Lodestone

" My Dinner With Andre " by Martin Maenza


One rainy night earlier in a seedy motel room forty miles south of Victoria, Georgia, two men with dark, European features waited. The muscular elder attempted to concentrate on the evening newscast but finally lost patience with the frantic pacing of the other. "Lancelin!" he shouted in his native French tongue. "You will sit down this instant or I will see to it that you don't do any walking for a long time!"

The thinner man in his early twenties winced at his brother's words. "Of course, sorry." Not wishing to incur Michel's wraith again, Lancelin nervously found a seat and picked up a pencil. He scribbled some random lines, as quietly as possible, on a sheet of paper before him. That kept him busy for a few moments, until a loud thunderclap outside frightened him so that he snapped the lead point.

They exchanged no further words until a knock came at the door. Lancelin jumped with the sudden sound; Michel just leered at him as he walked by to answer it. After a quick glance out of the peephole, he removed the chain and opened the door. "Bonsoir, monsieur Carlin," he said.

Their guest was a heavyset man in his mid forties, slightly balding. He shook the rain from his trench coat, stepped into the motel room and laid his briefcase down on the table near Lancelin. "I understand that y'all are experts in your field," he stated in a southern accent, putting emphasis on the last word. "Y'all came highly recommended."

"Indeed we are," Michel boomed. "The Hardouin name is renowned throughout Europe in the area of industrial espionage."

Lancelin remained quiet for he knew his brother was far superior at the sales pitch. Far superior at a lot of things, in fact.

Mr. Carlin smiled. "Good. For that is just what I have need for." He snapped open his briefcase, and Lancelin's eyes grew wide. Inside were tens of thousands of dollars in cash. "I would like you gentlemen to retrieve something that is rightfully mine." Out of one of the pockets of the case he pulled a manila folder with the label AtlanTech on it and handed it to Michel. "You'll find everything y'all need to know in there."

***

Saturday evening, music blared from the boombox on the counter, and the smell of a roast filled the kitchen. Knives, forks and spoons bounced through the air to the beat and found their proper places around the plates at the table.

As the hammond organ droned in, a blonde teenager sang along, "...and their kids were hippie chicks and hypocrites...because fashion is smashin' the true meaning of it...".

The buzzer on the oven went off, drawing her attention to the dinner cooking therein. When she opened the door, the heat caused her to draw back. "Now where are those pot holders?" Not seeing them readily available, she shrugged her right shoulder and concentrated. The roaster pan rose off the rack and moved as if carried by invisible hands out of the oven.

Just then, Kyle and Beverly Harper walked into the kitchen, still dressed in the festive clothes from their tropical vacation. Startled by their arrival, the girl allowed the roaster drop the last half inch to the stove top, causing the lid to shift and drop into the roaster pan. "Mom! Daddy! I didn't hear you come in the front door."

Her father redirected his stern look from the stove to the counter, reached over to the boombox and dropped the volume from fifteen to one. "Obviously." He glanced down at the jewel box and its parental advisory symbol on front, adjusting his sunglasses to read it. "Smashmouth? It sounded, for a second, like you had one of my Doors CDs." He then thought As if she would listen to anything resembling decent music.

"Clare, we missed you," Beverly said as she hugged her daughter. "You didn't have to go to all this trouble to make a big dinner."

"I knew you guys probably didn't get anything substantial to eat on the flight back so I thought I would whip up one of Daddy's favorite." Clare looked to her father for a reaction, but he seemed to be in less than pleasant mood.

"I'll take the bags upstairs, Bev, while you help Clare finish getting things ready." He glanced once more at the roaster on the stove. "Looks like she could use an extra set of hands." He emphasized the last word as he left the room.

Clare looked at her mother. "Daddy doesn't seem too relaxed from his vacation."

Beverly smiled reassuringly. "He'll be fine. It'll pass soon enough." Or so she hoped.

***

The Hardouin brothers were traveling north on I-675 in a black compact car. Lancelin nervously stubbed his cigarette in the ashtray. "Michel, do you have the directions?" he asked in French.

"Of course!" his brother snapped. "Don't take me for an imbecile like yourself! You just follow my instructions and this will go off without a faute!" Lancelin turned his head away and stared out the window.

Michel shook his head disapprovingly at his brother. He knew Lancelin possessed the skills of a world class thief, but his extreme nervousness and paranoia held him back. Perhaps this job might give him some of the confidence he needed to succeed in the business. For if he did not get some soon, he might end up getting himself killed instead.

***

Around the Harper dinner table, Beverly finished a forkful of potatoes and answered her daughter's question. "The villa had a little stone pathway down to the beach. Very convenient for early morning swims or late night walks ."

"Did you do any scuba diving?" Clare asked.

"We did some early in the week," Kyle grumbled. "But I wasn't up for it by the end."

"Oh?"

"Something didn't agree with your father." Beverly added and gently nudged her husband under the table with her foot.

"Did you get some bad seafood, Daddy? You know how you sometimes react to shrimp cocktails."

"No, dear. The food was excellent." Beverly chimed in. "In fact, there was a wonderful restaurant just walking distance from the villa. They had the most wonderful buffet at lunch time. Clams, fresh fish, beef, chicken, vegetables. Why just so much to chose from. We ate there a number of times."

"Yes," Kyle nodded. "In fact, we even went to the bar there for drinks a few nights. It was one of the few places that I could catch the broadcasts from CNN." Beverly tried to nudge him under the table again. This time he was ready for her and moved his leg out of the way. "There was one particularly interesting news story I caught." He looked very intently in Clare's direction. "It was about a hostage crisis and our old enemy Assault! "

Clare choked on the carrot piece she was swallowing. Beverly sprung to her daughter's side and began to tap her firmly on the back. "Honey, are you all right?"

Clare stopped coughing, took a sip of her Diet Coke and then answered. "I'm okay, Mom. Just went down the wrong pipe is all."

"Good to see you're okay," Kyle stated. "Now, would you care to tell us why you were involved in a dangerous situation against a notorious terrorist, posing as your mother?" He glared at his daughter, waiting for an answer. An awkward silence filled the room for a brief moment.

"Daddy, Assault was demanding that Magnet and Steel show up," Clare finally explained.

"He always tended to demand a lot of things," Kyle replied. "That doesn't mean he deserved to get them or that you should risk your life!"

Clare frowned. "There was no time to contact you two much less anything you could do from Jamaica. I figured I could borrow Mom's costume and help out. I fooled him long enough for the Police to get the situation under control." 1

"You aren't a super-hero! You are a seventeen year old girl."

"But I have powers."

"You have no experience!"

"I have Mom's training!" Then Clare realized what she had blurted out.

Kyle focused his glare at his wife. "You've been training her?"

"Just some basic things," Beverly responded calmly. "When Clare reached puberty and her body started to develop her special abilities, she had questions. I was best equipped to handle them, given I'd been there myself." She paused to gauge Kyle's response; he didn't seem convinced. "She was a very quick study, though I made her practice a lot."

Kyle raised his right hand then quickly closed it tightly. Sometimes he got so angry that he wanted to hit something, to release the built up aggression. That was one thing he missed, a retired hero: the release it gave him. Of course, he never would hit anyone he cared about, regardless of the situation. "We'll discuss that later, Bev!" He turned back to Clare. "Still, what made you think you could take on someone like Assault? Do you realize how dangerous he can be?"

"Of course I do, Daddy." Clare recalled that, after her powers developed, her parents sat her down and told her all about their secret lives as super-heroes during the 1970's and early 1980's. They wanted her to realize why she had these powers and also the great responsibility that came with them. They also drilled into her the importance of keeping it a secret. "I remember how you two first encountered him when he tried to assassinate President Gerald Ford at Disney World." Then she added, "If I remember, that was early on in your careers too."

"That is true," Beverly agreed. She recalled that it was Spring Break and their school had chosen Orlando over the often crowded Dayton Beach. At that time she did not know who was underneath Steel's mask, but it became pretty obvious after this adventure that they both went to the same university. It wasn't that long after that the two would share their secret identities.

"No, it is not the same!" Kyle stated. "Your mother and I were already in college at the time! Plus, we had worked together so we were able to back one another up! And, Assault did not have access to the type of weapons that are available today!"

"But, Daddy. He is also not the same man you faced. He had been in prison for years, and he seemed more obsessed with killing you guys than to come up with a decent plan. Besides he's got to be at least as old as you if not more so."

Beverly tried to suppress a giggle at her daughter's last statement.

Kyle pointed his finger at Clare. "And that obsession makes him even more dangerous! There is no telling what he would have done! Someone could have been hurt or killed! You could have been killed!"

"But it all turned out fine," Clare said. That was one fact her father could not dispute. Beverly nodded in agreement.

"You got lucky." Kyle seemed to be less angry, now that he had released that which he had bottled up for days.

Clare started to gather some of the dishes to clear the table. "I'll promise to be more careful next time."

"Next time?" Kyle shouted. The redness was returning to his face. "Oh no, young lady! There is not going to be a next time! You got to dress up as Magnet once, but I am not going to allow you to do that again!"

Clare wanted to disagree. She wanted to tell him she was a grown woman, able to make her own decisions. But the last few minutes had reminded her that there was no reasoning with her father when he was angry about something. Instead, she simply said, "Okay, Daddy. I promise not to borrow Mom's costume again." She picked up the dishes to take them to the sink.

Beverly stood up to help clear the table. She gave her husband one of those I-hope-you're-happy-looks.

Kyle stabbed at his last piece of roast with his fork and gestured to Clare with it. "And another thing. You're grounded for a week starting tonight."

"But..." Clare started to protest.

Her mother glided up behind her and kept her walking towards the sink. "Shh, honey." Beverly whispered in her ear. "Better not push it."

Things remained pretty quiet in the kitchen for the next fifteen minutes. When she finished helping wash the dishes, Clare retired to her room. Sebastion was resting at the foot of the bed.

Clare was about to reach for the remote when her phone rang. She grabbed the hand set on the first ring, hoping her father did not hear it as well. He might decide to take away her phone privileges too. "Hello," she said.

"Hey, Clare."

"Hey, Anita," Clare replied. It was Anita Hansen, Clare's best friend since grade school. The two had always sat next to each other and managed to become almost as close as sisters. "What's up?"

"A bunch of us are getting together to go see Scream 2 again. The late show starts at 9:45. What time you want me to pick you up?"

"I'm going to have to pass," Clare answered. "My father's kind of mad at me for borrowing something of my Mom's while they were gone." Which, of course, was the truth. "I better lay low for the night."

"That stinks. They're barely home a day and they're already on your case."

"Well, they did let me stay home alone for a week, so they aren't so bad."

"Well, Jimmy is going to be so bummed." Anita laughed.

"Puhleeze. He hangs around us enough as it is. The last thing I'd want to do is go to the movies with him." Clare laid back on her bed and stroked Sebastion with her free hand. The gray cat purred approvingly.

"But you know it would make his year. Especially a scary movie where he could comfort you when it got really scary." Anita relentlessly teased her friend now.

"Oh sure. He'd be the one more likely to be hiding his eyes." Clare laughed too. "Who else is going?"

"I was going to invite Cynthia Brekmann. You know, the one who just transferred here from California."

"Really?"

"Yeah. She seems pretty cool. Besides, she drives a really cool sports car. You know her dad works for WCM. I hear he's a really big programmer or designer or something."

"Well, whatever. Shoot me an email and let me know how things went."

"Sure thing, Clare. Talk with you later."

"Night, Anita." Clare hung up the phone and grabbed the TV remote lying on the night stand. After flipping through a few stations, she settled on Xena: Warrior Princess. "Guess its just you and me tonight, Lucy." After watching for a few moments, an idea came to Clare. She grabbed a pad of paper and pencil from her desk and began to sketch.

***

Ron Campbell took a long drag on his cigarette as he looked up at the evening sky. Being a the third shift watchman was a sweet deal, he thought. No one to answer to, plenty of peace and quiet, and of course being able to slip into any office for a quick nap now and again. Yes, indeed, he sure had it easy. Hard to believe they paid him for this.

That was the last thought he had before a pipe bashed into the base of his skull, knocking him unconscious!

Out of the shadows stepped Michel and Lancelin Hardouin. Both dressed all in black with ski caps to hide their facial features. "See, mon frere," Michel said in French as he slipped the pipe into his belt. "As easy as that." He then reached down and plucked the badge off of Campbell's body with his gloved hand.

They each picked up an end and placed the body behind the bushes near the back entrance. Lancelin quickly bound the man's hands and gagged him, then joined his brother at the doorway.

Michel slid the badge into the reader, and the light clicked from red to green. The door swung open automatically and, quickly, they hurried inside. Michel motioned to the stairway; the brothers ascended to the second floor.

At the top of the stairs, they opened the door slowly. Michel listened for a moment.

Once confident the coast was clear, they darted down to the third doorway on the left where a cipher lock barred their entrance.

Lancelin muttered a prayer as Michel punched in a combination of numbers. Carlin had provided them with the lab's access code along with the schematics of the AtlanTech building. He hoped that security hadn't felt in necessary to change the code after Carlin's dismissal. Michel finished and turned the knob. Lancelin breathed a sigh of relief; the code had been the same.

The hum of machinery and a series of blinking lights greeted them from the darkness. Before Lancelin closed the door behind them, Michel removed a flashlight from his belt. He waited until the door clicked shut before pressing the on switch.

The wide beam of light danced around the room. The perimeter was lined with a lot of equipment: a computer, some universal power sources and a generator. All attached via some wires or cables to an apparatus in the center of the room, the item they were hired to retrieve.

It was a silvery metal device, semi-cylindrical in shape and about the length of a steamer trunk. Unlike everything else in the room, this was something that originated from beyond this planet. Carlin said it was some form of engine that was recovered from the Invasion. AtlanTech had been analyzing it for almost a year now. Carlin felt he was close to a breakthrough in cracking the technology, but his unprofessional conduct just weeks ago lead to his dismissal. He wanted that engine.

"We must hurry and get it disconnected," Michel ordered. Lancelin searched for the power button to shut down the computer. Michel snapped at him. "No, just pull the cables, imbecile!" The older brother was not paying attention as he tugged the main power cable that was feeding the engine.

The cable lashed about like a hissing cobra, with sparks showering in every direction! The shock caused Michel to drop it, and the live end touched the casing of the engine. Lancelin was about to scream but could not get the sound out fast enough.

The engine let out a high pitched whine just before exploding outwards! The brunt of the blast caught both brothers! The discharged energy and flames quickly ignited other pieces of equipment in the lab and soon a chain of explosions enveloped the second floor of the building. The outside wall on the east side crumbled as the burning building lit up the evening sky!


1 See "Under the Gun " in issue 1 for more details.- the Editor.