"Little late to worry now. And as for the plane. I was afraid you"d take it into your head to go looking for Blaise, and frankly, funding the clinic is a h.e.l.l of a lot more important."
"You can be very cold."
"No, I just know when to cut my losses."
The cars up ahead suddenly braked and the red flare of their taillights punctuated and underscored Tach"s sharp reply. "I don"t think he"s a loss!"
"Then you"re a delusional fool."
Tachyon dropped his head briefly into his hand. "All right, I don"t want to think that."
Cody spun the wheel and they shot up the ramp and under a sign marked DEPARTING Pa.s.sENGERS.
"Better. G.o.d d.a.m.n it, Tachyon, in maybe twenty or thirty years I"ll have you past the guilt, out of the wallow of self-pity, and you"ll have figured out when to shut up."
"Thank heaven I"m a big enough man to listen to this catalog of my flaws."
Cody"s eye raked his diminutive form. "Well, your ego is big enough to handle it."
"I"m also highly encouraged."
"By what?"
"That you are willing to devote your life to the reclamation of my mind, body, and spirit."
The seat belt nearly cut Tach in half as Cody slammed on the brakes in front of the terminal.
"I don"t think my original statement went quite that way."
"It was implicit."
Tach closed the prosthetic hand around the handle and pushed open the door. Cody moved to the trunk and pulled out his two big suitcases.
"How long are you going to be gone?" she asked. "Three days."
"You"ve got enough here for a round-the-world cruise."
"But, my dear, one must dress."
He was smiling bravely up at her, but inside he suddenly felt like he was filled with broken gla.s.s. Tears sprang to his eyes, and he muttered a curse.
Cody laid her hands on his shoulders. "What is it? You look stricken."
"I don"t know. Nothing." Tach shook his head. "I am suddenly just so very, very unhappy."
For a long moment she looked at him, then bending down, she placed a soft feather-light kiss at the corner of his mouth. Tachyon stared at her in amazement.
"Smile for me, kid," she said, a crooked smile curving her own lips.
Tachyon burst out, "Cody, come with me to Washington."
"What? You"re crazy. I"ve got no ticket, I don"t have any luggage, what about my kid-" She paused for breath. "And who"s going to run the clinic?"
People were shouldering past them as the couple blocked the automatic doors into the terminal.
"Please, I am frightened for you."
"I"ll holler if I need you."
"It will be too far to come."
"You"re hysterical. It"s the pain pills talking."
"Cody, he means to harm us."
"Do you or don"t you want me to call the police and have them search for Blaise?"
"No." Tach stared seriously up at her. "For if he"s found, I shall surely have to kill him."
When you"re stark naked and dressed only in a scarlet robe that had obviously been ripped off from some local Episcopalian church choir, you can feel like a real dork.
Add to that the fact that nerves were giving Blaise the most amazing hard-on it had ever been his pleasure to experience. Or maybe he just got off on big black candles and a droning tape of Tibetan monastery chants, he thought ironically as Molly led him into the dark, echoing room. Molly glanced down at his p.e.n.i.s thrusting aggressively from between the folds of his gown, and grinned. "You"re gonna do just fine," she muttered as if to herself, but intending for Blaise to hear.
He didn"t respond. This and anything that followed could be endured. The ultimate prize was too great to blow it with a fit of temper now.
Jumpers lined the walls. Blaise did a quick head count. Forty-two. But many of those weren"t jumpers. You couldn"t jump until you"d been initiated. Most, like Kelly, were still waiting. Blaise noted that two-thirds were boys. Why? Did it whatever it was-affect males more strongly than females? How did one make a jumper?
A lurid green pentagram had been painted on the stained tile floor. On the walls were painted other occult symbols. The swastika, a leering goat"s head, 666. The enormous room was lit by a score of black candles, but they did little more than chase the shadows into the corners of the roof where they hung like brooding bats.
In the center of the pentagram was a low table. It was an odd height if it was meant to serve as an altar. And the three red satin pillows tossed on its polished black surface really ruined any hope of suggesting blood sacrifices.
Molly closed her fingers around Blaise"s left wrist and led him three times around the pentagram. At the eastern point they stepped into the figure, and the jumpers let out a weird, undulating cry. Blaise had to bite back a laugh. Then from the darkness a man"s voice asked, "Who comes to be made?"
"Only one, Prime," called Molly. "Is he worthy?"
"He is brave. He is trustful."
"Will he serve?"
Molly nudged Blaise.
"I"ll serve," the boy replied. Apparently it was the right answer.
Molly signaled and Kent hurried forward to pull off the choir robe. They were all staring at him. Kelly especially. Blaise ran a hand across his chest.
Noticed that he was starting to grow hair. He had become a man. He could pinpoint the moment. He had gone into that morgue a child. Emerged a man.
"Lie down on the table," whispered Molly. "With your stomach on the pillows."
For a moment he bridled at the undignified positionhis bare a.s.s thrust aggressively skyward.
Patience. Patience.
Tachyon vomiting his life out across the hood of his limo. No, even better across Cody"s lap.
Paper-dry hands cupped his rump, and Blaise almost lost it.
Didn"t take a genius to figure out what was coming. Parted his b.u.t.tocks.
Oh, I"m gonna get you for this, Grandpa! Tearing pain as the man thrust deep within him.
A lifetime later and it was over. Blaise rose stiffly from the table. There was blood on his a.s.s and legs.
The man gestured a broad sweeping motion that set the hanging sleeve of his gown to swaying. "Reach out. Seize one of them. Trade with them. For you it should be child"s play."
Yeah, snarled Blaise internally, and he reached out for the man.
Nothing happened. Behind the mask the man"s eyes glittered. The mouth twisted stiffly into a smile.
"You beautiful b.a.s.t.a.r.d," the Prime said. "You would try to f.u.c.k with me. Forget it, I can"t be jumped."
"Can you be killed?" Blaise asked sweetly. From behind him he heard Molly gasp.
"Oh, yes, but without me there are no more jumpers. Don"t shoot yourself in the foot, Blaise, in a fit of pique." The hem of the gown whispered about his feet as the Prime turned and slunk back into the shadows.
Blaise turned back to his peers. They peered back at him like bright cardinals in their scarlet robes.
"Come on, let"s play," said Molly.
And Blaise reached out. Seemed to bounce out of his skin. Shoot like liquid fire. He came to rest in Kent"s body. He looked out at the world from new eyes.
Glancing down, he studied the overly long thumbnail on the right hand, the callused finger pads. Would the body remember how to play guitar? Blaise wondered. Then he was on to other sensations. Like the fact that Kent smelled funny. Blaise looked across to his body. Molly and Kelly were easing it to the floor. It... he ... Kent-d.a.m.n!-seemed to be conscious, but frozen in some kind of fugue state.
Blaise made the jump back. Shook off Kelly"s patting hands. Climbed to his feet.
Raucous laughter rang through the rafters, skittered among the shadows. The jumpers stood in shocked silence.
Blaise threw back his head and screamed like a banshee.
"Oh, Tachyon! You"re going to wish I had only killed you!"
n.o.body"s Home
by Walton Simons
Kenneth was late. Central Park baked in the August heat. Most of the animals in the zoo were napping. Jerry sat in front of the seventy-five-foot-tall cage that had been his home back when he was a giant ape. A lone pigeon walked up to him, head bobbing. Jerry shooed it away.
He felt a strong hand on his shoulder.
"It"s just me," Kenneth said, sitting down beside him. "Sorry I"m late."
"What"s up? You sounded pretty mysterious on the phone."
Kenneth nodded. "It"s Latham. He"s going around the bend, I think. He"s involved in more than you can imagine. For years he"s been a major figure in the Shadow Fist Society. Which includes everyone from punks like the Immaculate Egrets and Werewolves up to very respectable businessmen. And Latham"s in it up to his neck."
"But he"s got something on you, too. Right?" Jerry leaned forward. He"d been trying to come up with material on Latham for months, and hadn"t turned up anything other than a few interesting reports from his time in Vietnam.
Kenneth looked away. "There are some things I"d rather Beth didn"t know about.
Other women. We"ve made such progress since almost getting divorced. I don"t want to jeopardize my marriage. Latham has some pretty graphic evidence. One of the women I saw was working for him." He turned back to Jerry. "This isn"t to be repeated, you understand."
"Only under torture," Jerry said. "Who"s Kien?"
"You"re better off not finding out, but it may come to that soon."
"What do you mean?" Jerry wiped his sweaty forehead. "Latham knows I have information on him. He wants to trade it for what he has on me." Kenneth shook his head. "But I"ve known St. John a long time. He"ll hold back something to keep me in line."
"So what are you going to do?"
"Give you my file on Latham, if you"ll have it. He"s made some threats lately. I wouldn"t put it past him to break into the house trying to get them. Beth might get hurt. This way I can let it drop that the papers are no longer in my home.
He"ll suspect you might have them, of course."
Jerry shrugged. "The day a native New Yorker is scared of some high-cla.s.s thug from Beantown will never come." Jerry paused. "Well, maybe he does make me a little nervous."
"Good, because he"s a very dangerous man." Kenneth looked straight at Jerry.
"You"re sure you don"t mind?"
"Nope. Look over there." Jerry pointed at the chimp cage. One of the apes was high in a tree, throwing its s.h.i.t at another on the ground. "That"s what we"ll be doing to Latham soon."
"I"ll settle for a return to the established balance of fear," Kenneth said.
"We"ll manage," Jerry said, putting his hand on his brother"s shoulder.
"Thanks." Kenneth opened his briefcase. "Now, let"s discuss what you"re going to do about your appointment with the city officials next week."
"Right." Jerry sighed and stared back at the chimp cage. Sometimes the s.h.i.t got thrown at you, as well.
Jerry sat on the worn, orange couch, shifting his weight. It was hot outside and his sweaty legs stuck to the cushion through his pants. The waiting room was quiet, except for the male secretary"s fingers on the keyboard, m.u.f.fled voices from inside the offices, and the breathing of the joker woman sharing the couch with Jerry.