Chapter Twenty-Two
April 28
th
, 2021
What a week it had been. Andy had spent most of it on set, helping polish and rework scenes so they played better, as he'd been trying not to think about the Men's Protection Act going into law. He and Phil had also been playing phone tag, so he'd been unable to get clarification about what was going on in terms of the weird little short-circuit his body had done to prevent him from being hit in the head with an escrima stick. Phil had been adamant that they only talk in person for a while, as if he no longer fully trusted the communications lines. That had certainly set off a few alarm bells in Andy's head, as had the extremely exhausted tone he'd heard in his friend's voice.
During the last few days, they'd stopped by Em's London apartment and spent the last few days camped there, although Andy learned how much he disliked the paparazzi hanging around all the time, trying to get pictures of him and the rest of The Rooks. At one point, one of them had tried holding a camera up and over a wall and Melody had shattered the lens with a well-thrown rock.
It was good to see some people were starting to be out and about, though, because it meant the whole world was starting to adapt to life under the new normal. He, Ash, Fi, Melody and Lexi had even stopped and had breakfast in a nice little corner pub one morning right before they left.
Andy was happy to back on U.S. soil, though, and it didn't feel like as many eyes were on him. As much as it had pained her, Niko had agreed it was finally time for her not to be part of his regular patrol and security, especially since her due date was a week away. It was probably for the best that she simply start getting ready to be a mother.
The house had gone through several changes, and one of the larger bedrooms had been converted into a nursery. Jade had decided to take on the role of house nanny for the foreseeable future, and she seemed genuinely excited about being up in the middle of the night, making sure the house was fully stocked, especially since Ash's twins were only going to be a few weeks behind Niko's baby. She'd set the nursery right up next to her room and had already started preparing to be up during the nights keeping tabs on the babies.
That was still, hopefully, a week or so away, though, and today, Andy, Fi and Ash were having lunch with Phil, Linda and Violet at a place called Cliff House on the western edge of San Francisco. Andy had been surprised that Phil had wanted them to meet outside of New Eden, but assumed Phil had his reasons. Violet was keeping watch, along with Melody and Alexis.
Cliff House had been operating on the edge of shutdown for years, and the closure due to the epidemics hadn't done them any favors. They had reopened, but the entire place was empty except for the group of them, and Andy wondered if that meant they were still going to have to shut down. They did have one of the best views anywhere around, but the menu certainly wasn't cheap, not that Andy worried about that kind of thing as much as he used to.
"So what are we doing here, Phil?" Andy asked as they sat down at the table. "What's so important that we can't just have lunch in New Eden?"
"I wanted to be out of the office, because things are getting strange the more research I do, and I want you to be an outside objective observer for me, to make sure I'm not jumping to any conclusions that I can't back up," Phil said with a sigh. He looked ragged around the edges. "You said a week ago you had something you wanted to talk to me about regarding the serum?"
"Yeah, I was on the set with Em and Sarah, and they were practicing some fight choreography off to one side to me andβ"
"You heard a voice in your head?" Linda asked him, a wry smile on her lips. "Tell me you did. It'll make me feel
oh so vindicated
."
Andy looked at her in shock as next to her, Phil was simply shaking his head. "You didn't... did you, Andy?"
"I... I did," Andy admitted. "It was like I think the nanobots inside of my bloodstream were speaking directly to me."
"What did they say?" Phil asked him.
"It was strange... it was like... block or charge," Andy said. "Like that guy on Twitter always says. But it was very much a question, and it wanted a response."
"What did you choose?"
"Block," Andy said. "And as soon as I did, my arm shot up and caught the escrima stick out of the air, like it was nothing, like it was something I could do all the time."
Phil looked over at Linda. "That sound about right?"
She nodded. "Sounds like about what's happened to me. The question was phrased differently, but yeah, it seems like the same sort of thing I've gone through a couple of times."
"What the hell was it?" Andy asked them.
"We
think
it's exactly what you
think
it was... the nanobots making contact, offering you one of two options to help you deal with a matter of self-preservation," Phil said. "I suspect the other option would've been to treat the incoming stick as a threat rather than an accident, and to fling it back at whoever let it fly your way."
"Well, I'm certainly glad
that
didn't happen," Andy said. "Should I expect to be hearing more from our tiny robotic friends? I wasn't aware they could
do
that. There haven't been any reports of that sort of thing in the documentation you've been providing to Oversight."
"You can't just keep every discovery about this serum secret, Phil," Fiona said.
"Before Andy came forward, I mostly only had Linda's word for it, and while I believe her, it's also only happened a few times for her."
"What's 'a few?'" Andy asked.
"Three, each in moments where split second decision making was crucial," Linda said.
"Each time you or Phil were in danger?"
"Once I was, once Phil was and the last time... well, the last time I think things would've gotten dramatically out of hand if I hadn't acted the way that I did," Linda sighed, picking up her glass of water. "I've tried loads of times since then to try and have conversations with them, tried talking
at
them... all to no avail."
"If it's happened to you and it's happened to me, it's probably happened to loads of other people," Andy said.
"Other people, yes," Phil corrected. "
Loads
, no. There's a handful of things that we've figured out probably contributed towards this, and it's going to be a lot less likely than you think. First off, we're certain it
can
only happen in very large teams."
"Define 'very large.'"
"Twenty or more."
"What're you at these days, anyway, Phil?"
"Twenty-one," Phil said.
"Slacker," Andy teased.
"Don't think that one extra person puts you ahead, my friend," Phil shot back with a smirk. "As far as we can tell, Teams are factored in terms of 5s, so twenty-one and twenty-two partners are exactly the same, other than one other person's needs to look after."
"What, like tiers?"
"Exactly. Tier 1 Teams - 1-5 partners plus core. Tier 2 - 6-10, Tier 3 - 11-15, Tier 4 - 16-20, Tier 5 - 21-25, Tier 6 - 26+. You're not even top tier," Phil chuckled. "I'm not either, though, so don't worry about it. Besides, we're starting to think Tier 6s may have additional complications to them."