street and up the steep steps she went; past
the pool and into the lower lobby of her own hotel, with little attention spent
on anything except getting past the oncoming herd of people and the crowd by the
escalators.
The group waiting for the elevators in the main lobby was
large, as always. Mandi cut left and headed for the stairs, instead, dodging
people who preferred the stairs as a short cut to the convention's hospitality
suite in 221, which was only a few steps from the stairwell.
Traffic on
the stairs thinned to nothing above the second floor and Mandi flew above the
steps until she reached the fourth floor.
Through the stairwell door and
down the corridor toward her room she went. A man in a suit one of Frank's
people glanced out of one of the rooms and recognized her with a nod and a
small salute. Mandi nodded back as she passed, but her stride remained constant
until she reached her door.
Once in her room, Mandi picked up the TV's
remote as she set her purse and key card on the bed, flicked the channel to WNN,
and noted the time on the screen bar.
Five-fifty-eight. Two minutes to
newstime. Mandi sat on the edge of the bed and watched the remnants of an item
about some event in Marseilles, France, that didn't seem particularly newsworthy
to her.
The cell phone in her purse chirped and she reached for it with
more than a trace of irritation. Someone had to choose just this moment to call
her...
Tapping it on, she said, "Angel here."
"Dragonfly here. You
sound a little tense, milady. Sounds as if we're watching the same channel."
Listening to the background sounds at his end, Mandi said, "Yes, we are. It
sounds as if you're in a bar, Dragonfly."
"Only because I am, ma'am. I
stopped in the lobby's pub to grab a burger platter. Had the bartender turn on
the news, in case the newsies have used the last couple of hours to figure a way
around the confiscations. Have you made any plans yet?"
"Plans?"
"Yeah. If they show the pictures, will you stay at the convention or leave?"
With a ladylike snort, Mandi said, "Leave, I'd think."
"Won't help,"
said Cade. "If I can make blowups, others can, too, and they'll circulate
nationwide. Worldwide. Did you see the 'Dawn' lookalike contest in the program
guide? If the pictures are shown, what would you say to a 'Mandi Steele
Lookalike Contest'? After something like that, you'd be just another pretty tree
in the forest while you're here."
After a moment of horrified silence,
Mandi asked, "You're actually serious, aren't you?"
Around a mouthful of
french fries, Cade said, "Yup. I know a guy who can set it up and they can build
it into one of the other costume contests. It can be the first of its kind."
"The what?!"
"The first ever 'Mandi Steele Lookalike Contest'. Who
knows? If you enter, you might even win. Think about it and call me back after
the news."
He disconnected and Mandi sat staring at the phone. Had Cade
lost his mind?