Read Chase (ChronoShift Trilogy) Online

Authors: Zack Mason

Tags: #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Fiction - Historical, #Fiction - Thriller

Chase (ChronoShift Trilogy) (3 page)

BOOK: Chase (ChronoShift Trilogy)
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"
Time is the justice that examines all offenders.
"

 

                      ~ William Shakespeare

 

 

November 22
nd
1963, Dallas, TX

 

Ty groaned.  He wanted to lift his bloodied face up in defiance of his abusers, but he couldn't summon enough strength.  He refused to let them think they'd broken his spirit.

Earlier, Ty had shifted back to the day of the Kennedy assassination in search of traces of their newly discovered nemesis, John Smith.

Unfortunately, Smith had turned the tables on Ty.  He didn’t know these men who had kidnapped him, so he’d never seen them coming.  He and Mark hadn't even known Smith had henchmen working for him until now.

For all Ty knew, there could be an army of men out there with shifters on their wrists.  What if Smith was just the tip of the iceberg?

These men hadn't divulged any info so far, not even their names.  Smith was nowhere to be seen, and their apparent leader sported an odd, squarish patch of grey above his brow amidst what otherwise was a solid bush of jet black hair, so Ty mentally dubbed him Grey Tuft.

Grey Tuft had a shifter just like Mark and Ty's, but the other hirelings didn't.  Which was a good thing.  That would seem to indicate there was a limit on the number of time-traveling goons opposing them.

It was these other hirelings who beat him mercilessly now.  He didn't think Grey Tuft even knew they were doing it.  No doubt he was a cold one.  He had made it clear he was going to kill Ty and bury his body in concrete so it would never be found, but in spite of the man's cruel tone, he didn't seem to have a lot of passion invested in the deed.  To him, it was a job, following orders.  A senseless beating requires anger.

These other two, however, were a different story.  They were the hired help.  Lowlife scum scraped up from the dregs of society.  They hadn't dared lay a finger on him before Grey Tuft left the room, but once that door had closed, the racial slurs and blows flowed forth.

Ty now heard a new voice outside the room.  He went limp, feigning unconsciousness, hoping to stop the beating so he could hear what was being said.  The two goons kicked him a few more times in the gut for good measure and then retired to some chairs in the corner where they lit a couple cigarettes.

The voice outside the thick door bore clear authority in its tone. 
Was that Smith?
  Ty could barely make out the muffled words.

"...know what I said...plans changed...No."

"We should...at least..."

"Can't die...cause too many problems...clear?...Take him..."

"... the others?"

"No problem...just...him..."

 

The conversation stopped.  The door opened.  Grey Tuft entered by himself.

Peeking weakly through swollen eyes, Ty didn't see any sign of Smith or anyone else outside the door.

"You
idiots
!  What did you do?"

Grey Tuft kneeled and turned Ty's face up, examining the extent of the damage.  "You two are lucky he's alive or you'd be headed for a concrete grave yourselves right now."

"Wuz yur name," Ty slurred, spitting blood through his teeth.

"What's it matter?"

"Wanna know whoz gonna kill me."

"Torino.  Vincent Torino, and there's been a change of plans, your highness.  You ain't gonna die, but you still ain't gonna see the sun for a long, long time.  Boss has got different plans for you."

He let go and Ty's head sagged, lolling from side to side.   This time, he truly did fall unconscious.

 

***

 

August 14
th
1834, Virginia Woodland
s

 

"I thought we were prepared for this kind of thing," Rialto growled, glaring a hole through his men.

"Rialto — you, of all people, should know how difficult it is to pin down someone who’s got a shifter."

"If you're prepared, it shouldn't matter."

"We were, but I couldn't stay with the guy 24 /7.  Phillips shifted in and out within a one-second window and took Carpen with him.  Even if we'd been in the room with our weapons ready, we couldn't possibly have gotten a good shot off in that amount of time."

Stanley Graves was sweating profusely, but more from the thick summer humidity than from any pressure put on him by Rialto.  Killing another time-shifter was a difficult proposition, especially when the guy had friends capable of intervening.  No, he didn't feel bad about Carpen slipping through his fingers.

"You don't fear me, do you, Graves?"  Rialto asked.

"Huh?"

"If I ever have to show you why you should fear me, it'll be too late for that fear to do you much good. 
That
I promise."

Graves involuntarily gulped.  "Look, Rialto, we've got all the time we want.  You saw how easy it was to capture their shift signatures with this tracker.  We almost came in right on top of them last time, and we know they're sitting under those trees over there in 1814.  These trackers Irvine gave you are amazing.  We have the upper hand for sure."

Stanley Irvine, a physicist Rialto had hired to study the shifters, had successfully built several small portable devices that Rialto called "trackers."  The trackers were encased in black plastic and slightly larger than a car fob.  If a tracker was pointed at a person shifting between times, the handheld device could detect tiny fluctuations in the electromagnetic field surrounding the person and interpret those fluctuations to give the exact date and time to which that person had just gone.

 

In other words, Mark Carpen could shift through time till he was blue in the face, but all Rialto had to do was point his little tracker at Carpen as he left and he would know to exactly which moment in time the man had gone.  It was a powerful device, yet it ran on a simple watch battery.

"What's the plan, boss?"

Rialto slitted his eyes, staring at the copse of trees where Carpen and Phillips would be sitting — twenty years in the past.  His enemies would be there for just a moment in 1814, but for Rialto, they were there perpetually.  He could shift into their "moment" any time he wanted.  There was no reason to hurry or be impatient.  His tracker empowered him.  He was the chaser.  They were the ones on the run, frantically wondering which second would be their last.

"We could play shifting games with these guys for days, but we wouldn't accomplish anything without the element of surprise.  Plus, they could get in a lucky shot.  When we go after them again, we'll shift in at a distance so they don't hear us coming.  If they shift out, we’ll follow.  If they don't shift out, we’ll snipe ’em."

 

***

 

August 14
th
1814, Virginia Woodlands

 

Silently, Mark and Hardy moved deeper into the woods.  Mark raised two fingers to his eye and motioned sharply in two different directions.  Hardy understood the hand signal.  They would split up, moving in parallel, but staying about a hundred feet apart.  If one of them ran into trouble, the other would be close enough to help, but far enough away not to get caught in the same trouble.  Patrolling 101.

Being mid-August in Virginia, the brush was dense enough to provide good cover.  They weren’t visible to each other, but knew vaguely where the other was at all times.  They continued stealthily until they reached a natural rendezvous point.

 

***

 

"Where are they?"  Rialto hissed.

Graves pointed at a flash of black cloth between some bushes.  "I think that's Carpen over there."

"Where's Phillips?"

"Not sure.  Can't see him."

Rialto cursed.  "These guys are in their element now," he rued.

"Why don't we go back to when they were under those trees together?"

"Because they were only there for a couple of seconds.  Good chance they'd just shift around us and gain the upper hand if we're not successful with our first shots."

"What are we gonna do then?"

"We don't push it.  We'll stalk Carpen, one of us on either side.  Keep an eye out for Phillips.  If you get a good shot at Carpen, take it, but if it looks like that's going to happen, prepare yourself
before
you take the shot.  If Phillips sees Carpen go down, he'll shift back to take you out before you shoot.

“If we never get a good opportunity, we'll follow as far as we can without giving ourselves away."

 

Graves nodded and they split up, Graves continuing along Mark's right flank and Rialto circling around to the left.  They didn't dare get too close.  Carpen was highly trained in pursuits like this — and they were not.

Rialto saw him again.  He whipped his rifle up hastily.  Carpen had momentarily exposed himself in a small clearing through which he had to pass in order to reach a large cluster of rocks.  The rocks would make excellent cover, and he knew he had to take Carpen out before he reached them.

He hesitated.

He was too nervous.  If he pulled the trigger, he might succeed and kill Carpen, but then Phillips would know.   Phillips would shift back.  Phillips would put a bullet in his head before he pulled the trigger, but that would only happen if Rialto pulled the trigger originally.

His hand shook with indecision.  He cursed as Carpen made it to safety.

 

***

 

Hunkering behind some brush in an open space enclosed by the giant rocks, Mark had a clear view of both entrances to the central pocket where he was hiding.  Over his head, a rock overhang would protect him if Rialto or his men tried to climb the boulders and attack from above.

Something moved in the brush by one of the entrances.

Mark readied himself.

It was Hardy.

Stealthily, Hardy entered the rock cluster and joined Mark in his defensive position.

"Anything?"

"Yeah, heard one of ’em behind me," Mark replied.

"How do they know
when
to find us?" Hardy hissed, "We shifted twice.  That should have ended it.  It's like they know where we went, but to the exact second."

"Rialto must have some kind of detection device that can tell where we shift to."

"Who's Rialto?"

"How
exactly
did you find me, Hardy?"

"Savannah."

"What did she tell you?"

"Showed me the note, told me about Smith, where you and Ty had gone."

"Where's Ty?"

"Not sure.  He disappeared too.  I came after you first."

Mark studied him.  "Smith's real name is Rialto.  That's all I know about the guy...other than the fact he's trying to kill us for some reason."

"Where'd he get his shifters?"

"No idea."

"You think maybe our shifters used to belong to him?"

"How should I know?"  Mark pondered the possibility.  "No…something's fishy.  At one point, Rialto got hold of my old Wal-Mart shares before I'd cashed them in and burned them.  It undid all the wealth I'd built, but it also made his shifter disappear from off his wrist.  His ability to shift is somehow tied to everything I've built."

"So, why's he trying to kill you then?  That would have to affect him too, right?"

"Don't know.  If he's trying to kill me now, then whatever happened to allow him to get a shifter must have already happened."

"Man, this time travel stuff is bending my brain."

 

"No joke."

"What are we gonna do?"

"If he can detect us when we shift, we'll just give our position away every time we do.  We need to evaporate into the woods without shifting and put as much distance between them and us as we can.  If we can lose them, they shouldn't be able to detect our shifts any more."

"Agreed."

"Let's split up.  We don't want to give them an opportunity to take us both out in one fell swoop."

"Good call."

"Head toward D.C.  Meet me in front of the White House at 8:00 PM tonight."

 

***

 

"Climb that rock and see if you can get a shot," Rialto ordered.

Graves ran to the rocks and scrambled to the top.  He straightened, ever so slowly, and scanned the area below.  Mark and Hardy were concealed by the overhang, so he wasn’t able to pinpoint their position.

"No sign of them," he reported.

Rialto cursed.  "They must have slipped out.  We'll circle around, see if we can pick up their trail again."

By the time Rialto and Graves settled on their plan of action, Mark and Hardy had already left the rock cluster at different ends and melted into the forest.

 

 

 

 

 

 

August 14
th
1814, 8:00 PM, Washington D.C.

 

Mark reached the White House first.  At least, it looked kind of like the White House.  It was in the right place, but something was off about it.

Maybe it was the long series of columns extending from either side. 
Were those there in modern times?
  They didn't look right.  Maybe they were covered by trees in the future and just couldn't be seen.  There did seem to be a scarcity of trees here on the southern side, though there were plenty facing the north.

BOOK: Chase (ChronoShift Trilogy)
2.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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