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Authors: Charlie Huston

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--Nothing. I'll let him know you're coming.

--How you gonna do that?

He gestures to the warehouse.

--We don't have much, but I do know how to use a pay phone.

I slip the paper into my pocket.

--Any tips on how I can get up there?

He stands on tiptoe to look into the pot, then reaches for a giant wooden spoon and gives
the contents a stir.

--You could do what the Duke suggested.

--The Duke?

--Ellington.

--Yeah, what was his idea?

He smiles.

--Take the A train.

--Been saving that one up for a rainy day?

He shrugs.

I look at his skin, trying to find some evidence that he was ever anything but pasty
white, ever a guy that could have been with the Hood. Can't find it.

I point at the pot.

--By the way, what's cooking?

--Bones.

--No kidding? Thought you guys already ate.

--One of us failed last week. We'll crack his bones and eat the marrow tonight. You could
stay.

--I'll pass.

I leave him there, stirring his pot. At the warehouse door, I pause. I turn around and
look back up at the loft. Daniel is at the top of the stairs, watching me.

I remember what else he told me, what he told me last time, after he told me that he's
failing. He told me someone would have to replace him.

Well, fuck that, that's none of my fucking business whatsoever.

I haul the door open and walk out into the night, leaving the smell of steaming bones
behind.

The A train. As if I couldn't have figured that for myself. As if I haven't been trying
like hell to avoid it.

I come out of the Enclave warehouse onto Little West 12th and think about the A train. All
this territory around here is no-man's-land. This is the turf no one wants because it's
too close to the Enclave. I can grab the A at 14th, but that will put me right on the
Coalition's southern border. They'll have spotters. Better I go to 4th Street and catch it
there. Stay in no-man's-land, where no one is watching. Once I'm on the A, I'll have more
than enough opportunities to get caught out.

The Coalition doesn't like anyone riding the rails under their turf. The major stops,
Grand Central, Penn Station, Times Square, Columbus Circle, you come walking out of one of
those stations and you're nailed. They got spotters living in apartments, watching over
the exits. Slobs that never go out. They just sit there at the window all night, snapping
pictures through telephoto lenses, changing videotapes in their cameras and flipping
through face-books to see if they recognize anyone. Rent is paid by the Coalition, along
with an allowance to cover takeout from the local diner. Once a week an enforcer comes in,
picks up the video and the film and the logbook, and drops off a fresh pint. The smaller
stops, they got guys there, too. May only be every other stop, but you don't know which
ones. Just like you don't know which train one of their enforcers will be cruising,
looking for interlopers. If I get on at West 4th and ride express to 145th, I don't have
to worry about those spotters aboveground. But from 14th to 110th, anywhere in there I
could end up with an enforcer on the train. How do I know all this? Because the Coalition
wants everybody to know. It's their way of saying,
Stay off the grass. Trespassers will be prosecuted.
And if they let you know about the spotters and the patrols, that means they're only the
tip of the iceberg.

The A train. Thanks for the help.

I take a cab to West 4th to save time. I think about telling the cabbie to turn the thing
around and take me uptown, but that's a worse play than the subway. On the train I'll only
have to worry about the patrols, and there can only be so many. In a cab, going through
rush hour traffic, there are too many chances of getting spotted from the sidewalk or
another car. Too random. So the Duke Ellington Express it is.

I get out of my cab at 4th and Sixth. It's dark and cold, but the lights inside The Cage
are on and a half dozen guys in sweats are playing three on three. I stop and light a
smoke and watch. I'm in a hurry, but this is a long fucking train ride and I can't smoke
down in the hole. There's a small cluster of people standing next to the tall chain-link
fence watching the showboating street-ballers inside. They whip no-look passes at each
other or lob alley-oops. No one plays D. I finish my smoke and light another. 4th to
145th? Even on the express that's a two-smoke ride.

It's no-man's-land. I can take the time for the smoke. No one comes onto this turf. No one
risks walking across it, let alone hunting or doing business on it. No one risks doing
anything that might offend the Enclave. Piss the freaks off and they come for you. End up
eating
your
fucking marrow.

Eating your marrow?

Doesn't it have something to do with blood? Shouldn't they get sick if they eat another
Vampyre's marrow? I mean, even if you boil those bones, the Vyrus has been in there. Shit.
That's weird. And what did Daniel say?
That again.
What the fuck was that about?

Color me pensive. Color me lost in thought and avoiding getting on the train, lighting a
third cigarette without even thinking about it, because that's my story. That's my excuse
for why I don't smell Tom until the fucker jams the barrel of his gun in my back.

--What is it, Pitt? Old dog syndrome? New tricks just don't sink in? Can't get it through
your head to stop fucking around on my watch?

He shoves the gun a little deeper into my backbone, hurrying me east on 4th toward
Washington Square Park and the Society border.

--Hadn't heard no-man's was part of your beat now.

--Fuck off. You know what I'm talking about. Shaking down pledged members on Society turf,
going into their homes and grilling them on Society business.

--Where you get that?

--Think you're the only one who can pump Philip Sax for information? Get out the rubber
hoses and that pussy opens up and spills everything. Didn't even have to lay in to him. We
did anyway, just to teach him a lesson, but we didn't have to.

He's alone. Tom's not the brightest bulb, but he knew better than to follow me over here
with a troop. Enclave would have had his ass for that. But he'll have partisans waiting
across the border. We set foot on the far curb of Washington Square East and I'll be
bracketed by his boys right away.

--Not even Terry's gonna be able to help you on this one, Pitt. Poking on our turf without
our say-so. Poking into official Society business. And then crossing over to report to
those assholes? Fucking-A, I knew you stooged for the Coalition, but Enclave? That's just
sick. Fronting for those mujahideen motherfuckers.

--Got your head on a swivel, Tom? Keeping your eyes peeled? One of those motherfuckers
hears you talking about them like that, they'll find you in your safe house and flay you
alive with their teeth.

--Fuck off. Fuck off and walk.

I glance back at him.

--Seriously, you ever see them in action? Scary shit. Like Bruce Lee on speed. Only like if
you had to cut off his head or something to kill him. Saw two of them spar once. One got
his arm torn off, kept coming. Other arm came off, kept coming. Got his leg wrapped around
the other guy's neck, brought him down and scissored him. Squeezed the guy til his eyes
about popped out. Whole time he's spraying this white gunk from his stumps. That was
sparring. Scaaaaary shit.

--Shut the fuck up.

I glance back again as we cross Washington Square West. His eyes are zipping side to side.

The light is against us at Fifth. I step off the curb as a battered and graffitied
delivery van whips around the corner. Tom grabs my left arm and pulls me back into him,
the gun getting pinned sideways between us. He knows right away he's made a mistake. Poor
him.

He tries to keep his grip on my arm while he gets the gun barrel jammed back where it
belongs. And he is a strong fucker. But Mr. Two Pints In Two Days is stronger just now.
And faster. I go left, twist my arm free and clip him with my elbow as I dodge into the
street and around to the far side of a NYC Parks Department pickup sitting at the curb. He
takes a couple steps around it to the right. I go right. He goes left. I go left. He shows
me the gun, flashing it low and out of sight from the people on the sidewalk, reminding me
who's in charge.

--Get the fuck over here, Pitt.

--Why?

--Get the fuck over here or I'll shoot you.

--Park's full of undercover cops looking to bust the dealers in there. Pull the trigger and
they'll be on your ass in a flash. Throw you in a cell. That's if you're lucky, if the
Enclave aren't watching. Waiting to see if you're gonna cause a scene.

--Shut the fuck up.

--Shit, Tom, don't you ever bother to put together a plan? I mean a good one.

--Shut the fuck up.

--Know what Terry calls you behind your back?

--Shut!

--
Halfcock.

--The!

--I assumed it was cuz you're always going off that way.

--Fuck!

--But maybe he knows something I don't.

--Up!

--If you get what I mean.

He gets it.

He comes storming around the hood of the truck, shoving the pistol into one of the huge
pockets of his army surplus jacket, those dirty blond dreads flying behind him.

--Gonna kick your fucking ass. Gonna beat your fucking face like I beat it before.

He did beat my face pretty bad that time. I got a gap between two molars that used to be
filled by a third molar before he knocked it out. That pissed me off. So when he comes
toward me with his fist raised, I let him tag me once on the neck and grab his sleeve and
pull him close so he thinks I want to grapple, and then I use my free hand to whip out the
.32 that's still tucked in the back of my waistband because he was too fucking stupid to
give me a little pat-down when he got the drop on me, and while he's trying to wrap his
hand around my throat I press the barrel against the top of his thigh and pull the
trigger.

Joe Pitt 2 - No Dominion

The shot is muffled by our bodies, but the folks who were just slowing down to look at our
little scuffle decide it's best to keep moving along. Tom falls to the ground, hands
pressed over the hole in his leg, and I turn around and start walking quickly back toward
Sixth. I mix in with the folks a little farther down the sidewalk and listen for the
telltale sound of running feet that would mean there actually were a couple cops in the
park wasting time on the dime-bag dealers.

I don't bother looking back to see what Tom is doing. He'll be on his feet by now, but he
won't try coming after me with that hole in his leg. He'll be moving as quickly as
possible back toward the Society border, making for the partisans he has posted there,
hoping like hell there are no cops around. Once he crosses onto his own turf there'll be a
safe house right around the corner, the place he was planning to take me.

I reach The Cage and walk past it and down the steps into the West 4th Street station,
crossing my fingers that Tom didn't get nabbed. I might get away with shooting him, but if
he gets busted, if it ends up being that kind of scene, I may as well take this train to
the end of the line and get out and start walking 'til I walk right off the edge of the
island.

It's just after six. The train is packed tight, the commuters squashed against each other
in the aisles bitterly eyeballing the commuters squashed together on the seats. I press
through the clot of bodies that always forms around the doors and find a little elbow room
at the end of the car, the last car on the train. We pull out and everyone lurches.

We cover the distance to 14th in a couple minutes. A bunch of people spill out of the
train to make a connection, but even more cram themselves on. The intercom buzzes static
as the conductor shouts at the passengers, telling them not to block the doors. The doors
close and we're off. Across the Coalition border.

I stand a little taller than most of the bodies squeezed in here. I use the height to scan
the faces. I don't smell anything I shouldn't, just the rank air and the sweat slowly
starting to trickle beneath everyone's parkas. There could be a Coalition Renfield on
board, but I don't see anything. Fair enough. The real danger starts at 34th, the first
stop in Coalition turf.

The train zips through the local stop at 23rd. Somewhere in the middle of the car a man
too short for me to see through the bodies is yelling at the top of his lungs, telling the
passengers about how he was burned out of his apartment and how he needs ten dollars and
forty-seven cents to have enough to stay in a transient hotel tonight. I think about
Terry.

Figure Tom's move one of two ways. Either he told Terry I'd been poking around and Terry
rubber-stamped his play on me, or he invoked his security authority and made the move
himself. Terry might have cleared it, just to keep from admitting that I was doing some
clandestine shit for him. Just to keep a cover on whatever his angle is. Figure it's more
likely Tom did it on his own. After my lengthy chat with Terry, Tom's smart enough to know
something's up. He sure as shit knows Phil is my number one snitch. He probably didn't
bother to follow me at first, just went after Phil. Once he beat everything out of him, he
would have checked in with The Count.

We jerk to a stop at the 34th Street platform. I get some breathing room as the Bridge and
Tunnel commuters pile off and make for Penn Station, but I lose it right away as the
Midtown workers heading for Queens and the Bronx come on.

Figure Tom wouldn't have to threaten The Count. Hell, The Count is one of his. Tom just
has to ask him what I wanted, what I was looking into. Figure that was too close to the
bone. Close to something anyway. Close to all these new fish popping up and the whole
shooting the Vyrus thing. After that, all he needed to do was stake out my pad and tail me
over to the Enclave. Fucker's definitely got a bee in his bonnet over this shit.

42nd Street , Times Square. The train exhales a rancid mass of drones and sucks in a fresh
mass of the same. The doors close. 59th Street and relative safety dead ahead. The A runs
express from 59th all the way to 125th, inside Hood turf. After 59th, any enforcers riding
the express will be taking a big chance.

Yeah, Tom's definitely got some skin in this game. Then again, it could all be Terry. He
might have sent Tom after me himself. Maybe I got too close too fast when I talked to The
Count. Maybe Terry's finally gotten tired of having me on Society turf and the whole thing
is the start of his play to get rid of me.

Something tickles my nose.

Blood.

Someone in the car is bleeding. Bleeding fresh. Not menstrual blood, not an old cut
opening up, but fresh blood. Someone just opened a small wound.

I don't look up. It's the oldest trick in the book, so I don't look up. Could be a
nosebleed. Could be a little kid's tooth just fell out. Could be some lady got jarred by
the train swaying from side to side and ran the sharp tip of her nail file up under her
nail. Still, I don't look up. 'Cause it just as easily could be someone just pricked their
hand with a tiny lance and is watching everybody on the train, watching to see who jerks
their face toward the source of the blood. The oldest trick in the book.

I keep my head down and scent the air. Someone has stepped in dog crap. A businessman had
to puke after his four martini lunch and tried to cover the smell with a fistful of
Altoids. Someone just bought a CD player and I smell the new plastic as they tear open the
bubble-pack it's wrapped in. Shampoo. Ink from the fat tip of a felt-tip pen as a kid tags
a window of the car. Someone had sex just before she caught the train and semen dribbles
down the inside of her thigh. Foot powder. Tiger Balm. A Hershey's bar. French fries. A
puff of deodorant released as someone unzips their jacket. Hair spray, hair gel, hair
mousse, hair cream, hair wax. Over a dozen types of perfumes, twice as many lotions and
creams. Once I focus on all of it, once I let that lizard part of my brain that deals with
smells start sifting them all out and identifying them, it makes me want to vomit. I bite
it back and take another whiff.

The stagnant
menudo
someone had for breakfast carried up from their stomach with a belch. The urine staining
the adult diaper of a senior citizen. The mold caking the old paperbacks crammed into the
sack carried by the homeless guy. The years of sweat soaked into the rim of a kid's
favorite baseball cap escaping as he pulls the bill farther to the side. The smell of
spent fireworks clinging to my gun, the stale cigarette smoke that always surrounds me,
last night's bourbon still in my throat, the socks I didn't bother to change today.

It's awful. All of it. But nowhere in it do I smell the Vyrus. Nowhere but in my own
blood. I try to stop, try to breathe easy and focus my mind on something else. I bring my
head up and let my eyes bob and drift around, lazily taking in the faces around me. There
is no trace of the Vyrus in here other than my own, but that doesn't mean I'm safe. The
bleeder could be a savvy Renfield, one trained by Coalition enforcers to look for a
sniffer. Or it could be worse. It could be a Van Helsing. If it is a Van Helsing, if it's
a staker who knows enough to prick his finger and wait to see who takes an interest, he'll
be dangerous as hell. A Van Helsing that knows the game? Shit. He won't care about borders
and treaties and turf. A Van Helsing will ride this car with me all the way up to the
Hood. I get off the train with a Van Helsing on my ass, bring that to Hood turf? There's
no punishment that covers that, nothing but getting tumored by the sun.

The train slows, pulling to a stop at 59th Street, Columbus Circle.

The Upper West Side types hurry off the train to rush home and meet their spouses, who are
also coming home from work, so they can both kiss their trophy babies before their
Jamaican nannies put the little ones to bed so they can go out to dinner and not talk to
one another. They are replaced by the far upper Manhattan Caribbeans who have finished
cleaning houses and walking dogs and working their shifts at Balducci's and are heading
home to fuck up their own children and not talk to their spouses. I watch them. I don't
bother with subtlety now, I watch everyone who stays on the train, looking for the thing
that is not like the others.

The doors try to close and get caught on one of the overstuffed bags of the homeless guy.
The conductor is on the intercom again, screaming through the static.

--DO NOT BLOCK THE DOORS AT THE BACK OF THE TRAIN!

The doors slide open for a moment, but rather than stepping through them the homeless guy
adjusts his grip on the bag and gets caught again as the doors slide shut.

--STOP BLOCKING THE DOORS BACK THERE!

They open again and a couple people on the platform take advantage of the opportunity to
squeeze in around the homeless guy, who gets stuck again.

--GET OUT OF THE WAY OF THE DOORS BACK THERE! YOU'RE HOLDING EVERYBODY UP! THE TRAIN WILL
NOT MOVE UNTIL YOU STOP BLOCKING THE DOORS!

A young guy gets off his seat and tries to help the homeless guy with his bags. The
homeless guy jerks away from him, cursing, and the doors close on him again.

--STOP BLOCKING THE DOORS! STOP BLOCKING THE DOORS! STOP BLOCKING THE DOORS!

The kid throws up his hands and goes to sit back down, but someone has already grabbed his
seat. The doors open and the homeless guy hefts his bags and lets a businessman on the
train. Then he steps clear of the doors as they finally close all the way. Just before
they close, just before they seal us in here nice and tight, I finally notice the fresh
red stain on the side of one of his bags: the spot of blood from his pricked fingertip.
And as the train begins to move, I smell something new in the car, something that smells
like me, and I catch the eye of the businessman the homeless guy stepped so easily aside
for at that last moment. He's staring at me, not bothering to hide it. And why shouldn't
we stare at each other? We're stuck together in here all the way up.

Fucking Coalition. Got a Renfield riding the line doing the homeless thing. I try to
remember if he got on at 14th or if he was already on the train at 4th. That would be like
the Coalition, to have the sap riding the whole line, dangling out there to get picked
off. I wonder if he did the finger-prick trick because he spotted me. Does Predo have that
big a hard-on for me? Does he have my photo circulating through his Renfields? Maybe not,
maybe it's just standard for them: Let a little blood before Columbus Circle and see if
anyone bites. If they do, you block the door long enough for an enforcer patrolling the
platform to get on the train. Well, whether he had me from the get-go or not, he must have
picked me up when I started sniffing around. Good Renfield, that one. Ever see him again,
I'll find out what his blood tastes like. But this guy here giving me the eyeball? He's
another matter entirely.

Enforcer. Coalition Gestapo. He'll be well fed. He'll be armed. He'll have some moves. He
stands in the middle of the car, glancing at me every now and then to see that I don't do
anything rash. Don't know what that would be. My back is resting against the rear of the
train. I suppose I could smash the glass on the emergency exit and dive out of the
speeding train onto the tracks and hope I don't break my neck or tumble into the third
rail. But I'll save that as a final option.

The train is still full, the line dead ends at 207th. I can either get off in the middle
of Hood turf with the enforcer on my ass, or ride the line all the way to the end and
transfer to a downtown train. Of course, that will mean crossing back over Coalition turf.
I don't know if this guy's got any backup on board, but if I'm still on this thing with
him and we go back down to 59th, he's bound to pick up some help. At some point before
14th, they'll make a move to drag me off. That or see how far I want to ride. Into
no-man's? Lower Manhattan? I don't even want to think about Lower Manhattan and all the
tiny, crazy Clans down there. Across the river and into the bush? Who the fuck knows what
goes on once you cross the water. Nice choices.

I give him a good once-over. Looks late twenties. Not that that means anything. Got on one
of those nice suits Predo has them all wear. Hair slicked back. Not as big as me, but
there's a build under the suit.

The train's been racing the line, cutting through the local stations and leaving them
behind. The driver's got the pedal down, making up for the time he lost when the Renfield
blocked the doors. I see a sign for 110th flicker past. That's it, we're gone, above the
line and in the Hood.

The enforcer is staring into my eyes now, trying to put the voodoo on me; give me the
willies with his undead badassness. I give it back to him. Fat fucking enforcer. Overfed.
Pampered. Coalition paying all his bills, doing all his hunting for him. Sitting tight
until Dexter Predo says jump.
How high, Mr. Predo, how high?
I know this fucker. I know what he's got. Fuck this guy. He wants to play eyeÐkung fu,
wants to try and put the fear in me? We can play. We can play.

The train stops at 125th. He keeps his stare on, shooting me all his fantasies about how
big the world of hurt's gonna be when he lays his hands on me. I nod my head at him and
walk off the train, into the station in the heart of the Hood. Right underneath the
intersection of Martin Luther King and Frederick Douglass Boulevards. He hesitates, then
jumps off between the doors before they can close. That's right, motherfucker, made you
blink.

--OK, guy.

I take the stairs up from the platform one at a time.

--All right, you showed your stones. Now let's go back to the platform and wait for a
downtown train.

I come to the top of the stairs and take a look around. They're doing a ton of
construction in the station and the whole Uptown half is sealed off behind sheets of
plywood painted bright MTA blue. If I want to exit that way, I'll have to go back to the
platform and take the stairs at the far end.

BOOK: Joe Pitt 2 - No Dominion
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