Read New Title 32 Online

Authors: Bryan Fields

Tags: #Urban Fantasy

New Title 32 (8 page)

He moved in front of me, grinning fit to burst. “David, good to see you again. Guys, David Fraser. We had a little bidding war over Curious Diversions a couple years ago. I cut my losses, but Dave went all in. Dave, meet Carl Tanner with Apex Designs, and the one and only Tim Lawson, head honcho and design guru at Spartan. So, Dave, got a product yet?”

I put on a cheerful grin. “Nope! We just decided to come down here and pass out soap and deodorant to the fanboys. We’re doing a public service to help your players get laid.”

That got a few chuckles. Neil seized on the line and tried again. “Speaking of getting laid, how much is your date running you? You just decide to ah,
blow
the last of your capital?”

I fought off the urge to punch Neil. Instead, I kissed Rose’s fingers. “Between eighty and a hundred K per year. Rose is my CFO. Absolute hardcore financial genius. She’s also my fiancée. Why all the interest? Did you decide to give up humping little boys?”

Neil’s face darkened. “Yeah, very funny. So tell me, David. How does it feel to be a complete loser?”

I shot back with, “Why don’t you ask your wife how it feels to be rid of one?”

A collective “Oh, boy…” went up from the guys standing behind him. Neil jumped toward me, trying to throw a punch. Several hands grabbed his arms and I saw two bouncers looking our way.

Industry gossip had it his wife had just left him for his largest backer. Supposedly, Neil still had to kiss the guy’s ass at every board meeting, too. From his reaction, I’d say there was a good bit of truth to the reports. Neil shook himself loose and stepped away.

I ignored him and clasped hands with his buddies. “A pleasure to meet both of you. I’ve enjoyed your work for several years. I’d love to chat, but we’re expected up on two. Have a good show.” I gave Neil a farewell wave as we headed upstairs.

This was where the big names were. Managers and senior designers for most of the top ten subscription-based games in the world. Marketing managers from all the biggest distributers. A handful of celebrities who had done acting and voice over work in some of the big titles. Tim Lawson could have been up here as well; I gave him points for sticking with his friends.

Right in the middle of the mob, holding court and surveying his realm, was Gordon Norris. President, CEO, and majority owner of Avalanche Games. Lorena, the Damazi from last night, walked next to him, enjoying the spotlight. Good for her.

We found an open spot and ordered drinks. Our first toast was to enjoying the moment. Whatever else happened this week, we were here now, and that was enough.

* * * *

While we were partying, darker events were taking place a few miles away. In the grand scheme of things, this was little more than one brief skirmish in a vast and ancient war, but it made a great impression on those involved. I think of it as the moment in a chess game when both queens take position on the field.

Even in Las Vegas, few people heard, or cared to know, about this incident. It earned a brief mention on the news, but only after a piece on the desperate shortage of bagpipers available for a new Irish stepdancing production. I’m including this narrative to give later events some context, hopefully without spoilers. Bear with me; it’ll make sense in time.

There is an official police report on file, but it’s dry, repeats a lot, and the officers clearly didn’t want to hear anything that wasn’t consistent with a drive-by shooting. This narrative pulls from that report, as well as some after-action discussions with witnesses. As Nadia said, “It may have happened, it may not have happened, but this is the truth.”

Just before nine that Wednesday night, “Bob”, a middle-twenties Caucasian male, got off a bus on Las Vegas Boulevard, several blocks north of Charleston. He was walking east to his apartment when he noticed a group of older-model cars circling the area. He decided to go a few blocks out of his way to a well-trafficked convenience store, feeling he would be safer in a more populated area.

Bob worked as a waiter for an Italian restaurant on the Strip, and he was carrying a large amount of cash from the night’s tips. The convenience store had a working ATM, so he deposited the cash into his account, just to be prudent. The ATM receipt shows the time as nine thirty-two p.m.

Eight members of a street gang known variously as the North Vegas 40s or the Rolling 40s entered the shop to purchase cigarettes and beverages. They took no adverse action against Bob or the store staff and left without incident.

Outside, a Hispanic boy and girl, both nine to ten years of age, asked the gang members for food or money. One gang member brought the children inside the store and told them to pick out several sandwiches and bottles of milk or orange juice. Another called the police from an outside pay phone and reported the children as possibly being lost or in distress. He requested an officer be sent to pick the children up for their safety.

Bob selected some items he needed as well, and then the group of vehicles he had seen earlier pulled in and parked in front of the store.

A large number of Hispanic, Caucasian, and African-American individuals emerged from the cars. All had gaunt features and emaciated bodies. Their clothing was decrepit, torn, and stained beyond recovery. The newcomers began issuing demands, though Bob couldn’t make out what they were.

The Rolling 40s refused. One entered the store and shouted, “They want the kids!” One store clerk and the two gang members now inside the store attempted to sneak the children out the back. Bob decided to go with them and tried to call the police from his cell phone. They heard gunshots coming from the parking lot, and ran south through the alley toward Charleston.

Security camera footage showed the Rolling 40s pulling out handguns and firing them. The rounds blew out several car windows and hit multiple vehicles, but did not appear to even strike the newcomers. Crime scene investigation later determined fifty-one rounds were fired. Eleven rounds were recovered from the vehicles or other objects in the area. Thirty-seven bullets were scattered on the ground, but none showed any trace of impact deformation—as though they stopped in mid-air and fell to the ground.

Four of the Rolling 40s died in the parking lot, all from sudden and overwhelming levels of cocaine, heroin, and PCP in their systems. No evidence of these drugs could be found at the scene. In each case, death occurred in minutes. The poor bastards didn’t take more than two steps after whatever it was hit them.

The fifth of the Rolling 40s turned up three blocks away, alive but badly injured. His face had numerous claw marks on it and his eyes were missing. His memories and statements were not coherent. He ran away from the gunfire but remembers nothing else after that point.

While looking for help, the two Rolling 40s, the store clerk, the two children, and Bob passed a fenced-off culvert for the storm drain system. The children stated they would be safe hiding in the culvert, so the four adults breached the fence.

At this time, the other gang found them, but didn’t cross the fence. A woman with blood-tangled stringy hair, bloody hands, and gore-streaked empty eye sockets approached, calling the children’s names.

As she closed on the group, a bright blue radiance filled the area. A glowing woman with blue hair and a dark blue robe appeared in front of the children. All the opposing gang members collapsed to the ground. Bob indicated he saw the woman in blue pull “blood-covered faces”, which he believed to be the souls of the slain, out of the bleeding woman’s body. He stated the blue woman’s touch transformed them into orbs of light, which floated away into the sky.

The bloody woman vanished. The blue woman told the children not to be afraid, to go back to the shelter and pray for their fallen friends as well as for those who attacked them. At that point a police car saw the blue glow coming from the culvert and investigated. The blue woman vanished before the police officers saw her.

The children had run away that afternoon from the Meadows homeless shelter in the old downtown area. No missing child alert ever went out. At any given time, Las Vegas had thousands of homeless people, living in and moving between cars, shanty towns, tents, living with friends or family, and squatting in repossessed houses.

With so much movement in the population, tracking a single family could be near impossible. When other children raised the alarm, all authorities involved assumed the family had moved on or been given bus tickets to another state—a favorite way of addressing the homeless situation, despite being officially disapproved of.

The two children were reunited with their parents early Thursday morning. Counselors noticed a few abnormal statements, but didn’t think any of them significant. One incident stood out during their assessment: both became terrified to the point of hysteria by a portrait of the Virgin Mary on the wall of the exam room. Their behaviors escalated to the point of physical violence against the staff until the portrait was identified and removed. The children refused to discuss the matter, because “she sees us and she knows our names.” Quote obtained from an eyewitness to the session.

Another individual missing from the Meadows shelter, Toni Aguilar—seventeen, Hispanic female—turned up fifty feet inside the storm drain culvert during a cursory sweep for additional evidence. She was hospitalized for exposure. Her record showed eight foster homes in six years, before she ran away from the last one and wound up at the Meadows shelter. Child services elected not to try to place her again. Previous foster parents indicated she had a history of reality dissociation and reports of delusions.

On waking, she stated she had been chasing after the younger children and had tripped while in the culvert, striking her head. She exhibited no awareness of the above events and had to be reassured the younger children were safe. Child services refused to take her in, so the hospital released her Thursday afternoon.

Bob had multiple bullet holes in his garments, but no wounds. Fragments of metal, all partial remains of expended bullets, were found in the folds of his clothes. He had no explanation, and medical needles had no issue puncturing his skin. He was released Thursday morning. He would not answer any additional questions and referred all inquiries back to his police statement.

The last surviving Rolling 40s’ member was arrested on an outstanding traffic warrant and released after a court appearance Friday morning. He was last reported trying to make arrangements to enter theology school. His account of the incident was put up for sale on his church’s web site, with all proceeds to go to his college fund.

The store clerk returned to work the next day and declined to make any further statement.

 

 

Chapter Six

Showtime

 

Thursday’s wake-up call came at five thirty. The show opened at nine, but Rose and I were going to a casual-dress industry breakfast at seven, by personal invitation from Gordon Norris. Last night, Lorena had spotted me across the room and invited us over for a chat.

When I introduced Rose, Lorena said, “Congratulations, David. If I’d know what I was up against I wouldn’t have bothered you.”

Gordon laughed and shook my hand. “So you’re the guy I owe my thanks to. If you’d said yes, Lorena and I wouldn’t have met. How about I upgrade your industry ranking for the conferences? It’ll get you into all the top-end content and open a lot of doors for you. Interested?”

Of course I was. Introducing the boss to his new girlfriend was like diamonds in the hand.

After Rose and I sat down at the breakfast, Gordon and Lorena came in. She was out of costume and wearing regular walking prosthetics under a nice pants suit. She looked like a mid-level executive, until she looked at Gordon. You could almost see the rosy little hearts rising out of her eyes.

Since I managed a whole two hours of sleep last night, all I wanted was some comfort food, of which there was none on the menu. How could anyone in their right mind think caviar, black truffles, and pesto were breakfast foods? I made a note to file a bug report with the maître d’.

The coffee was great and the people at our table very congenial. We swapped some horror stories about programmers ignoring deadlines or not commenting their code, egotistical investors, and the fickle nature of the fan community. By the time the speaker got to the podium, I was happy and relaxed.

Our speaker was an ethicist from an international human-rights organization speaking on treatment of real-world ethical issues within game environments. Integrating the Geneva Convention and war crimes trials into modern warfare games, for example. Requiring moral behavior in order to win, and punishing evil acts with jail time or in-game community service. Providing opportunities for immoral persons to confess and atone for their misdeeds. Public shaming, such as mandatory tags on characters based on the crimes they had committed.

The speech didn’t get an enthusiastic reception. When the speaker opened the floor to questions, he was met with a polite silence. Until Rose spoke up.

“Have you factored in the financial impact of removing all the fun from our games? I don’t see this type of change to fundamental gameplay resulting in anything but a net decrease in customers.”

That got a laugh. Everyone had been thinking it but was too restrained to say it.

Across the room, a steel-haired woman in her mid to late fifties spoke up. “Whose morality would you propose be used? A game based on the founding of this country, using the social and moral codes of the period, would be unsellable due to that era’s attitudes on race and sex. If you base game-winning play on conforming to modern attitudes and morals, you lose any claim to historical authenticity. A fantasy game would be worse. A Dragon has no moral issues with burning a town, eating everyone, and taking all the valuables they can find. Do you expect the heroes to file a grievance with the United Nations?”

That opened the doors for actual conversation, and I loved it. I was sitting with people I’d looked up to and envied for years, listening to them discuss issues that could shape the way games were designed for years, impacting the lives of thousands of employees and millions of fans. It was a heady feeling.

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