Ground Zero rj-13

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Ground Zero rj-13 Page 35

by F. Paul Wilson


  Where would Darryl and Ansari be? A group of guys were clustered around the stairway down to the basement. He headed in their direction. The basement looked like the place to be, and after following Thompson and Drexler yesterday, that made sense. If the Fhinntmanchca was here, that was where he’d find it.

  “All right, everybody!” he called, clapping his hands as he approached. “Let’s get clear! The ambulances are here. Let’s let the EMTs through.”

  He began clearing a path down the steps, but a big guy at the door wouldn’t move.

  “Off-limits. And who the fuck are you?”

  Jack looked him square in the eye. “One of your Kicker brothers. And I’ve got EMTs right behind me. You gonna keep them out while Hags and Ansari bleed to death?”

  His eyes shifted. “Ain’t bleeding.”

  No? Strange. Now he wanted more than ever to get past that door.

  “You know what I mean. Come on, clear the door. You really gonna stand there and keep them from getting help?”

  That last seemed to do it. With a grunt he turned the knob and shoved the door open. Jack slipped through and found a mess.

  He counted eight Kickers, each seemingly damaged in a different way, lying or sitting on the floor. Moans and sobs filled the room. Half a dozen others stood and stared at them or tried to help. He spotted Ansari on his knees, tears streaming down his cheeks as he felt around on the floor with his left hand.

  “Anybody seen my hand? Where’s my fucking hand?”

  What?

  And then Jack saw the stump of his right wrist, but no blood there—it looked charred.

  Hagaman sat on the floor, his back against the wall, his face a sick pale green. He clutched the stump of his left arm, charred as well. The rest of the arm lay across his lap.

  He kept repeating, “You think they’ll be able to sew it back on? Do ya? Do ya?”

  Half a dozen other Kickers had deep, deep burns in their arms and backs. One lay facedown on the floor. He had a fist-size hole in his upper back, all the way through into his chest cavity. Except for the lack of blood, it looked like the kind of exit wound a Magnum hollowpoint would make. The guy’s eyes stared at nothing and he wasn’t breathing.

  What the hell happened here?

  “Where’s the boss?” he asked one of the dazed-looking Kickers standing around and watching. The guy wore his sandy hair in a long mullet.

  “Huh?” He blinked and focused. He seemed to have been in a trance. “He followed Darryl.”

  “Where’d they go?”

  “The fuck should I know?” he said, his voice thick with the Deep South. “I just hope I never fuckin see that guy again.”

  “Who, the boss?”

  “You fuckin kiddin me? Darryl!” He gestured to the fallen Kickers. “Look what he did!”

  Jack stared at the guy. He seemed sober. His pupils looked okay.

  Shock seeped through as he surveyed the devastation again.

  “Darryl did this?”

  “Fuck yeah!”

  Jack tried to imagine it and failed.

  “How?”

  “The fuck I know? Like anything he touched turned to steam. Never seen nothin like it and hope to God I never see it again.”

  Darryl? This guy had to be on drugs. But then again, the wounds Jack had seen sort of fit with what he was saying.

  But how? Could it have anything to do with the Fhinntmanchca? Had to. What other explanation could there be?

  Over the guy’s shoulder and past his mullet, Jack saw the door to the smaller side room standing open. He needed to see what lay at the bottom of that circular stairway.

  “How about Drexler? He around?”

  “Who?”

  “The dude in the white suit.”

  “Oh, yeah. That his name? He went with the boss.”

  The EMTs arrived then, and suddenly the focus was on them. Jack used the diversion to slip into the back room.

  Inside, the closet door stood open, with the trapdoor up as well. Looked like someone had left in a hurry. Jack closed the door to the main room, then stepped into the closet and listened for sound from below.

  All quiet.

  Okay. Make this quick.

  He drew the Glock and started down at a quick pace, but the way the staircase wobbled slowed him. He spotted gaps in the railings. They looked melted . . . charred . . . like the wounds he’d just seen.

  Darryl?

  When he reached the subcellar he found the lights on. It smelled like the hold of a slave ship. A quick search proved it empty except for a leaking, gelatinous mass in an alcove at the far end. Jack approached it cautiously, wondering what it could be.

  A close-up view was no help. He nudged it with a boot and the toe popped through the skin or whatever encased it. Thick, milky-white goo began to leak out onto the floor. Jack slapped a hand over his nose and stepped back. It stank like a rotten egg . . .

  Diana had described the Fhinntmanchca as emerging from an egg. Was this it? If so, where was the Fhinntmanchca?

  Darryl. Darryl had the Fhinntmanchca. That had to be it. He’d carried it up from the subcellar and whoever got in his way got hurt.

  Had to find Darryl.

  He ran up the wrought-iron stair, ignoring the wobble, and charged into the main room. The EMTs looked baffled as they tended to the wounded. Jack slipped past, made it up the steps, and out to the front entrance.

  “Anyone see where Darryl went?” he called from the top step.

  The dozen or so hanging about ignored him, but Kewan was just arriving from the right.

  “Just saw him, Johnny,” he said, jerking a thumb over his shoulder. “Crossing Allen. The boss and the suit weren’t far behind.”

  I owe you, Kewan, he thought as he hurried down the steps.

  “Thanks, man.”

  Kewan smiled and held up two fingers, scissoring them open and closed. “Got a cig?”

  Jack pulled the pack from his pocket and pressed it into his hand.

  “All yours, my friend.”

  “Hey, awright!”

  Jack left him shaking one free as he trotted up the street.

  Thompson and Drexler following Darryl. Only one reason he could think of for that confirmed his earlier suspicion: Darryl had the Fhinntmanchca.

  13

  Mother . . .

  The word breathed in his mind, filled it, flooded it, owned it.

  Not his mother, not anyone’s mother, just an idea of mother. And he wanted her.

  She was a glowing speck in his vision, dead ahead, but far ahead, miles ahead.

  He came to a wall. He could see the bright mother speck against the bricks. He turned and walked along until he cleared the wall, then he turned and faced the speck again. He continued his journey toward it . . . toward her.

  For he must reach her. Nothing else mattered. His wants, his needs, his dreams, none of that mattered. Not even his name mattered.

  His name . . . he was pretty sure it was “Darryl.” He’d heard people say that word to him. He remembered being sick and wanting a cure, but the memory of just what kind of sickness he’d had was lost to him now.

  It didn’t matter. Nothing mattered anymore but Mother. He had to find her, embrace her, clutch her to him.

  And then he would be well. Then he would be clean and whole, and all the world would be renewed.

  He picked up speed.

  I’m coming, Mother.

  14

  “Where the fuck is he going?” Thompson said in a peeved tone. “We must have walked ten miles already.”

  Ernst glanced at him. Sweat beaded his face. The hair at the nape of his neck was dark with moisture.

  “More like half that,” Ernst said, but he knew how Thompson felt.

  The heat of the day was growing and he was not dressed for this sort of activity. He’d unbuttoned his vest and loosened his collar, but none of that had helped. Plus he wasn’t used to physical activity. He wished he’d done more to stay in shape.
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br />   Darryl had led them up Bowery and then up Broadway through Times Square. Now he seemed headed toward Central Park. The stores weren’t open yet, so car and pedestrian traffic were light. Good thing. Because Darryl did not stop for anything. He seemed to have a specific destination in mind and was relentless in his progress toward it. He paid no heed to WALK or DON’T WALK signals, simply stepped off the curb and into the street without breaking stride, sometimes to a chorus of shrieking tires, blaring horns, and screamed curses. He didn’t seem to notice. His pale skin, sunken eyes, stained clothing, and stiff, plastered-down hair lent him a frightening look that caused the scattered Sunday morning pedestrians to allow him plenty of room.

  As they neared Central Park South, the street and pedestrian traffic thickened. Something was going to happen. A collision with a car or a person seemed inevitable.

  “Maybe we should walk ahead of him,” Ernst said.

  Thompson nodded. “Just thinking the same thing. Only a matter of time before—”

  A woman screamed and fell away from Darryl, dropping to her knees and clutching her forearm as a teacup-size puff of scarlet smoke evaporated in the air between them.

  “My arm!” she wailed. “He burned my arm!”

  Ernst hurried past without looking at her, his eyes fixed on Darryl’s back. He edged by those deadly swinging arms and positioned himself a dozen feet in front of him. He began waving his own arms as he matched his pace to Darryl’s.

  “Make room! Make room! Coming through!”

  He didn’t know how badly that woman was hurt, but had no doubt Emergency Services would be called. Police would arrive with them, and soon they’d be searching for Darryl. The last thing needed now was a melee between Darryl and the NYPD. He didn’t think anyone or anything could stop Darryl, but they could impede him, throw him off course, perhaps make him miss a window of opportunity for whatever he was supposed to accomplish.

  They’d have a much harder time finding him without a trail of wounded pedestrians to follow.

  People seemed to be listening to him, because they were moving to the sides to let him pass. Ernst kept glancing over his shoulder to check on Darryl’s position. He wanted to keep a safe distance between them.

  He came to 58th Street. The orange don’t-walk hand was lit. He knew Darryl would ignore it. He looked left and saw a black stretch limo racing his way, trying to make the light. Another backward glance shot Ernst’s heart rate into the stratosphere: Darryl and the limo were on a collision course.

  He stepped out into the street and began waving at the car, but it didn’t slow. If anything, it picked up speed as it began to honk at him. Darryl was closer now. Ernst held his ground and waved his arms more frantically. The car never slowed. The honks became one prolonged blare. The maniac was going to hit him.

  Ernst jumped out of the way just as Darryl stepped off the curb and into the street.

  15

  “Oh, my God,” Weezy said. “He’s been through pure hell.”

  As they’d strolled through Central Park, the Lady had covered the past year or so of Jack’s life—sketching the succession of betrayals and treachery, the circumstances of Kate’s and his father’s deaths, Tom’s mysterious fate, but going into detail about what had happened to Vicky, Gia, and their baby just this past January. Eventually they’d reached the Turtle Pond and settled there.

  They’d chosen a spot near the water’s edge. The grass had been worn thin by the countless feet trampling it day after day, but that changed as soon as the Lady seated herself on the ground. Weezy watched in amazement as the anemic, beaten-down blades closest to her began to thicken and green and straighten. The rejuvenation spread in a slowly widening ripple until the grass for about a hundred feet in all directions looked like a carefully manicured lawn.

  And then the turtles began to leave the water and approach. Soon a couple of dozen clustered around her, stretching their necks from their shells to stare at her.

  But that didn’t last. They’d had the lawn pretty much to themselves when they arrived, but now people were beginning to straggle in, bringing blankets and kids and food. The Lady shooed the turtles back into the water.

  Weezy watched them swim with their heads above the surface toward the island at the center of the pond. Birds were circling and landing there. Not far away a snowy egret stood frozen in the shallows, eyes fixed on the water, waiting for breakfast to swim by. Nearby a man was trying to help his son launch a kite but the breeze was too gentle to keep it aloft.

  Granite-walled Belvedere Castle with its conical tower loomed on the opposite shore atop Vista Rock, while the horseshoe of the Delacorte Theater sat empty to their right. She remembered dragging Steve there years ago to see Hamlet at the annual “Shakespeare in the Park” series.

  A lump formed in her throat as she remembered how he’d said he’d hated reading Shakespeare in school and she’d countered that the plays were meant to be seen and heard, not read. He’d come away a fan.

  If only he could be here beside her now, with the Lady, learning the secrets behind the Secret History.

  Weezy gestured around her. “All this peace and beauty. It’s all stage dressing, isn’t it. Built to keep us from knowing about the dark turmoil that lurks behind it all.”

  “No,” the Lady said. “It’s real enough. It’s simply not the only reality. And it is just as well that what is on the other side is hidden. Revealing it would cause only panic and misery.”

  “But people deserve the truth, don’t they?”

  She shrugged her thin, stooped shoulders. “Why? Because you think knowledge is power? It isn’t. Behind all this is an ugly truth they are powerless to do anything about.”

  Weezy couldn’t—wouldn’t buy that.

  “Then why am I parsing the Compendium? Why is Jack somewhere out there trying to find the Fhinntmanchca?”

  “You and Jack are not common folk. You are gifted, and he is . . . cursed.” She pointed to a woman playing pattycake with a little girl on a blanket. “Look at that mother. Would she be better off knowing what fate awaits her child if the Fhinntmanchca destroys the noosphere? Would she be happier? Would she even be out here playing with her child if she knew?”

  She thought about what the Lady had said about Jack.

  . . . cursed . . .

  From what she’d heard, it certainly seemed that way.

  A spear has no branches . . .

  Those words, and their portent, made her shudder each time she thought of them.

  “How does Gia handle that?” she wondered out loud.

  “Handle what?”

  “Knowing that someone tried to kill her and Vicky and did kill her daughter just because the baby was Jack’s?”

  “She doesn’t know,” the Lady said.

  “How can that—?”

  “Jack hasn’t told her yet.”

  “Oh.”

  Not good. She could see him looking and waiting for the right time to drop that bomb, but more than six months had passed.

  “An odd tone in that syllable.”

  “Big, big mistake.”

  The Lady turned to her. “I agree. But you sound disappointed.”

  “Maybe I am . . . a little.” She wasn’t sure why.

  “Because he is not perfect?”

  Was that it?

  “Maybe.”

  “Is that fair to him? He’s never pretended to be perfect. Quite the contrary. He makes mistakes and he knows it. And though he may be the Heir, he’s still only human. I know many beings who are perfectly human, but not one perfect human being. We should not expect perfection in anyone. If we do we shall be perfectly frustrated.”

  “We shouldn’t expect even you to be perfect?”

  The Lady smiled. “I’m only as perfect as the beings who feed the noosphere, and they are all imperfect.”

  Something occurred to her, and it made her uncomfortable.

  “You know an awful lot about Jack. Are you that aware of everyone?”


  She shook her head. “Because he is the Heir, I know where he is and I can find him. I pay special attention to Jack. That was why I moved into Johnson shortly after he was born. He was never aware of it, but I’ve kept an eye on him all his life.”

  Weezy shook her head. “I could have used some looking after.”

  “Your trials came from within and from the world around you, but they were always of this sphere. Jack has been an object of scrutiny from beyond.”

  “ ‘Watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man’s.’ ” She winked at the Lady. “H. G. Wells, War of the Worlds.”

  “Perhaps not so ‘keenly and closely,’ but watched nonetheless. It is not for me to interfere in the natural course of events in this sphere.” She nudged the dog with a foot and it raised its head. “My friend here is not so strict as I on such matters, but the fact remains that, despite how much we wish we could at times, we do not exist to influence human concerns and events.”

  “Except in Jack’s case.”

  “His case is different. Forces from beyond this sphere have impinged and warped the trajectory of his life. Since they originate beyond the normal course of human events, I have on occasion felt justified in stepping in to nudge him onto a less hazardous path, or to ameliorate the effects of their intrusions. I have had varying success. For instance, I was able to save Gia and Vicky. I could not save their unborn.”

  Weezy thought again about Gia not knowing that the accident was no accident, and that it had been caused simply because of her relationship with Jack.

  How would she react when Jack finally told her? Weezy didn’t know her well enough to say. But she had a pretty good idea how she’d feel if she happened to learn from another source: furious, betrayed, devastated.

  It might destroy their relationship.

  Weezy suddenly hated herself for what she was thinking.

  Don’t. Go. There.

  Ever.

  The thought retreated, but it wouldn’t die.

  “You should convince him to tell Gia about what happened—ASAP.”

  “That is not my province. But you, as a friend—”

 

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