We'll see, he said.
Surely Sakhr would know better than to go along with such a dumb plot. Surely his desperation hadn't exceeded his aversion to risk. Quentin should know better too. He may have insight into physics, but that doesn't make him a good pilot... unless the idiot considered his video game skills as experience.
This still didn't explain why they bothered separating the assemblers.
She visualized what the machines were producing. Each had only made three or four bars that could latch together, hardly enough to build a glider for one, much less for all of them. Since Stephano would deploy in... (Victoria checked the time) six minutes. Quentin clearly thought he had more time than he actually had.
She called for Gandara. "Captain."
"Yes, ma'am?"
"If an unregistered vehicle were to leave from the tower, would the grid be able to catch it?"
"Unregistered vehicle?"
"Like a hang glider."
"It should, ma'am. The Lakiran campus has a sensor grid starting at the eighth floor and up. Any unregistered mass greater than twenty kilograms will be snagged and delivered to a holding area."
"Where is that?"
The military base at Leguan Island."
"Can you arrange for the system to separate the objects and isolate them from one another?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"Call the base. Have them stand by. Tell them that if the grid should deliver anything, that they are to isolate the target with wall bots and stand by. They are not to approach.
"Yes, ma'am." He got to work.
Not that Victoria could allow it to come to that. If Quentin did try to fly off, the grid would not pick up small things, like falling tortoises. That was unacceptable.
She'd capture them all and figure out their plan later. This nonsense needed to end now.
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Quentin set down the string of reflexors. "There. That's done. Time to get the supplies."
Sakhr stood and headed for the door.
"Not you," Quentin said.
"What? You need help carrying the supplies upstairs, no?"
"I do." Quentin ripped some drapes off Victoria's bed. "So take these and go to the roof while I get the poles. We'll put it all together up there."
"What about those reflexor nodes?"
Quentin shrugged. "I'm taking them."
Sakhr narrowed his eyes.
Alex came came over and took the drapes. "Stop worrying, Sakhr. I'll be with you. Quentin will meet us on the roof."
"I do need somebody to help me," Quentin replied.
Alex looked around. "Sibyl, you're wearing a strong body. Help Quentin carry the poles up. Christof, get the tortoises and come with us."
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So they split up. Quentin and Sibyl headed downstairs while Alex, Christof, and Sakhr headed to the roof.
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"The marines are dropping now, Your Majesty," Stephano said.
"There are three people on the roof. One is my daughter. You need to neutralize her immediately."
"Yes, ma'am."
"And another has a handgun, but you must not hurt her. Incapacitate, disarm, and isolate. That's all.
"Understood."
Victoria was micromanaging again. She couldn't help herself. The action would start any moment, and Quentin was up to something...
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Sibyl followed Quentin to the elevator lobby on Victoria's private floor. The assembler there had produced five rods which lay in a row in the dispenser tray. Each was an arm's length. Quentin bundled them up and wrapped the cable of reflexors around them, making sure the reflexors faced outward.
"What are you doing?" asked Sibyl.
"You'll see," Quentin replied. "You've got to promise me that if I tell you to do something, you'll do it. Don't hesitate. Okay?"
"Okay." Sibyl sounded unsure.
"Good." Having bundled the bars together, he let them drop. They lowered into the dispenser tray gently, as though the rods were trying not to make a clatter. "Let's leave this here for a minute. And get down to the others."
He headed for the stairs. Though Sibyl frowned in confusion, she followed.
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Alex was on the roof first. He went straight to Victoria's hopper and opened the hatch.
"The craft?" Sakhr said. "I thought we couldn't fly this."
"We can't, but that's not—"
"What are those?" Christof was pointing up.
Six black dots were rapidly approaching from the sky.
"Get inside!" Sakhr dashed for the rooftop door, but Alex caught his shirt, nearly yanking him off his feet.
The black dots expanded to become deployment pods. Each slammed onto the rooftop along the edge. Their hatches exploded outward. Marines jumped out. Each wore full covering military gear, complete with a respirator mask over their faces. They all brandished rifles.
"Inside!" Sakhr yelled.
"No. The ship. Get in the ship." Alex pulled him toward the hatch.
The marines open fired. Barbed flechettes ricocheted off the hopper. One struck Sakhr in the side. Screaming, he crumpled.
Alex drew his security pistol fired wildly at the marines. They evaded.
Turning back, he grabbed Sakhr's collar and pulled him toward the hopper. "Help me," he yelled. Christof tossed the box of tortoises into the hopper and helped Alex with Sakhr.
Before they could pull him aboard, a marine fired electrified barbs at the hatch. Christof crumpled into the hopper. Sakhr fell to the platform concrete.
Alex returned fire. Two bullets punched into the marine's reinforced armor, causing him to stumble back. Other marines approached. With Christof incapacitated, Alex couldn't lift Sakhr fast enough. He pushed him out of the way and slammed the shuttle door closed. Inside, he frantically yanked a switch that looked like it might be a lock, but kept a constant pull on the door handle, just in case they could open it anyway.
Seconds passed. Tentatively, he let the hatch door go. When nothing happened, he scrabbled to the cockpit.
Out the window, he saw the marines dragging Sakhr toward their deployment capsules. They shoved him inside one and slammed the lid. The capsule lifted into the sky like a buoy released from the ocean bottom.
"Ta ta, old man. I never said there wasn't risk."
He fumbled with the dashboard. Once he'd turned the hopper on, he sat back and waited.
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But what was Alexander waiting for?
Whatever it was, it had to do with whatever Quentin was doing. It made Victoria nervous.
Her mental gaze of Alex was diverted by Captain Stephano.
"They've rescued your daughter," he said. "We've sent her off in a deployment pod. Other hostages have holed up in your shuttle."
"Good. Leave them alone for now. Have your team proceed downstairs. There are two in the service stairwell. I want them stopped."
"Understood, ma'am."
She nearly hit the call end button, but stopped. "And keep my daughter isolated. No one opens her pod until I say so."
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Quentin was opening the door to the fifty-sixth floor when Sibyl snapped her head up to look at the ceiling.
"People just arrived," she said.
"What? How many?"
"A dozen, maybe. They're fighting. Sakhr is panicking."
"God fucking dammit," Quentin growled. "I needed two more minutes. That's all. Fuck." He glared at the door. "Fuck it. We're still doing this. I'm not going back in a damn lizard. Come on."
The assembler in the lobby had produced five poles, just like the others. Quentin ran past it to the service elevator. Popping a release catch along the door frame, pried open the door. "Okay. Grab those sticks in the tray and throw them down the shaft."
"What?" said Sibyl. "Down the elevator?"
"Do it now."
Sibyl grabbed the bars. Her hands recoiled at first, but she tried again and tossed them through the door. They clattered down the shaft.
Quentin released the elevator door and ran toward the stairs. "Come on. Next ones."
Sibyl hurried after, cradling her hands. "Why were they so hot?"
Quentin held the stairwell door open for her. As she passed, he mumbled, "Because they're radioactive."