“… saso ti da mati natno, zara ti raguesta di la ramo… ”
“Listen,” Eddie said. “What happens if you die? You die, what do I do? How do I get on this more money than I can imagine you were talking about?”
“… maso si nami lama -what the fuck are you talking about, you scavenging little shit?”
Instantly, Trix Desoto was lucid, and lifting her head to glare at him cold-eyed. It wasn’t even like she was fighting off the pain. That switch thing yet again; a completely different person had been switched on in her like a light.
Eddie found himself feeling shamefaced under her direct and contemptuous gaze.
“All I mean is,” he said, not a little shamefacedly, “is that I don’t know what any of this is about. I don’t know who to call. You die on me out here, how am I gonna know who to call?”
“Then my advice to you would be to drive like a motherfucker and just hope I don’t.”
The light of coherence snapped off and her head fell back.
“ Slami makto, shaba tlek na doura rashamateran… ”
Eddie drove.
3.
Las Vitas was little more than a glorified truck stop: a settle-down because, what the hell, folks just sometimes still have to stop somewhere. A cluster of second-string services around the dead remains of a TexMexxon station.
The station itself had croaked near around twenty years ago, so far as those who were in a position to know had told Eddie Kalish. Bolt-on hydrogen-fusion technology had not been kind to the dealers from the days when vehicles needed their regular fix of hydrocarbons.
What Las Vitas had was communications. With the C amp;C rig totalled back at the site of the ambush, Las Vitas was the nearest place that Trix Desoto could make whatever calls she needed to make.
That, at least, had been the plan.
“Shit…” Eddie checked the scene and then just kept on going. “Gangcult hit it hard and serious-maybe the same guys did you. This was heavy-duty.”
The big, vestigial TexMexx sign which had served as an accretion point for Las Vitas was down, the dishes strapped to its superstructure shattered or scattered. That had probably been the first order of business: take out the comms before they could get off a signal to the US Cav.
And vehicles that might have been stopping over were long gone, save for a flipped-over garbage truck with a hole punched through it. Prefab cabins were just smoking polycarbon shells; the jerry-built structures that had been thrown up from local materials in the first place merely ash.
Reddish-brown smears dotted on the levelled concrete expanse where trucks and road-trains had once parked; weird little organic lumps that you didn’t want to look at in case you worked out what they were.
The ruins of Las Vitas still smoked gently. The fires had had maybe an hour to burn down. If survivors were going to be crawling out of-or back to-the wreckage then they would have done it by now. Las Vitas had been zombie-towned-in coming weeks and months it would turn into a ghost town, but for the moment the meat was just too fresh.
Eddie kept his eyes on the pristine blacktop and just drove, mind working furiously. Such as it was. Only one immediate possibility occurred.
“Las Vitas is a bust,” he said, wondering if Trix Desoto could even hear him through her babbling. “There’s only one thing for it. We’re gonna have to try Little Deke.”
Last time Eddie Kalish had seen Little Deke had been in the rear-view mirror, as the guy was bringing up a scattergun and loosing off as Eddie tooled the stolen RV out of his compound.
Eddie had come across the thing, half-buried under a collection of old dune-buggy frames, and had wondered what it was. He’d had the idea that Recreational Vehicles were supposed to be these big old sixteen-wheelers with a load the size of a prefab house and dirt bikes slung across the back.
This was just a clunky little capsule barely bigger than any street car.
Small enough that Eddie could imagine taking it and driving it away.
“It’s a Veedubya,” Little Deke had told him, spitting out the word along with a wet gob of thoroughly masticated loco weed. “Fuckin’ Kraut Karrier. It’s older than I am. Now get your sorry ass over here and help me strip down this piece of shit coolant system.”
Eddie’s thoughts had kept coming back to the little RV. He’d been working for Little Deke pretty much as long as he could remember-long enough that he didn’t remember if Deke was any kind of family or just some guy.
Little Deke hadn’t treated him particularly badly, but as he’d gotten older Eddie had realised that all he was, and what he was, was stuck there in the junkyard going nowhere.
There had just been nothing to keep him there. Eddie had taken to sleeping in the little RV, spent odd hours fixing it up, waited for his chance to swipe a working hydrogen cell, and then just got the hell out. There was a big, wide world out there, apparently, and Eddie had wanted a taste of it.
In the end, he had never got so far. A couple of years aimless wandering, never pulling down the kind of score that might get him further… and now he was crawling back.
“Cut him in on the money, he’ll be fine,” Eddie told Trix Desoto, not sure at this point whether she could hear and understand him or not. “That is, if he doesn’t just shoot me on sight.”
The electrowire stood dark and silent-which meant nothing, on account of the fact that several million volts running through steel mesh gives no visible sign.
The gate was held securely shut by a heavy-gauge electromag-lock, and there was no sign of movement behind it save for the vague flapping of polymer sheeting and the like amongst the junk.
A camera tracked back and forth in its housing to regard them, a light blinking on its faceplate under the lens.
After a while the lock buzzed and low-yield servos cut in to swing the gate-sections open, outward, against the force of gravity that held them customarily shut.
“Well, he hasn’t shot us yet,” said Eddie. “That might be a sign.”
Eddie nosed the van into the compound, alert for the first flash of movement.
No sight or sound of threat at all… not even from the skunk/rottweiler hybrids that, he now recalled, Little Deke left the run of the compound to when not around.
Dogs with skunk glands grafted into them, together with microelectronic triggering implants. Kind of like those money-packages that spray you when you try to rip them off-although money-packages didn’t have the kind of jaws that could tear you a new one before they went off.
Back in the day, the creatures had been trained to recognise Eddie’s scent and not attack; these days, Eddie wasn’t so sure, even if they were old enough to remember him being around.
Ah, well. The lack of skunkdogs meant that Little Deke was going to be around, somewhere. Eddie supposed that he could be holed up somewhere in the piles of junk, waiting and drawing a sniper-bead on him, but he knew that wasn’t Little Deke’s style.
If he was still angry, after a couple of years, he wouldn’t be exactly subtle: he’d just come at them roaring and blazing away.
Eddie shut off his engine. Off to one side he could hear the hum of the meth-generators that supplied the compound and its fence with power, but the old AmTrak boxcar which served Little Deke as a domicile was dark and silent.
No lights burning even though it was getting on for dusk. The big floods lashed to various items in the junk piles and lit the yard for night work stood dark and dormant.
Eddie left the van and made his cautious way to the AmTrak car. “Deke? You there? I just wanna say that…”
Snapshots.
Eddie would never have a clear and sequential memory of the adrenalin of panic kicking in. Just telegraphic snapshots of single, discrete images, like the output of the random camera of the eye jump-cut together: