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The Electric Church Part 22

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Moje stared for another moment, and then straightened up. "Yes, sir," he said, but he did not sound convinced. He turned to his Stormers.

"You heard the man. This is the chief of Internal Affairs, boys and girls, and he can eat your t.e.s.t.i.c.l.es for lunch any day he feels like. Make a hole, we're bringing these men out of here. Exterminate anything that gets in your way."

He turned to look over his shoulder. "All right, Chief," he said. "Follow us."

The Stormers formed around us and we began moving back the way the SSF team had come. The floor was littered with dead Monks, and the occasional ObFu Kit blending a corpse into the floor. I limped along with a painful hitch and forced myself to catch up with Moje, the crazy laughter gurgling in my throat.

"Don't worry," I said. "I'm sure you'll get a chance to kill me once we're topside. In fact, I'm positive."



He ignored me, eyes forward.

"What's the situation up there, Colonel Moje?" Marin asked suddenly.

Moje straightened up as he walked. "Chaos, sir. Monks have gone crazy everywhere-we're getting reports in from all over. We're stretched pretty thin trying to keep things bottled up. SSF bra.s.s issued a blanket directive to shoot Monks on sight about an hour ago." A small grin broke through his manicured poise. "We've been enjoying ourselves ever since."

"Once we reach the outside, Colonel Moje, I'll be taking personal charge of the city, understood?" Gone was the herky-jerky d.i.c.k Marin I'd dealt with, the grinning, amused little man. Here was the chief of Internal Affairs, the King Worm, and my glee dried up again as I contemplated the obvious outcome of all this chaos-a power vacuum, with a few dozen Richard Marins dancing on top of the pyramid. It was the False Crisis coup d'etat coup d'etat-the System in flames again, riots everywhere, and d.i.c.k Marin's avatars everywhere taking personal command. Were thirty of him enough to handle a worldwide crisis? He was was thinking in digital, arrayed chips processing clock cycles. As we walked through the death spasms of the Electric Church, I stared at d.i.c.k Marin's back in admiration. It was genius. thinking in digital, arrayed chips processing clock cycles. As we walked through the death spasms of the Electric Church, I stared at d.i.c.k Marin's back in admiration. It was genius.

I wondered what would happen if I drew my gun and shot Marin in the face. Certainly, there were more Richard Marins out there to carry his good work on, but in my specific specific situation, the idea was fascinating. But I wanted to see Kieth, and even Belling, out of this tomb safely first. Enough people had died simply for being a.s.sociated with me, Avery Cates, Angel of Death. I just shook my head, giggling. "Genius!" situation, the idea was fascinating. But I wanted to see Kieth, and even Belling, out of this tomb safely first. Enough people had died simply for being a.s.sociated with me, Avery Cates, Angel of Death. I just shook my head, giggling. "Genius!"

Marin spun around and walked backward, regarding me. He didn't say anything.

"Director Marin," Moje said, looking straight ahead, "when we get topside I'm going to ask permission to put a bullet in Avery Cates's head. I sincerely hope, for the good of the System, that whatever arrangement you have with him won't interfere."

Marin continued walking backward for a moment, saying nothing, and then spun around in silence. I knew he would regard our special arrangement as finished the moment we were outside. He might not actively try to murder me, but I could feel in my bones that he wouldn't be upset or at all disappointed if Elias Moje gunned me down. Marin could save me. All it would take was one word from him to Moje. One f.u.c.king word of negation, and Moje would choke on his tongue and shiver with rage-but Moje was too terrified of Marin to disobey a direct order.

And Moje, the overfed, sleek motherf.u.c.ker. Lord knew what his official duties were, what he was supposed to actually be doing doing as a System Security officer, but apparently chasing one runty Gunner across the f.u.c.king globe was well within his job description. Even if I managed to squirm away from him, he would come after me with all the determination of a petty man affronted. And if I killed him, there would be others. Even if Marin came through on his other promise-to blank out my file and give me a new ident.i.ty-eventually I'd look at another System Pig cross-eyed and be in the same hole. The whole G.o.dd.a.m.n System was broken. Madmen had been running it for decades, and now it would be run by avatars of d.i.c.k Marin, and the Elias Mojes of the world would keep grinding our necks under their shiny, expensive boots until they grew old and fat and died pensioned somewhere, in their sleep, laughing at us. as a System Security officer, but apparently chasing one runty Gunner across the f.u.c.king globe was well within his job description. Even if I managed to squirm away from him, he would come after me with all the determination of a petty man affronted. And if I killed him, there would be others. Even if Marin came through on his other promise-to blank out my file and give me a new ident.i.ty-eventually I'd look at another System Pig cross-eyed and be in the same hole. The whole G.o.dd.a.m.n System was broken. Madmen had been running it for decades, and now it would be run by avatars of d.i.c.k Marin, and the Elias Mojes of the world would keep grinding our necks under their shiny, expensive boots until they grew old and fat and died pensioned somewhere, in their sleep, laughing at us.

I didn't want to be part of the System anymore. Sitting on top of a pyramid of s.h.i.t wasn't something I aspired to. I thought of Kev Gatz. Poor f.u.c.king weirdo should have been something special, something celebrated, but instead he was dead after a hard life and there were a dozen more just like him stepping right into the same s.h.i.tty place. If I was going to die anyway, I was going to die causing the System as much grief as I could.

I stumbled a little at the thought, a jolt of excitement going through me as a plan bloomed in my head, complete and insane and immediately the only way I could go. Belling and Kieth glanced back at me. I looked at Belling and smiled. He stared at me in recognition-the look on my face must have seemed familiar to an old crook like him. He'd said to give him a reason, and some cops to kill, and I thought I might be able to do the former, and as for the latter we were currently in the company of some of the dirtiest cops in the G.o.dd.a.m.n world. After a moment, he smiled back.

The hall was inclined upward. We'd lost a few more Stormers from the sheer volume of bullets; Moje's team had shrunk to about six. f.u.c.king h.e.l.l, the System Pigs could be killed just like anybody else.

The Stormers cut through one last door and we emerged blinking into a bright, watery London morning. The sound of sirens and displacement roared everywhere, and half the blue sky was filled with thick, slow-moving black smoke. Dead Monks lay everywhere inside the complex gates. A downed hover smoldered just twenty feet from where we stood. The six Stormers formed up around us, but it was pretty clear that this area of the city, for the moment, was abandoned.

Moje and Marin turned to face me. I was amazed to note that d.i.c.k Marin still looked perfectly coiffed and neat, as if he hadn't spent the last few hours crawling through madness and murder and dust. Moje was grinning. I grinned back and took a deep breath.

"Mr. Cates," Marin said with his typical manic cheer, "I am informed that your money has been transferred. Congratulations, you are now a rich man, and I consider our business to be at an end."

"Director Marin," Moje started to say, and I brought my gun out of its holster and leveled it at Moje's face with practiced ease. He blinked, closing his mouth with a click, and then smiled again.

"You wouldn't dare, Mr. Cates. Your life wouldn't be worth spit."

I shrugged. "It isn't worth much now."

"Don't forget our deal, Mr. Cates," Marin said smoothly, jerking his head down and to the left to stare at a dead Monk for a moment, receiving reports from his other avatars. "You've got a chance to start over, rich, anonymous-secure."

Moje was still smiling. "Pull that trigger, and my team will eat you alive."

I waited a moment, then moved my gun just a tick to the left and put a bullet into d.i.c.k Marin's face, then moved the gun back level with Moje.

He stared at me, his smile forgotten and rotting on his face. He didn't know Marin was an avatar. He thought I'd just shot the King Worm dead right in front of him.

Around us, the Stormers all tensed and leaned forward, as if blown by a strong wind. But they were well-trained, waiting on Moje's order.

"Colonel Moje," I said steadily, prepared for the headshot, ready for it to end if it had to. "I'm tired of the System. I'm tired of System Cops. Cops. I'm hereby dedicating the rest of my life to destroying this f.u.c.ked-up world. I may not live more than a minute longer, but in that minute all I will do with my time is fight against all of it-all of it, including the G.o.dd.a.m.n SSF. Understand?" I nodded. "Starting with you." I'm hereby dedicating the rest of my life to destroying this f.u.c.ked-up world. I may not live more than a minute longer, but in that minute all I will do with my time is fight against all of it-all of it, including the G.o.dd.a.m.n SSF. Understand?" I nodded. "Starting with you."

He squinted at me, wondering. I could sense Wa Belling next to me, standing tense.

Moje drew a deep breath and opened his mouth. I put a bullet in it.

I moved, and Belling moved with me. Even Kieth moved, instead of standing there pop-eyed in terror. I rolled right, firing, and Belling rolled left, firing, while Kieth fired wildly at the Stormers nearest him, screaming. He even managed to hit one before emptying his clip.

Belling and I hit three of the others as we rolled, good, clean killshots. I tried to pull myself up, keep moving, but my legs couldn't move quickly enough and got caught up in each other. I saw ObFu boots out of the corner of my eye and dove for them, wrenching my back in the effort as I wrapped my arms around the boots and knocked the Stormer off her feet. I held on to her legs with all my strength, until the sound of a racked chamber rang through the still air, and the Stormer went still. I looked up, and Wa Belling, formerly Canny Orel, stood over us, gun pointed at the Stormer's head.

"I'm sick of System Pigs, too," Belling said, nodding. "Sick of it all."

"Holy s.h.i.t," I heard Kieth say weakly. "I can't believe we just did that."

I couldn't either. I was still on borrowed time, and a thrill of triumph went through me. Not dead yet, Not dead yet, I thought. I thought.

I let go of the Stormer's legs and rolled over painfully. "They're just G.o.dd.a.m.n men and women, and they die the same." I pulled myself to my feet and turned to the last Stormer, who panted on the ground, and stared down at her. "They make the same mistakes we do, and they're f.u.c.king arrogant." I kicked her gun away, trying to catch my breath. "You, I'm letting go," I said. "Go tell them. Tell the f.u.c.king SSF that Avery Cates has gone apes.h.i.t. Tell them there's nothing they can offer me. Tell them I'm going to start tearing the world apart, brick by brick, cop by cop. Tell them I don't think it will take me as long as they might think. Tell them I dare them to stop me."

We all stood in our places for a moment, nothing moving, not even a hint of breeze. Then Belling kicked the Stormer in the side.

"Go," he said.

I looked around. London was on fire, and the sounds of rioting filled the air. We weren't going to have any trouble getting out of the city.

We watched the Stormer climb painfully to her feet, stare at us for a moment, and then begin backing away warily.

"Don't worry," Belling called out. "We'll kill you later."

Epilogue.

The Whole G.o.dd.a.m.n World Is Against You Now 00101.

Pickering's was crowded. It was a rainy, dismal night in rotting New York, the heavy rain wearing down the melted stone of the old buildings and breaking up the crumbling asphalt of the dirty, trash-swamped streets. The regulars had gotten in early to drink blinding gin, smoke stolen cigarettes, and guard their seats against the influx of newbies. Fights broke out over the unsteady wooden chairs in Pickering's, and people had been cut up and almost killed over territorial skirmishes. The place had always been crowded, especially on c.r.a.ppy nights, but within the last year things had begun getting beyond Pick's ability to control. So many people were crowding into the place every night the fights were continuous, and he was approaching a point where he wouldn't be able to bribe away the Crushers that showed up, sniffing suspiciously at so much underground talent drinking in one place.

The kid wasn't more than seventeen years old. Tall, skinny, with broken teeth and long, delicate fingers, he stepped into the bar uncertainly, furtively peering around. His greasy dark hair was pasted to his forehead; his pale, blemished skin shone in Pickering's weak light. The crowd eyed him surrept.i.tiously and almost everyone came to the same unflattering conclusion: amateur. amateur.

The kid didn't try for one of the seats. He looked around once, shrugged his cheap, tattered coat onto his narrow shoulders, and moved confidently toward the back of the room, where the metal security door led to Pick's office. A tall, amazingly muscled man stood with his back against the door, arms crossed, illegally augmented muscles twitching with their own intelligence.

Halfway there, a leather-gloved hand shot out and took hold of the kid's arm. The owner of the hand was a squat, gray-skinned man whose face was an intricate maze of broken blood vessels. A ragged, ugly scar trailed from his scalp to his throat. He licked his lips and looked the kid up and down before speaking.

"Tell ya what, kiddo," he said in a thick, slurred voice, "gimme whatever it is ya got an' I'll let ya walk outta here alive."

Soft, unenthusiastic laughter rippled around him-interested to see how the kid would react, but seeing no real sport in it.

"Let go," the kid said, looking down. "Or I'll feed your fingers to you."

More laughter, this time mocking, and the squat man in leather took it to be mocking him. him. He might have let the kid past if he'd squirmed a little, begged a little, but a smart-mouth had to be taught a lesson. "Watch yer mouth, pup," he growled, squeezing the kid's arm tight. "This ain't a place you get to smart-mouth, see?" He might have let the kid past if he'd squirmed a little, begged a little, but a smart-mouth had to be taught a lesson. "Watch yer mouth, pup," he growled, squeezing the kid's arm tight. "This ain't a place you get to smart-mouth, see?"

The kid continued to stare for a moment. Then, without warning, he whipped out his free arm, a knife popping from his sleeve into his open palm. Grasping the knife firmly, he slashed downward at the squat man, opening up a gash on his face. Blood splashed onto the table, and the squat man threw himself backward, hands slapped over his face, screeching.

"You f.u.c.king cut me! You little runt!"

The kid stared at him for a second or two, then wiped the knife on his coat and returned it to its spring-loaded holster in his sleeve. He continued to the guarded door.

The big man standing in front of the door eyed him warily. "Versuchen sie nicht das mit mir, zicklein. I'll I'll schnapper sie in zwei, schnapper sie in zwei," The big man said. "Ya?"

The kid shook his head. "I don't understand that s.h.i.t, man."

The big man sighed petulantly. "f.u.c.king Americans," he said in thickly accented English. "Don't f.u.c.king know s.h.i.t about the rest of the world. What the f.u.c.k do you want?"

The kid squared his chin. "I want to see Avery Cates."

One of the big man's hands whipped out and caught the kid by the throat, the other taking hold of the kid's arm to prevent more knifeplay. He didn't squeeze hard. Everyone ignored them.

"No name zicklein, name zicklein," the German muttered. "No f.u.c.king name, name, ya?" ya?"

The kid nodded and licked his lips. "Okay, all right. I need to see him."

The German released him and studied the kid for a moment. "You gots something to show the man?"

The kid nodded. "I got something."

The German nodded. "Weapons. All of them. Then, I scan you, ya? Don't f.u.c.k with me or out on your a.s.s you go, ya?"

The kid nodded and handed over the knife. The German looked at it. "That's it?"

The kid nodded. "That's it."

Sighing, the huge man picked up a small wand-shaped device and ran it up and down the kid's body, studying a slim screen on one end. Satisfied, he stepped aside and waved the kid in. Hesitating for just a moment, the kid shrugged his coat on again and stepped forward. The door opened automatically.

Pick's back room was as crowded as ever. The kid stared at the piles of paper as he shuffled through the narrow floors.p.a.ce toward the ancient desk. He'd never seen so much paper in his life, and wondered what in h.e.l.l it was good for. Three men watched his approach. One was very old, sitting behind the desk, one hand on a strange, flat device covered in b.u.t.tons. The youngest-looking one was dressed all in black, and sat on the edge of the desk, a cigarette dangling between two fingers, his hair-starting to go gray-slicked down, long in the back. He was pale and unshaven, and smiled a little from behind his sungla.s.ses.

The third man was old, too, but stood against the wall behind the desk, dressed expensively. His hair was entirely white, but was combed and trimmed. He smoked a cigarette, too, and stared at the kid with frightening, flat eyes.

The kid swallowed as he came to a stop in front of them. He stared at the younger man directly in front of him, eyes wide.

"Are you-" he started, but the younger man held up a hand immediately.

"No names, mi amigo, mi amigo," he said. "The SSF has ears everywhere. We do our best to sweep the place, but it's better to be safe than sorry."

The kid nodded. "I was told to come here, and, um, talk to, uh . . ." He hesitated. "You, I guess." He squared his shoulders. "I want to be involved."

The younger man smiled and glanced back at the older man behind him. "Hear that? He wants to be involved in our good work."

"Ask him." The older man exhaled smoke. "If he has credentials."

The younger man kept grinning, turning back to the kid. He put his cigarette between his lips and spread his hands. "Kid, you got credentials?"

The kid nodded. Reaching into a coat pocket, he produced a small leather case. He tossed it to the long-haired man, who caught it easily, flipping it open. A hologram of a golden badge glowed dimly in the room, along with a digital photo of a stern-looking black man and a running stream of textual information.

"Captain Calvin Billington. System Security Force." He glanced up at the kid and pa.s.sed the badge back to the older man, who accepted it silently. "How? When?"

"Hour ago," the kid said, "Battery Cemetery. Throat cut. It was clean." He kept his face stern and mean, but couldn't resist snuffling back snot and dragging one arm across his nose. "That Pig's been robbing us f.u.c.king blind. blind. Whatever we nick from the swells, he's there, like a G.o.dd.a.m.n ghost, pushing you around, b.l.o.o.d.ying noses, messing with the girls." He nodded. "f.u.c.ker deserved it." Whatever we nick from the swells, he's there, like a G.o.dd.a.m.n ghost, pushing you around, b.l.o.o.d.ying noses, messing with the girls." He nodded. "f.u.c.ker deserved it."

The younger man nodded. "Mr. Pickering? Can you confirm this?"

The ancient man tapped on his b.u.t.tons and stared at a sickly glowing screen. "I've got a Captain Billington down, throat cut, called in half an hour ago." He blinked. "Kid, you better lay low. They got a good description of you."

The kid nodded. "Sure."

The younger man studied the kid as the older man behind him pa.s.sed the badge forward. "All right. This isn't a game, you know, right? This isn't some snuff thief gang you run with for a few weeks, make some skag. This is serious." He thrust a crooked finger at the kid. "You just killed a System Cop. The whole G.o.dd.a.m.n world is against you now. We're all you got."

The kid's face hardened and he lifted his chin. "I know what the f.u.c.k I'm doing. I can't stand this world. I hate the f.u.c.king System."

The younger man studied the kid for a moment longer, then nodded. "All right. A few ground rules. First ground rule is, keep your f.u.c.king mouth shut. I don't care who you think you are, you don't get drunk and brag, you don't let hints slip, you don't let anything anything f.u.c.king slip. We don't exist. None of us ever met. I don't know who you are." The man's face hardened in turn, and suddenly didn't seem so young anymore. "But I do, don't I? So f.u.c.k us, you get f.u.c.king slip. We don't exist. None of us ever met. I don't know who you are." The man's face hardened in turn, and suddenly didn't seem so young anymore. "But I do, don't I? So f.u.c.k us, you get f.u.c.ked f.u.c.ked in return, right?" in return, right?"

The kid nodded. "I'm not going anywhere."

The younger man studied the kid for a moment and then nodded. "All right. Go on back out. We'll be in touch. "They watched the kid exit the office. The long-haired man walked slowly back to the desk.

"Youngest one yet," Pick growled. "According to this, he's f.u.c.king sixteen."

"I'd already killed three men when I was sixteen, Pick," Cates replied, reclaiming his spot on the desk. "Doesn't take age to be able to fight for something."

"Another one," Belling said quietly from behind him, eyes on the security screens. A middle-aged black woman, wearing a patch over one eye and sporting a metallic claw for a left hand, was giving the German a loud lecture, which the rippling ma.s.s of artificial muscle took stoically.

Cates stared up at the screen, the same nonsmile playing over his features. They'd been straggling in ever since they sent the word out and backed it up with furious action: two major robberies, six dead cops-each of them an evil b.a.s.t.a.r.d, mourned by no one-and press releases for each. The f.u.c.king cops-they were good, the best, but they'd never been up against a member of the Dunmharu and Avery Cates. Not simultaneously. And they'd never been up against an entire G.o.dd.a.m.n city either. And the Crushers were too f.u.c.king greedy to pa.s.s up the protection money and give up Pickering's.

He watched the German put the woman through the usual security and felt a familiar buzzing excitement inside. He thought grimly, It's begun. It's begun.

Avery Cates will return in The Digital Plague.

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The Electric Church Part 22 summary

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