Burning Chrome
|
|||||
|
Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Next page work yet, how come I can see it?" Nance giggled. "That's the best part half the work isn't done yet. Didn't have the time to assemble the pieces into a unified program. Turn on that radio, huh? I want to dance." She kicked off her shoes. Deke tuned in something gutsy. Then, at Nance's urging, turned it down, almost to a whisper. "I scored two hits of hype, see." She was bouncing on the bed, weaving her hands like a Balinese dancer. "Ever try the stuff? In-credible. Gives you like absolute concentration. Look here." She stood en pointe. "Never done that before." "Hype," Deke said. "Last person I heard of got caught with that shit got three years in the infantry. How'd you score it?" "Cut a deal with a vet who was in grad school. She bombed out last month. Stuff gives me perfect visualization. I can hold the projection with my eyes shut. It was a snap assembling the program in my head." "On just two hits, huh?" "One hit. I'm saving the other. Teach was so im- pressed he's sponsoring me for a job interview. A recruiter from I. G. Feuchtwaren hits campus in two weeks. That cap is gonna sell him the program and me. I'm gonna cut out of school two years early, straight in- to industry, do not pass jail, do not pay two hundred dollars." The snake curled into a flaming tiara. It gave Deke a funny-creepy feeling to think of. Nance walking out of his life. "I'm a witch," Nance sang, "a wetware witch." She shucked her shirt over her head and sent it flying. Her fine, high breasts moved freely, gracefully, as she danced. "I'm gonna make it" now she was singing a current pop hit "to the . . . top!" Her nipples were small and pink and aroused. The firesnake licked at them and whipped away. "Hey, Nance," Deke said uncomfortably. "Calm down a little, huh?" "I'm celebrating!" She hooked a thumb into her shiny gold panties. Fire swirled around hand and crotch. "I'm the virgin goddess, baby, and I have the pow-er!" Singing again. Deke looked away. "Gotta go now," he mumbled. Gotta go home and jerk off. He wondered where she'd hidden that second hit. Could be anywhere. There was a protocol to the circuit, a tacit order of deference and precedence as elaborate as that of a Man- darin court. It didn't matter that Deke was hot, that his rep was spreading like wildfire. Even a name flyboy couldn't just challenge whom he wished. He had to climb the ranks. But if you flew every night. If you were always available to anybody's challenge. And if you were good. . . well, it was possible to climb fast. Deke was one plane up. It was tournament fight- ing, three planes against three. Not many spectators, a dozen maybe, but it was a good fight, and they were noisy. Deke was immersed in the manic calm of combat when he realized suddenly that they had fallen silent. Saw the kickers stir and exchange glances. Eyes flicked past him. He heard the elevator doors close. Coolly, he disposed of the second of his opponent's planes, then risked a quick glance over his shoulder. Tiny Montgomery had just entered Jackman's. The wheelchair whispered across browning linoleum, guided by tiny twitches of one imperfectly paralyzed hand. His expression was stern, blank, calm. In that instant, Deke lost two planes. One to de- resolution gone to blur and canceled out by the facilitator and the other because his opponent was a real fighter. Guy did a barrel roll, killing speed and slip- ping to the side, and strafed Deke's biplane as it shot past. It went down in flames. Their last two planes shared altitude and speed, and as they turned, trying for position, they naturally fell into a circling pattern. The kickers made room as Tiny wheeled up against the table. Bobby Earl Cline trailed after him, lanky and casual. Deke and his opponent traded glances and pulled their machines back from the pool table so they could hear the man out. Tiny smiled. His features were small, clustered in the center of his pale, doughy face. One finger twitched slightly on the chrome handrest. "I heard about you." He looked straight at Deke. His voice was soft and shockingly sweet, a baby-girl little voice. "I heard you're good." Deke nodded slowly. The smile left Tiny's face. His soft, fleshy lips relaxed into a natural pout, as if he were waiting for a kiss. His small, bright eyes studied Deke without malice. "Let's see what you can do, then." Deke lost himself in the cool game of war. And when the enemy went down in smoke and flame, to ex- plode and vanish against the table, Tiny wordlessly turned his chair, wheeled it into the elevator, and was gone. As Deke was gathering up his winnings, Bobby Earl eased up to him and said, "The man wants to play you. "Yeah?" Deke was nowhere near high enough on the circuit to challenge Tiny. "What's the scam?" "Man who was coming up from Atlanta tomorrow canceled. 01' Tiny, he was spoiling to go up against somebody new. So it looks like you get your shot at the Max." "Tomorrow? Wednesday? Doesn't give me much prep time." Bobby Earl smiled gently. "I don't think that makes no nevermind." "How's that, Mr. Cline?" "Boy, you just ain't got the moves, you follow me? Ain't got no surprises. You fly just like some kinda beginner, only faster and slicker. You follow what I'm trying to say?" "I'm not sure I do. You want to put a little action on that?" "Tell you truthful," Cline said, "I been hoping on that." He drew a small black notebook from his pocket and licked a pencil stub. "Give you five to one. They's nobody gonna give no fairer odds than that." He looked at Deke almost sadly. "But Tiny, he's just naturally better'n you, and that's all she wrote, boy. He lives for that goddamned game, ain't got nothing else. Can't get out of that goddamned chair. You think you can best a man who's fighting for his life, you are just lying to yourself." Norman Rockwell's portrait of the colonel regarded Deke dispassionately from the Kentucky Fried across Richmond Road from the coffee bar. Deke held his cup with hands that were cold and trembling. His skull hummed with fatigue. Cline was right, he told the col- onel. I can go up against Tiny, but I can't win. The colonel stared back, gaze calm and level and not par- ticularly kindly, taking in the coffee bar and Best Buy and all his drag-ass kingdom of Richmond Road. Wait- ing for Deke to admit to the terrible thing he had to do. "The bitch is planning to leave me anyway," Deke said aloud. Which made the black countergirl look at him funny, then quickly away. "Daddy called!" Nance danced into the apartment, slamming the door behind her. "And you know what? He says if I can get this job and hold it for six months, he'll have the brainlock reversed. Can you believe it? Deke?" She hesitated. "You okay?" Deke stood. Now that the moment was on him, he felt unreal, like he was in a movie or something. "How come you never came home last night?" Nance asked. The skin on his face was unnaturally taut, a parch- ment mask. "Where'd you stash the hype, Nance? I need it." "Deke," she said, trying a tentative smile that in- stantly vanished. "Deke, that's mine. My hit. I need it. For my interview." He smiled scornfully. "You got money. You can always score another cap." "Not by Friday! Listen, Deke, this is really impor- tant. My whole life is riding on this interview. I need that cap. It's all I got!" "Baby, you got the fucking world! Take a look around you six ounces of blond Lebanese hash! Little anchovy fish in tins. Unlimited medical coverage, if you need it." She was backing away from him, stumbling against the static waves of unwashed bedding and wrinkled glossy magazines that crested at the foot of her bed. "Me, I never had a glimmer of any of this. Never had the kind of edge it takes to get along. Well, this one time I am gonna. There is a match in two hours that I am going to fucking well win. Do you hear me?" He was working himself into a rage, and that was good. He needed it for what he had to do. Nance flung up an arm, palm open, but he was ready for that and slapped her hand aside, never even catching a glimpse of the dark tunnel, let alone those little red eyes. Then they were both falling, and he was on top of her, her breath hot and rapid in his face. "Deke! Deke! I need that shit, Deke, my interview, it's the only. . . I gotta. . . gotta. . ." She twisted her face away, crying into the wall. "Please, God, please don't.. ." "Where did you stash it?" Pinned against the bed under his body, Nance began to spasm, her entire body convulsing in pain and fear. "Where is it?" Her face was bloodless, gray corpse flesh, and hor- ror burned in her eyes. Her lips squirmed. It was too late to stop now; he'd crossed over the line. Deke felt re- volted and nauseated, all the more so because on some unexpected and unwelcome level, he was enjoying this. "Where is it, Nance?" And slowly, very gently, he began to stroke her face. Deke summoned Jackman's elevator with a finger that moved as fast and straight as a hornet and landed daint- ily as a butterfly on the call button. He was full of boun- cy energy, and it was all under control. On the way up, he whipped off his shades and chuckled at his reflection in the finger-smudged chrome. The blacks of his eyes |
|||||
|