Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Profiteering



Gwen Davies awoke to the drumbeat of rain against the bedroom windows. At least the weather was still cool enough that the windows weren’t open. She didn’t know how she’d defend the house over the coming summer when it would be too hot to keep it fully sealed. Hurricane-proof windows acted as added security against the recycling crews, but she thought she needed a dog even though Khyber and Kisangani would never forgive her if she brought one home.

The house was dark. Not just dark, black, with none of the telltale glows of modern living, no clock, no microwave, no streetlights, just like the rest of the neighborhood. The power was out again as it often was these days, whether due to rationing or a storm-related outage. She wondered what time it was. A year ago, she would have glanced at the clock on the nightstand then perhaps padded to the office and checked email. Now she lay awake listening for the clock to ring the hour instead of reaching for her watch. How much a year had changed.

But she was still here, still surviving, despite Stirling’s dire warnings nine months ago. Unlike so many others who had been forced to abandon the neighborhood before winter for distant, friendlier enclaves around the Great Lakes, New England, California and the Pacific Northwest. With the arrival of spring, she expected more defections soon.

She wondered whether the storm or something else had startled her from sleep. Kisangani was curled up by her feet, her calico fur standing out against the blanket. Across the bed Khyber’s ears were up, listening. Gwen tried to decide whether to risk a light. The granddaughter clock in the living room started to ring the hour, but was cut off by a peal of thunder. Was that two or three?

Khyber sprang to his feet. Pacing back and forth across the bed, he growled as he stared up at the ceiling, just like last fall when rats had taken up residence in the attic. Now she heard it, the hollow rumble of footsteps across the roof tiles that she had mistaken for distant thunder. That meant a recycling crew was on the roof again after the photovoltaics.

Gwen threw off the sheets and grabbed her grandfather’s over-and-under .22/.410 from beside the bed. Without bothering with a robe, she rushed out through the living room to the front hall, and unbolted the front door. Stepping out into a tattoo of heavy rain against the overhang of the front porch, she slammed the solid wood door. When that warning provoked no response, she levered back the rifle’s hammer using her weight as much as her strength. The metal ridges dug into the meat of her thumb as she slowly forced it back until, in a relief, it clicked solidly into place. She slid the selector knob up and then back down to ensure the shotgun, not the .22, would fire, braced the butt against her shoulder and aimed into the grass of front yard without getting the barrel wet.

The night exploded against her shoulder when her finger overcame the old, stiff trigger that no amount of oil ever eased. Her ears rang, but above the real and residual din, she heard the echo of heavy feet clomping along the roof tiles toward the back of the house. Gun in hand, she raced inside, through the living room again and onto the back porch just in time to hear the solid thump, thump of two people dropping from the roof into the backyard.

Once again, she pried back the hammer. She snicked the selector knob to the top position and aimed just to the left of where she heard the chainlink rattle as two nearly invisible shadows clambered over it. When she was young, back when life had less meaning, she had been a deadeye shot with a BB gun, able to pick off dragonflies and minnows in midair and midstream. Tonight, she had no desire to shoot anything. She hated wasting more ammunition, and having to repair a hole in the porch screen, but her father had taught her never to aim at something she didn’t want to hit. The last thing she wanted was to wound one of them and have the crew bear a grudge. Or worse, kill one and find it was a child. But she needed to send a clear message that she was capable of defending her property. The photovoltaics were the only things that guaranteed her survival.

Once again, her ears rang as the hammer snapped forward, though this time she felt no kick onto her shoulder. Through her gunshot deadened ears she heard two people splash headlong through the knee-deep water in the ditch and scramble up the far bank to the safety of the woods beyond.

She returned inside just long enough to rebolt the front door, throw on a pair of fatigues and a work shirt, and grab a flashlight and more ammunition before settling into a porch chair for the remainder of the night. She was lucky her father had kept her grandfather's unlicensed gun along with a cache of ammunition. She wished she had the pistol, too, but that had been lost to the family before she was born. The only difference between it and the rifle was that she knew that gun had actually been used to kill someone, if only its owner.

She wrapped herself in her long-sleeved shirt against the chill night air. She didn’t mean to sleep, but she did.

The trees across the ditch were awash in orange light when Gwen awoke. There was no further sign of the recycling crew. Rifle in hand, she retreated back through the sliding glass door into the house.

Inside, she paused to wind the granddaughter clock. She swung open the glass-front door and pulled down on the chains opposite the brass counterweights. The mechanism responded with a satisfying ratcheting noise. Like the gun, the family heirloom had become a sought-after non-electric antique. She checked it against her iPad. She had adjusted the pendulum to keep almost perfect time, less than a minute drift each week depending on the temperature and humidity.

Seven-thirty. Sunday morning. A year ago, she would have cooked a full sit-down breakfast then read the Sunday Times on her iPad and relaxed before another week began. Now, almost all the coffee was gone, as was the tea, cocoa, sugar and chocolate, casualties of the Pioneer Party’s no import, no export national Self-Sufficiency Laws that had been foisted on the public as a cure to their lingering economic woes. Where there had been a promise to end unemployment, there was now little work to be had other than survival which took no weekends off and carried no benefits or paid vacations.

Instead, Gwen had a full day scheduled. She needed to re-setup the wind turbine in the backyard. Last night as the thunderstorms approached, she had secured it by folding the blades and setting the brakes on the generator. After that, she had to go up on the roof to check the photovoltaics so she could recharge the hybrid and the house’s battery bank. She also needed to inspect the solar water heater for damage. Then she would run the weekly diagnostics on the charging system. At least the recycling crew wouldn’t have been able to get to that. Bad enough they had been on the roof. She hoped they hadn’t done much damage. Her spares were dwindling and she had very little left to trade for more.

Last night convinced her that if she was going to make it through the summer, she needed a dog. The park was awash with strays but taking one in was a tricky business. Though she’d heard the ones that hadn’t gone completely feral made fiercely loyal guardians out of gratitude. Coming up with food would be a trick. Two cats were hard enough to feed and Khyber mostly hunted for himself. Though since she’d found the half-eaten stray on the top of the ditch in December and later spotted a coyote eyeing the yard at noon, she kept him inside more.

Maybe she could trade for one of the co-op’s new puppies. Linda would ask about the clock again, but Gwen wouldn't trade it. It was one of the few things left from her mother. Most of the others she’d had to trade just to maintain the house. For too many, she hadn’t gotten half of what they were worth. Hard times drove hard bargains. Stirling had warned her early on how difficult it would be to stay.

She also had to find time to talk to Ted. The Neighborhood Watch was supposed to patrol even during storms. At the very least, someone should have checked on her when they heard the gunshots. The recycling crews didn't care about the weather. They used the park and the old rail-trail as transit routes for their hit-and-runs and conduits for their black market goods. As the fuel shortages had worsened, the Sheriff’s Department patrolled less. They were in the pockets of the bigger enclaves anyway. She was beginning to wonder if Ted had joined them.

Before she dealt with Ted or the co-op, she needed to use some of her Internet ration to download the latest spot market numbers to her iPad. The price of natural gas and coal would tell her how much credit she would earn from the mandated electric power buyback. That had been one of the few advantages anyone had seen from enforced energy independence since the Pioneer Party had taken power.

When they had first arisen as a political movement, the Pioneer Party had promised to return the nation to its former glory. If the country didn’t make it, mine it or grow it, they didn’t need it. If they had it, no one else would get it. It proved an amazingly popular platform that quickly embedded itself into the public consciousness. In less than a year, the Pioneer Party had transformed from merely advocating isolationist self-sufficiency into an ultra-nationalist autarky. In the process, they succeeded in turning the Great Recession into the Great Dismantling. When the collapse came, it was spectacular.

Gwen walked her Internet connection through a series of anonymous proxies and blind cutouts so she could download the latest international bootleg of pirated news articles. Real news, not the propaganda from the official feeds.

She downloaded and skimmed some of the local headlines as she waited for authentication of her connection. Nothing much new. Alan Long had proposed a new Commission ordinance authorizing the bulk seizure of properties unoccupied for more than three months through a state-authorized urban renewal variant of eminent domain. The Commission would auction off the seized neighborhoods soon after. She suspected the enclaves were pulling the strings on this one. They played puppeteer for most of the Commission’s recent work. The Commission had already begun cutting services to neighborhoods less than half-occupied, following the precedent established in Detroit several years ago.

In an underground opposition blog, she read the last enclave loyal to the Commission south of the university was still holding out after a grueling ninety-eight days of siege. Only a narrow, dangerous supply corridor to the heart of Commission territory kept it going at all. The Commission could no longer justify the resources necessary to keep that corridor open, despite the propaganda setback it would mean. The university was sponsoring negotiations on relocation, though few communities seemed interested. Fifty households were more than most neighborhoods could absorb without significant aid. Given the level of creative violence committed by Matt McBride and his party-sponsored militia leading up to the siege, few seemed interested in seeing if they possessed a strong enough leash to hold that particular dog now that it had tasted of blood.

Gwen was grateful those fanatical divisions had yet to find their way across the lake. There had been a day when she’d bemoaned the lack of interest the rest of the county had in the area in which she lived. Now that anonymity was a blessing.

As she finished downloading and terminated her connection, Gwen noticed people from the neighborhood beginning to trickle down the street, all in the same direction. She wondered if she hadn’t been the only one to suffer an incident last night. She shutdown the iPad, locked up the house and followed after them to check. She was careful to make sure that Khyber didn’t dash through the open door, as he sometimes liked to. He had yet to get used to being unable to come and go as he pleased as he had a year ago.

She found people gathered in small knots and clusters along the sidewalk across the street from the Sinclairs, as if standing back from a police line or keeping a safe distance from a quarantine area. That was never a good sign. Ted Stuart watched from one driveway down as Pete Sinclair loaded items of necessity, security, sentiment and value into his family’s blue SUV, a job he approached with grim determination. Two deputies from the Neighborhood Watch armed with hunting rifles kept an eye up and down the street.

Gwen wandered across the no man’s land to stand next to Ted, the only one willing to cross into his personal zone of exclusion. The morning air was thick and heavy, as much with fear and distrust as with humidity from last night’s storm. Both men and women watched sidelong to see if there would be a confrontation between the mismatched pair. Ted was a full head taller than Gwen, and looked like he had once worked out. By comparison, she was a small, dark-haired waif. But the neighborhood knew she was the flint to Ted’s steel. When they clashed, sparks were bound to fly.

Ted stood like a soldier or a cop, straight, unmoving, eyes intently forward. He claimed to have been a Marine back before they’d all been brought back home to join the ranks of unemployed. The rumor Gwen had heard was that, at least, was true. The part he never mentioned was his official title of aviation survival equipmentman. He spent his only tour inspecting and repairing parachutes, a two-year stitch-bitch someone said. But every Marine was a rifleman, right? That was more training than anyone else in the neighborhood had.

Gwen stood in silence a moment, observing her part of their ritual. “Last night, I had a crew up on the roof after the solar panels,” she said after a moment. “Might have gotten them, too, if Khyber hadn’t tipped me off. But this looks more serious.”

“They’re pulling out,” Ted said, his voice as bereft of emotion as his expression.

“What happened?” Gwen thought the Sinclairs were long-term holdouts. They’d been targeted twice before but stayed.

“Someone wrapped a pair of girl’s underwear around a rock during the storm and launched it through the front window.” He said it as though it were an everyday occurrence, or soon would be, rather than the worst kind of predatory threat.

Aghast, Gwen turned to face him. “She’s only ten!”

“You think they care?” Ted didn’t move his eyes from the SUV. He watched each item that came out of the house as if making of mental inventory of what was leaving and what would be left behind. “They would have made good on that threat if that’s what it took to drive them out. Lucky for her, they didn’t have to.”

Lucky, Gwen thought, was not the word she would have chosen. The poor girl and her parents must be terrified. “And where was the Watch in all this? You’re supposed to patrol rain or shine.”

Now, Ted directed his gaze down at her. “We can’t help you out over here anymore, Gwen. We took a vote. This side of the neighborhood is on its own.”

“What?” Her voice turned flat and flinty, like Khyber’s or Kisangani’s when they felt she’d been gone too long.

“The recycling crews are getting bolder. We’re stretched too thin. We have to cut back patrols to the core neighborhood.”

“As I remember,” she said, staring up at him with all the intensity she could muster, “we’re members of this neighborhood, too. My father started the Watch. My mother helped establish the co-op.”

“Your parent’s are dead, Gwen” Ted said, then turned back to the Sinclairs. “We’ve decided to consolidate around the ponds. Only half of you are left on this side of the neighborhood anyway. With the roads up north set to open, pretty soon it’ll only be one in three. That’s too much territory to cover with no additional help.”

“You could let women rejoin the Watch,” she pointedly suggested. “We were out there all last fall and did just fine. At least a dozen would sign up.”

“If their husbands let them.” Ted dismissed the idea without even a flick of his hand. “If Rodriguez is willing to threaten a ten year-old girl, what do you think he’d do to a full-grown woman?”

“So what are we supposed to do now?” Gwen could not longer contain her anger and frustration. “Cut a deal with Crew 102? Pay them for protection? We might as well pay the Sheriff. His rates are cheaper, if more imaginative.”

“A few of you can always fold into the empty houses on our side of the neighborhood,” he said. “We can always use talent like yours.”

“Equipment like mine you mean. I generate half the power in this neighborhood.”

Ted ignored the remark. “The house across the street is still open.”

“You mean ‘Rainbow 6?’” Gwen said. Ted’s face twitched. “Yeah, I’ve heard what you call it when you think no one’s listening. Funny how they were the first to go. You never did agree with their politics, did you?”

“Careful, Gwen” Ted replied evenly, “Or you’ll find yourself defending this place alone.”

“Like we’re not already.” Gwen turned away and stalked back toward the house along the sidewalk. She had work to do. But first she needed to talk to Linda and the co-op. Armed with the new spot market numbers, she hoped to be able to cut a side deal for a dog and a pistol. If she were going to hold out on her own, they would be the minimum she required.

Three blocks away, Gwen found Linda preparing the soil in one of the co-op’s community gardens, a formerly empty lot on a utility easement. The time to plant the corn, beans, squash, peppers and tomatoes was only a week away. The co-op planted all five intertwined to maximize their yields in the weak, sandy soil. They’d found the technique in one of Gwen’s mother’s books. The fall crop had come in strong. The neighborhood was better fed last winter than most enclaves, but even that was relative.

Linda Patino was a wiry, weatherworn woman, bronzed from working the past nine months outside. She was of that indeterminate age where she might have been thinking about early retirement before it had been thrust upon her by the current crisis. She worked her rake with the patient vigor of a Midwesterner used to long days beneath a prairie sun.

“Lend a hand if you have the time,” Linda said, pointing to the pile of gardening tools as she saw Gwen approaching.

Gwen picked up a steel rake and started turning soil. It felt good to do something productive with her hands. Her mother had always enjoyed caring for living things. She’d tended toward her father whose affinity ran more toward the manmade. “I need to talk to you about a trade with the co-op. I heard the Novak’s puppies are already weaned.”

Linda leaned on her rake. “That could be a problem.”

“Are they all accounted for?” Gwen asked, hoping to change the likely answer. “I’ve still got a little excess power to trade.”

“It’s not that.” Linda went back to turning soil. “Ted’s made defense items a priority. No trade outside the enclave.”

“I’m not outside the enclave,” Gwen reminded her.

“You are now,” Linda said, tackling a stubborn weed with the tines of her rake. “He’s readjusted the boundaries.”

They worked together for a moment in silence, the only sound the shushing of the painted steel against the sandy soil interspersed with an occasional tearing sound as they dug out one of many encroaching weeds. The garden was right across from the neighborhood entrance to the park. Soon, it would need guarding from poachers. Gwen wondered how Ted would handle that since it, too, was technically outside the new enclave.

“And what if I stop selling my power to the co-op?” Gwen asked, trying to keep her voice level.

“Who else would you sell it to?” Linda sounded genuinely curious.

“The McMansions in the old orange groves. Maybe the farmsteads on Nina.” Gwen paused a moment for effect. “Crew 102.”

“They don’t buy power,” Linda snorted, “they take it. Rodriguez would drive you out before he’d pay.”

“How’s that different is that than the Neighborhood Watch right now?” Gwen asked, attacking a weed cluster with her rake. “Ted’s cut off my protection. Without a dog and more than a two-shot rifle, how long do you think I’ll hold out? Wake up, Linda. We’re not in Kansas anymore.”

“There’s nothing I can do. Ted says we need everything to survive ourselves.”

“Sounds like he’s gone over to the Pioneer Party on you.”

“Look around, Gwen.” Linda paused in her raking, sweeping her arm to encompass the surrounding houses and the park. “Each day we get weaker and the other enclaves get stronger. We have to consolidate and hold on to what we have.”

“That’s not why my mother setup the co-op,” Gwen replied in a low, quiet voice that most people didn’t realize was a warning. “It was to share what we have. We all get stronger by trading what we have in surplus.”

“Well, now that you mention it,” Linda said in her negotiating tone, “there might be one thing Ted would accept…”

Gwen cut her off. “He already has the books from my parents’ library. I traded those at a loss for seed. I traded all the Wedgwood, the silver and the crystal so we could feed the children of this enclave instead of just the Watch. Once it was empty, I traded my mother’s china cabinet for spare parts. There’s nothing left of value except power and even that’s in short supply. Ted has everything.”

“There’s still the clock,” Linda said, undeterred. “I could get him to make you a good deal for that. In fact, I could do it right now.”

Gwen went with a fallback to see how serious Linda was. “I’m willing to offer the schoolhouse clock from the library.”

Linda shook her head. “You know he’s looking for the grandfather clock.”

“It’s a granddaughter clock,” Gwen corrected, “and it’s not for sale. My mother’s grandfather made it by hand. It’s the only thing I have left from her aside from a few blankets she crocheted that I haven’t given away.”

“Just mentioning it, Gwen.” Linda resumed her work.

“What’s he need it for anyway?” Gwen pulled at a particularly stubborn weed. “It’s not like he doesn’t have access to electronic time. I know he can’t store everything he’s acquired in his garage and he certainly doesn’t have the taste to keep it in the house.”

“I overheard him say it’s a gift for a friend, someone he needs to impress who likes that sort of thing. Someone powerful.”

Gwen’s eyes narrowed. “And that doesn’t raise a red flag to you?”

“Look, Gwen, you have to understand. Ted said no guns or dogs to anyone outside the core enclave. He said they’ll just disappear when the rest of you leave anyway. The co-op can’t go up against him. Everyone’s afraid they’ll be the next target. If Ted cuts off our protection, well, you know where we’ll be. None of us have outside contacts.” That was a direct shot at Stirling.

“I tell you what, Linda.” Gwen set down her rake. “You tell Ted I’m looking into other offers for my excess power. And don’t think I won’t wreck the machinery if someone tries to take it by force. It only takes about fifteen seconds. You want to be his negotiator, you can tell him that.”

“Ted won’t like being threatened,” Linda said.

“It’s not a threat,” Gwen said before she left, “unless he tries something stupid. Now, if he wants to negotiate like an adult, he knows where to find me. Until then, tell him his lights are on borrowed time.”


By the time Gwen arrived back at the house, the morning was gone. The day had turned warm, though not hot by summer standards. She still needed to verify her current generating capacity. If the salvage crew had damaged any of the panels on the roof, she’d need to repair or replace them. That would cut into the margins she had for trade. Not that trade seemed likely right now. But she needed to do something to burn off some of her anger.

Up on the roof, the south and east side panels both checked out. No cracks, no footprints across their faces, no pry-marks around their edges. The storm had washed away the accumulated dust, so she should see a slight boost in efficiency. A couple connections had been kicked loose on the west side as the crew had scrambled to safety, but she found no lasting damage.

Looking off to the east, Gwen watched the crowd disperse as the Sinclair’s SUV eased its way out of the neighborhood. Ten years ago, trees in the front yard would have screened her view, trees she’d climbed as a kid, trees her parents had planted when they were newlyweds. Gwen remembered how her mother had cried even as she’d helped Stirling and her father cut them down. That was in the early days of the Pioneer Party. Her father, while disagreeing vehemently with what he saw as shortsighted policies, had the vision to understand they would need as much solar and wind as they could afford as long as the party stayed in power. The trees blocked the morning and evening sun and cut the wind. So they came down.

With the Sinclairs gone, that made just over twenty-five abandoned houses in her three-block corner of the neighborhood. She wondered where they’d go. Pete Sinclair was local. His wife came from somewhere up north, Pennsylvania or Ohio. That was a long way to travel on degrading highways that needed petroleum to maintain them. They had been the last family in her section with children under thirteen.

People had fled according to the pattern Stirling had predicted a year ago, first the ones with money, then with an education, with moderate views, and finally with young children. Now he said all that were left were the partisans, the opportunists and those with nowhere else to go or no money to get there. Sometimes she wondered where she fit in her brother’s hierarchy. Probably as the lone idealist.

Stirling had left for Vermont, nicknamed “the People’s Republic of” by the Pioneer Party pundits, with both their halves of the inheritance from their parents, hers for safe keeping. He’d tried to convince Gwen to come with him while there was still time. But she couldn’t abandon her childhood home to be burned down, stripped or occupied by refugees from another enclave. There was no way to sell it in the continually depressed housing market.

Remembering made her angry again. Angry with the Sinclairs, angry with her parents, angry with Stirling, Angry with everyone who had left her behind. Each loss made life just a little harder. Each made waking up in the morning and getting back to work just a little more difficult. Most of all, she was angry with the Pioneer Party. Angry with the people who believed their threats and lies. She’d learned to harness that anger just to get the work done.

After the rooftop inspection, she ran the weekly diagnostic on the battery bank and its associated hardware in the garage. Her father had installed the charging racks along the back wall, using all the space that his workshop and her mother’s craft table had once occupied. All the readings came up within spec, though a few had begun to drift the wrong direction, an ominous trend if she wanted to increase the amount of power she put up for sale. Still, the equipment’s efficiency was holding solid. That meant a boost when she unfolded the wind turbine. She’d already missed the onshore breeze, but there was time to capture the middays and then the offshore. From her glance at the weather earlier, the night promised to be breezy and clear.

Back on the ground, Gwen unshipped the turbine’s blades and locked them in place. As she released the brake on the generator, a shot rang out from the park and ricocheted off the steel stanchion. Instinctively, she ducked to the ground, even though a remote part of her mind recognized it was too late to avoid that bullet. She scrambled around the corner of the house and crouched behind a blooming azalea. There was no other cover in the backyard, and she dared not expose herself to make a break for the front. She just hoped the sniper wasn’t in the wedge of park that still had an angle on where she was hiding.

She clung to the corner, her heart pounding so hard she wasn’t sure that she’d hear a follow-up shot even if it came. She rummaged through her mind to remember where she’d left the rifle. Inside, next to the front door, where it always rested during the day. She hadn’t thought to bring it out with her. No one had ever taken a shot at her before.

A minute passed, then two. Time for a decision. Either the sniper had abandoned the park, or he had moved to where he could get a clean shot on her and was sighting in right now. Either way, there was no point to staying where she was. After a mental count to three she darted toward the front of the house, keeping as low as she could without compromising speed. Her heart felt fluttery and light as she sped around the corner into the front yard and bolted toward the front door. Her hands shook as she sorted out the right key. She managed to get it into the lock after two or three jerky tries.

As the door slammed behind her, Gwen fumbled for the rifle and collapsed with her back against the wall. She felt as though she had run a marathon of fifty-yard dashes, though she had barely sprinted fifteen. She cradled her grandfather’s gun like a long lost lover or a rediscovered missing child.

A few minutes later, Khyber and Kisangani came to investigate why she was sitting on the floor. Khyber approached to sniff her. Once he had convinced himself that she was safe, he butted her elbow with his orange, tiger-striped head, then rubbed his face along her arm. She was glad he hadn’t decided to slip out while the door was open. Kisangani watched her from beneath one of the dining room chairs, her calico fur nearly camouflaged among the afternoon shadows on the carpet.

After recovering her breath to where she felt she felt steady, Gwen swept through the house dropping all the blinds. She wasn’t quite sure what else to do. Suddenly trade seemed both more and less important. A pistol would do little against a sniper unless she just wanted to throw some wild shots. A dog might only act as another target. Yet both took on a new urgency if only to help her feel more in control of her situation. There was only one player left she might be able to trade with. But now was not the time to venture outside, not so close to the incident and with the sniper unaccounted for.

She thought about Skyping Stirling but knew she was in peak hours for being online. She desperately wanted to hear his voice. He would never say, I told you so. He would offer to help her in any way he could. But she wondered if she might detect a silent judgment behind his concern, the unvoiced pressure to abandon their parents’ home and retreat to his farmstead in Vermont where such incidents did not happen, at least not yet. Following so many who had fled the neighborhood already would taste of copper and defeat. This was her home. She’d be damned if anyone would drive her out.

With that avenue of comfort denied, a wave of exhaustion washed over Gwen. Suddenly, she only wanted to sleep. She thought she might feel more safe tomorrow morning, though whether she would actually be more safe she was far from certain.

Instead, she busied herself checking her situation. First, she peered through a crack in the blinds to ensure that the blades of the wind turbine were turning and that its swivel was free for them to chase the wind. She verified the battery bank was changing and delivering all her excess power back onto the grid. She then calculated how much surplus power she had in relation to her existing agreements. Her margins were running pretty tight after turbine was down for an evening and morning, but she had enough to make a few emergency preparations.

Next, in a ritual not unlike the first day of hurricane season in years past with her parents, she reviewed her supplies in case she was trapped inside. She fired up the well pump and topped off her cistern. She verified all her electronics and flashlights had fresh batteries and their replacements were topping off in the chargers. She made certain her first aid kits were fully stocked. She inventoried her propane, her last-ditch means of cooking. Food wasn’t a problem, at least any more than it normally was. She had a full stock of dry goods in the pantry and meat packed into the freezer that was plugged into the inverter. She’d be forced to keep Khyber and Kisangani inside all the time, which meant tapping into their reserve cans of food. She’d figure out how to replenish those later.

Finally, she checked her supply of ammunition. She still had almost a thousand rounds of .22 long rifle. She’d been saving that for when she had to supplement her meat ration with small game. The .410 was more of a concern. She had less than a hundred shells of light buckshot left. That was her primary defensive round. Given that it had never been popular, reloads where nearly impossible to come by. That could be a problem long-term. But for now, she was as prepared as she could be.

By the time she finished, it was too late to venture out. The day had been nearly wasted, but at least she had succeeded in organizing away her fears. She double-checked all the windows and door locks, moved the rifle into the bedroom and tried to calm her mind to get some sleep. She was certain in the morning that she would have a better, more peaceful outlook.

Peace did not come that night. Kisangani slept, but Khyber roamed the house seeking ways to express his displeasure at having been cooped up during his traditional hunting time. Throughout the night, Gwen started awake at every real or imagined noise.

When she heard the clock ring three, then four and her mind continued racing, she got up and flashed Stirling a message to setup a Skype before he left for work. She wasn’t sure she slept again but she when she rolled over, it was dawn. Stirling’s reply was waiting on her iPad.

She didn’t waste any time once they established the connection. Any incidental news they could exchange by email. Time online was a precious and costly commodity. She set a countdown timer in a prominent position on the screen to keep from exceeding her Internet ration and running up too high a charge.

“What’s the price of silver on the Swiss exchange?” she asked by way of a greeting. “I need you sell another one of dad’s coins and deposit the money in my PayPal account. Can you still do that?”

“Yeah.” Her brother drew out the word slowly, hedging. “What is it that you need?”

“Information,” she said. “I need the money to pay for more Internet access so I can do some research. I’m looking for a tie between the head of the Neighborhood Watch and one of the enclaves.”

“Give me his name and whatever information you have. I can do the research from up here. It’ll be quicker and cheaper. We still have FioS online.”

“You sure you want to do that? This could attract a lot of attention.”

“Don’t worry, Gwen. I’ve been listening. I’ve downloaded most of the anonymity software you recommended, plus some you might not have access to just yet. It’s as safe for me as it is for you, maybe safer. They expect hits like that from up here, even if they back-trace it this far. Just send the information using an IronKey cutout, like you did before.”

“Ok. I’m setting it up now. You should have it in a little while. And thanks, Stirling.”

“For what?” He looked puzzled.

“For not trying to convince me to abandon the house and come up there.”

He sighed, and looked concerned. “I think it’s a bit too late for that, at least until the situation stabilizes.”

“What do you mean?” she asked. “What’s going on up there?”

“Haven’t you heard the news?”

“We don’t get much national news down here anymore, Stirling. Local politics is pretty much all we can handle and even that’s censored.”

“The Pioneer Party cut our remaining ties. From NAFTA to the Euro-zone, they’ve cancelled all our free trade agreements. Our biggest source of income up here right now is black market smuggling to and from Canada. New York is trying to close our border. They enacted a $10 migration fee under Article I, Section 9, which has effectively shutdown trade. Massachusetts is considering the same.”

“That’s not what the Constitution says,” Gwen protested. “That clause was about slavery.”

“Constitutional law has never been Pioneer Party’s strong point. But it doesn’t matter. No one has the money to cross the border. In retaliation, Vermont has enacted strict immigration limits. So, for the moment, you’re on your own. I can get you anything we can transmit electronically, including money if you need it. But that’s going to be all for a while.”

Gwen rubbed her hand across her forehead, just like her father used to do, and caught herself self-consciously. The clock was ticking down to zero on her timer. She needed to leave enough in her Internet ration to download Stirling’s response whenever it came. So she said a terse goodbye and cut the connection.

That conversation set the tone for the rest of the day. Mid-morning, she saw Ted headed up the driveway. Two of his deputies from the Watch waited at the corner. As he turned up the walk, Gwen opened the front door and stepped outside, rifle in hand, hooking a quick foot under Khyber and redirecting him into the office as he tried to sneak past her.

“What can I do for you, Ted?” she asked from the front porch, keeping the rifle pointed neutrally between her feet and his.

He stopped a couple yards away. “I hear you’re still making trouble, Gwen. I told you where that could lead.”

“I’m not making trouble.” She adjusted her grip on her gun. “I’m just trying to keep my home safe and the people who matter to me fed. You need power, I need a dog and a gun. It’s really pretty simple, who needs what the other has more? I’m thinking that it’s you.”

“I wouldn’t be too sure of that, Gwen. I have information that could make your life uncomfortable pretty quickly. Valuable information.”

“What are you getting at?” Gwen glared at him. “You know nothing about me.”

“No, not you,” he said, “your father. Remember the couple who lived in Rainbow 6, the ones with the Darwin fish on their car? Friends of your parents, right?”

Gwen nodded.

He went on. “Well, the husband told me something interesting just before they headed north. He said that his wife was the executor of your father’s will before you and Stirling were adopted. Yeah, I know you’re not his real family, not in any meaningful way.”

Gwen sneered but stayed silent. Ted was trying to antagonize her, but she needed to hear what he had to say.

“More interestingly,” Ted continued, “he said that your father had a safe deposit box. It contained something valuable, though your father never said exactly what. Now that got me thinking. You’ve done pretty good for yourself since your parents died. Even with the Self-Sufficiency Laws, you always have coffee and Internet access. You’re always talking to your ‘brother.’ How is that, Gwen? What did your father have tucked away?”

Gwen saw where the direction he was headed and cut him off. “There’s no family fortune, Ted. My father was a planner. He saw this day coming, stocked up and prepared. No one else wanted to listen. Including you, as I recall.”

“Really.” He ignored the last thing she said. “If he was such a planner, how is it he didn’t he plan that as well? I think there was something in that box. What was it, Gwen? Gold? Jewelry? Coins?”

Gwen’s heart froze for an instant, but she tried not to let it show on her face. He was only guessing. He couldn’t know. She thought quickly. “Have you ever seen me trade anything like that? No. All that was in that box were worthless insurance papers and my mother’s wedding rings that Stirling sold off to buy his ticket out. He gave me the house in exchange. There is no family fortune,” she repeated, hoping it would sink in.

“See, that really doesn’t matter, does it?” Ted took on a lecturing tone like she’d heard him use with the kids in the neighborhood. “People believe what they want to believe. All I need to do is start a rumor, and certain folks in this enclave will be digging up your yard with shovels. They’ll take pickaxes to the foundation of your house. That’s after they run you off and burn it down. Or leave you inside.” He left that final threat hanging naked in the air between them.

“I tell you what, Ted.” Gwen adjusted her rifle to point from the ground to the sky, including Ted in its sweep for just an instant. She’d learned with bullies it was sometimes best to escalate rather than capitulate. Though only if she thought she could win. “You start your little rumor and see how far it gets you as you’re sitting in the dark. I’m ready to ink a deal with any of three other enclaves for my power. And now my price just went up. Armed protection will be part of any bargain. The people I’m talking to have more than just a few hunting rifles. And they aren’t so afraid to use them that they hide in the woods like snipers. Though I doubt they’d be above doing that, either. But if they did, they’d hit what they aimed at.”

“Maybe next time they will,” he said. Then, he motioned his deputies to watch her as he retreated down the walk.

Now she’d done it. Gwen wished she had inherited her mother’s patience rather than her father’s temper. She had no one lined up for her power. She had no allies, just an inkling of one that might pan out, but only if she had some leverage. Now, she’d have to seek them out, leverage or not. She hoped Stirling came up with something soon.

Gwen headed back into the house, quickly collected what she needed and hurried out again. From this point forward, she would go everywhere armed. Not that she agreed with violence. She just didn’t want be an easy target for someone who did. Normally, she might have risked going out through the back, but she wanted the house locked up tight. She quickly circled around to the back gate, hoping not to be seen as she disappeared into the trees across the ditch. In her rush she didn’t notice the eyes watching her intently from the bushes.

She began searching the park for Crew 102. She found signs of their handiwork near the bathrooms but didn’t see any of their people. Perhaps the Sheriff’s Department had run them off. Or maybe they were watching her through the trees. If so, they were probably wondering how one woman could be so bold as to invade their territory armed only with a break-action antique. Or maybe they were busy with a salvage operation somewhere else. She just hoped she hadn’t read the situation wrong. If the sniper was one of theirs, it would be a short trip.

After a few hours wandering the trails and concrete paths, she decided she’d better give up and look again in the morning. As she entered her yard through the back gate, she decided to complete a circuit of the house, just to make certain nothing had happened while she was gone. Everything checked out.

As she turned up the walk to the front door in the long, afternoon shadows, Gwen noticed Khyber lying on the doormat, almost as if sleeping, with what might have been a severely mangled, clay-stained baseball lying near his front paws. No, that wasn’t quite right. Something was wrong with that picture.

Gwen edged closer. At first she couldn’t figure out was what it was. Her mind couldn’t sync up the color, size and shape with anything she knew. Or maybe she didn’t want to. When she spotted the two glassy yellow eyes staring blankly back at her and the pink slip of a tongue peeking out from the curved slit of a mouth, she almost fainted.

It was a cat’s head. Khyber had left a cat’s head at her door. No, her mind slowly worked through the image, not another cat’s head. It was Khyber’s head, six inches away from his decapitated body.

Gwen closed her eyes and stopped moving. It didn’t help. She could still see the picture in her mind.

Her breath came in ragged gulps. Her body started shaking. Her stomach sank and turned over. She covered her mouth with a hand to hold back a scream. Why would anyone do this to her baby? They couldn’t have. Could they?

She knew she had to look again. She had to make sure. She hadn’t gotten that good a look before she shut the vision out, hoping to erase it. She remembered finding the coyote-killed stray, its intestines snaking out from where its hind legs had been ripped away. That day, she’d been afraid it was Kisangani, but it hadn’t been. Maybe today the universe would be as kind.

Gwen took a deep breath through the hand clamped across her mouth. She hardened herself against what she might see. She tried to wall off her emotions, as she had often seen Stirling do. Slowly, almost unwillingly, she opened her eyes and forced them down, dreading what she might find. She leaned in closer. It couldn’t be him. Please don’t let it be.

But it was. The body’s coloration was exactly the same as Khyber’s. It was same size, the same build, had the same orange stripes and the same classic tabby markings on its forehead. Definitely Khyber. The cut was clean as if made by a machete. There was no blood, so the killing been done somewhere else.

Gwen felt her world tunnel in until she realized she’d stopped breathing.

Slowly, she exhaled, closed her eyes again and stood up straight. As the tears began to flow, a sudden wave of guilt washed over her as she understood. This was a message, just like the rock with the Sinclairs. Someone had killed her cat just to drive her out. The same cat who had lovingly welcomed her home just the day before. Her baby. She just hoped he hadn’t suffered.

Averting her eyes, Gwen skirted around his body and unlocked the front door. Just inside, Kisangani sat with her paws tucked under her beneath one of the dining room chairs, watching intently. Thankfully, she didn’t try to dash outside. Not that she ever did. That was Khyber’s trick.

Gwen closed the door on the horror behind her. She quickly toured the house, rifle in hand, looking for any sign of forced entry. She found none. Nothing was missing or out of place. Only Khyber.

She wondered if he’d dashed when she’d left for the park and she hadn’t noticed. She had been in a hurry. Then a chill rushed across her face like the first blush of a freezing fog. Had her parents given someone in the neighborhood a key? She’d never changed the locks. Were she and Kisangani now in danger?

No, nothing else had been disturbed. Khyber would not have gone quietly. Still, the thought of the Neighborhood Watch being in her home left her nauseous. If she could leave for Vermont tonight, she knew she would and abandon everything. Nothing in the house was worth the price she’d just been forced to pay.

But it was too late for that thought now.

Gwen collapsed to the floor beside Kisangani. As Gwen stroked her silky fur, she began to cry. How could someone do that to an innocent creature just to get to her? Kisangani rubbed her whiskers along Gwen’s cheek then licked her nose tentatively as if to remind her that she was still alive. Her rough tongue tickled. Gwen’s laughter came out as sobs.

Soon, Kisangani went in search of her bowl. Gwen wiped her tears on her sleeve, then went into the garage to retrieve a shovel. Returning to the scene outside, she carefully buried the Khyber in the front garden deep enough to ensure no scavengers would dig him up. When she finished, she glanced sidelong down the street. Sure enough, one of Ted’s deputies was watching. She turned away and went back inside as if she hadn’t noticed.


The next morning, Gwen arose before dawn. She hadn’t slept well again. Kisangani had spent most of the night calling for her lost friend as if her mournful cries could guide him home. Gwen hated leaving her alone, but she had no choice. She desperately needed an ally and Crew 102 was the only one left. She needed to find them and get back before anyone noticed. As the sky had just begun to lighten, she slipped out the back gate into the park.

Gwen found the men she was looking for along one of the concrete walkways, dismantling an aluminum safety rail as salvage. She watched them through the trees a moment. There were three of them. One with a rifle keeping watch along the park road while the other two worked at disassembling the railing with a socket set and wrenches. A reciprocating saw lay on the ground between them, but she figured that might be a last resort given the noise it would make. Either that or they were conserving recharge time. Two more rifles leaned within easy reach against the rail.

Slowly, she emerged from the woods with one hand raised and the other balancing the rifle butt against her hip, its barrel pointed toward the sky. The man with the rifle spun around. The other two scrambled for their weapons.

“I’m here to talk,” Gwen said, hoping she hadn’t made a grave mistake. “Maybe offer you a deal.”

The man with the rifle squinted. “I know you, don’t I?”

Gwen tried to place his face. He was older, his black hair graying at the temples. He was no one she recognized. “I don’t think so.”

“Yeah, you’re from the Sandy Lots co-op. You used to stand night watch at the garden by the gate. You’re from the house with the windmill.” He had a slight, lilting accent, neither heavy nor unpleasant.

“Gwen,” she said. Stirling told her to always give people a name so that she became a real person in their minds. “The one you took a shot at yesterday.”

He waved the other two back to work. “Brad. You’ve got the wrong people, Gwen. Wasn’t us. Someone tipped us off three days ago that it was a good time to clear out so we did. We stay on our side of the ditch, just like our agreement. We’ve got no quarrel with you.”

“But it seems that someone might have a quarrel with you,” Gwen said. “I think Ted Stuart is setting you up to take a fall for a number of incidents on our side of the fence. I want to make a deal for your help. Or see if I can buy out whatever deal he made.”

Brad stared back at her impassively. “We’re not interested in your internal politics. We’re just trying to keep our families fed.”

Gwen thought for a moment, taking in Brad and his crew’s appearance. All three looked thin and hollow. Their jeans were ragged, their equipment worn. Surely this couldn’t be the feared Crew 102. They could only be a few months away from starvation and outright banditry. “What if I can point you with an untapped food source in your territory?” she asked.

“Go on.” Brad sounded dubious. He fingered his rifle.

“See those vines there behind you,” Gwen said, pointing, “The ones with the ragged, heart-shaped leaves?”

He glanced over a shoulder. “Yeah, they cover everything. They’re a nuisance. Someone should burn them down.”

“Come mid-July, all those tiny, green clusters along the vines will grow into small, sweet grapes the size of large blueberries. Enough to supplement a minor enclave’s diet for the summer. Most people don’t know they aren’t poisonous. Now you do.”

“July is a long time to wait.”

“You can start with the brambles behind you.” She pointed to them now. “Those are blackberries. There aren’t many in the park, but enough to get you started until the grapes come in.”

“Why should I believe you?” Brad made it sound not so much like a question as a way of life.

“You have a phone and Internet access?” she asked. When he nodded, she said, “Then snap a picture and check it out yourself. When you do, remember how many of those clusters you see.”

Brad looked up and down several vines as if doing mental calculations. “And who says someone else won’t harvest them before we can?”

“Our people are afraid of you,” she said. When he didn’t react, she explained, “Everyone in the neighborhood knows that Crew 102 controls the park. No one else is strong enough to even try, at least not yet. It could be a whole new sidelight trade for you.”

Brad's eyes narrowed suspiciously. “What do you mean, ‘yet?’”

“That’s what I’m here to talk to you about. What if our enclave recognized your claim? Full rights to the park with no more poaching or clearing out?”

“In exchange for?” He ran one hand along a remarkably clean-shaven chin.

“A mutual protection pact,” Gwen stated her full position quickly as she might not get another chance, “plus preferred trade, power and food for materials and parts, and any surplus from the park.”

“That’s not a deal.” Brad smiled slyly. “Your enclave is on the verge of collapse. All we have to do is wait it out.”

“Don’t bet on it,” Gwen shot back. “By the time you decide to move, someone stronger will already be in there. And, trust me, they won’t negotiate.”

“And if I already have a deal with Ted?” He raised an eyebrow.

“Then you are about to be disappointed,” Gwen answered without hesitation. “The Pioneer Party has its eye on this side of the lake. It won’t be long before they move in with the Commission’s full backing.”

Brad’s brow furrowed. “You have proof?” He sounded interested, not surprised.

“Not yet, but I will.” Her tone reinforced a confidence she did not feel.

“When you do, let me know.” Brad gave her a text address to contact him. “If someone’s double-dealing me, I want to know. Until then, we won’t get involved. But we will give you alone safe passage out, if you want it, for the info on the grapes.”


When she arrived back at the house, Gwen checked for a message from Stirling. She desperately needed some kind of leverage to sway people, whether the community, the co-op or Crew 102. After her recent conversations, she knew no one would move without rock-solid proof. While she didn’t find a message, she did find video file waiting in her Dropbox. No attached message or information accompanied it, though if it were from Stirling, she wouldn’t expect any. So she fired up her virus scan and anti-malware programs then spooled it up in quarantine.

The video was less than five minutes long. It appeared to be cell phone footage taken at a party. A posh party in a century-old house, maybe in the North Shore district from the look of it. The video had no sound.

Gwen quickly identified the host, Alan Long, powerbroker and head of the county’s Pioneer Party dominated Commission. An elegantly seductive Daphne Christiansen draped herself across his arm, her youth and pale complexion forming a perfect juxtaposition against the dark, rich wood cabinets containing his antiques. Both were well known public figures that spent a considerable amount of time together. Nothing useful there. So what was Stirling getting at? He wouldn’t have gone through the expense of sending a video for only that.

Three minutes into it, Gwen found what must have attracted Stirling’s attention. The video followed Alan’s hand as he gestured first to a delicate porcelain figurine in a strikingly familiar, cherry wood china cabinet then to someone standing in a shadowed entryway across the room. The camera took a moment to adjust, but Gwen recognized Alan was pointing to Matt McBride, the leader of the Pioneer Party’s besieged enclave south of downtown that was about to be consolidated out of existence. He hadn’t been seen in public for a couple months. She wondered how old the video was. Interesting, but still not of much value.

That was when she noticed who McBride was standing next to in quiet consultation, just for an instant as his face made an appearance from behind McBride’s head just as the camera phone started to swing back. She had to freeze-frame it just to be certain, but there was no mistaking who it was. Ted Stuart. And that threw into question exactly who Alan Long had been pointing at.

Suddenly just enough of a picture dropped into place to tell her she was paying attention to the wrong things. Now she understood why the china cabinet looked so familiar. It was her mother’s. Stirling must have seen that too. That’s when she began to notice how many of the other antiques were similar to ones remembered seeing around the neighborhood, including the porcelain figurine.

She restarted the video from the beginning, this time focusing on the background rather than the people. Over the next hour, she replayed it several times, freeze-framing as she went, tagging times and items, and doing screen grabs on the zoom-ins. Whoever’s cell phone that had shot this had remarkable resolution. She wondered how much it had cost Stirling to dig this up. She then burned what remained of her month’s Internet ration to research all the names and faces, and retrieve articles related to everyone she saw.

By the time she was done, she was confident she had the leverage she needed. She loaded the video and her newly created files onto her iPad then made arrangements to gather all the parties she needed in one place tomorrow.

First, she sent word to Linda that she wanted to address the entire co-op the next day, mid-morning. She knew that meant Ted would be there, too, without her seeking him out directly. Technically, he wasn’t part of the co-op, but would want to know what she had to say regardless. That’s if he didn’t try to strike first.

Next, she sent a text to the leader of Crew 102. She prayed no one noticed Brad Rodriguez sneak through the back gate just after sunset. When he left an hour later, they had the workings of a deal. She just hoped she could deliver her end. At least she knew there were friendly eyes watching over her from the park that night.

The next morning, she watched through the front window as her neighbors gathered for co-op meeting. She waiting until the trickle slowed to single drops before collecting her iPad, heading out onto the back porch and signaling the woods. Brad and two of his crew armed with high-caliber, semi-automatic hunting rifles met her at the fence. They fell in beside her as she headed down the ditch toward the community gate near the garden she’d helped till with Linda three days earlier.

“You sure this will work?” Brad asked. His sparkling eyes from the night before had turned hard in the morning sun, as hard as the pistol at his side.

“I’m not sure of anything,” Gwen said. “Just make sure your crew keeps an eye out. They do know how to use those rifles, don’t they?”

“We know our business. I just hope you know yours. If this thing blows up, we’re all screwed.”

“Even if it works, we might be screwed anyway,” Gwen whispered under her breath.

They walked in silence down the right-of-way on the neighborhood side of the ditch. One of Brad’s crew out front, the other trailing behind. Both alternated between watching the woods and the gaps between the houses.

As the rounded the corner at the retaining pond, Gwen turned to Brad and asked, “Out of curiosity, what did you do before the collapse?”

“I was a county building inspector when my Reserve unit got called up for a couple tours overseas. When I got back, the Commission laid us all off. I tried general contracting, but by then there was no work. So I hooked up with these guys and we formed a crew.”

Gwen nodded, not wanting to push any deeper. That he had no love for the Commission was all she really needed to know now that she’d already sold her soul.

They re-entered the neighborhood through the community gate. They approached Linda’s along the sidewalk from the blind side. Linda’s house, the unofficial co-op meeting place, was around the next corner on the far side of the street. Most of the houses on this backstretch were abandoned. One had been burned out and two more stripped back to the studs. Brad’s handiwork, or Ted’s? Now she no longer knew.

As they rounded the corner, Gwen saw more people clustered around Linda’s than she expected. Most of the families in her section of the neighborhood were there. They were all looking down the street the other way, toward the road to her house. She spotted Ted standing next to Linda in her driveway, a pistol on his belt. A quick scan revealed two deputies, one at either of the cross-streets she would normally use.

She and Brad were halfway up the block before anyone noticed them. They had just started to cross over to the far side of the street when someone pointed. In an expanding wave, people turned their heads. Murmurs of dismay rippled behind as the crowd recognized Brad Rodriguez and the members Crew 102. A few people began to edge away.

Ted shouted for Gwen to stop, then shouted for his two deputies when she didn’t. Gwen ignored him and just kept walking. Brad’s crew drifted up the street on an intercept course with Ted’s deputies. Fifty feet away from each other, both sets of armed men stopped, and glanced back at their leaders. Ted made a subtle hand gesture. Brad did nothing.

When Gwen was a driveway away, Ted put a hand on his pistol butt. More people began to disperse. No one wanted to be caught by stray gunfire.

“That’s close enough, Gwen,” Ted said in a voice that didn’t shout but still carried. “What do you want?”

“I’m here to see the co-op,” she called back, “not you.”

“With an armed guard?” Ted shook his head. “I don’t think so.”

“In the past two days, I’ve been threatened, shot at and had a pet decapitated as a warning. You’re damned right with an armed guard, Ted. Besides,” she lifted her iPad high so everyone could see it, “I have something here I think the co-op will want to see.” That sent another shock wave through the crowd.

Ted motioned for everyone to stay where they were then strode out to meet Gwen and Brad. Linda followed a few steps behind like an adopted stray that didn’t know quite what else to do.

“What are you doing here, Rodriguez?” Ted said in a low tone once he was an arm’s length away. “You’ve got no business in this.”

“Does that mean our deal is off?” Brad replied, the sparkle returning to his eye. “That makes me rethink Crew 102’s position.”

“What’s that, some kind of threat?” Ted asked.

“Enemy of my enemy,” Gwen said. Brad didn’t contradict her. Ted narrowed his eyes.

“What game are you playing, Gwen?” Ted asked in a low growl. “You know when you leave here, I won’t be able to guarantee your safety.”

“You’ve made that perfectly clear over the past two days,” she replied, “but I’m still here.”

“Your new buddy here is most likely responsible for that,” Ted said.

“Forget it Ted,” Gwen said. “There’s no one in earshot so you may as well drop your lies. I’m about to expose them anyway.” She waggled the iPad at him as a taunt.

“Nobody’s ever going see whatever’s on that tablet. So you might as well turn around and go home.” Ted reached for the iPad as if Gwen would just give it to him.

“Back off,” Brad said, advancing as Gwen sidestepped and pulled the tablet out of Ted’s reach. Both men’s hands dropped to their pistols, but before either could react further, Linda stepped up from where she’d been lurking and plucked the iPad out of Gwen’s hand from behind.

“I’ll take a look at that,” Linda said, retreating with the tablet. Brad quickly imposed himself between Ted and Linda, then looked to Gwen. She held her breath and nodded. Linda’s judgment would be the gold standard in the neighborhood, right or wrong.

Brad stood poised to grab Ted if he tried to muscle past. “It’s out of your hands now, Stitch-Bitch, so you may as well relax and wait with the rest of us.”

Ted stiffened at the nickname. “That’s almost funny from the leader of a recycling crew who probably thinks he was serving his country every time he picked up his welfare check. You even legal, Rodriguez?”

“Don’t test me,” Brad said. “I did two years in the mountains chasing insurgents, not six months with a sewing kit in an air-conditioned tent.”

Ted leaned back a fraction. He cast a venomous glance at Linda as she stared at the iPad screen in the deep shade of an ornamental palm. He sucked in his lower lip and chewed it, a sign Gwen took to mean he was either nervous or scheming. His eyes scanned back and forth as if trying to review what could be on the iPad that might incriminate him. After a moment, he stepped back and crossed his arms, seemingly satisfied there could be nothing.

Linda’s attention was fixed upon the screen. Occasionally she adjusted the controls. Gwen decided to see if she could shake Ted up.

“Pretty soon she’ll be calling people over,” Gwen said, eyeing the crowd to see who Linda might pick out. “She’ll probably start with the Clarks, the Sheas and the Johnsons.”

“What would she need them for?” Ted asked.

“To identify their stuff, I expect,” Gwen said. “You might want to think about what you want to do before she calls over Tom’s wife. After she sees where her mother’s porcelain figurines ended up, you might lose a deputy. Unless, of course, you cut him in.”

Ted licked his lips and shot a quick glance at Tom who was still in a standoff with Brad’s crew. “That doesn’t prove anything. Everyone traded me their stuff willingly. I got them what they needed to survive.”

“Oh, I don’t know,” Gwen replied. “I think Linda is putting together the whole thing now. How you’ve been feeding our family heirlooms to your buddy Alan Long after paying us a fraction of what you sold them for.”

“That’s a bluff. You can’t have any proof.”

“Not just anyone gets into one of Alan’s see-and-be-seens at his house in North Shore, do they? How’d you come by an invitation anyway? Though his people really should be better about checking his guests’ cell phones. How do you think these people will feel when they see you sampling champagne and caviar while they’re growing corn in their backyards?”

The blood drained from Ted’s face as he finally understood what was on the tablet. He recovered quickly. “I’ll just explain it was the price of protection. Without it, we’d all be driven out.”

“And that’s why you’ve been emptying this part of the neighborhood as fast as you can,” Gwen shot back, “to make room for Matt McBride’s enclave before he loses his hold south of downtown? And why you’ve been trading the excess people here were forced to sell or leave behind? Maybe she won’t piece together how you’ve been playing the co-op against Crew 102, stoking our distrust into outright hostility, and killing off any beneficial trade to support the Pioneer Party at her expense. Maybe she won’t notice the same tactics here as downtown.”

Gwen paused to cast a meaningful look over at Linda who was running a finger across the screen as if confirming a calculation, then continued, “But I figure from Linda’s expression, she’s figured out just how badly the she’s been used. I give it another five minutes before she wanders over to start asking Brad some difficult questions. Questions he might be willing to answer somewhat truthfully.”

“Maybe completely truthfully,” Brad added with a hard look.

“I’ll deny it,” Ted said, shaking his head. “None of it true. Whatever you’ve got is a fake.”

Gwen nodded, casually dropping one hand into her pocket. “Denial is an option, of course. But it looks like Linda’s about ready to call over the first group. How long before someone starts a rumor about how much the Pioneer Party paid you to sell us out? They pay in gold, don’t they? How long before someone starts wondering where you stashed all the profit, and starts thinking about digging up your foundation with a pickaxe?” ‘People believe what they want to believe,’ isn’t that what you said?”

Ted’s hand drifted toward his pistol.

Gwen flicked her eyes to his hand and back. “As you think about what you might want to do next,” She pulled her hand out of her pocket to reveal a thumb-drive hanging from a lanyard, “remember, this is only one of a dozen copies that I’ve made.”

“Try anything, and I guarantee you’ll die second.” Brad whispered harshly, then gestured to his crew up the road. “Those two aren’t the only eyes I have watching us.”

Ted’s hand froze then eased away. He snapped his eyes back and forth between them. “I’m not done with you. With either of you.”

“See to your family, Ted,” Gwen said, conciliatory again. “Get them out before these people start gathering the torches and pitchforks. Crew 102 and I will guarantee your safe passage, you, your family and whatever you can fit into one car only.”

Brad nodded with feral smile.

Linda started calling people over, the same names that Gwen had anticipated she would.

Ted paled and stiffened, then stalked off toward his guards. Brad gave his crew a level hand signal. They allowed the man to pass. Ted gathered his two deputies and marched back toward his end of the neighborhood. Brad’s pair shadowed them to down the street, then took up positions to secure the connecting road.

“You think it’s over?” Brad asked, glaring narrowly at Ted’s retreating back.

Gwen shook her head. “No, we’re just buying time until people wake up to see that men like him just like to profit on human misery.”

A minute later, Linda handed off the iPad to one the women who had joined her, then strode over. She pursed her sun-cracked lips and gave Gwen a long, probing look. Gwen kept her face open and neutral. After a moment, Linda said. “I think you and I need to have an overdue discussion, Gwen. Something about a dog and a gun? I hear the Novak’s still have a pup from their rottie’s litter. That’s if you’re still interested.”


A few days later, Gwen awoke to the drumbeat of rain again.

The clock in the living room rang five. Kisangani was curled up by her feet. Gwen’s heart pounded as she sat up and looked around for Khyber. Then she remembered he was gone. She shivered as she tried to blot out her final memory of him. Like raindrops down the windowpanes, tears started streaking down her cheeks.

When she thought she heard a rumble on the roof again, Gwen reached for the .22 caliber pistol on the nightstand. Brega raised her head from her nightly position beside the bed, where Gwen couldn’t leave without disturbing her. It hadn’t taken Kisangani long to train the young rottweiler where she did and didn’t belong. As the rumble elongated into rolling thunder, Gwen relaxed and pulled her hand away. Brega settled back and sighed, satisfied there was nothing wrong.

Gwen lay back down, too, and closed her eyes again, comforted that at least she was still here, still surviving. At least for another moment. At least for one more day.


© 2011 Edward P. Morgan III

Friday, April 15, 2011

The Inside Man



I feel like I'm drifting. I feel like everyone is moving in fast-forward while I am standing still. I feel like that scene from that movie, the one where everyone is sped up except me. Events below have caused me to disengage.

I live my life on the periphery. Even when I am part of a group, I'm always on the fringe. I never feel that I belong here, wherever here is today. Some days that works to my advantage. Many days it doesn't. I am self-sufficient and independent but work alone.

My file says I started as a snitch, a low-level informant. Like most things in my life, that too is a lie. They pay me to watch, to observe, sometimes enemies, sometimes allies. In this organization, we have no friends. Sometimes, there is a secondary mission, off the books, omitted from the file. Drop the right word here, the right expression there, reinforce the right idea or nudge someone in the right direction. But leave no trace, no fingerprints. Make certain they never realize that I'm the provocateur.

Today, the mission is in a convention center, a massive, informal, three-hotel complex with a maze of meeting rooms and subterranean auditoriums. The hotels are connected by skybridge walkways above the street. That's good because I don't like to go outside. Too many places for others to watch and hide.

On paper, the mission was simple. They always are in someone else's mind. A weapons dealer was using a science fiction convention to cover for a major tech exchange. The initial bids had already been recorded in a blind auction. Now, it was down to the survivors. There would be an inspection and a second round of bidding, then the winner would take delivery in the middle of a crowd of forty thousand plus.

My primary mission had been to ID the principals and their entourages. My secondary was to tag one of the cases with a noisy geo-locator when my partner lost her bid. Which she would have. That was part of the plan. The tag was meant to look like a double-cross to sow the seeds of betrayal between one faction and another. If anything went wrong, the final layer was containment. I knew there would be a security team staged nearby to make sure the tech didn’t get released unsupervised, but I didn’t know exactly where. All I had to do was call.

I didn’t often work with a partner. More of an associate since she didn’t even know I was there. But I remembered her from the early days, back before I worked alone. Now, I was Intel, she was Field Ops. I’d had the training but had never had to use it.

It was a complex mission requiring coordination, one of my most complicated yet. We even had an inside man. And that's where everything had gone horribly wrong. But that wasn’t why I’d disengaged.

I had started in overwatch up on the first floor railing, thirty feet above the lobby, overlooking the Atrium below.

When I'd been given my partner’s description, tall, lanky, flaming orange hair with three glittery tears running down one cheek, I’d thought, not exactly inconspicuous. Not exactly subtle. That was before I realized how many of these freaks there'd be. Thousands. Some were dressed in weirdly bright colors with hair in pink and green and blue. Others were in pseudo military uniforms from no army that I recognized. Many were hauling large, black cargo containers like amateur roadies at cross between a Battle of the Bands and a taping of Antiques Roadshow. And the place was awash in weapons, mostly replicas I assumed. Ideal for an illicit transfer. Who would notice one more set of freaks?

I'd sat through the introductory briefing. I knew most of the names of the characters but I couldn't be bothered to recall them unless I had to.

Seventeen minutes ago, I had watched my partner disappear into an all-night concert in one of the auditoriums. The tech, loaded into a pair of large, black Pelican cases, was already inside. The cases were MilSpec sealed against everything unhealthy for the tech: moisture, dust, shock and awe. Like my partner, they blended in perfectly with the rest of the décor.

I knew there was a problem when I saw a flying wedge of hotel security forcing its way through the crowd followed by the paramedics. Later, I learned later that my partner had suffered respiratory failure. They’d revived her in the ambulance.

I had never lost a partner on a mission before. That provided the momentary distraction someone else was looking for. In the excitement, both buyers and sellers had dispersed. And like the queen in a game of three-card Monte, the cases had disappeared.

While my bosses had me watching her, we'd both been betrayed from the outside. Or much, much deeper within. Someone had set us up nice and clean, just like I would have done it. Sow a seed of doubt and let the paranoia grow at its own speed. If anyone knew I’d been watching her, now they'd be watching me.

I had no way of knowing who had taken her out. Her radio had been silent on the issue. And the identity of the inside man had been compartmentalized outside my knowledge. I had a sneaking suspicion there was a contingency in play, one I wouldn't like.

I let the scene wash over me as I thought, disengaged but not despondent.

I assessed the situation on the floor below. I saw both convention and hotel security, but I didn't worry about them. Cops only a little more. If the situation turned ugly, they'd pull out and wait for reinforcements. Though there might be enough to form a tactical squad if they thought of it. That could be a problem. At least I didn't see any real military like at the airport. Or were there? Some of these guys could pass.

Standing there, I was torn between my partner and the cases. The problem was things were moving too fast. Everything but me. And I wasn't even supposed to be here.

I hated improv but figured I had no other viable options. Right now, the secondary took precedent. If the containment kicked in, this place would take a long time to recover. Time to earn my pay.

I had maybe minutes before this entire complex went Fallujah on me. If the security team had a spotter, they'd start containment any time now. My only shot was tagging the cases before they moved again. I could pull rank and take charge, but that meant exposure for me and my bosses. Not publicity they liked. If our security team picked up the signal from the geo-locator, they might wait to see how this all played out. Relying on them for subtly was never a wise contingency plan. But it was the only one I had.

I had an idea where the cases might be headed, but needed to make a couple quick stops before I followed. My Bluetooth earpiece would descramble any of our secure transmissions with the help of my Blackberry, but it couldn’t monitor convention or hotel security without the proper inputs. Which meant I needed a security headset. Then I had to trap all their frequencies.

Luckily, I'd scoped out the OpSec parameters before the mission started. Convention security would be the easiest place to score a headset, and theirs might pick up hotel security as a bonus. That meant a four-level descent down two different stairwells. The glass elevators would have been better, as maybe I could recon on the way down, but the elevators in this place took forever. Didn't any of these freaks ever take the stairs? It sure looked like some of them might benefit from a little Stairmaster by Marriott. But that opened up traffic-free alternate routes for me.

I also needed a change of wardrobe. Business casual was far too upscale for this affair. I’d go shopping on my way.

I dropped down the back stairs two at a time. At the Atrium level, I crossed to a secondary stairwell, avoiding the crowds milling around the grand staircase and the escalators. Even this end of the hotel was crawling with photographers, voyeurs and the exhibitionist objects of their desire. After the scene outside the concert, I was amazed con security hadn't cleared the floor. After the flying phone incident last night, the place had gone into virtual lockdown, badges and room keys only.

Two floors down, I exited into a party of light and shadow pulsing to a Euro-trash beat. The music wasn't half-bad, but the costumes the musicians wore made Alice Cooper look like a deacon's wife at a churchyard social. The problem was I needed to pretend I was interested.

First things first. I needed a badge. So, I picked the first person I saw staggering toward the elevators alone. A quick bump and slight of hand, and I had become "Marilyn, My Bitterness," whoever she was supposed to be. That one hadn't been covered in my briefing but would have to do.

From there, I made a quick circuit behind the music tables and lifted an unattended T-shirt, hoping it wasn't triple-extra large like most of the ones I’d seen people wearing down here. It turned out to be a blood donor shirt, which I hoped wasn't prophetic. At least it was black and not tie-dyed purple and blue. It had a pretty cool Chinese dragon on it. I could work with that.

Next, I dodged my way through the press of see and be seen toward con security. The door to their command post, if you could call it that, was one of the few clear spots on this level, right across from a band whose music repelled even these geeks. I tried to figure some way to use that to my advantage but couldn't. So, I feigned brief interest in front of some pasty twentysomething nerdling whose eyes lit up as I approached. I turned away before he could open his mouth once I’d set up my Blackberry. I’d settled on the distraction I needed.

Security was clear, so I ducked inside.

"Can I help you?" asked the girl sitting behind one of the four computer terminals. She looked like she might be sixteen, but all the twentysomethings did these days. I knew they had security cameras out on the floor. I'd already scouted out their blind spots.

"I think you might have trouble brewing outside,” I said. “The gang in gray-face looks like they want to start a turf war with some guys in boxes behind the stairs. It could go Kandahar pretty quick.”

She just stared at me like I'd spoken Chinese, which I would if I thought it might help.

"He means Plan 9 is looking for trouble with the action figures behind the spiral staircase," said a woman over my shoulder. "You're about to have a major Jedi versus Sith."

I turned around to find a tall, lanky woman with bright blue hair dressed in black overcoat with a tight, white, sleeveless T beneath. Yet another one not covered in my briefing. She was what they called con-hot. Not New York, celebrity nightclub, sex tape hot, but someone no sane man would kick out of his hotel room even sober.

I glanced at her badge. "Miss Corrosion." The only real name was "Lucretia." I’d only heard of one Lucretia, the Borgia pope’s daughter, and she wasn’t a sweet young thing.

Whatever she said, it got the response I was looking for. These pencil-necks could really move when they wanted to. A guy in camo with a sparkling green plastic, St. Paddy's Day bowler led a squad with headsets out the door, bellowing, "Move, people!"

"Is there anything else?" the twentysomething asked as if she were surprised I was still standing there. As was I.

"Come on, honey, quit thinking hentai or we'll be late for the Live Astronomy at the Hilton," Miss Corrosion grasped my hand and led me out. I had no idea what she’d just said.

I was still trying to figure it out as she pulled me into the stairwell. "What in the…" was all I managed to get out before the door closed behind us.

"I hope whatever you were after in there was worth it," she said as she spun me around. "Because that stunt means they’ll remember us both."

"I don't know who you think you are," I started again, trying for a sterner tone.

"Well, I know you’re not." she flipped up my badge up, "Marilyn, My Bitterness. I suspect she'll be missing this pretty soon, and be right back in Security to report it. You’d better hope they didn't make the name. Now give me that T-shirt you lifted."

Before I could protest, she had dropped her coat on the rail and was shucking out of the sleeveless T that already left very little to the imagination.

"I know they're pretty, but do you really have time for sightseeing right now?" she said as she extended her hand, now wearing only the black, pleated skirt and tights. I turned away, passing her the shirt.

"I don't know what your angle is here, but I've got an appointment." I said with my eyes shaded. Then something draped across my hands.

"Get out of the button-down and put these on,” she said. I looked down at my hand. Her T-shirt and skirt. She had to be kidding.

"It's a cargo kilt,” she said, laughing at my expression. "All the metrosexuals are wearing them. Don't worry, it's adjustable. And the shirt will fit, though I think you'll stretch it out more than will ever look good on me again. I hope you're not going commando under there."

She was serious. And dark-haired now. She was in the process of wrapping the blue wig in her coat and stuffing it under the bottom stair. "You could have picked a larger size. This is going be drafty," she said tugging the blood-donor shirt down over her tights, looking down her back.

Not moving, I tried a new tack. "Thanks for the free show and all, but, I think you have me confused with someone else."

"Contrary to your opinion," she replied, hands on hips, "I don't do this for just anyone. I'm your advanced team. I'd show you my ID, but," she made a show of flipping her hands down her torso. A small, black clutch had materialized over one shoulder. "Maybe this will do." She cracked open her purse to reveal the crosshatched grip of a small pistol. That looked real enough.

I'm not sure whether it was her credentials or the amazing resemblance she bore to my downed partner, but I opted to use her as a local guide for the moment. Whoever she was, she knew the indigenous population better than I did, and might even know the terrain. Besides, I wanted to know exactly who she was and what had happened to my partner. Keep your friends close and all of that.

"I'll need that coat," I said.

"The coat's a dead giveaway."

"So's this," I said, opening my shirt to expose the holster.

"Good point." She started digging it out from beneath the stairs.

Not having an alternative, I shed my slacks and shirt and squeezed into her ribbed, sleeveless T and pleated skirt. Drafty didn't even begin to cover it. I transferred my Blackberry to a pocket, then adjusted the holster to rest in the small of my back.

"At least the shoes work," she said as she looked me up and down, "but lose those socks. That's too geeky even here. Too bad you didn’t score a staff badge. Just turn yours around and security might not notice."

As I adjusted my Bluetooth around my ear, she tossed me a radio unit like all the convention security people wore. "I think you forgot this."

“Thanks.” I dropped it in the pocket opposite my Blackberry. With the frequencies I'd picked outside con security, I was now full duplex, transmit and receive. If I trusted her.

“Where to now?” she asked.

“Back to where the cases started, down in the basement of the Hilton. If we’re lucky, we can pick them up again there.”

A quick sprint upstairs landed us right outside the skybridge between hotels. Traffic was light. The meeting rooms had mostly closed down. Problem was, if we didn’t have to fight the crowds, neither did the guys with the cases. Unless they’d taken time to unload, they could be almost anywhere by now.

Less than five minutes later, we were descending a long escalator in the Hilton.

The basement was a huge, open space, mostly, but not quite, empty. It had the feel of a twenty-four-hour diner, the kind you know is crazy busy at breakfast, lunch and dinner, but you wonder just who’s sitting there at 2 a.m.

Amongst the bare, round tables that looked like an ill-attended wedding reception were a smattering of groups of mostly young men huddled around boards surrounded by cards and crowded with multicolored pieces. At a glance, I didn’t see anything I recognized. No Risk. No Monopoly. There was something that looked a little like Clue, but I couldn’t make heads or tails of it.

Miss Corrosion and I surveyed the landscape for any sign of the cases. Aside from a couple of cloth privacy screens, there wasn’t anyplace to hide them down here. Except in plain sight mixed in with the stacks of black plastic crates off in one corner. After a quick circuit of the room to peer behind the dividers, we made for them. Where we were greeted by two guys, both younger, one tall, large and happy, the other short, thin and very serious.

The little guy spoke first. “Here to check out a board game?”

The big guy looked at my partner and said, “You look like you’d be up for something adventurous, Runebound or Descent.” Then he turned to me. “But you look more old-school strategic, maybe Axis and Allies or Lord of the Rings Risk. So I’m betting that Arkham Horror or BSG would be just the thing to satisfy both of you.”

“Actually,” Miss Corrosion said, “we were supposed to meet some friends down here. They would have been carrying a couple cases just like one of those.” She pointed toward the stack near the wall that seemed to be vomiting more board games than my cousins’ basement when I was young.

The two young men looked at each other uncertainly.

“Don’t tell anyone,” she said, leaning in conspiratorially, “but I heard a rumor that they have a signed copy of Chainmail. My friend here is a bit of a collector and very interested. They might have some other stuff, too, but didn’t really want to advertise that they were hauling it around.”

The little guy looked dubious. “Third edition?” he asked.

“Second,” she answered, “The one before TSR.”

They both nodded approvingly.

“There were a couple of guys hanging around like they were waiting for someone. I figured they were meeting up with a gaming group. I tried to interest them in a game of Killer Bunnies to pass the time, but they weren’t biting. They took off a few minutes ago.”

“You don’t know where they were headed, do you?” she asked.

The big guy answered this time. “They said maybe they had gotten confused and were supposed to meet in the Hyatt.”

“Yeah, but that might have just been an excuse,” the smaller guy added. “They looked kind of uncomfortable when we approached them.”

Miss Corrosion looked at me. “Well, I guess we’ll have to check there. This deal would be too good to pass up.”

“You might tell them the con frowns on private sales down here,” the big guy added. “They need to take it upstairs or we’ll all be in trouble.”

“Thanks. I’ll do that,” she said. “We just wanted to make the exchange in public. You know how much it’s worth.”

They both nodded again, this time sympathetically.

But I could feel their eyes follow us all the way to the escalator. As it carried us up, I asked, “What in the hell is second-edition chain mail, some kind of weird medieval armor you people wear?”

“It’s an old pamphlet from the 70’s with war game rules for miniatures,” she said without looking over at me.

“How expensive could a little booklet be?”

“Five hundred base. Five times that if Gygax signed it. At least ten if the other guy did.”

“Five grand American for a game?” I said. She nodded distractedly. I could only shake my head. But she seemed to know what she was talking about enough to fool the geek experts, at least for a couple minutes. And she had gotten more out of them then I thought I could have, not that it was much.

Once we hit the lobby, she started for the escalator that would take us back up to the skybridge we had come over on.

“Where are you going?” I asked.

“To the Hyatt. We might still be able to catch up with them.”

I shook my head. “It’s time to call in containment. If those cases get released into the wild, it’ll look like a bad day in Bosnia.”

“We should give it one more chance before we call in the cavalry. You know what this place will look like when they come charging in. Besides, we haven’t been out of visual that long.”

“We shouldn’t have been out of visual at all,” I said. “You’ll just have to keep your team under control.” We both knew how likely that was regardless of what either of us wanted. But I’d never met a reluctant security spotter before. They usually had hair-triggers for calling in the troops and causing a scene. Maybe she’d done time in Ops.

“I don’t recommend this,” she said.

“I get that,” I said. “But it’s my call.”

“It’ll go down better if they hear it from me. But I’ll need your authentication and override code.”

Ah. I’d been waiting for this. It almost made sense. CYA. My bosses would not be pleased.

Reluctantly, I gave her what she wanted. She made contact with the security team over a secure channel behind a cupped hand. Discretely, I monitored her frequencies on my Blackberry while pretending to check my messages. Everything checked out. Perhaps she was on my team after all.

She terminated the connection.

“Where do we link up?” I asked.

“They’ll deploy through Peachtree Station.”

“How long?”

“Five to ten depending on the trains. They’re staging one station up.”

I nodded. Just enough time to street-hike and meet them. I waited for her next move.

“You should meet up with the security team and coordinate them,” she said. “I’ll recon the Hyatt and set up forward ops. We can rendezvous there.”

I nodded again. That, too, almost made sense. By the book protocol.

“Sounds good” I said. “I’ll snag a sat-comm from the tac-leader and get in touch. We’ll link up in fifteen in the Hyatt. That’s too short a timetable to work the proper channels with the cops and hotel security, so we’ll have to keep this quick and quiet, and hope it doesn’t blow up worse than it already has. So, keep it subtle.”

She turned a hip, dropped a shoulder and smiled that perfect smile. “I don’t know any other way.”

We split up in the lobby. I broke left, down a secondary conference wing crowded with lab-coated geeks pushing a projection cart that carried a cross between a Frankenstein movie prop and a WWII-era nuclear bomb that seemed to be playing music, if you could call it that. It sounded like a psychedelic funeral dirge.

I lingered where the wing exited onto the street. The food court mall by the subway station was a straight shot, two blocks up. Going around rather than through the Marriott was the optimal route this time of night. The Atrium would be even more packed than when we left. I assumed when I left her that Miss Corrosion would exit the front of the Hilton and head up the block on the other side of the building. We didn’t have much time before the security team was onsite, and they definitely needed adult supervision. Still, I hesitated and watched the glassed-in skybridge above the street. Sure enough, I saw her striding across, dodging through people like a salmon through rocks on its way upstream.

I started across the crosswalk in case she was watching for me. But I palmed my Blackberry and set it to record a frequency scan, just in case. Less than a minute later, I saw what I was looking for as green bars flashed across the display. She was talking to someone and it wasn’t me. I broke into a run uphill. Now, it was a race. The skirt was a definite distraction.

I was on the stairs up the outside of Peachtree Center when I heard the first rumblings of trouble over the con security headset. Someone had reported an unspecified incident in the food court. Con security was polling their positions for confirmation. Judging by the spike in radio traffic, hotel security and Atlanta PD were doing the same. They’d already closed down the two skybridges in the Marriott as a precaution. In five minutes the cops might start emptying the place, which was exactly what I didn’t want.

I didn’t have much time to get our security team in position and come up with a plan.

At the top of the staircase, I glanced back down the street. Foot traffic between hotels was picking up. At least they weren’t turning people away from the Hyatt yet.

I ducked inside just as a rent-a-cop was checking the door. I almost clocked him as I burst in which seemed to annoy him. But that probably described his entire weekend. Then I almost bowled him over as I beelined for the subway entrance. He shouted after me, but didn’t pursue as I raced away, my skirt flying up. How did women wear these things, never mind run in them? Now I knew how field hockey players felt, only my uniform didn’t include any cute and colorful spandex undershorts.

I met the lead elements of the security team at the top of the world’s longest, most disorienting escalator. They were dressed like high-tech government-issue ninjas, complete with the requisite gadgets, holsters and black, eye-slitted ski masks. In this place, they’d blend right in. I knew the leader, an agent I’d worked with several times before named Chen. He, at least, was safe.

“We only have a couple minutes before this place blows up like a Taepodong missile,” I told him. Then I looked over his shoulder. They were only five of them. “Where is the rest of the team?”

“I’ve already deployed second squad along the street per your orders,” Chen said.

I shook my head. That confirmed it. Somebody was working against me. “Ok, we don’t have time to reconfigure.”

“I can radio them…”

“Radio’s compromised. We’ll just have to make it work. First, I need you to set up cell phone jammers to cover this entire block. Plus, we need all police frequencies offline. That means fire, too. That’s how they’re going to make their move to get the cases out. Once we’re inside, I want the entire hotel phone system disabled.”

The agents raised their eyebrows. “All that’s going to get a lot of attention,” Chen noted.

“All the good choices were gone before you got here,” I said. “Switch over to encrypted, spread-spectrum mode. By the way, someone hand me a spare sat-comm.” One materialized in my hand. As I jacked it into my Blackberry, I continued. “I need two agents to cover the skybridges here. Just hold this side and make sure no one leaves even if that means a standoff. Drop someone here to cover our retreat. One more comes with us to cover the other skybridge in the Hyatt. Bring in the lead from second squad to cover the back stairs to the street. That leaves you,” I said to Chen, “in the lobby while I flush them out.”

“Standard containment?” one of the agents asked.

“No. Local PD seems inclined to keep people out for the moment. That works for us. Our biggest threat is an uncontrolled evacuation. But we don’t care if the people leave. All we care is that nothing bigger than a carryon gets out. At last visual, the tech was still in the cases, but could be transferred to a large duffel bag. Probably wheeled. It’s heavy.”

“Vehicle traffic?” another asked.

“I’ll cover the parking garage and lock it down after I verify the loading docks are clear. Have the external team signal if they spot a service truck. According to the hotel intranet, there’s nothing scheduled.”

“And the backup team?” Chen asked.

“Call them in to secure the subway and relieve our people in the food court, though I doubt they’ll get here in time to do much more than cover our retreat. This could go down fast. But if they do, have your second collect up his remnants into a strike team.”

“What about local PD and hotel security?” the lone female agent asked.

“Recruit them if you can,” I said. “If not, use any threat necessary to keep them out of our way. National security and federal obstruction for starters. Use any agency name except our own.”

They all nodded. That, at least, was standard procedure.

“If there are no other questions…” I paused for a moment. Everyone shook their heads. “Let’s get moving before someone thinks to pull a fire alarm.”

We left one agent to hold the subway for us, then dropped two in food court to cover the skybridges there.

As we transited through the hotel corridor to the lobby, I gave Chen a few more instructions.

“I want you to setup a tactical net monitoring all secure communications. Any disposition changes, regardless of source, including mine, get passed on to me through this secure channel.” I setup a special IM thread on my Blackberry. Chen nodded, then stopped short.

A young woman wearing little more than silver cat’s ears and a well-animated tail had paused in front of us, blocking our way. “I love the costumes,” she said “The new Stargate?”

“Something like that,” I said.

“The weapons look so real.” She pulled out a camera. “Do you mind if I get a picture?”

Chen started to reach for her camera, but I waved him off. “We’re in the middle of a live action right now and running late. But we’ll be over in the Atrium a little later. They’ll be a lot more of us then.”

“I’ll look for you,” she said as she scoped out my legs then sashayed off toward the food court, glancing back over her shoulder.

“Not exactly procedure,” the female agent noted.

“You get a lot of that here,” I said. “It’s best to improvise.”

She nodded and smiled knowingly, pretending to peek under my pleated kilt.

At the hotel lobby, I pointed her toward the skybridge beyond the bar. Chen headed for the cluster of hotel security, Atlanta PD and state police holding a worried conclave by the escalators as they eyed the still expanding crowd. By now, their radios would be nothing but static and their cell phones would have no bars. Even the landlines would be down hard, if they thought of them at all.

I split off and headed for the back way into the underground complex. I pulled up the convention map and overlaid the floor plan I’d downloaded.

Even if the second team came online quickly, we still didn’t have enough personal to cover all the exits, as a quick trip around the block on Google Maps will tell you.

As I descended the first set of escalators in the eerily empty International Tower, I contacted Miss Corrosion on the comm. “The security team’s in place. What’s your 20?”

“I’m in the basement,” she said, “Conference Center level. Is the strike team online?” I was surprised she answered but was interested in what else she had to say. Maybe I was wrong about what was going on.

“No, we’ll form it up when second team gets onsite. First, we need a target, before local PD thinks this is a bomb scare and does something stupid.”

“You might rethink that,” she said. “They are going to move it through the parking garage.

“I’ll secure it then come to you.”

“Hold there. I’ll bring them to you as soon as I confirm a visual. Back in five.”

“Signal when we have a target.” I said. She closed the channel just as her position marker sprang to life on the 3D overlay on my Blackberry. With the sat-comm, I could track her position in real-time for what it was worth. Which was might be something like Greek debt on the European market by now. I broke into a run. I didn’t know exactly who she was but I didn’t want to miss another face-to-face.

After dodging my way through the cartoon crowd spilling out of the rooms on the lowest level, I came to the bottom of the escalators leading back up into the Hyatt proper. To my left were the doors into the underground parking garage. All valet, no self-service. So unless they had someone on staff, the cases were unlikely to be going out that way. But I already knew that. Which left me precious little time to figure out where they were.

I checked my dedicated IM channel. None of our people had been moved, so no tip off there. I checked Miss Corrosion’s position, and found her meandering two levels up. I knew better than wasting my time with that. God only knew whose pocket her comm was in by now. I suspected she’d turned traitor in this game. But where the hell was the exchange going down?

As I stood disengaged again, a young woman in shiny, white plastic body armor nudged past me to get on the escalator up, just as two guys in western long coats, one wearing the ugliest yellow and orange knit hat I’d ever seen, were about to step off the down side.

“Aren’t you a little short to be a storm trooper?” one of them asked her as they passed. Probably the best pickup line he could think of.

“You know how many times I’ve heard that this weekend,” she sighed. The pair of them seemed to take her acknowledgement as an invitation and u-turned right back up to sniff her tail. A newsprint program fell out of the tall one’s coat pocket onto the bottom landing as he nudged his buddy with an elbow like he thought he might get laid. Out of your league, friend.

Looking for inspiration, I picked the program up and thumbed through it. It was a pocket schedule for the convention. Not much official going on this time of night, except the cartoons, some B-movies and a couple concerts.

Wait. Concerts. Amps, instruments and all kinds of other electronic equipment. And tons of crates to get it all in and out. Plus music to cover any noise.

I quickly I checked the room and cross-referenced it with the hotel floor plan. And there it was, hiding in plain sight, a vehicle elevator. Even if we’d cleared this level, we might not have found it until too late.

I dashed up the escalator. The next level was more crowded but not overly so, mostly milling drunks and a couple of attractive twentysomething hook-ups seeking out the deepest shadows. Pretty much like the backstairs of every nightclub I’ve ever been to. They might be geeks but they still seemed fundamentally human right then. I’m sure none of us had thought at the beginning of the weekend that national security would include protecting them and their weird fantasies.

The next up escalator was packed, so I dodged to the stairs between it and the down, taking them two and three at a time until I crashed into the sea of humanity at the top. I pushed my way into the press of alcohol and sweat soaked bodies, past the impromptu hotel bar, past the potbellied Gene Simmons clone, past the drooling picture takers gathered around a young woman clad only in green body paint and a few strategically positioned leaves, past the sparkling merman with a trident who definitely worked out and was eyeing my legs. Finally, past mob after mob of fishnet stockinged, tightly corseted, brightly-colored hair, pasty-skinned, black eyelinered young men and women, some on leashes. It was like an expiration date expired casting call for Road Warrior with no Mel Gibsons, all drawn into a mutant congregation by the thumping baseline in the auditorium beyond.

The doors to the concert hall were cordoned with velvet ropes and more con security who were turning everyone away and shouting at the crowd. “You aren’t getting in this way. The line starts outside. So move back before the Fire Marshall shuts us down.”

Line? For a geekfest concert? And what the hell was a Cruxshadow anyway? I could see where they were snaking the line across the floor like some evil Disney carnival ride. The crowd was loud and restless. It was setting up like the streets of Belfast during marching season.

I was tempted to push my way through with the gun and badge routine. But this posse was one incident away from a complete meltdown. If I were still in business casual, I just would have just walked across like I belonged. That wasn’t going to work in a kilt and sleeveless T with a perv coat concealing a gun. But I needed to cross that line. I had no doubt the Pelican cases were somewhere inside.

So, instead of waiting for random friction to ignite the crowd, I decided to start flicking matches. I may not know the language but I knew rival tribes when I saw them. Words would be unnecessary to inflame their mutual contempt into open combat. Fortunately, there was plenty of exposed flesh to provide the tinder, most of which was infused with alcohol.

Starting a fight is easy. Ducking out of it without getting caught is harder. The two cops at the bottom of the escalators to and from the lobby above were in surveillance mode, sweeping their gaze back and forth across the crowd like twin beacons of a lighthouse. That made the timing tricky but not impossible.

I quickly ID’d my target, an attractive young woman in a chain mail bikini half-drunkenly draped across a bare-chested Schwartzenegger knockoff. Crowded in close behind, a knot of small, weaselly guys in yet another set of unidentifiable uniforms was openly ogling anything with breasts and legs. They’d gotten loud and demonstrative, resulting in several disdainful glances being exchanged. Perfect. Time to light this candle.

When the crowd parted briefly, I slipped by the woman obliquely. I made certain my right hand, the one nearest her, was visibly occupied above my waist texting on my Blackberry. Trailing my left hand behind my back, I flicked her bare behind with a finger, then slapped my hand angrily against my leg as I pulled it back to my side to make sure the sting registered in her mind. I retreated without a backward glance as the crowd closed behind me like the Red Sea.

The crack of the slap silenced the residual noise just in time for the pain of the flick to catch up with the young woman’s beer-addled senses. “Ow! Someone pinched my ass!”

An expectant hush descended, quickly followed by a sonorous “The fuck you did!” from the Conan clone directed at the pervs behind him. From there, the turbulence in my wake erupted like an Irish folksong. A moment later, cops and security beelined in from all sides like a brace of Exorcet missiles. By then, I was a couple dozen feet clear, slipping the security headset out of my pocket and turning my badge backwards. As all the males in con security abandoned their posts to help with the fracas, I approached the heavyset woman in the con security shirt still standing beside the door.

“Go inside and get some reinforcements,” I said. “I’ll take over here.” She looked puzzled as if trying to piece together what I wanted. I didn’t give her time to think. “Do it,” I commanded, “before this turns place into a riot. The radios are still dead. We’ve got no way to call for help.” I tapped the headset to reinforce what I was saying.

She scurried inside. Which left me as the only fox guarding the henhouse door.

I ducked under the yellow crime tape blocking access to a third set of double doors into the concert hall to my left. Straight back were two more doors, either of which would provide the most direct access to my destination. Both were locked, of course. So, I’d have to take the back way through the concert. I just hoped I still had time. The pandemonium could catch up with me at any moment if the cops decided to shut down the floor.

I slipped inside the double doors and was greeted by utter darkness. Opening the inside door was like passing through a barrier into a world defined by a throbbing baseline driving flashing, multicolored lights. The place was SRO front to back, a few thousand packed in easy. Row upon row of chairs were filled. There was a mosh pit directly in front of the stage. All around, scaffolding supported lights, amps and video screens. Farther back, a raised camera platform recorded all the action. I had to say these people knew how to party. It was like a high tech, geek-themed Mardi Gras in here. All it needed was the beads.

I sidestepped into an alcove with a water station, surveyed the layout and consulted the map on my Blackberry. The rollup door to my destination sat right behind the blackout curtain that blocked the view backstage.

The band was somewhere south of metal and north of modern rock. They sported the standard-issue instruments plus a pair of violins. Two dancers in black bustiers flanked the lead singer who strode across the stage with Jaggerian confidence, his spiked hair bouncing with the beat. For all the sound and fury around him, he definitely knew how to sing. The music wasn’t half-bad. I might have to check out a CD when all this was over. When the singer grabbed a chair and waded out into the mosh pit flanked by a security escort, I seized my opportunity.

I wormed my way through the crowd toward the blackout screen leading backstage, after almost getting clocked by an apologetic redhead with a shawl who had jumped up in front of me to start dancing in the aisle. She could have been nearly my age.

Backstage access was controlled by a lone security sentry, the only one in sight who wasn’t with the singer or hadn’t been caught up in the mayhem outside. He looked like a Braveheart wannabe in a kilt with a combo balding braid. I tried the authority play, attempting to walk straight past like he wasn’t there.

He blocked me with an arm like that Scottish log they tossed at the highland games, as if it would have stopped me were I so inclined. “Where do you think you’re going?” he barked over music.

“I need to find Dave or Mike,” I picked two common names at random, nearly screaming them to be heard, then snatched a third out of my head. “Sarah said one of them might be back here.”

“Big Dave?” He furrowed his brow.

I dredged a sobriquet out of the briefing, something unique but physically unidentifiable. “Chthulhu Dave.”

“Chthulhu Dave,” he chuckled. “That’s a good one. It fits. Give me a message, I’ll tell him when I see him.”

I used what I had been told would be a one-time, all-access emergency pass and hoped it worked. I leaned in close to his ear. “Tell him the Fire Marshall’s sniffing around outside. One more incident and he says he’ll shut us down before the encore and screw the second act. It’ll be room keys only down here.”

I saw him mouth an obscenity as he glanced over his shoulder. I craned my neck with him. Behind the cluster of people beside the stage, all of them focused on the performance, I spotted the aluminum rollup door I was looking for, firmly closed. That meant I needed to get to the service corridor that circled the room and come up on my destination from behind. I spied the door to that, too, as I panned the area.

Just as I was about to drop this bruiser and declare a medical emergency, he relented. “Try the other stage entrance by the mixer,” he pointed across the room as he yelled into my ear.

“It’ll be quicker if I go behind,” I said, gesturing to the stage door.

This time, he just nodded and cast a worried eye at the number of people dancing around the singer on his impromptu stage. The guy had guts. As I started by, security grabbed my arm. “Send anyone else you see back there my way.”

“Will do, “ I yelled. I breezed right past the cluster of groupies, roadies and support crew without so much as a second glance. I stepped lightly so as not to become entangled in the snake’s nest of cables taped across the floor.

A few seconds later, I escaped the thumping beat and seizure inducing light show through the rear service door. The music still echoed in the corridor like a Sunday morning hangover. I had expected unpainted cinderblock but found finished wallboard lined with wood bumpers, and a drop ceiling with recessed fluorescents.

To the left, behind the stage, the corridor narrowed to fit three emergency stairwells. I marked those in my mind as they might be my easiest access to the street if I was wrong. To the right it jockeyed around the back wall of the vehicle elevator, the front of which was my destination. The corridor was devoid of activity, though littered with black, wheeled cases but not the Pelicans I was looking for. I ignored them. Most were lidless and either empty or disgorging cables and electronics. Those still sealed were awash in backstage detritus, discarded playlists, empty Red Bull cans and crumpled snack bags.

On my Blackberry I quickly confirmed that none of our security team had been repositioned. They were still in place, which meant I might be on the right track. Miss Corrosion’s comm unit was now hovering on the lobby level in the vicinity of the bar. Her five minutes was almost up.

I moved around the corner to the right. Straight ahead, I could see the first of the two doors I’d found locked earlier. The space between it and the other, around another corner and out of sight, was occupied by a fourth emergency stairwell. There were too many places to hide in this maze.

I hugged the near wall, watching foot after foot of corridor expose itself beyond the jog as I cautiously advanced. From the map, I had an idea of what to expect but knew from experience that maps didn’t always translate accurately. Soon, I could see the other door. Closer and to the right, within a walled of alcove, was a set of open stairs that scissored back to somewhere off my map. So far, everything was clear.

At the corner I gave a listen. I heard nothing over the throbbing concert. Show time.

I bobbed my head out and back, taking in the rollup door across the space and the entrance to the vehicle elevator on my right. No one home in front. I moved to the next corner, careful not to engage any of the elevator buttons, then ducked my head around again.

Inside the elevator, I found a white Econoline van. A perfect hiding space. If we’d quickly cleared the parking garage and the loading docks, we never would have found it. The elevator’s safety gate was up, which meant someone had been here recently. I spot-checked the van’s side mirror. No one looking back. Quickly, I cleared the other side and its mirror, then the underside. No sentry. Strange. Where were these people? I would have thought they’d have someone watching such a valuable cargo. I was beginning to doubt my instincts.

I pressed my ear to one of the windowless back doors of the van, then cautiously opened it after I heard nothing stir inside. There they were, the Pelican cases, just as I’d last seen them, ready to roll. I confirmed they were still loaded with the tech then dropped in my surprise, the noisy geo-locator. Now all I had to do was walk away.

I had just closed the door when I heard a lull in the music. In the hush I could make out the singer’s voice.

“Do you know what time it is?” he asked the crowd. Accompanied by a few thousand voices raised in unison in an eerie, Euro-soccer-style chant, he answered his own question. “It’s time for ‘Marilyn, My Bitterness.’” I looked down at my badge, and hoped he wasn’t talking about me.

In the instant of cheering that followed before the music returned to full volume, I heard voices and heavy feet descending the blind side of the open stairs. Crap. I bolted for the hidey-hole in the cubby beneath the stairwell. I dropped all pretenses and drew my pistol. It was too late to bluff my way out now.

“See, no one stole it back,” one of them said as he stepped into the loading area in front of the vehicle elevator. “None of them even know it’s here. Nothing to worry about.”

“I’ve got to admit,” the other said, “the band is pretty good. But why not stay for one more song? That redhead was getting into it.”

“That’s always the song they close with,” the first answered, then turned back to business. “Go ahead and get the van ready. She’ll be here any minute.”

I pulled out my Blackberry and thumbed up the radio locator. Sure enough, Miss Corrosion was on her way down the nearest emergency stairwell. So, she hadn’t ditched the radio. Just as I was about to give Chen a head’s up, I heard my own voice on the comm telling him I had reestablished contact and they could pull out. What the? Then the channel went dead. Rather, it appeared to. ComSec 101: There is no better jammer than one of your own compromised radios.

Before I could react, the door to the stairwell swung open. I scrambled to reposition myself into the farthest corner where I hoped neither she nor the van crew could see me. Too late. I caught a glimpse of her as I darted by, holding a pistol in one hand and a Blackberry with a sat-comm unit that looked suspiciously like my own in the other. That meant she knew exactly where I was, too. Where the hell had she been hiding that. More importantly, where had she gotten it? Off my partner I presumed.

“Start the van,” Miss Corrosion said. “We leave as soon as the music ends. We’ve got a delivery to make. I’ll be there in a minute. There’s something else I need to check.”

I didn’t have many options now. If I started throwing shots, this place would turn into a rerun of Mogadishu circa 1993. A pile of bodies was not what my bosses wanted. I knew she had a pistol and I suspected her companions did as well. You don’t rip off both my organization and the type of people we were dealing with armed only with a nice figure and a smile. My backup was on their way out. Any minute now, the locals’ radios would come back online. I was certain that would play into her escape plan.

I had nowhere else to run, no other place to hide. I had no idea what she had planned for me. If I disappeared now, it would only confirm my superiors’ suspicions. To them, she was just an extra with neither a name nor profile. I was the one with the expertise to pull this off, and it was my voice giving all the commands. If I died, it wouldn’t matter. Either way, she had neatly rolled up an eight-month operation and tied it with a bow. Only I knew that she had to be someone else’s inside man. She couldn’t have done all this without someone feeding her information. And she’d never talk if she were dead. I had underestimated her.

I heard her heels like tiny gunshots above the raging concert slowly click, click, clicking closer across the concrete floor. I couldn’t get a fix on her exact position because of the music, but my Blackberry showed her headed right for me. She knew exactly where I was. All she had to do was flush me out.

My heart began racing as fast as my thoughts. This shootout wouldn’t go down like Lethal Weapon, more like an entry vestibule in the Bronx. I had never fired at anything other than paper targets and that only a handful of times a year to qualify for a gun. She looked amazingly like my partner. Would I hesitate? I suspected she wouldn’t. And the odds were three-to-one against me.

In silent prayer, I stared up at the white acoustic tiles on the ceiling as she closed the angle. Up there, I spied my guardian angel in the form of an automated sprinkler head. If I couldn’t prevent her escape, I could certainly move up the timetable and make it more dramatic.

Bracing my back into the corner, I steadied my pistol with both hands, sighted in on the red glass bulb and squeezed off a single round just like on the range. As the gun’s concussion deafened me, the hallway exploded in a shield of water, light and sound. Time to slowed to stop-motion fast. Bullseye.

A white strobe flashed like lightning through the artificial downpour, only instead of thunder, a piercing, three-tone siren cut the air. I didn’t know how many sprinklers were open now, only this one or the entire line. It didn’t matter. In less than a minute, the hallway would be awash with thousands of conventioneers descending the emergency stairs to the street, once they believed the fire alarm was real. That didn’t leave Miss Corrosion much time to deal with me without witnesses.

I didn’t plan to make her job any easier. While I still had surprise, I seized the initiative. I popped out from behind the concrete stairs and fired off two more rounds, aiming for the van, a target I knew I could hit. I kept my aim high, so as not to damage the cases. I retreated to cover quickly, not bothering to note where the bullets struck. My only objective was to keep Miss Corrosion from drawing a bead on me. She and one of her companions belated registered as blurs of motion. I didn’t even try to extrapolate where they were headed.

Miss Corrosion recovered fast. She laid down covering fire on the move, spraying chips of concrete whizzing by my ears. I closed my eyes and kept my head firmly down. She screamed for her accomplice to prep the elevator.

When her gunfire paused, I popped out again, snapping off three more shots in the van’s direction, my vision tunneling only to the elevator. All I wanted now was to keep them moving away from me. Miss Corrosion rolled under the crosshatched safety gate as it slammed into place. By the time I ducked back, the elevator had begun its descent. More shots smashed into the wall behind me, sending shards of cinderblock and droplets of molten metal splashing across my face.

A few heartbeats later, I dropped lower beneath the stairs, ducking out and back quickly, squeezing off another couple rounds. Miss Corrosion returned fire, but without the accuracy or sting of her previous volleys. The angle was no longer in her favor as she and the van disappeared into the floor. Quickly, her shots became despondent then stopped altogether.

A few seconds later, my vision widened back to normal as a ringing registered against the siren rattling my ears. I emerged from my hidey-hole like a rain-soaked rat to survey the damage, wondering how to flee this sinking ship. The music next door had ceased. Any second now, I expected security to investigate as they cleared the floor. Time to disappear.

The mission hadn’t gone as planned, but close enough for anyone in my line of work. Rule one of counter-espionage: No plan survives first contact with the enemy. With that in mind, this one had stood up pretty well. The primary and secondary had been accomplished, all without resorting to containment. Not a bad night’s work. Miss Corrosion was good, almost as good as me, but she worked with amateurs. They never should have left the van unguarded.

As I walked across the hallway to the emergency exit, I enjoyed the cool water splashing against my face. I wondered if the action would have moved back to the Marriott, or maybe the Hilton now. These people definitely knew how to party. I could use a drink and a little female company. Maybe they weren’t all that strange. And I still had an expense account, a room key and a badge.

Stepping out of the artificial rain into the shelter of the stairwell, I pulled my Blackberry from the pocket of my kilt. On the IM channel I’d set up earlier, I typed Chen. “The package has been tagged. Standard frequency. Tell Ops I’ve exposed their inside man. They can pick her up from here.”


© 2011 Edward P. Morgan III

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Khost



The cat eyed Ajani with the same accusatory expression she’d used after their argument that night. Its one good eye focused on his slightest movement, careful that it remained beyond the reach of his hand. Its bluish, milky eye wandered, as if it were looking back to a time when it could still trust him. Back to when he could contain his anger, back before it had overwhelmed him, if only for an instant. Now, they both had to live with the consequences.

Ajani squatted onto his heels as slowly as the shade crossing the porch, as slowly as the sun crossing the distant, snow-capped mountains. He reached for the tea he’d set out, an extra cup waiting, as was custom, in case someone from the village happened by.

The cat crept forward. Ajani didn’t understand why it kept coming back, but he was grateful. Of course, he fed it when no one else in the village would. That would have been her wish. To him, it was a creature of the mountains like himself, reluctant to accept another man’s charity or pity. But with only one eye now, what choice did it have?

"I’m afraid this is the last of the lamb for a while, young one," Ajani said softly. The cat looked from him to the plate of meat scraps a few feet away, gauging the distance and how quickly Ajani’s hand could cover it. When it judged it would have time dash away should Ajani twitch, it moved in. It devoured his offering greedily, like the parched soil of his field drinking in water back when the poppies had swelled with blooms. The cat kept its ears forward, listening, snapping its head up each time Ajani gently sipped his tea.

After all this time, Ajani still only thought of it as "cat," though he knew Namir had given it a secret name, one she wouldn’t tell him. But he had learned that name anyway. Sometimes, Ajani had heard her whispering it at night. Khost, after the foreigners’ base down the valley, and the university she had said she would attend. She had thought she was being clever, disguising two desires beneath a single name. At the time, he had thought it was innocent enough, another of her girlish games he so adored. In the way of all young girls, she had given a secret name to everything. Muna had said that she’d grow out of it.

The cat finished its meal and stretched out on its side in a corner of sunlight, washing a paw well beyond his reach, its good eye watching him surreptitiously. In the same way Namir used to watch him when she was young. As with her, he pretended not to notice, his part in the games they’d used to play.

Ajani turned from the mountains toward the village to see Yasir puffing his way up the road, his pakul cap askew from where he’d wiped his brow. Yasir was not a man built for the struggles of their country. Yasir’s father and grandfather had struggled against the Russians. Ajani’s father had smuggled weapons across the border on hidden trails. Neither Yasir nor Ajani had been so brave against the Students, though few men who still lived had.

Yasir collapsed onto the porch and accepted the cup of tea Ajani offered with a small wave of thanks. Ajani wondered how Yasir had ever managed on pilgrimage last year.

"The tea is strong today," Yasir said after a tentative sip, dropping in a sugar cube after. "You have finally mastered making it. Muna would be proud." He then reached for one of the dried apricots Ajani had set out on a plate. The cat feigned sleep now. Only the slightest flicking of its tail betrayed its continued vigilance.

"That animal is cursed," Yasir said, giving it a narrow glance between sips.

"The cat did nothing to cause my troubles," Ajani said. He knew Yasir was only making conversation.

"Few men would be so forgiving. Here, I brought you something." Yasir held out a small cloth bag that smelled like tobacco. "I’ve added cloves to the blend, a trick I learned from the Indonesians on pilgrimage."

Ajani accepted the bag, as hospitality required. Perhaps he could use it to bribe the foreigners. Or the Students should he encounter them again.

Yasir pulled a cigarette from behind his ear and struck a match against one of the pale bricks of Ajani’s house. He drew a long, deep breath, then let it out with a satisfyingly smoky sigh.

Ajani wished he could smoke again. He had once enjoyed rolling his own cigarettes the way his father had taught him as a boy. In years past, Ajani and Yasir would sit on the porch for hours, smoking cigarettes, drinking Muna’s tea that Namir brought them and discussing the latest news. It paid to have the village tobacconist as a friend, both in cigarettes and in gossip. Only the foreigners smoked much now, while telling all of his people not to. Last year, Namir had started smoking. That was where their argument had begun that night.

"It’s been almost a year, Ajani," Yasir said as if he could read his friend’s thoughts. "You should let yourself enjoy this life again. What happened was God’s will."

"God didn’t guide my hand that night," Ajani said.

"Your hand did not plant the mine. The Students did."

"Without my hand, Namir would never have been out that morning."

Yasir just waved away Ajani’s argument, his hand now firmly holding his cigarette. They had been through this conversation a dozen times before.

Zemar had said there would be trouble when Muna had started dressing Namir as a boy. Muna had reminded Ajani that it was an accepted custom, even under the Students’ rule. At first Ajani hadn’t minded. The other villagers had stopped giving him looks of pity for Muna not bearing him a son. But once Namir had begun to change into a woman, she’d been reluctant to give up her established freedoms, playing soccer, attending classes, wandering the village unescorted. Muna had said their daughter just needed time to adjust to her new role. Muna had been through it herself, and she’d made Ajani a good wife, hadn’t she?

"Other men would have been more patient," Ajani broke their mutual silence.

"Other men would have beaten her with a stick," Yasir corrected through a cloud of bluish smoke. "Zemar would have used a wire."

"I think Zemar misses life under the Students."

"Many men’s memories have grown short, Ajani. Zemar suffered as much as any of us when the Students were in power."

"But now he seeks to profit from their return. And drag us all into ruin with his ventures."

Yasir left that undisputed. His breathing had become less ragged from the exertion of the climb. Ajani tried to enjoy the sweet, rich smell of the cigarette smoke but it only reminded him of that night.

Ajani had smelled the smoke in Namir’s room, as he had twice before. Muna had asked him to let it be. There was no prohibition against women smoking. But Ajani knew Namir had stolen the tobacco from his bag. Not a path any young woman should ever set her feet upon. He had called her into the kitchen. They had argued. Zemar had said earlier that Ajani allowed his women too much freedom, that they needed discipline or they would never respect him as a man. But Ajani couldn’t bring himself to strike either his wife or his daughter. His grandfather would have been aghast. His father merely amused.

Their argument had grown loud, drifting from cigarettes to Namir’s sidelong glances at the foreign soldiers. Fortunately, Ajani lived well beyond the outskirts of the village, so there were no ears to convert their words into whispered gossip.

Still, Ajani had had a trying day, the continuation of a trying year. The previous spring, Zemar had convinced him to devote a portion of his land to growing poppies, saying even a small parcel such as his would make a man rich with what the brokers paid. Initially, his modest crop had blossomed like his daughter, bright and colorful against an otherwise brown and dusty land. But that day, Zemar had quoted him a much lower price than in the spring, he said because Ajani hadn’t given him enough money to pay the proper bribes. Now, the foreigners had become interested. And that had brought the Students out from hiding in the mountains.

Ajani was angry because he thought Zemar had misled him. Angry at Zemar, angry at the foreigners who wouldn’t let them make any money after taking away their country. Angry at Namir for looking at those foreign men with eyes as piercing as the mountain sky, and wanting to imitate their women, some of whom were soldiers. Namir wasn’t old enough to know how the Students punished women who were so bold. It made him even angrier to remember.

Even in a blinding rage, Ajani hadn’t thought to strike his daughter. He couldn’t. So he’d lashed out at the one thing she loved, the cat. Now he spent his days trying to court its affection.

"I can never take back what I’ve done," Ajani said.

"All we can do is pray for forgiveness," his friend replied, taking another apricot. "That and go on living."

That night, the cat had jumped up on the table between them as their words grew loud and angry, purring and rubbing as though to play the peacemaker. Ajani had snapped out his hand with all a man’s power, not really thinking until he’d connected. Like swatting at a fly in summer. The cat had yowled and scrambled off the table, its claws leaving scars across the wood like a painful memory.

By the time Ajani had realized what he’d done, he was alone. Both his women were in hiding. He’d slept on the porch that night, afraid of the fear he’d seen behind their eyes.

He remembered telling Yasir the next day that Namir had sneaked past both her parents before dawn to find her beloved pet. Instead, she’d found a mine the Students had buried as a gift to a foreign patrol. The sound of her discovery had awakened the entire village.

"I fear God turned his back on me that night," Ajani said, staring up at the deep blue dome of heaven.

"God only shows his back to those who turn away. Many in the village lost someone last winter."

From that morning onward, Muna would no longer speak to him. She cooked his meals, cleaned his house, stitched his clothing, performed all the duties required of a wife. But she never said a word. Ajani had grown so accustomed to her silence that he had barely noticed when she started coughing. At first, he thought she was using it to remind him of her displeasure, as women sometimes did. Then came the day her coughing hadn’t stopped. Blood soon followed.

Neither he nor the others in the village who had taken up Zemar’s venture had any money left for medicine. All the poppies had withered soon after Namir’s death, just days before the harvest. Either the Students or the foreigners had poisoned them. The village had grown quieter that winter as more soil became freshly turned and neatly piled with stones, the only markers to the dead except the memories of the living.

Yasir crushed out the remains of his cigarette. He levered himself to his feet and dusted off his vest.

"I have to go, Ajani. Zemar and I are meeting the foreign soldiers who want to see if the village has recovered. Like their medicine would have gone unwelcomed last winter. At least they are not the Students. Or the Russians."

With a wave, Yasir started back down the road.

Ajani looked around for the cat. During his conversation with Yasir, it had disappeared, like a recrimination of the lies he’d recounted in his mind. It, like Muna, had seen his hand connect right across his daughter’s face. The cat had been too quick to accept the blow. Ajani’s hand, and the all power behind it, had carried until it found Namir’s beautiful eye.

For a moment, she had only stared at him while covering her eye like an accusation. Then she’d fled the house, the cat close behind. She had spent her last night crying somewhere in the darkness, cold and alone with only the stars to comfort her. Her sobs had occasionally drifted to Ajani’s ears through the clear night air, but he had hardened his heart, thinking them a lesson.

Like a good wife, Muna had never contradicted his story to Yasir. She, too, might have thought his tale of the cat would spare them the looks of pity they had shed when Namir had temporarily become a boy. But she’d never said.

In truth, Ajani did not know how the cat had been blinded. It had slunk back to the house with a milky eye three days later, perhaps a little wiser for seeking out a more peaceful home. His was a hard country, if sometimes unintentionally.

Ajani found the cat sitting half behind the corner of the house, watching him again. Its expression changed from wariness to curiosity as he studied the gray stripes around its eyes. It still looked so young and innocent despite its world-worn scar. He had never noticed the thin strip of light fur that highlighted its eyes in the same way Namir’s had been offset by her long, dark lashes.

Ajani remembered Namir had been born with those lashes, remembered Muna had already settled on the name because it would fit either a son or daughter. Back then, Ajani had thought it didn’t matter, as there would always be time for more children. He remembered his only child’s name meant "swift cat." If only she had been as quick as the cat that night.

He remembered the day Zemar’s wife, Hidi, had hurried up the road with a bag of kittens she had smuggled away before her husband could tie a knot in it and throw it in the river. Remembered Namir begging him to keep one without knowing he’d already decided that at least one of them should live. He had pretended to protest just to make her joy all the greater when he finally gave in, his only condition that she pick a boy so that he might have some male companionship beneath his roof. He remembered watching Namir dip a rag in goat’s milk to suckle it until it was fully weaned, and thinking what a gentle wife and mother she would make some man. Maybe even Yasir.

The cat still studied him from the corner, peering out just a little farther.

"I know your secret name, young one," Ajani said quietly, rubbing his outreached fingers together as he’d seen Namir do to lure it closer. "Or should I call you Khost?"

The cat tilted its head and pricked its ears, then yawned and stretched toward Ajani, settling just within fingertip reach, though it remained tense and ready to spring should Ajani attempt to touch it. Ajani counted that as progress as he slowly brought his hand back to his side.

They sat together on the porch for a time, both staring toward the snow forming on the distant mountains. The passes would be closing soon. Ajani still knew some hidden trails the foreigners had yet to discover. Perhaps, he’d use one to cross to a place where they had no influence. A place where he could forget and begin again.

But, if he left his home and that night behind, he’d have to bring Khost with him, if only to remember.


© 2011 Edward P. Morgan III

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Guardian

Rain is a distant memory, like the tender young shoots of spring. Where once a wide and swirling river flowed, only a tiny trickle remains. The steady wind smells hot and dry, without a trace of moisture in it.

The clans raise clouds of dust as we move across the plain. Drought drives us to seek greener grazing lands as we chase the distant storms. In our trek along this well-worn route, we pause at watering holes to recover our strength before setting our feet on the ancient path again.

Our clan, Antilopina’s clan, follows the larger ones, picking through their leavings. From the day I was born, I have associated the scent of our clan with shelter and with home. They are my aunts, my sisters, my nieces. Now, I have a daughter of my own. Giselle is my joy, a brightness in this otherwise dun and dreary land. Like many in our clan, this is her first journey across the plain. It is only my second.

Along the shriveled river, our few men stand watch at the edge of the clan’s territory. We have no soldiers, only sentries to scan for danger and raise an alarm. With so many new mothers among us, we are a tempting target for Panthera and her kin. But we are quick and agile, ready to flee from the slightest provocation. Our enemies have a difficult time capturing us unless they catch us alone and off-guard.

Antilopina nestles up our territory to the small rise where Papio’s clan leader has marked his claim. His is a foreign clan with strange and different customs. His lieutenants are his soldiers. They all guard families of their own. His clan doesn’t worry as much about lone enemies like Panthera, only when her more powerful cousins form up in packs to hunt.

My mother always told me that the leader of Papio’s clan was our Guardian. Without him, I might not be alive. The fragrance of his clan blends with our own to create a comforting scent of safety. He and his soldiers are powerful and strong where our men are not. To young eyes they look like heroes.

When I was young, my mother warned me not to provoke the Guardian or I would pay a terrible price. I still do not know why he protects our clan. A dark secret swirls around him, but my mother never confided it to me. She fell last season when Panthera’s kin came stalking. With the Sheba dead, Antilopina inherited our clan. Now, she, not my mother, is our matriarch and the keeper of our secrets.

Today is not a travel day. Antilopina declared a day of rest, a day for gathering food and water to help us on our journey before the grasses become trampled and the stream muddy from the nearness of too many feet.

Grant and Thompson stand watch beyond the edge of our encampment. Their eyes sweep across the plain seeking anything dangerous or out of place as Antilopina leads the clan out for gleaning at first light. The clan disperses to search for succulents.

I keep Giselle close, under the shadow of my limited protection. I instruct her on which plants to look for and which are best left untouched. I wish she would pay more attention to the ever-present dangers of the plain. She is still young. The world is new and full of wonder to her eyes. She would rather bound through the grass than attend to my mundane lessons. Many mornings I wish I could join her. But there is still so much for her to learn.

I struggle to remember all the lore my mother passed on to me. My sole focus is to teach Giselle and keep her safe so that she might pass on the Sheba’s wisdom to her daughters in turn. Even a change in a birdsong might signal danger on the plain.

We drift out from the others as we find a patch of ungleaned succulents near the long grass claimed by a rival clan. The river lends a cool, tingly edge to the morning. A thin mist rises and burns off across the valley.

Giselle begins chasing a black and yellow butterfly. I don’t have the heart to call her back to her lessons on such a stunning day. The sun begins to warm my skin, breeding complacency disguised as nostalgia as I watch her play. I range a little farther from the clan to keep Giselle in sight. It’s only when I hear Grant echo Thompson’s warning signal that I realize how far we’ve strayed.

I glance around to identify the danger. There, precisely camouflaged as always, Panthera has come calling, moving low through the high forage of a distant clan.

I call Giselle to my side. She doesn’t heed my voice. Instead, she springs away as though we’ve begun a game of hide and seek. Not the time, my daughter.

I survey the grassland again. Thompson’s gaze directs me to where Panthera is lurking. Giselle hasn’t noticed. She’s still too excited by the day.

By the river, the Guardian and his lieutenants are lounging beneath a tree on the small rise near the shore. When Cuvier and Dama take up the watch’s warning, the Guardian stretches and yawns before rising to see what’s caused the commotion.

I begin to feel skittish. Panthera is edging closer. Grant takes up a new cry. Our enemy is not alone. Her adolescent son hunts with her. When they hunt together, they move as if they share a mind. They stalk toward positions to cut off Giselle from the rest of clan. In a few heartbeats, I, too, will be isolated. If I run now, I might be able to save myself. But I cannot abandon my daughter.

The Guardian watches but does not move. Why does he not come? Has the Sheba’s death changed the terms of our agreement? Is there some part of the pact that I do not understand?

I call Giselle again. I stomp a foot insistently. She takes it as a challenge and bounds away. Now, I must chase after her. If I encounter Panthera or her son in the tall grass, I’ll have no choice but to protect my daughter. I go nowhere on the plain unarmed. But I am small even for our people, so have only surprise and determination, not strength, on my side. Still, no one will take my Giselle without a fight.

I find Giselle exploring at the edge of the tall grass, on the outskirts of a larger clan’s territory. Each time I try to herd her back toward the safety of the river, she springs away toward a new distraction. I dare not scold her too loudly. Panthera’s hearing is keen and she moves on padded feet.

I chase Giselle through a maze of well-worn trails. Her legs have grown long, her body fast. The tall grass obscures my sightline to the clan. I still hear Grant’s and Thompson’s warnings echoing through the shallow valley. Other clans recall their members to form defensive perimeters. We are too small for that. Our safety relies on watches, warnings and our feet.

I leave the tall grass when I hear the warnings change again. Our sentries have lost sight of Panthera. Many dozens of paces away, Giselle also emerges, her head cocked as if finally taking notice of the danger. I wish I could tell her how much her playfulness has imperiled us both. I save my admonishment for when we return to the safety of the clan. I suspect she now realizes that this life is not a game.

From the edge of the shorter grass, I scan the plain again. The Guardian and his lieutenants are ambling toward us now, spread across the valley. The Guardian is in the lead, his lieutenants trailing to either side. They must see something our scouts cannot. They rarely leave their shade and the safety of the river on speculation. I trace the line of their passage toward the long grass. There, midway between Giselle and I, a pair of eyes close to the ground darts from me to her.

I call to Giselle to stay exactly where she is. Perhaps Panthera hasn’t spotted her through the camouflage of her position. She may have been heard but not yet seen, a cardinal rule for all children of the plain. It’s too late to retrieve her, too late to dash to her side and shield her with my body. All I can do is distract Panthera, like any mother would. Expose myself to protect my wayward daughter. Even from this distance, I can see Giselle shivering where she stands. The reality of our situation has finally settled in.

I gauge the distance, gauge Panthera’s speed against my own. How long can I outrun her? How far will I get before she captures me? She doesn’t seem to have noticed the Guardian and his lieutenants. They are cunning. They aren’t headed directly for her. They circle around to cut her off once she reveals herself to chase either Giselle or I. All I need to do is stall for time.

Then I remember her son also lurks nearby. I feel his eyes fixed hungrily upon me from somewhere in the brush. Any moment, I could find myself caught between him and his mother, a captive to my fate. I have no choice. Panthera is preparing to spring her ambush. The Guardian will not arrive in time to protect Giselle.

Step by step, I limp out from hiding favoring one leg as though I’ve injured it in the brush, a trick I’ve learned from the flyers on the plain. I know this ploy will attract Panthera’s attention. It is much easier to run down the wounded than the young. I am a more tempting target for her anyway. I carry more weight than Giselle among the clan.

I feel Panthera’s eyes shift to me, watching for any misstep to indicate a ruse. I continue limping, wandering slightly as if lost and disoriented, casting wide eyes toward the river and our clan. I let my fear wash over me until I’m sure she can smell it in my sweat even from this distance. That, at least, is not untrue.

I pause, balancing as I hang the leg in the midair. I’m certain Panthera’s spotted me. The hair on my neck rises from the focus of her eyes. Doe-eyed, I gaze across the valley. The Guardian and his lieutenants have disappeared. Now I begin to worry in earnest.

Before I can take another hobbling step, the long grass near Panthera erupts in violence. I jump sideways as her screams carry across the plain. The Guardian has navigated the maze of trails to ambush her unaware. He and one lieutenant engage her in a pitched battle. A heartbeat later, she sprints toward her daylight refuge, bloodied but intact. The Guardian’s lieutenant gives chase, though he doesn’t try to catch her. An instant later, his other lieutenant drives off Panthera’s son. He, too, ceases the chase after a few paces. The Guardian roars and beats his chest with one arm, reinforcing his claim to this territory and to us.

I am overjoyed at our good fortune. Giselle remains alive with a valuable lesson that will serve her and her daughters well.

My celebration dies prematurely as I see her tentatively emerge from her blind. The situation reorders itself before my eyes. The Guardian and his soldiers have not just positioned themselves to protect Giselle and I from Panthera. Their new positions interpose them between us, the clan and each other. What treachery is this?

Giselle does not sense this latest danger. Before I can open my mouth, she prances up to the Guardian to thank him. He reaches out a hand as if to stroke her hair. With a quick grab and shake, he snaps her neck.

I charge to confront him with my simple weapons. One of his lieutenants draws back a hand before I come within a dozen paces. His warning is clear. I can join her if I like.

I freeze where I stand. Dying will serve no purpose now other than to deprive my next daughter of the lesson I have learned.

I look to Antilopina, who shakes her head in resignation. Only Cuvier and Dama hang their heads in sympathy. The rest of the clan has already turned away to resume their gleaning. Grant and Thompson resume their watch.

The Guardian slings Giselle’s body over one shoulder, a ration of protein for him and his soldiers before they move with us again.

Now I understand the Sheba’s warning about the Guardian, the dark secret that swirls around him. The occasional theft of a life like Giselle’s is the unstated price of his protection.

The next morning, I resume the northward migration with the remainder of my clan. My world is as brown and sere as the landscape, as lifeless as my heart. I bear the Guardian wide passage as he perches upon his hill, his beard still stained from last night’s feast. Where yesterday I drew comfort from his nearness, today I find his scent tainted with danger and the pain of a mother's loss.


© 2011 Edward P. Morgan III