Scenes From the Secret History (The Secret History of the World)

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Scenes From the Secret History (The Secret History of the World) Page 13

by F. Paul Wilson


  Oh, shit, he was falling.

  At the last second he kicked out against the upright with his other foot, allowing him to belly-flop onto the slowly moving roof of the uptown A. The air whooshed out of him on impact.

  He gasped, struggling for a breath. Christ, that hurt.

  Still fighting for air, he managed to turn onto his side and watch the DDPer go into a half crouch, ready to jump, then change his mind. As the train picked up speed, Jack waved, then rolled onto his back, temporarily wiped out.

  The rest of the story waits here: Dark City

  1993

  FEAR CITY

  The final book of the Early Years Trilogy. Drexler and the Order are encouraging a cadre of Islamists to bring jihad to America but are suddenly backpedaling when they announce that they want to blow up the World Trade Towers. No! Anything but that! They have good reason, but we won’t learn it until Ground Zero.

  This one proved a challenge. It’s a year and a half after Dark City and things are changing. Disney is moving onto 42nd Street, Times Square is starting a facelift, and Jack can’t get his fix-it business going. Everybody thinks he’s a hit man. He’s not. He’s a repairman – of situations, not appliances.

  Everything in the novel has to point toward the 1993 WTC bombing. I worked out a timeline for the bombers’ activity and it definitely didn’t work for me. These guys had no sense of pacing. So I had to compress 8 weeks of activity into 11 days. I mean, come on, guys, where’s your sense of urgency?

  I think I have some of the best dialogue I’ve ever written in this book. So instead of an opening scene, I’m going to present snippets of dialogue and character bits from throughout the novel.

  FEAR CITY

  (snippets)

  "I want to find whoever did this, Abe."

  "I will help you."

  "And after I find them I want to take a long time killing them."

  "That I will leave to you."

  “You followed her all the way into Westchester County,” Abe said, “and all you got was a license plate number?”

  “You sound like a T-shirt slogan.”

  But where to eat?

  Apparently Cristin already had an idea. “I found a cool little French place on East Sixty-first called Le Pistou.”

  Jack made a face. “Really? What’s choice number two?”

  “But you like French.”

  “I do.” He could eat just about anything, even snails. “But I don’t know if I could eat at a place called Piss Stew.”

  “It’s vegetable soup.”

  He held up his hands. “Stop. You’re only making it worse.”

  “What do I call you, laddie?” the boss man in the swivel chair said as the van lurched into motion.

  What the hell had he stumbled into?

  Jack said, “How about telling me what this is all about.”

  The boss held up Jack’s pistol. “Look, it’s a wee Glock. What’d you do, leave it out in the rain?” He checked the breech, then dropped it on the carpeted floor. “That’s not a pistol.” He reached into his coat and removed a big 1911 .45. “This is a pistol.”

  Jack couldn’t resist. “Okay, so you’ve seen Crocodile Dundee. Good for you.”

  One of the guys up front snickered.

  Burkes pointed to a draped form on the floor. “Another friend?”

  Jack nodded.

  Burkes wandered over to where the driver sprawled with the three arrow shafts jutting toward the ceiling from the eyes and mouth of his blood-coated face.

  “And this, I take it, was not a friend.” He showed Jack a tight, grim smile. “Had a wee bit of a temper tantrum, did we?”

  “Yeah. A wee.”

  Burkes stood over the driver’s body. “And what’s his part in our drama?”

  Jack hadn’t mentioned the key fob when he’d called. He pulled out the driver’s keys and handed them over.

  “I found this in his pocket.”

  Burkes gave him a questioning look as he took the keys. He turned the fob over and stared. Then he looked up at Jack, his lips working but making no sound.

  Jack nodded. “Yeah, I know.”

  The unspeakable was… unspeakable.

  Burkes averted his eyes as he handed back the keys. “Here. It’s giving me the boak.” He took a couple of deep breaths, then kicked the driver’s body so hard it came off the ground.

  “Cunt!”

  Jack parked before a two-story brick colonial that looked pretty much like every other house in Forest Hills. A little sign out front read:

  DR. ADÈLE MOREAU

  APPOINTMENT ONLY

  Dr. Moreau? Really?

  Burkes exited by the side of the van and walked up to the front door. A tall thin woman with odd-colored hair answered his knock; she carried a little dog in her arms. She pointed to the garage, then closed the door.

  Could she be the torturer known as La Chirurgienne?

  La Chirurgienne said, “Voila. No need for lifting and turning. All parts of him are accessible.”

  “Want us to strip him before we go?” Rob said.

  “Not necessary. I find proximity to a naked human, how shall we say, distasteful. I can cut away to expose whatever area I wish to explore.”

  Explore…Jack shuddered at the way she said that.

  Burkes stepped closer and jabbed a finger at her. “You will make up for that by performing IV on a second captive – gratis.”

  La Chirurgienne blinked in surprise, obviously unused to people getting in her face like Burkes. But she didn’t look terribly put off by the idea.

  “Very well.” She smiled and walked away. “I shall await his arrival.”

  “‘IV’?” Jack said. “Like a needle? Like death from lethal injection? He deserves more than–”

  “With la Chirurgienne, ‘IV’ means Infernum Viventes.”

  “Still no help.”

  “It’s Latin.” Burkes’s grin was not a pretty thing. “It means ‘living hell.’”

  Abe finally took a great-white bite of his sausage-and-egg McMuffin. Jack had known it would not go untouched for long. He doubted any news, no matter how tragic, could kill Abe’s appetite.

  After swallowing, Abe shook his head. “A mensch we’ve lost.”

  Jack bit into his own McMuffin. He loved these things. “How well did you know him?”

  A shrug. “Heart-to-hearts we never had. But in some men you can detect the mensch without many words. A man may hide a lot of himself, but the mensch always manages to peek through.”

  Abe shook his head as he stared at him. “In town not three years and already you’ve run into smuggling, mass murder, Dominican gangs, human trafficking, torture, and international terrorism. How does this happen?”

  “Just lucky I guess.”

  “After all this tummel,” Abe said, “how are you going to go back to being Repairman Jack?”

  “I was never Repairman Jack. That’s your thing.”

  “No, it’s your thing.” He pulled a sheet of paper from under the counter and pushed it across. “Here: for the personals pages.”

  Jack stared, dumbfounded.

  When all else fails…

  When nothing else works…

  REPAIRMAN JACK

  Abe said, “I can see you’re speechless with wonder and admiration. I was quite taken myself when I realized what I’d created. Like poetry it reads.”

  Jack burst out laughing. “You’re kidding, right?”

  “I should be kidding about your career? Your future? This is what you need to bring people with troubles to your door – or at least to your table in that bar. Just add whatever phone number you want and you’re all set.”

  “How about I add yours?”

  Jack said, “There’s a law somewhere: Olga’s can’t close. It’s an institution.”

  She opened the menu. “Everything changes,” she said, “but not this place. Look. They still serve turkey croquettes with mashed potatoes and gravy. Ugh.”

 
“How can you say ‘ugh’? You never tried them. Ever.”

  She’d been South Burlington County Regional High School’s only vegetarian – at least the only one as far as he knew. He could still hear her saying, If it had a face or a mother, I don’t want it on my plate.

  “Well, they just sound awful. But not as awful as creamed chipped beef – which they also still have.” She gave an exaggerated shudder. “Remember how you used to order that just to gross me out?”

  “On toast. Mmmm.”

  One time she refused to kiss him after he’d eaten it.

  “And remember how you tried to convince me that chipped beef never had a face or a mother?”

  “Since the scientific community has yet to present convincing evidence to the contrary, I persist in my contention.”

  Julio came by. “Drinking?”

  Burkes said, “Thought you’d never ask. I’m desperate for a bevvy.” He pointed to Jack’s glass. “What’s that?”

  “Rolling Rock.” Jack hadn’t been able to look at a brew yesterday. But that had been yesterday.

  Burkes made a face. “An American lager? Not likely.” He turned back to Julio. “Got anything good to drink? Something with some body to it?”

  “You mean like Guinness?”

  Burkes slapped the table. “Now you’re talking, lad!”

  “We ain’t got none.”

  Jack pushed back a laugh. He’d seen that coming.

  Read the rest here: Fear City

  February

  SIBS

  Sibs is the only one of my fifty-plus novels with a strong erotic element. I usually avoid sex scenes. (Yeah, I hear you: Write what you know, Wilson.) But really, they offer too much potential for purple prose. And in too many cases I think they're unnecessary.

  But they were necessary in Sibs. The villain is a voluptuary and sex is what he's after. So I had to show rather than simply hint. The result is a mixture of horror and police procedural, with erotica fueling the plot.

  The seeds of Sibs were planted decades before its publication when I was writing and rewriting a short story about a unique form of sexual domination. When I finally got it right, Weird Tales published it as "Menage a Trois" (later reprinted in the first Hot Blood anthology).

  But all along I'd been thinking about another variant on the story, and when I devised the final twist in the spring of 1990, I had to drop everything and write it. I was in the middle of Reprisal but I put it aside and sat down and wrote Sibs in nine weeks (as a part-time writer). I was doing 50 pages a day sometimes. Like taking dictation. It's a wonderful experience every writer should have. It consumed me. That fire is reflected in the pace of the book. Sibs has, perhaps, some shortcomings in that hellbent-for-leather pace, but I didn't want go back and tinker with it. Something special there, the way it gushed from me. I can't say it's a terribly nuanced novel, but it's one of my favorites for the sheer joy of being able to rap that thing out. It grabs you by the throat and does not let go.

  For those interested in inter-story connections, Sibs has a number of links to the Secret History: The most obvious is that the Gati family has obviously been touched by the Otherness. How that happened, we’ll never know. What we do know: Jack uses Dr. Gates' house as part of a fix in Legacies; in All the Rage, Luc Monnet bids on wine offered by the Gates estate; the Gati family in Sibs is featured in "Menage a Trois" where a Detective Burke plays a part in the framing sections, just as he does in "The Cleaning Machine," which happens to be about one of the Seven Infernals.

  Here’s the opening chapter. You’ve got to admit it’s a doozy…

  SIBS

  (sample)

  February 4

  12:45 a.m.

  The evening was uneventful until it got crazy. Craziness had been the farthest thing from Ed Bannion's mind when he invited his younger brother into the city.

  Phil came in through the Lincoln from Tinton Falls, New Jersey, and Ed met him at a midtown parking lot. No special occasion, just keeping in touch. They went downtown and then began a steady march back up: Before-dinner drinks at The Airplane in SoHo, an off-off-Broadway play in Kips Bay, shrimp in green sauce at El Quijote in Chelsea, and finally a nitecap in the Oak Bar at the Plaza. And it was there in the Oak Bar, there in the heart of the jewel in Ivana Trump's tiara, while they were standing side by side, each with a foot on the brass rail, staring at the misty painting of the Plaza fountain behind the cash register, that the young blonde squeezed between them and ordered a double JD on the rocks.

  "Hi, guys!" she said, bright and cheery with a smile that made Ed wince in its glare.

  A real piece. She looked around twenty-five but she could have been thirty. Either way, she was younger than Ed. Her wavy blond hair was like a pale cloud around her head, and her face had a fresh, All-American look that contrasted sharply with the high-slit leather mini-skirt and the low-cut sweater that exposed smooth, bouncy crescents of her breasts. She had what they call a bod that wouldn't quit. Sexy as all hell, and not the least bit shy.

  "So, what's happening here with you Plaza-type dudes?"

  "We're not–” Ed began but Phil cut him off.

  "Just hanging out," Phil said. "Waiting for something to happen."

  "Yeah?" she said. "My name's Ingrid, and I'm waiting for the same thing. Isn't that something?"

  "That's something, all right," Phil purred.

  Ed stared at his brother who had suddenly become cool, smooth, and seductive. He hardly recognized him. Ed was a bachelor, but good lord, Phil had a wife and child back home in Jersey!

  "You guys look alike. You related?"

  "We're brothers," Ed said, feeling he should add his two cents. The clash of her bold and brassy attitude with her angel-soft good looks excited him. "I'm the older one – but not by much."

  "Yeah?" she said with a seductive smile. "You never could tell. You guys come here often?"

  "This is our headquarters whenever we're in the Apple," Phil said.

  Ed struggled to keep from laughing out loud.

  "Me, too," Ingrid said. "I've got an appointment with Mike Nichols this week. He's shooting his next feature right here in Manhattan, you know, and my agent's got me an audition with him. So I'm just killing some time while I wait for Solly to firm up the exact time and place. What're you guys in town for?"

  "We're in textiles," Phil said with this oily grin. "Y'know...rugs and stuff? We sell textiles by the mile."

  Ed was shocked by his brother's facile way with a lie. Phil was a Wa-Wa manager. He wouldn't know a broadloom from a flying carpet.

  "Really?" Ingrid said. "That sounds boring as shit. Can you guys fuck?"

  Ed saw his brother's eyes bulge as he felt his own jaw drop. That sweet face, those innocent eyes. And talking like that!

  Phil glanced quickly at Ed, then back at Ingrid.

  "Sure we do. What do you think we are, queer?"

  "I don't know," she said. "I've been crammed in between the two of you and neither one of you has even tried to feel me up. Something's wrong here."

  "My brother and I were raised to be gentlemen," Phil said.

  "I kinda like that," she said, slipping a finger inside Phil's shirt, "but you can carry that polite shit too far. Want to come up to my room? It's got a great view of the park."

  "I don't know about that," Phil said. "What's it gonna cost me?"

  Her smile was sweet. "Cost? Nothing. My treat. But there's a condition."

  Ed didn't like the sound of this.

  "Phil, uh, maybe you should–”

  "The both of you have to come," Ingrid said.

  Ed swallowed and wet his dry lips.

  "You want both of us?"

  She looked at him and laughed. His expression must have reflected the excited turmoil within him.

  "Yeah! Guys always run out of steam before I do. One ain't enough, know what I mean? So I like to have a back-up along. That too kinky for you fellows?"

  Thoughts of herpes, syphilis, the clap, and AIDS ra
n through Ed's mind. Then she ran a hand over his crotch. From the startled look on Phil's face, Ed guessed that she was doing the same to his brother.

  Phil's voice was strained. "What floor?"

  Before long they were twelve stories above Central Park South. Ingrid wasted no time once they were in the room. She offered them each a toot from the small vial of coke she produced, took a good snort herself, then knelt down between them and unzipped their flies.

  And as the interlude progressed, it got crazier and crazier. This was one hungry lady.

  Eventually it came to a point where Phil was sprawled back on the hotel bed, naked, moaning as Ingrid worked on him. She knelt on the carpet with her thighs spread wide as her head bobbed up and down over Phil's pelvis. And Ed...he knelt behind her, gripping her black garter belt like a rodeo rider hanging onto the reins of a bucking bronco, his pelvis slapping against her smooth buttocks as he slid in and out of her.

  She paused and lifted her head from Phil.

  "Baby, don't stop now," Phil said. His voice was thick, hoarse.

  She turned her head and looked over her shoulder at Ed. In the dim light filtering across the bed from the open bathroom door, he could see her face. Her eyes glistened and her cheeks were flushed. Beautiful, and as insatiable as she was uninhibited.

  "Do it faster," she said. "And harder! I want to come, damn it!"

  Ed said nothing. He'd already come once himself, and was climbing the upslope toward number two. He picked up the pace, ramming deeper into her.

  "Oh, yessss!" she said through a groan, and then went back to doing Ed.

 

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