Joe Pitt 1 - Already Dead (17 page)

Read Joe Pitt 1 - Already Dead Online

Authors: Charlie Huston

I take another look at her, limp and helpless on the ground. I should take another pint.
Just to be safe I should take one more. Hell, I should just drain her. I can. I can carry
her to the avenue like she's my drunk girlfriend. Get her in a cab, take her home and have
all the time in the world to get it all. Fucking chick like that, walking around loaded,
shit-faced out of her mind, chick like that is asking for trouble. Shit, chick like that
probably has a death wish. Be doing her a fucking favor. I bend over to pick her up.

I stop.

It's the Vyrus. It's just the fucking Vyrus talking. It's not me. I know better. That's
not the way to do things. It's stupid and it's weak. It's not who I am. I may not be the
sharpest crayon in the box, but I'm smarter than that. And I'm not that weak. Not yet.

So I shove the plywood out of the way, step onto the sidewalk, shove it back and head for
home. I get about two steps before Hurley clobbers me again.

--I fucking knew it.

Oh, hell.

--Fucking knew it. Consorting. Consorting and poaching.

I keep my eyes closed. I know who I'm gonna see when I open them and I'd just as soon put
it off for another minute.

--Mr. Clean. Mr. Shit Don't Stick on Me, and there he is, consorting with the Coalition and
poaching that chick.

--Don't say chick.

--Yeah, yeah. Poaching that woman. I told Terry, told him and told him, but he coddles this
guy. Knows he spooks for the Coalition and he lets him stay down here anyway. Well not
anymore. Wanted evidence?

I open my eyes. Closet. Dark. Dank. Dim cracks of light sneak in around the edges of an
ill-fitting door.

--I got evidence.

I'm lying on my side. I go to push myself up and realize that my hands are cuffed and my
ankles are shackled. I squirm into a sitting position. The brick wall behind my back
sweats moisture.

--What kind of evidence?

--Well I saw him, didn't I? Me and Hurley both saw him.

--But doing what, Tom?

--We saw him take that Coalition chick . . . woman into his place, and we saw him poach
that other ch . . . woman.

--How do you know she was Coalition? Are they wearing uniforms now?

--Trust me, you saw this one, you'd know she was Coalition.

--How?

--How? The way you always know. Had that attitude, that
the world belongs to me
attitude. Talk about a bitch who thinks her shit doesn't stink. This one--

--Don't call women bitches.

--Yeah, right.

I scoot closer to the door and put my eye against one of the cracks. I'm back at Society
headquarters. Squares of carpet sample are spread around on the floor and handmade
anarchist protest posters that look like oversized ransom notes cover the walls. I can see
Tom Nolan's back. He's standing at a hot plate, stirring a big pot of something steaming
and smelly.

--So you saw him with a woman who might be Coalition. And what else?

--She was Coalition. But even if she wasn't? He poached. Right on the street, just whacked
that girl.

--Was she a child?

--What?

--Was she a child?

--In her twenties or something.

--So she's not a girl, right?

--Right, yeah. He whacked this woman right on the street and dragged her into a
construction site. Tapped her right there for anyone to see. A total fucking abuse of
Society policies. On our turf. A slap in the face to our beliefs and methods. That can't
be disputed, period. And besides, you're the one who's always going on about how more
women are tapped than men.

Lydia comes into view and stands next to Tom.

--I'm not
going on
about anything. There is a huge imbalance in the number of women victimized by
Vyrus-incited violence.

--That's what I'm saying.

--So you just had Hurley knock him out and carry him down the street to here?

--Hey, I had to take action. There's no telling what he's plotting with his bosses up
there, what kind of trouble they have him stirring up. It was time to deal with it. He's a
Coalition stooge and the time has come.

--Uh-huh.

She turns from Tom and faces someone I can't see.

--Hurley, did you see the woman he took into his apartment?

--Yeah.

--Was she Coalition?

--Don't know. Coulda bin.

--You think she was?

--Don't know. Tom said she wuz. Coulda bin. Nice lookin' lady.

--Uh-huh.

Tom turns from the hot plate.

--Hey, don't say lady.

--Why?

--Because it's demeaning.

Lydia looks at Tom.

--Get off him, Tom.

--What the hell, you just gave me shit for--

--Because you know better. Hurley's an old dog. Let him talk how he wants.

--Jesus! Fucking double standards. That's, you know what that is? That's
counterrevolutionary. We're all equals. We're all equals

or we're not. I don't like rules, but if we're gonna have them they have to apply across
the board. --Get off it, Tom.

She turns back to Hurley.

--What about the woman he tapped?

--S'a pretty good tap, all tings considered like.

--But was it by the book?

There's silence and I can hear Hurley's brain grinding away on that one. Probably trying
to remember what a book is.

--Not da way Terry likes it done. Dat's why I sapped 'im.

--OK.

She turns back to Tom.

--So now what?

--Now what? Now we question the cocksucker.

--Tom!

--Sorry, sorry. You know me and my anarchists are sympathetic to the gay and lesbian
community. It just slipped out.

--Slip it back in.

She walks out of view. Tom starts stirring his stinky pot again.

--Anyway, when he wakes up we put a rubber hose on him and see what starts to pour out.

--I'm awake, Tom.

He spins around.

--How long, asshole, how long you been spying?

--You mean, how long have I been awake and trying to get back to sleep so I don't have to
listen to your crap?

He comes over to the closet, close enough so that all I can see through the crack is the
leg of his crusty jeans.

--That's right, smart-ass, keep fucking jerking my chain. See what it gets you.

--Hey, Tom, I'd never jerk your chain. That's Terry's job.

--OK, that's it. You fucking asked and now you're going to fucking receive.

He starts unlocking the door. -Please, man, have Hurley knock me out again so I can get
some fucking rest.

The lock snaps open and I hear a chain rattling. I roll onto my back, knees tucked up
against my chest.

--Hurley's not gonna do a goddamn thing, smart guy, I'm gonna take care of business myself
this time.

--You planning on taking off my cuffs?

--Whatever way you want it.

The door swings open. I jackrabbit him, kicking out with both feet, and catch him in the
gut. He woofs and stumbles back into the room. A spindly chair catches him across the back
of the knees and splinters under his weight as he crashes on top of it. I shove myself
back up on my ass and lean out the door of the closet and hold my cuffed hands out.

--Hey, Tom, I'd help you up if I didn't have these things on.

--That's it, cocksucker.

He comes at me fast. The only thing I have time for is to regret that I have such a big
fucking mouth.

I try kicking him again, hoping to knock his legs out and get him down on the floor where
I can wrap the cuff chain around his neck and maybe crush his windpipe. It doesn't work.
He dodges the kick easily, grabs the front of my jacket, lifts me off the floor, and
starts pummeling my face. Lydia grabs him and pulls him off of me almost immediately, but
he's already jackhammered me ten or eleven times. I fall in a heap. Blood I can't afford
to lose runs from my nose and mouth. Tom lunges at me again and Lydia easily shoves him
back.

--Fuck do you think you're doing, cunt?

Her bodybuilder shoulders bunch, but her voice is calm.

--Watch the language.

--Stop telling me how to fucking talk, dyke!

--Tom, if you say girl, chick, lady, bitch, cocksucker, fag, lesbo, dyke, queer or cunt one
more time, not only am I going to beat the sperm out of you, I'm going to have a couple
shemale Vamps I know find you in an alley some night and open your back door. Wide.

He makes his move, and bounces off Hurley who is suddenly between them.

--Terry would'nae want yous two fightin'.

I'm on my side, spitting and snorting blood.

--Yeah, guys, dad's gonna be mad when he gets home and sees you can't get along.

Tom just about jumps out of his shoes trying to get at me, but Hurley puts a hand on his
shoulder and he freezes. Hurley turns his head and looks at me.

--Maybe you best oughta shut yer trap, Joe.

I'm looking at the little puddle of blood on the floor in front of my face and thinking
about sucking it up.

--Yeah, yeah, maybe you're right, Hurl. Hell, even you can have a good idea sometimes.

He grunts.

--'Member dat last time ya smarted off, Joe?

--Yeah.

--I wuz gentle on ya dat time.

I shut up. He looks from Lydia to Tom.

--Yous two oughta shake hands, show dere ain't no hard feelin's.

Tom groans.

--Fucking come on.

Lydia sticks her hand out.

--He's right, Tom. We're all on the same side here. We can't let our tempers get the better
of us.

She's smiling at him. He takes her hand. She squeezes. It's not obvious, Hurley misses it.
Tom yanks his hand back and takes a swipe at her.

--Fuckin' bitch!

Hurley blocks the punch and gives Tom a gentle push that sends him reeling to the far
wall.

--OK, Tom, take a walk.

--The fuck?

--Terry would'nae like dis. So take a walk, get some air.

--It's light out.

--So go upstairs.

--But that fucking--

Hurley raises a finger.

--OK, that's cool, that's cool, I'm cool. I'll go up. But I want that fucking spy back in
his cell.

Hurley shrugs.

--Sure.

He takes two steps, scoops me up and dumps me back in the closet. The door closes and the
chain is drawn back into place. I hear Tom start up the basement steps and then stop.

--Lydia, you're right, we're on the same side. I'll remember that,
baby.

A door opens and closes and he's gone. A chair creeks heavily as Hurley sits down.

--See, dat's better. Everybody gettin' along.

--He says he's an anarchist, but really he's a fascist. You know he wanted uniforms? He
actually wanted to get T-shirts or armbands or something for all the members of the
Society. Not only that, but he wanted affiliations to be indicated on the uniforms,
different symbols depending on whether you're one of his Anarchists or in the Lesbian, Gay
and Other-Gendered Alliance or the Communist Manifesto or whatever your Society Affiliate
might be. He said it would make for unity, so we could identify one another on the street.
What he's really after is a system of classification. He wants to know where his enemies
are so he can take care of them when he's ready. And he says he backs the goals of the
LGOGA, but I can tell we freak him out. I mean, before I got infected, the infected queers
weren't even organized, let alone represented on the council. Now he has us in his face at
every meeting. Little fascist prick. And he's making a bid for Security Chief? He's
already half a Stalin. Give him a badge and he'll go full-blown Hitler.

She's sitting at the table out there, eating a bowl of whatever veggie stew Tom had been
mixing up.

--If he ever does take charge of security he's not gonna be too happy about having you
around, Hurley. He likes using your muscle now, but if he gets the chance, he'll have his
Anarchists in jackboots and carrying truncheons and he won't need your help knocking
people out. That's why we need to keep an eye on each other's backs.

--I keep a eye on everybody's back, Lydia. Jus' like Terry tells me to.

--Yes, but are Terry's interests yours? Are you going to spend your whole life letting him
make decisions for you?

--It's worked OK so far.

--Yes, I see that, but--

I can't listen to this with the cramps hitting me. One or the other, but please not both.
I decide to do something about it.

--Hey, Lydia.

Silence.

--Lydia.

--What?

--There's nothing I'd like more than to listen to you trying to make Hurley understand the
politics of personal empowerment, but I'm hurting a little in here.

--Yeah, you looked a little rough around the edges.

--Maybe I could get that blood I tapped.

--Sorry, Joe, that's Exhibit A in Tom's case against you. As much as I hate the little
prick I can't mess with evidence.

--Got any you could spare?

--No.

--Uh-huh. Well seeing as I'm all cuffed up maybe you could let me out of here.

--No. I think you're going to have to stay in there until Terry gets back from the Hood.

--Any idea when that's gonna be?

--Could be tonight, could be a couple nights. Depends on when they can get him safe
passage.

Couple nights.

--So maybe you can call him?

--He doesn't want us calling him up there. He thinks the Coalition may have some people
inside a couple of the service providers. They could tap landlines and cell signals. He's
worried they might find out when and how he's coming back down. Sounds a little paranoid
to me, like maybe he's been listening to Tom, but why take the chance.

--Yeah, that's great, Lydia, but see, there's this girl out there that I need to find.

--Woman.

--No,
girl.
The kind young enough to get raped by her daddy.

She comes a little closer to the door.

I don't know much about Lydia, but I know enough. I know that just a couple years back she
was at NYU, finishing her thesis on Radical Gender Roles. I know she was a big player in
campus politics. I know she used to teach women's self-defense classes. I also know a
desperate Rogue tried to jump her one night and got eye-gouged and groin-punched for his
trouble. But not before he bit a hole in her cheek. What I hear, it turned out she knew
some people that she didn't even know she knew. They noticed when she started getting
sick. Guess these friends got her through and hooked her up with Terry. I think the
biggest shock for her was discovering that Vyrus-infected lesbians and gays were
completely unorganized. She took care of that.

Other books

Delay of Game by Catherine Gayle
Greatshadow by James Maxey
The Last Spymaster by Lynds, Gayle
Faded Dreams by Eileen Haworth
Fair Wind to Widdershins by Allan Frewin Jones
Seven Kisses in a Row by Patricia MacLachlan
Slave by Sherri Hayes
Bayou My Love: A Novel by Faulkenberry, Lauren