Byte
Me
By
Pauline B. Jones
Prologue
Overhead,
tiny pinpoints of light gave depth to the moonless night sky, while thirty
stories down, miniature streetlights made a path for the occasional car to
follow. The silence was so deep, Phoebe Mentel heard her own breath whispering
in and out of her lungs. She leaned on the parapet and studied the tower
across from her and her companion, taking the moment to find her focus and
quiet her mind.
"You
ready?" he asked. She turned as he dropped his bundle of equipment at her
feet and knelt to extract the rocket launcher. He was dressed to steal in
deepest black. Only his eyes gleamed out of the dark, eyes far too blue to be
true.
Lucky for her, she didn't need true. She needed there.
"I
was born ready." She spoke softly, but her voice, lightly laced with her
mother's Southern charm, sounded loud in her ears. Also dressed to blend with
the night, she'd covered her chin length hair with a black stocking cap and
smeared her face with blacking until only her brown eyes were visible.
His
smile came fast and white, cutting into his dark silhouette like a lost
Cheshire cat before fading back into the night. He readied the launcher, then
used the parapet to steady his arms as he sighted in on the shadowy outline of
the tower opposite.
A
pop. A hiss. A double strand of rope snaked across the gap between the two
buildings in a gleaming, silver arc. A muffled clunk found its way back
to their ears.
He
tugged on the rope until the grappling hook resisted. He tested it for give.
There was none. He leaned back, using his full weight to tug again. It still
held. He secured their end with brisk, practiced economy, then bent to check
his climbing harness. When he’d shouldered his pack and was securely
anchored to the rope, he looked at her.
Phoebe
adjusted her earpiece. "You receiving?"
He
nodded. "You?"
"Soft
and clear."
"Catch
you on the flip side." He gave her a cheeky salute and vaulted over the
parapet into space. The double rope sagged but held as he disappeared into the
night. After a time the tension on the rope eased.
"It's
a go." His voice in her ear confirmed what her eyes saw. Her turn to step
up and do or die.
In
a perfect mimicry of his actions, Phoebe took her place at the parapet. A
confident vault, her body kept angled against a gravity more imagined than
felt, then the slide into darkness. Moving slowly at first, she quickly picked
up speed. The side of the building formed out of shadow. She curled her legs
and thrust out with her feet, using the resulting bounce to swing up and hook
the edge of the roof. Her partner, programmed to be gallant, reached down and
pulled her up beside him.
Phoebe
shed her pack and knelt by the grill over the building’s airshaft and
quickly removed it, while he got out their equipment, all of it the latest in
high-tech gadgetry. When she'd exposed the alarm wires bypassed them, they
roped up again and started down the shaft, following a route laid out in her
head. It was a gift, a talent, an instinct that was as much a part of her
physiology as her eyes and hair and what she'd heard was her father's nose. If
there was a way to get to something, a path to follow, she could find it.
Deep
in the building's bowels, cutting-edge technology opened the wall they needed
to access as easy as a whore spread her legs, giving them the prize they
sought. They lost two minutes when a guard broke routine, but made up the time
on the trip back to their starting point. Phoebe released the rope and drew it
in with a sigh of relief.
"I
think that was our best time yet," her companion said, the English accent
giving the words more importance than they deserved.
Phoebe
frowned. "If we could shave off another sixty seconds¾“
The
muffled shrill of her telephone, followed by the harsh whine of two computers
attempting communication, cut across her words with a warning that her virtual
reality game was about to be invaded.
Phoebe
looked around, wondering where, from which direction, the invasion would come,
but when Phagan spoke, his voice, disembodied and synthesized, came at her
from the star studded night "sky."
"Playing
with Steele again, Pathphinder?"
"Phagan."
Phoebe touched a button on her headset, deleting the virtual Remington Steele
she'd used as her partner-in-crime. She crossed virtual arms. "Coming
down? Or are we playing God tonight?"
It
was his favorite role, in virtual or real reality.
The
darkness to her right rippled, and a figure stepped out from behind a
ventilation stack. On Phagan's cue, not Phoebe's, the moon rose to light his
entrance as Deputy US Marshal Samuel Gerrard from “The Fugitive.”
She
grinned inside her headset. Trust him to crash her B&E game with a lawman.
The boy had always had a dark and wicked sense of humor.
"My
enemies, and some of my friends, say I can only play Lucifer," he
drawled, his voice only slightly less disembodied now that he was
"earthbound.”
"I'll
pretend to disagree if you've cast me decently this time." Phoebe trusted
Phagan with her life but not her dignity. Never with her dignity.
He
walked a circle around her, his purloined visage showing a wicked appreciation
for the female form. "I'm feeling benign tonight, with a taste for Meg
Ryan."
"I
look like Meg Ryan?"
He
arched "Sam's" brows. "Do you mind?"
"Why
should I? She's cute and her thighs are smaller than mine."
Phagan
laughed, throwing "Sam's" head back. The faint, artificial light was
kind to the craggy face and dark tumble of stolen hair. Sam seemed amazingly
real—as long as Phagan kept his mouth shut. When he didn't, he sounded like
the android from hell. Phagan never used his own voice. Like God, he preferred
a mouthpiece.
She'd
been playing his games for seven years and still couldn't put an actual face
or a voice to him. Sometimes, in her real world, she'd study the faces around
her, wondering if one of them belonged to him. There were things he’d said,
things he did that told her he'd seen her more than once.
"You
do it?" he asked, nodding in the direction of the building across the
way.
"Despite
you wanting the timing tighter than Meg Ryan's thighs."
"You
needed a challenge. The last one was too easy."
"Not
my fault," Phoebe said. "You're the wizard of virtual world."
He
straddled a ventilation pipe, sat and flashed his stolen grin.
She
smiled back, but absently. She had to tell him, but she didn't want to. She
wanted to keep the past at bay, but she couldn't. It nicked her present like
paper cutting skin, welling scarlet from the breach, burning like acid.
"What?"
Instead
of speaking, Phoebe produced a couple of virtual cigars, handing one to him
and "lighting" hers. Virtual smoke was no threat to her lungs and it
gave her something to do with her hands. A wise precaution, since even in
virtual world Phagan could read them like a Gypsy.
With
a purloined brow cocked, he took his and lit up, blowing smoke out in a stream
before asking, "We celebrating something?"
Phoebe
looked at Phagan but "Sam's" cool dark stare deflected her ability
to read him, even as she felt his X-ray scrutiny rake her from top to toe. She
blew a series of perfect smoke circles, with a little help from the computer
program, before saying as flatly as she could, "I found him."
Phagan
stood up, took a drag of the cigar, then rolled the brown cylinder between his
fingers as he considered her words. "You sure?"
Phoebe
lowered her cigar, her hands a work of rock-steady art.
"I'm sure."
Phagan
turned his virtual high beams on her, waiting for more. With a vaguely
frustrated sigh, she gave it to him. "He's had some work done on his
face. But I'd know his eyes if he'd turned himself into a woman."
"Sam"
looked thoughtful. He sent some smoke rings out to ambush hers, before asking
as if it didn't matter, "Where?"
She
looked at him, feeling a brief moment of real amusement take the edge off her
angst. "Denver."
Phagan
had Sam do surprise. "No shit? How'd we miss him?"
"He's
been playing Howard Hughes recluse."
Phagan
crushed out the cigar. "So how'd you spot him?"
"Apparently
he's decided to come out. Caught his mug in the newspaper. It seems--"
Phoebe couldn't stop the quiver in her hands from playing out in front of
Phagan, "he's almost got himself engaged to a prominent widow."
"Sam's"
gaze got sharper. "Kids?"
"Two."
Phoebe licked her dry lips inside the VR helmet. "Girls."
He
nodded slowly. "Right. I'll contact Ollie. Make sure he's ready to move
when you are."
"I'm
ready." Inside the headset where he couldn't see, Phoebe's mouth curved
in a smile seared by her acid past. "He made me ready."
Byte Me is available in ebook and trade paperback from www.hardshell.com and in hardcover from Five Star.
Ó 2000 Pauline Baird Jones All rights reserved.