Read Chemical Burn Online

Authors: Quincy J. Allen

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary Fiction, #Dystopian

Chemical Burn (3 page)

BOOK: Chemical Burn
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I saw two black SUVs pull up in perfect unison on either side of the limo. The rear windows of both vehicles rolled down. Gun barrels slid out into the night, pointing at the forward section of the limo.

I leapt forward, grabbed Natalia, and pulled her down onto the floor. We landed with a thud, and I rolled on top of her, my hips pressed between her legs.

“What the!—” Natalia shouted.

“Hang on!” I whispered into her ear, covering her with my body as much as I could. I couldn’t let her get killed if I wanted to find Xen’s killer.

Machine gun fire shattered the night, and even through the heavily tinted windows and the downpour outside, it bathed the interior in bright, flickering-orange light. Bullets bounced off armored steel, glass, and pavement, filling the interior with thunder.

We heard the limousine’s engine roar as Victor hammered the gas, and the rear tires screamed, breaking loose from the wet pavement for thirty yards as they fought the mass of the heavily armored sedan. The headlights of the two SUVs drifted back to the rear-quarter of the limousine, and the gunfire stopped briefly.

“Friends of yours?” I asked.

“What do you think?” she replied, a bit perturbed but remarkably calm for a business executive—man or woman—exposed to gunfire. Most suits would have shit themselves after the first shot.

Engines roared as our pursuers pulled forward again, drawing even with the limo. Gun barrels slid out to fire another volley when the limousine swerved violently to the left. Metal screeched on metal as the two vehicles smashed together. Tires squealed on the left as the driver slammed on his brakes. A second later, a deafening crash filled our ears when the SUV smashed head-on with a garbage truck going the other direction. The SUV’s horn stuck with the impact and faded quickly behind us.

Then a machine gun from the other SUV cooked off. The thunder of ricochets again filled the compartment, and as I looked up, I saw the barrel drift down towards the front tire of the limo.

“This thing have solid tires, by chance?” I asked, yelling over the sound of the gunfire.

“Of course,” she hollered back matter-of-factly.

“We’re gonna need ’em!” I yelled as the sound changed from bullets hitting steel and glass to hitting pavement and solid rubber. I could feel the front tire start to bounce and bump unevenly as chunks of it were chewed away by the barrage.

The limousine lurched again, to the right this time, and we careened off the SUV. Both vehicles swerved back and forth several times, crashing solidly against each other, but the greater mass of the limo began to win out. Each crash pushed the SUV closer to the curb.

I heard a squeal of rubber as the SUV’s tires locked up. The limousine passed a light-post that the SUV must have barely avoided hitting. The window between the driver and us slid open.

“Where to, madam?” Victor shouted over the roar of the engine. His voice was pained but calm, thick with Russian origins. By the sound of it, he had taken a slug.

“Are we near Xen’s house?” I yelled.

“Yes!” he replied.

“Drive this thing through the front doors!” I ordered.

“Are you out of your mind?” Victor hollered back.

“Just DO IT!” I screamed. I turned to face Natalia, and our noses nearly touched. “We can’t out run them, and if they catch us in the open, the five or six guys in that SUV will tear us to pieces. In cover we have a chance.
Trust me
.”

“Do it, Victor,” Natalia yelled.


Da!
” Victor obeyed.

The limousine swerved around several more corners with the sound of multiple machine guns bouncing bullets off the back of the limo and into the rear tires.

“Hang on!” Victor yelled.

I grabbed Natalia tightly and rolled on my side with my back facing the front. The front of the car bounced off the curb, absorbing our momentum as the front end tore up a big chunk of Xen’s lawn. With the impact Natalia and I slid neatly up against the base of the front seats. The limo ran over several bushes and small trees in Xen’s yard and passed through the yellow police-line tape barring the front doors. The tape made a lot less noise than the doors as we passed through. With a deafening sound of crunching metal and splintering wood, we came to an abrupt stop.

Tires squealed behind us as the second SUV came in for the kill.

***

A Minor Secret

The old me took over, and my conscience dissolved into fiery ash. I smiled, savoring the feel of the predator I was designed to be. Nothing remained but the hard-wired desire to eradicate the target. It was time to play.

The instant the car came to a stop, I rolled over Natalia, grabbed the door handle, and opened it a crack. I heard Victor’s door open. A second later, the bark of a Kalashnikov filled the night as Victor fired at the SUV. I peered through the crack of the door and saw several rain-hazed shadows dive for cover. Sparks from Victor’s gunfire spattered across the side of the SUV, and I turned to Natalia as she got to her knees.

“You okay?”

“Yes,” she replied calmly.

“When I say go, follow me out the door straight ahead, through the doorway, and into the kitchen.”

“Wait,” she urged.

“What?” I was impatient, hungry for the kill.

She shifted her body around me to the back seat and hit a panel underneath the back seat. It flopped open revealing several weapons.

“Here, take this,” she said, offering me a Glock .40.

“I don’t like guns.”

“What?” she said shocked.

“I don’t like guns. They’re not any fun.”

She stared at me in disbelief, blinking slowly.

“Suit yourself,” she said finally, shaking her head as she reached in again. “I do,” she added as she slipped the Glock onto the back of her belt and grabbed a Kalashnikov. She removed her suit-jacket and shoes. “Is there any broken glass out there?”

I quickly lifted my head over the window frame and looked at the ground between the car and the kitchen.

“No. A few boards, some splinters of wood. I don’t see any nails sticking up either.”

“Good.”

Machine gun fire rattled off of the back of the car. Victor’s Kalashnikov erupted again, pinning down our assailants.

“GO!” I hissed as I opened the door. Placing my foot on the doorframe, I leapt like a cat, spanning the eight feet to the kitchen doorway without touching the ground. Natalia peeked out the door, saw it was clear, and rolled out. She came up in a crouch, laying down a burst of suppressing fire with the Kalashnikov as she ran. Victor saw her make the dash and opened up with two fast bursts. Bullets sprayed out into the night, bouncing off the SUV and forcing several of our assailants back into cover. I turned in the doorway and watched Natalia cross the short distance like a commando, obviously combat-trained.

“Victor!
MOVE IT!
” I yelled.

Natalia spun around in the doorway, kneeling below me. She flipped the selector of the rifle to single-shot and aimed out the shattered front doorway.

Victor rolled over the hood of the car, using it for cover, and dropped behind the door I’d left open. I could see him favoring his left leg. Wedging the barrel in the crease between the door and body of the car, Victor aimed another burst of suppressing fire into the street and then bolted towards us.

Just as he started to move, I saw three shadows pop up from their cover and take aim.

Crack! Crack!
Natalia’s rifle barked. One shadow dropped where he stood, and the other spun off behind a tree. The third opened fire on full auto and sent a hailstorm of bullets into Victor’s path. He spun around like a top. The Kalashnikov flew from his hands and sailed off deeper into the house with a loud clatter. He dropped limply, face down at Natalia’s feet, his head and arms flung through the doorway. There was blood everywhere. Natalia looked down at the prone body but said nothing. She fired three more rounds into the street to keep the gunmen pinned down.

I bent down, grabbed one of Victor’s arms, and dragged him quickly inside. As I pulled, Victor’s coat and shirtsleeves slid back, and I noticed a black tattoo on his wrist:

I rolled Victor’s body over onto his back, revealing a hopeless reality. With rounds through his neck and head, he was dead before he hit the ground.

“Leave him,” Natalia said when she turned and saw her driver. I picked up no emotion at all: not sadness, regret, shock …
nothing
. Victor was just a body to her. I filed that little fact away along with the others.

“Where to now?” she asked as she flipped the double banana clip around in her rifle. She switched the selector back to full auto as gunfire came through the front doorway again, sending chunks of plaster flying from the thick, adobe-spackled walls.

“Downstairs,” I whispered, nodding my head towards a door at the back of the kitchen.

Natalia stuck the barrel of the rifle around the corner and, taking one quick peek, unloaded a long burst outside without looking. She heard the satisfying yelp of a man catching a piece of the burst, and we both enjoyed the sound of his screaming.

“Nice shot,” I said, grinning.

“Thank you, but won’t we be cornered down there?” she whispered.

“No,” I said confidently.

Making sure we were behind the counter, I reached into an inner pocket and pulled out a baseball-sized sphere. Translucent, like smoky glass, it had a seam down the middle and two small black rectangles embedded in the center. With a twist, the two halves came apart and, holding up the first, I pressed a few times on the small, black control. I caught Natalia looking at it, but she couldn’t possibly recognize the characters. I set the device to double-trigger, quarter-second and placed it at knee-level on the kitchen-island facing the doorway. Clicking on the readout of the second half, I set it to quad-trigger, four-second and placed it directly below the first one.

Natalia got a confused look on her face when I grabbed a bag of potato chips off the counter, tore it open, and emptied the bag on the floor just inside the doorway. Chips scattered across the tiles and over Victor’s body. I wish I could have captured the baffled look on her face as I tossed the empty bag on the counter.

Through the downpour, I heard someone run across the yard and take cover behind the limousine.

“Move. Through and down,” I said quickly, pointing towards the door at the back of the kitchen with my thumb.

Natalia ran without hesitating, crouching as she skirted around the island and scuttled to the back door leading downstairs. She reached the door, silently opened it, and bolted down the stairs, her bare feet making almost no sound at all.

She’s good
, I thought.
Definitely combat trained
.

I straightened up, turned, and walked casually back towards the door to the basement. As I rounded the corner of the kitchen island, I heard a man rush up against the wall outside and then a rustle as he quickly peeked around the corner and drew back.

“One …” I said, counting the motions in front of the burner as I closed my eyes and walked towards the basement door.

The gunman, seeing my exposed back, took the bait hook, line, and sinker. I could almost see it in my head. He came around the corner, the second motion in the doorway triggering the first of my devices. In the quarter-second it took for the barrel to traverse from straight up to just shy of drawing a bead on me, the device I’d placed—called a
burner
—cooked off. An intense, metallic hissing sound filled the room, like magnesium burning. The kitchen burned with an impossibly bright light and intense heat, and the blast-wave hit the poor bastard square in the face. It cooked his skin, fused his eyelids open, and burned out his eyes. His clothes ignited as well. I knew because I’d seen it before.
Many
times.

“Two.” I smiled wickedly. The gun clattered to the floor, and the man screamed in agony.

“Mamma mia!” another gunman yelled from out near the limousine. I paused in the doorway as the burning man rolled around in the foyer, his cries pitiful. But I have no pity for men like him. Neither did his friends apparently, since they didn’t seem interested in putting him out. Instead they choose to watch his polyester clothing burn and melt into his skin. I stood in the doorway, waiting for them.

Natalia stood at the bottom of the stairs, her body hidden behind a wall as she aimed the Glock up the stairwell. “What are you doing?” she hissed.

I looked at her calmly, pressed a finger to my lips to quiet her, and gave a reassuring
I-have-everything-under-control
look … which I did.

I turned back to the kitchen to see another man peek around the corner and disappear. The heat of the first burner had charred a wide, black circle around the doorway, and the paper of a hanging notepad still burned.

“Three,” I said to myself and headed down the stairs calmly whistling a few bars of “Singing in the Rain.” I pictured the next few seconds in my head. The gunman waited a few seconds to make sure there wasn’t another bomb. He’d certainly been horrified by what happened to his partner, and the timing between the glance and the first cook-off had been almost instant. When nothing happened, he moved through the doorway.

I heard potato chips crunching under his feet.

“Shit!” he blurted.

I knew exactly where he was, the timing working out perfectly.

He moved over Victor’s lifeless body, chips crunching with each step, and slipped into the corner of the kitchen. He probably had is back against the charred wall and his gun barrel held steady at waist level, pointed at the stairwell. If he had any brains, he’d be crouching to keep as much of the island between him and the door as possible, for all the good it was about to do him.

“Four,” I said for the last motion trigger. Then I started counting seconds. “One …”

“It’s clear,” he hissed. I heard a second pair of footsteps hit the potato chips. The second guy probably didn’t even register the sound his feet made as he moved. With that much adrenaline, focus can be both a friend and an enemy. Gunfights are like that.

“Two …” I continued, looking down at Rachel and smiling.

“They’re downstairs,” the first gunmen whispered. I heard their feet still shuffling across the chips.

“Three …” My smile turned to vicious delight. I strolled to the bottom of the stairs, cool as a cucumber. “Four,” I said and looked up at the ceiling above me, waiting for the inevitable.

A second metallic hiss erupted from the kitchen, and the stairwell was bathed with the acidic glow of bright light. Natalia and I heard the two men erupt into screams.

She looked at me with a half-impressed, half-horrified look on her face. “What the hell are those things?” she asked, incredulous.

“Oh … nothing,” I said and shrugged innocently. “I think those boys have probably had enough, but we should get going just the same. The cops have got to be on the way, although the rain and traffic will slow them down. I hope they bring a fire engine or two,” I said, a bit embarrassed. I felt kind of bad about what I’d done to Xen’s kitchen.

I pulled off my shoes and left them at the base of the stairs. I looked up and saw both of our footprints coming down, outlined in Victor’s blood.

“Wipe your feet,” I said.

Natalia looked down and realized that the bottoms of her feet were covered. She wiped them back and forth on the carpet, stretching her toes to clean them.

I walked across the main area of the basement—a nicely appointed home-theater—and stopped at a door in the corner. Natalia backed away from the base of the stairs, her Glock raised in one hand and the Kalashnikov held over her shoulder with the other. She kept looking down occasionally to make sure she wasn’t leaving a trail. We could both hear all three burning men still screaming.

“Where are we going?” she asked over her shoulder.

“This way,” I said with a friendly smile on my face. I opened the door and motioned for her to go in.

“That’s a closet, Mister Case,” she said dryly as she stepped in. I found it interesting that she already knew that, and I stacked the fact on top of the others in my head. She pressed back some dusty ski-jackets and pants, crouching slightly to get under the shelf and clothes-bar inside.

“Of course it is,” I replied calmly as I stepped in and closed the door behind me. The small closet was pitch-black. I could feel her leaning up against me, bent at an awkward angle. Even sweaty as she was, she smelled fantastic. I raised my hand, accidentally brushing up against her breast as I did.

“Hey …” she said.

“Sorry,” I half-apologized as I slid my hand along the top of the doorjamb. I pressed a recessed button hidden there. We heard a loud click, and a seam of pale light appeared at the back of the closet. I shifted around her and pushed open a door.

“After you,” I said gallantly.

“How did you know…?” she started.

“I built it,” I said before she could finish the question. I could feel my conscience slipping back into place as the predator faded back into the depths where I keep him.

Natalia slid between the jackets and stepped into a passage that looked to be made of smooth, gray plastic. Four florescent lamps were spaced evenly down its hundred-foot length. My foot bumped into something as I stepped through the back door of the closet. I looked down and saw a pair of small running shoes. It occurred to me that Xen and Natalia were about the same size.

“Hey,” I said, reaching down to pick up the shoes. “These may fit.”

BOOK: Chemical Burn
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