Now We Are Monsters (The Commander) (37 page)

“When you come back, the information in question goes to both Arms,” Carol said.  “Don’t try and contact us.  We’ll contact you when it’s safe.”

Ah.  Now more of this made sense.  Carol had sold Keaton on the deal.  “In that case, you should thank Stacy for me for the funding.”

“I will, Hank.  Don’t dilly-dally.  You have two weeks to get yourself on a plane,” Carol said, and hung up the phone.

He mopped his eyebrows and took a deep breath.  At least this had been a short conversation.

Carol was making progress on her graduation test.  Finally.  She expected to succeed after about two weeks.

 

Carol Hancock: August 16, 1967

Had I set my plans in motion too soon?  Four in the morning, parked in the driveway of an empty house with a For Sale sign, out in the Oranges, high on juice…dammit.  Dammit, dammit, dammit!

I
suspected I had broken my right pinkie finger when I smashed the damned thing, as well.

 

I had grabbed the man in Newark a few minutes before midnight, a nineteen-year-old street guy, amenable to being ordered into the trunk of my ride at gunpoint.  I couldn’t help metasensing him and smelling him as I drove, and in less than two minutes the scent of his juice worked its cheating way into my mind.

Once I drove us out of Newark proper I pulled off the main highway, turned onto a quiet side road, and stopped the car to shake.  What I was doing was unnatural.  As I suffered my shakes, my kill shouted for help through the gag.  His juice was so beautiful.  I needed his juice.  I could practically taste the rush, the wonderful exalted high.

I wanted my kill.  I needed my kill.  Now.  Such a beautiful kill.  I turned away and found I couldn’t walk farther than about a hundred feet away before I got the shakes again.

My kill decided to scream in terror, reigniting my lust.  The distance made no difference.

I walked back to my ride, got back in, put my head on the steering wheel and listened to the distant highway noises.  I hurt.  I wanted the juice.  I had earned it.  I had been able to avoid thinking about the juice lust while I captured him. The thrill of the hunt and capture distracted me, and I was high enough on juice for another kill to put me close to oversupply and going over into Monster.

I had him now.  I had finished the hunt.  It was time for the kill.

I gripped the steering wheel tight, until I heard a creaking sound.  Rage swept through me and I bashed my fingers with one of my many pain tools I carried with me, a hammer.

The juice monkey backed off from the pain.  Good.

I started up the car again and drove.

I focused on the pain.

I drove.

Unfortunately
, my Arm capabilities didn’t to me any favors this time.  After five minutes, the pain from my bashed finger receded and the juice monkey resumed its grip.

I stopped the car again.  Dammit!

I put my hand into my pocket and found Keaton’s little flensing knife, in the small sheath I had made for it.  I took the knife out of my pocket, took the knife out of the little sheath and looked at it.  The tiny blade glistened menacingly.  Once the knife had owned my life, the same way the juice did.  Once this knife had cut me, tortured me, and tore me open.

I took that knife and I plunged it into my arm.  Pain!  It hurt.  The knife tortured me.

Don’t think.  Drive.

My world contracted to nothing but the pain and the driving of the car.  When the pain faded, I jiggled the knife again until the pain shot through me.  Three times the knife fell out, forcing me to stab myself again.  I controlled my mind and thought of nothing but the pain.

 

I lasted through twenty minutes of this self-torture before the prey became
mine
.  I learned one thing: I could have driven around forever, using the pain to drive away my need to draw his juice.  I hadn’t been able to do so before and this trick would likely save my life someday.

Unfortunately, once he became
mine
I wouldn’t be able to give him up to Keaton.  The test was over.  I found a nice safe place and drew his juice in this nice vacant house in the Oranges.

I growled and hissed as bad as Mr. Lizard.  My plan had failed.  I sat in the vacant house, annoyed, with a broken pinkie, and perilously close to whiny angst.

No.  Bad thoughts, exactly what my addiction literature warned me against.  The proper way to state my progress was: ‘my plan hadn’t worked perfectly’.  Big difference.

I needed to give this some thought.  My gut said I should be able to make this work.  Somehow.  I was devious enough – dammit, Zielinski – smart enough to be able to find a way to make this work.

First, though, I had a body to dispose of and some men of loose morals to screw.

 

Gilgamesh: August 21, 1967

At three-fifteen in the morning, Gilgamesh walked home from his place of nominal employment, a used appliance shop.  He had spent the evening cannibalizing three dishwashers for parts to make one working used dishwasher, a typical evening these days.  His employer allowed him to work at night and paid him by the piece.  The night was clear and cool, and this late even the bars were closed.  Few cars traveled the roads, the only thing punctuating the silence.

Gilgamesh’s truck was broken again, a week’s worth of broken.  The truck needed carburetor work.  He didn’t mind the walk through the quiet calming darkness.  In the distance, he metasensed Sinclair sleeping, Wire and Hancock reading, and the Skinner meditating.  Tolstoy was out of range.

His metasense never ceased to amaze him.  He was as
aware of the Crows and Arms as he was aware of the Focuses, their households, and all the various Transforms who scattered all over the city during the day.  He metasensed them all without thinking about it, the web of Transforms always in the back of his mind.  In the distance, the Focus Hera and her larger-than-normal set of bodyguards patrolled, the only ones out now.  They patrolled in response to that Focus’s Beast Man sighting.  Gilgamesh found the Focus’s patrols amusing.  They weren’t very good at it and all they had managed to accomplish was to scare up a large crop of protesters from the Monsters Die group.  Not that Monsters Die protested at night, of course.

As he walked home, he noticed Wire, who stood watch, put down his book and frantically dial his phone.  A few moments later, Sinclair startled awake.  Sinclair looked around and then, in a pure panic, vomited up dross.  Then he raced around his apartment, collected some small belongings, and ran for the door.

Panic hit and Gilgamesh’s own dross threatened to sick up.  Only one thing would generate a reaction like that: Wire had metasensed a hostile Beast Man on its way into town.  The hostility reading wouldn’t be a guess, as Wire was much better than Gilgamesh at reading emotions.  Gilgamesh began to run.  He cursed his broken truck; he would never be able to escape an attack by a Beast Man on foot.  He cursed his stubborn refusal to dip into his meager savings to repair his truck; he was most likely going to die in the next few minutes.  Hell, he thought, if he had any brains he should have left Philadelphia when Sinclair first glimpsed the Beast Man.

In his panic, Gilgamesh ran northeast towards Sinclair and Sinclair’s truck, crossing over Cobbs Creek and up north of Walnut Street.  He cut through parking lots and hopped fences, ignoring roads for the direct path.  He would rather have run to Wire, but if Wire sensed a Beast Man and he didn’t, the Beast Man had to be on the other side of Wire, which made running to Wire the wrong way to run.  Gilgamesh felt his dross gurgling inside him again.

Gilgamesh cut through an alley leading to a loading dock behind a small factory…and metasensed a Beast Man
ahead
of him.  The Beast came directly toward him from the northwest, coming in
fast
.  Gilgamesh had never metasensed a living creature moving so fast.  The Beast came in on all fours, like an animal, moving over forty miles an hour.  Gilgamesh worked the angles and realized this Beast Man was out of Wire’s range, which meant – total horrific panic – more than one Beast Man was in on the attack.

Worse, the one after Gilgamesh was Enkidu.

Which meant this was
personal
.  Suddenly, Gilgamesh found within himself an extra burst of speed.

Enkidu’s juice structure showed the crossed W bands Sinclair had described, but Gilgamesh also metasensed Enkidu’s old R bands in his glow.  Despite those changes, Enkidu’s body had changed even more: four legs, big claws, big teeth, and overall much larger.  He would intercept Gilgamesh long before Gilgamesh made it to Sinclair.  Gilgamesh changed directions in panic, now headed toward Wire instead of Sinclair, running as fast as he could make his body go.

As Gilgamesh turned, Enkidu turned to follow.  From what Gilgamesh had learned, a Beast Man had to pay attention in order to sense a Crow, but Enkidu so obviously was.  Gilgamesh had guessed right: Enkidu
was
after him in specific.

Enkidu approached close enough for Gilgamesh to read a violent hunting ardor permeating the Beast Man’s emotions.  The juice churned in Gilgamesh and he sicked it up.  He gasped for breath, sweat dripping in his eyes as he tried to drive himself faster, legs pumping and feet pounding.  He cleared the last fence behind the alley and turned onto the street again, the quiet streets not nearly so peaceful any more.  Enkidu would catch up to Gilgamesh in less than a mile, long before Gilgamesh reached Wire and his car.  Gilgamesh tried to run faster, but he couldn’t.

Sweat dripped and Gilgamesh’s breath came in gasps.  He considered his possible options, all bleak.  The Arms’ warehouse sat across the Schuylkill River, four miles away to the southwest.  Focus Hera patrolled about three miles to the west.  Tolstoy lived two miles south of the Arms, out of his range.  The Delaware River bounded him on the east.

Up ahead, just on this side of the Schuylkill, he metasensed Wire running.  He had made the last of his calls and ran to his car.  To the north, Sinclair made for his own car.  There was still no sign of Tolstoy.  Then Gilgamesh sensed the other Beast Man chasing after Wire with an inhuman speed only a little slower than Enkidu’s charge.  The dross came up again in further panic.

Damn.  He realized what he should have done to start with: run toward Focus Hera.  The directions the Beast Men chose for their approach took them nowhere near the Focus.  In desperation, Gilgamesh turned toward Focus Hera, which did nothing to ease his panic.

A late night car drove by him as he ran through a silent intersection.  The driver, a teenager boy, stared at him open-mouthed as they drove by, as did his passengers, two other teen boys.  They didn’t stop.

Behind him, Enkidu turned the corner three blocks back, visible for the first time.  Gilgamesh tried to put on a burst of speed but he didn’t have any bursts left in him.  To the south, Wire reached his car and got in, the Beast Man charging at him still hundreds of yards away.  Wire would make it.  Sinclair was already driving his car away.  Gilgamesh was glad that some of them would survive.  There was still no sign of Tolstoy.

Enkidu closed with each stride, the clicks on the pavement from the beast’s claws eating into Gilgamesh’s sanity.  Enkidu’s massive form consumed the blocks with a terrible efficiency.  Gilgamesh ran, past the dark windows of Uncle Eddie’s Bail Bond Service, past the silence of the Walnut Street Pub, past the tawdry shabbiness of
the Nero Gentlemen’s Club, featuring Girls! Girls! Girls!  His legs pumped with a hopeless desperation, two and a half miles from Focus Hera and her patrol.

He wasn’t going to make it.

Enkidu began to rumble a low growl, almost too deep to hear, as he caught up with Gilgamesh.  Incredibly, with a deep laugh of triumph, Enkidu put on a burst of inhuman, impossible speed.  Enkidu’s hot breath gusted on Gilgamesh’s back, and the steady engine sound of Enkidu’s heartbeat and breathing joined the ominous clicking of his claws against the pavement.  Even on all fours, Enkidu’s head was level with Gilgamesh’s shoulders.

Gilgamesh turned, desperate, into the empty parking lot of the Nero Club, scattered with trash and broken glass, hoping he might find a refuge in that closed and silent building.

Enkidu, so close behind him, reached out with a swiping motion as he turned.  Gilgamesh felt a tearing, stabbing pain in the back of his right leg, and he fell.  As he fell, Enkidu reached out again, and that same stabbing pain went through his left leg.

Gilgamesh hit the pavement hard, shredding his hands and left cheek and chest as his momentum slid him forward.

He hadn’t even stopped sliding when a foot came down on his back, hundreds of pounds of weight crushing him into the asphalt of the Nero Club parking lot.  Gilgamesh couldn’t breathe.  He sicked up dross again, the tiny amount he had left.  Enkidu caught it easily and absorbed it into himself.

Above him, Enkidu roared.  Triumph, victory, dominance.  A noise that a lion would have been proud of.  Not even remotely human, and loud enough to wake up every normal within miles.  The Focus patrol certainly heard it; they stopped and took up a defensive position.  Panicked by the terror of Enkidu’s roar, Gilgamesh pushed against the weight of the foot on his back.  Enkidu didn’t even react.  Gilgamesh couldn’t breathe and his legs didn’t obey him.

Other books

Caprion's Wings by T. L. Shreffler
Hallowed Bones by Carolyn Haines
Sheikh's Command by Sophia Lynn
The Habit of Art: A Play by Alan Bennett
Love's a Stage by Laura London
Good Heavens by Margaret A. Graham
Lowcountry Boneyard by Susan M. Boyer