Read shadowrun 40 The Burning Time Online

Authors: Stephen Kenson

Tags: #Fantasy, #General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Contemporary, #Twenty-First Century, #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy Fiction

shadowrun 40 The Burning Time (6 page)

BOOK: shadowrun 40 The Burning Time
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She slid into the seat opposite Talon without stopping to order anything at the counter. He, of course, was sitting with his back to the rear wall of the Java-Hut. That way he could keep his eye on the doors, and be able to make a quick exit out the back if necessary. Trouble knew he was watching her back too.

"I got your message," Trouble said. "How are you doing?"

"Almost awake." He took another sip from his cup. "You want something?" he asked, nodding toward the counter.

She shook her head. "I’m ready when you are."

Talon downed the last of his soykaf and crumpled the cup in his hand.

"Okay, let’s go." He tossed the cup into the trash on the way out. Their destination was the apartment of Dan Otabi.

He followed Trouble to her car, a dark green Honda ZX Turbo. They were headed for Dan Otabi’s place.

Talon slid into the passenger seat, and was instantly belted in by the safety harness. Sitting behind the wheel, Trouble pulled out a thin cable and jacked into the car’s auto-pilot, which gave her direct control over the Honda’s on-board computer. It wasn’t the complete control you got from a control rig like Val used, but it was good enough for driving in the Boston area.

They rode in silence for a bit, then Trouble looked at him with concern. "Didn’t you sleep last night?"

Talon gave a short laugh. "Shows that much, huh?"

She nodded. "Yeah, some."

"Trouble, I’ve got a bad feeling."

"About the run?"

"I don’t know, about everything. Something’s going on."

"You really believe you saw Jase last night, don’t you?"

"Don’t you?" he asked.

She shrugged. "I don’t know. I’m no mage. I work with data, stuff that makes sense. You’re the one who tangles with spirits and spells and whatnot. You’re sure it was him?"

"Yes, I’m sure."

"Sure it was him—or sure it was something that looked like him?"

Talon thought about that for a moment. "I don’t know, Trouble. It happened so fast. I mean, I’m sure it looked like him, but the whole thing happened so fast. ."

"Hey, Tal, don’t get me wrong," Trouble said, laying one hand over his. "I believe you saw something. All I’m saying is that it might be not be what you think. Maybe somebody is fragging with your head."

"Maybe," Talon said. "And I’m going to find out."

"How?"

"Visit the astral planes to find out if Jase is trying to contact me or if it’s something else."

"When?"

"After the run. I want to get biz taken care of first."

"If it’s somebody trying to mess with you," Trouble said, "we’ll help you out."

"I know. That’s not what I’m worried about. What if it is Jase trying to reach out to me somehow?"

Trouble didn’t have an answer, and they lapsed back into silence for the rest of the drive to the apartment complex where Dan Otabi lived. They up alongside a keypad at the gate. Trouble put on a pair of black leather gloves as she lowered her window with a mental command.

"Hello, and welcome to Arlington Park Apartments," said a smooth, synthesized voice from the hidden speakers. "Please enter your residential code or the apartment number of the person you are visiting."

Trouble tapped some numbers into the keypad. A tone sounded from the speakers, and the voice said, "Thank you. Mr. Otabi’s apartment is number 308, second building on your left. Please enjoy your visit." The gate began to slide open, and Trouble drove directly to a numbered space in front of one of the entrances to the complex.

"Not bad," Talon mused, looking around. Arlington Park wasn’t as posh as some corporate condoplexes he’d seen, but it was ritzy enough for a sarariman like Dan Otabi. He lived alone, which suited their purposes.

Trouble parked the car. "Ready?" she asked.

"Yeah, except for one last touch." Talon wove his hands through the air, making mystical passes from his forehead to his feet, then he turned and did the same for Trouble. When finished with that, he closed his eyes in concentration, his fingers interlaced at his chest. Finally, he clapped his hands and blinked a couple of times, like he was coming out of a trance.

"What’d you do?" Trouble asked.

"Masking spell," Talon said. "In case someone sees us."

"Good idea. We shouldn’t have any problem with the electronic security. It thinks we’re authorized ‘guests’ of Mr. Otabi. The frame I planted in the building system will erase the records of our little visit before it deletes itself. Let’s go."

From the lobby, they took an elevator to the third floor, where Otabi lived. As they were exiting the elevator, they passed a human woman and a younger elf, who saw an ork and a human in their late teens or early twenties. The young elf looked at the "ork"—Talon—with studied distaste and gave them as wide a berth as possible in the hall.

Good, Talon thought. The elf would definitely remember seeing a couple of scruffy metahumans near Otabi’s place at this time of day.

"This is it," Trouble said when they reached number 308. She slipped a maglock passkey into the reader in the door-lock. It clicked immediately, and the LED light turned from red to green as the passkey scrambled the maglock’s systems. Talon pushed the door open, and they went in.

Otabi’s apartment was a slightly neater, more adult version of a college dorm room. There was a small kitchenette with a collection of dishes stacked in and around the sink. Off that was a living room with floor-to-ceiling windows and a balcony overlooking the grounds around the building. An entertainment center holding a trideo unit, stereo, and other modules filled one wall. Facing it was a large sofa with a low, Japanese-style table in front of it.

Talon bent to examine some items scattered over the table while Trouble quickly checked the other rooms.

"All clear," she said.

Talon gestured to the items on the table. "It’s all here." A Novatech Sandman simsense player and a handful of chips and their plastic casings were scattered over the tabletop. The player looked like last’s model, and there were easily a dozen chips.

"There’s a lot more chips in the bedroom," Trouble said.

Talon picked up the Sandman and stuffed it into his carrying bag. "Look around for more hardware," he said. A quick search turned up an older chip-player made by Fuchi, Novatech’s predecessor. That followed the Sandman into the bag, along with more of Otabi’s chips.

"Why don’t we just slip our chip in with his other ones," Trouble asked, "or replace his player?"

Talon shook his head. "That’d take too long. We’ve got to be sure Otabi uses the chip. We have no way of knowing which are his favorites without a lot of legwork we don’t have time for. We also don’t know if he’d recognize a fake. We’ve got to make him come to us. Did you get anything else?"

"Yeah, trid chips and drek like that. Nothing major."

"Okay, then let’s buzz. Leave the door open slightly. That should get somebody’s attention."

As they left the apartment and proceeded down the hall, they passed a different man coming out of the elevator this time. He was a red-haired human who looked like a corporate type on his day off. The man gave Talon and Trouble a long look, and Talon in his ork-form couldn’t resist giving him a tusky grin as he and Trouble stepped into the elevator.

Roy Kilaro walked past the two rough-looking metahumans, who got into the elevator he’d taken to the third floor. They certainly had no business in a place like Arlington Park, and he looked at them curiously. He walked down the hall to Dan Otabi’s apartment, then stopped short when he saw that the door was ajar. The LEDs above the maglock were flashing back and forth between red and green, indicating that the lock was scrambled, probably by some sort of passkey.

Roy glanced back toward the elevators. It looked like somebody had beat him to it. He’d been planning to talk to the neighbors as well as toss Otabi’s flat, but the open door changed his plans. He couldn’t risk being implicated in the break-in because it would tip off Otabi. He turned back toward the elevators.

He was leaving without getting the proof he’d hoped to find, yet he was more suspicious than ever. Someone else had wanted to get into Dan Otabi’s doss bad enough to break in. Otabi was hiding something, and Roy Kilaro was going to find out what it was.

CHAPTER EIGHT

As Trouble and Talon drove away from Dan Otabi’s apartment, Trouble
noticed that the sky had cleared and was alight with stars and the waxing moon.

"So now we wait and see if Otabi contacts you?" Trouble asked.

Talon nodded. "Um-hmm. Without his simsense toys, he’s going to be desperate for a fix, and the only dealer he knows is me. I think his habit will cancel out what happened at the Avalon the other night."

"Maybe he’ll just go down to the local Warez, Etc. and pick up a new simdeck."

"I don’t think so. He’s had a taste of the good stuff. He won’t be satisfied with anything less. The regular sims just won’t do it for him anymore. Even if he does decide to get another deck and some chips, there are still some things we can do."

"So that leaves the next move up to him," Trouble said. "Val will be keeping an eye on Otabi, but we can’t do much more until he takes the bait. Want to go grab a bite?"

Talon shook his head. "I think I’d better go back home and try to catch up on some sleep."

"Want me to drive you back to your place, then?"

Talon shrugged. "I could take Aracos. . ."

"You’re dead on your feet, Tal. Let me take you home. It’s no big deal."

"Okay," he said, settling back against the seat. There was a moment of silence as Trouble shifted lanes, navigating through the maze of Boston streets with ease.

"Can I ask you something?" she said.

Talon over at her from under hooded eyes. "Sure."

"Has there. . .have you been involved with anyone else since Jase?"

"You mean romantically?"

"Yeah."

Talon took a deep breath and let it out with a long sigh. "Yes. No. Not really—I mean, yes, I’ve been involved with other guys since Jase died. I hooked up from time to time in college, and there are a lot more available guys in the shadows than most people think." He gave a wry smile. "But it was mostly brief encounters or short flings. I never met anyone like Jase, somebody I was really, truly in love with. I think I managed to convince myself it was love a few times, but those never panned out. I guess when it comes to romance I’m as hopeless as our buddy Otabi. I think I should stay away from simsense, though. I can see how plugging into a perfect fantasy life where you’ve got everything you ever wanted could be addictive."

"Yeah," Trouble said.

"How about you?" he asked. "Has there been anyone since Ian?"

Trouble glanced over at Talon, then back to the road. Traffic had slowed through a series of lights, and now they’d came to a stop.

"Not really. I guess we’re a lot alike in that respect. Ian was my first real love. Looking back on it, I was pretty naive at the time. I’ve dated here and there since then, but that’s about it."

"Our business doesn’t exactly give us many opportunities to meet the right people, does it?" Talon said.

"No. Besides, what are the chances of the right one coming along anyway? You don’t run into that kind of person every day."

"Are you sorry you called it quits with Ian?" Talon asked. "For me, there wasn’t much choice, but. . ."

"Most of the time, no," Trouble said. "He cared so much about freeing the Irish that it seemed to mean more to him than I did. I guess I didn’t really want to share him with a cause, you know?"

"Yeah, I can see that."

The traffic began to move again, and they lapsed back into silence as Trouble cut through the city to South Boston.

Talon began to go over the run with her. They agreed that, if all went as planned with Otabi, they should be able to pull it off with ease.

"The only other thing that bothers me is that we don’t have any real information on the Johnson," Talon said. That bothered Trouble as well. Most employers—"Mr. Johnsons," as they were known—valued their anonymity. Shadowrunners, however, liked to know whom they were working for, just in case their Johnson tried to use them for some secret purpose of his own. The team knew very little about their current employer, apart from the fact that his credit was good.

"I’ll see if I can dig up something," Trouble said, pulling up to the curb in front of Talon’s doss.

He got out of the car. "Good. I’ll give you a call when everything’s set for the meet."

"Okay." She watched him until he’d climbed the front steps and gone through the door of his apartment house before putting the ZX back into gear. At the stop sign, she glanced back again before driving on.

Don’t be stupid, she told herself, but she really didn’t have much choice People in love were always doing stupid things, weren’t they? She turned the corner, but didn’t head for home to start tracking down information about their Mr. Johnson. She drove toward the Rox, a section of the Boston plex that most people avoided if they could.

She was headed for "Doc’s Clinic," as it was known among the locals. It had no official name because most of the places and people in the Rox didn’t officially exist. When the metroplex government was formed, they decided to write off southern Roxbury and the Lowell-Lawrence Zone. From then on, the only market in the Rox or Lowell-Lawrence was the black market. That included medical services, and Doc’s Clinic was one of several that patched up Rox residents for a reasonable fee and no questions asked.

That same policy made it popular with people who, for various reasons, preferred not to visit the licensed hospitals and doctors. In addition to stitching you up or giving you something for whatever ailed you, Doc’s was a place to get certain modifications, if the price was right and what you wanted was available. The mods included anything from a cyber-replacement hand to new eyes to a new face that wouldn’t be quite so well known to the authorities.

"Doc" was Dr. Daniel MacArthur, a former combat medic for Ares Macrotechnology. He’d served in the Desert Wars for awhile after discharge from the UCAS military. Then he went to work for Ares, with some "consulting" work on the side until his bosses caught on. Ares booted him out and his license to practice medicine was revoked. In the Rox, however, everyone called him Doc, and no one cared about the license because he knew what he was doing. There weren’t many street docs better than Doctor Mac.

BOOK: shadowrun 40 The Burning Time
3.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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