Read The Mall Online

Authors: Bryant Delafosse

The Mall (19 page)

“We borrowed it from the Radio Shack.
 
Mommy said it was okay as long as we returned them when the lights came back on.”

He cast an accusatory look at Lara.

Sighing heavily, she said, “I’m Lara and my daughter’s name is Coraline. I have a son named Owen.
 
The reason you don’t see my son is because he’s missing, separated from me just before the black-out. Or whatever the hell happened.”

“My name is Simon Peter,” the mechanic replied, turning back to Cora and grasping her hand.
 
She giggled and glanced at her mother.

“Mommy, his hand feels like a fishie.”

Simon rose and stepped over to a personal computer on a short dolly in the center of the room.
 
He unplugged a hand-held device that looked like a large cell-phone and studied its screen distractedly.
 
“You really should proceed to the north exit along with the others.
 
Since everyone else is headed outside, it would seem reasonable to assume he’ll be with them.”

Lara hopped to her feet, Cora mirroring her a second later.

“He’s not with the others.
 
My son wouldn’t leave the Mall without us.
 
Maybe it’s unreasonable to assume, but right now, that’s what my intuition’s telling me.
 
Believe me when I tell you, that instinct is not something I would have trusted before this day started,” Lara replied, her voice rising along with her ire.
 
“I’m not leaving this Mall without my son.
 
Now if you can’t help me narrow down his location, I would at least appreciate your not alerting security to my presence, because if anyone tries to take me out of this Mall without my son by my side, I’m going to physically break one of their limbs.
 
Do you understand?”

Simon stared silently at Lara with a blank expression, his eyes magnified slightly by the glasses.
 
After a moment, he returned his attention to the hand-held device in his hands, not a word spoken in response.

Lara sighed heavily and started for the door, pulling Cora after her with a firm tug.
 
“C’mon, Cora.
 
Let’s go find your brother.”

“He was inside the Di-Lithium Arcade in yellow sector when the network failed,” Simon told her in a matter-of-fact tone.

“Yellow sector?
How do you know that?”

“I have access to information saved to the parent network but not yet distributed to sib units.”
 
He displayed the small unit in his hand as if the gesture explained everything.

Lara dropped Cora’s hand and stepped toward him with eyes wide with expectation.
 
“Please tell me that security has him.”

Simon shrugged his shoulders, flipped the cover down over the device, and slipped it into the pocket of his pants.

“Does your thingee tell you if he’s been spotted since then?”

“That information had yet to be transmitted from the sibs to the parent when the system failed,” he replied.
 
“If a sentry obtained that info, the data sits un-sent in its processor.”

Lara stepped into Simon’s face, the other shrinking back slightly.
 
“You’ll have to excuse me if I’m a tad tense just now, but what exactly does that mean in English?”

“That is the last bit of information on your son,” he replied, studying her with a sort of cautious interest.
 
“There is a high probability that your son left with the others.
 
I would radio security but all communications are down.”
 
Simon collapsed atop a rolling stool and looked around the room at the scattered bodies of the mechanized men filling the room as far as the dim light revealed.
 
“I recommend you proceed immediately to the northern-most exit in red sector.”

Lara stared at the mechanic incredulously,
then
turned her back on him, frustration etched in her face.

“Soon it will be completely dark inside the complex.
 
The power of the emergency lights is limited given the charge built up from the solar panels on the roof.
 
Oh!
 
There goes another one.”
 
One of the lights in the hallway flickered and died, the mechanic’s face drifting even deeper into shadow, causing even more of his features to disappear, like the tide washing a sandcastle away.

Her patience depleted, Lara threw open the swinging door, pushed Cora firmly through as she tossed a quick “bye, Reggie,” over her shoulder, and thrust the door back behind her with as much strength as she could muster.
 
“Thanks for your help,” she called out bitterly.

As Lara pulled Cora after her down the hallway, she asked her.
 
“Mommy, why don’t we ask Reggie for
help.
 
Robots are required to help humans in trouble.
 
It’s part of their basic programming.
 
That’s what they taught us in Mrs. Sawyer’s computer class.”

“We can do it ourselves, sweet pea,” Lara told her, rushing forward until she reached the end of the hallway, then stopped and glanced clandestinely around the corner.
 
“Now, we’re going to be just as quiet as we were before.”

Edging carefully around a fallen blue sector Bot, Lara stepped before a blank screen where a digital map had once been displayed.
 
“Hell’s bells,” Lara grumbled looking around in an effort to get some kind of orientation.
 
“Doesn’t anyone believe in simple low tech solutions anymore?”
 
She gave the immobile Bot at her feet a solid kick to its head.

Never good at directions, Lara attempted to draw herself a quick map in her head.

Red-North—
This
was where they had first entered the Mall and where the evacuees where all headed.
 
She noted to steer clear of this section at all costs.

Blue-South—
This
was where they were now.

Yellow-East—
The
arcade, their destination--though she had no clue where the arcade might be in this section, and without a map and with the number stores in this leviathan, it would be like finding a needle in a haystack.

Suddenly, Lara heard footsteps behind her and she froze in place.

Shit!

Putting on her best vulnerable female face, she turned toward the source of the sound with a congenial smile, which turned quickly to shocked surprise.

Simon Peter strode past, a large industrial flashlight in hand, with scarcely a look in her direction.
 
“We should take the escalator down to the subterranean level.
 
We can make quicker time that way.”

Allowing a few seconds for her confusion to crystallize into understanding, Lara glanced from Simon to the silver Bot closing the distance between them.

“Hi Reggie!”
Cora hissed loudly, unable to suppress the excitement in her voice.

“Hello, little ma’am,” it replied, gesturing for them to follow Simon.
 
“If you could both please step this way toward the escalators, I will follow behind to prevent any possible incident.
 
Thank you for your cooperation.”

Lara rushed after Simon.
 
“Hey,” she called loudly,
then
frightened by the volume of her own voice, she hissed, “What are you doing?”

“Didn’t I say that I would help you,” Simon murmured, glancing back and delivering a mysterious hand gesture in Reggie’s direction.

“Well… no,” Lara replied with confusion.
 
“No, you didn’t.”

“Oh, you’re right,” Simon replied in a dazed tone, glancing furtively at Lara.
 
“Sorry.”

He glanced back at the silver Bot again and made two more gestures.

Reggie swept both his arms out and lifted Cora in one smooth motion, placing her securely on his shoulders, the five-year-old screeching more out of joy than fear.

Lara spun and thrust her arms into the air as if to catch her daughter.

 
“We’ll make much better time if she rides with Reggie,” the mechanic called over his shoulder.

 
“She’s quite safe, ma’am,” the silver Bot announced, gently taking her tiny hands in his massive metal fingers and guiding them to either side of his smooth skull piece.
 
“Hold tightly, little ma’am.
 
I’ll tread as smoothly as possible.”

As Cora grabbed the Bot’s shiny head, Lara relaxed slightly and glared at Simon.
 
“I would appreciate some warning next time.”

“She’s quite safe, ma’am,” the silver Bot reassured, beckoning her forward with a delicate wave of one metallic hand.
 
“Please do not be afraid.”

“Thank you, Reggie,” Lara responded, rushing after Simon.
 
“You seem to have been programmed with a much better bedside manner than your friend here.”

Simon glanced back, making eye contact with Lara.
 
He opened his mouth then closed it again.
 
“The escalator should be just ahead.”

“Why are we taking the escalator?
 
We need to get to where my son was last spotted--the arcade,” Lara exclaimed, making an effort to catch up to Simon.

“The subterranean level is the quickest way to the yellow sector.”

Lara frowned and shook her head.
 
“My son wouldn’t go down there.
 
If we go below, we might pass him by if he were headed toward us on the upper level.”

Simon continued at his same pace.

Lara reached out and snagged him roughly by his shirt-sleeve.
 
“Are you even hearing a word I’m saying?”

Simon swung around, a look of confusion on his face.

“We’re not going down there,” she repeated.
 
“We’re going to stay up here.”

After a moment, Simon finally gave a nod of acknowledgement as Reggie came around to stand in front of him at attention.

“Sir, I feel it’s imperative to warn you that the last remaining exit will be closed and locked shortly in accordance with policy and procedure code 6112…”

Simon raised a hand and slashed the air, cutting the Bot off in mid-sentence as if a plug had just been pulled.
 
He started walking again, Reggie following dutifully behind and leaving Lara standing in confusion.

“Hello?” she called, scampering to catch up.
 
When she reached Simon’s side, she glared up at him in exasperation.
 
“Care to explain what that was all that about?”

Simon made a quick series of gestures.
 
The silver Bot led Cora slightly ahead and out of earshot as Simon and Lara continued behind them at a distance.
 
“Mrs. Myers…”

“Lara, please.”

Simon appeared to lose his train of thought momentarily before continuing with even more urgency.
 
“I must warn you, Lara, that in taking these steps to find your son, you might be placing your other child in indirect danger.”

Frowning at him, Lara glanced up ahead at Cora, who was engaged in a running one-way dialogue with her stoic companion.
 
“Then Mrs. Boudreaux read us a book about jellyfish and Jason Sperling kept talking through the whole thing, so he got a time out.
 
He’s always getting time outs.”

“Danger of what?”
Lara asked Simon in a low voice.

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