The Saffron Malformation (19 page)

Read The Saffron Malformation Online

Authors: Bryan Walker

BOOK: The Saffron Malformation
13.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

             
Quey nodded.  That was what he and Dusty had in common, their hatred for the bottom line and the men that worship it.

             
Nostalgia had a way of passing time in a hurry.  Fen Quada was going to be creeping up on him in about twenty minutes or so.

 

 

             
There were two Fen Quadas really.  The first was above the cliffs, a decent sized settlement of about thirty square kilometers, and the second was down on the cliffs a distance over and back from the beach.  Quey was headed for the latter, more specifically Railens’s Rusty Nails and Fluffy Tails.  It was a bar and it was right on the edge.  There was a patio out back where you could sit and look out at the crashing waves of the beautiful ocean you’d be crazy to swim in.

             
Quey used his sheet, folded to fit in his palm, to call the bar and let them know he was about to roll up.

“Bout time,” Railen said.  “Thought maybe savages got you.”

Quey smiled, remembering how close that joke was to being true for a moment and replied, “No such luck.  Just a bit of a delay.”

“Well it’ll be good to see you.”

“Back at cha,” he finished and turned off the device.

Quey shifted the truck to manual drive and took the wheel.  He hated navigating
the narrow road down the cliffs and he was sure he was going off someday.

             
“Not today,” he said with a sigh as he made it to the bottom and continued on down the road to Nails and Tails.  As he pulled into the parking lot he could see a kid of about twenty, Arnie Quey thought he was called, waving him in.  He wore a blue apron over a tropical shirt and tan board shorts.

             
Quey hopped out of the truck and took a long breath of fresh sea air.  It was amazing to him that people still loved the ocean.  They traveled from all over to come to these costal towns and look out at the sand and surf.  There were some towns that even had places down on the beach.  Even now, feeling the warm breeze, Quey suspected there were people down on the sand, lying on blankets dangerously close to the ocean.

             
Rail came out of his bar with a smile on his face and a hand extended.  “What happened, get lost without the big man?” he asked.  “Let me ask you, who wiped your ass and shook your dick this time around?”

             
Quey laughed and shook the man’s hand.  “No one,” Quey said grinning, “Just been wiping it on this here hand the whole way.”

             
Rail pointed at him and laughed back.  “Come on in you lazy bastard.”

             
“Be right there,” Quey said.  He went to the back of the truck, opened the door and looked at Geo.  “Here we go,” he said as he used the app to activate it and watched it roll out of the truck and away down the road.  “Hope you know what the fuck you’re doing,” he whispered before heading into Rusty Nails and Fluffy Tails.

             
The inside was tropical, and a great deal of money had been spent to make it look thrown together.  Fine wood had been crafted to make the bar look like a tiki and imitation palm fronds were strewn about the room aplenty.  Parked at the bar, sipping a light beer from a mug, was Reggie ‘the Regulator’ Vann.

             
Reggie was one of the people along his route Quey considered a friend.  He was a big man, about six foot two and just over two hundred pounds of muscle, bald as a baby and dark as oil.  He’d done military work for Blue Moon security until a few years back.  He saw action in the conflict on south continent—that was the skirmish that led Blue Moon Authority to decide to ground all aircraft.  Some people didn’t like that move and more than a few were willing to let the company know.  Of course a month later the hyper-rail trains came online, almost like the whole thing had been planned for long before the conflict began, and for the most part people were appeased.

             
Quey’d read about the conflict itself but you couldn’t trust the news when it came to stuff like that.  They claimed anti-corps, the go to villain, had started the attacks.  Sometimes Quey thought the corporations invented anti-corps so they’d have someone to blame.  In any case, whatever the reason or the cause, Reggie didn’t talk about it.

             
“Quey!” Reggie said, his voice deep but gentle, looking over at him and smiling.  “Good to see you brother.”

             
“You too,” Quey agreed and they shook hands.  “Hey and I’ve got a little somethin’ for you in my truck, Regulator.”

             
“Oh come on,” Reggie said, embarrassed, “You don’t have to do that.  People ‘round here take good care of me.”

             
“Yeah,” Quey added, “And I’m one of ‘em.”

             
Reggie smiled and said, “Well alright.”

             
“Wanna go over the order?” Rail asked stepping up on the other side of the bar.

             
Quey unfolded and dropped his sheet on the light, glossy wood of the bar and said, “Naw, I trust you.”

             
“Arnie?” Rail called and the boy ran in.  Rail handed him the computer and said, “Pull this off the truck.”  The boy hurried for the door and was almost out.

             
“Oh, Arnie?” Quey called and the boy stopped, peeking his head back in from around the corner.  “Near the front there’s an open crate of bottled shine.  Bring a pair in.”

             
“Sure thing,” Arnie said and then he was gone.

             
Rail and Reggie looked over at him.  “Figure we’d crack one now and you can save the other for later.”

             
“Later tonight you mean,” Reggie joked and the three of them laughed.

             
“Sticken round till tomorrow then?” Rail asked.

             
“Actually a bit longer.  Maybe three days.”

             
“Three,” Rail said, shocked.  “Just what you got going on for three days.”

             
“Errands,” Quey replied.

             
Reggie pointed out the obvious when he said, “Quey, you’re only here a few times a year, how is it you racked up three days’ worth of errands?”

             
“Just ran into some trouble on the road and said I’d help someone out in exchange for patchin me up.”

             
Reggie and Rail exchanged a glance and a nod.  They agreed—seemed like something Quey would do.

             
“But I’ll tell you what,” Quey said to Rail.  “You set me up till then—I’ll give you half off.”

             
Rails eyes bulged and Reggie took a sip from his mug.  “Half off,” Rail started, then stopped and thought.  “Set you up how?”

             
“Just a bed and an occasional raid on the kitchen.”

             
“That all?” Rail said chuckling, “Shit I’da given you my daughters virginity for half off.”

             
Reggie laughed heartily and Quey chuckled back, “I’ll remember that for next time.”

             
“Sure,” Rail said, “Then I’ll have to shoot you.”

             
“It’d be worth it just to see.  I mean that’d be some trick, selling me her virginity, what with her having a kid and all.”

             
Reggie burst out, laughing with his mouth open and Rail joined in.  “You got me there,” he said.

             
“She even in town these days?” Quey asked.

             
Rail shook his head and his mood sunk as he replied, “Naw she got work as a teacher up near Northshire.”

             
Quey nodded and he was about to ask more, maybe delve into the dip his expression took at the mention of her, but Arnie came back with the bottles he’d requested and set them on the bar.

             
“These the ones?” he asked and Quey nodded.

             
“Have one with us,” Quey offered the boy.

             
Arnie looked at Rail, “Got the inventory to put up.”

             
“He can have one,” Quey told Rail as he cracked a bottle.

             
Rail thought for a moment, nodding.  “Sure why not.”  He placed two ounce glasses on the bar and Quey filled them half way.  “That, my boy, is a perfect pour,” Rail said.

             
Each of them lifted a glass and touched them together.

             
“What to?” Reggie asked.

             
“Quey’s sudden generosity?” Rail asked.

             
Reggie grinned, “Better not bring it up, he might come to his senses.”  The men laughed.

             
“How about to good folk, worth spillin’ some shine with,” Quey offered.

             
Everyone nodded agreement and said, “To folk,” before slamming the shine back.  It was sweet on the tongue and burned in the throat, a perfect brew.

             
“I tell you boy,” Rail said.  “Sometimes I think you’re better than Cal.”

             
Quey looked at him but didn’t laugh.  “Not possible,” he said quietly and the matter departed untouched further.

 

 

             
As afternoon drifted into evening the room began to fill with bartenders, wait staff, and customers.  Rusty Nails and Fluffy Tails was quite popular, even with the locals, mostly because of the beach crowd.  Everyone knew it was the place to go if you were looking to pick up some passing strange.  The girls came in wearing their bikinis, some still wet from one of the many filtered pools down near the beach.  They weren’t just run of the mill holes in the ground filled with water either; they were dug into the sand and sloped gently like the ocean and had wave machines out at the end.

             
“Whoever started that,” Cal told him once as they sat on the porch behind Rail’s and looked down at the sunbathing women lying on the sand around the filtered pool, “Was a god-damn genius.  Deserves some kinda reward.”

             
Three women entered the bar wearing sheer robes they didn’t bother to tie over their bathing suits and Reggie took notice.  “It’s good to see you brother,” he said to Quey, “But I do believe I see some ladies in need of regulatin’.”

             
“Just don’t hurt yourself,” Quey told him with a smile.

             
Reggie spent five minutes talking with the ladies, sitting at a table near the bar, and came back with a smile.  “Told me they’d be down at the pool again tomorrow, if I’d like to join them.”

             
Quey smiled, “And I’m sure you will.”

             
“You know you could come too,” Reggie said, giving his shoulder a tap, “I don’t need but two of em,” he finished with a laugh.

             
“That’s mighty generous of you,” Quey replied and finished his glass of shine.

             
“I knew that dirty rig looked familiar,” a friendly voice said from behind them.  Quey and Reggie turned and looked back at Dusty and Rachel, approaching from the dining room.

             
Quey grinned and extended his hand with an emphatic, “Hey!  Dusty boy!”

             
Dusty shook it and added, “Told you you’d make it around to peddle your poison to these vagrants, so where’s my large stack?”

             
“Fraid I had to spend that grand,” Quey said solemn.

             
“Tell me she was worth it at least.”

             
Quey laughed and said, “Best I’ve had.”  He thought, momentarily of Rain.

             
“Well at least pour me some of that swill you treacherous bastard.”

             
“You love it the most,” he said to his old friend as he grabbed the bottle and looked to Rachel, standing to the side and slightly behind him.  “Rachel,” he said, “Looking lovely as always.”

             
She smiled, “Best get your flirting out of the way now, I’m about to be an honest woman.”

             
Quey’s eyes bulged and he looked from her to Dusty and back again.

             
“Darlin’, I was supposed to tell him,” Dusty said, giving her hand a squeeze.

             
“Wait,” Quey said, shocked.  “You two…”

             
Rachel held up her left hand and showed him the modest ring she wore on her fourth finger.

             
“You can’t be that shocked I’m leaving the noble bachelor ranks.”

Other books

Simon & Rose by V.A. Dold
A Season of Eden by Jennifer Laurens
Miss Webster and Chérif by Patricia Duncker
The Faithful Wife by Diana Hamilton
The Costanzo Baby Secret by Catherine Spencer
Suffragette in the City by Katie MacAlister
Pecan Pies and Homicides by Ellery Adams
Finding North by Carmen Jenner
One Whisper Away by Emma Wildes