mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
168 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
168 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
\chapauth{King Plum the Nth}
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\chapter{Untitled}
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I'd never been to San Diego before. Never been further west
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than Iowa. But I like to travel and I like my job, so when my job
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called on me to travel, I packed my Beretta and bought a one way
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ticket to SoCal. One way because, in my line of work, you can never
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be sure if you'll be coming back. My name is Luke Bavarious,
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I'm a private detective and this is the story of how I died.
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The bus disgorged its wretched few passengers into a diseased
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corner of the city. In some ways, all cities are the same, and San
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Diego was no different. You won't find a bus depo or the
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train station in a nice part of town. No, the rich white folk pawn
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this stuff off on the poor blacks. As if their urban lives
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weren't hard enough; the man sweeps all his dirt under the
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rug of the black culture's communities.
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I hadn't been on the streets of San Diago more than ten
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minutes when I was mugged the first time.
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``The fuck you doin' in our neighborhood,
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whitie?''
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I could've cried. There were four of them. They were tough,
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angry black youths, and if they pushed this too far, they'd
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get hurt. ``Just passing through,'' I said.
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``Passing like a piece of shit, mo'fucker. Gotta pay to
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walk our streets.''
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``It's public property,'' I didn't break eye
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contact. Like dealing with an angry dog, when you talk to a gang
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member, you can't show fear. ``I'm the public. Let
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me past,'' I unbuttoned my jacket, flashed my Beretta.
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``There's doesn't have to be any
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trouble.''
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The kid, their leader, lifted the hem of his hoody with a slow
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insolent gesture to show off his own piece, a Glock. Two of the
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others reached for the back of their waist bands. I tried again,
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using their language: ``Don't start none, won't be
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none.'' I'd tried in vein.
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``Stupid mo'fucker.'' The leader jerked his piece
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from his pants. His draw was admirably fast. These kids knew
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violence, they were born it, it was their legacy. A cold, harsh
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society had turned an indifferent shoulder to them and they had
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risen to the challenge, becoming the only thing they could be in
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this city. They were tough, but I was professional. My Beretta
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barked four times, once for each of them, and the fight was over
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before it began. They weren't dead, but they couldn't
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threaten me anymore. I moved on. Violence isn't the answer,
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but sometimes it can teach a lesson that needs to be learned.
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The lady, Kelly, my client back in New York, had told me all about
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San Diego. Said her old man had taken her and her sister, Amy,
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there after the divorce. Kelly'd been a little girl, the
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sister was a baby. ``The kids at my new school,'' she
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said, ``taught me fast. My first day, they told me it
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wasn't smart to wear so much red.'' We made love for
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hours that night. It was glorious but I never felt like she was
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really there under me. She was that little girl again, scared to
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finish her first day at school in that pretty red dress.
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So she'd gotten old enough and run away, all the way to New
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York City. But her baby sister, fifteen now, was still trapped with
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the father. Still trapped in San Diego. She'd hired me to go
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find her, save her, and bring her back. ``He won't give
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you any trouble, Luke. Just make sure you see him during the day.
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He works at night.'' She'd paid me in cash and her
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body.
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I found the little cinderblock house she'd described and I
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knocked at the door. The only answer was a dog barking in the next
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yard. I walked around the front yard a bit, looked and saw I
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wasn't being watched, and slipped around the corner of the
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house. I let myself into the fenced off back yard, peering in
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windows as I passed. The place looked deserted. Around back, I
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found a narrow concrete stairway leading down to a basement door. I
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figured what the hell and went down the stairs and tried the door.
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It was open. I went in.
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It was gloomy and smelled damp and it looked pretty empty. All I
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saw was a couple of cardboard boxes, a water heater, a couple of
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coffins. ``What the hell?!'' Curiosity is a big part of
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my job but I wish I hadn't given into it then. I walked over
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to the first coffin, lifted the lid. There was the too fresh body
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of a man, thirty something, long black hair pulled straight back
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from the temples, a trickle of blood running down from his livid
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lips. I stared, shocked, and as I did, his eyes snapped open.
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Before I could do more than gasp his hand was on my throat.
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``Who are you,'' he demanded. ``What do you
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want?''
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``Your daughter,'' I choked. ``She sent
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me.''
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``My daughter?'' His eyes glanced to my right.
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``She's right there.'' I looked as best I could and
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saw a young woman, the spitting image of my client but a decade
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younger.
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``Oh,'' he said, rising from his coffin, ``you mean
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the traitor.''
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``She said{\ldots}'' I was choking to death in his grasp.
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I produced the Beretta, painfully slow, but it was like he wanted
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me to shoot him. I squeezed off the last few shots, right into his
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gut. He didn't so much as flinch.
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``I know what she said,'' he said. ``She said I was
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harsh. That I abused them.'' He grimaced horribly and his eye
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teeth erected into fangs. ``But she never understood. You have
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to be tough to live in a city like this, Mr.\ Bavarious. I only
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wanted to make my little girls tough.'' The world was fading,
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purple splotches exploding in my vision. ``Amy will show you
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what I mean.'' The girl hissed, drawing her lips back from
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cobra-like fangs.
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{\ldots}I guess you wouldn't say I died exactly. Could a dead
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man tell you his tale? But that's the story of how I stopped
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living.
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