Monday, December 31, 2007

Chuck vs. the Past Chapter 9: "Captivity"

So I realized as I wrote this chapter that this story has gotten really, incredibly dark. I did not intend it to go that way - I intended it to be fairly light and fluffy, like Chuck vs. the Future was. However, this is just the way it has come out. I hope you still enjoy the story.


2:18 A.M. MST

July 13th, 2018

33rd Floor, Chase Tower

Phoenix, Arizona

Sarah was awake. She had been awake for just over two hours – the longest period of time she had been awake without being pumped full of electricity since just after noon the prior day.

Unexpectedly, her blindfold was ripped off. Her eyes, not having seen light for fourteen hours, took a moment to adjust to even the dim light of the office she was in.

Then she felt her chair tip backward, and there was a moment of terror as she thought she was going to be dropped on the floor. Then she realized she was being dragged somewhere.

Frank Mullins dragged Sarah’s chair a few feet, and then set it upright, facing the other four women. “Hello, Director Walker,” he spat, stepping around her to stand in front of her. “How are you doing?”

Sarah tried to spit at him, but her mouth wasn’t working quite properly, and she ended up simply drooling down her chin. She had to satisfy herself with staring death at Mullins.

“Oh, my, not the look of death,” he mocked her. “Heaven forbid.”

With no warning, he backhanded the right side of her face as hard as he could. Sarah started moving her head to the left as he swung, though, so the majority of the impact was lost. She still tasted blood in her mouth.

“Director Walker,” he said viciously, “you are going to tell me something.”

“Like hell,” she tried to say. It ended up coming out more like, “Liii heh.”

“What was that, Director Walker? ‘Like hell’? Oh, wrong answer.”

He swung at her again, this time from the other direction, and this time, instead of moving her head, she turned to face his hand head on, sinking her teeth in as hard as she could the instant his hand made contact with her mouth.

Mullins howled in agony and tore his hand from her mouth, collapsing to the floor. After a moment, he got to his knees, a fiery rage burning in his eyes. “Well, Director Walker, you just signed your death warrant,” he growled. “But before you die, you’re going to tell me the name and location of every single agent of the Omaha Project.”

Sarah’s eyebrows went up. Speaking very carefully so that she could make herself understood, she said, “Would… that… be… before… or… after… you… suck… that… guy’s… dick?”

Mullins, rising to his feet, cocked his head and gave Sarah a curious look. “Not quite that,” he said. “However, if two hours from now, you haven’t started talking, we’re going to have to do some pretty vicious stuff to your friends here.”

“We’ll start with Chuck’s sister… then move on to the courageous first mate of theSerenity… then we’ll take care of the freak… and last, but not least, Mr. Early has something very special set aside for little Miss Kaylee Frye.”

Sarah watched Kaylee’s eyes go wide. “No…” Kaylee whispered. “Please… no…”

“What… do… you… plan… on… doing… you… sadistic… fuck?”

Mullins got as close to Sarah’s face as he could. “Ever heard of a Reaver, Director Walker?” he asked her in a low growl.

Zoe and River gasped. Kaylee started crying. “Ask them what Reavers are, Director Walker,” Mullins said. “Because we’re going to make them look like preschoolers.”

With that, Mullins reached behind Sarah’s ear. She gasped involuntarily as something touched the back of it. “Oh, don’t worry, Director,” he said, “we’re not going to hurt you yet. You’re FAR too valuable. I’m just putting a Bluetooth on your ear. That way, when you’re ready to talk, you can just say my name, and I’ll come a-runnin’!”

Mullins and Early headed for a door off to the side, followed by a very pale Bob Richter. “We’ll just be right next door,” Mullins stated. “Don’t forget… two hours. Then it’s the end of the world.”


4:01 A.M. MST

Sky Harbor International Airport

Phoenix, Arizona

The jet-black Gulfstream V taxied off of Runway 26 well in excess of the posted speed limit of 30 miles per hour. Blazing up to the Lincoln Executive Terminal, it jolted to a halt a scant ten feet from the Suburban waiting for its passengers.

A stairway was rolled up to the door, and as soon as it was there, the hatch popped open and seven men dressed in riot gear poured out. Chuck, Casey, Morgan, Devin, Mal, and Jayne were all heavily armed. Simon had two handguns and was hoping to not have to use them.

Not a word was spoken as the men piled into the Suburban. The Omaha Project officer from Phoenix was at the wheel. He didn’t speak either – just pulled off the tarmac onto deserted Sky Harbor Blvd., headed west.

Twelve minutes later, the Suburban screeched to a halt in the parking garage of the Chase Tower. “The ID signal’s coming from over here,” Morgan said, the first words spoken by any of them in over an hour. Morgan led them to a bank of elevators. Casey hit the “up” button –

And the elevator doors opened, revealing Kaylee Frye’s ID card lying on the floor. Chuck entered the elevator and picked it up. He sighed, a deep sigh of desperation. “Let’s see if we can figure out where they are,” he said resignedly.

The seven piled into the elevator and rose to the lobby. Casey and Chuck exited the elevator. “Hold the elevator right there,” Casey instructed as they walked out. Devin placed his hand on the “door open” button and held it.

Casey and Chuck approached the security desk, guns out. When the security guard looked up, his eyes widened. Casey immediately held up his ID. “Federal agents,” he said. “I need to see a list of all building tenants.”

“Excuse me?” the security guard said. “I don’t know if I can –“

He suddenly found himself face to face with the business end of a Heckler & Koch MP10 machine pistol. “Here ya go,” he gulped, picking a sheet of paper up off his desk and handing it to Casey.

“Chuck?” Casey asked simply, handing the sheet over. Chuck scanned it –

A picture of a middle-aged white man. A consulting company. A Fulcrum file.

“Richter Consulting, 33rd floor,” Chuck said. “Has offices in Washington, Phoenix, and Tampa. Owned by Bob Richter, formerly of the NSA – and Fulcrum.”

“Thirty-third floor!” Casey shouted as they crossed the lobby back to the elevator.

As soon as the doors had closed, the security guard picked up the phone. “Yeah, Mr. Richter? You’re about to have company.”


Richter Consulting

33rd Floor, Chase Tower

“Time’s up, Director Walker,” Mullins said evilly.

Sarah didn’t say a word. “Well, we’ll start with Ellie, then,” Mullins said. “I think… hmmm, what do you think, Mr. Early? Mutilation or violation?”

“Whatever,” Jubal Early replied. “Whatever you feel like.”

“I think we’ll ask the President,” Mullins laughed, pulling a quarter out of his pocket. “Heads, George Washington tells us to mutilate her. Tails, the Eagle tells us to violate her.”

He flipped the quarter up into the air, and let it land on the floor. “Tails,” he announced. “Violation it is!”

Crossing to Ellie, he grabbed her by the hair, and picked her up, forcing her handcuffs up and over the back of the chair. “On your knees, bitch,” he snarled. He began to undo his belt buckle, when Bob Richter came running in.

“We’ve got a problem,” he yelled. “Bartowski and Casey fuckin’ found us somehow. I told you we couldn’t mess with these guys!”

“Shut up, Bob,” Mullins replied. Turning to Sarah, he drew his TASER and shot her again. She slumped over in her chair. “Come on, let’s grab Director Walker and head for the roof. I can have a Fulcrum bird here to pick us up in five minutes.”

Then he paused. “Oh, but wait. It’ll be from the Phoenix Police Department, and their helicopters only carry four. I’m so sorry, Mr. Early, but Director Walker’s a FAR more valuable commodity than you are.”

He aimed the TASER again, and shot Jubal Early in the center of his chest. Early fell to the ground, paralyzed from the electric shock.

Mullins and Richter dragged Sarah Walker to the elevator bank. Seconds later, an elevator arrived. They dragged her in, Mullins pressed the “Roof” button, Richter swiped his key card, and the doors closed.

No more than two minutes later, there was a “ding” announcing the arrival of the other elevator. The four women all cringed, expecting their torturers to have returned – but instead, were greeted with the welcome sight of seven very familiar black-suited men piling out of the elevator.

Chuck gasped when he saw Ellie on her side, and ran to her, pulling her upright and pulling off her blindfold. “Are you okay?” he whispered, pulling her into a hug.

“I’m fine,” she replied, trying not to burst into tears. “But… you might want to check on Kaylee.”

Casey and Mal were working on freeing Zoe. Simon was comforting River. Devin and Morgan both rushed to Ellie’s side as soon as Chuck stood, and Jayne stood guard in front of the elevator.

Chuck winced as he stood up, a tightness still present in the left side of his chest. “It’ll be there for a while,” Dr. Russell had told him. It still hurt.

As he crossed the room to Kaylee, she looked him in the eyes, trying to smile. When he reached her, he removed the small cutters from his utility belt, reached behind her, and cut her handcuffs. Then, without a word, he folded her into his embrace. She broke then, her breath coming in great heaves. “Oh God,” she cried. “Oh, God, oh, God, he was going to rape me.”

Chuck’s eyes widened, and he pulled back. “WHAT?!” he gasped, shocked. “WHO was going to rape you?”

Kaylee pointed at the prostrate form of Jubal Early on the floor behind Chuck. Chuck turned to see him, and turned back to Kaylee. “Who the hell is that?”

Kaylee tried to answer, but couldn’t speak. She didn’t have to.

“His name is Jubal Early,” Mal said, his voice sounding dead. “He invaded my ship over eight years ago. He threatened to rape Kaylee, told her he’d do horrible things to her if she tried to stop him. I’m going to guess that he offered to follow through on that.”

“Is that true?” came Jayne’s voice from behind Chuck. “Did he…”

Kaylee nodded. Chuck saw Mal’s face go void of emotions, and then saw Mal make eye contact with Jayne. Chuck turned to Jayne, and saw him nod.

Crossing to Early, both Mal and Jayne reached down and lifted him to his feet. Then, Mal brought his arm back and gave Early an almighty smack across the face, waking him up.

“Jubal Fucking Early,” he snarled. “I can’t believe I didn’t notice your stench the moment you landed on Earth.”

“Malcolm Reynolds,” Early replied. “What exactly do you want with me?”

“Remember what I did to you last time I saw you?” Mal asked menacingly.

“You kicked me, and I floated off into space, where I was lucky enough to be retrieved by some lovely folk from Greenleaf,” Early replied.

“Guess what,” Mal said. “I’m gonna do it again, and it’s going to be a little more permanent this time.”

“Mal, wait!” Casey shouted, but it was too late.

Jayne brought his gun up and shot the window behind Early. As the glass shattered, Malcolm Reynolds lifted his right foot, and put his boot directly into Early’s chest with all the force he could muster. Early staggered backwards –

Right out the opening where the window had been.

There was a scream as he fell – and then there was no more sound.

Except for the sound of a helicopter taking off from the roof of the Chase Tower.

“What the hell?” Casey asked, looking out the window. “Phoenix PD?”

“That’s them,” Zoe said quietly. “That’s Mullins and the other guy. They have Sarah Walker with them.”

Chuck lifted his head toward the ceiling. He closed his eyes and took a deep breath. His chest twinged with pain. “Dammit,” he breathed. “God dammit.”

Bringing his head back down, he said, “John, I’m turning this operation over to you. I’m not in good enough physical shape, and I’m certainly in no emotional state to be leading this mission.”

Casey looked at him. Then, he said, “Alright, Chuck. I want you to take the Suburban and get all these civilians to the Nerd Herd office. You’ve got a safe house there, right?”

Chuck nodded. “Good. They should be alright there. I’ll commandeer a police car or something, and then I’m going to find out where that helicopter went, and then I’m going to go retrieve Sarah.”

Mal turned to face him. “I’m going with you.”

“No,” Casey said automatically.

“Me too,” Jayne stated.

“No,” Casey replied. “Neither of you is going with me.”

“Colonel Casey,” Mal said, “we are combat trained, and we have had a hell of a lot of experience fighting scumbags. It’ll be a suicide mission if you go alone. We’re going with you.”

“As am I,” Zoe announced, standing up.

Casey threw his hands in the air and looked to the ceiling. “Fine. You can all three come. It’ll be like the Village People do special ops.”

Simon turned his riot gear and weaponry over to Zoe. Casey and the three Serenity crew left, leaving the four men and three women standing in the now drafty thirty-third floor office.

“Let’s go,” Chuck said tiredly, heading for the elevator. “It’s time to go hide.”

Chuck vs. the Past Chapter 8: "A Signal in the Night"

9:16 P.M. PDT

July 12th, 2018

San Pedro Peninsula Hospital

San Pedro, California

Two hours earlier, an ambulance had roared up to the front of the Bartowski property in Rancho Palos Verdes. Casey and Mal had done a sweep of the property and determined it was secure.

Over Chuck’s weak protests, he was loaded onto a stretcher and placed in the back of the ambulance. Devin insisted on riding along with him. Casey, Morgan, Jayne, Mal, and Simon loaded into Casey’s Suburban to follow the ambulance.

Devin had called Don Russell to meet him at Peninsula Hospital. “Getting to a hospital was a good idea as far as precautionary measures go,” Dr. Russell said, “but really, he’ll be fine.

“Are you sure about that?” Devin asked.

“Devin,” Dr. Russell replied patiently, “you’re a neurologist. I’m a cardiologist. Trust me. It was a minor heart attack, and you caught it practically before it began. There’s almost no damage to the cardiac muscle. I think Chuck should stay overnight for observation, but I’m going to leave that decision up to him.”

And so a few minutes later, Devin was in Chuck’s room, giving him the lowdown on the situation. Devin had kicked everybody else out when he came into the room.

“So, Dr. Russell says you can go home, but I’d really be more comfortable if you spent the night in the hospital.”

“Devin,” Chuck said, “how can I lie here in the hospital when Ellie and Kaylee and Sarah and River and Zoe are all out there, somewhere, in God knows what danger? How can I just stay here?”

Devin cast his eyes to the floor. When he looked back up, a day’s worth of exhaustion and anxiety had drawn itself on his face. “Chuck,” he replied, “believe me when I say that I can’t stand not knowing where Ellie is, and that the only thing I know is that she’s been kidnapped.”

He stopped and took a deep breath, then blew it out again in frustration. “But there’s nothing I can do about it right now. As far as I can tell, there’s nothing you can do about it either, and you’re not going to help them any by stirring yourself into another heart attack.”

“Devin…”

“Chuck,” Devin said, his voice rising, “Dr. Russell is the attending physician here, but if I have to, I will get myself placed on file as the physician of record, and so help me, I will have you restrained and handcuffed to that bed if I have to. Your sister will kill me if I let you do anything to yourself.”

Chuck, realizing he was not going to win this argument, put his hands up in defeat. “Okay, okay, I’ll stay. Just as long as I can get up to go use the bathroom when I need to.”

“Don’t worry. No bedpan for the Chuckster.”


Time Unknown

Location Unknown

After the five women had been handcuffed and herded into the helicopter parked on Little Santa Monica Blvd., Sarah (still unconscious) and Ellie had been blindfolded. Kaylee, Zoe, and River, however, were not.

“Why did you blindfold them, and not us?” Zoe asked Mullins.

“Because you don’t have a clue where we’re going,” Mullins replied with an unpleasant tone. “They both live in Los Angeles and could easily figure it out.

“Now,” he continued, “ordinarily, I would take away all your IDs, your phones, what have you. However, God knows what booby traps the CIA might have set up, so I’m just going to activate this.”

He pulled out a device no larger than a small cell phone, and pressed a button on it.

“Nothing happened,” Kaylee said quietly, still terrified at Jubal Early’s threat to follow through on the promise he had made more than eight years prior.

“Nothing visible,” Mullins corrected her. “But I just activated an electromagnetic field that blocks the signals from your phones and the ident chips in your ID cards. Nobody will be able to track you that way.”

After about two hours of flying very low – so low at times that it looked like they were going to crash into freeway ramps – the helicopters swooped in for a landing at a small airport out in the middle of agricultural fields. Sarah had woken up twice during the trip and been zapped with a stun gun both times for her troubles.

“You are going to cause permanent damage to her nervous system if you keep doing that,” Ellie had said angrily after hearing the stun gun for the second time.

“Oh, I’m sorry,” Mullins replied. “Did I not mention that Director Walker here shot me in the FACE?! You’ll forgive me if I could give a shit about her nervous system.”

The helicopters had taxied into a hangar. From there, the five were transferred into a large yellow truck with no windows. Kaylee could see a silhouette on the side of something that looked like it used to say “Ryder.” She wanted to ask what that was, but kept her mouth shut out of fear.

After the rear door of the truck was closed, it began to feel like it was descending. About two minutes later, the engine of the truck started, and they pulled forward.

They drove for what felt like forever without stopping. When they finally stopped, Sarah had positioned herself by the back door to attack whoever opened it – and was preemptively shot with a TASER, yet again, when the door opened.

“If you have to go to the bathroom, you will go now,” Mullins said, a real gun in his hands rather than a TASER. “Although it looks like Director Walker doesn’t need to anymore.”

“Exactly how are we supposed to accomplish this?” Zoe asked.

“We pull down your drawers. You squat. You do your thing. We pull your drawers back up,” Mullins said, with an almost bored tone.

Kaylee had the unfortunate experience of making eye contact with Early at just that moment. “Yeah, I don’t need to go,” she said, hurriedly heading back for the truck. The other three women agreed.

“Suit yourself,” Mullins called to their backs.

After being closed back up in the truck, they drove for quite a while longer. When they stopped, the door was opened again, and Sarah was shot with the TASER once more. “You’re a monster, you know that?” Zoe asked Mullins angrily.

“You have no idea, lady.”

They were in a parking structure of some sort. Mullins, Early, and the third man, who Kaylee had heard Mullins call “Richter”, herded them over to a bank of elevators. They boarded one, and Richter pressed the button for the 33rd floor.

As the elevator ascended, Kaylee nervously dug her fingers into the rear pockets of her jeans – and felt something in the right pocket.

Her California ID card.

She had been keeping it in her back pocket in case she needed ID, so that she wouldn’t have to dig around in her purse for it every time she needed it. And now, it might just be the answer to prayer.

Almost imperceptibly, she checked to her right and her left, making sure that neither Richter or especially Early was watching her. Agonizingly slowly, she used the first two fingers of her left hand to slip the ID out. As it came out of her pocket, she let go of it, letting it slide down the back of her leg to the floor. Ever so slightly lifting her right foot, she let the ID fall to the floor, and then put her foot back on top of it.

When the elevator doors opened, they were ushered out into a set of offices. Kaylee held her breath as they exited the elevator, but neither of the men who had been standing next to her seemed to notice the ID card lying face down on the floor of the elevator.

Please, God, please let this work, she prayed to a God she barely believed in.


11:31 P.M. PDT

San Pedro Peninsula Hospital

Morgan sat alone in the lobby of the hospital, staring blankly at his Palm Pilot. He felt incredibly lost in this situation. Of all the men who had been at Chuck’s place earlier in the day, he was the only one who didn’t have a very personal connection with any of the kidnapped women. Oh, sure, he had had a crush on Ellie back in the day, but that was it.

And he didn’t feel like there was anything he could contribute to the situation. He was just a GSA lackey, assigned to help Chuck oversee Nerd Herd/Omaha operations for the greater Los Angeles area. He felt utterly useless.

So Morgan sat there, giving a half-hearted attempt to a game of Solitaire, when a small red box began flashing in the upper left hand corner of the Palm screen. “No way,” he said in disbelief.

He tapped the box with the stylus, and the ident-tracking application popped up. “No WAY,” he said again. Looking up, he scanned the lobby. Where the hell was everybody?

Morgan popped out of his chair and sprinted for the cafeteria. Only one person was in there – but it was just the person he needed. John Casey had fallen asleep on a table.

“Casey!” Morgan shouted, racing across to him. “Casey!” He shook his shoulder.

“Huh? Mom?” Casey slurred, coming awake. Then he looked up. “Morgan? What the hell?”

Morgan didn’t say anything, just put the Palm on the table in front of Casey. Casey went from practically asleep to wide awake in less than a second. “Christ,” he uttered.

Standing up, he strode rapidly out of the cafeteria. Morgan grabbed his Palm and ran after Casey, struggling to keep up with the much taller man.

A moment later, Casey swept down the hallway toward Chuck’s room. “Wake up, wake up!” he called, pulling Mal, Simon, and Jayne, all asleep in the hallway, out of their slumber.

Turning to the left, he barged into Chuck’s room. Chuck was awake, watching the Tonight Show; Devin had fallen asleep. “Wake up, Doc!” Casey said.

Devin’s eyes popped open, and Chuck hit the mute button on the remote control. “What’s going on?” he asked, as the three Serenity crew piled into the room.

“Five minutes ago, we got a positive track on Kaylee Frye’s ID,” Morgan reported. “It just popped up on my Palm Pilot. It came out of nowhere.”

In an instant, Chuck was out of his bed. “Pardon my nakedness,” he cracked, stripping off the hospital gown and grabbing the pair of jeans that was on the chair next to his bed.

“Chuck,” Devin warned.

“Shut up, Devin,” Chuck replied. “What’s the location, Morgan?”

Chase Bank Tower,” Morgan said. “201 North Central Avenue. In Phoenix.”

Casey, Devin, and Chuck all just looked at Morgan. “Phoenix?”

Morgan nodded. “As in Arizona.”

A determined look set in on Chuck’s face. “Let’s go to Arizona.”


11:57 P.M. MST

33rd Floor, Chase Tower

Phoenix, Arizona

The five women had been tied to chairs facing a wall. Kaylee was tied up next to Sarah, and she sensed that Sarah was beginning to stir.

“Sarah,” Kaylee whispered. “Sarah, if you’re awake, nod your head a little.”

Almost imperceptibly, Sarah’s head moved forward and then back.

“I think I may have been able to let your people know where we are,” Kaylee whispered. “I had my ident card in my back pocket, and I was able to slip it out and drop it on the floor of the elevator.”

A grim smile grew on Sarah’s face. “Good job,” she whispered back, her speech slightly slurred. “We’ll make an agent of you yet.”