I blow it out.
– ’Cause I’d really like to stick it back in there.
She doesn’t move.
– It’ll come down to making a choice. Whether you want it or not. You’ll have to show what you are.
I sit on one of the chairs, pick up my boots, the worst of the blood and crud scraped off them.
– Interesting you should put it that way. Earlier tonight, had a little chat with Amanda Horde. Crazy twist that she is, she’s finally got the thing nailed down. Sounds like it anyway.
She folds her arms.
– What thing?
I put on one of the boots, start to do the laces.
– The Vyrus. The thing. You know.
She stands there.
I put on the other boot.
– So she had quite a lot to tell me about what I am. What we all are.
Lace up.
– According to her, what I am is what I’ve always been. According to her, I wasn’t infected, I was activated. What was already inside me was just switched on. I wasn’t turned into a blood-drinker, I was one all along.
I rise.
– Which, if I follow her right, means the same for all of us.
I step to my jacket, hung on a nail next to the radiator, just about dry from the sponging I gave it.
– No one made us Vampyres, we were Vampyres all along.
I slip it on.
– What I’m doing, Lydia, is just what comes naturally for what I am.
I step to her.
– And what I am is the same thing as you.
Past her.
– You want to fight it, be my guest.
I open the door.
– I got better things to take a swing at than myself.
The corridors are full of Terry’s partisans and Lydia’s Bulls. They give one another the hairy eyeball as they put edges on machetes, load battered sawed-offs, work the actions on a few Tech 9s, and put the finishing touches on a satchel full of Molotovs.
I think about the black-market military ordnance the enforcers were prepping in the uptown garage. I think about a few of those guys getting a drop on us as we come through a door. I think about how high the bodies would have to pile before they’d stop the bullets and let me and whoever else might be hanging at the rear make a run for it.
Ugly things is what I’m thinking.
I find Terry in a second-floor room. Smells like cedar incense and mimeo ink. Posters of Lennon and Lenin staring at each other from across the room. Frameless mattress on the floor with a sleeping bag on top. Camp stool at an old school desk in the corner. Turntable playing a track from Exile on Main St. “Ventilator Blues.”
Terry’s sitting in the chair, changed into combat boots, faded Levis, and a Vietnam-era U.S. Army field jacket with an American flag peace sign on the back, worn open over a Che Guevara T-shirt.
He’s cleaning a vintage AK-47.
I give him a nod.
– Time to free the people?
He hefts the assault rifle.
– That’s the idea, Joe. Always has been.
I walk over to the turntable and pick up the album jacket, listen to the song.
– Mood music.
He withdraws a cleaning rod from the barrel, dragging out a scrap of cotton.
– There are times when aggression is sadly in order. This is a song that has always helped me to psychologically prepare for the onset of violence.
I put the jacket down.
– Makes you feel like killing.
He shoulders the gun.
– Nothing in this world, Joe, nothing at all.
He dry fires, listening to the snap of the pin.
– Nothing makes me feel like killing.
– Not even me?
He fits a banana clip to the receiver, slaps it home.
– You’ve tempted my weakness on more than one occasion, but I’m, I don’t know, I’m not a man who contemplates killing, even in anger, who contemplates it with pleasure.
I walk to the window, lean against the plywood nailed over it.
– Who said anything about contemplation. I’m talking about doing it.
He lays the gun across his lap.
– What can I tell you, man, it’s just not my thing.
I nod.
– Still, you got moves, Ter. May not use them much anymore, but you got ‘em.
He takes a black watch cap from the desktop, puts it on, tucks his ponytail up inside.
– Some skills, you just acquire them. Doesn’t mean you revel in them or anything. The times taught me what I had to do.
– Funny, I got the idea old lady Vandewater taught you what to do back when you trained to be an enforcer.
He rests the butt of the gun on the floor, barrel against his knee.
– History makes us, forges us, we hone the edge. I was shaped to be a weapon for the Coalition, but I chose to cut the other way. You take what is given you, and you use it. Chubby’s daughter and her baby.
– Yeah, how’d you get along with her?
He rubs his forehead.
– I’ll admit she, you know, taxed the limits of my sense of humor.
– Relentless with that shit.
– Totally relentless.
– But you talked it right back at her, didn’t you? He smiles.
– Dear lady, urgency is on the wind. We must act.
– Nice.
– It didn’t help. She, I don’t know, got it in her head that she’d be better off somewhere else. I think running is just in her, you know, her personal script. Part of her drama. A shame. Infected and uninfected. That baby. There is real potential in that kind of narrative. I’m sure she’ll see it.
– Or maybe she’s already sensed you’re a two-faced asshole.
He pings a fingernail off the barrel of his gun, but doesn’t say anything.
I find my tobacco.
– Me, I’m not worried about you selling us out, Terry. I figure you’ve done that at least a half-dozen times over the years. Made some backdoor deal with Predo. That’s the way of the world. Like presidents and prime ministers, right? In the end, they all went to the same schools, speak the same lingo. Us peons, we just don’t understand how it’s done. So they do it for our own good. Screwing us, I mean. You and Predo, studying together with Vandewater, once I had that figured, I knew where you stood. Mean, I knew from way back you’re full of shit, but it was only the last couple years I knew you’re just another player.
He pokes his index finger in the barrel, pulls it out with a little pop.
– If there’s a point here, Joe, I have a ton of details to take care of. You know.
I got a cigarette rolled. Lighting it with a punk of incense makes the first drag taste foul, but it improves after that.
– Just that things seem to be closing out is all. And, like you said a while back, I’m a curious type. Things left unanswered, they make me itchy. Speaking of which.
I pick a flake of tobacco from my tongue.
– I was thinking how the Horde kid’s crazy dad isolated the zombie bacteria.
He purses his lips, makes the gun barrel pop again.
I smoke.
– That whole deal where he made those nutty dentures that injected the goop into someone and infected them. You know, to start a zombie plague. Bonkers, that guy. No wonder his daughter is short a few cards.
Pop goes the barrel.
I raise a finger, one of the few.
– Come to think of it, after I got my hands on those chompers, didn’t I lay them off on you?
I push off from the plywood and stroll toward the door.
– Tell ya, those teeth, in the wrong hands, they could start some serious trouble.
I stop at the door and look back at him.
He looks up, no movement in his face.
Dead face.
I smile.
– Hey, Terry, I didn’t know any better, I’d say for sure you were in the mood to kill someone.
Pop.
I wave as I make my way to the stairs at the end of the hall.
– Thanks for the answers on that one, Terry. That itch, been driving me nuts.
Thrashing.
Where’d Lydia get an idea like that?
Me, I’m miles from land, clinging to a scrap of wood, hoping to see a sail on the horizon. Someone at the rail to throw me a rope. Get me on deck, I can kill the crew and take the helm and point the damn thing where I want to go.