SITTING BY
DESOLATE STREAMS – Act III
"It is
better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the
cloak of nonviolence to cover impotence."
-- Mahatma Gandhi
The door slammed shut with a
colossal clang. "Whose name did you say you rented this storage
space under, again?" Pablo Losada looked
around the dimly-lit room, which was crammed from one stained fungicrete wall to the other with boxes of lab equipment
and supplies.
"Director Wei, of course," Icarus
replied, weaving his way between a crated ultramicroscope
and a pedestal-mounted centrifuge to the far corner of the room.
"When you have a photographic memory, you kinda
pick up other people's passwords, credit codes, and locker combinations whether
you mean to or don't." He turned to his former lab assistant with
his trademarked big grin. "Speaking of which, 12345 isn't the
hardest door code to remember."
"That was kinda the point," Losada
grumbled. "Something I could give out to my girlfriends without
worrying that it would give them a clue what my other passwords might
be."
"Ah, here we go," Icarus muttered as he turned back to the box he was
after. He reached in and pulled out a handful of paper banknotes.
Even in a high-tech society, street vendors (and criminals) preferred paper
money to credit chips and cash cards, and non-electronic money was essential
for the petty bribery and other off-the-books transactions that kept the
machinery of bureaucracy well-lubricated. Even so, Losada
let out a low whistle when he saw the thickness of the bankroll that Dr. Hicks
calmly shoved in his pants pocket.
"As I said, I've been
planning a getaway for twenty years," the scientist cheerfully offered as
he made his way back through the piled boxes and gear. "So, every time
I drew out cash from an ATM, I stuck 20 crowns or so in my rainy-day
fund. Anyone checking my bank records who even
noticed the discrepancy between what I withdrew and what I spent, would just
assume I was spending it on booze or drugs or porn from some street vendor,
giving it to beggars, stuff like that. Small amounts like that, but over
twenty years…it added up pretty fast." Icarus
led his reluctant partner out of the storage shed, locking it behind him.
"Couple that with some discreet investments once the
piggy bank got full, and I've got almost a quarter million crowns stashed here
and there in small bills."
"Discreet
investments?"
"Gambling,
Pablo...photographic memory, remember? You'd be
amazed how useful it can be to be able to remember the order of cards in a deck
at a blackjack table."
"You're full of
surprises, boss…"
"Not half as surprising
as where we're going next."
Back in the days of the Fed,
the Talavera spaceport had once also had an attached
military launch field for supply shuttles and stratospheric fighters.
When the Eastern Bloc had taken the planet over, they'd built their own
military base on the other side of the Canal and had converted the ex-military
facilities to civilian use. But the war had reduced the population of the
nearby systems, and enough people fled New Madrid in the immediate aftermath of
the war to set up shop elsewhere that there was no longer enough traffic to
keep all runways and launch cradles at the spaceport running. The former
military strip had been shut down for over a decade, and several disused
outbuildings and storage sheds had been converted to non-aerospace uses.
One such building was a former missile-warhead storage bunker that had been
converted (after a few discreet payments to a spaceport official) into a
watering hole for the ground crews and maintenance technicians who worked at
the spaceport, as well as the lower-class type of flight crews.
"This is your favorite
bar?" Losada asked incredulously.
Dr. Hicks smiled wryly.
"Of course I prefer the Double Helix," he said, referring to one of
the bars near the sprawling UNM-Talavera campus that
catered to students at the
"It's got a certain I don't know what, you've got that
right," Pablo muttered to himself. The decades-old ceramcrete was crumbling, and what dust wasn't floating in
the air seemed to be coating every surface in sight, including several of the
patrons. A haze of dust and smoke, combined with a poorly-designed (and
poorly-maintained) lighting system to make it nearly impossible to see all the
way across the room, despite it being barely 15 meters from the main door to
the back wall. Also blocking the view were several large and mean-looking
individuals, some of whom were merely standing around and getting noisily
drunk, but one of whom seemed determined to block not only the view of the back
wall, but physical entrance to the facility as well.
"Well, if it isn't the
good Doctor," the man said in a mocking tone of voice, his voice slightly
slurred from the alcohol he'd been liberally consuming all afternoon.
"Didn't I tell you not to come here again?"
"Now, Lobo, don't get
angry," Icarus said in a soothing tone of
voice. "I told you, I wasn't cheating…"
"Counting cards ain't cheating?" His tone made it quite plain
that, as far as he was concerned, it was the worst kind of cheating imaginable..
"Maybe we'd better pick
another bar," Pablo said under his breath.
"Oh, don't worry,
Pablo," Icarus continued. "Lobo here
looks mean, but he's really harmless, ain't that
right, Lobo?"
"I'll show you how
harmless I am," Lobo bellowed, and swung a fist the size of a Christmas
Ham at the two researchers. Losada dodged to
the left, Hicks to the right, and both began rapidly backing up towards the
door. Lobo gave a low growl and started after them, but suddenly yelped
in surprise and turned to face the bar with an astonished expression on his
face. The bartender fired a second time with his dartgun,
and a second tranquilizer-filled syringe plunged into Lobo's torso, this time
into his chest instead of his back. The large bully's eyes bugged out in
utter wonderment, then he stiffened, and collapsed
like a heap of bricks.
"Sorry about that,
Doc," the bartender apologized as he came out from behind the bar, his
dart rifle still warily aimed at the now-sleeping Lobo. "Lobo had a
couple too many today, was a bit annoyed when I cut him off.” He nudged
the sleeping man with his toe, and seemed satisfied when the hulking mass of
flesh didn't stir. In fact, a low, buzzing snore came up from the
prostrate thug.
"Hey, no problem,
Emile," Dr. Hicks said. "Thanks for putting him down."
"Hey, thanks for the tranq darts," the bartender replied.
"They've been mighty useful with some of the regulars around
here."
"Well, they're designed
for escaping mental patients, but I figured they'd be just as useful on rowdy
drunks." Dr. Hicks nodded over to an empty table in the
corner. "Let us give you a hand with wolf-boy here, and then you can
get me two glasses of my usual."
The two researchers helped the
bartender drag the unconscious form of Lobo to the empty table in the corner,
and then sat down at a side booth while the bartender went to get their
drinks.
"You're a regular
here?" an incredulous Pablo Losada asked his
boss. "Do you think it's wise to go someplace where people know who
you are?" He surreptitiously looked both ways to see if anyone
seemed to be listening in on their conversation. "After all, you're
supposedly dead."
Icarus
chuckled. "Pablo, no one here is gonna
poke their nose in anyone else's business, especially if the cops are
involved."
"There's no honor among
thieves, doc," Pablo reminded him.
"Anyone rats out anyone
else here, they'll never be able to show their faces in Magritte's place ever
again."
"Who's Magritte?"
"Emile Magritte, the
bartender. We were in the LI together, back in the Fed."
"Great.
Another damn Lost Geezer…"
"The whole galaxy is
lost," the bartender said, arriving with two liter-sized mugs of best
bitters. "But still the stars manage to not bump into each
other."
"At least not too
often," agreed Icarus. "Speaking of
the stars, Emile…"
"You want a chaser of
something stronger, gonna see the stars, are
you?" answered Emile Magritte with a big grin.
"No, I was wondering if
you can recommend a good travel agent, so to speak," Icarus
replied with a laugh. "Someone who can cut through all the red tape,
if one wants to arrange a vacation. At the last minute, so to
speak."
"Ah, gonna
do some traveling, but don't have time to jump through a bunch of bureaucratic
hoops, so to speak."
"That's right."
"So to speak,"
interjected Losada with a very weak grin. He
was already halfway through his mug.
"Well then, the man
you're looking for is right over there. Just came in yesterday, but from
the talk, he's got a fine ship, and is adept at cutting through red
tape."
"Exactly what I'm looking
for," said Dr. Hicks with a decisive nod of his head. "Send him
a round on me."
"M. Welthammer
will be mighty pleased with that introduction, I'm sure."
*****
The ship experienced one final jolt
and then stopped.
Jonathan Hawking looked about the
eerily silent cargo module. Using his
light amplification oculars, he could see the other six soldiers around
him. All of them were crouched among the
43 plasteel crates of ketracite. Their delta-armor was significantly less
bulky than fully powered suits, but it still made for poor concealment in the
cramped module. They would have to rely
on the darkness.
Peterson’s voice sounded in Hawking’s helmet on the wide-band, “You think they’ll
search us now, sir?”
The major replied, “Don’t know, they
may wait until the beginning of the next shift, whenever that is. Stay alert.
If they don’t open her up in the next few minutes, we’ll try reentering
the ship.”
When that ImpSec
platoon had showed up in the docking bay, the squadron had barely had enough
time to grab their armor and duck into the cargo module before the Imps had
busted down the door. Since no one had
opened up the compartment yet, they all figured that the ship was in enemy
hands, but they didn’t know much past that.
They’d been in transit for about three hours now, and Hawking assumed
the stop meant they were docked, probably at an impound station.
There was a clanging noise from the
cargo module’s hatchway, and the whirring of motors as the airlock mechanism
that separated the ship from the independent modules was activated.
Major Shrak
commed in, “Looks like
they’re not going to keep us waiting.
This probably isn’t anything more dangerous than a search party come to
see what the Captain was hauling, let them come all the way in the door before
you open up. And remember where you are,
I don’t want anyone firing anything bigger than a pop-gun.”
Civilian ships, like the Resolve, weren’t designed to deal with
combat, either external or internal, and firing any of a
power armor’s array of heavy weapons inside the ship could destroy the
stability of the hull, and blow them all into space. So, the squadron carried would use
low-velocity gauss guns. The pellets
they fired would shatter on impact, powerful enough to kill an unarmored man,
if you hit him just right, but they wouldn’t do anything more than just leave a
tiny dent on the ship’s walls.
Hawking looked to his left; Private
Jenkins was rolling a high-explosive grenade around in his left hand. He didn’t think Freak would disobey the
major, but even so, the man’s obsession with explosions and fire worried
Hawking.
The hatch slid open and two men
wearing black Imperial Security uniforms stepped in. They carried a large scanning device between
them, and set it down a few feet inside the hatchway.
One of them punched a command into
the object, and looked at a glowing screen.
“What do we have here…ketracite, and lots of
it!”
The other was looking at a couple of
crates near him, and fumbling for a flashlight on his belt, “By the Emperor,
that stuff’s worth a fortune. I wonder
if—“
The hatch slammed shut behind
them. Somehow, Tiller had managed to get
behind the men without alerting them.
The Imps started to spin around, but it was over before they even saw
the phantom.
Hawking chambered a new flechette cartridge into his weapon, and stepped forward
with the rest of the squad.
With a wave from Shrak,
the team formed up on the hatch, and Tiller re-opened it.
Hawking jumped down first. He landed, went to his knees, and shot
another Imp at internal diagnostics console of the bridge. The rest of the squad followed him.
There was no one on the ship’s
living deck, though they noted that the weapons locker had been emptied, but
thankfully its contents were sitting in a pile just a few meters away. On the lower deck, they killed two more men,
apparently assigned to guard the ship’s external hatch. And then they were alone.
“It’s an impound station alright,” Shrak announced.
They were in a small (a pessimist
would say cramped) docking bay, the Imperial Security insignia and the
designation “Node A-9” were painted along the walls.
“So now what,
boss? We just fly her out of
here?” That was Peterson again.
“Nah, this station is bound to be
armed; we wouldn’t get half a klick before they slagged us. We’ll need something to either distract or
disable them. Tiller, think you might be
able to find the control—“
“Heh heh, why risk attacking the control
center, sir? Heh... I have a better
plan.”
A grimace crossed the major’s face,
but he didn’t bother to discipline Freak; it would be a waste of time. “And
what would that be, private?”
“Still 43 crates
of ketracite in the hold, heh,
heh.
Make a very big boom, destroy the entire station.”
“That’s the Captain’s cargo.”
“So?” The sergeant belted out.
“Captain’s not here and his ship’s worth more than the ketracite. How he going to get it back if we kill
ourselves assaulting an ImpSec garrison?”
“Point taken, anyone else have any
thoughts?”
Tiller spoke quietly, “Station of
this class… 30, 40 crewmen, half with power armor.”
Major Shrak
considered this for a few moments.
Hawking shifted his weight, looking bored as his eyes moved about. The bay had an unfinished, industrial look
about it. The only moving parts seemed
to be the enormous doorway immediately aft of the Resolve, and a freight-sized lift just fore. The space-entrance seemed to be only a single
hatch, so Hawking assumed the entire bay could act as an airlock itself, and
pump atmosphere in and out of the chamber.
The major looked up again, “All
right, Freak, it’s your lucky day.
Peterson, you watch him as he sets charges to blow the station. Tiller, take Harvern
and Moore and guard the lift for Imps.
Hawking, see about that door behind us and about killing the gravity in
here. I’ll try to get the ship up and running
again. All clear? Move.”
Hawking borrowed a demolitions kit
from Freak, though the private only parted with his bombs after much
grumbling. Using some zero-gee
handholds, he scaled the wall to the door, and began placing shaped charges
where Hawking hoped the outer rails were mounted to the station.
He was nearly done packing some
high-density plastic explosives around the door’s perimeter when the lift on
the opposing wall gave a metallic groan, and Harvern
yelled for everyone to go to ground.
Hawking hit the deck, twisting his
ankle in the process. He drew the gauss
rifle from his back and stared down the length of the bay to the lift.
His rifle had a mid-range telescopic
sight on it, so he could see some of what was going on nearly 300 meters away.
Sergeant Harvern,
the squad’s heavy-weapons guy, was crouching behind the triple spiker-gun he had set up directly in front of the lift,
about 20 meters away. Tiller was beside him making some adjustments to the
weapon.
The lift slid open, and four ImpSec Troopers burst out.
Each was wearing power-armor, not the heaviest equipment Hawking had
seen, but still very capable military suits, far-outclassing anything his own
squadron had. The troopers all hefted
heavy plasma rifles.
Harvern
began firing immediately, the spiker gun spewing a
nearly continuous blaze of energy. The
first of the assaulters jerked and toppled forward, his suit charred, before
the others broke and began firing their own weapons.
Luckily for Hawking’s
team, the Imps weren’t very good shots, and most of the initial plasma bursts
dissipated in the bay’s atmosphere, or landed comfortably distant from anyone
on the thick metal surface. Another of
their attackers was chewed up by Harvern, and then
finished off with a couple of gauss bolts to the face from
Tiller, in his usually creepy way,
was simply standing and firing a gauss gun single handedly, paying no mind to
the plasma that seemed to just bend around him.
One of the Imps charged Harvern’s position while he was tracking back from the last
kill, but this attack was cut short when the soldier simply exploded.
Freak giggled, and loaded another
bomb into his weapon. Glancing back,
Hawking saw that the Imp had probably survived; the blast didn’t penetrate his
armor. But he wasn’t a worry anymore;
one of his arms had been wrenched around his back, and his suit seemed to have
lost power, the squadron could deal with him later.
The final survivor blazed away and
Peterson fell from a blast. But the rest
of the team’s fire converged on him, and the Imp was cut to pieces.
Peterson pulled himself to his feet,
the blow had been a glancing one, but his side was still badly burned, and his
armor would have to be replaced. Freak
tossed a grenade into the lift, and they wouldn’t have to worry about more
attacks, for a while at least.
Clutching his gut, Peterson cheered,
“Well, we sure kicked those sons of bitches’ asses.”
Harvern
shouldered his gun and said simply, “Divine judgment has been passed.” It was a solemn eulogy.
Major Shrak
jumped out the ship’s hatch, “Well, I got her fired up; I hope for your sake
you didn’t let the bastards put a hole in her.”
Ten minutes later, with all-too rusty pilot, Major Shrak, at the helm, the Resolve
entered orbit around New Madrid while Imperial Security Impound Node Alpha-Nine
went up in a silent, majestic ball of fire.
Hawking got a dreadful feeling in his gut as the bandaged
Peterson turned to the Major and asked, “Now what?”
Joseph Howard bent over a steaming mug of coffee, and
inhaled deeply. He was seated at an
outlying café in the middle-class district of De Ulloa
station, as far as he could be from people who might bother him, while still in
a public area. Joe wasn’t worried about the captain, he would get away somehow,
he always did, and then he’d call Joe, and they’d meet up again.
What Joe was really worried about
was the ship. He’d put a lot of time
into making that thing run better and smoother than the bucket of bolts it
wanted to be, and Joe didn’t want to lose it now. But getting the Resolve away from ImpSec was going to be
a hell of a feat.
He drank his coffee and decided not
to think about, the captain would think of a plan.
Joe looked around. It was a nice station, completed just
fourteen years ago, though it had been host to a number of people since its
inception just two years after the Middle Kingdom crystallized its hold on the
galaxy. Bloody waste of money too, in
Joe’s opinion, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t enjoy it.
The people were nice enough, though
like most stations many of them were either just passing through, or looking to
hide from a former life. But this was
one of the better parts—
Joe spotted them. Three ImpSec
agents, had walked into the café, and were talking to the bartender. One of them noticed Joe, and the three began
walking towards him.
Shit.
Joe took a final sip from his mug, then set it on the table, and leaned back, trying to look
relaxed. The Imps had already
interrogated him, and he’d shared everything he thought it was safe to
know. But obviously they weren’t
satisfied, probably still looking for the soldiers, so they were coming back
for him.
Only too late did Joe notice the
agents’ posture, the way they looked at him as they approached. They weren’t here for more questions.
Joe desperately grabbed for his gun,
but it was hopeless. He felt the
impacts, and was surprised that no pain followed. His chair toppled backwards, and landed hard. New
*****
Chan took his time. Lying down and
getting back up, stretching his sore muscles as he did so. After a while he
lifted his arms and felt around the control collar buzzed, gave Chan a slight
shock and fell to the bed. Chan again stretched, finding it to be more
refreshing when he could lift his arms above his head and let out a groan.
Turning towards the door that Joy
had left through, he made his way over and carefully
stepped through. He found himself in a clear tunnel. The end was a door about a
hundred meters from where he stood into a large dome that hovered far above the
room he had been in. Looking out across the campus, a huge area, about three
hundred acres, surrounded by walls, he caught his breath at the sight. Green
covered everywhere. Vines clung to the walls, twirling in the slight breezes of
Artemis. Trees shot from the ground and their limbs reminded him of home. Habor sighed and leaned against a wall. The door to the
dome opened and a small stocky man limped over to Chan, stopping right in front
of him, looking from his altitude at the towering height of Chan’s body.
“Mighty fine specimen, if I don’t
say so myself.”
Chan looked with some bemusement at
the old man. “And who are you?”
“I’m the one who saved your scrawny
neck, son, and you’d better watch yourself. You’re not the only one with
special powers.” As he said this, the old man chuckled and poked Chan in the
stomach.
“Hey!”
“Can’t the doc give his patient
a physical?” The old man prodded him again; Lee was powerless to stop him.
Every time he moved his arms to stop him, they froze. He continued to poke the
werewolf until Joy entered the tunnel.
Turning, both men watched her
approach. Chan watched her, embarrassed, through glinting eyes. Joy gave him a
dirty look but smiled beneath it, standing beside the old man.
“I’m surprised you haven’t beaten
him up, Uncle Gav.” she said with a laugh.
I’d like to see you try, Habor said to himself.
I bet you would, came a voice from behind him.
Chan whirled to find the speaker,
but there was no person to go with the voice.
It isn’t such a good idea to turn
your back on the enemy, Chan Lee!
Habor
turned to see, not the old man he was expecting, but a soldier twice his size,
muscles bulging from arms of steel, and a hand ready to grip his throat. He
morphed; nothing happened.
Chan braced himself against the
wall, waiting for the attack, his muscles pulsing to move… but the attack never
came. Instead, only a laugh and a gentle fading of the large soldier occurred,
returning into the old man that originally was there. Gavenny’s
shoulders were heaving with laughter and Joy held her laugh in her shining
brown eyes that were filled with her smile.
“What the go sch
was that?”
“A figment of your
imagination.”
“Whoever you are, you’d better…”
Chan looked down at himself; he was in full Crinos
form.
“Young man,” Gav
replied, “you’re just full of anger. I’m helping you release that anger without
being a danger to others. You have a story that is far more complicated than
ours. I can help, but you’re going to have to do a lot of work on that temper.”
But you have to admit, the
old man’s voice sounded in his head, that
was quite funny. Chan watched him closely, but no sound came out his lips. You
learn fast, my Chan, now let’s not scare the young lady. How
‘bout a drink and a warm meal?
“That sounds great.” Lee smiled
again and followed the old man towards the dome.
The dome turned out to be a huge
reservoir, filled with sparkling water. A huge species of… something swam in
the bright depths of the tank, their bodies creating ripples on top of the
water. Doc Gavenny led Chan down the stairs that
circled the tank, descending the entire length. A large fish bumped the wall,
teeth glinting in the artificial light.
“What are those?” Lee asked as a
large mammal swam by, flippers pushing its long neck, elephant-like body, and
webbed hind feet cleanly through the water.
“Those are hemtaphohelians
– hemtas for short. We breed ‘em
here, then let them loose on the planet. They’re
extremely useful in refurnishing the ground with nutrients.”
It took Habor
a moment to understand what he was saying. “You mean they shit a lot.”
“Like clockwork.” The doctor
shrugged. “Plus they cut down on the weeds, allowing for fertile land to be
processed. Sooner or later, we’re gonna have to
engineer a species to keep their numbers down.”
“Do they taste any good?”
Joy gasped but Gavenny just chuckled. “Yep. Come
on, we’re almost there.”
At the end of the stairs, there was
a large circular space, filled with comfortable seats that faced the tank.
Everything seemed to be made out of glass and Chan searched the area with
amazement, without trying to show too much curiosity.
“Take a seat.”
“Thanks,” Chan replied, began to
sit, then straightened himself. “After you,” he waved
to Joy.
“Gentleman, huh?
I thought you chose the rougher side of life.”
“Stop bugging him,” her uncle
chastised her, “he’s trying. I don’t remember John…” he stopped as silence filled
the room. The swimming of the fish nearby was deafening. “Joy, I’m sorry, I
didn’t mean…”
Joy lifted her head and tried to
smile. “It’s okay, I know. I think I’m going to go through and take a break.
I’ll see you in a while.”
“Sure you don’t want something to
eat?”
“No, you guys go ahead. This guy,”
she pointed to Habor, “needs something in his
stomach.”
Slowly she turned and left through
another door; Chan watched her leave.
She’s missed her John since he
left for war and went missing.
“I’m sorry.”
“Well, that’s the pi chi way
things go.”
“Let me get some of that grub.”
Lee sat and watched as the doctor
sat beside him on the couch and tapped something into a panel on the armrest.
Two droids appeared from the walls approached dragging gurneys. In a few
moments, a steaming plate of food sat on Chan’s lap, and he began to devour it.
After filling his stomach, Habor left the doctor and went looking for Joy. Following
her path, he found her sitting beside a pool. Small red fish swam joyfully beneath
her feet. Her hair was brown and the pool reflected her beautifully. Chan moved
towards her and rested his hand on her shoulder.
“You okay?” Chan was surprised with
himself. Normally he wouldn’t have cared a pentera
su what this woman was thinking.
“Yeah.” Joy
was surprised with herself. Normally she wouldn’t have showed her emotions to a
stranger.
“You don’t look okay.”
“I’ll be fine. It’s really nothing.”
She smiled up into his face.” You get enough to eat?”
“Maybe.”
‘What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It’s just something I used to say
to Cres back on R34.” He laughed remembering their
last conversation. “Cres was one hell of a good
joker. You wouldn’t have liked him though; too crude.”
“I’m not that civilized.”
“Really?”
“Shut up.”
Silence.
*****
Sherif Tian-yi
Sherif
pauses and takes a breath. And then
another. It’s hard to get a decent
lungful of air on this miserable planet, he thinks to himself. Above him, another Hoshin
Aircar spews its poison into the atmosphere. “God this planet is polluted.” Minos didn’t spend
unnecessary money on atmosphere condensers.
After many more hours, even walking
became difficult. Sherif
finally sat down, tired and unable to go further. He was wheezing badly. It wasn’t that breathing was hard, it was
just impossible to get a full lungful.
“It’s hard, ain’t
it? You can’t breathe until you get used
to it.”
Sherif
took another breath that didn’t help.
The old man sighed. “Get up,
son. You gotta
get to a place with some moving air.”
The old man dragged him to his feet and pulled him towards an
intersection.
“There now, don’t ya feel better, ja?” Sherif leaned over
and spit up. The old man stood back and
chuckled grimly. “Ya
get into a
And a particularly violent hurl, Sherif could finally speak.
“Thank you, sai, I appreciate it. I really do.”
He leaned forward, and spit up again.
The old man chuckled. “Ya’ve probably not
ever smelt anything like this before.”
Lunch was good, but dinner was
better. Jason, the old man, took Sherif around the industrial area. They spoke to each other, with Jason doing
most of the talking.
At dinner time, Sherif
and Jason wandered towards a soup kitchen.
"It's not much," Jason explained, "but it beats
tightening yar belt again." The soup kitchen was run by Lord's Christians
Church. "There's something about
them Christians. Ever since they were
run out of New Israel, they have been weird.
My folks were Christian, and I supposes that
makes me one too. But watch yar toes; I hears they eat babies." Jason chuckled harshly.
Sherif had
a natural distrust of religion taught in school. It wasn't that he had ever met anyone
particularly religious, but he had been taught how most of humanity's problems
stemmed from the belief in a god. The
official religion of the Middle Kingdom was none at all.
So when
Sherif
wandered into the kitchen. It was spartan, but clean.
He looked around, a little confused.
"Over here, hung mao."
He peered into the giant pot. Inside, bits of potato floated in water with
bits of fish and bits of leaves.
"Smells good," Sherif said.
"It should. Bay leaves are tasty," said the Asian
boy. "By the way, my name is Shao Feng."
"Pleased to
meet you, Feng."
"Oops, here they come."
Sherif
spent the next forty-five minutes ladling out soup. He was careful not to spill any, and answered
the thank yous with a smile. Several people came up for second helpings,
and although Tanya frowned at them, and then at Sherif,
he filled their bowl again. At one
point, she came up and looked into the soup bowl, saw that it was still mostly
full, and nodded her head curtly.
After everyone had been up, Tanya
walked back over. She looked into the
giant pot, and when it wasn't near to empty, she berated Sherif. "You're supposed to give them a full
bowl. Why bother saving any?" She frowned fiercely at him, and "Go
over and clean dishes. Feng, ladle out the rest of this soup to anyone who wants
some more." Upon hearing this,
several people immediately stood up and went to the line again.
Sherif
hung his head, and went over to clean dishes.
He had enjoyed all the "thank yous"
he was getting. He wiped dishes for
twenty minutes, until Tanya Roberts walked over towards him. "I've not seen you here before. What's your name?"
"Sherif Tian-yi
"Well Mr. Adams, you need to be
certain to be more careful in the future."
She flipped her head away and walked towards Feng
and came back a moment later with a bowl of soup. "Here you are."
Sherif
mumbled a grateful "thanks", quickly ate the soup, and went back to washing
dishes.
After he was finished,
Sherif
dreamt of his parents, and when he awoke, he awoke with hatred. Anger struck.
Anger at the people who killed his parents. Anger at the hate and pain
done to him. He wished vengeance.
He walked all day. He walked past apartments and factories,
stores and warehouses, taverns and churches.
He walked until his feet hurt and then he walked until they didn’t hurt. At the end of the day, his throat was dry,
his eyes were dry, and his nose was dry.
He sat down again on the pavement.
His knees ached; he wasn’t used to walking on fungicrete. He drew his legs close to his body. Sherif Tian-yi
*****
As the Dickerson approached the asteroid cluster, which contained Gamma
Site, Weathers felt the other members of his bridge crew relax. There was no automated distress call to warn
them away. Beta had been swarming with
slants and the free ship had spent the last week making very sure that they
were not being pursued. Weathers ordered
the ship to approach the base carefully, but that was more to give the
appearance of vigilance that out of necessity.
There
is no danger here, or if there is I don’t feel it.
The stress of the last couple weeks had seemed to hone Weathers’ special
sensory abilities. Unsure why, he
chalked it up to all the stress he and the crew had undergone. Nothing
like facing survival situation to cause one to evolve, wish I knew where this
was going… or how to control it.
“Sir,” Ensign Hargave
reported, “I am picking up signs of a ship alongside Gamma, it appears to be
the Marm.” Looks
of joy cascaded along the faces of the crew as the bridge erupted in
adulation. The Marm was the pet name given to the Marduke, a fast freighter which had been adapted by the flotilla’s
original leader to serve as a training platform for any new members the group
might acquire. The vessel’s first
commander had been an older female officer whom the students had called, behind
her back, the school marm. While she had passed away a few years back,
her nickname lived on as the name of the ship. More importantly to Weathers,
his son, Gordon, was on his first tour as a midshipman aboard the training
vessel.
“Open a hail, let’s see if they are
who we hope they are,” requested Weathers.
Once they determined they were friendly, the exultant vessel docked with
Gamma. As the crew disembarked, they
were met with cheers from the younger sailors who made up the crew of the Marm.
Weathers immediately found Gordon amongst the crowd and raced to be
reunited with his son. Similar scenes
were replayed across the dock area as the two crews mingled. Allowing himself a
moment to revel in an embrace with the child he thought he had lost, Weathers
soon pulled himself back to matters at hand.
“Son, where’s your captain? I
have some bad news.”
“We figured as much, Dad. We were out on maneuvers when the slopes hit
Alpha. Commander Blackburn put out a
message that all ships should scatter, but so far we are the only one to make
it here, other than Dickerson of
course. Where is the rest of the
flotilla?”
“Well…” David couldn’t bring himself
to say it. Yes, Gordie, everyone else is sucking
vacuum around Ashdown because we didn’t expect the Eastern Bastards to pop out
right in front of us. All he could manage was “they didn’t make it.”
“Oh,” the midshipman knew what that
meant, and immediately starting scanning the crowd to change the topic. “Well, the
captain is around here somewhere. Frankly, I think everyone is here to meet y’all.”
At that point Gordon Weathers found
the woman he was looking for. As he
tried to make his way towards her, he saw a member of his crew with whom she
was talking, do the exact same ritual and pointed David Weathers out. After exchanging greetings, the two moved to
storeroom three, which had apparently been converted into officer’s quarters.
“So, Captain Weathers, I assume things
were disastrous out there? Last time we met, you were a buck lieutenant.” Her
eyes looked him over. “What happened at Alpha?”
“That is exactly what I was
going to mention, Captain Lyle.”
“Call me Susan, Dave. We’re both captains
now… plus there’s are no crew present.”
“All right… Susan. Someone must have
told the slopes we and other free flotillas were going to help Ashdown. When we came out of hyperspace at the meeting
coordinates, we were hammered by a heavy cruiser and its auxiliaries. We had to play possum to make it out
alive. We salvaged enough from the other
ships to get out, but… we were lucky.”
“Yeah, guess so.” Lyle nodded. “When
the order to scatter was issued, I thought we might have a traitor in our
ranks. That’s why we came here. Only
bridge officers know about this place, since it is little more than an
emergency re-supply station. Lucky for
us, someone had the vision to put it here.”
“Here” was actually an asteroid belt
orbiting a cold star in a planet-less system roughly between Saemaul, Mool and the Bug
Quarantine zone. The captain of the Featherston, one
of the ships destroyed during the Ashdown Rebellion, was the son of a
free-lance space miner. His family had
visited that system when he was young. After the slants had destroyed Earth Fleet,
he suggested it as a possible site for a base.
The other captains did not want to be that close to the bugs, but it was
to be utilized in an emergency, such as their other two bases getting
demolished.
“I figured something like that had
gone down. Where do you think we should
go from here?”
Weathers shrugged. “I had some
ideas. I think Ashdown demonstrated that
we cannot count on outsiders for help, and involvement in anything less that a
massive movement against the Eastern Bloc exposes us to great risk. What would you think of keeping it simple and
in-house. Let’s
start raiding supply routes and wait.
Someday a chance to hit those bastards will appear, and I want to be
around to enjoy their fall.”
“Sounds like an excellent plan, Dave. What would you think of re-shuffling folks
between the crews? My people are young
and… well, I wouldn’t mind a few experienced people on my bridge.”
“Strip my staff clean?”
“Well, I am senior officer
now.”
“You want an admiral’s flag with
that?”
“God, no!”
She smiled. “We’ve got a fleet of two ships for the moment, and that’s hardly
enough to worry about pinning stars and planets to people.”
“Fair enough, Susan. Let’s put our XO’s on that personnel shuffle immediately while you give
me a tour of this place. We need to know
what’s available for our little war.”
*****
Yoko raised
the cigarette to her lips with trembling fingers and took a deep drag. “I’m sorry, sensei, “ she said to Cho, exhausted. “I
just can’t do it! The network’s too
secure!”
“Gosa!” Cho countered. “You can and you will. You’re weak, but you’re still wu jen.”
“Huh?”
“A mage,
Yoko,” Cho said irritably. “I’ve used that term before,
you should know it by now! C’mon, Yoko,
give the spell one more try. I’ll talk
you through it.
“Hai,
sensei,” the fat hacker said wearily, staring bleary-eyed at the password
prompt.
“Nhut! Usha!
Hung!” Cho beckoned to her
other apprentices. “Watch and learn!”
Yoko sighed
heavily, snuffing out the cigarette in an overflowing ashtray as her fellow
students gathered around her, then closed her eyes and placed her fingers on
the keyboard.
“There is
no reality except what we create,” Cho whispered to
her apprentice. “Reality is clay; you
are the potter.” Cho observed Yoko’s brow furrow at
the reference, and tried a different approach.
“Uh… reality is just code, and you are the programmer?”
“Oh!” Yoko
said, nodding.
Golram computer nerd… Cho
thought scornfully, but continued in a gentle voice. “Take a deep breath. Now hold it. Now tap your quintessence. Concen-“
“Eh?” Yoko
grunted.
“Your chi,
Yoko, your chi,” Cho clarified, her voice
betraying a trace of annoyance.
“Concentrate you chi in your chest, in your heart. Your chi is all that is truly real –
and you control it. Now breathe
out. Your chi is a river of
reality, flowing through you, down your arms, into the computer, across the
network, into the
Cho waited while Yoko’s greasy face twisted in
concentration, beads of sweat forming on her brow as she huffed and puffed like
a hog. Finally she grunted affirmatively
and nodded.
“What is
a password, anyway?” Cho continued softly. “Just digits. Anyone can guess it. The odds are high, but it is possible. You can feel the password, Yoko. You can read the password. You know the
password. You are the password;
your chi determines it. Let your chi
flow through your fingertips into the keyboard, Yoko; they know where to
go. Pour it out, Yoko… now!” Instantly Yoko tapped out a 15 digit code and
hit enter, then opened her eyes to see the results.
YOU HAVE
ENTERED AND INVALID LOGON ID OR PASSWORD
There was a tense
silence you could cut with a knife. Yoko shot a nervous glance at her
master. Cho’s
face had hardened. Her jaw pressed her
lips into a thin line. Nhut and Usha exchanged worried
glances.
“Sorry, sensei,” Yoko
apologized. “I just… I dunno… I told you I couldn’t –
AHH!“
Like a snake, Cho’s arm had shot out and smacked Yoko hard upside the
head, knocking her face into the keyboard with a startled cry. “You didn’t put enough positive chi in
the box, you worthless piece of gosa!” Cho snapped. Her
apprentices shifted uncomfortably behind her.
“You’ve tried this twelve times!” Cho
yelled. “I could have trained a yak to do this by now!”
“But it’s the Imperial
Net, Cho!” Yoko whined,
pinching her nose as it began to bleed.
“And I’m just a ‘prentice!”
“Y’know,
I think I will train a yak! At
least a yak would be thinner and smell better!”
The insult hit Yoko like a blow.
She flinched and looked away, blinking rapidly. Cho knew Yoko was
sensitive about her weight, but she didn’t care. Hell, she was just getting started. “Your dad thinks you’ll be the best hacker in
Yakuza-Tanzhi, but I think I should
kick your fat ass back down to casino tech support ‘cause you’re totally useless! What do you think about that, fatso-san?”
Behind Cho, Usha kicked Nhut’s ankle and jerked her head toward Yoko. Nhut shrugged.
“I… I’m sorry, sensei…
I… I…” Yoko stammered, her voice beginning to crack.
“On, stop
blubbering!” Cho sneered. “Everyone knows whales can’t cry!”
Do something! Usha silently mouthed to Nhut, glaring at the cross-eyed thief. Nhut shook his
head, eyes wide, and pointed urgently back at Usha. You do something!
“Ta ma de!” Cho swore as she dealt Yoko a harsh slap that knocked her
out of her chair. “Golram shi fa ren shiba
pyongshin…”
“Sensei!”
Hung called out.
Cho
stopped, surprised, and glanced at the muscle-bound ninja with no neck. It was the first time he had spoken all day.
“Honorable sensei,”
Hung said, bowing low, “Time is short.
Can you not cast the spell yourself so we may continue with the
planning?”
Cho
scowled at him. She knew he had a point, but she was in the middle of a good
rant…
Nhut
whipped out his pack of smokes and popped one between his lips. “Hey, you want one, Cho?”
he mumbled, providing another distraction. “They’re Nirvanas!” He held the pack of marijuana cigarettes out
to Cho, who stared at them, undecided.
“Regulars?”
Cho asked finally.
“Uh…
no, ultralight 100s.”
Nhut said. He
knew Cho preferred extra-wide unfiltered, but hoped
she’d smoke one anyway and mellow out.
Weed is weed, after all, and junkies are junkies.
“Sch, why not?” Cho sighed, taking one.
“I deserve a break after training that gaujo!” As soon as Cho
turned away, Usha yanked Yoko to her feet and
scurried out of the room with the crying, bleeding young girl.
“Please, sensei,” Hung
said, gesturing toward the computer, “Show us how it is done.”
“Golram
right I will!” Cho muttered, sitting down at the
terminal and puffing on her joint as the stench of burning marijuana filled the
room. She paused for a brief second, eyes closed, palm pressed against the
monitor, before tapping out a password.
YOU HAVE
ENTERED AND INVALID LOGON ID OR PASSWORD
“Eh?” Cho grunted, clearly surprised. She tried again, concentrating longer this time.
YOU HAVE
ENTERED AND INVALID LOGON ID OR PASSWORD
By the time
Usha and Yoko returned, the chubby young hacker
pressing a cold can of Yangtze Cola to her swollen nose, Cho
had tried the password a dozen times and failed. She glared at the screen, puzzled, and took a
long drag off the joint.
“Something ain’t right here,” Cho
muttered. “Something’s blocking me. Ain’t just a
security program – there’s something magickal going
on, too. Seen anything like this before,
Nhut?” she asked, turning to the tall thief.
Nhut shook his head slowly as breathed out a cloud of
smoke. He was already squinting and
grinning from the weed. “Don’t think
so. What about you, Yoko?”
Yoko shook her
head. “Uh-uh. Technomagickal
locks… y’know… run off chi crystal batteries, sensei
– those aren’t nearly powerful enough to stop you,” she said timidly, then paused to wipe blood off her chin. “The must be a live mage on the other end -
or several.”
A chill ran down Cho’s spine. This
hit was looking tougher all the time.
She took a deep drag off the joint.
“Well, this is a dead end,” she muttered. “The network’s too secure.”
Hung
cleared his throat loudly. Cho glanced at him.
Hung stared silently back at her.
“What?” Cho asked puzzled.
Hung
glanced at Yoko. Her eyes were dry now,
but blood still dribbled down her face.
“Oh.” Cho said softly. “How’s your nose, Yoko?” she asked
finally, not looking at her.
“Fine, sensei!”
Yoko chirped.
“Gosa. Don’t lie to me,
girl. It still stings.”
“Uh… well…
yeah,” Yoko confessed, looking down.
“What about
now?”
“Uh… no! It
stopped!” Yoko lowered the soda can and
gingerly felt her nose. The swelling had disappeared, as had the blood. “Thank you, sensei!”
“Okay,
so you couldn’t hack the
“Oh, lots!”
Yoko said, perking up at the chance to be useful again. She opened the can of
Yangtze Cola and slurped it noisily.
“Well, I was able to hack into the contractor company that built
the palace, so we’ve got floor plans, blueprints, schematics… even some info
about security systems. Here, I
downloaded it to your datapad!” Yoko said, tossing it
to Cho. “Of
course, the palace was built sixteen years ago, so the security info could be
out of date…”
“So what
are we dealing with?” Cho asked her.
“Mostly
standard stuff,” Yoko answered cheerfully.
“Security camera, keycards, retinal scans, weapon scanners – the usual chem, bio, and rad sensors –
armed guards, and… um…” Yoko paused to slurp her cola. “Uh… ethereal scanners.”
“Jin sai!” Cho cried. “Those machines that read auras and spot wu
jen at fifty meters?”
“Uh… yeah,”
Yoko said, not looking at her.
“So there’s
no way to get in there without them knowing we’re all wu
jen?”
Yoko
shrugged and nodded, then stepped back, obviously fearing another angry
outburst.
“Okay, Nhut, how do we get past them?” Cho
asked her thief apprentice.
“Mmm?” Nhut
looked up, clearly high. “Oh. Ummm… well…” he
pondered, puffing his joint and grinning.
“Not around so much as through.”
“What do
you mean?”
“Uh… like,
we go through the scanners.”
“Gaujo! We’ll get caught!”
“Uh, no,
don’t think so,” Nhut said casually, taking another
hit off his joint.
“Why not?”
“Well,
duh!” Nhut
giggled. “’Cause they
only detect wu jen,
Cho!”
“But we ARE
wu jen!”
“Uh,
well, yeah, right now we are - but not by the time we go through, we
won’t be, no.”
“I have a
gun and a shovel, Nhut...”
“Y’know, like, Quellers,
Cho!” Nhut explained
quickly. “Y’know,
the funky drugs they use on rouge wu jen in prison to stop their magick? So, like, we take those, and the ethereal
scanners will read us as unawakened!”
“Walk into
a royal palace to whack a prince with no magic?” Cho
summed up in disbelief.
“Uh… yeah,
that’s the idea.”
“No way in
hell.”
“Hey, Quellers do wear off in a few hours, y’know...”
“No way in
hell. And did I mention you’re a stoned
fool?
“Well,
yeah, everyone knows that!” Nhut chucked. “But, like, that’s the only way I know around
the scanners, Cho,” Nhut shrugged,
“So unless you got a better idea, take it or leave it.”
Cho glared at him.
She was liking this job less and less.
“Usha,
think you can get your hands on some Quellers?” she
asked at last.
The exotic Malay
smuggler nodded. “Shouldn’t
be too tough. We’re yakuza, after all – controlled substances are
our business.”
“Now, I’m not saying
we’re going to use it,” Cho said firmly, wheeling
back on Nhut and sticking a finger in his face, “I’m
just covering all the angles, that’s all.”
Cho lit another joint and threw herself down
on Yoko’s dusty, worn out sofa. “Okay,
now how are we gonna whack this guy? This is gonna be a
tough one…”
“What, can’t we just
shoot ‘em?” Nhut
asked. He threw himself down on the
couch next to Cho – and missed completely, toppling
over the back and onto the floor.
“No more Nirvanas
for you,” Cho called over the back of the sofa. “And no, we can’t just cap this guy, ‘cause Cheong wants us to frame Lord Dai for it.” Cho took another
drag off the joint. “Trouble is, nobles are too rich and too smart to blatantly murder a
prince. Dai would assassinate the guy
quietly – make it look natural or something.
So that means we gotta murder this guy in a
way that looks natural, but screw up the job so they can tell it is
a murder after all. And we gotta do it in a way that no one can tell it was screwed up
on purpose.” Cho
leaned back and closed her eyes, concentrating.
“On top of all that, we gotta leave an
evidence trial pointing to Lord Dai. But
once again, a Lord would be smart enough to cover his ass, so we gotta leave an evidence trail that looks like it was
covered up, but not quite well enough.
And if that ain’t enough, we can’t leave any
evidence pointing back to Yakuza-Tanzhi. Oh, and we’ve only got a few days to set this
all up… is this making any sense to you guys, or I just rambling?”
“No, that makes
sense,” Yoko said, and sipped her Cola.
Hung grunted
affirmatively.
“I’m following you so
far,” Usha nodded.
“Ummm… what?” Nhut
asked from behind the couch.
Cho
opened her eyes. “Ta ma de, Nhut! How can you possibly
be stoned on this ultralight gosa!” Cho exclaimed, snuffing out her joint. “I’m not even getting a buzz of this ditch
weed!” She pulled out her opium pipe and
began filling the bowl with Khymer Rouge. “Okay, Hung, you’re our resident ninja. How would a lord whack a political rival and
get away with it?”
Hung was busy doing
push-ups in a corner. “Hire an
assassin,” he said without looking up, arms pumping up and down, “to use poison
or a fake accident.”
“I like the fake
accident idea,” Cho said, puffing on her pipe. “Fast. Lethal. Easy to miss something in a cover-up, more
evidence for ImpSec to follow. So Prince Tomo has
a little accident. Now, how do we frame
Lord Dai?” The quintet pondered the question
in silence.
“A lord would hire an
assassin,” Usha began, brushing long dark curly hair
out of her face. “So we tie the evidence
to the assassin, then tie the assassin to Lord
Dai. That shouldn’t be too hard, as long
as Yoko hacks into Lord Dai’s records and for a little creative bookkeeping.”
“I like it…” Cho said, pausing to take another hit off her pipe, “except
for the part where they catch the assassin.
I’m not really looking to end my days in prison pumped full of quellers.”
“Well, not us,
obviously,” Usha conceded, “We’ll have to set up
someone else as the assassin, perhaps from a rival yakuza, since ImpSec is bound to go after whoever’s involved.”
“I like the sound of
that,” Cho nodded.
“I suggest Yakuza-Yuriatu,” Usha
continued. “If we can weaken them, we’ll
have a better foothold on the
“Nope,” Cho said, shaking her head, “Yakuza-Gaijin.”
“I… don’t think
that’s wise,” Usha said cautiously, “They’re a
powerful family, Cho…”
“Yeah, but I hate
those round-eyed hung mao,”
Cho said, as if that settled the matter.
“Umm…” Usha said, clearly uncomfortable with the idea but
searching for the most diplomatic words. “Word on the street is they’ve got
friends in high places.”
“So do we,” Cho shrugged, exhaling yellow
opium smoke.
“Not this high,” Usha said firmly, shaking her head. “Rumor has it the obuyan
of Yakuza-Gaijin has a direct pipeline to Minister Treschi.”
“Gosa!”
Cho
swore dismissively. “Rumor,
nothing more.”
“Cho…”
Usha said, deadly serious, “Yakuza-Gaijin is
the only non-han family on the streets. Not just that, but they dominate
Avalon - no family can even get a toehold there. They couldn’t have come this far without a lot
of help from powerful friends.”
“All the more reason
to sic ImpSec on ‘em and
bring ‘em down a peg.” Cho
countered.
“Look, Cho, this hit is very political, and—“
“I said Yakuza-Gaijin,”
Cho said, raising her voice. “Why are we still talking about this?”
“The obuyan of our family should make kind of
call,” Usha said, meeting Cho’s
gaze.
Cho
put down her pipe and stood up slowly.
Her eyes bored into Usha’s. “You questioning me, ji
nu?” she asked, her voice dangerously low. Usha lowered her
eyes, but not before Cho caught a glimpse of burning
anger.
“Iye,
sensei,” she said softly.
“Yer golram right, yer not!” Cho
snapped. “And let me make this clear,
bitch: if you even think about going over my head - you’re finished,
done, gone from my service and protection. That little smuggling ship you’re so proud
of? Don’t forget who owns it. I’ll find a new captain and ship your sorry
ass back to the whorehouse where I found you.
I’m sure some fat sweaty hung mao
could think up a few uses for that firm brown ass of yours. That what you want?”
“Iye, sensei.”
“Well, then get this
through your head – I am in charge, you do what I say. Dong ma?”
“Hai!”
“And that goes for the rest of you!” Cho sneered at her other apprentices. “Anyone who’s got a problem with me can leave
at any time! Under me you’re wu jen – special,
elite, invaluable… but without me you’re just freaks. Yakuza street scum.
Dong ma?”
A chorus of “hai’s” sounded, but Cho wasn’t
listening anymore. She snatched up her
pipe and dug in her pocket for the opium. Usha’s
challenge - however minor - had pissed her off tremendously, and she needed to
mellow out, now - before she began flinging spells at her pupils.
“All right, here’s
the plan,” Cho dictated and she shook some Khmer
Rouge into her pipe bowl. “Nhut, you work with me on planning this ‘accident’. Yoko,
start hacking Lord Dai’s accounts wherever you can find them.” Cho paused to light
the bowl and inhale a deep breath of the yellow smoke. “Hung, go kidnap a Yakuza-Gaijin
assassin and bring him back here for a little memory magic.” As Cho sucked down
a second toke, Hung made his first facial expression of the day – stunned
disbelief – and obediently nodded and headed for the door. “Usha, you-“ Cho stopped suddenly, coughing
fiercely. She pounded on her chest, then took a deep, gasping breath. “Usha,
you go and – cuf! cuf! - find
us some – cuf! cuf! – Quellers, and – cuf! cuf!
cuf! – “
“Sensei?”
Yoko asked timidly, “You alright?”
Cho
nodded and gave her a thumbs-up, but couldn’t stop coughing long enough to
talk.
“Sensei? Cho?” Usha asked, concerned. Nhut’s head popped
over the back of the couch, looking alarmed.
Even Hung paused in the doorway.
All eyes were on Cho.
But Cho didn’t respond.
She was clutching her throat, eyes bulging, as her chokes turned into
thin wheezes. She began to stagger and
flailed her arms around for balance. Her
opium pipe slipped from her fingers and shattered on the ground a second before
Cho collapsed to the floor herself.
“Den
deh mah!”
Nhut
yelled, staggering forward as spasms racked Cho’s body.
“Is she okay?” Yoko
asked fearfully, hands pressed to her mouth.
“No she’s
not okay, gaujo!” Nhut
yelled as he ripped his belt off and tried to shove the leather between Cho’s teeth while she convulsed violently. “Call an ambulance – I think she’s
overdosing!”
END
OF ACT THREE
Text Copyright (C) 2004 by Marcus Johnston. All Rights Reserved. Do not try ANY of this at home, because no matter how obviously great the idea is, most bartenders do not have a tranquilizer rifle hidden next to the cash register.