The Infected 1: Proxy (40 page)

Read The Infected 1: Proxy Online

Authors: P. S. Power

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: The Infected 1: Proxy
13.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She kissed him, a cameraman taking several pictures, so he smiled and held her hand for a second.

"If any of these turn out, send me a copy? I could use the proof that somewhere in the world women think I'm at least decent. We never got to really talk... are you... OK?" He knew he sounded hesitant, but the last time they met he hadn't exactly supported her position.

She smiled and put an arm around him, friendly but not sexual.

"Mr. Yi, I never got a chance to thank you. Things got tense for a while and, with one thing and another, then being played by Bridget Chambers... Well I'm sure you understand. Just... in the whole world there are only a handful of men that could go toe to toe with Prime, less than that who would do it on purpose, and you did it just to save me... That's humbling. If you ever need anything, let me know." She kissed him again on the cheek and walked off, toward Karen, who'd dressed in a nice, but plain, blue skirt and white blouse, with a red belt. Patriotic. Scott had kept to a plain gray suit that of course looked incredible on him. On the good side, with those two behind him he doubted that anyone had even noticed him out front before. Now if he could just blend into the room...

No alcohol was served, so Brian got a glass of punch, something that probably contained real juice and sparkling something or other, to judge from the little bubbles in it, and met a surly-looking older man at the bar, who did a double take when he saw who stood next to him. The man got a coffee with cream and artificial sweetener and turned to Brian before he could walk away.

"So, the man of the hour. Enjoying living the life of the rich and famous on the taxpayer's dollar?" His tone didn't sound friendly. Not at all. Well, not everyone was going to hug him and tell him good job, he knew. Life was never like that. Not his life at least.

Brian raised his shoulders and realized that, if this man were a reporter, that wouldn't work. He struggled for a moment and decided to just go with the truth rather than something flip or glib.

"It depends what you mean by life of the rich and famous. I mean, the government - which means the taxpayer - is spending a lot of money to get me trained. If that's what you mean, well, enjoying is... not exactly what I'm doing. Like last week, I got flown to a training exercise in a private jet. That can't be cheap, right? But then I had to eat bugs and pack my clothes with leaves and pine needles for warmth at night and survive without anything, not even a knife, just the clothes I wore in... That's where I left from when the thing with the senator happened and where I went back to."

The man didn't look happy with the answer and asked about what he did at the base, when he wasn't out camping. Brian laughed, wondering just how bad this guy would make him look in the news, and went on. No matter how bad it was, the guy had to make a living, right?

"I have a nice room, eight outfits - five of them sweats and t-shirts, three copies of what I'm wearing right now. I get two meals and exercise or train for at least nine hours a day, often more. A lot more if you include the firearms work, but that's not very physical. Um, more exercise, not meals, that part stays pretty constant. I've had some weight issues in the past and need to be fit, so try to not overeat now. The training is going up. In the mornings I've been walking or running, but I don't know how far. It varies, depending on how hurt I am..."

A female voice came from behind him.

"About twenty to thirty miles, Brian. At least on the days you can run. I've seen you walk nearly ten in conditions I wouldn't be out of medical." The woman speaking stared at the reporter. "We put him out in some of the harshest survival training in the world and it's a break for him, Richard. Even then he saved nearly fifteen people directly during that time, from the middle of nowhere. He's not one of us soft team one people." Brian thought hard seeing a woman he only vaguely recognized. The last time he'd seen her he'd been knocking her into a wall, hitting her with a convenient Prime, so he could run away from her and the rest of her team. The pretty violet costume lady.

The surly man suddenly lit up and took her hand warmly. For a second Brian thought the chubby fellow was going to kiss the back of it, but he merely bowed over it slightly.

"Georgia! I didn't think they were going to let the rest of you out here with this mob. Good to see you. So... Yi isn't one of your first squad? I'd thought... Well he's been out here enough and he does have some presence that polls well..."

The woman shook her head, lightly red-brown and bobbed, cute he realized, when she wasn't standing ominously in her superhero costume. He didn't have a clue what kind of powers she had at all, so how she would have kicked his butt when they'd last seen her escaped him. Maybe an area of effect thing? Tightly packed as she was, with her own group, would have stopped it from being used. She made a point of holding the man's thick hand, stroking the back of it gently. Neither of them showed any sign of wanting to let go.

"No, Brian is on team three. Where the most powerful operatives all are. The people we send when no one else can get something done. Or when they have to go alone, without back-up, sometimes against incredible odds. The taxpayers could be spending twenty-times what they do on them and still be getting their money's worth. You know about the Jackal, but did you know Brian also took out the Blood Brothers, all four of them. By himself. Just to protect one old man who's home they invaded. No one's been able to touch them for years. And the Compton River serial killer, you heard that he was killed trying to get his last victim? Seventy-two girls and women over twenty years. Gone now thanks to him." Her finger pointed at Brian meaningfully, touching him on the nose in a way which must have looked cute, because several nearby people laughed.

"In the last three years team one has taken on twenty-seven high powered Infected and brought them to justice. Team two does that in a year, easy. Brian's done that in the last two and a half months. Alone. And all his power does is get him there." The woman, Georgia, teared up. A real tear running down her cheek. She didn't wipe at it though.

"He's also spent more time in medical in that time than all of team one and two put together, been starved and beaten and almost died so many times that if you and I could split it up between us we'd snap, both of us, and no one in the whole world would blame us for it either... Rich and famous? I checked his purchases at the store and all he's gotten have been basic toiletries and two haircuts. Forty-three dollars worth of goods and services in all. He doesn't even own his clothing. Yes, he rode on a private jet. His team leader's, paid for by her parents, not the taxpayers... All that's even true, by the way Richard. I know you'll check it out." She dimpled and kissed the man on the cheek and then winked at Brian.

The whole thing had made him feel uncomfortable. Fighting, even when needed, didn't make you a good person. It was what you did to survive and help others live that made it important, but not a virtue. Besides, he had a lot to learn about it to even be halfway decent. Right now he knew that he still kind of sucked. That he'd gotten lucky helped, but that didn't mean he could slack off.

Two hours and six reporters later, the whole thing broke up. Brian asked Karen to come down to nine after dinner, trying to be cheery about the whole thing. She looked down and nodded, seeming shy suddenly. He could get with Marcia at dinner but had no clue how to get in touch with Jason. He found Christian in her office the first time he'd ever gone in, and asked her how that would be done. She chuckled at him and pointed toward the wall next to her.

"One door over, he's here." She smiled at him, her look less...disgusted with him than usual.

She gestured at him, indicating his whole body.

"You've been in... horrible pain and discomfort the whole time I've known you, Brian. Getting close to you at all has been like, well, like having your pain and the emotional stuff on top of my own... Wicked. OK, it's bizarre as all heck that you've got Karen's little sister in your head, but as long as she's being helpful... Well, you'd be surprised what some of the people around here actually have going on inside. And no, I won't tell everyone everything, I'll leave that to you, unless it becomes important. Then I'll do what's best for everyone concerned. Until then..." She waved her hand airily.

Brian hid his shock at first and even considered lying about Dharma - Becky - but realized that would be a waste of everyone's time. The girl appeared and Christian's eyes went wide.

"Wow, that's... Is it really you, Dharma? Are you her ghost?" The blond team leader looked so soft in her pink fuzzy sweater, fifties style skirt and pearls, but didn't back away from the potential ghost in fear. In fact she leaned forward, interested.

For her part, Becky just smiled and walked over to the woman, giving her a hug that they both seemed to feel. Brian didn't feel her. He felt a little jealous for a second.

"Don't know, Chris. I really don't. I doubt it. Probably a copy that Karen's power made somehow. But... I feel like me. Just more than I was. The inside of this guy's mind is... intense. We should chat sometime..." She looked at Brian meaningfully.

Taking the hint, he excused himself to go see Jason and ask if he'd meet with everyone after dinner. He didn't blink or ask about what, just nodded and asked where. Brian smiled and told him that they'd planned to meet at the round table outside his office door in the common room area.

So someplace easy to find.

The meeting went well and felt congenial and even happy to Brian. Everyone left a little before eight-thirty, leaving instructions for him to be asleep - or at least in bed - by nine. It reminded him of being twelve, ordered into bed without being tired and told it was for his own good. The only difference here was that Doctor Kern came and gave him a shot of something fifteen minutes before that, making him sleep hard, a dark, warm feeling with no particular discomfort for once.

He woke to a pounding on the door at six-twenty. He knew it was six-twenty because Karen stood on the other side of the door and told him. Loudly. Several times. She let him shave and brush his teeth, get on socks and shoes, and took him directly to the track on fourteen, sleep still in his eyes and feeling fuzzy-headed and like he wanted to crawl back into bed.

"I know. But you can't afford to hang out and lounge around like a big softy anymore..." she told him as they walked, not giving him a chance to speak first. He shrugged, remembering that this had been all part of the plan. Kind of his plan too. Mainly Marcia's, with some help from Jason, but he had asked... So his fault.

He learned two things that day, both shook him a little bit. More than a little really. The first he should have guessed, of course, all things considered. He wasn't in nearly the shape he'd thought he was.

They started with a two mile slow run to warm up, which felt fine to him, good even, but then Karen had him run sprints, as fast as he could for thirty seconds, gave him two minutes to recover, then had him do it again. They did this eight times. By the third one he spent his two minutes gasping and wheezing and by the sixth the only thing that kept him from getting sick violently was that he didn't have anything in his stomach. When they finished the eighth one he wanted to collapse and just lay on the ground for a while, catch his breath, and maybe reconsider that being drugged into a virtual coma thing. Instead he got a two minute break and had to run again, this time at a reasonable pace, for almost two hours at just under a speed that caused his stomach to cramp up. He did get to have water, but that got handed to him in measured doses, so he didn't have too much at any one time, in a small pink water bottle.

Then he'd apparently earned the right to switch to weight lifting, forty-five minutes of heavy weights followed by running, almost literally, down to fifteen for the next part of the day. Karen stayed and watched this part, but the actual instruction came from a slightly-built man named Carl who had him work on a strange moving climbing wall. The whole thing rotated vertically, like a treadmill on end, and stood about fifteen feet high. The hand holds were just projections that moved out of the wall at regular intervals, each about the size of a grapefruit. At first.

After about ten minutes, just as he started getting the hang of things, the wall sped up, Carl calling out instructions and hints. The red and blue projections popping out as the belt like wall came down at him, instead of being out the whole time. He started feeling his shoulders and legs burn by twenty minutes.

Carl apparently didn't understand that he wasn't one of the more physically oriented people at the base, because he made the whole thing go faster twice more, forcing Brian to scramble as he panted, trying not to fall off the wall. He called things out, not sounding mean, but his voice definitely having a serious edge to it.

"That's kind of pathetic, Brian... I expect a lot more out of you, understand? You have to be ready for anything, all the time..." Carl, muscular, thin, and pleasant sounding, turned the machine up another notch, his gray climbing clothes looking worn, tight, shiny pants and a loose white shirt with no sleeves, shifted around as he stared at the wall. After a while, Brian thought he might be done when the guy called out that he looked better.

Instead the projections changed size. Some were suddenly a lot bigger, about the size of a bowling ball, and about as round, others about the size of slightly rounded ends of candy bars in varying shapes. The speed didn't let off, but he had to work twice as hard to not fall off. Brian scrambled and shifted, nearly losing it time after time, Carl yelling at him when he wasn't groaning. It wasn't boot-camp-like screaming, just suggestions, but the man clearly didn't sound happy with his performance.

Other books

Rook by Cameron, Sharon
Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr
The Best Laid Plans by Amy Vastine
Knight for a Day by Kate McMullan
Baldur's Gate by Athans, Philip
Monkey Wrench by Terri Thayer
The Meme Machine by Susan Blackmore