Chapter 6 "“ "Affiliations"
Ali walked into the hanger bay/conference room fifteen minutes after the meeting started. Funding always went into field technology and, on rare occasions, into paychecks, but seldom into making HQ resemble a base of operations in any way, shape or form. It looked more like a run down college dormitory with a place to land a helicopter. Beyond that, the best they could do for a conference area was a card table and a rolling black board next to a make shift kitchenette in the hanger bay. Certainly not a step up from Ali’s last job.
“Nice of you to join us Allison.” Mathieu said dryly.
Mathieu’s eyes, hidden behind a red-tinted visor, still managed to bore holes into you when he glared in your direction. Ali wondered if it was part of his cybernetic abilities, or if he just had a knack for making everyone in a room feel uncomfortable. Not the most inspiring quality in a leader, if you asked her.
She shrugged off his comment and jabbed her middle finger into the air like she was demonstrating what she was suggesting. “Up yours space man.” without attempting to conceal her contempt.
More then a few seconds of uncomfortable silence fell upon the room. Mathieu said nothing. He stood motionless, his bulky arms folded rigidly against his chest and the lopsided arrow insignia emblazoned across it. His jet black uniform starkly contrasted Ali’s egg shell version and every one else’s on the team for that matter. Other then his exposed jaw line and proboscis, nothing of his flesh could be seen. His hair, eyes and ears were completely obscured by the visor and the hood of his form-fitting leather-like accoutrements. It was less the mantle of a team leader from Ali’s viewpoint, and more the shroud of an executioner.
2-Hype, the enigmatic African warrior from some tribe Ali had never heard of, stood behind Mathieu examining some kind of data node with his “good” eye. He gave Ali a sideways glance over the collar of his bulky bomber jacket that Ali might have found contemptible, if he didn’t look at everyone that way.
Melinda (who had chosen the ridiculous code name of Sweet Thang) crouched beneath an open panel on the hover-copter that served as the team’s main mode of transport. If Melinda found her uniform in any way revealing, then she didn’t show it. A carroty duplicate of Ali’s, only with matching boots and wristlets that bore similar marking to the lopsided arrow insignia, Melinda wore her uniform with confidence that bordered on trashy. Her page boy haircut concealed her ebony face as sparks shot out from the avant-garde soldering tool she was using. She paid no attention to the interchange. She was absorbed in the inner workings of “her” hover-copter like a lover lost in coitus. Team interpersonal relations were clearly not her concern.
Walter leaned casually against a far wall, his metallic silver uniform a total departure from the team standard. Ali supposed it had to be to accommodate his unique “needs”. His expression was not visible behind the metal V-shaped masked that attached to his face, but his posture was giving his bemusement of the situation completely away.
Maria on the other hand, hovered in one corner of the hanger bay, literally looking down on Ali and the others. Her gentle features were discernibly troubled, as it seemed Maria, or Corazòn, lived up to her code name in more ways then one. Empathy was her curse and her blessing, as she felt the emotion of every single being within a twelve mile radius. The strongest emotions being the ones in her immediate vicinity. Right now, Ali could only imagine what it felt like to feel irritated, amused, absorbed and angered all at the same time. Not to mention dealing with her own inherent feelings.
For a moment, Ali remembered what it was like to be the one with shuttered away feelings. The insignificant one in a group. The one who let every awkward moment and harsh word hurt like a finger poke to the eye. But this was not that Ali Candela. That Ali died long ago.
“I barely got any sleep last night what with this complex’s incessant droning-” She marched defiantly passed Mathieu and not so subtly bumped into Melinda’s posterior. “Melinda’s constant welding-” it seemed she was making a bee line for David, “And whatever the hell that God awful noise was coming from your room all night.” She stuck a finger in the general area of Walter’s face, careful not to make actual physical contact with him.
She smoothly turned around addressing more the group then Mathieu, “So you’ll excuse me if I’m a little on the irritated, groggy side this morning.” Seating herself in a metal folding chair, she pretended the metal wasn’t ice cold against her exposed thighs. She brusquely crossed her legs, folded her arms and said, “Or you can kiss my ass. Whichever you prefer.”
Mathieu stood stone faced for what felt like a solid minute. Whatever was going on in his mind, it appeared he would address any issues with Ali at a later time. But not before making sure all five people in the room nearly asphyxiated on the awkward silence.
“Please continue with the mission briefing, Maria.” He said, with his body so rigid, it looked as if he were carved out of onyx.
Maria descended angelically from her position above the hover-copter, tiny bursts of crimson radiance sparkling in her wake. She had probably been spot checking something for Melinda when Ali walked into the room. The ivory color of her uniform’s version contrasted her own olive complexion and the jet-black main that seemed to flow about her countenance as if it were a living, breathing entity unto itself. The heart symbol on her chest, that replaced the typical inverted arrow stump, shimmered, almost as if to beat like an actual heart. She should have looked like an oversized playing card, but something about Maria, even Ali couldn’t deny, was inexplicably graceful. Her every motion and gesture an elegantly orchestrated pantomime, a choreographed and meticulously rehearsed ballet. No one should be that graceful, Ali thought. Not a regular human being anyway. But she supposed that Corazon was not exactly a “regular” human being. Nobody in this room could fit that definition.
Maria came to rest in front of a large rolling dry-erase board that had a pyramidal object sketched out on it in red ink. She cleared her throat and began speaking in a distinctly Hispanic patois. Her voice was soft, her words carefully chosen and spoken melodically. Ruby red lips parted in graceful cadence as she began seamlessly filling in the details Ali had apparently missed. “As I was saying, you have all seen the news reports of the brutal attacks on random U.S. citizens over the last year and a half. Even before the apparent homicide of Captain Darren Walker, better known to you as American Justice, our own investigations into the these bizarre attacks and murders had us on the trail of the Cli-MAXX narcotic long before the press, or even the police, were aware of the situation.
“For the last year, we have attempted to track down the distribution of Cli-MAXX to its source, and while the effort has garnered us some small victories, the origin of this terrible weapon has remained ever elusive. We have shut down regional distribution centers, contained so-called ‘MAXXAddicts’ at critical stages of their transformations and undoubtedly curbed a swelling tide of chaos and death that would have consumed many of this nation’s communities. Nevertheless, we have been little more then a treatment for the symptoms of a much larger disease. A stop-gap for the unrelenting wave of anarchy that will no doubt ensue if this drug’s originators are not swiftly discovered and appropriately dealt with. Today, our tactics change.
Mathieu moved in behind Maria, “Melinda is making adjustments to the Enforcer’s external sensors, increasing their sensitivity to psionic energy spikes by roughly 600%.”
“This will, of course, burn out the entire sensor array and it will have to be replaced-” Maria began to add.
“But for a few seconds,” Ali interrupted. “We’ll know exactly when and where a Cli-MAXX pyramid has been snapped. So big deal. What does that give us besides a ruined sensor array and a cut in pay?”
Mathieu tilted his visor downward, almost as if he planned to look over their ridge like a pair of reading glasses. “What it gives us, Allison, is a opportunity to confront a MAXXAddict at the initial stages of his transformation. When he or she is at their most powerful”
“Something we’ve never managed to do.” Maria added.
“She’s right” Interjected the charcoal complexioned African. He had turned to Ali gesturing with what looked like a scalding cup of black coffee, and was glaring at her with that one gleaming golden eye. “Even before you rejoined the team, we were never able to confront a MAXXAddict before they excised a big chunk of property and lives from the landscape. We’ve never been anything more then a clean-up crew.”
Walter’s silver V-mask glimmered as it bobbed back and forth in amusement, his cockney accent slipping slightly, “Now we’ve got a chance to nip things in the bud before they get out of control! Fantastic!”
“And more importantly” Maria continued, “ we will be given the prospect of apprehending a Maxx Dealer or tracking him to his source.”
“Whoa, whoa! Hold up one second” Ali stood up with palms open. “Catching a Maxx Head while he’s shooting up in one thing. Catching a MAXX Dealer and backtracking him to his source is a bit far fetched don’t you think? Distributors were easy. There were never anything more then storage units with great advance warning systems and even better escape routes. But a dealer? Come on! Your reaching for this one.”
“Not really.” Walter shot back. “Think about it. What’s the one thing we do know about MAXX Dealers?”
“That their hard to catch.”
“Impossible to catch! Which means that their constantly mobile. Making only one or two deals at a given place or time. These blokes ain’t selling dime bags out the boot of their BMWs. Their going to their users, making their sale quick and painless and heading for the hills soon afterward. And since a MAXXAddict never waits more then a few minutes after scoring a hit-”
“Then when we locate the addict doing whatever it is he does with that triangle thingy, we follow the black sedan racing from the crime scene back to his lair. Alright, I get.” Ali still wasn’t completely convinced judging from the sardonic lilt she used, but figured she might as well play along and see where all this would led them. She hadn’t seen much action these days anyway and it’s not like she had much say in matter.
“And before Allison finishes another one of our sentences, remember this,” Mathieu apparently agreed with Ali in that respect. “Our mission relies primarily on time and circumstance. What your people refer to as luck, we need in immense quantities. Time is running out. Funding is running out. We’ve got one shot and one shot only. We fail, and FUSION dies.”
Ali was not impressed, “Enough with the melodrama already, when do finally get on with it?” It was less of a question then it was an instruction.
Mathieu glanced in Melinda’s direction and she seemingly responded to his gaze. As she removed a pair of darkened soldering goggles, the straps caught her bobbed reddish locks revealing her finely chiseled ebony features. She looked over one shoulder at Mathieu and smiled with gleaming white teeth, as a delicate chain that connected an earring with a nose ring glistened against an elated cheekbone. The immeasurable pleasure in her voice was almost disconcerting.
“Oh, it’s on baby!” She stood up with hands on hips, working her neck back and forth. “It is on!”
Apparently, it was on-