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Back To The Time Trap

Time Trap 02

(1992)*

Keith Laumer

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Book Information

 

 

 

PROLOGUE

 

              Roger Tyson was in his living room, sitting in a grossly overstuffed chair in a pink-and-yellow floral design, which, he realized, would appear grotesque to anyone who didn't know how much Sears had charged him for it. Q'nell came in from the kitchen with a plate of hot-from-the-oven tollhouse cookies and a glass of cold milk.

 

              Roger looked up at his beautiful bride, whom he never called "Nellie," and admired for the zillionth time her perfect profile, her slender neck, and the soul-stirring curve of her right breast. Stifling the impulse to reach out and caress that organ, he picked up a cookie instead.

 

              "This is the life, Nellie," he murmured, and pulled her down into his lap. Prosser on Torts fell to the floor with a forlorn thump!

 

              "Stop it, silly," Q'nell ordered without conviction.

 

              Just then the phone rang. Roger ignored it, but Q'nell picked it up. She listened with a puzzled expression and said hesitantly, "Yes, it is, but" She recoiled slightly from the instrument in her hand.

 

              "It's a Mr. Ucker," she told Roger, who put up a hand like a traffic cop.

 

              "I'm not here!" he barked. "Besides, it couldn't be! That was all a delirium-dream, remember?"

 

              Q'nell put the phone in his hand, patted his cheek, and went back into the kitchen, casting an anxious glance back at him.

 

              "Never mind how I am!" Roger yelled into the phone, "And I am definitely NOT 'your boy'! And I don't care what dire calamity is about to befall the world! Solve it without my help!"

 

              Roger's eye was caught by a quick movement over behind the home entertainment center, over seven hundred bucks at Simon's, on the blink, and not even paid for yet. His ire intensified. "Q'nell!" he yelled. "Bugs! As big as rats!"

 

              Q'nell came back in, her expression one of mild curiosity.

 

              "T'son," she said softly. "What"

 

              "Over there!" Roger barked. "Behind the telly! A huge black bettle! Don't you even know how to keep this place clean? If there were no food scraps lying around, Dugs wouldn't be attracted!" He realized he was motormouthing and shut up abruptly.

 

              "It's six P.M.!" he said suddenly, then changed his tone to a wheedling one: "Let's watch Daphne's Dilemma." Without awaiting her agreement as she sat beside him, he used his new remote to switch on the TV. The screen flickered and brightened, showing a reddish, rutabagalike entity with head-tentacles and sharp-pointed limbs like metallic crab-legs. Roger switched off and threw the control unit from him. Q'nell exclaimed and went after it. "Roger," she said reproachfully, using the name she employed only when seriously displeased with her mate's behavior.

 

              "All right! All right!" Tyson groaned. "You see? He's already starting to ruin everything!"

 

              "Oh! My casserole!" Q'nell exclaimed and headed for the kitchen.

 

              "Didn't you see him?" Roger yelled after her.

 

              Her pert features poked around the door. "See whom, dear?" she cooed.

 

              "The Rhox!" Roger barked. "Instead of Daphne, we got the Rhox!"

 

              "What rocks, Roger?"

 

              "The Rhox!" Roger snapped. "That Oob fellow! Don't tell me you've forgotten!"

 

              "Roger," Q'nell said reproachfully, coming back to sit beside him again and take his hand in hers. "Didn't we agree that was a delirium induced by the shock of the accident?"

 

              "Sure," Roger agreed, "but we know we were lying!" He took her shapely chin in his hand and turned her face so that he could look into her eyes.

 

              "The Trans-Temporal Bore," he said distinctly, "Culture One, and the null engine, and that damned love-nest contract with R'heet!"

 

              "Roger, we agreed we'd never mention all that again."

 

              "Right!" Roger gobbled. "But I have to. Didn't you see him on the TV just then?"

 

              "Whom? Rheet?"

 

              "No! Oob!" Roger corrected. "We agreed not to talk about him, but when I see him right here in our living room ...! And there was the phone call before that! It was UKR, warning me, or whatever; wanted me to volunteer for some kind of suicide mission!"

 

              "Why, don't you do it, T'son."

 

              "Don't worry!" Roger said fervently. "Do you think I'm crazy?"

 

              She patted his hand. "Let's not go into that again, dear," she urged softly, looking concernedly into his eyes.

 

              "Watch! I'll show you!" He retrieved the remote tuner and switched it on. The distraught face of a pretty young woman appeared, registering disquiet, or perhaps a bad smell.

 

              "Don't be so upset, Daphne," Q'nell suggested. "Fen-wick is coming back; he was only delayed by a flat tire."

 

              "To Perdition with Fenwick!" Roger yelled. "The trouble with TV is they all just look like nice-looking young folks who came to Hollywood to see if maybe they could make it on the tube. Take Fenwick, there; he doesn't look like a brain surgeonhe looks like a TV actor!"

 

              "I see what you mean, Roger," his bride agreed. "But is it worth getting all upset about?"

 

              "It is if it means wrecking my home!"

 

              "Silly boy. It's only a soap opera. Fenwick is moving on Daphne, not me."

 

              "That's not what I mean. I saw him! Just a second ago, right on the screen!"

 

              "Certainly you did. That was just a flashback, so we'd know about the flat tire."

 

              "I don't mean that! I mean that Rhox!"

 

              "Oh, you mean that desert background in the Auburn ad. Lovely! They shoot all those ads in Arizona, I read in the TV Guide."

 

              "What do you mean, 'Auburn ad'?" Roger demanded. "Auburn folded back in the Depression!"

 

              "No, I mean Auburn-Cord-Deusenberg," Q'nell amplified. "The big car company."

 

              "That's what I mean, too!" Roger cut her off. "There hasn't been an Auburn ad since 1933."

 

              "Don't be silly, Roger," Q'nell urged. "They didn't even have TV in 1933!"

 

              "Of course not!" Roger answered. "That's my point!"

 

              "Why, didn't you like the lovely desert scenery?" Q'nell wondered. "I always thought you wanted to go there someday."

 

              "I mean Oob!" Roger corrected. "With UKR phoning me, and Oob popping up on the tube, I feel like we're right back in the Time Trap!"

 

              "But, Roger," Q'nell pointed out. "We aren't; we're right here at home, perfectly safe and happy. And your cookies are getting cold. You know you like them while the chocolate chips are still melted."

 

              Roger grabbed one and stuffed it back. "Umm, delicious, ' he murmured. Q'nell kissed him. The phone rang again.

 

              "Don't answer it!" Roger ordered, and resumed what he was doing.

 

              "Roger, not right here in the living room," Q'nell objected mildly. She picked up the phone.

 

              "Oh, yes, Mary," she said, nodding. "Tomorrow will be fine. About three, then?" She hung up. Roger grabbed the phone:

 

              "UKR?" he yelled into it. "Leave me alone, dammit! I'm not going!"

 

              Q'nell took the phone and cradled it again. "You weren't invited," she reported. "It's strictly a hen party."

 

              "Look!" Roger blurted. "He's back!" He pointed to the screen, where Oob, his usual robust magenta darkened to a dull beet-red, was waving his tentacles wildly.

 

              "Tyson!" he called. "Help! In the name of the Builder, help me! They're overwhelming the Control Center! Just come over here, I beg you!" His color faded to a sickly off-white. "Farewell!" he croaked. "I'm done for, Tyson! Perhaps if you act in time, you can still avert" A shiny blue-black beetle-like creature obtruded between Oob and the camera. Roger just had time to glimpse rows of shredding-hooks on its momentarily exposed underside before it fell on Oob and his voice trailed off in an agonized wail as the creature began to devour him alive.

 

              "Hold it! That's different!" Roger blurted, and rushed to the TV, where, behind the embattled Rhox, Daphne was now holding a match to the corner of a document, watching it begin to blacken and curl. "We have to stop it!" Roger groaned.

 

              "Roger!" Q'nell interceded. "It's only the fake will she had Ben make up to fool Winslow into revealing himself! It's all right! Do sit down! You're spoiling the whole segment!"

 

              "I'm not talking about that dopey soap," Roger retorted. "Didn't you see Oob just then, when he practically filled the screenand that blue cockroach that was eating him?"

 

              "I don't know what you mean," she said concernedly. "Do sit down, T'son, and tell me what you're talking about!"

 

              "I'm talking about the damned Museum, or filing system, or laboratory slides, or whatever!" Roger replied in a tightly controlled tone. "I know we agreed to forget the Trans-Temporal Bore and Culture One and all that, but nobody can really just forget something! And here it is back! Oob and UKR within five minutes of each other! They're trying to reinvolve us!"

 

              "Why," Q'nell asked reasonably, "would anyone want to involve us, of all people, in such nonsense?"

 

              "It's not nonsense!" Roger yelled, then, "I'm sorry, dear, I didn't mean to shout at you."

 

              The TV burped and flashed spectral colors, then cleared to show a crisp, 3-D image of a lumpy shape like a potato, only dull red, with a wide, lipless mouth, a single enormous eye, and multiple appendages.

 

              Roger stared. "But it's turned off!' he stated in a tone of astonishment, and pushed the off button again. There was no change, except that Oob extended a limb like a stainless-steel crab legout a good six inches beyond the glass surface of the screen, Roger realised wildly. The pincers-tipped member groped over the control knobs. The image brightened. Roger advanced, reached out and switched channels to UHF. Oob dwindled away for a moment, then reappeared, more vivid than before.

 

              "Thank you, my boy," he said in his familiar gluey voice.

 

              "What are you doing here?" Roger demanded, as Q'nell grasped his arm and tugged gently.

 

              "If you'll just come and lie down awhile," she suggested.

 

              He shook her hand off and whirled to face her. "Can't you see him?" he demanded. "It's Oob! You remember Oob! He was the rutabaga oa the Yamaha who was chasing you the night we met!"

 

              That was part of the delirium, Roger," she chided. "We agreed"

 

              "I don't give a damn what we agreed!" Roger barked in a strangled voice as he attempted to suppress his fury at her imperturbability. He felt a touch from behind, and spun to face Oob, the Rhox, standing on pointed limbs not two feet away, while Daphne chattered on the screen behind him.

 

              "There's no point in fighting it, lad," Oob told him sternly. "She can't see me: I'm in tight focus. There are imbalances in the Cosmic All which only you, due to your accumulation of Y-energies during your transit of the Bore, can remedy. Just come along quietly."

 

              "Never!" Roger yelled, at which Oob sidled deftly past him to confront Q'nell. She smiled sweetly, Roger saw in the instant before he launched himself at the monster's back. Oob fended him off with a complicated thrust of ropy tentacles. Q'nell screamed.

 

              That's more like it!" Roger clutched her. "I know you didn't see as much as I did of Oob the last time, but anybody can see he's not somebody you'd want climbing out of your practically-new sixty-five-dollar Atwater Kent! He released the sobbing giri and grabbed two of Oob's muscular tentacles; not without effort, he tied them in a square knot. Oob responded by turning a pale pink and uttering a despairing wail.

 

              "How did you know?" he sobbed. "That sneaky UKR must have tipped you off that intertwining my prime manipulat...

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