He moved a little closer, spread his arms.
"We're just trying to help you, friend."
"I don't want help," said Kline. "And I'm not your friend."
"Of course not," said the chief Paul, soothingly.
"All I want is to be left alone."
"Who could ask for anything more?" asked the Paul. "We want to leave you alone, friend Kline, we want you to come and go as you please. They're the ones who keep trying to kill you. We only want to help you."
Kline didn't say anything.
"If you'd rather not," said the chief Paul, "I can't force you. But they did remove several of your toes if I'm not mistaken, not to mention your entire arm."
"Forearm," said Kline, "and I was the one who removed it."
"Voluntarily, Mr. Kline? Or were you coerced?"
"Coerced," said Gous.
"Thank you, Paul," said the chief Paul. "'A' for effort. But I was asking our friend Kline. How can you ever live a normal life," he said, turning back to Kline, "until they're dead?"
"I'm not looking for revenge," said Kline.
"This isn't vengeance," said the chief Paul. "It's holy wrath."
Kline stared at him for a long moment and then began to pace, first in one direction then in the other, the crowd of Pauls rustling out of his way. What sort of life do I have left for myself ? he wondered. There was still the satchel full of money, secure in a safe deposit box, assuming he could still locate the key. He could simply leave here, get the money, and vanish.
But they'd be waiting, he knew, they'd try to stop him before he could even get the money. Could he make it? Could he really vanish? Even if he did, would he still flinch every time he saw the absence of a limb?
"But of course, there's always vengeance as well," said the chief Paul, and there was a rumble from the Pauls behind him. "Wouldn't you like to kill the man who took your arm?"
"He's already dead," said Kline. "I already killed him."
"Borchert?" said Gous, and laughed. "He's far from dead."
Kline stopped moving, his missing hand tightening into a fist. "You're lying," he said.
"I assure you, he's not," said the chief Paul. "Borchert survived your little fire."
"He was dead before the fire," said Kline.
Gous shook his head. "If he was, he came back to life again," he said.
"This is a trick," Kline said, voice rising, "just to get me to kill them."
"It isn't," said the chief Paul. "Cross my heart and hope to die."
Kline started to pace again. Curiosity is a terrible thing, he was thinking. How is it possible to stop oneself from needing to know? He moved back and forth, trying to figure the best way out. Was it possible simply to walk away and disappear, to leave all this behind forever?
For him, for this, he realized, it wasn't. At least not yet.
"If I do this," said Kline. "I want never to see any of you ever again."
"Agreed," said the chief Paul.
"Even me, Mr. Kline?" asked Gous, a hurt look on his face.
"Even you, Gous," said Kline.
"Paul," said Gous.
"My point exactly," said Kline raggedly. "All right," he said, "so be it."
PART THREE
I.
What is the fewest number of them that I will have to kill? Kline wondered as he drove. Just Borchert? Will that be enough to keep them from coming after me?
No, he thought. At the very least he'd have to kill the guards at the gate, then three or four guards in the building. And what about the other high-level amputees? Would one of them be poised to take over from Borchert, and would he continue to hunt Kline? Would he be safe if he killed everyone with twelve amputations or more? Ten? Eight? Could he risk stopping before they were all dead?
About a mile away, he pulled the car off the road and down between some trees, out of sight from the road, then stayed there a moment, gripping the wheel, staring through the windshield at the flutter and wave of leaves in the wind. I could turn around, he mused. I could drive to the police station and turn myself in, he said, knowing even as he thought this that he wouldn't do it, that it was already too late.
He loaded the clips of each of the four pistols on the seat beside him, not easily done with one hand, then clicked them in, then affixed silencers to the end of each gun, awkwardly screwing them into place. The remainder of the bullets he placed in his jacket pockets. He placed one gun in the shoulder holster, one in the holster at his waist. The third he held in his hand. The fourth he wasn't certain what to do with, so he left it in the car.
Angel of destruction . . . he thought . . . like a thief in the night . . . not with an olive branch but with a sword . . .
He got out of the car and started walking, sticking close to the edge of the dirt road, always near enough to the trees that he could scramble for cover. His palm was sweating; soon, he had to put the gun down and wipe his hand dry against his shirt. When he picked the gun up again it was sticky with dust. Hardly an auspicious beginning, he thought.
He trudged on. Once he came in sight of the gates, he threaded his way down into the undergrowth, working slowly and carefully until he was in the last clump of bushes before open ground.
There were two guards, perhaps fifty meters away, just inside the gate.
And now what? he thought.
He stayed watching them. From time to time, one would wander in either direction down the fence and then wander back, never more than twenty or thirty meters from his companion. After a while, one guard was relieved and replaced. Kline looked at his watch. Then he waited.
The other guard was relieved two hours later.
Two hours, he thought. In and out.
He waited, thinking it through. He could shoot one of the guards as he wandered down the fence, but could he get back to the other and kill him before he raised the alarm? Should he wait for darkness and try to get them both at once? Where had the alarm system been? And when did they turn the lights on? He tried to remember what it had been like on his trip out, but he had been too crazed, had lost too much blood; he only remembered scattered images, he couldn't make any sense of it. One thing was as good as another, he thought; he might as well just go ahead and rush in now.
But he stayed there, waiting.
Besides, he told himself, it doesn't matter which way I do it. I can't be killed.
The light had started to deepen, shadows lengthening, the sun turning a dark orange and falling lower.
If I use only one clip, he told himself, maybe I can still come out of this human.
He balanced the gun on his knee, wiping his hand dry on his other knee. He took the gun up again. He tried to start forward, but couldn't make himself move.
Easiest thing to do was simply to lift the barrel of the gun and put it snugly into his own mouth and pull the trigger. As Frank had said, it would save everybody a lot of trouble. But then he thought of Borchert, of strangling him with his single hand and trying not to pass out. One clip, he told himself, just one clip, but realized as he thought this that he didn't care how many clips it took, nor what it might do to him.
The sun crossed the edge of the horizon and slowly went, and it was twilight. The lights hadn't yet come on, and one guard had just replaced another, and one guard was wandering out along the fence, bored, near him, and was just starting back, his back turned. Kline, crouched, came out of the bushes, and ran lightly toward him and shot him in the back of the head, the silencer giving off a dull cough as he fired. The guard went down in a heap without a sound. Kline kept running along the fence and there, at the gates, was the other guard, raising his gun prosthetic and looking at him. Kline fired and the shot, skew, struck the guard's gun arm, sparking off it. Kline fired again, the bullet this time striking the guard in the chest. The guard went down but not before a few rounds thunked out of his gun and into the dirt.
Ah, hell, thought Kline.
When he got there the man was still moving, weakly folding up, eyes gla
zing over in the dark, blood pumping out of his chest as he took crazed little breaths. Kline broke the man's neck with his heel, then rolled him off the roadway and between the guard box and the fence. Then he stood in front of the guard box and waited.
A few minutes later he heard the sound of steps and there, at a little distance, was a human figure, his outline clear, his features far from distinct in the darkness. Kline, his back to the guard box, hoped he was even less distinct, that the gun would look enough like a gun-arm to pass.
"Everything okay?" the figure asked.
"Everything okay," Kline said.
"What about the shots?"
"That wasn't from here," said Kline.
"No? Where's your partner?"
"Down the fence a little way," said Kline. "He went to see if there's a problem."
"That's not procedure," said the man.
"I told him not to do it."
The man cursed softly, then sighed. And then, a different note entering his voice, he asked, "Why haven't you turned on the lights?"
Kline quickly shot him, aiming for his head. The man disappeared into the darkness of the ground and Kline could hear him thrashing loudly, gurgling. Kline rushed forward and fell on him and struck him on the head with the pistol, then dropped the pistol and strangled him with one hand, the guard's eyes vague glints in the darkness that slowly went away.
The guard's neck was wet and slippery, and to strangle him properly Kline had to block the hole he had shot in his throat. By the time he pulled his arm away it was slippery and wet with blood, and he had to wipe his hand as best he could on the dead man's pants before groping the gun out of the darkness and getting up.
Three dead, he thought. But four bullets. But still human.
He started along the road, keeping to one side of it. Ahead were a few lights, the heart of the compound.
Two bullets left, he thought, and then wished he'd thought to ask for a Browning.
He passed a row of houses, light coming out of most of them, then turned down a smaller road, keeping to one side, houses a little more spread out now. He entered a third, smaller, tree-lined alley that dead-ended in front of the small two-story building he had briefly lived in.
From there, he backtracked, searched around until he found the path cutting away from the road, its crushed white shells luminous and unearthly in the darkness. He followed the path carefully, keeping to one side of it to avoid crunching the shells beneath his feet.
The path moved into the trees, then dipped down. There was, he remembered suddenly, a security camera somewhere, affixed to a tree, and then he wondered how many cameras he had already passed without noticing. Did they broadcast to the guard box by the gate, he wondered, or to somewhere else? He should have gone inside the guard box, at least looked, but it was too late now.
There it was, an angular irregularity high on the shadow of one of the trees. He pushed his way through the brush and back into the trees and around the camera, slowly working his way back to the path, which turned out to be difficult, because the path had curved away. He followed the path uphill where it widened into a tree-lined avenue.
There, in front of him and behind its fence, was the old manor house, some of its windows lit and casting a gentle glow on the lawn. There was still, Kline noticed, the smell of burning in the air. It grew stronger as, crouching, he came closer. The lawn was darker in spots and probably burnt away, streaks of smoke all up one side of the building. Looking through the fence he saw, near the entrance, a pile of lumber, a bandsaw. At least, he thought, I made an impression.
What now? he wondered, and started searching for the guard. There he was, just inside the fence, there near the gate. What now? he wondered.
He stood up and moved rapidly toward the gate.
"Don't shoot," he said. "Don't shoot. It's me, Ramse."
"Ramse," said the guard. "What--" and by that time Kline was close enough to shoot him in the head.
Only the guard didn't go down. He seemed instead like he'd been switched off. He just stood there unmoving, his empty eye socket open, the side of his head torn away and oozing. Kline lifted the gun again, but the guard didn't even respond. He slowly lowered the gun, then helped the guard first to sit then lie down. He left him there, staring into the sky.
One bullet left, he thought. Still human.
Mostly, he thought, and moved toward the door.
He knocked, and the door opened slightly.
"What is wanted?" asked the guard, and then saw Kline's face. He tried to close the door, but Kline already had the barrel of the pistol wedged in the crack and shot him in the chest. The guard fell back, gasping, trying to raise his gun prosthesis, but Kline was already through the doorway and on top of him, forcing the man's arm to fold the gun prosthesis back so that when it went off it fired into the guard's belly and was muffled between their two bodies.
Kline held still and listened, keeping his hand over the guard's mouth as the man slowly died beneath him. The shots, despite being muffled, still echoed down the hall, or so it seemed to Kline, right on top of the gun.
He waited, but nothing happened. How is it possible, he thought, that nobody heard? He rolled slowly off the guard and lay beside him, gathering his breath. He was soaked with blood now, wet with it from neck to knees. The guard beside him was even bloodier, though his face was pale as porcelain, expressionless as a plate. Kline sat up.
Out of bullets, he thought and dropped the pistol. He reached for the gun holstered at his waist and then hesitated, picking the first gun off the floor. He ejected the clip, reloaded it.
Six bullets left, he told himself. Still human.
I've beat the system, he thought, and then thought, no. This was simply a sign that he'd already stopped being human and wasn't planning on coming back.
How was it that they had done it? he tried to remember, staring at the end of the white hall. Two times? Three times?
Three, he thought it was. He knocked three times and waited. Nothing happened. He tried it again and heard movement on the other side, and a moment later the door opened and a guard pushed his face out, his single eye puffy with sleep, and Kline shot him dead.
How many does that make? Kline wondered idly, and then was amazed that he didn't immediately know. He shoved at the door until he'd slid the dead guard forward enough that he could squeeze his way in and step over him and into the stairwell. Slowly he started up, only beginning to become aware of the smell that the blood he was covered with seemed to have. It reminded him of something, but he couldn't place it. What if the Pauls are right? he couldn't help but wonder. He tried not to think about it.
He stopped at the third and final landing. Very carefully he opened the door a crack, half-expecting to see a dozen guards there waiting for him, but he saw nobody. I can't be killed, thought Kline, and then thought, I'm slowly going mad.
No, he thought, as he opened the door wide and stepped into the hall, quickly.
He made his way to the door at the end of the hall, pressing his ear to it. There was a sound from the other side, a low and constant humming, and occasionally something rising above it.
He pushed at the door's lever with his elbow, found it unlocked. Slowly he pushed it the rest of the way down, opened the door, slipped quietly in.
It was different inside from when he had last been there. The walls were in the process of being redone, covered with sheetrock that wasn't yet taped or painted. The varnish of the floor, especially near the door, was blistered and scorched. Borchert's simple pallet had been replaced by a hospital bed, identical to the one Kline himself had occupied. The humming was coming from a machine beside the bed, from which a tube ran, connecting to a breathing mask covering Borchert's mouth and nose. He was lying in the bed, swathed in gauze. What Kline could see of his skin was red and peeling and puckered, his hair all gone save for a ragged, ravaged clump. Beside him, sitting in a wheelchair, her back toward Kline, was a legless nurse in a starched white uniform, he
r back very straight, in the process of replacing the dressings around Borchert's foot.
Kline moved slowly forward. The nurse, still working on the foot, chatting idly, didn't hear him. But Borchert cocked his head.
"Who is it?" he said, into the mask, his breath fogging the plastic. His voice was flatter than normal, Kline noticed, not quite Borchert's voice, something seriously wrong with it. It was, he realized, the voice he'd heard on the telephone in the hospital.
"There's no one," the nurse was saying. "It's just me."
Borchert opened his eyes and Kline saw that both eyes were opaque and dull, seemingly without pupil. Blind. He took another step forward.
"There's someone here," said Borchert. "I can feel it."
The nurse turned slightly and caught sight of Kline out of the corner of her eye, froze. Kline pointed the gun at her.
"You're right," she said.
"Who is it?" Borchert asked.
"It's him," said the nurse.
They stayed like that for a moment then the nurse turned back, finished winding the dressing. Kline came quickly behind her and struck her hard on the head with the pistol butt. She slumped, the top half of her collapsing onto Borchert. Borchert winced. Kline dragged her back into the wheelchair, wheeled her to face against the wall, where he could see her, and set the brakes.
"So we haven't managed to kill you after all, Mr. Kline," said Borchert. "Not, I must say, for lack of trying. You seem to live a charmed life."
"What happened to your eyes?" asked Kline.
Borchert smiled, the movement distorting his face terribly. "Always wanting to know, Mr. Kline. You'd think you'd have learned your lesson. Did you come here just to ask me that?"
"Not exactly," said Kline.
"Not exactly," said Borchert. "Always holding something back, Mr. Kline. Intimacy issues, perhaps?" And he smiled wider, the damaged skin just beside his mouth cracking, growing moist with a pinkish fluid in the cracks, leaking.
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