An Eighty Percent Solution (CorpGov) (24 page)

“Audit?” asked the other courageous traveler
.

“Naw
.
I’m here to pick up a delivery,” he dissembled uncomfortably
.
His eyes darted over the
imposing
black monolith and the one place he didn’t want to be any closer to
.

“Oh
.
Metros say I made a seven figure bonus last year
.
It wasn’t even high six and I have the receipts to prove it
.”

“Good luck to you
.
Those police auditors can be vicious
.”

“Yeah, I know
.
I’ve been losing sleep for the last two weeks
.”

Tony shortened his stride
.
The lie he offered provided him with the best option
.
If he turned around and caught another bus
,
he’d
be advertising his guilt
.
No one changed TriMets at Metro

no one
.
Whipping out his
solido pad
,
h
e programmed frantically, finishing just as the audit victim passed through the door, waving in irritation
.
Tony didn’t understand
,
but had to act as if
he’d
been everywhere as a courier
, as though being here meant nothing in particular
.
He fearlessly pushed through the whispery nano-curtain
,
barely feeling the full body scan it performed
.

Inside the foyer stood a smiling
twenty
-
meter propaganda solido of a Metro in
familiar blue
body armor
without his helmet
.
Gentle music, spiked with subliminal messages of respect
,
floated down
.
“We keep you and yours safe!” The imposing solido bent down and gave a young girl back her
purple teddy bear
.
The adrenaline running through
Tony’s
system shed the subliminals like
rain off a Burberry
.

Turning to the right he found a brutally ugly Metro sergeant sitting atop a
five
-
meter
-
high obsidian desk obviously
designed to intimidate anyone who hadn’t already been cowed by the display in the immense foyer
.
 

“I’m here for an
a
-a-au
dit
,” the man stammered
.

“Show me your chit,” the sergeant barked.

“Chit
?
The m
-
mail said to show up today or be forfeit.”

“You have to have a chit to get back to the auditors.”

“You didn’t send me a chit!”

“Read the law, civ
.
It clearly reads that
you’re
required to show up one week before your audit to get a chit
.
Without it we can’t do a background check on you.”

“So what do I do now?”

“Not much, civ
.
Pay the tax and the fine.”

“But
it’s
wrong!” he said turning purple with rage.

“Civ, I’m going to give you just one chance to turn around and walk out
.
If you don’t you’ll be doing five months harvesting yeast in the
Antarctic
Sea
,
and that’s
after I break all your teeth
.”

The man blanched and backed away slowly
.
Tony caught a foul whiff as the man turned and ran out the front door.

“Stupid ghit,” Tony said in fake derision
,
handing his solido pad to the desk sergeant
.
“I’m here for a pickup from
O
fficer Nguyen.”

“Pickups are in the service entrance on the level
ten
pad.”

“Yes,
O
fficer, I understand
that’s
normal, but I was told to report here to pick up something personal
,
as you can see on the pad
.”
He put as much respect in his tone as he would for the CEO of a major corporation.

“Yeah, I can see
.
Lee Nguyen is on vacation right now and he didn’t leave anything here
.
You have your databases crossed
.”

This didn’t surprise Tony
,
as he
’d
accessed
the public
ly available
Metro files for
just such an
absentee
.

Well, I don’t want to anger you,
O
fficer
.
If you ain’t got nothing, you ain’t got nothing
.
I get paid either way
.
I better check with my office, though
.”
He stepped away from the desk and spoke into his ring
.
“Triple Five, Eight Thousand.”

“Stanford Courier Dispatch.”

“Hey, I’m here at Metro…” Tony’s luck finally p
layed
out
.
The air in the foyer compressed, stealing his breath. He didn’t even hear the explosion
.

“What was that?” Sergeant demanded
.
Tony’s heart stuttered in his chest
.
Three full seconds silently passed before sirens within Metro began to wail
.

“This is
D
ispatch
.
What do you want?” Tony’s ring
comm
demanded
.

“Oh, they say they have no pickup from Nguyen
.”

“One second…I show no pick-up at Metro or from Nguyen
.
You must have a damaged pad or downloaded the wrong DB
.
Please return to base
.”
This also didn’t surprise Tony.

“Affirmative
.”
He cut the connection
.
“I’m sorry,
O
fficer
.
I seem to have a damaged pad
.
Can I get that back so I can get it fixed?”

“Here
.”
Frantically coordinating some other action from his net link
,
the sergeant barely offered him a glance
.
Tony scooted out the door with a heavy sigh
.
The audit victim stood quivering at the landing platform
.

“Did you hear that?” Tony asked as the TriMet number 6784 pulled up
.
His fellow traveler didn’t say anything
,
but he
had
a blank stare and his skin bore a mottled paleness
, not to mention the foul whiff coming from his pants
.
Tony felt
he’d
be just as happy to get away from this place
.

Tony dared a look in the general direction of the
Mercy
Hospital
to see a malignant
gray
cloud slowly billow
ing
around the skyscrapers of downtown
. The thick smoke
didn’t lose opacity as it expanded out and down
.
A silence that never existed in any city now cloaked
Portland
like the sheet pulled over the recently deceased.

 

 

 

 

 

Implement

Phase
Four

 

Back in his underground cell
,
Tony sat with a hangman’s noose twisting his guts and
Vise Grips
on his vocal cords
.

“…bomb went off at a particularly bad time as the shift change in
an
operating room caught nearly twice as many heroic medical workers at their post,” said a computer tablet sitting on a
n old
-
fashioned
maglev table between h
im
and Linc.

“The CEO of
Colonization Unlimited
, the parent company of
Mercy
Hospital
, insists the perpetrators will be caught and punished
.”
Linc leaned back in his disposable chair with half a grin
.

The picture on the solido tablet panned across the blackened chairs, walls torn in half, and a melted desktop
.
A woman cradled her bloody arm to her chest, ignoring the fact that it no longer connected to the rest of her body
.
Two small children of indeterminate sex, wrapped tightly in one another’s arms, shuffled along through the
gray
rubble with blank stares on their face
.

“This kind of
barbarism
isn’t
a form of warfare
,
but rather large
-
scale murder
.
None of these
victims
carried a gun
.
None of them threatened anyone
.”
The scene switched to
show
a morgue
,
where a row of corpses lay in body bags
,
and then flipped back to a hospital emergency room, every surface covered in
gray
dust where people
paced or sprawled on the floor,
weeping and crying
.

A vile taste crept into Tony’s mouth
.
From never having even struck someone
,
to a multiple murderer in a single stroke
.
He regretted
eating
the soup before Linc picked him up
.
He regretted it even more when he doubled over and the contents of his stomach ejected from his mouth and nose onto the floor.

“In the end, however
,
it’s
only a matter of time and resources
.
We’ve
increased our private security by seventy-five percent.” The picture snapped to thousands of Pinkertons in shiny
-
gray
riot gear
receiving
special weapons and instructions
.
“We will find them
.
We will try them
.
We will execute them.”

“To wrap up here, the Green Action Militia has claimed responsibility for a bomb that killed seven and seriously injured twenty-seven in a midmorning bombing of
Mercy
Hospital
.
Updates as they arise
.
This is Cindy Bindle reporting for
CNI
.”

“Thank you
,
Cindy
.
We return you to your regular programming currently in progress…” 

Tony wiped his mouth on his sleeve as Linc stopped the solido playback.

“Congratulations
.
One of the best kill counts we’ve had from such a small device.”

* * *
 

Brown plastic boxes piled at random acted as impromptu chairs and tables for a loudly debating quorum
.
Linc, Suet
,
and eleven others, none b
e
aring any resemblance to the next, sprawled among
st
the crates
in a loose
circle
.
Sonya sat on the floor in a perfect lotus
, her simple white cotton dress loose around her
.

“So he
lai’
one farging bomb
.
Anyone can

o
.
I say he’s a prob’em.”

“He questioned the orders.”

“He doesn’t know anything about security procedures
.
Just let him go.”

Other books

Ruthless and Rotten by Ms. Michel Moore
Gallows Hill by Lois Duncan
African Laughter by Doris Lessing
The Little Girls by Elizabeth Bowen
Liquidate Paris by Sven Hassel
Confession by Gary Whitmore
Natural Ordermage by L. E. Modesitt
Beautiful People by Wendy Holden
Claimed By Shadow by Karen Chance