Part 18 (1/2)

Over at Inventory Simly held his repaired Glitchometer and pointed it at the giant vats that stored the ingredients to Sleep. Refreshment, Twinkle, and Snooze were the three basic building blocks, and due to the ever-increasing demand for Sleep in The World, inventory had to be kept at the highest possible levels. But if the Glitch had infiltrated one of the drums, Simly's device was registering nothing.

BLIP . . . BLIP . . . BLIP . . . BLIP . . .

”Glitchometer my fat Seemsian tuchus!”

Simly angrily tossed the machine aside, resolving to never activate it again. Here he was, on a Mission with Ca.s.siopeia Lake herself-whose poster adorned the wall of his dorm room at the IFR-and he had yet to do anything other than ask a bunch of stupid questions and spray a can of Raid.

”This is it, French Frye. If you can't come through now, you don't deserve to be a Fixer!”

Simly closed his eyes and once again tried to follow Becker's advice on how to activate the 7th Sense. He imagined he was the same schoolboy as before, except this time he was more specific, picturing growing up on a small farm in Dubuque, Iowa (for no apparent reason), where he rode with his father through the cornfields on a tractor, as in tune with the rhythms of Nature as humanly possible. He even went as far as visualizing himself crawling into bed, sunburned and worn out at the end of another long day, and ready for a much-needed Good Night's Sleep. Sense. He imagined he was the same schoolboy as before, except this time he was more specific, picturing growing up on a small farm in Dubuque, Iowa (for no apparent reason), where he rode with his father through the cornfields on a tractor, as in tune with the rhythms of Nature as humanly possible. He even went as far as visualizing himself crawling into bed, sunburned and worn out at the end of another long day, and ready for a much-needed Good Night's Sleep.

”Something's wrong in The Seems,” he imagined desperately, like Becker or Casey or any other true Fixer might. ”Now, isolate the feeling of where the Glitch could be.”

But no matter how hard or how sincerely he tried, nothing would come his way. No feeling, no sense, no tingle, nothing.

”Frye to Fixer Drane,” his hand despondently reached for his Receiver, ”I got nothing either.”

”Lake? Is that you, Lake?”

Back at the Decompression Chamber, Dominic's mind had begun to play tricks on him. As soon as the Fixers had disappeared, he'd become convinced that there was a small tear in his suit and had covered himself with masking tape and glue.

”Identify yourself!” He shouted at no one in particular.

The lack of response only served to further chip away at Dominic's fraying nerves. While his tenure as Administrator had been an uneventful one, there had also not been any major advances in the art. His greatest hope and the holy grail of Sleep had been to find the long-awaited cure for Insomnia, and he had driven his men hard, but the increasing sense of anxiety in The World (plus budget cuts) had conspired against any such innovation.

”I knew I should have stayed in Public Works! I could have had a nice fat desk job at the Flower Plant, but noooo noooo . . . I had to be a big shot and transfer into Sleep!” . . . I had to be a big shot and transfer into Sleep!”

The worst part was, with annual reviews coming up and the Powers That Be looking to downsize at every turn, this entire fiasco could cause Dominic to be phased out entirely. He checked his beloved pocket.w.a.tch but that only exacerbated the problem, for Dawn was now only forty minutes away.

”Is that you, Lake? Is that you?”

Despite his b.u.mmedoutedness, Simly Frye kept his chin up and made his way over to Packaging. It was a low-lit room filled with long tables, measuring scales, and plastic bags exactly like the one revealed by the Glimmer of Hope. Each bag was filled with the same Sleep that coated the air, and hung on miniature hooks designed to carry them down to Central s.h.i.+pping-but the a.s.sembly line had stopped dead. And so had the people who worked there.

There were rows and rows of them, all wearing protective Pajamas just like Simly's, but they were slumped over their posts and unmoving. The fog of Sleep was even thicker in here, and piles of the stuff had blanketed the ground and people like snow.

”h.e.l.lo?” Simly could feel cold fear spreading through his belly. ”Are you guys all right?”

They didn't look all right.

”What's wrong with you people?” The moment Simly touched one, the Tireless Worker collapsed to the floor and rolled onto his back. He looked dead to the world, his face hideously encrusted and air filter hopelessly clogged with thick yellow grime.

The Briefer backed away, beginning to hyperventilate, but he pulled himself together.

”Concentrate, Simly!” The Glitch had obviously been here on its path of devastation, but the question of where it was right now still remained. ”You can do this.”

For one final time, he closed his eyes and visualized his Iowan alter ego back in bed at the farmhouse of his youth. Listening carefully, he extended his awareness and picked up the sounds of the creaks in the floorboards, the swaying of the corn in the fields, and the groaning of the horses in the barn outside.

”Reach, Simly . . . reach . . .”

The moment was feeling real to him, realer than ever before. But it wasn't until he conjured up Rufus, the old family dog (who slept twenty-three hours of the day), walking into his bedroom with an unexpected spring in his step, that Simly felt something he had never felt before in his life.

A tiny chill on his arms that quickly traveled down to his toes. It was a feeling that almost spoke to him, whispering in his ear, pointing to the main Exhaustion Pipe that led to each of the individual packaging spouts. If that feeling was right, then the Glitch was was still here. So he carefully removed a Safety Net from his Briefcase, and was about to pry open the pipe, when- still here. So he carefully removed a Safety Net from his Briefcase, and was about to pry open the pipe, when-WHOOs.h.!.+

A jet of yellow powder exploded from the pipe, shattering his gla.s.s visor and filling his lungs with Sleep.

”Help! Help me!”

But it was too late. His eyes were rolling back in his head and he was going into REM.

”Simly!” Casey appeared over his shoulder, catching him just before he fell. ”Stay with me, Brief. Stay with me.”

She reached into her Toolkit, pulling out a small balloon, which Simly rapidly inhaled. Almost instantaneously he popped back up.

”What happened? Where was I?”

”You're okay, Simly. You just needed a Breath of Fresh Air.” Casey removed a helmet from one of the lifeless Tireless Workers and replaced it on Simly's head. ”What happened?”

”The Glitch, Casey-it's in that Exhaustion Pipe!”

The Fixer hopped to her feet, but when she removed the epoxy seal, the only thing inside were cables and fibergla.s.s tubes.

”If it was there, it's gone now.” Her eyes followed the pipe, which snaked along the floor, up into the ceiling, and back to the center of the Master Bedroom. ”But there's only one place left it can go.”

The Drowsenheim 4000 was the latest in Sleep reactor technology and produced triple the quant.i.ty of its underwhelming predecessor, the Outkold 42. Still, the machine did the same dangerous job of synthesizing Refreshment, Twinkle, and Snooze into the precious salve known as Sleep. Its core was located behind eight-inch-thick gla.s.s, which protected those on the outside from any possible meltdown, but to Becker Drane it looked like a meltdown may have already occurred.

In fact, the Control Center before him looked like a scene out of a movie that he and Benjamin had watched one day on AMC called The China Syndrome The China Syndrome (which had freaked his little brother out almost as bad as (which had freaked his little brother out almost as bad as Pinata Pinata). Workers lay pa.s.sed out everywhere-not just the reactor crew, but the Security Detail, Packagers, and even some R & D types who must have come running when the alarms began to sound. Monitors and gauges were all in the red, and Sleep was burping out of the release nozzles in fits and starts, creating the ever-thickening yellow cloud in the air.

Worse yet, behind the gla.s.s the reactor itself was flickering and sparking as if ready to blow at any moment.

”Lake to Drane, come in, over!”

Becker picked up the Receiver. ”Read you loud and clear.”

”Get over to the Drowsenheim-I think the Glitch may be inside!”

”No maybe about it. I'm here right now and it doesn't look good.”

”On our way.”

Becker hung up his Receiver and turned to chapter 6 of his Manual. According to the sectional blueprints, the Drowsenheim was arrayed like a Russian Tea Doll, with one protective sh.e.l.l or ”casing” inside another, inside another-all designed to protect the inner core from exposure.

”Let me have a gander.” Casey arrived with Briefer Frye in tow and pointed to the center of the diagram. ”There's still time to Fix it, but we have to stop the Glitch before it gets there-to the core.”

”But the sh.e.l.ls are rigged with magnetic trip wires!” cried Simly. ”If anything touches the sides . . .”

”If it were easy, it wouldn't be fun.” Casey winked at Sim, and he blushed like a schoolboy (from Dubuque).