Monday, January 14, 2008

Bennie Lee "Ben" Ferguson For President-The Candidate Of Change

It seems that a large segment of the voting public are attracted to candidates that call for and promise "change". Well, don't just take them at their word. Vote for the candidate who doesn't just call for change. Ask yourself, what candidate, more than any other, embodies the concept of change. I think I may have found the answer in Bennie Lee "Ben" Ferguson-the candidate of change.

I can almost hear you asking, "okay, I get it. But what about his-er, her-er, it's other qualifications for office?"

Well, Bennie Lee should be more than qualified to defend our nation and engage in the war on terror. After all, after spending some time as head of a local Log Cabin Republicans group in Kansas, Bennie Lee worked as a security guard. So, what else could you ask for-more or less?

Now, Bennie Lee is a member of the Libertarian Party, and is a write-in candidate for President of the United States. So, come on, write in Bennie Lee "Ben" Ferguson. After all-

What have you got to lose?


Tato Nano-A Car For India's Growing Middle Class


At a price of roughly the equivalent of $2,500 US dollars, about 200,000,000 new drivers might soon be driving the Tato Nano.

Of course, the global warming crowd is up to their usual brand of histrionics over this, but what else is new? If they had their way, people in the US would be back to the horse and buggy and outside toilet days, while the people of India, where the car was created, would be living like people in-well, India. You can't please these fucktards. The Nano doesn't have air-conditioning, so you'd think that would please them, but they are too busy bitching about the prospect of poor Indian families finally being able to get around on something besides-if they are lucky-motor scooters with sidecars.

They insist that India should develop public transportation. Yessiree, I know for a fact there ain't nothing I enjoy more than shopping via city bus.

This blog post from India will tell you all about the various features of the Tato Nano, which doesn't eat hay and doesn't shit on the streets.

The Shaft

Things like this are the main, almost the only reason I keep my registration to vote Democratic up to this point. Think it couldn't happen here? Well, actually, it could, and unfortunately the Democratic Party is growing ever more useless by the day to do anything about it.

Notice the Mexican Labor Boards excuse to deny higher wages for their workers, even in the face of worldwide increase in copper prices. They want to keep wages low to "attract investors".

What it all amounts to is, that's as good an excuse as any, I guess, but if it wasn't for that, there would damn sure be another one to take it's place.

Things like this are why:

*The Middle Class keeps dwindling, here and everywhere.

*Jobs are sent overseas (after all, no matter how low wages get in the US, corporations can always find someplace where they can hire cheaper labor).

Mexican workers and the common person there can't propser in their own country, and so they come here, illegally if they have to (which actually, for now, is easier than coming here legally).

I fucking hate Mexico and want to overthrow its fucking useless, racist government, which consists of, or at least is controlled by, families who are the wealthy descendants of the Spanish conquistadores who have little use for the Indian, Mestizo, and mixed population at large.

Now they've found a loophole in the law to close down the strike, and so they've moved in with armed thugs to intimidate the workers, while twenty people have been injured, some seriously.

Oh yeah, and five workers are missing.

All because the company that controls their copper mines in Sonoma don't want to improve worker health and safety conditions, and don't want to pay a living wage.

Oh, and by the way, the same fucking company is buying mines in the US.


Friday, January 11, 2008

Radu-Chapter XXXIV (A Novel by Patrick Kelley)

Previous Installments-
Part One
Prologue and Chapters I-X
Part Two
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
PartThree
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Radu-Chapter XXXIV (A Novel by Patrick Kelley)
11 pages approximate
Phelps van was making noises again. Time for a tune-up, he thought, as the outline of DC came into view.

“You know, it’s a shame,” he said. “I’ve lived practically within walking distance of this place almost all my life, and I’m a news photographer, yet I’ve been here a total of four times. The last time I was here was 2003. All I have to show for it is a picture of the Lincoln Memorial.”

Grace tried to steady herself, but her nervous anxiety, to say nothing of her dizziness and nausea, made it difficult.

“It really doesn’t do you any good to come to Washington if you can’t bring an authentic press pass,” she replied. “Even then, it’s not easy. This place is murder on a struggling reporter with no connections. Trust me on that.”

She realized she probably sounded more dismissive than she intended, and looked toward him and tried to put on her best smile.

“I really appreciate you driving me here,” she said.

“Well, I couldn’t very well let you come here yourself, even by plane,” he said. “You look like hell, and I know you feel like shit. You really should take some time off.”

“That is not an option,” she said.

“So, who is the father, anyway?” he asked. “By the way, I thought you told me you couldn’t have kids.”

She wondered whether she should tell him. What could it possibly hurt? She decided against it.

“I have no idea whose it is,” she replied. “All that matters to me is that it’s mine.”

Phelps maneuvered in the midst of the oppressive traffic onto the Georgetown exit. The identity of the father of Grace’s child was the least of his concerns.

“So, just what is the reason for all of this secrecy, this hiding from public view?” he asked. “You know everybody in Baltimore has been looking for you, and you say you’re innocent of any involvement in the deaths of Karinsky and Lawson, so why not just come forward and give a statement and clear it all up?”

“One of these days, I just might do that,” she replied. “For now, I’m working under deep cover and I can’t afford to allow my whereabouts to be known by certain parties. It will be clear soon enough, you’ll see.”

“So you’re working on something that important huh?” he asked. “I take it that it must be a really big story for you to go to all these extra pains. Does it have anything to do with what happened at Khoska’s Church at all, or was that just an incidental something that just happened to get in the way? Oh, and by the way, just what was all that about anyway?”

“You got involved in the wrong department of the journalism business, Phelps, you should have been a reporter. I went to the church to confront Sierra, and she attacked me. Then, she started acting crazy. She turned the Church into her own private music studio, without benefit of a band or even a karaoke machine. Karinsky and Khoska tried to make her stop, but she would not.

“I got bored with her making a spectacle of herself, and left. Mainly, though, I got bored with the mosquitoes. They were thick in there that night. I could not take that. Whatever happened afterward, I have no idea. I only know it had nothing to do with me, regardless of what Khoska told you. I heard she stabbed herself to death, right there in the church. I sure didn’t do it, though I would have like to at the time. I can certainly promise you I didn’t hoist Karinsky up on top of the spire of the cross and impale him on it.”

Grace was hiding something, and Phelps knew it. She had no idea of the extent of his conversations with the old Priest, or at least so he hoped. Yet, when she called him to ask him to drive her to Georgetown to see a friend, he remembered Khoska’s entreaties to help her. He did not want to do it, but felt it was incumbent on him to do what he could to get to the bottom of what certainly was the most baffling mystery he ever encountered.

“So who is this friend of yours?” he asked. “Is he a contact, some kind of reliable news source?”

“No, actually, he is nothing but a friend, one I haven’t seen in a good many years. When he learned of my current predicament, he offered to help, and I more than gladly decided to take him up on his offer. There is nothing at all mysterious about it.”

Soon, she was giving him directions to what eventually lead to an old three-story Brownstone on the outskirts of Georgetown. As he pulled up into the driveway, he peered back toward the back of the van.

“By the way, I have something I want to show you,” he said.

After he parked the van, he reached back and grabbed hold of the handle of the item he earlier procured from the old cabin in the woods of West Virginia. When she saw the old aluminum bat, she did not blink an eye, her bland expression more of wonder as to why he would should someone such a thing as this.

“I’ve seen bigger ones,” she said with a shrug.

“You could really bash someone’s brains in with this,” he said. “Would you like to have it? It might come in handy here in DC.”

“That is a point,” she said as she reached for the bat. “Would you like to come in for a few minutes?”

“No, that’s all right,” he said. “I’ll just wait long enough to make sure your friend’s home so you won’t have to wait alone out here too long, then I’ll be on my way.”

“If he’s not here, someone will be, and I am expected,” she replied. “Still, as I said, you are welcome to come in.”

Phelps was busting at the seams to accompany her inside, but something deep inside of him was wary of entering that house. Besides, it was unnecessary. Soon enough, he would find out all he needed to know. Therefore, he declined her invitation.

“So, I take it this aluminum bat can be considered a baby shower gift?” she asked as she opened the door.

“Yeah, pretty much,” he replied. “Just don’t swing it around too much. You can do a lot of damage with that thing.”

She stood there looking at the bat, and Phelps realized she did not seem to have a clue as to what he was getting at. Could Khoska have been wrong, he wondered? He said himself he was not at the cabin during the time Grace allegedly murdered Karl Emil Grozhny. Was it not possible someone else committed the deed? Phelps realized of course he wanted to believe that, but on the other hand, Khoska’s accusations pertaining to Grace and the murders of her entire adopted family were hard to refute.

He sat there and watched her, holding the bat, as though trying to understand the connection she felt with the object-or, possibly, trying to figure out just why he was acting so mysterious about it. Phelps told her goodbye, and that if she needed anything else, to give him a call. She thanked him and said goodbye as he started to drive off.

However, Phelps was not really returning to Baltimore-not right away. As he drove toward the city of Washington, he placed a call to Cruiser Dietrich, the wizened old editor-in-chief of The Baltimore Explorer, who agreed to pay Phelps’s expenses. He gave Cruiser the address of the house in Georgetown at which he had dropped Grace off, as well as the license number of the Lexus parked in the cobblestone driveway of what looked to be a Pre-Civil War era mansion. It took under half an hour for Cruiser to call him back.

“You need to get back here as soon as you can,” he said.

“What’s up?” Phelps asked, hiding as best he could his concern due to the overtly frantic tone in Dietrich’s voice.

“These are the big leagues, boy,” the old man replied.

“Okay, so who is this guy anyway?” Phelps demanded.

“Edward Akido,” came the reply. “He’s a registered lobbyist for a pharmaceutical firm, as well as several foreign governments, including the Sudan, as well as India, Syria, Pakistan, Iran, Cuba, China, and Turkey. He has also lobbied extensively on behalf of the Palestinian Authority.”

“What about Romania?”

“I’ll have to check on that to be sure,” Cruiser answered. “Why is that important?”

“I’m not sure,” Phelps answered as he just now pulled onto the lane indicated as the route to Ronald Reagan Airport.

“Is there anything else he represents?”

“Some energy companies, for the most part,” came the reply. “Also, some banking and investment firms, insurance, and contract arms suppliers. All of this though is almost incidental. I have not even gotten to the really juicy part yet. This guy just came on the scene eight years ago. He just more or less appeared out of nowhere. Before this, he was an insurance and investment company executive, a mid-level manager of a mid-sized firm. He was an apparent nobody, somebody that would never show up on anybody’s radar screen.”

“You’re right, that’s really strange,” Phelps agreed. “Maybe he’s got some kind of pull with some political family, like maybe with the Morrisons, for example.”

“Or, how about with the CIA?” Dietrich replied. “While we’re at it, what about the DEA and the ATF?”

“Oh, fuck!” Phelps said. “You are fucking kidding me, right?”

“I wish I was, boy,” Cruiser responded. “I really wish I was. I don’t know how this guy ever gets any sleep, because he’s in bed with some really nasty bastards-including, it’s rumored, the Taliban. Do you remember the recent deal between India and Pakistan?”

“Uh-huh, I remember-what about it?”

“He brokered that. He evidently did this by twisting some arms of some people the Taliban has in high positions in the Pakistani military and security services. Phelps, I am telling you, this is not somebody you need to be fucking with. Back off, boy.”

“How in the hell did you find this shit out so fast?” Phelps asked, his head spinning to the point he came close to missing the exit ramp to the airport.

“I just put the address and license number through the computer and his name popped out. Then, I ran him through a list of lobbyists, and his name comes up in connection with Briscoe and Lamont Ltd, which is the insurance and investment company that he worked for. They were a successful firm, but not a major player until a little more than ten years ago. Now, all of a sudden, they have offices all over the place, including all those countries I mentioned. He is not with them anymore, but suddenly he is a registered Washington lobbyist. Put two and two together Phelps.”

“So, you put two and two together and this somehow adds up to an Indian-Pakistani treaty?”

“Phelps, that’s no secret, that’s a selling point. That’s practically on his resume’.”

For a minute, both men were silent, as Phelps tried to digest the information he received, in an attempt to ferret out how much of it was actually the truth.

“All right, why in the hell would the CIA and those other agencies need lobbyists?”

“Partially for funding, but also for legal clauses-exclusions in bills that might regulate some of their more clandestine activities, especially those ones that ain’t necessarily in the public interest, if you know what I mean. Phelps, this guy knows how to get things done precisely because he knows the major players. Of course, there’s no way you can be involved in so much dirt without some mud sticking to you.”

“It still doesn’t make any sense,” Phelps insisted. “If he has that much influence then he can keep his name out of the public spotlight. This smells like some kind of facade.”

“All right, that’s a point,” Dietrich said. “I’ll look some more into it, but in the meantime, you need to get your ass back here quick.”

“Cant do that, Cruiser” he replied. “I’m on my way now to New Jersey. The only thing I am missing is the plane. Oh, that reminds me-check and see if he has any connection to Phillip Khoska and Voroslav Moloku.”

“Yeah, I’ll say there’s a connection,” Dietrich said. “Akito works for the same pharmaceutical company those clowns embezzled funds from. He is a lobbyist for them, too. Look, Phelps-wait a minute, why are you going to New Jersey?”

“I have an appointment with Khoska,” he replied.

“Now wait a minute”-

“I really have to go, Dietrich,” he said. “My plane leaves in an hour.”

“Phelps, wait, listen to this-Akito has been hired at the State Department. That is why all this was made public. Okay, now it all makes sense. Well, it does, but it does not. How would Grace be involved with somebody like this? Are you sure you gave me the right address? Are you sure you even pulled into the right driveway?”

“I’ll talk to you later, Cruiser,” Phelps said, not about to allow Cruiser Dietrich or anyone else to talk him out of a story that could finally be his big ticket out of the tabloids and into the relatively respectable business of actual journalism. He already had his ticket to New Jersey, so all he had to do now was arrange for transportation once he got there. He quickly found the Alamo Car Rental agency and arranged for a vehicle to be waiting for him upon his arrival. He left his van in the lot, making sure he left nothing behind before he locked it up and made his way toward the terminal.

Cruiser called him four times by the time he caught the plane, and another three by the time he touched down in New Jersey. When he finally made it off the plane, he decided he had better call the old fart one more time.

“Phelps, something ain’t right,” Cruiser insisted. “Why would Khoska agree to talk to you?”

“I know his father for one, and for another I know Grace,” he explained as he drove in his Alamo rental toward the home of Phillip Khoska, currently under house arrest pending an appearance before the Grand Jury.

“So in other words, you ain’t so much interviewing him as he is interviewing you,” Dietrich observed. “Boy, you had better watch your ass good.”

“I’m an expert at that, Cruiser,” he replied. “I got to get off of here for now. Hold the presses, boss. If this works out, you’re going to be publishing a story that might well be Pulitzer material.”

“With all the crap that’s been going on around Baltimore for the last few months you would think something would qualify for some kind of award,” Dietrich said. “I ain’t counting on it though. Just be careful.”

It was another twenty minutes before Phelps arrived at Phillip Khoska’s house, which impressed him with its sheer cold ostentation. This man wants the world to know he is rich, an irony in its own right seeing as to how he made an appreciable amount of it-allegedly, of course. That, of course, he wanted no one to know about, which was understandable owing to the fact the government would soon likely auction it off.

When he walked up to the front door, he looked around, almost positive one van and two cars parked down the street contained federal agents. He waved in their direction, shook his head, and rung the doorbell. He waited more than a minute before the door finally opened, and the younger wife of Phillip, whom he recognized from the papers and looking hard and cold, stuck her head out and asked what he wanted.

“I’m Everett Phelps, from the Baltimore Examiner,” he replied. “I have an appointment with your husband.”

“Good,” she replied. “You can keep him company while I finish packing. I am out of here in thirty minutes, maybe less. You can come on in if you want.”

Ordinarily, Phelps would consider a woman like this one cold bitch, but under the circumstances, he could hardly blame her, though he found it hard to have much sympathy for her. Had he not known already her name was Pamela, he might expect her to introduce herself as “Buffy”.

He entered the house, which overwhelmed him with a sense of solitude and despair. There was no furniture outside of a love seat and one recliner with an end table. The wall was devoid of clocks, mirrors, or pictures. There was not even a throw rug on the bare, hard wood floor, which looked previously carpeted, owing to lack of waxing. There was not so much as an ashtray, and so Pamela walked back toward the den flicking her ashes on the floor.

“Oh, Phillip, love of my life, you have company, break out the chips and dip,” she said sarcastically. Yeah, she is a cold bitch at that, he thought.

Then, they both reacted to the sound of a loud crack, the sound of a gunshot, and looked at each other in a unified look of stunned awareness.

“Mr. Khoska, are you all right?” Phelps asked. Pamela tried the door only to find it locked from the inside.

“Phillip!” she shouted. “Oh shit, mister, we have to do something.”

“Get away from the door,” he ordered. “You’d better call 911.”

She moved, and Phelps, after ramming his shoulder against the door several times, began to kick. After the fourth time, he threw his entire weight against it, and again, and a third time, but the fourth time finally sent the door flying open. Phelps lunged into the room sideways from the force of his lunge, and there was Phillip Khoska lying on the floor with a derringer at his side, a pool of blood at the back of his head.

He heard Pamela rummaging through her bags and assumed she was attempting to retrieve her cell phone, but he saw the phone on a table in what was evidently a private study.

He placed a call to 911, and wondered whether he should call Dietrich. First, he had to take some pictures. He took a series of them, and then noticed something. Khoska moved, and groaned. He breathed in deep, short gasps. Phillip Khoska was still alive.

“Mr. Khoska,” he said. “It’s me, Greg Phelps. Don’t try to talk or move. Someone should be here shortly.”

“The-phone-erase-the tape,” he said urgently and in obvious pain.

“What are you talking about?” he said, but then Khoska opened his eyes and seemed disturbed when he saw for the first time Phelps standing over him. He angled his eyes over toward the phone. Phelps went to the phone, but then Pamela entered, took one look at her husband lying there on the floor, and screamed.

“Mrs. Khoska, you really shouldn’t be in here right now,” Phelps said. “I already called 911, an ambulance and the cops should be here in a few minutes. You should really wait outside.”

“Is-he dead?” she asked but then saw he was in fact still alive, if barely. Then, before Phelps could move or speak another word, she was at his side, begging him to hold on until help arrived.

“You can’t die now,” she insisted. Phelps considered this display based probably not on concern or affection so much as a determination to secure her portion of community property, which would probably be considerable, even if the government took at least ninety percent of it. There was even a better than average chance he had more in offshore accounts she was after.

“You’d better go outside and wait for them,” he advised her. “I think I can keep him going until they get here, but I need space, and I need to keep him calm.”

She looked at him, then rose and stomped out of the room, for which Phelps was grateful. He walked over toward the phone, and noticed Khoska seemed desperately forming words at his lips. Phelps watched him carefully, and could make out the silent, deliberately slow accentuation of his lips.

“Grace-machine.”

Phelps played the answering machine, which yet contained one recent message.

“Hello, Phillip-you know who this is. It is over, after all this time. You lost. Soon, everything will come out-everything that you ever did, not only to me but to others as well. Your life is over. You have lost everything. Your family is gone now, and so is your money. You have nothing left to live for. Watch the DVD, Mr. Khoska. Click on the link. When you are through, do the right thing. For once in your life-just do the right thing.”

Phelps erased the tape. He then walked over to the DVD player under the plasma screen television, and ejected the DVD. He knew he had the right thing when he saw the name of it-Rappin’ With The Chairman by Toby Da Pimp. What would a man like Phillip Khoska be doing with something like this, he wondered. More ominously, what could possibly convince him to kill himself in such a fashion? Then, he saw the box, opened on the end table where Khoska had sat. He looked at it and saw that whoever addressed it to him had included no return address. He was no firearms expert, but the indentation inside the carved oak box told him all he needed to know. Someone had sent Phillip Khoska the Derringer in this box, obviously with the expectation he would do exactly what he had done.

Yet, why a Derringer? They were notoriously inefficient. John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln with a Derringer, true enough-but the sixteenth president lingered for hours before he finally died. Even now, Phelps could hear the distant yet approaching sounds of ambulances. Khoska would more than likely survive, may even conceivable make a full recovery. It made no sense.

As the ambulance even now pulled up in the driveway, Phillip leaned down toward the yet conscious Phillip Khoska, who struggled to keep his eyes open.

“Mr. Khoska, why did Grace want you to shoot yourself?” he demanded. “What is this all about?”

Khoska finally strained to speak, desperately trying to tell Phelps something-but what?

“Warn-my father,” he said with an urgently strained whisper.

Phelps kept his eyes peeled on Khoska, hoping for more information. What should he warn Aleksandre Khoska about that the old Orthodox Priest already did not know about, or at least did not strongly suspect?

“Warn him about what?” Phelps said, as even now he heard the sounds of footsteps through the opening door.

“Daniel,” Khoska said with a voice now already so weakened he seemed barely strong enough to speak above a whisper.

“Berry-is going-to kill him,” he continued, as suddenly a team of EMT personnel entered the room followed by an officer of the New Jersey State Police.

“Mr. Khoska, what are you talking about? Who’s Daniel?”

The EMT’s however quickly took over, before Khoska could respond. They were all over Khoska, in fact, and fromthe looks of him, it was unlikely at this point Khoska could have responded anyway. He seemed to be fading fast. Now, a police officer was questioning Phelps. Luckily for him Buffy was here when the shot was fired, he considered. Otherwise, he might be in for a long night.

The police were suspicious of Phelps, but allowed him to leave after four hours of questioning. They could not seem to comprehend why Phillip Khoska would agree to an interview with a muckraking photographer-a paparazzi, of all things-when he on the advice of legal counsel denied all interview requests from legitimate journalists. The fact that he just happened to be present during a suicide attempt looked all the more suspicious, despite the fact that Phelps made the 911 call.

Before he returned to Baltimore, he went to the hospital where Khoska now lingered on life support, having lapsed into and out of, and finally back into a coma from which he was yet to recover. The hospital called Aleksandre Khoska, but Phelps thought he as well should phone the old Priest. He did so, but Aleksandre seemed coldly uninterested in the fate of his wayward son.

“I am glad he survived, of course,” he said. “Perhaps he will recover sufficiently to see to the welfare of his soul, though I tend to doubt it. There is nothing I can do for him regardless.”

Phelps now found himself in the incredible position of feeling pity for a man credibly accused of running a sex-slave ring, of child prostitution and internet child pornography, of drug smuggling, embezzlement of corporate funds, of money laundering, of murder, and God only knew what else. On the other hand, he tempered his sympathy with the knowledge that Phillip Khoska had, throughout his life, carved out a cold, hard niche for himself.

“He had something he wanted me to tell you,” Phelps said. “Do you know somebody named Daniel or have a relative by that name? If you do, according to him, our good friend Detective Berry is planning to kill him. He was adamant that I tell you about it.”

For a brief moment, Khoska was silent, though Phelps could discern a sudden audible gasp.

“Are you sure about this?” he finally asked.

“Well, that’s what he said anyway,” Phelps replied. To his dismay, Khoska told him he had to hang up, and did so before Phelps could respond.

“Son of a bitch!” he shouted.

By the time he made it back to Washington, where he quickly retrieved his van, he found himself listening to and watching the entirety of the DVD on his van’s player as he drove around Washington. Nothing he saw or heard made any sense to him. Why on earth would Phillip Khoska be interested in this kind of thug garbage?

Then he saw it, on what was supposed to be Da Pimp’s version of Strangers In The Night. It was the usual second rate, in Phelps’s opinion, rap rip-off. At one point, however, it featured a girl-a young, Oriental girl, dressed in nothing but a black leather thong and tank top, strolling down what seemed to be an unusually large alley between large and ramshackle tenement buildings, lined with junkies, winos and whores who regarded her curiously, as she made her way up to Toby. She had one line that she repeated several times as she looked around, and into the video camera.

“Lick-lick-lick-lick-lick-lick-lick-lick this,” she said-over, and over, and over again.

“I know I’ve seen you somewhere before,” he said, and backed up the tape. It then occurred to him that as she recited her one line, she seemed to indicate the area of her vagina, which seemed to have a subtle glow to it.

She would then walk up to Toby, who while reciting his rap, took her in his arms, turned her around, and shoved her into the arms of a waiting wino as he walked off continuing his rap while a background vocalist sung the chorus to the actual song in a falsetto voice.

Screw it, he decided. It probably had nothing to do with Khoska anyway. The DVD might well have belonged to his idiot wife. On the other hand, he had to remind himself to consider the unlikelihood of such a coincidence, especially when there was a connection between the Seventeenth Pulse and Khoska’s own cutthroat gang. There had to be a correlation, he decided.

He went to one of the DC area libraries and got on-line. While he was here, he decided he might as well check out the available information regarding the mysterious Edward Akito. This as well turned out to be a waste of time. Aside from a number of pictures of the Japanese man, including one with his late wife, there was nothing new. He decided he would return to Baltimore. Unfortunately, there was a problem. His van refused to start.

“Phelps, why don’t you just junk that damn thing,” Cruiser demanded when he called. “How the hell old is that thing anyway?”

“Look, it’s no big deal, according to the mechanic it’s probably the computer. Once I get that done, with a tune up it should be as good as new. Well, it should be good enough to get me back to Baltimore at least. In the meantime, I want you to see if you can hook me up with some kind of interview with somebody that knows this Akito.”

“Who do you think I am Phelps, Bob Woodward? I am telling you, this is not somebody that you can just have a casual off-the-record chat with, and he sure as hell ain’t going to tell you anything on the record. What would you ask him anyway? There is no conceivable reason to interview somebody like this to begin with. He is going in as an under-assistant secretary of some little niche agency at the State Department. I don’t think he even has to be confirmed by the Senate. He’s a minor player at best-technically speaking, of course.”

“Well, maybe some people in the government might be interested in his connection with Phillip Khoska, and with the Russian Mafia. I’m sure the President and his staff would find that highly interesting, to be sure, assuming they don’t already know it.”

“Yeah, as if-remember when I told you to watch your ass, Phelps? That is exactly what I was talking about. Come back to Baltimore, boy. Sometimes digging in the dirt will only make you dirty. If you ain’t real careful about six foot of it ends up on top of you-kapish?”

“Alright, damn, I’ll come back as soon as the van is fixed,” he promised.

Of course, Phelps intended to keep that promise, but in the meantime, he decided it couldn’t hurt to make some use of his time. He returned to the library and played the DVD, whereupon he made a discovery. The young Japanese girl seemed to be pointing to her crotch area as she recited her one repetitious line. He noticed something else-her crotch, for a brief instant, seemed to glow. Then, it finally occurred to Phelps.

“She’s saying “click this,” he said. Looking around, he decided to back up the DVD, and he did just that. It had the effect of pausing the DVD at first, but then something else happened. A new window seemed to open, and there was the girl, in the same alley, surrounded by shadowy, unseen figures. She was now naked, apparently in a great deal of pain, bruised and bloody. She had obviously been badly beaten, and probably raped. Her eyes glared with pain, humiliation, desperation, and abject terror. She seemed to force herself to look into the camera. Then, as Phelps thought he could hear an animal growling in the background, she spoke.

“Long live the Seventeenth Pulse. Long live Securitate. Long live The Sacred Order Of The Dragon. Long live The True Church Of The Sacred Blood Of The Crucified And Resurrected Lord Jesus Christ. Death to the heresy of the false church and world governments. Please, forgive me my sins on this night of my death.”

She broke down and cried pitifully as suddenly, the animals came into view. There were dogs, countless numbers of them, ranging from pit bulls, Doberman Pinschers, and other breeds, which all ripped mercilessly into the hapless girl, ripping her to shreds in a matter of under a minute, as she begged to no avail.

As Phelps watched in an aura of helpless confusion and dismay, he found himself unable yet to turn from the computer screen as the window closed and returned to the exact spot at which he clicked on the hidden link. Phelps now once more looked upon the revolting face of Dwayne Lecher.

“You son-of-a-bitch,” he hissed.

He walked back outside the library and phoned Cruiser, who was now adamant that he return to Washington.

“Do you know what has happened?”

“Khoska is dead?”

“No, Khoiska is still in a coma. The FBI is looking for you now. What in the hell is wrong with you? Why did you erase the message on Khoska’s answering machine? Do you think you can get away with stuff like that?”

Phelps muttered under his breath as he tried to block out the sound of Cruiser’s rant.

“Never mind that, Cruiser,” he said. “I’m sending you a copy of a DVD. Check your e-mail. Pay attention to the version of Strangers In The Night. There’s a girl there, a Chinese girl. When she keeps saying “lick this”, move your browser over her crotch and click it. It’s a hyper-link to a snuff film. It’s incredible. I’m not sure, but I think the girl is Susan Chou-in fact I’m positive that’s who she is.”

“My God, Phelps, are you serious?” he asked. “Is that what you took from Khoska’s house? Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you, they are after you for that too. You need to get in here right now, boy. We’ll try to work something out for you.”

“Fine, I’ll be there, but first you have to promise me that you’ll look at the DVD, and the link. Please.”

Dietrich promised him he would do so, and Phelps told him he was on his way back to Baltimore. By the time he found a cab and made it to the garage, his van was ready, and so he drove off as he wondered if he could possibly make it to The Examiner’s office building before the feds picked him up. He might be in real trouble, but he could not afford to worry about that now. He had tried to protect Grace while in the process of undertaking his own investigation. He told himself Grace was a witless pawn in over her head. Now he wanted to ring her neck. How could he have been so stupid?

By the time he made it back to Baltimore, it was approaching nightfall, and he decided to make one quick stop at the now almost completely restored Krovell Funeral Home. He knew from searching Grace’s apartment earlier that there was a connection in some way with the people involved in that business. Martin and Louise Krovell especially were under suspicion since the death fo Grady Desmond. He parked far enough away for no one to see him-he hoped-and he waited.

Soon, and luckily from another direction, he saw the car of Lieutenant James Barry pull up to the front of the building. He had someone with him-a female. He zoomed in with his camera lens, and saw, to his horror, there was a third person in the back seat. It was a young girl, who looked as though bound in some manner. Suddenly, he saw someone else standing outside the funeral home.

Marlowe Krovell, he realized, was alive. It was him, standing outside the house, in plain sight, and looking very anxious, as Phelps began shooting roll after roll of pictures. The woman who rode with Barry looked to be in horrible shape, yet she seemed well at the same time, though she walked with a stiff gait. The girl cried. Phelps called Cruiser on the phone.

“Now where in the hell are you?” Dietrich demanded. “Damn you boy, are you determined to be charged with a federal crime? I’m telling you one more time to get your ass in here now-pronto!”

“I’m sending you some pictures, Cruiser, of Marlowe Krovell and James Berry. There’s a couple of other people too, a young girl and some woman that looks like something out of the pits of hell. I don’t know what’s going on here Cruiser, but I think the girl is in danger. You should call the police as soon as you can. Have you seen the DVD yet?”

“Yeah, I saw it,” he said. “You’re right, it’s the Chou girl. Your pictures just came over. Hold on. You need to get away from there though, it might be dangerous there.”

However, Marlowe had disappeared, and so had the girl. Now, Barry and the strange, horrid looking woman got back into Barry’s car and drove off toward the same direction from which they arrived. Phelps hurriedly continued shooting the pictures of the back of the car, being especially careful to capture Barry’s license plate.

“Phelps then left, and made his way toward the Examiner office. He knew it would be a waste of time attempting to return to his own apartment. He considered briefly the idea of going to Grace’s apartment, since he did have a key, but decided that would be risky as well.

As soon as he got to Phelps’s office, he turned over the original DVD. Suddenly, Cruiser seemed delighted.

“That was great work, boy,” he said. “You really had me going for awhile. I think you’re off your rocker about Krovell, though. You do need to get some rest.”

“I know it was Krovell-I saw him with my own two eyes. He’s on the film. You can see for yourself.”

“That’s just the thing, I did see it. Well, you were right about Barry at least,” Cruiser said. “I don’t know who the other people are, but if the other man is supposed to be Marlowe Krovell, he sure has changed a hell of a lot. I guess death will change a person, but this is a little much.”

He handed Phelps the newly developed photos, copies Phelps e-mailed him earlier. While Barry, the strange woman, and the apparently kidnapped girl looked the same, the person he took as Marlowe had decidedly changed. Instead of Marlowe Krovell, he now looked upon the form of a man who looked to be in his fifties, yet with dried leathery skin that in death would easily pass as mummified. His hair was long, thick, wavy, and blonde. The only resemblance to Marlowe was the eyes, which showed up now the same bright green. In his own way, he looked even more horrible than the woman, who looked worse in the photo than she did from the distance at which Phelps saw her in person. She looked, in effect, not only to be a walking corpse, but one at a preliminary stage of decomposition.

“I don’t know what in the hell is going on here, Cruiser, but its some bad shit.”

“You don’t know the half of it,” the old editor replied. “I ran some of these pictures through our database of photos. That woman came back as Raven Randall. I would almost have to say that is just as impossible as the man being Marlowe as you insisted. The only thing about that is, it just so happens that, by the way, her body is missing from the morgue. Her corpse was one of those the morgue was checking for signs of post mortem sexual abuse by Brad Marlowe. Well, evidently, if that was true, it gives a completely new meaning to the term “waking the dead.”

“So, this is it,” Phelps said. “I’m here, just like you insisted. I guess I’m toast. Go ahead and call the feds. I’m ready.”

“I wish I didn’t have to do this, Phelps,” he said. “Still, if I don’t go along with them I could face a charge myself. I promise you, I’ll make sure you have access to the best lawyer I can get you. Just don’t lie to them about anything. Tampering with evidence is a serious charge under any jurisdiction. Don’t make it worse by engaging in perjury, by lying to the FBI in the course of a federal investigation. You’re just lucky that the New Jersey Police answered the 911 call you put in-which, by the way, is another thing in your favor. The Feds don’t really have a reason to charge you. Don’t give them a reason, boy, I’m begging you. If you play your cards right, they can get you out of hot water with the New Jersey authorities.”

“I think I need to go out and have a smoke before they get here,” Phelps said.

“Phelps”-

“I promise, I’m not going to run away,” he assured the old editor.

“All right,” Dietrich said. “Go on, I’ll give you ten minutes before I call.”

Phelps reluctantly walked out and lit up a Winston. He breathed in deeply. How could he have let things get so out of control, and all for Grace Rodescu at that? He was under no illusions about her. Grace would hang him or anyone else out to dry without a second thought, if the price was right. Fore that matter, it would not have to be an astronomical sum before it qualified as “right”.

It was now dark, and Phelps felt as though someone watched his every move. It was cold, too, and as he inhaled the cold air along with the thick warm smoke of his cigarette, it hurt his lungs. He coughed harshly. He wanted to go back inside. Surely Cruiser wouldn’t deny him the time and space to have one smoke in comfort. Before he made it to the door, he realized someone moved behind him. He could feel the presence of another person. He turned, and there he was.

It was a man, judging by his size, in a dark gray burlap robe. He could make out no features through the hood, as the streetlight seemed to illuminate only the shadows of the hood that hid his features.

“Who in the hell are you?” he asked.

The man gave no answer, but Phelps could see his eyes, glowing like red-hot embers, burning into him, piercing into his consciousness, making him uncomfortably hot despite the cold night Baltimore air.

“I asked you a question-who the hell are you?”

Phelps was suddenly paralyzed, and found it impossible to turn from the burning gaze of the man. Soon, his features came into focus. Phelps realized then, as he looked upon his terrible, ungodly countenance-he somehow knew this man. He came closer to him, walking slowly and yet steadily towards him. Phelps wanted to run, but could not, as the man, with a speed that belied his seemingly ponderous size, seized him by the neck and, with an iron grip under his chin, hoisted him off the ground with one hand, as Phelps flailed helplessly in the air. At first he made several ineffectual attempts to strike back, to kick, but it was all to no avail. The man kept his eyes focused on Phelps’s own eyes, as Phelps saw his entire life flashing before him. He saw the time he was a kid in the second grade. One of the older kids, a twelve year old, caught him after school and held him up in the same manner and shook him until Phelps, in front of everyone in school, it seemed, pissed all over himself.

He saw the time his own father did the same thing to him when he came home and caught him beating his mother, and remembered how he threatened to beat him to a pulp if he ever told anyone. He saw then how later on his father gave him his first camera for his birthday, and how he used to go all over Baltimore taking pictures of street scenes. Later, he would sell pictures of dating couples at the outdoor cafes. He tried to open his first photography studio, a business venture that ended in failure and debt-until he started work as a freelance news photographer, a job that led to his first and only full time job with the Examiner.

He saw all of these things, in the flash of an instant, his life in pictures, a still-life collage, distilled down to enough snapshots to fill a shoebox, but otherwise, a life of little substance.

Now, he was helpless, and limp as a dishcloth, until he found himself laid out on the sidewalk, barely conscious. He wondered now-who am I? He looked around and saw no one. He vaguely remembered a man in a gray robe and hood. Where did he go? Had he seen him at all? Why could he not remember where he was? Why could he not remember who he was?

“Your name is Phelps, right?”

He looked around to see the large black man reaching toward him with his tattoo-marked wrist, while looking at him earnestly. Of course, he was right. His name was Phelps.

“Yeah,” he replied. “That’s me. Do I know you?”

The man shook his head in the affirmative.

“Come on, man,” he said. “I’ve been sent to take you home. You’ve had a hard night. You’ll be alright after a little rest.”

The man motioned toward the open door of the vehicle. Phelps rose, but he was shaky and weak, so the man helped steady him. He helped him to the Land Rover. Phelps got in and, after the man closed the door, he got behind the wheel and drove away.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

A Probably Crazy Fucking Idea


The Hydra picture above is one I am thinking of using as the header picture for a new blog I am thinking of starting. It's not one I am wanting to do instead of this one, but in addition to it. In fact, I will have little to do with it. The idea behind this blog is one I got while reading the constant sniping that goes on between two readers and commenters of another blog. The idea is to start a blog, and add these two guys, in addition to others, as team members. Let them just go at each other about anything and everything they want, with no holds barred.

If anyone would be interested let me know. Of course the caveat is these two guys would both have to agree to it, but I don't think they will. I don't think either of them took me seriously when I brought the subject up. Well, I was very serious. I think it could be a big hit.

The only rule I can think of right now would be no "mommy blogs", or "what I ate for breakfast" shit. Porn would be fine as long as it's not illegal shit or doesn't turn into a spam center. Oh yeah, that goes for spam of any kind. Otherwise, people can feel free to tear each other new assholes if they want.

I think it would be cool myself. One guy is a Trotskyist, the other a US government official of some sort who bills himself as a social liberal who no longer has a home in the Democratic Party and is a Giuliani supporter. If they would join as team members, and I can get others to join in the fun, it would be worth the effort, I'm sure.

If anybody has any thoughts, let me know. More than likely though, I doubt I'll go through with it unless I can get some kind of commitment from them, and hopefully a few others as well.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

New Hampshire Primary Assessment-Where Do We Go From Here?

The New Hampshire primary went as expected on the Republican side, though the Democratic race was something of a surprise. Hillary pulled out a victory over second place Obama, while Edwards was a distant third. There were three separate factors involved.

Hillary’s show of emotion during a town hall format question and answer period showed what is portrayed as a warmer, more feminine side that she previously seemed unwilling, possible unable, to show. At the same time, she managed to put this across as concern for the country, as opposed to taking her prior defeat by Obama personally.

At the same time, this did not denigrate her renowned steely resolve as much as enhance it. Hilary Clinton is seen by her staunchest supporters, and to an extent justifiably so, as a person much like Margaret Thatcher in her strength of character and determination, if not in her political beliefs.

So, where is all of this going from here? Frankly, there is a good chance now that Obama will lose South Carolina. If he does, he is finished. It would be a mistake to consider him the odds on favorite to win that state based on the majority black Democratic population. There are two things to consider. One is that the Clintons are themselves well liked by the black Democratic population in general. Another that may be just as pertinent to South Carolina, and to southern blacks in general, is the Clintons may have a secret weapon by the name of Harold Ford Jr.

Since his defeat in the Tennessee Senate race in 2006, Ford has gone on to become the chairman of the Democratic Leadership Committee, the moderate Democratic group co-founded by Bill Clinton, who still exerts a great influence on the group. Look for Ford-in the background of course-to call in favors amongst the leadership of southern black Democrats, among whom he is very influential.

Of course, Obama might yet still pull out a victory, which he definitely needs before Super Tuesday rolls around. When that day comes, the only sure safe state for Obama is Illinois-where he has the fabled Chicago Democratic machine at his disposal-and arguably California and Michigan. Those last two states, however, are by no means certain, especially Michigan if John Edwards is still on the ballot.

There is actually a good chance that, if Obama fails to win South Carolina and preferably one or two more states, he might well withdraw and throw his support behind Edwards, especially if he wins no states at all between now and then. Even if he does, ti might well be too late by then to stop what might be a Hillary steamroller. His name will still be on the ballot, after all, and his more faithful supporters will vote for him or no on else, regardless of his stated wishes.

There is also a chance he could throw his weight behind Hillary if he perceives the inevitability of a Clinton nomination.

In all likelihood, however, by the time Super Tuesday comes along, Hillary will have the nomination sewed up.

At any rate there were two other factors in her victory in New Hampshire. A good lot of the Democratic voters were undecided until practically the last minute, and sometime during that brief snapshot in time, decided on Hillary.

Finally, the independent voters of the state, who could vote in one or the other party primaries, opted to vote for John McCain in the Republican race instead of Obama in the Democratic one.

That brings us to the Republican results. So far, out of three state contests, we have three separate winners. Huckabee won Iowa, Romney won Wyoming, and McCain won New Hampshire on the strength of the independent voters of the state. It is still, technically, anybody’s race, but it would seem as though the race for the Republican nomination is shaping up as between Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani, with Mike Huckabee playing the role of spoiler. Due to his influence, I give a slight edge to Giuliani. Huckabee’s supporters would be unlikely to vote for Giuliani, at least in the primary, and as long as he is in the race, Huckabee will siphon votes from Romney.

However, Romney absolutely has to win Michigan, or you can stick a fork in him. Most people, even most conservative Republicans, see Romney as a smooth, practiced, polished politico who might be a bit of a phony, and every bit the flip-flopper as John Kerry. His support thus far is a distillation of the idea that he is the only true conservative who, at this point, stands a chance of winning. Yet, even his conservative views seem questionable, and self-serving, given his former record as governor of Massachusetts. Moreover, most voters view him as outright attempting to buy the nomination. Voters to a large degree automatically resent this. Because of all these factors, as well as some dismay amongst some circles as to his Mormon faith, his support is shallow at best.

By the same token nobody outside the evangelical, socially conservative Christians likes or trusts Mike Huckabee. The depth of his support outside that faction is almost non-existent. He might well win in South Carolina, and a handful of other states with a large evangelical movement, but if he does, as I say, it will be at Romney’s expense. He might even conceivably throw one or two of these states over into Giuliani’s column, as unlikely as that seems for now.

I do not want to count Fred Thompson out of the race yet. If he can pull off a win in South Carolina, and do well in others, he might well do considerably above expectations on Super Tuesday. In order for this to occur, however, two things have to happen as I see it. One, he has to win South Carolina, and preferably one or two others. The second thing is Mitt Romney has to lose Michigan, and afterwards drop out of the race.

I simply cannot see McCain being a factor in any place besides possibly Michigan, unless it would be Arizona. That is by no means a sure thing for him, despite the fact it is his home state.

It is actually very conceivable that the nomination will be undecided by the time the Republican primary rolls around. If so, whoever has the third most delegates-more than likely this will be Huckabee, possibly McCain-will be in the role of king maker. A Huckabee or even a McCain Vice-Presidential slot is not out of the question, and is actually likely, under a Giuliani or Thompson ticket-not so much under a Romney, who would doubtless opt for Thompson, at least the way things stand now.

As for the Democrats, is there any possibility of a Clinton-Obama ticket? It would seem unlikely, but stranger things have happened. Politics after all is partly the art of the practical. There are few if any dream teams in reality. When it comes to the promise of power, politicians of all stripe have one quality that distinguishes them above the common folk-the have an inner resolve that translates to all outward appearances into very thick skin

Monday, January 07, 2008

Not That I'm Bragging Or Anything, But-


What can I say? When I get it right, I really get it right. On the other hand, I avoided making my usual prediction of a terrorist attack purposely timed to coincide with a Mars retrograde opposition to the Sun, and of course, the shit hits the fan in Pakistan. Benazir Bhutto was assassinated there, apparently by Al-Queda terrorists, just two days after Christmas, and four days or so after the opposition.

In the meantime, there has been a volcanic eruption in Chile, and I think another is expected in Nicaragua.

Anyway, if you are or have been in one of the areas affected by the winter blizzards and extreme cold, stay warm, and good luck. Remember, I'm only the messenger. Well, okay, it was a lucky guess. Maybe.

Tim Russert-Fucktard With An Agenda


Who does this fucking guy think he is? Look, if no one wants to believe me that he is trying his damndest to promote John McCain, that's fine. All I ask is that you watch this fuckhead. Bear in mind, it wouldn't bother me so much if he would just come out and say "I'm for John McCain, and here's why." Or even if he just said, "I'm for John McCain, and fuck you if you don't like it." But no, this greasy fatass has got to play coy and act like he's an objective journalist and reporter just giving the facts. Yeah, bullshit.

Fuck the Bills, too.

Britney Loves Michael-A Perfect Match


The above photo is from an appearance in 1999, in which Michael Jackson apeared with Britney Spears in a duet of Jackson's hit single The Way You Make Me Feel.

It has given me an idea that this could well be the next up-and-coming couple of the year-Britney Spears and Michael Jackson. This might have actually been the starting point. It was not too long after this joint appearance that Michael Jackson's troubles soon began in earnest, while Britney's fortunes were just beginning to rise.

Soon, it seemed as though his life was a constant runaway train, running out of control, while she could do no wrong. Soon, Jackson was done. Then, when it seemed as though no one could ever top his shenanigans, Britney quickly began her own downward spiral, until it has gotten to the point where she is what and where she is today.

What would be more natural than for the two of them to begin together, to put their lives back together-well, together.

It would be a match made in paparazzi heaven. Britney would get to meet wealthy Arab princes and sheiks from Dubai. She would get a quick infusion of cash investments toward a real comeback. She would probably get quite a few infusions of other things as well-like multiple semen samples, for example.

They could also do albums together, and videos. They could do a concert tour. It might just be the shot in the arm both Britney and Michael need, both for their careers and their personal lives. Can you imagine that marriage? That would be the biggest wedding since Charles and Diana.

Moreover, when Britney wanted to go out and party, she could do so, secure in the knowledge that that great lover of children, Michael Jackson, would gladly baby sit her two precious little boys. Ex-husband Kevin Federline would probably be willing to work out a renewal of joint custody. Why would he not? Hell, just offer him a guest vocalist gig on the new albums first single.

Please, Michael and Britney-do this. Get married-please. A new world awaits you both. For that matter, so does the old one. Don't let all your adoring fans down.

Controller-In-Chief

What kind of experience does Hillary Clinton possess that make her supporters think she is qualified to be President of the United States? Admittedly, you could make the case she has more than either Obama or Edwards-but is it the right kind of experience? I guess it depends on what you value.

Sure, she has met foreign leaders and knows all the major players of the Washington establishment, the Press, etc., and she knows how “the game” is played. Of course, you can make the same case for almost any world leader or bureaucrat. The question becomes not so much is she qualified to lead, but instead, what would be the style and manner of leadership?

Many people assume that a Hillary presidency would be a resumption and continuation of the Presidency of Bill Clinton. I honestly believe nothing could be further from the truth. Well, I should qualify that. It might well be a continuation of certain aspects of the first Clinton presidency, but I am very much afraid it would be mostly the negative aspects, with few of the more positive ones, if any.

I will just come right out and say it-Hillary’s major experience, throughout almost the entirety of her public career, can be summed up thusly-she spent her time controlling Bill Clinton. She spent her time controlling mainly his personal life, and doing what amounted to a very heavy-handed and yet behind-the-scenes damage control during those times when she failed to control him. Those times, evidently, appear to be numerous.

Imagine the situation in a different context-suppose Bill Clinton were a movie or rock star. Think of him as the kind of guy who would have innumerable groupies, orgies, drug parties. Imagine all the trouble he could potentially get into. Think of the hotel rooms vandalized or set on fire, or with holes kicked in walls and windows broken. Look at the potential for lawsuits over various questionable activities. Then, along comes Hillary, with her pay-offs, her bribes, threats, and media spin-the ultimate manager. She would be the one to reel him in, to bring him back in line-cold, hard, and practical.

It is one thing to have somebody like that in the capacity as First Lady, doing damage control, but with no legitimate power of her own over affairs of state. It is something else quite again to give somebody like that actual power and control. To put it bluntly, that is exactly the kind of president she would be-the ultimate control freak.

She would run the nation and affairs of state-and by extension would attempt to run the citizenry of the nation-in the exact same manner she tried to run the day-to-day life of William Jefferson Clinton, with varying degrees of success. Her heavy hand and thick ankles would come crashing down on every aspect of American life, from what we (and especially our children) read, write, watch, listen to, eat, drink, smoke, all the way down to what and how much we drive, and how much exercise we get on a daily basis.

It would not be pretty-and no matter how much he tried, Bill Clinton would never be able to put a human face on it. Well, there is nothing human about it, so how could he? Sure, certain things might be good, or better, on a policy level in certain respects. The economy and foreign affairs might see some probably minor improvement in general and there might well be needed policy initiatives and accomplishments that might ease the pain.

On the other hand, at what price would these come, assuming they did (which is actually a big assumption)? Personally, I do not think it would be worth the price, and I am unwilling to pay it. I urge anyone who would even consider voting for Hilary Clinton for President of the United States to consider just what you might be getting, and more importantly, just what you might be giving up.

During Bill Clinton’s second term of office, Hillary already started the long torturous process of trying to change her image to the American people. She began a public relations campaign geared toward the protection and preservation of early American artifacts, such as the Liberty Bell, the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, etc. It was an effort to make her appear to respect those institutions that define us as a nation.

Well, I would love to own an original Benjamin Franklin stove. I doubt, though, that I would ever use it. I am very much afraid that will be Hillary Clinton’s attitude toward the Constitution. Do not ever leave it out where it can get in the way. Put it up somewhere where it is out of sight-you know, where it is safe. You can always bring it out when it is convenient to do so-you know, when you want to make a good impression.

What Makes Fred Run-And Why He's Wasting His Time

Fred Thompson is running because a large segment of the Republican Party base wanted him to, and all but drafted him. The big problem with this is, there are many people who aren't interested in a Thompson presidency, if not outright hostile to the idea.

1. The media-who have been downplaying his candidacy from day one, and have even attempted to sabotage his campaign by the release of unsubstantiated rumors meant to suppress the vote for him. Example-Tim Russert has recently all but become the spokesman for the McCain campaign, suggesting that Thompson might soon withdraw and throw his support behind McCain. He did this during a broadcast of NBC Nightly News, on the night of the Iowa caucus. Three days later, on Meet The Press, he conducted a favorable "interview" segment with McCain, just two days before the New Hampshire primary, in which he trumpeted McCain's lead in the polls.

2. The power players in the Republican Party itself. I'm telling you for a fact-they don't want him. They know that Thompson is not interested in the politics as usual, pay-the-piper king making that goes along with traditional party politics. Thompson wants to do what he honestly feels is right for the country-whether or not that happens to coincide with the interests of the Washington elites.

3. Fred Thompson himself-he's just not made for the dirt ball politics that make or break a candidate. He wants to make his case, he wants you to listen thoughtfully to what he has to say, and make your decision. Then, providing he wins your support, he wants to go about the business of doing what's right for the country, with no nonsense and no strings attached. Because of the way he is, Fred Thompson is not going to kiss your babies-or your ass.

4. Fred Thompson is a Federalist-He doesn't just talk the talk, he walks the walk. Unfortunately, most of the people in power don't view the philosophy as anything more than than a curious anachronism, at best. They don't want it-or him.

As such, my advice to Thompson supporters is as follows-write, e-mail, and phone your Republican Party officials on all levels and express your support for the Thompson campaign. That is the only chance that his campaign will ever get off the ground. If the Party apparatchiks are willing to support him and stand by him-or at the very least accept him-then he has a chance. If they do not, then he has no chance. It is just that simple.

Then, let Thompson himself know that you expect him to run his campaign as though he wants to win it. If he does that, he might just pull it off. Stranger things have happened. Just take a look at his wife.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

The Romneylan Empire And Its Wounded Bird Of Pray

"It is a good thing to pray for the dead".

Of course, the Romney campaign is not exactly dead yet, but it's damn sure on life support. His opponents for the Republican nomination smell blood and, in the last Republican debate, moved in for the kill.

When Romney chided Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, telling him to not mischaracterize a certain one of his positions, Huckabee asked "which one?"

John McCain added that, although he disagreed with Romney on many things, one thing he would have to agree on is that "you sure are the candidate of change."

Romney is obviously beleaguered by these assaults, and he had better pull it together. If he can't stand up to these kinds of attacks, he is doomed. Don't think for one minute that questions, reservations, and suspicions about his membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints is settled-far from it. Among many things he will be questioned about, like it or not, will be his beliefs that-

*A man named Hinckley, the present day President of the Church, is a modern day prophet who speaks infallibly for God (and who incidentally does not believe in separation of church and state).

*God was once a man, and now lives on a distant planet.

*Mormons are so big on genealogy because they believe they are called to baptize all those people now dead who ever lived-including all non-Mormons-and they do this by way of surrogates.

*The Garden of Eden was once in Missouri, which will soon be the center of a coming world capital (though the spiritual capitol will be Jerusalem).

That is just a small sample. There is more, much more, and if Romney goes much further, he will eventually be faced with serious questions from those who have reservations about electing a man who holds such inordinate beliefs. That he believes them in and of itself might be a miniscule factor were it not for the fact that his family is high up in the leadership of the church.

His father, George Romney, was the first cousin of a man who once held the position of President of the most august body within the leadership of the LDS, known as The Twelve Apostles. Among their responsibilities is electing the President of the Church from within their own membership, and funding proselytization efforts.

His reaction to his loss in Iowa the other night was obviously one of barely disguised disappointment, which is understandable. His reaction to attacks on him during the debate was one of obvious frustration.

I don't know whether or not he has been wearing his magic underwear the last few nights. If so, judging from his reactions at the debate, I think they probably need a good ritual cleansing.

John McCain-A Crazy Candidate For A Crazy Party


The McCain candidacy is suddenly resurgent after months on life support. It is accurate and yet simplistic to assess this revival as due to his previous stands on The Surge, which to many now seems prescient. Though there is a great amount of truth to this, there are other reasons that might be even more vital. In fact there are three reasons why I think John McCain stands a very good chance of being the next nominee for President on the Republican Party.
1. The media loves him. Tim Russert in particular seems to go out of his way to promote him.

2. The voters want a man of experience in all areas of government. John McCain meets this qualification.

3. The voters want, even more importantly, a candidate who seems to be honest and promises change.

When you add all these factors in, you can see that all it would take for McCain to be well on his way to winning the GOP nomination would be a decisive win in New Hampshire this Tuesday. Then, the money will start pouring in to his campaign. That is for now his weakest area. His campaign is almost destitute when it comes to cash on hand. A convincing win might well change his fortunes in that regard as well.

Of course, he would still have to reassure a good many of the Republican faithful who see him as a "RINO" (Republican in name only). This is true not only of the conservative base of the party, but the power brokers as well.

There is another reason, however, that McCain stands a good chance. He might well be a perfect reflection of the Republican Party as a whole. Like the Party, John McCain might be a person with a fractured, fragmented personality. Of all the candidates, he might be the one who can glue together all those fractured pieces into a illusory semblance of a sane entity.

On the other hand-well, maybe not.

Huckabee-The Chicken That Came Home To Roost


Be careful what you ask for. Beginning in 1948, when then Democratic governor Strom Thurmond bolted the Democratic Party to form the "Dixiecrats" in his run for the Presidency, the Republican Party has been asking for-Democrats. You know, those Democrats who, to paraphrase the famous words of Ronald Reagan, did not leave the party so much as the party left them.

It was a long term and for the most part successful drive, culminating the elections of Nixon, Reagan, and Bushes I and II. To be sure, there were hiccups along the way, with the elections of Carter and Clinton. For the most part, however, these were short term re-defections that didn't amount to a movement so much as a test run, based on the hopes that the Democratic Party finally saw the light in those areas where it mattered the most.

The most obvious non-Presidential successes of the Republican drive for Democratic votes was in the 1994 and 2002 mid-term elections. The Republicans took over both houses of Congress in the first case, and in the second, George Bush became the first incumbent President in more than fifty years whose party won seats in the mid-term. Perhaps most importantly, the Republican Party came to a kind of prominence in the Deep South that two decades and more earlier would have been unimaginable.

Now, the Republican Party is in a tail-spin, and as I have been saying, seems afflicted with multiple personality disorder, where the various fragmented parts of the whole are manifesting in the various personalities that make it up, rach one vying for control of what is actually an entity at war with itself internally.

One of the most important parts of the Republican psyche is the "born again, evangelical" Christians, who make up a large part of those former Democrats who left in disgust the party of the working, common man.

Now, they want payback for the years of loyalty to the party, and they will not, it seems, be denied. Now, they want one of their own. An economically moderate former Baptist minister and Arkansas governor from Hope Arkansas who is actually to a great extent a social liberal and who even to some degree talks like a Democrat on foreign policy issues.

Oh, but he is anti-abortion and believes God has a place in the public arena. Since he believes in these things, and apparently believes in a literalist interpretation of the Bible, that makes him, to the Christian base, one of them, even if he is a moderate on border security issues and favors such things as a nationwide smoking ban.

Establishment Republicans are going crazy. They point out that heraised taxes more than Bill Clinton. Of course, what they don't say (and to a great extent don't realize) is that as a governor of a state, he had no choice. Many if not most states-and this evidently includes Arkansas-do not have the luxury of running up huge deficits. They have budgets they must balance. Therefore, if it is impossible for a Republican governor to rein in spending in a state in which the legislature is controlled by Democrats, tax raises might well be unavoidable.

This doesn't worry me so much as some of the other problems with Huckabee. Still, I have to admit, it's fun watching the Party go berserk over this guy.

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Radu-Chapter XXXIII (A Novel by Patrick Kelley)

Previous Installments-
Part One
Prologue and Chapters I-X
Part Two
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
PartThree
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Radu-Chapter XXXIII (A Novel by Patrick Kelley)
23 pages approximate
No one thought the Crypt would reopen following the shootout that occurred not that many months before, but then Marnie Moloku purchased the building and the business. It seemed fitting to her, and though she could care less about the business, it would make a suitable front, with a clientele conducive to her long-range plans.

Unfortunately, her plans ended up blown all to hell, quite literally-or so it seemed when the vials of “magic blood”, as her confederates referred to them, were destroyed in the course of an explosion that took the life of her major client. The upswing to all that was, she still had the money-all two billion dollars worth. She had not now, nor would she ever, transfer those funds to the pharmaceutical company that purchased the vials, which in fact they never received. Since Uncle Phillip arranged the sell, and more or less embezzled the funds to do so, arranging for payment to a shell company from which he planned to transfer the funds to a Panamanian account-well, what could he or they say?

It served Uncle Phillip right, she reasoned. He should have known better than to trust someone of her expertise, knowledge, and more importantly, her drive. Now, Uncle Phillip had other, far more important problems. Aside from the embezzlement charges, he was the prime and in fact the only suspect in the murders of his entire family. Marnie figured she was, as of now, the least of his worries.

Phillip Khoska was broke. Marnie doubted he could even pay his light bill. She smiled at the thought of him applying for Legal Aid. Poor Uncle Phillip, she thought. As more days went past, she worried less about her mother as well. She was obviously in hiding somewhere, and was probably better off than Phillip. She would do well, Marnie considered, to count her blessings.

Marnie had her own life to live, and she would live it. She had no stomach for far-reaching conspiracies geared toward power. She was a billionaire, in fact if not law-that was all the power she needed. She had one of the best law firms at her disposal that would protect her. All she had to do was talk. All she had to do was stay put until they needed her to tell all she knew about the criminal, international cartel that Uncle Phillip had taken over and expanded, the remaining members of which were now under a legal microscope.

With one word from her, their drug smuggling cartel, their sex-slave ring, their child pornography, all of it, was history, and that suited Marnie fine. She had nothing to do with any of that. She merely found out about all of it, and provided the necessary account records that could prove it. If anything happened to her, they would face additional charges of murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and most importantly, murder of a federal witness.

In the meantime, in return for her cooperation, she had a blanket guarantee of pardon for any and all crimes or any potential legal or civil liability due to her past activities and associations. She tried to get a blanket pardon to extend into perpetuity, but the feds just looked at her and laughed. Then, they cursed. Then, they told her to go to hell. When she heard that, she realized she may have gone too far, and so backed down from that demand. What in the hell, she had two billion dollars-no need in pushing her luck.

She had Toby to thank for all of this-or, more specifically, his partner Hacksaw. It was he who hacked into Phillips accounts, and did it all for the sheer joy, the art of the game. Well, that and for twenty million dollars. That was a mere one percent of the two billion total-pocket change. She looked in the mirror and smiled, well pleased with herself. Now she could afford a nose job, a boob job, and even a minor tummy tuck. Soon, when all of this was over, she would disappear to the Riviera, or Monaco, possibly Dubai, and live the way she always knew she should live. There would be no more college, no drudgery working towards a master’s degree in business. She had given everybody a crash course in business economics-a real crash course.

She could afford, for now, to remain in Baltimore, and she would have fun while she did. She had previously arranged through her father for the transfer of The Crypt to her name, and now that old man Voroslav was dead, she no longer had a partner, silent or otherwise. It would no longer be a front for a criminal enterprise, but actually a legitimate business, one that she would use as a means of passing the time until the feds called her to testify. Then, she would be on her way.

Once that happened, she would be a heroine. She would have single-handedly brought down one of the most ruthless crime cartels in recent history, arguably of all time. She would be on the cover of Newsweek and Time, invited on all the morning network interview shows, and all the cable news channels.

Just wait until Ricky Peterson saw her then, she thought. She would make sure she looked her best, and straight into the camera, so he would know he was looking at that “little fat-ass Marnie” that used to have such a crush on him. She would wait a while, buy his law-firm, and fire him. On second thought, maybe she would keep him on just for grins.

For now, The Crypt provided her with the protection she would need without having to spend months in the relative solitude of witness protection. It would also provide her with some fun and excitement. She missed the adventure of the con game. She even missed the danger. It gave her a rush that was better than any drug. Her father tried to protect her all her life. He made sure she had armed escorts wherever she went. At first, it was stifling and suffocating. She came to realize that the only way she could function in such an environment was to throw herself into it.

Voroslave told her many times she could have anything she wanted, and she took him at his word. She sniffed cocaine and smoked cigarettes to the tune of two packs a day, and drunk like the proverbial fish. She lost weight over a seven-month period, going down from a hefty one hundred seventy eight pounds, to a mere one hundred thirty four. That was her first and perhaps her most remarkable lesson in life. She would study her form in the mirror, and realized she still looked as fat as she ever did. Therefore, she lost another twenty pounds. Then she lost another ten. Now, she could finally tell a difference, but only in the mirror. In her day-to-day life and activities, she realized she did not feel any different.

She became nervous and more irritable by the day, and made everybody’s life miserable. She all but made this a goal, thinking that nobody liked her anyway, so why in the hell shouldn’t she make them all suffer? Finally, she collapsed, and though her family assumed it was a nervous breakdown, no one realized at first that it was, in fact, drug induced. When her father realized she had been a habitual cocaine user, he practically went through the roof. He got out of his hermetically sealed room, which he did only on rare occasions-a sure sign that he was not merely upset, but murderously enraged.

When he discovered the names of the drug dealers responsible for his daughter’s predicament, they quickly vanished. Marnie vanished as well, into the confines of a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility. This is where Marnie learned her next important lesson in life. This facility had a reputation for being one of the toughest yet most elite addiction treatment and recovery centers in the United States, and at first it lived up to it’s reputation. Most of the people sent there did not make it through the first month, which meant they would never return.

Marnie was determined to make it through the duration of the six-month commitment. By the time she was halfway through the program, however, she noticed a marked change in the attitudes of the attendants and therapists, all the way from the management on down through the lower staff. In time, she realized she could have everything she wanted. She was every bit as free while in this facility as she had been in her daily life. In fact, most people here catered to her every whim during her last two months. She had gamed the system and won.

When her treatment was over and she returned home, the first thing she did was snort a line of cocaine. Then, she seduced her bodyguard. She began a series of affairs with a number of mainly married men, and became a frequent partygoer. Then, one day, her father picked her up from one of her seldom school attendances, and she knew something was badly wrong.

“So where are we going?” she asked.

“I have something I want to show you,” he answered. “I think you are going to find this very interesting.”

They soon found themselves in a remote area of northern Illinois. Marnie followed her father’s instructions to get out of the car and to follow him down a path through a thickly wooded area until they got where the path led down an embankment. When they reached the bottom, they found themselves in a clearing, where waited two men who stood by a third one who was bound. It was Adrian, the forty-something bodyguard she had earlier seduced, and in fact had fucked on a number of occasions.

Oh, shit, she thought, and she knew from the look on Voroslav’s face that she had better not dare deny anything. That, however, turned out not to be the point.

“Adrian has something he wants to tell you,” Voroslav said. “Go on, Adrian, tell Marnie what you’ve been telling all your friends about her.”

The man was beaten, and barely conscious. He was in fear for his life, actually, and Marnie knew his fears were well founded. Eventually, though, he choked out the words.

“You’re-a little slut, Marnie. You would fuck anything-you-would suck a-dogs dick-if it was big enough-for you to see it. If a horse-fucked you, Marnie-it wouldn’t feel-a thing.”

He stopped and caught his breath, gasping and crying as he avoided her gaze.

“Look my daughter in the eyes when you talk to her,” Voroslav demanded, as Marnie just stood there, stunned, hurt, and furious.

“Go on, Adrian, tell Marnie the bit about the cave-Mammoth Cave, I think it is. Tell her how if you were to crawl inside her ‘cavernous cunt’, as I believe you referred to it, one might be likely to encounter a team of lost explorers, and perhaps if they are not careful, a hibernating bear or two. Go on and tell my daughter all your little hilarious jokes about her. I am sure she will find them almost as amusing as I did when I heard them.

“On the other hand, why bother? You sit there and catch your breath, and I’ll just let her hear one of your previously recorded stand-up routines.”

Voroslave turned on a tape recorder that set nearby, and Marnie heard for the first time the voice of her security guard inspiring rounds of laughter at her expense.

“Well, I certainly cannot add anything to that,” Voroslav concluded as he shut off the tape. “So, Adrian, do you have any new jokes you wish to share with us? After all, this is going to be your farewell appearance. Why not come up with something new, and truly memorable?”

Adrian, however, said nothing, as Voroslav handed Marnie a gun. The irony of this was not lost on Marnie. Adrian taught her how to shoot this very gun.

“As a man of experience in such matters, I can tell you the satisfaction you achieve will be greater if you shoot him right between the eyes, while he looks you straight in yours. You can decide to let him live, however, if you want. That is up to you. We will go up here and give you time to make up your mind.”

Voroslav and the men had taken not six steps, however, before they heard the gunshot ring out. They turned to see Marnie standing there, over the now dead body of the man, his blood spattered on her blouse, his brains blown out the back of his head, while Marnie had the gun’s barrel stuck completely in the man’s mouth.

Voroslav was shocked, not thinking she would do this at all, let alone so quickly and easily. He reached out for his daughter, but Marnie was cold, and unresponsive.

“I’ll be up in a minute,” she said. “Go on back up to the car and wait for me.”

Voroslav and the other men turned and walked up the path toward the car, but then they heard another shot ring out. They turned, Voroslav horrified at the thought that Marnie had likely taken her own life. Instead, he saw the other bodyguard down on the ground, slumped over on his knees, as the second one looked in horror toward Marnie who, with a cold glare, had the gun pointed right towards his chest. She fired, sending the bullet flying straight through his heart.

She then pointed the gun at her father, but lowered it.

“I want to drive home,” she said.

“Of course, Marnie,” he replied.

Things retuned to normal afterwards. Marnie returned to school, and threw herself seriously into her work. She was sixteen years old by now, and entertained notions of entering the business profession. She still struggled with her weight, but otherwise her life was under control. Then, she became pregnant. She considered an abortion, but feared the long-term medical consequences of this as much as she did the use of birth control, as well as the irreversible as well as potential side-affects of any type of surgery. She carried the birth to term, all the while keeping the fact of her pregnancy a secret from her parents and everyone else. She hid it quite well, most people assuming she was going through yet another weight gain phase.

When she gave birth, it was unexpectedly, a little more than a month before the child was due. She was on her way back from a party in Wisconsin when her car broke down in a remote area on the far side of Racine. She was high, and distraught, and then the baby came, after a period of more than three hours. Now, what would she do? She could not give the baby up for adoption without risking public knowledge of her pregnancy. Yet, she could not just abandon it. If they discovered the infant, they might also discover that it was hers. Then, she would really be in trouble-especially if it were dead by the time they found it.

In desperation, she tried once more to start the car, and it started with no problem. It was like some kind of sign. She looked out over the great expanse of Lake Michigan. Then she looked down on the infant girl to which she had just given birth.

She cut the cord. She kissed the child, and named it Leticia. She found an old board, to which she tied the child with a piece of rope, and pushed it out into the lake. She watched as it sunk beneath the waves. She stood there, for over an hour, and felt remarkably calm. She was hungry, though-very hungry.

Marnie went on another crash diet after about seven moths of bingeing, and started to feel her life was under control once more, until she met Lieutenant James Berry of the Baltimore Police Department. It turned out someone had stolen her identity, and the perpetrator turned out to have been a woman by the name of Grace Rodescu, whom Berry had been investigating for various activities of fraud and theft, and even suspicion of murder. She supposedly was involved with certain members of an organized crime ring by the name of the Seventeenth Pulse. Why, Marnie wondered, would this woman even know who she was, and why would anyone in Baltimore steal her identity? It made no sense, and she assumed it had something to do with her grandfather, the kooky old man who was, like her father, a Priest of the Romanian Orthodox Church.

Marnie fed Berry a lot of information, and he in turn told Marnie things she had previously only suspected, and a good many others she would never have imagined. Then, of course, she fucked Berry. It was just her nature. If she were alone with any man for so much as an hour, something inside of her had to have him. If she could not get him alone for any length of time, she would determine at some point to do so. She had a very voracious appetite.

Now, seven years and four abandoned babies later, here she was, the owner and manager of a trendy Goth club, and billionaire. She and Berry had their ups-and-downs, their splits and reconciliations, and their alliances. When she needed him, she usually managed to prevail. Lately, however, Berry seemed changed in some profound way. He was not the same person. Yet, he still did as she asked. It was almost unfathomable, but it was as though Berry was under someone’s control. He was the same, yet was different. He was aware, and yet oddly detached. She wondered perhaps if her mother had Berry under control, but decided this was not the case. Something else had happened, something she could not quite put her finger on. Of course, she knew her mother and Berry had been involved for years. In fact, they almost shared the man in what was akin to a polyandrous relationship.

What was even stranger was Voroslav’s tacit approval. He no longer cared. He became progressively worse in his neurotic illness, and as a corresponding symptom, he trusted almost no one. Loyalty of course was for sale, and he had obviously purchased Berry’s, and allowed things to take their course as he became more and more withdrawn. Of course, even Berry could not protect him from the wrath of the Orthodox Church, but Voroslav almost seemed relieved when they defrocked him. Now, he had less reason to step outside his private germ-free environment. That was of course until the Feds arrested him and played off his unreasonable fear of germs to the extent he quickly told them all he knew about Phillip Khoska and his criminal enterprise.

Someone had betrayed them all, and at first, she thought it was Berry-but that made no sense. Nor did it seem likely that the original source and cause of the Fed’s investigation, Greg Morrison, knew that much. She briefly wondered whether Phillip’s new wife might have turned him and the organization, but decided she was too much of an airhead and was a typical gold-digger, whom Phillip Khoska kept as a trophy wife. He would share nothing with the likes of her, any more than he would his first wife.

That left only one other person-her mother, Doris. She had to be the culprit, and Marnie was determined to bring her down before she brought down all of them. The more she considered her options, though, the more she knew that she herself was safe. She had no part in the organization, outside of indirect knowledge of certain activities. Doris was a different story. Her mother knew almost everything there was to know. She was probably in some witness protection deal, and none would see her until the day of her testimony before a grand jury. Therefore, she knew she had to work fast if she was going to salvage anything like a legacy. She found her father’s papers and other personal effects, and had herself named his executor in the light of her mother’s disappearance. She was amazed at how relatively easy this was to accomplish, and how easily she fooled the pharmaceutical company into thinking she was a legitimate representative. Well, after all, on paper she was.

She arranged for the funds transferal into an account from which they quickly vanished into the ether, all in the name of Phillip Khoska. Now, with him fighting for his freedom, she was free to live openly. It was time for a new life, which in a sense she would ring in this New Year’s Eve.

She dressed the part, too. In a long flowing sequined black lace gown and jet-black hair with a silver lock, she looked every bit the Goth Queen of The Damned. As the customers filed in for the advertised “Grand New Year’s Eve Re-Opening”, she greeted them all with a free drink of their choice, as the band made ready to take the stage. She would have nothing but the best for her business debut, and so hired a band called The Butchers, an up-and-coming regional band that she had to pay triple the usual considerable rate in order to get them on such short notice. Yet, here they were now, setting up their equipment, as the handful of employees she hired for the night started preparing for the night’s festivities.

She even arranged a buffet featuring crab cakes and lobster tails-but the best was yet to come. While the crowd was gearing up for the coming celebration, and checking out the Tarot reader’s booth, and the curtain enclosed chair of tattoo artist and piercer Jim “The Needle” Houser, she beckoned her bouncer for the night, a muscle bound and oft-pierced specimen by the name of Grater, to follow her down in the basement. They were not there, however, to inspect the inventory of booze, but what waited within three specific metal kegs.

“You are kidding me, right?” the bouncer asked. “This shit ain’t really blood, is it?”

“Of course it is,” she replied. “Do you think I’m stupid enough to engage in something that could get me a charge of false advertising?”

“Oh yeah, I forgot,” he replied with a laugh. “‘Magic Blood’-yeah, the Better Business Bureau would ream your ass if they got word you tried to palm off a cheap substitute.”

“Just make sure the temperature stays at this level,” she said, indicating the temperature gauge pointing to 36 degrees. “If it fluctuates more than two degrees either way, reset it. By the way, this shit is anything but cheap. It cost two billion dollars for the patent. You remember how much there was when I brought it here two weeks ago, right?”

“Yeah, each keg was about a third of the way full,” he replied as she lifted the top. He looked inside each one, and his shock quickly turned to skeptical amusement.

“Okay, what did you do, add tomato juice?” he asked.

“No, it replicates,” she replied. “That’s why it’s magic blood. Do you want to fuck?”

“Huh?” he asked. “Well, to tell you the truth, I don’t believe in engaging in personal relationships with my employers or my fellow employees.”

“If you don’t I’ll fire you,” she said.

“Well, since you put it that way-sure,” he replied.

She started undoing his pants as he grasped her breast, but before they could get further along, they stopped at the sound of footsteps coming down the steps. She turned to see Toby, but the person behind him engendered the biggest surprise.

“You’ll never change, will you, Marnie?” she heard the voice of her mother say.

“Mom?” she replied with undisguised anxiety.

“Beat it!” Toby commanded the bouncer, who looked at him as he would a chimpanzee.

“Who the fuck do you think you’re talking to?” the man asked.

“A man that probably wouldn’t like his studs coming out as much as he liked them going in,” the Pulse leader answered. “Now get the fuck back upstairs until we sends for you.”

He looked around at Marnie, but his new boss looked downcast, unsure of herself, and at a total loss for words. For the first time since he met her, her eyes did not meet his. He turned reluctantly and walked toward the steps.

“What is this?” Marnie asked. “Toby, what are you doing here with her?”

“Don’t you know by now, Marnie, I can take any man away from you?” Doris replied. “I can even get them to tell me things you’ve said and done. For example, if you planned to kill me-just for an example-I bet you old Toby here would tell me about it the first chance he got.”

Marnie could say no more, and started to cry. Then, she became angry.

“You’re responsible for Dad killing himself,” she said. “You’re the one who’s been blabbing to the feds. I know it, so don’t try to deny it.”

Doris just looked at her in an attitude of disgust.

“Yeah, so what!” she replied. “I can understand why you would be upset, though. He spoiled you from the time you were a baby, and turned you into a worthless piece of shit. Now he’s gone, and yes, I’m happy to have been the one mainly responsible for it.”

“You’re a coward,” Marnie then raged. “We would lose everything because of you. The Feds will take all we have, all because you caved in when Morrison talked. You’re a traitor.”

“Is that what you think? Morrison is a pawn, Marnie-sorry to tell you, but you are wrong. The Feds did not come to me-I went to them. Luckily, you tried to carry on Voroslav’s work-you saved me the trouble. Now, thanks to you, I’m home free. Oh, and your money, that you embezzled-I’m afraid it’s in a different place now-a safe place. You can thank Toby here for that.”

“Hacksaw is my guy, you know,” Toby explained.

“Hey, you know something, Toby, why don’t you carry this stuff up here? Hell, it’s New Years. There’s no need in keeping the folks waiting. The band’s playing, after all-why not just start passing out the goods, make them all happy they decided to drop by?”

“Yeah, I guess I can put up with these freaks long enough to do that,” he said. “I tell you, though, if I’m going to have to spend my New Years in this damn place, I better get one hell of a bonus.”

He hoisted one keg up and onto a two-wheeler and started up the steps.

“And they is gonna drink this shit, right? Yeah, man, and white people say us black folks are dumb fucks. Man, oh man.”

He chuckled as he made his way to the top of the steps, and then out the door.

“This basement has a curse, Marnie,” Doris continued. “The last owner died in here, you know. I wonder which of us are going to die in it tonight. Do not bother reminding me you are my daughter, by the way, I am so not impressed by that. Of course, I might not kill you after all. I might just punish you, like I used to do when you were a little girl and you were bad. Do you remember what I used to do to you, Marnie, when you were bad?”

Marnie was suddenly in terror for her life, and knew her mother was not going to let her off so easily. How could she have been stupid enough to trust Toby, or for that matter, James Berry, who was also probably in on this as well. She wanted to run, to hide, the way she used to when her mother came home and would demand an account of her activities. She knew however that there was nowhere to run, and nowhere to hide.

“I need to take a piss, Marnie,” Doris now said. “Come to think of it, I think I need to take a big shit. Is there a bathroom, down here?”

Marnie trembled in fear, afraid to face her mother’s savage gaze.

“I just don’t think I can make it upstairs in time,” she said. “I sure can’t just go to the bathroom on the floor, you know. I need something else to go on.”

“No-please don’t,” Marnie begged, years of humiliation and terror suddenly bubbling to the surface.

“Get down on your knees, Marnie,” Doris demanded. “If you don’t you’re going to only make it worse on yourself-a lot worse.”

Marie now bawled like an infant as she lowered herself on her knees.

“Hold your face straight up in the air, Marnie,” now commanded the vicious voice of her mother. As she did so, she felt a thick, hot stream of urine cascading over her face, burning her nostrils and mouth, which she futilely attempted to spit out, as suddenly there was a knock at the basement door.

“Well, we have company, Marnie-I wonder who that could be? I guess I had better answer it, before whoever it is gets impatient and thinks you are being a bad hostess. Stay right where you are. I’ll be back to take my shit.”

Marnie cried pitifully as Doris opened the door, to admit David Chou, who looked remarkably grim.

“Turn around, Marnie-I want you to meet the man who salvaged our little operation-the man who retrieved the vials from that hotel room, before the little bomb you planted on him destroyed it. You really should thank him. After all, he is the man who isolated the enzyme responsible for the blood’s replication properties.”

Marnie was aghast to see Chou standing over her.

“I guess you want to piss on me too,” she said, still crying in humiliation.

“After what you did to my daughter, I want to do far more than merely piss on you,” he replied. “Part of my payment, for returning the vials, is that you die in horrible agony-very slowly. My daughter did nothing to deserve what happened to her. Your mother tells me that you undertook this solely on your own initiative. I tend to believe her. As such, I am happy to say I have been appointed the director of the Johns Hopkins research unit in specific charge of this project. Your mother has convinced me that the work with the blood stands to be a great boon to humanity. At least, in this way, I can feel my daughter did not die in vain.”

“You see, Marnie, before Voroslav died, he transferred all his stock in the company to me,” Doris explained. “I have elected to use this to leverage my own position, to make up in some small way for the bankruptcy the company is going through, thanks to yours and Phillips embezzlement.”

“She’s lying to you,” Marnie suddenly addressed Chou. “She was in on all of it. She knew all about the funds being embezzled. She has them all now.”

Chou just looked through her with a stone-faced expression.

“When I turned you in to the authorities,” he said, “after I learned your identity, do you know what they told me? They said that you were a federal witness, and that you had immunity from all crimes. There was nothing I could do about it. When you die, the people responsible for what happened to my daughter, those who were your confederates, will also face justice. If that happens to include your mother, so be it. If not, just as well.

“Since you have already given testimony to federal investigators, I have no qualms now about seeing you die. When that time comes, it will happen. It will happen quickly-but oh, so slowly.

Doris then suggested to Chou that if he wanted to end Marnie’s life, this would be the perfect opportunity. She would go upstairs and leave him alone with her to think about it. Chou watched dispassionately as Doris walked up the stairs, while Marnie screamed in terror, begging her not to leave her alone with him.

“Marnie, I am very sorry, but I have a business to run,” she said. “See, I neglected to tell you earlier-I’ve also had our accountant transfer your business here into my name. I took the liberty of having your signature forged, you see. I’m sure you won’t mind, will you dear?”

She recoiled in horror at the thought of how her mother manipulated this sequence of events, as she had all her life, and looked at Chou in desperation.

“This was all her doing,” she replied. “All of this was her plan, and that includes your daughter’s kidnapping. I swear to God, the murder was an accident. I had nothing to do with that, that was Toby’s people, and mom was probably responsible for that too. I swear, I am telling you the truth. Lieutenant James Berry was in on it as well.”

Chou looked at her coldly.

“I know,” he said, with a sudden knowing smile.

“When you look at me, where do you think I am from?” he continued. “I bet you think I am from China, right? No, I was born and raised here. My grandfather came here from Hong Kong. He came during the Cultural Revolution. He knew that eventually the People’s Republic would get Hong Kong back, according to terms of the treaty with Britain signed decades earlier. Even though he knew he would not be alive then, he hated the idea of his family being under that despicable regime, and so he saved all the money he could, and he came here.

“He was a gentle, humble, simple family doctor, and he believed in the American Dream. He was actually quite a good doctor. He was a modern doctor too. He kept up with all the medical journals and the new techniques and developments. When he came here, do you know what he did for a living? He was a janitor. He could not make enough money even to send his children to medical school. The best he could do was barely manage to send his oldest son, who was my father, to a two year business school.

“My father eventually opened a retail grocery store, in a downtown neighborhood of Baltimore, not far in fact from this very area. He did manage to send me to school, but I had to work my ass off in the meantime. That was especially true when my father and mother were robbed and murdered by a group of black thugs.

“Luckily, the perpetrators did not get away with it-not at first. The police apprehended them, due to an informant who identified all of them. When the police searched their premises, they had in their possessions certain items they traced directly back to my father’s store.

“One of the men turned state’s evidence on the others, and received a reduced sentence of five years. Another of the men denied any but the most indirect involvement, and as a result, they merely revoked his parole for a previous robbery and assault. As for the actual killer, he got twenty years to life. He claimed that the shooting was accidental, that he never intended to kill my father, but my father resisted the robbery-which that was probably the truth. He also claimed that my father in anger hurled a racist slur at him. He also insisted that my father charged inordinately high prices for his goods. My father extended credit to quite a few customers, you see, and he would add a ten percent surcharge on other purchases they made later in order to balance accounts. This robber accused my father of loan shark practices.

“The prosecutor’s office initially wanted life without parole, but eventually settled for twenty to life. Why do you think that happened? I will tell you. It was because of men like Harvey Caldwell, and Christopher George, and others of their ilk. They insisted on certain aspects of the arrest and investigation, as well as the trial itself, having racist overtones. And, of course, this was during an election year, and so white politicians such as Randall Morrison threw their weight behind demands for leniency.

“All of those men eventually got out of prison. The chief perpetrator ended up serving a mere four years in prison. You see, when the next election came around, a new judge, an appellate judge, reviewed the case and ordered a reduction of the sentence. The prosecutor, Mr. Lonnie Brock, convinced the DA not to file an appeal, and he prevailed. Both my father and my mother were murdered, for no reason that makes any sense, and the main killer serves four years in prison. He works now for one of Harvey Caldwell’s organizations, one geared supposedly toward prison rehabilitation, though some rumor it to be a recruitment tool for the Seventeenth Pulse. Another of the men works for the city, I believe as a garbage collector. Yet another is back in prison, for murder and rape. Another one died from a drug overdose.

“My father and mother, of course, are still dead.”

Marnie was now increasingly frantic, yet knew she would receive no sympathy from David Chou.

“I suppose you think I hate black people,” he mused. “No, I do not, not at all. What I hate is the system, and the people that run it and profit from it. In the meantime, most people are blind to it. They never see the injustices and inequities until it victimizes them. I am as bad as the rest in that regard. I had to lose my parents before I understood. I do not believe this is what my grandfather came to this country for, do you? Yet, to his dying day, he still believed in this country. He insisted that it was an aberration of the system, not the system itself. Well, he had to tell himself this to keep his sanity, I suppose. When he died, my grandmother went to Pyongyang. She lives in a nice little flat that she shares with her sister. They actually do quite well. Her nephew is a physician-from my understanding, quite a good one.”

Chou now produced a large hypodermic needle, into which he extracted a substance that looked suspiciously, to Marnie, like blood.

“I understand you have a word for this-“magic blood”-not the most original name one might think of, I suppose, yet simple, and certainly effective. I believe you plan for your patrons to drink it tonight. Now, it would be interesting to see what effects that might have on them. When I thought of this, it occurred to me to wonder how much greater the effect might be were it injected directly into a person’s bloodstream.”

Marnie’s face betrayed ever-growing terror, and now she was frantic.

“Please, don’t do this,” she begged.

“Oh, don’t be afraid, Miss Moloku,” he replied. “True, the apparent blood type of this amazing sample is AB negative, which is to say, it is the so-called “universal recipient”. Nevertheless, a small amount such as in this syringe would not have any seriously deleterious side effects to speak of, in ordinary cases. Of course, the amazing replication faculties might well serve to negate those reassurances. Perhaps we shall see. As a physician, I love to experiment. It is the inquisitive, scientific nature I suppose which is both my gift, and at times, my curse.”

“I know you are doing this because of your daughter,” she said. ‘I told you, that was not my plan. It was my mother’s doings. So you think you are going to punish her by taking me the way she took Susan. I’m telling you, she could care less about me. She has treated me like shit my whole life.”

Chou looked at her and gave an amused smile, though only briefly.

“I could care less about you either, or about her,” he replied. “The both of you are almost incidental. Oh, I shall extract retribution for Susan’s murder, for sure. That however is only a minor and temporary project. The most important one is yet to come, though it is well under way.

“You know, at first I thought I wanted to restore the “American Dream”. I quickly realized two things, however. The first one is, that is somewhat arrogant on my part. After all, I am, like my grandfather before me, a simple family physician. After I came down off my high horse, however, I realized a second fact, one that is more pertinent. You see, I have come to the realization that the so-called “American Dream”, like all other such dreams, are for those who sleep. They tend to slumber through dreams, and by the time they awake, it is too late once they see that dreams are, after all, fantasies. They tend to wake up from their dreams and come to their senses only when those dreams turn into nightmares.”

“Please don’t hurt me,” she begged.

“I wouldn’t dream of it,” he replied with a leer as he yanked her by her piss-drenched hair and slammed her face against the stone wall. He quickly puffed up a vein and, while she was semi-conscious from the sudden blow, he injected the hypodermic into her arm. As he withdrew the syringe, she suddenly gasped deeply, as her heart raced wildly and her eyes bulged in their sockets.

“If you are lucky, Miss Moloku, this will be over by the time the New Year arrives,” Chou said. “Speaking of which, if you will excuse me, I think I shall see it in. I really do need a drink.”

He made his way up the steps, as Marnie’s breathing grew ever faster and deeper, and the pain in her chest grew worse by the second. She felt as though she were burning, and might well at any second burst into flames. She wanted to scream for help, to beg for mercy, even though she realized it would be futile. Still, she tried to scream, but no words came out of her mouth. She looked at her arms, and saw to her horror the deep purplish red and black splotches that erupted on them, as she painfully pulled herself over toward where her purse lay. She opened it frantically, cursing herself for not having the foresight to think to have her gun with her. Instead, she found her compact. She opened it and looked into the mirror, and was immediately horrified by what she saw. She saw similar splotches erupting on her now swollen face, erupting with pus. Her entire body burned with an intense heat, and she felt as though some force inside of her threatened to tear her apart, though every movement by her only intensified the sensation. Her skin tightened and seemed to crack, as bodily fluids oozed out of her.

She wanted to move toward the door, to run, but every movement only brought her ever more intensified pain. Then, as she looked toward the door, it opened, and she saw the horrid form of Raven Randall, staring at her in a state of confused and anguished fury. She tried to ask the girl who she was, and tried to beg for help, but could make no sounds other than helplessly pitiful moans, as Raven cocked her head and looked at her in puzzlement, while her nostrils sniffed the air.

Raven turned from her, toward one of the remaining casks, her nostril picking up the scent of the liquid substance that oozed within. She made her way hungrily to the metal object and tried vainly to remove the lid, but succeeded only in picking up the entire full cask, which she threw to the ground in frustration. She then looked toward the helplessly flailing girl, who now lay writhing on the ground in agony. She looked at first one and then the other, deciding to try once more to open the cask. She set it upright, seeing as she did so that the top lid turned. She continued turning until she eventually loosened up the lid, and then removed it. She stuck her hand down inside of it, and then brought it up to her mouth, hungrily lapping up the cold, thick substance. She then picked up the entire cask, wrapping her arms around it as she did so, then bringing it up over her head. She turned it upside-down, allowing the thick blood to flow over her face as she drank hungrily of the life-giving substance. Then, she set it down.

She was not satisfied. It was cold, and it should be warm. This only made her want more, yet hurt her somehow at the same time. She turned once more toward the terrified, pain-wracked figure on the floor, and could sense the substance inside of her, only warm, and pumping wildly. Her nostrils turned once more toward Marnie, and Raven could smell the scent of her terror. She made her way over towards her. When she reached her, she rolled her over on her stomach, an action that seemed to cause the figure considerable pain, and inspired yet even greater terror. The scent of Marnie’s fear inflamed her senses, and so she tore into the stomach of the woman, who screamed in a cry of agony.

Raven snarled and laughed as the woman, for now still alive, lay there with her entrails exposed, watching in wild-eyed horror as Raven thrashed into her inside organs, blindly pulling out pieces of muscle and flesh, any organ she could reach, pulling them out and eating hungrily. She made her way up to the woman’s stomach, ripping it out in chunks and hastily eating. She finally found the heart, but it had stopped beating. She bit into it frantically, but stopped at the sound of the door opening from upstairs, and the sounds of heavy footsteps walking down the stairs, dragging behind him some strange object that slapped each of the old wooden steps with a metallic thud.

Raven looked up toward the approaching sounds, and then snarled. She growled as the footsteps drew ever closer. Then, she hurriedly scurried back toward the door, and behind some boxes, hiding from the view of Dwayne Lecher, who viewed the ghastly scene of the ravaged corpse of Marnie Moloku with a mixture of horror and disgust.

“Oh, hell naw!” he said as he stifled the sick feeling that permeated every fiber of his being. “Fuck this, I’m heading back to the hood. No wonder she didn’t want that motherfucker to come down here with me.”

He then noticed the overturned cask and the spilled contents, then walked over toward the other one. He shook his head as he angled the cask onto the two-wheeler, and then backed up toward the steps. He could not get out of here fast enough, he said to himself.

By the time that he returned to the upper level of The Crypt, the party was in full swing. He looked with amazement at the throngs of eerily dressed party-goers, dancing to the discordant sounds of what Marnie earlier bragged to him was one of the most in demand Goth metal bands in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan region. He shook his head in disbelief. After what he saw downstairs, they actually seemed normal.

Doris beckoned him toward her office, so he deposited the cask, taking the time to look toward the other, to see it was now half-empty.

“These fucking people are crazy,” he said. “Where is that fucking gook doctor? I thought you told me he was only going to rough her up a little. Shit, he butchered that girl.”

“What in the hell are you talking about?” she demanded.

“I’m talking about she’s dead,” he replied. “I don’t just mean dead, I mean tore up inside out. Look at him over there. He don’t have a drop of anything on him. He acts like he just casually walked in here. Damn, that is some cold shit. I mean, I’ve killed people before, but damn”-

“Marnie is dead?” she demanded.

“Yeah, god damn it, she’s dead. Do I have to spell it out for you? She’s D-E-A-D! Dead!”

Doris told Toby to stay where he was, but before he could respond, she was down the steps. After ten minutes, she returned, a dazed look on her face. She made her way over toward Chou, who sat at the bar nursing a Scotch and Soda.

“What did you do to Marnie?” she asked.

“I injected her with a syringe full of the blood,” he explained with no visible trace of emotion. “It will kill her eventually, and she will be in an excruciating amount of pain until she dies, probably in about two weeks-give or take a day or two. That was our deal. If you intend to back out now, I have some bad news for you-it is too late.

“I told you all of this before. What part of it did you not understand?”

“The part where she was torn apart,” Doris replied. “You never mentioned anything about that.”

He finally betrayed a look of surprise, yet still betrayed no concern.

“I did nothing other than what I told you I would do. That was my price, and you agreed to it. Now, if you will excuse me-as much as I would like to see the New Year in with this fine crowd you have here, I think I would prefer to see it in with what is left of my own family. I bid you farewell, Miss Moloku. I have a great deal of work to prepare for-starting tomorrow.”

As he started toward the door, he noted the entrance of Marty Evans, whom he recently released from the hospital following a near fatal heroin overdose. He turned one last time toward Doris Moloku.

“By the way, Doris,” he said. “Give my regards to Lieutenant Berry.”

“I will do that,” she replied uneasily.

She called Berry immediately. She knew the man whom she and Marnie shared for so many years would be distraught at her demise, but it was unavoidable. He would have to know, especially since it was now incumbent on him to dispose of her body. She did not trust Berry. The more days that went by, the stranger he acted. She could usually read his moods and almost his very thoughts, but lately his manner was so reserved, she wondered seriously if he was in the process of turning states evidence on her. She decided this was unlikely, but something was definitely wrong.

He answered right away, and she told him straight out.

“Marnie has been murdered,” she said. “It’s pretty gruesome, so I thought I should warn you ahead of time. I know you were very fond of her, though why I could never understand. Still, you need to come here. Someone needs to dispose of her body.”

“Sure, I’ll be right over,” he replied, and then hung up. It was almost like a response to a casual invitation. She did not know what to make of it, as she approached Lecher, who looked on the scene of the overfilled nightclub in an attitude of amazement.

“Are you sure these people are even human beings?” he asked as he looked toward one man whose tattoos and piercings seemed almost to obscure his entire features, and who suddenly spun wildly to an extended solo from the band’s lead guitarist.

“Never mind that,” she replied. “I need to ask you about Berry. What do you know about him?”

“He’s a religious freak,” Lecher replied. “He thinks he’s got the god market cornered for some reason. He thinks everybody else is either sinners or hypocrites. Let me see, what was that fucking word he got for church people?”

He seemed to search his mind as he pondered the matter in silence, until finally he managed to dredge up the word that encapsulated the attitude of Lieutenant James Berry towards most other members of even the religious community to which he belonged.

“Oh yeah-heretics,” he said. “That’s people that worship God in the wrong way. He be going on about that shit every time I see him. He’s a fucking nut, is what it boils down to. He says one day when Christ comes back he be going to separate the wheat from the chaff, and every person on earth that aint saved in the right way, meaning his way of course, is going to be put through the wine press of God’s wrath.

“So anyways he introduces me to these two old people once, this old man and woman, and so I just plays along with him, and you know what they do? They baptize me. Yeah, Mercury and Hacksaw, they get in on it too, and Ratchet and Fishbait as well. You know something-I don’t give a shit, and besides, those two old people were really cool. They even like my music. They be the ones that convinced me to do that CD of Frank Sinatra songs.

“Anyway, I don’t think you have worry about Berry. That motherfucker over there, though, I don’t trust him. Ain’t nobody just going to let it slide they daughter be getting killed like she did. He ain’t right.”

Doris looked over toward where Chou stood now, talking to one of the regulars, a younger man who seemed gratefully intense as he stood talking to Chou, who lingered there to speak with him on his way out.

“That’s Marty Evans,” Lecher explained. “Now what in the fuck would Chou be doing talking to a fucking heroin addict? I tell you, everything about that guy sets alarm bells ringing. I know he knows about his daughter being down in the hood with my guys and me the night she died, but he doesn’t give me a second look. I’m telling you he’s up to something.”

“You’re letting your imagination run away with you,” she said. “I told him you were not responsible for his daughter’s death, that Marnie had her murdered after she picked her up from your place.”

“Yeah, right, and he just takes your word for that, and doesn’t even ask me anything about it, or so much as look my way. I tell you, something ain’t right.”

“Toby, for God’s sake, he’s getting a hundred million dollars,” she replied. “That is pretty good compensation for the death of a daughter that, to be blunt, he despised, who he fought with constantly, and who hated his guts in return.”

Toby kept his eyes peeled on the doctor, who now turned to leave.

“I still want to know what he’s talking to Evans about,” he said, as he casually made his way toward the man he knew well as one of the Seventeenth Pulses most consistent customers over the years. Evans didn’t notice him at first, not until Toby was almost up on him.

“You looking to score, Evans?” he said.

“Toby-what are you doing here?” Marty answered in apprehension. “If you came here for that money I owe you”-

“Aw hell, that shit is simple,” Toby said. “What, two hundred dollars? You’re good for it. If you need some more, your credit’s good.”

“I’m off the shit,” Evans said firmly. “No offense, man, but that drug shit is over for good. I’ve spent enough time in rehab the last few days, just enough to know I don’t ever want to go through the shit I’ve gone through lately. Have you by any chance seen Marlowe?”

“Marlowe-you mean Krovell? What the hell are you talking about, that fag is dead as a doorknob.”

“Yeah, well if he hears you called him a fag you’ll find out how dead he is,” Evans replied. “I’ve seen him, and believe me, you don’t want to get on his bad side.”

Toby just looked at Evans in amazement. He looked to be steady, and sober, but something had obviously gotten to him.

“Look, Evans, I ain’t some punk ass like Joseph Karinsky. I can handle myself, even if that freak is alive, which I know he ain’t, cos I saw his body after the hospital bombing. See, here’s a little bit of information for you. Not that I know anything, you understand, but word on the street is, that whole thing was Krovell’s doing, to try to escape, only it didn’t work. Whoever bombed that place for him did his job a little too good and Marlowe got all caught up in it. He’s dead. Don’t get me wrong now, I like a good ghost story as much as everybody else, but them and other fairy tales are only good up to a point. After a while they turn you into a fruit loop that hangs out in places like this, and thinks the shit those guys are doing up there is music. Just between you and me-you been hanging out here too long.

“Like I said about the smack though-if you change your mind, your credit’s good.”

“Well, I ain’t changing my mind, and I’ll get that two hundred to you in a few days,” Evans insisted. “Thanks anyway.”

He turned to walk off, but as he did, the door opened and Lieutenant Berry entered. Marty just stood rooted to the spot, unable to turn his gaze off Berry, who returned his glare with equal intensity, though with no apparent animosity, as he walked over to where the two stood.

“Marty, I hear you’re clean these days,” he said. “That’s good-I’m real pleased to hear that. Hard drugs can really screw with your head, you know.”

“Yeah, I figured that out,” he replied. “Did they ever figure out who killed those guys at the morgue?”

Berry looked at Evans in evident confusion, at first, and then drew himself back as though it took him a minute to realize what he meant.

“Oh, you mean Peyton and the guard,” he said. “No, not yet, but don’t worry. We know that had nothing to do with you. Well, I know anyway. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to have a little talk with Dwayne here.”

Marty nodded and left as though he couldn’t get away quickly enough, as Berry turned to the rap artist cum thug with an ear to ear grin.

“Quite a crowd here tonight, huh?” he asked.

“Man, you are really too much, do you know that?” Toby said, but Berry caught a glimpse of apprehension in his civilian informant’s eyes that gave him some concern.

“What’s wrong?” he asked.

“She hasn’t told you yet, has she?”

“You mean about Marnie?” Berry asked. “Yeah, she called me just a few minutes ago.”

Lecher stood there looking at Berry in wonder at his casual attitude. Maybe it just had not rally sunk in, he considered.

“Well, I think you ought to know, she’s tore up pretty fucking bad,” he said. “I know you were close and all, so I just thought you deserved a heads up.”

“Gee, well that’s right thoughtful of you, Toby,” Berry replied.

What in the hell is wrong with him, Toby wondered. Berry just stood there, smiling, as he looked around at first one and then another in the crowd, and toward the band.

“Look, I’m getting the hell out of here,” Toby finally said. “I got my own New Years party I supposed to be at, and in fact I’m more’n an hour late. Call if you need anything, but please-not until after two. I’ll try to make it here by three.”

Berry assured him he could handle everything here on his own, so Lecher turned to leave, but before he made it to the door, Berry stopped him and wished him a Happy New Year. Lecher stopped and looked at Berry, almost sure he was in a state of shock, or something similar to that. He returned the wish, and then walked out the door as quickly as he could, as Berry walked up to the bar and ordered a Samuel Adams beer. He sipped it slowly, and then, on a whim, ordered a round of drinks for the crowd.

“Everybody drink up!” he shouted, as the appreciative crowd thanked him in near unanimity. He began sipping his second drink as he surveyed the makeshift tattoo booth.

“You know, I’m not sure this is legal here,” Berry told “The Needle”. “On the other hand, the hell with it. What kinds of tattoos are you doing?”

“Anything you want,” Houser replied. “Dragon, snake, vulture, bat, spider’s web, or dagger dripping blood, all free, provided I include The Crypt logo underneath it. Ordinarily these tattoos would be from two hundred dollars on up to four-fifty. You don’t look like the type of guy that would be into tattoos, by the way, or piercings either. You ain’t a cop, are you?”

“Yeah, I am, but no problem, I ain’t on duty,” Berry replied reassuringly. “I just wondered if you could do a “MOM” tattoo, but I guess not, huh?”

“Sorry, no, I didn’t bring the design for that one,” Houser replied. “This is clean, by the way. It’s not really a standard tattoo needle. It’s a laser. It’s completely safe, takes less than one-fourth the time of a regular tattoo needle, and can be done in one setting. It’s also easier and less expensive to remove, with less resultant scarring.”

“Well, I’ll be hornswoggled,” Berry said. “So this is turning into something of a science fair. I see you also do piercings. Is there any chance you might pierce my rectum?”

“So, what are you a wise guy or something?” Houser asked with suddenly narrowed eyes.

“Oh, not at all,” Berry reassured him. “I just thought that since people pierce just about”-

“Hey Mister, thanks for the drink a minute ago,” an obviously under aged dyed pink-haired girl said as she tugged at Berry’s elbow. He turned to see her standing in front of a group of people most of who also looked considerably below the legal drinking age.

“I was thinking of getting my pussy tattooed with a snake or something? I was just wondering what you thought I should get.”

“A vulture would be more like it,” one of her friends said as she rolled her eyes.

“Or a spider’s web,” opined yet another.

“I wouldn’t get a tattoo on your pussy if I were you,” Berry said dryly. “When your pubic hairs start coming in it’s liable to cause some problems.”

The girl reacted with a stunned expression as her friends snickered.

“You have to have an adult ID anyway,” Houser explained.

“You could always get your nipple pierced,” Berry suggested. “As long as you wear it on a regular basis and guard against infection the hole will grow right along with the rest of it.”

To her friends delighted amusement, she raised her top to reveal two smaller than average sized bare breasts with relatively large, protruding nipples.

“I guess they’re big enough to do it now, huh?” she asked with a mock lecherous grin.

“Well, they seem to be nice and firm,” he replied as he reached out for her left nipple. He squeezed it tightly between his thumb and index finger, inducing a loud scream of pain as he started walking toward the door, both dragging and, with his right hand at her back, pushing her beside him all the way in a state of shock and humiliation.

“Now, you get your ass out of here,” he said, and then looked toward her friends, who stood staring at him and in each other in complete shock.

“That goes for the rest of you, get your asses out of here before I haul you in and close this place down,” he warned them.

“Kids these days,” he observed to Houser, who just stared at him coldly as he walked toward the stage, where the band now made ready to perform another set.

“You guys know anything by The Mocktones?” he asked.

“Who the fuck are they?” asked the band’s front man and lead singer, as the lead guitarist shrugged.

“Never mind,” he said. “Marilyn Manson will do. In fact, that will do fine. Happy New Years.”

He headed back toward the bar as the band regarded him with curious wonder. Before he got there, however, a wild looking woman with dark brown hair with blood red streaks and smears of the same colored make-up stopped him.

“Hey, you want to dance, man?” she asked. Berry turned and, seeing the girl, he screamed.

“Oh hell,” he said. “I’m sorry. I thought you were somebody I know. Hey, why not, I’ve always wanted to learn to dance. Why don’t you just let me watch a few times, then maybe I’ll know what to do?”

He finally made it back to the bar and ordered another Samuel Adams, and noticed almost everybody else seemed to be drinking Bloody Mary’s. He noticed something else. Everybody seemed to either be staring at him, or trying with great difficulty not to do so.

“What in the hell are you doing?” he suddenly heard Doris demand. He turned to see her standing behind him with an obvious look of impatient exasperation. “I need to see you back in the office.”

“I’ll be there in just a few minutes,” he said. “It’s been some time since I’ve been to a New Year’s Eve Party that I wasn’t on duty. Don’t worry, Marnie ain’t going anywhere.”

For just a second, she stiffened as though frozen in the instant, as the band suddenly began to play. Berry suddenly remembered a suggestion he wanted to make, but now he realized he would have to wait until this band finished yet another probably excruciatingly long number. He watched Doris stomp back toward the office in a fury, and he stood. He finished his drink. He removed his gun from his side-holster, pointed it up in the air, and discharged it.

The band stopped as several people either screamed or shouted in shock, and various people dropped to the floor.

“Hey, mister, what the hell is wrong with you?” the transgender bartender demanded in some concern, as a customer, who looked to be either an old regular or a bouncer, approached him calmly, yet methodically. Berry ignored both of them.

“Hey, everybody, I have a suggestion to make,” he shouted to the crowd. “Listen up. It just occurred to me that at the rate you people are drinking the magic blood, there won’t be any left to see the New Years in with. So I just suggest we hold off until then, and when the clock strikes twelve, we all toast in unison. What do you all say?”

“Anything you say, mister,” the bartender replied in a tone of notable concern and anxiety.

“Hey, you know, that’s not a bad fucking idea,” one of the customers said, whereupon a number of patrons agreed more or less enthusiastically.

“Great,” Berry said. “In the meantime-bartender, another round of drinks on me, for everybody.”

Everybody in the immediate vicinity cheered and shouted their thanks as Berry made his way slowly toward the office, then stopped once more to address the bartender, who seemed yet nervous over the disruption, as the band members seemed engaged in a conversation with Jim “The Needle” Houser.

“By the way, are you a woman changing into a man, or a man changing into a woman?”

“I’m a woman and I’ve already changed,” the transgender bartender answered uneasily.

“Oh-I’m really sorry. Please, my apologies,” Berry replied as he turned and headed toward the office, where Doris paced the floor.

“What in the hell do you think you’re doing?” Doris demanded.

“Look, I needed to linger around out there for a few minutes,” Berry replied. “You never can tell if there might be people from the department in this place, especially owing to its late reputation. From what I can tell, though, it seems clear, for now. Still, you can’t be too careful.”

“Fine, so what are you going to do about Marnie?” she asked. “Toby was no help at all. He insisted he had to leave, so I’m stuck with her. I have to get her out of here, just in case we are raided. Now here you are shooting off your weapon in a crowded barroom. What in the hell is wrong with you?”

Berry told her not to worry, that he would see to her in his own good time. For now, he just wanted to go down and pay his respects.

He walked downstairs, making sure to close and lock the basement door behind him. It was worse even than either Toby or Doris implied. Damn, he thought, there’s almost nothing left but bones. He kneeled down beside her, crossed himself, said a quick prayer, and then he cried. He sat there for a few minutes, crying profusely, until he caught the hint of a slight movement. Then, he heard a low, gutteral moan-and then a growl, that seemed to grow in intensity.

“Raven-is that you, sweetheart?” he asked.

Then he saw her hair sticking out from behind stacked crates of Hennessy Brandy.

“Raven, come out here-now!” he demanded. Slowly, she rose, and looked at him with foreboding. She looked at him, moaned lowly, and then let out a roar as she lowered herself into a threateningly offensive stance. She walked slowly and cautiously toward him as he rose.

“Where have you been, Raven? You know you’re not supposed to leave the house. I have the car parked out in the back. You’d better let me take you to the trunk. You know what will happen if you’re out when the sun rises.”

He said this slowly, deliberately, as she cocked her head, trying to understand, trying to decipher his tone, his body language, and his emotions. He was steady, and calm, but most of all, he was firm, though not angry. Yet, she felt an overwhelming sense of sadness emanating from him, and this confused her. She moaned.

“Come on, Raven, let’s go to the car. You can wait in the trunk until I take you home. It won’t take too long.”

She looked toward the ravaged body of Marnie Moloku, and he sighed with realization.

“Okay, we can take her with us,” he said. “I know you stay hungry, don’t you, Raven?”

She growled fiercely and loudly, however, when he moved toward the body, and when he bent down she bared her teeth and moved quickly toward him. He jumped back, whereupon she pounced on the cadaver, guarding it protectively.

“For God’s sake, Raven, we can’t stay down here,” he insisted. “You can’t stay down here. We have to leave.”

She continued to growl as he moved closer, and he reached into his inside coat pocket and retrieved the small, plastic water pistol he had carried with him for some days now. He sprayed her, and she howled in horror, and then backed away from the body. She continued to growl in impotent frustration and fear, as he bent down and picked up the body. He carried it outside to where his car awaited, and then he opened the trunk. After placing the body on top of a plastic sheet, he returned to the basement of the club. Raven was sitting on her haunches, rocking back and forth. She yet wore the same clothes she was buried in, and which now were dirty, threadbare, and in tatters.

After he got her home, he would clean her up and dress her in some decent clothes, he decided, though this would be a challenge due to the morbid fear of water that now afflicted her. He told her to bow her head.

“Let’s pray, Raven,” he said. “Lord, will you please watch out for Raven and keep her safe from harm. Take her into your bosom, oh Lord. Forgive her all her sins in the name of the Father, the Son, and The Holy Ghost. Amen.”

Raven looked at him as he recited this prayer, which he often did, with her head cocked on her shoulder. Then, she did something she never before had done. She spoke.

“Aaaa-Men!” she said. Then, she looked at his shocked expression, and she laughed. It was not a laugh of joy, however, but a derisive laugh of insanity, yet also of pain, and hopelessness.

“That’s a start, Raven,” he said. “Com on, now, let’s go. You can eat while you’re waiting.”

She followed behind him, out the basement door, around the back to the car. She looked up at the sky, in dread of seeing the sun, with its blistering heat and sickening light. Then, she looked into the car trunk, her nostrils sniffing wildly. She reached toward the body, but Berry grabbed her arm. She snarled as she pulled away from him.

“Raven, get in the trunk, before somebody sees you,” he commanded.

She looked back toward The Crypt, and he saw a sense of longing in her eyes.

“Yeah, I know, you miss this place, don’t you?” he asked. “That’s understandable. You had a lot of good times here. Everything has changed, Raven. All of your old friends, they are dead and gone. There’s nothing here for you anymore, but memories. You have to leave it behind.”

He said this with such sincerity that she could not help but feel overcome by simultaneous waves of pity, longing, regret, and despair. Somewhere deep inside, she understood what he told her, and knew that he was right. At the same time, it angered her. She looked inside the trunk once more, and then she carefully climbed inside of it. She looked up at the sky, and he saw her tremble. He retrieved his flashlight, and shone it above her, an action that made her stiffen with uncontrollable terror.

“It won’t be long now, Raven,” he said. He shut the car trunk.

“Try to get some sleep, Raven,” he said, and then he went back inside.

Back up in the bar, he had another Samuel Adams, and attempted to drown out the laughter and noise of the New Years revelers. He walked up to the Tarot booth, and asked for a reading, and asked the woman what the charge was.

“It’s free tonight, courtesy of the owner,” she said.

“Are you a Wiccan?” he asked.

“Yes I am, third generation Alexandrian trad, in fact. I’ve been doing tarot for eighteen years now. I’m also a professional astrologer.”

She shuffled the cards, and laid out three of them, all upside down, or as she put it, reversed.

“The Three of Swords means that you recently were forced to cut ties, or otherwise make some kind of profound change in your life, in order to force a resolution to an ongoing problem of some magnitude. It was painful, but necessary, though the pain yet lingers.

“The second card, the Emperor, describes your present situation. You are a man of firm commitments and values. Yet, you tend to be at times too much of an authoritarian, and can be unyielding. Even when things seem hopeless, you never give up, but work within the system to accomplish your long-term goals. The last card relates to the probable outcome in terms of the near future.”

She paused before continuing, and seemed to be considering her next words.

“Okay, I’m waiting,” he said.

“The last card is the Seven of Swords, which like the other two is reversed. This advises you to be wary of falling into the traps of your own deceptions, both those deceptions you portray in your relations towards others, and those delusions of your own self-deceptions.”

“Wow, that’s really very good,” he said. “You say you’ve been doing this for eighteen years?”

She affirmed that she had.

“You do know you’re going to go to hell, right?” he asked. She seemed taken aback by this, but tried to throw it off with a casual laugh.

“Just thought I’d better throw that out there, for your own good,” he said as he turned to walk away. “Happy New Year to you, though.”

Berry went back into the office, to see Doris sitting at the desk with her head lowered and her hands cupped over her face.

“Relax, it’s taken care of,” he said.

“No, it’s not taken care of,” she shouted. “It’s a fucking mess. Thanks to my husband’s insane trust of our daughter in matters she was not by any stretch of the imagination capable of coping with on anything like a rational level, it is a mountain of fucking shit. Now I have to pay all the people that she has hired, and close this place down. First, I have to go over everything here and make sure she did not leave anything that might incriminate me. In the meantime, when the feds figure out she is missing, they are going to come looking for me.

“So what are you still here for anyway? The idea was to take her body out somewhere and dispose of it, not leave her out in the trunk of your care for the next three or four hours.”

“I’m going to stay here and see in the New Year,” he replied. “Do you have a problem with that?”

“Fine,” she replied. “See it in, just stay the hell out of my way and don’t be making any more scenes out there. Those people are creepy enough as it is. Now, I have to hang out here and listen to some insane racket that passes to them for music, and when the clock strikes twelve, I have to pass out about seventy ounces of blood-for them to drink, no less, to ring in the New Year. Between now and then I have to worry about being raided, while you have my daughter’s body, or what’s left of it, out in the trunk of your car.”

The phone rang, and she answered it quickly, but seemed suspiciously unsure of what to say to whomever she spoke.

“I need to take this in private if you don’t mind,” she said.

“Uh-huh, sure,” he replied, and walked on out. He returned to the basement, moving as quickly as he could once he got down the steps and out of sight of the clubs patrons. He hurried to the basement door, which he left unlocked in case he needed to leave quickly. Sure enough, he heard someone outside, talking to someone on the phone.

“She was dirty and bloody as hell is all I can tell you,” the man said. “Yes, of course she was alive. He put her right in the trunk along with the body. She acted like she didn’t want to go at first, but he got her in there somehow and closed the trunk. Whoever she was she acted fucking crazy.”

For a minute, he said no more, but then spoke again.

“Yeah, I’ll call them, but I’m telling you now, I don’t want my name in this,” he continued.

Fishbait, he realized. That son-of-a-bitch. He should have killed him that night during the raid as he first planned, but the bastard gave up quick, so he could not just kill him in cold blood with all the other police in the club. Toby insisted he was cool, but on the other hand, he did not trust Toby either. Now, come to find out, they were planning to set him up. Doris, however, let it slip-unfortunately for her-by mentioning his already putting Marnie’s body in the car. She could not have known about that without having other eyes watching his movements.

It was all he could do to go out there and let Raven out of the trunk-let her deal with the backstabbing son-of-a-bitch. He had a better idea, however, one that would not be quite as messy. After Fishbait got off the phone, Berry casually walked out, with his gun drawn.

“I’m glad you’re here,” he said. “Raven’s still hungry. That girl has got one hell of an appetite.”

“Berry,” Fishbait replied. “Hey, man, Happy New Year to you. Wha’cha doing hanging around here, though? Me, I’m looking for some action. Whose Raven?”

“Raven-you know, Raven, the girl you saw me put in the trunk a minute ago-that Raven.”

Fishbait looked at him with uncertainty, wondering how he could play this off, but was obviously at a loss for words.

“I would imagine she’s about ready for desert about now,” Berry continued. “She seems to really like it when a person’s blood starts pumping real fast and strong. That girl, she just can’t stop eating. But, you know how that is.

“As my ex-wife always used to say-a growing boy needs his food. Of course, Raven isn’t a boy, though she’s not really a girl, either, when you get right down to it. Just your average, garden-variety zombie, I guess. They especially like brains. I think that’s their version of soul food.”

“Look man, I don’t know what you’re going on about, dig it, I was just out celebrating the New Year and come out here to have a smoke.”

“Oh, good, I could use a cigarette. Can I bum one from you?”

Fishbait stiffened, but recovered from a frozen expression to make the pretence of searching his pockets.

“Maybe you dropped them while you were talking on your cell phone, you think?”

“All right, man, look now, there ain’t no need in getting”-

“You look worried, Fishbait,” Berry said as he aimed his gun. “Actually, this is your lucky night. You’re going to be a star. See, since this ain’t my police revolver, so since the bullets can’t be traced back to me, you’re going to be on Unsolved Mysteries. Oh, darn, wait a minute-they cancelled that show a long time ago. Well, shit, I don’t guess this is your lucky night after all.”

He fired a bullet straight into Fishbait’s throat, and the Pulse member dropped down to his knees.

“I would aim for the heart or the head, but then again, if I did that they might think you were killed by a professional hit man, and that would be kind of embarrassing.”

Berry watched as Fishbait clung desperately to life for a little over two minutes, and finally died. He opened the trunk of his car, but he did so cautiously. Raven was now half-asleep, and she growled, but seemed too far-gone to completely awake. He tugged gently at the decimated corpse which she half-covered as she slumbered, which induced a louder warning growl as she partially opened her eyes. He successfully removed the corpse, keeping it enclosed within the plastic sheeting as he did so, after which he closed the trunk back. He then stuffed the corpse into the open dumpster.

That bitch tried to screw me, he thought to himself. James Berry was a big believer in returning the favor when it came to getting a good fucking. He pulled Fushbait’s body off to the side of the dumpster, and with some difficulty, he hoisted him up and dumped him in there as well, then taking great pains to sufficiently cover both bodies with garbage, paper, and cardboard. Let the city dump sort them out, he mused, as he briefly walked back inside the basement. Satisfied that Doris had not followed him downstairs, he shut the door and walked up the steps to the upper street level. He then returned through the front door to The Crypt.

It was close now to midnight, and he looked toward the office, where Doris stood, looking at him curiously. He walked up to the bar and ordered another Samuel Adams. He decided he would wait around until twelve. The transgender bartender, whose name he learned was Leigh, was busily pouring blood into shot glasses, while at the same time trying to keep up with the demands for drinks. He offered to help him/her. But Leigh-or was it Lee-declined. She already had a helper, in fact, the same man who earlier seemed ready to pounce on him when he discharged his gun in the ceiling.

Berry was amazed that they somehow managed to fill and set all the glasses-easily more than a hundred of them-with just over ten minutes to spare until the New Years. She announced the temporary closing of the bar as she started to stack the shot glasses. She then announced the special of the hour was ready to be served, and was on the house for all who wanted it. They began filing up to the bar, reaching for the concoction, while Berry felt himself oddly compelled to join in. He looked around to see Marty Evans had returned, and was eyeing him suspiciously, then turned when he noted Berry watching him. That was never a good sign, he realized. Damn that fucking Peyton and his big mouth, he thought.

Soon, the countdown began, and when the clock struck twelve, he lifted his glass and prepared to drink along with almost the entire house full of patrons and employees, including Leigh. He looked over toward Marty. He was not drinking. Berry turned up his shut glass as The Butchers began the most bizarre rendition of Auld Lang Sine he ever heard.

Then, he heard nothing. Everything went silent. There was no noise from the band, no din of chatter from the patrons. He looked at several of them, and realized they were all the same. Their eyes were all green. That was damn strange. What was stranger was the way the green spread out over their faces. They were all green, and then gray. They were all dead, he realized. Holy shit! He looked over toward Evans, and even though Marty was not looking at him, he was watching him.

The little bastard fucking knows everything, he realized-or he thinks he does. The laughter of the patrons were now starting to filter through what he realized was the buzzing and low toned ringing that had at first drowned them out. He was starting to pick up pieces of conversation.

“Wow, what the fuck is in this shit?” somebody asked.

“Whatever it is,” another replied, “I damn sure want me some more of it.”

He could hear the band playing again, and everybody started dancing. They are all like cattle, he thought.

“You are right,” he heard a voice say. “They are livestock, in a sense.”

Who in the hell was that, he thought. He turned and saw no one at first, until he looked toward the mirror. He saw his reflection, but it was not his face. Oh, shit. He thought. It’s him again. The intense looking man with the blonde hair and beard, dressed like something out of a poor man’s Ren Fair. What is he doing in my reflection?

“They are very content, are they not?” the man asked him. “Livestock usually are until they reach the slaughter house. That is when they are at their tastiest.”

He closed his eyes, and rubbed his temples. When he opened his eyes again, the man was gone, and he was back there in the mirror, looking at himself the way he should be. The man was still somewhere, though. He could feel his presence. He looked around at the crowd, and realized then, the man was everywhere.

He felt a tap on his shoulder, and turned to see a sight that horrified him. Susie Chou was looking him straight in the eyes, with an accusatory look and threatening demeanor.

“You’re going to pay for what you did, mister,” she warned him.

“I-didn’t do anything,” he said.

“What’s wrong with you mister?” she asked, but it wasn’t Susie anymore, but another patron-a woman with multiple piercings, including through her tongue.

“Are you all right? You don’t look so good.”

“Oh, I’m fine,” he said, though he knew he was obviously far from that.

He realized then that everybody there knew him, and knew everything about him. It was not merely him, though. They all knew each other, and they all knew everything about each other. It was deep, inner knowledge, though, one that made them all a part of some universal consciousness. They were all One.

Leigh now returned to selling drinks, and he declined another. He looked at her and really saw her for the first time. That is no lady, he realized, and she never was. Oh, crap.

The band played, all the patrons danced and swayed, and then they began making out, and having sex. It soon turned into an orgy, one that threatened to go on throughout the night. He just sat back and watched, as did a number of other patrons. He was happy and relieved that he was not the only wallflower in the group. He turned to see if he could see any sign of Evans, but Marty was now again nowhere in sight. He began to wonder if he really saw him at all.

It took more than an hour for the feeling to fade, though it did so gradually, and he and seemingly everyone else was normal once more, though one man seemed obsessed with staring at himself in the mirror. He was babbling.

“Does he have blonde hair and a beard, and dressed in really old clothes?” he asked the man. The man just looked at him, however, with a wild expression.

“Mike, are you okay?” Leigh asked the man, but he just stared at her.

The man said nothing a first, but then he looked toward Berry, and then at the bartender.

“He’s going to kill everybody,” he observed. “I’ve got to get him out of me.”

“Yeah, you do that,” Berry said with a shrug. Suddenly, the man produced a knife and sliced an artery in his left arm, as Berry just watched.

“My God!” Leigh suddenly cried out, but everyone just stood around in a circle, watching as the man named Mike continually bled out on the bar, on the floor, and all over himself. She jumped over the bar and laid him down as she tried to stop the bleeding, while Berry just stood there. He knew then he had to leave, but realized he should stay on the premises. He walked slowly back toward the office.

“What in the hell is going on out there?” Doris asked.

“Some fool just killed himself, or tried to,” he replied. “I’m sticking back here until the cops leave. I didn’t see a damn thing.”

“Why in the hell are you even still here to begin with?”

“Oh, I thought you might want to join in on the orgy that’s been gong on for the last thirty minutes or so, but from your expression I’m guessing not. Are you closing this place down anytime soon?”

She told him she was, and this relieved him, as he still felt strange. He remained back in the office the entire time the police and the ambulance personnel were on the scene. Luckily, none of them entered the office, or got anywhere near it, as they busied themselves with taking statements from the patrons as they ushered them off the premises. It took some time for The Butchers and Jim “The Needle” Houser to load up their equipment, though the Wiccan Tarot Reader left quickly. Once all the featured artists were gone, the only ones left on the premises were himself, Doris, and Leigh, who insisted on speaking to Marnie.

“Where did she go anyway?” she demanded.

“She’s out in the dumpster,” Berry answered. “What’s left of her is probably being gnawed away by rats right about now.”

When he said this, Doris dropped her rum and coke on the floor, and stood in shock. Leigh just looked at him.

“Who are you, anyway?” she demanded.

“I’m the guy that put her there,” he replied. He looked back over toward Doris, who stood transfixed, her mouth open as drool trailed down her chin.

“I’m not the one that killed her though,” he continued. “I was just the one that was supposed to be accused of it, after an anonymous tipster called in that I had her in the trunk of my car. Ain’t that right, Doris?”

“That’s crazy,” she replied. “I don’t have any idea what you are talking about.”

He ignored Doris, however.

“How long have you been a fed, Leigh? I’m guessing you were here to protect Marnie from all these vicious criminals that might want to do her in before she testified. People like her mom here, for example.”

Before she could reply, Berry produced his gun.

“Do you know what the sentence is for killing a federal officer, you stupid son-of-a-bi”-

Before she finished, a gunshot pierced her abdomen. As she fell to the floor with a groan, Berry went through the inside of her blouse, where he found a badge that identified her as one Leigh Bosley, and an agent with the FBI. He threw this up on the desk, and then checked her thoroughly.

“Good, she wasn’t wearing a wire,” he said. “That means Marnie must have known who she was and was working with her”

Doris still looked to be in shock and not sure of how to react or what to say.

“Don’t feel bad, Doris-it’s not your fault,” he said. “You and Marnie both got caught up in something you never understood. Hell, even your brother Phillip can’t even begin to scratch the surface as to what this is really all about. He thinks he’s in charge. I guess that makes him an even bigger fool than you, don’t it? Hell, I don’t even know what’s going on myself. I’m just along for the ride. I have about as much of a clue as to what’s going on as Raven does.”

“Who’s-Raven?” she asked as she moved to sit at the desk in an attempt to steady herself. He watched her warily. Then, he beamed a smile.

“Hey, guess what? I’ve got a meeting with the Archbishop here in a couple of weeks. Ain’t that something? I’m being recommended as the head of a new Third Order for lay Catholics that work with the downtrodden, with whores and drug addicts, with criminals and the criminally insane. I always felt that was a special calling of mine. Being a decorated law enforcement officer for the City of Baltimore carries weight, you know. I might even get a special audience with the Pope.”

She sat there, looking toward the desk, afraid to look him in the eyes. He just watched her, and smiled, as he walked back and forth in front of her.

“Oh, you know something-strike that might business. I definitely will get that audience with the Pope. See, I have this goal in life. I want to be a Saint. The bad thing about having a goal like that is, you never live to achieve it. That is all right, though. Something happened tonight that made me realize, it is going to happen after all. I’m going to make it happen, and you’re not going to stop me, Doris.”

He then approached her with a smile of pure, unadulterated menace.

“You’re not going to stop me at all.”

“James, please-we can work this all out,” she said. “I’ve got money. I have a lot of it, more than you can imagine. I know you want to do good things for the Church, ain’t that right? Just imagine how much good you can do with two or three hundred million dollars. Hell, you can start your own religion with that.”

“I would never do that,” he replied. “That would be a heresy. You have a point about doing good, though. How much money do you have Doris? Why don’t you call and find out. Then maybe I’ll tell you how much of it I want.”

She regarded him cautiously, and it seemed to her that he was sincerely interested.

“You have to promise me, you won’t hurt me.”

He promised, so she called a number on a paper that lay upon the desk. After a series of rings, she requested to know the amount in a specific numbered account. Within under a minute, she felt the entire world come crashing down around her.

“It’s gone,” she said. “The money has gone. They transferred the money. God damn them they transferred the money.”

“You mean Toby and Hacksaw, right? You really thought you could trust them didn’t you? Now what would make you think a thing like that? Those people are criminals, Doris. I’ve known them for years. In fact, they work for me. Or, well, they did. See, they fucked me too, in a manner of speaking. One of them was going to turn me in to the cops a little while ago. They betrayed me, they betrayed Marnie-and damn, Doris, it looks like they betrayed you too.”

“You can make them give the money back,” she said. “You know how”-

“Doris, you haven’t caught on yet,” he answered. “Money is not important. Well, it is important, but in a bad way. It makes people do things they ordinarily would not do. Everybody has their price, for just about anything. They will betray their friends, their family, and even God. Hell, it almost turned my own head just now, but you know what? I am only human. Let Toby and the Pulse have their money. As for you, Doris, you have exactly what I want.”

“I-I do?”

“Yeah-nothing whatsoever.”

“James, please!” she screamed, but James shushed her with a finger to his lips.

“Do you hear that sound, Doris? Do you know what that is? That is a garbage truck. That is the sound of Marnie and Fishbait going on a journey to their final destination to the city dump, which I would imagine is already quite filled up by now. It is still dark out there, so nobody will see them when the driver unloads them onto the piles of papers and garbage and disposable diapers and what have you. They will be looking though, for Marnie at least, here in the next few days, in connection with the murder of a federal agent. She’s going to be wanted in connection with a double murder, actually.”

“Don’t do this, I’m”-

However, the gunshot rung out and hit Doris between her breasts. She crumpled to the floor, whereupon Berry placed another bullet to her temple and fired a second time.

Berry crossed himself and said a quick rosary. As he left, he decided he would leave the front door unlocked, and the basement as well. He would just have to be certain no one saw him leave. If they did, of course, even if they knew him, they would probably not connect him with such a gruesome series of murders.

What in the hell, he wondered, would make anybody think such a thing?