There were more lost pet posters pointing the way towards this girl, Penny. The trail of hopscotch courts led right to her home. She must have had no idea that we were coming. Lex was already thinking ahead. She was probably no precog, or else she’d be on the move away from us. If she was a telepath, she’d pick up on the danger too and bolt. She’s probably a telekinetic, then. Better watch out, little kid or not.
We rolled by the house slowly, casing it like burglars. Except it wasn’t the silverware we were coming for, it was a child. I wanted to jump out and get this done. A little kid wasn’t going to be much of a challenge and I wanted to go after something more exciting, but mostly I just wanted out of the car. I hate those things. Huge violently colored grandma cars. Except that they weren’t cars the same way that the faces of the low men weren’t really faces. The things creeped me out.
But we made our circuit of the block, making sure that nothing looked off. We’d been lured into an ambush by some ka-tet from the Tet Corporation (real imaginative name, there) before and had to shoot our way out. Lex was too smart to get caught by something like that again.
“Do you feel it, James?” Lex asked me. Even though the question came out of the blue, I knew what he was talking about. There was something in the air, but also inside. I don’t have the words to describe the feeling of impending doom that was rising around us like a fog, but Lex did.
“Ka-shume. There’s going to be death today, James. Today our ‘tet breaks.” He sounded very sad, but resigned. That’s how he treated anything that began with ka, with resignation and acceptance, whatever ka was doing. He looked at me with and blinked her large green eyes slowly. They narrowed to slits like black slashes in the jade iris. “I hope it’s not you, friend.”
I gave him a smile, if only to make my friend feel better. “Don’t worry.” But I was worried. This feeling was unstoppable. Rolling around the house to check for traps or dangers wasn’t going to make it go away. For the first time I really felt the inevitability of ka.
We pulled up in front of the house after circling the block and piled out of the car. The low men were actually sniffing like they caught a scent. Right in front of the house was a hopscotch court with chalked stars and comets all around it. On the number 5 was a painted rock. Fuck me, the kid’d actually been playing on the court right here.
We went in, expecting trouble and taking it slowly, carefully. When we picked up kids, Lex could just hypnotize them like a vegas act. He flipped a coin between his fingers faster and faster and you could just see their eyes glaze over like I’d gotten my fangs into them. He even showed me the trick and I’d done it a few times. They always came quietly. Adults were a little harder, maybe just because half of them don’t believe in hypnosis. But if they won’t watch the dancing coin, Lex can still get into their heads. He’s too good a progger. I was hopping it wouldn’t come to shooting today.
The door wasn’t locked (nice bright Saturday afternoon like this, who would lock their door?) so we just strolled right in. The girl’s mother comes into the hall first and Lex takes off his hat and catches her mind with those big jade eyes. “Who is it, honey?” we hear from deeper in the house. “Honey?” When her father comes in, Lex pins him with his stare like a butterfly to corkboard. They just stand there like department store mannequins.
We brush by them and move into the house, looking for the girl. I’m glad she’s not in the kitchen. Telekinetics and cutlery are not a good combination. Her bedroom door is open (Penny painted on the wood with each letter a different color), and I see her sitting on the floor, playing. The low men step inside to grab her – it’s just easier to hypnotize someone when they’re sitting still and if we got a hold of her it’d be harder for her to fling shit at us. I was beginning to think that good ole ka was wrong this time.
But she wasn’t a telekinetic. She gasps in surprise when she sees strange men pushing into her room and she can probably feel us. How wrong we are. She screamed and it must have snapped her parents out of Lex’s hold. We heard them shouting and running towards us and then the vampires turned and opened fire. The close-range blasts dimmed my hearing and the gunsmoke stung my eyes.
Penny screamed again, but when the low men lunged for the girl, she just…wasn’t there.
“Shit! She’s a teleporter.” Lex’s smooth voice was low and he belted out the words rapidly, the way he sounds when we’re under fire and it’s going to be a tough one. “We’re not taking this one back. Find the girl. I managed to prog her and she doesn’t know what she’s doing. She can’t have gone far.” Lex started pushing everyone out of the room, shoving us in different directions to look for her. “Find the girl and kill her!”
I took off running through the back door and turned left, splitting off from the pack. I’d shot people before. Just like Sayre said I turned out to be good at the real “Kill.” And I knew that we had to kill this little kid. I picked up enough from Lex’s mind to get an idea about the kind of destruction a teleporter could wreak. No way this one was going back to Blue Haven and no way was the Tet Corporation getting their hands on her.
I saw her at the corner of the back yard, slipping through the fence where she’d pushed a plank out of the way. I dashed after her pulling out my sawed off and my Thompson. Jeeze the kid couldn’t be more than ten years old and I pulled out enough iron to take on a swat team. The rest of the pack was right behind her, one of the low men and the other little vampires. A hard kick to the fence damn near knocked it over and they crashed through.
I was right behind them, ripping my expensive coat on the jagged wood. I saw the girl trip and go down and a bright splash of blood, the only bright color in the whole world. She’d skinned her knee when she fell. My ka-mates caught up to her and closed around her. She looked up, her lower lip trembling and tears drawing silvery lines down her cheeks, but she was done crying.
I wouldn’t hear the expression until later, but I felt it at that moment when they were about to kill her. I’d forgotten the face of my father. He never went far, no he was no success story. But he always dressed his best, always did his best. And he taught me the same. I was his success story. So what had I done with everything he’d given me? I’d become a blood-drinking monster a kidnapper and a child-killer.
I couldn’t change the fact of what I’d become. There’s no cure for vampirism. But I did have a choice about the rest. I lifted my Thompson and held down the trigger, raking it back and forth across the yard over Penny’s head.
They went down, shot in the back. The one in the yellow coat grunted and pitched forward, coming within inches of falling right on top of Penny. The vampires just disappeared out of their clothes like smoke. I could actually see the late afternoon sunlight through the holes in their shirts before they crumpled to the ground.
The girl had clapped her hands over her ears and for a second I felt sorry for her. She was being chased by monsters, her parents were dead, and her ears must be screaming in pain. She slowly lifted her head and looked at me. It broke my heart, but it reminded me that even after ten years of riding the lost highways and kidnapping psychics that at least I still had one.
When she started to get up I motioned for her to stay put and I went to the fence. I stood next to the splintered gap where we’d burst in on the neighbors yard (damned good thing they weren’t home) and waited. A second later I heard running footsteps and I caught the other low man as he came through the fence. I punched him in the gut with my sawed off and blew both barrels, and his guts, out his ass.
I waited a while longer, knowing that Lex was still out there, and that’d I’d betrayed him. Chances are that Penny was still going to die and I was going to die with her. But Lex didn’t come running through like the rest of my ka-tet had. No, he was too smart for that. I backed away from the fence, and slipped another pair of shells into the breach of the scatter gun.
I turned and motioned Penny to come over. To my surprise she leapt up and ran towards me, throwing her arms around my hips and pressing her face into my belly. Her tears soaked right through my shirt and I could feel them on my skin, hot and wet like blood. I picked her up and she wrapped her arms around my neck, burying her face against my shoulder like the kitten the posters called her. What the hell was I doing?
I kicked in the neighbors back door and carried Penny through a laundry room and into a kitchen. Lex was waiting there.
“James.” He just said my name, but there was real pain in his voice. I felt it too. We were real friends and we’d betrayed each other. And we both felt ka-shume still hovering around us, still turning ka’s wheel towards death.
I snapped up my Thompson in one hand, turning to the left to put my body in-between Penny and Lex’s return fire. He went for the berretta under his arm and we both fired. Lex’s shot went through my arm and I wanted to fall back from the pain, to get behind better cover than the little kitchen island between us. But I owed Lex this much. I owed him a finish. I held down the trigger and watched my rounds punched little red holes in his clean white shirt, making his body jump and dance like a puppet worked by a guy with Parkinson’s. He hit the fridge and slid down slowly, dragging down magnets and coupons and crayon drawings and leaving a trail of brilliant scarlet.
I lowered my speed-shooter and panted, my ears still ringing from the gunfire. The pain began to seep in through the adrenalin and my fingers let my gun slip out of their grasp. I turned my head to Penny, who was clinging to me and nearly choking me.
“Penny? Penny? Let go. Let go darling, just for a second.” She looked up at me, her eyes red-rimmed but mostly dry now and gave me a very reasonable nod. I set her down and walked around the island and looked down at Lex, curled up on his side in a pool of blood.
I kneeled down next to the friend I killed and rolled him over onto his back. He laid there for a few moments, then his green eyes shot open and he gasped. Blood spattered from his mouth and stuck in his whiskers. He reached up almost slowly towards me, and I leaned closer in case he could still speak. I had to hear his last words, even if he used them to curse me. It would be no more than I deserved.
He put his soft-furred fingers against my face and then he dragged them down. I felt his claws extend and then rip into my cheek and chin. I jerked my hand towards my shotgun, but his hand was falling limply to the floor. Hot pain stung my eye and lip where he’s slashed me.
“James…” I leaned closer to hear him, even after what he’d just done. “You always were more like a Gunslinger than a Regulator. It’s okay to respect an enemy…” He lapped some blood from his mouth with a tongue already coated in blood. “My claws… not an attack…. A lesson…. If you would be a gunslinger, then learn…well. Never approach an enemy like this unless you…are sure he cannot...harm you.”
“I’m sorry, Lex,” I said.
He blinked his jade green eyes for the last time and made a pitiful mewing noise. “Ka,” was all he said.
I picked up Penny again and went to the garage. Keys were hanging from a little wooden plaque shaped like a large key and I found the one that started the SUV inside. I stopped a few blocks away, just far enough to be clear of the police and just sat there with my hands on the wheel, trying not to shake.
Penny was quiet for a while, then she asked me, “What’s your name?”
The left side of my face was numb but for the pain. “James. James Cain.”
Penny scooted closer on the bench seat. She reached into my jacket and pulled out my handkerchief. She shook it out and then folded it so she could use the part of it with the least blood on it.
“My name is Penny White. You saved my life.” She started dabbing at the slashes on my face with a corner of the kerchief.
“Yeah… I guess so,” I mumbled. I sat there and let her clean the blood out of the deep scratches. We probably should have been worrying about the bullet in my arm, but Penny went on cleaning my face, maybe it was what she thought she was supposed to do. When I cried she patted away the tears too.
“Ka,” I told her.