Sonic the Hedgehog "The Temporal Syndrome" by Shawn Wolski The author will accept questions and comments via E-mail at the following address: n5una@mail.utexas.edu Sonic the Hedgehog and other associated characters are based on the creations of Service and Games (Sega), Archie Comic Publications, and the Sonic the Hedgehog cartoons (Saturday morning issue) created by DIC and Sega of America. Bookshire Draftwood and Cmdr. Packbell are the exclusive creations of David Pistone (rotor@primenet.com). This work is protected under various copyright laws. The author grants his permission for free distribution, under the premise that the work retains its original format. No other utilization of the following work, monetary or otherwise, is permitted. Historian's Note: The events on Mobius take place a short time before Robotnik developed Project Doomsday. 500 million years ago, on the planet Cassandra, a planet far from Mobius.... It was near dawn in Pandora City, capital of the continent Vulpecula in Cassandra's NW hemisphere. The light from the star Arcania gradually rose above the horizon with a yellow-red glare, casting it's color over the city like a thick blanket. For the fox citizens that lived in the city and the rest of the continent, it nearly time to go inside, away from the light that they would otherwise be enjoying. They knew that darkness was their sole sanctuary now, for the ozone layer over Cassandra had nearly been depleted. The continent Vulpecula and the other continent in the NE hemisphere, Vulpes Prime, had been at war for over 30 years. Operation Merger, the unofficial name of the war, was one to annihilate all prejudice between the Reds (red foxes on Vulpecula) and the Grays (gray foxes on Vulpes Prime). The intended ultimate result was to end the prejudice by destroying the other race. The basic philosophy was: no other race, no hate-crimes. Operation Merger started out in a rather primitive fashion (compared to the technology that was available at the time) with chemical weapons that wrecked havoc on the atmosphere's ozone layer and caused global chaos. Nearly all the arable land on Cassandra was lost to Arcania's increased radiation input to the planet's biosphere, leaving the people to starve and the biologists mad at work to find ways to alter the food crops for adaptation to the UV and IR rays. About ten years after the beginning of Operation Merger, the two superpowers agreed to use only advanced technology in the war, attempting to prevent any further losses. But not even the energy weapons could stop the chemical plague in the atmosphere. Work had begun in the 12th year of the war to revitalize the ozone layer, but to this day the procedures used had only been a partial success. However, today was not only a day of retreat to the sheltered coves. It was also a day of hope and expectancy. For this day was one that would go down in history for the Reds and the Grays. The two superpowers agreed to end the war and start working out their social differences in more peaceful ways. Prime Vixen Vala Andros of the Reds and Ambassador Falina Wren of the Grays agreed to begin the major series of peace talks after taking care of some unfinished business. The unfinished business in their minds was the removal of the ultimate weapon and the technical data required to construct and maintain it from Cassandra. The device would then be sent by an automatic probe into Arcania. The Red and Gray superpowers worked together to remove this devastating monster from Cassandra: the Reds supplied the weapon and technological data (it was their design), and the Grays supplied the ion drive system for the probe. To insure that the probe arrived to the star, an auxiliary dimensional warp drive was installed by the Reds. After the procedure was complete, the peace talks would begin. Vala stood naked by the East Sector window, in her executive habitation room of the Prime Lineage Home, located in the center of Pandora City. She scanned slowly over the visible areas that she could see of Pandora City. There wasn't much to see at this hour of the day, since it was right before dawn and her windows had the mandatory UV/IR filtering tint sheets on the window interiors and exteriors, but the Prime Vixen saw enough to set the mood for her day. The eastern area of the city was nearly halfway destroyed, since the major military technological factories and bases were located there. Reports indicated that the attacks on those installations were conducted by a large baryon particle weapons satellite from space. It was a small comfort that the weapons array was not aimed at any of the civilian provinces. So far. 'This war has been such a waste for both of our peoples,' Vala thought to herself. 'It will take decades, maybe centuries at least, to rebuild what we have both lost. But it will be done.' She put more determination into that last thought than she ever thought she had under the circumstances, but it didn't hurt to be hopeful in these trying times. She was startled from the universe of her thoughts to those of the physical universe by a soft whistle. It was from one of her personal communications panels on the wall. She walked over to it, noticing the video display showed her faithful Prime Family Aide, Marcus Devrom. Vala was about to press the "Return Access" key; however, after taking stock of the situation she was currently in, she pressed the "Audio TX Only" key. It wasn't exactly good form to present yourself to your aides when you weren't arrayed with the proper attire. "Yes, Marcus. What is it?" Vala tried to say in a calm, composed voice, but failed at the attempt. She knew that Marcus would understand the reason she decided not to acknowledge him with a video transmission from her node; it wasn't the first time. Marcus, however, spoke with a calm voice and a straight face that belied his humor in the situation. "Prime Vixen Vala, I have received a message from Ambassador Falina Wren's aide. The Ambassador wishes to speak to you about Operation Excommunicate and about the preliminary plans for the peace conference." "Very well, then. Send a message to Ambassador Wren's aide that I will be ready to discuss the matters in about fifteen minutes." Vala managed to regain her composure that time. "Yes, Your Honor." The video imager blacked out a second later. Vala let out a sigh of partial relief. Trying to stay as confident and commanding as possible isn't always easy under potentially embarrassing conditions. Not one to permanently harp on these subject matters, Vala put the incident out of her mind and set about making herself more acceptable for public view. The transmission would be broadcast on every conceivable communications frequency available on Cassandra, both audio and video. Vala walked over to her wardrobe, searching for something that would be "ambassadorial", giving her people and the Grays a feeling of power and reassurance. Let's see: the black, red, green, violet, or do I need new clothes? Good, found the right dress. Blue brings out my eye color. And, ouch! is hair cantankerous at times like these when you really have to look your best. Where are those medals? Under the bed, yes. Now for the.....did I forget anything? No. The fifteen minutes past faster than Vala had anticipated, but she was prepared to speak to all the Cassandrans a few seconds before one of her communications panels gave the long-awaited signal. Marcus was visible again. "Your Honor, Ambassador Falina Wren is now waiting for your reply." Vala pressed the "Return Access" key and said in her best Prime Vixen voice, "Reroute her transmission to this panel." Ambassador Falina Wren appeared on the video display about two seconds later. "Greetings, Prime Vixen Vala Andros." The Prime Vixen displayed her obligatory (but well-intended) respect toward her counterpart. "Greetings Ambassador Falina Wren. I look forward to initiating the main peace conference with you." "As do I with you, Prime Vixen. I have received a notice from Operation Excommunicate Coordinate Operations Corps that the weapon has been loaded onto the probe, and it's now in geosynchronous orbit. Are you prepared to commence your phase of the operation?" Falina looked at Vala expectantly. "I am prepared to do so," Vala decreed confidently. "Begin Phase Two of Operation Excommunicate." Phase Two involved the probe's ion drive prestart and ignition. Both ambassadors and their constituents watched their vidscreens with an intensity tangible enough to be cut with a phased neutron beam. About three seconds later, a brief discharge came from the drive exhaust. The ion propulsion system slowly accumulated the required energy to displace itself from its orbital position with Cassandra. Five long minutes later, the probe had sufficient thrust to exit orbital space and cross into interplanetary space in order to arrive at its destination. The planetary and orbital support crews made exacting checks on the heading of the probe, for the fate of Cassandra hinged on the fate of the probe. The crews were apparently in unanimous agreement that the probe was on course, for it kept moving in the same direction, unaltered by external command protocols. A collective sigh of relief spread throughout the Cassandran population. This was the first cooperative effort between the Reds and Grays for over 30 years, and they have nearly accomplished a common goal. "Well, Prime Vixen," said Falina, "up to now the operation has been a success. I think it's time to start considering what terms we should discuss." "I agree," Vala voiced with determination. "First of all, I wish to-" Vala broke off her statement in midsentence, eyeing the vidscreen with nervous and frightened intensity. And with good reason. For on the video displays accross Cassandra, the probe's ion drive disengaged without authorization from the support crews. Three seconds later, the dimensional warp nacelles had a more intense field of blue light around them. They flashed for a millisecond. The probe was off course, heading out of the solar system as fast as its dimension warp propulsion system could take it. On Cassandra and its artificial satellites, jaws dropped with shock as the event took place. Shock was soon replaced by anger from the Grays. Falina displayed her anger, as well as the collective anger of her constituents, toward Vala. "Vala! Did you think that you could insult my intelligence for so long?! How would I know that you were sending a long-range automatic probe to your military space outposts?! You have dishonored me, Vala! Just as you have dishonored yourself and your aristocratic people!" Vala tried to get a few words in, to soothe Falina and explain how it was all a mistake. However, the communications channel closed before anything could be said. Vala took a last look at the city with a dreadful resolve. For she knew what would take place in the next few seconds, and no power in the universe could prevent it. The ultimate reprisal had begun. Vala could almost hear the military satellites repositioning their weapons at major cities and other sites on Cassandra. Phased neutron beams flashed through the vacuum of space to the biosphere of the planet. All the molecules in the cities and surrounding areas were broken, their bonding shattered from exposure to the intense neutron bombardment. There was no time for any last words or thoughts; only time for destruction throughout Cassandra. In the exchange, a satellite malfunctioned, and increased its weapons power. The phaser plowed through the crust, mantle, and finally the core. This disrupted the core's stability, sending massive quakes through the planet. The instability increased until the core fragmented, sending hot metallic shrapnel through the overlying layers. What was a planet became a collection of planetesimals. Cassandra and its inhabitants were destroyed. Unknown to the Cassandrans, the accident on the probe was caused by a disrupted power transfer from the ion drive system. Apparently, the construction crews underestimated the amount of shielding required for the power transfer conduits. One of the ion drive conduits was too close to the warp drive power control system. When the conduit broke its shielding and arced, the warp power system received an unintended power influx. The information came too late for the Cassandrans. They were extinct long before the cause was recovered from a place far away, in both space and time. * * *  Trials of time... Five-hundred million years later, the automatic probe remained as the only surviving evidence that the Cassandrans ever existed. Ironically, the very act of the probe (however accidental) saving itself from doom destroyed an entire race. If the probe had even a vestige of emotion for what its act had done, it might consider itself lucky. In a span of time that organic lifeforms have great difficulty in comprehending, the probe had left its home system and arrived at another place, far from the planet of lifeforms that wished to destroy it and its lethal cargo. The probe had, in its own way, accomplished a great deal, even if only for the sake of survival. However, survival didn't come without a cost. Over time, major systems that insured the proper operation and integrity of the probe were disabled by decay or damage from the primal span of space. After about two years in warp space, the probe's navigational shield generator lost the power connection to the shield array. What started at that point (and continued through the operational lifespan of the probe) was an incessant barrage orchestrated on the probe by the universe. The once pristine metaliceramic case became pitted by the bombardment of hydrogen ions, dust, and other interstellar material. The probe's computer decreased the probe's velocity to sublight (.05 c), but the pelting continued. The probe suffered other attacks besides dust. About 250 million years into its journey to nowhere in particular, the probe came a little too close to a supernova. The shockwave didn't rupture the hull, but it did commit severe damage to the aft sensor array. The probe engaged warp drive to escape from the anticipated carnage that would ensue, but not without becoming partially blind first. Unknown to the probe, engaging warp drive at this point would cause more damage than the supernova itself would. For the probe was still in the proximity of the leading energy wave, and a warp engagement here under any circumstances was hazardous. The lead energy wave intensified over the warp nacelles, to the point of rupturing the field control inductors. Plasma from the damaged nacelles funneled back toward the matter/antimatter reactant core, then back to the nacelles. Energy cycled back and forth through the plasma/energy transfer system. The result: an short-lived isostatic energy state. The probe shot away from the exploding star with a newfound speed, staying in warp space for about two days. Resulting damage: loss of maneuvering thrusters, moderate damage to the computer core, and warp power conduit coolant loss to space. After the probe's computers managed to regain control of the probe, the warp core and all associated hardware were jettisoned to prevent any unexpected warp engagement, leaving the probe with an ion drive as its sole means of propulsion and power. The probe was safe, but not for very long. Five million years ago, the probe lost its forward sensor array and the ion drive. It drifted through space, blind and powerless. The probe became the playtoy of gravitational forces that eventually aimed it toward an unassuming star system in an unknown region of space. The probe entered the system, being tossed about repeatedly by the planets. The probe apparently thought that it should take out its frustrations on the unseen offenders. On the next gravitational pull, the probe twisted so that it would be parallel to the enemy. The probe fell straight into the gravitational field, but this would be the last one to torment it. * * * Present day, 0600 hours at Robotropolis... Robotnik was on his command chair, facing away from the main video/data display system in the Command & Control Center. He scanned over the data displayed on a data screen on an armrest of his chair. It was data of a sort he wasn't particularly fond of. Apparently Sonic had managed to narrowly escape yet again from a well-laid trap, and Robotnik found out why. SWATBot reinforcements were not of sufficient amount in Sector 21B, probably due to a misallocation in the SWATBot distribution. What angered Robotnik even more was the fact that Sector 21B was (emphasis on was) the area where the Advanced Technology R&D Laboratory had been. The facility had been the mainstay of Robotnik's war against the Mobius Freedom Fighters, churning out more powerful laser emitters and generators, more efficient engines for the Hover Units, new chemicals, and other methods of dealing with the troublesome upstarts. Now that facility was no more, and Robotnik felt a little more vulnerable to whatever cruel desires that the Freedom Fighters had. Feeling vulnerable wasn't an appropriate mindset for the Conqueror of Mobius. He drove that point home by thrusting his roboticised arm down on the data display, hard. Unfortunately, the device wasn't constructed to withstand such treatment. The screen shattered, expelling electronic circuitry all over the floor. Amazed for an instant, the irony of the situation revealed itself to Robotnik. He didn't need Sonic and his subordinates to destroy what technology he and Snively were able to create and utilize. He could destroy it all himself, and do a much better job of it as well. What was merely an embarrassing emotional outburst, even if only to himself, only made the situation worse. There was one less useful video display in the room, testimony to the futility of both the situation and the animalistic response. He sat in his command chair with a scowl that even he didn't know he make until now. Robotnik wasn't the only person present to hear the cacophony of hardware stressed beyond its designed physical limits. Snively was monitoring the power outputs from the main hydroelectric plants when Robotnik temporarily lost his normally calm, dark composure. Snively stiffened with primal fear, as if there would be another blow struck in the near future, meant for him. Slowly regaining his courage, Snively redirected his eyes from the main command computer to his natural eye level, and slowly rotated his body around to a point where he could see the back of Robotnik's command chair. Sweeping his eyes over the floor around the chair, he noticed the end product of Robotnik's brief display of emotional chaos. Another small vidscreen recycled, and for the fifth time this week. If the Hedgehog retained his record of successful attacks on them, pretty soon Robotnik would start ripping Robotropolis apart in anger, transistor by transistor, and wire by wire. Snively didn't know whether to speak at this point or not, and then decided it wouldn't make a difference anyway. Robotnik amazed himself for the third time that day when his scowl became even sharper by the sound of Snively's voice. "Sir?" Snively ventured forth onto unknown territory, but his curiosity had gotten the better of him. What happened next was totally unexpected. Robotnik pressed a key on the left chair command panel to rotate the chair around to face Snively. He slowly rose out of the chair, paced over to Snively's position, and grabbed him by the collar. Robotnik gave Snively a very hard, irritated stare about six inches from his face. "Yes, Mr. Snively?" Robotnik gave him a rather dangerous invitation. Snively could only reply with a nervous laugh and started fingering his shirt collar. Robotnik responded by darkening his stare even further, and said with the model of an impatient ruler, "Well, Snively?" He nearly shrieked on that statement. Any courage that Snively ever had vanished at that point. He could only give Robotnik a stare, the pathetic stare similar to a person that was about to be roboticised. Robotnik gave Snively a cringe of dismissal, drew the arm that he was holding Snively with back, and threw him at the wall. The resounding impact of flesh on metal, plus seeing Snively knocked out cold, calmed Robotnik down a degree. A very small degree. It seemed that nothing would be accomplished today at this rate. The loss of the R&D facility, plus the success of Sonic for bypassing security via a gap that never should have existed around a very sensitive military area, were not encouraging. The situation was about to change. Robotnik heard the sound of three robots walking in cadence, two metallic, one not. The three robots walked into the C&C with what sounded almost like a determined candor. The two SWATBots stopped, and moved into their guard positions by the doorway. The other robot, actually an android, continued to step forward. The android then scanned over the room with all the sensors available to it, looking over the decimated vidscreen and Snively lying on the floor in a rather uncomfortable position. Taking stock of the situation, it decided to keep a respectable distance from Robotnik. You never know when you might be the next advanced artificial construct to visit Dr. Robotnik, but never go out again in functional condition. Seeing his pride and joy, Cmdr. Packbell, Robotnik's anger simmered down to nothing nearly immediately. "Yes, Packbell," said Robotnik in a voice that would redeem a criminal, "what news do you have to report?" "Sir," said Packbell in a calm monotone, to prevent the former anger from erupting on him, "I have news of a spacecraft that fell from space at about 0400 hours. I was on patrol with the Delta SWAT Team looking for the Wolf Pack Freedom Fighters during that time." "Are you certain that it was from space, and not just one of our spy satellites?" Robotnik questioned. "Yes, sir. The mass, volume, and general configuration do not match any of our surveillance or other equipment. It also does not match anything that we know that Knothole or any other Freedom Fighter group has. It is more than likely from another planet." Packbell tried to parse the information out as completely as possible, still not completely convinced that Robotnik was in a benign mood. Robotnik's interest was piqued. "Where is this spacecraft now?" "About 200.7 kilometers south of here, located in Granite Wastes of the Great Unknown, sir. We have also found something in it that you might find particularly interesting." "Is that so? Show me the reconnaissance tapes." Robotnik was very interested now. Packbell strolled over to the main computer, and pressed the appropriate controls to call up the requested video data. A second later, a still-graphic appeared with the piece of equipment that Packbell anticipated might be of importance to Robotnik. Robotnik's eyes went wide when he looked over the device. From the looks of it, it could very well turn the tide of the war toward Robotnik's favor. If there was any doubt in Packbell's mind that Robotnik's day was about to be a good one, all of it disappeared. "Very well," Robotnik said, all interest still focused on the image, "inform the surveillance team that I want that weapon back here immediately, as well as any information they can find about its operation." A slight pause from Packbell. Nearly insignificant, but enough to speak of trouble. "Well, Packbell? Are there any problems with those orders?" Robotnik's anger slowly reemerged, taking a new target in its sights. It was Packbell's turn to begin worrying about his future welfare. One look at Snively reconfirmed just how far Robotnik would tolerate such insubordination. Packbell searched through his positronic matrix to find any flaws that might have caused him to withhold the information, possibly a connection that may have decayed over time due to lack of use. A small feeling of horror built up in Packbell, after completing a full diagnostic, and finding nothing. One of the many other things to attribute to his reaction by what limited emotional level he had; not by an electronic failure. He managed to regain his composure in time to save his circuitry from the robot recycler. "Yes, sir. There is a matter of difficulty involved in executing those commands. In order to return the weapon and the required operational data to Robotropolis, there is a matter of being able to do the requested operations in the first place." "How is that so?" Robotnik's dark stare and gravely voice slowly intensified, a sign that Packbell had not yet been reprieved from uncertain physical damage. "The craft has many occurrences of hieroglyphics, for lack of a better term, on the computers and the weapon's protective housing. I projected that they would have the required information as to how the weapon's housing would be opened, and the same may be true for the data download procedure." A pause, as if to consider what else needed to be said, and then he continued. "I instructed the SWATBots to attempt a brute-force method of obtaining both; however, the results were not successful. In short, a language translator is required to aid in opening the protective housing and downloading the data." Robotnik calmed down, but not completely. A hint of a dangerous red glow from Robotnik's eyes still glared in Packbell's face. "Do you mean to tell me that you don't have the facilities to get a translation?" "No, Dr. Robotnik. I have no such program available to me, and I could not download it from any data site from our position. That is why I returned without the weapon and the data. I required something or someone that could alleviate the problem of translation." Packbell managed to retain his composure, even though he knew that he was standing near what could very well turn into a mental version of an unstable nuclear reactor slowly building toward meltdown condition. Surprisingly, Robotnik disengaged his stare, thought over the change in the situation, and started his scheming mode. He paced the floor for a few minutes, Packbell remained in his position by the main computer. "Very well, then," Robotnik finally said. "Inform the service crews that I want my personal Hover Unit ready in the next five minutes. You and I will join the reconnaissance group." As if suddenly remembering something, Packbell stuttered, "What about......" He pointed in Snively's general direction. Snively, for the moment, was still on vacation. "Never mind him. He can catch up with us after he wakes up. Now, Packbell my boy, let's see about that weapon." Five minutes later, Robotnik and Packbell were cruising toward the eastern outpost for the linguistics program archive, certain that Snively would not take part in the mission anytime soon. However, there was someone unnoticed in the air ducts that saw and missed nothing. Charles Hedgehog ran back down the air ducts, toward the location of his covert operations base. 0620 hours, in the Great Plains... The sun was just barely above the horizon, its light creating an array of complex and beautiful patterns of colors across the sky. To any observer, it would be so distracting that they would forget that Mobius ever was at war with Robotnik, and that their day to be alive as an organic lifeform would be their last. Compared to the overly-familiar background of the somber and depressing pollution cloud that wrapped over Robotropolis like a Terran boa constrictor, this scene was heaven. The air was pure with the smell of clean air; not the choking, lethal atmosphere that Robotnik called his home. Yes, a spectator would almost forget everything that took place in the past eleven years. Almost. From this particular vantage point, located somewhere in the Great Plains, the observer could see Robotropolis' microcosm, a reminder of reality. The atmosphere had a reality of its own: a benign and malignant side. There were areas where they alone were present and the dominant form, and others where they intermixed, as if even Mobius' biosphere was fighting a war of it's own to keep the evil clouds at bay. It wasn't entirely clear as to what side had the advantage and would eventually become victorious, so it seemed to be a stalemate. So far. The significance of the atmospheric battle that had been going on for about eleven years had not been lost on Princess Sally. She had trouble sleeping the past night, due to the work involved with being the first defense front against Robotnik. So she decided to suspend the war, at least in her mind, for a little while so she could relax. Belatedly realizing the error in choosing this location to view the sunrise only made her mood worse. For that battle between the two areas of Mobius' biosphere had a symbolic connection to what the current situation with the war against Robotnik was. There was no win or lose; there was only an isostatic balance between the offensive acts of the armies. 'We give what seems to be the final blow to Robotnik's plans, and he's able to turn around and do the same to us!' Sally screamed with near-despair in her mind. 'No matter what we do, both sides end up equal. Only while Robotnik loses SWATBots, we lose good-hearted people!' Sally considered the situation, almost thought it futile. 'No! I-we can't let that come between us and the safety of Mobius, as well as our families. We will stop Robotnik some day in the future!' At this point, Sally started crying. The tears and the intent, however, were of brazen determination; not sadness. Amazing how the war had progressed on for so long, and yet people still had the tenacity to face it with the same drive they had so many years ago. One point in the Freedom Fighters' favor. She looked up at the sky again, and saw an imaginary blue speck. She rubbed her eyes to remove it from her field of vision. The speck remained visible, and it was moving at a high velocity toward the east. Fearing the worst, Sally reached into her backpack and pulled out an IR/binocular unit. She saw that her suspicions were correct. It was difficult to know what operation was underway, but it's generally a sign of trouble for the Freedom Fighters when Robotnik is personally going to an area to inspect the process of his schemes. She turned to run back to Knothole. When she was near the Great Plains/Great Forest border, she heard the trilling hoot of the messenger bird. It was high above, and apparently did not see her. Sally cupped a fist around her mouth and called to the bird. He responded by swooping down, and executing an expertly-placed landing on Sally's outstretched arm. She the top off the cylindrical container and pulled out a paper with a message inscribed on it. It read: NEW SITUATION DEVELOPING: ROBOTNIK HAS THE LOCATION OF AN ALIEN PROBE THAT HAS CRASH-LANDED IN THE GREAT UNKNOWN. CONTAINS WEAPON OF UNKNOWN TYPE. SEND A TEAM TO THESE COORDINATES TO INVESTIGATE: 20N 30W Included with the message was a small data disk. She took a quick look over the video data, and considered the potential of what this craft had to offer. Needless to say, it did not bode well. Sally quickened her pace to twice as fast as before, given the severity of the events that might unfold if actions were not taken to prevent whatever Robotnik had in mind. * * * Immediately after returning to Knothole, Sally assembled a small investigatory team for the mission at her hut. It consisted of: Sonic as field commander, Dulcy as transporter, and herself as computer expert. Sally had called Bookshire in to assist with making modifications to Nicole, in the hopes that Nicole would be able to translate the alien language seen on many of the craft's computers and other hardware. This turned into an extensive technical conversation that Sonic was not privy to the finer details of. This went on for about 20 minutes, and then he couldn't withstand the technical jargon that seemed to permeate the hut. He made his level of technical knowledge abundantly clear to the rest of the investigatory party. "Now wait a Sonic Second!" the hedgehog interrupted, a testimony to frustration. "If you do what, you'll be able to do who?! What on Mobius is that?!" He threw his arms up in a gesture of surrender. Sally was about to give Sonic a message of her own on no uncertain terms in frustration herself, but Bookshire saved them both from engaging in a battle of wits which there would be no definable successor. Speaking very patiently to Sonic, while giving Sally a look that convinced her to refrain from dictating any ascorbic comments, he said, "What we're trying to do is this, Sonic," A pause, and then he continued. "If we can interconnect Nicole's language system, that is, the knowledge of the languages that she already can translate, to the new dynamic predictive logic circuit that I installed, we might have a better chance of having Nicole translating the alien's language." Sonic gave Bookshire a look that explained that he wasn't exactly impressed, but he got the message. "Well, OK," he finally said. "But what about all that other stuff that you were saying about putting in Nicole?" Bookshire spoke again as the emotional mediator. "Those other circuits are for her sensor array. There's no telling what Robotnik found out there, and I had a few new circuits I wanted to test out." Apparently satisfied by the explanations, Sonic walked over to a chair and sat down with his hands on his forehead, muttering to himself in a voice so low that noone could comprehend what was happening in his unique hedgehog mind. Dulcy looked on the entire confrontation of techspeak versus the not-so-inclined hedgehog with a small degree of amusement. Of course, she had about as much understanding of the situation as Sonic, but she was content to wait and try to sort out everything when she could get a better understanding of technology in general. Right now, there was no hope of getting an introductory course in computer science, so she, like Sonic, had to consign herself to being lost in the technobabble. The only distinction was that Dulcy had considerably more patience, something that made a difference, even if it was only Sally's nerves that were at stake. The technical conversation resumed, and continued for about five minutes. Satisfied with the upgrades to Nicole, Sally secured Nicole's case together. "OK team", she said, observing her comrades, "this is what we need to do." What ensued after that point was another technical conversation, but it was one of tactical nature, something that Sonic readily understood without question. * * * After all the talk and preparation, the investigation force was ready to depart for the crash site at about 0900 hours. Bookshire stood by Dulcy, explaining to Sally one final time how to operate the new hardware installed in Nicole. Sonic, as usual, looked around with the air of someone lost in a very boring conversation; Dulcy just grinned, equally clueless but not inclined to make the matter a public issue. "Now remember, Sally," Bookshire was admonishing, "try to prevent any excessive motion with Nicole. It would skew the alignment on the circuits. But if anything does happen, press this key to reset the circuits. It should reinitialize them and correct the problem." "All right, Bookshire," said Sally. "Thanks for helping me with the upgrades." "No problem at all, Sally. Anything to help out a friend in need of technical assistance. Ever since Rotor caught that flu, I've been filling in for him in the past few days." He paused to think, and then began speaking in a more severe tone. "But you kids have something more important to to than listen me babble off. Get going to that crash site!" Bookshire then paced away as fast as his injured leg would permit. The three friends watched him in mutual amazement. Suddenly remembering what task they had prepared for, Sally spoke for the three of them. "He's right, you know. Dulcy, you heard the man. Let's go!" Sally said decisively. "Crack-the-whip time, Sally. Hang on!" Dulcy warned. There was a flutter of wings against air, a feeling of levitation, and suddenly, a strong propulsive force directed upward as Dulcy snapped her tail. A few seconds later, they were one with the midmorning sky, heading toward uncertain danger. * * * It had been about one hour and 45 minutes after Robotnik and Packbell arrived at the probe's crash site at 0800 hours, and Robotnik had still been no closer to understanding what the hieroglyphics meant than what he knew a few hours before. Pacing around the dead probe, he kept his eyes on the WorkerBots and the weapon, with more emphasis on the weapon. The hieroglyphics made no sense whatsoever, and it was becoming more than obvious that the translation program wasn't about to retrieve the linguistics base anytime soon, if ever. It was clear that the device was SOME kind of weapon, but WHAT? He considered the point over and over in his mind, knowing that the time that he spent thinking about the weapon's use gave Sonic and his companions time to learn that something was amuck, and they would come to investigate and/or prevent the process from obtaining completion. He was about to slip into that mood he felt earlier in the day, when he learned that the lab had been destroyed. Today was about to be another one of those days... Apparently Packbell had noticed the general futility of the situation, for he voiced it for both of them. "Dr. Robotnik, it is entirely possible that Sonic may become wise to the situation. We must leave soon before he arrives." Robotnik cringed in disbelief when he heard that, but he knew that Packbell was right. Further waiting on his part would only serve to jeopardize the mission. The only option left was to scrap both the mission and the probe's cargo. Unless... Robotnik considered the unfinished thought further. 'No, pouring over the language program by ourselves won't be enough,' he thought. 'However, maybe we can get the Freedom Fighters to do it for us, and then WE take the weapon! Yes, that's good, very good indeed.' He then made a turn to Packbell. "Packbell, notify the WorkerBots and SWATBots to cancel the retrieval project." Packbell could only stand in his position in front of Robotnik, mouth agape with surprise and possibly mild shock. "Doctor," he said, "are you certain about this?" Robotnik's anger nearly flared, surprised at Packbell's ignorance to the opportunity that leaving the probe would give them. "Yes, Packbell my boy. Leave the probe. This would give us the opportunity for the Freedom Fighters to do the work for us." He managed to keep his anger under control, at least on the outside. Packbell's shocked glare converted to one of elated understanding as the hexadecimal codes in his positronic matrix resolved the procedure of this new tactic. His only response was to radio the message to the other robots present. The robots suddenly stopped working and began converging on their transport units. Robotnik and Packbell followed suit. A few minutes later, there was no sign of Robotnik or anything else native to Mobius in the probe's area. Except for a few stealthy devices that Robotnik left behind to provide a visual link to Robotnik's personal Hover Unit. This precaution was for the arrival of a certain blue hedgehog that Robotnik knew and loved...to roboticise. * * * The midday sun blazed in all its fury down on Dulcy, and she didn't know how much more heat she could withstand. "How much further, Sally?" she questioned, unable to hide the evidence of heat exhaustion from her voice. "I gotta stop for a water break soon. It's hot out here!" Sonic and Sally weren't much better off than Dulcy. Sonic was sweating so much that he felt like the raging one km-high waterfall in Bolder Bay. Sally was feeling a little lightheaded from the extended thermal exposure. One point was clear to all three: find a shaded area and drink copious amounts of water. Sally scanned over the barren landscape for a suitable area with her IR/binocular unit, then pointed the location out to Dulcy. It was a cliff outcrop located in a valley that had enough shade for the three of them, plus some space to stretch out and relax for a while. "Right down there looks fine, Dulcy," said Sally in a tone similar to Dulcy's. "Music to my ears! Going down!" Dulcy said, ecstatic about the prospect of being able to get out of the sun's heat for a while. With strength that she didn't even know she still had, she snapped her tail to accelerate down to the new-found haven. Acceleration which Sonic and Sally weren't exactly prepared for, or even able to tolerate. "Yo, Dulce! Not so fast! I'm gonna hurl if this keeps up!" Sonic exclaimed, his face becoming a blue-gray tint in response to the sudden downward thrust. It was too late for any deceleration to take place. Dulcy was already well into her dive-bomb orientation, about 30 degrees relative to the ground. Two seconds later, she angled her upper body high to facilitate landing, but she did so slightly too fast. With her aerodynamics sufficiently disrupted, she and her friends hung in midair about two meters above the ground. For a painfully long time (it was actually about a second), Dulcy looked over to her companions as if to give an apologetic "Oops", and then dropped like a massive bomb to the hard rock below them. Short screams came from the comrades as the air forcefully discharged them from its stronghold. "Ooohh, I'm home, Ma," Dulcy babbled in mild shock. After shaking the disorienting feeling out of her head, Dulcy took stock of her situation. Her posterior was the ultimate tribute to discomfort, but the pain would pass. She also felt two furry bodies gripping her back with unprecedented strength. Dulcy looked over her shoulder to Sonic and Sally. "Are you two OK?" she inquired, concerned about their facial expressions. Sonic looked as if he was ready to expel his breakfast with extreme prejudice, and Sally wasn't too far behind in completing a similar act herself. After having a detailed view of Dulcy's worried face, they managed to expedite a small degree of control over their digestive systems. "Not if you count my stomach," the two said in unison, with a hint of the resonance forced by the impact still in their voices. Temporarily not in their best condition, but otherwise functional. They slid slowly down Dulcy's back, in order to prevent a relapse of that unpleasant feeling in their abdominal area. Dulcy then assisted them in the short travel to the shade. After an hour of lounging in the shaded refuge and having liberal amounts of water applied both internally and externally, the three were prepared to continue the mission. Now all that remained to be accomplished was to arrive at the intended destination and prevent Robotnik from taking action on whatever plan he had for the innovative wartoy. The only problem was: where was the probe relative to their location? "Nicole," Sally commanded, "show our location relative to the location of the alien probe." "Unable to comply, Sally," Nicole responded politely, almost apologetically. "The present location is an area that has unusually high concentration of refractory minerals which are preventing any fix of a reliable bearing." Not having the required background in basic geology, Sonic gave a disdainful look to Sally and Nicole, with emphasis on Nicole. He said nothing, for his face revealed all. Nicole didn't understand the expression on the hedgehog's face, but Sally did. "She means, Sonic," Sally explained, "that there are rocks in this valley that are affecting her sensors. We need to get out of this valley to find the probe's location again." "I don't know about that, Sal," Sonic said thoughtfully. "Besides, take a look at that." To emphasize his point, he pointed toward the sky. Little did they realize during their reprieve from the heat, the sky had been turning darker and darker during the time that they spent hiding from the sun. Darkness meant heavy cloud cover. Heavy cloud cover meant rain. And rain in the desert meant floods, for the rain came down in a torrential downpour. With further consideration, they realized that they were in the worst possible area to get away from the sun and a flood. There was a roar in the distance from the south end of the valley. A roar that signified the relentless advance of a solid wall of water. There was no time for words; only actions would serve their purpose here. Sonic and Sally took their positions on Dulcy's back, and gripped her scales with all the strength they had. Dulcy leaped into the air, and shot off like a torpedo with all the might she could manage to give. Two seconds later, the wall of water screamed by them, inundating their resting place that would have become their permanent residence had they not acted hastily. "Well, so much for getting out of there," Dulcy observed. "Can you get a fix on the probe now, Sally?" "Sorry, Dulcy," Sally replied. "Too much interference from the storm. I can't even tell what direction we're going." Nicole's sensors had been enhanced, but Bookshire and Sally didn't account for a scenario of this nature where enhanced (but unshielded) sensors would be at best, only disoriented. The worst case wasn't very appealing, and would require the long and tedious construction of a new computer unit. This was time that they didn't have the luxury to spend. Unless... Sally tried to remember everything that Bookshire had installed in Nicole. EVERYTHING. Then, something in her mind finally connected. "Nicole," she said, "decrease the search radius and buffer the sensor inputs." "Sal, what's that going to do?" Sonic said with familiar confusion. "This should help Nicole get a better chance find the probe again," Sally replied. "Besides, we can't be too far away from the probe that we can't just use a short range sensor scan. It would take a load off the long-range scanners and be much more effective." Apparently content with the parsed data, Sonic said nothing further. The only sounds now were the sounds of the storm, Dulcy's wings, and Nicole making a scan with the reconfigured sensors. A few moments later, an acknowledgment sound came from Nicole. The three friends waited in anticipation for the bearing. Sally read the data display, and translated it for Dulcy. "Dulcy," she said, "turn right and keep going straight. That way is to the probe." "All right, Sally," said the dragon. "Oh, and by the way," Dulcy said jokingly, "does anyone want to stay here? Nice river-front property available; wouldn't want to see it go to waste." Helpless guffaws from all three ensued. Their spirits lifted again, they flew off to attend to some more serious matters. * * * They came to a stop at an area five km away from the probe's crash site, dry and none the worse for wear...so far. Due to the prearranged mission plans, Dulcy would stay behind and monitor from a remote location. Robotnik has been out looking for dragons again recently, and now wasn't exactly a good time for a dragon to be visible to his sensors. He had ways of capturing dragons that weren't exactly pleasant, plus there was a chance that Robotnik had that technology with him. In this case, stealth was the best defense. "Remember, Dulce," Sonic admonished, "you stay here an keep an eye out for Chrome Dome and his pals. If we get into trouble, jam back to Knothole, pronto. Sal and I will take care of things at our end." A pause, and then he continued. "Any questions?" The dragon could only shake her head in the gesture of "no". Dulcy was far too knowledgeable about Freedom Fighter tactics, and the confrontation with Robotnik was always met with the same basis of one of the tactical codes: risk as few people as possible, while still allowing for successful completion of the mission. However, that didn't mean that she was required to like the orders she had been given. Dulcy had a concerned look on her face to that effect. Sonic sensed this sign of dissension, and decided to be diplomatic about it. "Look, Dulcy," the hedgehog said kindly, "I know you want to help us kick old Buttnik's tail. But this is for your protection as well as ours." He thought for a few seconds, tapping his foot, and produced an innovative plan to appeal to Dulcy. His eyes lit up with the glee. "Tell ya what," he continued, "sometime soon I'm probably going after one of Robotnik's wartoys in Robotown. I want you on my lookout team, only this time, you'll be able to do more." Dulcy looked at Sonic in shocked disbelief, but said nothing. Sonic nodded with an honest smile on his face to confirm her suspicions that she hadn't misread his proposal. She thought it over, and decided that it was a fair trade. "Good luck you two," she finally said. "I'll be watching to see that you two kids don't cause any trouble." A few seconds of laughter later, and everyone's nerves had been settled. Dulcy usually was one to look at the brighter side of just about everything, and had more than once made that point apparent, however humorous it was. Then again, it could have been because of the humor that people might see in it. Whatever the reason, Dulcy got the message, and made it clear in her own way that she would stolidly stand by her promise. Satisfied that his message had completed its intended service, Sonic said to Sally, "Come on, Sal! My sneaks are just itching to hit the old road!" "Ready Sonic," was the reply from Sally, analyzing Nicole's diagnostics. "Just had check Nicole's sensors. They're fine." "Cool. So let's get outta here." Sonic picked up Sally, and held her horizontally across his arms. His feet accelerated in place, and his legs soon became a circular blur of motion. "Warp time!" Sonic exclaimed as his velocity rose to critical. There was a sonic boom, and a blue blur where Sonic and Sally had been. A few seconds later, they were nearly halfway to the crashed probe and the mystery weapon it carried. On their way to the probe, Sonic thought he saw something very familiar. He decelerated to a stop to get a more detailed look at what this object was. "What's wrong, Sonic?" Sally inquired, concerned. "I don't get it, Sal," Sonic replied, baffled. "I think I just saw US around here somewhere." "What are you talking about, Sonic?" Sonic had no answer to that question. He quickly scanned over the immediate vicinity with his eyes, and found the familiar objects again. His suspicions were confirmed. "Over there, Sal! Look!" Sonic blurted, pointing out the location behind the exposed old granite intrusion. Sally looked toward the specified area. She was just as shocked by what she saw as Sonic. There was another Sonic and Sally present. The two pairs of Knothole Freedom Fighters stared at each other for an indeterminate amount of time, due to the shock of seeing themselves. The "other" Sonic was the one to break the spell. "Sal, we've seen ourselves! We came back too late!" he yelled, the pinnacle of failure present in his voice. He picked up the "other" Sally and sped off to an area unknown. Sonic and Sally looked at each other, mouths completely open with shock again after seeing this totally unexpected spectacle take place. Neither knew what to say, until Sonic asked the obvious question about the authenticity of the "other" Sonic and Sally. Sonic was nearly at a loss for words. "Sal," he muttered, as if he didn't trust his mouth to emit coherent speech, "was THAT us?" "It looked like us, but I'm not sure if it was or not," was all that Sally could contribute to their minuscule library of knowledge on the subject. Sonic considered the matter over again in his mind, thought about the possibilities, and decided not to progress any further on the matter. They had more important ways to occupy their time, such as finding out what the hieroglyphs in the probe meant. He made the point clear to Sally. "Well, whether it was or not," he said with a hint of responsibility in his voice, "we have more important things to worry about: Robuttnik and that probe." Sally was still somewhat disoriented, but understood Sonic well enough to voice her opinion as well. "I agree. Let's go!" Sonic's legs became a circular blur of motion again, and his former location exploded in a thunderclap-like sound. In about two seconds, he and Sally were at the crash site. After their arrival, Sonic performed a quick countersurveilance procedure, to insure that Robotnik wouldn't be watching them from a remote location. Finding no evidence of any equipment, Sonic gave Sally the "go ahead" gesture. Sally walked over to a computer terminal and began work on the hieroglyphics with Nicole. Little did they know that Robotnik was watching them, and in a way they hadn't anticipated. The new StealthSurveilance Orbs were performing admirably. Now all Robotnik had to do was watch the audio/video downlink, and take action at the proper time. One hour later, Sonic was becoming restless. Belated thoughts of danger and warnings passed through his mind. This was the time that the "what ifs" started a mental reign of terror. What if Sonic had missed something in his antisurveillance pass? What if Robotnik really was watching them? What if...the thought was too unsettling to finish in the privacy of his own mind. "Uh, Sal," Sonic began, nervously, "are we going to get the results anytime this century?" "I'm no closer to finishing than the last time you asked - five seconds ago," Sally retorted. "I don't even know if this translation program will work, so I'm trying to give Nicole as much data as possible to increase the language base she has to work with. Besides that, I've had to get Nicole to supply partial power to the computers here just to get them to work. It hasn't been easy." Still somewhat nervous, and yet unwilling to interrupt Sally any further, Sonic walked over what remained of the "top" of the probe. He quickly looked over the landscape with his binoculars. He looked out about five km, and saw no sign of anything, organic or otherwise, besides Dulcy. He directed his IR/binocular unit visual sensor toward Dulcy. She waved to him to signal that they were still in her sights; Sonic waved back to acknowledge the signal. Having nothing else to occupy his time besides keeping watch, Sonic didn't know how much more suspense he could take. Fortunately for Sonic, he wouldn't have to wait any longer. Sally had just finished scanning over the last bits of data they could find for the translation program to use. Nicole said the key phrases that both of them had been waiting for: "Transcription complete. Data currently saved to permanent storage. Executing language compiler." The wait after then was minute compared to the transcription phase, but it still irritated Sonic's nerves. "Translation complete. Data prepared for display purposes." "Display data," Sally commanded, relieved that the process was over. The preliminary data that the probe had concerning the point of origin and other location points were visible via the holographic projection. As Sally scrolled the data page down, relief immediately converted to horror. Noticing this sudden change on Sally's face, Sonic jumped down from his guard position to investigate the affair in detail. Sonic looked over to his close friend of eleven years, and queried Sally on the sudden change of situation. "What's up, Sal?" he asked. Sally said nothing. She looked as if she couldn't even trust herself to speak. When this only continued to provoke a concerned response from Sonic, she handed Nicole to Sonic for his personal investigation. Most of the text and other video was nothing more than useless technobabble to him, but he understood enough to see why Sally had become so afraid of being around the probe and its cargo. A similar look spread over his face, and he even began to feel a bit sick at the prospect. "You're telling me, Nicole," Sonic questioned, seeking verification, "that this is a TIME MACHINE?" "In the crudest sense, the device is a time machine. According to the available data, the weapon was used to-" She was hastily interrupted by Sonic. "Yes, yes, I got the picture, Nicole," was the hedgehog's only response to the halting the continuation of the more graphic contributions the general utilization file had. Toying with the space/time continuum was something that gave him a headache, in more ways than one. The Cassandrans had been wise to rid themselves of this weapon; only the probe was supposed to be destroyed in their star system, not to crash-land on an alien planet where it was possible for someone like Robotnik to get his hands on. The survival of the probe had destroyed their planet, so the probe was the final connection to the Cassandrans' existence. A legacy that had to be destroyed before anything detrimental could happen to other planets. It was far too late for Cassandra, but not so for Mobius, if Sonic and Sally acted fast. Finding her courage again, Sally managed to speak. "Sonic, this thing needs to be destroyed." "Gotcha, Sal. So how?" the hedgehog ventured. "Well, first we need to get that protective cover off." To Nicole, she said, "Nicole, access data regarding the unloading procedure." "Searching for required index," Nicole dictated. After a second of scanning over the permanent data storage unit, Nicole found the requested file. "Reading file, Sally." A holographic display appeared about two meters in front of Sally. "All right, Sonic," Sally said, "let's get to work. First locate the code latches along the base." They dove into the procedure, as per instructions translated by Nicole. They were that much closer to destroying the weapon. * * * While the unloading process was going on at the probe's location, Robotnik made the decision to move in. He made a call to his field commander, with a smile of accomplishment on his face. "Packbell! Notify the other Hover Units. We attack NOW!" Packbell acknowledged the message, and relayed it to all the Hover Units. Five seconds later, the fleet screamed toward the probe with all available power. * * * Right before Robotnik's arrival, Sonic and Sally were trying to find the autodestruct key on the time machine. They were unable to commit themselves to any further searching, for Robotnik, Packbell, and the entire Delta SWATBot Group were practically face-to-face with them. Before the two Freedom Fighters could snap out of shock from Robotnik's sudden appearance, they were apprehended by two SWATBots and bound together back-to-back by a security shackle. Sonic and Sally struggled to escape, but the electromagnetic field was too powerful to permit any hope of departure. Robotnik laughed his evil laugh of glee when he saw the two attempt to escape. "It's no use, Hedgehog. Your speed won't get you out of this one very easily." Robotnik was definitely enjoying this. He continued in his best poetic tone to Sally, "And you, Princess. Why do you struggle so? It would only serve to bruise your beautiful body, not to mention leave me with noone to be my consort." Sally cringed visibly and spoke in her best acidic voice, "In your dreams, Doctor! I'll be your consort when you get a life!" "Oh, what a pity. I thought that I might actually be able to trust you two. 'Later', I thought," Robotnik said only in a slightly derisive tone. "Oh, and I almost forgot. Thank you for providing me with the information I need to the Key to Mobius," he said, bowing in his most gracious bow. It was Sonic's turn to add a rebuttal. "Yeah, we'll give you the Key to Mobius, Robuttnik," Sonic replied with a sneer on his face. "We'll shove it down your throat after we use it to lock you up in prison for good!" Slightly, but only slightly, taken aback by Sonic's comment, Robotnik thought over what his next action should be. Stroking his mustache, he quickly thought of another way to deal with the two brash young Freedom Fighters. Finding one, an evil smile crept over his face, making it more than apparent to Sonic and Sally that their fate would not be favorable to their survival. "Very well, then," he finally said to them. "How about we make a deal?" Sally spoke for herself and Sonic. "We don't make deals with criminals, Robotnik." "Wait until you hear the proposal, Princess," he said to Sally. After a thoughtful pause, he continued on. "I challenge you to determine your fate on your own. If you, Hedgehog, are as fast as you believe yourself to be-" An interruption by Sonic. "Faster than you'll ever know, Robotnik." "As I was saying," he continued, unflagged by Sonic's remark, "if you're fast enough to escape from me, I'll make certain that you are allowed to return to Knothole and warn your friends about this weapon. If not, well, let's just say you never will." Mutual shock emanated from Sonic and Sally. It had to be a trap, but what if Sonic was able to dash away from Robotnik's Delta Group and safely return to Knothole. The prospect stung in Sonic's side, since it seemed to me more a question of pride than anything else. This was as Robotnik intended. "Sal, I gotta do it," Sonic whispered to his companion. "Right, Sonic," she answered back. "You know as well as I do that this could be a trick." Sonic resonated his voice to sound suave, and said, "Come on, Sal. I can outrun anything that Robuttnik has. Trust me." "Oh, I hate it when you say that," was her only response. She consented to the challenge, however. "Excellent," said Robotnik in a voice that sounded like the cat that was about to catch the canary. "Now that we are in mutual agreement, I shall let you perform your part of the bargain." To the SWATBots, he ordered, "Set them free." One second later, the EM field disengaged and the metal bar was lifted from the prisoners. Now free of the bonds, Sally quickly jumped into Sonic's arms. The hedgehog accelerated in place for about a second, and then was somewhere else. Robotnik, however, wasn't about to let them escape so easily. He signaled to Packbell to engage the weapon. A yellow beam flashed between the temporal displacement final emitter and Sonic's position. In the distance, Robotnik could hear the screams of the two, possibly the initial effects of the time transport. A few seconds later, they were present no more. From the point of view of the two Knothole Freedom Fighters, the temporal displacement effects were unpleasant and moderately painful. It was as if the temporal transport beam was stripping them apart, atom by atom. They felt their DNA split into its component strands and recombine a billion times per second, as though their DNA was struggling with great difficulty to maintain contact with the current time period. The very essence of their bodies valiantly attempting to combat the effects of the beam, but the beam eventually became the victor. After the transport initialization phase was complete, Sonic and Sally felt themselves literally thrown into an unknown future time. There was a flash of intense red light, and then the two found themselves lost in the Great Unknown, but this place was far more alien to them than the Great Unknown of their time. It was the Great Unknown of the distant future. * * * In the present, Robotnik was thoroughly enjoying his latest victory over his worst adversaries. After eleven years of contending with a teenage hedgehog and his friends, and losing in the process, this event was one to be celebrated. Now that the foundation of the Knothole Freedom Fighters had been razed from existence (at least in this time period), the rest the infrastructure should fall eventually. With the fall of the Knothole Freedom Fighter front, Mobius would be in his hands, to have and control. "Yes!" Robotnik exclaimed with excitement and accomplishment. "Now, to celebrate." An evil chuckle from Robotnik came forth, lasting for about two minutes. When he managed to regain his composure, he turned to face Packbell and said, "Very good shot, Packbell. If you weren't already at your position in the chain of command, I would promote you. However, since I cannot do so, I will merely congratulate you." Thank you, Doctor Robotnik," Packbell responded, also gratified to see Sonic and Sally vanish from the current timeline, although appended with a more insidious motive. He had been waiting for the perfect time to terminate Robotnik's reign to begin his own, and the "death" of the hedgehog seemed to be the most auspicious opportunity to do so. Yes, Robotnik might be somewhat more readily caught off guard this time. In fact.... An unusual sight caught Packbell's eye. He hurriedly directed his sensors over the control panel of the temporal displacement device. There was a graphical bar that steadily lengthened toward an area shaded in red. Although Packbell couldn't even begin to translate the Cassandran language and understand the control labels, a feeling of dread increased within him in synchronization with the bar. What he saw, he instinctively didn't believe was productive to his future survival. As if the machine wished to acknowledge that hypothesis, an audio signal steadily increased in volume in coordination with the lengthening bar. It was unnoticeable at first, then it became apparent to both Packbell and Robotnik. After Robotnik first became aware of the unusual noise, he stepped over to the control panel. Observing that Packbell was shocked with fear, or otherwise in a positronic-lockup due to a problem he couldn't resolve, Robotnik looked over the control panel to obtain an understanding of what would strike such an unsettling response in Packbell. He noticed that a graphical bar was stretching uncomfortably close to a shaded red area. Robotnik froze in place, for he knew in the back of his mind what was happening, and felt foolish for assuming that the power cells in the device would be stable enough to safely retain their charge without facing the risk of an unrecoverable power feedback loop. The last thing Robotnik saw was a flash of lethal radiation, and then nothing more. Just as on Cassandra, the fate of Mobius depended on the fate of an ultimate weapon. The difference in the comparison was that the weapon itself would be responsible for destroying the planet that its lifeforms knew and loved. In its own sort of way, the weapon seemed to wish to atone for the crime of its survival, so its only solution was to destroy itself. The morals of its use made no difference; preventing any further utilization was all that mattered. There was no place on Mobius for anyone or anything to avoid the global carnage that would reform the planet just as the format command reinitializes a hard drive. An explosion occurred at ground zero of the probe's crash site, ejecting gigatons of dust into the atmosphere. The explosion was also powerful enough to create resonance in the crust and mantle throughout the planet. Shockwaves transmitted through the mantle caused the crust to restructure into waves, and finally into fragments of mixed granodiorite/basalt material when the stress was too great for the crust to withstand. Continents and oceans alike steamed with fury in the catastrophe. The fragments and dust slowly sank into the exposed mantle, leaving nothing to go to waste. In a matter of minutes, the planet that was Mobius to its inhabitants became a hot radioactive sphere of undifferentiated molten rock. The new world had an opportunity to become a biological storehouse, but at the cost of losing everything its predecessor had. It would be a long wait before the genesis of new life would occur in the body of a very simple and unassuming lifeform, and much longer before two certain displaced lifeforms from the previous world would appear. * * * Dawn of an new eon... The reformation of the planet was remarkably similar to Earth's, with differences in the formation of the key elements as far as time was concerned. Asteroids fell into the magma ocean, though not the swarms that existed in Mobius' initial formation about 4.6 billion years ago. With the decreased introduction of new material into the planet's microcosm, the global magma ocean cooled considerably faster at the surface than it had the first time. In about 100 million years, the first piece of basaltic crust formed and remained floating on the magma. Having a base to expand on, more basalt formed and cooled until the planet was covered with a primordial basaltic crust. Occasionally breaks formed in the crust, caused either by limited input from asteroids or differential stress in the mantle. From these fractured areas came the vapors that would form the first reducing atmosphere. For about 300 million years, the atmosphere remained relatively stable. That was until the introduced water content became high enough to permanently change all that. Storms of lightning emerged, and with storms came torrential rains to cool the crust and form a global ocean. The ocean remained dominant for about a few million years, but the crust was not content to remain under the ocean's rule. Continents started forming, encroaching on the ocean's territory. At about this time in the history of the new world, the basic building blocks of life started forming in the ocean and pools of water found on the infant continents. These amino acids eventually began forming chains, and these chains found others of their kind to combine with. Nearly two billion years after the global catastrophe that Robotnik had caused, life had reinstated its hold on Mobius. One progression followed another, and the series continued until many forms of diverse life literally exploded into existence (similar to the event that took place at the Precambrian/Cambrian time boundary). For about 200 million years, life remained in its birthplace, the ocean. Due to reasons unknown, some simple forms of plant life began to see the logic of exploiting the virgin environment of the upper world, so they made the first advancement toward the open spaces of exposed igneous and sedimentary rock. The rogue plant life didn't survive for very long out of the water, but life evolved, and soon (in geologic terms) plants extended complicated root systems into the remains of their pioneering ancestors. It is at this point where Sonic and Sally reappeared in Mobius' geologic time record. The present future... Their time travel was completed in a matter of seconds relative to them, yet Sonic and Sally's journey spanned an incomprehensible span of time in realspace. The Mobius they knew was an ancient, dead world without any sign in the new world that its predecessor had ever existed. They were aliens, potentially pieces of future evolution on the new world (or not if life would eventually evolve differently this time around). In any case, they didn't belong in this time period. The pair were cast out from the temporal displacement singularity, as if it were a predator that didn't like the taste of its quarry after the kill. After a two meter drop, Sonic and Sally lied on the ground, still paralyzed by the initialization phase. As their DNA returned to normal, they both gained more interactive contact with their new environment. Sonic was the first to gradually regain consciousness. He found himself lying flat, with his frontal region in full contact with a shallow carbonate mud pool. Fortunately, his head was on a more solid, but still relatively soft carbonate mud mound. If that were not the case, he would have drowned in twenty centimeters of mud. Not blind to the irony of the situation, he briefly thought about how he could confront Robotnik and all his robots, only to be forced into time travel and nearly meet his demise in a pungent mud pool. Not exactly the main event of his life. Another thing that Sonic noticed was something all too familiar about the mud itself. Of course the color was sufficient enough to tell the hedgehog otherwise, and the mud was full of calcium carbonate material and not an intricate mixture of quicksand, petroleum, and clay mud, but he could swear that it felt like MegaMuck. He tested his extremities to confirm this. His fingers didn't flex very well, and it was a battle just to slightly bend his arms and legs. All too familiar a reminder of the old world. As he felt himself coming further out from the shocked state induced by the time travel, Sonic noticed that there was something warm and furry resting on the left side his back. Rotating his head to the general direction of the contact area, he saw Sally's head there. Sonic breathed a sigh of relief. He wasn't the only one to explore the intricacies of their mutual ironical situation. He shook around a bit, gently, to wake Sally. She remained in a dazed state, not reacting to his motion. The hedgehog decided to test another tactic. He rotated his body so that his front would be in contact with Sally's head, and positioned her head on his upper abdominal area. This time, he tried shaking her a little more forcefully and whispering into her ear. "Sally, Sally, it's me. Remember, your best bud, Sonic?" he said softly, and waited for a few seconds. The results were not very encouraging. She seemed like she was coming out of her dream world, but she needed just a little more encouragement. 'OK, Hedgehog. What now?' Sonic thought to himself. In response, his brain produced a plan to give Sally the perfect wake-up call. He rose slowly, taking precautions not to let her head become one with the mud pool. He slowly pulled her over to the mud mound, and carefully placed her head on it. No further response from that, but Sonic wasn't finished yet. After he put her head on the mud mound, he tried to locate Nicole. After about a minute of feeling around Sally's legs and feet, he found Nicole still attached to one of her boots. Picking Nicole off her boot and out of the mud, Sonic observed the small computer's condition. She was, expectedly, drenched with the products of broken shells and organic excretions of calcium carbonate, but would she still work? He tried brushing her off, but belatedly realized that using his hands to remove the mud from Nicole was about as useful as drying a wet floor with water. The hedgehog then decided to test which hypothesis was correct. "Yo, Nicole," he commanded to the small computer. Nicole trilled in response. THAT woke Sally up, and with an energetic efficiency. A powerful force swelled through her body, providing an intensity similar to moving through air, as if the restrictive carbonate mud didn't exist. She leaped out of the mud as fast as she could, and slowly paced over to Sonic like someone with murder on her mind. She stared into his eyes with an intense, and borderline dangerous regard for his future welfare. Which, in this case, didn't hold much in favor for Sonic. If Sonic had the mind-set to see the humor in the situation, he would have noticed that Sally looked as if she tried to get a little too much mud out of her mud pack. All the normally jovial hedgehog could see now were Sally's eyes, vicious and full of primordial anger. "What...are...you...doing...to...NICOLE?!" she demanded, like a mother crocodile accosting an unfortunate predator intent on feasting on her young. Sonic slowly backed off, his own eyes pleading for mercy. "Whoa, Sal. Chill a minute!" he ventured, his voice a little slurred with the surprise that one of his closest friends would ever attack him like this. Suddenly regaining his generally frolicsome mood, but only halfway, he said half-jokingly and half-seriously, "Man, you redheads sure are cranky when you wake up in the morning. Definitely not cool, Sal." The last comment from Sonic tamed Sally's precarious mood. She stopped strutting toward him, and a smile gradually crept across her face as she seemed to consider exactly what danger Sonic could be to Nicole's electronics. She sat down, looked at herself and the hedgehog, noticing that they were both covered up to the neck with mud. She laughed hysterically at the sight for about a minute, as she thought about how an oversized mud pack and a hedgehog would look together. Sonic was about as anyone could get to that level of contact, and so was she. The hedgehog could only stare at her, unsettled by the response. It wasn't exactly the one he wanted, but it would have to do for now. As if realizing the effect she had on her friend, Sally stopped laughing, but her face softened to a considerate grin instead of a more serious regard. She stood up, and walked slowly over to Sonic. Anyone else would say that her strut, her facial expression, and of course being covered in mud made her seem like she was attempting to be seductive. But Sonic knew Sally better than that. She enveloped him in a caressing embrace. "Sonic," she said softly while stroking his upper torso, "didn't I tell you to be more careful when you try out those mud packs? What do you do with them anyway?" Not intent on spoiling the humor, Sonic was quick to respond. "Sal," he said in a voice as soft as what Sally used, "even hedgehogs need a little beauty work done every once in a while. Besides, I think I got a hold of Dulcy's by mistake." "Yes, but don't you think it was time you-" She stopped herself, as if remembering something. Her face hardened to a serious and thoughtful one. Sonic, realizing what significance one particular word in her sentence had, followed suit. They both disengaged their embrace simultaneously, and slowly descended. They sat and stared at each other, both thinking of the ramifications of their situation. The hedgehog asked the obvious, but necessary, question. "Sal," he queried, "where are we?" Slightly off the mark. Sally corrected him. "It's not a question of WHERE, Sonic. It's more like WHEN. From the looks of things, we could've been transported forward or back in time." "How do we find out when, Sal?" She thought the matter over. Then she remembered something about one of the new sensors Bookshire had told her about. She relayed the data to Sonic. "If I'm not mistaken, Bookshire installed a temporal displacement sensor in Nicole. She might be able to tell us where in time we are." She added privately in her thoughts, 'I hope.' Sonic handed Nicole over to Sally. She retrieved her little computer, and quickly analyzed the condition of its functionality. Aside from the test that Sonic had done, she checked Nicole via her diagnostics programs. The results were favorable: covered in mud, but otherwise capable of running programs and displaying data via her screen or holographic projector. Nicole had been constructed well, and was meant to be more than an aesthetic ornament. The aesthetics could wait, for the two Freedom Fighters had more important concerns. "Nicole," Sally directed, "calculate the total time differential between the time period right before the transport phase and now." "Working," the computer responded, "connection has been established with temporal singularity." After a second of processing pieces of complex data, Nicole resolved them into understandable temporal dynamics graphs. "Approximate time of transport: 3.8 billion years delta-t positive relative to our time period." After hearing about how long they have been lost in limbo between the two time periods (relative to realspace), both dropped their jaws with shock. A million years was incomprehensible enough, but the time that had spanned since the fateful day of their temporal displacement defied every level of understanding. Many geologic events (major and minor) can potentially take place in a decade, in some cases even a year. 3.8 billion years leaves many opportunities for anything to happen. Of course, with this span of displacement in time travel, everything that they once had was gone a long time ago and decomposed to dust. All the familiar sights, sounds, personal relations, and other things that were generally taken for granted no longer existed. In this time period, they were the aliens, and Nature generally had ways with dispatching of organic components that weren't part of the whole. If they stayed in this time period, there was a likelihood that they wouldn't find the food they needed to survive, or shelter for their exclusive use. Staying here would be a death sentence; returning to their time period was imperative. That was assuming that doing so was possible in the first place; there was no guarantee to the process even existing in the first place. Sally started crying when she finally considered the immensity of their dilemma, and how everyone else wasn't present to keep them company. She thought of Tails, Bunny, Dulcy, Rotor, Bookshire, Charles Hedgehog, and even Antoine. The opportunity to meet other Freedom Fighters was also out of the question. It was as if time was against them, and that statement was no further from the truth than now. Sonic noticed the unrest that was present in his companion, so he went over to embrace her. She said nothing, but she returned the embrace. They both understood what they were feeling, for they were both in the same situation. Both tried to think of ways to comfort the other, but they also understood that words had no ultimate value here. They were alone for now, and nothing in the universe could change that. Fighting back tears of his own, Sonic said to Sally in a gentle voice, "Sal, how 'bout we go find someplace else to go? I don't really like the idea of sleeping in a mud pit." Sally struggled to speak, and succeeded. "You're right," she said, sniffling with extreme grief. "Yes, it would be a good idea to find shelter." She added slightly jokingly, "Besides, we already had our mud bath for the day." They both managed to find humor in that statement, and reacted accordingly. With a new immediate purpose to meet, they set about finding an area that was somewhat more solid, not to mention less offensive to the olfactory nerves. Before they began their trek for a provisional residence, Sally left a remote multipurpose sensor/transponder, in order to monitor the temporal singularity. With a little help from Nicole, they located solid ground about six km due north. Given the fact that the mud was about half as viscous as MegaMuck, Sonic had some difficulty trying to get through, but he could manage. * * * It was near dusk when they found a site that would serve as a suitable shelter for the duration of their stay, however long it would be. It was a cavern located about fifty km inland from the carbonate mud pit. It had a few of the amenities of modern life: a bath (subterranean lake), water from the stream that fed the lake, and beds (unusual calcium carbonate cave formations that were actually soft enough to sleep on). All that remained was one problem: food. There was nothing available besides the native plants, and they were officially declared unfit for consumption by Nicole. They did have ration packs, but those were nearly completely consumed before the incident in the canyon. All they could do at this point is conserve their energy. In the endeavor to keep them distracted from their gastronomic requirements, Sonic and Sally took a bath to rinse the mud off, and talked about anything in general for a while. They also reviewed the data regarding the temporal displacement device and the other hardware in the probe. Sonic tried to be as accommodating as possible, trying not to interrupt when a new piece of technobabble surfaced. Sally appreciated this act forwarded by the normally impatient and disinclined hedgehog. In return, she tried putting in a little more explanation into the more difficult concepts so that she and Sonic would understand them. Whether Sonic acted this way out of kindness or for another motive wasn't clear. What was clear was that they were both in the same situation, and teamwork would be their only savior. As time slowly progressed on for the two surviving Freedom Fighters, they learned a great deal of information about the temporal displacement device. However, none of the data was actually useful in the field combat sense. More data had to be searched through to find something they could utilize. That was until an hour before midnight, when something caught Sally's eye. "Sonic," Sally said, "I think I've found something that might get us back to our time period." The hedgehog replied patiently, "As I say to Bunny, 'I'm all ears.'" Sally then continued with the description. "According to this, we can return to our own time period by applying an inverse temporal entry vector utilizing the same level of power that was used by the device to send us here." Sonic thought that statement over. He stood up, apparently tired of sitting while contemplating the issue. "Let me get this straight, Sal," he hazarded. "If we go back through that time hole with the same amount of juice that got us here, we get back to our time?" "Exactly, Sonic," Sally confirmed. "I'm already working on calculating what power level the device used to bring us here." To Nicole, she asked, "Nicole, what is the absolute time differential from previous readings?" "Calculating, Sally," Nicole answered. "Absolute temporal displacement: three billion, 800 million, 200 thousand, 906 years, two months, five days, ten hours, five minutes, thirty seconds. Readings based on prescaled data." The hedgehog wasn't exactly aware as to why that level of accuracy was required. He made his point audible. "In order to get back to our time," Sally explained, "we need to know exactly when it was we were transported here. If the wrong level of power is given on the return trip, we may find ourselves before or after the time we want to go back to." "How does power on the return relate to the power the time machine used?" Sonic asked thoughtfully. "According to the data, the power response is linear. That is, the power differential relative to what the device used would send us before or after the event took place." "So that means if I give it more juice than the device used, we could go back in time to before we were sent here?" "Right," Sally said. She was about to continue, but she paused, thinking about what observation Sonic had made. Slightly surprised by his proposal, she said, "Sonic, you want to go back to the time before we were sent to this time period?" "Correctomundo, Sal," he confirmed. "But why?" Sally was somewhat puzzled by the hedgehog's choice of tactics. It was Sonic's turn to explain his rationale. "Let me put it this way, Sal," he began, pacing as he spoke, like a professor teaching a class. He amplified his voice, speaking to the cavern at large, to give his statements an ominous sound to them. The cavern's acoustics provided the perfect response. "There's still too much we don't know about that time machine that even the info Nicole got can't tell us. We don't know if it was an experimental wartoy or otherwise, and billions of other things that might affect how well it works. Another is that thing's old beyond belief. We don't have a clue to how it reacted after 'Buttnik fired it, and this hedgehog ain't willing to bet on something being stable for that long." Sally thought the point over, and concluded that Sonic could be right about the temporal displacement device. Considering the matter further, if they did go back in time to the right hour or even minute, there might be enough of an opportunity to destroy the machine before Robotnik had the chance to use it himself. The key was to find the right time, and go back to it so that they could perform the necessary destructive acts. One thing remained burning away in her mind, though. "There's just one thing though," Sally stated, "if we go back in time to a point before we were sent here, we wouldn't exist after a while." "Say what?!" exclaimed the confused hedgehog. "Sorry, Sonic. I didn't mean that the way it sounded," she apologized. "What I meant was that WE, the you and I here, would cease to exist at the time when Robotnik engaged that device. The 'other' us, the Sonic and Sally in sync with time back in the past will live. They, I mean we, just won't remember what happened. If we're successful this time around, it would be to our other selves like the entire incident never happened. You and I would have destroyed the device, so the other us would never be sent to the future. Do you still want to go back before Robotnik used it against us?" "It's a chance we'll have to take, Sal. If we go back to when Robotnik sent us here, we'd just end up in that beam again. And if we go after, that thing might blow up in our face." "You're right, Sonic," she finally said after scheming over the proposed plan. "Going back before Robotnik got his hands on it and used it against us would be the best idea I heard all day." "Yo, Sal. Remember this: the Hedgehog is always right." He dictated this teasingly. Sally retorted in kind. "Since when?" Sonic responded with a glare, but they both knew it to be mocking only; not a real threat. Sally responded with her own glare toward Sonic. Mutually disarmed, they surrendered to laughter and embraced each other for a while. Realizing that the technical discussion of time and space had purged more energy out of them than expected, they went to sleep. The next morning would be the day of the great escape from this future time period, in the hopes of creating a better one in the past. * * * The next morning, the two companions in time went back to the temporal singularity for the final preparations on their return trip. Along the way, they discussed and decided when to return to, and what power level was needed. While walking through the mud pool, they both tripped over rocks hidden under the opaque layer of shell and other carbonate excretion products. This eventually covered them in mud from their head to their feet, making the journey even more difficult since they were partially blinded by the mud caked over their eyes. But they managed to trek on. Within about two hours, they managed to arrive at the temporal singularity site. "Where's it at, Sal?" Sonic inquired, quickly scanning for their passage to home. "I can't see it out there anywhere." Sally handed a pair of multispectrum goggles to him and responded, "Here, try these on, Sonic. I've modified them to detect temporal distortions." Sonic retrieved the goggles, put them on his face, and searched the area again. "Got it," the hedgehog said to his comrade when he located the singularity thirty meters ahead of them. "Cool. You got the juicing limit set, Sal? That might've been the mistake we made the last time we tried this," he said not without some concern. Technically, Sonic was incorrect in his last statement. From the viewpoint of Mobius' past, this would be the first time that they executed this plan. However, now wasn't the time to argue the finer points of temporal physics. "Yep, already done. Twelve megawatts exactly," Sally verified. "Just remember this," she admonished, "we need to go DIRECTLY into the temporal singularity. Otherwise..." she trailed off, not inclined to think of the consequences. There wasn't any need for further discussion on this particular subject. It had been covered before. They both knew that if Sonic didn't enter the singularity perpendicular to its event horizon, the best that could happen is that they could be transported anywhere in time, without their discretion. The worst case, they could be trapped in the singularity for all eternity. No margin for error existed here, and everything depended on Sonic's concentration and undeviating stability to a path. With nothing further to review or to prepare for, they began Phase 1: powering for time transport. Sonic reprogrammed the goggles to display only the areas of the strongest temporal displacement potential and added a target sight centerlined for him, for that indicated the correct path to vector into. Sally got behind him, gripping his back with all the strength she had. She pulled the power ring out of his backpack, and he assumed his stance to engage the power transfer. An energy field formed around the hedgehog, gradually becoming more powerful and displacing the mud around his feet as he concentrated on generating the required energy to travel over 3.8 billion years into the past. Nothing else existed in his mind; only the power ring field mattered now. Nicole was programmed to emit an audible signal when the detected power field reached the preset energy level. No indication tone came from the little computer. Sonic was straining to his limit to generate the power field, but he needed a little more encouragement. Sally noticed the hedgehog's predicament, and tried to motivate him on further. "Sonic, you can do it. I know you can. Concentrate harder." His only response was to strengthen the energy level in the power field. About five seconds later, Nicole gave the signal they were waiting for. He halted his energy demands from the power ring, but maintained the power field surrounding him and Sally. Sonic then lowered his field of vision and centered his target sight on the strongest area of temporal displacement. After obtaining the desired target, he maintained his aim, and fired. Phase 2 had begun. Sonic covered the thirty meter distance to the temporal singularity in a microsecond, his velocity warping the volume of air around the energy field into an intense shock wave cone. Sonic entered the temporal singularity perfectly, and remained on course back to the other opening in time and space. All that remained now was to traverse the incomprehensible span of time back to the device and the person responsible for their troubles. * * * Return from the future, to the present at 0800 hours... Robotnik and Packbell arrived at the crash site in Robotnik's personal Hover Unit. They had retrieved not only the linguistics program, they also selected WorkerBots for a small squad. WorkerBots were much more adept at performing the required delicate work on the probe and its cargo than the SWATBots were constructed and programmed to exercise. Packbell personally took responsibility for dispatching the WorkerBots and assigning them to their required duties. Robotnik remained in his command chair, watching them disperse to their positions. He reveled in the absolute beauty in the weapon, even though he had no knowledge of what specific function it had. He didn't concern himself with what the weapon was utilized for, as long as it would aid him in turning the tide of the war in his favor. Today could very well become a rather productive day after all. Without any provocation that was visible to Robotnik, an explosion occurred somewhere outside to the west of his personal Hover Unit. It was very loud, and somewhat familiar, but he was unable to identify who or what could generate that level of thundering out of nowhere. The answer struck him when the windshield shattered about a second later from the massive wind shear. There was no other explanation; it had to be a certain blue spiny Freedom Fighter that Robotnik had learned to despise and fear in the past eleven years. It was Sonic, and more specifically, the shock wave generated by him that gave Robotnik the first and final warning. After departing from the temporal displacement singularity, Sonic sustained his entry velocity, due to the fact that his inertia was too high for him to decelerate immediately. To allow himself to do so, Sonic circled the probe's position at a radius of three km. Even from that distance, the hedgehog could view the evidence that his warped air cone was wrecking havoc all over the probe site. Hover Units were under take-off condition, and then spun around erratically during and after the wave impacted with their hulls. Some SWATBots were vacuumed into the air, eventually bashing into other SWATBots or Hover Units. Windows shattered, and electrical explosions emitted from over-stressed hardware. Fortunately, WorkerBots weren't present in the metallic storm. Decelerating to a sufficient pace, he moved in for the fatal strike, like a Terran lion on the final assault for disoriented prey. Sonic darted toward his general target area, and reached the outer rim of Hover Units in about five seconds. Sally had managed to retain her life-grip on Sonic, using every bit of energy she had available in her body to prevent her from becoming an abandoned piece of debris in the hedgehog's warped air cone. Sonic located and halted in front of Robotnik's Hover Unit. "Yo, Robuttnik," he said observantly, "nice looking windshield. Must be part of your latest stealth technology." Looking past the remains of the windshield, he said, "Ooohhh, mando cool look on the insides. Are fried control boards and circuits in?" To Sally, he ordered in a whisper, "You can get off now, Sal. Hedgehog Express has stopped." She released her grip and moved to stand by him. Robotnik could only stare at the two Freedom Fighters with an expression full of anger, bafflement, and fear simultaneously displayed. Observing their condition after a few seconds, Robotnik regained a small degree of his own macabre humor at the sight of something that looked like it was a costume for a mud monster movie. His evil grin came out of his shocked face, but only a little. "Well, Hedgehog," he dictated in a voice that attempted to sound authoritative and failed, "been playing in the mud have you? I thought that was below you; I guess I was mistaken. Where have you been?" The hedgehog retaliated with a confident strike, "Oh, just tromping across a mud pit that doesn't exist yet." He chuckled at the thought, knowing that Robotnik would have no such memory of the incident. In the technicalities of temporal physics, it had not occurred yet in this time period. Robotnik nearly resumed his multispectrum stare, but caught himself before he became victim to his shock. He sank into his dark and devious regard that notoriously struck instant fear into Freedom Fighters. "Never mind that," his voice all gravel and almost unnoticeable. He amplified his voice, maintaining the same tone, to say, "SWATBots! Get that hedgehog!" All the remaining SWATBots came out of their stealthy positions and moved toward Sonic and Sally. Sonic quickly scanned the immediate area, not exactly pleased with the odds. Robotnik transformed his dangerous frown into a lethal grin as the SWATBots gradually decreased the distance to their quarry. Sonic and Sally huddled, backs together, looking for an opening in the circle of SWATBots. They found no such escape route. "Doesn't look good, Sal," the hedgehog observed. "You're right about that. Got any ideas?" Sally queried. He quickly searched his memory regarding how to handle the situation. He snapped his fingers, with what little snapping he could do due to the mud on his fingers. "As a matter of fact," he confirmed, "I do. Hold tight, these 'bots are gonna be hittin' the rocks." Within a second, Sonic created a twenty-meter high blue tornado around Sally, providing refuge for her. Everything outside the eye of this storm however, was not so fortunate. Sonic finished off the rest of the SWATBots and Hover Units, turning them into scrap metal and plastics, while leaving the probe and Robotnik's Hover Unit undamaged. Satisfied with his work, he revectered himself in the opposite direction to quiet the whirlwind that he formed. After returning to his position by Sally, Sonic directed an evil grin at Robotnik and said, "Need any more convincing, Robotnik? Or do I need to really get serious?" Robotnik wasn't taking the hedgehog seriously, however. "You're going to have to do better than that, Hedgehog," he sneered with all the intensity he could provide. To Sally, he said with a note of derision and superiority directed to Robotnik, "Doesn't he ever get tired?" Sally could only smile and shrug with an "I don't know" motion. "Well, I do," he continued, "and if this doesn't convince him, I don't know what will." With that said, he generated another vortex, only this time directed toward the WorkerBots and Packbell located in the probe. After finding a suitable opening in the probe, Sonic vacuumed up and transferred the robots from the probe to Robotnik's personal Hover Unit. With that done, his disengaged his artificial vortex and returned to his position by Sally for a second time. He crossed his arms defiantly, glared at Robotnik, and waited for a response. No further verbal exchange or demonstration of will was necessary between the two adversaries. Sonic was clearly the victor in this case, and Robotnik had no way to regain control. He had lost yet again to the teenage blue hedgehog. His Hover Unit promptly made an unfashionable retreat, with all available power utilized for propulsion, should the hedgehog decide to make his unspoken threat a reality. After Robotnik's departure, Sonic felt all his energy supplied from the adrenaline pour out of him like water from a waterfall. Without any power to even support his balance, Sonic tilted and fell like a freshly cut tree. Sally saw his travel to the ground and managed to catch him before he impacted with the solid granite. She looked into his eyes, her face filled with concern. Sonic opened his eyes, and saw his friend's worried mask through the mud that covered it. "I'm OK, Sal," he said weakly, "Going after old 'Buttnik like that wore me out more than I thought." Not totally convinced, she helped him regain his standing position, still providing as much physical and psychological support as possible. She was surprised that he had been able to expend that much power for so long. Anyone else would have more than likely dropped dead with the extreme exhaustion. Then again, Sonic wasn't an average hedgehog. "Sonic, you've got to stop and rest for a while," she advised him. "You haven't eaten anything for a long time. I'll see if I can dig something up out of my ration pack. There has to be something in there somewhere." No bravado response from the hedgehog for that statement. Sonic was the prime example of someone serious, and wasn't inclined to engage in his usual cavorting attitude. This meant that something was REALLY wrong with her friend. "No time," he responded, with the sobriety of voice and mind as stable as hydrogen gas at absolute zero. "We've got to destroy that machine, now." Sonic gradually regained a small degree of strength, then gently pushed Sally away, making his intentions clear with his body language that his words and judgment were the end of any further argument over delaying the mission plans. He had every intention to destroy the temporal displacement device, even if the effort killed him. Mobius would be saved, no matter what condition Sonic was in. He slowly advanced toward the device that was (or in this case of time, would be) the cause of all their problems. Sally walked beside him, keeping her pace equal to his in case he should fall again. He maintained his balance the entire ten meters to the probe, and the remaining five meters to the weapon's protective shield control panel. The hedgehog was beleaguered, but not out yet. "Sally," he said finally, with an infinitely tired but determined voice, "does Nicole understand the circuits under this control panel?" After receiving an affirmative nod from his friend, he carefully retrieved Nicole from her and focused all his attention on the little computer. "Nicole," he commanded, getting some of his more jovial voice back, "pull that shield off." "Accessing circuit pathways," Nicole replied. She emitted a tone afterwards, and said, "Circuits inoperative. Power required to engage the necessary hardware and software." Sonic's face did not alter its form with that statement. He searched his mind for what he knew about power supplies. 'So that's it,' he thought, 'Robotnik must have had some portable power cells around while he was using the computers. The probe's power supply must be down.' He searched the immediate area for a clue, and found a suspiciously large conduit along the left (relative to his position) wall. The conduit connected to a metallic sphere. "What's this, Nicole?" he asked the small computer. "It is an impulse power unit, utilized for the probe's propulsion or for auxiliary power." she responded. "How do we get it working again?" queried the serious and interested hedgehog. "The impulse power unit requires matter/antimatter reactants as a power source." Sonic's heart sank with that statement. To come all this way, only to be beaten by advanced and specialized hardware! "However," Nicole continued, "the unit may be able to utilize a power ring if the level input is controlled and monitored." Having no words of his own to contribute, Sonic opened the impulse power unit and inserted his power ring. He kept his hands in contact with the power ring, to provide input regulation and avoid destroying the hardware from uncontrolled levels of energy. "Sally," Sonic called to his friend, "take it from here. I'm going to take care of the power supply." Sally ran over to Nicole, picked her up, and returned to the control panel. After taking her position, she gave her friend a "go ahead" signal. The hedgehog confirmed his by concentrating on the power ring. The energy input began as a minuscule spark at first, and then gradually gained strength with every passing second. Sally remotely monitored the energy input into the computers. When the power reached the required minimum level, she called to her comrade, "Keep it there, Sonic." She noticed that Sonic was straining to keep the power level stable, but he contributed no complaints in regard to his welfare. To Nicole, she said, "Nicole, remove the shield." "Accessing, Sally," Nicole replied. "Circuit pathways connected." With that confirmation came the nearly quiet action of electromagnetic repulsors slowly removing the protective shield from the temporal displacement device's haven. Once the shield had retracted completely, the computers disengaged the power supplied to the subunits controlling the shield placement system. The device was now exposed for its atrocity, and would return payment with its destruction. Sonic disabled his power transfer and slowly trudged over to Sally's position. He glared at the large object ahead of him with malignance, and said to her, "This thing goes down, today." "Wait a minute, Sonic," as she checked over the device's ambient power levels. "We have to discharge the energy cells that power the particle controls. If we destroy it now, the explosion could do the same to Mobius." "Where's the energy cells?" Sally checked the schematics for them. "They're under the case, located in the center of the top circuit board." "Can I cut through that metal, Sally?" the hedgehog asked, for he noticed that the metal was unlike anything he had ever seen before. She analyzed the case's composition, and confirmed his request. "No problem, Sonic. Are you sure you want to do this?" He replied with a question of his own. "Is there another way?" She checked for anything that might assist in opening the protective case, for repair points, places for hardware upgrades, and other possible openings. Finding none, she shook her head as if to say "no". With that confirmation, Sonic raised his power ring and concentrated on transferring its energy to his body. At his low organic power state, the power ring and what he wanted to destroy became the only existing objects besides him in his personal universe. The power ring now supplied nearly all of Sonic's energy; without it, he would be little more than a vegetable. He rolled into a ball, and let his spiny back perform the task for him. With part of the case shredded off, he leaped to the center of the top circuit board, where the energy cells were located. A faint, familiar voice called out to him from the darkness. "Look for the two largest wires in front of you. Short them together." Sonic found a black and red wire. He pulled them with what strength he had left from their sockets. Finding the bare, uninsulated copper, he shorted the connections. The energy cells responded with a hum, which steadily increased in volume with every second. Not the desired effect. The familiar voice called to him again, now screaming. "It's going to explode! Get away from there, Sonic!" Sonic's mind raced, thinking of ways to avert the imminent explosion that would take place. One solution came to mind. The only alternative to the destruction of Mobius. He raised his power ring above him, positioning it perpendicular to the ground. He concentrated once again on the power ring as his other hand wrapped around the improvised shorted connection he made a few seconds before. A blinding flash of light emanated from the power ring. Sally shielded her eyes as she attempted to see what act the hedgehog was performing. He was using himself and the power ring as a power transfer point, venting all the energy from the energy cells to space. The immense power that surged through him and the strain to dissipate that energy nearly threw him away from the circuits, as if the temporal displacement device wanted to live. Sonic maintained a firm hold on the wires, not allowing himself to be subdued by the power that would otherwise advance toward a catastrophic explosion. The power ring provided some protection, but it didn't provide immunity to the device's retaliation. When all the power was drained from the energy cells, Sonic began the next phase of the operation. Still clinging to his power ring, the hedgehog reached his other hand into his backpack, and it produced three timed-explosive charges. There would be more than enough energy unleashed to destroy the device and the probe, if they were positioned correctly. He activated them all simultaneously, then dropped to the floor of the probe and placed them where they would insure the total fragmentation of the machine that would have caused so much trouble for Mobius. After retrieving Sally for the escape from the near-future blast radius, he raised his power ring for the last time, then dashed away into the distance. Five seconds later, the probe and its cargo no longer existed on Mobius. The two Knothole Freedom Fighters saw the explosion from about three km away from ground zero. Mobius was safe again, for at least one more day. It had been the first assault from space, and it was successfully deterred. However, there was one war that day which would claim a life. Sonic was near death, his power ring almost dimmed from the extensive energy demands that the hedgehog made from it. He was surprised that it had lasted for so long, but Charles Hedgehog had designed them well. Their life was also his life; just as their death was also a mutual demise. He took one last look at the carnage that destroyed their ultimate adversary of the day. Sally noticed that the power ring was dimming, synchronous with Sonic's life force which was slowly slipping away. She knew what was happening, and was unable to ease her friend's pain or prevent the shadow of death receiving final payment. She held him, looked into his eyes, and kissed him passionately. They both knew that this was the last time in this universe that this particular pair of Freedom Fighters would have the opportunity to be together. Their counterparts, the Sonic and Sally synchronous with time, would never know what happened. The mission was a success, but a price had to be paid. And the payment was extracted, with no concern for emotion. Sonic's payment came a few seconds after their last demonstration of affection. Sally felt his body turn cold, and saw his eyes permanently close. Sally gently lowered Sonic to the ground, weeping for both of them. Sonic had met his death, but he went down fighting every step of the way. She buried the savior of Mobius in the best way she knew how, with the limited materials available in the Great Unknown. She regarded his grave, knowing that with time, she too would cease to exist in this universe. * * * After Sonic's talk with Dulcy, and receiving a demonstration of her unflagging humor, he and Sally rushed off to the probe's crash site. The arrived without incident, but noticed that something was not there to greet their eyes. The only evidence that the probe and the cargo it carried existed was a large black circular mark on the rock where it landed. There was no evidence that Robotnik had ever been there, since the remains of the SWATBots and Hover Units had been vaporized in the blast zone. "What d'ya suppose happened, Sal?" queried the totally baffled hedgehog. "Hard to say, Sonic," was her only reply, for she was as much at a loss for words as Sonic. "Well, so much for another wartoy that old 'Buttnik could've used. Sure would've liked to know what it was though," Sonic said, trying to solve the mystery of the day and failing. "So would have I," said Sally. "But I guess some things are better left in the past." Sonic signaled to Dulcy for a retrieval. The pair would never know how much truth there was to Sally's last philosophical statement. HISTORY FILE: TERMINATED