The Bridge Chronicles Trilogy (44 page)

Read The Bridge Chronicles Trilogy Online

Authors: Gary Ballard

Tags: #noir, #speculative fiction, #hard boiled, #science fiction, #cybernetics, #scifi, #cyberpunk, #near future, #urban fantasy

BOOK: The Bridge Chronicles Trilogy
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“Yes,” Seyd-Il replied, but a little too quickly and without conviction.

“And then there’s me.” A look of angry fear spread across the entire Council. “You know me, you know I’m crazy as fuck. You also know I’m a survivor and if I think I’m threatened, well, who knows what I’ll say or who I’ll say it to.”

“Are you threatening us?”

Bridge raised his hands in front of his chest. “Whoa, whoa, perish the thought. All I’m saying is I have an offer for you that I think will help us all out. And if you aren’t interested in hearing it, well…”

His last trump card came into play. A screeching, shrieking wail broke out in the chamber. The red sun above Bridge’s head suddenly grew hotter, brighter then expanded, pillars of fire shooting out from its center to engulf the surrounding rings. One pillar fell to the floor by Bridge’s side, forming from the ground up into the burning figure of Mu. His appearance matched his physical appearance, even down to the clothing. The technomancer stood in the world completely unfettered by its rules. Raising his arms at his side, Mu’s feet left the floor and he levitated above the chamber, a flaming god.

“This is my friend Mu. He’s a technomancer. And yes, he’s not an illusion; he’s actually here in this hidden little virtual world. He’s not plugged into any crèche. He’s completely untraceable, a GlobalNet ghost that you cannot defend against. He can move data around without the slightest trail.”

“And he can show you how to do it… well, some of it. The hidden part anyway. You’ll still have to crèche up. But you can take this city off the grid completely. Now, are we done with the foreplay?”

Far-el leaned back in his chair, looking to each of his companions for guidance. All nodded in turn with slow reluctance. “Let’s talk alone in my chambers.”

 

 

 

Far-el sighed heavily and sagged into a chair, taking off his headband and placing it on the table in front of him. He indicated a chair but Bridge ignored it, preferring to stand by the window overlooking the city. “What’s with the headbands?” Bridge asked casually.

“What do you mean?”

“Everybody around here has one. It’s like half the choices you get in the avatar creator. Who has the headband fetish?”

“Don’t ask me, ask Curt Swan.”

“Who’s Curt Swan?”

Far-el sighed and rubbed his eyes, then ran his hands quickly through his hair. Despite the realistic appearance of everything, it still felt somewhat out of place in this antiseptic world. “Never mind. What are you doing here, Bridge?”

“I’m here to make you an offer.”

“You want us to help out
Los Magos
. You want us to get involved.”

“Not just
Magos
. I want you to help all the Families. We both know how this is going to end. CLED is all up in their shit right now, and I have the mayor’s personal assurance that they will keep at it until there’s nothing left. They’ve already succeeded in driving you guys underground. The body count is piling up. This may have started as beef between
Magos
and
Diablos
, but it’s escalated. This ain’t about turf, this is about Chronosoft putting its boot down on the independent operators.”

“Wait, go back. What was that about the mayor?”

“We talked. I had a hand in his election. Long story, and trust me, you don’t want to know about it. But he all but admitted that he’s pushing CLED into hammering the Families down like a rusty nail. They make him look bad. They make the LGL look bad. It’s not just taking back the subway, it’s splitting them up and destroying them in detail. He wants to dismantle them, buy up all the land and redevelop it into the new, shiny Chronosoft-approved Los Angeles.”

“A land deal?”

“Not ultimately, but he’s opportunistic enough to exploit the company to make a buck. Chronosoft wants a lower crime rate. Taking out the gangs accomplishes that. All those evictions that brought the Citizen Brigades to live with the Families opens up land for purchase. That land gets bulldozed and turned into expensive developments for corporate drones. Five years from now, LA looks like a totally different city.”

“So what do you care? It’s not like you’re the paragon of virtue. What’s in it for the Amoral Bridge?”

Bridge dismissed the nickname with a wave of his hand. “I didn’t make that name up.”

“But you sure lived up to it.”

“It’s served me well. But can’t nobody be totally amoral. Everybody’s got their limits.”

“And this reaches your limits w amoral. Ehy? You’re not a member of the Families and you made it quite clear you didn’t care about us in that meeting. And don’t go bringing up Stonewall either, because you pretty much sold him out then too.”

“Maybe I don’t want my city to turn into happy fun land.”

“Uh uh, not buying that either. You and I both know the tighter wound those people get, the more they seek you out for the kind of things they aren’t supposed to want.” Far-el fixed him with a brutal stare. “This is about Angela isn’t it?”

Bridge quickly averted his eyes from Far-el’s hard gaze, looked at Mu then away again as well. Even here, he could feel the tears welling up behind his eyes, but he fought them off. “They fucked with me. I might have deserved it, maybe I even ought to have expected it, but she shouldn’t have had to. She shouldn’t have been involved. They made it personal.”

“Revenge, then?”

Bridge shrugged. “A re-balancing.”

Far-el turned his attention to Mu. “You technomancers, you can help us hide the Bottle City?”

Mu hesitated, his eyes asking Bridge for permission. “We could hide an elephant in a closet. I’ll have to check with the Council, of course.”

“We’ll check with them,” Bridge added.

“Provided they approve the exchange, I’d say within two weeks you’ll be completely invisible.”

“And what do you get out of the deal?” Far-el inquired.

Mu frowned at Bridge. “Yes, Bridge, what DO we get out of it?”

“You let me handle that,” Bridge replied. It didn’t seem to placate the wizard, but he remained silent.

Far-el let the tension between bodyguard and client pass without comment. “What do you want then?”

Bridge perked up. “What, no need to hold some Council meeting to decide? You can make that decision by yourself?”

Far-el sighed again, a heavy weight seeming to drag his shoulders to the floor. “The Council will back me. They generally don’t care about making decisions, so long as they get to know about them before everybody else. That way they can blame me if it blows up in our faces. You know we even tried direct representation one time. Every decision got put to an instant vote, a little voting window popped up on everyone’s interface with a concise summary of the choices. You could have voted without even lifting a finger. You know what kind of turnout we got? 40%. Which means despite every bit of inconvenience being removed from the process, 6 out of 10 of every one of these lazy bastards didn’t give a damn one way or the other what we did, so long as the City was still there.an m0" width

“Yeah, breaking news. Humans still lazy cocksuckers.”

Far-el chuckled. “So what do you want the City to do for you in exchange for this magical invisibility cloak?”

“Four things, actually.”

“You’re pressing it.”

“I do that. Four things.” He indicated the number with his fingers. “First off, I need an excavator, sharpish.”

“An excavator? Can’t you just hire one?”

Excavators were a specialized form of legalized hacker, part detective, part undertaker. In the world of always on GlobalNet connections, with every financial, personal and business transaction being done through some form of GlobalNet connection, a body accumulated a ton of data, all of which was hidden behind extremely secure GlobalNet ID’s tied to each individual. Once that individual passed on, all that information would be inaccessible if arrangements had not been made beforehand. To retrieve all that information, the survivors hired excavators to hack the deceased’s ID. A hacker like Angela, however, would have used a myriad of illegal backup ID’s unconnected to her real ID to avoid detection by GlobalNet authorities.

“You know how good Angela was, how many ID’s she probably had. I need a team of excavators who weren’t hired by her crazy ass mother or the cops. And I need it within the next 18 hours.”

That brought a heavy sigh. “That’ll be tight, but we’ve got a team.”

“I knew you would. Second, I need a hiding space, somewhere I can chill out and think some shit over, someplace I can process all the shit the excavators will be bringing me. A clean room. Doesn’t have to be Kandor-themed, just somewhere I can float.”

“That’s easy.”

“Third, I need you personally to talk to the other leaders of the Families. Not Stonewall, he’s already onboard. But I need you to get the rest of them to meet again, including Nacho. I need everybody at this address, tomorrow night. They can bring three reps besides the leadership, but they need to all be there. Especially Nacho.”

“That’s a mighty big ask. None of them want to stick their necks out.”

“Make them. Send Johnny out if you have to.”

“No way. I’m not about to put him in harm’s way.”

“Does he know?” Far-el snapped a confused look at Bridge, then understanding set in. “Does he know you aren’t a man in the flesh?”

Far-el tried in vain to wave it away. “ a He does. It hasn’t helped our ‘relationship’ any. He wants me to get a surgery, as if I ever walk around in the flesh anymore. And don’t even get him started on THAT particular choice.”

“Yeah, well everybody knows you two are an item. Ain’t many secrets like that among the families.”

“That’s why I got him off the streets, so nobody could use him to get to me.”

“And that’s why he’s the perfect guy to send to
El Diablos
. It’ll go a long way towards convincing them you’re serious about this meet. You tell them he’s bringing details on
Los Magos
surrendering. They’ll come for that.”

“Is it true? Of course it isn’t true, Stonewall got that name for a reason. What about the others? How am I supposed to get them to come?”

“You tell them about the fourth thing.”

“That fourth thing better be pretty good. They aren’t inclined to listen to anyone.”

“It is. That fourth thing? You’re going to need most of the City on this one. I got us a backdoor into the LGL Admin, and I need the Bottle City to use that backdoor for something.”

Far-el sat forward quickly. “How did you get us in there? And why?”

Bridge grinned. Far-el’s expression grew grimmer as Bridge explained what he needed. By the time Bridge had finished, the leader of the Bottle City was scowling.

“You are one crazy son of a bitch.”

“That I am. Do we have a deal?”

Far-el nodded.

 

 

 

Chapter 13

March 11, 2029

Time Unknown

 

Bridge floated in formless ether, completely unconcerned that his surroundings were nonexistent. He had asked Far-el for a clean room to stew in, then promptly removed every bit of decoration. Floating textureless, a vaguely-humanoid shaped blob of mercury shifted its shape with every stray thought passing through his mind. Dark cloudy space with the occasional twinkling star of data wrapped him in a blanket of shadow.

His body floated in the human soup, a dall sensory stimulation cut off by the crèche in Freeman’s apartment. But his mind needed that sensory deprivation as well, so he locked himself in the GlobalNet equivalent of a sensory deprivation tank. He needed to think. Bridge always said he didn’t do guilt, but he really meant that he ignored any guilt he might feel for as long as he could. The guilt bank had reached overflowing.

Too many things to be guilty about. Though he hadn’t promised he would rescue Aristotle’s grandmother from the dome in Boulder, he had certainly implied that his trip to the dome had something to do with the elderly woman. But he hadn’t gone there for Lalasa Freeman, he’d gone because the technomancers had forced him, had assaulted him psychically through his interface jack. He couldn’t have done anything to help Lalasa Freeman, but telling himself that over and over for the last five months hadn’t reduced the guilt one iota. In fact, all 30,000 of the deaths that had resulted from the technomancers ill-conceived experiment in Boulder weren’t his responsibility, yet he felt responsible all the same. Balfour and the rest of the wizards couldn’t really even be sure the people were dead, but Bridge knew his help had ensured the scientists turned wizards avoided the repercussions of their actions.

And then there was the escape from Boulder, the mad parade of remote-controlled cars that transformed into robotic golems and smashed through a cordon of National Guard and Legios Ranger checkpoints. That idea had been Bridge’s, and it had resulted in deaths: five soldiers and seven Rangers according to the news feeds. Carl’s dragon illusion had killed at least two other soldiers by blowing up a tank. But one death in particular affected Bridge. He had been driving when their convoy had broken through the last checkpoint, and in doing so, he had run over a soldier fleeing from one of the robots. Bridge had tried to avoid the soldier, but the sickening crunch of metal on bone had been unmistakable. Bridge had locked eyes with the dying soldier, had watched the young man spin and fall, a broken rag doll whose last moments must have been filled with the most uncomprehending fear and confusion. Bridge had been relieved to discover Corporal Eager, as the news had identified him, at least had not been married, or a father. At least there was that. Bridge had not made a widow or orphan. But there had been nights since that had found Bridge wide awake, eyes boring into the ceiling while Cpl. Eager’s frightened death mask stared back.

All that guilt, every single bit, Bridge could have dealt with, could have put aside without too much trouble. Those deaths, regrettable as they may be, weren’t anyone important in his life. Sure, he felt bad for Aristotle’s grandmother, but it wasn’t like Aristotle couldn’t live without her. He’d been doing just fine the whole time he worked with Bridge, never letting Bridge know he even had a grandmother. But those deaths didn’t impact him. They had as much relevance to Bridge as the thousands that starved daily in Africa, or the deaths of political prisoners in China, or aliens millions of light years away. Angela was another story.

For the first time since he’d been pulled from the wreckage of his apartment, he let himself think about Angela, really think about her and remember her. Every memory, every phrase they uttered to each other, every nuance, every facial expression, every date, every party, every single instance he could bring to the surface of his thoughts, he reviewed. Disconnected from his body, none of the pain he should be feeling penetrated. His stomach did not churn. His eyes di. Butd not tear up. The great physical pain of loss that crawled up every inch of his body like his muscles had turned into paper wrinkling up in the brilliant sun underneath his clammy skin, that pain didn’t even register. The physical responses that grief triggered could not touch him in here, separated from the nerves that carried those feelings to his brain. He felt only the numbness of ethereal disembodiment. It was the perfect death of emotion, and he hated every minute of it.

 

 

 

At some point during his aimless drifting in GlobalNet space, Bridge fell asleep, his thoughts forming strange images in the formless void of the clean room. A buzzing sound immediately snapped him back to wakefulness. Far-el was contacting him. Bridge opened a video window displaying the chiseled good looks of his Bottle City persona. “The excavation job is done, Bridge.”

Bridge unconsciously shook his avatar’s head to ward off sleepiness despite not feeling any physical stimuli that required such a movement. “Good, good. Pipe me the link.” Far-el did so and Bridge opened a window into Angela’s data trove. “How about those other things?”

“We found the backdoor. I’ve got twenty guys poking around for the data you need right now.”

“And the Families?”

“Working it. The Panthers are hesitant, but they’re in.”

“Good man. Keep at it.” Bridge shut off the connection without further comment.

Bridge stared over the connection to Angela’s data with an uncharacteristic hesitation. An excavation didn’t merely open up the deceased’s data to access, it made it possible for the survivor to inhabit the deceased’s GlobalNet personas. Akin to wearing someone else’s skin, Bridge found himself reluctant to be this close to Angela this soon. Well aware of the urgent necessity, he promised himself he would only stay as long as necessary and no more.

The pain he felt upon entering her data domain eclipsed even his worst imaginations. He rezzed into her lobby, and immediately felt a cold mental shiver. The familiar settings somehow took on a completely different air with this kind of root access. Bridge could see the room’s normal exterior, the same exterior he saw when he had been allowed into this setting. But he also saw all the commands that Angela could execute to alter the room’s appearance, to allow access to others, and all the secret things she kept in the room that he never could have seen in his own ID. Emails piled up in her inbox, stylized as a bubbling witch’s cauldron that flashed to remind her that new messages waited. Portals littered the walls; all admin access portals to one of the many virtual worlds Angela had ties with, either as creator, demigod or volunteer administrator. He recognized her prized possession, Ars-Perthnia, as well as a few familiar ones. Bridge chuckled when he realized she had worked with Boostup Arena, one of the fabled “bloodsport” cyber arenas, where hackers pit themseell as a lves against other hackers in battles with very real, very potentially lethal consequences. A large, ledger-shaped book floated in the middle of the room. Grabbing it with her hand, it lit up with the phrase “Accounts” highlighted on the cover. Bridge assumed it to be a spreadsheet for her information brokerage. He set it aside for later. Someone would need to straighten out the accounts, take over the business or place her subordinates onto different paths, but not today.

He could feel Angela in the room. Perhaps it was the fact that his avatar assumed the form of Baroness Elethia that Angela had preferred. It felt unnatural and awkward, the kind of ill-fitting proxy body both unfamiliar and unwanted. He rifled through her available avatars and chose one that closely resembled an idealized version of her real body, only with all the obvious flaws removed. It helped only a little. Bridge sat cross-legged and levitated in the middle of the room.

His first task was to secure the avatar from other excavators. He generated a new series of encryption keys for access, changed all the passwords required, then flagged the account as active, shifting the billing access to one of Angela’s many backup accounts. This one appeared to get its money from a dry cleaner in Amsterdam owned by an Annalea Bosch. Bridge wanted to make sure that whoever Angela’s mother hired to dredge her dead daughter’s digital life would find nothing. He would ensure that Baroness Elethia lived on, somehow, some way, but the particulars of that operation would wait for another day, when time did not press so heavily on him.

He initiated a search for the keywords “Bridge” mixed with a number of other phrases like “car,” “shooting,” “stonewall” and “art show.” The search took a thankfully short time to return results, leaving him little time to ponder his surroundings further. The first link was the jackpot, a bundle of data organized in a folder. It included a recording of their conversations the night of the art show, when the first
Diablos
attack had taken place. He fast-forwarded through the conversations up until he reached the point of the attack, then watched the attack again through his own eyes, once removed. Finally, the frame he wanted appeared, showing the plate on the attacking vehicle before its destruction. Examining the frame brought up a blinking link highlighting the plate number and Bridge clicked it.

Angela had done her work well. The plate’s registration information came up almost immediately. Originally purchased by an Eduardo Sanchez of El Segundo, deceased, the car had passed through a succession of hands before being swept up in a CLED drug raid shortly after the riots had ended. The car had sat in police impound for over a year before it had been signed out by an officer in early summer 2028. From then on, its record was empty. The car had simply ceased to exist, its data trail ending at that point. How did a car get signed out from police impound to show up a year later as the getaway vehicle in a gang war drive-by? Bridge shifted back to the name of the officer assigned the vehicle, an Officer Vasquez. The name contained a link which Bridge clicked. Angela must have thought Vazquez was important enough to explore.

The cop’s dossier popped up, and Bridge sighed. “Of fucking course,” he said, everything becoming clear. He recognized the face instantly, despite the differences. Officer Vasquez was Chimuelo, second-in-command of
El Diablos
. The dossier listed Vasquez as deceased, of course, the, a bundle perfect cover for the kind of deep undercover work he must be doing.

He thought back to the conversation with Mayor Soto in the limo. Bridge had thought the mayor merely an opportunist, taking the most advantage of a situation that likely had been inevitable since the riots. He had thought Soto capable of spotting a weakness and profit from exploiting that weakness, but no more than that. But the shape of the real plan revealed itself to be much larger, much more ambitious than even Bridge could have imagined. Not content with waiting for an opportunity to exploit, Soto had decided to create one. Vasquez had been sent into
El Diablos
undercover and had worked himself very quickly into a position of influence. That was why Chimuelo had never taken a shot at Nacho. Why kill the leader when you could manipulate him instead? Chimuelo likely got
Diablos
the shiny new guns they were sporting, he got them cars and access to all the information CLED could gather. That was why
Diablos
had been able to work without an army of hackers. Once Vasquez as Chimuelo had created a big enough shitstorm between the gangs, CLED would be forced to step in and with all that super-duper hardware
Diablos
had been given, CLED would have no choice but to respond with superior force. The resulting bloodbath could not only take out most of the gangs, it could open up all new areas of the city for exploitation under the confiscation laws.

Bridge had exactly the information he needed, and the plan he’d been making up as he went along crystallized. He would need someone in the corporate way, someone with enough juice to make Chronosoft an offer they couldn’t refuse. It would be the only way to end the gang war without the destruction of the Families, but it would be dangerous. Bridge finished up what he could in Angela’s domain, then logged out. The apartment was dark as he crawled out of the crèche, stumbled to the shower, legs wobbly from so much time without use. The cold water pouring over his body cleared his mind further, setting an unavoidable path before him.

It was time for that Bridge magic.

 

 

 

Chapter 14

March 11, 2029

10:27 a.m.

 

After a quick shower, Bridge stalked out of Freeman’s apartment towards the nearest subway station with Mu in tow. As he walked, he tugged an ancient 3G phone out of his pants pocket. Staring at the battered pink shell of the device caused him to chuckle. No one had used phones like this for at least a decade, with its actual keyboard, little mouse and buggy voice activation. No one, that is, except criminals like himself looking to live off the grid. The Families had raided landfills from Northern and Southern California and the surrounding states to build up the collection of disposable junk phones. The Bottle City Boys had helped set up an assembly line of throwaway SIM cards and dead-end phone numbers, stealing bandwidth wherever they cn oould get it. The Families had the most sophisticated cell network in the Los Angeles area, and it technically didn’t even exist. Bridge laughed every time he heard tone on one of these phones, amazed at how much more reliable they were than the commercial handheld phone market these days.

The line rang once. “Talk,” returned Stonewall’s fatigue-saturated voice.

“It’s me, I’m coming in.”

“Your little conversation fruitful?”

“If I had to guess, I’d say yes. What station?”

Stonewall gave him a station address and a set of cipher numbers to indicate the actual station he was meant to find. “See you soon, brother,” Bridge said. Stonewall cut the connection without even a goodbye. He was still a bit miffed.

The subway stations, which had been left alone by CLED for so long, were being targeted with deadly accuracy. Most of the Families were in full retreat. Stonewall had put the
Magos
on what he called “The Nomad Plan.” No group could stay in any one station longer than eight hours, shuffling families, gangsters and support equipment around in one giant, city-wide shell game. It was effective but tiring.

Bridge had to hoof it over a mile to get to the proper station, bypassing two stations along the way. The cops had retaken the first, the other firmly in AsiaTown possession. Even though he was friendly with Stonewall, the rank and file
Magos
showed him little warmth. Once the train began moving, he relaxed a little. The guards never relaxed at all. Every station they passed could contain
Diablos
or CLED, and though the trains were running on express protocols, only stopping at specific stations, any run through enemy territory could be a gauntlet of gunfire or an intentional derailment.

Bridge glanced over at Mu, who sat in silent meditation, his eyes closed. The kid’s haggard face showed signs of the strain Bridge had put him under. Mu must maintain a force field over the two of them at almost all times, and the effort must have been considerable. Bridge wasn’t about to take any more chances, though, at least not until he could solve this situation.

Stonewall greeted him gruffly at the train’s door. Bridge took no time for pleasantries. “What the situation, brother?” he said as soon as the doors had swished open.

“It ain’t good, Bridge. I got injured all over the city and way too few doctors. We lost thirty overnight, and CLED just took back the last North Hollywood station we had.”

“They’re pushing you south, aren’t they? Towards the Warehouse?”

The large Mexican nodded grimly. “
Si
, just like you said they would. Herding us like cattle into the slaughter stalls.”

“Any hope of breaking through to the south?”

“Seventh Street is almost wall-to-wall cops. They got Gunheds patrolling up and down 24-7. And after that warehouse blowup yesterday, Sixth is pretty stacked up too.” He scratched the blonde stubble growing on his cheeks and grimaced. “You know they confiscated that place? What’s left of it, anyway. Told Earnest he had aided and abetted criminal activity and his assets were fucking forfeit. How the fuck they able to do that in this country? I thought this was America.”

“Welcome to the Sovereign State of Chronosoft,” Bridge replied, his words dripping sarcasm thick as molasses. “You know as well as I do this ain’t that place anymore.”

They walked on in silence for a moment. Bridge got a look around the station. The subway entrances were trashed deliberately, as a warning to the foolhardy and the tourists that the subways were not safe for them. But once a visitor had penetrated to the interior, they would have found
Magos
-dedicated housekeepers, the abandoned shops kept spotless. Not so these days. Everywhere Bridge looked, trash piled up, and disconsolate refugees stared back with shell-shocked eyes. The wounded and the well were stacked on top of each other like cordwood. The smell of human misery permeated every inch of the place, a sickly sour smell of fear sweat with desperation mirrored in every eye. They had not given up yet, but they were wobbling.

Bridge coughed. “How’s Cierra?”

“Bleeding but alive. She woke up about ten minutes ago.”

“Can I talk to her?”

“That’s where we’re going.” Stonewall led them through the back of an old sub shop. The young Shotcaller had been propped up against the wall, a dirty, blood-stained blanket wrapped around her legs. Her eyes were closed. Her head leaned back against the wall, sweat drenching her face, her mocha skin ashen.

“Little sister, Bridge is here,” Stonewall said softly.

Cierra’s eyes snapped open. “Good for him. You got
el médico
in your pocket for me?”

“He’s making his way here. One of them is, anyway. I got as many as I could find on short notice willing to risk the gangland.”

“They needs to move their asses then,” she replied with a rueful smile. “This shit hurts.” She indicated the large bandage on her shoulder, stained shiny with blood.

“Tell Bridge what you told me,” Stonewall said, “about who did this to you.”

“That old buzzard Goyo shot me. Fucking
traidor
. He let me and the boys get pinned down then come out to finish the job like a good little backstabber. If he wasn’t such a shitty shot, he might have got me, too. When I find that cocksucker, I am going to eat his fucking liver.” Her anger got the better of her, her emphatic hand gestures causing a wince of pain.

“We can probably arrange that without much trouble. He’s in the morgue. CLED got him. Well, they say it was CLED but what little scuttlebutt I’m getting is that it wasn’t exactly CLED strictly speaking.”


Federales
?”

Bridge shook his head. “No, they were Chronosoft. Danton mentioned something called Special Squad, which is a new one on me. But they are mean, terminator motherfuckers with no qualms about popping caps in asses. Three guys took down the warehouse and blew the fuck out of the Gun Club next door with barely a scratch.”

“Good. Hope it fucking hurt.”

Stonewall tossed Bridge an earnest look. “Goyo’s been
Magos
before we was
Magos
. How did Nacho turn him?”

All Bridge could offer was a shrug. “Maybe he didn’t share your vision of the future. Maybe he wanted to go out in a blaze of glory and didn’t care how it happened. The real question is who do you trust now?”

“Besides her? Nobody.”

“Good man.”

“I got your back,
Tapia
. You can count on that.”

“You get better,
hermana
.”

Stonewall stood and ushered Bridge away. “She going to be all right? She looks like shit,” the fixer whispered.

“Fuck you!” Cierra muttered from the floor.

“Yeah, she’ll be fine,” Bridge chuckled.

With the door closed, Stonewall’s smile faded. He fixed Bridge with as serious a gaze as Bridge had ever seen. “You said you got something cooking. You want to let me in on it?”

“You ain’t going to like it.”

“Do I ever?” Bridge began to explain the skeleton of his burgeoning plan, and each sentence made the ex-footballer’s mood darker.

 

 

 

Their conversation had led them out of the restaurant into the larger station mall, through a set of double doors leading down an access hallway into the station’s office. They sat on either side of a battered pre-21
st
desk made of cheap imitation wood that was chipped and scarred with decades of abuse. Mu stood guard outside the office. No one had bothered to clean the place, all manner of papers strewn everywhere. Sitting in battered padded chairs, they s with decaipped coffee and discussed Bridge’s plan. Stonewall’s grim frown amply demonstrated his thoughts on the plan.

“You know that’s not only crazy and immoral, it’s practically barbaric,” Stonewall said, his right hand absentmindedly stroking the blonde soul patch. “You really think you can pull that off?”

“I’d say it’s maybe 50-50.” The confident smile only deepened the Mexican’s frown. “Look, there aren’t many other options out there.
Magos
can’t fight a street war on two fronts, especially when one of those fronts is the goddamn CLED and the other is better supplied and frankly, bugfuck crazy. You can’t count on the other Families for help, because they are getting squeezed just as hard by the cops. Hell, even the Panthers are getting hassled, and they ain’t fighting nobody. And how many of your Shotcallers can you trust after what happened with Goyo? I mean, he was old school
Magos
from way back.”

“That was the problem, brother,” Stonewall replied. “That old school macho bullshit is still alive and well. I thought Goyo had more respect for Pedro’s vision than that.”

“Well, you were wrong.”

“And it almost got Cierra killed. I know. But this thing… it’s insane.”

“It’s exactly the kind of thing you say you’ve been working towards, only it ain’t all flowers and rainbows. It was never going to be. It’s going to take blood and you goddamn well know it.”

Stonewall nodded solemnly, lost in silent thought. “Speaking of blood,” he began reluctantly. “You not going to Angela’s funeral?” Phrased like a question, it hit Bridge like an accusatory statement of fact.

“I’m dead, remember. And I killed her, least that’s what anybody showing up to that thing will think. I show up to that funeral, it’s all going to shit. They’d arrest me on sight. And I’m betting Angie’s mom is going to be there. I’d rather be thrown in pound-me-in-the-ass-prison than have to face that crazy bitch at her daughter’s funeral.”

“She’s that bad?”

“Dude, you have no idea. You think Angie lived ‘Netside as much as she did because she was a happy sort? When her mom was sober, and that wasn’t fucking often, she could tear Angie down with two sentences. And I mean, tear down to a sobbing, crying husk. Drunk? That woman could take on King Kong single-handedly.”

“Sounds like a winner.”

Bridge rolled his eyes. “Totally.”

“You got any idea who killed her?” Stonewall seemed to choose his words carefully, treading with caution through the difficult subject.

“Definitely corporate. The guy was overconfident, but not without reason. Disabled the security system p>

“It have anything to do with this war?”

Bridge shook his head. “No. Boulder.” Stonewall nodded knowingly. “I want to say it was Legios, but really, can you think of one big-time corp that wouldn’t want a piece of that technomancer pie at this stage? Yeah, me neither. Well, they ain’t getting it. Those fuckers have taken enough already.”

Stonewall leaned forward, an intent curiosity in his eyes. “Is that why you’re doing this? Helping us, I mean. It ain’t like you. Is this just some misplaced revenge thing you got going on?”

Bridge returned the look with a smile of pure malice. “Maybe.”


¡Híjole!
That’s pretty cold, Bridge. You do realize lots of people could die because of this, right?” Bridge answered with a solemn nod. “Well, whatever your motivation, I don’t give a shit. We need your help. Where you headed next?”

“I got to meet a limey bastard with two fake fingers.”

“Not…?”

“Yep. I’m taking a lunch with Paulie.”


Ay wey
. Doesn’t he want you dead?”

“We came to a mutual understanding. And I’m about to offer his boss a golden ticket out of corporate purgatory.”

“If Paulie doesn’t kill you first.”

“Naturally.”

“What else do you need from me? Besides a place to sleep, food and free transportation?” The footballer’s crooked smile warmed the room slightly.

Bridge chuckled. “I could use a few more SIM cards.”

“I think we can manage that.” Stonewall reached into the desk drawer and passed over a handful of tiny chips, used to connect the ancient cell phones to their pirate network. “We’ve having to switch cards after every call.”

“You got enough cards?”

“Oh yeah, we got thousands of them. As long as you’re switching with every call, you can reuse some too. It’ll take them days to kill off one card and by that time we’ve used twenty others they have to trace. Not a lot of programmers working for the man even understand the language on these things anymore.”

“Good thing,” Bridge quipped. “I’ll let you know when and where the meet is going down. Stay safe.”

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