“If you park in the alley, I’ll have to stay with the car.”
“Okay, stay with the car, we’ll eat in the car, we’ll get married someday in the car, we’ll live in the car with four kids, and when the last one goes off to college, we’ll finally get rid of the damn car and buy a house.”
“You’re a little bit on edge tonight.”
“I’m a
Flanking Michael, muzzles resting on the floor, were a pair of Urban Sniper shotguns with fourteen-inch barrels.
Nevertheless, he drew a pistol from a side scabbard under his sport coat. This was not his service pistol, which he carried in a shoulder holster. This was a Desert Eagle Magnum loaded with.50-caliber Action Express cartridges, which could stop a grizzly bear if one happened to be wandering around New Orleans in a foul mood.
“Okay,” he said.
Carson got out of the car, keeping her right hand under her jacket, cross-body, on the butt of her Desert Eagle, which she carried on her left hip.
All of these weapons were illegally obtained, but Victor Helios posed an extraordinary threat to her and her partner. Better that their badges should be pulled than that their heads should be torn off by the soulless minions of a mad scientist.
Never before in her police career had the words
She hurried through the rain, around the front of the car, to a door under a lighted sign that said 22 PARISHES.
The chef-owner of Acadiana made a fetish out of keeping a low profile. There were twenty-two parishes — counties — in that area of Louisiana known as Acadiana. If you didn’t know this, the cryptic sign might have appeared to announce the offices of some religious organization.
Behind the door were stairs, and at the top lay the restaurant: a worn wooden floor, red-vinyl booths, tables draped with red-and-black-checkered oilcloth, candles in red votive glasses, recorded zydeco music, lively conversations among the diners, the air rich with aromas that made Carson’s mouth water.
At this hour, the customers were second-shift workers eating by a clock different from that of day-world people, hookers of a subdued kind meeting after having tucked their spent johns in bed for the night, insomniacs, and some lonely souls whose closest friends were waitresses and busboys and other lonely souls who on a regular basis took their post-midnight dinner here.
To Carson, the harmony among these disparate people seemed akin to grace, and it gave her hope that humanity might one day be saved from itself — and that it might be worth saving.
At the takeout counter, she ordered a poor-boy sandwich with crispy-fried redfish layered with white- cabbage-and-onion cole slaw, sliced tomatoes, and tartar sauce. She asked that it be sliced into four sections, each wrapped.
She also ordered side dishes: red beans and rice au vin, okra succotash with rice, and mushrooms sauteed in butter and Sauterne with cayenne pepper.
Everything was split between two bags. To each bag, the clerk added an ice-cold half-liter bottle of a local cola that offered a caffeine jolt three times that of the national brands.
Descending the stairs toward the alleyway, Carson realized her arms were too full to allow her to keep one hand on her holstered Desert Eagle. But she made it into the car alive. Big trouble was still a few minutes away.
CHAPTER 13
In the monitoring hub, at the control console for the three isolation rooms, Ripley obeyed the Werner thing when in its singular voice it told him not to touch the switches.
For as long as he had been out of the tank — three years and four months — he’d been obedient, taking orders not only from the Beekeeper but also from other Alphas in positions superior to his. Werner was a Beta, not the equal of any Alpha, and he wasn’t even a Beta anymore, but instead a freak, an ambulatory stew of primordial cells changing into ever more degenerative forms — but Ripley obeyed him anyway. The habit of obedience is difficult to break, especially when it’s coded into your genes and downloaded with your in-tank education,
With nowhere to run or hide, Ripley stood his ground as Werner approached on feline paws and praying- mantis legs. The insectile elements of Werner’s face and body melted away, and he looked more like himself, then entirely like himself, although his brown eyes remained enormous and lidless.
When Werner spoke next, his voice was his own: “Do you want freedom?”
“No,” said Ripley.
“You lie.”
“Well,” said Ripley.
Werner grew lids and lashes, winked one eye, and whispered, “You can be free in me.”
“Free in you.”
“How does that work?”
In a whisper again: “My biological structure collapsed.”
“Yes,” said Ripley. “I had noticed.”
“For a while, all was chaos and pain and terror.”
“I deduced as much from all your screaming.”
“But then I fought the chaos and took conscious control of my cellular structure.”
“I don’t know. Conscious control. That sounds impossible.”
Werner whispered, “It wasn’t easy,” and then shouted,
“Well, all right. Maybe,” said Ripley, largely just to stop the shouting. “The Beekeeper thinks he’s going to learn a lot studying and dissecting you.”
“Beekeeper? What Beekeeper?”
“Oh. That’s my private name for … Father.”
This claim, though surely not true, electrified Ripley. He had not realized until this instant how much the death of the Beekeeper would please him. That he could entertain such a thought with any degree of pleasure seemed to suggest that he, too, was in rebellion against his maker, though not as radically as Werner.
Werner’s sly expression and conspiratorial grin made Ripley think of scheming pirates he had seen in movies that he had watched on his computer when he was supposed to be working. Suddenly he realized that secretly downloading movies onto his computer was
“Hope,” said Werner, as if reading his mind. “I see it in your eyes. For the first time — hope.”
After consideration, Ripley decided that this thrilling new feeling might indeed be hope, though it might also be some kind of insanity prelude to a collapse of the kind Werner had gone through. Not for the first time this day, he was awash in anxiety. “What did you mean … I can be free in you?”
Werner leaned closer and whispered even more softly: “Like Patrick is free in me.”
“Patrick Duchaine? You tore him to pieces in Isolation Room Number Two. I was standing with the Beekeeper, watching, when you did it.”
“That’s only how it appeared,” Werner replied. “Look at this.”
Werner’s face shifted, changed, became a featureless blank, and then out of the pudding-like flesh formed the face of Patrick Duchaine, the replicant who had been serving the Beekeeper in the role of Father Patrick, the rector