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Snowburn

Page 11

by E J Frost

“Leave your viewie on.”

  “I will . . . I’m getting in the tube now. If

  I lose signal, I’ll call you back.”

  “Okay.”

  Homemade or not, her viewie is a good

  little piece of tech. I can hear the hum of the

  tube’s neg cells. Kez’s frequent yawns. The

  snick of the tube’s platform settling into its

  brakes marks the end of her journey without

  any loss of signal. The viewie picks up the

  soft thumps of her boots on thick carpeting.

  She must have left her board in the building’s

  lobby because she’s swinging her arm freely.

  The red-veined pearlstone walls streak back

  and forth like a crazy pendulum. I flick off

  the vid before it gives me an epileptic fit and

  just listen to the audio.

  After what sounds like a long walk over

  deep carpet, she stops. There’s a clink of ice

  in glaz. A sharp tap on a hard surface.

  “Kezzy-Kez-Kez,” says a man’s voice.

  “Is that you, Kezzy? You look good. All

  grown up.”

  “Mister Kincaid.” Her voice is thin and

  sharp. Definitely not old friends. She doesn’t

  even manage to make it sound respectful, just

  irritated.

  “How long’s it been, Kezzy? Five

  years?”

  “Since I ran for Livvy? Eight. Are those

  my credits?”

  “Yeah, you want a drink?”

  He’s drinking at zero-eight-hundred? His

  addiction must be worse than I’ve heard if

  he’s taking the edge off with alcohol this

  early in the day. Or maybe it’s late for him.

  “No thank you. Do you mind if I count

  them?”

  “Go ahead.”

  There’s a snap and the rustle of plaz. A

  heavy feminine sigh. “This is short. The deal

  was twelve.”

  Twelve thousand credits. Close to what

  I’d guessed. And a windfall for a runner like

  Kez, even after she pays me off. But not

  enough to risk her life for. We’re going to

  have to have a talk about her priorities, her

  and me.

  “Oh, yeah.” A creak of genSkin. “Here’s

  the other two.” A rustle of plaz and the clink

  of octagons. “But you still gotta earn these.”

  “I’ve done the run. Your people verified

  that everything is there. I said no goddamn

  extras. Just pay me my money and let me be

  on my way!”

  A moment of deadly silence follows her

  outburst and my gut clenches. I close my eyes

  when I hear the next sound. The explosive

  contact of flesh on flesh. “You telling me

  what to do, bitch?” Another heavy slap.

  “You disrespect me in front of my own

  people?”

  Another slap, and on this hit Kez finally

  cries out. “No!” Her next words turn my

  blood to ice. “Let me go!”

  I snap the vid on, glimpse the dark,

  handsome face I remember from the Red

  Carpet, twisted with rage and flushed with

  excitement. He raises his hand over his head,

  brings it down with brutal force outside my

  range of vision. But the sound is enough, and

  Kez screams, “Stop!”

  “Get on that desk, bitch.” From the sound

  of it, she struggles. The vid pinwheels and

  steadies on a long expanse of bare wood,

  looking out on a panoramic view of the rain-

  streaked city.

  The sound of his fly being pulled open

  jolts me to my feet. “Kezra!” I roar into the

  com.

  There’s a sudden silence, broken by

  Kez’s breathy sobs.

  “Who the fuck is that?”

  A hand slams over the vid. Yanks it up

  until we’re eye to eye. “You the beast she

  brought to the drop?”

  “That’s right,” I say while I run through

  different plays in my mind. He likes it rough,

  the hooker said. Threats might just excite

  him, particularly since I’m too far away to

  carry any of them out before he rapes Kez.

  “Fuck off.” He slams her wrist back onto

  the desk. “You’re breaking up the party.”

  “Hope you’re not thinking of partying

  with Kez,” I say.

  He leans over and sneers into the viewie.

  “You gonna stop me?”

  “No, but I wanna make sure I get my

  share. Her ass belongs to me for the next

  forty-six hours. And I don’t take sloppy

  seconds.”

  Kincaid laughs a low, ugly laugh.

  “Shoulda known you’d already be rented

  out.” He disappears and I look out across the

  desk and over the city again. I wait to hear if

  he closes up his fly. There’s no noise except

  Kez’s hitching breaths.

  “Get up, bitch,” he says finally. “You’re

  bleeding on my desk.”

  She moves. The vid spins and pixilates.

  A rustle and clink as she picks up the

  wrapped stacks of credits. The vid goes dark

  as she shoves them in her backpack. Spins

  again as she puts the backpack over her

  shoulder.

  “Put that down,” Kincaid says. I can’t see

  him; Kez’s wrist is pointed at the ceiling. But

  I can hear the creak as he sits down. “You

  still gotta earn these two.”

  “Keep them,” Kez mumbles.

  “Kezzy-Kez-Kez, you say that like you

  got a choice. Put your bag down and get over

  here right fucking now.”

  “You heard Mister Snow—”

  “It’s only your ass he’s got a claim on,

  you numb bitch. Get over here. And turn that

  fucking thing off. It’s fucking up my

  concentration.”

  The viewie goes dead.

  I sink down into my own chair. Did I

  help, or did I make it worse? I rub my hands

  over my face. I should have gone with her.

  Left the box with her fucking narcoleptic

  brother and dogged her every step. I knew

  she didn’t like him; I knew he’s a sadistic

  prick, and I still let her go alone.

  I slam my fist into her fucking box. Watch

  it rock in mid-air. I should have gone with

  her.

  Five minutes of pacing the Marie’s tiny

  flight deck, imagining the worst. Five

  minutes of berating myself for not going with

  her. Five minutes of reminding myself not to

  care, that she’s just a good fuck, and that this,

  this is exactly why I’ve always been better

  off alone. Finally, the com buzzes.

  “Snow?”

  I slam the controls. No vid. The monitor

  shows me an eye with a red line through it.

  She’s turned off the vid on her end. “Where

  are you?”

  “Leaving Tyng Tower. I’ve got the

  money. You can give them the box.”

  “When I’ve seen that you’re okay.”

  “I’m . . . okay. I’ll be there in fifteen

  minutes.”

  “Leave your viewie on.”

  “I said I was okay.”

  I don’t believe her. And if something />
  happens to her on the trip back, I want to

  know about it immediately, not after she’s

  overdue. “In case you run into traffic.”

  “Fine.” I hear the hum of her board’s neg

  cells powering up. “See you in fifteen.”

  I pop an eskey out of the Marie’s

  console, hook it into my ear, and go to wake

  her brother. We’re not going to be

  outnumbered again.

  Sixteen minutes later, Kez walks through

  the wall panel that Hat Trick and his

  bodyguards left open. She’s carrying her

  float board under one arm, her ubiquitous

  backpack under the other. She’s limping a

  little. She’s pulled her slouchy hat over her

  dreads. It shadows her face, but I can see her

  mouth and chin. The skin around her mouth is

  an angry red and a thin crust of blood has

  dried over a split in her lower lip.

  Hat Trick, who tried to engage first me

  and then Ape in conversation but gave it up

  as a bad job, rises from the chair he’s been

  slouched in. “We good, b?”

  Kez nods. “Ape, give them the box.” Her

  voice sounds rough, raspy.

  Her brother’s got the box, so that my

  hands are free. They’re shoved deep in my

  pockets, gripping my knives in their hidden

  sheaths. Stroking the hilts while I’ve been

  waiting for Kez has been the only thing that’s

  kept me from cutting everyone’s throat.

  Ape holds the box’s tether out to Hat

  Trick, but Mara-the-Merc takes it out of his

  hand. Her partner nods at me. “Pleasure

  doing business with you.”

  I tip my chin at him. I’ve had plenty of

  time to stare down the two mercs while

  we’ve been waiting. Another time, another

  place, we’d be seeing who’s stronger, who’s

  faster. But here and now, they’re not after

  me, and I want to get Kez out of here as fast

  as I can, so we’ll all just walk away, nice

  and quiet and professional.

  Kez gives the mercs a wide berth as they

  pass her on their way out. I expect Hat Trick

  to follow them. Instead, he trails a few steps

  behind Kez as she makes her way across the

  dock to where Ape and I stand near the

  windows.

  “Let’s go,” she says.

  “Wait a mo, b,” Hat Trick says. “We

  ain’t quite done here.”

  Kez turns her head slightly. I can’t see

  her eyes in the shadow of her hat, but the

  corners of her mouth turn down. “Yes, we

  are.”

  Hat Trick adjusts himself again, bounces

  on his toes. “Mister Kincaid, he told me

  about you. He said you’d have somethin’ for

  me once everything was done. Something

  nice.”

  Kez lifts her head. As the shadows under

  the brim of her hat flee, I see the red and

  purple bruise circling her right eye. The

  spiderweb bloom of blood in the sclera.

  My shiv’s in my hand before I have time

  to think about it.

  “Kincaid used up all my nice for today,”

  Kez says. “Besides, I hear you’ve got crabs.”

  So she did read the graffiti. I chuckle,

  loudly enough for Hat Trick to hear. His neck

  flushes.

  “Looky, bitch—”

  He reaches for Kez. She flinches back

  and before he can grab for her again, I’m

  there. Point of my shiv up under his chin. My

  hand on his wrist. I could snap the bone

  before he has time to whimper. But this is

  still Kez’s show, and I won’t kill, or even

  maim, until she tells me to.

  “You want something nice?” I dig the

  point of the blade in a little deeper. A bead

  of blood runs down its honed edge.

  Kez puts her hand on my arm. “Don’t.

  He’s Tyng’s nephew. Let’s just go.”

  I want a little payback. I want to hurt the

  family who has hurt her. Badly enough that I

  press a fraction deeper before I lower the

  blade. Flick his blood onto the permacrete.

  “Fuck, yodel,” Hat Trick whines. He

  touches the underside of his chin with his

  fingers. Blood smears into the stubble on his

  neck. “You didn’t need to do that.”

  “Remember that the next time a woman

  tells you no,” I say.

  Kez tugs on my arm. “C’mon, Snow, let’s

  go.”

  I let her drag me away, leaving Hat Trick

  standing forlornly in the middle of the dim,

  empty dock. After watching us for several

  seconds, he puts his earbuds back in his ears,

  bounces a few times on his toes, and

  wanders off in the other direction. Maybe

  Mike and Mara are waiting for him, but I

  don’t think so. They were there for the box,

  not to protect him. Guess the Tyng family

  doesn’t give much of a shit about its

  wayward sons.

  Kez leads the way to the Marie, moving

  faster than I thought she could. Either she’s

  desperate to be away from New Brunny –

  and I wouldn’t blame her if she is – or she’s

  pissed.

  I’ve left the Marie’s ramp open in case

  we needed to make a quick get-away. I catch

  up with her as she starts up the ramp. Put my

  hand on the strap of her backpack and begin

  to ease it off her shoulder. She yanks it back.

  Okay, she’s pissed.

  “At me, men or life in general?” I ask,

  keeping pace with her as she strides up the

  ramp.

  “All of the above,” she hisses.

  Given her day so far, I can understand

  that. Looks like I made it worse after all. “I

  should have come with you,” I say, by way

  of apology.

  She turns her head enough to look at me

  out of her reddened eye. “What are you

  talking about?”

  “If I’d been with you . . . it wouldn’t have

  happened. I should have come with you.”

  Kez shakes her head and stalks off

  towards the passenger lounge. Leaves me

  standing in the corridor, wondering what to

  say. Ape brushes by me, follows his sister

  into the lounge. “I knew it wouldn’t last,” he

  sniffs at me.

  Oh, no, Monkey Boy does not get the last

  word.

  I slam open the door to the passenger

  lounge as it cycles shut after Ape. Cock my

  thumb back towards the corridor. “Get out.”

  “Nice fucking timing, Ace.” Ape glances

  at Kez, who has stopped in the middle of

  stowing her float board. She’s glaring at me,

  a look that carries particular weight out of

  her bloodied eye. She doesn’t look at her

  brother. He shrugs and pushes past me again.

  The door snicks shut behind him.

  “If you two are gonna fuck, could you be

  quick about it?” he shouts back through the

  door.

  Kez shakes her head and shoves her

  board further into the storage compartment.
/>   “You want your share? It’s right there.”

  She tips her head at three wrapped stacks

  of octagons, sitting on top of her backpack in

  one of the passenger cradles. I don’t need to

  count them to know there’s three thousand

  there.

  “Thought we agreed on two and a half.”

  She shrugs and pulls the flight webbing

  around her board. “You’ve earned it.”

  “So that’s it?” If she thinks I’m giving up

  the hour plus she owes me in a bed, she can

  think again. But now’s probably not the time

  to mention it. “We’re all square?”

  She looks up at me. Her expression

  twists, going lost and anguished for a

  moment. Her lower lip quivers. She bites

  down on it, flinches and gets her face under

  control. “Sure.” She slams the compartment

  hatch. Reaches for the rolls of credits with

  jerky, broken movements.

  I take her by the shoulders and pull her

  back against my chest. Careful not to touch

  anywhere she might be hurt. Grateful that

  nothing about her pain and vulnerability has

  made me hard. I lower my face into her hair.

  Breath in the soap smell, soured by sweat.

  “Did I make it worse?”

  “With Hat Trick? Yeah, what were you

  thinking? The Tyngs never forget anyone who

  makes them bleed—”

  That’s why she’s pissed at me? For

  sticking Ass Hat? “With Kincaid.”

  “Oh.” She relaxes a little against me.

  “No. I . . . no.”

  “Did he rape you?”

  She shakes her head. “My ass is still your

  exclusive preserve.”

  Yeah, I was afraid she might see it that

  way. “You heard of the Red Carpet?”

  “In the Delta?” She shrugs. “I guess so.”

  “Very rough trade. ‘Bout two months ago,

  I crossed paths with Kincaid there. He’s a

  regular.”

  “So?”

  She’s too tired to make the connection; I

  supply it for her. “Threats would have made

  it worse. I said what I said to keep him off

  you. Didn’t have to be true.”

  She lets her head loll back against my

  shoulder. “But it is true, isn’t it?”

  “No, we’re square.” I’m not like

  Kincaid. I won’t be like him, no matter how

  much I want that time in a bed and the rest of

  what she promised me. She came to me.

  Gave herself to me. I took what she offered,

  but I didn’t force her. I’ve never forced a

  woman, no matter how much I wanted her,

  and I’m not starting with Kez. If she wants

  this to be the end, if she wants to walk away,

  I’ll let her go. Somehow.

 

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