12-25-2008, 08:21 AM
Chapter Nineteen
Trauma
Trauma
âWhere the HELL is Fred?â Christopher Rabikes shouted in frustration.
âWhere the hell are we?â Lizzie asked, dejected. They were still in the air.
âOhio, from the looks of it.â Chris looked out the jumbo-jet window. Moulty, Pardy, and even David were asleep in the nearest chairs. Lizzie was trying to relax.
âYou donât like to fly, do you?â Chris asked her.
Her eyes bulged. âForget it. Iâm not going through that again.â She changed seats.
âSay what?â Rabikes asked, perplexed.
âNever mind,â she sighed. âI wish I had a TV to scan. Or a radio. Something... anything.â
âEverybody needs a break, Liz. Donât beat yourself up. Besides, itâs not like these VSO bastards are making it easy for us. Theyâre not on VHF... or UHF.â
David Furfy stirred, startled, sweating slightly. âGod!â he breathed.
âWhatâs the matter, David?â Lizzie asked.
Furfy looked at them both. âI just... had the worst frigging nightmare in my life... oh, man... you ever see that movie, Being John Malkovich?â Lizzie shook her head no. âWell, in this dream, all of us were back in Beltsville.. you, me, Chris, Becky, John... everybody... but... b-but... everybody in the house... everybody in the city h-h-had Rabikesâs face on them!â he shuddered.
âOh, my God!â Lizzie gasped, mouth wide with horror.
âWhatâs so scary about that?â demanded Chris.
âAnd all anyone said was âRabikes? Rabikes Rabikes? Rabikes. Rabikes Rabikes Rabi-â
âDavid, stop!â Lizzie pleaded. âItâs so... disgusting!â Then she asked âPardy and Moulty, too?â There was fear in her voice.
âYes! Everybody in the whole city! It was awful!â Furfy reached for an air-sickness bag. âIt was... it was...â he vomited. Lizzie looked sick, too.
âWhatâs the matter, babe? Rabikes taunted. âDonât like my head on your body?â Lizzie game him a dirty look, then ran to the bathroom. Rabikes glanced at Moulty and Pardy -- then decided he didnât feel like eating at the moment, he looked out the plane window, and decided to pray...
? ? ?
When Becky, Roberts, Hunt and Emerson had returned to the hovercraft in the middle of the night -- other soldiers tending to Emerson, once aboard-- Becky stormed off to her quarters, furious and distraught.
Iâm a killer now, she despaired. I didnât kill the woman, but she wouldâve died from what I did to her. Looking at herself in the bathroom mirror, soot and sweat covered her face. Stop it! She tried to kill me! She was racist filth. I probably killed Skumm, but I donât want to know! They were gonna kill Emerson-- gonna kill me-- what was I supposed to -- OH, GOD, WHY?!?
The screams of Pardy, Fricker, Cath were mixed with the crazed laughing of Pure Skumm within her brain, until Becky snapped. Sheâd been pacing back and forth, tears streaming, passing the Roy Scheider collection over and over until she knocked them clean off the table with one savage swipe of an arm. Her emotions blazing, Becky melted the tapes, then ran into her closet, tearing at the forty outfits Roberts had provided for her, ripping, then burning them.
On deck 4, a soldier watched Becky on a security monitor. Immediately, he alerted Roberts on the intercom. âSheâs going crazy. Tearing up her room.â
The doctor was impassive. âDonât send anyone in. Sheâs not going to leave the room. Sheâs got to vent, thatâs all. Keep watching. If she does leave, then call us. She canât hurt herself in there. Sheâs immune to fire, remember. Besides, the walls, floor and ceilings wonât melt. My chemical compound protects them from molecular breakdown, no matter how hot it gets.â
âWhat do you call that stuff, Doc?â Hunt asked him.
âDolex-138. My invention.â Roberts smiled. âI shouldâve sprayed her tapes and clothes with it.â Theyâd be protected, too,â he said sadly.
âHow about people?â Hunt asked, curious.
âNo way,â Roberts said. âThe chemicalâs poisonous to human skin. âInanimate objects just absorb it, and theyâre still safe for humans. Well, there goes the books and CD collection. Sheâs definitely angry.â
Inside the room, Becky took her frustrations out on the large-screen TV set, which burned into grey goop as the glass cracked and exploded into tiny pieces. She walked around, still angry beyond belief, looking for something else to destroy. There was nothing left but the bed. She advanced.
âYoung lady, I realize youâve had an extremely rough day,â Robertâs voice sounded from the intercom, âbut thereâs no point in incinerating your --â
She blasted the entire bed to hell. All of Robertsâs gifts and amenities were not toasty ash. If she wasnât already exhausted from the stress of the previous day (ant its two terrifying missions), she would have filled the entire room with wall-to-wall flames. It wouldnât have harmed her at all. Sheâd rather die than kill, but the one thing she couldnât destroy was herself.
Why? Why, why, why, God, why? Becky curled into a fetal position and lay hopelessly on the floor, trying not to think of anything except happy thoughts, but finding none...
? ? ?
Eight hours later, there was a knock on the door. She wasnât sure whether sheâd gotten any sleep or not. Sheâd rested, anyway. The fires were all out. She was surrounded by a sea of grey ash and melted debris.
A second knock. âFox, itâs me,â Hunt said.
âGo away,â Becky hissed.
He entered, carrying a tray. âBreakfast.â
âI donât want any.â Her back was turned to him. She was sitting on a blackened chair, staring lifelessly at the wall.
âTough. Take it anyway. Iâm leaving it here. If you burn it, Iâll bring in another. Burn that one too, weâll bring in an IV. Just eat it, okay?â
âJust leave it and go.â She still didnât turn around.
He placed the food down on the former bed. It was just solid enough. âYou shouldnât obsess about this. You had to do what you did. Skumm was a menace.â
âAnd now Iâm a killer just like you,â she said, her voice breaking. âThank you all so very much.â
Hunt actually looked hurt. He touched her shoulder. âBecky... youâve got to...â
âIâd like to be alone now, Kevin,â she cut him off.
He hesitated, then left the room.
She still didnât turn around.