Read Prelude to a Scream Online

Authors: Jim Nisbet

Tags: #Bisac Code 1: FIC000000; FIC031000; FIC030000

Prelude to a Scream (16 page)

BOOK: Prelude to a Scream
11.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The high-pitched squeal of a modem assaulted his ear.

He cursed, disconnected, redialed.

While it rang Stanley stared at the lighter.

Fong answered at the fourth ring.

“Fong. Stanley.”

“My white friend. What's cooking?”

“I got a name and a password.”

“What, no phone number?”

“You can probably get to this outfit through any Internet gateway.”

“What outfit?”

“It's a national database of living-will-type organ, blood and bone marrow donors called DonorNet.”

“Yuck.”

“Think positive. The organ they donate might be your own.”

“Or yours.”

“Very funny.”

“So what am I looking for?”

Stanley gave Fong a rundown of the glitch he and Giles had discovered.

“Oh,” said Fong. “That explains this wacky sexgram spamming my in-basket, here.”

“What sexgram?”

“Standby.”

Stanley could hear Fong's fingers driving a keyboard, chording fistfuls of keys like it was a piano. Another touch typist. Where did they come from?

“Check it out, and I quote:”

Old Hippie,

We overlooked it just now (need to test this address anyway), but, given type O-Negative, turns out if change _Sex_ category from (M) to (F), donor info remains as selected (Y)es or (N)o. But, given O-Negative, if change (F)emale to (M)ale donor info automatically goes to (Y)es if already (N)o. In other words, the trapdoor's only interest is in type O-Negative Males.

Hmm. Just had a thought. Right back…

Back. I was right. Changing category from (M)arried to (S)ingle does the same thing.

They're after _single_ O-Negative males.

Will be in touch.

Guiro

“Go, Giles,” said Stanley. “Is there a return address?”

“Yeah.”

“E-mail him back. Mark it private and say, ‘Go Guiro Go'.”

Fong typed. “What does this mean?”

“That's our inside boy, whom you're in place to cross-check. And it means he's on the case.”

“Hmmm. He's got menu-driven software acting like this?”

“It's possible the whole network is rigged.”

“In my entire Mah-Jong career,” said Fong, “that's the most brazen bullshit I've ever heard of.”

“It's worked on at least nine victims so far. Giles got interested in the problem on account it impugns the integrity of his data.”

“Is that a fact? We'll have to run him for President.”

“It could have been a put-on, but I don't think so.”

“Stanley, you are paranoid.”

“In normal people, excess paranoia is filtered through a system of paired kidneys.”

“You mean, to halve the number of kidneys is to square the amount of paranoia?”

“Axiomatic.”

“And all this time I think to myself, that Stanley, he's not learning a word of Chinese.”

“So I'm thinking it might be advantageous if you continue with your inquiries, despite this guy MacIntosh's apparent interest. Double up on him, so to speak.”

“Sounds good to me.”

Stanley gently freed his hand from Iris' and took up the little spiral notebook. “The phone number there is 255-2289. The password
foment
in combination with some or all of the name
Giles MacIntosh
should get you on for starters.”

“Hey,” said Fong, “like the computer.”

“Not quite.” Stanley spelled all three words, holding his notes up to the dim light. “I want a sort off the organ database. Query for everybody on it who (1) is male, (2) single, (3) lives within fifty miles of San Francisco, (4) has type O-Negative blood, (5) is HIV-negative, (6) has tested negative for any kind of renal dysfunction or kidney disease, insofar as they are listed or considered, and (7) has been a client of the San Francisco Clinic for Sexually Transmitted Diseases in the past two years, whose modem number you now have. A list of everybody who works in the joint would be handy too, particularly the names of whatever computer consultants and sysops you can come up with. Look out for one with first name Tommy.”

While they were talking, Iris had worked the toes of both her bare feet under Stanley's hip.

“You got that?”

“Sure.” Fong repeated the filter specs. Stanley listened in silence, staring at Iris, who wiggled her toes and blew smoke between Stanley's face and notebook pages.

Fong said, “Should be easy, man. How'd you get that guy's handle?”

“I just limped in and asked for it. This kid's so sympathetic, I'm surprised he's got time to feed himself.”

“Anything else?”

“Yes. Isn't there a newspaper database on CompuServe?”

“Sure. It's one of the handiest things on it.”

“Does it have both the
Chronicle
and the
Examiner
?”

“Yep.”

“Good. Query both papers for any mention of the black market in human organs, organ theft, illegal trade in organs, etc. Go back two years. Emphasize kidneys, kidney theft, illegal transplants, mysterious women in bars. We're particularly interested in any local case of a guy with blood type O-Negative meeting a smart and sexy woman in a bar and going home with her, only to wake up in Golden Gate Park missing a kidney.”

“What if there are no such cases in the papers?”

“Then we'll have to see what the cops have in their computers.”

“Now we're talking fun,” said Fong.

“While you're at it, see if you can download any articles about California surgeons or internists cashiered for egregious malpractice.”

“Man, you
have
to be egregious to get cashiered.”

“Call me,” said Stanley, holding Iris' eyes with his own.

“Where?” said Fong.

“I'll be at…”

“Five six six,” said Iris quietly.

“Five six six,” repeated Stanley.

“Two two three zero.”

“Two two three zero.”

“Got it.” Fong rang off.

Stanley had to take his eyes off Iris to find the button to turn off the phone.

“You'll have instant access,” Iris said. “That phone can go wherever we go.”

“What if we stay right here?”

“It'll do that, too.”

He set the telephone on the floor.

She moved a little bit closer.

Stanley put his arm around her shoulders. The kimono was silk, and now it parted over her knees, which were just under his chin and against his chest.

She kissed him.

He kissed her back.

She nipped his lip with her teeth.

He asked her, “Why me?”

She traced the lines of his mouth with a fingernail.

“You've been hurt. I'm a nurse.”

“That's not enough.”

“You're a hero.”

“Still not enough.”

She shrugged. “I've never kissed a hero before.”

“You're not kissing one now.”

She smiled and snuggled. “I'm getting pretty close, though.”

In the dim gloom each of her eyes reflected a tiny candleflame.

“No more than that?”

“Well…,” she said. “You really want to know?”

“Yes…”

“There's that scar.”

She giggled.

“Scar? What—?”

“This scar,” she said, pulling at his shirt.

“That scar,” he said, grabbing her hand. “What about it?”

She stopped tugging and locked eyes with him.

“May I see it?”

“You've already seen it.”

“I want to see it again.”

“What for?”

She snatched the shirttail out from under his belt.

“Okay, okay,” Stanley said. “Ouch.”

“Just relax,” she whispered. Her voice had gone a little husky.

“Who, me? Sure, sure. I'll relax.”

She plucked at the buttons on his shirt. “I can't see the whole thing. Lie down.”

Stanley relaxed against the cushions of the couch.

Iris worked on the clothing problem.

“Ohhh,” she said after a while. “It's beautiful.”

“Thanks,” said Stanley staring at the floor. “Though I feel I might well have gotten through life without it.”

“Oh, Stanley,” she said. “But now you have it, and it's a beautiful scar.”

Stanley sighed loudly.

A moment passed, and another. He could hear her breathing.

When she spoke, he realized her mouth was inches from his hip. “May I… touch it?”

“Iris,” Stanley said. “Why…?”

She blew little puffs of air over his flesh.

He suddenly acquiesced. “Of course. Of course you can touch it.”

She ran a finger along the line of still-fresh sutures. The edge of her nail ticked them off slowly, like the tang of a zipper passing over its teeth.

It tickled, it itched, it felt very strange, but Stanley lay still for it, until he involuntarily shivered.

Iris permitted herself a profound sigh.

The scar began to feel better—or at least different. Stanley had to admit, it felt better than it had felt in quite a number of days.

She moved the fingernail back the other way.

“Iris.” He tried to sit up.

“Hush,” she said, pushing him back onto the couch. “I want…”

“What do you want?”


Scarlingus
.” It was a whispered hiss. A dragon's exhale.

Before Stanley had time to believe his ears she added, “Also known as
cicatricio
.”

His mind helped out by supplying the image of a forked serpent's tongue straddling the scar of his recently acquired incision.

“God almighty,” Stanley blurted aloud.

“She approves,” Iris chuckled.

Stanley ran a mental finger down the index to his inner catalogue of acceptable social behavior.
Scar-licking, scar-licking
… The categories skipped from
Rorschach
to
Scintillant
— no
scarlingus
.

Stall. See if you can get another shot — with a beer back
,
an inner voice hastily advised.

She had her own advice. “Stick with me, brain-boy. You'll go far and come soon.”

“Don't — don't you get enough of that… in the hospital?” Stanley stammered.

“What — sex?” She laughed. “You've got to be kidding.”

“No. I meant scars, enough of scars.”

“I originally thought that nursing would get me close to my most favorite thing in the world,” she admitted simply, addressing, in fact, the scar. “Alas, it's a case of so near, yet so far.”

“Scarlingus…”

“Yes. May I, darling? You'll like it. May I run the tip of my tongue along the entire length of your scar?” She laughed gaily. “You'll probably scream with pleasure. Go ahead. The old lady downstairs is deaf.” He could feel her breath on his hip. “It's a beautiful scar. And so fresh. It's not even really a scar yet, you know. It's still… it's a
nascent
scar. It's a wound, really. No longer an incision, not yet a scar. A healing wound. A blessing. Deliciously ripe.”

“I hadn't really thought of it that way, Iris.”

“Licking is good for a wound. You know?”

“Dogs do it,” he suggested.

“We should do it, too,” she said. But she wasn't even listening to him anymore.

Iris rose to brush her lips lightly over his shoulder, nuzzled the hair at the edge of his scalp, and said moistly into his ear, “I want to touch the tip of my tongue to it, just to its edge. It won't hurt you. It might even turn you on.”

“Go for it.”

She didn't move. “Then you can do anything to me you want, Stanley…”

“I beg your pardon?”

“There must be something I can do for you, Stanley. Something… special…?”

BOOK: Prelude to a Scream
11.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Glimpses by Lynn Flewelling
Girl on a Plane by Miriam Moss
Rage of Angels by Sidney Sheldon
Nightmares & Geezenstacks by Fredric Brown
The man at Kambala by Kay Thorpe


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024