The darkness was overwhelming. Without streetlights, the streets and buildings were black against the black of the sky, an enveloping night punctuated only by the lights of vehicles, and the flashing red and blues of police cruisers.
Into this darkness drifted ever-present, freezing rain, lighter than before and invisible, except where it caught the police lights.
The intersection of the Parkway and South Main Street was blocked with cars, at least six of them jammed together in a multi-car pile-up, no doubt caused by the sudden loss of street and traffic lights. The drivers were standing around yelling at each other in the darkness. Vienna swung the wheel sharply, the pickup lifting and tilting as she cut left across the centre line, aiming straight at a pair of ornate wrought-iron gates in a wall surrounding an apartment building.
“Hold on!” she yelled, but it wasn’t necessary. The blunt knife that was the front bumper of the pickup sliced through the gates as if they were made of cardboard, twisted metal spinning away to the sides.
They raced through a construction site, with timber stacked in tidy piles, over some scrubby ground and through another fence, this one just a plastic orange safety fence.
Then they were out on South Abel Street, and Vienna put her foot down, regardless of the people who had to jump out of the way.
An overturned car, on fire, blocked the road ahead. Clearly visible in the flickering yellow flames, the dazed occupants sat on the curb.
This time Vienna didn’t stop, didn’t change course; she just veered slightly, aiming for the trunk of the car. There was a jarring crunch and then they were past. Sam looked back to see the car spinning and burning like a giant Roman candle.
Sirens on police cars wailed as they circled around, aimlessly, helpless in the omnipresent darkness.
Sounds of smashing glass came from both sides and the sound of shredded tyres somewhere nearby was followed by the sickening thud of an accident.
A police car pulled out of a side street and raced up behind them, lights flashing. Before Sam could even warn the others, however, a four-wheel drive slid out of a side street, sideswiping the police car, which screeched to a halt and fell away behind them.
They took Calaveras Boulevard out to the Sinclair Freeway interchange, then north on I-680.
The rain eased, then stopped as they rolled out into the desert. Sam sank back into the upholstery and said nothing, exhausted by the day’s events.
Ranger glared at him from the rear seat, handcuffed to the doorhandle.
“We don’t have time to get to Cheyenne,” Vienna said. “Even if we drive through the night. Someone will have reported this car stolen before then. We’ll have to hide the pickup and change cars again.”
“What do you think, Dodge?” Sam asked.
Dodge looked blank.
“We need to do something,” Vienna said harshly, “or Tactical will be all over us when Ursula comes back online.”
Sam looked back at Dodge. He looked tired and confused.
“I have an idea,” Sam said. “I know somewhere we could go.”
“Where?” Dodge asked.
Sam shook his head. “The less Ranger knows, the better.”
They stopped in Livermore where the streets were dark, but deserted, and Sam and Vienna went shopping with the aid of a tyre iron from the rear of the pickup.
They stopped at a food store, a hardware supplies store and an electronics store, in that order. Sam helped Vienna load cartons of food into the tray of the pickup, along with boltcutters and other tools that he thought they might need. The hardware store had a good supply of hazmat suits and he took four.
The electronics store yielded a laptop computer and a sensor device in a black leather carry case. Sam stowed the device in the back of the pickup, being careful not to let Ranger see it.
At the end of the short shopping spree, Vienna climbed behind the wheel and took them back onto the interstate.
It was dark and hilly, but the lights of the pickup reached out in front of them, clawing back the night, and they made good time, veering around to the south-east and merging onto the I-5 towards Los Angeles.
The pickup had a GPS navigation unit, but it was offline. The whole world was currently offline, Sam thought. There was a map book in the glove compartment though, and he flicked the reading light on to help him study it.
“Stay on the interstate until we get to exit 278,” he said. “Take Highway 46 towards Wasco.”
Vienna’s eyes narrowed for a moment, then opened in understanding. “Through to Bakersfield, right?”
“Yeah.”
Dark farmland stretched out to their left, and even darker mountains to their right, illuminated only by starlight.
Sam yawned, and wondered how Vienna was managing to stay awake. Hours passed and the landscape started to blur outside his window into a kaleidoscope image of heavy black and brown shapes.
“You won’t get away with this,” Ranger said abruptly, yanking Sam back to full consciousness. “It was bad enough before, but kidnapping a Federal Agent is going to add years to your jail time.”
“What did they do?” Vienna asked, her hands tensing on the steering wheel. “I wasn’t there, remember? You tell me. What did they do that was so bad?”
“You could get off lightly,” Ranger said by way of reply. “You weren’t involved at the start, and you could say you were duped or pressured by these two into being an accessory. I’d support you.”
“Thanks, I appreciate that,” Vienna said. “So what exactly did these two mugs do, that had a whole troop of Tactical chasing them out of the CDD building?”
“They attacked Swamp Witch,” Ranger said. “We still don’t know how, but they used some kind of technology to induce a neurological event. Same thing happened in Chicago, and guess who was on the spot that time as well. Dodge and Sam. I think that Swamp Witch found out what they were up to and tried to stop them.”
“We never attacked Swamp Witch,” Sam said. “That was–”
Vienna cut him off. “How do you know it was them? For sure.”
“I saw the security footage,” Ranger replied. “I saw the two of them coming out of the swamp, and then Swamp Witch started screaming.”
“We never–” Sam began, but Vienna held up a hand to silence him.
“Shut up, Sam. I want to hear Ranger’s version,” she said. “So you can clearly remember Sam and Dodge coming out before Swamp Witch screamed?”
“As clear as you’re sitting in front of me now.”
“What if you never saw that at all?” Vienna asked.
“I saw it,” Ranger said firmly.
“I know, but what if it was a false memory that had been implanted in your brain? How would you know the difference?”
“I saw it,” Ranger said again.
“You remember seeing it. What if that memory was false? How would you know?”
“You’re the bright one, you tell me,” Ranger said.
“You wouldn’t know,” Sam said. “Not if you thought it was a genuine memory.”
“We are our memories,” Dodge said. “That’s all we are. That’s what makes us the person we are. The sum of all our memories from the day we were born. If you took a person and replaced his set of memories with another set, he’d be a different person. He’d think, act and feel things differently.”
“I know what I remember,” Ranger said.
“You’re missing the point,” Vienna said. “If it was possible to implant a false memory, of something that never happened, then to you that memory would be as real as if it really did happen.”
“How is that even possible?” Ranger scoffed.
“Through a neuro-headset,” Vienna said simply and Sam could see Ranger considering that.
“Why would anyone do that?” Ranger said. “What motivation would these people have to frame Dodge and Sam, even if it were possible?”
“Because ‘these people’ were the real culprits,” Vienna said. “They were the ones who attacked Swamp Witch. Dodge and Sam figured out who they were, so to cover themselves they implanted memories to blame Dodge and Sam.”
“I had orders from Jaggard,” Ranger protested.
“You think he doesn’t have a neuro-headset?” Sam asked. “They got at him too.”
“Even if it’s true,” Ranger said, “give yourselves up now before things get any worse. Let me take you in and I promise that neither you, nor I, will go within ten feet of a neuro-set until the end of your trial.”
“It’s too late for that,” Sam said, an image of Kiwi coming into his head, his finger pointed accusingly. “Too many people have already been affected.”
Ranger lapsed into silence and stared out of the window at nothing.
Sam said, “How do any of us know that anything is real?”
“We don’t,” Dodge said.
“Everything I know is a memory,” Sam continued. “Every person I ever met, everything I have ever done. It could all be false. Implanted.”
It was a staggering thought. What if nothing that had gone before had ever really happened? Were the people he remembered as his mother and father really his parents? Had Fargas even existed, except in his mind?
“I think you’d know,” Vienna said. “I don’t know why, but somehow, I think you’d know.”
Sam slept for a while and only woke when the pickup truck slowed down to the side of the road and stopped. It was already light, and he wondered where they were. An image of a road sign stuck in his mind, something they must have passed somewhere along the way: Death Valley Road.
Where was Death Valley? His waking mind struggled to put it into context. Then it came to him.
“Time to get geared up,” he said. “There are some protective suits in the back and we all need to wear them.”
Outside, the early morning light glinted coldly off the barbs of a high barricade fence that straddled the highway directly in front of them.
Signs mounted on the fence said Danger and No Admittance. A large triangular sign had a skull in one corner, a running man in another, and a radiation symbol in the third.
Further down the highway, about twenty yards beyond the barricades, the grimy, dust-covered remains of a sign were embedded upside down in the dirt.
Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada.