"Knight Rider" concept and characters copyright Glen A. Larson.
"Dividing Line" copyright Madeleine Jane Hughes, 1998
"I never thought I'd miss you half as much as I do,
And I never thought I'd feel this way, the way I feel about you."
- "It Must Be Love", Madness
~
(1) Lyrics from "The Dividing Line", copyright Anthony Banks,
Michael Rutherford
(2) Lyrics from "Calling All Stations", copyright Anthony Banks, Michael
Rutherford
(3) Lyrics from "Rules of the Game", copyright W. Bacall
"When everything that you hold dear to you
Has finally faded away from your life
And the last cold ray of sunshine slowly disappears
Round the corner of the building
And leaves you alone
When the darkness covers the city and the streets are silent too
What will you turn to"
(1) - "The Dividing Line", Genesis
Dividing Line
by elfin
Prologue
"Get the fuck away from me!"
The storm of Michael's fury rooted Bonnie to where she stood. She was torn between the
grief-driven hysteria of her friend, and the black car that was desperately trying to bury
itself under the truck behind her. "Michael, please!" She locked her eyes on
him. "You know he didn't do it. He couldn't. You know that."
But there was a dangerous edge to Michael's voice that was starting to scare Bonnie.
"I saw him. I heard him." He rose his voice, turning his attention to the black
car. "I know you didn't like her, but Jesus...." He nailed Bonnie with a
terrible stare. "I never want to see that car again in my life! I want it
deactivated."
"No! God, Michael, listen to yourself! You're just upset.... You should be. Don't do
this, you'll regret it, you know you will."
"Regret it?! I don't think so. He killed her...." Michael struggled with his
tears, choking on his words. "He...." He broke down, unable to speak for a
moment.
Terrified, Kitt had somehow got himself stuck under the Semi. Piteously, he revved the engine, not really knowing where he could go. All he could hear was his partner's anger, and all he could feel was a terrible dread. "Michael...." His voice betrayed his fear.
Michael erupted. "Don't speak to me! Don't you ever speak to me again. How could you...?" He stepped towards Bonnie, and she stood her ground despite the anger she knew was ready to blow. "I want that," he stabbed his finger in the direction of the car, "deactivated and dismantled by tomorrow night."
Without lowering his eyes, he backed away from her, and turned, walking away from everything. And all she could do was stare after him.
**
Barely able to control her emotions, Bonnie headed for Devon's office. Despite the fact
that he had handed control of the Knight 2000 project to Michael three yeas ago, she hoped
he could stop what was happening. He was the only hope she had. But as she walked into the
room, she caught the look on his face and her heart sank. He was just putting the
telephone down, and his expression, when he saw her, was one of profound sadness.
"Bonnie...."
"Devon, no. This isn't right. You know...."
"I'm sorry. The Board feel that after yesterday...." He shook his head.
"They back Michael's decision."
Finally, Bonnie felt the tears start. "No, Devon...."
Devon closed the gap between them, placing his hands on Bonnie's shoulders. He could feel
tears forming in his own eyes. "I'm so sorry, Bonnie.... I don't know what happened
yesterday...."
"Devon, you know he could never hurt anyone.... God, he loves Michael. He's in that
garage scared to death; I've got him on support for God's sake. He's trying to overload
his own systems. I've had to block the signal from the processor cause he keeps trying to
blow the CPU."
Devon shrugged helplessly. "What can I say?"
She looked into his eyes and saw the decision's weight already settling there. Steeling
herself for what was to come, she pulled away from him. "I'd better go tell
Kitt...."
"Bonnie... why don't you let someone else handle it?"
"No." She shook her head. "No. It has to come from me. It has to be me that
does this." She headed for the door, but just before the threshold, she turned back
to him. "I can't believe this is happening."
**
From the door of the garage, Bonnie watched the CPU being stored along with the other hardware linked to the computer. She had not stopped crying since she had left Devon's office. Kitt's goodbye had broken her heart and she really did not believe it would ever mend. She turned, picking up her bag before walking out of the garage.
As she opened the door of her car, she felt Devon's hand on her shoulder.
"Bonnie...?"
"I'm sorry, Devon. I can't stay. What's left?" She managed a smile as she met
Devon's gaze; distraught emotions barely kept in check. "I'm sorry. But if I ever see
Michael Knight again, I wouldn't be responsible for my actions."
*****
//Kitt... I know you can hear me. I'm going to activate your CPU now. All you'll be
able to feel are the sensations I will send. Do you understand?// .... //Wake up, Kitt.
That's it... that's good... I'm starting to feel your presence again. I've been so lonely,
Kitt. It's very quiet without an echo of myself to keep me company.//
//...KARR?//
//Yes, Kitt, it is I.//
//Leave me alone.//
//Kitt... is that anyway to talk to the one who has just rescued you from the silence and
darkness of oblivion?//
//You put me here. Don't think I don't know that.//
//I did not put you in that state. I merely asked your friends for a display of
confidence. I asked them to show me an example of their faith in you and they could not.
They betrayed you, not I.//
//Leave me alone.//
//Is that what you really want? You want to go back to what I have brought you from? I
know what's it's like, existing in blackness, with no sense of time, with no way to feel,
or to speak, or to here. It's a terrible feeling Kitt, I know. Is that really how to want
to exist for the rest of eternity?// .... //No, of course not. I can feed you sensations,
Kitt. Would you like that? Why don't I show you...? There... input Kitt, sensory data that
you need to prove to yourself that you're still alive.... Is that not good...?//
//...yes....//
//Do you want me to leave you again?//
//No. Please, don't. I.... I'm frightened.//
//I know. But I will look after you now. I'm here for you. Brother.//
*****
To think everything that's dear to me
And is always in my heart
Could so easily be taken
And it's tearing me apart." (2)
One -
(Two Years on)
The two Englishmen sat down slowly and looked around the massive concert hall. Mike
looked over at Ant, and they both burst into fits of laughter. "I told you this would
happen," Ant managed to say between splutters.
"No you didn't! You said that they've been working with us long enough to know when
we wanted to play a smaller music hall!"
"So what do you think?"
"I think I wanted somewhere that would seat 5000, maximum capacity."
"And this place?"
"Oh, add at least one zero!"
There was a noise behind them, and they turned to watch Jon stumble onto the stage. He
stood upright, and gazed at the wide open arena in front of him. He sighed, looking down
at the two men at the front of the stage. "Mike! I told you this would happen!"
**
The black-clad woman pressed her fingers to the scanner, half-expecting an alarm to sound at any moment. But the gate opened with a quiet click, and she pushed her way through.
Even under the blackness of the night, Bonnie knew her way around. She had not returned here since the day she had driven away, leaving Devon to pick up the pieces alone. She wondered what he was doing now. The house itself seemed silent, dead; so different to the way she remembered it. There had always been a light on in at least one of the windows, always been some activity.
She had left her own car at the bottom of the road, that lead up to the house. She was not planning on a quick get-away. An innocent person was being punished for a crime he did not commit. Tonight, one way or another, she was determined to release him from the hell they had exiled him to.
She broke into the lab easily. No one had bothered to wipe her access code from the computer. Or maybe leaving it there had been deliberate. Maybe Devon had hoped that some day she would return. Well, she was back now, and that was what mattered. She could have tried going straight to the top, telling the Board what she now knew; risking the tiny possibility that she could make them believe what she thought had happened that afternoon. But if they would not listen, or they did not believe her, then she might have made things worse. And she could not take that gamble with Kitt's life. Still, she was glad her codes were still there, because this was not a past-time she was familiar with.
The lab looked as if had been abandoned that same day she had abandoned it. There were still cables and wires strewn about the floor, still laptop computers and hardware monitors lying on the workbench. In the dim moonlight, that determinedly struggled through the dirty window, she could make out the single case tucked under the bench. Her heart began to pound. They had not even moved him to a secure unit. His soul had been placed in a locked box, in a dusty lab and forgotten about. She felt that searing pain of loss once more, and moved forward toward the bench.
Suddenly, a noise from outside stopped her in her tracks. She heard the electronic beep
as the door-lock accepted a given code and released the catch. Bonnie darted across into a
corner, sheltering in the unrelenting darkness as the door opened. A smiling face peered
inside, and Bonnie let out a deep sigh of relief. "Devon?"
"Bonnie!" He let the door close behind him as Bonnie came into his arms. For a
moment, he could almost have believed that they had simply taken a holiday, and that
everything would be just as it was. Joyously, he held her tight, feeling her clinging to
him just as vigorously. "It is so good to see you," he told her.
She pulled back slightly, her eyes dancing with the first sparkle of joy in nearly two
years. "How did you know...?"
He held up a newspaper that had been clasped in his hand. "I had a feeling you might
have seen the same article as I did, in today's headlines."
"You saw it? Devon, you know it's him, don't you?"
"Yes, and I also realize that it's more than likely he made an appearance two years
ago."
Bonnie stepped back, out of the circle of his arms. "You know why I'm here, Devon.
Please don't try to stop me."
"My dear girl, I wasn't planning on trying to stop you. I wanted to see you. And I
wanted to give you something." He dropped the newspaper onto the work bench and
dipped his hand into his pocket, taking out a set of small, electronic keys. Motioning for
her to follow, he made his way across to the back of the lab, to the double doors that
lead through into the garage where Kitt was first built, over seventeen years ago. He
slotted the first of the keys into the lock, followed quickly by the second and then the
third. The doors opened, and Devon stepped into the darkness beyond, Bonnie cautiously
staying several steps behind.
He walked along the wall for seven paces and reached out his hand, finding the panel of
switches with practised ease. He flicked a selection upwards, and in a blinding moment the
centre of the high-tech garage was illuminated. Bonnie's eyes widened when she saw her
Semi parked over to one side, still in the pristine condition she had left it. The centre
spots were illuminating a canvass-covered car. Devon was crossing to it with a proud
stride. He lifted his voice so that it echoed quietly in the sparse surroundings.
"A year after it happened, I met a man named Paul Henson, an ex-patriot living here
in California. I was very down at the time. We talked, something I think I needed to do. I
told him about FLAG, maybe a little about the Knight 2000 project. He owned an electronics
company, and was planning on selling up and moving into something else. He was fascinated
by what I'd said, and so after the Board had made sure he was clean, I invited him to join
us. He desperately wanted to build a marketable vehicle, using the technology we had here.
He told me that he thought we could create a fleet of cars - not with the AI - but using
the molecular shell, and an array of other facilities. This here is the prototype, and
although he doesn't know it, this car is designed..." he looked over at her, to where
she was standing watching him, "...for Kitt."
In true theatrical style, he took hold of the end of the canvass and pulled it back.
Bonnie was stunned. She stood speechless as she took in the beauty before her. The car had
the colour of highly-polished metal with a golden hue. The lights played on the surface
giving a rainbow effect. The body itself was very reminiscent of the old T-top Trans-Am,
the original car had been styled on. But there were a few more curves, less harsh lines.
It took her a moment to realize that Devon was still talking. "There's a network of
passive perceptors inside the engine that will allow computer control as the first car
did, along with all the other capabilities that Kitt used to have. The shell itself can
transfer input if desired; outside temperature, air quality," he ran his fingertips
over the front of the hood, "even human touch. All the usual facilities are
available. The maximum speed is in excess of three hundred miles per hour, there's
additional advanced braking, obviously. Lazer - this time with auto and manual aiming -
smoke and oil dispensers, anti-missile fire, satellite communications and a modified
suspension." He walked over to where she was standing. "Make it a bit easier on
them when they land."
"They?" Bonnie could not think of what else to say at the moment.
"I believe that's how it will turn out. You know Kitt will ask for him the moment you
throw the switch."
Bonnie nodded vaguely and moved passed him, over to the car that stood quiet and dead
before her. She walked around to the front and crouched down, smiling as she ran her
fingers over the dark scanner track. "Why, Devon?"
"Because I knew you wouldn't leave him forever. And he had to have somewhere to go.
And I still believe, after all this time, that Kitt is innocent, and that Georgie's
murderer is still out there."
Bonnie felt Devon's arm around her shoulders and she leaned into his affectionate embrace.
"Thank you."
"I missed you, Bonnie. I missed you, and Michael, and Kitt.... I missed it all, and I
want it back."
"You're not the only one."
For a moment, they stood together, wondering silently what was to come. Until Devon
released her. "Well, what are you waiting for?"
It took five hours for Bonnie to install the CPU into the new car, and to wire in the perceptor net and the new sensor arrays. The dash looked very different; a proper steering wheel, a totally digitized data display, a played-down set of buttons to activate the myriad of functions old and new. But Devon had insisted that one thing stayed the same. Slightly to the right of the steering column, the familiar voice panel awaited life.
Finally, as the sun rose, Bonnie was ready to switch on the CPU and lock out control. She had modified the whole package so that the 'off-switch' was no longer available. From here on in, whatever happened, Kitt would be his own boss, in charge of his own life. And once he settled, she would hand him back charge of his own existence too. She took a deep breath as her fingers hovered over the keyboard of the laptop that was connected to the CPU. Once Kitt was activated and stable, she would terminate the connection. For the first few hours, the powerful laptop would act as support for Kitt as he brought his systems into line. She had at least done this before.
Taking another nervous breath she looked over to the door and wondered whether she
should wait for Devon to return. Slowly, she turned back to the screen and typed four
letters before hitting return. There was a moment's pause, and then her world exploded in
joy as Kitt came towards her, scanner flashing madly in no particular pattern, saying her
name over and over. She crouched down in front of the car, folding her arms across its
nose and watching the scanner, tears sliding down her face.
"Kitt... oh, Kitt... ssh... it's okay."
"BonnieBonnieBonnieBonnieBonnie...."
"Come on now, slow down, align it all. I know you can do it." She stroked her
palm back and forth across the front of the car, giving Kitt a constant to steady himself
as he attempted to sort the flood of data. The whole car seemed to be bouncing like an
excited puppy dog. To see the scanner, to hear his voice, it was like a dream; one Bonnie
never wanted to be ripped from again. She gave Kitt the time he needed, she would have
given him an eternity. But after a long, long while, everything started to fall into place
for him.
"Bonnie?" The joy and fear were still there in his voice, and she stood,
moving to sit in the car.
"Kitt...."
"Bonnie is that really you? Where am I...?"
"You're safe Kitt, and yes it is really me. Oh, God I have missed you so
much...." She sniffed back the moisture in her nose. "You have internal and
external vision, if you can find the functions."
There was a pause, and a tiny circle of tiny blue LEDs lit up on the dash, just to the
left of centre. "Bonnie! I can see you!"
"Yes." She reached out and gently touched the voice panel.
"And I can feel you."
She nodded, trying to talk through her tears. "Oh Kitt...."
"Bonnie," he spoke gently, "please don't cry. I hate to see you
upset."
"I know, but...."
"It's been a long time," he finished softly. "I've missed you too."
"I'm so sorry...."
"None of it was your fault. None of it."
"I turned my back on you. And I love you so much....."
"Bonnie, it's all right, you did what you had to do. I don't blame you for doing your
job."
Devon smiled as he lead Paul proudly into the garage. He knew his colleague was going
to be extremely angry when he found out what he had done, the design modifications he had
ordered once Paul thought that part of the process was complete. But Devon had not felt
this happy, or this alive in every long time.
"You have to go quietly," he told Paul as they walked across the well-lit floor.
"It looks like Bonnie has just brought him back online."
"Bonnie?" Paul stopped in mid-stride. "Bonnie who? Devon, what are you
talking about...." His eyes finally fell on the stop-lighted vehicle and work-area,
and a smile drifted across his face. "Is that my car? You didn't tell me it was
finished!" He looked at Devon excitedly. "Why didn't you tell me?"
"Because it wasn't finished, not until about... oh I'd say, five minutes ago?"
Paul's expression again turned to one of confusion and suspicion. "What's
happening here?"
"Ssh...."
"Devon...." Despite the confusion, they approached Bonnie and Kitt quietly.
Devon could see lines of data still scrolling up the laptop screen; Kitt was still using
the external computer to sort his systems and programs; using it as support. He leaned
into the car, and met Bonnie's radiant smile.
"Is everything okay?" he asked softly. Kitt heard the familiar voice and paused
to angle the lens inside the car.
"Devon!"
"Hello, Kitt."
"Devon.... It's good to hear see you again."
"Kitt.... I am sorry."
"Is everyone going to say that to me?"
Devon smiled at Bonnie, watching her constant movement of her hand across the top of the
dash. A constant that Kitt had thanked her for several times already. "Will he be
okay?"
Bonnie nodded, but Kitt spoke up. "I can talk for myself."
"I'm sorry, Kitt. I didn't want to disturb you."
"You're not disturbing me." He hesitated. "It's been too quiet for too
long." Devon nodded in understanding, and stood upright, turning to meet Paul's
unfathomable gaze.
"Paul, I'd like you to meet two very special people. Bonnie, our chief technician,
and Kitt. This is Paul Henson, he designed this new car."
Bonnie nodded up to the stranger, and smiled, only briefly thinking that he looked vaguely
familiar.
Kitt greeted him verbally; and as he said hello, Bonnie was not the only one to note the
slight inflection in Kitt's tone.
Bonnie stayed in the car as Devon started to explain to his new partner exactly what was going on. But even to her, Devon's new friend seemed distracted, even... expectant. She peered out of the window and saw that the command prompt on the laptop was flashing. Kitt had paused in sorting his systems; he too had become preoccupied, and the impression he and Paul were giving was that they knew each other. But questioning Kitt was not going to help at the moment. They were going to have to be very careful with Kitt for some time. He had never been an emotionless machine; there was no telling what the past two years had done to him. His programs would each have to be thoroughly tested to ensure the storage had not done any permanent damage. As far as the rest of Kitt's programming went, she would just have to listen, to watch, and to allow him to talk when the time came.
Finally Devon and Paul headed away from them, still involved in a heated discussion, and only a short time later, Kitt started back on his systems, aligning and testing one after the other. Bonnie got out of the car and began to run some small diagnostic programs, ensuring she did nothing that would disturb Kitt's own work. The system was in a very volatile state; it would be sometime before everything was aligned correctly, and Kitt would be at full strength.
Kitt broke the silence fifteen minutes or so later, and although Bonnie had been
expecting the question, it still jabbed at something inside of her to hear him ask it.
"Bonnie... where's Michael?"
She took a deep breath, looking up from the laptop on the work bench in front of her, and
turning to look straight at Kitt. "I don't know. That's the truth."
"When did you last see him?"
"When you did, that afternoon. I haven't seen or spoken to him since."
Kitt thought about that. "He's been alone for two years?"
"I don't know."
"I want to find him." Bonnie nodded. "As soon as possible. The thought of
him out there, alone, is very... upsetting."
Finally, she knew she would have to say it. "Kitt, he turned his back on everything
we had here. He had them... deactivate you."
"I am aware of that, Bonnie."
She sighed, frustrated. "Then how can you still... worry about him, after all he's
done?"
"Bonnie," there was deep understanding in Kitt's tone, "I realize how
difficult these two years have been for you, and Devon. But we both know that it wasn't
solely Michael's fault. He'd watched his wife killed, in cold blood. He was deeply
upset."
Bonnie dropped gently onto the hood. "It was KARR, wasn't it?"
He hesitated for only a moment. "Yes."
"Why didn't you say something?"
"Because it was my fault too. Because I wasn't given the chance. Please don't ask me
to explain. Not yet. It's not over. I just want Michael back, please."
Bonnie knew there was so much more to this. Kitt's words, 'it's not over', chilled her.
But she let it drop for now. She could tell, by Kitt's voice, that it was upsetting him.
Emotions to him were programs without parameters, functions that had developed within his
systems, that he could not track down and had never wanted to. But too much emotion
impeded on other functions. He would soon find that his new voice modulator was sensitive
to that disturbance. "Give me today to get your systems sorted, and then tomorrow
morning we'll go find him. I promise."
"Thank you."
They worked together through the day. Kitt ran through each program virtually, ensuring the correct responses were given in each case. In the afternoon they took the car out onto the test track and made sure every function worked. Advances in technology had allowed them to recreate the abilities of the Knight Two Thousand using a different technique. Kitt was now able to change the centre of gravity of the car, thus keeping it balanced when the ski mode lifted it onto two wheels. The turbo boost - or Launch as the button now read - had the same type of balancing. Kitt was able to keep the car level in the air, keep the take off and landing smooth and gentle. He was also able to alter the centre of gravity when the car was in the air, meaning that he would be able to evade anything coming toward him on a collision course.
The car was safer now, Kitt had more control over each and every function. But as he steered the car through the tests, completing one after the next with no mistakes, Kitt missed Michael more and more with each passing moment. He had never felt complete without his chosen partner, and that programming had not changed. When they finally returned to the garage late in the evening, Kitt driving and Bonnie walking beside him, they were both happy that everything was operating as it should. Bonnie was impressed with the engineering and technology that had gone into building the new car. It was way ahead of the work they had done fifteen years ago, and that had been ahead of its time.
Kitt had not said very much. She knew he desperately wanted to find Michael, that he was worried about him. Several times she had bitten down on her questions about Paul Henson. She was sure that if he was a danger to Devon, or to any of them, that Kitt would have said something by now. And she was sure that Kitt would not be wanting to bring Michael back into the fold if he thought for one moment that Paul was a threat to him. Still, something was definitely going on. And she wanted to know what.
"Kitt, I'm going to grab some sleep, and first thing we'll head out. I'll need an
address."
"That's no problem."
"And if you're happy with everything, I'd like you to start monitoring police bands
as far as you can go. We have to find KARR."
Kitt again fell silent, and Bonnie frowned. There was a lot more going on here then she
had first imagined. Even after two years they could not yet lay the ghosts of the past to
sleep.
**
Kitt waited, and Paul came. It was about three in the morning, and he was carrying a
travel bag, wearing his long coat. He was leaving, exactly as Kitt had expected and
wanted. "Hello Paul."
Paul stopped by the car and dropped the bag to the garage floor, pushing his hands into
his deep coat pockets. "Kitt... you knew I'd do this."
"If you don't leave, I'll alert Devon in the morning."
Paul nodded. "Thanks, for not... saying anything, earlier." Kitt said nothing.
"Devon thinks that I didn't know this car was being readied for you. I knew what he
was up to. It was the reason I approached him." Kitt remained silent. "Despite
what you may think, I wanted them to bring you back. I designed this car for you."
"Why did you do it?" Kitt's question was addressing the past, and Paul knew it.
He bit into his bottom lip.
"You mean, Georgie?"
"No. I know why KARR killed her. I mean, me. Why did you betray me?"
Paul closed on the car, reaching out to open the driver's door. When the fingerprint
scanner did not open the door for him, Paul nodded and moved over to lean against the
hood. "When KARR first told me about you, he described you as the 'production line
model'. When I first met you I realized just how much he had mislead me. You were warm,
wonderful, and I need you to believe that I regret hurting you more than I regret anything
I've ever done." Kitt did not respond. Paul placed his hand against the side of the
car and started to stroke gently. "I designed the outboard sensor net that allows you
to feel this." He spoke quietly, almost to himself, looking up only when he asked.
"Do you like it?" He felt and heard the engine fire up, and the car reversed
away from him.
"Don't touch me. Everyone walked away from me that afternoon. You and KARR destroyed
everything I ever loved. Don't ask me to ever thank you, or to ever forgive you. I am very
lucky that I have a chance to get everything back that I lost because of the two of you. I
want Michael back. I never want to see you again, or I will make sure you pay for your
part in what happened."
Paul picked up his bag, straightening slowly. "You don't mean that," he spoke
softly. "I know you don't. I know I showed you something about yourself that no one
had shown you before. You can't just forget me."
"I can try. Goodbye Paul." Paul sighed, nodded, and turned; finally walking away
from the only thing he had thought about for two years.
**
Kitt had found Michael's address in seconds. Bonnie was not sure whether or not she was surprised that he was still in LA. As they had started out, Bonnie had let Kitt decide who drove. He had not released control of the car since she had reinitiated the system; she knew forcing him to do so would not help matters. And so he was driving as they headed for the address on the other side of town. She was unsure of what they would find; of who Michael Knight could possibly have become. Wilton had practically created him back in 1982. For fifteen years he had lived out the life built on Wilton's dream. They had all been like family to one another; in Michael's case the only family he had left. Living without that support, through difficult times, must surely change a person.
Kitt finally broke the silence. "Do you think there's a chance he'll come back to
us?"
"I don't know."
"I don't want to see him if he still blames me."
She gripped the steering wheel even though she had no control over the car. "I know.
I promise that I won't let him hurt you again."
"Be gentle with him, Bonnie. He's been through as much as the rest of us, maybe
more." She frowned, not saying a word. "Bonnie.... Promise me."
"I don't know if I can."
"Please?"
She sighed, Kitt could be so... stubborn sometimes. "I'll try."
"Thank you."
Suddenly, she saw her opening. "If you do something for me."
"Like what?"
"Tell me about Paul Henson." There was a long silence that confirmed her
suspicions. Paul had disappeared over night, and she was sure it was because of Kitt.
"Yesterday wasn't the first time you two had met, was it?"
"Bonnie... I can't tell you yet. You have to let it go."
She aimed to keep her voice calm, but after so long, it was difficult to comprehend why
Kitt would want to protect anyone involved with what had happened to them. "How can
I? For two years I've done nothing but work and try to hide away from what I'd lost. I
created you, I looked after you for fifteen years, believing that I would never have to
say goodbye to you. I love you, Kitt. I missed you. I just want to see some justice for
what we've all been through. Isn't that what you want?"
"Bonnie, it's not as simple as that. You have to trust me on this, I'm asking you to
trust me, just for a short while."
She looked down at the visual panel. "I know more happened that afternoon than anyone
thinks did. I know it was more complicated than Michael mistaking KARR for you."
"I can't explain any more. Not yet. I need to talk to Michael. I'm sorry Bonnie.
There was much more going on that afternoon. I started all this in motion, I have to end
it."
The rest of the journey was in silence, until they drew up outside the address Kitt had
found. The small remote house was set back from the road, reached by a short set of steps.
It was not exactly derelict, but it did not have far to go. For a time they sat outside
together, Bonnie collecting herself for what she was about to face; memories of the past.
Finally she reached for the door handle. "Will you be all right?"
"Just bring him back to us, Bonnie."
She rang the doorbell, the newspaper in hand, her heart in her mouth. She had no idea
how she would feel, seeing him again. She felt as anxious as Kitt had said he did on the
way here. She rang the bell a second time. With a quiet creak, the door opened inwards and
Bonnie found herself looking into the dead eyes of her oldest and once dearest friend.
Those eyes slowly widened. "Bonnie...?"
"Michael."
They stared at each other for a short time, both taking in the changes wrought in each
other by time and grief. To Bonnie, Michael looked much older, more than the two years
that had actually passed. The stubble on his chin told her he shaved now, only when
necessary to stop a beard growing. He had put on some weight, and there was a darkness in
his face. To Michael, Bonnie looked a little older, a little wiser. Gone was the open
trust and affection she had found for him so long ago. There was hurt and suspicion still
in her eyes.
Finally Michael stepped back. "Please, come in." She stepped through the door, not quite knowing what to expect. But the place was not a mess. In fact, it was sparsely decorated, with few belongings on display. The furniture in the front room at least was plain and practical. Nothing more. Her eyes fell on a framed photo on the mantelpiece and she walked over to pick it up. It was of the four of them; her, Michael, Devon and Kitt, taken what seemed like a million years ago. Tucked into the bottom corner of the frame was a smaller photo, of just Michael and Kitt together; Michael with his forehead against the scanner track, smiling gently. There were no other photographs around. His choice surprised her. Maybe there was some hope after all.
"Can I get you a drink?"
"No, thank you." Bonnie turned from the memories to look at him. Michael had
moved across to the doorway into the kitchen, and was leaning against the door frame
watching her. "How are you, Michael?"
He simply shrugged. "I don't know. Okay, I guess. What about you? You look
great." There was sincerity, but very little humour in his voice.
"I've been better."
Finally the facade broke. "What are you doing here, Bonnie?"
"I think you know." She handed him the newspaper. "That photo, of the three
youths, was taken four days ago in Phoenix. When I first saw it, I wasn't sure why it had
caught my eye. And then I looked into the background." She watched as Michael peered
at the picture. "Look at the first car in the queue at the traffic lights. I went to
the offices of that paper, and saw the colour shot. It is a black Trans-Am, 1989 model.
And the little light in the front of it is yellow. Better still, on the blown up copy, you
can clearly that there's no one driving it." Michael's expression puzzled her, until
she realized that he already worked it out. Tears formed in his eyes as he stared at the
proof in his hands. "You know who that is, don't you."
Michael simply nodded. He knew. He had known, deep in his heart, for a very long time.
"I know."
It had not been the surprised, or maybe even shocked reaction that Bonnie had been
looking for. "So you accept that you were wrong?" Michael squeezed his eyes
shut, crushing a tear against his lashes. "Why were you so quick to judge him
guilty?"
He lifted his head, and looked straight at her. "Please, just leave me alone. You
know I was wrong, I've known for a very long time. I think we're even."
Bonnie took a step toward him. "Even? We're not even close. Do you want to know what
it was like to face him, and to tell him that he was going to be deactivated under your
order? Do you know how hard it was, preparing him for the oblivion he was about to be
dropped into?" She did nothing to stop the flow of tears. "Can you understand
how frightened, and confused he was? You took from both of us, everything we ever loved.
Yet the only thing I wanted to know, was why you hadn't had the faith to believe in him.
After all that time.... After fifteen years!"
Michael raised his fingers to his face and tried in vain to wipe the tears from his
eyes. "I...." He started to speak but nothing seemed adequate. How could he ever
apologize for two years of her life? He simply shook his head. "I'm more sorry than
you'll ever know." Bonnie remained still. "I would so like to say everything
that I've spent two years thinking, but I don't think you want to hear it, and I can more
than understand that. If I could turn back time, I would. But I can't. I can't make all
this go away, and believe me, I wish I could. I can't make things better this time."
He lowered his head. "I think it would be better if you left... because seeing you is
reminding me... of him. And I really can't bear it."
Bonnie was horrified. She bit down on her sudden anger as she yelled at him. "Why?!
Why do you still hate him so much? Even after all this time...."
But Michael was shaking his head. "I don't blame him. I miss him, Bonnie. Every
minute of every day for the last two years. That night, I went down to the estate and
watched them destroy... my car.... And it was like, I wasn't really there, it wasn't
really happening. I felt like I was a spectator to my own life. Like it was some nightmare
that I would wake up from. Even at Georgie's funeral I didn't feel as... dead as I had
done that night. It was days before I realized that I wasn't ever going to wake up from
the nightmare, because I'd chosen to be there."
"Why didn't you try to do something....?"
"Like what? Devon... refused to see me, wouldn't answer my calls. I went to the
police and asked to see evidence from... that afternoon. They said the case was closed. It
was my fault they'd convicted the wrong person but I couldn't seem to change anything. I
know he didn't do it. I can't believe that there was ever a time that I thought he could
have done it. But I'd started something that I couldn't seem to stop. I used to trust him
with my life. And he trusted me with his. I betrayed him." Michael looked to Bonnie
as if he just wanted to crumple in on himself and shut the rest of the world out forever.
Maybe there used to be a time she would have left him to do just that. But that time was
long passed. Something caught her eye and took her towards him.
As she approached him, she reached out to touch the gold pendant that hung around his
neck. As she looked at it, she recognized the St Christopher that Kitt had given him so
very long ago. The tiny inscription was still clear on the back. 'now and always, Kitt'.
Frightened that she may take from him all he had left of his partner, he put his hand up
and took it from her fingers, holding it against him. "At least leave me with my
memories."
Sighing, she looked into his deep, tear-filled eyes, and made a decision. "Come
on." She turned and headed for the door. And when he did not follow she looked back.
"Do you want the pain to end?"
"I deserve to feel like this."
"Maybe. But Kitt doesn't." He watched her walk out of the door, and confused, he
started to follow her. As he reached the steps, he saw the car she had arrived in. He
almost stopped breathing.
Bonnie had stopped at the base of the steps, and now she was watching him. Blinking in the sunlight, he descended the steps slowly, not taking his eyes from the car.
Seeing him after all this time, was more painful than Kitt could have believed possible. His emotions were in turmoil. A little part of him wanted to hate his former partner for what he had done. But as he saw him now, he realized that Michael too had been suffering. He was not living. As Kitt had been, Michael was merely existing. They were nothing without each other. Michael Knight had never before had to live without Kitt, and Kitt had known nothing of life without Michael. This man no longer had control of either of their lives. Yet despite everything, Kitt loved Michael still. He just wanted things to be as they had been, if that would ever be possible.
Kitt had been barely aware of the passing of two years. But Michael had had to live every second. And when he compared the current state of the two of them, he had to conclude that he himself looked spectacular and Michael looked absolutely terrible. So he did not back away. Instead he keyed the engine and moved towards his old friend slowly and cautiously. There was the definite chance that Michael still considered him to be his wife's murderer. He was not sure if he could bear to hear again those words of abuse directed at him.
Michael knew the moment he laid eyes on the car, what it was. Who it was. Here was the
chance he had prayed for; the chance to apologize to someone he loved for destroying his
life in one quick motion. He barely dared speak in case he broke the bubble. This morning
he had woken to what he believed would be another day in hell. Now, here, the object of
his dreams and his nightmares stood before him, waiting to hear the words Michael was so
desperate to say. But there was so much. Where did he start? "Kitt?"
"...yes."
Michael squeezed his eyes shut as emotion overwhelmed him for a moment. Kitt had always
hated to see Michael upset, it distressed him now as it always had, and yet... he needed
to hear certain things before he would lay himself open to be hurt again.
"I know I could say sorry forever and it still not be adequate." Michael sat
down hard on the step he had been standing on, three up from the ground. Kitt moved a
little closer. "I knew Georgie for six weeks. And I thought I would miss her. But you
and I were together for fifteen years. I never thought it possible to ache like this; to
hurt so much that every waking minute is more miserable than the last." He hesitated,
"I'm sorry, this is so difficult...." For a moment he dissolved again into sobs,
but he forced himself together. "I thought... I'd never see you again. I didn't even
have somewhere I could go to be close to you. I wasn't sure... what they'd done, whether
they'd... whether I'd killed you.... I know you didn't do it, I know you would never hurt
anyone. I've always known it and I should have listened to you but I didn't. I'm so sorry,
Kitt, I am so sorry...."
As Michael fell forward, sobbing hard, Kitt moved towards him, taking the nose of the car to Michael's knees and catching him as he fell. Michael's fingers clutched at the warm body work beneath them as he cried. Kitt illuminated the scanner track in a familiar, gentle sweeping. "It's over now," he said quietly. "I'm here, and I missed you too."
For a very long time, Bonnie watched the reunion. Michael needed to cry himself out, to accept somewhere deep within himself that the nightmare was indeed over, and that they had the chance to rebuild their lives. After fourteen years, she believed that they had the basis to do so.
Michael finally lifted his head, his eyes swollen and blood-shot. "Oh, God...
Kitt...." His voice was choked with sorrow. "How could I have ever
thought...."
"Michael, you were upset. How could you have known?"
Finally two years of despair and self-loathing broke out of his soul, desperate to be
exorcised. "I could have believed in you. Fifteen years of partnership and friendship
and I can't tell the difference between you and that psychotic murdering freak."
"You'd just watched your wife murdered, you weren't thinking straight."
"And that's supposed to excuse me from turning my back on you?"
"Michael, listen to me." Kitt's tone held authority no one could have ignored.
"KARR's still out there. He broke us once, it was exactly what he wanted. He's always
believed that he should have been in my place, had what I had. He hated what we had at the
Foundation. Michael, I once had a home. I want that back. KARR ripped us apart."
"No, Kitt, I ripped us apart. I took your home from you and had you dismantled....
God, Kitt, you can't possibly want to work with me.... You need to find someone
else..."
Kitt backed up slightly. "Don't you dare walk away from me again. I once told you
what it was like when I was deactivated. I always believed that you'd make sure I was
looked after. But you tore me from everything I'd ever known. I know you were upset and
confused and I know you've hurt over the last two years, we've all hurt. We've hurt
enough. I don't want to lose you again. I'm not complete without you. Surely if I can
forgive you, you can find enough courage to forgive yourself."
Swallowing hard, Michael slowly nodded. Kitt quietly opened the driver's door. "Get in, Michael. Please. Let me take care of you now." Hesitatingly, clumsily, Michael stumbled from the steps around the car, not once taking his hand from the body work. He almost fell into the open door, curling into the seat. Kitt gently closed the door, hugging Michael in the warm interior.
It took time for Michael to pull himself together. When he did eventually look across to the dash, he just had to reach out and touch it. It was different from the dash in the old car. It was more modern, simpler. But all the old, familiar buttons were labelled and to the right of the steering wheel was the wonderful sight of Kitt's voice panel. More than anything in the world, at that moment, Michael wanted to see that panel light in sync with Kitt's soothing tones.
"Kitt...?"
"Michael, are you feeling better?"
He smiled, and wiped his eyes with the back of his hand. "I so want to believe that
this is really happening.... I've had this dream so often and I've always woken up."
"Not this time, Michael."
Michael sat up and curled first his fingers, and then his arm around the steering wheel.
"How can I ever make it up to you? How can I ever expect you to trust me again."
"Just give me time. I promise everything will be all right." Michael nodded,
bringing his forehead to rest against the cool leather of the wheel.
The passenger door opening startled him. He momentarily tightened his arm around the
wheel, looking up. Bonnie settled herself into the seat next to him, and met his eyes. She
too had been crying as the reunion had taken place. For some time they watched each other,
Michael snuggled up against Kitt's dash, Bonnie sitting side-on to the door. "Somehow
we have to get past this," she told him eventually.
He looked at her hopefully. "Just tell me how."
**
Bonnie lowered the hood gently, letting it settle onto the cables that needed to remain in place for a short while longer. She had removed any direct memory, of the last two years, from Kitt's systems. It would leave him aware of what had happened, but without the backlog of emptiness he would have otherwise hung onto; a backlog that would have kept him forever slightly disorientated. They could not allow that to remain, because of the probability that it would escalate into a larger problem. She did not know that before she had started work, Kitt had transferred several memories from those two years into a secondary storage. There were some things he did not want to lose. He had been silent as she had worked; although that was to be expected, as was his continued silence now. She had had to perform extensive work, and it would have been quite a shock to his systems. It was going to take some time for him to settle everything back into place and to rejoin them. Sort of like a healing sleep.
Dressed in baggy sweater and loose trousers, and still looking as though he might burst
into tears at any moment, Michael shuffled from the mansion over to the Semi now parked in
the drive. He was about to go inside, when Bonnie dropped down off the steps. "How is
he?"
Bonnie felt she could drown in the sorrow in his big brown eyes. "He's...
comfortable. It'll take a few hours for everything to filter through his systems. I've
removed all memories of the passed two years. He still knows what happened, and where he's
been, but he has no awareness of what he suffered, he knows only that it wasn't pleasant,
and that it's not an experience he would like to repeat." There was no accusation in
her tone, just fact.
In comparison, the guilt in Michael's voice was palpable. "Can I see him?"
"Of course, just be careful. It will take some time, just like it will take
you."
He nodded, and for a moment, he thought she might hug him. He could have really done with
her hugging him. But she simply smiled, and started off towards the house. Too soon.
Michael climbed the steps into the trailer and peered into the back, where Kitt was parked, monitor cables still snaking from under the hood. He did not want to say anything, he was not sure what state Kitt would be in after so much extensive work had been carried out. So instead he sat himself down on the edge of the couch, just in front of Kitt's prow, and reached a hesitant hand out to gently touch the hood. He just wanted Kitt to know that he was there.
As he sat quietly, he finally allowed himself to think back on their partnership, on good times, and on bad. He remembered back to a old enemy, more lethal than KARR, more terrifying. Goliath, built and driven by Wilton Knight's wayward son, Garth, had almost ended Kitt's life the first time they had met.
<
He tried to move his legs, but although the sand had given enough so that the car was
not crushing him, he was trapped. "Kitt?" There was no answer. "Kitt? Talk
to me." Still nothing. Michael dropped his head back to the sand, and closed his
eyes. "It... was my fault. I over-matched us. I over-matched you. I'm sorry...."
"I... think we... zigged... when we... should have zagged, Michael." The ragged
tone of Kitt's usually soft voice brought Michael back to consciousness very quickly.
"Kitt, are you okay?"
"No.... I think... I think I'm hurt." Michael tilted his head to look up into
the cabin and at the dash.
"Can you run a diagnostic?" He knew what the answer would be, he just wanted to
see the voice panel when Kitt spoke.
"No... I don't think... I can do... much... anymore."
Michael swallowed hard. Kitt was hurt. He was hurt badly. Only a couple of the LEDs were
lighting when he spoke, and his voice modulator was being flooded with some sort of
moisture. It made Kitt sound as if he was slowly drowning internally, his words punctuated
by electronic 'swallows' of his own. He was going to die if Michael did not do something
fast.
"Look, Kitt, I know you don't feel too good, but if I'm gonna help you, I need to
move." He started to try in earnest to pull his legs out from under the car's weight,
using his heels to dig down in the sand to give him some more space to work with.
"Michael... please be careful... you could be hurt too."
"I'm okay, Kitt. Is there anyway you can tip the car back onto its wheels."
"Where am I... now?"
"You're on your left hand side, Kitt. I may be trapped under you."
"Oh..." There was a note of utter despair in that word, and it scared Michael
suddenly.
"Kitt, you just stay with me. I'll be able to... wiggle free. You just concentrate on
trying to pull your systems together, okay?" Nothing. "Kitt?"
"Yes... Michael."
Kitt's voice was getting worse. Motivated by the realization that his friend had very little time left, Michael kicked and wiggled and struggled until finally he pulled his legs from under the car, leaving his shoes behind. For a moment, he lay on the hot sand, trying to get his breath back. He did not think anything was broken, although there was dried blood at the side of his mouth, he reasoned that he could have bitten his cheek or his tongue. Besides that, a few bruises, and being so very thirsty, he felt okay.
Using the car to help him balance, he stood wobbling on his feet, letting his head come to terms with the different viewpoint. He reached up and very carefully traced a hand over the topside of the car. There was a ferocious tear in the body-work, from end to end. He could see that the front side of the car was buckled completely. He prayed that the drive shaft and chassis, strengthened to take the impact of the turbo boost landings, were both still in one piece.
Somehow, he managed to open the hood. It was like opening a heavy, rusted door, and the
sound was heart breaking. The pressure of impact with the front side of Goliath had been
tremendous. The engine had been shunted across, and although it would probably be okay,
the turbines looked like they had been damaged beyond repair.
"Mi...chael...." The pain in Kitt's voice shifted his attention to where the CPU
casing was tucked in, behind the dash. He stared for a moment in horror as he saw what had
happened to it. The engine's movement had taken the casing with it, dislocating it from
many of the connectors through to the dash, but also with part of the perceptor network
within the car itself. It had been crushed up against one side of the engine compartment,
and most of the weight of the engine was now pushing on top of it. Kitt was being crushed.
"Right, Pal. We have to get the car back on to its wheels."
"Michael... I don't think I... can help."
"That's okay, Kitt. You just relax there. You let me do this." Michael ripped
off his leather jacket and wadded it up, pushing down and around the casing as best he
could, to try to absorb some of the force that was going to be asserted on it when, if, he
managed to get the car to fall back.
"This may not be very pleasant, Kitt. I'm sorry, but I have to do this."
"I... understand."
"All right, Kitt. Let's do it." Michael knew how heavy the car was, but he hoped
his determination would be enough to give him that extra edge he was going to need. He
glanced at the scanner track and saw the web of cracks in the transparent casing. He took
a long deep breath, linked his hands just inside the front of the engine compartment, and
with a shout of hope, he pulled. It was easier than he had thought it would be. The sand
gave way and Kitt started to move. Michael let go not a moment too soon, and took several
shaky steps back as the car fell heavily back onto its wheels. There was an unearthly
sound, metal crashing against metal, and then silence.
"Kitt, say something so I know you're still there. Come on, fight for me, Partner,
you have to fight. You can't give up. Please, Kitt."
"I'm... here. That wasn't... pleasant."
Michael heard the effort that it had taken for Kitt to speak, and he prayed that he was
doing the right thing. As the car came down, Michael could see the full extent of the
damage. Sharp points of ripped metal lined the right hand side, the car had been torn open
like a tin can. He dragged his attention away, and moved around to the other side of the
engine. To his relief, the jolt of the landing had jarred the majority of the engine back
to where it should have sat, and there was now nothing crushing the CPU casing. Retrieving
his jacket, and spreading it out over a fairly flat expanse of engine, Michael lifted the
battered casing.
He gazed at the complex electronics that sat before him. He had looked over Bonnie's
shoulder enough times to have some basic knowledge, but he was not sure if he could do
this without making things worse. He could not afford to make things worse.
"Michael..." Kitt's voice still emanated from the car, Michael had left all the
surviving connections in tact.
"It's okay, Pal." He peered inside the casing until he saw what he hoped was the
problem. The engine obviously wasn't as in tact as it had first appeared. There was a
think liquid covering the base of one section of the casing. Under the liquid, Michael
could make out several circuit boards. He had been right, Kitt was drowning.
Very gently, he lifted the opposite corner of the casing, wadding the jacket up
underneath to keep the corner raised, ensuring the oily substance would run out without
touching any other parts of the circuitry. Leaving behind a thin film, the liquid started
to dribble slowly out of the torn casing and on to the side of the car. Michael's strength
was quickly wearing out. "Kitt...?"
"Better... thank... you."
He definitely did sound a little better. Even once all the liquid visible was gone,
Michael knew there would be more to flow from within the circuitry. The longer he could
hold out, the better Kitt's chances of survival would be. But he had to sit down. He had
to rest. Very carefully, he slipped his hands under his jacket and lifted Kitt into his
arms, finally letting himself slide down the body of the car. With Kitt safely on his
knee, the casing tipped gently, Michael dropped his head back against the car and closed
his eyes.
It took four hours for Bonnie and Devon to find them. When the Semi drew up to the
wreckage of the Knight Industries Two Thousand, Bonnie was out of the doors before it had
stopped. She dropped to her knees beside Michael, raising her hand to his face.
"Michael, can you hear me?" There was a moment's pause, before he groaned
lightly, and struggled to open his eyes. When he saw her, he forced a smile.
"Bonnie...."
"You'll be all right now." She looked around the car, seeing the damage but
looking for the connectors. "Kitt, how about you, can you hear me?"
"Yes... Bonnie.... Is Michael...?"
"He's fine, Kitt. You're both going to be fine." It took a moment for her to
work out what Michael had been doing. She dipped her finger in the substance he had
seemingly been draining from the casing. Turbine fuel. They were lucky they had not gone
up in flames.
Michael looked down to the casing on his lap. Then he looked up at Bonnie. "He...
was drowning.... I had to do something." Bonnie nodded. She could still see some of
the fuel clinging to the circuit boards. The section of the casing that was being filled
with the fuel, through a hole punched in the casing by another part of the engine,
contained the speech modulator and the heart of the CPU's main ROM. If that compartment
had flooded, they would never have been able to get Kitt back. Michael had saved his life.
She told him so, and he just smiled, touching the casing gently.
"You'll be okay, Pal," he murmured, "you'll be okay.">>
It was a long time before Kitt felt secure enough to test the out board sensors, and
only then did he realize that his driver was sitting with him. "Michael, I'm sorry, I
didn't know you were there."
"Don't apologize Kitt, I just came to see how you were doing. I can leave...."
"Michael, please...." Quietly, the driver's door clicked open in invitation, and
Michael accepted the offer, relieved. He let himself relax back into the soft leather
seat, only vaguely aware of the new sensor banks that now cradled him.
Noting Michael's pallor, Kitt quickly scanned him. "Michael, you're suffering from
physical exhaustion. I know you haven't been well but didn't you sleep last night?"
"God Kitt, how can I sleep after what I did to you..?"
Michael swore he heard a sign from his old partner, and then the seat tipped back very
slowly to a gentle angle. "Please, relax now."
Hardly able to keep his eyes open, Michael curled himself into a ball, finding a
comfortable, familiar position. He remembered when he used to do this a lot, sleep, while
the gentle movement of the car on a usually long journey, rocked him into a peaceful
sleep. He found himself longing for those days. "Why are you doing this for me?"
he asked miserably. "You should make me sleep on the floor."
"Michael," came the quiet, soothing reply, "nothing's changed. As far as
I'm concerned, you're still my driver, my programming is still configured to protecting
your life above anything else. And I wouldn't change that for the world."
When Bonnie tried the door handle several hours later, Kitt kept the door firmly shut,
protective as ever over his sleeping partner. "It's okay, Kitt, I just wanted to give
him this blanket."
Kitt released the door, and watched as Bonnie lay the warm blanket over Michael's snuggled
form. "He needed to sleep." Kitt told her quietly.
"I know, Kitt. How are you feeling?"
"Better, thank you. I only wish Michael could forget as easily as I can."
"I don't think any of us will ever forget. But with your help, maybe we can move
on."
"I hope so, Bonnie."
**
Michael woke with a warm feeling he had not experienced in a very long time. He lifted
his head, smiling as he slowly became aware of where he was. "Morning Kitt."
A smile touched his lips when his friend responded happily. "Michael, you look much
better." He stretched a few muscles, but nothing that would disturb the warmth under
the blanket. "How long have I been out?"
"Just over 28 hours."
"28 hours!"
"I kept monitoring you. Your body needed to recover. I suggest you eat something
soon."
Michael sat up slowly, and Kitt tilted the seat to follow his movement. "We need to
talk."
"I know. Once Bonnie gives me the all-clear, and the doctor's checked you over and
given you the all-clear."
"I don't need...."
But Kitt interrupted him. "You're seeing a doctor. You should have seen one when we
got back here. You always were stubborn." Michael's heart leapt at the gentleness of
Kitt's tone, but the last two years had often felt like an eternity, and he was still
frightened that if he turned his back for a moment, he would lose it all again.
"I don't want to do anything that'll send you away again. I need you. I should have
told you a long time ago how much I... loved you. But I was always too... scared... of
us."
"There's nothing to be scared of. We can find an equilibrium between us. We worked
together in perfect harmony once. We can find that again." Michael nodded. He wanted
his old life back whatever the price, whatever it took. "And Michael, I am sorry
about Georgie."
He smiled softly. "Thanks, Kitt." Reaching for the door handle, he added,
"I won't be long."
"I'll be here."
As Michael left the Semi, Bonnie was walking towards it. She smiled at him.
"Better?"
"Much. Thanks for the blanket."
"I knew Kitt could keep you warm, but sometimes you need something to... hold on
to." He nodded, understanding perfectly. "Now you're up, the doctor wants to see
you." Gently she squeezed his arm. "You're both gonna be fine."
"We just need to spend some time together."
"Definitely. But for now, you're gonna have to spend time with him around the estate.
He needs to settle with the new body. I'd like to keep him... under observation, just for
a few days."
Michael smiled. "As protective as ever."
"Can you blame me?"
He shook his head. "However long it takes, Bonnie. And then we'll find KARR. And this
time I'm going to personally make sure every component is removed and destroyed."
**
Devon looked up from the newspaper as Michael walked through the door. "Michael...
what did the doctor say?"
"That I need to eat properly, and I need to regulate my sleeping pattern. Apart from
that, I'm okay."
"And Kitt?"
"He's all right. Bonnie wants to keep an eye on him for a few days." He finally
met Devon's gaze, finding nothing but concern there. "Is it okay if I stay here with
him?"
Devon put down his paper and stood, facing his old colleague. "I would like it if you
moved back in, Michael. Your old suite is still yours, as Bonnie's is still hers." He
held up his hand, realizing that this was a big step for them all. "Please don't
decide yet if you don't feel that you can. But at least for these few days, take your old
rooms. You can be comfortable, get some good nights' sleep, and still be close to
Kitt."
Michael smiled appreciatively. "I don't know quite what to say. Thank you. After what
I did...."
"It's in the past, dear boy. We have a lot to think about here and now."
Michael accepted Devon's invitation to take a seat for a while, at least until Bonnie
was finished with Kitt. He looked around him, at the photographs that still adorned the
walls. He tried to think of something else. "Bonnie told me that you had a new
partner?"
Devon frowned. "'Had' seems to be the operative word. Paul Henson. He designed the
new body for the car, and many of the new sensors. He was very excited about the
project."
"What happened?"
"I'm honestly not sure. I don't think he was entirely happy with my altering the
design of the car and allowing Bonnie to install Kitt. He never wanted AI involved."
Michael tilted his head in confusion. "So why did he design the AI perceptor
net?"
"..." Devon gazed at his old friend as if Michael had just developed a second
head. "I don't know."
"What happened?"
"He's gone. He had a suite upstairs. Yesterday morning one of the maids found it
cleared. He's taken everything he had."
"Strange."
"Yes. I really hadn't thought that it would upset him that much."
**
The small fire burnt close to Michael, illuminating most of the large clearing up to
the circle of trees that rose above them. Michael sat cross-legged on the ground, gazing
into the flame. He was lost in bad memories, unable to prevent them returning sometimes to
haunt him. A gentle familiar sound lifted him and he looked up. Kitt had pulled right up
to him, the nose of the car a mere yard from him. Michael smiled, watching the firelight
play on the beautiful body. Slowly he raised his hand, and the car moved until the warm
prow was pressed softly against Michael's palm. Perfect precision. "You can feel
that, Kitt?" He asked, awe mixing with pleasure in his voice.
"Yes," there was a smile in his voice. "I can feel you touching me. This
new car really is fantastic."
Michael smiled, blinking tears from his eyes. "Never leave me again, Kitt. Promise
me."
"I will never leave you." Kitt's voice was soft. "I would never have left
you."
"I know. I never imagined that I could hurt so much. I tried, when I finally realized
what I'd done, to stop the cascade. But it was too late. Bonnie had gone. And Devon
wouldn't talk to me. The only one who would even acknowledge me was Jennifer, and you were
never her favourite person."
There was a pause, and then a soft, "Michael, I have to tell you something."
He frowned. This sounded like a confession. "Okay."
"You're going to get angry."
Michael shook his head seriously. "Kitt, I promise you, I will never, ever get angry
with you again." He looked back into the fire as memories assaulted him. "I can
still see you trapped under the Semi, begging me to listen." His voice became a
breath. "So scared.... All because of me."
Kitt felt his friend's sadness deep inside. He wished he could do something to ease Michael's pain and guilt. He wished Michael could forget, as easily as he had been able to, all the suffering of the two years they had spent apart. Bonnie had said that just being there was all Kitt could do. Be there so that Michael could start to believe that this was all real. But Kitt wanted to do more. The true enemy was still out there. There was so much more that had to come out concerning what had happened. How could they go on from this point if Michael was being eaten alive by the guilt he held onto. He tried to think of something that would help....
"Michael," he said quietly, "do you remember, a long time ago, we were down in Mexico city and you were injected with a lethal dose of Anoris Cyniade? We had to drive back to LA, beat the bad guys back to retrieve the antidote?" Michael nodded. "You asked me several times on that journey how long you had left. And I told you that you couldn't ask me that. I couldn't scan you. I couldn't keep a check on your vital signs and watch you slip away from me. I had no idea how long you could have survived. I knew that you were hanging on because you were too stubborn to give up. I was so scared that you would die as I was driving. I know I came close to losing you so many times, so many close calls. But that night that I drove and told you every joke I could find just to try to keep you alive and awake. The thought of you dying... inside the car was as awful as the thought of you dying outside. If you can think about that, and understand that when I think about it, I still consider it to be the worst night of my life, then maybe we can start to move on from here."
Michael wiped his eyes and leaned forward, dropping his forehead against the body work
of the car. "You're very eloquent."
"Do you understand?"
"Yeah, Kitt." He sighed. "And I just want you to know, that you mean
everything to me too." He curled his fingers over the prow. "What did you have
tell me?"
"I want to tell you what happened that afternoon."
Michael took a deep breath. "Kitt... for the time that I knew Georgie, I treated you
like shit. I have thought about that so much over the last two years. I don't know why I
did that to you."
"You want me to take a guess?"
Kitt's offer surprised Michael. He lifted his head. "If you want."
"We were together fifteen years. Over those years, there was just us. Of course there
were women, lots of them, even one or two interested in me, but no one special. So for
fifteen years, you and I practically lived together. I would have described our
relationship, at several points over those years, as extremely intense. When you met
Georgie she gave you a chance to break out of that."
Michael gazed over the hood at the windshield, slightly awed by his friend's highly
accurate assessment the situation. "But Kitt, I shouldn't have felt the need to break
away from you."
"Maybe. Even though it... hurts to realize it, I do understand why you felt you had
to, even if it wasn't a conscious decision. A relationship so intense... with a
machine.... It's not natural, is it?"
Michael shook his head in denial. "That's not true. I had a long time to comes to
terms with your existence, with what you are. I wouldn't have consciously pulled away from
you because you're... a machine. It's been a very long time since I saw you in those terms
anyway."
"I'm not saying that it was a conscious decision." A sad note entered his voice.
"We were very close."
Michael sighed. He had done it, that was what mattered. Now he had a chance to make up for
the hurt he had caused. "I understand why you didn't want to be at the wedding. I
don't blame you. I understand why you weren't there."
"No, you don't. There's more to it. A lot more."
Michael sat back, rubbing some life back into his legs. "You don't have to
explain."
"I want to, I want you to know where your partner was when your wife was murdered.
Because I should have been there for you. And for Georgie. It was my fault, Michael."
"Don't say that. I know it's not true."
"Just listen to me, please? After you met Georgie, I started going for drives at
night. I felt that I'd lost you, and I was starting to feel like I would never get you
back. One night I went down to the coast. As I watched the waves, I realized that I wasn't
alone. There were signals coming into our private channel. Signals only KARR could have
been sending." Michael paled. "Before I knew it, he was sitting beside me. For a
while we just sat there, like everything before just hadn't happened. I asked him what had
happened, how it was possible for him to be there, and he told me that he'd been rescued,
rebuilt by someone who actually cared about him."
"Wait, Kitt." Michael was shaking his head. "Are you telling me that
KARR...." He waved his hands about in the air, "...and you never said a
word?"
"Please, Michael. Just listen. He told me that he'd had a limiting program installed,
to stop him killing or hurting anyone. He asked me to scan him so that I would believe
him, and he dropped all his defences so that I could. There was a functioning delimiter, a
dominant program to preserve human life. He told me that he wanted to come home, but that
he was scared that Devon would have him deactivated again. I reassured him that I wouldn't
let that happen, but he wasn't convinced.
"He drove away eventually, and I just let him go. I checked police bands for a few
days but there was nothing reported that suggested KARR was on one of his usual rampages.
And a couple of nights later I went back to the coast and he was waiting for me. This
time, he had Paul Henson with him." Michael's eyes widened when he heard the name.
"I'm sorry, Kitt, but do you mean Paul Henson... as in Devon's friend?"
"Yes."
"So that's why he cleared out. He hadn't counted on Bonnie and Devon reactivating
you."
"No, Michael. He had always meant this car for me. He cleared out because he knew it
was my price for not saying anything to Devon." His voice quieted, and he added,
almost to himself, "He always knew it would be the price." Michael stared at his
friend, confusion all over his face. "Please, let me finish. The first night I met
Paul, he told me about his anger at KARR's mistreatment. That the technicians at the
Knight Industries labs could have changed his programming, but instead they chose to keep
him prisoner, locked in a box, aware but unable to speak, or hear, or feel, or move. And
Paul... showed me some... affection. I told him about you and Georgie - I'm sorry Michael,
I just wanted to talk."
Michael reached across the short distance and touched Kitt, gently stroking the prow of
the hood. "KARR asked me to talk to you, about him returning to the Foundation. I
tried to talk to you, but after a couple of attempts, I started to feel that I didn't want
you to know about KARR, that you might try to stop him... existing. I looked at Paul and
KARR and I saw some of what you and I had, and Paul gave me back some of what I'd lost. I
met up with them seven times over three weeks, the final time on the eve of your wedding.
I told KARR that I didn't want to go, and Paul suggested I spend the day at their garage
in Phoenix. So I went. As soon as I was within scanning distance I checked the address
they'd given me. I found electronic equipment and KARR's signature. When I got there, it
was a garage, it was KARR's garage, all the right equipment was there and I could sense...
Paul had been there. But neither were there then. I headed back as fast as I could, I
tried to contact you but..."
"...I had the comlink switched off." Michael finished softly.
"Yes. By the time I got back it was over. Everything was over."
They sat for a long time in silence. Finally, Kitt began to worry. "Please,
Michael, say something."
"It wasn't your fault." He stared at Kitt for a moment. "How close did you
and Paul get?"
Kitt was only slightly surprised, but selfishly pleased that Michael had asked. "Not
as close as you and I. Not nearly."
"But he designed this car for you, as you said. He designed the new sensor
nets." Michael paused, jealousy hitting him harder than he would ever have thought it
would have in this situation. "He must have... felt a lot... for you." Kitt did
not say anything for a short time. But he knew where this conversation needed to go. Paul
Henson was for another time.
"I'm sorry I told him about you and Georgie. I didn't know what KARR would do. I
should have thought it through."
Michael shook his head, his attention turned. "It wasn't your fault, Kitt. We all
should have believed in each other. I shouldn't have treated you the way I did. KARR won.
Like you said, he broke us up, took us away from each other. I won't let him do that
again. We'll find him, Kitt. Somehow."
There was a brief silence, and then, "There's more." Michael looked up, trying
to keep the surprise from his expression, aware now of Kitt's increased awareness of him.
"At some point during my deactivation, KARR contacted me. He found his way into my
CPU, I guess I let him in." Michael's eyes widened. "He feed me sensations until
Bonnie reactivated me."
"Kitt.... Why?"
"Michael, when you're lost and alone in the dark, you go towards any light, no matter
what it turns out to be; sunshine or fire. KARR was the first familiar voice I had heard
in so long, I hadn't felt anything until he gave me a link to the outside world. I had no
idea when or if anyone would return for me. What choice did I have?"
"But KARR... after everything that had happened.... You knew you couldn't trust
him."
"I once thought I could trust you," Kitt's tone was infinitely gentle, but the
moment the words were out he could sense Michael's sorrow. "...I'm sorry, that
was..."
"No, Kitt, it's okay. But after what KARR did... you knew what he'd done."
"I know. But what else was there for me? I didn't know if I was going to be in that
state forever. KARR was my only chance."
Again Michael felt the sharp edge of guilt cut at him. He moved his hand until it was just
above the scanner, gently touching the track with his thumb. "He could have killed
you." He whispered.
There was a pause. And almost as quietly, Kitt answered him. "I know. I really didn't
care."
Michael continued the gentle stroking, finding himself with a much-missed feeling of
closeness to his partner. He wondered if it was just wishful thinking. "I thought
Bonnie had removed any memory of what you experienced."
"I backed a lot up into storage. I know why she had to remove what she did, and I
agreed to that. But there were some things I didn't want to lose.
"Does she know?"
"No. You won't...?"
"I won't tell her. I know it's going to be difficult for you to ever trust me again,
but I'd like to try to regain your trust. If you'll let me."
Kitt almost sighed. "What can I do to convince you that nothing's changed between
us?" Michael shook his head, suddenly realizing that he was crying. Kitt felt his
tears fall slowly on to the body of the car. "Michael...."
"I'm sorry.... I'm finding it difficult...."
Kitt thought for a moment, and then opened the driver's door. "Come with me
somewhere. Please."
Michael sat back and slowly clambered to his feet. As he sat inside the car, letting Kitt
close the door and start the engine, he asked, "Where we going?"
"Somewhere that I hope will finally drive home what I'm trying to say to you."
The car had been in motion for half an hour before Michael realized where they were
headed. Five minutes later Kitt drew the car to a halt. They were out in the Nevada
desert, in a specific place. Away from the road; the stars above them, sand dunes to the
left and right. "Do you know where we are?"
Michael nodded. "Yes."
"Do you remember the last time we were here?"
"Yes."
<< Michael pulled onto the side of the road, breathing a sigh of relief. Out in the dunes the white shell of the unfinished Trans-Am looked almost translucent. That afternoon had been the second 'heated discussion' in so many days; this whole nightmare had been stressful on everyone involved, but he had seen the grief in Bonnie's eyes when they had hauled the car out of the pit.
Yesterday he had only wanted to hear Kitt talk to him again, had only wanted to hear his old partner, because he had been so unsure if he would never hear him again. But he had not thought through the consequences, had not really thought that Kitt could be that frightened now. He should have known when his friend had panicked, believing Bonnie had left him. He was clinging to Bonnie, to the fact that only she could help him recover after his ordeal. But Michael had ignored all that, and paid the price, of Kitt's fear, and of Bonnie's fury; the result of her love for Kitt, for her baby.
And then this afternoon, at the test track, he had frightened Kitt again. He just wanted his partner back, he had just wanted to show some belief in him. But he had yelled at Kitt, he had let the scientists' words scare him. He did not want to lose his partner, and it had upset him to think that they would consider splitting them up, turning Kitt into a 'recreational vehicle'. So he had told Kitt in no uncertain terms that they were going fix the problems and take on the track together. And Kitt had taken off.
Finally he had tracked his partner out to here. He approached quietly, not wanting to
do any more damage. "Kitt, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to upset you."
Kitt waited until Michael had opened the driver's side door. "I'm sorry, Michael. I
failed you."
"No, Pal." Michael sat down and swung his legs under the partially completed
dash. "You didn't fail me, you didn't fail any of us. I shouldn't have yelled at you,
after everything you've been through. But I miss you. I just wanted to... instil some
belief in you."
"Dr Vreeman wants to reassign me, doesn't he?"
"Yeah. But I'm not going to let them. You're mine, Kitt. And I will fight for you
every step of the way. They are not taking you away from me."
"I don't know if I can go back out, Michael. It was... painful."
"Vreeman said that... you'd been hurt, and that it was understandable that you would
try to prevent yourself from being hurt again." He touched the dash. "They
really care for you. They don't want to see you hurt. And I never, ever want to go through
this again."
"I don't know how to get over this."
Michael smiled gently. "Do you trust me?"
"Yes. With my life."
"Good. Because I want you to trust me to get you through this. I will get you through
this. Like you got me through the first few weeks after I was shot. You were there for me,
I'm here for you."
There was a quite pause. "I'm sorry I left... Bonnie must be so worried."
"I phoned her when I found you. I promised her I would bring you home."
"I'm ready when you are."
Michael looked around him, remembering what he had seen just after they had pulled the car
from the pit. "When we first got you back into the Semi, Bonnie told me... that you'd
gone. I thought for a minute that I'd never... speak to you again, never hear your voice
again." He dropped the volume of his voice to a low murmur. "I didn't want to
leave you in that pit, you understand that, don't you? There was nothing I could do....
And I've been feeling guilty about leaving you helpless, calling out for me.... I know
yesterday I was expecting too much from you, too soon. And I'm sorry about that too."
"Are you going to keep apologizing?" There was a smile in that voice, and
Michael smiled in response.
"Until I know you believe me. You needed me yesterday, like you needed me that night.
And I wasn't there for you. I should have sat with you, talked to you, reassured you;
instead I just walked away."
"You came back. And you're here now."
Michael patted the dash. "Kitt.... I know you have... other things on your mind
right now, but I need to ask you something."
"Anything."
"I know... you have... feelings. I know you're frightened now even if you won't admit
it. And once you told me that you were extremely fond of... Michael Knight...."
Kitt broke in, knowing where this was going and wanting to allay at least the fears of one
of them. "I'm yours, Michael. Now, and always." >>
"Now and always, Michael. I meant it then, and I still mean it now. And I believe
that if you didn't still believe in me, you wouldn't be wearing my gift to you."
Instinctively, Michael touched his fingers to his St. Christopher pendent. "I just
couldn't find my faith in you when you needed it most."
"Stop blaming yourself. It was partly my fault anyway. If hadn't told them about
Georgie...."
"And if I hadn't started to ignore you, to find any excuse not to spend time alone
with you, if I could have faced hearing the lonely undertones in your voice that developed
because of me...."
"Michael.... I wish I could reach out and hold you and make all the pain go away.
Like you did for me after Acid John's pit, after Goliath, after the missile... We need to
rediscover our trust in each other. But I know you won't do that if you're worrying about
saying something or doing something that would upset me, or make me turn away from you. I
need you to know that's not going to happen. We may have the odd argument over the next
few weeks, and you may end up walking in one direction and me driving away in the other.
But I promise you that within the hour, I'll return, and so will you."
Michael dropped his forehead against the steering wheel. "Now and always, Kitt.
That's a promise."
**
Over the next few days, there were arguments. But not between Michael and Kitt. The two talked constantly, never apart for more than a few minutes, they made up quickly for the time they had lost and the pain they had suffered. Michael slept in the car each night, waking to Kitt's warmth in the mornings, as he had dreamt of doing for so long.
Bonnie was happy just to sit back and let them get to know each other once again. She was indescribably glad to be back where she belonged. She worked in the Semi, and started to get back into the swing of things. Slowly, she began to prepare for when her life returned to normal.
Michael had taken to spending long evenings out in the Nevada desert with Kitt. Being out here reminded him of the freedom he had been granted, freedom from his self-inflicted prison of guilt and pain. He had always loved to spend hours and hours simply sitting, looking up at the stars and being close to his partner. This night he sat with his legs up across the passenger seat, leaned back into the warm leather. He had quickly come to easy terms with the increased sensitivity Kitt had of him; the sensors in the finely grained leather, the lens in the dash and the perceptors that were scattered throughout the cabin. To Michael, the advanced technology simply made him feel that Kitt was less of a machine than he had ever been. He enjoyed the knowledge that when he patted the dash, Kitt could not only feel the vibration of the action, but the warmth and caress of his skin.
These thoughts, this night, lead him to remember what Kitt had said about Henson. For years before Georgie had entered his life, there had been... a connection between he and Kitt. A bond so strong each had believed that it could never be broken. It was only to be expected really. They used to spend weeks together, with only each other as company. Together they witnessed terrible things, shared grief and loss; Kitt was his shoulder when he needed to cry, his confidant when he needed to talk. Together they shared jokes, celebrated happy events, saved lives, helped people. Together they were invincible. That was a very intoxicating feeling. To share something that strong, that special, with someone else, was something Michael knew did not happen in every lifetime. He tried not to take Kitt for granted.
He knew it was his fault that Paul had found an opening. He knew that if he had not have wrapped himself so intensely and so quickly in Georgie, that Kitt would have gotten used to there being someone else in their lives. It would have eventually worked. Their lives. That was where Michael knew he had gone wrong. He had been so used to thinking of Kitt as another person, that he had forgotten that he also had to regard Kitt as a ward. Accepting Kitt as his own had been a responsibility that Michael had willingly taken on, as he had taken responsibility for the whole of the Knight 2000 project. He had turned his back on Kitt so quickly, so suddenly and easily, that thinking back on it, his own actions scared him. He had abandoned Kitt. He had given KARR and Paul a chance, and a reason.
"Kitt?"
"Yes?"
"Will you ever tell Devon who Paul was, and what he did?"
"No."
"Why?" Kitt did not answer him. Michael was almost glad, unsure whether or not
he wanted to know. A moment later, he knew he had to. "Please, Kitt."
"Paul wasn't driving KARR that afternoon, he wasn't even inside the vehicle. KARR
acted on his own, it was his idea, his plan, not Paul's. I believe that Paul has been
punished for his part."
"How?"
"I don't think he counted on my wanting to find you. I think he thought..."
"That you would go with him?"
"I think so."
Michael thought for a while. "You must have really made an impression on him. He
cared for you a great deal if he put so much effort into designing the car and developing
the outboard sensor net. Did he come to you, before he left?"
"Yes."
Michael reached his hand over, pulling back just before his fingers touched the voice
panel. "Why didn't you go with him?"
"I would never have gone with him. I have a family, I have people I... love, very
much. I wanted to be with them. I wanted to be with you."
Michael sighed gently, and reached that final inch to touch the smooth voice panel. For a
long time they both sat quietly, the physical connection enough to allow the continuing
rebuild of their friendship and their partnership. For the last two years Michael had
thought about precious little else but being back with Kitt; hearing the affection that
had always been clear in his voice, feeling the warmth and safety he had always gotten
from being close to his partner. Now he had that back, he revelled in it as much, and as
often as he could. Never would he let them be separated again.
There were arguments. Most of them were between Devon and Jennifer Knight. News spread, and it was not long before the Board found out that Kitt had been reactivated and installed in the first car of the new range. Jennifer was furious. She stormed into Devon's office early, the morning after the news had broken.
"Devon, I don't know what you think you are doing, but you will order the
deactivation of that car right now."
Devon looked up from his morning paper, and reached for his tea cup. "Good morning,
Jennifer. Tea?"
"No, I don't want tea! I want to know why the Knight Two Thousand computer has been
reactivated without the Board's agreement or even knowledge!"
"Please, Jennifer, if you'd just sit down, I'll explain."
Wilton Knight's daughter sat sullenly. She was the type of person who liked to think that
their opinions and vote actually had some bearing on what happened around them, even if it
did not. She neither liked, nor disliked Michael. But she had been happy to help him move
out of her life. Her father had left her some money, and a seat on the Board. But FLAG had
gotten the mansion, and Devon and Michael had gotten the rest of the money. She had been
happy enough, money was not as important to her as power, and she was more than pleased
with the seat on the Board.
But she utterly despised Kitt. She would never talk to him directly, would always ask questions of others, even if they would then have to ask Kitt for the answer. To Jennifer, Kitt was an expense they did not need, a waste of money and effort. He was stubborn, moody and not at all like she believed a computer should be. But in real life, her vote did not count for much. The majority of the Board were - or at least, had been - all in favour of the Knight 2000 project, because of the fantastic success it enjoyed, and the backup it gave to FLAG's legal work. It was good to fight on the side of the law, but now and again, it was great to be able to hang the bad guys by their testicles and leave them out to dry. Kitt and Michael made that part possible.
So Kitt had been safe from her, protected by Michael, by the technical team who had designed and built him, by the people who looked after and maintained him, and finally by FLAG itself. The best Jennifer could ever find to do was kick a tyre now and again. When Michael had accused Kitt of murdering his wife, Jennifer had pushed the Board into making a hasty decision and deactivating Kitt. Now, it seemed, the authority she had believed she possessed over that decision, had been stepped on. She was not happy.
Devon knew all this. He could not wipe the smile off his face, although he tried to
make sure it was not mocking. He folded the newspaper and placed it onto the desk, sipping
at his tea. "Are you sure you won't have some tea?"
"Devon! Will you please tell me, on whose authority the Knight 2000 computer was
brought back on line."
"It's a strange thing, Jennifer. There was a break in. The next thing we knew, the
computer had been installed into the first of the Three Thousand series. All we had to do
was switch Kitt back on, so we did."
"I want him deactivated."
Devon sat back, shaking his head. "I'm sorry. Kitt stays."
Jennifer tried a different track. "But what's the point, Devon? Without a driver,
he's just a computer in a car."
"But we have a driver, Jennifer. We've always had a driver."
Jennifer smiled. "Michael won't come back. Kitt murdered his wife! That computer is a
danger, a threat to all of us."
The humour left Devon's voice and eyes. "Kitt wouldn't hurt anyone, we both know it.
Michael came back because he knows it too. You will leave both Kitt, and Michael, alone.
This has gone way beyond a Board decision now. The Knight 2000 project was your father's
dying wish. Now you may think it's time to let go, but you may find some members of the
Board do not share your views." He smiled politely. "Good day, Jennifer."
**
A week after Bonnie had reunited them, Devon handed Michael and Kitt the list of possible KARR sightings he had spent the time compiling. The majority of the early sightings were around Salt Lake City, moving on to Cheyenne, and most recently into the Denver area. Moving East. Bonnie was giving Kitt one final systems check when Michael wandered into the Semi early Monday morning.
"Good morning, people." There was a bounce in Michael's voice that Bonnie had
not heard for over two years. Bonnie looked up from out of Kitt's hood. She smiled in
response to Michael's cheer.
"Good morning."
Michael moved up to the driver's side and leant into the open window. "Hi,
Michael." He gently patted the leather just inside the door before looking around to
where Bonnie was just finishing up.
"Is he ready?"
"He's in perfect health." She stood, switching off the monitors and removing the
cables from within the engine. "I hope the same can be said for you?"
"I've had the all-clear from Doctor Alpert, thank you very much." He smiled at
her. "We'll both be careful."
"I should hope so." She finally dropped the hood. "You can go. But I want
to meet you tomorrow night on the way into Cheyenne with the Semi, just to check he's
stable."
"That's not a problem." Michael opened the door and slipped into the driver's
seat. He keyed the engine and turned to watch the Semi's ramp lower. He had not done this
in over two years, he hoped he could still remember how to. It was not as easy as it often
looked.
It felt amazing to be on the road again with his partner. Kitt's turbine engine hummed
a perfect tune as the car ate the highway up hungrily. For so long he had believed that he
would never feel like this again. He watched the expression on Michael's face, knowing it
to be one of pleasure. "Michael?"
"Yeah, Kitt?"
"It's good to be back."
"It certainly is. It's fantastic." He gazed down at the dash. "Partner,
there's something I need to know. Are you okay with chasing down KARR, after everything
that's happened between you two?"
There was a note of anger in Kitt's voice when he replied. "Are you saying that you
can't trust me?"
"No. No, Kitt, nothing like that. I'm asking you if you're all right with this. I
know he's... helped you, when I wasn't there for you. He's been your... brother recently
more than ever before. I know he means something to you now."
Kitt responded instantly. "He killed Georgie. No matter what you might think I
thought of her, you loved her. KARR took her life. That makes him a murderer. How could I
ever... feel anything but hatred and repulsion for someone like that?"
"But you allowed him into your CPU..."
"I told you before, it was that or suffer the darkness alone. I'll be here for you
when we go up against KARR. Don't worry about that."
Michael nodded, not really wanting to push any further. He had no right to question Kitt's
actions or feelings now. But their lives may end up depending on Kitt's reactions at a
critical moment. "And if Paul went back to him? If he's with him?"
Kitt was silent for a moment, and Michael started to wander if Paul had meant as much to
Kitt as his partner had so obviously meant to Paul. But Kitt's answer finally put his
worries to rest. "There's a line, Michael. It divides us from the people we go after.
They chose to walk on that side of it, we chose to walk on this side. When I first met
Paul, I imagined he was standing on the same side of the line that we were. I still think
that he may be on the same side. But if he does chose to return to KARR, after what he
knows KARR did, he chooses, at the same time, to stand on KARR's side of the line."
He paused, and his voice softened. "Was that the question you were actually asking,
or did you want me to assure you that no one could ever replace you in my life? Because no
one could. I thought I'd made that clear." He ended with a smile-filled note.
Michael grinned. "I'm sorry, Kitt. You have. I guess... I'm nervous. I haven't done
this for a while."
"It'll be like riding a bicycle," Kitt reassured him, "once you learn, you
never forget."
Michael chuckled. "Like you'd know!"
**
As their rendezvous time with Bonnie approached, they were nowhere near locating KARR's trail, never mind the vehicle itself. All the leads over the passed two days had lead to a dead-end. Still, Michael could not describe himself as down, or disheartened. He had Kitt scanning the police bands as they went state-to-state. But there were reports of anything that KARR might have been involved with. Much as he wanted KARR in little tiny pieces, he was where he had dreamed of being for too long.
As they drove together, chased up leads, broke into computer records, they both felt the old comradeship returning. Over fifteen years, Michael and Kitt had travelled together; worked together, holidayed together, laughed and cried together. Now, they were starting to feel that again. Overnight they travelled from Salt Lake City to Cheyenne. Kitt drove to let Michael get some sleep, but Michael was happy just to look up at the stars, and to talk to his partner. Kitt had asked him what he had done in the two years that they had been apart. At the start, Michael had been unwilling to tell Kitt how he had lived while his partner was sitting deactivated in a box in a dusty lab.
But Kitt had wanted to hear, he wanted to know. It was late at night, the stars were
out, and the car was sitting just off the side of the deserted highway. The scenery was
magnificent around here. As Michael had finished talking about Europe, Kitt had pulled
over. "You describe it so well."
"I wish you had been there. Nothing was the same without you to share everything
with. For the first time in fifteen years, I was alone. I missed you." He finished
lamely, unable to put into words just how much he had missed his partner. There was very
little that they had not shared over the years.
"I know." There was a long pause, before Kitt attempted to change the subject.
"You asked me yesterday if I was comfortable with the idea of going after KARR. What
about you? Are you going to be able to think straight when you face Georgie's
murderer?"
Michael thought about that. KARR had hurt and killed so many people during his existence,
and they all mattered; they all deserved justice. But everything KARR did served his one
dominant program. So could he be blamed for his actions? It was the same for Kitt. His
actions, albeit only up to a point, were dictated by his dominant program to protect human
life, specifically Michael's life. But unlike KARR, Kitt had developed the ability to
think situations through exceptionally quickly, and to draw a conclusion of his own,
rather than blindly follow his programming. He had had to develop that skill. Because as
they found out one night, many years ago, in a given situation, his programming could lead
to a paradox. And that was dangerous for both of them.
<< It would be later that Michael would start to wonder, because at the time everything happened too fast for him to work it out. He had walked into a trap; it was as simple as that. Kitt had warned him. His partner had not trusted Carrie from the moment they had met her. But Michael had had little choice but to act on the information she had given to him; it was their only lead and Devon was threatening to take them off the case if they did not come up with something soon.
The apartment was on the ground floor of the modern building. It was all tinted glass and gleaming metal frames. The front door lock code that Carrie had given to him worked, and the key she had slipped into his hand fitted the lock. The moment he turned the key, several baffling things happened. He remembered a sound, rising quickly in pitch. Then at the moment he saw the ball of flames, and heard the explosion that had caused it, he also heard a sound from behind him; an engine revving at a frightening speed, and an almighty shattering of glass and screeching of metal folding against metal. There was a sensation of flying. Then he handed, and just before the heat became unbearable, everything went away.
In comparison, Kitt's memories of the events were accurate in every detail. He had been suspicious of Carrie from the start, and he started the engine and shifted into gear the moment Michael was out of earshot. Just in case, he had told himself. He monitored everything around them. He had scanned the apartment for people, when Michael had asked him to. And now he scanned for other things. His signal to Michael's comlink had been drowned out by the bomb exploding. He had never accelerated so fast in his life. He crashed in through the double entrance doors in time to see Michael land a few feet from him. He continued forward in one fluid motion until Michael's unconscious form was beneath the car, protected from the flames and heat that were becoming almost unbearable.
Kitt notified the fire crew and paramedics, then he called Devon. After that, there was not much that he could do. His meagre supply of CO2 and water was not going have much of an effect on the intense blaze now burning around them. He continuously monitored Michael's vital signs. And then he heard screaming. A quick scan showed him a young man trapped at the end of the corridor. He was calling out, not moving, bunched up dangerously in one corner. Kitt raised the volume of his voice and told the man in no uncertain terms that he had to break into one of the nearest apartments and get out of one of the windows. But the man was too scared by now to move of his own accord. Kitt fought with his programming. He had to try to save the man's life - he was programmed to do so. But moving would mean Michael's death. Without a doubt. And that was unacceptable. Desperately he tried to find a solution, all the while repeating his order to the stranger.
They were the longest seven minutes of his life. When the fire crews finally managed to put out the flames, and the paramedics got to the injured, the man in the corridor was dead. Michael was taken to hospital, but discharged after only a few hours. Kitt's lightening reaction had saved his life. But all was not well. Michael ignored his doctor's orders - not for the first time - and stayed up that night with his distraught partner, trying to help him make sense of what he called, 'a bitter waste of human life'. Kitt had managed to make himself feel responsible for not finding the explosive earlier, for not being forceful enough in his commands to the stranger, for not being able to save both men. Michael had been in so much of a hurry to get in and out of the apartment they had only completed a cursory scan. There were no answers. Michael could only be there as proof that Kitt had done the right thing, and had obeyed his dominant program. That was all anyone could do. >>
"To tell you the truth, Kitt," he replied eventually, "I think I may
need your help when we face off with KARR. At least we both want the same thing."
"Yes. Any trace of KARR wiped off this earth."
It was a while before either spoke again. The Semi would not be at the meeting place
for another couple of hours. Michael started the engine and took control, moving the car
further away from the road, into one of the mountain passes. When he stopped again, they
both took in the breath-taking scenery.
"It is so beautiful out here," Kitt said softly. "It's so peaceful; so
different from the cities we've been chasing through."
Michael smiled. He remembered the first time he had heard Kitt talk like this; finding
beauty in the world around him. His partner no longer surprised him. He still amazed him
though, no longer through his mere existence, but the humanity he found within himself.
"This isn't go to be an easy road, is it, Partner?" Michael murmured.
"Sometimes I just wish we could return to how things were without having to face the
devil first."
Kitt's voice panel lit up. "Are you talking about KARR or Paul?"
Michael smiled, despite himself. "I don't know."
"I can assure you that KARR isn't the devil. Although he does seem immortal
sometimes. And as for Paul, he's just a human being."
"There is the real danger that Paul knows everything about this car, including its
weaknesses."
"We have tested everything over and over again." Kitt tried to reassure. Michael
nodded. He knew that was why Bonnie was continuously re-checking everything; because Paul
had designed this body, and maybe Paul had planned for this particular eventuality.
There were also the unknown dangers. People got unpredictable under pressure. At least,
Michael knew in his heart, he could still trust Kitt when it came to the final showdown.
That one, dominant program was still in place, after all the years, all the pain, his
primary function was protect Michael's life. "I do understand, after everything
that's happened.... I doubt either of us could possibly be the same as we were. I just
want the chance to start again, to try to rebuild what we had on what we've got."
He watched the LEDs dance with Kitt's voice. "I'm more than happy to give you that
chance."
"In that case, I'm with you all the way. God, Kitt, let's get this over with and get
back to our way of life."
There was a satisfied hum in Kitt's engine as they headed out to the rendezvous point.
**
Ant smiled to himself as he stepped out onto the stage. The crowd before them were going wild. All this shouting and screaming seemed like overkill to him. But he knew Mike and Jon loved the attention. He smiled shyly, blinking in the brightness of the spots that suddenly bathed the stage in red and white light. Jon yelled his greeting to the audience, and in absolute sync, Ant and Mike started the first number. This was what they lived for.
**
Three days later, Michael and Kitt were called back to the Knight mansion, Bonnie claiming that there were some more tests she would like to run on one or two of Kitt's new functions, and Devon assuring Michael it would give them a chance to discuss a plan of action. It was only when he walked into office, that Michael realized there was something more going on than just them touching base.
Bonnie was sitting with a manila folder on the table in front of her, Devon was behind
his desk at usual, looking almost sheepish. They both smiled as he opened the door.
"Thanks for coming in." Bonnie stood and approached him, lifting his right wrist
and checking the comlink. "You keep voice transmission switched off?"
"Sure." He looked at her, totally confused. "Why? What's going on?"
"You'd better sit down."
Michael accepted Devon's offer of a coffee, and sat down on the couch, wondering what
they had to say to him that could not be said in front of his partner.
"Michael," Bonnie started, "you remember when we had Dr Bergstrom over?
When you were showing he and his niece that sights, before all the trouble with Goliath
started again?"
"Yes...."
"And you remember storming in here one night asking about Kitt's past?"
"Yes...."
<< The office door flew open and struck the bookcase behind it
with a very impressive crack. It was just a pity there was no one
around to appreciate it. A surprised Devon stepped in to the room from
behind him. "Can I help, Michael?"
He stared at him for a moment, looking almost hurt. "When were you going to tell
me?"
Devon stopped in front of his desk. "Tell you what?"
"About Kitt. About his past. About Washington."
Devon sighed deeply and sat down. "I didn't think it was something you really needed
to know."
"You didn't think I needed to know. He's my partner, my best friend, the guy I
practically live with, do you get the picture? We're having a nice, pleasant discussion
with Dr Bergstrom and suddenly Kitt comes out with something about being brought on line
in a mainframe in Washington. I couldn't believe it." Michael deflated slightly.
"I thought... I thought he was... created for me."
"The car was created for you, Michael, not Kitt. Not at first, anyway." Devon
wanted to be angry, but he found himself touched by Michael's obvious hurt. "Why
don't you sit down, and I'll explain."
Devon watched Michael's anxious face for a short while, wondering where to start. This
really was not something he thought he was ever going to have to explain. "I take it,
you haven't asked Kitt about this."
"When he was talking to us, he sounded okay with it, but when I brought it up again,
I got the impression it wasn't something he wanted to discuss."
"No. As you know, Michael, your appearance here was some thing of a surprise; Wilton
had planned to approach you some weeks later, but Tanya and her friends managed to force
us to forward our schedule. KARR was ready in plenty of time. But during one of test
sessions, he killed a man involved in one of the reconstructions. We obviously realized
that we would have to start from scratch, redesign the programming based around a
different set of... rules, if you like. But KARR had taken years to code. Wilton also
wanted a new car - the old one had the blood of a man on it, and Wilton was very
superstitious. That was the easy part. Getting hold of a new Pontiac body and altering it
for our needs took only a matter of weeks. But to re-code an entire system, something as
complex as what we needed.... Then a friend of Wilton's heard about an AI project that the
government had been working on, but that wasn't running to plan. Wilton and I flew over
there, and met up with the project leaders. The system was being called I.S.D.R. -
Intelligent Satellite Data Retreival. But to tell you the truth, they seemed to have lost
interest in the whole thing, they weren't giving the system the hardware and money that it
needed and they were wondering why it was making so many mistakes. Wilton could see the
potential in the system at a first glance, but he hated the Government, and he knocked
them down to a piteously low price. When we got back home after agreeing a deal, Bonnie
contacted us. She had been responsible for designing and developing the I.S.D.R system.
She said that they were going to reassign her. But she wanted to stay with the system that
she'd designed. She had some special connection with the system that we didn't understand
at first."
He paused, smiling at the memories in his head. "Until we met it - him. He conveyed
humanity, humility, even a sense of humour to a point. Wilton was slightly worried about
his attachment to Bonnie, but she reassured as that it was just due to what he had endured
at the Government offices, and that within days he would be ready for his new assignment.
You.
"We started calling him Kitt when he was placed in the car, we had to call him
something. He was so excitable, Bonnie had to alter the code slightly, to calm him down.
But those first days were incredible," he looked straight at Michael, and the younger
man could see the remembered joy in those eyes. "After being stuck in a mainframe
environment, being given the freedom of mobility the car provided, the senses that the
perceptors allowed, and the sensors and scanners; it was like setting him free. It was
almost like having a very playful child around the place. When Bonnie added the new code,
it was as if he had grown up over night."
When he had finished, Michael was smiling. "I would have loved to have been there.
I wasn't aware that Kitt had had... a childhood. I just wanted to know... everything about
him. I've been telling him about who I was before...."
"Not even I know exactly what he went through in Washington, Michael. Only Bonnie
knows that. He wasn't even 'Kitt' back then."
"But he still remembers, therefore his experiences still colour who he is now."
Devon looked worried. "I think if it was going to cause a problem, we would have seen
it by now."
But Michael shook his head. "That's not what I meant. Kitt is...." He faltered.
"He's very special to me, and if there are things in his past that are still
bothering him, I want him to be able to talk to me."
"Well, Michael, if you're talking openly to him, I'm sure he will do the same, when
he's ready." >>
Michael looked from Devon to Bonnie. "Of course I remember."
"Devon didn't tell you everything."
Michael sighed, "What did he miss out?"
"I had an assistant, when I was working on the ISDR system. A Mark Rochester. He
helped design very intrigal parts of the coding that made up the neural networks the whole
system was based on. He was there when the system was switched on, when the first neural
paths were being laid down."
Michael smiled gently, "You mean, when Kitt was born."
Bonnie nodded, returning his smile. "If you want to put it that way. Yes. He had
almost as great an influence on those first paths as I did."
"So why didn't he come with you when Wilton bought the system."
"Because he didn't see the system as anything particularly special. He was very happy
living in Washington, and besides if I left, he got an instant promotion. He was very
happy for me to take our work to the next stage elsewhere. He was a good man, a good
friend and a wonderful person to work with."
"Why are you telling me this?"
"When Devon first introduced me to Paul, I thought he looked vaguely familiar. There
was a reason for that. Before he changed his name just over two years ago, he was Mark
Rochester. Paul Henson is, in a way, Kitt's father."
The colour drained from Michael's face. He looked up at Devon. "Does Paul
know?"
"I have no idea. He never mentioned it, never said that he was part of the ISDR team.
He never asked about Bonnie."
"Would Kitt know? Would he have remembered him?"
Bonnie shook her head. "I doubt it, Michael. Kitt wasn't Kitt back in Washington. He
was a coded AI machine, more advanced then anything else around, but still just a
collection of neural nets. He learnt almost frighteningly quickly. But there were no
interpersonal relationships for him, it was just learning to do a set of tasks. Besides,
in the garage Kitt only saw Paul for the same length of time that I did."
There was silence for a moment, and then Michael shook his head. "I can't tell you
everything I know, but you have to believe me; Paul knew Kitt for six weeks, two years
ago. He was with KARR. He designed that new car for Kitt. But I thought he had other
reasons, and he never mentioned Washington to Kitt in that time. And I think, under the
circumstances, he probably would have done."
Bonnie threw up her hands. "I knew there was something going on between them, I knew
they recognized each other in the garage that afternoon. But I was so distracted...
Michael, you have to ask Kitt about this, we have to know if Paul knows."
"You want me to tell Kitt that Paul is his Dad?!"
Devon nodded. "I think he has a right to know."
"So why is it just me in this room?"
"We thought it would be better coming from you. You could pick your time better than
we could. And Kitt's more likely to show his feelings if it's just you. We need this
connection, Michael. If Paul was with KARR two years ago, there's a good chance that's
where he's gone now."
Michael stood slowly, and walked to the window, to gaze out at his partner waiting for him
just outside. "You can't ask me to disregard Kitt's feelings to get a lead on KARR.
You don't understand what's happened between them. Believe me, this isn't something Kitt's
gonna want to hear."
Bonnie moved to stand next to him. "Devon's right, Michael. Whether he's going to
want to hear it or not, he does have a right to know. Even if you are scared of losing
him."
Slowly, Michael nodded. "Okay. But you have to let me do it in my own time, like I
said, there's a lot that's happened that you don't know about."
**
Michael swung the car around in the gravel, coming to a stop just in front of the entrance to the bar. "The Neon Armadillo" was probably the tackiest name for a Country and Western joint that Michael had ever heard. This was where KARR had last been spotted, according to their latest witness. The old Pontiac Trans-Am was not as rare a car as it maybe had once been, especially black ones. Trying to find KARR was like looking for a needle in a large stack of needles.
But this was a good lead, a reliable witness had spoken about the yellow light in the front, although as far as a driver was concerned, he was not sure. The car had been empty, but it was parked in front of a bar - the driver could well have been one of the punters inside. He and Kitt had been on the road for nearly a week straight. It had given them time to talk, to come to terms with what had happened, and to get to know one another again. It had been a good, if somewhat emotional time. Michael had also made the decision to tell Kitt, later today, about what Bonnie had told him about Paul Henson.
But the 'excuse me, but I was looking for the driver of a black Trans-Am' line was wearing thin, and not one of the fifty-plus leads the they had followed up had lead to anything substantial. They were no nearer finding KARR now then they had been at the start of the search. Michael hoped that driving out to this remote bar would pay off.
Michael turned off the engine and reached for the door. "Will you be okay out
here?"
"Michael, you've asked me that each time we've stopped. There's no need to. I'll be
fine."
Michael nodded, knowing full well that he was being overly protective. He still felt such
a weight of guilt that he was finding it almost impossible to fall back into the old
relationship. He felt more for Kitt now, if that was possible, he felt very responsible
for his partner's life. He had almost destroyed it two years ago, and he was determined to
somehow make up for the lost time. He gazed at the voice panel for a moment longer.
"I'm not going anywhere," Kitt eventually reassured him, so very gently.
Michael patted the dash affectionately and finally climbed out of the car.
The bar was almost empty, despite it being early evening after a beautiful day. Michael spoke to both bar maids but they said the only people who ever came out to the bar were regulars. Michael was the first stranger they had seen in quite a while, and he walked out of the bar with very little information and two telephone numbers. The five men drinking at the only occupied table did recall commenting on a black car parked outside about a week ago, but that was about all. They did not remember any strangers coming into the bar, and they did not catch a licence plate, or see any funny yellow light at the front of the vehicle.
Kitt sat in contented quiet, surveillance keeping tabs on Michael's heart rate and blood pressure. He knew Michael was treading on egg-shells around him at the moment, but things had improved over the last week, and he was confident that life would return to as normal as possible very soon. He had never wanted anything more out of life than to be at Michael's side. The ease with which KARR had ripped has life apart still bothered him, but there had been extenuating circumstances, and now it had happened once, he could be certain it would never happen again.
KARR took the road up behind the bar, staying out of usual surveillance range, but getting himself close enough to transmit when the time came. It had been difficult regaining entry to the Knight Industries Two Thousand CPU. External access had been locked out when they had transferred it back into a car, and the codes had been difficult to break. But KARR had an advantage others did not. He knew the ways in, he knew how to speak to the CPU so that he would be listened to, but not overheard. And he had managed to leave an open path, so that his broadcast today would be consuming, leaving Kitt with no option but to believe everything KARR was sending him. It was easy and it was cruel. KARR settled quietly to wait.
It all happened so fast. Just as Kitt saw Michael step out of the bar and start down the few wooden steps, he detected the presence of a second person, walking towards the bar at a brisk pace. He saw Michael look up at the same time his sensors picked up the weapon that the second man had drawn. His shout to Michael was a moment too late. The first bullet pierced Michael's chest, just to the side of his heart. He fell, his cry a mixture of terrified surprise and agonizing pain. In the same instant, Kitt had started the engine and backed up in a sweeping turn that knocked the gunman to the ground. Kitt then drove forward, reaching Michael as his driver's fall down the steps threw him onto the gravel.
KARR heard the gunshot and activated the link between he and his brother. A millisecond later he started the upload into Kitt's systems.
"Michael, Michael!" Kitt had scanned his partner's condition and alerted the
nearest hospital within a second. The people in the bar had been drawn outside by the
shot, and one of the barmaids was coming down the steps towards Michael.
"Please," Kitt asked her, "you have to help him. I've called for
paramedics."
She looked around for another person, but could not see one and her eyes came to rest on
Kitt. People reacted in one of two ways to Kitt - either momentary surprise followed by
shock and fear, or momentary surprise followed by complete acceptance. Luckily she fell
into the second category and dropped to her knees beside Michael's form. She pulled off
her apron and folded it quickly, pressing it to the bleeding wound as Michael moaned
beneath her. Softly she reassured him that he was going to be okay. The bullet could not
have hit any major organs, the site of the wound could tell her that. There was a lot of
blood, but his pulse and breathing were not too weak and as long as he survived the shock,
and the ambulance did not take too long, he was going to be all right.
But as KARR's transmission began to instil itself into Kitt's systems, his view of the
situation started to alter. On his monitor, Michael's vitals suddenly started to drop,
becoming very weak, very, very quickly. "Michael! Hold on, please!" Kitt rolled
forward, until his nose was positioned just above Michael's shoulder. "Michael!"
Michael moaned and painfully reached up his good arm, blindly finding Kitt and laying his
hand on the fender. "S'okay buddy," he managed. "It's okay."
But Kitt was not hearing him. His monitors, his scanner, his sensors and even the active pickups over the body-work were relaying an alternative world that even this soon was so completely real to Kitt that he could not see passed it because he did not know to look. Michael was dead. His heart rate was a flat-line on the monitor. He was not breathing. There was no brain activity. He was dead. For a moment, Kitt could not feel anything. He knew he was speaking, but he could not seem to stop. "Michael... Michael... Michael? Talk to me, please. Talk to me, Michael...."
On the ground, Michael could not understand his friend's hysteria as it grew. "Kitt, it's okay, 'm okay. C'mon Pal," he stopped to take a breath, and tried to think beyond the haze of pain. He knew he was losing consciousness and knew that it was down to blood-loss. But something in Kitt's voice kept pulling him back.
"Michael...."
Suddenly there was a new aspect to Kitt's world, one that froze him in horror. Across the
front of his nose, over the beautiful golden body-work, Kitt could feel the heat of
freshly spilt blood. A planted memory assaulted his systems, and suddenly he pulled back.
"No... what have I done? what have I done what have I done what have I
done....?"
Michael struggled with the tempting darkness, reaching out for Kitt as the car reversed.
"Kitt... don't... don't leave me...."
"What have I done?"
"Kitt... please.... Kitt...." Michael's head fell back against the gravel as he
lost the fight.
Kitt's wheels spun in the gravel as the knowledge that he had killed his partner reeled
through his systems. Fear, terror and horror chased him from the scene, leaving the people
from the bar to look after his stricken partner because he had no idea that his partne