"Junior!" he yelled.
A kid ran to him in medic crime scene attire.
"Junior, it's your lucky day."
"Yes, Mr. Del?"
"You get to be the primary coroner on one of the biggest cases in Metropolis history."
"Really, Mr. Del?"
"Yes, really. Your case, beginning to end. In fact, I have so much confidence in you, I'm going to vacate the scene and let you work," he said and took off his surgical gloves. "Yours will be the only signature on the reports."
"Oh sir, you won't regret this. You won't."
"I know." The main coroner glanced at me before disappearing out the main door. I could hear the commotion of gathering media outside.
I stood to my feet slowly as two medics helped me. A Police Watch commissioner was lying dead in a secure police watch room. I realized that all three groups were wondering what I was going to do. I started out this case getting shot at, and ended it by getting shot at. I was officially done. I held my chest and walked to the door.
"Mr. Cruz!" the reporters yelled.
The only thing more disturbing than the city's reporters knowing you by sight was seeing a few of them wearing T-shirts with your face on it.
"Mr. Cruz, what happened in there?" one asked.
"They say the real mastermind of the Sweet Street Shoot-Out was a Police Watch Commissioner."
"People," I stopped and said. "Metropolis has to heal and get back on its feet. Please let it do that. I followed a lead here and confronted the man. He attempted to shoot me and he was killed by security. That's it. He and the gang leader were behind it all for what all these criminals are about. Money. So please don't write any false stories of grand conspiracies. Two criminals tried to do a crime. They got caught. They got killed. That's it. I'm going home and you better let the city heal. Now, get out of my way."
The media cleared a path for me as I walked by holding my chest.
Chapter 62: The Mayor
I pretended to be in more pain and anguish than I was because waiting for me at the Concrete Mama was my new sidewalk johnny army, courtesy of Phishy. The cheers and applauding gave me a headache. Inside my own place was the next bit of madness with my concealed-weapon Ma and my sword-toting Pops. She was going to mother me to death, which is what all mothers do, so I closed my eyes from time to time as she spoke to me. Finally they let me go to bed. Dot stopped by but I was so exhausted that I couldn't move. My body wanted to merge with the covers and bed and never emerge again.
Is this what a real case was like? I wasn't going to make it to 40, let alone 92, if there were many more cases like this one. Well, I made it to the end alive and case solved. My next appointment was with sleep.
I really didn't want to go back to the office, but I had to. I had a business to run and I suspected I'd have more clients than I could handle.
"Remember when I said you had two more high-level clients wanting to see you?" PJ asked me standing in my office.
"The case is over. What does it matter now?"
"He's on his way up."
"What? Who?"
The Mayor came in through the front door without security or his entourage, dressed in casual clothes and a black baseball cap. He saw me standing at the entrance of my office.
"Nice work, Mr. Cruz. You saved the city."
He walked over to PJ's desk and dumped a fat envelope on her desk. "What the city owes you." He smiled, turned and left.
"What was that about?" I asked.
"He hired you."
"What?"
"He hired you to find out who was behind the body-cam tapes disappearing. I wouldn't take no for an answer."
I saw PJ's bionic arm reaching for the envelope and I snatched it from her desk. I opened it with PJ's big head peering around my shoulder, as I quickly counted it.
"What's that?"
Inside the envelope was my new gun license. I had never seen a full-use gun license before. With this license, I could possess, carry, even concealed, any weapon known to man. It was signed by none other than Chief Hub himself. I had asked Wilford G. Jr to straighten this out for me and he did. I went back to counting.
"This is a lot of money."
"You have a lot of bills and starving employees too."
"You, starving." I laughed and pulled out a wad of cash from the envelope. "Here, so you can stop pestering me."
"About time," she said with a smile.
She opened up her mobile computer and I knew for the rest of the day she'd be shopping online.
"And when will we be officially open again?" she asked. "Famous people can't go on vacation."
"I'm not famous and I can go on vacation whenever I want. We can open on Monday, officially."
Hopefully, I could pick some cases where I didn't get shot.
Chapter 63: The Man From Up-Top
Technically, he was a spaceman. All Up-Top people were space people. They were always in their all-white outfits and we never knew if that was for some legitimate reason or if it was just to be the opposite of us.
"You're a Zero-baby?" I asked.
The spaceman sitting in the chair across from my desk smiled. "If that colloquial means I was born in zero-gravity, then yes?"
"I didn't mean any offense."
"None taken. We have colloquialisms too."
"I'm sure you do."
Mr. Seraff was the third and final "high-level" client PJ had for me. I was anxious to meet him, even though I had no idea what I was meeting him about. Meeting him meant that officially all the business that had to do with the Easy Chair Charlie Murder Case was concluded. I liked clear endings to things.
"It was very important for us to meet with you, but--"
"You're with Interpol?"
"Interpol reports to my agency. We're the civilian side of things."
"I don't like Interpol."
He smiled. "I don't suppose you would. Which is why we wanted to meet with you. People seem to misconstrue the actions of off-worlders too often."
"I was not misconstruing anything. Your guy wanted to sacrifice an innocent victim to a kidnapping criminal gang member informant on your payroll. And to be fair, senior members of my own government and police force were going along. You see how things turned out for them. What happened to this guy, who threatened me and my livelihood?"
"Mr. Cruz, the person you're referring to is no longer working for Interpol."
"Where did he go? I bet he was promoted."
"Actually, he's in charge of the security at a local colony school. His career change was not voluntary. You see, Mr. Cruz, Up-Top doesn't believe innocents should be sacrificed in the name of politics either. People seem to forget that we're all humans."
"What about the spaceships?"
"A prelude to an invasion, Mr. Cruz?"
"I don't believe all that, but you did side with the Mayor and Chief against the police and people."
"The police and people, how quaint. We were asked by the duly elected leader of one of the largest super-cities in the world to render aid in the face of a city emergency. What should we have done? We came. I can't help what conspiracy theorists and anti-off-worlder bigots say."
"My secretary said you wanted to hire me. Hire me for what, Mr. Seraff? The case is over."
"This case is over, Mr. Cruz. The next one is right around the corner and many more after that. I'm here because I want to hire you for...access."
"Access? What does that mean? I'm a detective."
"Ever looked at your competition in the Yellow Pages, Mr. Cruz?"
"I have."
"You represent a very unique kind of detective. I'm not sure if even you grasp that yet. You're not a government detective, not a megacorp detective. Your clients have been government, corporate, and the average citizen on the street. High-class and low-life. How many of your competitors can say they are known by sight by every cop in the city--favorably? Who can call in favors--favors from a vast network of street people across the c
ity? Yes, you are a very unique individual and we believe it's a relationship worth cultivating."
"For what reason?"
"Insurance against the future. The future rarely is as shiny as people think."
"I can assure you, Mr. Seraff, that in a city where it rains 80% of the time, no one here really has a sunny disposition on anything."
"Yes, of course, you're right, Mr. Cruz. Let's just say that the retainer I'm leaving is the price of a video-call to be made to you sometime in the future and that all you have to do is take the call. Nothing more. No obligation to even take the case."
"I can do that."
"Good. Then my job is done."
He stood from his chair and he shook my hand. The man seemed to have no muscle strength in his hand at all. Zero-baby, indeed.
"And one other thing, Mr. Cruz. Do you know a Mr. W?"
"No."
"Monkey Baker?"
"Yeah, he tried to have his animal gangs kill me, but the police took care of them."
"Did they get him?"
"No, but he has no men anymore. Why do you ask?"
"My sources say he's Up-Top."
"How?"
"Sadly, we have a criminal world too. I'd keep an eye and ear out for him. You can never be too careful."
"I don't forget people who shoot at me. It's a personality flaw of mine."
"Good for you. It was a pleasure meeting you, Mr. Cruz. I look forward to our next encounter. The detective who saved Metropolis. I have a spaceship to catch."
I wasn't going to get too worked up about some grown man running around in a monkey mask. He'd get what was coming to him.
It was all so weird. Politicians and spacemen wanting me on their payroll. I was going to ignore all of them, though I was happy to take the money. I wanted to get back to normal cases. I saw that I wouldn't need to solicit reviews anymore. As of my last glance at my virtual storefront, I had more reviews than the top ten private investigation firms in Metropolis combined. I wasn't so adverse to being franchised after all.
Chapter 64: Run-Time
Like every classic hover-car collector in the universe, I was still paranoid about my vehicle. I went stalker crazy when someone scratched it, who knows what creature I'd become if someone were to damage it. I had left it in storage all this time. I marked the end of the case when the spaceman walked out my office.
I waited in the Concrete Mama parking bay, expecting to see Flash jet in, but as it came in I knew it wasn't Flash driving after all. Not all people drive the same, some have their own idiosyncrasies. Flashy was a zippy-driver; this person was a smooth glider. I heard the passenger door click open and I lifted the door.
"Mr. Run-Time," I said to my friend lounging back in my drivers' seat. "I don't think I've seen you drive since we were back in high school."
He laughed. "I can assure you that I've driven quite a bit since then. I only use the limo or jet for business. My kids need to go anywhere it's me, Dad, who gets them there. No drivers allowed for the family hover-car. Get in."
I hopped into my passenger seat and closed the door. It had been a long time since I had the passenger seat vantage point of my own Pony.
"We gave it a complimentary wax and detail."
I looked around and rubbed the dashboard. There was nothing like that new car smell.
"Nice," I said.
"I wanted to chat before life intrudes in again."
"That happens a lot."
"What do you think, Private Investigator, Cruz? At the beginning of this I bet you never thought it would all unfold as it did."
"I was betting I wasn't even going to get to the end."
"You did. We all did."
"Sometimes I'll get quiet at my office desk or home sofa and wonder what the hell I'd gotten myself into. Then I'd realize I had a big grin on my face."
Run-Time laughed. "Then life is good. Keep it that way."
"You gave me my first case."
"I gave your first investigation gig. You got your case on your own. You made the case. No one else would have or could have done what you did. I'm glad I was there to help. Don't forget your friends when you get to the top."
Now I laughed. "You're the one at the top."
"You're right there with me," he said.
We shook hands and spent almost an hour small-talking about absolutely nothing, which is what friends do.
Chapter 65: Dot
"What do you plan to do, Mr. Cruz?"
"I don't know yet."
Everyone kept asking me that question before, when I was in the thick of things, when all I wanted was to be left alone. I remember Exe's conversation with me in Run-Time's office.
"I lived in a time when the crooks had better weapons than the cops. It was no fun at all. I remember hiding in my place, scared of the crooks coming at me, shooting me on purpose to get my stuff, and scared of the neighbors shooting me by accident. Anarchy only looks cool in the movies; the real thing is far from it. Please, Mr. Cruz, I appeal to your good judgment. You live here, you know the streets. We have to look out for ourselves. No one Up-Top gives a damn. I'm not asking you to do anything illegal. I'm just asking you to keep the full truth to yourself. No one has to know. We can't jeopardize the Angel program. I helped it get started when I was a hottie in my twenties. It was controversial at the time. The cops despised us civvies watching their every move when they went into action. But a strange thing happened. They grew to love it. They wouldn't go into action without us watching. We changed too. We saw what the so-called good people did. Spitting at them, cursing, provoking them. They became more like us and we became more like them. It has kept our fragile order intact all this time, but it's still fragile. I can't offer you anything for your cooperation, Mr. Cruz. That would be quid pro quo and that's illegal. I appeal to your good sense, because we all live in this city together."
Dot took the day off to hang out with me in the office. It was a field trip of sorts and she brought with her a group of high school fashionistas-in-training. It seemed like every kid in the city wanted to visit Liquid Cool.
I got back from my food run and PJ yelled at me, "You just missed her. Run to the elevator and you can catch her."
I dumped the bags of food in her arms and ran to the elevator. Who am I running after? I caught a glimpse of Exe as the elevators doors closed. She managed do to a quick wave. I walked back to my office.
"What did she want?"
PJ handed me an envelope.
"What's with all these envelopes?" I tucked the envelope under my arm and focused on the food. We were all starving. PJ grabbed her nouveau-French-whatever and plopped it on her desk. Dot and I took our food into my office.
We set up the food on the table in my siting area.
"Are you going to open it?" Dot asked.
"Oh." I had already forgotten about the envelope.
I walked to my desk and grabbed a letter opener from front desk drawer and sliced the top open.
Dot joined me at the desk. I opened it and reached in.
It was an official Private Investigation License!
I stared at the document, speechless. It was affirmation that I was legal and I no longer had to play games.
"Wow, look at the expiration date," Dot said.
The date was 100 years in the future. I had a private investigator license for life.
There was another document in the envelope. It was small and I glanced at Dot. What could it be?
It was a reissue of my national ID card. Why would they do that? I had to stare at it before I noticed it. My title! It was listed as Private Investigator.
For all my adult life, I was a "laborer." In my eyes, that always meant the same as "human" or "mammal" or "Earthling". It was a constant reminder of failure. Everyone said otherwise, but I could never shake the feeling that I was nothing. Laborer was the bare-bones basic occupation designation. You didn't do anything to get it. The computer assigned it to you automatically. You had to make an aff
irmative step to change your occupation designation, which I had never done.
No one cared about names in business. Titles! Metropolis was all about title status--the last prejudice.
The card said that I had made it. My new vocation was real and had been rendered as such with the city government for all to see. There it was. I was crying. I didn't even have time to stop myself.
Dot was smiling and gave me a side hug.
"A better life is all I want for me and my girl."
I thought of when I was hiding in that new spot in that secret alley days after my birthday. How far I had come in such a short time. Run-Time, Prima Donna, and so many others said my ticket would come and now it had. I touched the tip of my hat as an acknowledgment to my posthumous mentor Wilford G.. I'd send copies of the license to Ma and Pops for framing.
There was a major storm brewing outside, but I said to myself that we'd take a half-day off from work to celebrate and stop by the Good Kosher man for a righteous rack of roses, then I'd take Dot out dancing and no storm was going to tell us different.
"Oh, my parents want you over for dinner again soon," Dot said as we walked out of the office. "And I can proudly show them your official private eye license. But I don't know what's got into them, with the planning for the wedding and all, they want to make your favorite burrito. I didn't know you had a favorite burrito."
Thank you for reading!
Dear Reader,
I hope you enjoyed my debut cyberpunk detective series, Liquid Cool.
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Austin Dragon
Liquid Cool: The Cyberpunk Detective Series Page 31