Chaz:

Night brings peace for some, for those who can sleep. Personally I think it’s all a ruse. Go ahead, close your eyes. Tomorrow will be better than today. Go ahead. I dare you. Well, I’m not taking any bets. When I stand and look out at the night sky, I have a hard time believing that the sun is really going to rise again.

The landscape of George faded away, faster than I wanted. I was alone. Remembering that freak in the jazz club. He left a bad taste in my mouth. Almost like I’d swallowed a glass of his jive-sweet take-me-to-the-sky high, and now his snake-in-the-skin was going to rub off on me.

I’ve never liked gen-spike addicts, the way their skin ripples and shivers, like it’s crawling with a hundred snakes. There’s something primeval about them, as if evolution somehow reversed, imploded in upon itself; maybe Darwin stood up in the middle of the night and pushed a cosmic button and then suddenly all his clever theories began to unwind. Not that I ever believed in them in the first place, but somehow the gen freaks have his name tattooed on their souls.

And I hate to say it because it sounds so déjà vu, but I felt like I had seen this guy somewhere before.

A bad feeling slipped up my tailbone, lodged itself in the center of my chest and then twisted.

Had we been followed tonight? I thought I’d seen that guy earlier in the evening, outside the museum. He had turned around, watched Angelique when we got in the taxi and headed for the jazz club. And then in the cemetery, a flash of eyes watched me, between the crypts.

Was my imagination working overtime just because my Newbie collapsed and went off-line? Or—this one was even worse—was somebody after the Newbie?

Her identity was a secret: even she didn’t know for sure who she had been in her previous life yet. That was all part of the deal. Fresh Start. Nobody knew who you were or what you’d done. Even the mugs couldn’t come after you for a past crime, as long as you hadn’t committed a capital. It was a little bit like redemption. I know that sounds corny, but it was true. Sign on the dotted line and then when the time comes, everything gets washed away. Your family can’t find you, your creditors can’t find you, even your best friend won’t know where you went. A brand-new beginning. And if you planned everything right, there should be a nice little sum of money waiting, investments accrued over lifetimes.

Still, people have cracked the system before.

We pretend to be this omnipotent organization, but we’ve got our weak points.

“Run a track on marker number”—I paused and checked my log—“sixteen-point-four-three-eight-eight. Check to see where it’s been tonight.”

I tried my best to settle back and relax while the Grid ran a search on the gen freak I’d tagged a few hours ago. I knew he wouldn’t keep the marker long. Within a few days he’d find somebody in a back alley with barely enough techno-skills to take it out. I just hoped that they would accidentally yank out some muscle and nerve at the same time. Our markers have tentacles that lace for at least five inches on either side of the insertion point. Not many black-market geeks have the talent to remove one. Or the guts.

The search paused and skittered, jammed to a stop sooner than I expected.

“Parameters?” a silver voice asked.

“Where and when. Give it to me on a satellite map, include street names. Make it ‘up close and personal.’”

It flashed across the VR screen. Shorter than it should have been, both in distance and time. Either the jerk went home and fell asleep, or he had already found someone to remove the marker.

“Closer. Zoom in on the street names.”

The map sizzled, then jumped, razor-sharp exact. I immediately recognized the beginning of the glowing yellow trail. I smiled. The brute must have taken a while to catch his breath. He didn’t leave the alley behind the club for about half an hour, long after the Newbie and I left. Nice. I wish I could have put him down for longer. It’s illegal, but with some of these Mongoloid jerks, I feel like the limits need to be stretched.

Nobody tells me yes or no. Nobody but me. And that little voice, almost too quiet to hear sometimes.

I stood up and walked closer to the screen. Read the street names out loud as I followed the trail with my finger. Something strange about the way he traveled. Stop and go. Almost made me think he wasn’t alone, like he was with somebody else.

“You got any real satellite shots of this?”

A duplicate map, sans the yellow tracking line, shot up on the far wall. I walked over, examined it. I was right, there were four goons down there.

I went back to the first map, continued the trail. Stopped. That bad feeling was back. His trail led to the City of the Dead. The same time the Newbie and I were there.

He had followed us.

And as far as I could tell, there was only one way he could have found us.

That was as much evidence as I needed, but for some reason I continued to follow his trail. He didn’t track us after the cemetery, didn’t come here. I paused. Maybe I was wrong. Maybe it was a one-in-a-million fluke, like winning a lottery ticket. Maybe he hadn’t followed us.

I took his trail to the end.

It had to be wrong.

“Is this data corrupted? Any chance somebody tampered with the marker?”

A long, reflective whirring pause. “No. The data is correct.”

That Neanderthal’s trail ended at Fresh Start, at our main headquarters.

This was beginning to look like an inside job.

Afterlife
001-coverpage.html
002-titlepage.html
003-dedicationpage.html
004-TOC.html
005-part01.html
006-chapter01.html
007-chapter02.html
008-chapter03.html
009-chapter04.html
010-chapter05.html
011-chapter06.html
012-chapter07.html
013-chapter08.html
014-chapter09.html
015-chapter10.html
016-chapter11.html
017-chapter12.html
018-chapter13.html
019-chapter14.html
020-chapter15.html
021-chapter16.html
022-chapter17.html
023-chapter18.html
024-chapter19.html
025-chapter20.html
026-chapter21.html
027-part02.html
028-chapter22.html
029-chapter23.html
030-part03.html
031-chapter24.html
032-chapter25.html
033-chapter26.html
034-chapter27.html
035-chapter28.html
036-chapter29.html
037-part04.html
038-chapter30.html
039-chapter31.html
040-chapter32.html
041-chapter33.html
042-chapter34.html
043-chapter35.html
044-chapter36.html
045-chapter37.html
046-chapter38.html
047-chapter39.html
048-chapter40.html
049-chapter41.html
050-part05.html
051-chapter42.html
052-chapter43.html
053-chapter44.html
054-chapter45.html
055-chapter46.html
056-chapter47.html
057-chapter48.html
058-chapter49.html
059-chapter50.html
060-chapter51.html
061-chapter52.html
062-chapter53.html
063-chapter54.html
064-chapter55.html
065-chapter56.html
066-chapter57.html
067-chapter58.html
068-chapter59.html
069-part06.html
070-chapter60.html
071-chapter61.html
072-chapter62.html
073-chapter63.html
074-chapter64.html
075-chapter65.html
076-chapter66.html
077-chapter67.html
078-chapter68.html
079-chapter69.html
080-chapter70.html
081-chapter71.html
082-chapter72.html
083-chapter73.html
084-chapter74.html
085-chapter75.html
086-chapter76.html
087-chapter77.html
088-chapter78.html
089-chapter79.html
090-chapter80.html
091-chapter81.html
092-chapter82.html
093-acknowledgepage.html
094-aboutauthorpage.html
095-creditpage.html
096-copyrightpage.html
097-aboutpublisherpage.html