front of its head.
âCareful!â said Rad, tugging on Jenniferâs arm. She didnât resist as he pulled her back, but when he turned her around he was surprised to see her smiling.
âWe need to get out of here,â said Rad. âI donât like this one little bit.â
âOpen another.â
Rad huffed in the cold air. âWhat?â
âTheyâre not active,â said Jennifer. âOpen another lock-up.â
Rad was frozen to the spot. Behind Jennifer the ranks of inactive robots stood like life-size childrenâs toys.
âOK,â he said, finally, not quite believing what he was doing. He moved to the next roller door on the left and picked the padlock. The door shot up with a bang that made him jump.
Inside were more robots. Another fifty. Rad looked down the length of the warehouse, then turned and peered into the gloom over the other side of the vast space. The building was lined with the lock-ups, at least sixteen on each wall. Sixteen times fifty wasâ¦
âHeâs been busy,â said Jennifer. âThey have warehouses all over the city. If theyâre all filled with robotsâ¦â
Rad shook his head. âSomeone is hiding a robot army in the city?â He swept the hat off his head, the scale of the mystery heâd stumbled into almost too big to comprehend. He licked his lips and decided to focus down on something a little smaller. He moved to the nearby stack of crates.
âWhat about this stuff?â He lifted out the metal cylinder again. âAny idea what this is?â
âItâs a Geiger counter,â said Jennifer, âpart of one, anyway.â
âThat so?â Rad raised the cylinder to his eye and tried to look into the end that was black glass, but it was totally opaque.
âIt detects radiation.â
Rad looked at her over the metal cylinder.
Jennifer blew out a breath and it steamed in the air between them. âWelcome to the age atomic, detective.â
Â
THREE
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Rad sat in his chair behind his desk. He was turned around, not facing the office door and the grandfather clock in the corner, but the large square window immediately behind his desk. The blinds were up, and it was night, the light in the office turning the window into a big mirror.
Funny how things had come full circle. It hadnât worked out with Claudia, although theyâd tried their darnedest, but the truth was their marriage was an echo of something which had never happened, not in this dimension. That was the worst part, knowing what the Empire State was and what it had done to them. It had worried at Rad and it had worried at Claudia, and eventually it had pushed them apart. But maybe that was for the best. Rad didnât like change, although he knew that might have been the Empire State pushing him again. He liked his job and his liked his office. He had looked around for better, of course, but none had that window and the view, so Rad had stayed put and the little room next to the office was still his home.
Rad watched his reflection, and he watched the corners of the room behind him. Then he sighed and took a sip of his coffee and sighed again. The coffee was good. Real coffee, from the other side, from New York. He had Mr Jones to thank for that. Except now the Fissure was gone and the city had begun to freeze, and while the coffee was warming Rad knew he needed to keep an eye on his supply because suddenly it was a limited resource again.
Huh. Jones. Rad wondered if Nimrodâs agent from New York and Carsonâs agent from the Empire State were connected, or even the same person, in a way.
Rad had secured the lock-ups and theyâd hidden Cliffâs body in an empty crate in the warehouse. Heâd be found eventually. Rad wasnât sure if that meant the clock was ticking or not, but he had the feeling that time was most certainly running out. Hundreds â thousands â of robots hidden