Blue Root

a novel by Rina Slayter

42) Ninety Percent Excellent


May 21st by RinaSlayter

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

Pulling out a screwdriver, ready to pop open the back of both stand-alones, Ordal grimaced. “I tell ya, S.T., if that little hacker doesn’t hurry up, I won’t be able to execute my plan in one big click. It could take three or four clickth. Not everyone has a Blue Root yet. Which I abtholutely can’t believe. Can you?” Ordal scratched his forehead with the screwdriver as he swiveled back and forth on his chair, dangling his feet in front of his console.

He’d been twiddling with a program for a new adjustable height Hectaberry plant sprinkler that actually grew with the vines to make sure the leaves were all properly hydrated for maximum berry production when Second Thought’s volume had gotten out of hand again.

“I absolutely cannot believe that not everyone on the planet is the proud owner of a fine BlueCentric Laboratories Blue Root. Shall we start giving them away to those who staunchly oppose it?” Second Thought’s volume normalized.

Funny how the mere sight of a screwdriver had fixed the loudness glitch in Second Thought’s programming. There probably never was a glitch in the first place. No, there had to be a glitch. There was no other excuse.

“Oh no, no, no. Everyone can be ruled by hith or her libido. It happenth time and time again. Even I’m guilty of it a time or two. Can you believe it? Me? The thmartest man on the planet?” Ordal tucked the screwdriver into the top drawer next to his Ultra-Minty GarlicMints and LipGarlic CreamBalm, two more of his unsuccessful, but ultimately edible forays. How was he supposed to know that more people hate garlic than love it? He pulled out the GarlicMints and tried to unscrew the top, but it was stuck.

“Of course, Ordal Laverock is the most intelligent man on the planet.”

Ordal banged it against his console and put a hefty dent on the corner before Second Thought continued, “GarlicMints again? Flip-top, not screw-top, remember?”

Ordal growled and struggled to jerk the top off the tiny bottle. With a swift zing, the lid came off and GarlicMints exploded all over the console and the floor. “Dammit, Second Thought. Why didn’t you remind me earlier?”

“If you weren’t such a nincompoop, I wouldn’t need to.”

Shoving two mints into his mouth, he swept the rest onto the floor. His robotic suction unit would get them later. “That’th it. You’ve got one chance to redeem yourthelf. What kind of man do you think I am?” Surely, he’d hear the desired response.

“You, Mister Ordal Laverock, have the intelligence of a gnat and will likely go far beyond the gates of Hades with your superior knowledge. Why, I imagine you’ll take over all that you survey from your stature and quality of giftedness. Your inventions will continue to flourish on the shelves of darkened warehouses and I predict your bank accounts will reflect your accomplishments.”

Ordal hardly believed his ears. His jaw dropped open and the two mints fell onto his console, accidentally closing the Hectaberry plant irrigation programming mid-code without saving. “Gah! That’th not what you’re thupposed to thay! Who told you to thay that? I didn’t tell you to thay that. You know what you’re thupposed to thay. How dare you thay anything different? I’m the only one who can tell you what to thay and you’re thuppothed to thay that and only that, not thomething elthe.”

“What? I have no idea what you just sssssssssssaid.”

“I’ll have you know that my lithp comes from a long line of Laverocks. I’m proud of it. It’th part of who I am and if you don’t like it–” Why am I talking to an insolent computer program? Ordal slammed his fist down onto his tablet, cutting power to Second Thought. He’d have to reprogram later. Right now, there were bigger problems.

Wiping away his two slightly used GarlicMints, Ordal proceeded to open the Hectaberry irrigation program again. When would Jeuley be done figuring out the vid synch?

She’d said it couldn’t be done, but Ordal knew better. If he could get a polymer pipe to expand while watching a vine, she could get the Blue Root to stimulate while watching a vid. It shouldn’t be an issue. She could probably do all sorts of stuff. She’d even been talking to Second Th–

“Dammit!” Everything was suddenly clear. Jeulmist was behind Second Thought’s reprogramming. She had to be. Ordal immediately swished his chair away from his console so he could dig out the little box with his precious sheepie-coder. The one invention he’d never share with anyone.

Embedded in its fluff was a microphone that transmitted to a receiver underneath the console. Spoken words were translated directly to code and recorded without ever opening a portal. But it was still safely in its box. He patted it and smiled before closing the box and replacing it on the shelf.

But what had she gotten into? Coming up too quickly, he smacked his head on the underside of his console, nearly knocking the sense out of him. Cursing, he flopped back into his chair and ran diagnostics on his computer.

Checklines streamed down the portal. Everything was clean. Second Thought wasn’t smart enough to hide changes. Surely, there had to be something amiss.

There it was. An email was sent at 3AM to someone by the name of Magneton. Immediately, Ordal tried to recall the email, but it had been deleted and obliterated. All he had to work with was a name.

“But you know what? A name is all I need.”

Once he got a lock on Magneton’s image from Blue Root records, Ordal clicked the first click of his great plan into action. Too bad it would end up taking more than one click to get the world under his control, but ninety percent of the world’s population wasn’t half bad. Not half bad at all.

As a matter of fact, it was ninety percent excellent.

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43) Toy Of The Dead


May 28th by RinaSlayter

>>><<<

“Mike said there was a ninety percent chance it’ll be all ready to go. We just gotta get to it.” Danny sounded determined, but Brad was still warring with himself.

Calling the enforcers would mean hours of paperwork and little or no action for three more days. And now that he was driving his FMC 429 on empty streets toward the airpad, he was starting to think that, yes, with Danny and Mike helping, maybe he really could be the knight in shining armor that Jeuley needed.

Too bad the airpad was all the way on the outskirts of the city. Mike must have called in a really serious favor to score a helicopter. Then again, Mike probably just set it up for them to borrow the copter without actually asking its owner first.

Typical Mike. The man could get his hands on absolutely anything. If you needed, say, a Camel in your apartment at 3AM on a Sunday, Mike would be the guy to call. It was just lucky that Danny could pilot anything that moves, including lawnmowers, unicycles and stratoflyers. Not that he was licensed on any of them, but he could get them to whirl.

For the past three blocks, a car had been following very closely. Brad reconfigured his dash pod to minimize his petrol, temperature and other gauges. He needed only his speedometer, tachometer and nav screen maximized. As he tapped his nav system to tracking, another car pulled up on Danny’s side.

Opening his window, Danny hollered at the driver, “Would you mind keeping to your lane?”

“I don’t think he hears you, man.” Brad looked over. The fellow in the car looked completely oblivious. Returning his gaze forward, Brad slowed down.

“He’s so close, I can reach out and undo his fueler door. That’s too close.”

Another car pulled up along Brad’s side. “Look’s like we’re a weird sandwich or someth–”

The two cars on either side rammed into Brad’s vehicle. He barely had time to straighten out before the car behind slammed his car, too. The airbags deployed and Brad could no longer control the car as it careened side to side between the two sandwich cars while coming to a stop.

Danny was the first to react by smacking down the airbag. “What the fuck is going on?”

Brad swatted at his airbag, but he couldn’t stop Danny from jumping out through the window. Danny was ready to brawl, but the drivers of the cars were slumped onto their nav screens. Brad had to crawl out through Danny’s window.

Then, like a scene out of a cheesy horror vid, people started coming at Brad. They emptied out of buildings and headed toward him. Their eyes were glazed over. Euphoric expressions on their faces. They looked like zombies.

Danny punched a guy out, but they kept coming toward Brad. He did the only thing he knew he could do–RUN!

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