* * *
The sounds of fighting in the doss long over, Wesley pushed open the back door to the upper-floor apartment cautiously as if expecting resistance. The rusty hinges creaked horribly, and when the door finally reached a half meter wide, he froze at the awful sight of the carnage displayed. But even as Wesley started to retch, his dirty hands moved expertly over the broken bodies, taking weapons, credsticks, optical chips, and everything else he could stuff into his patched pants. The smell of feces and blood was thick enough to taste, but he ignored the stench. He’d encountered worse, much worse, on the streets. Just never this fresh. Some of the bodies were still warm. That was the bad part. The suggestion of life where there was none.
Loaded down to where he was barely able to waddle, Wesley slipped quietly out the back door, closing it behind him and locking it with a key taken off the wall. An extra knife, solid and made of good steel, was slid under the jamb as a shim to hinder the pursuit he knew would be coming.
Minutes later, a squad of combat troops dressed in Lone Star uniforms came bursting in through the front door, weapons out and ready for anything but what they found: naked dead, smashed furniture, numerous small fires, and a crucified ork. By the time the officers finished searching the two floors of the huge doss and decided to break down the back door, all they found was a trail of bloody bare footprints on the stairs going up to the first floor and then out again into the alley. They lost the tracks in the prickly weeds of a vacant lot. When more Lone Stare reinforcements and a Doc Wagon team arrived, everything and everybody of any importance was long gone.
Pink neon biinked constantly outside the bedroom window. On, off, on, off. Primitive Morse for look-at-me. The one table in the sparse room was covered with wire and bits of equipment from a dozen different decks, radios, and even selected parts from the telecom. If old Walter Gibson and Rube Goldberg had a kid, this would have been their first creation. A 3D Jackson Pollock.
Swung around to point at the wall, the trideo was showing the wallpaper the classic ‘Vampire Hunter D!’, the noise of it masking their soft conversations from any possible eavesdroppers beyond the thin foamboard dividers.
“Is it working?” asked Thumbs hopefully.
“Ssssh,” said Silver, eyes closed, fiber-optic cable connecting her to the Fuchi 8 and then the sparking ruin of the Fuchi 2 recovered by Moonfeather from Two Bears’ hands. Seated uncomfortably in a cheap macroplas chair, Silver was jacked into the mess.
“Why did Two Bears risk his life to grab this?” she mumbled, not taking her attention off the cobbled-together Frankenstein. “Files corrupted, recovery programs scrambled, databytes flickering about in here as random as snowflakes in a storm! Gods, this is totally trashed. A complete waste . . . whoa, what was that?”
Silver became perfectly still, except for her fingers tapping variously on the keyboards of both Fuchi decks. “I’m going in!”
Dressed in only boxers and T-shirt, Delphia was shaving in the washstand with the complimentary free soap and a cheap razor. His wounds were still sore as hell, but for a man who’d been shot a half a dozen times only hours ago, he was doing fine. All the way here, Moonfeather sang a healing song over him, and as they pulled the Elite into the parking lot of the north Miami Domino Motel he stumbled out with the others on his own feet. Starving, but alive. Gods, was he hungry!
The Domino was a classic by-the-hour. And even though it wasn’t Saturday night, or a holiday, four people of assorted races and different sexes renting one room for the whole night did raise the clerk’s interest. The stickful of creds lowered them, though, allaying his suspicions, and they got the rent-a-doss. It was cheap, but relatively clean.
Rinsing the razor off under the tepid tapwater, Delphia wondered what the magic done on him was going to cost. He already had a sneaking suspicion what pound of flesh the Cat shaman wanted from him.
“What do we do about Two Bears?” asked Thumbs, watching Silver work.
“Word on the grid is that he died yesterday,” said Moonfeather. “Now it’s true.” She was sitting on the bed, her bracelets, rings, and necklaces spread out before her. Occasionally, she would sing to them, or just hum to herself. Nothing seemed to be happening, but she looked pleased.
“The services are tomorrow,” added Delphia, drying his face.
“Buried so soon? How come?”
“Some religious thing. He’s got to go under within twenty-four hours.”
“I liked him,” said Thumbs for no apparent reason.
Pulling on fresh clothes he’d taken from the trunk of the Elite, Delphia shrugged. “He was a Johnson. He fragged up. Now he’s wormfood. Happens to everybody eventually.”
“What do we do if there’s any usable data on the chips in that relic?” asked Moonfeather. “Call the Johnson and collect the fee?”
“We have the number,” confirmed Thumbs, reaching into a plastifoam box and pulling an icy beer into view. He popped the top with a callused thumb and took a draft. “So who makes the call?”
“Me,” said Delphia in his no-nonsense tone, buttoning a shirt. “I’m the one who talked to the J. Anybody else chats him up and we could blow the deal.”
“And all those lovely nuyen,” added Moonfeather.
“Hey,” said Silver softly, getting their attention as she jacked out. “I’m starting to download.” She spoke in a whisper as if afraid a loud noise might terminate the tremulous connections. Everybody crowded around her, but not near enough to jostle an elbow.
She spoke ever so softly, “Found something. My Fuchi 8 can download a thousand times faster than this old thing could when it was brand new.” Fingers tapping, keyboards clicking. “Yeah, there we are, sweetie. This is a lot easier than running the Matrix. Don’t need anywhere near the concentration to twig the job. But if I pull on the data too hard, the jury-rigged system will crash, scrambling all those zeros and ones and there’ll be nothing left but a half-melted paperweight people paid blood to get.”
They others stood and watched the cracked lights on the old Fuchi change color and patterns, moving to the technological tune of the decker, who played the keyboards like an ambidextrous pianist. After a few ticks, a thin stream of smoke curled up from the Fuchi 2 and it went dark.
“Dead,” announced Silver. “The recovery program burned her out. Just couldn’t take it. Poor dear.” Removing the fiber-optic cable from her temple, she looked at the technological rat’s nest lying before her with a puzzled expression. In the background, Vampire Hunter D confronted the dark shogun and revealed who he really was. A fight between the titans immediately ensued.
“Beer?” asked Thumbs politely.
“Any kaf?”
“Nope.”
“Beer’ll do. Thanx.”
“Well?” asked Delphia, straightening his cuffs. “Anything?”
“Yes and no,” Silver said, rubbing the cold can along the side of her face. “There was a record of the original transaction about the book chip. Not the contract with the publisher, but the private contract between Gordon and the author.”
“Say again?” asked Thumbs, thrusting out his tusks.
Silver still held the beer to her throat. “Gordon didn’t write the fragging book. It was a lie. He was the ghost author. A front for the real writer.”
“Why hide that you wrote a book?” inquired Moonfeather making a face.
Thumbs crushed an empty beer can. “Why write the book is the real question?”
“Because he had too much to say, and wasn’t allowed to talk,” rationalized Delphia, adjusting his suspenders. “Somebody who knew great secrets and could not speak of them.” He started to walk and talk. “It’s a common problem among the upper echelons of any gov or business. Bursting with forbidden knowledge, somebody hired a nobody to front for his public confession. He got to talk, and stay safe at the same time.”
“And Gordon got some nuyen and a hot rep for basically doing nothing,” observed Moonfeather. “Sounds like a win/win to me.”
Leaning forward, elbows on knees, Thumbs snorted rudely. “Yeah, except for that getting crucified part at the end, a sweet deal.”
On the trideo, lightning crashed as the mutants escaped, and norms attacked vampires while the great castle began to fall apart amid the civil war of blood relatives.
“Was there a name?” asked Delphia bluntly.
Silver sipped the beer. “Yeah, some chummer named James Harvin.”
Moonfeather gawked. “The James Harvin?”
“There might be another,” Delphia growled. “But I have only heard of one in town.”
Thumbs halted in the process of opening a beer with a tusk. “Harvin,” he said.
“James J. demigod-this-town-is-mine-frag-you Harvin. The CEO of Gunderson Corporation. The guy who ordered the Night of Law. That James Harvin secretly wrote a book about pirates?”
“Apparently so,” said Silver, starting to pull wires and turn off switches.
“Whafor?”
“Maybe he likes pirates.”
“Maybe he is a pirate. Or used to be, anyway.”
Thumbs drained his beer and opened another quickly. “How are we going to arrange a meet with a top drawer like him?” asked Moonfeather, polishing a large catseye gem on her T-top.
Swallowing a mouthful, Thumbs laughed bitterly. “God needs an appointment to see Harvin. Us? Null program.”
“Silver, think you can get into their system and dig some data?” Moonfeather breathed on the stone and polished some more. “What Harvin knows, I’ll wager his mainframes do also.”
“Yeah, buried under so much IC it’d sink the Titanic II. Pillage the frames of TGC?” She shook her head. “No way.”
“So what about Atlantic Security? Use it as a back door,” offered Delphia, taking a seat. “One owns the other. They must have a sweetheart deal to exchange data.”
“Zero sum there. AtSec also writes the IC guarding most of the major corps and multinationals in the Carib League,” said Silver, patting her deck as if it was a pet. “Nobody’s getting past their black ice without at least one executive access code or using the master terminal in Harvin’s private office.”
Accepting a beer, Delphia vetoed that. “The system’s probably triple-sealed too. That’s standard. Unless it’s Harvin accessing the mainframe, it’ll blow and bring a drek-load of guards with shotguns and chipped hellhounds and tox knows what else. Blessed Yomi, just getting into his office would take a miracle!”
Silver shivered.
“Yeah? Well, I can get us the access codes,” said Thumbs, setting aside his beer. “Maybe a couple of the codes. Fresh, hot, and tight.”
For a tick, nobody could speak. Vampire Hunter D finished rolling the credits and Mobilesuit Gundham began immediately, the intro music fast and jazzy, with lots of bass and brass.
Something banged on the wall from the other side. “Turn down the fragging cartoons!” shouted a muffled voice. “It’s three in the bloody hack, ya gleebs!”
Reaching for the bedside table, Silver turned on the radio too.
“Argh!” screamed their neighbor, and then his trideo started blaring the jazzy fight music from Xabungle. “Ha! Take that!”
“You’re telling us you can get us into Harvin’s files?” smirked Moonfeather contemptuously.
The floor creaked under his awesome weight as Thumbs crossed the room to look out the curtained window at the blink-blink of the electric motel sign. He stood, haloed in pink neon, his horns curving above his smooth bald head.
“Yeah, that’s what I’m telling you,” he said. “Ever started a riot?”
With two ork guards behind them, two in front and one on point, the corporate executive and her escort came down the inclined ramp of the underground parking lot. She wore a slingaround spidersilk dress in the latest mode, the fabric mimicking flowing water as it rippled with every step. Her ankle-strap highs perfectly matched her long scarf, and complemented her elaborately coiffed hair. He was less noticeable, as befitting his lower status, in a simple black on black tuxedo, slicked-back blonde hair, a slight stagger in his walk from too much good champagne and too little food.
The ork bodyguards were in somber ballistic suits, their shirts lumpy from the armor plating attached to their skin underneath. They were wired to each other via headcoms, and wore silenced machine pistols slung over their shoulders, backup smartlink handguns on their hips, and flash grenades on their belts. It was an average night out, nothing special. Their suit had gone out on the town, and now they were escorting her and her paramour back to the penthouse for sweaty vanilla. No big jewels involved, no corporate data, no unknown or dangerous turf, no high-crime neighborhood. Cake. A yawner.
The guards proceeded toward the Mitsubishi Nightsky limousine in standard two-on-two formation, the point man drawing any potential fire in the lead. Following them was
the couple. The man was smiling and laughing, probably in
anticipation of whatever fleshy delights awaited them at the apartment. She was more serious, frowning slightly as she studied the limo with its tinted windows.
The driver had not come to the front door of the restaurant when she beeped. Most unacceptable. He had done this once before, passed out from sampling the liquor in the wet bar. It brought him a reduction in rank and pay, which should have been sufficient punishment for the indiscretion. Well, the old norm had seen his last drop of her liquor supply. She would fire him here and now, and he could walk back by himself through Overtown. It would serve him right if the gangs killed him.