Deckard felt the soft, hot pulse. Enough meters away that he was only knocked back against the wall of the building beside him, impact with brick and metal jarring him dizzy for a moment. Neon serpents, kanji store signs, hissed a rain of sparks, glass tubing shock-broken, upon him and the others who’d been knocked off their feet. Bracing himself against the wall, Deckard pushed himself upright, the figures around him still on their hands and knees, trying to crawl away across the bright shrapnel of the shattered windows, or gaping at the inferno crash, now at ground zero.
The blimp’s rudimentary skeleton, meridians of an ovoid globe, showed through the engulfing flames. Another mortar had been fired, but with no incendiary charge. Instead, a grappling hook, prongs snapping into a sharp-pointed iron flower, ran a cord from the blimp’s wreckage, back to an anchor point in the alley on the other side of the street. Hunched against the blaze’s thermal force, Deckard shielded his eyes with his hand, squinting at the action on the other end of the taut line.
More of the blimp’s frame twisted and burst rivets free as the hulk collapsed with terminal grandeur into the street, the blunt nose fire-wrapped and gouging a ragged furrow into the concrete; the tail end’s stubby fins clawed out a row of tenth-story windows before tearing loose and sailing aloft on the fire’s updraft.
Another pair of iron hooks, looped overhead and handthrown by the figures in the alley, snagged the black frame, drawing it down tighter, as though the burning craft were an animal that might tear loose in its agony and vault into the smoke-clouded sky. Deckard could see the men, a half dozen or so gritting their teeth, clad in white fireproof Nomex suits, tugging at the lines, leaning back with their feet braced against the ash-strewn pavement.
The lower edge of the blimp’s billboard-sized viewscreen hit the ground with a sharp jolt, evoking a last flicker of life from it. The visual programming went into skittering fast-forward mode.
The voice of the images screamed. No longer seductive, cajoling: “A new life!” Pitch whipping higher, as though in sudden fear: “New life! Chance! New!” Into the idiot ultrasonic, trembling the shards of glass left in the buildings’ window frames: “Start anew!”
One of the attackers ran out from the alley, line and grappling hook circling over his head and uplifted hand. The dead and still living who’d been caught in the explosion sprawled at his feet as he let go, the hook singing toward the center of the tilted viewscreen. The pronged metal hit square the rapid play of colored photons. They flew apart, the rigid membrane that had trapped them now dissolving into razor bits, the circuitry beneath arcing into overload and meltdown. Deckard spun away, shielding his face with his arm, the fragments of glass and hot-tipped wires falling across his shoulders like hail.
“It’s all lies!”
Another voice, amplified but not the one that had boomed, then screamed from the crashing blimp. He turned back to the street, the infinitesimal bell-like percussion of glass fragments chiming across the now-vacated street. One of the mortar crew-maybe the one who’d run out with the last grappling hook; he couldn’t tell—had leapt onto one of the bent metal struts, the dying flames silhouetting his insulated form. The man had black carbon streaks across his wild-eyed face, a bullhorn in his thickgloved hand.
“They’re telling you lies!” Shouting through the flared horn, voice snapping its echo against the surrounding towers. “It’s always been lies!”
Deckard stepped away from the wall behind him, to the curb and then down to the debris-filled street. Scraps of the blimp’s fabric, still burning and exuding oily black smoke, spotted the asphalt. Distant sirens, approaching at ground level and in the sky, cut through the cries and shouts of the crowd that had packed the space only a few minutes before.
“You have to listen!” The voice coming out of the bullhorn had a fanatic’s, a believer’s, trembling edge. “Not to me . . . but to them!” Even from where Deckard stood, a mad illumination shone visible in the man’s gaze. “They’ve come back . . . to tell us!” The man turned, holding on to an upright strut of the blimp’s frame for balance, aiming the bullhorn’s trajectory across all the angles of the street. “They know the truth! They’ve been shown the light! The light of the stars!”
From the corner of his eye, Deckard saw other motion. The koban booth had been toppled over in the explosion, pinning the uniformed cop. Face bloodied, the cop had now managed to get out from underneath and was struggling to get to his feet. He’d already drawn the heavy black gun from his belt.
“Humans! Jesus Christ doesn’t love you anymore!” An aching whine of feedback tagged along with the words shrieking out of the bullhorn. “The eye of compassion has moved on! It sees only suffering! The eye of compassion no longer sees you.”
Deckard turned from the sight of the ranting figure, the blimp’s smoldering ruins a pulpit, and saw the uniformed cop aiming the gun, arms outstretched, one hand folded over the other.
A red bloom appeared on the front of the ranting man’s white Nomex jumpsuit. Silent now, he looked down. Then he crumpled, gloved hand letting go of the frame strut beside him, body folding around the splintered breastbone and falling to the flame-specked pavement.
“Hey!” With one hand braced against the metal weight on his leg, Deckard ran toward the cop. He ignored the black hole of the gun’s snout swinging around in his direction. “They’re over there! The ones who did it—” When the cop’s shot had silenced the bullhorn, the rest of the crew in the alley had fled, abandoning the mortar behind them. Deckard pointed to another, closer space between the street’s buildings. “I saw them go!”
He knew he had to work fast before the approaching LAPD spinners landed on the scene. The beams of their searchlights were already stabbing down from above, sweeping across the wreckage.
The cop, a net of blood over his face, still looked stunned. He let Deckard grab his arm and pull him toward the unlit space away from the street.
“Right back here—” In the buildings’ shadow, he pushed the uniformed cop a step ahead of himself.
“Huh?” The cop raised his wobbling gun, aiming at nothing. “I don’t see any—”
His words were cut off as Deckard brought the steel rod across his throat. Hands on either end, a knee braced hard against the small of the cop’s back. A sharper tug and less than a minute of pressure on the windpipe, the cop dangling and struggling red-faced, then only dangling-he let go and the cop fell, palms and open mouth against the alley’s heat-cracked cement.
He glanced over his shoulder as he bent above the unconscious cop. The police spinners had landed, their red and blue strobe flashers painting a luminous carnival across the building fronts and the downed U.N. blimp. Paramedic units hovered above, waiting for the SWAT teams to finish securing the area. The hands of the injured clutched at the black-uniformed knees, then were kicked aside as the officers established a perimeter with assault rifles leveled in all directions.
Hands as hooks under the cop’s arms, Deckard dragged him farther into the darkness. It took only a few minutes to strip the LAPD uniform off the lolling body, put it on with all buckles and other pieces of leather and chrome snapped tight. He wadded up the white jacket and his own dirtstained clothing and tossed them away.
The cop, vulnerable-looking in bare skin and boring underwear, started to move, eyes fluttering open. Deckard fished the cuffs from the uniform’s belt and fastened the cop’s wrists behind a convenient drainpipe. Before the cop could make a sound, Deckard had the miranda gag slapped over the other man’s face, the oxygen-permeable membrane stifling even the whisper of his breathing.