Read The Beam: Season Two Online

Authors: Sean Platt,Johnny B. Truant

The Beam: Season Two (44 page)

BOOK: The Beam: Season Two
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“Okay, okay! Noah Fucking West!”
 

After a long moment, she felt Jimmy’s hand snatched from her back and decided she had permission to rise. She did, slowly, keeping her hands visible. A moment later, she was back in the chair, her hair tousled and scalp bleeding. She realized with irritation that the assault had knocked her boobs sideways and that she wouldn’t be able to adjust them without looking cheeky. Why had she gone big? Small tits had to be so much easier.
 

“Fifty meterbars.” Jimmy rested the edge of his huge cleaver against the tabletop.

“I’ll make it up to you. I have money.”
 
It was technically true, but not very. The refurb that had changed Doc to Kate had used up just about all she had — everything she’d slaved for through decades as Thomas Stahl and had earned by Doc’s sweat and blood — but she did still have a small savings. A
very
small savings, not remotely enough to cover fifty meterbars of Lunis and a ditched shuttle. But dealing with the credit discrepancy was ten steps down the road, and Kate really only had to move one at a time. Once free of Jimmy, she could try any number of options, the most obvious of which was to run. She could settle in Old Chicago, maybe. What the hell; on record, it was District Two, but they still called it the Second City because the place was such a party.
 

“This isn’t about the money,” Jimmy said. “This is about the shortage of dust.”

His eyes were still livid, but something in his manner had relaxed. If Kate had to guess, it was probably resignation that she was seeing. Whatever was going to be fucked had already been fucked. He could be angry about the fucking, but there was little point because the die was already irrevocably cast. She remembered what he’d said about the dominoes, about how important this shipment was, and how its failure would tip things that could not, under any circumstances, be allowed to tip.

“Maybe I can go back for it,” she said. It was an absurd suggestion, but she had to come up with something. She couldn’t stop eyeing the heavy cleaver in Jimmy’s hand. She knew he had a temper, and that he’d killed others before.
 

Kai had gotten Kate the smuggling gig through her old pal Stanford (he of the Beamer-filled apartment building, subsequently cleared of suspicion within Kai’s levels of tolerance), and the man seemed to know endless acres of lowlifes. Stanford didn’t know who Kate had once been; all he knew was what Kai had told him (and supported through a virtual sheaf of falsified files) about Kate being an excellent operator with a reputation for being a rock star in her trade. Doc already knew about Omar’s problems on the moon, with his prime runner having been pinched, so Kai and Kate had angled for a position within Omar’s company. Doc — now as Kate — had wanted to keep Omar close, and already knew his operation inside out. Her first job with the company had been a home run that had reinforced her phony rock star reputation with a genuine rock star success. The job fit Doc’s old strengths, from duplicity to rapport skills to salesmanship…or sales
woman
ship. The only sharp edge — literally, in this case — was Jimmy and his murderous temper.
 

“How the fuck are you going to go back for it? Are you suggesting flying up alone then coming back with an unregistered and unticketed shuttle that somehow got there all by itself? Your window to get off with that particular rig has passed. They have you coming back, if they know how to look for you. So you go back and pull a shuttle out of your ass? You think they won’t strip it to the screws?”
 

“Maybe I could recover a little bit at a time. Take a worm.”
 

“Dammit, Rigby. We need all of this dust
now
. You know how many trips it would take you to smuggle all that dust down a handful of centimeterbars at a time? You think they won’t get curious about how often you’re headed up there? Oh, and there’s just the matter of the dead inspector. I keep forgetting that little wrinkle.”
 

With a start, Kate realized that she’d pretty much forgotten about Inspector Levy too. Whatever Sector 7 was, it had allowed “Levy,” with Kate pulling the strings using his voice, to expunge her visit.
 

“Oh, right,” said Kate.
 

“You have to stay here. The shuttle has to stay there — and without a proper conveyance, the
dust
has to stay there too. We could send up another man, but…”
 

“You can’t send up someone else!” Kate blurted, cutting him off. “That’s my commission!”
 

Jimmy paused then turned the cleaver around on its tip, making it spin. His angry outburst seemed to be over, but he hadn’t returned his blade to the rack. His relatively calm menace was somehow more unnerving than the fury he’d displayed when angry.
 

“You’re worried about your commission? Really?” said Jimmy. “You got pinched. Then you killed the fucking inspector. You think that’s not going to cause big problems for our entire industry? They’ll quietly increase security across the board then make a big announcement. Earthbound customs will gear up, and the public will be outraged. You know how they handle these things. They’ll drag his family out, do sweet pieces about how he was just a working Joe doing a job…”
 

“He was dirty! He wanted to fuck me then let me go!”
 

“So why didn’t you just do it? Take one for the team?”

Kate rose in her chair then forced herself to sit when Jimmy raised his non-cleaver hand.

“You’re paid well for taking a little moon ride, Rigby.” An edge slipped into Jimmy’s voice. “If you wanted a clean and squeaky job, you could have gotten a Directorate office gig.” He spread his hands, the cleaver winking in the overhead light. “This is what you chose. Someone wants you to suck dick to grease the wheels, you swallow the cock. The tests we had you do before that first run pegged your morals as ‘pliable.’ That’s a valuable result, and we don’t see it often. It means you
have
a moral code, but that you’re utterly convinced it supports whatever you’re doing at the time, no matter how much the situation’s needs might change. It basically means you’re fucking crazy, or a narcissist.”
 

“He wanted to
fuck
me.”
 

“What, like you’ve never been fucked? How about if I told you that I’d let you get back to work — no harm, no foul — if you gave me a little something?”
 

Kate felt her mouth open, unsure how to respond. But before she could, Jimmy raised his hand and waved it at her dismissively.
 

“Oh, relax.” He pointed to a ring on his finger. “I’m happily married. Unlike you, I don’t have pliable morals. That’s why I’m the boss and you’re the fucking runner.”
 

Kate considered questioning Jimmy’s morals (how did being married justify his life as a thief and murderer?) but glanced at the cleaver in his hand and decided not to.
 

“Look. You’ve landed us in a lot of shit. A
shitheap
of shit. Now, thanks to you, an entire colony of Organa junkies will run dry.”
 

“Organas?” Kate almost wanted to laugh. Who gave a shit about Organas?

“Yes,
Organas
, and don’t you for one fucking second presume to question this operation. You’re a fucking lowlife soldier. That’s it. You run dust, you lie, you steal, you do whatever you have to do to get the dust back because that’s
why
you exist. If the inspectors line up with their dicks out wanting to blow a load in your mouth, you take it and come running back to me with cum and the words
thank you
dripping from your lips. You’re my little bitch, got it? You don’t get to make decisions or question anything. You do as you’re told because if you disappeared one day, nobody would notice or care. We clear?”

Reluctantly, seeing no benefit in snark, Kate slowly nodded. But she didn’t like this at all and wasn’t used to being a lackey. She’d always been Enterprise and hated the Directorate ethic. She
made
the rules; she didn’t follow them. She would play for now then do what she could to shuffle the deck later — through Jimmy, through Omar, through whomever she could reach. Doc Stahl had never been anyone’s bitch, and Kate Rigby wouldn’t be either.
 

“You don’t need to know the details, but let’s just say you’ve caused a lot of problems with this little fuckup of yours. Problems with the Organas going cold, problems with our suppliers and buyer alike, problems with your cover on the moon, problems with the feds. You think they don’t know who the smugglers are? Sure they do; we’re just not a big enough problem most of the time to warrant what it would take to close our doors. You might have changed that. Because you fucked up, and now it’s up to you if you want to be part of the solution.”

“They had new security! Why the fuck didn’t anyone tell me about the new nanobot shit?”
 

Jimmy slammed the cleaver into the table. It stuck handle-up, quivering.
 

“How did you not
work around it?”
Jimmy countered, his temper again slipping. “That’s why we hired you! Things come up! Unexpected things! We know what we know, but your job is to deal with what we don’t! So in this particular case, what do you do?
You fuck the inspector instead of killing him!”
 

Kate sighed noisily, slowly shaking her head. “Well then. What are you going to do with me?”
 

“I’m not sure yet. I
want
to kill you. It won’t solve anything, but it’ll make me feel better.”
 

“You can’t kill me.”
 

“Sure I can. You’re nothing but a problem. You’re useless. You can’t run back to the moon, and if we keep you alive, we have to hide and protect you. Maybe you don’t know how business works, but we don’t collect liabilities. You were hired as an asset, and now you’re the opposite.”

Kate inhaled, held it, kept her mouth shut, then exhaled in a huff. Time to play her ace.
 

“I want to talk to Omar,” she said.

Instead of blustering at Kate’s request, Jimmy smiled. He tapped his head beside his eyes, through which she realized Omar had been watching the meeting all along.

“Well, that’s good,” he said. “Because Omar wants to talk to you, too.”

Chapter 5

Air connections in the mountains near the Organa compound were flaky even when they were good. Sometimes, you could get a mobile signal everywhere, including in the hand-dug cellar that Scooter had spent a summer excavating so he could make root beer. Other days, you couldn’t get one at the top of the tallest hill. The most reliable places to find connections (which shouldn’t have mattered within a technophobe population, but which everyone somehow knew regardless) were usually at the gate, where Crumb used to stand…and, ironically, near Leo’s house.
 

Today, the signals were scattered and unreliable. Leah didn’t want to start tapping her mobile’s screen the minute she and Crumb (sorry…
Steve
) arrived, but the uncheckable, constantly pinging handheld felt like an unscratchable itch. York had already seen her obsessing over the mobile and might be willing to give her a mercy pass, but others wouldn’t. Leah was already a pariah among those hypocritical bastards, and she didn’t want another lecture from Leo. He knew she had her mobile, of course — and Leah, in turn, knew that Leo had one of his own — but rubbing it in the compound’s collective face was a bad idea. To the mountain Organas, using the occasional piece of technology was like masturbation: everyone did it, but you were supposed to know enough to keep it private.
 

Checking her messages would be an especially bad idea right now, she reminded herself, brushing the mobile in her pocket as if encouraging it to stay put. No matter what Leo tried to pretend, the Lunis supply was dangerously thin. Leo himself had looked frazzled and unfocused the last time she’d seen him, and the patina of peace that normally glazed the hippies’ expressions had worn through to show some of the rough, threadbare material beneath. They were wearing brave faces, but she knew they were jonesing. It made Leah feel guilty for scoring in the city. She’d only had enough credits for a few moderate doses and had taken them all herself rather than bringing any back. But what the hell; the others never come to
her
defense.
 

But still, the phone’s itch was maddening. She had to get away. She left York and Dominic to get reacquainted (York to meet Dominic for the first time with a clear head, Dominic to meet the body he’d saved with another mind inhabiting it) and walked toward Leo’s. Being careful to stay out of sight (she didn’t need a discussion with the Organa leader; she needed to answer these fucking messages before someone blew a gasket), she circled the building while holding her mobile in the air.
 

Nothing.
 

Knowing she was wasting time, Leah paced the village, glancing down at her handheld as she hid it in the folds of her sarong. She passed person after person, looking up and smiling at each. She was given half smiles in return. It was easy for Leah to feign amity; she wasn’t hurting just yet. But the same wasn’t true for the others in the village. She saw red eyes. Long faces. Twitchy muscles and a few nervous tics. From a distance, she watched as two men walking past each other had an accidental collision. After running into each other, the first shoved the second hard in the chest and kept walking. The second yelled after him. Leah couldn’t make out exactly what he said, but she somehow doubted it was “Lovely morning, isn’t it?”
 

BOOK: The Beam: Season Two
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