Book Read Free

Snowburn

Page 33

by E J Frost


  three-note whistle.

  One of the kids spins around. When he

  sees Kez, he detaches himself from the

  cluster and approaches Kez. She holds out

  her fist and the kid bangs it with his, then

  gives her a hug.

  “Kezzy.”

  “Banks,” she says. “Which way’s the

  wind blowing?”

  “North-north-east, sass, and gusty.

  What’re you doing on the SoBo?”

  Kez hooks her thumb towards the water.

  “Cloudlands. I need to be there by midnight.”

  The kid snorts. “Good fuckin’ luck.”

  “I heard there might be a route. You

  know Shaker?”

  The kid nods and gestures to a shop-front

  about a quarter-klick down the long arcade

  of shops set back from the beach. A

  holographic skimmer hangs over the shop’s

  façade. “It’ll be a Mirrormen route. Stay

  away from that shit, sass.”

  Kez shakes her head. Her dreadlocks

  flutter in the breeze off the water. “Can’t. I

  need to get out there tonight. You know any

  other way?”

  “No, but I got some biz on the Rock

  tonight and that’ll be part of the route, so you

  want to come with me that far, hey, there’s

  safety in numbers.”

  Kez nods. “It’d be good to run with you

  again, Banks.” She turns slightly and gestures

  to me. “This is Snow. He’s my pilot—”

  I hold my hand out to the kid. I’m not

  knocking fists with someone who doesn’t

  look old enough to shave. “And her partner,”

  I say.

  The kid glances at Kez and when she

  nods, shakes my hand gravely. “Nice to

  meetcha, Mister Snow.”

  “This is my sister, Erin,” Kez gestures

  towards her sister, who is standing slightly

  away from us, looking bored. Erin nods at

  the kid but doesn’t offer hand or fist.

  “Miz Erin,” the kid says in

  acknowledgement. He may be a beach punk,

  but he has manners. When Kez nods towards

  the skimmer shop, the kid retrieves a float

  board and a pullover that’s patterned to look

  like the spotted and swirled hide of a

  kemwar, one of the native desert predators.

  He has style as well as manners.

  He says hasty good-byes to his friends,

  tangles tongues with one of the girls, and

  falls into step with Kez as she starts towards

  the skimmer shop. She glances back at me

  and I move up on her other side. Take the

  hand she offers to me.

  “Hadn’t heard you’d taken on a partner,

  sass,” the kid says with a glance at our

  joined hands.

  Kez lifts an eyebrow. “What have you

  heard, Banks?”

  He shrugs. “I heard about that thing with

  Jax. People were saying you might not make

  it.”

  Kez’s expression hardens. “I made it.”

  I don’t know who Jax is, but unless she’s

  had multiple near-death experiences

  recently, he must be behind the scar on her

  back. I add his name to my ever-growing list.

  “Yeah, you look good,” the kid says

  appraisingly. I can’t fault the kid’s taste.

  With her white-blonde hair shining in the

  sunlight, her eyes sparkling in their circles of

  kohl and warm pink color staining her

  cheeks, Kez does look good. Her black tank

  shows off her tight little curves, and in her

  well-worn fatigues, her legs look endless.

  Next to the baggy beach bums we’ve left

  behind, she looks like a threedy star.

  Kez laughs. “You’re still too young,

  Banks.”

  My kitten definitely prefers older men.

  “Aww, sass!” The kid’s deeply tanned

  cheeks darken. “You’ve been saying that for

  years.”

  “You’ve been too young for me for years.

  Besides, weren’t you just swapping spit with

  Reeva back there?”

  The kid colors. “Yeah. We’ve had a thing

  going for a couple of months. But, you know,

  you were always my first and only.”

  Kez laughs again and ruffles the kid’s

  spiky black hair. In addition to being too

  young for her, he’s about four centimeters

  shorter than she is. “I’m pretty sure you said

  that about Nevie and Tesha and everyone

  else at the House who didn’t have a steady.”

  “Nevie. Mmm, mmm, mmm.” The kid

  snaps his fingers. “That girl is greener than

  green.”

  Kez chuckles and squeezes my hand. I

  nod at her, enjoying the interplay, but I

  understand the meaning behind that squeeze.

  This is another boy who bypassed Kez to go

  after the beautiful girl.

  “How long have you been here, Banks?”

  Kez asks. “I didn’t even know you’d gone

  SoBo.”

  “Just coming up on a year. My Aundy

  opened up down here.” The kid points at a

  shop a little further down the arcade from

  our destination. Looks like some sort of

  holistic health store. The front window is

  crowded with crystals, plaz bulbs containing

  bits of dried plants, and, curiously, the

  complete jaws of an orclas, one of Kuseros’s

  larger aquatic predators. What are the health

  benefits of owning a giant set of teeth?

  Maybe just a reminder that you’ve had the

  good fortune not to get eaten. “She needed

  someone to take care of things. That’s why I

  gotta be out on the Rock tonight. I got a

  delivery coming in.”

  There are a number of large rocks in the

  channel between the mainland and the

  Cloudlands, but when the kid says he has a

  delivery, I know he means just one rock.

  Outniss. It’s a chain of tiny, rocky islands

  north of the Cloudlands. Just outside the

  defensive perimeter. A frequent meeting

  place for smugglers. The atoll was formed

  by a meteor-strike and the islands’ black

  sand beaches are so rich in thorium and

  uranium that they glow in the dark. The

  ambient radiation, and the natural fission

  going on under the sand, fucks with any kind

  of scanning, even thermal imaging. So the

  govvies are blind, deaf and dumb on Outniss.

  But meetings there need to be kept short,

  unless you want a rad dose worse than taking

  a stroll around Zhonnys naked.

  “Route runs through Outniss, we’re gonna

  need a skimmer,” I observe to Kez.

  “Shaker’ll rent ‘em to you,” the kid says.

  “But you’ll need finboards past Outniss. No

  way you can get a skimmer through the

  Cloudline. I’ll bring the skimmer back, you

  want me to. Save your deposit.”

  Kez laughs. “Then you’re splitting the

  rental.”

  “Aww, sass.” The kid snaps his fingers

  again, but it’s token resistance. He’s already

  on-board.

  Chapter 20
r />   Under the holographic skimmer, the

  entrance to Shaker’s shop is dark and cool.

  A pair of girls wearing too little for the early

  spring weather lounge on a pseudo-wicker

  couch. The kid trades insults with them, and

  one of them trails us through the shop.

  The shop’s empty. Tall holos show

  different models of skimmer, but there’s no

  sign of the owner. We move through the shop

  to the back, where a long glaz counter

  separates the show-space from a dark back

  room. The mouthy girl brushes past and hops

  up on the glaz counter. Crosses her bare legs

  and swings a glitter-booted foot at us.

  Behind her, an older man with a curly salt-

  and-pepper beard down to his chest, a

  graying crew cut and haylon-rimmed goggles

  emerges from the depths of the room behind

  the counter.

  The girl says something else to the kid in

  the teenage patois they speak. I’m not sure

  exactly what it means, but it clearly calls his

  manhood into question. The kid grabs his

  nuts and gestures unequivocally at the girl.

  “You think again, son,” the old man

  growls. He puts down the mechanical part

  he’s fiddling with and leans across the

  counter. “That’s my daughter you’re wavin’

  your little prick at.”

  I chuckle. Extend my hand to him over the

  counter. “Vazilly Vark sent us.”

  He shakes my hand and pushes his

  daughter off the counter. The heavy muscles

  in his forearm flex under densely decorated

  skin. Half-naked women and bearded

  dragons. “Go put some clothes on, Trista.

  Then little punks not shake their pricks at

  you.”

  The girl grumbles but slides around the

  counter and disappears into the back.

  “You Snow?” Shaker asks. I nod and his

  goggled gaze shifts to Kez, casting skittering

  green shadows across the counter. “You must

  be Lightfoot. Zilly told me you’d be with

  him. Let’s see it.”

  Kez glances at me and when I nod, she

  pulls off her left boot and sweeps her leg

  high so her foot lands on the counter. I peer

  around to see what the hell she’s showing

  him.

  It’s a tattoo. On the bottom of her foot. I

  saw it the night I undressed her at my place,

  but I couldn’t see anything beyond a dark

  shape. Now in the light from Shaker’s

  goggles I see a lightning bolt that zigzags

  from just under her toes to her heel.

  Lightfoot. Words spiral around the lightning

  bolt, but I’m at the wrong angle to read them.

  I lean over and whisper into her ear. “What’s

  it say?”

  She tilts her head. Looks up at me through

  the wind-blown fringe of her bangs. “Kez

  was here.”

  I chuckle. Shaker echoes me. “You who

  you say you are. No one else crazy enough to

  lase that shit on their foot. Zilly said you

  okay, so what you want?”

  Kez slides her foot off the counter and

  busies herself with her boot. Her voice is

  muffled by her dreads, but clear enough to

  hear when she says, “We need the route to

  the Cloudlands. Tonight.”

  Shaker sucks his lower lip into his mouth.

  Chews on his chin-fur for a moment. “Not

  tonight. Mirrormen dancin’ tonight.”

  Kez straightens. Nods grimly. “It has to

  be tonight. You got a route or not?”

  “I got a route. You not gonna like it.

  ‘Specially you and her.” Shaker nods at Erin.

  “They catch you—”

  “We’re barbeque. I know. I’ve been to

  one of their parties before.” She has the scar

  to prove it. I run two fingers down her spine

  and she leans into me. Rests her soft head on

  my shoulder. “What’s the route?”

  With a sigh, Shaker taps the counter and a

  hologram rises from it. He fiddles with it for

  a moment. Colors scroll across Kez’s

  corneas as she watches the hologram and I

  watch her. Gold, blue and black reflect in

  her eyes when the colors stop whirling.

  I shift my gaze from Kez’s determined

  frown to the threedy map rising from the

  counter. Golden Sands appears as a small

  pile of buildings, marked by a miniature

  version of the ornate seashell archway that

  decorated the plaza. A tiny skimmer, no

  larger than my thumbnail, shoots along the

  coast from Golden Sands to Hot Sands, a

  heavy industrial port ten klicks to the north. I

  start to object – there aren’t any transports

  from Hot Sands to the Cloudlands. Then big

  black bowship, probably moving cargo to the

  Eastern Colony, slides out of Hot Sands. The

  skimmer disappears under the bowship, and I

  shut my mouth. We’re hitchhiking.

  The bowship moves across the rippling

  blue of the bay, heading out to the deep

  ocean. As the bowship passes the low green

  atoll of Outniss, the skimmer reappears. It

  drops out of the underside of the bowship

  and settles on one of the small islands. Then

  a tiny green finboard, the sliver of a

  fingernail, shoots out of the skimmer and

  across the waving blue to intersect with

  another bowship, moving south towards the

  green and brown humps of the Cloudlands.

  This bowship appeared from off the northern

  edge of the map. Probably from Ykimo.

  There’s a regular run from Ykimo to Tiv, on

  the North Island. Sure enough, the bowship

  moves ponderously past the atoll and angles

  toward a pile of ceramsteel and glaz

  buildings that mark Tiv’s perch on the

  Cloudlands’ north coast.

  “How often do the ships run?” Kez asks.

  “Twice a day. Morning and night. You

  got about two hours to get to Hot Sands to

  catch the next one.”

  Kez nods.

  “That’s fucked, sass,” the kid observes.

  “No way you can hide on a bowship. They

  got eyes everywhere.”

  “Underneath,” Kez and I say at the same

  time. She glances over her shoulder at me

  and I smile at her. Let her take the lead.

  “That’s the secret of the route. The

  Mirrormen figured out a way to tuck a

  skimmer under a bowship.”

  “Without getting carved into chum,” I

  add.

  Shaker nods, his beard wagging. He taps

  the counter a few more times and the map

  dissolves. The formidable prongs of a

  bowship rise from the counter. The ship

  slowly rotates upside-down. Vents for the

  ship’s huge airjets run down either side of

  the split hull. Between the vents, there’s a

  narrow cavity. When the ship is in the water,

  anything tucked into that cavity will be out of

  the slipstream of the jets. And out of sight,

  sound and sensor.

  But it’ll be a ti
ght fit, even for a skimmer.

  The cavity is maybe six meters wide.

  Shooting that groove while the ship is in

  motion is going to be quite a trick.

  Shaker holds out a bullet-shaped piece of

  mech. “This is a transponder, synched to the

  bowships’ frequency. It’ll guide you right

  into that hole, and the bowship won’t register

  anything other than an echo.”

  Kez takes the transponder, turns it over in

  her fingers, and hands it back to Shaker.

  “The Mirrormen got the frequency.” At

  Shaker’s nod, she asks, “Why do they let you

  sell it?”

  “They take seventy percent.”

  “Knew I needed to renegotiate,” I

  murmur. Kez shoots me a grin over her

  shoulder.

  “Can two skimmers fit under one of those

  ships?” I ask.

  Shaker nods. “But the Mirrormen catch

  you, they take a hundred percent outta your

  hide.”

  “Yeah, I figured.” I glance at Banks.

  “How were you plannin’ to get out to the

  Rock tonight?”

  “Night ferry from the Circus,” the kid

  says. “But we can’t take the girls on it. Not

  tonight.”

  Not with the Mirrormen dancing,

  whatever that means. I haven’t heard the

  expression before, but I know the Mirrormen

  frequently hold trance-parties. I thought they

  were impromptu, but maybe they’re linked to

  the cycle of Kuseros’s moons. I also know

  that you don’t want to be a guest at a

  Mirrormen party. They’ll rape you or eat

  you, depending on their mood. Or both.

  “So,” Kez says. “How much is this going

  to cost?”

  The holograms disappear and Shaker

  leans forward across the counter. “Two

  thousand hard. And two thousand deposit,

  since I don’t see my skimmer comin’ back.”

  Kez shakes her head and a couple of

  beads woven into her dreads rattle

  musically. “Get real, mister. Five hundred

  for the skimmer, three finboards and three

  suits. Five hundred deposit. Banks will bring

  back the skimmer. Right, Banks?”

  Before the kid can back her up, Shaker

  snorts. “Not if the Mirrormen catch you.”

  “They’ll sell you back the skimmer,” Kez

  says, crossing her arms over her chest.

  “At two hundred percent. Twenty-five

  hundred all in, for friends of Zilly.”

  “Zilly wouldn’t like his friends gettin’

  ripped off,” I say slowly. Make sure I’ve got

  his attention. Shaker doesn’t look like

  someone who is easily intimidated. He’s soft

  around the middle, but otherwise muscular

 

‹ Prev