When they’d been relieved of all the tools and weapons, they were lifted to their feet and held in place as another figure entered the room: Jinn al-Khalif, with a rifle in his hand.
He strode up to Kurt. “We’ve been waiting for you,” he said.
“No doubt your spy told you we were coming.”
Jinn smiled like a jackal. “Yes, as a matter of fact, she did.”
With that, he slammed the butt of his rifle into Kurt’s gut, knocking the wind out of him and dropping him back to the floor.
“Her name is Zarrina. She sends her regards.”
CHAPTER 24
BACK ON BOARD THE FLOATING ISLAND OF AQUA-TERRA, Paul and Gamay had spent most of the day with Marchetti, studying the sample of “wild” microbots they’d captured.
A makeshift lab had been set up to replace the flooded forward compartment. Marchetti’s computers, a small radio transmitter, and other equipment now lay scattered about the room.
Without the electron microscope, they couldn’t see the individual microbots, but under a pair of medical-grade optical scopes Paul and Gamay were studying two separate samples that had grouped together in little clusters almost like algae or bacteria.
Marchetti sat at his computer console, tapping away. Leilani sat nearby, fidgeting nervously. After spending the morning calling up the original design specs, they’d begun testing and attempting to signal the bots with the standard commands Marchetti had programmed into the prototypes years before.
“They’re not doing anything,” Paul said for the tenth time.
“Are you sure?” Marchetti said, still transmitting command protocols. “I mean they’re awfully small, maybe you’re missing something.”
“We’re looking at them through the microscopes,” Paul said, “and they’re just sitting there. Like lazy relatives after a Thanksgiving feast.”
Gamay shot him a look. “You’re not talking about my relatives, are you?”
“Just Cousin Willie, for the most part.”
She appeared hurt for an instant and then shrugged. “You’re right, he flops on that couch Thursday afternoon and doesn’t get up until Sunday.”
Marchetti coughed loudly to get their attention. “Assuming the microbots haven’t been taken over by th
e spirit of Cousin Willie, I can only conclude that Otero has changed the command codes.”
“So how’s this going to help us, then?” Leilani asked.
Before Marchetti could reply Gamay asked a more practical question. “Is there any way we can extract the codes from the bots themselves? Maybe reverse engineer them and read their programming?”
Marchetti shook his head. “Not with the equipment I have here.”
“What about extracting it from Otero himself?” Leilani added. “Or from his friend? We have them down there in those cells. Let’s grab the keys and go talk to them. And by talk, I mean force them to talk.”
Gamay glanced at Paul. They were worried about Leilani. As the days wore on, she seemed only to grow angrier and more frustrated, especially since the incident on the airship.
“I’m pretty firmly in the anti-coercion camp,” Marchetti said.
“He tried to kill you,” Leilani said.
“Good point,” Marchetti noted. “Let’s go beat it out of him. I’ll see if I can find a rubber hose or something.”
“That was a quick turnabout,” Gamay said.
“I’m a flip-flopper,” Marchetti replied, “what can I tell you?”
“Maybe there’s another way?”