Javier’s sharp eyes had caught the tensing of his body. “What?”
“I don’t know. Hold on.” Patryk focused his goggles until, at last, the features of the room became sharply delineated. On the same wall as that doorway he saw the only piece of furniture: a built-in vanity unit with a large mirror. Shifting his position slightly, he concentrated on the mirror. He could see himself in the glass; the window he peered through was reflected, and it was indeed a one-way view. But more importantly, at the base of the window’s sill he could see a little strip with a series of buttons. Patryk smiled thinly. He touched another keypad, and then a single purple ray pierced through the black window into the room, projected by a tiny lens on the goggles. He moved his head, until the beam struck the mirror. It bent sharply back in his direction, reflected off the silvered glass. By angling his head further, he inched the refracted beam toward the buttons directly below him, beneath the window’s sill. Finally, he aligned the beam with one of the rubber buttons, and then he thumbed a little notched wheel set into the goggles, increasing the intensity of the ray until the purple light was almost a nonluminous black; almost a solid black rod.
With a little whisper, as of escaping sealed air, the window slid upwards. They were in.
“I got point,” Hollis hissed, pulling a large handgun out of its holster beneath his jacket. He started to slip past Javier. Javier almost grabbed his arm to stop him, not liking that Hollis hadn’t waited for him to give his orders, but decided to let him go. Brat had been Hollis’s close friend. And why take point himself if someone else was chomping at the bit? But Javier held his gun ready to cover the black man as he pulled himself through the open portal.
“Careful,” Patryk whispered urgently, “I thought I saw somebody inside.”
“I’ll take care of that,” Hollis said ominously.
“It might be Brat!” Javier reminded him. He climbed through next. Mott was a close third, and the others all followed, Patryk bringing up the rear. As soon as he was through, he unholstered his own gun as the others had – all except Tiny Meat, who didn’t use a gun, though they could smell the sharp chemical bite of his rising bile.
Satisfied that the last of his friends was now inside, Hollis moved to the open doorway across the room, pistol held ready.
“Moron,” Javier barely uttered under his breath. He motioned for Patryk to hasten and cover Hollis. Patryk nodded, flicked a switch on the goggles he still wore to avail himself of their basic night vision function. Only he would be able to see clearly into the murk beyond this room, but that hadn’t stopped Hollis from approaching the threshold and now peeking around its edge.
Hollis’s black market firearm was a Scimitar .55, an expensive semiautomatic, silvery glitter sparkling across its dark purple enameled body. It had an internal silencing feature. The gun that killed Hollis did not. A crude revolver, its thunder in these dead rooms like a detonation inside the head of every one of the Snarlers. But it was only Hollis who was actually struck by its lead projectile. The bullet smashed a sizable chunk out of the right side of his tattooed face, taking one peeking eye with it. His body slumped back almost gently, folded to the floor, and Patryk jumped over it as he took Hollis’s place.
“Blast!” screamed dreadlocked Mott, surging forward with his own gun ready. “Blasting fuckers!”
“Mott, keep back!” Javier roared.
But Mott had learned a little from his friend’s death, and plastered himself to the wall behind Patryk, ready to follow him into the next room should Javier give the word.
“Oh God...oh my God,” whimpered Clara, backing toward the open window they had clambered through only moments earlier. Despite having a gun of her own in hand, she wanted to flee right now – even if it meant abandoning her friends in the face of great danger – but she was more afraid of incurring Javier’s anger than that of whoever was lurking in the gloom beyond that doorway.
“Who is out there?” called a muffled voice from within the next room.
“We’re here to kill you, you motherblasting fuck!” Mott bellowed, with eyes bulging.
“Mott, shut it!” Javier snapped. He edged closer to Patryk, and called over his shoulder, “Who are you?”
“Don’t shoot, okay?” the voice replied. It sounded strangely distorted. “I’m sorry...”
“You’re sorry? You’re fucking sorry? You killed our friend!” Mott yelled.
“I said shut it,” Javier told him. He again addressed the voice in the darkness. “I asked you who you are!”
“We’re squatters here. We came in to squat. Please, please don’t shoot! I didn’t mean to kill your friend...I thought he was one of those things.”
“What things?” Javier demanded.
“The Blank People.”
“What fucking Blank People?”
They all heard Clara scream. They all turned. They all saw her being pulled backwards out the open window they had climbed through, by two pairs of gray arms.
And then she was gone, and then her screams really began.
THREE: GHOSTS
Jeremy Stake preferred riding a hoverbike, a leftover trait from his days in the Blue War, but sometimes his job called for him to use a hovercar instead, and he owned one of those, too. Similarly, when he was off the job, or on a job that required him to look casual, his clothing style was quite different from the nondescript black business suit he wore now – a generic look useful for any number of environments. He adapted to the occasion. But the regulars at the Legion of Veterans Post 69 recognized him in either casual or business-like incarnation, and they had tired of teasing him about whether he was off to the stock market or – when he needed to use the toilet – if he were headed for the “boardroom.”
The veterans’ former taunts aside, his suit wasn’t quite that spiffy, and the hovercar he parked in front of LOV 69 was dimpled and dented here and there. He climbed out of it, and entered into the little building’s cavernous shadows. Bass-heavy music thudded from a jukebox, a sports program played on one giant VT screen and a muted soap opera (watched avidly by several drunken gray-haired men) on another. Neons glowed fuzzily through cigarette smoke, and a genie-like holographic woman belly-danced inside a large plastic bottle advertising Knickerson beer. He seated himself on one of the stools at the bar.
Without having to be asked, the bartender pulled a tap to fill a glass with Zub beer and placed it in front of him. This man, Watt, was a Choom veteran of the Red War, older than Stake, his crew-cut hair silvered and one arm replaced from the elbow down with a nimble-fingered, plastic prosthesis black as an insect’s limb. Despite his grunt of greeting and perpetual glower, he was one of the few men in the Post whom Stake spoke with at any length. Stake returned the greeting by asking, “Any wars broke out since last time I was in?”
“Not this week, unless I’m forgetting something.”
Stake picked up and sipped the foam off his beer, swiveling on the stool a little to scan the other occupants of the barroom. Sitting at a table in front of glass cases containing framed portraits of past Post commanders, various plaques and medals of valor, and trophies won by school sports teams the Post had sponsored, were some more Red War veterans and some similarly boozy-looking women. The Red War vets seemed to predominate at this Post. That was okay by Stake. He didn’t really want to reminisce all that much with other Blue War vets. But then, he asked himself sometimes, why did he even come to this place when he felt in the need of a brew? Maybe it was a distant camaraderie, safely filtered. Maybe it was something like a programmed behavior. He was used to that, from those bloody years.
Watt had told him what some of the older vets had claimed: that two decades ago, a crew of veterans from the Klu-Koza Conflict had come in here from time to time. Could that be true, when some said there had been no survivors of that conflict, and others held to the belief that the engagement had never happened at all? Well, those mythical men were gone now, if they had ever been here. Ghosts hung in the air like the ci
garette smoke. Ghosts of veterans now dead, and the conjoined ghosts of all the people they had killed. The live souls who hunched over the tables and bar, wearing baseball caps and windbreakers thick with military pins and patches, were embalming themselves with alcohol; ghosts in the making.
Is that what I am? Stake wondered. Is that why I come here?
“Want a shot with that?” Watt asked, scooping up the one munit tip Stake had dropped beside his coaster.
“No thanks,” Stake replied without looking around at him. “I’m on a job this afternoon. Just killing time.”
“Time’s all we got left to kill these days, huh?” slurred a hulk down at the end of the bar. It was a man named Lark. Stake had been trying to ignore the fellow Blue War vet’s presence. In the past they had occasionally compared notes, but Stake had found nothing like comfort or pleasure in the exercise. Lark hadn’t seemed to like being dismissed, and so it wasn’t unusual for him to take a poke or two at Stake before subsiding into conversation with whatever dumpy barroom floozy he could coax beside him with a bottle of Zub.
“Depends on what you do for a living,” Stake mumbled.
“Oh, that’s right, you’re a private detective. You still get in a little gunplay, do ya, huh? I thought you mostly looked through a camera’s sights these days, Jer. Following cheating wives and all that.”
“Yeah. And when you want me to follow your wife, you just call me, okay? I’ll give you a discount.”
The woman beside Lark, not his wife, chortled. Lark growled, “Blast you, Stake! At least I have a wife, you stinking mutant. Who the hell would want you?”
“Ease up, boys,” Watt said disinterestedly.
Lark went on, “Course, a guy can always pay for it. I expect you had a few blue-skinned prosties in your time, huh? I know I did.” Lark turned his attention to Watt. “Those Jiini women, man. Beautiful. Beautiful like a cobra is beautiful. But you know what gets a Ha Jiin man the hottest? It’s hands, man. They have a fetish for hands. See, in the Ha Jiin culture, aristocratic women always showed off their status by making sure their hands looked dainty and delicate. No calluses, no scars. It got so crazy over the years that these women started dipping their hands into this stuff like liquid nitrogen, to crystallize them. It petrifies them, man, turns them as hard and useless as the hands of a statue. All smooth and white.”
“I’ve seen a show about it on VT,” Watt told him.
Lark went on as if he hadn’t heard. “See? They’re showing they don’t need to use their hands. No manual labor for them. So after that practice began, the regular not-so-aristocratic girls started wearing white rubber gloves to at least make their hands look like they’re petrified.” He chuckled. “I tell ya, nothing pops a Ha Jiin guy’s cork like having a lady stroke him off with one of those cool white hands, though most guys have to settle for the fake ones. I had me the real deal once.”
“You told me about it,” the Choom bartender grumbled. “More than once.”
But Stake hadn’t heard the story, and he found himself tensing up inside, as if he knew what was coming. As if the woman Lark was referring to was Thi. But it couldn’t be Thi. His Thi. She had not possessed crystallized hands, as glossy – and immobile – as alabaster. She hadn’t even worn imitative gloves. Her small hands had been only too mobile, and nicked with scars, even with little black hairs on the knuckles; a working woman’s hands.
A killer’s hands.
Lark continued, despite Watt’s words. “We captured this plantation once. These rich bastards, with their own private army of guards. Well, they didn’t stand up to us long. Anyway, the family had a few daughters, and the oldest daughter had those frozen white hands, man, just like her Mom, only the Mom was old. Those Jiini women are the most beautiful women in the universe, but when they hit a certain old age – bam – they shrivel up fast. Anyway, this daughter...oh. I took her upstairs, and I had me a look at that blue skin. But she didn’t like my pink skin, I guess.” He turned to laugh at the woman beside him, but she only gaped at him with a fish-like expression.
Stake was remembering Thi’s blue skin. Her eyes, gazing up into his. Her unreadable eyes.
“When I was done with that little blue bitch, I left her alive. But I broke her hands with the butt of my rifle. I broke ’em to pieces, man, you should have seen it. Hell, she didn’t need them anyway, did she? Aristocratic little...”
Watt’s eyes had followed Stake off his stool, and down the length of the bar. He could have stopped Stake, or tried warning Lark, but he didn’t. He didn’t like Lark. And he was just a little afraid of Stake. He trusted him not to make too much of a mess.
“...bitch,” Lark said, a second before Jeremy Stake grabbed him by the back of his collar and slammed his face onto the bar. Out of respect for Watt, he didn’t smash the vet’s face into his glass and spill his Knickerson, but there was still a spurt of blood from the man’s split right eyebrow. Stake let go of Lark, watched him thump bonelessly to the floor.
“Fucking barbarian,” he muttered.
“I’ll tell him he got too drunk,” Watt sighed. “Slipped off his stool and bashed his face.”
“I don’t care what you tell him,” Stake said. He glanced at a clock advertising Clemens Light beer. “I gotta go.”
“Hey,” Lark’s would-be pick-up griped, “what are you, some kind of blue-lover? They were the enemy, weren’t they?”
“Keep out of it, Joy,” Watt advised her.
“Yeah? Well this guy cost me my next beer.”
“Here.” Stake tossed some munits onto the bar. “It’s on me.” He then went to the door, and after the tomb-like darkness of the Post the brightness of the city made him squint as if in pain.
***
Stake had anticipated a weapon scanner at the school, particularly as this was an upscale private school, and so he had made sure not to be packing anything today. It wouldn’t have gone over well, regardless of the fact that Yuki Fukuda waited for him, smiling, inside the lobby. Visitors, even parents, had to pass through this separate entrance. After having him stand on the scanning platform for a moment, the guard (himself unquestionably armed) waved Stake through. He signed into a log at the reception desk. The woman behind the counter said pleasantly, “Yuki tells me you’re a business associate of her father’s, who might have employment for her after graduation.”
She had, had she? Stake smiled. He wasn’t sure Yuki would find his line of work very rewarding financially, or very palatable for that matter. He often found it unpalatable himself. Did she have the proper qualifications as a masochist? “Well, it’s never too soon to contemplate the future,” Stake said, setting the pen down on the logbook.
“Thank you. Right through there, Mr. Stake,” the woman said.
Stake passed into the high-ceilinged lobby of the Arbury School. The crest he had seen on the blazers of Yuki and her friends was reproduced gigantically on the lobby’s polished floor, like some cabalistic symbol awaiting all manner of hedonistic rituals, orgies of students divested of their primly seductive uniforms. Stake banished that image as best he could as he approached his client’s lovely daughter with her bright, shy face.
“Nice to see you again, Yuki.” He shook her tiny hand.
“Thank you, Mr. Stake. It’s lunch time...do you want to join me in the dining hall?”
“You don’t mind sitting openly like that? What will your classmates think of me?”
“They’ll think you’re my boyfriend,” she joked, then she hid her giggle behind her hand. “I’m sorry.”
Stake felt weirdly shy himself. “Ah, well, if you don’t mind people seeing us, then I don’t mind. But have you told anybody that your Dad hired a man to look for your kawaii-doll?”
“No. If anyone asks, I’ll tell them you’re a business associate of my father’s, who...”
“Who might have employment for you after you graduate. The receptionist told me. Good story.”
“Thank you. Okay, then. This way, please.”<
br />
If Stake had felt shy before, he was ready to pull his head into his collar like a turtle when they entered the cafeteria together. It would have been easier, he thought, had the students not all been female. It just felt wrong, as if he had blundered into a convent. Yuki seemed unconcerned about it, and maybe even liked showing off her male guest in some perverse way. He supposed at her age, and in the competitive mind-set of the wealthy, any attention was good attention. He was only somewhat relieved when they found a small table to sit at alone.
“I’ll spare you from going through the lunch line; I’ll get your lunch for you,” she told him, then recited today’s menu. He chose the same meal she was having – sushi – but asked for a coffee to go with it. She giggled again. “Coffee with sushi? If you like.”
Soon Stake was breaking up an eel roll with a pair of chopsticks and transporting the morsels to his mouth with a modicum of grace. He glanced around the vast room surreptitiously, trying to get a feel for the Arbury School’s environment, both physical and psychological. Yes, Fukuda had given him Yuki’s story, but now he wanted to hear it from her own lips, and in the place that it had happened, to see what impressions might be gleaned firsthand. And so he had called Fukuda this morning, and Fukuda had given him the go-ahead to visit Yuki at her school, as he had offered the day before. Fukuda had then called the school to clear it with them. Had he been honest about Stake’s mission, or had he given a story similar to that which Yuki had told the receptionist?
Over the heavy buzz of youthful female voices, gathering at the ceiling like a solid mass, Yuki asked him, “Did my Daddy show you pictures of Dai-oo-ika?”
“Yes, he did.”
“Oh. Well, I have more right here, if you want to see them.”
Deadstock: A Punktown Novel Page 4