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Authors: Neal Barrett

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BOOK: Judge Dredd
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“Though no official will comment at this time, there is little doubt that this tragedy and the earlier massacre of Judges and civilians at the Mega-City Bank are most certainly connected. Our news-drones are on the scene, and we’ll bring you an update on this story as soon as possible.”

TWENTY-NINE

T
he six Lawmasters stopped in the street, just at the entrance of the darkened alley. The deep throb of muffled engines was the only sound except for the steady drip of water overhead. Senior Sergeant Landdale knew the city as well as any man could, and he didn’t like this place at all. Downtown, as deep as you could go. If the underbelly of Mega-City was a cesspool, the stink started here.

“Dispatcher said a Six-Oh-Three, Sergeant. If there’s an Armed Robbery in Progress here, they’re being nice and quiet about it.”

“Keep your eyes open and your mouth shut, Colter. You haven’t seen the dog, don’t go telling me what color it is.”

“Yes, Sergeant.” Colter felt the color rise to his cheeks. He didn’t have to look at the other Judges. He knew they were grinning behind their visors. Senior Sergeant Judge Landdale was always putting him down with shit Colter didn’t understand. “Don’t start singing till they pass out the music” was last week’s helpful hint. This week it was the damn dog.

“All right,” Landdale said finally, “Bolo, take the point. Pierce, you back him up real close.”

Landdale spoke softly into his visor-comm, telling the dispatcher there was no sign of a Six-Oh-Three or anything else except a lot of bad smells, and they would henceforth investigate the said area in question, stand by.

The harsh headlights of the six Lawmasters had enough power to light up the cellars of hell, but they scarcely ate through twenty feet of the murky atmosphere of the alley. Landdale didn’t care for that at all. He had stayed alive as a Street Judge for fifteen years by religiously following Landdale’s Law: “If it’s light, yell ‘Halt!’ then shoot and bring up the body bags. If it’s dark, just shoot and check it out the next day.” The only thing wrong with this practice was it
never
got light in this part of town. Never did and never would.

Bolo and Pierce were entering the alley, hugging opposite walls, Lawgivers off-safety, suit-lights on blind. The other members of the squad waited, holding their breaths. Suddenly, a high, whirring sound cut through the silence of the dark. Landdale and his men turned on their heels as one, fingers on the squeeze. The landcar wheezed to a stop, scant milliseconds before the Judges would’ve opened fire and turned it into a blossom of superheated gas.

Landdale put his rage on hold, stalked over to the squat vehicle, and yanked open the door.

“All right, groon-breath,” he said, “haul it out of there. I want to see ten empty digits dancing in the air.”

The man stepped out. He was a small man with a face as round as a pie.

“No need for alarm, Judge. I’m not armed. My name’s—”

“I know who you are.” Landdale lowered his weapon in disgust. “You’re that sum-bitch on the video. What are you doing here, Harold? This is a potential crime scene.”

“Harrow. Duncan Harrow with the news,” Harrow corrected. “I ran the scales, follow the little blips, the little lights. I look and listen in. That’s how I get the news. I was down in Yellow Quad, got the Six-Oh-Three, possible Armed—”

“I know what it is, mister.” Landdale glanced down the alley, then back to Harrow. “I got an interdiction in progress here. You get your ass back in that vehicle now. Turn it around and go quiet-like back the way you came in.”

“Huh-uh. I don’t have to do that. I’m a certified journalist. I have every right to be here.”

Landdale raised his visor. His eyes were hard as flint. “I’ll tell you what you got. You got every right I
tell
you you got. So far that isn’t even
one.
” He poked the muzzle of his Lawgiver between Harrow’s eyes. “Now you turn this piece of crap around and git.”

Harrow took a deep breath, ready to tell this uppity Street Judge who he knew in what high places, and decided that really wouldn’t help. This was a man who’d been around a while, and likely had a broad understanding of resisting arrest.

“Yes, sir,” Harrow said. “You got it, sir.”

He wound up the window, turned the car in a quick circle, and disappeared down the block.

Landdale watched him go, muttering under his breath. He didn’t like the video or anyone on it. They said whatever they wanted to, even something bad about a Judge. Landdale was sure it was video people behind that awful business with Fargo and Dredd. Things like that shouldn’t happen. The Judges ought to take care of their own. And if something
did
happen, groons like that Harold guy shouldn’t be allowed to stand in front of a camera and crow.

He thought about the groon. He thought about his hair. If he remembered, the guy didn’t have any hair. He had hair on the video, he didn’t have any hair now. Maybe that was a rule. You had to have some hair on top, you were on the video. You were off, you could do whatever you wanted to. So why not wear it all the time? Landdale wondered. Guys like that, who’s to say what they might do?

“Nothing,
nada,”
Polo said into his visor-comm. “Zero plus two up here.”

“That’s a double,” Pierce said. “I got junk and bad smells and that’s all.”

“Okay, squad, standard line-and-stagger, let’s move it in,” Landdale said.

The Judges began their sweep. They were pros, and they kept the chatter down to a word here and there to let Landdale know what was going on with every man. Nothing happened. The water dripped steadily from the city up above. The alley was thick with murky poison air.

“Up here, team,” Bolo said suddenly. “I’ve got potential lifeforms, Sarge.”

“Shit,” Pierce put in, “how can you tell? It’s bums, Sergeant. Scummos and vags. We’ve landed in Maggot City, guys.”

Landdale walked up toward where Bolo and Pierce were shining their lights. Colter was up there, too, Rodger and Workman on Landdale’s right.

Landdale shook his head at the pitiful sight. Judge Pierce was right. These miserable creatures were human, but only because you couldn’t classify them as anything else, not without offending some other group like earthworms or slugs. They shuffled away, squealing in fright, turning their sallow faces from the light, ducking beneath their ragged hoods.

Landdale made a mental note to tell Dispatch what he thought of their Armed Robbery in Progress report. There was something in progress here, all right. Like lice. “All right, get ’em out of here, move ’em out.”

“Where, Sarge?”

“What?”

“Where you want us to put them?”

Landdale recognized the voice. Colter again. The guy was a pain, had to have an
answer
to everything. Landdale wondered if the droog would notice he was still a corporal when he retired, and maybe wonder why.

“I don’t
care
where you put them,” Landdale said. “They’re here. Take them somewhere that
isn’t
here. Bolo, you see another alley up there?”

“Got nothing but alleys up here, Sarge.”

“Fine. Put ’em up there.”

What is wrong with these people?
Landdale thought.
I got to do everything? I got to tell them to wash their hands before dinner, I gotta

“Sarge—something
up
here. Pierce, Workman, cover me . . .”

“What is it, Two, what’ve you got?” Landdale caught the urgency in Bolo’s voice, a man shifting into second gear.

“Don’t know . . . Something wrong, over there. Give me some more light, Rodger. You—come out of there.
Now.
Put your hands up high and—
yaaaaaaak!”

Bolo’s voice went dead. Landdale heard static and then that was gone, too. Pierce or Workman or someone screamed. He couldn’t tell who. A Lawgiver chattered, lighting up the dark. A visor light went out.

Landdale snapped off his beam and went low, keeping to the wall. No use calling on the comm. Bolo was dead, out of it for sure. Maybe the other guys, too. What happened up there?

Someone breathing hard . . . no, chest wound. Sucking air. Landdale took a cautious step forward. His boot found something soft. One of ’em, no way to tell who.

Don’t stay here, get out, get help. No one’s going to blame you for that . . .

“Sarge! Oh my
Gaaaah . . . !”

“Shut up, can it, whoever that is!”

The spot went on, turning dark into light. Landdale’s visor darkened, compensating for the blinding flare. Not a visor light. Too damn bright. Too—

He saw it, a fraction of a second before he fired, big son of a bitch, copper and steel, muckin’ feet as big as a car, shiny stuff blinking in his gut, awful red eyes . . .

Landdale squeezed his trigger and didn’t stop. A beam of blue light sizzled along the wall above his head, slicing through brick like fat, hissing through Senior Sergeant Landdale from his visor to his crotch.

THIRTY

I
lsa lowered her hood and sniffed the air.

“It smells dreadful here. Really unpleasant, dear.”

Rico smiled. “Well, that
is
the point, isn’t it? Drama. Horror. Death. Really dreadful smells. A theatrical event.”

“It’s all of that,” she said.

Rico glanced over his shoulder. The massive robot stood silent, light from the still glowing fires in the alley dancing on its mirrored hide.

“Come on, Fido. Be a good boy, and Daddy will get you a very nice bone.”

THIRTY-ONE

“T
his is Tommy Waco with the news . . .

“Bear with me, if you will, ladies and gentlemen. There are—there are times when it’s difficult to do a journalist’s job in the professional and objective manner in which that job should—and must—be performed.

“I’m certain that everyone who’s watching me now is aware of the latest tragic event that has shocked and stunned Mega-City—the ambush and slaughter of five, possibly six Judges—we can’t say exactly how many at this moment—an ambush that took place in the notorious downtown district, Black Quad Nine.

“There are few facts available at this time. What we do know is that the Judges were burned beyond recognition, along with several vagrants. Sources report that an illegal weapon was used in this brutal killing, but that information is not confirmed . . .

“Sorry, I’m still here, my friends. This is—difficult, as I said. This part of the story has
not
been on the news. Another person lost his life in that chaotic event in the Black Quad. A colleague, a friend, and a fine journalist. A man you, the viewers, have come to know and respect as a commentator on this station.

“Duncan Harrow died in that same alley tonight. Duncan’s car was found parked several blocks from the alley in question. But Duncan’s remains, along with his blackened video camera, were found several feet within the alley itself, near the scene of the disaster.

“It was like Duncan Harrow to put himself in harm’s way in order to bring you the news. That’s the kind of man—the kind of reporter—Duncan Harrow was. A man very like another journalist we sorely miss, Vardis Hammond.

“Maybe I’m going out on a limb now. Maybe it’s no longer
safe
for a journalist to speak to you in this manner, but here it is. Vardis Hammond felt that much of the lawlessness in Mega-City could be laid at the feet of those very persons responsible for upholding the Law. I’m speaking of the High Council of Judges itself. If you’re listening, members of this respected body, what’s your answer? Is Mega-City out of control, at the mercy of criminal terrorists? As Citizens, we need to know where we stand in these dangerous times. As the self-appointed guardians of our Society, you have an obligation to
let
us know. You have an obligation to the living. And you have an obligation to those who have died for the cause of Law and Order. Citizen and Judge alike.

“This is Tommy Waco with the news. Back to you, Katie Chloe, for an on-the-scene report from the site of the tragic Black Quad massacre . . .”

THIRTY-TWO

T
he only trouble with the Judge Hunters’ sand cruiser was the sand. Fergie wondered how technology could build a Mega-City, and still make an air valve that ground a fine engine into mush.

“We’re finished,” Fergie said, pulling himself from under the machine. “Finished. Done. Dead.”

“We’re walking,” Dredd said.

“We’re what?”

Dredd didn’t answer. He picked up Fargo’s shotgun from the hood, turned away, and started east. Fergie squinted at the sun and gently touched his cracked and swollen lips.

“You’re crazy, Dredd. It’s about two million miles to Mega-City. We don’t have any food. We don’t have any water. I can’t even spit anymore.”

“It’s
seventeen
miles, you moron. You can take a droid apart, you can’t add? Those Hunters punched a trip-dial before they left home. It’s a regulation.”

“Might as well be a million miles,” Fergie muttered to himself. “We’re not going anywhere without water.”

“Have a nice day,” Dredd said.

He kept on walking. He didn’t stop or turn around. Fergie watched him go. In a moment, he seemed to be walking on glass. His body wavered as the heat rose up from the earth. The horizon rippled like a cheap video.

He’s nuts,
Fergie told himself.
He’s a Judge and he’s nuts. Judges don’t think like normal people, and Dredd’s about seven times crazier than the rest of that bunch.

Fergie couldn’t see him anymore. All he could see was a quivering silver lake. The lake turned upside down and shimmered in the sky.

He’s crazy, but he’s not that crazy. He didn’t walk out there to die. He left
me
here to die is what he did. He’s got water . . . the bastard’s got water and he’s left old Fergie to die!

Fergie ran. He ran for a minute and a half. Then he dropped on his face and ate sand. Then he got up and ran again.

When Dredd came back and found him, he was on his hands and knees, chasing a centipede. He said the centipede had a canteen and wouldn’t tell him where.

“You’re a groon,” Dredd said. “You want water, pick that thing up and eat it. Insects have moisture inside.”

BOOK: Judge Dredd
11.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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