Day of the Damned (9 page)

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Authors: David Gunn

BOOK: Day of the Damned
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Chapter 17

THE CITY SPREADS OUT BELOW US. SO VAST IT FROTHS UP FROM the volcano floor right to the crater’s edge. A tiny speck in the middle is the cathedral. The gap in front is Zabo Square. You can parade an army there. OctoV has done it.

Just not in my lifetime.

Beyond the square lies an area of big houses, then the river. This is not a river at all. It’s a closed-system ribbon lake that cuts the city in two. Although the two pieces are not equal in size and it’s years since the river has flowed.

We stand on the eastern rim.

Around here, the caldera rises too steeply for anything but shacks on stilts to be built and scabs of bare rock show where some of those have toppled onto shacks below, sending them crashing onto the buildings below that.

Leona is looking around with a smile on her face.

‘Never knew it was so beautiful.’

That’s one way of putting it.

In a small square below, barrio dwellers are putting up stalls and unloading three-wheel tuktuks. A woman I know has a stall there.

Supplier of used weapons.

Cheapest price on the planet, guaranteed.

Beyond the little market is a row of rotting houses, built from stonefoam and fibreboard. I own one of the largest. Golden Memories. My bar and brothel . . .

Paper Osamu, U
Free ambassador to this edge of the Spiral, told me they were designed to last less than fifty years. Seven hundred years later they’re still going. She knows stuff like that. The U
Free like to study primitive peoples.

In my case, their ambassador liked to fuck them also.

That flat patch of dirt beyond is the Emsworth landing fields. A rotting square of concrete and scrub, edged with crumbling warehouses.

It was here OctoV first landed.

A bronze statue near the gate shows him in a bulky space suit carrying a helmet. He’s wearing primitive gravity boots and has an air scrubber on his back.

It is unlike any other statue of our glorious leader. These show him as he now is. Aged fourteen, in cavalry uniform, with elegant ringlets falling to his shoulders, and a sabre belted to his narrow waist.

SVEN?

‘Fuck . . .’

‘Sir. Are you all right?’

I’m on my knees, fighting the urge to vomit. Around me the hard edges of the city fade to leave static in my mouth.

Sergeant Leona’s speaking.

Hers isn’t the voice I hear in my head.

IS THAT YOU?

Waves of nausea rock me.

We’ve been here before. In my head is the voice of the only man General Jaxx will bow his knee to . . . Mind you, it’s been a while since you could describe OctoV as anything approaching human.

THAT’S NOT KIND.

The words fade and with it the nausea.

Leaving me on my knees, being watched by Anton, Sergeant Leona and Sergeant Toro. Anton looks worried. Toro looks shocked. Leona’s expression is harder to read.

Wiping my mouth with the back of my hand, I push myself to my feet and spit.

‘What happened?’ Anton asks.

Makes me realize he’s never seen me do that before. ‘You don’t want to know,’ I tell him. Only he does, and so does Sergeant Toro.

Can see it in his face.

‘Wetware.’ That’s the most I’m going to say.

Toro’s stare hardens.

Wetware is illegal. It’s also favoured by the metalheads. Since the Enlightened want us dead as badly as we want them wiped from the face of this galaxy, and it’s only fear of the U/Free that keeps us from slaughtering each other, owning a symbiont is close to proof of treason.

‘The general knows.’

Shouldn’t have said that. I’m supposed to be ex-Legion.

‘Did some work for him,’ I say. ‘Like you. Nothing special . . .’

The sergeant smiles sourly. He thinks he knows what nothing special means. It means I only just came out of it alive. And I have more sense than to talk about it to him or anyone else, ever.

Five minutes from here is a brothel, with wide beds and fresh food, alcohol and girls who’ll be only too happy to help us relax, or not . . .

As I said, I own the place.

Keeping it safe, and collecting their cut for keeping the neighbourhood safe from outsiders, are the Aux, my team.

It takes effort to keep walking. The turn-off to Golden Memories is deserted at this time of the morning. In the distance, a girl with blonde hair splashes water from a pail across a pavement outside.

Looks like Lisa to me. She could be settling the dust or washing away last night’s vomit. Depends on the evening everyone had.

Anton’s staring around him.

‘God,’ he says. ‘This is grim.’

Sergeant Leona catches my eye. Doesn’t look bad to us.

The houses have doors, roofs and windows. Most of their glass is unbroken. All right, the cats are thin, and the only dog we see has three legs, but it’s alive, and the cockcrow from a yard behind says chicken is still on the menu. There are cities where cat is what you get served. And the only reason you get cat is that all the dogs have gone.

‘What?’ Anton demands.

‘Just thinking . . .’

He opens his mouth and shuts it again.

All right, I know. Thinking makes me bad-tempered.

I lead them away from Golden Memories and down a narrow lane that skirts the landing field. Somewhere along here is a hole in the mesh. Unless someone’s mended it. They haven’t. Not sure who would anyway.

Maybe someone owns this field.

Hard to tell, looking at the derelict warehouses around its edge and the fleet of rusting cargo carriers awaiting a wrecking crew.

‘Through here,’ I say.

We push our bikes to keep the noise down.

Sergeant Leona needs help getting her bike through the mesh. Anton assists her, being the gentleman he is. Between them they manage to get the bars well and truly trapped. ‘Out of my way.’

Moving them aside, I rip the wire with one hand and pick up the bike with my other and drag it after me.

‘Wait here,’ I say. ‘Anybody asks, you’re looking for work. If they want to know what you did before this, ignore the question. That’s answer enough.’

I leave them looking worried.

Probably wondering if I intend to come back.

Guess the landing field looks odd unless you’ve seen one before. A mountain of engine parts, endless scuttling bots chewing steel down to dust, more broken tugs and cargo carriers than you can imagine.

The man I’m looking for lives in a warehouse. Since he’s fucking one of the girls from Golden Memories and he knows that I know he’s been drinking on a free tab for the last six months he’ll probably help.

That’s help, without threats being needed.

It’s his kid I spot first.

‘Sven . . .’ he says.

‘You didn’t see me.’

‘Didn’t I?’

‘Absolutely not. You understand?’

Blue eyes look from under a fringe. I was ugly as sin as a kid. This boy lacks the ugliness but his intensity keeps friends away. He’s ripping legs from a bucket of combat bots he drops in the dirt. After a few seconds, the bots uncurl and begin eating their own weight in shaved metal.

It’s the only way to get the bastards to repair.

I taught the kid how to do that.

From the look of things, he’s repaired thousands, because I can see them eating their way through huge sheets of space plating. And a rust-stained circle now surrounds his dad’s warehouse where other cargo carriers used to be.

‘OK,’ he says. ‘I didn’t see you. Didn’t see your friends either.’ He points into the distance where Anton and the others stand.

‘Your dad in?’

The boy nods.

‘Is he alone?’

A grin greets my question.

‘Angelique’s gone home for the weekend.’

He makes it sound like a trip to the country.

Since I know the furthest she’s been from Golden Memories is eight streets, Angelique’s obviously staying with her aunt, who lives in one of the shacks above the market.

‘Here,’ I say, emptying coins into his hand. ‘Buy me a tortilla and get one for yourself.’

‘What about them?’

I nod, and he scurries away.

The stairs to Per’s office are rusty. They also creak. So I’m not surprised to open his door and find myself staring at the muzzle of a Colt automatic. It’s large calibre, with old-fashioned sights.

His finger is on the trigger.

‘Fuck,’ he says, lowering the gun. ‘Thought you were—’ He hesitates, thinks about whether he wants to finish that sentence.

I leave him to it as I look round his room.

A double mattress, a screen fixed to the wall, an old leather chair with a gash across its back, a stack of something that looks like memory boxes, a bucket full of broken combat bots, half of them waving their legs like upturned crabs.

He’s tidied up since I was last here.

A bottle lies on its side.

‘Angelique doesn’t like me drinking.’

‘So you drink when she’s away?’

He grins, an unshaven grin that doesn’t reach his eyes. He’s been on a bender for longer than a single weekend. Which might explain why his son is already up and Angelique’s staying with her aunt.

‘You can feel it?’ he asks me.

I look at him, wondering . . .

‘Static,’ I say. ‘That’s what I can feel. A flat taste like blood in the back of my throat.’

‘Sven,’ says Per, ‘I didn’t mean literally.’

‘Oh.’ Shrugging, I look at him.

‘All the same,’ he says, ‘that’s a pretty good description.’

‘For what?’

‘Whatever’s happening.’ He stares at me through bloodshot eyes. ‘Van Zill’s refusing to pay his taxes. Neen’s not happy.’

Federico Van Zill is a scumbag, would-be crime boss we let live in return for one fifth of everything he earns. Neen you know, he’s my sergeant. ‘Why hasn’t Neen handled it?’

‘Two days ago Van Zill vanished.’

‘Dead?’

‘Doubt you’ll get that lucky.’

We’re silent, and Per looks down at his gun.

It’s recently oiled, and I’m willing to bet good money he’s field-stripped it and loaded up a few spare clips. Other changes occur to me. The bars over the window for a start.

And those creaking stairs . . .

‘Loosened some bolts,’ he says. ‘To warn me if someone’s coming.’

Nodding at the bottle, I say, ‘Is that because you haven’t killed before, and you’re trying to find the courage? Or you have, and didn’t like it?’

‘The boy doesn’t know that.’

Must be the second, then. When I hold out my hand, he hands me the gun.

The weight’s good, its clips clean and full. The pin dry-fires with a sharp click and the barrel has been pulled through so thoroughly it’s a twist of silvery steel. The broken grip on one side of the handle is recently mended.

All the same.

Pulling a side arm from my belt, I offer it to Per, who looks uncertain. So I put it on the deck beside his empty bottle and add three clips. ‘Explosive,’ I tell him, tapping the first. ‘Take out a truck, no problem.’

He nods.

So I tap the second. ‘Hollow-point. Maximum spread and minimum weight loss. No use against ceramic. But take someone off at the knee and it doesn’t matter what they’re wearing above.’

He looks sick.

Probably because he knows it’s true.

‘Armour-piercing,’ I tell him, pointing at the third clip. ‘A thermite core hot enough to melt steel.’

Per’s looking at a fortune.

This lot would sell to Angelique’s aunt for more than he makes in a month. But he won’t be parting with them. I can see that in his eyes.

‘Take a shower, have a shave, eat something.’

He nods.

‘And teach your boy how to use that.’

Misery twists Per’s face as he realizes I mean his original gun.

‘Alternatively, let him get killed.’

There’s a price to my kindness. I want our bikes serviced and stored safely, I want tyres that don’t look as if they’ve been blasted by a shotgun. And I want Per and his boy to keep quiet about my being here. That means he doesn’t tell his squeeze.

Angelique has tits like a goddess, cascades of blonde hair and no inhibitions. Believe me, I know . . . The night we spent together we shared the mattress with Lisa, her cousin.

The one slopping off the steps in front of Golden Memories.

But tell her something when she’s flat on her back and half the neighbourhood knows by lunchtime. She’s a girl who really can’t keep anything shut.

‘Understand?’

Per nods. ‘I owe you my life already.’

Takes me a moment to work out what he means. A while back, I came through here, having just landed, and stumbled over a small boy trying to mend a spider bot. Helping the boy brought his father. Had to fight myself for six streets before deciding not to go back and kill them both.

Because that’s what I should have done.

‘Tell me you didn’t,’ Per says.

‘Do what?’

‘Ride those up the face.’

‘They’re Icefelds. It’s what they’re for.’

‘Sven,’ he says, ‘gyros exist to stop dispatch riders falling off their bikes.’ Per very carefully doesn’t ask the others their names or introduce himself. He simply drops to a crouch beside my bike and sucks his teeth at the state of its tyre, the cracked dampers and the broken fairing. His eyes widen at the sight of the spray and prays.

‘Expecting trouble?’

‘Always.’

‘Ain’t that the truth,’ he says.

If anyone notices Leona rip a piece from her tortilla and toss it down as an offering, they have the manners to keep that to themselves.

Chapter 18

LEONA WHISPERS THAT SOMEONE IS FOLLOWING. I KNOW THAT already. One man, who picked up our tail when we hit Farlight’s centre but is still five or six people back. A few minutes ago, he was ahead of us. Before that he was in a parallel street, watching us through shop windows and sightings down side alleys.

He’s good. Although that turned-up collar and pulled-down cap must be a bastard in this heat.

‘You’re grinning, sir.’

‘Fuck of a way to spend my leave.’

She smiles. ‘You want me to do something about our friend?’

I shake my head. Anton and Sergeant Toro are ahead. My suggestion to break into two groups and make our tracker’s job a little less easy. I’ve got good reasons for not wanting anyone to know I’m here.

And Anton’s life depends on it.

For all I know, Toro and Leona have equally good reasons of their own. Which means one of us would have killed the follower if we thought him professional. But if he was professional we wouldn’t have seen him.

Unless, of course . . .

I’m tempted to tell Leona to drop back and kill him. Just so I can simplify my thoughts and get back to saving Colonel Vijay and getting Anton out of here.

‘How much longer?’ Anton demands.

Sergeant Toro tells him ten minutes.

We’re walking the boulevard feeding into Zabo Square.

The roof of the cathedral gleams in the distance. Gold domes reflecting the last of the evening light. Leona’s counting off the chimes from the tower clock. ‘Seven, eight, nine . . .’ Not sure why, since she’s wearing a standard-issue watch and knows the time already.

Smartly dressed women fill the colonnades.

Expensive hovers skim the road beyond the square.

People like me don’t belong. I’m thinking this, when I spot a naked woman, scrawled in red chalk on a nearby wall. A trampled rose lies underneath it. Seems people like me use this area after all.

Flicking the sign of Legba Uploaded, Leona blushes because I notice. So I pull Legba’s medallion from my shirt. Soldiers have their own saint.

Not everyone approves.

A truck goes by filled with Death’s Head troopers. Cropped hair, hard faces, thousand-yard stares . . . A small boy points and is slapped for his pains. The child’s father bustles him away. No one else stares or catches the troopers’ eyes. Not that they could; the Death’s Head troopers glare straight ahead.

‘Almost there, sir,’ Sergeant Toro tells Anton.

‘You’ve been saying that for the last ten minutes.’

The sergeant scowls. ‘Never approached the colonel’s house from this direction before . . .’ He’s still using the same excuse twenty minutes later, when the clock tower rings the half hour, and I decide it’s time to catch up.

‘You’re lost?’

The sergeant scowls some more.

Cutting under an arch, we find ourselves in a wide street, high walls on either side inset with double doors. The houses rise five storeys above us. Most have lenz over their entrances and weapons systems that track us as we move.

The weapons systems are obvious.

Makes me think they’re bluff. And the real systems are hidden. I waste time trying to identify them as Sergeant Toro tries to remember which door.

‘You’re certain, this time?’ Anton demands.

‘Yes, sir.’

There’s a tightness to the sergeant’s voice. Anton has that effect on me sometimes too. Stepping up to a door, Toro knocks three times in quick succession. A double knock answers from inside. I’d do one knock in reply, but the sergeant does three and a small door swings open.

Bombproof, I notice. For all that it’s painted faded green. The double doors it lets us enter have electronic locks and deadbolts fat as my wrist.

The soldier who lets us in is out of uniform.

‘You’re expected.’

We’re what?

Colonel Vijay’s courtyard is lit by hidden lights. A run of steps leads to its black and shiny front door. Exactly the place I’d expect him to live.

‘Fuck,’ says Sergeant Toro. ‘Look at that.’

A sleek hover sits near the steps. It’s got obsidian black windows, a knitted carbon skirt and a grille like a shark’s open jaw, with chrome teeth and recessed eyes. A tiny flagstaff juts from its long hood.

The flag itself is rolled and tied.

‘How the other half live,’ he mutters.

Leona nods.

‘Announce yourself,’ the soldier says. Seeing my glare, he adds, ‘If you would, sir.’

Wise man.

‘Lieutenant Sven Tveskoeg for Colonel Jaxx.’

‘And the others?’ The voice from the speaker grille isn’t Vijay. Wouldn’t expect it to be.

‘Anton Tezuka. Sergeants Toro and—’

The door clicks open before I finish my list. Either the AI is stupid, or we’re being covered by so much artillery that chopped meat is today’s option if we make a bad move.

At my hip, Vijay’s sabre shivers.

Unclipping it, I catch Anton’s gaze.

‘Sven,’ he whispers. ‘You’re not . . .’

He’s right. I’m not.

I’m assuming a software glitch between Vijay’s AI and the sabre he gave me. Since the AI outguns the sabre, it makes sense not to make the house nervous.

Putting the sabre to sleep, I reclip it and straighten my coat. We’re not in uniform, any of us. But Vijay Jaxx is still a Death’s Head colonel.

After knocking at a door, the housekeeper steps back and nods for us to enter. So we do, and that is when our day begins to unravel.

‘Good job,’ says a voice.

It’s talking to Sergeant Toro, who nods his head, accepting the praise.

‘And you two . . . What took you so long?’

Clearly, Sergeant Leona isn’t important enough to be in this conversation. General Luc sits at a desk. Behind him stand two Wolf Brigade troopers. At the Wolf’s signal, our travelling companion peels away to join them.

‘You bastard . . .’

‘Shut it,’ I tell Leona.

‘Sorry, sir.’

Toro’s a sergeant, all right. In the Wolf Brigade.

‘Like puppets,’ General Luc says. ‘Pull the strings and watch them walk. Knew you wouldn’t be able to resist it.’ He’s talking to me. Grinning at Anton, his gaze slides to a halt when it reaches Sergeant Leona.

‘Where did you find her?’

‘Picked her up on the way,’ Anton says. ‘Shortly before we met—’ He jerks his chin towards the wall. ‘Whatever he’s called.’

‘Toro,’ says the Wolf. ‘My staff sergeant.’

‘If I might, sir,’ Toro says.

‘Feel free.’

Pulling down his eyelids in turn, our travelling companion pops first one and then another coloured lens from his grey eyes.

‘Bastard things, sir . . .’

‘All in a good cause, Toro.’

Leaning forward, the Wolf takes a closer look at his map of the city. It’s a paper map, so old that it curls at the corners. However it’s not Sergeant Toro’s deceit, General Luc’s smugness, or the map that raises my blood pressure. It’s the girl sitting on the edge of his desk, swinging her legs like a teenage hooker.

‘Hi Sven,’ she says, trumping my scowl with a grin. ‘Wondered when you’d get round to me. Long time no see.’

‘Not long enough.’

Ms Osamu pouts. ‘That’s not kind.’

Paper Osamu is the daughter of the U/Free president, and a one-time lover of mine. She’s also their ambassador. Today her eyes are blue and her skin pale. Her dress is thin enough to leave nothing to the imagination.

‘Yes,’ she says, ‘I’m still wearing the same body as last time.’

Bitch.

‘Tveskoeg,’ General Luc says.

My hand is on my gun.

‘How many darts,’ he says, ‘do you think are trained on you?’

Now is when I need the SIG-37. My real gun could shut down the AI, or fool it into thinking we’re friends. At the very least it could tell me how much of the general’s confidence is bluff.

‘Madame,’ he says. ‘If you could stop swinging your legs.’

Paper pouts again.

Sliding her gaze round the room, she looks for weapons. There are none visible, obviously enough. House defence systems use needle guns. Steel darts blown from hidden tubes in the walls and ceiling and floor. A good AI can kill one man in a group of fifty and leave the rest untouched.

‘I heal fast. And she’ll be dead whatever happens.’

‘And your friends?’ he asks. ‘Do they heal fast too?’

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