Kill City Blues. Richard Kadrey

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Kill City Blues - Richard  Kadrey

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behind him ready to stomp me to apple butter if I scratch my nose. But that’s not going to happen. I can already see it in his body language. His shoulders are slumped. His voice is calm and low. His heart rate is dropping back to normal. When I see flat-out disappointment on his face, I know whose funny ring tone just saved my nice creased slacks.

      Shoulders slaps his phone closed and sticks it back in his jacket pocket. It takes him a second to get the words out.

      “Mr. Stark, I’ve been told that you’re authorized for a visit with the Augur.” Then comes the really hard part. “I hope you’ll forgive any inconvenience the new security measures might have caused you.”

      “I forgive you,” I say, “but I’m not bringing a piñata to your birthday party. You’ll have to get your own goddamn candy.”

      In grand Sub Rosa tradition, from the outside Blackburn’s mansion looks like something a wino coughed up after a night of Sterno and generic, nonfilter cigarettes. In this case, it looks like an abandoned residency hotel on South Main Street. The first floor is boarded up, covered with cryptic gang graffiti and stapled flyers for bands and strip clubs. The second and third floors are empty, burned-out shells. It’s all just hoodoo, of course. Inside, Blackburn’s place is a Victorian wet dream. Hell, it’s so real he probably has opium addicts and lungers planted in the guest rooms to add a little more color to the place.

      Inside, a guy in his early twenties in a gray suit he can’t possibly afford greets me. A staff monkey. A young Sub Rosa emperor-in-training waiting to enter the big leagues. I wonder how connected you have to be to get a gig like this at his age.

      “Please follow me, sir,” he says in a voice smooth as buttermilk. I follow him into Blackburn’s study. I killed a few people in here last month, but you’d never know it by the look of the place. No blood or a single bone fragment in sight. My compliments to your mystical janitors.

      “James. Good to see you,” says Blackburn, coming from around his desk to shake my hand. He’s on a first-name basis with me since I saved his wife. I’m not on a first-name basis with him because he’s as close to God as we have in California.

      “Thanks. And thanks for calling off your dogs. Did you hire all of them on my account? I’m flattered all to hell.”

      Blackburn points to a seat by the desk. I sit. He goes back around and settles down.

      “Not you specifically. It’s more because of … well, everything. Your coming in so easily was unnerving, of course, but Aelita’s behavior was worse. I’m good at seeing what people really are, but I suppose that skill doesn’t extend to angels. Anyway after the …”

      “Massacre?”

      “Yes, the massacre here, I decided that we finally needed to update security. The old ways of respect and even fear for the office of Augur are long gone. The twenty-first century is a fine place, but it’s a little medieval too. We need our Great Companies to keep the neighbor’s dog from crapping on the lawn.”

      “If ‘Great Companies’ means expensive mercs, I guess so. Still, with your money I think you could do better. At least one of your guys wanted to start trouble, not put it down.”

      “I know,” says Blackburn. “That’s why I called when I did. And he’s not usually like that. He’s usually a good man. It’s just that you scared him.”

      “Me? Look at me. I’m dressed like a Deadwood dance-hall girl. How am I going to scare pros?”

      “Because you’re still James Stark and everyone knows the things you’ve done. And gotten away with.”

      “Now you’re making me blush.”

      Blackburn gives me a smile. I can read people too. He’s indulging me because he wants something.

      “If you’re really so interested in my security, why don’t you come and work for me? I hear you’re having some trouble with your revenue stream,” Blackburn says.

      “Is it that obvious these aren’t my clothes?”

      “I’m offering you Aelita’s old position as head of my security team. Wouldn’t you like to step into her shoes and show how much better you’d be at the job?”

      “Don’t you already have a new security chief?”

      “Yes. Audsley Ishii. A very competent man. But I’d rather have Sandman Slim on my side.”

      “On the payroll, you mean.”

      “Exactly. What do you say?”

      I shake my head.

      “I tried the salaryman thing back with the Golden Vigil. I work a lot better on my own, thanks. And right now I’m kind of busy trying to save, you know, the world.”

      “I thought your chasing Aelita was a more personal thing.”

      “It’s pretty damn personal, but she’s not what I’m chasing right now.”

      Blackburn leans back in his chair. Steeples his hands.

      “You mean the bauble.”

      “It’s a god-killing weapon.”

      “I’ve heard the stories. All unsubstantiated.”

      “Do you think when the Angra Om Ya come stomping back, you’ll bribe pissed-off elder gods with brunch and VIP night at Disneyland?”

      Blackburn’s hands go from a steeple to a dismissive little wave.

      “Come on, Stark. You’ve seen the celestial realms. You don’t really believe all this nonsense about old gods and ultimate weapons, do you?”

      “I believe it because I met one of the Angra. Remember the ghost that offed the mayor a while back? Her name is Lamia.”

      “The little girl with the knife, you mean?”

      “She killed off enough Dreamers to destabilize reality. If I hadn’t stopped her, she might have destroyed the world all on her own. And she’s just one little piece of what these fuckers can do.”

      Blackburn goes quiet for a minute. It’s on his face. Am I here hustling him with ghost stories or am I telling the truth and maybe he and the other masters of the universe ought to start getting scared?

      “I’ve looked into L.A.’s future and haven’t seen anything like what you’re describing.”

      I shrug.

      “You couldn’t see what an angel was angling to do. What makes you think you can see what gods want?”

      He leans forward, his elbows on the desk.

      “Work for me. I can give you access to more resources than you can possibly have on your own.”

      “Thanks, but seriously, I’m terrible. You’d want me dead in a week,” I say. “But let me ask you something. Are you the one keeping the cops off me? Maybe clearing the decks just enough so I have to work for you?”

      He

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