'He can’t be gone,” Zsadist said hoarsely. “He just can’t be…”
Chapter Forty-four
'What do you mean, work?” the guy with the prison tats said.
Lash put his elbows on his knees and looked his new best friend in the eyes. How the two of them had gone from loudmouth loggerheads to cozy as kittens was a testament to the powers of seduction. First you hit head-on to establish equality. Then you showed respect. Then you talked about money.
The other two, the ’banger with,
Lash smiled. “I’m looking for help with enforcement.”
Prison Tat’s stare was full of dirty deeds done dirt cheap. “You run a bar?”
“Nope.” He glanced at RIP. “Guess you could say it’s territorial.”
The ’banger nodded like he knew all the rules of that board game.
Prison Tat flexed his arms. “What makes you think I’d carry on anything wichu? I don’t know you.”
Lash leaned back so his shoulders were against the cinder blocks. “Just thought you’d like to make some green. My bad.”
As he closed his eyes like he was going to sleep, he heard voices that popped open his lids. An officer was bringing another offender down to the holding cell.
The newbie was let in, and the three hard-asses pulled their glaring, watch-yer-ass welcome wagon. One of the junkies looked up and offered a watery smile like he knew the guy in a business capacity.
Interesting. So the guy was a dealer.
Eagle Man sized up the crowd and nodded to Lash in recognition before taking a seat on the other end of the bench. He looked more annoyed than scared.
Prison Tat leaned into Lash. “Didn’t say I weren’t interested.”
Lash shifted his eyes over. “How do I find you to talk terms?”
“You know Buss’s Bikes?”
“It’s that Harley rehab place on Tremont, right?”
“Yeah. Me and my bro own it. We ride.”
“Then you know more people who could help me.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
“What’s your name?”
Prison Tat’s eyes narrowed. Then he pointed to a depiction of a Harley low-rider that was inked on his arm. “You call me Low.”
Diego RIP’s foot started tapping, like he was holding something in, but Lash wasn’t ready to tango with the gangs or the skinheads. Not yet. Starting small was safer. He’d see if he could add a couple of bikers to the Lessening Society mix. If that worked out, then he’d go trolling. Maybe even get his ass arrested again as an entree.
“Owens,” a cop called out at the door.
“Laters,” Lash said to Low. He nodded at Diego, the skinhead, and the dealer and left the druggies to their conversations with the floor.
Out in central processing, he waited while an officer explained page after page of “here are the charges against you,” “this is the public defender’s office number-you need to call them if you want to get assigned an attorney,” “your court date is in six weeks,” “if you fail to show, your bail will be forfeited and an arrest warrant will be issued,” blah, blah, blah…
He signed the name Larry Owens a couple of times, and then he was let out into the hall he’d been led down while handcuffed eight hours ago. At the end of the linoleum stretch, Mr. D was sitting in a grotty plastic chair, and as he got to his feet he seemed relieved.
“We’re going for food,” Lash said as they headed toward the exit.
“Yes, suh.”
Lash walked out of the front of the CPD’s building, too distracted by the things he needed to do to think about the time. When the sunshine hit him square in the face, he reared back with a scream and slammed into Mr. D.
Covering his face, he scrambled back for the building.
Mr. D caught him by the upper arms. “What-”
“The sun!” Lash was almost back through the doors when he realized… nothing was happening. There was nothing up in flames, no great ball of fire, no horrible burning demise.
He stopped… and turned around to face the sun for the first time in his life. “It’s so bright.” He shielded his eyes with his forearm.
“You’re not supposed to look straight into it.”
“It’s… warm.”
Falling back against the building’s stone facade, he couldn’t believe the warmth. As the rays beat into him, they radiated through his skin into his muscles.
He’d never envied humans before. But, God, if he’d known how this felt, he would have all along.
“You okay?” Mr. D asked.
“Yeah… yeah, I am.” He closed his eyes and just breathed in and out. “My parents… they never let me go out. Pretrans are supposed to be able to handle sunlight up until the change, but my mom and dad never wanted to risk it.”
“Can’t imagine not havin’ no sun.”
After this, neither could Lash.
Tilting his chin up, he closed his eyes for a moment… and vowed to thank his father the next time he saw him.
This was… magnificent.
Phury woke up with a burning, foul taste in his mouth. Actually it was all over, like someone had sprayed the inside of his skin with oven cleaner.
Eyes were glued shut. Stomach was a lead ball. Lungs were inflating and deflating with all the enthusiasm of a pair of stoners the day after a Grateful Dead binge. And leading the charge on going absolutely nowhere was his brain, which evidently had flatlined and not been resuscitated along with the rest of his body.
Actually, his chest was pretty much a closed shop as well. Or…no, his heart must have still been beating, because… well, it had to be, didn’t it? Or he wouldn’t have thoughts, right?
An image of the gray wasteland came to him, the wizard silhouetted against that vast gray horizon.
The wizard laughed.
Phury groaned and heard someone move.
“Cormia,” he croaked.
“No.”
That voice, that deep, male voice. So like the one that came out of his own mouth. In fact, it was identical.
Zsadist was with him.
As Phury turned his head, his brain sloshed in his skull, his bone dome nothing but a fish tank that had water and plants and a little treasure chest with bubbles, but nothing with fins in it. Nothing that actually lived.
Z looked as bad as Phury had ever seen him, with dark shadows under his eyes and his lips drawn tight and that scar more visible than ever.
