Read The Bridge Chronicles Trilogy Online

Authors: Gary Ballard

Tags: #noir, #speculative fiction, #hard boiled, #science fiction, #cybernetics, #scifi, #cyberpunk, #near future, #urban fantasy

The Bridge Chronicles Trilogy (35 page)

“Mr. Mayor will do,” Soto replied.

“So, Arturo, do you want to talk about what kind of a fuckup your boy Thames committed to make it necessary to do what I did?”

Soto waved his hand dismissively. “I’m not here to rehash the past. While your stunt certainly created a stir, it ultimately hasn’t hindered my administration in the slightest.”


Score one for the cocksucker,’
Bridge thought. The dancing had begun the minute Bridge stepped in the car, and so far, Soto had made it quite clear he would lead. Bridge’s attempts to get under the man’s skin had bounced off Soto’s so far impervious shell, while the politician had clearlyn had cl illustrated Bridge’s impotence. Bridge poured a two-finger draught of a fine bottle of whiskey from the mini-bar and sipped it casually. “Then to what do I owe the pleasure of riding in your fine tax burner and drinking some really outstanding whiskey on the regular jackoff’s dime?”

“Juan Ricardo,” the Mayor said with startling directness. “The man you call Stonewall. I want him.”

Bridge stopped cold in mid sip, savoring the taste of the alcohol as it burned his tongue, then letting the burn slip down his throat. He carefully placed the glass down in an opulently paneled cup holder and crossed his arms. “He doesn’t swing that way,” Bridge replied in a flat, humorless tone.

“Your attempts to draw me out by insulting my manhood are in vain, you realize. I know he’s your friend. I know that he has helped you out on occasion and you have done so in return. I know that he is now the leader of the so-called
Los Magos
gang that has infested our subways, a gang that is even now engaged in the first stages of a very dangerous, very loud street war with
El Diablos
. I know that you were enlisted to broker peace between the two factions, a peace that proved elusive. I know that he aided you during the unfortunate circumstances surrounding my election.” Bridge shouldn’t have been all that surprised. After all, most of what he got involved with was at least common knowledge to CLED and anyone on the streets. His activities weren’t exactly illegal; even under Chronosoft law, the police couldn’t really arrest someone for ‘knowing a guy.’ What really surprised Bridge was that the mayor had placed enough eyes on Bridge to gather information into one conversation.

“And I know that whatever happened in Boulder last year, he was with you.” The statement tossed Bridge’s stomach into a cyclone of nervous activity. He had supposed his trip to Boulder wasn’t a state secret. The knowledge could have been had, but it would have taken some digging. If the mayor’s people had done that digging, it meant that Chronosoft had that information as well. Every LGL in the world wanted to figure out what had happened in Boulder for one reason or another. The coinciding appearance of the technomancers so soon after the strange events in Boulder, as well as the Glowbugging business that could cause so many problems for the energy utilities those corporations ran made any knowledge of the Boulder incident priceless. The price could be in money or lives, and the corporations wouldn’t have cared either way. Tying Bridge to that event was more dangerous than any other business he could be involved in.

“What do you want with Stonewall?”

The triumphant gleam in Soto’s eye shot waves of anger through Bridge. Neither man liked being on the bottom in a negotiation, and both were well aware of the other’s position. “This street war is bad for business. It’s bad for your business, it’s bad for the corporation’s business, but most importantly, it’s very bad for the Local Governance License. You may not be aware of this, but the LGL program comes up for audit next year. One of the measures of its success is the ability to quell civil unrest and lower crime rates. Letting these Families run roughshod over the entire city, letting them shoot each other up like this is the Gaza Strip, letting them control one of the major branches of public transportation… well, it looks bad. As mayor, one of the pillarsf the pi of my campaign was rebuilding our city after the destruction these savages caused in the riots.”

The vague outline of the mayor’s plan began to form in Bridge’s mind. “Rebuilding. You’re moving all those people out, all those evictions… you’re taking the land. You’re going to redevelop it all, aren’t you?”

“We’re not just redeveloping, we are resurrecting! We’re reshaping the city into the kind of place it should be. Safe, clean…”

“Corporate.”

“Someone has to foot the bill. They should get a say in how their money is being spent.”

“And I suppose all the construction projects go through your companies, right?”

“Not officially, no. That wouldn’t be proper.”

“It’d be fucking illegal, even with the LGL’s lax laws regarding conflict of interest.”

“Yes, well, good thing those contracts aren’t going to companies I own, then isn’t it?”

“That’s it? That’s what this is all about? One great big land swindle? One real estate paper circle jerk that lines your pockets?”

“The profit is secondary to the vision. This city has been a cesspool for too long. The riots are what happen when you don’t drain the pool often enough. It’s time to drain the pool, skim off the shit and start over.”

Bridge chuckled. “Too bad there wasn’t a hurricane to wipe the map for you.”

“One makes do with what one has.”

“This gang war is the perfect excuse then. Let the spics kick up a little dust, so you can send CLED in to take them out and steal all their land. Not even going to provide them with some smallpox blankets? How can you do that to your own people?”

The calm veneer cracked for the first time since Bridge had gotten in the car. A tortured sneer erased Soto’s carefully crafted mask of indifference. “My people.” He growled. “You mean the Mexicans? I wasn’t born in Mexico, I was born right here. I grew up with two parents who did everything they could to hide their own heritage and they made damn sure I did too. You know why? Because they knew this country didn’t give a shit about a couple of wetbacks and their spic kid, legal or not. No matter how nice my clothes were, I was one more beaner sucking off the government tit. This country doesn’t give a fuck about culture, or people, Mexicans or blacks or whites or Chinese. All it gives a fuck about is money because money is power. My people lived in Boyle Heights and they got shot, their houses burned, their streets turned into a war zone by both the cops and those Mexicans you claim are my people. Why? Because they didn’t have the money to buy their own security, they didn’t make enough money for the cops to come down to come dhe streets every two minutes. Those same people you claim I should give a shit about will stab me in the back the minute things go to shit.”

“Fuck the other guy before he fucks you first,” Bridge rambled absentmindedly while staring out the window.

Soto smiled. The placid expression returned. “All you have to do is offer this Stonewall character up. Let us know where he’ll be, when he’s vulnerable. CLED will take care of the rest.”

Bridge tossed the rest of the drink back quickly. “I’ll see what I can do.” He spotted a battered street term out the window. Suddenly, he felt the irresistible urge to get out of the car, to be somewhere else as quickly as he could. “Drop me off here. I’ll catch a cab where I need to go.” The car slid gracefully to a stop at the corner.

“Glad to see we could come to some sort of understanding, Mr. Bridge,” Soto said with an oozing satisfaction as he opened the door. “I know that tinge of loyalty you’re feeling is a strong one. Best to ignore it. It will only get you into trouble.”

Bridge nodded, barely hearing a word the mayor said. He stood in a daze and waved as the car pulled away. He needed to think, and a long solitary cab ride would be the trick. He called Aristotle and Mu and told them to head home without him. When the cab came, he rolled down the window and slumped in the back seat, letting the cool night air flow over his face.

Over forty-five minutes later, he closed the front door of his apartment. The living room was bathed in shadows, the only light spilling in through the tiny slits in the front blinds. The hallway to the back bedroom was lit with the tiny sliver escaping through the door, which stood slightly ajar. He rubbed the stubble on his chin as he walked towards the room, buried in thoughts. Had he not been so preoccupied, he’d have noticed the eerie silence over the whole place. Absent were the whirring fans of a crèche cooling system. He should have heard the fans from the front door, but they were silent. Angela should have greeted him in holographic form as he came in. She very rarely slept outside the crèche this late at night.

But he noticed none of this. His thoughts were too heavy. It wasn’t until he saw Angela’s crèche that he noticed the missing ambient noise. The shiny black coffin was inert, no fans blowing, no lights on the surface indicating power and information flowing in and out of the pill-shaped box. The lid sat slightly ajar, but none of its internal lights shone from its innards. A hand hung limply from the opening. A female hand.

An explosion of pain and light filled Bridge’s vision and he slumped to the floor.

 

 

 

Chapter 9

March 9, 2029

11:51 p.m.

 

Copper. Spit it out. Wet. Fur. Scratching face. No. Carpet. Bedroom carpet. Dust smell. Dirty. Have to vacuum. Open eyes. Dark. Can’t see. Wait. Light. Pain. Light is pain. Room. Room spinning. Window. Ceiling. Fan. Slow turning. Revolution. Floor. Ugly brown carpet full of dust. Spit copper. Blood. It’s blood. On the carpet. Blink. Can’t see. Tears. Spit. Hands. Push up. Fall. Push up. Head swimming. Window. Crèche. Woman’s hand. Floor. Carpet. Up on hands again. Legs not working. Work. Get up. Blood. Raise hand to mouth. Blood. Headache. Bruise. More blood. Crèche. Not working. Legs moved. On your knees. Get up. Someone here. Foot in chest. Pushed on back. Ceiling. Face. Black face. Dreads. Blurry. Crèche. The crèche isn’t working. Angela’s crèche isn’t working and that’s her dead lifeless hand spilling from it.

Bridge’s senses returned slowly, a kaleidoscope of swirling images and swimming vision as he slowly regained consciousness. He ended up on his back with his attacker standing calmly over him. His limited perceptions could only focus on one thing at a time, and that thing was Angela. She was in her crèche, and she wasn’t moving. As clarity inexorably returned, the chain of events that led to this ordered themselves into a linear narrative that Bridge could comprehend.

The crèche, otherwise known as the SukeMura Sensory Deprivation GlobalNet Interface, was, for all intents and purposes, a sealed coffin-like environment. The user lay in its pill-shaped interior and had their senses removed one by one. A liquid suffused with a light anaesthetic absorbed through the skin removed the sense of touch, covering the body, face and head completely. Earplugs and an oxygen mask covered the face, eyes and ears, cutting off sound, sight and smell while providing oxygen. An intravenous drip provided nutrition on those long runs, and small electrodes provided tiny shocks that prevented muscular atrophy. A waste catch covered the genitals, removing the need for bio breaks. The crèche was an environment that isolated consciousness from its earthly shell, and the SukeMura plug provided an avenue to the great data ocean that was the GlobalNet.

Without electricity, the crèche became a watery coffin in fact as well as in appearance. Bridge had experienced the jolt of power loss during the riots and it had been terrifying. Oxygen stopped flowing, and water would begin seeping into the facemask with the slightest movement. All the senses that had been removed would fire back up instantly. Perception snapped from whatever fantastic vista the NetBody had been experiencing to the darkened, claustrophobic feeling of being buried alive while also drowning. The best crèche models, like the one Angela lay in, had multiple battery backups. All backups took seconds to warm up, enough time to extricate oneself from the crèche before suffocation or drowning, precious seconds of sheer, thrashing, panicked terror. The locks were designed to pop open as soon as power was interrupted, whether the backups engaged or not. Angela’s model could have kept her in power for at least an hour after power loss, more than enough time to escape safely.

Unless someone stopped her, that is. Bridge imagined her last moments. She could have held her breath a minute and a half, maybe two minutes tops. She would have thrashed about initially; taking precious seconds gous secoetting her physical bearings without thinking there was any danger. She would have checked the power readouts glowing on the goggles that blocked her vision. Those readouts would have been dead, of course, because Bridge could tell, even now as he scooted back to lean heavily against the wall, that the backups had been disabled before the power had been cut. Angela would have immediately realized that the crèche was dead in the water and moved her leaden arms to lift the lid. Bridge imagined the muffled, annoyed curses she would have tossed at the box, irritated at having her work interrupted. Even the first resistance to opening wouldn’t have registered as dangerous through her peevish mood. Only when the lid had refused to budge after a second, harder push would she have started to panic. A quick gasp would have caught in her throat, fogging the oxygen mask as she pulled the last, scattered remnants of air from the interior. Water would have begun to seep in under the mask, and she would have tried to raise her head above the water line, in that miniscule void space between the water level and the ceiling. But even there, the air would be fetid and scant, redolent with the scent of body odor, stale water and the memory of electrical current. She might have lasted whole minutes that way, frantically slamming her hands against the coffin’s lid, burning what little oxygen remained faster and faster with each second. Maybe she wouldn’t have screamed a scream that would have been swallowed up by the thick casing. The carpet showed the signs of the crèche having been moved after long months crushed down by the weight of the equipment, proving that she had struggled mightily. But it would have been in vain. Floating, exploding lights would have crept into the edges of her vision, followed by the dark, textured shroud of unconsciousness crawling across her eyes. All would have gone dark, her eyes rolling back into her head as the last scrabbling breath left her body and her lungs strained to extract any solace from the air. She would have fainted finally, falling back into the water with mouth wide, water seeping into her mouth and nose and filling her dead lungs.

Angela was dead. Bridge repeated the words over and over in his mind, unable to process the reality. Angela was dead. She was dead. That was her lifeless hand draped cruelly over the lip of the crèche. Angela was dead.

“Up here, mon.” The voice slapped Bridge out of his trance. It was a lilting, male voice tinged with the slightest hint of a Jamaican accent. “Yeah, that was I. Focus over here, mon.” Standing over Bridge with the smug confidence of a trained killer was a wiry black man, just over six feet tall with long, brownish-blonde dreads. A set of nasty scars made a second set of eyebrows on his forehead, glowing a mottled, angry red on his caramel skin. He had the penetrating gaze that Bridge had seen in so many killers before him, the disinterested focus of someone so emotionally detached from his targets that he could kill them without a visible change in mood. Dressed in a full body suit of black with various pouches holding the tricks of his trade and a gun at his side, he leaned casually on a long metallic fighting staff that appeared to be collapsible.

“I have done for your girlfriend there, and for dat, I apologize. Business of Babylon is an ugly ting,” he said without regret.

“So why am I still alive?”

“I and I needs to talk, yah?”

Bridr="#000"ge spit another bloody wad onto the carpet. He leaned back against the wall with a sigh. “You want to talk? You’re not one of those douchebag hitmen that has to talk philosophy with their victims before they kak them, are you? ‘Cos if you are, go the fuck ahead and kill me now.”

“In good time, brudda,” he laughed. “I and I got business first. I is Michael.”

Bridge wiped his lip and stared daggers through the hitman. “Artemis Bridge. We can talk. Sure, we can talk about what ever you want. But when we’re done, I’m going to kill you.”

 

 

 

If the killer Michael was taken aback by Bridge’s threat, he gave no indication of it. Instead, he leaned farther forward on the fighting staff until his cheek brushed the sparkling metal and smiled. “Cu yu. A lot of men done said that to I, mon,” he grinned, “and yet I still walks the earth. What I so sure about?”

Bridge ignored the question. “What shall we talk about then?” His mind worked at a mile a minute, doing everything it could to divert its attention away from the beautiful, lithe wrist dangling limply from the lid of the crèche. “How’d you get in here? Past the security systems, I mean.”

“Trade secrets, mon. Yahso had some bad mojo in dem walls, but I and I breaks it. I and I know why I is here?”

“Can you cut the phony Rasta crap and talk English to me?”

“Whatsa matta, mon, I and I no like the words of H.I.M.? Fair enough. I and I learn your words. School was good for something.” The switch from Rasta to English was as smooth as silk. Michael’s voice had a whispered calm that in any other circumstance would have been soothing. “The rasta thing tends to scare the white boys. Is that better?”

“Much,” Bridge nodded. “You weren’t here to kill her, then?” Michael shook his head.

“She was here, you weren’t. I wanted to make sure we understood each other.”

“That was your first mistake. I don’t like threats. They make my asshole itch.”

“No threat, mon. My instructions were specific. You and anyone around you are gone, but not before I get the information I need. Who was she?”

Bridge rested his arms on his knees and let his head sink to his chest. “You fucking moron. You just killed one of the most notorious hackers on the West Coast. The bounties on her head are probably worth twice what they are paying you for me. Didn’t you even do your due diligence?”

“She wasn’t important.”

Bridge gritted his teeth. “See, it’s that attitude that’s the reason I’m going to kill you. Who the fuck hired you? Did they pick you up at the loading docks of the local department store?”

“This job’s going to net me a cool million. Your little girlfriend couldn’t be worth that much.”

“More, asshole.” Bridge chuckled ruefully. “Your contract – it was corporate, wasn’t it?” Michael shrugged, confirming it without a word. “Yeah, I thought so. I swear, these suits really do not have a clue how to run a killing. It’s all brute force and show with them. Come in to a joint and waste everyone even remotely connected. Total waste. It’s like they don’t see anybody that lives in their world as able to do a deal. Now, if you come to me, maybe put a knife at her throat, talk to me like businessmen, maybe we could work something out. But no, it’s all raze the earth and salt the ground. No wonder they still can’t stamp out the mob.”

“Are you telling me you’d really have been willing to deal with a knife at your girlfriend’s throat? “

“Wouldn’t be the first time. Even that ain’t necessary though. Do your research, man. I don’t do violence. I’m a pussycat. I talk. That’s my thing. You want something, I get it for you. I’m your Bridge. Someone over there has what you want, I’m the conduit.”

“What if it’s you that has what I want?”

“That makes it so much easier. None of this messy shit. I got it, you want it. What is it?’

“Boulder.”

The stone of nervous anger dropped from Bridge’s throat to his stomach. His whole body tingled with fear, in his toes, his genitals, his ears. Bridge couldn’t help but show surprise in spite of his best efforts to hide it.

“You didn’t really think you could be involved in something that big and not suffer any consequences, did you?”

Bridge had not thought that, but perhaps in the back of his mind, he had hoped. The lack of any kind of pursuit, the smooth setup of the technomancers’ Council, all of it had happened with so few hitches. The Glowbug sales had gone well, the installation of Mu as a bodyguard and the street cred that had bought him. It had all lulled Bridge into a false sense of security, he now realized.

“One could always hope,” Bridge responded. “How’d they connect me with it?”

“Well, they don’t really have any firm connection to anything,” Michael began. “They know you were in the area right before that dragon went apeshit on GlobalNet. Satellite imagery has you entering the state of Colorado in a car with two others, scuttlebutt has you hanging around evacuee camps yet there’s no record of you entering them. Your teenage media sensation, Ms. Angst, mentioned reports filed from Boulder by someone, and you two have done busines done bus. But there’s no evidence that you ever left Boulder, yet somehow you’re back here. And you have a technomancer for a bodyguard, you’re helping this guy sell these ‘Glowbugs’ around town.”

Bridge stayed silent. “No answer for that? Yeah, I didn’t think so. Who’s your contact? Do you know Sanderson Fielding and if so, where is he? Is he your contact with these technomancers?”

The name Sanderson Fielding made Bridge’s head pop up. A wry smile crossed his lips, and inside he giggled as much as he could, given the circumstances. Whichever corporation had hired Michael, they were after Sanderson Fielding. That meant they really didn’t have a clue what had gone on in Boulder.

Fielding had been the first journalist to report on the existence of the technomancers, providing the GlobalNet with a first-hand view as Carl the Flaming Dragon attacked and was ‘killed’ by Colorado National Guard soldiers. Since then, he’d filed a few reports on the technomancers, using a combination of rumors, innuendo and careful distortion to build a mythology around the wizards who used technology to create spells. Every media corporation wanted an interview with Sanderson Fielding, and every utility corporation wanted him dead.

Only a few select people knew the truth about Fielding, though. He didn’t exist. He was a phantom, a virtual persona created by Bridge and propagated by Angela, Michael Freeman and a few other hackers. Bridge had dodged something of a bullet. If they were coming after Bridge for a connection to Fielding, it meant they really still didn’t know that Bridge was a silent partner of the technomancers. And so long as they didn’t have that piece of information, Bridge had wiggle room.

“Which corporation was it, then?” Bridge asked.

“Does it matter? Any corporation with energy interests wants a mana engine for research, and they want the Glowbug trade dead. Or in their hands, naturally. Babylon does not sleep on an open market.”

“I only wanted to know which specific one I should direct my rage towards once I get done with you. You’re right, though, it really doesn’t matter. They’re all bastards who deserve everything I’m about to do to them.”

Bridge was done with this conversation. He had been waiting to pull out his ace in the hole, trying to extract every bit of information out of Michael that he could. Bridge had gotten more than he would have expected, thanks to the hitman’s overconfidence. Michael had done at least enough homework to know that Bridge wasn’t a physical threat, and had gone no farther. He hadn’t counted on Bridge’s technomancer bodyguard, however. He had believed that so long as Mu wasn’t in the same room, the wizard wasn’t a threat.

Anticipating trouble was one of Bridge’s strengths. He had long anticipated someone coming after him, and despite the fact that neither Angela or his name had been in anyway connected with this apartment, he had prepared for the possibility that someone would find his home. Mu and he had designed a failsafe, a voice-activated spell, a ward that would obliterate the entire apartment and everything and everyone in it. The entire space entiree would be rendered as ash. Only Bridge could trigger it, and only Bridge and Mu had known about it, just in case.

Angela was dead, and Bridge needed to escape the heat. He struggled to his feet, his knees buckling a little as he did so. “I got one more thing to say to you,” Bridge began, all traces of a smile gone from his face.

Michael tossed a smug grin back. “What is that?”

“Fa-toom-sha.”

‘Fa-toom-sha? What are you…”

Fire, concussion, explosion, darkness.

 

 

 

Interlude

Gabby

March 10, 2029

1:33 p.m.

 

Gabby prided himself on being the kind of old school gangster nobody fucked with and for the most part, he fit that description. He dressed in his best
cholo
costume to do business, recognizing for his set and announcing his hardness. White wife-beater tee, nano-enhanced biceps festooned with tats signifying his proud membership in
El Diablos
. Short for Gabriel, Gabby had become more of an ironic nickname. He rarely spoke, an absolute vault anytime the police questioned him. Nacho himself, leader of
El Diablos
, had bestowed the nickname back when they were both street punks in
Los Magos
. Gabby had gotten nicked for a piss-ant gun possession charge. The gun had been part of a stash of weapons stolen from an LAPD precinct during the riots. He had refused to flip on the gun supplier, so Nacho had jokingly nicknamed him Gabby for being so talkative, and Gabby wore it proudly. When
El Diablos
had broken with
Magos
, Gabby had followed, buying completely into their ‘survival of the fittest’ mentality. The nano-steroids came soon after, exploding his body with garish strength. He had even gone so far as to add a cybernetic ceramic plate covering his chest and abdomen. He would be powerful. His body would be stronger than the bodies of his enemies and his inferiors. To that end, he had been plotting to take out his immediate superior, Hipolito, for the last month, but the opportunity had not yet arisen.

His shaved head sparkled in the early afternoon sunlight as he led his crew into a warehouse at the end of Factory Place. His brother Castro kicked the door open as loudly as he could to announce their presence, then gave way as Gabby strode through with his best tough-guy scowl. Xavier and Sergio brought up the rear. Though all were armed, none carried their gear out in the open, relying on their nano-enhanced bulk and cybernetic accoutrements to intimidate. Most of the time that worked.

The warehouse was the headquarters of Los Angeles Valley Shipping, a small-time outfit run by a wiry little white guy named Earnest. Earnest bought his protection from
Los Magos
, but he had the misfortune of being located on the border between
Diablos
and
Magos
territories. As the war had kicked up over the last two days, Earnest found himself caught in the middle. Yesterday, Gabby had given Earnest a choice. Come over to
El Diablos
side and pay the increased protection tax, or get shot in the face after watching his business burned to the ground. Gabby considered it a simple choice, but he had given the worm 24 hours to think it over. That time was up.

Gabby’s loud entrance had alerted the warehouse workers. Most fled. One decided to be a hero. The 6’6” black dude came strolling up to Gabby smacking his left hand with a crowbar in his right, his posture full of threat. Gabby smiled at him, silently urging him to attack. Castro raised his cybernetic left arm and giggled as the leads from his hidden taser flashed out and struck the hero on either side of the windpipe. The man crumpled almost immediately, twitching and screaming as the voltage coursed through him. “What’s that? I can’t hear you, blackie!” Castro shouted into the man’s face as he tittered with glee. Xavier planted a kick squarely in the prone man’s ribs.

“Time’s up, Earnest!” Gabby shouted to the deserted warehouse. A line of glassed-in cubicles made up the office area to the right of the entrance, but they appeared empty. Crates were stacked in neat rows all through the loading bays, and a few trucks sat in the doorways with their cab doors opened. The whole area was silent except for the droning hum of the giant cooling fans. Nothing moved. Earnest was nowhere to be seen. ‘
Surely they ain’t got out that quick,
’ Gabby thought to himself. At this time of day, the loading area should be a beehive of activity, forklifts buzzing around with their cargo, workers moving goods from here to there. He motioned for Xavier and Sergio to search the loading docks and drew a gigantic pistol from his waistband. Castro followed him to the offices, but they were as empty as they looked.

“You think he’s out to lunch, bro?” Castro asked. Gabby’s unibrow furrowed. Something didn’t feel right. He peered into the darkness of the loading area, spotting Xavier. The young Mexican had reached one of the trucks and raised the cargo door with a cacophonous clatter.

Three quick shots rang out, throwing Xavier’s body back into a stack of crates, where he fell to the floor and lay still. Gabby threw Castro and himself into one of the offices, seeking shelter behind a thick oak desk. Bullets rained through the air, shattering the cubicle’s glass and showering them with shards. He didn’t see where Sergio had gotten to, but as the first salvo of shots subsided, he could hear Sergio’s SMG burp into life.

Castro cursed next to him. “What do we do, bro? Call up the boys?” Gabby grunted affirmatively. He stuck a cautious eye above the desk, spotting their attackers. Five
Magos
poured out of one of the trucks, armed with a variety of weapons. Gabby aimed his hand cannon, the gun’s built-in sensors spewing reams of targeting data onto the HUD built into his eyes. The gun picked a target, a beefy
Magos
with cybernetic goggles where his eyes should be, and Gabby squeezed the trigger twice. He smiled with pleasure as he heard the booming of his gun, so loud it ecso loud hoed off the tiny walls of the office. The gun’s targeting had done the trick, both shots catching the target in the cheeks, evaporating his face. Gabby caught a glimpse of the cyber goggles flying through the air before ducking down again. The wall behind him splintered with return fire.

“Light ‘em up, bro,” he screamed at Castro. He squeezed off three quick shots over the desk without looking, giving his brother time to pop up. Castro pointed the cyber arm into the warehouse and fired the mini-missile from a port next to the taser. The thin shriek of a finger-sized missile slicing through the air made Gabby’s ears hurt, but the explosion that followed deafened him completely.

Castro’s shot had hit the truck the
Magos
had emerged from, the cargo area absolutely disintegrating in flame. ‘
Must have been the incendiary round,
’ Gabby thought with absentminded clarity. Through the ringing in his ears, he thought he could hear the keening wail of a man screaming in abject torment.

Gabby gave his gun a quick examination. When that douchebag in a suit had sold them these guns, he’d made great pains to point out their big-time cutting edge features. All their shiny new weapons had embedded target cams which could link with any interface system like the HUD in Gabby’s eye. He flipped the switch that turned the link on. The split vision in his right eye threw him off for a minute, the tiny targeting window displaying a double image of his feet. Gabby shook off the dizziness and placed the gun on the desk above him, tracking for targets. The screaming
Magos
had been too close to the truck, and his body had been splashed with fuel from the gas tank. Falling to the ground, the burning gangster twitched as his screaming died off. A
Magos
head poked out from behind a crate, and Gabby’s finger twitched involuntarily. The shot grazed the
Magos’
cheek bone, tossing him back away from his cover. Three tracer shots blazed through the air from the right. Sergio must have flanked the
Magos’
position and finished what Gabby started.

Other books

Deadly Little Lessons by Laurie Faria Stolarz
How I Fall by Anne Eliot
Retribution by Jeanne C. Stein
The Ground She Walks Upon by Meagan McKinney
Labyrinth by A. C. H. Smith
Dragons Luck by Robert Asprin
Kiss by Francine Pascal
Oliver's Online by Hecht, Stephani, Kell, Amber