The Culled - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
The sensible savage.
I think somehow, somewhere inside, I felt indignant, too. Like: how dare these f.u.c.kers chase me? How dare they? How dare they outnumber me?
Me!
It was a useful emotion.
This was home, in a way. Worming through the darkened corridors of an emba.s.sy in some exotic place, waiting for the moment to strike. Lurking, stalking, closing in.
Or letting them come to me.
This time the a.r.s.eholes came mob-handed. They'd closed on the tracker beacon with admirable speed, slinking along open corridor corners to avoid ambushes, sidestep-by-sidestep. I could hear their progress with practiced acuity: three together on point then another (a softer tread, probably the woman) taking rearguard.
Only four. The other one was staked-out in the lobby, crushed and sliced-up by the gla.s.s cabinet. Twenty minutes into this nasty little game, and one f.u.c.ker down already.
It would be dishonest to pretend I wasn't enjoying myself.
I could hear them beyond the last corner of the twisting hall.
"Strong signal," one grunted, voice terse. "Directly ahead. Other end of the room."
An arm blurred in the shadows.
Something small flying, bouncing, rolling, then- Light and smoke and noise, and three heavy figures springing-out to let rip into the phosphor distraction. I couldn't even see the weapons; only feel the drumming of the air, the epileptic nightmare of endless automatic muzzleflare, and the quiet smugness on the bright faces of the attackers.
They were standing so close I could almost have touched them and, for the record, they were shooting in completely the wrong direction.
I waited until they'd walked further into the room. The one with the tracker grunted in satisfaction, claiming the marker was stationary and they must have hit me. They took up swaggering stances before the darkened 'Iroquois' display - now reduced to shattered plastic and crumbled wax - and took a few more potshots into the rubble, just to be sure.
Behind them, I ducked out from beneath the cosy chickenwire-supported wigwam of the Ojibwa tribe (never heard of them) and ghosted back along the empty corridor.
Divide and conquer.
The woman stood with her back to me, pressed into a pool of darkness, nervous at the cacophony her comrades were throwing-up from round the corner. She had a mini-Uzi in each hand - compact little toys with folded stocks and extra-long mags - and the pale curve of her neck was perfectly caught by the dim moonlight of the arched windows, like a ski slope. Waiting for an avalanche.
Carefully, using swaddled fabrics I'd stolen from my pals in the Ojibwa, I palmed the long shard of gla.s.s I'd used to slice the electric tag out from the skin of my shoulder (stop number two, remember?), I'd hidden it carefully amongst the dummy-display of the Iroquois, letting the morons walk right past me.
Some people might call that 'cheating'.
Don't you f.u.c.king give up, soldier!
Sir, no sir etc etc.
Cat and Mouse. Rule number two: Even the biggest cat picks-off mice one by one.
The woman had the good grace to die quietly, and she'd even warmed-up the grips of my two brand new Uzis. That's consideration for you.
Half an hour later, the others were getting frustrated.
I'd left the museum and headed south, careful not to double-back on the park. This whole lightless neighbourhood was their turf, and the more advantages I could give myself, the better. Right now that meant staying out from the moon-dappled weirdness of the trees, hugging the right-angles and solidity of the West Side.
I turned off down 74th and found a tenement block; took the fire escape up to the top floor and bust my way inside as quietly as I could. Still no sounds of pursuit - and after all why should there be? The marker pressed under my skin was their only ace; and now that was nothing but a b.l.o.o.d.y shard of circuitry in the pocket of a mannequin. It was almost tempting to sit out the two hours here, reclining on the unscavved sofa in some long-dead New Yorker's grotty little apartment.
But.
Think. Cover the angles.
But other people had surely cut out the trackers before.
The f.u.c.kos must have a Plan B.
But.
But if they have the marker, couldn't they just claim victory anyway?
'Proof of kill'?
But, but, but.
And the biggest s.h.i.+tter of them all: The End.
By midnight I had to present myself to a member of the Clergy. That's how it finished. That's how they knew who'd won or lost.
They'd given me a perfunctory description of places I could look: slums on the En-Tee border zones, territory markers down to the south, Clergy-run checkpoints. With each item on the list, spoken through softly clenched teeth by the pale-faced Cardinal Cy, I'd cast a quick glance at Nate - hiding in the crowd, face shadowed inside a hood. He'd simply shaken his head, over and over.
The Clergy weren't going to make this easy for me. They wouldn't be waiting to shake my hand, tell me well done. If they were waiting at all, it was with a bullet.
Think it through.
Cover the angles.
Which just left the park. Right back to the start. Presenting myself to the crowd and the b.a.s.t.a.r.d Cardinal himself, standing up there on the podium beside the turtle-pond with his four hulking Choirboy guards and his stupid ruby-red gla.s.ses, to show I'd done it.
Easy as that.
Big Scrim and his two remaining goons, they knew it as well as I did. They knew I'd be scurrying out from the undergrowth, back in the park, at five minutes before midnight. And that meant all they had to do was wait.
s.h.i.+t.
Cat and mouse. Rule number one.
So I plundered anything useful from the apartment - an out-of-date band-aid for my shoulder, a vac-sealed packet of salami on a shelf, a couple of rusty kitchen-knives in plastic sheaths, and went out to find them. Followed the sounds of engines rumbling. I took the rooftops where I could; a raggedy tabby going arm-over-arm, pouncing across alleyways and ghosting up empty fire escapes, leaving a trail of terrified scavs, their sleep disturbed by a prowling monster.
I found the Gulls hunched in the back of the biggest AV, far below the roof ledge of a fire station. Voices rose from below the closed hood, and I worked my way down with the utmost care; letting go of everything, letting something unevolved and primitive - but so much better at this s.h.i.+t - swim to the forefront of my mind.
I climbed down to meet them. An ape with Uzis.
At the foot of the building an alleyway cut out onto the main street, and there I nestled myself into the bricks, unfolding the stock of one of the tiny guns to give myself at least a fighting chance of hitting something.
I could see them clearly, shadowed by the moonlight like patches of cut-out card.
I could hear them.
Both of them. Two guys.
So where's number 3?
Scrim was busy, bent down over the scrawnier of his two warriors. Jacking a hypodermic needle into the other man's neck, holding him tight in a vicious headlock as he grunted and pleaded. I found myself entranced, all but forgetting to poise myself for that critical moment, that perfect shot.
"You f.u.c.k! You stay still. You f.u.c.k!" Scrim kept up a volley of abuse, squeezing the plunger with a sly grin. "You gonna help us, boy. You gonna find that limey s.h.i.+t. You gonna track his a.s.s."
The little man jerked his head and finally pulled away with a howl. Scrim watched him, smiling quietly, clambering down to the driver's seat.
The man s.h.i.+vered for a moment, sweat p.r.i.c.kling along his forehead. I held my breath, wondering what weird s.h.i.+t Doctor Scrim had prescribed, what narcotic treats the all-conquering Clergy had handed-over to help their pet Gulls finish me off.
The little man grunted. Frowned.
Then...
Changed.
He sat up. His head moved a little too quickly. Darting, like a bird's: from position to position with no intermediary movement. He drooled. He closed his eyes.
The thing inside me, the primitive 'self' in control, gave a little grunt of recognition.
The little man sniffed.
And licked his lips.
Scrim plucked something silvery-red from his pocket and dangled it above the man's nose. He tilted his head to taste it like a wolf on a scent, lapping at it, smearing it across his cheeks, then closed his eyes.
Scrim re-pocketed the tiny shape. Didn't take a genius to figure what it was.
The tracker. The tracker covered in my blood.
I s.h.i.+vered, despite myself.
The little man smiled. Sniffed again. Pointed his finger.
Opened his eyes.
Moaned.
Stared right at me.
f.u.c.k.
I was already running, I think, though I didn't realise it. Engines growling to life behind me, a voice shouting "There! There!", radios crackling in some distant world.
I heard someone say, through thick static: "Yeah. Roj that. Got him."
And then the sniper s.h.i.+tbag on the roof above, the third Gull, who'd been waiting like an angler poised over bait, waiting for the dumb psycho to try and turn the tables, opened fire and blew my f.u.c.king ear off.
Things rushed past without shape. Everything seemed to throb; the whole world bulging in time to the pain inside my head.
It hurt like a b.i.t.c.h, and I hadn't even had the time to poke and prod at it yet; to see how bad it was. In the mean time I was letting myself get good and freaked, imagining the worst.
I think I could still hear okay, though frankly nothing much came through except the throbbing and the engines. Always the engines. It felt like they'd been chasing me forever, though I guess it was more like an hour. Maybe more. I'd stop and look at my watch, if stopping wasn't tantamount to getting dead quickly.
The me doing the thinking - the instinctive snarling primate b.a.s.t.a.r.d I was taught to let out in situations like this - howled and yelped at the pain, fighting to scratch at the torrent pouring down my neck.
The me inside - rational, detached, cold, keeping the monkey-man in control... He loved it.
Such focus!
Such sensation!
Don't you f.u.c.king give up, soldier!
I ran like a steam train. Like a b.l.o.o.d.y Duracell bunny, with an amphetamine volcano up its furry a.r.s.e. Like an animator's run-cycle stuck on a fast-forward loop. The same movements over and over, with a background cyclorama tumbling by and nothing but the throb, throb, throb to accompany the slapping of my feet. Puddles. Cracked tarmac. Weed-strewn sidewalks.
What I'm getting at is, I ran like a robot. Never tiring, never feeling. I ran until I was sure my heart would pop, and smiled through frothing teeth and kept going.
f.u.c.k it, I kept thinking. f.u.c.k it all.
Down tight alleyways. Over dumpsters, through drifts of s.h.i.+tty litter. Sharp corners. Over wire fences and down labyrinthine pa.s.sages. The vehicle-roar came and went, bas.h.i.+ng and smas.h.i.+ng at intersections, voices raised in curses.
Hot breath, burning my lungs.
The AV couldn't keep up. It kept trying to double-round, to sneak ahead; headlights blazing then jerking off on some random course. They might have had some luck, if I hadn't been a contrary b.a.s.t.a.r.d. If I hadn't been changing my mind about what direction to run every five minutes.
The third man had a bike. Some suped-up j.a.panese travesty, whining like a prep.u.b.escent dragonfly, and he had no trouble sticking to me; negotiating alleys too tight for the four-wheeler. I took him down circuitous switchbacks and wide avenues, letting the skittish scavs confuse him, hiding behind dark corners and doubling-back every time he scorched past. Earning ten minute respites here and there, curled-up in dark rooms with terrified squatters moaning beneath soiled sleeping-bags. But he was good. Give him his due; he turned on a penny and came straight back the instant the sniffer-freak on the AV caught the scent, headlight tracking like a laser-sight, rubber squealing.
It would be fair to say - in fact it would be a royal b.l.o.o.d.y understatement - that I got fed up with him. The bike was enclosed like a sleek little turtle with riot-s.h.i.+elds and bullet-proof plex; caroming off angled walls that should have unseated him, slipping through the oil drum fires I pulled-down in my wake like a galleon through fog. And yeah, maybe he couldn't shoot me through the bal.u.s.trades of s.h.i.+elding; but it worked both ways, and every time I found some perilous vantage point - dangling from a low-hanging escape ladder, peering like Oscar the Grouch out of a scav-nest dumpster - to open up with the Uzis and riddle him with lead, all it achieved was to let him know where I was.
He was trying to make road kill. Exhaust me, flush me out in the open. Re-curved scythe-blades on the bike's front mudguard, ankle-breakers poking like twisted spokes from both wheels.
He was running me down, and he was f.u.c.king good at it.
So eventually what I did was: I stopped running.
Stood in full view.
Waited.
(Took a moment to glance at my watch. 23:13hrs, yank-time. Not out of the woods yet, boyo.) He came round the corner like a flaming bullet, and pulled-up with unnecessary flas.h.i.+ness, propping himself on the far leg so I couldn't even blast open his knees.
Cautious little c.o.c.ksucker.