This Machine Kills (37 page)

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Authors: Steve Liszka

BOOK: This Machine Kills
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   Taylor took a step closer to the injured man, “I won’t leave you. You didn’t give up on me.”

   “Go,” Warchild shouted, “I’ll be right behind…You’re not the only one with a score to settle.”

   Without saying anything else, Taylor turned to face the steel doors once more. He felt the energy return to his body as he broke first into a jog, then an all-out sprint as he launched himself at the entrance to the City. Beyond the bodies that lay in his way, he could see the polished windows of high-rise buildings reflect the firefight that was taking place in the sky around him.

   Climbing over the corpses of a guard and prisoner locked in mortal combat, he finally made it through the doors. He knew he should have kept moving, but once inside he had to stop and take in the bedlam that had been dragged into his once perfect world. That was when it hit him; they were inside and there was no going back.

Chapter 30

 

 
 

   In the past five years Taylor had succeeded in pushing the memory of Canada into a hidden part of his brain where he had managed to keep it locked down. Now, for the second time in a matter of days, he was reminded of the massacre that had delivered him back to Britain.

   It was hard to connect the carnage that surrounded him with the place that, until a few days before, had been his home. Hope City; the oasis of civilisation in a desert of hostility, had been overrun by the barbarians at its door. Not in the food lines in the Old-Town, not even during Billy Nothing’s Uprising, had he seen anything like this before.

   Virtually everyone in the City had come down to the southern gates to watch Freddie Milton press the button that would bring the doors to a close. It was the biggest event that had taken place in the City for years. Now, those thousands of terrified people trampled over each other in a desperate attempt to flee back to their homes as the men from the Old-Town descended on them.

   Taylor watched as the prisoners attacked the citizens with a violence that shocked even him. One smartly dressed man was being hacked down with a machete by a deviant, who laughed as he separated his victim’s arm from the rest of the body. Close by, a woman was being held down and scalped by the prisoner who simultaneously raped her. A child, who most likely belonged to the woman, cried hysterically as she viewed the scene. The few guards left on the wall were firing at will at anyone below, regardless if they came from outside the City or not. The air filled with the smell of blood and gunsmoke as the battered bodies of men, women and children lay all around.

   A huge poster of a smiling Freddie Milton with the logo ‘Your city is finally free’ across the bottom, now sported a pair of devil horns and blacked out eyes. Written across it in thick red paint were the words ‘This Machine Kills’.

   Straight ahead of him, Taylor could see the raised stage from where Milton must have commenced proceedings. Gathered around a large red button that would have taken both hands to operate, stood a terrified group of men wearing their most expensive suits. Taylor recognised a small bald man who tried to cower behind a larger colleague as Joshua Rand, one of Milton’s top men, responsible for healthcare in the City.

   The reason why these people were so scared was evident. Below them, scores of intruders tried to scramble onto the stage to get at the executives.  All that was preventing their success was a handful of SecForce troopers desperately swinging their truncheons with vicious force in a final attempt to keep them at bay. Captain Mason was gallantly leading the defence, and none brandished their weapons with such brutal but controlled aggression as he. As a man grabbed his leg, only to be knocked immediately unconscious by an almighty blow from his stick, Taylor imagined what a great photograph the scene would have made for Mason to hang on the wall of his office.

   When he had regained enough of his wits to consider where Milton must have been hiding, he was answered by the unmistakable noise of fast-rotating blades. He looked in the air to see Milton’s private helicopter flying dangerously close to the ground in the direction of the Hourglass, his home residence and place of safety.

   Sucking the air into his exhausted lungs, Taylor started running in the helicopter’s direction of travel. As most of the spectators had already fled for their lives, his route was relatively free of obstruction. Even if he had not known its location so well, it would have been impossible for him to not find Milton’s home. He only had to look up to the skyline to successfully plot his course to the tallest building in Hope City. An unmistakable trail of destruction lay before him, leaving him under no illusion just how serious the situation he was solely responsible for, really was.

   As he ran down the almost deserted road, distant and sometimes not so distant screams rang around the City. A middle aged man sprinted past him as his wife struggled to keep up with her brave protector, whilst a petrified woman who was fleeing some unknown terror, ran straight towards the danger at the gates. Other people just stood in the street, open-mouthed and in complete shock at what was happening to them.

   Approaching what was normally a busy junction, Taylor saw four men in prison
overalls dragging one of the City’s security officers out of his car though the broken windscreen. He looked up to see that the traffic lights were red. The fucking idiot must have stopped rather than risk breaking the law. As the men set about their screaming victim, Taylor told himself that there was only one thing he needed to be concerned with, and that was Milton. Stopping for anything else wasn’t an option.

   His thoughts were broken by the sound of breaking glass coming from overhead. He stopped dead in his tracks just in time to see a few clear fragments hit the ground in front of him, quickly followed by the body of a young man. Taylor looked up at the monorail high above. The man must have been thrown out of the window or else decided to jump, knowing the fate about to befall him and the other passengers would be even worse. Continuing in pursuit, he tried to ignore the cries from above.

   He was only a few streets away from the Hourglass, and for the first time allowing himself to imagine what he was going to do to Milton, when another SecForce vehicle appeared from a side street and screeched to a halt in front of him.
ourglass when a Houhhh
A young trooper jumped out of the driver’s seat, and with shaking hands pointed his pistol at Taylor, who could only sigh with disbelief. He had got so close, only to have his revenge ripped from him at the very end.

   “Put your hands in the air!” the boy shouted, his face soaked in sweat.

    Taylor slowly did as he was told.

   “Listen son,” he said, “you’ve got the wrong man, I’m just trying to get home.”

   He knew that if the kid recognised him, there was no way he could escape. As things stood, he would have been public enemy number one.  

   The boy pushed his gun forwards, “Just shut up, and walk towards the car.”

   Taylor obeyed, he knew the kid wouldn’t need much of an excuse to shoot. He had only taken a couple of steps when the young trooper pressed his hand to the side of his head as he listened to a message being transmitted into his ear-piece. As quickly as he had appeared, and without saying another thing, the boy jumped back into the vehicle and sped off in the direction it had been pointing, leaving only a smell of burnt rubber in the air. Taylor watched the car as it flew down the narrow street. The driver was going too fast to notice the petrol bomb being thrown in his direction. It showered the car’s bonnet in flames after smashing against the windscreen. He didn’t wait around to see if the boy would make the right decision that would save his life or not.

 

   When he reached the base of the Hourglass, Taylor’s heart was beating like a hummingbird’s. He could hear nothing else except its accelerated pounding in his head. It wasn’t just from the exertion it had taken to get there, but more the anticipation of what was about to happen. As expected, the building had been put into emergency lockdown. Where glass windows would normally be displaying the luxurious lobby of the building, bombproof metal shutters had dropped from the eaves. Not even a Rhino driven at full-speed would be able to penetrate it.

   Fortunately, this was not a problem for Taylor. Apart from Milton, he was one of the few people in the City who knew the code to open the doors; it was Charlotte’s birthday. She had confessed it to him in one of their post-coital moments of honesty. After punching the numbers into the panel on the main door, he watched as the metal shutters slowly made their way back into their housings. When they finally disappeared out of sight, he spoke his name into the small box on the panel. Recognising the friendly voice as a trusted member of staff, the door opened allowing him to enter the lobby.

   Once in the building, Taylor walked straight to the lift and punched the button repeatedly in a wasted attempt to speed up its descent. As he waited for its arrival, he gazed at the china vase sitting on the mahogany table in front of him. In all the times he had been there before, he had never stopped to look at the piece.

   On the vase was a magnificent design of a Japanese warrior with one hand brandishing the holster of his sword as the other clutched its handle, poised to draw the weapon and attack some unseen enemy. In the background, a woman he assumed was the man’s wife, stood wringing her hands in concern. When he looked carefully, he saw a single tear running down her pale, white cheek. Taylor wondered how something so fragile could have survived for so long in such a chaotic world.

   “You know for someone who thinks he’s so smart,” he heard a familiar but unwelcome voice say, “you’re an extremely predictable motherfucker.”

   When Rudy stepped out of the shadows, the sarcastic grin he usually met Taylor with
was nowhere to be seen. Instead, his assault rifle was aimed at the centre of his former Sergeant’s chest. As he turned to face him, Taylor bumped into the table, hearing the movement of the vase as it wobbled on its axis. He felt relief when there was no further sound of smashing china.

   “Look Rudy,” he said, holding his hands up passively, “I don’t care about you or anyone else. I just want Milton, that’s all.”

   Rudy took another step forward, “I don’t give a shit what you want, it’s what I want that matters, and what I want is to finish off what I started at the co-op. It’s your fault Skinner’s dead.”

   Taylor took a half step back, placing his hand behind him to steady the table he had backed into once more,

   “Don’t pretend you care,” he said, “I saw the way you abandoned Lennox when the bullets started flying. He’s dead too in case you were wondering.”

   Rudy shrugged, “Well now you get to join them.”

   “Fine,” Taylor said, his hand sliding slowly back along the table’s surface, “but if you’re going to kill me, at least let me be honest with you for once.”

   Rudy laughed, “Be my guest. It’s nice to see you’ve finally got the balls to come out with it.”

   Taylor gave him a tired smile, “You know something Rudy, in my time in this game I’ve seen a few things…worked with a few different people. But I swear to you, none of them, not even some of the real bastards I dealt with in Canada, were as big a cunt as you.”

   As Rudy chuckled, proud of the honour that was being bestowed on him, Taylor’s fingers continued to stretch back until they came into contact with the vase.

   “Compliments will get you nowhere.”

   “Let me finish,” Taylor cut back in, “because the thing about you is you’re not just a cunt, you’re the worst type of cunt.”

   Rudy laughed again, “That’s it, get it all out.”

   “And you want to know why?”

   “Do tell me,” Rudy encouraged him, “please.”

   “Because, despite all your whining about how much you hated working for me, you never had the balls to do anything about it except when you were pointing a gun at my head. You never had the guts to take me on did you? So you know what else that makes you?”

   Rudy shook his head, his face having lost some of its playfulness.

   “It makes you a bitch. A scared, little bitch who likes to run his mouth but never back it up. That’s why Spike could never take you seriously, he saw you for what you really are. A gutless fucking coward.”

   Taylor’s fingers were now stretched around the vase’s base.

   “Even now, when I’m all beaten up, you still haven’t got it in you to put your gun down and do things the right way. Now take your shot and get it over with, you fucking pussy.”

   He paused, then smiled, “Unless you fancy a shot at the title that is.”

   Taylor could see the turmoil running through Rudy’s head. Part of him wanted nothing more than to lay the gun on the floor and have it out with him in an old fashioned fight to the finish. The more rational side of his brain however, knew there was a chance there may still be some fight left in the wounded dog, and was happy to put him down with a bullet.

   Having created the necessary confusion, Taylor took his opportunity, and bringing his arm forward like a baseball pitcher, launched the vase at Rudy’s head.  The hurled object travelled at speed but Rudy had seen it coming; moving his head so the vase smashed into hundreds of pieces against the wall behind him. Even though the shot had missed, it had created the opportunity for Taylor to close in on him before he could start firing.

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