Head Space
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Head Space
The Fixer, Volume 6
Andrew Vaillencourt
Published by Andrew Vaillencourt, 2019.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
HEAD SPACE
First edition. March 2, 2019.
Copyright © 2019 Andrew Vaillencourt.
ISBN: 978-1386354062
Written by Andrew Vaillencourt.
Also by Andrew Vaillencourt
Hegemony
Sullivan's Run
Sullivan's Stand
The Fixer
Ordnance
Hell Follows
Hammers and Nails
Aphrodite's Tears
Dead Man Dreaming
Head Space
Escalante
Standalone
Thor's Day
Watch for more at Andrew Vaillencourt’s site.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Also By Andrew Vaillencourt
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER ONE
A ceramic sphere five millimeters in diameter sent flying across a crowded street should have been a silent and insignificant thing. The tiny mass, the pitiful volume, the utterly minuscule nature of so pathetic a speck could understandably go completely unnoticed by any of the dozens of people present for such a traverse. However, when that same projectile flew at twenty times the speed of sound, propelled to this ludicrous velocity by a powerful electromagnetic induction coil and spat from the muzzle of a gun, this is simply not the case. First, the bead shatters the sound barrier before it even exits the barrel. This leaves a shaft of pure vacuum in its wake that is rapidly filled by the crush of air pressure once it has exited. The report of atmospheric cavitation is not unlike the cracking of a whip. It is sharp, loud, and rather nerve-shattering.
Then, as the bead continues to shove rudely through the swirling morass of nitrogen, oxygen, and other constituent gasses that make up the air on a planet like Earth, friction begins to heat the surface layer of material. After about six feet of travel, the projectile is already glowing white hot. Soon, the little white ball is converting that air into pure plasma as it hurtles toward the unfortunate soul comprising its target.
The result is a gunshot both loud and visually distinct. For the merest fraction of an eyeblink, a startling whipcrack sound and a streak of yellow-white fire connect the barrel of a gun to a now-dying person. The motives and morals of shooter and shot are, of course, irrelevant to the pea-sized projectile. It bears no ill will toward either party and is consigned rather tightly to its own role of delivering kinetic and thermal energy to a soft ambulatory bag of fluids and stringy proteins. Without a life of its own for context, and without the necessary sentience to appreciate one, the bead will stay indifferent to the philosophical quandary of homicide. For its part, the bead will probably cease to exist when it shatters against an errant rib, or perhaps when the density and pressure of the various liquid-filled sacks inside a human body tear it apart. Either way, the bead will not care. It cannot care. It is only a ceramic sphere after all.
The small and narrow-eyed man firing this doomed missile across the bustling street was not an inanimate object. He was in fact a drug dealer. “Little” Jean Marceau was not a particularly good drug dealer either, if he was being honest. Perhaps too fond of his own product, perhaps not that great a businessman, he surpassed most of his industry brethren with his ability to judge his flaws with a modicum of objectivity. Objectively speaking, he was scared, and fear often made him stupid. Objectively speaking, this appeared to be one of those times. Not because he had just killed a man in broad daylight in front of a hundred or so witnesses. That constituted the sort of baseline stupid he might have managed even with a cool head. No, the stupid lived somewhere far more insidious. Just as his finger had touched off the first round of what he had initially planned to be a blistering fusillade of hot death, he realized something that twisted his guts into a knot.
He had just shot the wrong person.
A doughy man with a receding hairline and a brown jacket lurched and slammed into the polycarbonate window of a clothing store. The thin panel held against the impact, and the victim slumped glassy-eyed against the transparent pane for a brief and agonizing moment. The eyes of the dying man opened wide, asking questions with no good answers and pleading for a rescue certain to arrive too late. The man with the gun had no answers, and he had no help to give. The tubby legs buckled and some random businessman from The Sprawl slid down the glass, leaving a smear of thick red blood to mar the day’s special sale on women’s outerwear. The shooter knew he had killed the poor slob long before his victim slumped face down on the sidewalk. The drumbeat of his own panicked pulse roared in his ears, muffling the screams of terrified passers-by and the shouts of those warning each other of a crazed gunman on the street.
The man he had meant to kill looked up, saw him, and ran. For a moment Jean thought to shoot at him, hoping he might somehow salvage this screw-up and maybe make good on what was probably a fatal failure. He did not. If he had missed so egregiously at this range once, shooting the fleeing man in the back as he ran away did not feel like a strong possibility. He was no marksman, no kind of hitter. He sold bargain-basement blaze and firezene tabs to bored spacers and uptown college kids with more money than sense. He had only taken this job because things had gotten out of hand and fear motivated like nothing else. All he needed to do to keep a few of his more dogged creditors off his back, and clear up a favor owed to a business partner, was plug one ex-terrorist from Venus.
Jean understood the magnitude of his folly. He had not been in Dockside very long, just a few months. He did not know the lay of the land intimately though he remained very much aware of what he could expect to happen next.
I’m gonna get fixed.
It was a thought etched into his soul with acid. Dockside was The Fixer’s turf. Everybody knew that. Worse, the man he had just failed to kill was one of his crew. That fact alone made the job risky beyond any level Jean could accurately assess. Yet now the long-haired Venusian punk had gotten a good look at him and escaped. Jean decided that none of that mattered anymore. The plan had been to hit the kid and bolt to a waiting tram. A six-minute ride to Dock Four would get him to the next shuttle up to the Pride of Wayfair. The Fixer was not going to chase anyone onto a chartered and bonded freighter, after all. Jean would be off-world and hea
ding to Enterprise Station three hours later. With his mission failed, Jean surmised that the rest of the plan still had a lot going for it. Speeding away from New Boston at ten million miles per hour sounded like a very good idea at the moment.
Jean bolted for the corner as fast as his feet could carry him. The terrified gasps of passers-by and the screams of women reminded Jean that he should probably ditch the gun still clutched in his white-knuckled grip. The cheap pistol clattered to the sidewalk and skittered forgotten to the curb. Jean ignored it and ran faster. When he had cleared the block, he turned to an alley. He knew this alley connected a wide street with a narrower drive that led to a tram station. Under the cover of the alley’s deep shadows, Jean ditched his coat and hat in an attempt to alter his external appearance enough to throw off any pursuit. It might have worked if he had been able to suppress his terror enough to do anything other than run at full speed toward the tram and the desperate hope of escape.
Per his habit, Jean’s portion of fear came accompanied by the requisite dollop of stupid. He kept sprinting like a whipped spaniel through the streets and his headlong flight completely destroyed any effect his quick change of clothes may have had. Curious eyes followed him as rough shoves sent him through the lightly crowded lanes. He barely heard the bellowed imprecations sent his way by jostled dockworkers and ruffled tradesmen.
As stupid as fear might make him, terror did wonders for his ground speed. In scant seconds, he burst through a knot of bewildered skid drivers and like an oasis of hope the tram station loomed before his eyes. The urgent need for escape drove him to even greater speeds when he saw the door lights flash yellow in a helpful warning to passengers that they would be closing in just a few seconds. Jean sailed through the turnstile of the tram stop and blasted through the doors of the departing car right as they began to slide closed. Rough hands shoved him away as his momentum sent him breathless into the tired people already in the car and he spared them only his fear-soaked expression for apology. The scowls coming in return spoke volumes as to how inadequate an apology it was. Jean moved down the aisle before the frowns grew into belligerence. Escaping this debacle would be moot if he got bashed to death by a tram car filled with irate longshoremen. He was disappointed to find no empty seats in this car. Sprinting for three blocks constituted more exercise than he usually got in a week, and his legs burned with an electric pain from the effort. He acknowledged with a frustrated sigh that a chance to sit down for a few minutes was going to be too much to hope for. The grimy beige interior lay cramped with people either stuffed into hard plastic seats or standing with bored expressions and the overhead rail grasped in grease-stained fingers. The sea of quietly indignant faces told Jean that he must look quite a sight to the assembled commuters. Panting, sweaty, frazzled, and jittery, Little Jean had to accept that he was not nearly as inconspicuous as he ought to be considering how close he still remained to the scene of his crime. Yet Docksiders saw a lot of strange things on any given day. One terrified man fleeing some unknown horror would not even move the needle for this crowd.
The car surged forward and Jean let out a tense breath he did not remember holding. As it passed the street where he had done his nefarious deed, he saw people milling about and several Dockside cops setting up a perimeter around the dead man still lying against the wall of the storefront. His heart galloped in his chest as the tram pulled away. Each passing second putting more and more distance between the corpse and the clumsy killer. As this distance grew, so did Jean’s calm, and he began to think about the broader implications of his folly.
Not killing the target was bad. Killing some no-name bystander was worse. The people who had engaged his services were going to be extremely irritated with his performance. While he did not know them well, Jean felt confident they would not treat his failure with compassion and understanding. Would they want to kill him? Jean could not say. He sat one precarious step above a bottom-feeder on the spectrum of criminal influence. Even with today’s debacle, offing him was probably going to be more work than it was worth. He may or may not have been in possession of a few important names though, and that felt like it might be a problem. Putting a few hundred light-years between himself and Earth should soften that risk; or at least he hoped it would.
The thought of leaving Earth brought his thoughts back around to The Fixer. Everyone in Dockside talked about him like he was some sort of bogeyman Robin Hood. The street criminals that Jean associated with lived in near constant terror that they might run afoul of the powerful crime guilds and end up “fixed.” Jean did not really understand what that meant, but he was astute enough to surmise it was almost certainly unpleasant. His information on The Fixer did not amount to any great understanding, but he decided to operate under the impression that getting well clear of Dockside stood as his best chance to prevent any untoward encounters with the terrifying specter.
The six-minute journey to Dock Four passed like six hours. OmniCorp leased Dock Four, and in the tradition of the other docks had named it “Demeter” with respect to the trillions of tons of food and dry goods that slid down the invisible shaft of anti-gravitons between the twelve-hundred-foot spire and the ungainly gray bulk of freighters in orbit above. Little Jean neither knew nor cared about the lyrical origins of the Dock’s designation. His concerns were more pressing and immediate. Not wanting to risk the ire of the sour-faced men and women in the car, he resisted the urge to bolt and shove his way through the doors as they opened. He positively vibrated with tension as all riders began the slow process of filing through the aperture. With safety so close, Jean could taste the relief of safety in the over-processed air. The proximity of his escape maddened the man, and he shuffled his way out with the rest of the crowd, following too close and jostling those in his way.
When he had both feet on the steel deck of Dock Four Receiving, he accelerated to a brisk walk nigh indistinguishable from a jog. Hands of clay fumbled in his pocket for his comm, retrieving it eventually and flicking through screens until he found his boarding pass. He got so caught up in getting his credential ready that he bumped into the passenger kiosk and drew a weary sigh from the irritated man behind it. Jean ignored the man’s mumbled greeting and shoved his comm in front of the access scanner. The machine sounded a cheery chime and spoke in a dulcet woman’s voice through his earpiece. “Welcome to the passenger deck of the Pride of Wayfair, the largest and fastest of the recently constructed Valdez class of high-mass gate ships. Would you like to know more about the Valdez class of super-hauler? For more information about the Valdez class, you can direct your infonet aggregator to the Quinzy Heavy Industries infotainment channel. Here you will find the latest information on all the various ships and services provided by New Boston’s premier ship-building corporation...”
Jean had already started jogging toward his boarding shuttle. The droning of the bland commercial in his ear infuriated him, but he did not trust his hands to manipulate the controls of his comm while jogging.
The voice was still talking in that drab unoffensive monotone when static filled Jean’s ear. The honeyed buzzing of the woman’s voice faded away and another voice broke in. It was unfamiliar and spoke with a resigned, almost mocking tone.
“Oh Jean, Jean, Jean,” the stranger in his ear sighed. Jean whipped his head back and forth, not sure what he was looking for but hoping to find a clue as to who might be speaking. “You really are a terrible shot, aren’t you? I can see you are booked on the Pride. Nice ship. It looks like you’ll get up the antigrav shaft before I can get to you, so I figured I’d drop you a line before you got away.”
“Who is this?” Jean had hoped for a commanding and resolute tone. What he got sounded like a barked whisper.
“You mean you don’t know? That’s disturbing. You just tried to kill me, so I figured you were someone I had pissed off. It’s a good-sized list of people, anyway.”
“You? How did you get into my comm?”
A chuckle came, perhaps flavor
ed with youthful pride. “You really don’t know who I am then. Let’s just say there was only one comm leaving the scene at a dead run and headed right for the easiest escape route.”
This guy hacked the comm net? Jean’s cold sweat returned with a vengeance. What the hell have I gotten into?
The voice continued, prophetic. “You are probably wondering just what you have gotten yourself into at this point. Let me read you in. My name is Manny, and I work for The Fixer. I have access to pretty much everything there is to know about you right now. I have your comm code, obviously. I’ve also gone ahead and grabbed your biometrics, your criminal record, your former addresses, your friends and family information, and the name of your sister’s cat.”
Jean did not think such a thing was possible. His pace slowed, and his frantic search of the surroundings continued.
“It’s Percy, by the way.”
“What?” Jean was confused.
“The name of your sister’s cat. It’s Percy. Short for Percival. Man, she posts a lot of pictures of that thing.”
Jean’s heart began to sink. The stupid cat’s name was indeed Percival. God, he hated that cat.
The collection point for passenger shuttles sat barely fifty yards ahead now, but Jean was no longer sure that the perceived safety of his escape was anything more than the last forlorn hope of a dying fool.
“So, Jean. You might as well get on that shuttle because my boss and the big man are closing in fast. But here’s your problem. I may have just emptied your bank accounts, canceled your credit chits, and uh... there we go, I went ahead and swapped your biometrics file with a known terrorist’s. Don’t worry. He’s dead at the moment, so he won’t mind.”
Jean stopped cold. The collection point stood a mere six feet in front of his nose. Two measly yards away and beckoning with a softly pulsing amber light indicating he could board when ready. The line was moving. The other passengers already filed inside, their expressions locked in sour acknowledgment of the tight quarters. He heard them grunting polite greetings to the unfamiliar faces. If what the voice in his head said was true, there would be no safety to be found up there. Sure, he would get up to his ship, and he would get to Enterprise Station. If he stayed on board and did not try to book any other ships there, he would end up in Wayfair as planned.