Cole had a way of transforming the worst of situations into something inspiring.
“I know him. He will do anything to save his family,” Cole added. “What next, Enna?” Cole asked directing the conversation to her.
“We needed those weapons. We can’t take on the Council Guard with what we have. Luckily we have a Plan B. Craig?”
Craig brought a laptop over to the group and set it on the table. The rest of them gathered except Nam, who tended to Lev.
“Jess!” Craig barked.
Jesse opened his eyes and hopped up leaving his gun on the ground. He joined the rest of the group.
“Alright, Plan B,” Craig said as he turned the laptop on.
Thirteen
“Even on a hot day the Fringe is cold. The temperature out here might be warm and you know it is because you can feel the heat in the wind, but something still chills you. This chill is born in your spine, and shoots outward to your arms and legs, raising your hairs and prickling all of your skin. It’s like those few moments in your life when you feel completely empowered to achieve greatness but the Fringe lies to you. It ensnares you in its energy and makes you feel like something is right when everything couldn’t be more wrong.”
The blood-red sign for Johnny’s was barely visible in the darkness of the old parking structure’s bowels. There were all different kinds of transports parked outside the reticulated walls of the travel depot. Some were impressive, and some were little more than piles of metal with an engine. This was where the Runners ended their day.
A handful of people stood outside the de-radiation chamber, waiting for it to clear. One of the Runners was completely covered in a dark red ghille suit with hair-like tentacles reaching in every direction. Another one had padded armor with a high-tech filter mask that looked new. The other two had suits on that had been pieced together from gear long abandoned, and looked as though they might come apart at any moment.
An engine roared, and they all looked in Ripp’s direction as his car emerged from the darkness and settled a little away from the door. They all knew who’s Mustang it was.
Ripp stepped out, and the group waiting by the door made way for him. Not because they were scared, but they let him go ahead of them out of respect for the most sought-after Runner in the last fifty years. He was the best. Partly because of the fact that no one went out as far as he did, but mostly because of his ability to survive anything.
No one fought the hordes of Fringers the way he and Gus had, and no one was more favored by Johnny than he was. Of course, all of this had a lot to do with being trained by Johnny’s father.
Ripp acknowledged their respect with a simple raise of his hand and grabbed the door latch. The light on the outside panel immediately changed from red to green as if Ripp willed it to be ready for him.
“Thank you,” he said mechanically through his rad-breather.
Ripp closed the door behind him and stood while the air vacuum hissed, and compressed air cycled through vents in the ceiling.
He laughed to himself, remembering when a young runner prematurely took his rad-breather off before the cycle was done, resulting in burnt lungs and a shrunken voice box. It took months for the poor fellow to sound like something other than a small, excited child.
Ripp took his helmet off just as the lights in the chamber changed from red to green. His hair was matted, sweaty, and he looked exhausted.
The automatic door slid open and Ripp moved into a large storage room that held a dozen people’s rad-gear. He looked over at the old storage attendant who was fast asleep in a chair near the doorway and smiled. He stored his gear quietly trying not to wake the old woman and softly pushed through the spring-mounted doors into Johnny’s bar.
Ripp slipped past Johnny, who was turned around preparing drinks, spotted Gus and Lilly sitting at a table and headed over.
Gus kicked Lilly under the table.
“What was that for?” she whined.
Gus smiled, then looked past her.
“How’d it go?” he asked Ripp.
Lilly made room for Ripp. It was obvious that there wasn’t going to be enough room on Gus’s side.
“Didn’t find what I had hoped to, but there were CG Elites that showed up out of nowhere. That was fun.”
Ripp got settled and looked over at Lilly, who, as usual, was consumed with the social network on her Pigeon, mindlessly scrolling through the messages from the runner’s daily updates.
“There is nothing out there, at least on the surface, but I’m thinking we were right, something is going on. You said, ‘follow the power’.”
“Told you,” Gus said.
“Yeah, we’ll need to go back out after things cool down. Got some great gear off of em’ though.”
Gus chuckled. “Elites always have the good stuff. How many were out there?”
“Four.”
Gus paused for a second as he noticed the blood on Ripp’s shirt. “You ok?”
“Yeah, just a cut. How’d we do at the market?”
Gus got excited, and his worry for Ripp’s well-being changed to a childish smile.
“We made out pretty good, two-fifty for the converters, one-fifty for the gun and three hundred for…uh…” Gus looked around to see who was listening. “…that other thing.”
Ripp’s face lit up with approval. “We should change professions.”
Gus shook his head as an unwanted memory forced its way in. “Don’t think I could be a prostitute again.”
“Yeah, not what I was talking about,” Ripp said, making a sour face. “I really don’t want to picture that right now. What I meant was that we should just focus on that…other…thing.” he said, raising his eyebrows with each of the last two words.
“Ah, you mean the side business,” Gus said, winking. “Yes. Not sure what they do with them, but for that much money each time? I can live with not ever knowing what happens to those people.”
Ripp looked over at Lilly, who was obviously trying to look occupied, and softly nudged her. “Why so quiet Lil?”
Lilly looked up as if she had just noticed that Ripp was there and smiled an innocent smile.
“Hey, Ripp! How…”
“Lilly got shock rocked by Tooth’s boy on a baby con, and lost her score. So she put a fist in his face at the market today just before she pulled her Zeus machine on his playmate.”
Gus smiled as Lilly angrily shut her Pigeon down.
“Seriously? Couldn’t even let me ease into it? I really don’t like you right now.”
Gus’s smile faded when he saw the stern look on Ripp’s face. Lilly and Gus were ready for an explosion, but it never came.
“Yeah, I know,” Ripp said calmly, catching Lilly and Gus off guard.
“Nun gave me the heads up about the market. I figured it might have been over something like that.”
Lilly expected that there was going to be more, so she kept quiet.
Ripp leaned forward and looked at his hands. “You know I just smoothed everything over with Tooth right?”
Lilly sank in her seat. She could have dealt with Ripp being angry with her. She would have even preferred that he break something and yell at her in front of everyone, but the thought that she had disappointed Ripp was torture.
“I know.”
“Do you?” Ripp’s tone hardened.
“There are all kinds of bad Lil. Tooth is on the extreme end of ‘real crazy’ kill you, not just electrocute you bad. And he has been after our contracts for a long time.”
“I know. I’m sorry, I really am.”
Ripp shook his head slightly. Gus was about to interject, but kept his mouth shut when Ripp looked up at him.