TITLE: Once Upon A
Night in Sunnydale…
FANDOM: BTVS
AUTHORS:
Dex
Doqz
RATING:
PG13
DISCLAIMERS: All the recognizable characters you see belong
to Joss
Whedon and Mutant Enemy. Frank and Co. are property of
Doqx, Inc.
I knew it was going to be one of
those days when Mildred smiled at
me. It's just never a good sign
when your supervisor smiles at you in
that tone of voice. Last
time I got a smile like that I spent the
weekend getting the cat
out of the upholstery.
For most guys in my line of work that
smile would mean they just
pulled the deadman shift in the crack
house area of town. In
Sunnydale that's the shift you hope you
get.
I hitched up my lunchbox like a shield and stepped inside her office.
"Did you have a good weekend, Frank?"
she asked, drinking coffee,
chewing gum and smoking a cigarette at
the same time. It was a fleshy
pneumatic process that was horrible
to witness but impossible to
ignore.
"Just great,"
I told her and clutched my box tighter. There were at
least three
empty packs of cigarettes on her desk that I could see,
and it was
only 7pm. It meant only one thing. She was trying to quit
smoking
again.
"That's beautiful" she said stubbing out the
butt. "We've got a new
recruit."
Well, never let
it be said that she beat around the bush. Beat the
bush maybe. To
death. With a small child.
"I expect you to break him
in." That smile again as she produced
another cancer
stick.
I stared at her for a long moment. She didn't blink but
did get a
somewhat apologetic look as she lit another of her
V-Slims. "Look,
that's how it came out in the
scheduling."
"I thought we discussed this."
Actually I remembered that little
conversation quite vividly. It
was about half an hour after I found
out that the new boy' was a
fan of Blade movies.
Two words:
Closed. Casket.
"Frank, knock it off. You're good with the
rookies and you know it."
She grinned suddenly. "Hell,
you trained me, didn't you?"
"Yeah, and isn't that just a gift that keeps on giving."
It was a little cruel
of me, but still this was a hell of a thing
dump on a man on
Monday.
"Look, can't you give him one of the milk runs?"
"Like what?"
"Something in Kansas." I suggested blandly.
"Frank, this isn't a
negotiation. He needs to be shown the ropes and
it's your turn.
You don't like it—" She let the rest of the sentence
hang
there, meaningfully.
"Turn in the brown shorts?" I asked her snidely.
"Frank…" Mildred growled and I knew I was beaten.
"All right! I'll take the kid. I'll
take him. Happy now?" I held up
my hands in mock
surrender.
"Not until he makes it back here to clock out."
"I'll do my best." I promised her with
vast and obvious insincerity
and walked out, the shreds of my good
mood trailing behind me.
I'll tell you, most people think working at UPS is an easy job.
Morons.
The kid was in
the lounge, pretending he wasn't eyeing his reflection
in the
doors.
"Like the outfit?" I said, smirking.
"Well, it's not the Gap…"
God help me he was trying to be
funny. I stopped smirking and leveled
my best glare at him. He
headed for the little boys' room.
"… and ALWAYS—"
"Stay close to you." He sighed with
the dramatic petulance of all 19
year olds and got into the truck.
"C'mon, Frank. We're mailmen. How
bad can it be?"
I
had to bring him back alive, I reminded myself. Otherwise
Mildred
would partner me with St. Joe again. I sighed. Life was a
stone cold
bitch sometimes.
The kid was still talking as he
fiddled with the radio. "Neither,
rain, nor sleet, nor wind
or snow. Nothing can stop us!"
"That's the US Postal slogan."
'You absolute dolt,' went silent but hopefully clearly implicit.
He had the grace to look slightly abashed
for a second, but it passed
quickly. "But who do they call if
it absolutely, positively has to be
there overnight?!"
"FedEx."
I told him, but he was too busy listening to himself to let
little
things like facts matter.
"We're the invisible support of
this country. The symbol of
capitalism. The roaring engine!
Without us – anarchy!"
"Yeah, and the shotgun
gives us the strength of ten, because our
hearts are pure. Get
your paws the fuck away from my radio."
"Shotguns?"
The kid flashed that grin again. "We don't
carry
shotguns."
"What do you think you just stowed your lunchbox under, genius?"
The grin faltered but slowly came back. "Hey, that's pretty—"
"Much
something you don't touch without my explicit instructions,
got
me?"
"Geez. Not much of a sense of humor."
"Nope."
"You haven't even asked my name yet."
"Nope."
"Alec. Alec Whittacker."
"Still haven't asked."
That
shut him up long enough for me to finish loading the truck.
The
schedule said that our first stop would be…
"Oh, fuck."
"What?" Alec forgot that he was manfully
ignoring me and glanced at
the timetable curiously. "Where
are we going?"
City Hall.
The
comforting thing about Sunnydale City Hall is that it's the
only
public owned building in town that's never had to be rebuilt
due
to "PCP-related gang activity." Or, you know –
fire breathing hell
fiends, rampaging troll berserks or drunk
gorgons.
The worrying thing about Sunnydale City Hall is the
fact that it
houses people that scare the shit out of fire
breathing hell fiends,
rampaging troll berserks and drunk gorgons.
Or hires them.
Still. Job's the job.
"According to the manifesto, we've got—"
"One box, unlisted
biological material, one box coffee grounds. One
package, third
floor, delivery only and a stack of express mail for
the main
desk." I said flatly.
"How did you know that?"
Alec asked, looking me with the wide
innocent eyes of a complete
idiot.
"The first package," I told him, "is
frozen blood of an amphetamine
junkie. The second is cocaine,
laced with ground basilisk scales, for
the clerks. Give them
enough blow and you can do anything at the City
Hall, up to and
including running down the halls with your underpants
on your head
screaming that God told you to save the lollipops from
the gay
penguins, and they won't care."
Alec blinked and opened his mouth.
"Don't. Ask." I told him. Mostly out of
the goodness of my heart. God
knows I wish I could forget. "As
for the third floor… you don't want
to know about the third
floor."
"Blood and drugs? And isn't a basilisk like
a butterfly or
something?" Alec sounded a little upset.
"Geez, Frank, what are we
supposed to do with this
stuff?"
"Deliver it."
"But—"
"We
make our deliveries, Alec. First and last, we make
our
deliveries."
And with that I slammed down on the
brakes, prompting my partner to
introduce himself to the
windshield in an intimate manner.
"… ow." He informed me in a small voice.
"Shut up." I told him
and squinted up at the roadblock that was
currently glaring at my
beautiful truck in a manner that heavily
suggested increased
insurance premiums.
"Puny mortal! I shall tear off your
limbs and feast upon your eyes
while you praise the battle prowess
of the mighty Kulkhamish the
Ogun, of the…. Frank? Izzat
you?"
I sighed and let my hand fall away from the shotgun.
"Kul… I thought we talked about this."
"Frank, buddy, I'm mighty Kulkhamish of the
Golera Clan! If I don't
raise the Climsara they're gonna smoke my
ass, man!"
I stared at him for a second.
I really didn't have time for this.
"Kul?"
"Yeah?" He inquired somewhat hopefully.
"Get the fuck off the road."
"Umm… I'm kinda lost." He shuffled his
hooves embarrassedly. "Could
you point me toward the big H,
by any chance? I got all turned
around."
"Down the Main Street, two blocks, take a left at Grim's."
"Thanks!"
I
watched him trundle off, shook my head and told Alec to get his
jaw
off the floor.
"What the HELL was that thing?!"
I
measured him, debating whether he was ready for the grown up world
or
still in the Sunnydale Times demographic.
It was the pupils dilated to the size of small plates that decided it.
"That was Kul. He makes his own clown costumes."
"Oh," said Alec, uncertainly. "Never liked clowns much…. Look out!"
Brakes. Alec's face. Windshield.
I was rather starting to enjoy this.
"Frank."
Ah, crap.
"Hey, Angel." I eased my hand toward the
shotgun again. "How's it
going?"
He shrugged noncommittally and grunted.
That wasn't going to do it for me.
"Been getting any lately?" I inquired a bit more
pointedly. He glared
but did not go for my throat. I decided to
take that as a good sign
but kept my hand by the gun.
He gave me another glare. "Still souled."
"Ah." The hand came off the shotgun. "Heard you were LA-based now."
"Mostly. Been doing a little detective work."
"So it seems. A couple of run-ins with the law too."
Angel actually smiled slightly. "Some better than others."
"Yeah, I got that impression from Trevor."
"Who?" Angel's near smile faded as quickly as it had appeared.
"Trevor Lockley. We used
to work out of the same precinct back in the
bad old days."
"What did you tell him, Frank?"
"That you don't tan well. Tend to burn easy."
Angel's eyes blanked, going flinty and dark.
I put up both hands. Yanking Angel's chain was one
thing, and a lot
of fun at that, but going toe to toe with him
pissed off was
something else. More than their fair share of
demons had ended off a
world-conquering scheme with less limbs
than they started with
because of him. Plus I owed him. I hate
that.
"Just letting you know, Angel. Trevor is a
miserable old bastard, but
he's pretty protective of his little
girl. And he's got a lot of
friends on the LAPD. Ones that are
creative with problems."
"Thanks. You seen Kul?"
"Down the road, ahead two blocks."
"Thanks."
Angel leaned on the truck. "New guy?" He jerked a thumb
at
my windshield-splattered partner.
"Yeah." I said. "Brand new."
"You running the book?" He asked interestedly.
I nodded.
"What will you give me for Wednesday?"
I thought about it. "Three to one."
"Put me down for ten. And …uh… there's
really no need to mention to
Buffy that I stopped by."
I nodded again and by the time I looked he was gone. Drama queen.
"What was—"
"Never mind, kid. It's easier that way." I gunned the accelerator.
You have three options in Sunnydale.
Either you try to know nothing,
believing in the bad rash of neck
injuries and gang bullshit and
live your life.
Or you learn the way things are and figure out
your way to deal with
the fact that the bogeyman is real and lives
under the High School.
Or you find out the truth and go nuts.
The kid screamed Type Three to me.
George
let us into the City Hall parking lot. He eyed Alec
thoughtfully
and visibly fought the overwhelming temptation to get in
on the
pot. But it was Monday and Lynn probably confiscated the
paycheck
on Friday so he just waved us through.
"All right."
I turned to Alec who was still feeling his nose
gingerly.
"Follow
me. Don't talk to anyone. Don't make any sudden moves. Don't
ask
about anything. Don't use the elevators. And whatever you do,
stay
off the 3rd floor. Got it?"
"Got it."
He sounded sullen. I could really give a shit.
Right. First thing – Staff Room.
Staff Room was, as usual, filled with a blue
fog of nicotine and
incense that did not come from this dimension,
or the three closest
to us. I got a lot of respect for these
folks. The shit they got to
put up with is almost as bad as my
route. The only people that got it
worse are the sewer cleaners,
but they got a really good union.
Nowadays they don't work without
battle pay and body armor.
City Hall folks work for peanuts
and don't even have a shrink on
staff.
One day there is
going to be an interruption in the drug flow and
three months
later some schmuck will point to the smoking crater and
say: "This
is where Sunnydale used to be."
"I need to take a
leak." Alec informed me. He was going to take an
elevator to
the third floor.
"Hold it."
"I—"
"Just wait." I walked up to the floor manager. "Got a package."
"Coffee?"
"Yeah."
"Oh, thank God. We've been—uh, craving—"
"Save it.
Just sign." I toggled the clipboard at him, mentally
calculating
the safest way out. He took the receipt and Alec
obviously
concluded that while my attention was elsewhere he could
make it
to the elevator unnoticed. I made a note to tighten up the
odds.
He wasn't going to make Wednesday.
Fortunately, for him that is, Jacob Masterson got to him first.
Jacob requires
explaining. See, he got a job with the City Hall as a
janitor just
out of high school in 1915. He's spent well over eighty
years
working for the city and barely looks a day over, well,
seventy.
Really, imagine if Jed Clampett had a child with
Yoda, and you get
Jacob.
Anyhow, he's survived that long in
a place that makes South Central
look like an Amish amusement
park.. You gotta respect that.
Mind you, he is completely insane. You can't really blame him, though.
I watched the
floor boss sign my ledger and smiled contentedly at the
telltale
sound of Alec's balls disappearing between Jacob's
gnarled
fingers.
"Where you think you're goin', boy?"
The old coot rasped in a voice
that held all the gentleness and
compassion of my old gunnery
sergeant.
"Nyaghr."
Alec replied with the intelligence and presence of mind
I've come
to expect from him.
"You don't want to go into the
elevators, kid." Jacob said, and,
judging from Alec's pained
whimper, squeezed for emphasis. "Things
live in there.
Terrible Things…" he trailed off.
Just because Jacob is
a mad old monster, doesn't mean that he doesn't
know his shit.
Back in '92 some fucko got the bright idea that he
could speed up
his career by summoning the Younger Gods of the 9th
Underworld. He
didn't make deputy mayor, if that's what you're
wondering. And we
all get a nice workout and mostly use the stairs
these
days.
Behind me I could pretty much hear Alec's balls turn
into thin paste.
As attractive as that prospect was, I didn't much
fancy putting up
with even more of his bitching tonight, so I
glanced at old Jake
meaningfully. He glowered back but let the
little punk have his rocks
back.
"Jake." I nodded
to Alec to shut up and reclaimed my clipboard from
the clerk who
was too busy tearing into the parcel to care. "Is the
winch
up on the 4th set up?"
He just glared at me again. I
squinted apologetically. Of course it
was. Jacob was a pro.
"I
thought we were going to the 3rd." Alec gasped out at me,
staying
as far away from Jake as possible.
Jacob glanced at
him from beneath gray, bushy brows before looking
back at me.
"Fiver for Wednesday?"
"Got it."
I
took the stairs, Alec limping behind me. He looked a little
green,
which improved his overall demeanor, I thought. Better
silent and
looking into fertility drugs than dead.
The
fourth floor housed the Business and Municipal Tax offices. We
hit
the door only to have it move an inch before slamming against
the
makeshift barricade of desks and filing cabinets.
"What the hell… Dave! It's Frank!"
"Frank?" Dave's voice asked warily.
"Yeah. What's with the siege of Leningrad over here?"
"Sorry, Frank." Dave
Howard began shifting the furniture, with the
help of the rest of
the staff. "Didn't know it was you."
"What's the deal?"
Dave was a nice guy stuck working above the
open mouth of hell. You
could generate enough power to light up
most of Eastern Seaboard from
the nervous tick of his left
eye.
"Oh, Ms. Jenkins was in to complain about her property taxes."
"Ah." I looked around. "I would have shot first."
Dave grinned sickly to show that
he could take a joke. Hopefully he
was smart enough not to
actually piss Jenkins off. Peters, the old
crony of Wilkins, sent
a Morgul after her once. Once.
They were still finding bits of Peters in the sewer system.
Nobody knows what happened to the Morgul.
I nodded at Alec and gestured toward the rig standing
near the open
window. "Hook it up, rookie."
He
squinted angrily, probably offended about the rookie dig. I stared
at
him to remind him that I was the only one standing between his
hopes
for reproducing and old Jake. He went to tie the parcel.
The parcel rocked and chittered at him angrily.
"Fuck!" Said Alec and jumped on Dave's foot.
"Hey!"
"Shut
up!" I snarled, grabbing the package as it twitched toward
the
door and slinging it into the harness. Carefully, I launched
it
outside the window and dropped it down towards the window
below.
There was a growl and the steel cable went taut and
than slack with a
metallic twang. Just like usual.
"What
was it in there?" Alec asked, eyes wide and voice
trembling
slightly.
"You don't want to know."
"I'm not a kid, Frank!"
"All right, I don't want to know. That better?"
He opened his mouth. But then his eyes
flickered toward the window
and the steel wire that looked like it
was chewed on and spat out by
something that would make Godzilla
look like a diabetic puppy. He
shut up carefully and nodded. Well.
Whadda ya know. He could be
taught.
I said good-bye to Dave
and we trotted out, leaving him staring
fixedly at the phone as if
it was a rattlesnake whose tail he just
stepped on.
"Where to next?" Alec asked as we reached the lobby.
"The
truck." I told him and chewed on my lip, hurriedly assessing
the
situation. I'm never that comfortable in City Hall. They don't
let me
bring my shotgun in here, the fucks.
"No," Alec sighed exasperatedly behind me. "I mean…"
Something
fell down heavily a couple of floors above us, followed by
a
blood-curdling girlish scream that sounded a lot like Dave.
Alec swallowed loudly. "Right. The truck."
We made it
outside without any more excitement. On the steps Jacob
was
bandaging a dazed and slightly bleeding blonde intern.
"What
exactly does this guy do here?" Alec whispered to me,
smiling
hesitantly at the girl.
"I look after the
gremlins, refresh the wards, do a little combat
surgery, feed the
elevators… " Jacob paused and grinned evilly. "And
I
replace the urinal cakes."
Alec paled and made for the truck.
"Jake, you're a mad old bastard."
"Why, thanks Frank."
"Don't mention it."
I got in and locked the truck behind me.
Every site of mystic
importance has at least one person who performs
the mundane
functions and are just too useful and is pathologically
insane to
kill.
Even the craziest blood sucking despot from the depths
on Netherworld
needs someone to pick up dry cleaning and sort out
the electricity
bill.
"Tell me that's as weird as it
gets." Alec shivered. The armored bulk
of the "Sunnydale
Special" irregular UPS truck (It took a two-week
strike
before we got our rides modified and even then they bulked at
the
rotary machine guns. We need a better union.) seemed to reassure
him
a little.
I sighed.
Maybe it was time to have The Talk with the kid.
"Because drugs creep me out."
Maybe not.
"What's next?'
"A pick up at the Wholesale Thaumaturgical Supply Warehouse."
"Thaumaturgy?"
"You'll see." I gunned the engine. At least those lunatics were safe.
"Hey, boss! You want 90 watt Thessulah orbs or the powersaver ones?"
Yup, it was one of the
loony pick-ups. Which is a good thing. They
hardly ever try to
sacrifice you to the Snake Goddess of Upshallah at
the loony
pick-ups.
"Hey, Frank." Moonbeam waved at me,
without raising his head from his
computer.
"Beam." I nodded and looked around. "Looks like the business is good."
He shrugged. "Can't complain, nobody's
listening. What can I do for
you?"
"Beam!"
His sister's shriek made the proud owner of WTSW, INC wince,
with
a pained grimace flickering across his face.
"Gally, tone it down, would you?"
"I asked you three times already! 90s or Powersave?"
Moonbeam Johnson sighed and pinched the bridge of his nose.
"90s." He said
tiredly after a second's thought. Still unseen
Galadriel Freedom
Johnson Jr. snorted and the sound of her footsteps
retreated
deeper into the stacks.
Moonbeam turned to me again. "So. How can I be of assistance?"
I shrugged and gave him the
list. They didn't pay me enough to
memorize this crap. Beam
scanned through it quickly and frowned.
"Gally?"
"What?" She asked resentfully from the depths of the warehouse.
"Do we have a Dagon Sphere in stock?"
"What the fuck is a Dagon Sphere?"
Moonbeam sighed reproachfully. "You
keep assuming I know what any of
this crap we sell is."
Galadriel snorted again. "Who wants it?"
"Some monk guys in Romania."
"Well, then do the usual. Get a snow
globe and slap some hieroglyphs
on it. It's not like it's for Ms.
Jenkins."
"Miss Jenkins?" Alec whispered.
"Shut up." I turned back to Moonbeam.
"You're supposed to have this
ready for us, Moon. We've got a
schedule to keep."
He hates it when I call him that, but
he was in the wrong and he knew
it.
"It's been a busy
week. Lots of portents or some crap." Moonbeam
shook his
head. "Upped everything by 20."
"Beam…"
"Right, sorry. Look, I owe you one, all right?"
"Fine."
That just sewed up my Christmas bonus. "Your sister getting
that
sphere?"
"Spray painting it as we speak. Hey, who's the new guy?"
"Alec."
"Got space on Thursday?"
"Yep."
"Put us down for twenty."
"For what?" Alec asked, as Galadriel
came out with a glowing orb. She
had a smear of silver paint on
her cheek and an aggressively short,
blonde
haircut.
"Frank."
"Hey. That the package?"
"Yeah. Sorry about the wait."
Apologies. I scowled at her. "You owe me."
She shrugged and nodded. "Deal."
I bagged the globe. "Beam, Galadriel, see you next week."
"Later."
We
left the store with a stack of packages and Alec gave me a
look.
"Moonbeam? Galadriel?"
"Their parents were hippies."
"And they—"
"Aren't."
He
nodded understandingly and glanced back. I doubt he was hoping
to
catch another glimpse of Beam.
I considered telling him
that he had the wrong set of reproductive
organs to interest
Gally.
Didn't.
"Well?" He looked at me expectantly as I got behind the wheel.
"Next stop, Magic Box."
"The What Box?"
"Shut up. You're about to meet the Main Street Harpy."
"What the fuck does that mean?"
"Lemme put it in terms you'll understand. You got your wallet on you?"
"Yeah…" He replied warily.
"Hand it over."
"What?! There's like two hundred bucks in there."
"Yeah, and
if you don't give it to me you'll be financing the Magic
Box's new
wing. Give."
He passed it over.
The Magic Box
changed ownership fairly recently, the last owner
having come down
with a slight case of decapitation. I have not
really had the
chance to meet the new guy yet. However, despite the
fact that
that he'd moved into the high-profit, high mortality rate
world of
magical supplies and mystic items, things seemed to indicate
he
was a smart guy. The fact that up to date he was longest
surviving
proprietor of the shop in question seemed to prove that
he was good,
or more importantly lucky.
I have never met him.
His assistant, however, had wrought more terror on the
business
community of Greater Sunnydale than even Mr. Trick at his
worst.
Sunnydale citizens are a sturdy lot. They can deal with
animated
corpses and fire-breathing demons fairly quickly, but
motivated
petitions and tax applications are enough to chill the
most hard-
bitten madmen and psychopaths.
"So is this
the normal day for you?" Alec asked suddenly, and
somewhat
hopefully.
"No."
"Really?" He brightened up noticeably.
"Today is an easy run."
"Oh."
He seemed put out for some
reason but didn't have time to have a
really good sulk because we
were there.
"Now, remember what I told you?"
"Refer
to her as Ms. Jenkins at all times. Don't touch anything.
Don't
ask about the fertility idol. And if her boyfriend is around -
no
talk about Dracula.' Alec glanced at me out of the corner of his
eye.
"Are you jerking my chain, Frank?"
I didn't bother
dignifying it with a response. "Let's go meet the
little
woman."
I caught the smell of sulfur just in time to
wonder how I was going
to explain a horned vengeance demon with a
serious case of acne.
"Anyanka, I told you several times,
it's against regulations to…
Frank!"
"D'Hoffryn."
Beside
me my partner was clucking his tongue appreciatively. "Cool
costume,
mister. Does this place sell those glasses with mustaches
too? Oh,
and springy eyeballs!"
D'Hoffryn was looking faintly
nonplussed. I left them to it. If I was
really lucky, by the time
I returned my biggest worry would be
finding an understanding
owner for a toad.
"Frank! Dude! Do you have my..."
"Xander." I nodded and passed over the
bundle. "Transmetropolitan:
Spider's Trash and Rifts:
Africa."
"Cool! And what about, uh…"
"Under the Rifts, inside the National Geographic wrapper."
"Exxxcellent! You're the man, Frank."
"One of us has to be."
I shook my head and reminded myself that Ms.
Jenkins was his
girlfriend. There had to be more to him than met the
eye.
"You must work in the movies. That's cool! It is movies, right?"
"I
have brought vengeance and suffering to humanity since the
first
glimpses of the age of man, bothersome mortal."
"Man,
you actor guys. You're always on. Never break character.
That's
great." D'Hoffryn had a pretty easygoing disposition
for an
otherworldly creature of evil, so he in no way deserved
this. Plus,
Alec was piling stupidity on top of obliviousness at
frightening
speed.
"Rook, go unload the truck."
"I wanted to talk to-"
"Now." He was learning
something, at least. I didn't have to shout.
Xander followed him
out, likely doing damage control for D'Hoffryn
with Alec.
"New kid, Frank?"
"Yeah. New recruits, man..."
"I
know what you mean. They think they know everything, before
they've
even put in their first five hundred years."
"We had a saying in Vietnam. Young, dumb, and full of--"
"Wet
steaming entrails. I didn't know your Marines used the M'Kub
family
mantra?"
"Close enough."
"You
running the book?" I nodded. "Twenty-five for Friday.
Double it
if he's got a delivery to the morgue."
"Done. Man, rookies. I wish--"
"Yes?"
"Sorry. Not happening."
"Tease. Anyanka, I'm off to the
office. Next time you summon me,
please don't let it be for a
pyramid scheme."
"For the last time, it's called
multi-level chaos sharing. Look, you
recruit ten demons and they
each go out and recruit ten more demons.
And from each soul they
harvest, you get--"
"Yes, Anyanka. I heard the pitch
when they still called it
Christianity. Farewell." A flare of
fire, a puff of smoke and he was
gone. Beats the hell out of the
subway.
"Damn. He had all the good contacts too."
"Funny
old world, ain't it. Sign here." I passed her the pad,
and
stifled a groan as that shifty light gleamed in her eyes.
Headaches
and paperwork figured prominently in my future, I could
tell.
"I'm not signing for anything until I've inspected
the shipment for
damage." Yeah, she was the type to read the
shipping information from
front to back.
"Fine. The kid is getting it. You got your parcels ready?"
"Over here. Look, I've got fragile on the wrappers and everything."
"What
are you shipping?" I looked at the pile in horror. Even so
much
as rattle a fragile package from her store and she was
already filing
maximum return damage claims with head
office.
"Blood quenched iron ingots."
"How are those fragile?"
"Oh. I thought it was a
description if they got dropped on you. You
know, of, well...
you."
"Just give me the packing slip." The door
clattered open again to let
Alec and Xander back in. Two giant
stacks of packages that I didn't
have to carry made their way to
the counter.
"Xander! It's not your job to carry those."
"What? I'm just helping out my main man Alec
here. Did you know he
used to date a girl whose uncle cut William
Shatner's lawn? It's like
he's practically met James T.
Kirk!"
"I'm glad he's a geek, Xander. It's just--"
"That you invalidated the damage claims your
girlfriend was planning
to file against me by voluntarily helping
move the packages."
"That's not true."
"Oh
really?" I guess the dripping sarcasm made her think I
didn't
trust her. Which was wrong, in fact. I trusted Anya Jenkins
to be
Anya Jenkins, in the same way I always trusted a poisonous
snake to
try and bite me.
"I was going to file them against the new guy."
"Hey!" The kid whined.
Anya turned one of her top level
they-invented–
the-word-bitch-to-describe-me looks at him.
"But
we could make a cash arrangement now and not see it on your
personal
record."
"Kid, don't say a thing. Ms. Jenkins, I've
got his wallet and you're
making me late. Just sign the
bill."
"How am I supposed to make any money with you here, Frank?"
"By scamming those FedEx idiots like
the Almighty intended.
Afternoon."
"Yeah, I'll
see you for D&D on Friday, Alec!" Xander yelled and
Alec
waved back.
"I've got my dwarf barbarian freak on, Xander!"
"Frank." Anya got real quiet and real close. "Are you running a book?"
"Yeah."
"Twenty
for Thursday. Oh please, let it be Thursday." She shuddered
and
I nodded. Maybe she'd get lucky. Either way, it didn't matter to
me.
As long as I turned him in at the end of the day, breathing
without
the aid of large machines, my job was done. Yeah I was
setting the
bar pretty high. Call me an optimist.
Alec was sitting at the
dash, thumbing through the stack of
deliveries for the police
station. The amiable obliviousness was back
in his eyes after the
apparent normality of the Magic Box. The odds
just kept jumping
around in my head on his survivability.
"Here's your wallet."
"Thanks. Man, that wasn't so bad."
"If
you consider that you were one word from an out of court
settlement,
sure." The axles ground a bit as I pulled out. We were
still
having problems balancing out armor loads on our suspensions. I
made
a note to let the shop know. The same model was up for a
military
contract later this year.
"So, just the cops and then..."
"Lunch. We can clear up a delivery at the same time."
"What sort of--"
"Just don't, kid. You'll find out soon enough."
"Geez, you
make it all sound so mysterious." The rookie had a point.
If
he was going to survive, at some point he was going to have to
face
the truth of how things really worked in Sunnydale.
Maybe I'm
getting old, but the idea of taking yet another recruit
under my
wing to see them get their ass shot off tired me. Besides, I
only
had three more years until a pension and a wakeup back to the
real
world.
"Let's get this stuff dropped off. I'm getting
hungry and need a
drink."
"Sure, Frank. Whatever you say."
I like the Sunnydale PD. It's rare
to meet a group of people with
such overwhelming dedication to
their goal. True, that goal happened
to be an utter denial of
anything resembling reality but hey, we all
deal in our own
way.
That is not to say that the entire Sunnydale police force
is full of
fat idiots whom Wilkins hired mostly based on girth and
the minimal
requirement of being able to find their ass with both
hands and a
flashlight. Not the entire department, no.
Things
weren't always like that. Rumor is back in the 50s, some
asshole
smoked a cop and even Wilkins wasn't able to prevent the rest
of
em coming down on the bumpy crowd like a ton of bricks. Jake says
it
took a decade before demon population got back to its
previous
size.
There are some new cops that are trying to
do the whole serve and
protect thing. I kinda feel sorry for them.
I've seen it before, when
I joined the force. LAPD in the 70s….
being an honest cop was like
being Stevie Wonder at a Klan
rally.
So yeah, you get a couple of Don Quixotes every now and
then, running
around and generally getting in the Slayer's
way.
It's slated to get worse too, with the new Chief they've
brought in.
I made some calls about him, Lockley told me to just
stand back and
watch the blood and green goo splatter. Should be
fun days ahead.
"Yo, Frank."
"Kelly, Alec, Alec – Mike Kelly."
Mike was his usual
Irish-monster self, his cheap suit looking like it
was about to
explode at the seams. Sweet guy, but looks like a red-
haired
gorilla with a bad case of hemorrhoids. About as bright too. I
am
still unsure how he ever made detective.
He nodded to my
partner, lips stretching in what he persisted to
believe was an
amiable manner. Alec swallowed and nodded, his fingers
inching
toward the shotgun. Yeah. That's all I need to make my day
complete,
my partner emptying a round of buckshot into a cop 5 feet
from the
station.
"Alec, why don't you park the truck over there."
I nodded toward the
empty spot. Mike's eyes flickered and I used
the moment's distraction
to kick Alec in the shin and slap his
hand away from the gun.
"Ow! What did you do that f—"
"Just park the truck and wait for me."
His eyes suddenly brightened. "I get to drive?"
His
enthusiasm was like that of a young, loveable puppy. Made you
want
to smack him across the nose with a rolled up newspaper.
"Yeah.
You get to drive. To the curb." I caught his eyes with mine
and
smiled in a manner promising all sort of creative pain. "You
as
much as scratch my baby…" I let the sentence trail off,
leaving it to
his imagination.
He nodded. I looked at him
dubiously. His face assumed a wounded
expression that I am sure
played well with college sophomores. Well.
There was no help for
it, I was going to have to leave him
unsupervised at some point or
another. If he wasn't safe in the SDPD
yard…
I nodded to
Kelly to walk me over to the station house and grabbed
the
package. My mind boggled at the potential disasters of letting
this
genius and my new buddy make small talk. Still, pound for pound,
Mike
is as good as partner as you can wish for. I watched him go toe
to
toe with a Fyarl once. On the other hand he still calls the LA
Zoo
periodically to check up on that rogue grizzly' that attacked
him.
Like I said. Not the brightest brick in the toolbox. But
that's all
right. He's got…
"Eli."
"Frank! Where have you been?"
-his partner to do his thinking for
him. Elijah Weinberg is a short,
intense individual who moves in
great, sudden bursts of speed and
makes me tired just by looking
at him. Last time I had that much
energy chokeholds were still
legal and nobody cared if the president
got an occasional
blowjob.
You could also smoke inside a goddamn bar.
Eli
is the brains of this outfit. Mike is there just to hit things.
It
works out pretty well, actually. Worked even better when Eli
was
partnered with Sam but hey…
The station was almost
empty, with it being a Monday night and all. A
couple of uniforms
lounging by the coffee machine, Marlene manning
the phones, a
bunch of luckless drunks sleeping it off.
Mayberry jailhouse.
Riiiight.
I glanced at the floor by the john
where if you squinted just right,
you could still see the blot.
Very hard to get a melted chief of
police out of the linoleum as
it turns out.
On the other hand it makes a great cautionary
tale about shaking
warlocks down for protection money.
Eli
was glaring at me through his glasses in away that implied
an
impending lecture on the timely delivery of federal and
personal
mail. If I didn't head him off at the pass I'd be here
till sunrise.
Boy does like to hear himself talk.
"Beam slowed me down some. Kinda hectic over there."
"Ah." Eli nodded. "That portent shit?"
Yeah, he knows
what's what. I asked him if he was ever planning to
let Kelly in
on the score, once. He just snorted and told me to mind
my own
business and not to sell Mike short. I butted out.
He sat down
and glanced from me to Kelly and back. Mike was looking
mildly
puzzled behind his desk. Whether it was because he was trying
to
figure out what the word portent' meant or because he forgot how
to
spell judicial' again was anybody's guess.
"You got it
then?" Eli's fingers tapped impatiently on the ugly stack
of
folders. He looked like he hadn't slept in a week and hadn't
changed
his clothes since the last time I saw him. "The
Chronicles?"
Mutely I dropped the package on the desk.
There is no talking to Eli
when he gets like this. The long
nervous fingers tore into the paper
with unrelenting gusto,
revealing a musty old tome. He started
leafing through it,
muttering something to himself and absently
patting the desk for a
pencil. Any minute now he was going to start
clutching at his hair
in a habit that perpetually left him looking
like a midget mad
scientist.
I cleared my throat and tapped the clipboard
against the desk. He
waved me away without ever looking up still
muttering to himself
about hieroglyphs being cuneiform and that
changed everything. I
sympathized with his dedication, I really
did. What with the influx
of crazies and those dead kids with the
weird writing on them he had
a lot on his plate. But I had a
schedule. It's all about priorities.
I cleared my throat
again, a bit more loudly this time, and raised
the
clipboard…
"Frank! What's taking so damn long?"
By
the time we left I had another bet on Wednesday. The pot was
really
starting to look respectable.
Alec regained his entirely too chipper mood somehow.
"What was up with the wall in the
men's room? There's this really
weird warbling sound and it smells
kinda bad."
Some towns have a problem with being
underfunded. We have a haunted
bathroom in the police
station.
It's all about perspective, really.
"Another
thing. Who was that old guy in the picture right in
the
front?"
"Edward "Pops" McIntyre. Most famous cop on the Sunnydale force."
"Why?"
"Only
one to ever make retirement without a scratch on him. Shuddap
and
let me drive."
Alec was looking at the schedule and
humming something that sounded
suspiciously akin to "Bad To
The Bone."
"Look at this, we're almost half-done.
Y'know, Frank, this gig is not
half as bad as I thought it would
be. True hours are kinda eh, but I
am really starting to like this
town. It's got…" he frowned for a
second, then brightened
up and snapped his fingers. "Character."
It took a
considerable amount of will power for me not to slam on the
brakes,
for the sheer therapeutic value of seeing him smack into
the
windshield again.
Character?
Character?
It was definitely time to explain the facts of life to this puke.
I
used to tell people that working Sunnydale was a lot like nam
only
without the good parts – like hookers and heavy artillery.
People
used to think I was being cute.
Some things you just can't explain. Some things just gotta be shown.
"Let's go get that drink."
"What about lunch?"
"After."
"Yeah, ok. Where we goin'?"
I grinned tightly. "Willy's. Everybody comes to Willy's."
He didn't get it. Imagine my surprise.
Willy's was the kind of place that you used to have
to spit blood and
chew razorblades to prove tough enough to get
into. It had cleaned up
a lot these days. You only had to spit
blood and chew razorblades if
you wanted to. Quite a lot of the
clientele did. The kid's eyes were
the size of dinner plates as we
walked in. He nudged me once, which I
ignored, nodding at Willy.
The kid nudged me again, and whispered not
quietly enough in my
ear.
"Frank, what's up with this place? Is there some
kind of costume
convention going on in town?"
"Something
like that. Now shut up and get a table." I growled. Maybe
this
was a mistake. The kid practically screamed 'free lunch' with
every
movement, and a few of the demons in here wanted something
juicier
than chicken fingers. I squeezed into the space between a
Chaos
demon and a vampire couple, waving down the barman.
Back in
Khe Sahn, we had this guy in the platoon that seemed to draw
every
light duty possible. He paid off a medic to keep him on
sick
rotation, and spent more time in the infirmary than most of
the
doctors. He also had the uncanny ability to get his hands on
all the
things that smoothed out the rough edges of combat for
other people;
drugs, porn, whores. Rumor was that he had the dirt
on all the
officers, and they kept him out of combat in exchange
for him not
blabbing.
Shame someone dropped a grenade into
the latrine one day while he was
in there. Wasn't enough left of
him to fill a field helmet.
Willy reminded me of him. A weasel
with excellent survival instincts,
he's thrived by telling
everyone what they needed to know for money,
and opening up his
bar to the tastes of new clientele. A vampire once
told me that
Willy was the blood equivalent of our old MREs. You
could stay
alive by eating them, but might wish you hadn't. Plus,
being known
as an utter shill and coward made demons consider you not
worth
eating.
"Frank, buddy!"
"I'm not your buddy."
"Who is? You want the special or just a
couple of beers?" He said,
and caught my look. "On the
house, of course."
"Tell me something, Willy.
Portents, rumblings, nervous cops...
what's going on
tonight?"
"Well, I'm not supposed to tell anyone
but," he pocketed the twenty
without a pause. "I heard
rumors of some big summoning going on in
town. Might be mixed up
with this god or something. Sounds like a
party. Got the regulars
hopping."
"Apocalypse is good for business?"
"You
bet. No demon wants to start ending the world without a solid
lining
of kittens and chicken fingers in their stomachs."
"Slayer involved?"
"Some say no, some say yes."
"You telling me the truth?"
"It's not worth getting beaten up over."
"I believe you, Willy." I
dropped his deliveries on the bar. "Tell
the locals we got a
new guy on. They start feeling like dropping the
hammer on him,
I'll take it personal."
At least I could give the kid a
fighting chance. Besides, people know
me in this town. At least,
they learned what being driven over
repeatedly feels like, and
give me a healthy dose of respect.
Besides, even the darkest
minion of Hell needs to get his mummified
psychopaths hand and raw
amber somewhere.
Speaking of which… I glanced speculatively
at the kid and, of course,
found him in the process of alienating
a Dzhaybee. Well. It least it
wasn't a Fyarl. I shrugged and
decide to let this thing ride itself
out. Coincidentally enough I
had business to take care of, so I
turned back to Willy. "All
right, I'll be back in a bit. Remember
what I said."
The
little slimeball's eyes darted toward my newly-minted partner's
most
recent predicament and then back again.
I sighed. "I
ain't expecting the impossible." Boys will be boys and
all
that shit. Plus, like Gunny Jeffers always said – pain learns
you
good.
I hated that fucking sonuvabitch even worse than
I hated my old man,
may they both rot in hell.
"Just
try to keep it from getting terminal." I told Willy and
faded,
carefully pretending not to notice Alec's panicky look.
As
I got in the truck it occurs to me that I had been neglecting
the
bright side of life. If the snot didn't make it out of the
bar, Anya
would owe me a favor.
For a long moment I
considered going back in and taking back
the terminal'
restrictions but there was a schedule to keep.
The Bronze.
What happens when you put horny teenagers in a single
place over a
Hellmouth. Vicky had enlarged the skylights and
reinforced the
windows to celebrate her first year of owning the
club. After six
years, her hands shook like a palsy victim and her
cigarette
consumption made Mildred look like a non-smoker.
Still, you
had to admire her guts. She wouldn't sell it, close it, or
make
deals with the vampires or the demons. There was a thin net of
scars
on her stomach and thighs from when Trick made her an offer a
couple
of years ago. Bitch spat blood in his eyes and asked for a
cigarette
when he was done.
I remember that mentality over in the war:
crazy bastards who
wouldn't retreat or abandon a post because that
was the only thing
anchoring them to sanity. Brittle lunatics who
could kill you through
raw madness, going to the grave with their
teeth in your throat.
Vicky originally blew in from Miami. And she
took a scenic route too,
bumming around the country for a couple
of years.
Anyway, whatever it was that made her change coasts,
and, from
dropped hints, a fairly nice lawyer life-style for that
of first a
hobo and now a purveyor of Sunnydale's premiere
meat-market I wasn't
asking. She made herself at home right quick
though. These days she
knew every producer and dealer between
Sunnydale and Los Angeles, so
she got top flight bands and heavily
armed Hell's Angels when she
needed it. That wasn't who I was here
to see though.
It took me a while to spot her. It was the
lights. Totally fucks with
me when they set the lights to blink
along with the music. But
eventually there she was, by the
stairs.
Samantha Beretta' Barett.
It's a shame really.
I still remember when she was a cop. Her and Eli
made one hell of
a team until that thing with the Mayor. From the
fast-track
Detective to a bouncer in one month. And they're still not
talking
to each other, either. Her and Eli, I mean. What can you do?
Some
people take being knocked out by their partner and fiancé way
too
personally.
A fucking shame.
Well. That's the way the cookie crumbles sometimes.
Still. The Bronze made out on the
deal. Unless Vicky reverses her
policy on hiring demons, Sam is as
good as it gets. What the fuck she
is doing with the mummified
hand of Luis Escobeda – I don't really
want to know. Especially
considering that the rest of him is still
alive and presumably not
happy about the whole situation.
But you know what? Fuck it.
I am just here to deliver. And occasionally hit things. At
the
present I have to settle for shoving. Since the Bronze is the
only
game in town it's a zoo even on Mondays.
I tell you the noise they call music these days…
Christ, I have become my father.
I foresee a violent overabundance of alcohol in my
near future. And
hell, I have to swing by the cemetery anyway. He
always has a bottle
or two of the good stuff squirreled away. Not
like the warm piss they
serve here.
A mild shock of running
into something jars me out of my reverie and
I find myself looking
at the walking anti-steroid advertisement.
The fucker spilt his beer all over my shorts too.
"Hey, old man, watch where you're gokhcha…."
Hitting things is actually not
a part of my job at all. It's more
like a perk.
"Sam."
"Uncle Frank!"
Shut up. So she calls me that. So fucking what?
"Got your package."
"Excellent."
She grabs it out of my hand, and doesn't bat an eye when
it
wiggles.
A bunch of patrons notice but if there's anything
more ingrained in
the psyche of Sunnydale populace than a firm
desire to ignore reality
I sure as hell haven't found it.
Sam
could release the damn thing in the middle of the joint and order
it
to tap-dance and three weeks from now she would still be
getting
asked about that cute hamster.'
This fucking town.
Hell, a goddamn troll wasn't enough to keep them out of
the place,
for crap's sake. Although Sam was more than a bit
peeved about not
being able to stop it from trashing the place.
Vicky just spat, took
the damages out of her pet warlock's pay and
invested in another
spell.
She's the practical sort.
What
is really screwed up is that for all their determination not to
face
the flip-side of living on the damn Hellmouth, it rarely if
ever
interferes with their survival instincts.
New York?
Don't make me laugh.
"Any reason you order that thing, Samantha?"
"Not one I want to discuss."
She glanced at my use of her full name,
running a hand through her
dark hair, and at least had the decency to
look abashed. "Look,
I just don't want to get into it right now.
There's nothing
irrational going on."
Most people would have gotten the
full yeah-who-are-you-trying-to-
bullshit-kid look, but I have a
soft spot for her. "Fine. But if
there is something that
might come back on you, give me a heads up."
"Uncle Frank, you act like I'm setting up a drug ring."
"Money
would be better." I shoved away a would be suitor who was
trying
to inch around my arm to talk to Sam. "Reminds me. You
been
hearing anything funny going on tonight? Ritual of some
type?"
"Ritual?" Sam scratched her nose. "Not
that I've heard. Got the odd
bit of talk about something big
happening soon, but nothing firm. You
know how it is with these
kids; all angst and sex talk."
"Damn."
"You playing LAPD again, Frank?" She said, suddenly serious.
"One
thing I learned overseas, Sam. If shit is coming down, knowing
where
it's going to hit is the best way to avoid being under it."
"Sure. Look, I can call you later if I hear anything."
"Yeah,
thanks." I shrugged, the odd feeling that Sam wasn't telling
me
the whole story settling in my gut. It's one of those instinct
things
they tell you to listen to in Basic. "Hey, I have to collect
my
rookie. Drinks this weekend?"
"I'll call." She
disappeared back into the crowd, and unfortunately,
did little to
dispel my uneasy feeling.
Well, there were no
organs festooned over the door to Willy's when I
got there, and I
took that as a good sign. Willy normally keeps a
close eye on his
clientele, but considering Alec's unique ability to
turn every
situation balls up in no time flat it was even money that
one of
the demons decided to take a shot at burying him.
"Frank."
"Hey
Clem." The saggy demon had appeared at the door, a frantic
look
in his eyes.
"You better get in here!"
"Why?"
"It's your partner."
Shit. Mildred was going to stomp my guts in,
and that was just for
starters. And, God help me, I was actually
starting to like the kid a
little. Sure, he was dumb, ignorant and
destined for an early grave,
but he was basically a good kid. I
broke into a run, shoving Clem
aside and making a mental note to
break something small and painful
on Willy for getting my rookie
killed.
Even I'm wrong occasionally.
"Frank? That
you?" Alec said weakly. He was a mess. Eye cut and
swollen,
bleeding an angry red line down his cheek. The brown UPS
shirt had
almost been completely torn from his body, and ugly purple
bruises
were spreading across his chest. It didn't look like his nose
was
broken, but it was bleeding over his split lips very badly. But,
no
shit, you should have seen the other guy.
"Yeah sport.
It's me." The kid had a handful of a Dzhaybee demon's
crown
barbules, and was regularly slamming the demon's head into the
floor.
A Dzhaybee demon isn't as strong as a Fyarl demon, which would
have
already pulled Alec's arms off and beaten him to death with the
wet
ends. But it wasn't a lightweight either, and the kid was doing
a
creditable job of beating nine kinds of shit out of it.
"Clown
decided to start something." He fisted the Dzhaybee in
the
kidneys with semi-professional competence and an
amateur's
viciousness that was a pleasure to watch. "Punk."
"Glad to see you could handle it."
"Yeah." Alec
finally let go of the demon and got up. "Where's our
next
stop?"
"Sure you don't want to relax a bit first?"
"Nah, just a little whooz—" He passed out cold at my feet.
"Yeah." I picked him up,
chuckling a little at the grudgingly
respectful distance the
demons were giving him. "So, Eddie needed to
start something,
huh?"
"There was nothing I could do, Frank. I was
switching the kegs,
honest." Willy whined, and I did my best
to suppress a killing urge.
"Of course you were, Willy.
Grab a bottle of vodka and drop it into
the truck." Willy
opened his mouth. "Now." And shut it just as fast.
"It wasn't just Eddie, Frank."
"What?"
"Shirley's
out behind the bar." Clem said, and we both looked at each
other
for a moment before laughing.
"Both of em went for the kid?"
"He threw her into the table, grabbed a chair
and starting hitting
her with it until she stayed down."
Dzhaybee females are larger than
their mates. Meaner too.
Maybe he wasn't a complete waste.
"Thank, Clem. You go back to your poker game."
"Later, Frank."
I
walked/carried the kid back to truck, dumping him against the back
as
I fished out the first aid kit. I'd demanded medic grade trauma
kits
for all of our vehicles, and we saw our fatalities drop
fifteen
percent in one year. The kid looked a mess at first, but
once I got
the blood off, it was pretty easy to see that most of
his wounds were
light. No doubt he'd feel like I'd run the truck
over him for the
next few days, but I'd seen far worse in bar
brawls. Especially with
demons. I had just got his eyebrow taped
up when he jolted awake.
"Wha-!"
"Relax, rookie. I'm just trying to fix up your face."
"What happened?"
"You beat a guy unconscious with it.
Where did you learn how to
fight?"
"My dad was in
the Rangers when he was younger. He made my sisters
and I learn. I
ended up doing Krav Maga for ten years." Alec touched
his
swollen lips. "I still teach self defense at the
community
center."
"Pretty good moves in there. I know Eddie. He's no pushover."
"Pretty foul mouth for a clown."
"Well, he's… French."
"Oh."
Alec nodded in understanding, then frowned and finally shook
the
issue off as he winced, rubbing his shoulder gingerly. "So?
How
bad is it?"
"Cut on your eyebrow is the
worst. You'll feel like hell for a couple
of days, but I don't
think you broke anything." Yeah, the kid had
earned to be
treated like an adult until he made his next stupid
comment.
"There's a spare shirt in the truck you can wear."
"Thanks Frank."
"Don't mention it. Now," I stood up and
checked my watch. "Time to
stop for lunch. I happen to know
just the place too."
My shirt was hanging off
of him like a burial shroud, making him look
like a scarecrow
after a bad night on the town.
Which wasn't that far off the
mark now that I thought about it. It
didn't take long for the
war-hero to revert to type either. I was
beginning to come to the
conclusion that nothing short of a thorough
decapitation would
shut the kid up.
The cache of goodwill that he had built up
with me was beginning to
run thin. I sighed and scratched my head.
Wasn't the kid's fault, I
knew that. The uneasy feeling that
settled in the back of my head
after the non-conversation with Sam
was tugging at me in a not good
kind of way.
Fuck.
I
was too old to deal with quasi-paternal urges. And she was a
big
girl.
…
Fuck, I needed a drink.
"Frank?"
"Yeah?" I felt I
deserved a lot of credit for not barking at the guy.
Nobody
appreciates my sensitivity, I tell you what.
"Why are stopping here?"
"I told you." I said parked the truck. "Lunch."
"At the cemetery?"
"It's
very quiet this time of night. Scenic." I didn't bother with
the
lowjack. For good or ill the criminal element in Sunnydale is
kinda
thin. And remarkably few of the other kind try to carjack a
UPS
carrier. I expect that to change when the word about
the
improvements' gets around.
Besides, against the other' kind that jack would do exactly shit.
I did put Frank's car' sticker in the window though.
It's good to have a reputation.
"Man, this is creepy." Alec's eyes kept
darting around, as if he
expected a werewolf jump out at him any
second from a bush or
something.
Filled my heart with hope for the younger generation.
"I can't believe you eat
lunch – which is more like late supper by
the way – here. That
can't be good for your chi."
My chi? My CHI?!
"Listen, slick…"
"Clem, is that yo- Oh, hey, Frank."
Well, shit.
Alec stopped behind me and by the sound of it was making
like a fish
out of water again. Don't know if it's fair to blame
him at that. Not
exactly the picture I was expecting, my own
self.
"G'evening, Mrs. Summers."
The lady
sitting on the blanket, spread in front of crypt smiled back
at
me, seemingly unaware of the sheer wrongness of the whole
picture.
And I am not even talking about the company she was
in.
This fucking town, I swear to God.
"Hi, Frank." I always liked her smile. Reminded me of my niece.
"How many times do I have to tell you? It's Joyce. Who's your friend?"
"Alec Whitaker, ma'm. He's my new partner."
No sounds from behind me, so I discreetly
reminded him of his manners
with a well placed elbow.
"Ow. I mean, hi. I'm Alec. Alec Whitaker."
I turned and
glared. The kid got bonus points for getting the hint
almost
immediately and grabbing his hat off his head. Joyce grinned
into
her hand and shook her head.
"Nice to meet you, Alec."
I
like the lady and all, but I still needed a couple of seconds
to
swallow my plans.
Spike, the pale undead bastard,
smirked at me, the fucker, knowing
that with Joyce here my hope
for a discreet dip into his booze just
went up in smoke. I sneered
back, since if I had to bet I'd put money
on the fact that he was
in the same boat. His answering glower was
enough to brighten up
my dreary days.
Malik remained expressionless as he usually did.
Malik in all probability was the main reason for Alec's
first
reaction. Although the Billy Idol wannabe over there might
have had
something to do with it too. Who can tell.
"Guys, meet Alec. Alec – the guys."
"Um… hi."
Spike and Malik nodded, assessing the kid each in their own way.
"Who
decorated his face?" Malik asked softly and shifted. I nodded
my
thanks and sit down, grunting. Sucks to get old.
"We just came from Willy's."
"Oh."
"Eddie
and Shirl should wake up by noon, I am guessing." I
established
my partner's reputation without sounding defensive or
proud.
Much.
Malik looked impressed and Spike glanced at me, his
eyebrow raised
fractionally. I nodded.
"Monday?"
"I'll put you down."
"Brilliant."
Joyce shook her head again, looking at us both admonishingly.
Spike looked somewhat abashed.
I shrugged.
Thankfully the kid picked this moment to re-enter conversation.
"So, " He
wetted his lips carefully, glancing at Malik sidelong. "How
do
you know Frank?"
"Oh, everybody knows Frank." Spike drawled out, half mockingly.
I scowled. Joyce just looked tired.
Malik didn't say anything. He usually didn't.
In his profession that's what you'd call a bonus.
Malik Abrafo was not always a mild-mannered
groundskeeper of the
Restfield cemetery.
He used to run
with the Black Panthers when, in his own words, he was
young and
impressionable. He also told me once that Abrafo
means
executioner.
Yeah, that's what I said too. Not aloud, of course.
See, he's Order of Taraka. Retired. Not sure why,
but I gathered
there was an embarrassing situation of some sort,
involving a
daughter of a Kerchak demon-khan, a family castle and
some sort of
fire.
I didn't go looking for extra details. Call me squeamish.
Anyway, apparently there was some sort of
epiphany and Malik
discovered the joys of pacifism.
Rumor
is that he'd sworn not to raise his hand in anger ever again.
Even
in self-defense.
Not that anybody's been dumb enough to test
that theory, as far as I
know.
Anyway he's been the
groundskeeper here for the last eight years.
When he's not busy
cleaning me out of my poker money, that is.
Says it's a good job. Restful and conducive to contemplation.
Apparently
conversations with the undead gave him a whole new
perspective on
the metaphysical nature of enlightenment.
He and Joyce met at
her gallery one day and hit it off. From what I
understand the
first time Spike saw them sitting in front of his
crypt with a
picnic basket he went on a three day bender.
I gathered he had
this image of having the Talk about Joyce with
Malik. After he
found out that they were Just Friends he disappeared
into Willy's
for another week to drown himself into grateful oblivion.
I love this town.
Where else, for example, can you sit on a
blanket in the middle of
the cemetery and listen to a nice lady
gallery owner, a retired
professional shit-disturber and an undead
punk discuss primitive art
of sub-Equatorial Africa and the Shang
Dynasty China.
So I sat on the blanket and ate my sandwiches.
What would you do?
I almost choked on my
bologna when the kid jumped into the
conversation and was able to
hold his own.
Apparently his pop's been stationed in Africa a bunch.
"Alec, you seem like a very bright young man,"
Joyce said finally and
fixed him with a steely Mom-stare. "Why
aren't you in college?"
"Oh. Um…" The little
snot grinned sheepishly, hastily swallowing the
food. "I was
gonna go, but I figured this is the time to take some
time off.
See the world. Discover myself, y'know?"
Behind him Spike
rolled his eyes in almost audible disgust and I had
to admit he
had a point.
Joyce too, looked somewhat skeptical about
swallowing the semi-
Kerouakian line of bullshit of finding
oneself through employment at
UPS.
As she sighed and began
to dismantle my new partner's sense of self-
worth with
admiration-inducing efficiency, I squinted meaningfully at
Spike.
He got the hint immediately.
Making strategic retreat to the
crypt we proceeded to examine what
the vampire's wine cellar had
to offer.
Now there was still a bottle of vodka in my truck,
but I am not yet
senile enough to get plastered on hard liquor
during a Sunnydale
night shift.
Although given how this night has been going….
In any case, the beer was more of an
excuse than anything else, since
with every passing hour that
never quite forgotten feeling that there
was a sniper rifle
pointing at the back of my head had been steadily
growing stronger
and stronger.
"Anything going down tonight, Spike, that I should know about?"
He was suddenly looking arrogant and
shifty at the same time. Right.
Must be Slayer
business.
"Spike…"
He sighed and scratched
his nose, apparently deeming me trustworthy
enough. The privilege
of it all almost made my heart stop, I tell you
what.
"There's
a new Big Bad in town." He glanced toward the door, as if
to
make sure Joyce was well out of the earshot. Judging from the
sounds
he needn't have worried. Malik seemed to have her well
entertained.
"Who?"
"Goes by the name of Glory."
I spat and scowled at him. "Fuck, boy. I knew that a week back."
He sneered. "Oh, yeah? Did
you know about those Watcher tossers that
traipsed through here a
bit ago?"
I didn't. The bad feeling in the pit of my stomach grew.
"Don't get your knickers in a twist. They left."
"Spike, get to the point."
"Glory's a hellgod, it looks like."
Well. That was a whole and exciting level of unpleasant.
"What's she want?"
The
vampire finished his beer and, casually crushing the can, fished
out
a pack of cigarettes. I wasn't offered any. Hint seemed pretty
clear.
He told me as much as he was gonna.
Not that he really needed
to. There was a backpack in the corner of
the crypt with a bunch
of CDs half spilt out. And unless Spike's
tastes have changed
drastically in the last week and have come to
encompass the modern
American pop music, I could form a fairly
educated guess as to the
owner.
Which lent a lot of weight to the rumor that the Slayer
dropped Joyce
and her sister here a few days back for
safe-keeping.
This fucking town.
Still. If the Slayer
was in the thick of it, chances were it was
going to get handled
above the level of us simple folk. One way or
another.
UPS doesn't fight HellGods. It's in the contract.
…. well apart from that one time in the '80s. But FedEx started it!
I
finished my beer and thought longingly about just leaving
quietly,
getting in my beautiful truck and just driving. Until I
hit Mexico.
Start a whole new life.
"You got my stuff, by the way?"
… less than a day, I could hit the border. Less than a day.
"Well?"
"Here. Give
Em Enough Rope', original vinyl sighed by the band. And
a bootleg
of the last Passions season on DVD."
Before he could
revel in his new possessions, however, a blood-
curdling shriek
split the peaceful night of Sunnyd- yeah, I can't
even finish that
with a straight face.
He beat me outside, of course. But not by much.
It was Alec of course. But frankly, it was hard to
blame him this
time.
"Frank! My eye! It's saying things to me!"
It was too. Some of them were even printable.
Joyce was blinking rapidly and rooting through her
handbag. If she
was going to come up with some remedy against
mutant eyes, I was
planning on being extremely impressed.
Malik was just sitting there, head cocked curiously to the side.
"Oh." Spike said suddenly.
"What?"
"WHAT?!"
He
ignored Alec and cocked the scarred eyebrow at me. "What month
is
it, Frank?"
What month? What the hell did that….
Oh hell.
Spike's lips twitched. "Shirley is in mating season, mate."
This fucking town.
"I think I have some visine in here." Joyce said, ignored by everyone.
"Anyone speak Dzhaybee?" I knew enough of
it to puzzle out a warcry
and barter for what would no doubt be an
insanely exhausting evening
of degenerate lust. But what had been
a split eyebrow was now rimmed
with nubby teeth and was spitting
out a rapidfire mixture of curses,
obscenities and, for all we
knew, a major breakthrough in Dzhaybee
cooking techniques.
"Got
a bit. Back in Thailand." Spike shrugged. "Dzhaybee have a
thing
for ginger. San Francisco is lousy with them. Can't get
decent
takeaway without one inviting himself over."
"What's
it saying?" Alec was whimpering and trying to cover it with
his
hands, which only led to it biting at his fingers and snarling.
Malik
was prying Alec's hands back from it, which was about the only
thing
stopping the kid from taking his lunchbox to it.
"Omens, curses… apparently it knows your mum well, Frank."
"Not
funny." I scrubbed my hands through my hair. "So, what we
have
is a Dzhaybee demon slowly growing out of Alec'
face?"
"Sounds like."
"Get it off! Get it off!" Alec screamed.
"Calm down, kid."
I'll admit, the drooling and the little tongue that
lashed out
from his eyebrow was not something that was going to help
settle
my digestion after lunch. Spike cursed when it bit him, and
was
searching for a part to punch that wasn't my partner.
Malik
reached into the open picnic basket and pulled out an opened
bottle
of wine. He pulled the cork from the neck, and with great
care,
plugged it into the center of the snarling maw. It bit at the
cork
and tried to shriek at us around the plug. Alec was whimpering
and
near hysterical, trashing about. Joyce held his head while I
wound
a bandage across his
forehead, hiding the
nasty thing
underneath it.
"Spike, how do we get rid of it?"
"What do I look like, Frank? The bloody demon doctor?"
I lobbed over my thermos at him. "AB
negative, with just a hint of
brandy." Spike's eyebrows went
up. "However, if you don't give me a
straight answer about
this, you won't get to enjoy it. On account of
the fact that I
will beat you to death with the thermos."
"It's a
minor possession." Spike said with a theatrical
sigh.
"Dzhaybee don't have reproductive organs. They carry
their
genetic material in their teeth. When they bite you, they
transfer it
over, and the possession spreads out, like a disease.
Two, three days
tops, and you're a brand new baby
Dzhaybee."
"Fuck."
"That makes more sense to me too. But you never can tell with demons."
"How
do we get rid of it? Our insurance doesn't cover possession."
Despite
a strike threat, the bastards still won't increase our
coverage to
add demonic elements.
"Exorcism, I guess. Not really my thing."
"This is ridiculous. Frank, get him to your
truck. I'll call Mister
Giles to handle it." Joyce said, in a
no nonsense tone. "We can wait
for him at my house."
"Joyce, you know that's not safe." Spike said.
"I am not
going to sit here and let this young man change into some…
thing.
Malik, can you call the Magic Box for me?"
"Of
course." He shifted a bit. "Are you sure you don't want me
to
come along?"
"I'm sure Frank can handle it.
But thanks." She smiled, and I think
the man actually blushed
a bit. Joyce was one of the classic ladies;
made everyone feel
good about themselves. Maybe being the Slayer's
mother came with
powers of its own. "Now, let's get him out of here."
"Sure."
Alec trashed weakly, half in a faint from the shock. I hauled
him
up over my shoulder. Joyce walked beside, carrying our lunchboxes
as
I dragged him out of the cemetery and tossed him in the back of
the
truck. Hell, the pile of express mail was as soft as a
featherbed
back there.
"Frank?"
"Yeah, Joyce?" I gunned the motor, and pulled out on to the street.
"Have you ever wondered why just when you can't
imagine anything
could get any stranger in this town, it always
does?"
"Our own damn fault for living here."
"I
chose Sunnydale after the divorce because it seemed so quiet."
She
smiled ruefully. "Wholesome, compared to LA."
"After
my divorce, I chose it because I didn't believe anything could
be
worse than my marriage."
"Really?"
"Yeah.
I'm still right too." She laughed as we pulled up to her
house.
We talked a few times about her ex at the gallery. After the
first
explosion, FedEx refused to do any more deliveries there.
Wimps.
So, we'd get to talking between shipments. A lady that made me
wish
I was ten years younger most of the time.
"You're horrible, Frank."
"Goes with the job. I'll get the kid."
"Sure. Just put him on the couch." She
went on ahead to open the
door, while I grabbed Sleeping Beauty
out of the back. The eyebrow
was making a solid attempt to chew
its way through the cork, and I
didn't have much faith in it
lasting long. Hopefully that Giles got
himself over here quickly.
There was a kid in that house who didn't
need a sudden and intense
tutorial in Dzhaybee curses.
Joyce walked over to the couch
while the kid lay there. She touched
the bandage and jerked away
as it moved under her touch.
"This town. Who knew?"
"I know the feeling. Giles on his way?"
"I assume so. He's got to come from the Magic Box."
"He's the one that bought it? Is he insane?"
"I don't think so."
Joyce grinned. "He was the librarian at the high
school
before that."
"Yeah, I remember. I just didn't make
the connection when I heard
someone was crazed enough to buy that
deathtrap again." Some people
had the mindfuck to volunteer
for all of the shit duties.
"Shush." Joyce
admonished, moving back to the kitchen to make tea.
After what
seemed like an eternity, she reappeared with a tray of
teacups.
"Tea alright?"
"Sure." I would have killed
for a coffee at this point, but it was
pointless to argue.
Considering how late we were running at this
point, Mildred was
going to have my head for dinner.
It's funny what things
trigger your average epiphany. Mildred with a
fireaxe did it for
me and I froze with a teacup half-way to my lips
as the pieces of
what had been nagging at me for the last couple of
hours suddenly
clicked together into a very obvious and extremely
ugly
conclusion.
"Joyce..."
She just smiled and
took my cup away from me. "You apologize but you
urgently
need to step out and yes, Frank, it's perfectly all right
for Alec
to stay here until you'll come back from your study session
with
Willow."
I blinked.
She grinned, suddenly looking
much too young to have two kids. "You
had the same look my
darling eldest used to get just before she'd
feed me some
cockamamie story and dash out only to come back with
suspicious
stains on her sweater."
"Uhh…"
"Just be careful." She waved me off. "Go."
I went.
The drive was spent mostly by thinking of the ways I was
going to
kill Sam. The list was long, and refining and adding to
it filled
with deep, dark satisfaction I hadn't known since I
slugged my wife's
divorce lawyer.
It took a while to find
them. Longer than I thought it would. Longer
than I hoped.
In the end all I had to do was follow the sirens.
By the time I
got there things already got to that stage just past
fucked up and
well into the screaming and bleeding part.
Reminded me of Thanksgivings at my in-laws.
First thing I saw was Eli, his
left arm bent at an unnatural angle,
blasting away from behind his
car. The poor Toyota was looking like
it just had a minor
disagreement with Godzilla. Now a lot of
Sunnydale's finest still
run around with 38's. Mostly the fat and
dumb brigade that make
sure to answer any distress call with
deliberate speed that will
bring them there long after the sunrise
appears and the perps make
like a tree.
Like most of the brighter ones Eli carried a
modified M1911 pistol
and I happened to know that in the back of
his car there's a highly
illegal H&K G36c Compact Carbine. A
fine piece of Kraut engineering
and as accessible at the moment as
your average nuke silo. Sam was
crouching next to the kid and
doing what she did best with the gun
that gave her the
nickname.
Neither of them was doing any noticeable damage to
what looked like a
fairly pissed off Suvolte.
Mike, his
faithful shotgun bent into a pretzel and abandoned on a
sidewalk,
was screaming something in bad Gaelic and going toe to toe
with
what looked like a mutated gorilla and unless I was very
much
mistaken was a Nheoot. Mike was coming up second best but
didn't look
like he was quitting.
Malik was looking to be
on the verge of breaking his non-violence
vow. Standing as he was
between a terrified huddle of kids and an
ugly-ass snake the size
of a small bulldozer I saw few options.
We were all way too
fucking late, I thought absently as I drove my
beautiful truck
straight into the beastie, right past Spike, who was
rather
phlegmatically observing the chaos, from a safe vantage point
behind
a burning Volvo.
The snake crunched and screamed in a woman's
voice and then things
got a little hazy for a while.
I
vaguely remember a moment of clear lucidity as I smashed the
remnants
of my empty shotgun over the head of the goddamn snake that
just
wouldn't die.
The fire was glinting metallically off the
disheveled brown hair of a
coltish girl who reminded me of
someone… and then Spike was cursing
quietly and bitterly with an
almost savagely self-mocking air in his
voice, his eyes glinting
with something strange and wild – and then
he leapt and threw
the girl aside, as he went for Nheoot's throat,
above Malik's
crumpled form.
Which would amount to exactly shit, I knew.
Because we were all too
fucking late.
Suvolte toppled over
suddenly, ridden with bullets and Sam's knife
sticking out of his
eye and the real low part of my day stepped out
into the
light.
All those kids. We all should have seen it sooner.
But we didn't and they raised him.
St. Vigeous.
The Vampire Saint.
I gave the snake bitch one last kick and scrambled
under the truck,
fervently hoping that Sam knew what she was doing
as she reached for
our ace in the hole.
The mummy hand worked like a charm.
Escobeda was late but he arrived in style.
The main street was going to need serious remodeling.
The tall, hook-nosed warlock stepped carefully
over the various
twitching body parts and gave us all a long,
slightly disgusted look,
ignoring Vigeous with the indifference of
someone either insanely
powerful or just insane. I wasn't taking
bets.
The vamp was just standing there and smiling. Didn't
even turn to at
look how his Nheoot was doing, the creepy fuck.
And then suddenly he
was moving and holy fuck did he move. Spike
went flying like he was a
paper-mache doll, smacking into the wall
with an unpleasantly wet
sound.
He growled something and
was back on his feet in less than a second,
shaky and sans duster,
bleeding like a stuck pig.
Vigeous just smiled tiredly and put
a little more strength into his
next punch.
But that slowed
him just enough for Escobeda's beady eyes to finally
settle on Sam
and he squinted at her, extending his right arm. The
one that
ended in a stump.
She just stared at him, eyes wide, mouth open in a shocked o.'
"Sam," I screamed from under
the truck, uneasily aware of the faint
edge of hysteria entering
my voice as Spike dented the
stonework. "Give the nice
warlock his fucking mummy hand!"
She did.
We
didn't stay for the rest of the dance. Call me a spoilsport but
I
collected conscious and unconscious bodies and lit the fuck out
of
there.
It was going to be a stone cold bitch explaining
to Mildred about the
blood on the mail and the broken
headlight.
"So."
"Look, Frank--"
"You got the mummy hand because police
regulations in Sunnydale
strictly prohibit the use of any magical
means in law enforcement and
Eli couldn't get it delivered to the
station. Then you and he head on
down to Main Street because a
dozen grade nine students who have read
way too much White Wolf
books with a hard on decide to raise the
fucking Saint of Vampires
back into the world, and you figure that as
long as you bring in a
thousand year old Aztec warlock, he'll act as
the equalizer."
Yeah, I was being an asshole, but I was pissed.
"Something like that."
"But the part I'm having trouble with is
that, other than the utterly
retarded plan, was that both of you
lied to me about it."
It was late, I was tired, and felt
at least ten years older. After a
few years in this town, you've
gone through enough to make you a
believer or a madman. Less than
an hour ago, I was beating a snake-
woman-demon to death with the
butt of my shotgun and it was part of
my normal job
description.
I'd also seen Sunnydale General more times than I
ever wanted to. Eli
had gone into surgery about twenty minutes
ago. Mike was standing in
the corner, messily making his way
through an O'Henry and sweeping
aside the occasional intern that
assumed a face like a giant bruise
meant you needed medical
attention.
"We weren't sure. Eli's readings figured that
he and Mike could stop
it. The hand was strictly backup." Sam
said, and abruptly burst into
tears. I've watched that woman shrug
off three broken fingers with a
shrug, but here she was crying.
I hate being old.
"I'm sorry, kid." I muttered,
stupidly. Sam sniffed, rubbed her face
angrily.
"It's
just frustrating, Frank. We didn't tell you because, hell, Eli
knew
you'd come barreling in. This town, the cops are useless,
protecting
people involves severed hands, and the best hope is a
twenty year
old in bitch heels and a thing for the Gap." Sam sat
down
miserably, and goddamn, I didn't have anything to say. She
was right.
"Miss Barrett?" A young intern turned up, brown haired and earnest.
"How's Eli?"
"He'll
be fine. The broken ribs caused some internal bleeding, but we
got
it under control pretty quickly. He's got enough pins in his arm
to
set off LAX's metal detector from here, but he'll be fine in a
few
months." He smiled gently, and it turned into horror as
he was
engulfed into a massive hug from Mike.
"That's
good… good." Sam said, and shit, I knew where this was
going.
At least I could be nice and save the kid from Mike's Luca
Brasi
style embrace.
"Hey doc."
"Ben."
He tugged an arm free to offer his hand and tried to
extradite
himself.
"Appreciate it. Look, don't let Sam
spend the next week sleeping
here, alright?"
"Sure. Um, could you…?"
"Mike, down. Let the man
breathe." Kelly finally let go, tears in the
big oaf's eyes.
I was almost ready to get all sentimental. So I cut
that off at
the knees and made for the door.
"Yo, Frank." The
nurse at the reception desk waved at me behind a
small pile of
paperwork.
"Hey, Erin."
"Haven't see you around in a bit."
"Yeah, it's been a good couple of
months." I squinted, pained. "Er.
No offence."
She
grinned. "I gotcha. It's cool. All you brave macho men get
this
same panicky look at your eyes when you get a whiff of the
Hospital
food. Pussies."
I grunted noncommittally. I
hate hospitals and I was too fucking
exhausted to argue the
principle of the thing.
She grinned again, flipped her braid
over her shoulder and after a
minute's frown plucked a post-it
from somewhere and waved it at me
with a triumphant air about her.
"Aha!"
Erin squinted at the slip of paper, having
apparently yet again
forgotten her glasses at home. One of these
days the cops were going
to unwrap her pickup from a tree, I swear
to God.
"Alec. Alec Whitaker." She finally
pronounced. "That name mean
anything to you?"
"Yeah." I pinched the bridge of my nose. "Early retirement."
"He's
Frank's new protégé." Williams winked at me, as he pushed by
me
to the coffee machine.
"Don't use them big words,
doctor. You know I get confused." I turned
back to Erin.
"Where is he?"
"1242." She looked torn for
a second, medical ethic warring with
medical salary.
"Could I get in on Monday?" She finally asked hesitantly.
I looked at her for a long moment and then shrugged. What the hell.
"Hey, Frank."
Speak of the devil, I thought and turned to take in the damage.
Well, he seemed to be all right. Looked like shit.
"You look like shit, boy."
"Yeah, well…" He shrugged and pulled on
a tweed jacket that's seen
better decades. "Genetics are a
bitch and they don't do plastic
surgery here."
Erin giggled behind me.
Williams patted me on the shoulder
consolingly as he moved past,
stopping before Alec and giving him
an appraising look. "Thinks he
has a sense of humor,
huh?"
"He tries." I admitted. "Can I take
his butt out of here or is he
going to pass out like a little girl
on me again?"
"Hey!" Alec protested. I ignored him.
Things were settling into a nice routine between us.
Williams scratched the two-day stubble. "Well, he's
got six stitches
in his eyebrow."
"Great," I muttered. "Gonna have to ride around with a Spike wannabe."
"What was that?"
"Nothing."
Williams
shrugged. "If you can try and get him not to tear the thing
open
any more than necessary, I'd be extremely grateful. But no, I
don't
see any urgent reason to prolong our relationship, as
scintillating
a conversationalist Mr. Whitaker is. Apart from Erin's
severe need
for a romantic life."
"Hey!" Erin protested, blushing.
Williams ignored her.
Something about the way
the man ran his hospital appealed to me. I
couldn't quite put my
finger on it.
"Thanks, Doc. Hope I won't see you soon."
"Same, Frank." He gave me a mock salute,
and pulling the glasses off
the red-rimmed eyes, disappeared into
the bowels of the Hospital.
I nodded to Erin and made for the exit, the kid in tow.
"Where did you get that ugly piece of sartorial abortion?"
I know a couple of big words. Had
word-a-day Playboy calendar once.
Pamela Anderson was
sartorial.
"What, the jacket?" He preened, buckling
the belt. An impressive feat
in and of itself. "I think it
looks kinda good, actually. Mr. Giles
let me keep it. Oh!"
Alec slapped himself on the forehead and
immediately yowled like a
castrated cat. "Ow! Fucking hell. Shit! Ow!"
I suddenly felt very tired.
"Let me see."
"Fuck. Ow!"
"Get your hands away, you idiot."
I thumbed the ceiling-light on and grabbed his head to steady it.
"OW!"
"You said that already."
I
squinted. Didn't see any blood. "Looks ok. Doesn't seem like
you
pulled any stitches loose."
"It hurts like a son of a bitch, Frank!"
"No shit, Sherlock."
He batted my hands away angrily.
There was suddenly a tense air
in the car. He was staring at me and
breathing heavily.
Well, fuck. Took him long enough.
"Clowns, huh, Frank?" He asked heavily.
I shrugged and turned on the engine, flicking
the lamp off. Hell if I
was going to let him turn this in some
manly staring match.
"You're either ready for the truth, Alec or you aren't."
"And I wasn't, is that it?"
"No." I said and pulled out of the parking lot. "You weren't."
"And now?' His voice was strange.
"The jury's still out." I told him.
He fell silent, the shadows making his face looking gaunt and tired.
Hell.
I'm getting old.
After a second I added. "But the signs are hopeful."
His smile was brilliant in the darkness of the car.
"Giles said to tell
you he was sorry he couldn't stick around, by
the way." He
added, still grinning.
Made him look like a complete idiot.
I told him as much.
He didn't argue so we rode in blissful silence for a while.
"So." He said after a short
pause. "What are the rules on newbies
getting in on their own
pot?"
His decision not to comment on the sudden swerve of
the car made me
think highly of his instinct of
self-preservation.
"Well." He asked instead. "Where to next?"
"I fucking knew this was going
to happen one day." Frank muttered and
flicked his cigarette
into the abyss.
Mildred shrugged. "Yeah."
The
crater that used to be the town of Sunnydale stretched for
miles.
Somewhere at the bottom was the depot, Frank's house, and
most
importantly, his beautiful truck.
Insurance had better cover this.
"So." Alec asked. "What now?"
Frank glanced at him and then realized that Mildred
too seemed to
expect him to make the decision.
Visibly
swallowing a cutting remark, or perhaps his perennial promise
to
retire, he rubbed his forehead again and spat, tugging the
brown
shorts upwards.
"I hear there are openings in Cleveland."
Jacob stared down into the depth
of the crater, his grey stormy eyes
unreadable, the gnarled hands
still at his sides.
"Fuck if I am cleaning this up."
