Read Terminator Salvation: From the Ashes Online

Authors: Timothy Zahn

Tags: #End of the world, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Robots, #Media Tie-In, #Cyborgs, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Film Novelizations

Terminator Salvation: From the Ashes (12 page)

BOOK: Terminator Salvation: From the Ashes
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But Grimaldi didn’t speak for everyone in the Ashes. And the rest of the people didn’t deserve to die just because the chief had a double helping of boneheadedness.

“You know I can’t do that,” he said.

“I suppose not,” Kate agreed, her voice heavy with regret. “But we needed to ask.”

She nodded at him, then gestured the others toward the archway.

“How soon?” Orozco asked.

Kate paused mid-turn. “We think you’ve got until tomorrow night,” she said.

Less than two days. “Any suggestions?” Orozco asked, forcing his voice to stay calm.

“Explosives are always a good place to start,” Tunney said. “T-600s have electromagnetic cores built into strategic joints so that they can reassemble themselves if you blow off their arms or legs.

Blow them far enough off, though, and that trick won’t work anymore.”

“Do you have access to explosives?” Kate asked. “We might be able to spare you some.”

“I have some,” Orozco assured her. “And the makings for quite a few more.”

“Good,” Tunney said, glancing around the lobby. “You could also consider rigging a few booby-traps. There’s a lot of heavy stonework in here, especially this archway and the stone facing above it. Collapse a wall on a Terminator, and even if you don’t destroy it you’ll put it out of action for awhile.”

“Of course, blowing up walls could also bring the whole building down on top of us,” Orozco pointed out.

“There is that,” Tunney conceded. “I notice you also have a fair number of guns, which is good.

How many of them are large caliber—9mm, .45, or bigger?”

“A fair number,” Orozco said. “Unfortunately, a lot of our armament is smaller than that.”

“Those won’t do much against Terminators,” Kate said grimly.

“But if you can get in enough head shots with the larger rounds, the T-600s will usually go down,” Tunney said. “You can also go for the joints—if you can cripple them, they aren’t as much trouble.” He pursed his lips. “Of course, if Skynet throws in more than a couple of HKs, life will get trickier.”

“Your other choice is to run,” Kate said. “Collect everyone you can, collect everything you can, and get out.”

“And go where?” Orozco countered. “Is there any place that’s safe from Skynet?”

Kate’s lip twitched.

“No,” she admitted.

“Then there’s not much point in running, is there?” Orozco said.

Barnes snorted contemptuously.

“Or you could just roll over and die,” he growled. “Guess that’s up to you.”

“I wish it
was
up to me,” Orozco said ruefully. “Unfortunately, it isn’t.”

From behind him came the sound of an opening door, and he turned to see Grimaldi’s men filing out of the chief’s office. Apparently the skull session—or chewing out—was over. A couple of the men glowered at Orozco and Kate as they all headed together across the lobby and into the hallway that ran along the north side of the building.

“Excuse me a moment,” Orozco said, and he headed after them.

66

Halfway across the lobby, as he circled the old fountain, he glanced back over his shoulder to discover that Kate and her people had quietly disappeared.

He caught up with the nearest of the men, Wadleigh, halfway down the hallway.

“What are you doing?” Orozco asked him.

“What do you think?” Wadleigh retorted. “We’re going to find Connor’s back door and plug it.”

“Go ahead and find it,” Orozco said. “But don’t plug it. Not yet.”

Wadleigh snorted. “Sorry, Orozco, but the chief gave orders.” He turned away.

Orozco caught his arm and turned him back around.

“Find the door,” he repeated, enunciating each word carefully and distinctly, “but don’t plug it.

Put a bar across it if you want, or pile a few bricks on it that can be quickly removed. But
don’t plug
it.”

Wadleigh started to speak, took another look at Orozco’s face, and nodded silently. Orozco held his arm another moment, then released it. Wadleigh turned and continued down the hallway, hurrying but trying not to look like it.

Orozco watched for another moment, then returned to the lobby.

Four people. Only four people had been willing to leave the Ashes’ false sense of security in order to take on the more immediate risks of standing up against humanity’s common enemy. Only four people. And
one
of them had been just a teenager—

Orozco felt his breath catch in his throat.

Damn.

Damn.

67

CHAPTER

TEN

His measured tread switched to a reckless sprint as he tore across the lobby toward the entrance. He reached the archway, automatically getting a grip on his holstered Beretta as he dashed outside.

But Connor and his people were already gone.

Orozco took a couple of deep breaths, swearing viciously and uselessly to himself as he looked up and down the street. His plan had been to wait until Tunney’s recruitment talk was over, then quietly call them in from the sniper’s nest so they could meet the Resistance team.

But in all the excitement and tension it had completely slipped his mind. Now, it was too late.

Swearing one last time under his breath, he gave the hand signal to call Kyle and Star back in.

A minute later the two kids emerged through the battered doorway, Kyle with the Remington cradled ready in his arms, a taut look on his face.

“Where did all those other people come from?” he called as they started across the street. “They went south—I couldn’t see how far. Zac and Callahan and the Iliakis were with them. They weren’t being—I mean—?”

“No, they weren’t being kidnapped,” Orozco assured the teen as he took back the Remington.

“They left entirely of their own free will.”

“Should I have tried to stop them?” Kyle persisted, clearly still concerned that he’d failed in his assigned duty. Maybe he was assuming Orozco’s frustration was directed at him. “Maybe pinned them down until you could get there? I didn’t hear any shots, but there were all those others with them—”

“Kyle, you did fine,” Orozco said firmly, resting a reassuring hand on the boy’s shoulder. “Just relax, okay? I’m just sorry you didn’t get a chance to meet them.”

“Okay,” Kyle said, still sounding a little uncertain, as Orozco led the way back under the archway into their building. “Who were they, anyway?”

“Resistance recruiters,” Orozco told him. “They—”

“They were
Resistance?”
Kyle interrupted sharply, an unreadable expression on his face.

“That’s what they said,” Orozco answered, taken aback by the unexpected intensity of the boy’s reaction. “Why? Did you recognize any of them?”

Kyle looked away.

“No,” he said, his voice back under control again. “I just…wondered.”

“Ah,” Orozco said, letting the subject drop and looking around the lobby. Barney and Copeland, who had ostensibly been guarding the entrance, and who had really been put there to draw down on Barnes’ men, had of course disappeared with the rest of Grimaldi’s crowd.

“I guess you and I are on guard duty,” he commented to Kyle. “Unless you need to get some sleep.”

“I’m okay,” Kyle said, looking at Star. “So’s Star.” He peered closely at Orozco. “You’re the one who needs sleep.”

“I’ll be fine until Johnson and Baker show up for their shift.” Orozco handed the Remington back to Kyle. “Go put this away, if you would, and get me the M16.”

Kyle nodded and headed for the arms locker, Star trailing as always behind him.

68

Orozco watched them go, a dark heaviness settling in around his heart. Of all the people in their sorry little community, Kyle and Star were the ones who should have gone with Barnes’ group.

They were the ones who could have been of the most value to the Resistance’s war against Skynet.

But Barnes was gone, and Orozco didn’t have the faintest idea where to go looking for him.

Even if he had, he didn’t think he would appreciate having someone trying to chase him down, what with Skynet and the whole world right there watching.

Still, the universe was a crazy place. Maybe Kyle and Star would have another chance someday.

Kyle was swapping out the Remington for the M16 when Orozco spotted movement across the lobby. It was Nguyen, heading toward him, his expression ominously rigid.

Orozco winced. Nguyen and his fellow traders had been conspicuous by their absence during Tunney’s big sales pitch and Grimaldi’s botched attempt to show him up, but Orozco had no doubt they’d been listening closely to the proceedings. From the look on his face, it was a safe bet that the man had some piquant things to say about the whole fiasco.

Things Kyle and Star probably didn’t need to hear.

“Thanks,” Orozco said as Kyle handed him the M16. “You and Star never got breakfast this morning, did you?”

“Not really,” Kyle said.

“Neither did I,” Orozco said. “Why don’t you go see what Bessie’s got going in the kitchen. And bring me some back, too.”

Kyle glanced over his shoulder at Nguyen.

“Okay,” the teen said. Nodding to Star, he headed across the lobby toward the kitchen.

Nguyen watched them go, and it seemed to Orozco that he perhaps slowed down his pace a bit.

Maybe he didn’t want the kids hearing this, either.

“Morning,” Orozco said, nodding politely at Nguyen as he came into conversational range.

“And to you,” Nguyen replied. “Interesting morning it’s been, too. May I ask what in the name of hell and all its little demons you and Chief Grimaldi thought you were
doing?”

“Actually, that was all Chief Grimaldi’s idea,” Orozco said, eyeing Nguyen closely as an odd thought suddenly struck him. If Kyle and Star couldn’t go with Barnes and Kate Connor…

“In that case, it would appear that Chief Grimaldi has lost his mind,” Nguyen said. “You’ll excuse us if we don’t bother to make our formal farewells before we go.” He lifted a hand, and across the lobby the rest of the traders appeared, Nguyen’s second-in-command Vuong in the lead, with the group’s harnessed burros trailing closely behind them.

“I understand completely,” Orozco said. “But before you go, I have one last deal to offer.”

“We don’t deal with madmen, Orozco,” Nguyen said bluntly. “Anyone who pulls weapons on a Resistance group—”

“You won’t be dealing with madmen,” Orozco cut him off. “This is my deal, not Grimaldi’s. All I want is for you to take a couple of our kids back to the farm with you.”

Nguyen shook his head.

“Impossible. We can barely grow enough for ourselves and for necessary trade.”

“They could work,” Orozco offered. “Both of them.”

“We already have as many people as we have work for them to do,” Nguyen said. “There’s no more farmable land in our area.”

“But there will be someday,” Orozco persisted. “The soil is detoxifying as the short-life radioactives disintegrate. It’s happening here—it must be happening out there, too.”

“The radioactivity may be fading, but the soil is still contaminated with dangerous levels of heavy metals,” Nguyen said. “We have some techniques for clearing them out, but they’re slow.

We’re still years away from more arable soil.”

“What if I paid their room and board until you had work for them to do?”

Nguyen snorted. “With what?”

69

Orozco braced himself. “Gasoline.”

Nguyen seemed to draw back, his expression changing subtly.

“I thought Chief Grimaldi made all gasoline deals personally.”

“I’m making this one,” Orozco said. “You interested? Yes or no?”

Nguyen glanced around the lobby.

“How much are we talking about?”

“All of it,” Orozco said, feeling his pulse thudding in his neck, the words
treason
and
betrayal
whispering in his ears. “I’ll take you to our cache and show you the secret of how to get in without killing yourselves. In return, you’ll take Kyle and Star out of the city and keep them safe.”

“No one can promise safety,” Nguyen said. “Not these days.”

“Then you promise to keep them as safe as you can,” Orozco said. “And you pledge Randall to do the same.”

Nguyen hissed thoughtfully between his teeth.

“You know I can’t make a pledge for another,” he reminded Orozco. “But for gasoline, I think he’ll be willing.” He paused.
“And
for Mad Sergeant Orozco. Very well, it’s a deal. How soon can our new charges be ready?”

“They can be ready very quickly,” Orozco said. “Unfortunately, I still have some preparations to make for them, and I’ll need a couple of hours for that.”

“Which I presume you can’t do while you’re on guard duty.”

“Correct,” Orozco said. “Still, everything should be ready by mid-afternoon.”

Nguyen pursed his lips, studying Orozco’s face. Doubtless wondering whether the promise of free gasoline was worth the price of staying within Grimaldi’s reach for all those extra hours.

“I doubt the early afternoon will be nearly as interesting as the morning has been,” he said at last. “Very well, we’ll stay.”

“Thank you,” Orozco said. “I’ll get it done as quickly as I can.”

“Yes,” Nguyen said. “In the meantime, I trust you won’t mind if we do a little trading elsewhere in the neighborhood?”

Mentally, Orozco threw the man a salute. How to stay out of Grimaldi’s reach while still making the deal with Orozco, in one easy lesson.

“Not at all,” he assured the trader. “Just be back by mid-afternoon.”

The traders were gone by the time Kyle and Star returned with a small bowl of something.

“Breakfast was all gone,” Kyle said as he handed over the bowl. “But she said we could have some of the soup she was working on for dinner.”

“Thanks,” Orozco said, sniffing at the bowl. The soup looked thin, but it smelled pretty good.

“And now you two need to get some sleep. I’m going to have a special assignment for you later this afternoon.”

“What kind of assignment?” Kyle asked.

“The kind that you’ll need to be rested for,” Orozco said evasively. Eventually, of course, he would have to give them the whole truth. But not yet. Not yet. “So get going.”

“Okay.” Touching Star’s arm, Kyle turned and headed toward their sleeping mats.

Orozco lowered himself to the floor against his favorite pillar, settling himself into guard position, already feeling the fresh hole in his life. Kyle and Star were the best and the brightest Moldering Lost Ashes had to offer. They were also the closest thing to friends he still had. A few hundred gallons of gasoline was a small price to pay to buy their safety.

And it wasn’t like the gasoline was going to do anyone in Moldering Lost Ashes any good. Not once the Terminators came through.

Cradling his M16 across his arms, Orozco settled down to watch. And to think.

The building David had found was decrepit, drafty, and made largely from discarded drywall, which meant the place would be pretty uncomfortable in a serious rainstorm.

70

It had also been recently occupied, Connor noted as the group began unloading and sorting their equipment. Briefly, he wondered what the chances were that the former inhabitants might return and try to reclaim the place. That could be awkward, not to mention noisy.

But aside from that, the place was ideal. It was unobtrusive, it had a back door they could use in an emergency, and it was only four blocks from the Skynet staging area.

“Is this your headquarters?” one of the new people, Leon Iliaki, asked as he gave the place a dubious look.

“No, it’s just a temporary base,” Connor assured him. “We’ll be moving to better quarters in a couple of days.”

“Once we’re there, we’ll start your combat training,” Tunney added as he walked past with an ammo box under each arm.

One of the other newcomers, Callahan, stirred.

“Why wait?” he asked.

Connor eyed him. Usually new recruits needed a day or two to get their bearings. “You want to get started now?” he asked.

“What else are you going to do with us?” Callahan countered. “I mean, unless you’ve got some other work we can do.” He hunched his shoulders uncomfortably. “I don’t like the idea of eating someone else’s food without working for it.”

“Very commendable,” Connor complimented him. “There’s certainly enough work back at our main base. Unfortunately, we’ve got a mission coming up soon, and I can’t spare anyone to escort you back there just now.”

“Is it a mission in this neighborhood?” Leon Iliaki asked.

“The general neighborhood, yes,” Connor confirmed.

Callahan hunched his shoulders again. “Then all the more reason for us to learn as much about fighting as we can,” he said, his voice quavering a little. “This is where our friends are. We need to do whatever we can to help them.”

“Unless you can’t spare anyone for that, either,” Carol Iliaki offered hesitantly. “You seem awfully busy.”

“We are, a bit,” Connor confirmed. “But we’re never too busy to teach people who are ready to learn.”

Callahan glanced at Leon Iliaki, then at Zac, then back at Connor.

“In that case, I guess we’re ready,” he said.

“I am, too,” Carol Iliaki said.

Her husband looked at her in surprise.

“You’re not here to fight,” he protested. “You’re here to sew.”

“I doubt the Terminators will care where I stand in the table of organization,” she reminded him, her eyes on Connor. “Am I correct, Mr. Connor?”

“Your husband’s right about your primary duty,” Connor replied. “But you’re also right in that everyone needs to know at least the basics of combat. Tunney? Over to you.”

“Got it,” Tunney said. “Let me stow these boxes, and I’ll be right with you.”

“He’ll take you in hand,” Connor told the recruits. “Learn well.”

“We will,” Callahan promised. “Thank you.”

Connor nodded and moved off, long experience allowing him to cut through the apparent chaos swirling around him and assess each person and task with a single glance.

Some of the men and women had already completed their work, and while a few of them were taking a moment to rest or grab a quick bite, most were gathering around the table where Tunney had laid out the maps Connor and David had made of the Skynet staging area. Connor’s eyes flicked across that group, then shifted over to the corner where Kate was organizing her medical supplies.

71

He frowned, studying her more closely. A dark and serious look had settled onto his wife’s face, a look that couldn’t be wholly explained by the magnitude of the task facing them.

Interestingly enough, as Connor again glanced around the room he noted that Barnes had an almost identical look on
his
face. And Barnes
never
worried about the jobs Connor took them on.

BOOK: Terminator Salvation: From the Ashes
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