John Liedecker’s second born had just finished
up a session in the gym and was sauntering homeward toward his dorm
with his gym bag over his shoulder. He didn’t always saunter;
sometimes he sidled or moseyed. If the people he was passing were
unlucky, they might catch him storming. But no one had a memory
of him doing what they could put down is simply walking.
He wasn’t particularly handsome either. He
could have been, no doubt; especially with the platinum colored
frost in the tips of his hair and his father’s strong chin.
What ruined it were his eyes.
They weren’t eyes you put a color to because
if you ever locked eyes with him, you looked away. When one reached
for a word to describe them, you came up with words that went with
something sharp and pointy. He was always looking at people with
interest. Specifically the interest of a biology major for a formaldehyde
soaked frog.
Turning on the brick path leading up to Hathaway
House, the dormitory reserved for the children of alumni, or in
his case, for the children of massive donors, he fumbled in his
bag for a cigarette and lighter. He had everything sorted out and
the cigarette lit by the time he was within sight of the dormitory.
Two figures already occupied the plantation style
front porch: Roland Burke and Joe Callahan. Whenever the three agreed
to meet, they usually managed to beat him there. They had their
backs to him at the moment; Callahan sitting on the porch railing
and both having their heads bent over what was almost certainly
Burke’s palm-top.
Callahan was only slightly shorter than average,
but seeing him beside the monolith that was Burke, he looked like
he was a prop for Burke to sit on his knee and have sing while he
gargled. The ginger hair and ears his mother still thought he’d
grow into didn’t help.
Their voices carried down the walk as Liedecker
the Younger came up it.
“That’s bullshit, Burke.” Callahan
was saying. “Bullshit and you know it. She can’t actually
do that.”
Burke’s brow furrowed in frustration. “’Course
not. The show’s called Science Fact. They’ve
got real scientists to make sure it’s real.”
“Deep Fleet’s got scientists
too and I don’t think anyone believes there’s a real
Atlantis down there.” Callahan pointed out. “They bring
scientists in to show the producers how to fool people better.”
He leaned over the screen again. “No woman alive can do that.”
Vincent T. Liedecker reached the top step and exhaled
a long cloud of smoke. There was a no smoking sign posted, but for
alumni’s children this was more of a friendly request. “My
god, you two have really hit rock bottom if you’ve got to
turn to Science TV to see a woman. The internet turn ya down?”
Callahan turned red starting with the tips of his
ears and ending at the tip of his nose. Some people couldn’t
handle even tame ribbing. “Hey Vince, didn’t see you
coming up.”
“Vince, you ought to see this.” Said
Burke who didn’t care what he was accused of.
Smirking, he held up his hand to stop him. “Rather
not.” But it was too late, as Burke had thrust the screen
within inches of his face.
On the screen a woman in a red leotard was performing
gymnastics. The remarkable thing was that she was performing gymnastics
why passing herself though eight inch rings and gaps between transparent
walls of less than two inches.
“Burke?”
“Yeah?”
“Just when in the holy hell am I watching?”
The screen was pulled away and handed to Callahan who was instantly
hypnotized by it.
“You heard of a show called Science Fact?”
Burke waited to get a nod. “Well they had her on last night.
They say it’s a mutation of some kind that makes her like
rubber. A little later in the clip, then put her through a half
inch roller and she’s fine.”
“So what’s the plot?” Was Liedecker’s
instant reply.
“There’s no plot.” Burke shrugged,
which looked to be a major seismic even thanks to his stature. “It’s
what she is. Some folks are just born that way. With powers I mean,
not only as rubber women.”
Liedecker chuckled and took a drag off his cigarette.
“Burke, do you believe everything you hear on television or
the internet?”
“They’re real.” Burke protested.
Shaking his head, Liedecker dropped the cigarette
and ground it out with his heel. “Get real. The only powers
a body can hope for are the kind my daddy and Callahan’s got.”
Joe Callahan Sr. was on the board of Vitality Pharmaceuticals,
which made him a count or a duke to John Liedecker’s king.
Henry and Betty Burke were nameless accounting cogs at an insurance
firm, which didn’t really have a feudal analogue though the
other two didn’t hold it against him.
“You could probably build something with
powers like theirs.” Said Callahan, the only one of the three
who had ever set foot in the robotics center John Liedecker funded.
“There’s expansion aluminum now that can probably do
the rubber job. I read about it a few weeks ago.”
“Or.” Liedecker strolled over to the
opposite railing and leaned back on it. “You could use rubber.”
His favorite classes thus far had been psychology and philosophy
and science needed to do something new, not just efficient to impress
him.
He leaned his head back and watched the sky. “Doesn’t
matter though, ‘cause it’s neither here nor there.”
Without looking, he held up his bag. “In here, I’ve
got the best thing that’s happened to either of you apes since
your voice broke.”
With some maneuvering, he reached in and brought
out his own palm-top. For a moment, the screen dominated his vision,
then he held it up for his friends to see. “This is confirmation
for three in the executive skybox at MegaWare Stadium. For tomorrow.”
“Bullshit.” Callahan said with a look
of aw and covetousness. “The Break Fire Anthem show?”
Liedecker nodded. “An early birthday present
from the old man. The box, not the show.”
“They’re good.” Burke pointed
out. “But I don’t think it’s as big as you—“
“That’s because that ain’t the
big part.” Liedecker sat up and pulled himself to a seated
position on the railing. “The big part is that there’s
three more confirmations waiting in the message boxes of Catherine
Hagen, Annie Hindland, and Kelly Kavanek.”
He pushed off the railing and made a broad gesture.
“In case you have both been living under rocks the past year,
these are three beautiful seniors who will be sharing a
private box with us while listening to a band described by Sonic
Vibe as an electric aphrodisiac.”
Subtly was not on the menu. He took a bow as his
friends looked on in awe. “Now let’s celebrate with
some dead cow. Trio’s good for ya?”
Callahan wanted to ask things about the girls,
particularly which one was supposed to be with him, but he let Liedecker
steer the conversation. “Trio’s is all the way on the
other side of campus. Can’t we go to Faster Burger instead?”
This was rewarded with a disapproving glare. “I
cannot in good conscience and sound mind let any friend of mine
eat at that place.” He says. “Swear to God, I will call
you cab first.”
“What’s wrong with Faster Burger?”
Callahan looked affronted. “I love the special angus patty.”
“They print their meat.” Liedecker’s
voice withered with disgust.
“So?”
“That ain’t meat, Joe, that’s…
I don’t even have words. All I know is that to get meat, something’s
gotta die.”
“Trio’s probably uses clones.”
Was the defense.
“That’s completely fine by me.”
Liedecker shrugged. “A clone was alive at some point.”
“Guys.” Burke interjected. “I
don’t want to break up the fight we have all the goddamn time
over where to eat.” He said it like he meant it. Likely, he
did, because he usually won those arguments. “But I’ve
gotta head out early. Work.”
Unlike his friends, Burke wasn’t born with
a silver spoon in his mouth. Instead, he was born with a huge medical
bill for being such a big baby. So he had to work to help pay for
his education. Callahan and Liedecker again didn’t make a
big deal out of it, mostly out of guilt.
Liedecker spared Callahan another glare before
nodded amiably to Burke. “Seems like your boss wants you more
and more. Guess it’s good for your wallet though.”
Burke only nodded and set off.
From among the six men and one woman seated that
the big boardroom table rose a mustachioed man in his fifties. With
his wire rimmed glasses and bald spot that dominated the top of
his head, he looked like a substitute teacher.
“Smooth.” He looked more smug than
a man that looked like him had much right to be. The effect was
froggish. “All the store owners paid up on time, cops know
what’s what. Life is good.”
“What about the little thing with Mara 19?”
The question was delivered with exactly the right amount of insufferable
slyness from one of the seated men; a thin, well scrubbed man about
the same age as the speaker.
The standing man, whose name was Chandelling, took
a deep, affronted breath and gave the thin man, called Morris, a
withering look. Then he send a look more commonly seen on stray
dogs too new to homelessness to be feral to the man at the end of
the table.
“Y-yes. The incident.” He mopped his
forehead with a handkerchief plucked from his breast pocket. “I
was just getting to that. There was…” He stumbled on
his words, “An incident. With some Mara 19 prostitutes a-and
their pimp about two weeks ago. Ambridge sorted it out of course:
put the kid on his back a-and the women.”
There wasn’t a silence in the room so much
as the sound of a group of people preparing to listen. A dozen eyes
glanced to other eyes and communicated pity or avarice as was appropriate
at this juncture. Riverside was a good territory; not particularly
lucrative, but with the police properly paid; it was the safest
in the city from Mara 19, the Lobos, Wild Men and other assorted
gangs.
A match was struck.
Theodore Wosniak was very particular about his
cigars. They had to be from a specific shop in Miami (he insisted
that genuine Cuban cigars had gone downhill after the sanctions
were lifted) and they had to be lit with a wooden match.
From his seat at the head of the table, he looked
almost nonchalant as he lit the cigar and snuffed the match between
callused fingers.
He took a few more casual puffs before speaking,
cigar still in his mouth. “Two weeks? How come I haven’t
heard of it?” His voice was rough from decades of cigars and
much shouting in his earlier youth, but his tone made silk seem
like burlap.
“It was an isolated incident.” Chandelling
mumbled quickly.
“You’ve said ‘incident’
about a dozen times, William.” Wosniak said around his cigar.
“Think that’s the right word?” Chandelling nodded.
“Really? And… isolated? That’s the right word
too?”
“It’s the only gang activity in Riverside
in months.” The reply sounded like the squeak of something
very aware of nearby owls.
Wosniak ashed his cigar. “Lucille, you’re
over in Prosperity Heights. How many…” He gave Chandelling
a meaningful look, “incidents have your people seen to this
month?”
Lucy Harrow looked like a loving grandmother rather
than a lieutenant in Mayfield’s criminal organization. In
fact, she was a loving grandmother who was planning to go pick up
the youngest of her five grandchildren from elementary school after
the meeting. She was also a lieutenant in Mayfield’s criminal
organization.
“Just from Mara 19?” She asked. Wosniak
nodded. “Twenty-three off the top of my head. Penny ante drug
dealers, pimps—that kind of thing mostly, but they shot up
two or three of our own guys for it.”
Wosniak nodded. “Jameson. Give me a number.”
Ben Jameson was the youngest person at the meeting,
which wasn’t a great accomplishment; the Mayfield underworld
was entrenched and had excellent health care. “Thirty in The
Hills. Including killing Adam Billingsley, my best fixer.”
The boss of the bosses chewed his cigar and stared
at the still standing Chandelling. “Not an incident.”
He said plainly. “And not isolated. It’s endemic. My
city is… infested with these animals… these
vermin.
“They fight each other for the right to piss
on my trees. And they’ve got no idea how to run a goddamn
business. Whores and dealers out walking the streets—what
am I paying the police for if they can’t catch these sons
of bitches?”
He ran his gaze up and down the table, making sure
that each of his lieutenants knew that it wasn’t just Chandelling
who was on thin ice. “New York, Chicago, LA—all of them
at hell holes because of this civil war bullshit.”
Rising from his seat, he slipped on his jacket.
“And now it’s coming to my town? Hell no. Figure it
out. I want this over and done by the new year. Even if it means
killing ever last one of them.”