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Authors: Mitchel Scanlon

Tags: #Science Fiction

Red Shadows (4 page)

BOOK: Red Shadows
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For all that, given the unsettling grimace frozen into the priest's face, it was readily apparent that he had died an agonising death.

Scenarios played out in her mind, but none were able to explain how the old priest had died. Then, as her eyes scanned the rest of his body, she saw there was something curled around his hand. It was a whip, the lash made from a thin braid of synthi-leather with a series of knots and barbs set along its length. It made a sinister contrast. It was the kind of thing she might expect to see during a raid on an S&M bar, not in the dead hands of priest.

Okay, so let's review what we've got, she thought. A dead priest armed with a whip, with no obvious wounds on his body, in a room covered in blood; so much for trying to read the scene like a Street Judge, this is getting me nowhere. Forget the physical evidence. It's time to dig a little deeper; time to try it the Psi Division way.

Bending forward, she noticed small flecks of fresh blood on the barbs of the whip. Taking her glove off, she stretched out a hand towards it. Here goes nothing...

She opened her mind, letting the thoughts bubbling in her head grow still and silent as she extended her awareness from the physical world of commonplace reality to the more mysterious psychic world co-existing around it. The
psi-flux
, her tutors in Psi Division had called it when, as a child, they had first shown her how to control her powers. Whether they had the ability to read other people's thoughts or move objects with their minds, every psychic unconsciously manipulated the shifting frequencies of the psi-flux in order to use their powers. It was a realm of boundless potential and limitless energy: the source and wellspring of all creation - though even the most gifted psi could only draw on a fraction of its power. Right now, Anderson was less concerned with the infinite possibilities of the psi-flux than she was with finding out what had gone on inside the apartment.

She breathed in a deep draught of air, letting her awareness of the wider physical world fall away from her with a practised ease. In its place, she turned her attention to a series of smaller sensations as she attempted to make contact with the psi-flux. She felt the whip in her hand, the roughness of the synthi-leather at her fingertips, the wetness of the blood. She concentrated on her breathing, feeling the rhythmic expansions and contractions of her ribcage as each breath of air entered and left her body. In and out; deep breaths, counting down toward her destination. Five, Four, Three, Two, One...

Contact.

In an instant, a rush of images and sensations all but overwhelmed her. She saw the priest standing with the whip in his hand, his face sweating; his eyes aflame with righteous fury as he raised the whip and brought it down.
Crack!
The whip rose and fell again.
Crack!
She saw a group of men and women standing in a circle around him, screaming and shouting prayers. Recognising some of the wounded citizens she had seen in the hallway, she realised they were members of the priest's congregation. She saw faces contorted by fear and hatred as they spat and jeered at something lying at their feet. And, in the centre of the circle, she saw the focus of their attention. A young boy, perhaps ten years of age at most, his body naked and shaking, huddled face-down on the floor with his arms up to protect his head, the exposed flesh of his back a brutal patchwork of welts and cuts.

Crack!
The whip struck again, droplets of blood dancing in the air as it scourged the boy's back.
Crack!
The boy screamed and begged for mercy.
Crack!
The priest brought the whip down once more.

She saw the scene from a shifting series of perspectives, her point of view switching crazily back and forth from the boy to the priest. Dimly, she realised she was simultaneously reading the mutual psychic residue they had both left on the whip - the emotions and experiences of both victim and aggressor imprinted on an arm's-length piece of synthi-leather. She was the priest, breathing heavily from his exertions, his heart beating madly in his chest, his mind a raw haze of zealous frenzy. She was the boy, trapped in a world given over to pain and madness, agony coursing through him with every fall of the lash. Among the shrieking crowd, standing in a circle around him, he saw the faces of his parents. Help me! He put his hands out to his mother in supplication. Help me, Momma! Face wrinkling in disgust, she shied away from him while, beside her, his father kicked and stamped savagely at his hands.

Crack!
His body shook as the whip struck once more.
Crack!
The priest hit him again. The boy looked up at the face of his tormentor. The priest's eyes were wild and staring, his lips moving to mouth incomprehensible words. Seeing the whip rise again, the boy felt a sudden rush of rage building within him. With it came a strange new sensation. A feeling of power; a buzz and crackle inside his head like the sound of rain drizzling on a high-voltage line. The feeling grew stronger.

He looked at the priest more closely, peering past the outer layers of clothing and skin to the simpler patterns hidden beneath them. Instinctively, the boy felt a shift of perceptions.

Abruptly he saw the priest not as a man, but as a latticework of veins and arteries; a blueprint written in red. Barely understanding what it was he was doing, he reached out with his mind to the flowing red patterns in the body of the man standing over him. He felt the beating of the priest's heart, the pounding of his pulse, the thrum and throb of blood moving through him. Still using his mind, the boy reached out and
squeezed
...

The whip faltering in his hand, the priest paused in his labours. For an instant he seemed to grow unsteady on his feet as a shiver ran through his body. Then, while around him his parishioners continued to shout out prayers, the priest began to gag and choke, the skin of his neck becoming pink and distended as a bulge gathered at his throat. The bulge grew larger, the neck turning scarlet and bloated, the skin pushing out like the cheeks of a croaking bullfrog. At last, noticing their leader's distress, the priest's followers fell quiet - watching in appalled silence as the red bulge pushed its way upwards towards his face. The priest's body began to shake uncontrollably, his eyes widening in horror. Suddenly, a torrent of blood exploded from inside his mouth to spatter those standing near him. There were cries of terror and disbelief. But even as the screams reached a shrill crescendo, the boy had eyes only for the priest. Rapt in concentration, he squeezed hard with his mind as a jetting fountain of blood vomited from the old man's mouth. He squeezed harder, feeling a thrill of exhilaration as the priest fell to his knees, his head lolling back as the blood surged out of him. There was blood everywhere. Blood hit the ceiling and the walls. Blood seeped from the eyes, ears and noses of the people around him. He saw his mother screaming, blood welling in the palms of her hands, and he felt no remorse. Blood; they had hurt him. Blood; he would punish them all. Blood...

"Anderson?"

With a sudden start, Anderson heard a voice behind her. Her mind still filled with images of blood and panic, she looked around her in dumb confusion for a moment. The whip, the thought forced its way into her mind. I was reading the psychic residue on the whip to find out what happened. I must have gone in deeper than I intended. Lost track of the real world...

Finding her hand was clutching the whip, she released it, the last fading echo of the horrors she had seen falling away from her as the contact was broken.

"Anderson?"

She heard the voice again. As she stood up, she found herself face-to-face with a Street Judge standing beside her. His features beneath his helmet seemed familiar. Looking at his badge, she saw his name was Jansen.

"We've met before?" she asked.

"A few years back," the Street Judge nodded. "We worked a case together in Sector 15. A gang of stookie glanders were using a rogue psychic to help get rid of their competition. A pyrokine. He ended up going psycho and turned on his employers."

"I remember," she said. "We had to take him down the hard way." Unpleasant memories briefly flitted through her mind: a burning warehouse, herself and Jansen both injured, helping each other to safety as the building collapsed around them. It had been a close escape for both of them. She shook her head to clear it. "Long time no see, Jansen. I take it you're the one who called me in?"

"Yeah." He shrugged uneasily. "'Course, I wasn't expecting them to send in somebody so high up the food chain. This is pretty much an open and shut case." He nodded towards the whip lying on the floor. "I saw you doing a psi-scan. Guess you already know what happened here."

"Some of it." The memories of the things she had seen in the scan returned to her: the boy, the priest and the circle of screaming zealots. "It would be better if you told me the whole story from the beginning. It might help me fill in the blanks."

"Sure." Jansen paused for a moment, as though gathering his own thoughts before proceeding. "It started with a routine call from a neighbour complaining about a noise disturbance. When I arrived here, I found the scene like you see it now. Housing records show the apartment as belonging to Yuri and Elena Voysich - husband and wife. They're Sov Bloc dissidents. Came to Mega City One fifteen years ago claiming religious persecution in the old country, and were granted political asylum. They have one child. A son named Alexei. Ten years of age."

"Alexei." Without even realising it she said the name aloud, the sound of it lending reality to the images and sensations she had seen imprinted on the whip. "The boy's psychic?"

"Yeah. Only thing is, apparently nobody realised it. Somehow the boy's potential didn't show up in the usual genetic scans. Either that, or some Tek Judge screwed up." Jansen shrugged tiredly. "It happens. From interviewing the survivors outside, I found out the boy's powers began to manifest about six months back. Instead of the usual poltergeist activity or whatever, it started with him having attacks of unexplained spontaneous bleeding in different parts of his body, his feet, on the side of his torso, his forehead, the palms of his hands. Anybody normal would have taken the kid to the block doc for treatment, but the Voysich family are religious types. They don't believe in modern medicine. Instead, they decided it was a miracle."

"Stigmata," Anderson said quietly, understanding dawning as she remembered the woman with blood pooling in her hands. "The wounds of Christ. They thought it was a sign from Grud."

"That's right." Jansen shook his head in disbelief. "Damn holy rollers. With some of them it's like they don't realise they're living in the modern world. Like they still think it's the twentieth century, back when people used to burn witches." Beneath the faceplate of his helmet, she saw his expression grow dark. Then, pursing his lips in a sour expression, he began again. "Anyway, things started to go crazy a week or so ago when one of the neighbours died. Apparently, the neighbour was yelling at the kid about playing in the hallways when he suddenly dropped dead of a stroke. After that, the boy's parents decided maybe their kid's powers weren't a miracle after all. They went to a priest." Jansen gestured at the body of the old man lying in the centre of the room. "Who told them their son was possessed. The priest decided to perform an exorcism. That's what the whip was for. They were trying to beat the Devil out of the boy."

"That's what caused all this?" she said. Granted insight by the psi-scan earlier, her words were as much a statement as a question. "They beat the boy and he turned to the only means of protection he had - instinctively using his powers to defend himself."

"Looks like it," Jansen grimaced as he gazed down at the priest's body. "Don't know what the Med-Judge is going to call it when it comes to writing up the autopsy report: death by Psychic Exsanguination, maybe? What about you, Anderson? You ever hear about anything like this before?"

"It's called bio-manipulation," Anderson said. "The boy can use his mind to control the physical processes in the bodies of himself and others. It's a rare talent, but hardly unheard of. There's a theory that says the way our powers choose to manifest themselves is dictated by the unconscious mind. I wonder..."

An idea suddenly occurred to her. She moved over to the other side of the living room where she could see a series of pictures hanging on the wall. Cleaning the worst of the bloody spray from each one in turn, she revealed the images hidden underneath. They made a disturbing collection. The first picture showed an image of Christ's crucifixion painted in a digitally enhanced photo-realistic style, the specifics of his wounds rendered in gruesome and loving detail: the hole where the centurion's spear had pierced his side; the iron nails hammered through his feet and hands; the scourge marks criss-crossing his flesh.

The picture beside it showed a close-up of Christ's face with the crown of thorns biting into his forehead, wet red droplets running down his cheeks like bloody tears. Next to that there was a Tri-D holo-picture of Christ as the Sacred Heart, his hands pulling back his robes to reveal the beating heart exposed inside his chest, like a cutaway illustration in some kind of hellish textbook on medical anatomy. Incredibly, the picture was animated - the heart pulsing with a hypnotic metronome rhythm. Watching it, Anderson thought of the boy Alexei. The years of his childhood spent in the company of such images while the unknown power inside him grew slowly to maturity. A power nurtured and shaped by his environment while the number of his days were counted, second-by-second, by the beating of an animated heart.

"Anderson?" Having followed her as she went to the wall and cleaned the pictures, Jansen was now looking at her strangely. "You Okay? We seemed to lose you for a minute there."

"I was just thinking." She directed his attention to the images in front of them. "Makes you wonder, doesn't it? They say childhood upbringing can have a big impact on the way the powers of a latent psychic develop. Maybe if he'd been brought up in another family, Alexei's psychic abilities would have come out differently. As it was, he grew up in a family of religious fanatics, surrounded by images of suffering and torment, no doubt being told day after day that blood has a holy and sacred power. Is it any surprise that's what his unconscious mind latched onto as his powers grew to maturity? Blood."

BOOK: Red Shadows
10.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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