After the End: Recent Apocalypses

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After the End: Recent Apocalypses Page 21

by Kage Baker


  Chee’s a nervous skinny little guy with suspenders and red hair slicked straight back over a bald spot. He always has this acrid smell around him because of this steroid formula he uses on the bald spot, which makes his hair grow all right for a while, but then he starts picking at it compulsively and it all falls out and he has to start all over with the steroids, and in the meantime, he smells like the Hudson. And whatever the gel is, it makes his skull shine like a polished bowling ball. We used to tell him to stop using the stuff, but he’d go all rabid and try to bite you if you kept it up for long.

  “You’re late,” he said again. He was scratching his head like an epileptic monkey trying to groom himself.

  “Yeah? So?” I got my work jacket out of my locker and pulled it on. The fluorescents were all dim and flickery, but climate control was running, so the interior was actually pretty bearable, for once.

  “Pump Six is broken.”

  “Broken how?”

  Chee shrugged. “I don’t know. It’s stopped.”

  “Is it making a noise? Is it stopped all the way? Is it going slowly? Is it flooding? Come on, help me out.”

  Chee looked at me blankly. Even his head-picking stopped, for a second.

  “You try looking at the troubleshooting indexes?” I asked.

  Chee shrugged. “Didn’t think of it.”

  “How many times have I told you, that’s the first thing you do? How long has it been out?”

  “Since midnight?” He screwed up his face, thinking. “No, since ten.”

  “You switch the flows over?”

  He hit his forehead with the palm of his hand. “Forgot.”

  I started to run. “The entire Upper West Side doesn’t have sewage processing since LAST NIGHT? Why didn’t you call me?”

  Chee jogged after me, dogging my heels as we ran through the plant’s labyrinth to the control rooms. “You were off duty.”

  “So you just let it sit there?”

  It’s hard to shrug while you’re running full-out, but Chee managed it. “Stuff’s broken all the time. I didn’t figure it was that bad. You know, there was that bulb out in tunnel three, and then there was that leak from the toilets. And then the drinking fountain went out again. You always let things slide. I figured I’d let you sleep.”

  I didn’t bother trying to explain the difference. “If it happens again, just remember, if the pumps, any of them, die, you call me. It doesn’t matter where I am, I won’t be mad. You just call me. If we let these pumps go down, there’s no telling how many people could get sick. There’s bad stuff in that water, and we’ve got to stay on top of it, otherwise it bubbles up into the sewers and then it gets out in the air, and people get sick. You got it?”

  I shoved open the doors to the control room, and stopped.

  The floor was covered with toilet paper, rolls of it, all unstrung and dangled around the control room. Like some kind of mummy striptease had gone wrong. There must have been a hundred rolls unraveled all over the floor. “What the hell is this?”

  “This?” He looked around, scratching his head.

  “The paper, Chee.”

  “Oh. Right. We had a toilet paper fight last night. For some reason they triple delivered. We didn’t have enough space in the storage closet. I mean, we haven’t had ass wipes for two months, and then we had piles and piles of it—”

  “So you had a toilet paper fight while Pump Six was down?”

  Something in my voice must have finally gotten through. He cringed. “Hey, don’t look at me that way. I’ll get it picked up. No worries. Jeez. You’re worse than Mercati. And anyway, it wasn’t my fault. I was just getting ready to reload the dispensers and then Suze and Zoo came down and we got into this fight.” He shrugged. “It was just something to do, that’s all. And Suze started it, anyway.”

  I gave him another dirty look and kicked my way through the tangle of t.p. to the control consoles.

  Chee called after me, “Hey, how am I going to wind it back up if you kick it around?”

  I started throwing switches on the console, running diagnostics. I tried booting up the troubleshooting database, but got a connection error. Big surprise. I looked on the shelves for the hard copies of the operation and maintenance manuals, but they were missing. I looked at Chee. “Do you know where the manuals are?”

  “The what?”

  I pointed at the empty shelves.

  “Oh. They’re in the bathroom.”

  I looked at him. He looked back at me. I couldn’t make myself ask. I just turned back to the consoles. “Go get them, I need to figure out what these flashers mean.” There was a whole panel of them winking away at me, all for Pump Six.

  Chee scuttled out of the room, dragging t.p. behind him. Overhead, I heard the Observation Room door open: Suze, coming down the stairs. More trouble. She rustled through the t.p. streamers and came up close behind me, crowding. I could feel her breathing on my neck.

  “The pump’s been down for almost twelve hours,” she said. “I could write you up.” She thumped me in the back, hard. “I could write you up, buddy.” She did it again, harder. Bam.

  I thought about hitting her back, but I wasn’t going to give her another excuse to dock pay. Besides, she’s bigger than me. And she’s got more muscles than an orangutan. About as hairy, too. Instead, I said, “It would have helped if somebody had called.”

  “You talking back to me?” She gave me another shove and leaned around to get in my face, looking at me all squinty-eyed. “Twelve hours down-time,” she said again. “That’s grounds for a write-up. It’s in the manual. I can do it.”

  “No kidding? You read that? All by yourself?”

  “You’re not the only one who can read, Alvarez.” She turned and stomped back up the stairs to her office.

  Chee came back lugging the maintenance manuals. “I don’t know how you do this,” he puffed as he handed them over. “These manuals make no sense at all.”

  “It’s a talent.”

  I took the plastirene volumes and glanced up at Suze’s office. She was just standing there, looking down at me through the observation glass, looking like she was going to come down and beat my head in. A dimwit promo who got lucky when the old boss went into retirement.

  She has no idea what a boss does, so mostly she spends her time scowling at us, filling out paperwork that she can’t remember how to route, and molesting her secretary. Employment guarantees are great for people like me, but I can see why you might want to fire someone; the only way Suze was ever going to leave was if she fell down the Observation Room stairs and broke her neck.

  She scowled harder at me, trying to make me look away. I let her win. She’d either write me up, or she wouldn’t. And even if she did, she might still get distracted and forget to file it. At any rate, she couldn’t fire me. We were stuck together like a couple of cats tied in a sack.

  I started thumbing through the manuals’ plastic pages, going back and forth through the indexes as I cross-referenced all the flashers. I looked up again at the console. There were a lot of them. Maybe more than I’d ever seen.

  Chee squatted down beside me, watching. He started picking his head again. I think it’s a comfort thing for him. But it makes your skin crawl until you get used to it. Makes you think of lice.

  “You do that fast,” he said. “How come you didn’t go to college?”

  “You kidding?”

  “No way, man. You’re the smartest guy I ever met. You totally could have gone to college.”

  I glanced over at him, trying to tell if he was screwing with me. He looked back at me, completely sincere, like a dog waiting for a treat. I went back to the manual. “No ambition, I guess.”

  The truth was that I never made it through high school. I dropped out of P.S. 105 and never looked back. Or forward, I guess. I remember sitting in freshman algebra and watching the teacher’s lips flap and not understanding a word he was saying. I turned in worksheets and got Ds every time, even after I
redid them. None of the other kids were complaining, though. They just laughed at me when I kept asking him to explain the difference between squaring and doubling variables. You don’t have to be Einstein to figure out where you don’t belong.

  I started piecing my way through the troubleshooting diagrams. No clogs indicated. Go to Mechanics Diagnostics, Volume Three. I picked up the next binder of pages and started flipping. “Anyway, you’ve got a bad frame of reference. We aren’t exactly a bunch of Nobel Prize winners here.” I glanced up at Suze’s office. “Smart people don’t work in dumps like this.” Suze was scowling down at me again. I gave her the universal salute. “You see?”

  Chee shrugged. “I dunno. I tried reading that manual about twenty times on the john, and it still doesn’t make any sense to me. If you weren’t around, half the city would be swimming in shit right now.”

  Another flasher winked on the console: amber, amber, red . . . It stayed red.

  “In a couple minutes they’re going to be swimming in a lot worse than that. Believe me, buddy, there’s lots worse things than shit. Mercati showed me a list once, before he retired. All the things that run through here that the pumps are supposed to clean: polychlorinated biphenyls, bisphenyl-A, estrogen, phlalates, PCBs, heptachlor . . . ”

  “I got a Super Clean sticker for all that stuff.” He lifted his shirt and showed me the one he had stuck to his skin, right below his rib cage. A yellow smiley face sticker a little like the kind I used to get from my grandpa when he was feeling generous. It said SUPER CLEAN on the smiley’s forehead.

  “You buy those?”

  “Sure. Seven bucks for seven. I get ’em every week. I can drink the water straight, now. I’d even drink out of the Hudson.” He started scratching his skull again.

  I watched him scratch for a second, remembering how zit girl Nora had tried to sell some to Maria before they went swimming. “Well, I’m glad it’s working for you.” I turned and started keying restart sequences for the pumps. “Now let’s see if we can get this sucker started up, and keep all the neighbors who don’t buy stickers from having a pack of trogs. Get ready to pull a reboot on my say-so.”

  Chee went over to clear the data lines and put his hands on the restart levers. “I don’t know what difference it makes. I went through the park the other day and you know what I saw? A mama trog and five little baby trogs. What good does it do to keep trogs from getting born to good folks, when you got those ones down in the park making whole litters?”

  I looked over at Chee to say something back, but he kind of had a point. The reboot sequences completed and Pump Six’s indicators showed primed. “Three . . . two . . . one . . . Primed full,” I said. “Go. Go. Go.”

  Chee threw his levers and the consoles cleared green and somewhere deep down below us, sewage started pumping again.

  We climbed the skin of the Kusovic Center, climbing for heaven, climbing for Wicky. Maggie and Nora and Wu and me, worming our way up through stairwell turns, scrambling over rubble, kicking past condom wrappers and scattering Effy packets like autumn leaves. Wicky’s synthesized xylophones and Japanese kettledrums thrummed, urging us higher. Trogs and sadsack partiers who didn’t have my connections watched jealously as we climbed. Watched and whispered as we passed them by, all of them knowing that Max owed me favors and favors and favors and that I went to the front of the line because I kept the toilets running on time.

  The club was perched at the very top of the Kusovic, a bunch of old stockbroker offices. Max had torn down the glass cubicles and the old digital wallscreens that used to track the NYSE and had really opened the space up. Unfortunately, the club wasn’t much good in the winter anymore because we’d all gotten rowdy one night and shoved out the windows. But even if it was too damn breezy half the year, watching those windows falling had been a major high point at the club. A couple years later people were still talking about it, and I could still remember the slow way they came out of their frames and tumbled and sailed through the air. And when they hit bottom, they splashed across the streets like giant buckets of water.

  At any rate, the open-air thing worked really good in the summer, with all the rolling brownouts that were always knocking out the A/C.

  I got a shot of Effy as we went in the door, and the club rode in on a wave of primal flesh, a tribal gathering of sweaty jumping monkeys in half-torn business suits, all of us going crazy and eyeball wide until our faces were as pale and big as fish wallowing in the bottom of the ocean.

  Maggie was smiling at me as we danced and our whole oven fight was completely behind us. I was glad about that, because after our fork-in-the-outlet fight, she acted like it was my fault for a week, even after she said she forgave me. But now, in the dance throb of Wicky, I was her white knight again, and I was glad to be with her, even if it meant dragging Nora along.

  All the way up the stairs, I’d tried to not stare at Nora’s zit-pocked skin or make fun of her swollen-up face but she knew what I was thinking because she kept giving me dirty looks whenever I warned her to step around places where the stairway was crumbling. Talk about stupid, though. She’s about as sharp as a marble. I won’t drink or swim in any of the water around here. It comes from working with sewage all the time. You know way too much about everything that goes in and out of the system. People like Nora put a Kali-Mary pendant between their tits or stick a Super Clean smiley to their ass cheek and hope for the best. I drink bottled water and only shower with a filter head. And sometimes I still get creeped out. No pus rashes, though.

  The kettledrums throbbed inside my eyeballs. Across the club, Nora was dancing with Wu and now that my Effy was kicking into overdrive, I could see her positive qualities: she danced fast and furious . . . her hair was long and black . . . her zits were the size of breasts.

  They looked succulent.

  I sidled up to her and tried to apologize for not appreciating her before, but between the noise and my slobbering on her skin, I guess I failed to communicate effectively. She ran away before I could make it up to her and I ended up bouncing alone in Wicky’s kettledrum womb while the crowds rode in and out around me and the Effy built up in ocean throbs that ran from my eyeballs to my crotch and back again, bouncing me higher and higher and higher . . .

  A girl in torn knee socks and a nun’s habit was mewling in the bathroom when Maggie found us and pulled us apart and took me on the floor with people walking around us and trying to use the stainless steel piss troughs, but then Max grabbed me and I couldn’t tell if we’d been doing it on the bar and if that was the problem or if I was just taking a leak in the wrong place but Max kept complaining about bubbles in his gin and a riot a riot a RIOT that he was going to have on his hands if these Effy freaks didn’t get their liquor and he shoved me down under the bar where tubes come out of vats of gin and tonic and it was like floating inside the guts of an octopus with the waves of the kettledrums booming away above me.

  I wanted to sleep down there, maybe hunt for the nun’s red panties except that Max kept coming back to me with more Effy and saying we had to find the problem, the bubbly problem the bubbly problem, take some of this it will clear your damn head, find where the bubbles come from, where they fill the gin. No no no! The tonic the tonic the tonic! No bubbles in the tonic. Find the tonic. Stop the RIOT, make it all okay before the gag-gas trucks come and shut us down and dammit what are you sniffing down under there?

  Swimming under the bar . . . Swimming long and low . . . eyeballs wide . . . prehistoric fishy amongst giant mossy root-laced eggs, buried under the mist of the swamp, down with the bar rags and the lost spoons and the sticky slime of bar sugar, and these huge dead silver eggs lying under the roots, growing moss and mildew but nothing else, no yolky tonic coming out of these suckers, been sucked dry, sucked full dry by too many thirsty dinosaurs and of course that’s the problem. No tonic. None. None at all.

  More eggs! More eggs! We need more eggs! More big silver tonic dispensing eggs need to rumble in on handtrucks and roll
in on whitejacketed bow-tie bartender backs. More eggs need to take the prod from the long root green sucking tubes and then we can suck the tonic of their yolk out, and Max can keep on making g-and-t’s and I’m a hero hey hey hey a hero a goddamn superstar because I know a lot about silver eggs and how to stick in the right tubes and isn’t that why Maggie’s always pissed at me because my tube is never ready to stick into her eggs, or maybe she’s got no eggs to stick and we sure as hell aren’t going to the doctor to find out she’s got no eggs and no replacements either, not a single one coming in on a handtruck and isn’t that why she’s out in the crowd bouncing in a black corset with a guy licking her feet and giving me the finger?

  And isn’t that why we’re going to have a RIOT now when I beat that trogwad’s head in with this chunk of bar that I’m going to get Max to loan me . . . except I’m too far underwater to beat up boot licker. And little smoking piles of Effy keep blooming on the floor, and we’re all lapping them up because I’m a goddamn hero a hero a hero, the fixit man of all fixit men, and everyone bows and scrapes and passes me Effy because there isn’t going to be a RIOT and we won’t get shut down with gag-gas, and we won’t do the vomit crawl down the stairwells to the streets.

  And then Max shoves me back onto the dance floor with more shots of Effy for Maggie, a big old tray of forgiveness, and forgiveness comes easy when we’re all walking on the ceiling of the biggest oldest skyscraper in the sky.

  Blue kettle drums and eyeball nuns. Zits and dinner dates. Down the stairs and into the streets.

  By the time we stumbled out of Wicky I was finally coming out of the Effy folds but Maggie was still flying, running her hands all over me, touching me, telling me what she was going to do to me when we got home. Nora and Wu were supposed to be with us, but somehow we’d gotten separated. Maggie wasn’t interested in waiting around so we headed uptown, stumbling between the big old city towers, winding around sidewalk stink ads for Diabolo and Possession, and dodging fishdog stands with after-bar octopi on a stick.

  The night was finally cool, in the sweet spot between end of midnight swelter and beginning of morning smother. There was a blanket of humidity, wet on us, and seductive after the club. Without rain or freezes, I barely had to watch for concrete rain at all.

 

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