The Burn Zone (31 page)

Read The Burn Zone Online

Authors: James K. Decker

Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction, #made by MadMaxAU

 

He paused, and for a second I was afraid, really afraid that he was going to take me up on that and walk out the door.

 


Hey,
I


 


Dragan

s my problem, not yours. I don

t need your help, so if you want to go, then—

 


Hey,

he snapped.

If I wasn

t in, believe me, I

d already be gone.

 

I chewed my lip. My face burned.

 


And you do need help,

Vamp said,

no matter what you say.

 

I shrugged.

 


I care about you, okay?

he said, lowering his voice.

I don

t want you to get killed.

 


I know.

 

Nix had been watching off to the side, like he wasn

t sure what exactly he

d just witnessed. Vamp rubbed the bridge of his nose, and sighed.

 


I might have something,

he said.

I

ve been grinding on the eyebot data. I

ve got a few more leads for you.

 


If he

s behind a gate, though—

 


He had to stash those kids somewhere. Find the kid, and find the twistkey, right?

 

I nodded.

So you

re going to help me?

 


It

s going to take more than us to get Dragan out of there,

he said,

but I

m with you, Sam.

 

I hugged him, and kissed his neck when he wrapped his arms around me.

 


So, which one do you want to hit first?

I asked him, bringing up the eyebot images. The original trails he

d come up with had grown, but one had also branched and there was a lot of blank space between them.

 


It

s still not real clear,

Vamp said.

But it

s got to be somewhere around there. I

ve got a script trying to close the gap. Give it a little more time.

 


It has to be one of them. We should—

 


We can

t just go bouncing around Hangfei half-cocked. We have to have some idea where we

re going.

 

I followed the two ends of the trail, noting the parts of town he

d passed through. There were no gate hubs near the points where they went cold, so I didn

t think he jumped, but nothing in the area stood out, at least, no place you

d leave a couple of kids. There was no way to even know at what points he had the kids with him and when he was alone.

 


We can

t just stay here.

 


Security is crazy out there right now. You

re not going to be any good to Dragan in a detention center.

 


How long will your thing take?

 


By tonight I

ll have a better idea where the missing pieces are, and it

ll be easier to move too.

 

I didn

t like the idea of leaving Dragan hanging, just stewing in a hotel room waiting while he could be in trouble. For all we knew, the burn of Hangfei had already started, but Vamp was right. I wasn

t leaving without Dragan one way or the other, and right now all I had was a stab in the dark, if that. Either lead would be over
an hour away on foot, with blocks full of strangers by the thousands. He

d been branded a dissident, so I couldn

t just advertise I was looking for him, or someone would ID me and I

d get picked up for sure. Running off wouldn

t get me anything but arrested.

 


Okay,

I said.

Fine.

 


Okay?

 


I said okay.

 

I looked at the trails on the map, willing them, needing them to lead somewhere I recognized, somewhere that made sense.

 

Hours passed, though. The nervous conversation dried up until I couldn

t even respond to
Vamp

s
reassurances while I stared at the screen ready to jump out of my skin. The whiskey was long gone and I was on my third cigarillo, but even the alcohol and the Zen-oil-infused tobacco combined couldn

t calm my jitters. Vamp finally took to chatting with Nix in a low voice, hovering near the door, guarding it so I wouldn

t run off into the night. I tried not to resent him for it, but I couldn

t help it as I climbed into the creaky bed and tried my best to sleep.

 

~ * ~

 

Chapter Eleven

 

 

 

 

11:07:03 BC

 


No!

a voice shrieked, the terrorized alto of a little boy. I never learned his name, but I came to know his screams like the sound of my own voice.

No! No!

 

I opened my eyes to see that two men had entered the holding pit. Between them, a scrawny little figure thrashed while they held his twiggy wrists. They dragged him away toward the blood trough while a third man lifted the rendering vat cover and released a billowing cloud of steam. I breathed in through my nose, and smelled cooking meat.

 


No!

 

I managed to turn my head, rolling it against the concrete wall behind me until I could see the old man. He leaned back against the wall, his eyes closed and his hands over his ears.

 


Please! Do


 

A loud bang of electricity cut the boy off, and I looked back in time to see him crumple onto the damp concrete floor. One of the men grabbed his leg and dragged him over to the winch. Then he looped the cable in a figure eight around both ankles and secured the hook.

 

The first man pushed the button of a control box that hung from the ceiling. A motor whined as the cable lifted the boy up off the floor, and they guided him over until his wet hair dangled down over the trough.

 

I watched. I couldn

t look away, even though I knew I should. I watched as one of the men yanked the machete from out of the stained butcher block and then swung it.

 

It wasn

t dramatic, like in the movies. The boy

s head didn

t fly off or anything. It didn

t even look like he hit him that hard, just a little whack to the side of the neck that made the body wobble at the end of the cable, but it was enough. Blood began to glug out of the black, eye-shaped hole that appeared, until a thick stream splattered down into the trough. One little tap was the difference between being alive and being dead.

 

When it was done, the man thumped the machete back into the block and lit a cigarillo so he could smoke while he waited for the blood to drain out. He offered one to the other man, who took it.

 

Then they talked about some game they

d seen on TV, bonding like two schoolboys while the tiny figure turned slowly at the end of the cable.

 

He froze
midspin
, like someone hit pause or something. The two butchers froze too, one with a cloud of smoke hanging motionless in front of him where he

d exhaled it.

 


...
what
you are experiencing is not a dream,

the heavily accented voice said.

You will find this difficult to accept, but you are receiving an allied
transmission from outside the—

 

Static whined, and the voice cut out. The frozen figures flickered in front of me.

 


...
hidden inside several native transmissions where we hope it will not be detected by your authorities, who we
believe
have been compromised ...in an attempt to get the truth to you
...

 

The cloud of smoke billowed and the men

s voices continued while the little boy

s face turned slowly back around.

 


...
the
world is in grave danger. You have to...

 

The boy

s face turned toward me,
h
is eyes wide and staring through the lines of red that bled down into his hair, and I screamed.

 

I jerked awake with a gasp and felt a big arm around me. I panicked, and began to thrash.

 


Sam,

a voice said huskily in my ear.

Hey ...

 

A man lay behind me, holding me fast against him with one arm. I tried to kick the sheet away, to get free of the guy who had me, but I was stuck.

 


Sam,

the voice said again.

Take it easy.

 

I flipped around, and pushed against a muscular chest. I was staring directly into a man

s face, and a spike of adrenaline shot through me even as I realized it was Vamp. He

d pulled his hand away, holding it up where I could see it. He looked stunned.

 


Sam, it

s me. It

s just me.

 

I let out a pent-up breath, feeling the drool-damp pillow against my face. The air smelled like boozy sweat and bad breath, along with a strong-smelling musk that made my nose wrinkle. A soft green light did a mellow strobe against the wall as Vamp

s phone flashed on the nightstand.

 


Vamp,

I whispered.

 


Yeah,

he said.

It

s me.

 


Shit.

My heart was still going a mile a minute.

 


Are you okay?

 

I wiped my face. It was slick with sweat.

 


Yeah,

I said.

Yeah ... I

m fine.

 


You don

t look fine.

 

I shook my head.

 


I

m out of meds,

I mumbled.

I

m fine. It happens all the time.

Other books

El hombre equivocado by John Katzenbach
Once a Thief by Kay Hooper
The Daddy Decision by Donna Sterling
Absorption by David F. Weisman