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Authors: Ben Bequer

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“Shit, sorry,” she said and by how she was cringing, I could tell it was an accident.

“It’s ok,” I said fixing my hair.

I drove on, glancing back at her in the rear view mirror occasionally as she fell asleep.

* * *

It was late afternoon and Apogee was fast asleep in the backseat. We were headed north. My plan was to lodge up at some small bed and breakfast until things cooled down. If my theory was correct, the boys were well on their way to one of Jupiter’s moons for whatever Dr. Retcon needed there.

Voyager 1 made the trip from Earth to Jupiter in two years, so I figured that even with the benefit of Dr. Retcon’s technologically advanced Rocket Flyer; their trip would take some time.

But it wasn’t that weighing heavy on my mind as I got off I-84 and turned around, headed in the opposite direction. It was the sleeping heroine in the backseat that made me turn around. Attractive as she was, I was tired of having her around, tired of her damned whining and complaining. I wasn’t just scared that she would shake off Zundergrub’s spell. I was worried what would happen if a super came along and decided to ‘save’ her. People would get hurt, and I was tired of that happening on my account.

I went the long way around, instead of directly through Philadelphia and Baltimore. I drove down the 81 to Harrisburg, then down US-15 to the 270 and into Washington, DC.

It was silly, I know, because what I wanted to do I could do from everywhere, but there’s always been a method to my madness, even when it made no sense to me.

Reaching Bethesda, outside the District, I made my way south on the 495 to US-123, which snaked along the Potomac towards one of the bridges into the city. Traffic was murder, but Apogee slept peacefully as I came up 14th Street NW to E Street and turned right to find a spot to park.

I pulled the car on the curb beside a payphone bank, a block from the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building, and right across the street from my target building on E Street. Security was rampant, but my car was a black Suburban SUV with tinted windows and I was dressed in a black windbreaker. A big guy, in dark clothes with dark shades in a dark car.

I fit right in.

I walked up to a pay phone and dropped in some change. I dialed the number committed to memory. They answered after one ring.

“Mr. Braxton’s office,” the secretary said.

“I need to speak to Mr. Braxton.”

“He’s not available,” she said. “Can I take a message?”

“I’m sorry, miss, but he’s going to want to talk to me right now. I’m Blackjack.”

The pause told me the secretary either took me seriously and was starting a trace, or thought I was a kook and was starting a trace.

“I’ll get him for you,” Braxton’s secretary said and put me on hold.

While I waited, I ticked off the seconds in my head, having a rough idea of their response time in the middle of the District. Tracing a call didn’t work like in the movies. They knew the number, where you were almost instantly. Even on a cell phone, which cops could use as a GPS to track your location. The delay was merely how long it would take them to get their agents to the location.

I figured I had two minutes to make the call, and get well enough away from the location to be clear of the incoming agents or supers.

“Braxton here,” he said in a heavy smoker’s voice that I recognized from the press conference on television. “So, big bad Blackjack. Please tell me you’re calling to turn yourself in.”

I looked across the street, where a few agents were leaving the FBI building. It was totally unrelated, but hearing Braxton mention surrender gave me pause.

“Maybe.”

“Make my life a whole lot easier,” he admitted. “I don’t like this whole business.”

“What am I looking at? If I do surrender.”

Braxton took a long sigh. “What do you think? You’re looking at over two dozen crimes and violations of Wattley; local, federal and state. And there’s the whole thing with the Germans and the oil rig,” he said then broke into a hacking smoker’s cough.

“I guess I’m fucked,” I admitted.

“You said it kid,” Braxton said. “But it’s only going to get worse for you if you keep running. I mean, you know I’ve got everything after your ass now.”

I nodded, though I knew he couldn’t see me.

“I don’t know who to trust anymore,” I said, not knowing why I was commiserating with the guy who was trying to put me in jail.

“That’s what happens when you choose the wrong side, Blackjack. All this business of late, it doesn’t make any sense to me, or to any of the guys here. You were strictly small time for a couple of years, then all of the sudden you’re throwing heroes off buildings and knocking the crap out of people on live television. What happened to you?”

“I guess the prison shrinks will psychoanalyze it all out of me if it comes to that.”

“It will. It always does. Bad guys don’t die of old age,” he said, and I couldn’t help but think of Shivvers, bleeding to death on my arrow.

“I was also calling about something else,” I said looking at the backseat of my car, but Apogee wasn’t there. She was standing behind me, watching me curiously. She looked different now in civilian clothing, much better than before. She may have looked stunning in all that pushup spandex, but in normal clothes, her real beauty came through, natural and without compare.

“It’s Apogee. I’ve got her.”

“What, kidnapping now? Give me a break. You want me to-

“I didn’t kidnap her, Braxton,” I stopped him. “Zundergrub did something to her, so she’s stuck to me.”

“What, like with glue?” Braxton mocked.

“No, damn it. He used some sort of mental power and she can’t leave my side.”

“Ah,” he paused and I felt the seconds ticking by. “Is she alright?”

“Some bumps and bruises, but she’s fine. Here, talk to her.” I handed Apogee the phone.

“Hello William,” she said.

“I’m fine.”

“Yes, I’ve tried. Several times. I can’t.

“He’s behaving.”

“Yes, I tried breaking his face a few times too. I can’t either.”

She smiled mischievously at whatever Braxton said.

“I will.”

“Tell my mother I’m alright, please.”

Apogee nodded at what he was saying then suddenly stopped, and stared at me severely. She had figured out what I was doing.

“What are you trying to do?”

Braxton kept talking on the phone, but she dropped the cradle and left it hanging.

“Answer me!” she demanded.

I picked up the phone and hung it up.

“What is wrong with you?”

I clenched my fist, preparing for what I had to do, unpleasant as it was. There were a few police officers nearby, and what I could only surmise were FBI jocks who I had seen leaving the FBI building, heading towards a parking garage.

“Don’t,” she pleaded, but my left hand rose and clenched around her pretty throat. “Stop, please.”

“I’m sorry Apogee,” I managed, reaching my free arm back and opening my stance. “You can’t come with me. I’m a dead man, you see? If I turn myself in, Retcon’ll kill me.”

“Retcon?” she interrupted, but I lifted her off the ground, shutting her up.

“If I run,” I continued, “then your people will kill try to me, and you might get hurt.”

“No,” she managed.

“You have to trust me. Even though I’ve done nothing in my life to make you want to trust me.”

“I’ll die,” she began sobbing.

“No you won’t,” I said getting my courage up. One shot and she was out, and I could go. A few pedestrians were looking at us curiously, and even a cop across the street was starting to notice. Now was the time to do it.

“Zundergrub’s spell,” she managed through her tears. “It will kill me.”

“What?” I said, though it made perfect sense.

He must have programmed her with a psychosomatic trigger to give her heart failure, or a stroke. He knew I was a loner, and I’d eventually want to ditch Apogee. The doctor was tricky, keeping his tracks covered. He left me stuck to the one person in the world that wanted me dead, and left a psychic bomb to kill the assassin. I had to hand it to the doctor, finding a neat and tidy way to get rid of us both.

“No,” I managed. She coughed, unable to breathe. I put her down, but retained my grip on her.

She wept, “He was in my head, Blackjack. I heard him. If I fail, I’ll die. I don’t know how, but it’ll kill me.”

I released her, defeated, and got back in the car. Apogee tried to compose herself as she came around to her side but when she sat down, I noticed her sobbing softly, her face turned away from me. I let her cry and drove off into the busy D.C. traffic.

Across the street was the Frank F. Murrow building, the headquarters of the NAS, National Administration of Supers.

William Braxton’s office.

Chapter 15

Braxton had made it clear; something happens to her, and it’s on you. And Zundergrub had made it that much harder, with his potential mind bomb, so now I couldn’t get rid of the woman, I couldn’t really run to be free of the people that were trying to put me away. “People,” that’s a joke. The whole world was after me, and I had Apogee wrapped around my finger, like a beacon of light at midnight, drawing everyone towards me.

We drove out of the District and through Maryland, and it was almost ten o’clock at night by the time we were into Virginia. There I intended to turn West at the nearest major interstate and head through Kentucky into Indiana or Illinois. After that, I had no idea.

She was upset, and saddened by what happened in D.C. and at being my captive. I could feel her steaming; waiting for the next thing I would say so she could explode. Apogee was a ticking time bomb in the passenger seat, so I did what she couldn’t have possibly expected of me; I didn’t speak. It was easy for me, I’m always alone anyway.

Apogee dozed off here and there, but for the most part, she didn’t talk. Once she woke from a nap and saw my face, she grimaced, shaking her head. I laughed, and that was as much as we communicated.

For the whole damned day.

Her anger and diffidence made no sense to me. I was trying to help her. Maybe she’d have had a bad headache, but leaving her in D.C. would have saved everyone a lot of trouble. As it was, I was responsible for her. I was on the hook with Braxton and whoever cared. If anything happened to her, you could ‘tack it on to the sentence,’ as Apogee herself had said. The pressure was driving me insane. It was more than I could handle.

But this was different. If Zundergrub had worked some sort of psychosomatic trigger on her, set to go off if we were separated, then we were stuck together. Proximity was the key, but I also had to protect her from enemies and friends alike. If Braxton and the Seven came knocking, the first thing they’d do is put me down, and take her to safety, regardless of her pleas. Then the doctor’s mind bomb would kill her. What was it that Zundergrub had said?

“Save him.”

Zundergrub was obtuse as always. That could be interpreted in many different ways. Was she supposed to help by reforming me? Was that what she was trying to do? Since we’d made peace, I noticed her different. Friendly, as if resigned to her fate, but something else. She was concerned for me. I noticed it in her when we were near police officers, or a Super flew overhead.

It was midnight and her growling stomach announced to both of us that we’d have to stop and eat. We were dressed in civilian clothing, so I could potentially stop anywhere, but I had to minimize the risk of anyone recognizing her. So I pulled over into the next gas station I saw, one of those huge roadside spots that had a minimart.

It was a popular place, even so close to midnight so we were running a risk. But I was comforted by the fact that the place had no visible cameras and it was late enough that most folks would be minding their own business, or too bleary eyed to notice. That was the idea anyway.

She stayed in the car as I went inside and got us food and gas. My emergency money was dwindling, and I had to find a way to get a hold of Sandy through a secure phone so he could wire me some money.

I didn’t speak to anyone at the minimart either, which was strange, since everyone was being chatty. But when I walked up to the cashier and gave him my purchases, he clammed up and was suddenly worried. I am a tall guy, and I do tend to glower, but I didn’t recall giving the cashier reason to be frightened at me.

Maybe I was settling into my role as a bad guy.

“Please put the change on pump one,” I said as I paid with a broad smile, trying to put him at ease, but it only served to unnerve him more.

He nodded nervously, “Pump number one, got it.”

Before I left, I noticed that they also sold prepaid cell phones. I pulled out more of my emergency cash and bought a few.

Returning to the car, I found her still asleep. Her head was tilted back and her mouth wide open, which was a funny position to be in, but I muffled my laughter so she wouldn’t wake. I placed the sandwiches and drinks gently on driver’s seat and gassed up the car, looking out to the parked trailer trucks nearby. The truck park looked peaceful, each rig settled in its spot, plugged in so vehicle and driver could recharge their batteries together.

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