Part 22 (2/2)
”Tell ya what, kiddo,” he said in a thick, slurred voice, ”gimme whatever it is ya got an' I'll let ya walk outta here alive.”
Soft, unenthusiastic laughter rippled around him-interested to see how the kid would react, but seeing no real sport in it.
”Let go,” the kid said, looking down. ”Or I'll feed your fingers to you.”
More laughter, this time mocking, and the squat man in leather took it to be mocking him. him. He might have let the kid past if he'd squirmed a little, begged a little, but a smart-mouth had to be taught a lesson. ”Watch yer mouth, pup,” he growled, squeezing the kid's arm tight. ”This ain't a place you get to smart-mouth, see?” He might have let the kid past if he'd squirmed a little, begged a little, but a smart-mouth had to be taught a lesson. ”Watch yer mouth, pup,” he growled, squeezing the kid's arm tight. ”This ain't a place you get to smart-mouth, see?”
The kid continued to stare for a moment. Then, without warning, he whipped out his free arm, a knife popping from his sleeve into his open palm. Grasping the knife firmly, he slashed downward at the squat man, opening up a gash on his face. Blood splashed onto the table, and the squat man threw himself backward, hands slapped over his face, screeching.
”You f.u.c.king cut me! You little runt!”
The kid stared at him for a second or two, then wiped the knife on his coat and returned it to its spring-loaded holster in his sleeve. He continued to the guarded door.
The big man standing in front of the door eyed him warily. ”Versuchen sie nicht das mit mir, zicklein. I'll I'll schnapper sie in zwei, schnapper sie in zwei,” The big man said. ”Ya?”
The kid shook his head. ”I don't understand that s.h.i.+t, man.”
The big man sighed petulantly. ”f.u.c.king Americans,” he said in thickly accented English. ”Don't f.u.c.king know s.h.i.+t about the rest of the world. What the f.u.c.k do you want?”
The kid squared his chin. ”I want to see Avery Cates.”
One of the big man's hands whipped out and caught the kid by the throat, the other taking hold of the kid's arm to prevent more knifeplay. He didn't squeeze hard. Everyone ignored them.
”No name zicklein, name zicklein,” the German muttered. ”No f.u.c.king name, name, ya?” ya?”
The kid nodded and licked his lips. ”Okay, all right. I need to see him.”
The German released him and studied the kid for a moment. ”You gots something to show the man?”
The kid nodded. ”I got something.”
The German nodded. ”Weapons. All of them. Then, I scan you, ya? Don't f.u.c.k with me or out on your a.s.s you go, ya?”
The kid nodded and handed over the knife. The German looked at it. ”That's it?”
The kid nodded. ”That's it.”
Sighing, the huge man picked up a small wand-shaped device and ran it up and down the kid's body, studying a slim screen on one end. Satisfied, he stepped aside and waved the kid in. Hesitating for just a moment, the kid shrugged his coat on again and stepped forward. The door opened automatically.
Pick's back room was as crowded as ever. The kid stared at the piles of paper as he shuffled through the narrow floors.p.a.ce toward the ancient desk. He'd never seen so much paper in his life, and wondered what in h.e.l.l it was good for. Three men watched his approach. One was very old, sitting behind the desk, one hand on a strange, flat device covered in b.u.t.tons. The youngest-looking one was dressed all in black, and sat on the edge of the desk, a cigarette dangling between two fingers, his hair-starting to go gray-slicked down, long in the back. He was pale and unshaven, and smiled a little from behind his sungla.s.ses.
The third man was old, too, but stood against the wall behind the desk, dressed expensively. His hair was entirely white, but was combed and trimmed. He smoked a cigarette, too, and stared at the kid with frightening, flat eyes.
The kid swallowed as he came to a stop in front of them. He stared at the younger man directly in front of him, eyes wide.
”Are you-” he started, but the younger man held up a hand immediately.
”No names, mi amigo, mi amigo,” he said. ”The SSF has ears everywhere. We do our best to sweep the place, but it's better to be safe than sorry.”
The kid nodded. ”I was told to come here, and, um, talk to, uh . . .” He hesitated. ”You, I guess.” He squared his shoulders. ”I want to be involved.”
The younger man smiled and glanced back at the older man behind him. ”Hear that? He wants to be involved in our good work.”
”Ask him.” The older man exhaled smoke. ”If he has credentials.”
The younger man kept grinning, turning back to the kid. He put his cigarette between his lips and spread his hands. ”Kid, you got credentials?”
The kid nodded. Reaching into a coat pocket, he produced a small leather case. He tossed it to the long-haired man, who caught it easily, flipping it open. A hologram of a golden badge glowed dimly in the room, along with a digital photo of a stern-looking black man and a running stream of textual information.
”Captain Calvin Billington. System Security Force.” He glanced up at the kid and pa.s.sed the badge back to the older man, who accepted it silently. ”How? When?”
”Hour ago,” the kid said, ”Battery Cemetery. Throat cut. It was clean.” He kept his face stern and mean, but couldn't resist snuffling back snot and dragging one arm across his nose. ”That Pig's been robbing us f.u.c.king blind. blind. Whatever we nick from the swells, he's there, like a G.o.dd.a.m.n ghost, pus.h.i.+ng you around, b.l.o.o.d.ying noses, messing with the girls.” He nodded. ”f.u.c.ker deserved it.” Whatever we nick from the swells, he's there, like a G.o.dd.a.m.n ghost, pus.h.i.+ng you around, b.l.o.o.d.ying noses, messing with the girls.” He nodded. ”f.u.c.ker deserved it.”
The younger man nodded. ”Mr. Pickering? Can you confirm this?”
The ancient man tapped on his b.u.t.tons and stared at a sickly glowing screen. ”I've got a Captain Billington down, throat cut, called in half an hour ago.” He blinked. ”Kid, you better lay low. They got a good description of you.”
The kid nodded. ”Sure.”
The younger man studied the kid as the older man behind him pa.s.sed the badge forward. ”All right. This isn't a game, you know, right? This isn't some snuff thief gang you run with for a few weeks, make some skag. This is serious.” He thrust a crooked finger at the kid. ”You just killed a System Cop. The whole G.o.dd.a.m.n world is against you now. We're all you got.”
The kid's face hardened and he lifted his chin. ”I know what the f.u.c.k I'm doing. I can't stand this world. I hate the f.u.c.king System.”
The younger man studied the kid for a moment longer, then nodded. ”All right. A few ground rules. First ground rule is, keep your f.u.c.king mouth shut. I don't care who you think you are, you don't get drunk and brag, you don't let hints slip, you don't let anything anything f.u.c.king slip. We don't exist. None of us ever met. I don't know who you are.” The man's face hardened in turn, and suddenly didn't seem so young anymore. ”But I do, don't I? So f.u.c.k us, you get f.u.c.king slip. We don't exist. None of us ever met. I don't know who you are.” The man's face hardened in turn, and suddenly didn't seem so young anymore. ”But I do, don't I? So f.u.c.k us, you get f.u.c.ked f.u.c.ked in return, right?” in return, right?”
The kid nodded. ”I'm not going anywhere.”
The younger man studied the kid for a moment and then nodded. ”All right. Go on back out. We'll be in touch. ”They watched the kid exit the office. The long-haired man walked slowly back to the desk.
”Youngest one yet,” Pick growled. ”According to this, he's f.u.c.king sixteen.”
”I'd already killed three men when I was sixteen, Pick,” Cates replied, reclaiming his spot on the desk. ”Doesn't take age to be able to fight for something.”
”Another one,” Belling said quietly from behind him, eyes on the security screens. A middle-aged black woman, wearing a patch over one eye and sporting a metallic claw for a left hand, was giving the German a loud lecture, which the rippling ma.s.s of artificial muscle took stoically.
Cates stared up at the screen, the same nonsmile playing over his features. They'd been straggling in ever since they sent the word out and backed it up with furious action: two major robberies, six dead cops-each of them an evil b.a.s.t.a.r.d, mourned by no one-and press releases for each. The f.u.c.king cops-they were good, the best, but they'd never been up against a member of the Dunmharu and Avery Cates. Not simultaneously. And they'd never been up against an entire G.o.dd.a.m.n city either. And the Crushers were too f.u.c.king greedy to pa.s.s up the protection money and give up Pickering's.
He watched the German put the woman through the usual security and felt a familiar buzzing excitement inside. He thought grimly, It's begun. It's begun.
Avery Cates will return in The Digital Plague.
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