No dogs in philly, p.9

No Dogs in Philly, page 9

 

No Dogs in Philly
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  There he was, Friar, in the flesh. But where was there? They stood on a circular stone pillar about the diameter of a hot tub. Beyond the pillar was black, nothing but infinite black. She looked over the edge, far too close for her comfort, and saw more black. Up black, down black, left black, right black. If this was a vik it was about the most unimaginative she’d ever encountered, and easily the most realistic. The stone felt hard and real, she was honest-to-God freezing her tits off, and try as she might she couldn’t bring her focus back to the real world. She was stuck here. Great.

  Friar looked like he had looked alive: short, portly, balding, aged and wise with his professor getup. He seemed to be trying to talk but almost like he’d forgotten how. A lip-like indentation had formed in his forehead and was gabbing up and down. It migrated to his left cheek and then slithered down into his mouth. His real lips started moving and a sound came out like he was singing and moaning at the same time. The sound didn’t dissipate; it just built and echoed and piled onto the previous notes echoing and bouncing through the black, louder and louder and louder. She clamped her hands over her ears but the sound was inside her, forcing her to her knees. Then there was a pop.

  It was quiet and she was wet. She was kneeling in a puddle of orange…water? It felt strange on her, tingly. She stood and looked around and decided that if she was ever going to panic then now would be an excellent time. She wasn’t on Earth, that was for sure, or any place she could conceive of as being Earth-like. It was a swamp of tiny orange pools amidst a veiny, purple and green ground that was spongy and slick with what seemed like phlegm. There were trees, if you could call them that—sharp, geometric arrangements, black, zigzagging, right-angle branches sprouting from furry testicles, climbing up and joining together to form a geodesic canopy. There were things moving through the canopy, things slithering through the muck, the whole place crawled and twitched with life. Her Betty flew to her hand; she was going to start blasting but the gun turned into a flower. Friar appeared in front of her and took it.

  “I’m sorry, Saru. I’m so sorry,” he said. It was his real voice.

  “Tell me,” she said, fighting the panic. “Tell me right now if this is real.” As if she could trust him. He was as much a conjuring as anything else here—more so. Something fluttered overhead. Faint strings like strands of spider web slithered down from the canopy and caught a flitting—was it a bird? It had no wings, just a black, spiky/furry body with a large red hole that could have been its mouth or its ass or an eyeball. The spider strands constricted and she heard a shrill chitter as the creature was squeezed until its skin popped and its juices drizzled down to the sponge below, which gurgled and slurped at the drops of blood in apparent glee. She wanted go, right now.

  “I’m sorry, Saru. I’m so sorry.”

  “Friar what’s going on?”

  “I’m sorry, Saru. I’m so sorry. I’m sorry, Saru. I’m so sorry. So sorry. So sorry. So sorry. So sorry. So sorry. So sorry.”

  His voice rose in pitch so he sounded like a chipmunk: “Sorry sorry sorry sorry sorry sorry sorry,” and then fell and fell to become low, impossibly low, and the sound echoed as it had before, not dying but growing and building and bouncing around the swamp, and deep within the song of his repeated sorries she heard another song, a different song, one that it seemed to her had been sung for a very long time by a great number of people and living things that were not people, and even things that didn’t live, stars and planets and empty space, humming in perfect atomic unison: uausuausuausuausuausuau… It was too much to bear; she screamed, adding her own voice to the sound so it became part of the song, and then she shot upright like a catapult arm and smacked her forehead into Jojran’s nose.

  “Ow, fuck!” he yelled. He put his hand up and yelped. Blood was pouring from his nostrils. Saru looked around frantically and saw she was in a bedroom, a nice, large bedroom with clean white sheets and neat white furniture and windows across one whole wall, and through the windows was the city of Philadelphia, thank God. Also she was wearing ill-fitting silk pajamas, which meant that at some point Jojran had taken the initiative to undress her.

  “What happened?” she asked.

  “You broke my nose!”

  “Before that!”

  “Ow, it hurts!”

  She rolled out of bed and landed cat-like. Every danger sense, natural and enhanced, had leapt into activity and she felt herself operating in the lucid purity of combat instinct. In the corner she spied her clothes and she ran to her belt and clipped it on, Betty flying to her hand. Room by room she went through the apartment and scanned it for any threat. Nothing. Then she went back and got a Quick-e-Set strip and slapped it on Jojran’s nose. It shot him full of painkillers and then wriggled into the work of massaging his cartilage back into place. She even helped him clean up, scrubbing his face with a vigor he insisted was killing him. Her heart was pounding and she was soaked in a cold, clammy sweat. It took a half hour for her body to calm itself. She dressed and paced and then finally sat. Jojran sat on the other couch in the living room, eyeing her warily.

  “Are you okay?” he asked. “I’m fine, in case you care.”

  “What the fuck happened?”

  “Well, I was chasing down leads on the Net and then you went quiet all of a sudden, which I greatly appreciated. Then when I got off I found you passed out on the floor and assumed you drank too much, because really, I hope you have other friends to tell you this, Saru, but you’re an alcoholic. Anyway, I lovingly carried you to the bedroom and then when you didn’t wake up for a while I got worried. You were sweating like crazy, turned my sheets into a swamp.” He omitted the issue of undressing her. She didn’t press.

  “How long was I out?”

  “Almost a day.”

  “A day! And you just left me there?”

  “What was I going to do? Call a doctor? If I did that you’d be berating me right now for telling. You looked like shit; I thought you needed rest. So what happened, are you really okay? How do you feel now?”

  “I’m fine,” she said. “You were right, I’m tired. I needed to rest.”

  She couldn’t tell him about the blackout. She couldn’t tell anyone anything. While he’d been gabbing she’d been going through her implants and there was nothing, no recording, no poison indication, not even a red flag or suspicion she’d been hacked—nothing was missing, no thoughts were awry. She’d passed out for almost a day and all her systems showed was high levels of stress—just like she’d been in a nightmare. She was vulnerable, incredibly vulnerable like this. If this was a hack job it was the most sophisticated prank in all the universe. And if it was something that a bottle of rum and a security overhaul couldn’t fix… She could still hear that sound, that echoing sound as Friar tried to speak, and that long, hidden, swirling black note behind, below, above, and beyond everything, running in the background. It was faint now, something she could only notice with her full attention in a quiet place. It called to her, beckoned, and it was growing louder.

  Chapter 10

  The dog was getting bigger, it was impossible to ignore, and closer too. It used to hang around the sides of her vision, watching her from a distance, but now it was close, a few feet away, and huge, the size of a wolf, of a motorcycle. Fine, dog, do whatever you need to do. She still felt tingly, days, weeks after it had entered her and what? Made her invisible? Now, in the light of day, it was hard to remember the creature, that thing with the metal centipede body and the head of human torsos. Had it been real? How lit was she at the time? Had someone cut her a bad dose of sky? Had she just been lying passed out on the subway platform having another nightmare? No, it had been real, just like the dog was real.

  Someone was killing blue-eyed girls, as if she didn’t have enough problems. It wasn’t in the feeds, nothing official, but the rumor was out and the walkers were scared. It wasn’t your normal having-a-bit-of-fun killing or choke-too-hard killing either. It was religious, freak shit, the kind of shit that didn’t have a neatly tied shoelace ending. And that pig, sweaty Lou or gassy Lou or whatever the hell they called him was out putting bounties on her head—girls with great blue eyes, fantastic blue eyes. Well shit. She paused to study herself in the cracked window of an abandoned storefront. There goes your moneymaker. Men and women had paid a lot of money—or what seemed like a lot of money, more than she’d ever dish for a ride—to touch her while looking into those eyes, to have her kneel and let them stare down and dirty her. But who could say if it was an honest lay or a trap now—some freak wanting to carve out her sins with a knife.

  She kept walking, wrapping her trench coat and scarf tighter, ducking her head so the passersby couldn’t glimpse her face. With any luck they’d think she was a leper and keep to their way. She’d tried wearing sunglasses to complete her disguise, but with the clouds and the dark she couldn’t see shit, kept stepping in it and glass and syringes and tripping and potholes and the last time she’d had a condom dragging from her heel for about four blocks until the cashier at the liquor store pointed it out by yelling in his angry foreigner language. But the real fear was that she’d accidentally trip over an elzi and kick his implants. So she ditched the shades. Contacts, micro lenses, ocular implants—those were the answer. But that took money and she didn’t have any, or not the four-digit kind that she needed.

  Walking, walking, walking—where was this place? It had been ages…was it even open still? But of course it was. As long as there was a need there was a way, and everyone had needs. She wondered what they would take this time, if she even had anything left to sell. But there were memories there, good ones, good fucks and weird fucks that she’d be glad be rid of—better to give them to someone else, someone who could use them, and why not make a bit of cash for herself?

  There it was, the little wood door that wasn’t wood, between the pizza place and the strip club—Pleasure Island. She’d thought of getting gainful there but it rankled her to pay to get paid and the cut they took was enormous. Besides, if someone wanted to buy you and maybe keep you, well, there you were on display like a supermarket turkey, bundled and plucked. Better to wander, to keep moving, to be a little discreet and to only sell when you really needed that fix. To live was easy, just go to the Fish and the hips would look after you, give you their shitty gruel, teach you to sit and think and sing songs to keep yourself from dying of boredom. If you wanted a little luxury in life—and who didn’t deserve luxury?—then you had to work for it.

  Five knocks, two up, two low, and then one on the third pressure point right in the middle, that rang the bell. The door swung open and a tough opened the door, one she didn’t recognize. It had been a long time. He didn’t smile, didn’t react to her. But she could see him looking at her eyes, see a few calculations. Was the price still on her head, still out there for blue-eyed girls? Would he just conk her out and throw her in a sack and drive her to Lou’s? Her hand tensed around the shiv hidden in her bodice, so thin, so clever, no one ever found it till she had it on their throat. She’d stick this tough in the groin, a straightforward, small-distance motion—God he was big—easy as ringing a doorbell.

  “What do you want, whore?” he said, with the voice of a thousand cigarettes. She ignored him. Why don’t you try it one day? Better than being stuck on your feet packing ham or folding pants or smiling and sniffing ass in retail. Better to have freedom, her own life, of her own choosing, that, hell, no one would ever acknowledge or recognize or even treat with a fair lack of judging, but goddamn it was her life, that she’d made, all by herself, and she was in control of it.

  “I’m here to sell.” She tapped the side of her head. “I’ve got some high-value material up here.”

  Up the stairs was a waiting room—that always made her laugh—just like a real doctor’s office. Plain beige walls with a flower print, with your standard ugly chairs, a television, even, for the scum like her not plugged in, and a few magazines. She sat next to a nervous young man who couldn’t stop wringing his hands. His clothes were nice, fancy even, must’ve been a mechie or an embyay—they were the best, self-important, insecure, liked to feel big and got a real high from tossing bills. She guessed he’d done something foul he wanted to forget, maybe he’d seen some shit on the Net, wandered into a bad neighborhood, or maybe his girlfriend had left him. But the way he twitched it looked like guilt, or at least a knowing that he’d done something other people thought was bad. Probably he’d run over an elzi and thought he’d killed an actual person.

  She flipped through Living with Less, and read an article on a cake she could bake if she had an oven, that used Gaesporan flour to actually burn the exact number of calories you were cooking. It was under the title “Zero Sum Sweets.” Delicious. How nice to be so swimming in cash you could eat yourself to death. That was an actual problem that people had. She was glad she wasn’t people, didn’t want to be people, didn’t want a house she had to paint, with cabinets that needed to have all the right fucking handles to match the wallpaper, glad she didn’t live on a track of five different stops: work, home, work, restaurant (well, that would be nice), and home again. She was glad she didn’t have to fuck the same guy every single night and dance around with him for fifty years. She tossed the magazine on the pile and picked up one about celebrities. They had the right idea—lie, and fuck, and lie, and be an asshole and everyone loved them. She could be a celebrity.

  A nurse came out and called a name. The man next to her got up and went through the door to the operating room. She watched the television, but it was just thirty seconds of news crowded by ads. The ads pissed her off—they were loud and flashy and up in her face, and if they were people doing that they’d get beaten sideways. They were always trying to sell her stuff, but she didn’t have any money so it was just a big fuck you. Buy this. You need this. You are nothing without this. This thing, right here, look at it, it’s got colors and music. You fucking need this. She walked over and turned off the TV, glaring around to see if anyone would challenge her. No one said anything. They were mostly girls, like herself, reading magazines, or nodding off, or head in hands staring at the floor, and that one bitch in the corner was pregnant and sobbing and she didn’t even want to know that story.

  She sat back down. The dog had taken the young, nervous man’s seat. It was looking around but seemed relaxed, and she took that as a good sign. Here, at this very office, she’d tried to have the dog removed, but the doctor couldn’t find a thing that would be causing it, and short of a lobotomy there wasn’t anything he could do. Ever since the run-in with that monster on the subway (had the others made it?) she’d felt, not affection, but a sense of tolerance towards the dog. Real or not, the dog had tried to do something, warn her, hide her, and so it was protecting her in a way. She would have preferred the fire in that case—hide from assholes, burn the monsters—but she was still alive and that was something, something she couldn’t count on day to day anymore. The thing to do was enjoy herself more, drink more, buy more sky, find some men that she wanted because the future was looking less rosy every day.

  “Ria…” the nurse frowned when she saw the last name. Ria didn’t have one so she always put the filthiest thing she could imagine. She got up and followed the nurse through the door and into the operating room. The best part of coming here was the bathroom; it was so clean, impossibly clean, and sterile. She loved that smell, that alcohol smell of clean; it gave her a rush. The nurse didn’t want to let her go but she threatened to piss herself right then and there so the nurse gave. Ria took her time and then cleaned herself up nice. Then she went and lay down on the operating table; it was so comfortable, she could just drift off. Dr. Alloche came in, a wrinkly old man like a prune stuck on a body made of toothpicks. He was hairless except for big white caterpillar eyebrows that gave out everything he was thinking.

  “Hello, Ria, it’s been a while. Seven months since your last visit,” he said. God he was smart. He remembered her name, remembered everything about her, didn’t even glance at his records. Of course maybe he had them all digital, plugged into his brain, but she didn’t think so. There was no pause, no flicker of access—it was like he had them on the tip of his tongue, like he’d been thinking of her the whole time. Why was he here, operating in the Libs just shy of the Assistance Zone, between a caesarian-scar strip club and a saltine-ketchup pizza parlor? He should have been a TV doctor, in a big white hospital with sexy young nurses, running back and forth with his lab coat blowing behind him, driving a sports car. But they didn’t let you do the kinds of things he liked in a real hospital.

  “So what do you have for me today?” he asked. “Something interesting, I’m sure.”

  “Why don’t you poke around and see what you like?” she said. “I’ve got no secrets.”

  “Very well.”

  He placed a mask over her face and pumped in that lovely gas…ah she should come here more often…it was like a spa…like in the magazines…She found herself lying in the apartment of a married man, the man himself licking her, doing a messy job but she moaned like he was Christ reborn. The first time she’d gone on a memory trip like this she’d freaked and panicked and jerked herself out of it. When Dr. Alloche finally calmed her down and eased her into it they saw her memories were so patchy that they were useless. He still gave her a few bucks for the trouble, such a nice man. Now she was a pro, probably better than most people at remembering things. She made mental notes, walked herself through each step of remembering to get all the little details that were so crucial to getting off—the noises he made and the noises she made, the sweat of their bodies, the wet slapping sounds, the hot breath on her neck, the scratches she dug in his back and the smell of two naked bodies forcing into one another. That was money.

  She could see over the married man’s head, Dr. Alloche in the background, projecting himself into her memory. He looked around, nodded, and then the scene blurred and changed. This one was darker, she knew that would happen, that’s what the men wanted, what they would pay for, to see her hurt and put down. This had started in the back of a van but he’d tied her up and dragged her into the dirt, tearing her clothes to get to the prize and then forcing himself in roughly. She’d cried—but only because that’s what he’d wanted—and for all his show of masculinity he’d finished in a few hard stabs. That had pissed her off—it made the memory too short, less valuable. The doctor could shorten it, cut out the part where he’d untied her and then helped her up and apologized (he’d even kissed her on the cheek and blushed) but he couldn’t lengthen the act with any technical wizardry. Dr. Alloche nodded and then switched scenes again.

 

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