The Storm Giants

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Authors: Pearce Hansen

BOOK: The Storm Giants
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THE STORM GIANTS

©
2012 by Pearce Hansen

Cover Photo © 2012 Charles P. McNally

www.charlesmcnally.info

 

This is dedicated to my parents to whom I owe everything. May they rest in peace.

 

Many thanks to Pia for being willing to edit this beast.

“The life of man upon earth is a warfare
.” –
Job 7:1

 


Prove yourself brave, truthful, and unselfish, and someday, you will be a real boy.” –
The Blue Fairy to Pinocchio

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part One

Chapter 1
: One Lucky Baby

Chapter 2
: A Harsh Reunion

Chap
ter 3: The Storm Giants

C
hapter 4: The Widow Shows Her Face

Chapter 5
: A Passing and a Bolt for Home

Part Two

Chapter 6: So as Not to Intrude

Chapter
7: Constructive Purposes

Chapter 8
: The Mortal Risk of Display

Chapter 9
: A Night at the Sprints

Chapter 10
: Homecoming Interruptus

Chapter 1
1: Cowboy Pimps

Chapter 1
2: Blood & Media

Chapter 1
3: The Line Points the Way

Chapter 1
4: The Storm Giants in the Piney Woods

Chapter 1
5: Fate’s Cruelty

C
hapter 16: The Dossier

Chapter
17: Homeboy Intel

Chapter 18
: Mister Mossad Makes His Case

Chapter 19
: Playing it too Close to the Vest

Chapter 20
: Far, far Away

Chapter 2
1: The Orbit of His Infection

Part Three

Chapter 22: An Uncomfortable Ride

Chapter 23
: Loafers & Averted Gazes

Chapter 24
: Crimies of Convenience

Chapter 25
: A Bus Terminal at Christmas

Chapter 26
: The Scope Out

Chapter 27
: Pack Predator’s Prayer

Chapter 28
: Making the Cut

Chapter 29
: Job Assignments

Chapter 30
: The Zen of Shininess

Chapter 31
: Citizenship & Donuts

Chapter 32
: Hearts & Minds

Chapter 33
: Conflicting Agendas

Chapter 34
: An Unforgiveable Crime

Chapter 35
: A Grasshopper’s Regard

Chapter 36
: The Storm Giants Come Out to Play

Chapter 37
: The Ultimate Wellspring

Chapter 38
: ‘Cartoon People’

Chapter 39
: Best Friends Re-United

Chapter 40
: On the Discovery Channel

Chapter 41
: High Noon with the Widow

Chapter 42
: ‘An Interesting Man to be Around’

Chapter 43
: 21st Century Bonnie & Clyde

Chapter 44
: Martian Tripods & the Living Dead

Chapter 45
: The End of his Usefulness?

             
Part One

Chapter 1
: One Lucky Baby

T
he headlights of the car behind Everett veered to the left and off the road. Everett leaned on his brakes even as the car in the rear view shot over the shoulder and plunged down the slope out of sight.

The car had been tailgating
Everett for miles, constantly climbing up his ass as he drove at exactly the speed limit. This was a winding mountainous stretch of Highway 101, and there wasn't much to stop that car from jouncing all the way down to slam into the boulder strewn river a hundred feet below.

He scuffed the Es
cort to a halt on the shoulder, but just sat with his hands on the wheel. A mutinous rumbling in the back of his head: the smart move was to be away from here.

“Shut up
,” Everett said, and the rumblings complied, though sulkily.

Everett
opened the door and got out, went around to the shoulder and peeped over the edge. The rear end of the ex-tailgater’s auto was about ten feet down. It had struck a rock outcropping and stood vertical on its crumpled nose, spared the full drop.

The headlights illuminated the tree tops
below, and the red taillights beamed up to dazzle. Everett could smell gas even from up where he stood.

Tufts of grass and scrawny bushes provided adequate handholds as
Everett slid down the steep slope, reached the car's rear end and scuttled down the passenger side to stand on the outcropping. He smelt blood’s sly copper, wavering under the stench of gasoline.

He peere
d inside the shattered window, one hand shielding his eyes from the running lights’ glare. The child seat in back looked like some beast had mauled it. A baby hung suspended in the belts.

Everett
brushed chunks of safety glass away and stuck his big head and wide shoulders through the opening, knocking aside the garish tinseled heap of crushed Christmas presents. He unbuckled the glassy eyed infant with swift surgical economy.

Everett
glanced up at the car's driver as he pulled the baby out the window. The driver had no face left, just a brutal red hamburger smear dangling off what remained of her jaw.

The
smell of gas was stronger and, with a crackling whoosh, the engine caught fire. Holding the baby one handed like a football, Everett scrambled uphill with urgency.

He’d
almost reached the shoulder when the gas tank went up in a roaring fireball. Everett dove forward through the air until he slammed against the ground, turning onto his side as he hit to protect baby.

He
scrambled the rest of the way up the slope and over the shoulder to escape the increasing heat of the flames. His coat was on fire and he swam the backstroke in the dirt for a while until he decided the flames were probably extinguished.

Still lying on his
back, he held the infant up to inspect it utilizing the light from the burning car. The baby’s eyes were closed and it was unresponsive, but there was no blood or obvious trauma. Everett held it next to his ear and heard a tiny heartbeat, steady and strong for now.             

An eighteen
wheeler moaned to a stop as Everett inserted into the Escort with the baby. A sullen funeral pyre rose from the wreck, backlighting the compact car as it sped away into the night.

Everett
ignored the speed limit and squealed the Escort around the mountain road’s curves. His driving was lead foot as he pushed the four cylinder economy engine to the point of abuse, but there was no help for that.

"It's all right
,” Everett said, more to himself than to the unconscious infant on the floorboards. “Everything’s going to be better than right.”

A
head was a lit up sign pointing off highway to the local township’s hospital. Everett barreled the Escort down the off ramp exit, sparks scraping from the compact’s frame as it bottomed out when he hit the lower level frontage road.

A volunteer fire tru
ck warbled across his path as Everett ran the stop sign, forcing him to swerve around. A police cruiser was on the fire truck’s butt, but the Man peeled off and bootlegged around to pursue the Escort.

Everett
didn't slacken speed even after entering the hospital parking lot. The black-and-white was right behind as he skidded to a stop by the ER loading ramp, grasped the baby in proper useful fashion and rounded the car. The automatic doors slid open to allow entrance.

He’d
been in enough hospitals and emergency rooms to know most people preferred not to be there. Pain and fear hung in the air like a cloud, almost overwhelming the reek of medicine. Illness was glued to the walls by the industrial paint, or hovering invisible in the air waiting for prey. There was often blood too, but that was no bother.

"Hurt child here
,” Everett announced. Medical personnel plucked the infant Everett’s grasp and wheeled it away on a gurney, surrounding the baby like court attendants.

Everett
’s eyes lit on the bedraggled Christmas tree in the corner of the waiting room. A radio behind the counter was playing ‘Higher Ground,’ the Chili Pepper cover.

"You
need to fill out some paper work,” the intake receptionist said, rummaging some forms into a pile. She looked up to see the charred, smoking back of Everett's raincoat as he walked out the exit.             

Outside
, the police cruiser was parked at an angle in front of the Escort, blocking it in. The roller had ‘K9’ on the door, and its trouble lights were spinning. The police officer and his dog stood next to the Escort; the cop played his flashlight about the car’s interior looking for probable cause.

PoPo
swiveled to face Everett as he approached. The cop turned off the flash and transferred it to his left hand. His right moved to hover in the neighborhood of his holster snap.

Everett
wasn’t riding dirty, and the Escort’s registration was legit. For his own person, he had all the right papers faked up good enough to stand for a cursory database check.

He
looked PoPo in the eyes and smiled, radiating harmlessness. Everett pulled his hands from his coat pockets in politeness, spreading them empty at his sides and in full view.

The K-9
began to growl, his lips rippling into a white toothed snarl.

"Heel, Jake,” PoPo
ordered. Jake stopped growling and licked his lips with a strangled whine.

Po
Po wore a plastic smile, fake as Everett’s. They knew each other on sight; volumes of information were exchanged between the two without a word being spoken, without them ever having met before. PoPo’s badge gleamed, and his hand continued to hang around his pistol butt.

"The driver's
dead, sir,” the cop said, his right hand lowering to his side. “I just heard it on the radio in case you're interested. Good job on the kid, mister. Merry Christmas, eh?”

He started
toward his roller, unconcerned at exposing his back. The dog Jake favored Everett with an evil look over its shoulder as the two got into the cruiser.

The trouble lights shut
off, the roller backed up to allow the Escort room to leave, and PoPo waved dismissal. Jake glared at Everett from the passenger seat. Everett waved back at the two legged cop, and favored Jake with some bared teeth his own self.

“Merry Christmas
,” Everett called out in a jovial, careless voice to both law dogs – just like he bought into the idea of any holiday truce.

PoPo
had to be playing with him of course. Everett did a careful walk around of the Escort making sure the cop hadn’t peeled off the registration sticker, or knocked out a taillight to give himself probable cause to pull Everett over.

As far as
Everett could see the car hadn’t been messed with. PoPo sat in his roller as Everett left the parking lot, not even running the plates on his radio – maybe that baby
had
bought Everett some kind of ‘Get out of Jail Free’ card with this guy.             

If there’d been an alternate
route, Everett would’ve jogged over onto it. But this was the Emerald Triangle, a landscape resembling a sheet of moldy green aluminum foil that had been balled up tight and then only somewhat flattened out. The crumpled terrain’s constraints made Highway 101 the only real north-south corridor through this stretch of Northern California mountains, so there was nothing else to do but continue toward the Bay Area. He wasn’t about to lead potential trouble towards Mendocino and home.

It was dawn when he reached
Richmond, and he stopped at a pay phone off MacDonald long enough to call the hospital. When he confessed he was the person who brought the baby in, they violated HIPAA privacy enough to tell him the kid was okay. She’d be just fine, and her name was Cindy.

He drove the rest of the way
past Hayward to Russell City without incident.

The garage doors shut behi
nd the Escort as soon as he drove into the building, an auto body shop in a previous life. That same old sign hung on the wall, giving the command to all entering Larry’s domain: ‘Animalistic Behavior Only,’ in big placata style cholo lettering.

H
undreds of plastic keg caps were nailed to the wall surrounding the sign, souvenirs of the many many kegs that had been tapped here. The Dolby sound system blasted hypnotic, monotonous industrial techno.

Some of the
Lost Boys were lounging about as Everett headed to Larry’s office, about a dozen young males of various races playing cards or sitting around on benches watching TV.

The newer ones eyed him
in wariness, while the old hands avoided acknowledging Everett’s unobtrusive gaze at all. Everett didn’t recognize many of them though: this was a high turnover outfit.

He
walked into the office and sat down in front of Larry's bottle crowded desk, occupying as little space as possible in the seat and folding his hands in his lap as he withdrew into self. Larry had his 12-gauge pump leaning against the wall behind him. One of his Lost Boys stood sentry in the far corner of the office, a wiry little hand grenade of a dude with teeth bared in a high voltage snarl.

M
ost of Everett's attention was on Larry however: Larry’s impeccable silk suit; all the bling he festooned himself with; and his beaded corn rows dangling to his hulking shoulders. OG Larry looked like some kind of model/gangsta rapper hybrid. An interesting disparity, between Larry’s immaculate tailoring and his own thrift store chic and burnt raincoat.

Larry would have appeared almost respectable if not for his
empty, wet unfocused eyes and his huge, black pink-palmed banana fingered hands. Larry didn’t look up at Everett, instead concentrating on the opened kilo of cocaine atop an antique gilt framed mirror, lying next to an Ohaus triple beam scale.

He
used a razor blade to chip off shiny fish scale shaped chunks from the rocky brick. The kilo looked a little light; Everett estimated it as a California Key rather than a regulation 2.2 pounds.

Larry chopped
the pink pebbles of coke into fluffiness and put down the razor blade. With one eyebrow raised Spock style, he proffered a glass straw to Everett.

Everett
shook his head. “Wired from the road.”

“Always
the chatterbox,” Larry said. He shook his head in turn, making the beaded corn rows slither across his shoulders. “No, haystack, I’m just inspecting the merchandise. I’d like your expert opinion.”

Everett
shrugged, dabbed at the rosy pile with a forefinger and tasted it. Very clean; no detectable cut.

A rolling blastoff happened in
Everett’s mouth; the blooming high ensued even through the tissues of his mouth and gums. This was the good shit.

“Could step on i
t quite a bit and still make end users happy,” Everett said. “Unless you bake it up into hubba in the microwave?”

Larry dabbed his own
finger full of powder, and rubbed it across his upper and lower gums with two swipes. “You know me, haystack. I’m a wholesaler,” he said, grimacing at the drug’s acrid power. “They want to go to any trouble between themselves and street level, that’s their lookout.”

Everett
grasped a convenient jug of wine off the desk and took a small swallow to rinse the alkaline taste of coke from his numbed mouth. Larry took the bottle from Everett and swilled his own swig. Everett felt hot eyes on him, and aimed a gaze one time only at Larry’s scowling little Lost Boy, still standing in the corner focusing on him.

The
goon was a bony faced banty rooster, wearing baggin’ saggin’ pants over strip mall sneakers. An oversized Derby jacket hung on his emaciated frame like a tent. His tousled mop of dirty blond hair needed either a buzz cut or a brushing.

H
e stared at Everett as at an urgent puzzle. Everett looked down and away from the little goon’s gaze. This guy felt some kind of pissing contest was going on.

The same old
rituals, the same decrepit attempts at intimidation. A tension was trying to happen but Everett was here for information. No need to dominate anything or anyone.

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