by Dean Koontz
“He knows we know,” Carson said. “He sent two of his New Race assassins after us yesterday. Cute couple. Looked like dancers. We called them Fred and Ginger. They blasted their way through my house, nearly killed my brother.”
“Sounds like Benny and Cindi Lovewell,” Erika Helios said. “I’m of the New Race, too. But I don’t know about Benny and Cindi being sent after you yesterday. Victor killed me the day before yesterday.”
To Michael, Carson said, “She says Victor killed her the day before yesterday.”
“Who’re you talking to?” Erika asked.
“My partner, Michael Maddison.”
Erika said, “I know it sounds unbelievable, someone telling you she was killed yesterday.”
“Thanks to your husband,” Carson said, “there’s nothing we find hard to believe anymore.”
“I’ll believe any damn crazy thing,” Michael agreed.
“Victor sent my body to the dump. Do you know about Crosswoods Waste Management, Detective O’Connor?”
“It’s right next door to the tank farm where he’s gonna crank out six thousand of you folks a year.”
“You are on top of things. I figured you would be, if Victor worried about you. Nobody worries Victor.”
“Mrs. Helios, how did you get this number?”
“Victor had it. I saw it on his desk pad. That was before I was dead. But I have a photographic memory. I’m an Alpha.”
“Are you still dead?” Carson asked.
“No, no. Turns out, most of us he sends here are for-sure dead, but a few of us who seem to be dead … well, there’s still a trace of life energy in us that can be brought back to full power, so we can heal. They know how to save us here at the dump.”
“Who is they?”
“Those of the New Race discarded here but alive again. I’m one of them now. We call ourselves the Dumpsters.”
Carson said, “I didn’t know you people had a sense of humor.”
“We don’t,” Erika said. “Not until we die and drop our program and then come alive again. But this may be gibberish to you. Maybe you don’t understand about our programs.”
Carson thought of Pastor Kenny Laffite coming undone at his kitchen table in the parsonage, and she said, “Yeah, we know about that.”
“Oh, and I should have said, I’m Erika Four. The wife with him now is Erika Five.”
“He moves fast.”
“He’s always got Erikas in the tanks, just in case the latest one goes wrong. Flesh is cheap. That’s what he says.”
“Thank God for NoDoz and triple-threat cola,” Carson said.
Erika Four said, “Excuse me?”
“If I wasn’t pumped with caffeine to the eyebrows,” Carson said, “I wouldn’t be able to keep up with this conversation.”
“Detective, do you know you can’t trust anyone in the police department, so many of them are Victor’s people?”
“Yeah. We’re aware.”
“So you’re on your own. And here in the parish where the dump and the tank farm are located, every cop and most of the politicians are replicants. You can’t win this.”
“We can win this,” Carson disagreed.
Nodding so rapidly that he looked like an out-of-control bobblehead doll, Michael said, “We can win. We can win.”
“His empire is imploding,” Carson told Erika.
“Yes. We know. But you still need help.”
Thinking of Deucalion, Carson said, “We’ve got some help you don’t know about. But what do you have in mind?”
“We’ve got a deal to propose. The Dumpsters. We’ll help you defeat him, capture him—but there’s something we want.”
CHAPTER 45
VICTOR NEVER ENTERED the Hands of Mercy directly. Next door to the hospital, which now passed as a ware-house, a five-story office building housed the accounting and personnel-management departments of Biovision, the company that had made him a billionaire.
In the garage under the building, he parked his S600 Mercedes in a space reserved for him. At this hour, his was the only car.
He had been put off his stride by the business with Erika Four on the phone and Christine not knowing who she was. In moments like this, work was the best thing to settle his mind, and perhaps now more than ever, numerous issues required his attention.
Near his parking space was a painted steel door to which only he possessed a key. Beyond the door lay a twelve-foot-square concrete room.
Opposite the outer door, another door could be operated only by a wall-mounted keypad. Victor entered his code, and the electronic lock disengaged with a thonk.
He stepped into a six-foot-wide, eight-foot-high corridor with a concrete floor and block-and-timber walls. The passageway had been excavated secretly by members of the New Race.
Huge responsibilities came with any attempt to pull down an existing civilization and replace it with a new one. The weight on his shoulders might have been intolerable if there had not been perks like secret passageways, hidden rooms, and concealed staircases, which allowed a measure of fun in every day.
He had found such hugger-mugger thrilling ever since he was a boy growing up in a rambling house built by a paranoid grandfather who included in his design more blind doors than visible ones, more unknown rooms than known, more secret passages than public hallways. Victor thought it said something admirable about him that he had not lost touch with his roots, had not forgotten from where he came.
At the end of the corridor, another keypad accepted his code. A final door opened into an ordinary file room in the lowest realms of the Hands of Mercy.
These days, no work was conducted on this level. A regrettable incident had occurred here, the consequence of sloppy work by some of his Alphas, and forty had perished. He passed through a dimly lighted area, where unrepaired destruction loomed in the shadows.
In the elevator, on his way up to the main lab, Victor heard music by Wagner, and his heart stirred at the majesty of it. Then he realized someone must have activated The Creed, the short film that played once every day throughout the facility for the inspiration and motivation of the New Race staff. But only Victor knew the procedure whereby the computer could be directed to feed the film throughout the Hands of Mercy, and he was curious as to how it had been activated.
When he entered his laboratory, he stood before the embedded wall screen, charmed as always by the marching legions, by the city of tomorrow with its immense buildings that dear Adolf had imagined but had failed ever to erect, by the monuments to himself that would, when the city was built, be much more grand than these examples.
With a team of his people, he had created this realistic glimpse of the future through computer animation. Soon would come the moment when the Wagnerian score faded and in his own voice the Creed would be delivered.
He went to his workstation, intending to sit in his chair to enjoy the last of the film. But arriving there, turning to face the screen from across the room, he saw a portion of the floor ripple, about twenty feet away, and he thought with alarm, Chameleon.
CHAPTER 46
TOWARD THE END of a long incline, out of the darkness to the right of the roadway, a white-tailed doe bounded into the headlights and froze in fear.
Ignoring speed limits and periodic roadside pictographs of the silhouette of a leaping antlered buck, Carson had forgotten that at night in rural territory, deer could be no less a traffic hazard than drunken drivers.
Being a city girl out of her element was the lesser part of the problem. Having spent the past few days immersed in the twisted world of Victor Helios Frankenstein, she learned to fear and to be alert for extraordinary, preposterous, grotesque threats of all kinds, while becoming less attuned to the perils of ordinary life.
In spite of her complaints about the Honda, she had pressed it to a reckless speed. The instant she saw the deer in the northbound lane, she knew she was maybe five seconds from impact, couldn’t lose enough speed to avoid a disastrous collision,
might roll the car if she braked hard.
Speaking on behalf of the Dumpsters, Erika Four said, “… but there’s something we want,” just as the deer appeared.
To free both hands for the wheel, Carson tossed the cell phone to Michael, who snared it in midair as if he’d asked for it, and who at the same time reached cross-body with his left hand to press a button that put down the power window in his door.
In the split second she needed to throw the phone to Michael, Carson also considered her two options:
Pull left, pass Bambi’s mom by using the southbound lane and south shoulder, but you might startle her, she might try to complete her crossing, bounding hard into the Honda.
Pull right, go off-road behind the deer, but you might plow into another one if they were traveling in a herd or family.
Even as the phone arced through the air toward Michael’s rising hand, Carson put all her chips on a bet that the doe wasn’t alone. She swung into the southbound lane.
Directly ahead, a buck bolted from where she least expected, from the darkness on the left, into the southbound lane, returning for his petrified doe.
Having tossed the phone from right hand to left, having snatched the pistol from his shoulder rig, Michael thrust the weapon out the window, which was still purring down, and squeezed off two shots.
Spooked, the buck sprang out of harm’s way, into the northbound lane, the doe turned to follow him, the Honda exploded past them, and hardly more than a hundred feet away, a truck appeared at the top of the incline, barreling south.
The truck driver hammered his horn.
Carson pulled hard right.
In an arc, the truck’s headlights flared through the Honda’s interior.
Feeling the car want to roll, she avoided the brakes, eased off the accelerator, finessed the wheel to the left.
The truck shot past them so close Carson could hear the other driver cursing even though her window was closed.
When the potential energy of a roll transferred into a back-end slide, a rear tire stuttered off the pavement, gravel rattled against the undercarriage, but then they were on pavement once more, and in the northbound lane where they belonged.
As Carson accelerated, Michael holstered his pistol, tossed her cell phone back to her.
When she caught the phone and as he put up the window in his door, she said, “That settles it. We’ll get married.”
He said, “Obviously.”
Remembering the dog, she said, “How’s Duke?”
“Sitting on the backseat, grinning.”
“He is so our dog.”
When Carson put the phone to her ear, the former Mrs. Helios was saying, “Hello? Are you there? Hello?”
“Just dropped the phone,” Carson said. “You were saying you wanted something in return for helping us.”
“What are you going to do to Victor if you can get your hands on him?” Erika asked. “Arrest him?”
“Nooooo,” Carson said. “Don’t think so. Arresting him would be way too complicated.”
“It’d be the trial of the millennium,” Michael said.
Carson grimaced. “With all the appeals, we’d spend thirty years giving testimony.”
Michael said, “And we’d have to listen to a gazillion really bad monster jokes for the rest of our lives.”
“He’d probably get off scot-free anyway,” Carson said.
“He’d definitely get off,” Michael agreed.
“He’d be like a folk hero to a significant number of idiots.”
“Jury nullification,” Michael said.
“All he wanted was to build a utopia.”
“Paradise on Earth. Nothing wrong with that.”
“A one-nation world without war,” Carson said.
“All of humanity united in pursuit of a glorious future.”
“The New Race wouldn’t pollute like the Old Race.”
“Every last one of them would use the type of light-bulb they were told to use,” Michael said.
“No greed, less waste, a willingness to sacrifice.”
“They’d save the polar bears,” Michael said.
Carson said, “They’d save the oceans.”
“They’d save the planet.”
“They would. They’d save the solar system.”
“The universe.”
Carson said, “And all the killing, that wasn’t Victor’s fault.”
“Monsters,” Michael said. “Those damn monsters.”
“His creations just wouldn’t stay with the program.”
“We’ve seen it in movies a thousand times.”
“It’s tragic,” Carson said. “The brilliant scientist undone.”
“Betrayed by those ungrateful, rebellious monsters.”
“He’s not only going to get off, he’s going to end up with his own reality-TV show,” Carson said.
“He’ll be on Dancing with the Stars.”
“And he’ll win.”
On the phone, the former Mrs. Helios said, “I’m hearing only half of this, but what I hear is you aren’t handling it like police detectives anymore.”
“We’re vigilantes,” Carson acknowledged.
“You want to kill him,” Erika said.
“As often as it takes to make him dead,” Carson said.
“Then we want the same thing. And we can help you, those of us here at the dump. All we ask is don’t just shoot him. Take him alive. Help us kill him the way we want to do it.”
“How do you want to do it?” Carson asked.
“We want to chain him and take him down into the dump.”
“I’m with you so far.”
“We want to make him lie faceup in a grave of garbage lined with the dead flesh of his victims.”
“I like that.”
“Some of the others want to urinate on him.”
“I can understand the impulse.”
“We wish to buckle around his neck a metal collar with a high-voltage cable attached, through which eventually we can administer to him an electric charge powerful enough to make the marrow boil in his bones.”
“Wow.”
“But not right away. After the collar, we want to bury him alive under more garbage and listen to him scream and beg for mercy until we’ve had enough of that. Then we boil his marrow.”
“You’ve really thought this through,” Carson said.
“We really have.”
“Maybe we can work together.”
Erika said, “The next time he comes to the new tank farm—”
“That’ll probably be before dawn. We think he’ll retreat to the farm from New Orleans when the Hands of Mercy burns down.”
“Mercy is going to burn down?” Erika asked with childlike wonder and a tremor of delight.
“It’s going to burn down in …” Carson glanced at Michael, who checked his watch, and she repeated what he told her: “… in eight minutes.”
“Yes,” the fourth Mrs. Helios said, “he’ll surely flee to the farm.”
“My partner and I are already on our way.”
“Meet with us at Crosswoods, at the dump, before you go to the farm,” Erika said.
“I’ll have to talk to our other partner about that. I’ll get back to you. What’s your number there?”
As Erika recited her number, Carson repeated it to Michael, and he wrote it down.
Carson terminated the call, pocketed the phone, and said, “She sounds really nice for a monster.”
CHAPTER 47
ALTHOUGH HE DESPISED HUMANITY, Victor was biologically human. Although intellectually enlightened beyond the comprehension of others in the Old Race, he remained more physically like them than not. To Chameleon, Victor qualified as an approved target.
If he had not created Chameleon himself, Victor wouldn’t have known the meaning of the rippling floor. He would have thought he had imagined it or was having a transient ischemic attack.
Even now, knowing where to look, he could not e
asily discern Chameleon against the surface across which it moved.
On the desktop computer and on the big screen across the room, stirring, heroic visions of the New Race future continued to appear, but now Victor’s voice rose, reciting the Creed: “The universe is a sea of chaos in which random chance collides with happenstance and spins shatters of meaningless coincidence like shrapnel through our lives….”
Chameleon was wary in its approach, although it did not need to be so prudent and had not been programmed for caution, as it was virtually invisible and capable of speed. Most likely, it was being careful because this was its first hunting expedition. Once it had killed, it would become bolder.
“The purpose of the New Race is to impose order on the face of chaos, to harness the awesome destructive power of the universe and make it serve your needs, to bring meaning to a creation that has been meaningless since time immemorial….”
Victor casually backed deeper into the embrace of his U-shaped workstation.
Chameleon advanced as much as Victor retreated, and then another five feet, until it was only fifteen feet away.
It was a half-smart killing machine because its ability to blend with its environment gave it a great advantage that didn’t require it also to be truly smart. Victor’s intention was to manufacture tens of thousands of Chameleons, to release them on the day the revolution began, as backup for the brigades of New Race warriors as they began killing the Old.
“And the meaning that you will impose upon the universe is the meaning of your maker, the exaltation of my immortal name and face, the fulfillment of my vision and my every desire….”
The granite top of the workstation bumped against the back of Victor’s thighs, halting him.
Chameleon scuttled to within twelve feet and paused again. When it was still, Victor ceased to be able to see it even though he knew precisely where it stood. The ripple effect occurred only when the vicious creature remained in motion.
“Your satisfaction in the task, your every moment of pleasure, your relief from otherwise perpetual anxiety, will be achieved solely by the continuous perfect implementation of my will….”
Keeping his eyes on the spot where he’d last seen the clever mimic, Victor eased sideways, to a bank of three drawers on his left. He believed that what he needed was in the middle of the three.