Kill City Blues: A Sandman Slim Novel

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Kill City Blues: A Sandman Slim Novel Page 31

by Richard Kadrey


  “Let’s let bygones by bygones. We need each other now. You have the power and I have the infrastructure to fight these unholy bastards coming for our world. Work for the new Golden Vigil. We’re back together and fully funded by Homeland Security.”

  “If I say yes, you’re going to pay me.”

  “Of course. Same deal as before.”

  “Wrong. I have the 8 Ball in my back pocket. I figure that makes me kind of a defense contractor. And I ought to get paid like one, meaning grossly overpaid.”

  “There are rules to these things.”

  “I’m sick of hearing about everyone else’s rules. Break the rules. You have no idea what getting back the Qomrama cost.”

  “You’re going to let that pretty girl of yours die if you can’t blackmail the U.S. government out of a few more dollars?”

  “Pay me or you can fight the Angra with pitchforks and torches.”

  “How much do you want?”

  “Someone offered me a million dollars for it. Match the offer and we’re both yours.”

  “You know I can’t do that.”

  “I’m the weapons guy. Tell them I invented a nuclear water balloon or something.”

  “You mean this, don’t you? You’d kill the world for money?”

  “The more people like you tell me I can’t have things, the more I want them. And you’re forgetting something.”

  “What’s that?”

  “I have the key to the Room of Thirteen Doors. My girlfriend that you’re so worried about . . . we can hide in there. God can’t get in there. Lucifer can’t get in there. I bet the Angra can’t either. We can drink champagne in my own little bomb shelter while the rest of you are snacks for demon dogs.”

  Wells doesn’t say anything. Candy winks at me. Matthew doesn’t know what the fuck is going on.

  “I might be able to do a hundred-thousand-dollar consulting fee.”

  “Not even close.”

  “One and a half.”

  “Nine.”

  “Two and a half.”

  “Eight.”

  “Four.”

  “Seven.”

  “Five.”

  “Six and a half.”

  “Five and a half.”

  “Deal,” I say.

  “I’ll have to confirm with back east.”

  “Tell them if anyone tries to lowball me, the Qomrama disappears with me and mine.”

  Matthew yells, “Let me talk to the man.”

  I put the phone on speaker and hold it out to him.

  “Mr. Wells? It’s Matthew.”

  “Matthew? You’re still alive? Stark really is getting soft.”

  Matthew frowns. He’s not getting the sympathy he was hoping for.

  “Listen, Mr. Wells, this psycho set me up. He robbed a drugstore and left my wallet behind.”

  “And a gun,” I say.

  “A gun? Matt, you know you’re not supposed to be carrying firearms. You just violated your parole.”

  “I needed protection. You said you’d take care of me.”

  “I said to get in touch with your ex and use her to get to Stark. Not to stalk and terrorize the girl. As far at the Marshal’s Service is concerned, you invalidated the terms of our agreement and we have no further obligation toward you.”

  “You can’t hang me out to dry like this,” says Matthew.

  “I think he can,” Candy says.

  “We’re done, Matthew. Stark, take me off speaker.”

  I push the button and put the phone back to my ear.

  “It will take me a few days to work things out with Washington on the payment situation.”

  “Take your time. It’s only the end of the world. Anyway, you have my number.”

  “I sure do, pal.”

  “Call me back before the Christmas sales start. I want a new flat-screen for the bedroom.”

  “Are you sure you didn’t kill Aelita?”

  “I wish I could say yes, but no, I didn’t.”

  “Pity. I’d have respected you more if you’d had the wherewithal.”

  “That reminds me. If I work with the Vigil, you’ll square me with LAPD, right?”

  “If you’ll stop stealing so many goddamn cars.”

  “Marshal Wells. I’ve never heard you take the Lord’s name in vain before. Shame on you.”

  “You let me worry about me and the Lord.”

  “Maybe you can get me a company car. Or maybe you can get the Hellion hog declared street legal.”

  “The what?”

  “Call me when you have an answer on the money. If things work out, maybe we’ll get to spend the holidays together.”

  “Imagine my glee.”

  “I’m going to cut this idiot loose now. That okay with you?”

  “Do whatever you want with the scumbag.”

  “Good night, Marshal.”

  The line goes dead.

  “Matthew,” I say. “I think you’re about fresh out of friends. If I were you, the first thing I’d think about is getting out of California. Sorry I took your wallet and all your money.”

  “I’ll pay you back for this,” he says.

  “Careful, son. I’m about to become a federal law enforcement officer. They send you to Guantánamo for threatening fine upstanding types like me.”

  I nod to Candy and turn off the lamp. Drop the wire cutters on the tarp next to Matthew.

  “Feel free to let yourself out,” I say. “And you’ll want to be quick about it. The cops will be at the pharmacy by now and I kind of left a trail of pills from there to here. See you in the funny papers, Matt.”

  We leave and I pull the broken door shut.

  Candy says, “You didn’t really leave a trail of pills to the apartment, did you? Allegra could get in trouble.”

  “No, but Brainiac back there doesn’t know that. Anyway, even if he cuts himself out of the wire, I give him forty-eight hours before he’s back in county.”

  The rain has slacked off a bit. Just a slow drizzle. Maybe global warming will wash L.A. away before the Angra get a chance to.

  Candy says, “I’m sleeping with a G-man.”

  “A rich G-man.”

  “Let’s go home, J. Edgar. We have money to break furniture again.”

  I DUMP THE Escalade across from Donut Universe and Candy and I walk home in the rain like a stock photo on a greeting card.

  When I open the front door to Max Overdrive, Kasabian gimps over to us like his tail is on fire, glancing upstairs and talking quietly. The rain has cooled down the city, but he’s pale and sweating.

  “What’s going on?”

  He looks over his shoulder.

  “They’re upstairs. I told them that’s your room.”

  “Who is it?” says Candy.

  Kasabian goes back behind the video racks that form the walls of his bedroom shanty.

  “You deal. I don’t want any part of this shit.”

  Candy and I look at each other. She gets out her knife and I pull the Colt. We walk into the bedroom.

  Samael is sitting on the bed drinking one of Kasabian’s beers. Mr. Muninn is in the swivel chair by the desk drinking coffee from a ceramic Max Overdrive mug. I hope to hell Kasabian washed the thing before giving it to him.

  “Hi, Samael,” I say. He raises his beer to me in greeting. “Good evening, Mr. Muninn.”

  He doesn’t say anything for a minute. I turn to Candy.

  “Why don’t you go downstairs and keep Kasabian company for a while?”

  “You’ll be all right?”

  “No, he won’t,” says Mr. Muninn. “Nothing is all right, young lady.”

  Candy stands in the doorway.

  “Go on. I’ll see you in a few minutes,” I tell her.

  Mr. Muninn says, “Don’t worry. There won’t be any floods or lightning bolts tonight at least. We’re just going to talk like reasonable beings.”

  “That leaves out at least one of us,” says Samael, glancing at me.

  M
r. Muninn sets down his coffee cup.

  “You’re not helping the situation.”

  “Just trying to clarify which side each of us is on,” says Samael.

  “I presume you’re here because you’re on my side.”

  “Of course, Father. But I think I know some of Stark’s argument, and for once it’s not entirely dismissible.”

  “Fine. Then let’s hear what he has to say for himself.”

  I say, “I’m not giving you back Father Traven.”

  Muninn looks at Samael.

  “That’s not an argument. That’s a statement. Where’s the argument in that?”

  “Stark, would you mind elaborating a bit for Father?” says Samael.

  “I don’t know what else to say. I’m sorry I had to do what I did the way I did it, but I’m not letting Traven go back to Hell.”

  “And you think that’s your decision?” says Mr. Muninn.

  “As long as he’s in the Room it is.”

  Mr. Muninn crosses his legs. Laces his fingers together.

  “What I meant,” say Samael, “is that perhaps you’d state your reasons why you took Father Traven in the first place.”

  I try to put the whole thing together in my head before saying anything.

  “It’s not fair,” I say. “The father published a book. Big deal. Your book’s gotten a lot of people in trouble over the years. Do you deserve to be damned for that?”

  “You forget, Stark. I am in Hell. You sent me there.”

  “And you agreed to it.”

  “More fool me. I thought I could trust you. You’re a great disappointment.”

  “What do you want? I’m an Abomination.”

  Mr. Muninn dismisses the comment with a wave.

  “Please. That’s no excuse.”

  “You don’t care that I’m an Abomination, do you? You’ve never cared.”

  Samael smiles. Mr. Muninn nods.

  “I see where you’re going with this. You’ve trapped me into saying that I reject the technicality that you, a nephilim, are Abomination. And if I can do that, why can’t I reject the technicality that your friend the father wrote an offensive book?”

  “Well? Why can’t you?”

  “Because it’s not that simple, is it? You made it complicated by stealing him right from under my, Lucifer’s, nose. Do you know how that makes me look?”

  “Of course. The three of us know all about how shitty it is to be Lucifer.”

  “And yet you did it anyway.”

  “I got a little rash maybe. Okay. Sorry. Smite me with a lightning bolt.”

  Samael says, “It’s God that does lightning bolts. There’s just us little Devils here.”

  “Then stick me with a pitchfork. Look, if I’d come to you and asked for Traven’s soul, would you have given it to me?”

  “Of course not.”

  “Why?”

  “Why? Because there are rules that shape the universe. We might not like all of them, but without them there would be anarchy and nothing would work.”

  “Nothing works now.”

  “Now you’re being melodramatic.”

  “Are you happy? Am I happy? Is he happy?” I say, pointing to Samael. He takes a swig of beer.

  “Name me one happy creature in this universe. You can’t, can you?”

  “ ‘Call no man happy until he is dead,’ ” says Samael.

  “That’s Marcus Aurelius, right?”

  He makes a tsk noise.

  “Aeschylus. A Greek playwright. Didn’t you read any of the books I left for you?”

  “I remember the one where Curious George got to be a fireman.”

  “Getting back to the topic at hand,” says Mr. Muninn. “We’ve had this discussion before, Stark. You want me to take sides in the religious dispute between Hell’s old Church and the new. You want me to make mankind happy and cheerful and free from strife. You want me to be all things to all creatures.”

  “Shouldn’t you?”

  “Where would free will come into this scenario? The ability to make choices, good or bad.”

  “You never gave the angels free will. That’s why this one rebelled,” I say, pointing at Samael. “Maybe that’s another rule you should have broken.”

  Samael looks away. He doesn’t want to get dragged into this particular argument.

  “As I said to you once before, you don’t know what it is to be a ruler and you certainly have no idea what a deity is.”

  “Do you? Are you really a deity, or were the Gnostics right and you’re just the Demiurge, a caretaker who’s gotten in over his head and can’t keep the plumbing working?”

  “That’s an offensive question.”

  “That’s not an answer.”

  “I don’t have to explain myself to you.”

  “Who are you talking to? Stark or the Abomination?”

  “Both, I suspect.”

  “You know that both Deumos and Merihim are against you, right? They’re as bad as Aelita. Just more subtle.”

  He looks at me hard.

  “What makes you think that?”

  “Things I’ve seen and things I’ve been thinking about. Hey, here’s one good bit of news. Aelita is dead.”

  Mr. Muninn sits back in the chair. Rests his elbows on the arms.

  “I’m sorry to hear that. She was a troubled child, but at one time she was one of the ones closest to me.”

  “You could say we rebel angels had troubled childhoods, but I blame video games,” says Samael.

  Mr. Muninn says, “Quiet, you. Why don’t you go home and check on things at the palace.” He looks at me. “It’s getting crowded down there.”

  Samael looks disappointed.

  “You said I could come along. This is Stark we’re talking to. Not Mary Magdalen.”

  “Well, you’re not helping, so please keep your contributions on topic.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “So, Aelita is still one of your kids,” I say.

  “Of course. Even at his worst, so was Samael. So are you. So is all humankind.”

  “Let’s just keep this focused. Aelita is your kid. Samael is your kid. Merihim and Deumos are your kids.”

  “Yes. All the rebel angels are my children.”

  “Then you are one child-abusing motherfucker.”

  “Excuse me?” says Muninn. Thunder rumbles outside.

  “I’m an Abomination. A little outside everyone, right? I’m both sides and neither side of the argument. And I have your solution.”

  “To what?”

  “Your misery. And your kids’ misery.”

  “Please, enlighten us all with the revelation of Saint Stark.”

  “Close down Hell.”

  Samael crushes his beer can and belches.

  “Excuse me.”

  The prick knew where I was going all along. He wanted me to say it first.

  “I’m telling you as an ex-Lucifer, as someone who’s seen how miserable not just the damned are but the angels guarding them. Turn off the lights. Roll up the carpets and lock the doors. Whatever point you were making by tossing the rebels there has been made. Hell hasn’t redeemed the fallen angels. It’s created the biggest suicide cult in history. That’s why the generals agreed to Mason Faim’s idiot plan to storm Heaven. They knew it would fail and that Heaven’s armies would destroy them. Suicide by cop.”

  Mr. Muninn picks up his coffee. Sips it and makes a face. It’s gone cold. He moves his hand over it and it’s hot again. He takes another sip.

  “Nice trick,” I say.

  “Are you going to point out how weak I am now that I’ve split into pieces? Don’t bother. I feel it every day.”

  “I met Nefesh yesterday.”

  Mr. Muninn nods.

  “Yes, he told me all about it. My brother has come to stay with me.”

  “And me,” says Samael. “Two fathers in the same house. Can you imagine my joy?”

  “What about it, Mr. Muninn? Shut down Hell.”
r />   He shakes his head.

  “I’ll admit I’ve thought about it. I don’t know how I’d go about doing it. What to do with the angels that still want to rebel. What to do with the lost souls. Broken as I am, I don’t even know if I have the strength to do it anymore.”

  “Now you have Nefesh to help. Maybe the two of you could do it together.”

  “It’s a mad idea to consider as reality. Destroying Hell is an abstract notion. A philosophical argument. Nothing more.”

  “Not if you don’t want it to be. You can make it real.”

  “This is foolishness.”

  “You can do it and let the angels have some free will. Don’t drag any of them back to Heaven. Leave Hell’s gates open and let the ones that want to go back with you go and let the angels who want to stay in Hell stay. And find something better to do with all those damned souls. How many of them are like Father Traven, there on technicalities?”

  “This is all very romantic and heartfelt, Stark, but I’d like to point out a flaw in your argument,” says Samael. “You’ll notice that I’m not in Heaven anymore. Neither are a lot of angels. Hell is becoming a very crowded place and not just with rebels and lost souls.”

  “Angels are fleeing Heaven in droves,” says Mr. Muninn. “Ruach grows less rational by the hour.”

  “So you see, while your throw-the-gates-open argument might have some merit, it’s impossible to implement until Ruach is made sane or removed as Heaven’s guardian. And in the end, all of these arguments might be moot.”

  “The Angra,” I say.

  Samael nods.

  “The Angra.”

  “The Angra,” says Mr. Muninn.

  “You broke some rules when you took the universe from them. You can break one little rule for Father Traven.”

  “No,” says Mr. Muninn.

  “I guess it’s a Mexican standoff. Unless you’re going to toss me into a lake of fire or something.”

  Mr. Muninn makes a face.

  “You’d love that. It would fit right into your martyr complex.”

  “Then where are we?”

  “I have a counteroffer. A compromise.”

  “Okay.”

  “Eleusis. The place of virtuous pagans. It’s the most civilized place in Hell. Full of intellectuals and philosophers. The best of the old world. I think your Father Traven would fit right in.”

  “Yeah,” I say. “I always hated Eleusis too. It seems to me like another bullshit technicality. Why is it their fault that they hadn’t heard about your religion when it was something like nine people believed in back then?”

 

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