Read Immortality Is the Suck Online
Authors: A. M. Riley
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #General Fiction
231
Chapter Twenty-five
Not to belabor the obvious, but I'm not given to carefully considered
introspection. On the contrary, what would pass as “thoughts” in my head
would probably read as wildly bouncing Ping-Pong balls to most.
Even the monster growl of dual carbs between my legs, working her
through the traffic, couldn't calm the wildly careening thoughts; I think it's fair
to say that my emotions, not my misfiring brain, drove us all the way up the 1
to the bluffs overlooking the Malibu surf.
If I had died that night in the Marina warehouse, Peter would have been
better off. I swear this had not occurred to me until that moment. Or, better, if
I had died in Iraq. I think the only reason I didn't drive into the sea or just sit
there waiting for sunrise was I wouldn't allow myself to damage my Harley.
The old bitch didn't deserve me any more than did Peter.
Instead I made my way back to Hollywood, parking in the spot I'd found
and diving into the corner of the lower subbasement of the Motion Picture
Academy Archive building like an animal going to ground.
I was down there for a while.
Okay, if there are any undead reading this, a word to the wise. Don't try to
starve yourself to death. The survival instinct kicks in and your ability to
discriminate erodes with every passing minute. Pretty soon you'd suck blood
from a rat if you could catch one. So when I heard footsteps on the concrete
stairs coming down to my level, I didn't even consider who it might be or why; I
only considered how to immobilize them quickly enough to feed.
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Whatever he was carrying fell to the ground when I grabbed both his
wrists and twisted them behind him, shoved him against the wall, and planted
my fangs on his clean neck. Clean, cold neck. Clean, cold, undead neck.
“What, no kiss hello?” rasped Caballo.
I drew back. I could drink from him, but it wouldn't satisfy me for long. “I
smell blood,” I said.
“On the floor.” Caballo was able to work his way free. He pointed at the
containers that had rolled over by the mattress.
About fifteen minutes later, I swam up from the haze to find myself lying
on the mattress, two empty blood containers and a smiling young man beside
me.
“Shit, man. When did you last eat?”
“The night of the big bust.”
Caballo made a face. “Idiot. You should have called me. I'd have hooked
you up.”
His skin was sleek and plump. He'd lit the candles that I still had standing
along the wall and his round muscles shone like a young god's in the light. He
lay a hand, experimentally, on my thigh, but I moved away. I might be ready to
drink blood, but sex was still too remote and painful for me to think about.
“Where have you been getting your blood?” I asked him.
“Your computer geek,” said Caballo. “He's got some kind of medical license
so he can buy it wholesale.”
“Drew? Isn't he in jail?”
“He cut a deal. We work together now. Betsy and him and me. We are the
'Righteous Ones.'”
“Sounds like a comic book,” I observed dryly.
“I came to ask you to help us. Those two, they can't fight worth shit, man.”
“I'm really not interested in vigilante justice,” I said. “Thanks for the offer.”
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“It's not vigilante, we offer a service. For a fee. Drew figured it out. He has
a whole sliding scale and everything. We are like bounty hunters, man.”
“Skipping bail shouldn't result in having one's blood sucked,” I said. I
rolled over on my stomach and said to the wall, “I just want to be left alone.”
“Man, Betsy said you'd be a dick. What else you gonna do with eternity,
man? Lay here in the dark feeling sorry for yourself?”
“That was sort of the plan.”
“Well, that plan sucks. Eternity is a long fucking time, and you got an
obligation. You could be dead.”
“I had kind of hoped to be.”
I was surprised by a sudden hard slap on the back of my head. “Selfish
prick,” said Caballo. He rose and walked off, flinging a couple of slim cardboard
cards at me. They fluttered near my feet and I picked one up. It was a business
card. White on black with a cell phone number.
“Call me when you feel like being a man,” said Caballo. It seemed his
ascending footsteps echoed in my little room for a very long time.
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Chapter Twenty-six
Eternity is a very long time to sleep on a mattress that smells like a wino's
urine. I hauled my sorry butt out into the night the next evening to find a new
mattress. Or, at least one that didn't stink or have bugs.
Since resale of used mattresses is illegal, it was an easy acquisition. The
local junk yard wasn't open, but I heaved the thing easily over the fence,
leaving the freaked and insane guard dogs frothing and yowling behind me.
I found a wooden table in there too. And a couple of chairs. Then I slipped
an envelope under the door with a decent amount of cash.
I didn't give my actions much thought. I have found it easiest not to
question myself, and so I didn't. I went to a surplus store and found a small,
gas-powered generator for sale. A couple of khaki-colored wool blankets. A cup
and a plate.
The following night I went to a 7-Eleven and bought a magazine to read by
my tiny lamplight. And an ashtray. You can make a huge pile of ashes in an
eternity of smoking, you know.
The third night I bought a broom.
The fourth night, I bought a prepaid phone and called Caballo. “I've been
thinking…”
* * * * *
He and I crouched on the rooftop of a Public Storage warehouse. The night
was almost bright as day. Streetlights reflecting off the marine fog created an
eerie illumination much like a black light.
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He'd changed from his ubiquitous white T-shirt into a black one and wore
fingerless gloves. The scabbard of his sword slung over his back. I knew that
somewhere on his person he'd sequestered other arms, as had I. But they were
only backup. Our real weapons were ourselves.
“Betsy,” said Caballo, and grinned. “That girl can't shut up, man. Pretty
soon she's got me feeling every po' little black child in America needs my help.
Crazy bitch.”
Across from us, the door to another warehouse opened. A figure emerged.
Stout and, from our angle, seeming very short. He was soon followed by a slim
figure whose high heels clacked loudly on the concrete as they walked.
“That's them,” said Caballo. Still in his crouch, he crept toward the lip of
the roof.
“How do you know?” I whispered.
He grimaced. “I can smell it.” He ran a few short feet and, silent and swift,
leaped over the side of the roof.
I followed.
It was so easy I was almost embarrassed. Caballo held the man while I
forced his companion back into the warehouse where she seemed almost eager
to show me the tapes and photos and computer equipment they'd been using
to broadcast their garbage to the world.
Flash a little demon visage at a pedophile and it's amazing what they'll tell
you.
Caballo enjoyed sucking the man's blood and spitting it out on the ground
for a while, until the guy started to get dizzy and realize where this would end.
The woman had fainted dead away a couple of times. Something about the way
I smiled at her with all of my fangs seemed to do it.
They were practically begging us to drive them over to the place where
they'd hidden the boy. Caballo made a call then, and Betsy showed up. In a
dark suit and prim little bun, carrying a handbag and looking just like an angel
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of mercy from social services. She took the boy's hand and led him to the
nearest police station.
Caballo turned his bloody smile back to the man. The woman fainted
again.
We chucked them in the back of the truck and I followed Caballo to Parker
Center, where we left them tied up on the steps, a tidy box of evidence nearby.
As we were leaving, I saw a small crowd of people swarming from the station,
exclaiming at the delivery.
A man in a suit with sandy hair looked up and over when I started my
bike. Peter's gaze met mine.
“Let's get out of here,” I said to Caballo.
* * * * *
Caballo sat at my wooden table, watching me pace. We hadn't bothered
with the lights.
“Yeah. Sure.”
“You did a good thing tonight.”
“If you say so.” I lit a cigarette and tossed the match three feet to land
precisely in the center of the ashtray. I'd had time for a lot of practice lately.
“So you wanna fuck?” he asked.
“No, thanks.”
“You're so hard you're gonna bust.” He indicated the thickness between
my thighs.
“I'm on the wagon,” I said. “My dick gets me in more trouble than it's
worth.”
Caballo gave me a wise look. “Eternity is a long time, man.”
“Eternity is an illusion. I'm taking it one day at a time.”
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“Suit yourself.” He got up and went to the door. “So, about the gig with
Betsy and the geek. You in?”
“Sure,” I said. “What else do I have to not live for?”
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Chapter Twenty-seven
You'd think I'd feel a little better about things after that, but the next
night I woke in my familiar slump. I didn't rise off the mattress, turn on the
lamp, or even light a cigarette. I just lay there in the dark and felt myself drift
like a mote of dust.
Immortality. It's like fog. Sometimes it's thick and sometimes it's thin but
it never moves anywhere. It has no agenda, no definite goal. It just is.
I was lying on the mattress, imagining I could hear the gaping maw of the
giant, uncaring universe, when I did hear, very definitely and not my
imagination at all, a man's footsteps on the stairs.
A human man, or at least the smell of adrenalized blood, and the rapidly
thumping heart would indicate that.
By the time he'd reached the last riser and turned toward my room, I'd
recognized Peter. He stopped in the doorway. His familiar silhouette.
“Hello?” he said, scanning the room with his flashlight. The beam didn't
find me as I was crouching in a corner.
He stood there for a minute. Then I heard him sigh. He turned as if to go.
“Wait,” I said. My voice sounded weirdly rough.
“Adam?”
“Hold on,” I said. And I went over and turned on the generator. It hummed
for a minute and then the two lights switched on.
Peter and I stared at each other. Fuck, he looked good.
His expression was impossible for me to read. But then he blinked and
looked around, swiveling on one heel. “You cleaned,” he said. “Sort of.”
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I hadn't made
that
much of an effort. There was that stack of boxes in one
corner that might have been there since ABC studios kept their film vault here.
I'd only shoved them to the side. I saw his gaze go from the boxes to the
mattress to the table I'd found.
“You don't have to live like this,” he said.
“I'm not living,” I said. “I am maintaining my undead existence.”
He gave me a quizzical look.
I didn't want to explain my whole moral conundrum, the flat fog of
immortality, to him because it was embarrassing and too melodramatic.
I should have known that Peter would figure me out without me having to
say a word, though. “Well, if you think you need to be miserable, I'm not going
to argue with you,” he said. “But if you want me to come down here again,
you'd better get a sofa. A radio, maybe. To listen to the game.”
Something warm made itself known inside me. Something small and
glowing and fragile. Like a tiny light. “Okay, well, I guess if you want to come
down here.”
“Figured since you've been kind of out of the loop, you wouldn't have
heard. But we finally got the DNA back from your CI's wounds. And those other
bodies we found.”
“You ran DNA?” That was Peter for you. Thorough.
“Yeah. It wasn't yours, of course. We still haven't got a match on it.”
“You might try the Mexican database, I heard a few things.”
“Thanks. I never thought it was you.”
“I know.”
“But I figured you'd like to know that nobody else has to wonder either. If
you were worried. Oh, and I brought something for you. Hang on.” He sprinted
out the door; I heard him as he climbed all three flights and then, after a few
minute, came running back down. He jogged into the room carrying one of
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those coolers you'd take to a football game under one arm, an office file box