1006 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
1006 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
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Copyright 1989 Michael A. Stackpole
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Squeeze Play
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I
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As the bar's natural atmosphere raped my nostrils I had a sudden
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urge to remodel the place with a flame-thrower. From the outside,
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the boarded-over windows and plywood framing for the weatherbeaten
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door suggested someone had already tried that with "the Weed," as
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it's denizens affectionately called the place. I had to agree with
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the name -- nothing in here a load of Agent Orange wouldn't improve.
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The Weed was the kind of bar that aspired to be a dump when it grew
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up.
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I'd not liked Ronnie Killstar when I'd spoken with him to set up
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this meeting. After seeing the place he'd chosen I liked him even
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less. Easy, Wolf, I reminded myself, _Raven gave you this job
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because you've got more control than Kid Stealth or Tom Electric.
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Don't let him down -- you already owe him too much._
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Against my better judgement I crossed the short distance from the
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door to the bar. A small Mexican looking man wandered over to the
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place where I elbowed my way between two other patrons. His voice
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sounded like a ripsaw tearing into sheet steel. "Waddalya have?"
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I squinted against the burning smoke from my neighbor's
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Saskatchewan Corona Grande and shrugged. "What's on tap?"
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The bartender shook his head.
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"Great, make it a double."
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He stared blankly at my attempt at humor. "Waddalya have?" he
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rasped in a gravel-croak.
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I glanced at the cooler. "Green River Pale. No need for a glass."
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As he pulled the beer out of the cooler and brushed the ice off
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onto the grubby floor, I fished a handful of coins from my pocket.
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He twisted the cap off and I started plunking coins down one after
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another. I slowed when I got near what the beer had to cost, then
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stopped when his hand started to move forward. He glanced up at me,
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shrugged, then gave me the drink.
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I carried the bottle toward the corner furthest from the door. The
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beer tasted like his voice sounded, but cold, and I set it down
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quickly. Nestling myself into the booth, I unzipped my black leather
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jacket and settled in to watch the door, the bar and its patrons. I
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kept the beer in my left hand while letting my right rest near the
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butt of my Beretta Viper 14.
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My new vantage point allowed me a fuller appreciation of the
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Weed's decor. The plastic babydoll heads and high-heeled shoes
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hanging from the ceiling somehow made sense seen within the larger
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context. Most of the light came from sputtering neon signs begging
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patrons to drink exotic brews the bar no longer stocked. Silvery
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tinsel and some flashing lights left behind during a Christmas ages
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ago mocked the moribund setting, but somehow brought gaiety to the
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expression of the plastic, safe-sex doll floating above a busted
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pinball machine.
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The place oozed atmosphere.
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I used my beer bottle to smear a six-legged piece of that
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atmosphere across the table.
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About the only normal portion of the bar lay kitty-corner across
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the room from my position. Three 'trix-jack tables, the cocktail
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model, lay up against the wall. I should have taken it as
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significant that only one wirehead was using the Weed's facilities.
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She hugged a Seattle Seadog's baseball jacket around around her and
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looked cute, so I winked at her. A trode halo circled her ebony brow
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and the light from the unit's display washed in rainbow waves over
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her face, but she didn't notice it or me. Whatever graphics were
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flashing across the screen were for outsider consumption only -- that
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decker was jacked in deep and was playing her own little games.
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I smelled dead flowers about a second and a half before I heard
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the click of Ronnie Killstar's wrist spur. Large as life, or at
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least as large as he could muster, the pasty-faced street samurai
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slid into the booth across from me. The jaundiced light from the bar
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skittered across the razored edge of the curved metal blade jutting
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out from his right wrist and a red light glowed in his eyes.
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He sneered at me. "You ought to get your eyes done. I can bullseye
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a rat's ass at a thousand meters in the pitch dark. I saw you come
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in and I saw you sit down. I can see in here plain as day."
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That being the case, I saw no reason to mention he'd just wiped
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the sleeve of his white jacket through cockroach paste. I sniffed at
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the air. "I don't need eyes to find you, Ronnie. I just have to let
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my nose lead me to the guy who smells like his own funeral."
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Two large men slipped from in back where Ronnie had been waiting
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and stood on either side of our booth. They were both built like
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those smiling Buddha-type statues you can find down the coast in San
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Shanghai, 'cept these two wore more clothes, didn't smile and didn't
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look like they'd give you good luck if you rubbed their bellies.
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Still, if they were hanging around with Ronnie it meant they had to
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be losers -- which also explained why they looked so much at home in
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the Weed.
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His intimidation batteries in place and ready to fire, Ronnie
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reinforced his sneer. "I didn't figure the great Dr. Raven would
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trust Wolfgang Kies with an assignment of this importance."
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I smiled. "TM."
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"Huh?"
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I smiled more broadly. "I said, 'TM.' You forgot to add the
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trademark on to the phrase, 'the Great Dr. Raven.'" I shook my head
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ruefully. "That's why he sent me. You've got no manners and no sense
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of propriety. You wouldn't expect him to come to a place like this,
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would you?"
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Clearly any space in Ronnie's monosynaptic brain devoted to humor
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was overloaded by my effort. His eyes flashed on and off as he got
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angry and his concentration broke. Suddenly, with a metallic snap
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that sounded like a pistol being cocked, a ten-inch icepick blade
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shot out from between the middle and ring fingers on his right hand
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and he lunged forward. The tip touched my throat right above the
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silver wolf's-head totem I wear and drew a single drop of blood.
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"I don't need your static, you lickboot! Raven sent word that he
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wanted to make a deal with La Plante, not the other way around.
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We're not doing you a favor -- it's you that wants one from us."
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Killstar's dark eyes narrowed. "I want Raven!"
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With great effort I killed the urge to lunge forward and bite his
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face off. I swallowed hard and felt the icepick brush against my
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adam's-apple. "_I _ wanted La Plante. I would suggest we're even."
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I forced my eyes wide open and got the surprise reaction I
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expected as Ronnie looked into them for the first time. With the
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anger rising in me I knew they've have gone from green to silver --
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that change is not all that rare. Ronnie got an added treat, though,
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as a dark circle surrounded the iris with a Killer's Ring. _Your
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augmented eyes may let you see in the dark, but they can't do that.
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It's something you have to have inside -- it's not an option you get
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to tack-on aftermarket._
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Ronnie leaned back, but left the stinger extended. "Maybe we are
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even. What are you offering Mr. La Plante?"
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I ignored the question as a droplet of sweat burned into the
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pinprick at my throat. "I want proof she's still alive."
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The punk snapped his fingers and one of the Buddha brothers
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produced a pocket TV and slipped a small CD ROM into the unit. I
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took it from him and hit the play button. The LCD screen flickered
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to life and I saw Moira Alianha standing calmly before a wallscreen
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television. She moved back and forth in front of it and I
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concentrated on how her long, black hair trailed out and through the
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image. If they had recorded her moving before a blank screen then
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had masked in a recent program to make me think she was still alive,
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the process would have broken down on those fine details.
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It looked clean to me -- the news was current as of an hour ago --
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but I didn't want to give Ronnie the satisfaction of knowing I felt
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he'd done something right. "A SenseTape would have been better."
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It was an effort for him to roll his mechanical eyes to heaven.
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"And we could have brought her here with a brass band and an army of
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Grunges, but we don't think we're going to recover our overhead on
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this one. Satisfied?"
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I pocketed the device. "She's alive."
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Ronnie smiled like a gambler holding four of a kind. "Mister La
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Plante has a client who has offered us a great deal of money for
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Moira Alianha with her maidenhead intact. What can Raven offer us to
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outbid our other client?"
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I tried to suppress the wince, but the additional construction on
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either side of Ronnie's smile showed me I'd failed. Dr. Raven lost
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no love on Etienne La Plante, but recovering Moira and returning her
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to the Elven Lands south of the Seattle Sprawl meant he had to
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subordinate his own feelings and deal with the man. As Ronnie's
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smile cooled into a smug look of superiority, I decided Kid Stealth
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might have been right in the first place: bring the whole crew in
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and take La Plante's empire apart.
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"It won't insure we save the girl," Doc told him.
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"Yeah," acknowledged the Kid, "But it'll feel gigabytes better
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than helping that slime."
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I rested my elbows on the table and steepled my fingers. "I have
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been authorized to offer you the Fujiwara shipping schedule for the
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next six months in return for the girl. We can make the exchange
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tonight."
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For all of ten seconds Ronnie got that divine-revelation look on
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his face. Suddenly he realized how big a game he was involved in,
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and how small a player in it he was. Then his eyes hooded over as
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the little maggot figured out how important Moira Alianha had to be
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for the Doctor to offer that kind of information for her. A thought
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shot off on the wrong branch of his neural network and he began to
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believe in his own importance.
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He scoffed at the offer and eased himself out of the booth.
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"Maybe. I'll talk to La Plante and let you know. You can wait here
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until then."
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My right leg swept out and hooked up between his legs. I drew my
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knee up, jerking him and his squishy parts against the edge of the
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table. That knocked the wind of out him and caused him to jackknife
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forward. I grabbed a handful of his stringy, blond hair with my left
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hand and tucked the barrel of my Viper in his left ear.
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A Killer-Ring stare kept the karma twins at bay.
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"That was a wrong answer, Ronnie." I eared the hammer back on the
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automatic even though that was unnecessary on the double-action
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pistol. "Mr. La Plante, I know you'd not be who you are if you let
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an idiot like this conduct your negotiations for you without keeping
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tabs on him. I'd guess you've bugged Yin and Yang here, unless you
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tricked this dolt into carrying a set of ears on himself."
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A glint of gold from the cloisonn Orchid pin on Ronnie lapel gave
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him away. "Very good, Mr. La Plante. Your gang's trademark pin is a
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listening device. I salute your technomancers. I suggest your
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chauffeur pull the Limo around so we can discuss things in private,
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say, in five minutes. We'll take a spin around the block and then
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you'll drop me back here. If not, I'm going to decorate the Weed's
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ceiling with something that'll add some real color."
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The Coors clock on the wall ticked off four and a half minutes
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before the door opened. The Chauffeur, dressed in a spiffy uniform
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with creases sharp enough to cut like razors, nodded to me. I patted
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Ronnie patronizingly on the head. "We'll have to do this again when
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I have more time to play."
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Whatever Ronnie replied, it wasn't very polite and I put it down
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to his discomfort as I put my weight on his head as I stood. The
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twin pillars of eastern wisdom moved out of my way and I made it to
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the doorway unmolested. Aside from the wirehead on the rent-a-deck,
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no one in the place noticed my passing.
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I handed the Viper to the Chauffeur and stepped into the street.
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The white Avanti stretch limo looked as out of place on the litter-
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strewn street as a wharf rat in the Mayor's office, but that didn't
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stop it from being there. I waited as the Chauffeur scanned me with
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whatever he had for eyes behind those mirrored glasses of his, then
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smiled and entered the Limo's dark interior.
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Having grown up in the concrete alleys of Seattle, I thought of
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class as something you escaped from during the day. Despite my
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absolute loathing of anything and everything Etienne La Plante did
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and was, I still had to admit he had class. His double-breasted suit
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had been cut from cloth of silver, yet -- if possible -- did not look
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ostentatious or flashy. His wavy white hair had been perfectly cut
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and combed, giving me the impression that I'd stepped into a
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boardroom for a long planned meeting.
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I settled into a velvet seat so comfortable I could have died
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happy in it, especially if the woman seated next to La Plante gave
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me another one of her I-want-to-have-your-baby-or-at-least-try-hard-
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at-it smiles. In the armrest at my left hand sat a frosted mug of
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beer -- the half empty bottle next to it proclaimed it to be Henry
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Weinhard's Private Reserve.
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_Very good, Etienne, my favorite. Is it true that you bought the
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brewery because you heard one of Raven's men loved the stuff?_
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La Plante refrained from offering me his right hand, but I did not
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mind. If there was any flesh and blood left to it, the silver
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carapace hid it completely. I noticed, as he picked up his own mug
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of beer, that the hand articulated perfectly, but then _he_ could
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afford perfection. I'd not heard of any assassination attempts
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against him, so I had to assume he had voluntarily maimed himself.
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"I would apologize, Mr. Kies, for my underling's actions but, you
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understand, that was a test." He shrugged wearily. "After the bad
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blood between Dr. Raven and myself, you can hardly forgive my being
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suspicious."
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I nodded. "You can call me Wolf." I directed the comment more to
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the woman than La Plante and waited a half second for a similar
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offer of intimacy from the crime boss. I continued when he ignored
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me. "When Dr. Raven was informed you had become the custodian for
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Ms. Alianha and was called upon by her Elven guardians to get her
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back, he was forced to make some choices. I am sure you can
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understand that negotiation was not the most popular course of
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action suggested."
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The crimelord nodded sagely. "Former employees can be so, ah,
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vindictive, can't they?"
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_Sure, especially when you try to plant them in the harbor with
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their feet bound in a block of cement. No one would have figured Kid
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Stealth would blow off his own legs to escape that little deathtrap,
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but he did and survived. When your time comes, the timekeeper will
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be wearing shiny new legs and will move faster than even you
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remember._
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"You heard our offer. You get the Fujiwara shipment schedules for
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the next six months in return for the girl. We'll burn the data into
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an eprom for you. We can do the exchange tonight."
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La Plante maintained a nonchalant expression on his face. "You
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have a decker good enough to get into Fujiwara that quickly? We're
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talking multiple layers of ice with interactive defensive systems
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and the possibility of Artificial Intelligence directing counter-
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penetration efforts."
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I smiled confidently. "The only way to stop this decker is with
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Genuine Intelligence and a .45 automatic. We'll get the schedule for
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you."
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He hid his excitement at the offer well. "How do I know the data
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will be good?"
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I sat up straight. "You have Dr. Raven's word on it."
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Whereas Ronnie Killstar would have answered with some inane barb,
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La Plante just nodded. "Very well." He leaned over and whispered
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something in the redhead's ear. As she reached over and picked up my
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mug, he commented. "You've not tried your beer. I assure you, it has
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not been tampered with."
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She sipped and returned the mug to its place on the armrest. As
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she licked her lips I felt an urge to procreate, then counted to ten
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-- no fifteen -- to regain control. "Sorry," I smiled, "but after the
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Weed, drinking in here just wouldn't be the same. You understand."
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For her benefit I added, "Maybe another time..."
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The door opened again. La Plante's Chauffeur hovered by the door
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with my gun in hand. "Tonight, Mr. Kies, at warehouse building 18b,
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on the docks. We will give you the southern and western approaches.
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I would prefer this to be an intimate gathering."
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"My feelings exactly. You bring a dozen of your Grunges and I'll
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consider it even." I succeeded in getting myself perched on the edge
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of the seat. "And leave Ronnie at home..."
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La Plante waved my last remark off with a silvery flourish of his
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right hand. "Do not concern yourself with him. He has been assigned
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new duty. He'll be feeding fish for the foreseeable future."
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The Chauffeur handed me the pistol, then swung the door shut. I
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smiled at him and his plastic mask of servitude cracked. "Someday,
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Wolf, it will come down to you and me. I'll make it quick. I want
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you to know that."
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I met his mirror-eyed stare with my number two nasty glare. "Good,
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I like that. If the fights go too long, the blood stains set and
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then you can't ever get them out..."
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His plastic mask back in place, he turned and walked away. In
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spite of the nausea building in my stomach, I reentered the Weed. My
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beer still waited on the table, but Ronnie and the Wonton boys had
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vanished. I waited and sniffed, but I couldn't smell flowers.
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Instead of returning to my booth, I walked over to the jacktables.
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I pulled the bug from inside my jacket and tossed it on the black
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woman's deck. "Did you get it all?"
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Valerie Valkyrie, Raven's newest aide, gave me a smile that made
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me forget La Plante's tastetester. "Everything, including your pulse
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rate and blood pressure when she sucked on your beer."
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I felt the burn of a blush sweeping across my face and it grew
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hotter as it pulled a giggle from her throat. "Cute, Val. We'll
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discuss how much of that makes it into the report for the Doctor
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later. Right now we've got work to do."
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II
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"All right, Zig and Zag, let's go through the drill one more
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time."
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Zag frowned and the razor claws on the black man's left hand
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flicked out, then retracted with the speed of a snake's tongue.
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"We've got names..."
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I raised myself up to my full height, which still left me an inch
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or two shorter than either one of them. "And right now they're Zig
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and Zag. You're local talent and I'm your Mr. Johnson. Now you claim
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you want to join this elite circle my Mr. Johnson has put together?
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Fine, this is a tryout. Try living with new names for a second or
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two, got it?"
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Zig elbowed Zag and they both nodded. For street samurai they
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weren't bad. Zag had gone the obvious route of adding chrome in the
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|||
|
form of razor claws grafted to his hands and some wiring adjustments
|
|||
|
to his reflexes. He'd replaced his eyes with a laser-targeting unit
|
|||
|
linked to the scope on his Kalashnikov. He'd got a bit far, in my
|
|||
|
mind, by having his eyes look like amber tiger-eyes with slit
|
|||
|
pupils, but it was all part of the macho that made him a street
|
|||
|
samurai. Might look silly to me, but I don't think I'd like seeing
|
|||
|
them glow in a dark alley.
|
|||
|
Zig had been more discreet. He'd gone in for body work. Just from
|
|||
|
the way he walked I knew he'd had his reflexes cranked up so he
|
|||
|
moved with the speed of something between a Bengal tiger and
|
|||
|
striking cobra. I didn't see any body blades, but he was a bit more
|
|||
|
subtle than his partner so he might not have flashed them. I also
|
|||
|
got the impression he'd had some subdermal armor plates inserted to
|
|||
|
protect his vital organs -- a wise choice. One never knows where
|
|||
|
those replacement organs were grown. The failure percentage on cut-
|
|||
|
rate Khmer hearts made having a bandaid slapped on the old one look
|
|||
|
like a good bet for survival.
|
|||
|
"Val and I are going to jack into the Matrix. No one ought to be
|
|||
|
able to track us down to this place, but we can't be 100% certain of
|
|||
|
that. I need you two to be alert and careful because when we bust
|
|||
|
the system we're going after, things could get messy. What do you do
|
|||
|
if there's trouble?"
|
|||
|
Zag grumbled and walked over to where my MP-9 rested on the bed.
|
|||
|
"We slap the trodes off you and hand you this toy. Then we get the
|
|||
|
wirehead out of here."
|
|||
|
Val didn't notice the rancor in Zag's voice at his having been
|
|||
|
shot down earlier. When he asked if she would be interested in a
|
|||
|
little horizontal tango to "relieve the tension" she'd looked at him
|
|||
|
as if he was a Matrix deck with "Made in America" stamped on its
|
|||
|
side. Zig and I shared a smile as Zag's anger deepened when Val
|
|||
|
continued to ignore him.
|
|||
|
"Good. That's it. You get her out and get her to the place she
|
|||
|
tells you. Don't worry about me, I'll be fine."
|
|||
|
"Or dead." Zag hefted one of the spare clips for my submachinegun.
|
|||
|
"Freaking 9mm toy and you've got silver bullets!? Who do you think
|
|||
|
you are, the Lone Ranger?" He thumbed one bullet from the clip and
|
|||
|
tossed it to Zig.
|
|||
|
Easy, Wolf, better this tough guy act to hide his nerves than him
|
|||
|
falling apart on you. "I think I'm your Mr. Johnson -- and a
|
|||
|
superstitious one at that."
|
|||
|
Zig looked closely at the silver bullet in his hand. "Drilled and
|
|||
|
patched -- ho, laddie, these are special. You got mercury in there to
|
|||
|
make the bullet explode?"
|
|||
|
I shook my head solemnly. "Silver nitrate solution. Physics is the
|
|||
|
same, the result is nastier. Burns as it goes."
|
|||
|
Zig tossed the bullet back to his partner. "Be you planning on
|
|||
|
hunting a werewolf or something, boyo?"
|
|||
|
"Were you in Seattle during the Full Moon Slashings?"
|
|||
|
The mention of that series of killings tore Val away from her
|
|||
|
deck. "A half-dozen years ago? That was the first anyone had heard
|
|||
|
of Dr. Raven, isn't it?"
|
|||
|
"Yeah." I let that one word answer hang there long enough for all
|
|||
|
three of them to realize I wasn't going to say anything specific
|
|||
|
about that outing. "After that I've carried silver bullets. Never
|
|||
|
want to be without them if you need them."
|
|||
|
Val shivered. "Viper too?"
|
|||
|
"Amen." I forced myself to smile and break the mood. "You got that
|
|||
|
Hibatchi unit prepped yet?"
|
|||
|
Val scolded me. "Hitachi, Wolf, and you know it. This baby has
|
|||
|
been worked over a couple of times, with all the major league mods."
|
|||
|
I accepted a trode coronet from her slender fingers and pulled it
|
|||
|
onto my head. I adjusted it so the electrodes pressed against my
|
|||
|
temples and ran back over the midline of my skull. Val reached over
|
|||
|
and tightened the band to improve the contact, then she clipped the
|
|||
|
dangling lead into a splice cable. She slid that jack into the slot
|
|||
|
behind her left ear, then flipped a switch on the deck.
|
|||
|
I winked at her. "Let's do it."
|
|||
|
She winked back and hit a button on the keyboard. "Play ball."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Doc Raven had warned me that Valerie Valkyrie was special, but
|
|||
|
until we plunged through that electric aurora wall of static and
|
|||
|
into the Matrix, I had no idea how special. I'd jacked into the
|
|||
|
Matrix before -- who hasn't -- but it had always been at a public deck
|
|||
|
where I ended up inside an entertainment system. Moving from game
|
|||
|
program to game program I caught glimpses of cyberspace through the
|
|||
|
neat little windows the programmers had built into their systems,
|
|||
|
but I'd not had any desire to go out adventuring on my own.
|
|||
|
Normally the form and shape of the Matrix is decided by LANCON --
|
|||
|
the local area network controllers. Here in Seattle the Matrix
|
|||
|
resembled a vector graphic of the urban sprawl it encompassed. Well
|
|||
|
fortified databases were surrounded by fences and walls and Matrix
|
|||
|
security teams patrolled the electronic streets like cops cruising a
|
|||
|
beat. I'd heard it had been designed that way because it made the
|
|||
|
casual user feel as if he was in familiar surroundings and it made
|
|||
|
it easier for him to find his way around.
|
|||
|
In San Shanghai, my pet name for San Francisco, I understood the
|
|||
|
Matrix had originally had a similar geographical layout. Cablecars
|
|||
|
carried data transfers from one place to another in a landscape
|
|||
|
dominated by the Kyoto-Prudential tower. A Golden Gate bridge even
|
|||
|
carried users to the other local networks and rumor had it that the
|
|||
|
Army had a supersecret datastack corresponding to the Presidio
|
|||
|
nestled at its base.
|
|||
|
As things got strange and the world shifted, so did the Matrix in
|
|||
|
San Francisco. When a user entered the Chinatown area, the buildings
|
|||
|
melted away and the databases represented themselves with Mah Jong
|
|||
|
tiles. Hackers claimed that made it easier to pick out weak bases,
|
|||
|
but I don't know about that. I have heard it said, and can believe,
|
|||
|
that no one goes near the bases represented by Dragons.
|
|||
|
But that's the way of the world. Steer as clear as possible from
|
|||
|
Dragons -- words to live by and advice it'll kill you to ignore.
|
|||
|
I'd heard a hacker story that said if a decker got good enough
|
|||
|
junk he could impose his own sense of order on the Matrix. With
|
|||
|
enough skill and equipment he could make the Matrix appear the way
|
|||
|
he wanted it -- free of extraneous data. Another urban legend born in
|
|||
|
the Matrix.
|
|||
|
Valerie Valkyrie was a legendary decker.
|
|||
|
After only two seconds in cyberspace the landscape construct
|
|||
|
shifted. Gone were the clean lines of glowing lime-green streets and
|
|||
|
shining white buildings. Suddenly I found myself standing beside the
|
|||
|
pitcher's mound in a monstrous baseball stadium. Val, outlined in a
|
|||
|
neon-blue that matched her eyes, gave me a broad grin and pulled on
|
|||
|
a baseball cap that materialized from thin air. The cap had a Raven
|
|||
|
patch on it.
|
|||
|
"Sorry if you aren't used to this, Wolf." The shrug of her
|
|||
|
shoulders told me she wasn't sorry at all, and that my surprised
|
|||
|
reaction made her day. "Warping the Matrix to my conception of it
|
|||
|
give me a home-field advantage."
|
|||
|
Within the solar yellow of the glove on her right hand I saw her
|
|||
|
fingers move as they flew across the keyboard back in the real
|
|||
|
world. From a dugout over on the third base side of the field, a
|
|||
|
smallish man walked up toward the plate. Behind and above him a
|
|||
|
scoreboard flashed to life and spewed out all sorts of information
|
|||
|
in hexidecimal.
|
|||
|
I pointed up at the display. "Can you translate?"
|
|||
|
She looked at me as if I'd disappointed her, then nodded. Suddenly
|
|||
|
the scoreboard flickered and the handy notation of baseball replaced
|
|||
|
the curious array of numbers and letters. Coming up to bat was
|
|||
|
Ronnie Killstar's personal file. The count was 0 balls and 2 strikes
|
|||
|
and the scoreboard reported his batting average as .128. He batted
|
|||
|
right-handed.
|
|||
|
Val licked her lips as a catcher and umpire materialized behind
|
|||
|
the plate. "Can of corn." A green ball appeared in her left hand and
|
|||
|
she spun it around until she grasped it between her thumb, index and
|
|||
|
middle fingers. Rearing back, her azure outline blurred and she
|
|||
|
delivered the pitch. It arced in at the plate, then dropped a full
|
|||
|
six inches below Ronnie's futile swing.
|
|||
|
"Yer out!" screamed the umpire.
|
|||
|
All sorts of data poured out onto the scoreboard. It was a bit
|
|||
|
more nasty than one might expect to find on the average baseball
|
|||
|
card, but it still bespoke nothing more than a mediocre career. A
|
|||
|
quick comparison of his successful stolen bases versus times caught
|
|||
|
out in the attempt confirmed he was an unsuccessfuls small-time
|
|||
|
thief before La Plante took him on as a legbreaker.
|
|||
|
As the record of his most recent phone calls started to flash up
|
|||
|
on the scoreboard, I looked over at Val. "You can cut this any time
|
|||
|
you want. He's useless and now he's dead." I glanced over at the
|
|||
|
number of the last call he made. "Hope it was to his mother."
|
|||
|
Val wrinkled her nose. "I was unaware anyone had taught Petri
|
|||
|
dishes to answer the phone." She caught the ball the catcher threw
|
|||
|
back at her. "That was just a warm-up. I shouldn't have used a
|
|||
|
forkball on him -- that was overkill."
|
|||
|
Certain things started to click into place for me. Cracking
|
|||
|
systems required a vast array of ice-breaking programs. Most deckers
|
|||
|
use commercially developed software and, consequently, can only
|
|||
|
break into the most simple of bases.
|
|||
|
True artists like Val modify and write their own warez. I talked
|
|||
|
with a decker who ran under the handle of Merlin who had named all
|
|||
|
of his ice-breakers after spells. "It helps me remember what is
|
|||
|
what. When some system is trying to flatline you, you want to be
|
|||
|
able to react quickly with a codebomb that will do the job." Val,
|
|||
|
with her passion for baseball, had designed and named her ice-
|
|||
|
breakers for pitches.
|
|||
|
"Let's get on to the main show, okay?"
|
|||
|
"Roger."
|
|||
|
Val concentrated and her fingers moved. I noticed some subtle
|
|||
|
changes in the stadium as the Fujiwara database came into range for
|
|||
|
us to access it. "Okay, we're ready to begin. Kind of like robbing
|
|||
|
Peter to pay Paul, isn't it?"
|
|||
|
I nodded. Fujiwara Corporation was a legal shell that laundered
|
|||
|
money for a Yakuza group based further down the coast. Whereas La
|
|||
|
Plante was a broker who facilitated the movement of things from one
|
|||
|
party to another, Fujiwara actually brought contraband materials
|
|||
|
into Seattle from all over the world. On a scale of one to Hitler's
|
|||
|
SS, both groups ranked fairly high, but Fujiwara exercised a bit
|
|||
|
more restraint in how they dealt with rivals.
|
|||
|
That means they prefer a single yak hitter to a mad bomber. La
|
|||
|
Plante did as well until Kid Stealth had the temerity to defect to
|
|||
|
Raven. Neither group played nicely with their enemies, and this
|
|||
|
little Matrix run was about to deposit us on Fujiwara's bad side.
|
|||
|
The butterflies started in my stomach as a behemoth stepped from
|
|||
|
the dugout. He looked like something from a cartoon. He had tiny
|
|||
|
legs and a narrow waist that blossomed up into immensely powerful
|
|||
|
arms and shoulders. The bat he carried looked like it had been cold-
|
|||
|
hammered into shape from the hull of an aircraft carrier, but he
|
|||
|
wielded it as if it weighed no more than a spoon.
|
|||
|
The field changed abruptly when he stepped into the batter's box
|
|||
|
to hit right handed. Runner's appeared on second and third and the
|
|||
|
count stood even at 0 and 0. The batter's name appeared on the
|
|||
|
scoreboard as Babe Fujiwara and his batting average stood at a
|
|||
|
whopping .565.
|
|||
|
I swallowed hard. "Why do I get the feeling this man is the All-
|
|||
|
Star team all rolled into one?"
|
|||
|
Val wiped her brow on her sleeve. "That's because he is." Then she
|
|||
|
shot me a winning grin. "But that's okay, baby, because I'm Rookie
|
|||
|
of the Year."
|
|||
|
"Play ball!" cried the umpire.
|
|||
|
Val's fingers flashed over the ball and within her mitt as she
|
|||
|
reared back to throw. The fastball sizzled yellow and gold as it
|
|||
|
streaked toward the plate. Babe Fujiwara swung on the pitch and
|
|||
|
missed, but not by much. From the look on Val's face she had
|
|||
|
expected a larger margin of victory than the one she'd been given.
|
|||
|
Her cerulean eyes narrowed. I saw her grip the now green ball in
|
|||
|
the same way she had to deal with Ronnie. The forkball shot from her
|
|||
|
hand at medium speed, then dropped precipitously. Even so, his bat
|
|||
|
whipped around and he hit the ice-breaker solidly. Suddenly it
|
|||
|
shifted color from green to red and rocketed back on to the field.
|
|||
|
It hit me in the left ankle and fiery pain shot up my leg. The
|
|||
|
ball popped into the air as I dropped to the ground. Val sprang off
|
|||
|
the mound, gathered the ball up and tossed it over at Babe as he
|
|||
|
lumbered up the baseline toward first. When the ball hit him in the
|
|||
|
shoulder he exploded into blue sparks.
|
|||
|
Gasping against the pain, I looked up at her. "What the hell was
|
|||
|
that?"
|
|||
|
Val's nostrils flared. "Fujiwara has put some reactive warez on
|
|||
|
line. I managed to flip a couple of bits in that program and used it
|
|||
|
to destroy the ice layer that spawned it, but I'm not sure I can do
|
|||
|
that again."
|
|||
|
I got an uneasy feeling in the pit of my stomach. "We're in a bit
|
|||
|
deeper than we want to be, aren't we?"
|
|||
|
She looked over at the runners on second and third. "We got a pass
|
|||
|
on the first two layers of ice. We would have wasted time and broken
|
|||
|
them, but I thought speed was of the essence. Fujiwara gave them to
|
|||
|
us to make it difficult for us to get out of here..."
|
|||
|
I raised an eyebrow as I massaged my ankle. "You mean we're
|
|||
|
trapped in the Fujiwara database."
|
|||
|
She shrugged. "It's a matter of perspective."
|
|||
|
"Well, try it from my perspective, one of pain."
|
|||
|
"We're trapped." She saw me begin the fingerwork for the spell
|
|||
|
that would deaden the pain. "Don't waste the effort, Wolf. That
|
|||
|
stuff doesn't work in this environment." Her fingers convulsed and a
|
|||
|
blue mitt appeared on my left hand. "Just use this to block anything
|
|||
|
they hit at you and it should protect you."
|
|||
|
I looked at the mitt and pounded my right hand into its pocket.
|
|||
|
"If I get something I just put the runners out?"
|
|||
|
She nodded. "Don't tag them. It'll destroy the ice layer, but you
|
|||
|
don't want to be that close when it goes."
|
|||
|
"What happens if they score?"
|
|||
|
Val's smile died. "Don't ask. This is the big leagues."
|
|||
|
"Got it."
|
|||
|
The next layer of ice materialized as a somewhat smaller batter
|
|||
|
dubbed Mookie Fujiwara. He took position to bat left handed and I
|
|||
|
saw that did not please Val at all. The ball in her hand took on a
|
|||
|
bright orange color. She wound up and threw. The whirling screwball
|
|||
|
arced in and broke toward Mookie, jamming him on the fists. He
|
|||
|
fouled it off.
|
|||
|
Up on the scoreboard his batting average went from.500 to .375 and
|
|||
|
I took heart in that. It cheered Val up as well. She prepared
|
|||
|
another program and the ball coalesced into an opalescent sphere.
|
|||
|
Her knuckles rested on the seams, then she started her motion and
|
|||
|
threw.
|
|||
|
The program flew slowly toward the plate. It spun not at all, but
|
|||
|
floated and dipped erratically. It dove toward the ground as it
|
|||
|
neared the plate and Mookie missed it with a clean cut. Another
|
|||
|
strike toted itself up on the board and his average fell to .175.
|
|||
|
Val shot me a wink. "The knuckler always works on these midrange
|
|||
|
reactors. It never shows them enough for them to create a
|
|||
|
countercode quickly."
|
|||
|
I smiled reassuringly. "Gonna use it again?"
|
|||
|
"Nope." She studied the scoreboard and shook her head. "Do it
|
|||
|
again and I give it a chance to react. Got something else for this
|
|||
|
ice layer."
|
|||
|
A white ball formed in her hand. Val grinned cruelly and delivered
|
|||
|
the ball with a half-sidearm motion. It jetted in, then broke at the
|
|||
|
last second. Mookie swung and missed and the umpire called him out.
|
|||
|
He vanished and I heard a couple of voices cheering.
|
|||
|
Turning around I saw two figures in the grandstands. One looked
|
|||
|
like a glass spider and the other wore the form of a black cat.
|
|||
|
"What the hell?"
|
|||
|
Val waved at them. "Just some other deckers come to watch the fun.
|
|||
|
The Glass Tarantula and Alley Cat are two locals I've met before."
|
|||
|
That weird feeling ran up my spine again. "This was supposed to be
|
|||
|
a covert run, you know. What if Fuji learns we're here?"
|
|||
|
Valerie fixed me with a stare that made me want to hit the
|
|||
|
showers. "Wolf, the reactors in their ice means they already know
|
|||
|
we're here. We've had an audience in the owner's box ever since we
|
|||
|
started. Looks like the yaks at Fujiwara have a line into La
|
|||
|
Plante's operation."
|
|||
|
I filed that information away for future use as the final batter
|
|||
|
stepped out of the dugout. Whereas Babe had looked like a cartoon,
|
|||
|
this layer of ice manifested itself as a long, lean player with
|
|||
|
incredibly thick forearms and wrists. His flesh had a grayish,
|
|||
|
metallic tint to it and his head metamorphed into that of a horse.
|
|||
|
His name appeared on the scoreboard as Iron Horse Fujiwara and his
|
|||
|
batting average registered as .957. He batted left and the glint in
|
|||
|
his eye was nothing short of pure evil.
|
|||
|
Val's skin took on an ashen hue. "Dammit, I didn't think it would
|
|||
|
be this tough. I'm going to have to doctor some stuff here." A white
|
|||
|
ball appeared in her mitt but as her fingers worked on it, bloody
|
|||
|
tendrils shot through it.
|
|||
|
Satisfied, but not looking as confident as I would have liked, she
|
|||
|
watched the batter, then let the ball fly. It cruised in at a medium
|
|||
|
speed, then broke sharply as if it had fallen off a table. I looked
|
|||
|
for hesitation in the batter's eye, but I saw none and braced for
|
|||
|
disaster.
|
|||
|
The Iron Horse's bat whipped around in a buzz-saw arc and smashed
|
|||
|
the ball back at the mound. Halfway there the ball burst into flame,
|
|||
|
but the line drive didn't slow at all. Val raised her glove
|
|||
|
defensively and managed to get it into place to stop the ball from
|
|||
|
hitting her in the face. Her glove burst into flame and she spun to
|
|||
|
the ground, but the ball hung there for a second, defying gravity.
|
|||
|
I lunged at the ball. My glove boiled off and I felt as if I'd
|
|||
|
reached into a barbecue to barehand a glowing coal. "Help here,
|
|||
|
Val!"
|
|||
|
How she did what she did I don't know, but the flamed died and the
|
|||
|
ball took on a blue tint. I flipped it over to my right hand and saw
|
|||
|
the runner on third make a break for home. I drew the ball back to
|
|||
|
my right ear and threw it as hard as I could.
|
|||
|
The blue ball shot through the base-runner like a searchlight
|
|||
|
through fog. It flew on beyond him and into the dugout. A volcano of
|
|||
|
sparks shot from there and the baseball stadium begin to crumble. In
|
|||
|
an eyeblink we were back in the Citymap Matrix for Seattle and the
|
|||
|
third floor of the Fujiwara tower exploded.
|
|||
|
Then that imaging system failed me as well. I found myself
|
|||
|
floating in a sea of data. Waves of telephone numbers crested up
|
|||
|
over me and drove me down toward spreadsheets and cost overrun
|
|||
|
statements. Just as I felt as though I were drowning in a vast
|
|||
|
inventory system, a hand grabbed me on the shoulder and the
|
|||
|
safehouse room with Zig and Zag swam back into view.
|
|||
|
Val watched me closely and I knew Zag would have died to have her
|
|||
|
looking at him with such concern in her eyes. "Are you okay?"
|
|||
|
I thought about the question for a second, then nodded. "Yeah, I
|
|||
|
think so. What the hell happened?"
|
|||
|
The Valkyrie's eyes narrowed. "I can't be certain but I think the
|
|||
|
person who programmed Fujiwara's ICE system built himself a back
|
|||
|
door. That blue ball was a simple virus meant to pump spurious data
|
|||
|
into the system so quickly that things freeze up and give me a
|
|||
|
chance to react with another program. You tossed it through one of
|
|||
|
the layers we bypassed and right through the back door into their
|
|||
|
system. That stopped the Iron Horse on his trip to first and I used
|
|||
|
an ALS virus to dust him."
|
|||
|
"Did we get the information we needed?"
|
|||
|
On cue the Hitachi deck's eprom platform slid out from within the
|
|||
|
black case, offering the computer chip into which the Fujiwara
|
|||
|
information had been burned. "Looks like it." Her smile lessened a
|
|||
|
bit as she looked at me again. "What else?"
|
|||
|
I frowned. "Something's digging around at the back of my brain." I
|
|||
|
shrugged it off. "I guess I just want to be in an arena where I can
|
|||
|
shoot anybody who looks like the Iron Horse. It's the warrior in
|
|||
|
me."
|
|||
|
"Pity," she laughed, "You've got a future as a decker."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"What's he doing?" Zag asked as I started preparing myself for
|
|||
|
battle. Val frowned at him and remained quiet as I closed my eyes
|
|||
|
and reached inside. I pressed my hands together and touched the
|
|||
|
wolf's-head amulet at my throat. Using it as a focus, I let my mind
|
|||
|
touch the Wolf Spirit dwelling in my heart and mind.
|
|||
|
I saw it as a huge beast built mostly out of shadows except where
|
|||
|
lurid red highlights rippled across its fur. Lean and hungry, it
|
|||
|
still contained incredible power. When it felt my caress,
|
|||
|
enthusiastic fires burned in its eyes, but they dulled to a bloody
|
|||
|
color when it sensed my hesitation.
|
|||
|
"Is the time come, my son?" it asked in snarls and growls.
|
|||
|
"Yes, Old One. I need your speed and your sureness of movement."
|
|||
|
It regarded me with the same disdain Val had shown in cyberspace.
|
|||
|
"Let me deal with everything, Longtooth. You need not these machine
|
|||
|
men or the witch of the thinking machine. You will not need your
|
|||
|
guns. My way is pure. You know I am correct. Why do you resist me
|
|||
|
so?"
|
|||
|
I deflected us away from that discussion because I knew the dark
|
|||
|
and dangerous path it would cause me to tread. "I need what I need."
|
|||
|
The old wolf lay down to mock me. "I grant you what you need. It
|
|||
|
will not be long now that you and I will have this conversation
|
|||
|
again."
|
|||
|
I shook my head. "Seven days. I'll be clear of Seattle by then."
|
|||
|
The wolf howled and that sound echoed through my head as I opened
|
|||
|
my eyes. I heard the hissed sizzle of the spells trail off and found
|
|||
|
Zag staring at me with renewed respect and a bit of apprehension in
|
|||
|
his eyes. I could smell his nervous sweat even over and above the
|
|||
|
tangy sea scent and musty mildew odor hanging over the dock area. I
|
|||
|
smiled and nodded. _All set now. Let's hope La Plante hasn't gotten
|
|||
|
stupid._
|
|||
|
Zag swallowed hard. "Look, Mr. Kies, I'm sorry about any static I
|
|||
|
gave you before. With your rep and all, I figured you were like us."
|
|||
|
He held his right hand up and the razor claws flicked out at the
|
|||
|
ends of his fingers. "I didn't realize you weren't chromed."
|
|||
|
I read the confusion in his eyes like a banner headline on a news
|
|||
|
service monitor. I was known to be quick and nasty in a firefight. I
|
|||
|
was the aide who'd survived the most adventures with Dr. Raven -- and
|
|||
|
that was no mean feat. To Gillettes like Zig and Zag that meant I'd
|
|||
|
been filled with a bunch of cybernetic improvements. The idea that I
|
|||
|
might be a natural who used magic to augment his skills hadn't
|
|||
|
occurred to them. And, because they had chosen a route that
|
|||
|
virtually barred them from using magic, the sorcerous arts baffled
|
|||
|
and scared them.
|
|||
|
Zig handed me a small stick of black grease paint. He'd hidden
|
|||
|
his eyes within a pair of downward pointing triangles and had drawn
|
|||
|
an upward pointing triangle over his nose. "Symbol of the
|
|||
|
Halloweener's over in the Green River district."
|
|||
|
"I know." I put the facepaint stick down on a crate. "I don't
|
|||
|
paint up."
|
|||
|
That seemed to surprise them almost as much as my having used
|
|||
|
magic. Most folks who worked magic, especially of the shamanistic
|
|||
|
variety I used, were referred to as having 'gone native.' After the
|
|||
|
Ghost Dances had worked and killed lots of folks, many people
|
|||
|
traveled out to the reservations and swelled the population the
|
|||
|
Amerindian Nations. Some later left because the lifestyle didn't
|
|||
|
suit them, but those who stayed contributed to the polyglot make-up
|
|||
|
of the tribes. Consequently it wasn't completely strange to find a
|
|||
|
white man who knew Indian magic, but it was weird to find one who
|
|||
|
didn't go the whole way and paint up before battle.
|
|||
|
I broke the tension. "I don't paint up for something I hope won't
|
|||
|
be a battle. I'll be out there getting the girl, so I'll be naked-
|
|||
|
nude anyway." I pointed to the Kalashnikovs they carried. "They look
|
|||
|
like old friends."
|
|||
|
Zig patted his automatic rifle affectionately. "Sighted at 400
|
|||
|
meters for close-in work, lad. Stood me in good stead during the
|
|||
|
Triad invasion out on the Strip."
|
|||
|
"Good." I gave both of them one of my I-have-confidence-in-you
|
|||
|
smiles. "The drill's the same as earlier today. You get Val and
|
|||
|
Moira out. La Plante uses Grunges for muscle. If things get nasty,
|
|||
|
pop one or two of them, then see-saw your way out of there. If you
|
|||
|
burn a clip, I expect all the shots to hit an Ork, or you best be
|
|||
|
shooting at me. Hit and move -- a war of attrition we can't win."
|
|||
|
Both of them gave me a thumb's up so I turned to Val. "Sure you
|
|||
|
don't want a gun?"
|
|||
|
She shook her head with disgust. "You've got me bundled up in
|
|||
|
Kevlar so tight I can barely breathe. The last thing I want to do is
|
|||
|
make myself a target so they'll have cause to shoot me."
|
|||
|
I chuckled lightly. "Okay. Moira is your charge. Things get nasty,
|
|||
|
you get her out of there. Zig and Zag will keep the beasts at bay."
|
|||
|
Val nodded. "You have the chip?"
|
|||
|
I patted the pocket of my jacket. "Check." I hefted my MP-9 and
|
|||
|
let it dangle by the strap over my right shoulder. "Let's do this
|
|||
|
clean and all go home healthy. Places everyone." I dilled ma lungs
|
|||
|
with air and calmed my racing heart. "It's showtime."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I stepped from the warehouse into a dock area that had been
|
|||
|
cleared of anything approximating cover. Lit by bright halogen
|
|||
|
lights that held the night's darkness at bay, the open arena was
|
|||
|
defined, on two sides, by crates and loading machinery and on my
|
|||
|
side by the warehouse I'd just left. The fourth wall, the one I
|
|||
|
faced as I slipped between some crates, had been formed by another
|
|||
|
warehouse. The large doors stood open and La Plante's limo had been
|
|||
|
parked in it so the hood and tail of the vehicle almost appeared to
|
|||
|
holding the doors back.
|
|||
|
A dozen Grunges sporting various styles of submachineguns stood
|
|||
|
dutifully behind the limo and pointed their weapons in my direction.
|
|||
|
I held my hands away from my body and kept them open, but I knew my
|
|||
|
magically enhanced reflexes would allow me to shoulder the gun and
|
|||
|
snap off a half-dozen rounds before they even saw me move. In three
|
|||
|
seconds I could clear the clip and draw the Viper from my waistband
|
|||
|
to finish the job...
|
|||
|
_Back off, Wolfgang. It's the Old One's meddling that's making you
|
|||
|
think that way._
|
|||
|
The Chauffeur appeared in the middle of the line of Grunges. "Drop
|
|||
|
the gun, Kies."
|
|||
|
I barked out a sharp laugh. "Dream on. You've got me covered a
|
|||
|
dozen ways to Sunday."
|
|||
|
The Grunges -- others call them Orks -- began to hoot and twitter
|
|||
|
like the half-witted beasts most of them are. Ugly as sin and more
|
|||
|
stupid than even Ronnie, they make up the majority of the muscle for
|
|||
|
most criminal organizations. I understand that until puberty, when
|
|||
|
they undergo "goblinization," the ones that aren't purebred look and
|
|||
|
act like normal folks. After their hormones kick in they start
|
|||
|
thinking a lot less and make perfect little automatons for someone
|
|||
|
like La Plante to exploit. Of course, that's not to suggest they
|
|||
|
can't be cunning little beggars and get themselves into plenty of
|
|||
|
trouble, but it generally takes someone with an IQ in at least the
|
|||
|
low 80s to whip them into a destructive frenzy.
|
|||
|
I pointed to myself. "I'm going to walk out to the middle of this
|
|||
|
area and you'll send the girl to me. I'll turn over the chip to you.
|
|||
|
Keep your fingers off the triggers and this might just go down
|
|||
|
well."
|
|||
|
I didn't hear what the Chauffeur said to the Grunges, but their
|
|||
|
gibbering stopped. I crossed to the center of the arena, using my
|
|||
|
magically enhanced senses as best I could to see if I'd just walked
|
|||
|
into a massive trap. The roof-mounted halogen lights caused a
|
|||
|
problem because they left the tops of the warehouses in an
|
|||
|
impenetrable darkness that did not do anything to make me feel at
|
|||
|
ease. I had to assume La Plante had people up there securing the
|
|||
|
high ground, but the fact that the only Grunges I saw were leaning
|
|||
|
on his ride did not reassure me.
|
|||
|
When I reached the middle I stopped. The passenger door of the
|
|||
|
limo opened and a slender woman of indeterminate age left it to
|
|||
|
stand beside the vehicle. She didn't look exactly like the disc
|
|||
|
footage I'd seen of her -- yeah, everyone says that about CDs shot of
|
|||
|
them -- but I knew instantly that she had to be Moira Alianha. The
|
|||
|
pale dress she wore was fashionably short and revealed legs I was
|
|||
|
almost willing to die for, but she quickly cloaked herself with a
|
|||
|
dark wool blanket to ward off the chill air.
|
|||
|
With her head up, and just the tips of her ears peeking out
|
|||
|
through the long veil of her midnight hair, she walked to me. I gave
|
|||
|
her a smile designed to inspire hope and confidence, but she ignored
|
|||
|
me and only saw the black and red raven patch on the shoulder of my
|
|||
|
jacket. She blinked twice and then I thought she was going to faint.
|
|||
|
I reached out and steadied her. "Easy now, Ms. Alianha. We're
|
|||
|
almost home."
|
|||
|
She touched the patch with incredibly slender fingers. "My husband
|
|||
|
sent you?"
|
|||
|
I frowned and figured she was confused. "I work for Richard
|
|||
|
Raven."
|
|||
|
Moira smiled. "Yes, my husband to be."
|
|||
|
I almost swallowed my tongue. "Huh? Say what?"
|
|||
|
She just looked at me with vibrant green eyes.
|
|||
|
Suddenly everything seemed to run to chaos in my head. "Does
|
|||
|
anyone else know who you are to Raven?"
|
|||
|
Moira shook her head. "No, not here, why?"
|
|||
|
I let her question drift by unanswered. "Don't tell anyone,
|
|||
|
period." _If anyone finds out that she's close to Raven, her life
|
|||
|
won't be worth a melted CD and she could be used to hold Raven back
|
|||
|
from dealing with scum like La Plante._ His aides, folks like me and
|
|||
|
Val, accept the dangers connected with belonging to Raven's group.
|
|||
|
Moira was lucky that La Plante had no idea of her true value, or
|
|||
|
this little exchange would be lots nastier.
|
|||
|
The Chauffeur shouted at me. "Let's have the tea party and true
|
|||
|
confessions later. We want the chip, now!"
|
|||
|
Carefully, slowly, I reached into my jacket pocket. I withdrew
|
|||
|
from it a white piece of plastic about two inches square. The chip
|
|||
|
itself showed up in sharp contrast to the snowy plastic wafer to
|
|||
|
which it had been mounted. "I'll just put it down here..."
|
|||
|
I felt the plastic quiver and the chip explode as the bullet shot
|
|||
|
through it at Mach 4. The booming, rolling echo of the gunshot
|
|||
|
followed the bullet by a split-second, but I'd already turned and
|
|||
|
started to push Moira to safety. My right hand dropped the piece of
|
|||
|
plastic and enfolded the MP-9's pistol grip. I swept the gun around
|
|||
|
and snapped off two shots, one of which sent a headless Grunge
|
|||
|
pitching back to the warehouse floor. I heard the staccato roar of
|
|||
|
Zig and Zag's Kalishnikov's and saw three more Grunges drop out of
|
|||
|
sight amid sparks lancing from the limo's armored frame.
|
|||
|
Gunmen hidden on the rooftops slowly stood and their weapons
|
|||
|
lipped flame as I dragged Moira out of the killing zone. With so
|
|||
|
many people concentrating on just the pair of us I felt certain we'd
|
|||
|
be blasted to puppy chow before we'd gone a half-dozen steps, but
|
|||
|
the men on the roof started shooting at La Plante's Grunges. The
|
|||
|
confused Orcs returned the fire, but did so ineffectively because of
|
|||
|
the wealth of targets and the babel of orders being shouted by the
|
|||
|
Chauffeur.
|
|||
|
I'd just propelled Moira through the narrow warehouse doorway when
|
|||
|
a bullet finally caught me. It blew into the back of my left thigh
|
|||
|
and ricochetted off to the left after it shattered my femur. It
|
|||
|
ripped free of my leg two inches left and three below the entry
|
|||
|
point, tearing a chunk out of my femoral artery as it went.
|
|||
|
I screamed, but as the echo of the scream died in my head I heard
|
|||
|
the howl of a wolf rise in its place. Stumbling forward, I spilled
|
|||
|
onto the warehouse floor. My left knee hit hard and set another
|
|||
|
shockwave of pain through my leg. I tried to choke back another cry
|
|||
|
but it came out as a lupine yelp.
|
|||
|
I rolled over onto my back and pulled the MP-9 to me. "Move it,
|
|||
|
campers, get Moira out of here."
|
|||
|
Val stared at the hole in my leg. "You're hit!"
|
|||
|
I bit back the pain. "Yeah, my days in the big league are over.
|
|||
|
Maybe you can retire my uniform." I looked up at Zig and Zag. "Move
|
|||
|
it! I'll hold them off if I can. It's got to be Fujiwara yaks out
|
|||
|
there shooting the Grunges up. That'll buy you some time, and I'll
|
|||
|
buy you more. Go!"
|
|||
|
Zig made for the back door, but Moira shook her head and knelt
|
|||
|
beside me. "No, I'm not going. You need help."
|
|||
|
She started making all the proper motions for a spell, but I
|
|||
|
closed a bloody hand around her fingers. "Save it, sister. You'll
|
|||
|
need all the magic you can muster to get the hell out of Seattle.
|
|||
|
Val, get her out of here."
|
|||
|
Valerie crossed to Moira and rested her hands on her shoulders,
|
|||
|
but the elf shrugged her off. "No. I can save you. I can fix your
|
|||
|
leg."
|
|||
|
Inside my head the Old One growled seductively. "Let her fix you.
|
|||
|
Let her fill you with magic. Do as she asks and I assure you the
|
|||
|
others will not follow."
|
|||
|
"No!" I shouted at both of them.
|
|||
|
Her emerald eyes flashed with an anger that told me my stay of
|
|||
|
execution had been denied. "Wait." I pulled the Viper from my belt
|
|||
|
and tossed it to Val.
|
|||
|
She stared at it as if it were commercial software. "I don't want
|
|||
|
this."
|
|||
|
I swallowed hard. "You might." I reached down and dipped the
|
|||
|
fingers of my left hand in my blood and painted twin parallel lines
|
|||
|
beneath each eye and across my forehead. "Do this, Moira, and then
|
|||
|
leave. All of you, get out of here. Don't look back, no matter what.
|
|||
|
Don't go looking for me. I'll find you, when I can."
|
|||
|
Zig and Zag stared at me as if I'd gone mad and Val shivered.
|
|||
|
Moira ripped my pants away around the wound and pressed her hands to
|
|||
|
it. She subvocalized a chant, but I felt warmth and a tingling flow
|
|||
|
from her hands into my leg. Almost instantly it nibbled the pain
|
|||
|
away. The energy continued to build and tissue began to heal, my
|
|||
|
body motivated to restructure itself at a rate that should have
|
|||
|
taken months. Even so, I knew the spell she wove was more than I
|
|||
|
needed.
|
|||
|
And it was more than I could control.
|
|||
|
I grit my teeth and shoved her away. "Go, go!" I snapped at them.
|
|||
|
"Run!"
|
|||
|
They vanished from sight just as the first tremor hit me. I
|
|||
|
shrieked as fire filled my ribs with molten agony. I heard the crack
|
|||
|
as my breastbone parted down the middle, thickened and broadened to
|
|||
|
accept the new angle of my expanded rib cage. I gnashed my teeth at
|
|||
|
the pain and the growing canine teeth split my lower lip.
|
|||
|
"Don't fight it, Longtooth. It won't hurt so much," the Old One
|
|||
|
whispered.
|
|||
|
_Gotta retain some control! Can't let you run wild!_
|
|||
|
My long bones telescoped back down, shortening but strengthening
|
|||
|
my limbs. The muscles flowed into protoplasm as the transformation
|
|||
|
continued, then congealed into new muscles with new insertions able
|
|||
|
to exert more powerful pressure and leverage than before. My fingers
|
|||
|
and toes likewise shrank -- the latter far more than the former -- and
|
|||
|
organic claws grew to give me some new weaponry.
|
|||
|
My head felt as if it were exploding when my jaw and facial bones
|
|||
|
broke. My whole face grew out into a muzzle and my tongue lengthened
|
|||
|
along with it. The top of my head flattened somewhat and my eye
|
|||
|
sockets sank back to a more protected position. According to the
|
|||
|
only person to watch me go through this lunacy my eyes do not lose
|
|||
|
their silver color or the Killer Rings.
|
|||
|
The bodily transformation almost complete as my pelt thickened and
|
|||
|
ears lengthened, I felt the Old One begin to gnaw on my resolve and
|
|||
|
humanity. I clung to the image of Dr. Raven sitting across from me
|
|||
|
as I changed and the sound of his voice telling me how to
|
|||
|
concentrate so I would not surrender to the beast inside me. "You
|
|||
|
have been blessed by the Wolf Spirit, greatly blessed, but that
|
|||
|
blessing will be a curse if you surrender yourself to him."
|
|||
|
The Old One whimpered with disgust. "Someday Raven will fail you
|
|||
|
and you will become mine."
|
|||
|
_Stuff it, you mangy mutt. I've won this round._
|
|||
|
The advent of three Grunges storming through the warehouse door
|
|||
|
precluded any remark the Old One might have made. I gave them a
|
|||
|
toothy grin from the shadows. "My, my," I growled in a voice that
|
|||
|
even Grunges knew to fear, "what fine little piggies we have here."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It took a bit more than faery-tale huffing and puffing to blow
|
|||
|
them all down, but the Grunges didn't offer much more than that for
|
|||
|
a fight. They've never been much for hitting a moving target and in
|
|||
|
my more compact wolfform I don't stay in one place very long. I left
|
|||
|
them in a leaking heap on the warehouse floor, then dashed out into
|
|||
|
the killzone, doing my best to spit out Grunge blood.
|
|||
|
I couldn't have been much more than gray blur as I streaked across
|
|||
|
the opening, but I felt the Chauffeur's eyes on me the whole time. I
|
|||
|
paused for a second at the place from which the rifleshot had come,
|
|||
|
but a yakuza forced me to tear out his throat before I had finished
|
|||
|
nosing around. I almost lost control with that kill but,
|
|||
|
fortunately, the yak had some sort of augmentation that meant I got
|
|||
|
hydraulic fluid in addition to blood when I took him down.
|
|||
|
Despite that hardship, my nose confirmed what I had earlier
|
|||
|
guessed. I took keen delight in watching the Chauffeur shudder when
|
|||
|
my joyous howl filled the warehouse district like the fog rolling in
|
|||
|
from the coast.
|
|||
|
|
|||
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IV
|
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|
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Ronnie Killstar's eyes grew wide as the hole in my leg had been
|
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|
when he heard me release the cocking lever on the MP-9. Seated in
|
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|
his favorite chair, nestled deep in the shadows of his unlit living
|
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|
room, I spoke to him in a husky whisper. "Close the door. Sit down
|
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|
at the kitchen table."
|
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|
"What's this?" He stared blankly at the little repast I'd prepared
|
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|
him while I waited.
|
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|
I smiled at him. "That's your last meal."
|
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|
The punk stared at me. "Milk and cookies?"
|
|||
|
I shrugged. "It's the perfect thing for a little boy who doesn't
|
|||
|
know when he's not supposed to play adult games. If you'd have been
|
|||
|
content to just sell us out to Fujiwara, that would have worked
|
|||
|
fine."
|
|||
|
He tried to look offended, but his nervousness betrayed him. "I
|
|||
|
don't know what you're talking about."
|
|||
|
"Can it, joeboy. Val and I cracked your personnel file and it
|
|||
|
concluded with the last phone number you called. Later, when we
|
|||
|
broke into Fujiwara I recognized the same number. There was a
|
|||
|
connection."
|
|||
|
Ronnie straightened up in his chair. "Circumstantial evidence."
|
|||
|
I shook my head. "It would have been if you could have kept your
|
|||
|
ego in check. In the Weed you told me you could 'bullseye a rat's
|
|||
|
ass' at a klick in the dark. A chip's got to be four times the size
|
|||
|
of your average rat's ass, and the range wasn't nearly that long." I
|
|||
|
sighed. "And to top it off, you were still wearing that cologne of
|
|||
|
yours."
|
|||
|
It suddenly dawned on him that I was going to kill him. The color
|
|||
|
drained from his face and he looked at me with big puppy-dog eyes.
|
|||
|
Yet before they could have their full sympathetic effect on me, his
|
|||
|
features sharpened and a bit of the old, defiant fire reentered his
|
|||
|
bearing. "Wait a minute, I destroyed the chip you never really
|
|||
|
wanted to give to La Plante anyway. That's gotta count for
|
|||
|
something!"
|
|||
|
I hesitated for a second and hope blossomed on his face. Then I
|
|||
|
shook my head. "No, it doesn't. Dr. Raven had tipped Fujiwara about
|
|||
|
what we were going to do anyway. Fuji's programmers put a Trojan
|
|||
|
Horse carrying a nasty virus in that chip that would have destroyed
|
|||
|
La Plante's computer system. The ambush, which didn't include your
|
|||
|
shooting of the chip, was just to make sure La Plante bought the
|
|||
|
whole thing as genuine."
|
|||
|
Ronnie sank his head in his hands. "Go ahead, shoot me. I deserve
|
|||
|
it."
|
|||
|
I lifted the MP-9's muzzle to the ceiling. "No, I think I prefer
|
|||
|
letting you wallow in your own mortification. Word to the wise,
|
|||
|
kid," I shot back over my shoulder as I went to the door, "remember
|
|||
|
that you're not as tough as you think. Don't let your delusions of
|
|||
|
adequacy get you in over your head... again."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the way out I stopped the Chauffeur. "Don't bother."
|
|||
|
The plastic-faced man stared hard at me. "I didn't hear a shot."
|
|||
|
I gave him a wolfish grin and licked my lips. "You never do." I
|
|||
|
patted his cheek. "Ciao -- no pun intended. Until it's just you and
|
|||
|
me."
|