Gabriel's Sacrifice (The Scrapman Trilogy Book 2) (17 page)

BOOK: Gabriel's Sacrifice (The Scrapman Trilogy Book 2)
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Must be the hammer, come to make a chisel out of me.

Again he heard it rustle through the darkness, and again it eluded his advances.

“Come and get me, Hammer,” he beckoned. “I haven’t got all night!”

The rustling ceased in that instant, the thing falling deathly silent. Mohammad spun in the stillness, expecting it to spring on him; but it didn’t come as he’d requested.

It waited, patient.

Something pumped through him like battery acid, his flesh growing hot.

A scratching emitted from behind as he turned to find himself beneath the thing’s scrutiny.

It stood a generous distance away, observing Mohammad intently–a dark creature, skin like stretched rubber, offering a view of the anatomy within. It was a being made entirely of whatever brought Gabriel’s bottom half to life, a being seemingly composed of both mechanical and organic matter. The thing continued to look on Mohammad with deeply hollow, fabricated eyes, a row of upper teeth visible through its transparent cheeks.

It was a thing of nightmares.

Mohammad curled his gloved fingers and attempted to dismantle it with a volley of plasma, but the glove did not respond. He pressed the device, opting for invisibility, still it neglected to aid him.

The thing shook its head slowly.

It seemed Mohammad would not have the luxury of the glove while fighting the hammer. This would have to be done the old fashioned way.

“Fine,” Mohammad muttered. “I prefer a straight fight, anyway.”

The thing uncurled its fingers, each sloping to a sharpened tip.

Hammer’s got claws.

It disappeared again into the rolls of paper as Mohammad attempted to tail it. But the place was a maze, every turn offering a number of routes the thing might have taken, so the hammer lost him in a matter of seconds. Frustrated, Mohammad slammed his fist hard into the roll beside him, his knuckles leaving their perfect row of dents. Anger would not help him, still he could not fight it; and it only engulfed him further when the hammer came to slice him along his spine. Mohammad shrieked; but the thing was already gone.

Blood soaked his clothes before the symbiote had time to mend him completely, still his flesh only remained unmarred for a short while. Blood filled his mouth as the hammer carved open a portion of his neck on its second pass, Mohammad swinging at nothing but air and shadows. The thing was impossibly fast. He would die if he stayed. The hammer would spill him out, little by little, until there was nothing left to mend. The rollroom was a death trap; but the converting area was more open.

Another strike, this time along his calf. Mohammad collapsed upon the severing of a tendon. Amused, the thing chuckled as it slipped again out of sight.

This was sport, after all. Even Gabriel must have been admiring the show, his thin lips curling into a grin.

Mohammad squeezed himself between two rows of paper, dragging his leg behind him. The hammer reached in after, shredding the rolls as it pulled its torso closer. It shrieked as Mohammad kicked it hard in the face. He kicked it again and it slipped out.

When it stood before him at first, the thing appeared almost human in stature; but now Mohammad considered it more of a giant insect or arachnid in its method of attack. No longer finding the need for stealth, the sound of it was obvious as it clawed about his enclosure.

It felt as though serpents were slipping around within his skin–the odd sensation of the symbiote hard at work. When his leg healed he’d bring the thing out in the open. Mohammad wasn’t sure what he would do once he got there; but it would have to be a better set of circumstances than his present situation offered.

The hammer’s clatter grew faint as it increased the distance between them.

Where are you going?

It was no longer on ground level. The thing was climbing.

Oh shit.

It appeared again above him, clamoring down head first as it planted its talons into the paper. With jaw opened wide, its top row of teeth still looked human, but its bottom unfolded into a pair of lengthy mandibles

Healed or not, Mohammad yanked himself out as it descended. Trying his luck at running, he collided with a roll and skidded off toward the corrugator. Mohammad got to his feet again as the hammer launched after him. It crawled first on all fours, but reaching the clearing, its body twisted, joints shifted, and came to stand in its human form beneath the arching fire-door. The two of them paused there for a brief moment–the hammer seeming to size up its pray, Mohammad just grateful to be receiving the recess.

I don’t wanna be the godamned chisel.

He held out his hand nonetheless, beckoning the thing forward. “C’mon then, Hammer.”

It stepped out.

“Come teach me a lesson.”

The thing reversed its hind joints and buckled over, falling into something reminiscent of a panther.

Mohammad left in a sprint, carving the factory with the shape-shifter on his heels; and coming to the infeed line of the first converting machine, he yanked a roller free of the conveyor and swung it around.

But the hammer was not there to receive it.

The roller’s bearings swayed violently at its center, resonating through his fingertips as Mohammad twisted his head in all directions. The thing could be circling him, like some kind of mutant jungle cat. With an unusable alien weapon on his wrist, and nothing more than a six-foot metallic stick to defend himself, Mohammad was being hunted.

He’d read Burroughs religiously as a child; the knots presently in his stomach were similar to those he’d find as a boy, turning those classic pages of Tarzan–anxious to see the protagonist to victory, to see the mighty feline slain at long last. The thing was surely closing in, slinking its way through piles of corrugated stock, preparing to spill his blood upon the concrete floor yet again.

But this was a test, a conditioning process to teach him he was no longer human. He was something greater. This thing could indeed be beaten, only because he was anything
but
human.

“You are already dead, Mohammad.”

He found Gabriel standing a fair distance behind him, while the hammer, coming out of hiding, articulated itself upright as it went to stand beside the craftsman.

“I was just getting warmed up,” he insisted.

“This drone would have killed you, had I not intervened.”

“You don’t know that.”

Gabriel’s features grew stern. “I am hardly impressed with arrogance, Mohammad. The next time you meet the drone, I expect to see the effort and energy I put into you, not the slaughter I witnessed tonight.”

Both humbled and agitated by the Traveler’s words, Mohammad clenched his jaw and nodded in understanding. Gabriel fixed him in glossy, black eyes for several seconds before leaving with the hammer in stride.

“Next time, Gabriel,” Mohammad whispered, “I’m gonna tear that thing apart.”

24
Back-Stabbing Constituents

L
ater that morning Mohammad peeled off his blood-soaked clothing, and with sponge and bucket, scrubbed his skin clean beneath. Again, no lacerations, not so much as a scratch. The symbiote had Mohammad fully healed in no time, whatever blood he’d lost during the battle already replenished. No human would have survived that altercation, while Gabriel concluded Mohammad, himself, would have lost his life if the fight were allowed to continue.

Mohammad still doubted that assessment, however, as he played the fight over and over in his head, looking for weaknesses he could exploit the next time the hammer came to slice him open. It was an ominous thought; but Mohammad didn’t register pain like he used to, his threshold drastically magnified. He could surely take a beating, and as long as the symbiote could keep up, he was practically invincible. The trick was to keep moving.

If I’m confined, I die.

And without the glove, he’d have to find a more primitive form of defense. He needed a new hunting knife; and Mohammad was fairly certain of exactly where he could find one.

Requesting the emerald city, he enlarged the hunter’s store; and from it, chose the most prized door of any he’d constructed. All the violet people were gathered outside. It looked like Mohammad would be having the place all to himself. Already invisible, he penetrated it first with only his head, surveying the other side.

The hunter’s room, vacant and quiet.

Mohammad pulled the rest of his body through, allowing the hyper-wall to solidify behind him. The sheets on the bed to his right were quite unkempt, the comforter pulled almost all the way to the floor. It looked as though someone had removed themselves from it in a hurry. And on the wall beside it, the mark he’d left behind had been hastily erased, the remnants of it tinting that area the lightest shade of pink.

The hunter probably didn’t want news of the bogeyman’s infiltration to get out. That could certainly be damning from a leader’s perspective.

Scattered about the room, glossy in their gunmetal, from a multitude of knives to semi-automatics, plenty of weapons were available for his choosing. He didn’t have to look beyond this loft office, there was more than he knew what to do with. He played with the notion of taking everything, just throwing them all through the hyper-wall, into a heap of artillery on the factory floor. But it was in Mohammad’s best interest for the hunter to start feeling secure again, comfortable in his position of power. So instead he withdrew a single hunting knife from its sheath, admiring its serrated edges just before the blade met the hilt.

This will do nicely
.

He turned to leave when he heard voices outside. Looking through the window, Mohammad found many of them staring back. He almost retreated from sight before remembering the special liquid that currently encased his body.

What are they looking at?

Curiosity was already getting the better of him. Adding the knife to his belt, the liquid accepted it graciously, hiding the stolen weapon from view as well. He unlocked the door, allowing the glove to lock it again behind him, before venturing down the steps and out into the sunlight. He came to stand alongside the group as they talked amongst themselves; and what he saw on the wall, addressed to the bogeyman, had an instant effect on him:

All complete with his very official black handprint.

That final female tally was Radia, the final human Mohammad. And there had been five others, just like him, who’d also been condemned to the same fate as well. This was meant to taunt him, to anger him. It seemed the hunter had distinguished the source of Mohammad’s distain, adding a bit of insult to injury, a little salt to his wound.

But for what purpose?

The hunter was clearly methodical in mind, surely not prone to spontaneous fits of threatening graffiti.

This is a trap–has to be
.

Except the hunter had made a terrible error in planning. Not only didn’t he understand his adversary, but Mohammad was a being he could hardly even comprehend. Until becoming the final nail he’d be planting into the man’s coffin, the hunter’s ignorance would remain Mohammad’s most prized asset. But it was inevitable.

And if the hunter was truly at the top of his game, if he was truly at the level he believed himself to be, the only conclusion he could possibly come to, the only rationality there was to find was that he was already dead.

And there, bouncing briefly off the death-wall, a burst of Mohammad’s laughter caused those around him to spin in dumbfounded circles.

He approached it, running his fingers along the marks, inspecting the truth of the hunter’s claims. It did seem to be a ranking, a competition, a scoreboard of legitimate sport. Surely it was true, the numbers accurate in their data. They’d kept track, possibly placing bets upon that very wall, those with the highest numbers becoming superstars of this unfortunate era–fitting then, to turn it into a gateway, to redeem the stone beneath.

With the group at his back, Mohammad constructed a new door there, through which he returned to the factory. His eyes adjusted again to the darkness as he found the immensity of Gabriel awaiting him. And for the first time, Mohammad didn’t nearly jump out of his skin at the unexpected sight of the Traveler. Instead he relinquished his invisibility, and greeted him with a kind smile.

“Good morning, Gabriel,” he said. “I do hope it’s not misfortune that brings you.”

“Misfortune?” he asked. “I suppose that all depends on you, Mohammad.”

The Fijian’s eyes narrowed.

“I trust you have the hunter situation well under control.”

“Yes.” Mohammad nodded. He’d walked amongst them as they slept, slipped past armed guards who hadn’t the slightest notion of his presence. How could Gabriel have any doubt? “I can’t get any closer than I am.”

Gabriel raised the portion of pale flesh above his glossy, black eyes. “Is that so?”

“Yes.” Mohammad was beyond confident.

“Then you must be aware of the plot to assassinate him,” the Traveler stated, crossing his large arms.

Mohammad felt the slack in his face as it fell, the vacant expression he instantly donned. “The what?”

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