Dumpster.
I hit the rusted metal and rolled as a thud pounded through my chest and an explosion ripped through the wall behind me.
Calliope Flax—Wilamil Court, Apartment #516
I sat up on the couch and grabbed the pint bottle off the table next to it. I took a swig of hot whiskey and blew fumes out my nose. My right hand hurt like hell, and the left one kept ticking. I cut open the knuckles on both of them when I beat down that fat piece of shit the night before. The last thing I needed was another assault charge, but the cops never came.
The reminder to check my files popped up in the dark behind my eyelids. I pulled up the text from where I’d buried it. There were three notes:
I remembered that one. The other two, I didn’t.
I opened my eyes and sat up. I checked the JZI buffer. It was empty.
If I didn’t remember it and the JZI record was wiped, then someone who knew I might be recording was fucking with me.
I could see the flag from the couch—black and red with a green shield on it. I’d ripped it off the wall of a bomb-shelled office in Juba after we took out a pack of rebels inside. I used it to wrap the naked girl when I took her out of there. It hung ceiling to floor on the wall right across from the shitter. I knew for a fact there was no door behind it.
Didn’t I?
I put down the bottle, then got up off the couch and walked across the room to the wall with the flag. After a minute, I pulled up the file and made a note:
The buzzer went off at the front and I jumped.
“Shit!”
I stood there for a minute. My hand was still out, hanging there like I was scared to look.
The buzzer went off again.
“Keep your pants on!” I yelled. It had to be Buckster.
I let the flag fall back into place and went to the front door. When I opened it, Leon was there, wearing a rain coat with the hood pulled back.
“Hey, Chief.”
“Hey, yourself. Bad time?”
“No.”
He looked past me and smiled.
“Looks like you’re making yourself at home.”
“Yeah.”
The place they set me up had started to grow on me. The pipes worked and the heat and water stayed on. The people there weren’t a bunch of drunks and bums. After Bullrich and the grind, it was actually not half bad.
“You gonna let an old man in?”
“Sorry,” I said, opening the door. “You want a drink or something?”
“Don’t mind if I do.”
He shut the door behind him, then shook off his coat and threw it on the hook.
“I gotta piss first.”
“Have at it.”
I hit the can and left the door open a crack while I took a seat. I made one last note before I shut the file down:
The flood gates let go and I cracked my back.
Outside, I heard the old man’s ass hit the chair.
“You on Second Chance time or your own time?” I called out.
“Mine.”
“Damn it …”
I finished up and flushed. When I came back out to the main room, I found him leaning back in my chair.
“Make yourself at home,” I said. Wachalowski was still idling on the other end of the circuit.
I closed the link. In the kitchen, the sink was full of dirty dishes, but I had two clean glasses on the counter. I