They had received the call not long after seven in the morning: the Cheshire Police had spotted Marcus Freeman's car at a service station on the M6 just short of Manchester. That was significant; it would only have taken him four hours to get there from London, so the fact that he'd stopped there, rather than travelling on, meant that he wasn't planning on travelling much further north. It seemed likely that he was heading for somewhere in or around Manchester, but that hardly narrowed things down.
Especially since it would take them time to get in to work in the first place, they didn't want to take a four-hour motorway journey themselves, but fortunately, Helen had pulled some strings to get them there quicker. Which explained why the four of them were now sitting in the passenger compartment of a Westland Puma helicopter as it flew over the Midlands.
The roar of the blades made conversation difficult, but that wasn't stopping Curtis from trying. They hadn't even invited him, but he'd turned up at the pick-up point anyway. It had looked as if Helen was going to shout at him again, but she had evidently decided it wasn't worth the trouble and had let him on board.
"This guy's not going to conquer the Earth by taking over a truck stop in northern England," the American was saying.
"It's not a truck stop," said Helen tetchily, ignoring the implied question, "it only takes cars."
"Well, motel, whatever the heck it is. Either way, you can bet it's not what this alien is after. It's not strategic."
"What makes you think it wants to conquer the Earth, anyway?" asked Rebecca, "all it's done so far is start a bar fight and convince a few people to have sex. I don't like this mind-rape crap it seems to be into, but world conquest seems a bit of stretch."
"What else would aliens want? Plus, one of its pals shot a guy through the head," he reminded her, "See, Earth has plenty of natural resources; it probably wants to strip mine the planet for minerals or turn us all into slaves. And you gotta admit, slavery is part of its MO."
"Or it might want to hollow out the Earth's core and turn the planet into a giant spaceship," she countered.
"What?" he said, nonplussed, and clearly not getting the reference.
"I'm just saying that we don't know what it wants. But, yeah, okay, I agree that it isn't the service station, and it's probably already moving somewhere else. We can only hope there's some clue there. It must want something in the area, but Manchester is England's second city, so..."
"I thought that was Birmingham?"
"Only according to people from Birmingham."
"He's right about one thing," said Helen, "it is dangerous. One man is dead, and it can take over people's minds, which I don't like, no matter what it uses it for. Which is why I've got Nalini looking into a defence against it back at base."
"I hope she comes up with something," said Kate, speaking for the first time in a while, "I'd rather fight those flying robot things than... whatever the mind control part of it is about."
"Makes you wonder why it bothered to kill anyone..." mused Rebecca, partly to herself, "it can't have been to cover up what it had done, or it would have gone after Emma as well." Kate glanced across at her, and she realised that she had been speaking too quietly to be heard over the sound of the helicopter.
"But either way," the army officer said, "it may not have been what I expected to be doing this week, but I'm going to be ready for it," she touched the sidearm partly concealed beneath her jacket, "it's not going to convert any of us into sex-crazed Cybermen."
Curtis looked blank again, but Rebecca felt her heart melt. Kate had just made a Doctor Who reference... as if I wasn't finding her hard enough to resist as it is, thought the woman who had picked the title 'scientific advisor' for a reason.
This could be a long day.
***
The service station turned out to be an old one, the sort that had a covered bridge with shops in it over the motorway, linking buildings on either side. As Helen had indicated, it could hardly be called a truck stop, with the carpark and slip road not being suitable for large vehicles. The hotel stood on the northbound side, a nondescript modern three-story building evidently intended as no more than a place for travellers to rest for a night.
Exactly the sort of place Curtis would have called a 'motel', even if it lacked the typical American layout.
As they walked over, Rebecca saw a young couple in the carpark, evidently more interested in each other than in the fact that a military helicopter had just landed in a nearby field. The man was good-looking with sandy hair and a trim build, while the woman was rather shorter with long dark hair and a curvaceous figure. The way they were kissing just before they reluctantly headed off for different cars suggested that, at least some of the time, the hotel was used for one-night stop overs for reasons other than just travel.
She smiled as the couple parted, reflecting that not every such encounter had to be part of a mysterious alien agenda. From the little they had learned, neither of the pair looked to be possessed, since they were acting far too naturally for that. A genuine moment of affection, she guessed... although the fact that they were meeting here suggested a tryst that at least one of the pair wanted kept secret.
The group's arrival had not gone entirely unnoticed, however, since a police officer was already heading across the car park towards them. Helen went to meet her, flashing her ID card, although the officer barely glanced at it, apparently deciding that the arrival of a military helicopter was more than sufficient evidence that these were the people she was expecting.
Rebecca noticed that Curtis was hanging back, glancing around at the surroundings, and looking a little jittery. "Are you all right?" he asked him.
"Yeah, sure..." he muttered, "I'm just worried about these killer drone things. If there's any of them about, they could be a real threat."