DEAN R.KOONTZ. SOFT COME THE DRAGONS

And, abruptly, the air was filled with deadly steel bees.

Jacobs slipped from his seat, dragging Anne with him to crouch in the sheltered trough between the rows as darts rang against the metal backing of the chairs. He had his gun out, searching.

Carefully, he raised his head and looked about the the­ater, open to attack, and spotted the blonde. She was fif­teen rows back. She had stripped down the top of her organdy dress to free her breasts, marred by the thin, red surgical lines. Below each scar were six pinholes: dartgun barrels that punctured the skin like gigantic pores. Jacobs knew the breasts were hollow of flesh and contained, in­stead, dart clips and firing mechanisms packed in a silicone shell. The war had just begun and already he knew the basic mechanisms.

He aimed.

The blonde whirled—not out of malice, but in her pre­programmed fire-pattern—twelve barrels swinging in his di­rection. Jacobs depressed the trigger. The automatic burped out three fragmentation slugs. They tumbled the blonde backward in the dark, a final sputter of darts ringing from the backs of the seats in front of her . . .

Ringing. . . .

Ringing. . . . He woke to gloom.

For several seconds, he was not certain whether reality was: A—the bed and the peaceful room clothed in gray light, or B—the half-darkened theater and the killerbot spewing thin death across the rows of patrons. He blinked his eyes, yawned, felt his ears pop. The ringing was the phone, not thousands of metal thorns ricocheting off theater seats. He reached out, answered it. “Lo?”

“Phil?”

“Hmmm?”

It was Cullen. Reedy voice, whined words. He was second in command—first in command on this, Jacobs’ one night off —on the Northside Sector antikillerbot force and was ca­pable enough to keep things purring. Or should be. . . .

“Seems like a bad one, Phil.”

“Where?” He fought to maintain drowsiness in hopes he might yet return to dream-filled unconsciousness. All sleep was dream-filled now days.

“Medarts Building. Tenth floor. He’s extremely well-armed. Darts and bullets.”

“Both?” That sent a shiver through him. It was difficult enough to implant a single weapon system into a human body. Even with the new neutral synthetic fibers that com­posed most of the mechanisms, the body fought the rejec­tion of alien tissues. Supposedly, it would never be eco­nomically feasible to build more than one weapon into a killerbot. Recovery and healing time required for two sys­tems was six times as long. Half a dozen single-system kill­erbots could be prepared and dispatched in the same time needed to finish one double-systems bot. But if Euro had come up with a way to make it pay off, a method of re­ducing healing time. . . .

“Both,” Cullen confirmed.

“Maybe you have two of them trapped up there.”

“Could be. But I don’t think so. Even assuming there are two up there, the battle pattern is unusual. They don’t fire in a preprogrammed grid; they only fire when there is a target.”

“Impossible!” It had to be! If that killerbot were firing at targets instead of on a pattern, it meant the damn thing had some control of its finer reasoning powers. But if you gave a killerbot reasoning powers, it would soon reason that it had once been a human being, that it had been stripped of its humanity, that its mind had been bleached, its stomach or chest or thigh contaminated with a deadly weapons system. It would revolt, surely.

“Just the same,” Cullen said, anxiety riding his voice with keen spurs, “I think you had better come down here.”

He gave up trying to keep his mind clouded and his body next to sleep. “I’ll be there as soon as I can.” He placed the phone in its cradle and pushed himself to the edge of the bed. For the thousandth time, he reminded himself that the captain of an antikillerbot sector team had no real life of his own.

He dressed, struggled into his raincoat, and swallowed a cup of hot coffee in three large gulps. Then he went into the bedroom to tell Anne he was leaving before he remem­bered that Anne was dead.

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