Read Katja from the Punk Band Online

Authors: Simon Logan

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Suspense & Thrillers

Katja from the Punk Band (3 page)

BOOK: Katja from the Punk Band
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“Katja.”

The man is standing in the doorway to her room, wearing a jet black suit with a rounded collar like that of a priest, and has a thick gold earring in one ear. He carries a clipboard loaded with paper in one hand and a dictation machine in the other.

The man is Anatoli Aleksakhina and he is her parole officer.

“What the fuck are you doing here?” she asks him. She has the vial in her hand, not wanting to risk leaving it in the car with the junkie, and now regrets it. “How did you get in?”

“You were meant to come to the station today to check in.”

“I forgot,” she says. “I’ve been busy.”

“Katja, you should know by now that isn’t acceptable.”

“I know, I know, I’m sorry. I . . . there was a car accident and I . . .”

“You’re going to need to come to the station with me.”

Katja’s heart trip hammers. Her guitar is now strapped too tightly to her to allow her to swing it around like she often did at her gigs, to allow her to turn it into a weapon — again, as she often did at her gigs. Instead she considers the big heavy bass guitar that lies against the wall between herself and Aleksakhina.

“I can’t,” she tells him. “I’m late for my shift at the diner. I was just stopping off for a change of clothes. I got soaked when I went to help at the car accident.”

“The car accident,” Aleksakhina repeats. “And where was this?”

“Across town,” she answers immediately.

“Has it been reported? Because I could call now and . . .”

“No. I mean . . . yes. I mean, I saw someone else calling. Someone else called. Anyway, there’s no working phones here. Not anymore. But someone’s called already. I think I heard sirens.”

“You’re still going to need to come with me.”

And Katja is moving, slightly, just slightly, toward the bass guitar. It feels like she’s been in the room for hours and hopes the junkie will still be waiting for her outside.

“I can’t,” she insists. “My shift.”

“You’re taking your guitar to the diner?”

“I have a gig later. But I need to get to work.”

“I’ll call your manager. Explain.”

“I could come later, after I’m finished. I was going to do that anyway.”

“And what time do you finish?”

“A little after two am, usually.”

“Well that’s no good, is it? The conditions of your parole were that you should check in with me once a week. The last time I spoke to you was last Thursday. If you call me after your shift then that will be eight days, not seven.”

Katja’s jaw flexes. She clamps down on her anger. “Come on. Give me a break.”

“I’ve already given you several breaks, Katja. That’s why you’re on parole and not on month two of an eight-month stretch.”

“It’s two hours,” she says, moving closer again to the bass. “What the fuck difference does it make? Please, I’ve got to get to my shift. It’s rehabilitation, right?”

Aleksakhina shakes his head. “Sorry, Katja. You’re going to have to come with me.”

“No.”

And her hand squeezes the vial reflexively.

“What have you got there?” Aleksakhina asks.

Katja snatches her hand behind her back then brings it out again slowly when she realizes it’s too late. “Nothing,” she says weakly. Then, “Medicine. For my throat.”

Aleksakhina doesn’t buy it. “What are you involved in now, Katja?” he asks, and his voice is like that of a father who has discovered his daughter’s dope stash.

“I’m not involved in anything. I just want to get to my work.”

“Not tonight. Tonight you’re coming with me.”

Her face flexes involuntarily, an open display of distaste, and Aleksakhina reads it well because he takes another few steps and is now closer to the bass guitar than Katja. He extends his open hand to her.

“I can’t,” she tells him.

“Give it to me, Katja. We can discuss this back at the station.”

“I can’t go to the station. Not tonight. I promise, I’ll be there first thing in the morning.”

“You said a minute ago you’d come after your shift was done.” He is now holding a pair of handcuffs.

“Fine, whatever.”

“Give me the vial.”

Her nostrils flare and she slowly, reluctantly, hands it to him. She tongues her lip ring nervously as he looks it over but either he doesn’t recognize the significance of the watermark on the glass or he doesn’t care because he just puts it in his pocket.

“Come on,” he says, almost touching her arm. He pops one of the cuffs open. “With me.”

Again Katja’s nostrils flare and again she finds herself considering the bass guitar but now he has the vial, so she can’t risk attacking him and breaking it.
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.

“Okay,” she says finally and lets her head flop dramatically to her shoulders as her third liberty spike already has. “I’ll come. But are those things really necessary?”

“With you? Yes,” he says as he snaps the cuffs on her.

They go back out through the room’s main door, not the hatch Katja crawled through. If there is anyone else in the squat at the time, then they are certainly making themselves scarce. If they in any way helped Aleksakhina find her then they were certainly better off doing so. Cuffs or not, Katja is ready to do some damage.

But the place is silent as she is led up the untrustworthy staircase toward the front door. The parole officer knows not to bother trying to open the door itself, instead pushes aside a flap of corrugated iron that conceals another opening. He gestures for Katja to go through first.

And she thinks of the junkie as she bends down, having to angle herself to stop the butt of her guitar catching on the rim of the opening, using it as an excuse to go slowly. As she eases herself through, she notices Nikolai’s car still parked farther up the street, partially obscured by the dumpsters, and the engine is still running as she instructed.

Aleksakhina is right behind her, pushing his way out into the rain.

She could run, she thinks, sprint over to the junkie’s car and maybe throw herself in the back seat before Aleksakhina knows what is going on and then the two could be speeding off again. But to where? Aleksakhina has the vial, and there was no way she could grab it back from him while still cuffed — not without the risk of breaking it.

So what?

What now?

Nikolai will get a clear view of them once they start toward street level but she can’t risk him doing anything that might mean the vial getting broken.

“Come on.”

And Aleksakhina has a hand on the small of her back, and they go down the steps to the pavement, slip between the dumpsters. Katja glances back at Nikolai and he is still sitting there behind the wheel. The engine is running. The lights are off. Aleksakhina’s car is on the other side of the road and he leads her toward it, opens the rear door and puts her inside. She has to lean forward slightly because of the guitar. As the man settles into the driver’s seat, Katja looks over her shoulder and Nikolai is still in the car.

She doesn’t know if she wants him to come across or not. Perhaps it will be easier to come up with another plan, to dump the junkie while she can and get someone more reliable to help her. One of her band mates.

Of course.

Her band mates.

“Are you arresting me?” she asks through the metal grating that separates her from the front of the vehicle. “Do I get a phone call?”

“We’ll see,” Aleksakhina tells her, and drives off. He turns the car around and they pass Nikolai.

And he’s still sitting in the driver’s seat.

Fucking useless junkie.

 
PART TWO
FUCKING USELESS JUNKIE
 
CHAPTER THREE
 

He’s smiling, Nikolai.

He’s smiling because he has the money in his hands now and it feels real, it feels as good as a thick, heavy baggie of really pure stuff or a nice big sparkling rock straight out of the labs of one of the chemists. He has it wrapped up safely inside a plastic bag stuffed inside his coat and his arms are folded across his chest to protect it.

He worries that someone might come and snatch it from him because he’s done it himself in the past and here, in the area he’s at now with the streets acne’d with porn shops and liquor stores, he is at even greater risk than elsewhere. So he keeps himself to himself as he shuffles toward Kohl’s games arcade and ignores the enticements of the street girls who stumble after him and the dealers whose wares he doesn’t trust. He lets his hair fall before his eyes and focuses on the reflection of the arcade’s glittering lights, letting them draw him in.

The horrible, clawing feeling that has been lurking in his veins for the past few days has faded as this moment has grown closer. The release will not be far off. The voodoo splatter of sound effects blasts over him as he steps over the entrance to the arcade and a smile splits his face. Games cabinets stretch out on either side of him and the place is alive with all kinds of energy, drunk with it. He recognizes a few other players and they nod to him as he passes but he pays them no attention — there will be time for that later.

He heads straight for the booth that sits cage-like in the middle of the place. It is hexagonal, plated variously with reinforced glass, thick plastic, and scratched pieces of metal. Trapped inside it, its prisoner, is a morbidly obese woman who looks as if she is in there for life, held fast by the thick wedges of adipose tissue that seem to be inflated around her. Her hair is grey-blonde and wiry. Her arms are full of blue veins and he can see them pumping blood around. He becomes mesmerized by their beat and she has to snap him out of it by slamming her fist against the glass before him.

“The fuck you back here for?” she asks. She wears a headset that bites into the soft flesh of her cheek. Her voice comes through a speaker mounted on the side of the hexagon, static-sharp.

Nikolai tears his eyes from those pulsing veins of hers, then has difficulty deciding whether to speak to her face or to the dislocated voice coming from the speaker. He ends up going back and forth between the two like a puppy that can’t decide which treat to take.

“I need to see Kohl,” he tells her.

She blows a bubble from the bright pink gum she is chewing on, pops it. “Uh huh.”

Blows another bubble. Pops it. Her tongue is fat and veiny.

Nikolai grins uncontrollably, screws his feet against the ground. Taps the speaker.

“Hello?” he says into it. “I need to speak to . . .”

“I heard you. He’s busy.”

There is the mechanical stutter of gunfire coming from one of the game machines. The whine of a bomb dropping in another. This is a warzone, a private little warzone.

Nikolai bites down on a finger nail, tastes the bitterness of a piece of polish flaking off in his mouth. “Can I . . . ? Do you . . . ? I need to speak to him.”

“You as dumb as you look?” the woman blurts. She raises her head and Nikolai is pushed aside by another joystick junkie who shoves notes at her through a gap in the window. The woman pumps a lever and coins spill out across the counter. The man collects them all in a plastic bag then hurries off.

Nikolai is clenching and unclenching his fists. His mouth moves but he cannot summon the words.

Then, “Please. Tell him it’s Nikolai. Tell him I need to see him.”

“Oh,
Nikolai
,” the fat woman says. “Well why didn’t you say so in the first place?”

Nikolai sighs, relaxes. Nods. “Yeah, Nikolai.”

And the woman’s expression changes instantly. “He’s busy, Nikolai. Now fuck off, I have customers waiting.”

Nikolai looked behind him. “There’s nobody . . .”

“Fuck. Off.”

“I have money.”

“That’ll be a first.”

And he reaches into his coat and takes out the plastic bag just far enough that she can see the thick wad of notes inside. He leaves it there hopefully, tilting it from side to side as if that will somehow entice her further.

Finally the woman pops a final bubble. “Let me see if he’s around,” she says.

Nikolai grins and lets the woman chatter into her headset for a few moments.

“He says he’ll send someone down for you in a minute. Go wait for him out back.”

Nikolai shoves the baggy back into his coat, locks his arms around it once more, and shuffles off. He is quickly consumed by the Atari blitz, the stench of sugary drinks, and the metallic odour of the hot machinery. He rolls across to the back door, shadowed and hidden by the glow of the games, and leans against the nearest cabinet.

A young girl is playing, two fists wrapped around the little joysticks, snapping them back and forth in unison, her face still and expressionless. Flickers of hope or frustration every now and again. She is lost in the electronica and he knows the feeling well.

The world is shed. It crumbles and falls away like damaged brickwork. It is fake and surreal and once it is all gone there is only a pure blackness and you are floating in amongst it. Nothing touches you.

You are safe.

A hand snaps onto Nikolai’s shoulder, the fingers long and thin, seeming to have more joints than they should.

And it is a woman and she bulges with steroid musculature. She is wearing loose gym trousers and a triangular bikini top, her body like polished amber glass. She looks Nikolai up and down as if he is something that has just been coughed up by a pneumonia-ridden old man.

“Nikolai,” she says, half question, half statement.

He feels her hand sinking into the soft flesh of his shoulder as if she is seeking out the weakened tissue beneath, trying to determine his body fat ratio by touch alone. She sneers almost imperceptibly and turns.

“Come with me.”

And they go through the door and up a set of steps that shine as eagerly as her follicle-free skin, and Nikolai watches her muscles moving like little creatures trapped inside her. His tongue feels swollen. It is eager for the sparkling grains that Kohl will bring it in the next few minutes.

The muscled woman leads him to a door at the end of the corridor, though he already knows where to go since he has been there many times before. She crosses her thick arms and stands to one side.

BOOK: Katja from the Punk Band
6.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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