The Ultimate Werewolf

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by Byron Preiss (ed)


  The flight seemed endless, interminable, he knew it was taking longer than necessary.

  Customs, even with high government clearances (all masterpieces of forgery) and bribes, seemed to be drawn out sadistically by the mustachioed trio of petty officials; secure, and reveling in their momentary power.

  The overland facilities could not merely be called slow. They were reminiscent of the Molasses Man who cannot run till he's warmed-up and who, when he's warmed-up, grows too soft to run.

  Expectedly, like the most suspenseful chapter of a cheap gothic novel, a fierce electrical storm suddenly erupted out of the mountains when the ancient touring car was within a few miles of Talbot's destination. It rose up through the steep mountain pass, hurtling out of the sky, black as a grave, and swept across the road obscuring everything.

  The driver, a taciturn man whose accent had marked him as a Serbian, held the big saloon to the center of the road with the tenacity of a rodeo rider, hands at ten till and ten after midnight on the wheel.

  "Mister Talbot."

  "Yes?"

  "It grows worse. Will I turn back?"

  "How much farther?"

  "Perhaps seven kilometer."

  Headlights caught the moment of uprootment as a small tree by the roadside toppled toward them. The driver spun the wheel and accelerated. They rushed past as naked branches scraped across the boot of the touring car with the sound of fingernails on a blackboard. Talbot found he had been holding his breath. Death was beyond him, but the menace of the moment denied the knowledge.

  "I have to get there."

  "Then I go on. Be at ease."

  Talbot settled back. He could see the Serb smiling in the rearview mirror. Secure, he stared out the window. Branches of lightning shattered the darkness, causing the surrounding landscape to assume ominous, unsettling shapes.

  Finally, he arrived.

  The laboratory, an incongruous modernistic cube—bone white

  against the—again—ominous basalt of the looming prominences—sat high above the rutted road. They had been climbing steadily for hours and now, like carnivores waiting for the most opportune moment, the Carpathians loomed all around them.

  The driver negotiated the final mile and a half up the access road to the laboratory with difficulty: tides of dark, topsoil-and-twig-laden water rushed past them.

  Victor was waiting for him. Without extended greetings he had an associate take the suitcase, and he hurried Talbot to the sub-ground- floor theater where a half dozen technicians moved quickly at their tasks, plying between enormous banks of controls and a huge glass plate hanging suspended from guy-wires beneath the track-laden ceiling.

  The mood was one of highly charged expectancy; Talbot could feel it in the sharp, short glances the technicians threw him, in the way Victor steered him by the arm, in the uncanny racehorse readiness of the peculiar-looking machines around which the men and women swarmed. And he sensed in Victor's manner that something new and wonderful was about to be born in this laboratory. That perhaps ... at last . . . after so terribly, lightlessly long . . . peace waited for him in this white-tiled room. Victor was fairly bursting to talk.

  "Final adjustments," he said, indicating two female technicians working at a pair of similar machines mounted opposite each other on the walls facing the glass plate. To Talbot, they looked like laser projectors of a highly complex design. The women were tracking them slowly left and right on their gimbals, accompanied by soft electrical humming. Victor let Talbot study them for a long moment, then said, "Not lasers. Grasers. Gamma Ray Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Pay attention to them, they're at least half the heart of the answer to your problem."

  The technicians took sightings across the room, through the glass, and nodded at one another. Then the older of the two, a woman in her fifties, called to Victor.

  "On line, Doctor."

  Victor waved acknowledgment, and turned back to Talbot. "We'd have been ready sooner, but this damned storm. It's been going on for a week. It wouldn't have hampered us but we had a freak lightning strike on our main transformer. The power supply was on emergency for several days and it's taken a while to get everything up to peak strength again."

  A door opened in the wall of the gallery to Talbot's right. It opened

  slowly, as though it was heavy and the strength needed to force it was lacking. The yellow baked enamel plate on the door said, in heavy black letters, in French, personnel monitoring devices are required beyond this entrance.

  The door swung fully open, at last, and Talbot saw the warning plate on the other side:

  CAUTION

  RADIATION AREA

  There was a three-armed, triangular-shaped design beneath the words. He thought of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. For no rational reason.

  Then he saw the sign beneath, and had his rational reason:

  opening this door for more than 30 seconds will require a search and secure.

  Talbot's attention was divided between the doorway and what Victor had said. "You seem worried about the storm."

  "Not worried," Victor said, "just cautious. There's no conceivable way it could interfere with the experiment, unless we had another direct hit, which I doubt—we've taken special precautions—but I wouldn't want to risk the power going out in the middle of the shot."

  "The shot?"

  "I'll explain all that. In fact, I have to explain it, so your mite will have the knowledge." Victor smiled at Talbot's confusion. "Don't worry about it." An old woman in a lab smock had come through the door and now stood just behind and to the right of Talbot, waiting, clearly, for their conversation to end so she could speak to Victor.

  Victor turned his eyes to her. "Yes, Nadja?"

  Talbot looked at her. An acid rain began falling in his stomach.

  "Yesterday considerable effort was directed toward finding the cause of a high field horizontal instability," she said, speaking softly, tone- lessly, a page of some specific status report. "The attendant beam blowup prevented efficient extraction." Eighty, if a day. Gray eyes sunk deep in folds of crinkled flesh the color of liver paste. "During the afternoon the accelerator was shut down to effect several repairs." Withered, weary, bent, too many bones for the sack. "The super pinger at C48 was replaced with a section of vacuum chamber; it had a vacuum leak." Talbot was in extreme pain. Memories came at him in ravening hordes, a dark wave of ant bodies gnawing at everything soft and folded and vulnerable in his brain. "Two hours of beam time were lost during the owl shift because a solenoid failed on a new vacuum valve in the transfer hall

  "Mother . . . ?" Talbot said, whispering hoarsely.

  The old woman started violently, her head coming around and her eyes of settled ashes widening. "Victor," she said, terror in the word.

  Talbot barely moved, but Victor took him by the arm and held him. "Thank you, Nadja; go down to target station B and log the secondary beams. Go right now."

  She moved past them, hobbling, and quickly vanished through another door in the far wall, held open for her by one of the younger women.

  Talbot watched her go, tears in his eyes.

  "Oh my God, Victor. It was . . ."

  "No, Larry, it wasn't."

  "It was. So help me God it was! But how, Victor, tell me how?"

  Victor turned him and lifted his chin with his free hand. "Look at me, Larry. Damn it, I said look at me: it wasn't. You're wrong."

  The last time Lawrence Talbot had cried had been the morning he had awakened from sleep, lying under hydrangea shrubs in the botanical garden next to the Minneapolis Museum of Art, lying beside something bloody and still. Under his fingernails had been caked flesh and dirt and blood. That had been the time he learned about manacles and releasing oneself from them when in one state of consciousness, but not in another. Now, he felt like crying. Again. With cause.

  "Wait here a moment," Victor said. "Larry? Will you wait right here for me? I'll be back in a moment."

  He nod
ded, averting his face, and Victor went away. While he stood there, waves of painful memory thundering through him, a door slid open into the wall at the far side of the chamber, and another white- smocked technician stuck his head into the room. Through the opening, Talbot could see massive machinery in an enormous chamber beyond. Titanium electrodes. Stainless steel cones. He thought he recognized it: a Cockroft-Walton pre-accelerator.

  Victor came back with a glass of milky liquid. He handed it to Talbot.

  "Victor—" the technician called from the far doorway.

  "Drink it," Victor said to Talbot, then turned to the technician.

  "Ready to run."

  Victor waved to him. "Give me about ten minutes, Karl, then take it up to the first phase shift and signal us." The technician nodded understanding and vanished through the doorway; the door slid out of the wall and closed, hiding the imposing chamberful of equipment. "And that was part of the other half of the mystical, magical solution of your problem," the physicist said, smiling now like a proud father.

  "What was that I drank?"

  "Something to stabilize you. I can't have you hallucinating."

  "I wasn't hallucinating. What was her name?"

  "Nadja. You're wrong; you've never seen her before in your life. Have I ever lied to you? How far back do we know each other? I need your trust if this is going to go all the way."

  "I'll be all right." The milky liquid had already begun to work. Talbot's face lost its flush, his hands ceased trembling.

  Victor was very stern suddenly, a scientist without the time for sidetracks; there was information to be imparted. "Good. For a moment I thought I'd spent a great deal of time preparing . . . well," and he smiled again, quickly, "let me put it this way: I thought for a moment no one was coming to my party."

  Talbot gave a strained, tiny chuckle, and followed Victor to a bank of television monitors set into rolling frame-stacks in a corner. "Okay. Let's get you briefed." He turned on sets, one after another, till all twelve were glowing, each one holding a scene of dull-finished and massive installations.

  Monitor #1 showed an endlessly long underground tunnel painted eggshell white. Talbot had spent much of his two-month wait reading; he recognized the tunnel as a view down the "straightaway" of the main ring. Gigantic bending magnets in their shock-proof concrete cradles glowed faintly in the dim light of the tunnel.

  Monitor #2 showed the linac tunnel.

  Monitor #3 showed the rectifier stack of the Cockroft-Walton pre- accelerator.

  Monitor #4 was a view of the booster. Monitor #5 showed the interior of the transfer hall. Monitors #6 through #9 revealed three experimental target areas and, smaller in scope and size, an internal target area supporting the meson, neutrino and proton areas.

  The remaining three monitors showed research areas in the underground lab complex, the final one of which was the main hall itself, where Talbot stood looking into twelve monitors, in the twelfth screen of which could be seen Talbot standing looking into twelve . . .

  Victor turned off the sets.

  "What did you see?"

  All Talbot could think of was the old woman called Nadja. It couldn't be. "Larry! What did you see?"

  "From what I could see," Talbot said, "that looked to be a particle

  accelerator. And it looked as big as cern's proton synchrotron in Geneva."

  Victor was impressed. "You've been doing some reading."

  "It behooved me."

  "Well, well. Let's see if I can impress you. cern's accelerator reaches energies up to 33 BeV; the ring underneath this room reaches energies of 15 GeV."

  "Giga meaning billion."

  "You have been reading up, haven't you! Fifteen billion electron volts. There's simply no keeping secrets from you, is there, Larry?"

  "Only one."

  Victor waited expectantly.

  "Can you do it?"

  "Yes. Meteorology says the eye is almost passing over us. We'll have better than an hour, more than enough time for the dangerous parts of the experiment."

  "But you can do it."

  "Yes, Larry. I don't like having to say it twice." There was no hesitancy in his voice, none of the "yes but" equivocations he'd always heard before. Victor had found the trail.

  "I'm sorry, Victor. Anxiety. But if we're ready, why do I have to go through an indoctrination?"

  Victor grinned wryly and began reciting, "As your Wizard, I am about to embark on a hazardous and technically unexplainable journey to the upper stratosphere. To confer, converse, and otherwise hobnob with my fellow wizards."

  Talbot threw up his hands. "No more."

  "Okay, then. Pay attention. If I didn't have to, I wouldn't; believe me, nothing is more boring than listening to the sound of my own lectures. But your mite has to have all the data you have. So listen. Now comes the boring—but incredibly informative—explanation."

  ▼▼▼

  Western Europe's cern—Counseil Europeen pour la Recherche Nucle- aire—had settled on Geneva as the site for their Big Machine. Holland lost out on the rich plum because it was common knowledge the food was lousy in the Lowlands. A small matter, but a significant one.

  The Eastern Bloc's ceern—Conseil de VEurope de VEst pour la Recherche Nucleaire—had been forced into selecting this isolated location high in the White Carpathians (over such likelier and more hospitable sites as Cluj in Rumania, Budapest in Hungary and Gdansk in Poland) because Talbot's friend Victor had selected this site, cern had had Dahl and Wideroe and Goward and Adams and Reich; ceern had Victor. It balanced. He could call the tune.

  So the laboratory had been painstakingly built to his specifications, and the particle accelerator dwarfed the cern Machine. It dwarfed the four-mile ring at the Fermi National Accelerator Lab in Batavia, Illinois. It was, in fact, the world's largest, most advanced "synchrophasotron."

  Only seventy per cent of the experiments conducted in the underground laboratory were devoted to projects sponsored by ceern. One hundred per cent of the staff of Victor's complex was personally committed to him, not to ceern, not to the Eastern Bloc, not to philosophies or dogmas ... to the man. So thirty per cent of the experiments run on the sixteen-mile-diameter accelerator ring were Victor's own. If ceern knew—and it would have been difficult for them to find out—it said nothing. Seventy per cent of the fruits of genius was better than no per cent.

  Had Talbot known earlier that Victor's research was thrust in the direction of actualizing advanced theoretical breakthroughs in the nature of the structure of fundamental particles, he would never have wasted his time with the pseudos and dead-enders who had spent years on his problem, who had promised everything and delivered nothing but dust. But then, until Information Associates had marked the trail— a trail he had previously followed in every direction but the unexpected one that merged shadow with substance, reality with fantasy—until then, he had no need for Victor's exotic talents.

  While ceern basked in the warmth of secure knowledge that their resident genius was keeping them in front in the Super Accelerator Sweepstakes, Victor was briefing his oldest friend on the manner in which he would gift him with the peace of death; the manner in which Lawrence Talbot would find his soul; the manner in which he would precisely and exactly go inside his own body.

  "The answer to your problem is in two parts. First, we have to create a perfect simulacrum of you, a hundred thousand or a million times smaller than you, the original. Then, second, we have to actualize it, turn an image into something corporeal, substantial, material; something that exists. A miniature you with all the reality you possess, all the memories, all the knowledge."

  Talbot felt very mellow. The milky liquid had smoothed out the churning waters of his memory. He smiled. "I'm glad it wasn't a difficult problem."

  Victor looked rueful. "Next week I invent the steam engine. Get serious, Larry."

  "It's that Lethe cocktail you fed me."

  Victor's mouth tightened and Talbot knew he had to get hold of him
self. "Go on, I'm sorry."

  Victor hesitated a moment, securing his position of seriousness with a touch of free-floating guilt, then went on, "The first part of the problem is solved by using the grasers we've developed. We'll shoot a hologram of you, using a wave generated not from the electrons of the atom, but from the nucleus ... a wave a million times shorter, greater in resolution than that from a laser." He walked toward the large glass plate hanging in the middle of the lab, grasers trained on its center. "Come here."

  Talbot followed him.

  "Is this the holographic plate," he said, "it's just a sheet of photographic glass, isn't it?"

  "Not this," Victor said, touching the ten-foot square plate, "this!" He put his finger on a spot in the center of the glass and Talbot leaned in to look. He saw nothing at first, then detected a faint ripple; and when he put his face as close as possible to the imperfection he perceived a light moire pattern, like the surface of a fine silk scarf. He looked back at Victor.

  "Microholographic plate," Victor said. "Smaller than an integrated chip. That's where we capture your spirit, white-eyes, a million times reduced. About the size of a single cell, maybe a red corpuscle."

  Talbot giggled.

  "Come on," Victor said wearily. "You've had too much to drink, and it's my fault. Let's get this show on the road. You'll be straight by the time we're ready ... I just hope to God your mite isn't cockeyed."

  ▼▼▼

  Naked, they stood him in front of the ground photographic plate. The older of the female technicians aimed the graser at him, there was a soft sound Talbot took to be some mechanism locking into position, and then Victor said, "All right, Larry, that's it."

  He stared at them, expecting more.

  "That's it?"

  The technicians seemed very pleased, and amused at his reaction.

  "All done," said Victor. It had been that quick. He hadn't even seen the graser wave hit and lock in his image. "That's it?" he said again. Victor began to laugh. It spread through the lab. The technicians were clinging to their equipment; tears rolled down Victor's cheeks; everyone gasped for breath; and Talbot stood in front of the minute imperfection in the glass and felt like a retard.

 

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