He heard the sound behind him, knew there were two. Picked up the Judge Hunter’s gun, fired it in a circle an inch above the ground. The first man stopped, stared at his leg and went down. Dredd swung his weapon by the barrel, and smashed the Hunter’s face. He glanced at the Hunter he’d shot in the foot. The man cursed him and started up again. Dredd kicked him soundly in the head.
Okay, three. Everybody down. He swept the weapon around the room to make sure.
Fergie walked out of the corridor, clutching half a brick in his hand.
“You’re not going to finish ’em off? Why the hell not?”
Dredd looked at him. “Because I’m innocent, remember?”
Fergie shrugged. “Yeah, I remember. So? You think those groons give a damn about that?”
“Thanks for jumping in,” Dredd said. “I appreciate the help.”
“Hey, I was
Dredd swung around in a blur. The Hunter was up on his knees, finger on the trigger of his weapon. His head exploded in a shower of red. Dredd stared at the man in the doorway, a dark silhouette against the stars. The Remington hanging from his hand, the long duster coat…
Fargo showed him a weary grin. “Welcome to Cursed Earth, Joseph. Hell of a place we’ve created out here. I guess hell’s the right word, all right.”
Fargo glanced at the dead Hunter, then looked back at Dredd.
“I’d like to say I felt something for him. I’d like to, but I don’t.” He studied Fergie a moment, decided he was too tired to ask who Dredd’s companion might be.
“I don’t guess I’m who I was when I came out here. I don’t think anyone
“Yes, sir. Sit down. Please.”
Dredd nodded at Fergie. Fergie searched the room, and came back with two glass jars of water. Fargo took a healthy swig, letting the liquid trickle down his chin.
“Tastes good.” He leaned back, took off his hat and wiped his brow. He looked about the room and smiled.
“A little irony, I guess. You and me and the others winding up here.”
“Sir?” Dredd raised a brow.
“Don’t know where you are, do you? Those columns, that piece of carving up there… This is a courtroom, Joseph. Or used to be. That, part of a face, what’s left of it. Up there?”
“Yes, sir.” Dredd agreed, though he wasn’t certain what he could or couldn’t see.
“That’s the blind lady. Justice. Before your time. Mostly before mine, too. She treated everyone the same. No favors, no secrets. A jury of ordinary people. Hard to believe
Dredd shook his head. “You had to. You brought order out of chaos.”
“That we did. Solved a hell of a lot of problems. And
He saw Dredd’s confusion, and laid a hand on his arm. He seemed to hesitate, lost for a moment in thought.
“I never thought we’d be sitting here together. Or that I might have the chance to tell you what I could never tell you before. To be a Judge, to decide the fate of thousands of lives during your career, I think that’s… too much power in one man’s hands. Too much, Joseph. For me, you, any man.”
He looked right at Dredd. Dredd read the doubt in the old man’s eyes, the sorrow and regret, the pain of recalling a past that was written in the stone of lost years.
“I once tried to compensate for that,” he said. “To strike some kind of balance, to eliminate the mistakes we might make, to put Justice beyond the possibility of error. We tried to… to create the perfect Judge. We called it Janus.”
Dredd frowned. “I don’t understand, sir. I’ve never heard that name before.”
Fargo shook his head. “No, no you haven’t. It was forty years ago, Joseph. To create the perfect Judge, DNA samples were taken from all members of the Council. The samples were analyzed and studied. One was chosen for the Janus project. Mine. It was then refined again and again. Altered to enhance the best qualities and screen out the worst. Weaknesses. Frailties. Any physical or mental characteristics that might obstruct the purpose of the project. We… we created you, Joseph.”
Dredd’s breath caught in his throat.
“Listen to me.” Fargo shook his head. “Let me finish this.”
“I had real parents. I wasn’t made by any…
“Yes, you were, Joseph.”
“Joseph…”
Dredd gripped Fargo’s arm. “My parents were killed. When I was just a kid. They told me at the Academy.
“It was a lie.”
“I have a
“You have a fake, a lie.” Fargo shook him off.
“Both of—both of who?”
Fargo wouldn’t look at him. “There was another person created in that experiment. But something went wrong. Terribly wrong.”
Dredd blinked in sudden understanding. “I have a
“Yes.”
“And what went wrong with him? Is he dead, did he die?”
“He didn’t die. You were best friends at the Academy. Inseparable. Both of you star pupils. Then he… turned. Went bad. We didn’t know until then. We created one perfect Judge, and another who genetically mutated into the perfect criminal.” Fargo stopped. “And for his crimes… you judged him.”
Dredd came to his feet, fists clenched at his sides.
“I couldn’t, Joseph. You were like a son to me.”
“A
“Rico had to be killed,” Fargo said. “To protect you. To protect the city.”
“To protect
“Yes. That’s true. God help me, I cannot deny that. I did it for myself, for all of us, for—”
“Wait, wait…”
It struck him, then, like a physical blow, real and so suddenly clear it nearly brought him to his knees.
“Rico. He’s not dead.” He stared at Fargo. “Rico’s still alive.”
Fargo looked at his hands. “No, he’s not dead, Joseph. He’s alive. I signed the order myself. He’s in Aspen Prison. Special quarters there. I couldn’t—I couldn’t destroy him, whatever he was. He’s part of me. Part of you.”
Dredd struck his fist against the wall. “Damn it,
“Oh, Joseph, Joseph…”
All the color drained from Fargo’s face. He looked at his hands, as if he might make the whole thing go away.
“How, though? How could he…” He looked up at Dredd. “Griffin. It has to be. There’s no one else. He’s