Nano #4: Newton's Second Law - Gravitation
Part Eight- The Equal Arm Analytical
Balance.
By late October the acid rain had
long since stripped the trees of their leaves and the woodland lining I-95 slipped by in a
blasé blur. Dana and Grace were well into their fourth week of remapping each other's
bodies, a rather intense process as one can imagine. And when the two were not waist high
in geography, topography, or whipping cream, they worked closely on modification number
two of the nano project, where they happened to be heading that Friday morning.
"Barbara wants you to come to the meeting today."
"Babs wants me there? How genuinely intriguing." Dana rolled down the Jeep
Wrangler's window and spit into the wind.
"That's disgusting."
"You want me to swallow it?" she replied rolling the window back up.
"No."
"Do you want to swallow it?"
"Stop it, you're making me nauseous."
Dana grinned evilly. "I think I'm coming down with something."
"Did you get your flu shot like I asked you to?"
"No way, Grace. I'm not going to play into the hands of some government infectious
disease experiment."
"You're so paranoid."
"It's not paranoia if . . . "
"Yeah, yeah, yeah, if they're really out to get you."
They both shared a silent exchange of a very real concern. "And I'm not going to a
meeting so that a bunch of rich people can bitch at me and ask me why there isn't a cure
for cancer yet."
"Why not? I do it every week."
"That's because you have to. I'm a technical person, the only other person's opinion
I care about is yours, and we have meetings every night."
"You don't care about my opinion. If you did you wouldn't be launching loogies from
my car window. I'm waiting for one of those to fly back in and hit you in the face."
"Never gonna happen, Sweetcheeks." P-tew.
"Ach gross. Jesus, Dana, at the very least roll the window down next time."
"Sorry."
After half an hour of waiting on the downtown sidewalk for entrance into the small
restaurant the group ended up with the right half of the dining room. They pulled all of
the loose tables together and conquered several booths as well to make it homey. Somehow
Grace and Dana ended up at opposite ends of the large table which probably bothered the
introverted Dana moreso than her gregarious roomate. Grace was pleased to find out that
the young techs surrounding her were extremely friendly and had a million questions for
her, some of which centered on what she went through with the Beta Destroyers.
While Grace was busy socializing, Dana ordered the pitchers of beer, ten assorted large
pizzas, and several salads. By the second round of beer, Grace had warmed to her new
friends and they were singing lewd versions of Cole Porter songs and laughing
hysterically.
Rachel rolled her eyes at Doc. "This has to be Yalie humor." Dana nodded and sat
back to observe the glowing doctor. For a moment she was transported to an earlier time, a
year prior in a Blues bar where she first noticed the easy spirit of the beautiful woman,
her easy touch and smile, and the wonderful deep melodious laugh. The events of the past
year had transformed Grace into a serious gray creature as of late, but at that moment she
seemed young and vibrant and colorful again. Or had Dana changed Grace, sucked the
happiness from her to claim it as her own?
A sudden jolt of discomfort settled in on the ex-con as the noise level rose. Dana took a
long swig of her beer and returned her attention to a conversation about a theory on
circuits with Rachel and Ernie her computer assistant. Then she was reminded of why her
attention had wandered in the first place. She poured herself another beer and downed it
quickly. When she put her empty glass on the table her eyes wandered back to the object of
all her desires, the very same person whom she could not reach at the moment unless she
were to climb on top of the table and crawl down to her.
"What do you think, Doc?" the thick lensed red headed computer programmer asked.
"I think that you should write up a proposal for Grace and see if she will fund
you."
"You think she would help me?"
"Um hmm," she poured another tall glass.
Ernie beamed from ear to ear, his wild curly hair and freckles making him appear so
youthful it left Dana wondering if he was old enough for the beer he was sipping.
"Excuse me," Dana said pushing herself away from the table. On her way to the
bathroom she ordered another five pitchers and paid for the meal with her seldom used
credit card which was not in her real name. Paranoia was definitely a hard habit to shake.
She lingered in the bathroom longer than was necessary because it was quieter than the
rest of the restaurant except for the occasional flush.
When she returned she discovered that the entire group was plastered, lit, snockered out
of their gourds. Grace was standing on her chair reciting in her best bardic persona all
of the dirty limericks that Fuzzy had told her. Sometimes a good memory was not always a
good thing to waste. Rachel was on the other end yelling, "Bring it on,
Queenie," and offering her own very natty rhymes. The drunken students were laughing
and cheering their leaders on.
The tall ex-con felt lucky to be able to watch two of the people she cared for most in the
world having a good time and knowing she played some part in putting them there, in making
them happy. This gave her the rare feeling of being whole, much like the self
gratification she felt when she brought her lover physical pleasure.
Grace began to sway immediately after downing an offered glass, and several hands went up
to spot her. Rachel was doing her own weaving, but Dana was not too worried about the
hacker, she had more lives than a cat.
The energy level in the restaurant was so high it made the hair on Dana's arms stand on
end. She decided not to force her way back to the table when she realized a very lovely
undergraduate had infiltrated the party and was in her seat, eyeing Rachel suggestively.
Instead, she wandered to the back of the floor and hid in a dark booth to ride out the
rest of the evening. Seeking solitude, Dana dreamt of the calmness of the ocean, the sun
on her skin, the salty breeze, and the occasional action of battle with the seagulls
dive-bombing her grill for the day's catch.
A passing waitress offered her a cup of coffee which she gladly accepted. By the looks of
things she was going to be driving several people home or back to the hospital. Grace was
no longer on her chair, but she was involved in the happy chatter. More people were
filtering in the door for late pizza and the restaurant was crowded again, so much so that
Dana could no longer see her lover.
The busy waitress refilled her
coffee during a hasty pass and then disappeared into the crowd to take orders. A busboy
brushed noisily by her while bringing in extra chairs from a storeroom in the kitchen
distracting her.
"Hello, Dana," a man she thought she recognized slid into the vinyl bench across
from her. Another man towered over her blocking an escape and covering her reaction from
anyone else's view.
A shiver of panic traveled down her long spine. In reaction she palmed the coffee spoon
from the table and slipped it up her coat sleeve. "Let me guess. You're here to give
me another nano virus," she said dryly and lifted her cup to her lips and sipped.
"No, we're here to see if you would like to go for a ride with us."
Scorching coffee burned her tongue and the roof of her mouth. "I have other
plans."
"You will have to change them," the seated man replied calmly.
"And why would I want to do that? You guys can't be half the fun that my friends
are."
"Your friends, or that little blonde over there that you're living with, splashing
around naked with in the ocean at the most ungodly of hours? Hmmm?"
"How fun will she be when she's dead?" boomed the creep next to her.
Dana tried to lie. "I don't go for blondes."
The man across from her laughed at her attempt. "Then you wouldn't mind if Rob and I
introduced ourselves?"
"I doubt you're her type."
"We have a lot in common."
"I don't think so."
"Sure we do. For instance, I know some things about the Beta's creator that she is
not aware of, things that may not make you welcome in the facility where you work . . . or
in her bed."
Dana mentally picked that card up from the table and squirreled it away for later.
"Are you trying to blackmail me?"
Rob was beginning to feel conspicuous and opened up his leather jacket to reveal his
sidearm. "Get up off your ass, now."
Dana lifted her cup to her lips and played it cool. It was a public place, and she doubted
they would try to use an aerosol with themselves present. She was sure that her last
assailants had died undocumented after spraying her. "Make me, Uncle Fester."
His fat muscular hand jerked her upwards making her spill her coffee on the table and her
leg. "Hey!" she yelled. "I told you I don't dance." Several people in
the surrounding booths looked up to find out what the commotion was about.
The man who was seated across from her stood up and waved for his overbearing friend to
join him and they walked to the rowdy side of the dining room. The thinner man, who she
now remembered as the pre-dawn jogger pointed out Dana's favorite blonde to the brute.
"Fuck!" Dana began to panic. Action was necessary but she was unsure of what
kind. Her instinct was to lure the two men outside and try and beat them senseless, or be
beaten senseless. All that mattered was that Grace would be safe. The other option was to
try and make a break with Grace and run, but that would not solve anything and it would
leave other friends in jeopardy. Neither option gave her much hope.
She left a few dollars on the table and made for the door, hesitating long enough to
indicate with a flip of her dark head that they should follow her.
Stepping out into the cool air normally would have given the nanotech a sense of relief,
but Dana felt her body shaking with alarm. She admitted to herself that she most likely
would not survive whatever it was the two men had in store for her. Her luck had finally
run out, she thought.
A few feet of air and a glass window separated her from Grace whom she watched laughing
and conversing with a group of very beautiful people.
The wiry man managed to find his way out of the restaurant first and came to stand beside
Doc.
"Do you have a cigarette?" she asked. She knew he smoked by the yellow stains on
his hardened fingertips.
He reached into his pocket and handed one to her then reached over with his lighter and
held out a flame to her mouth while she sucked on the stick until the end was glowing
orange. Probably because she had not smoked since she was seventeen, the nicotine was
soothing her nerves.
Fester joined them. A long exhale. "So where are we going?"
"Someone in Washington wants to talk to you."
"State?"
"D.C."
" I was afraid you were going to say that." Doc turned to the larger man to size
him up against herself now that she was standing. He still had four or five inches each
way on her. She took another long drag. Out of the corner of her eye she watched Grace
still chatting happily. God, she looks so beautiful tonight, she thought. A group of
undergrads stumbled out of the restaurant and passed them.
"So what's the overall plan here. Frame me, kill me, and now talk to me. I hope I
don't sound too ignorant, guys, but the order seems a little out of whack. And you guys
aren't exactly tech material," another drag, "so what's the deal?"
"Let's go," Fester said grabbing her roughly by the arm and trying to pull her
to the side street where the car was parked.
"You're making a scene, Gorilla Man," Doc growled yanking her arm away. It took
every ounce of self control not to start a fight right there, but Grace was still too
close.
The smaller man stepped between them, facing Doc. "The car is this way."
"Rach, do you see Dana anywhere?" Grace interrupted the conversation between the
large pupiled hacker and a gorgeous blonde undergraduate.
"She probably made some new friends and ducked out on us. She hates crowds."
"But Dana doesn't make friends."
"Oh yeah? Then who are the two guys she's walking away with?" she asked
indicating the three forms moving away from the window.
"That's weird. Dana doesn't smoke. She thinks it's disgusting." Grace turned
back to Rachel and grabbed her shoulder for emphasis. "Something's terribly wrong.
And shit, I'm drunk. Help me find someone who can drive."
"Jack's the most sober one of us all."
Grace wove her way around the chairs until she reached the handsome man. He however, could
not find his car keys and by the time he realized he had not driven, Grace had run out
onto the sidewalk in search of Dana. Rachel and Jack followed her out of Pepe's just in
time to see the blue Sable turn right and disappear.
"We need to get on-line, Rachel."
Rachel blinked having missed a major link in the chain of events.
"Give me that pen, Jack," the doctor said snagging the ball-point from his
pocket. She scribbled down the license plate number on her palm.
"That's indelible, Dr. Wilson."
"Hurry up you two," she said breaking into a run towards her Jeep. Thank you,
she thought checking her coat pocket and finding she still had the keys. She tossed them
to Jack. "Where's the best place for this, Rachel? Your place or the lab."
Rachel was still trying to slice through her drunken haze and walk at the same time.
"For hacking?"
"Yeah, for freaking hacking. I need to get into the DMV database to track this number
down."
"For hacking , my place, most definitely."