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- From: JENKINS@agvax2.ag.ohio-state.edu (Kent Jenkins)
- Subject: Joy and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (more)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.010936.24786@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
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- Organization: Ohio State Cyberpsycho Rehab Clinic
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 01:09:36 GMT
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-
- Joy and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
- [Part 26]
- ...
-
- Wasp turned off the phone and sneered at the far wall.
-
- "What was said?" Vit asked.
-
- "Guy named 'Ghost'. Shit, I should have known. See, Ghost's this
- eccentric shit who owns all of the town that Rednix doesn't, which
- ends up to be a hell of a lot. Mafia even look up to this guy.
- Ghost and Rednix have had this war going on for as long as I can
- remember, 'cept the times where they trade with each other. I've
- got some receipts for some pretty sick shit from one to another.
-
- "So I figure Ghost caught wind that Rednix is dead and wants me
- snuffed, and you for being with me."
-
- Vit shook his head. "What does this have to do with Faust?"
-
- "Huh? I don't know. Nothing, I suppose."
-
- "The killing men were at her apartment. And at the bar."
-
- Wasp leapt up and began pacing. "Shit! And outside her apartment
- almost a week before that! And the huge apartment and the
- snipers...." Wasp let his mind process the enormity of the
- situation before he stopped pacing. "What does he want from her?"
-
- "What did your Rednix want from her?"
-
- The answer remained unanswered. Wasp could only think along one
- line. "Curse this gangreen crap and to hell with Rednix and Ghost
- both. We've got to rescue her."
- :::
-
- J.J. Faust was concerned. Her date with Patrick went well for the
- most part. He was kind, intelligent, gentlemanly ... yet she felt ill
- for the entire evening. A pencil-thin line of tension clenched about
- her throat and it wasn't until later that she remembered that a
- pendant once hung there, a pendant that drove her crazy. When she did
- remember, waves of guilt and doubt grabbed her. Guilt for throwing
- away the one thing that had made her a free woman, she had tossed it
- into the bay as though it had done nothing for her --
-
- /Stop it/, she told herself. She couldn't think and craved for the
- Liquid Apathy she left at her flat, even though it had stopped working
- for her days ago. The evening ended at ten when she simply could not
- stand any more of the pain or self-abuse. She smiled to Patrick who
- was a gentleman and took her home without question.
-
- Sitting huddled on her couch, praying the Liquid Apathy would work as
- she inhaled the drug, she couldn't help but be concerned. Her body
- was confused, trying to remind her of a pain that ended almost a year
- ago. She rubbed her neck as the drug failed to work yet again. Her
- skin was warm, but hot where she once wore the pendant. She applied
- a coolpack and the heat became bearable at last.
-
- Then the lights went out, emergency floodlights kicking on and casting
- a surrealistic mood over the room, shadows stretching over everything.
-
- "I don't need this!" yelled J.J. to any higher power who cared to
- listen. Her complaint was answered by a hurried knock at the door
- and, as she got up to answer it, the return of the lights and all her
- electronics. Everything made quiet noises as it reset itself.
-
- As J.J. turned on the door's small viewscreen her heart sped. The man
- was very young and blond, watching around nervously with his hands in
- the pockets of a baggy coat. Paranoia gripped her; who knew what was
- under that coat.
-
- "Wh-who are you?" she spoke to the viewscreen.
-
- "John," was the reply. "John Viresse from upstairs in 3C." The young
- man did not look rich but J.J. never met any of her upstairs
- neighbors.
-
- "What do you want?"
-
- "My foodsynth is out. I was wondering if I could borrow some ketsup."
- The reply was glib, and appeared true. Maybe he was a sports star,
- J.J. rationalized. The face looked familiar, but she did not trust
- the familiarity.
-
- Still, she opened the door and greeted the man with a crooked smile.
- "Hi," she said.
-
- He looked at her with glassy eyes, transfixed for a moment with a look
- of awe. Then he shook his head. "Sorry. Ketsup, right?"
-
- She laughed nervously and nodded as he passed her and walked inside.
-
- "I have to admit," he said as he surveyed the room, regret in his
- voice, "I don't live upstairs. My name is Wasp. I have to talk to
- you, J.J."
-
- Fright overtook her fraying nerves and she turned around to run, but a
- large and dark man stood in her doorway, letting himself in and
- closing the door. He looked very German, and her mind finally came up
- with a connection. The German and the young blond man. Then men who
- wanted to kill her.
-
- "J.J.," said John Viresse, or Wasp, or whatever, grabbing J.J.'s doe-
- frightened gaze. There seemed to be red and green shapes in his eyes,
- but she was too scared to care. "Please sit down. We're not here to
- hurt you, but we need to have a talk."
- ...
-
- This J.J. Faust woman was no killer. The entire European underground
- would be in great turmoil if this was discovered, months of deep
- reasearch and rumors mocked by this pitiful revelation. Vit discovered
- it and knew that everything the boy American said was right, that
- someone wanted her and had her. Her apartment was a cage set up by those
- who wished much from her. Vit could not fathom what this frightened
- woman could hold for anyone but it was obvious that there was something.
-
- "What ... what do you want to talk about?" asked Faust. She had her
- arms wrapped around herself protectively as she kept looking from one
- of the intruders to the other.
-
- The blonde American sat. "You're in trouble. You have been since Major
- Rednix set eyes on you."
-
- "Who?" This Faust knew manners and sat with her guest. Odd in an
- American.
-
- "Rednix. I think you called him Father Jim. You met him at ... at a
- very fancy party last June."
-
- Something hidden passed in that sentance and J.J. turned an ashen
- white, turning her gaze away from Wasp. Vit thought quickly and
- suspected that the party was set up by Rednix to gain what Faust had
- and the woman refused, killing the Major. Vit found himself
- surprised, deep in his own thoughts. If she did kill Rednix then she
- was the one he wanted, no hired killer but a jewelry designer.
-
- J.J.'s safety became suddenly important to Vit. What she had was
- enough that someone had lied, hiring killers to hunt a fellow hired
- killer. Wasp, now working in place of Rednix, wanted her alive. A
- great power of this large City wanted her not only alive, but in its
- control.
-
- Faust appeared completely unaware any of this was happening, again
- transfixed on Wasp, still ashen-faced with her jaw slightly hung down.
-
- "Your boss," Wasp explained, "works for a man named Ghost, a perverse
- man who has been known to pay for freshly-dead bodies and large
- amounts of drugs. He controls more underground in New York than the
- mob. He wants you J.J. I've been trying to get ahold of you for
- weeks to warn you."
-
- As the blonde boy went silent, the air hissed with anticipation.
- "Me?" Faust finally replied. Wasp nodded. Faust asked, "Wh-why?"
-
- "I don't know. It's something you have, maybe something you are.
- Ghost is into the strange. Rednix never knew how his mind worked and
- Rednix was just too quick for Ghost. They hated each other."
-
- Faust's voice was airy and weak. "And ... and now Rednix is dead,
- isn't he?"
-
- Wasp nodded gravely. "You need to get out of here, J.J. Get away
- from New York, away from Ghost. This apartment is a trap and you've
- been played a pawn. Rednix was after your pendant, J.J., but he was
- also after /you/."
-
- "And Ghost ...."
-
- There was a scruffing noise in the hallway, a quiet muttering of
- voices echoing off the concrete to the door. Vit heard maybe three of
- them.
-
- "Yes!" Wasp said urgently, still watching J.J. with dire intent. It
- then became far too clear to Vit that Wasp, too, wanted something from
- J.J.
-
- "I ... I promised to look for a boy's father. He's missing."
-
- Wasp grinned, sitting back. "What's the man's name? I can find him
- in a week."
-
- "We have company," Vit interrupted, pulling out his gun. "Outside.
- Three. It's an ambush." He stepped to one side of the doorway and
- looked at Wasp who was holding his shoulder and shaking his head.
- "Give me the large gun, then."
-
- Wasp tossed the heavy gun, it must have been at least fourty-nine
- caliber, and settled back to again hold his shoulder. J.J. was
- handing him a scrap of paper with the door fell inward.
-
- Gunfire scattered through the apartment, above everyone's heads. The
- last Vit saw of J.J. and Wasp was the young American pulling her
- behind the couch.
-
- He faced the doorway with the gun outstretched and saw not three but
- four men there. Three were carrying machineguns, the fourth in a suit
- and tie. He fired at the first one he could see, the spattering of
- blood blurred by the jarring kick of the weapon.
-
- The other two gunmen advanced, swiping at him with the weapon butts
- and scoring hits to drive him back. He shot one in the leg and was
- hit soundly on the side of the head. His world blurred and he fell.
-
- In the confused, fuzzed pattern of sight and sound, automatic gunfire
- was accompanied by the sound of breaking glass, almost pleasant to
- Vit. Voices called out all around him and eventually, the German
- passed out.
- ...
-
- [Copyright (c) 1992 by Kent Jenkins - Special effects done by ILM.]
-
- ---
- Kent Jenkins | I don't want the world,
- ("Thenomain") | I just want your half.
- |
-