Chapter OneBarry Kadocian pounded weakly on the door to the cell, where he had been incarcerated by Garrett Mader. His physical state was poor--he had been without food for three days now. He stumbled over to the bed, unhappily aware that he was spending longer and longer sleeping, but having no energy to do anything else. He started to crawl on to the mattress, to assume the foetal position he'd been inadvertently using during his last two sleeping periods, when he heard the click of the door latch. His reactions were as slowed as everything else about him at this point, but the technician who swung the door wide was greeted with a big smile.
"Mr. Kadocian! What are you doing here? Are you okay?" Shock was apparent in the man's voice.
"Is Mader here?" Memory, and a need for self-preservation, prompted Barry to ask somewhat harshly in reply.
Edward Sherman put one arm around Kadocian, helping him to a stool in the lab. Kadocian glanced around the shambles of the once-immaculate laboratory. A breeze across his face caused him to look up. Sharp spines of glass framed an enormous jagged hole in the smoke-coloured glass ceiling. "What happened here?" Barry asked in a whisper. "Where's Garrett Mader?"
Edward replied hesitantly, uncertain of Kadocian's role in what had happened. "Dr. Mader's been missing for three days, sir. We checked the wreckage, but there was no sign of him."
"Is his car still here?"
Edward nodded. "But he might have taken one of the other cars--or a helicopter."
"What did Elaine say?"
It took Sherman a moment to realise Kadocian was referring to Mader's wife. "She called six times yesterday, and four times today, demanding to speak with him. She thinks he's still here."
And avoiding her. Barry Kadocian looked askance at Ed Sherman, but didn't ask him where he'd gotten his information. The grapevine, in a facility like this, worked overtime. What couldn't be taken outside, was hashed and re-hashed within the compound.
Kadocian didn't state the obvious, either. It was clear to him that the so-called "search" hadn't really been all that thorough. Or else they would have found me. He took a kind of grim pleasure in the knowledge that Mader inspired so little loyalty in his employees. Then he remembered they hadn't exactly scoured the walls looking for him, either.
"This room--what happened in here?" Kadocian sat with a lab coat draped around himself, needing the warmth in his depleted state.
"We don't know. It may've been an explosion--that's one theory that's been suggested--but the glass looks like it imploded, which is causing some confusion."
Barry looked at the ground. Sure enough, if the amount of glass was any clue, then the shattering force must have come from without, because the ground was covered with shards.
"The latest theory is that the destruction was sound-activated--you know, some prolonged note at just the right pitch--"
Kadocian could tell this was the theory Edward favoured; in his excitement he was almost babbling. Barry interrupted his chatter with, "Or a miscalculation by a helicopter pilot?"
The other man suddenly realised how improbable his theory must seem to Kadocian. But, then, Kadocian hadn't seen what the rest of them had. Edward Sherman decided he wasn't going to be the one to enlighten him. He cleared his throat, and changed the subject. "How did you get locked in, Mr. Kadocian?"
There was no point in accusing Mader of imprisoning him. The time for that would be after Kadocian was clear of this facility. For now, an innocuous answer would suffice. "I'm not sure. Someone must have accidentally shut the door." He avoided saying the obvious: that the "someone" should have heard him pounding on the door, just as Sherman had. Instead, he asked politely, "Do you think you could find me some food? I haven't eaten in three days."
Edward nodded, pleased to do something to help. He quickly left the lab, after assuring Barry he'd be right back.
Barry walked carefully over the bits of smoke-coloured glass, listening to them crunch beneath his feet, hoping no pieces would pierce the leather soles of his shoes. Why hadn't they cleaned this mess up yet? Then he answered his own question. It's the result of Mader's strong influence. I should have recognised how much of this operation was tied up in one man. Even in Mader's absence, no one dares to touch his workspace or belongings. I guess I should be grateful that the technician even found me, he thought.
In one place, he saw the floor was stained with brown splatters, which remained as spots and smears. The smears continued across the floor to the operating table with its Velcro straps, and there was a large patch of the brown stain on the bed and the floor directly below. The colour was suggestive of dried blood, and he shuddered slightly at the implication. There were instruments and gauze scattered across the floor, and a chair tipped on its side. What had happened here?
Kadocian was about to step away from the table, when he spied several small objects on the floor that had an odd iridescence about them. In his weakened state, retrieving them was an effort, but his curiosity was aroused. He picked up the marble-like objects, only to find that they weren't rounded at all, but multi-faceted, in the way of cut stones. The iridescence ranged from a golden glow to a pinkish streaking, with unusual flashes of gilt if the objects were rotated. Barry wondered what they were, and whether it was safe to be touching them. Obviously, Mader had either developed, or supervised the development of, some new type of crystal. Barry slipped them into his pocket. They were so unusual that he decided to have them analysed. After all, he was in charge of the moneys that were funding Mader's operation.