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Chapter Sixteen

The Devil’s Doorstep

The moaning grew louder as the four ascended the stairs toward darkness. Cap raised a hand. Rock and Sun Ra stopped silently. Tex, who had turned his head to watch their rear, bumped into Rock.

“Watch your step, quack!” the Russian hissed over his shoulder.

Tex ran a hand through his long grey hair and said “When you get outta mah way, short, round, and ugly!”

Cap turned to gaze sternly at the pair. They instantly shut up and he continued along the stairway, climbing the steps with a silent, cat-like tread. Darkness filled the corridor at the top, but at the far end-from whence came the moans-light shone around the edges of hospital-style doors.

“This is maddening,” an exasperated voice behind the door said. “A few simple commands involve so many neurons!”

“This,” another voice insisted, “isn’t as simple as moving cargo from one point to another or firing a rifle. You want coordinated movement and speech that you can control!”

“Try this,” the first voice demanded.

The moaning increased, then became a garbled collection of guttural hisses and glottal clucks.

“That’s closer,” the second voice agreed.

Captain Anger quietly eased the door open. Even with his care, it creaked ever so lightly.

William Arthur Dandridge, leaning with both hands on a computer terminal, turned to see the powerful figure in the doorway. His assistant, bent over a monitor, looked up too. Startled, Dandridge stared into Anger’s deep green eyes and saw the confidence there. He felt that steady gaze peer into the deepest recesses of his soul. Nonetheless, he straightened up from the terminal and spoke in a loud, firm voice.

“Get the hell out of here.”

Sun Ra followed Cap into the room and glanced at the moaning figure-a middle-aged man lying supine on the table, surrounded by a phalanx of computer equipment and monitors. “Hey- that’s the Secretary General of the UN!”

Cap spoke, his voice deep and commanding. “I’ve come for you, Dandridge. Your dreams are finished. It’s nightmare time.”

Dandridge smiled almost wryly. “I don’t know who you are, but you look old enough to know never to threaten a man on his own turf.” He tapped a few keys on the terminal keyboard. With a chunking sound, semi-circular slit appeared in the floor between Dandridge and Captain Anger, spewing a blackish dust that spread toward the four intruders.

Rock and Sun Ra pulled their pistols and aimed in on Dandridge. Cap motioned them to hold their fire. The black stain spread toward them at a speedy clip.

“Don’t be concerned for your lives,” Dandridge said snidely. “These just devour free metals, such as that of your weapons. I want you alive for research.” He smiled again. “And don’t worry on my account-they’re programmed to stay away from the center of the room.”

At that, Cap smiled. Crouching down, he kept an eye on the approach of the microbotic horde as he pulled a metal cylinder from a bulging cargo pocket and set it behind him. Just before the dark wave reached his feet, he sprang toward Dandridge with a long and powerful leap.

Mouth agape, Dandridge watched in shock as the human missile flew toward him. The impact threw him against a bank of monitors, slamming them down together in a hail of shattered glass. The smell and heat of burning insulation choked his stu

Dandridge stared into the white teeth that gri

Acting swiftly, Rock gave the lawyer a leg up off the ground. Sun Ra wrapped his huge dark fists around a high-intensity operating lamp and pulled himself up, mighty biceps bulging with power. Rock did the same for Tex, who grabbed on to another lamp and held on with his strong surgeon’s hands.

With the tide of microbots closing in on him, Rock looked up to find another lamp. None were in reach.

Chyort vosmi!” he shouted.

“Here!” Sun Ra extended a foot within Rock’s grasp.





“Are you kidding?” Rock shouted. “We’d pull damn’ thing out of ceiling! I’ll-”

Rock stared with alarm at the black dust as it engulfed the cylinder Cap had placed on the floor. The shiny stainless steel quickly grew pitted and disintegrated, gnawed away by creatures so small that hundreds could ride on the back of an ant.

Cap clamped a tan, muscular hand around Dandridge’s throat and lifted him up. “Shut them off,” he growled.

“You think they’re radio dispatched like taxis?” Dandridge gurgled. “They leave the gate programmed. They keep working till they can’t find any more metal in their target zone.”

“Su

“Tex!” He slipped off his bandoliers of hand grenades and tossed them up to the doctor, who caught them on the toes of his boots.

“These things weigh a ton!” Tex shouted.

Rock watched as the black dust swarmed about his boots.

“You must have a way to stop them,” Cap uttered in a savage tone.

Purpling, Dandridge managed to choke out: “He won’t be hurt. I swear it.”

The microbots rode up Rock’s boots, devouring steel nails and brass eyelets. They tickled at his legs as he stood frozen for an instant.

“They’re not eating me!” he loudly confirmed, hardly reassured as he shook off the leather remains of his useless boots. The swarm hit his waistline, turning his belt buckle into powder. “Yipes!” he cried as his gut expanded from the released binding. He looked down. “Good thing zipper is nylon!” he yelped, grasping his slacks with one hand, balling the other into a fist, and turning toward Dandridge. “Let me at him, Skipper!”

“Wait.” Cap held his grip on Dandridge. “I want him to see something.” He turned his captive’s head toward the crumbling remnants of the cylinder. Liberated from inside by the hungry black dust, a silvery lump seemed to dissolve into a puddle amidst the ebony attackers.

“Scavengers!” the balding man cried, struggling to get away.

Reprogrammed scavengers,” Cap said. “Watch.”

The silver-grey microbots quickly spread out, overcoming and redesigning the metal-eaters. Within moments, the black and silver dust spread thin and vanished from view. Tex and Sun Ra dropped to the floor.

“I’ve developed an antidote for your machines, Dandridge. And your attack just unleashed them upon your island.”

Dandridge’s eyes widened. He looked up at the gri

Cap simply kept smiling, then said, “Tex-check out the Secretary General. Dr. Dandridge and I are going to discuss electronics. And his murder of scores of people, including Dr.

Madsen.”

Dandridge gripped Cap’s copper-hued wrists. His feet dangled almost a foot above the floor. “Madsen?” he said. “That’s a laugh. He-”

A voice blared from an overhead loudspeaker. “Drop him!”

“My lab assistant,” Dandridge said with a tone of proud triumph.

“Why should I?” Cap shouted.

“Two reasons,” the voice said. “A woman and a boy.”