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Debra Sorensen watched the General as he strutted around the underground facility, and she concentrated on his ever-shifting aura. Unlike her father, or even Delbert Moloch, this man rarely displayed the oily black shimmers of overt evil that those other two had, yet even so she picked up patterns and colors that upset her. While he wasn't exactly evil, he wasn't the benign character he so often pretended to be--despite all his airs of calm passivity. But now, with Callahan's and Goodman's disappearance, his aura had flared once again, filling the space around his seething eyes with hideous green streamers.
Then she parsed his thoughts.
He was angry because a tracking device had failed. Because the tracking device could only follow people traveling back in time. But not into the future. He was, for some reason, thinking about Franklin Roosevelt, the depression-era president. But why? What could someone who had passed away almost eighty years ago have to do with the future? She struggled to remember Roosevelt and grew faintly disoriented when she thought she recalled meeting him recently, but when she saw Roosevelt in the General's thoughts her sense of disorientation only grew more diffuse, almost like a heavy fog had settled over her. Then she saw huge, misshaped beings, squat triangular white-skinned things that moved with ponderous heaviness, and she saw the General talking with Roosevelt and one of these beings...
Krell. They called themselves Krell, and Debra wondered why that sounded so familiar.
She followed him to the huge orca pool on the lower level, and she watched the General's aura as it shifted from red to green and finally to a gentle cool blue, so she naturally concluded that he came here to relax--but as she looked on he waded out into the water and then just disappeared.
A minute passed, then two, and she ran out and looked down into the peaceful abyss and saw...nothing. No orcas, and no General. He had simply disappeared.
She focused on the water and tried to follow his thoughts but she found the way blocked, as if someone was deliberately trying to keep her away from the General's thoughts. But...who among the people in the underground complex was capable of that? No one she was aware of, with the possible exception of Brendon.
So she made her way up to the living quarters, and she found Brendan in the dining room reading a book. She picked up an omelet and went to a nearby table and watched the boy, watched his ever-shifting aura, but all she made out was a simple veil of swirling cool blues. When she entered his mind and began sifting through his thoughts he stopped reading and looked up from his book for a moment, then he turned and looked at her.