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Aloha from Hell. Richard KadreyЧитать онлайн книгу.

Aloha from Hell - Richard  Kadrey


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leans forward, resting her elbows on her knees, jacked up and exhausted at the same time.

      “I didn’t sell it to him. I gave it to him. We’re like, you know, friends. We’re going to get clean together.”

      I look at her. Her brain is vibrating so fast I can’t read her. I go another way.

      “Why not? You’ve got yourself a nice rich-boy client who was going to pay for your treatment. What was the plan? You take a walk your second day in and pocket whatever refund money you can con out of the clinic?”

      She shakes her head and her straw-dry hair sways around her cheeks.

      “It’s not like that. Hunter and me are friends. We’re going to do it together. For real this time.”

      “Then you haven’t heard about him.”

      She sits up. Alert and for the first time somewhat focused.

      “Something happened to Hunter?”

      “He’s missing. It was that last dose of Akira. His brain threw a rod. He jumped through a window and now he’s missing.”

      “Oh God. Oh God. Oh God.”

      She covers her face with her hands. That was dumb. Never tell meth heads the truth. The whole reason they’re high is they’re severely reality-phobic. I snap my fingers in front of Carolyn’s face. Lightly slap her arms.

      “Come back to earth, Carolyn. We need you. Hunter needs you.”

      “Will he be okay?”

      “I don’t know. It depends entirely on what you can tell me. I need the name of your supplier.”

      “Why do you need that? Why aren’t you out looking for him?”

      “Do you know where to start looking?”

      “No.”

      “Neither do we. What we do know is that Hunter used Akira without any problems and then all of a sudden he went psychobilly. I have a bad feeling that maybe there was something wrong with that last batch. Hunter’s reaction wasn’t a regular OD. It was real specific, so I want to know what was in there, who put it in there, and why.”

      She sits up and shakes her head. Draws her hands close to her body.

      “I can’t tell you that.”

      “Yes, you can. You’re Hunter’s friend and you want him found so the two of you can get better together.”

      “I can’t.”

      I scoot forward on the chair and lean close to Carolyn. She freezes, trying to keep her eyes from meeting mine.

      “Or maybe you’re not Hunter’s friend and you gave him a hot shot. Is that what you did, Carolyn? Did someone give you a special dose of Akira just for Hunter?”

      Stop digging, boys, we struck oil.

      Carolyn’s brain is still humming like a tuning fork, but at least she’s focused on something now. It’s there in her eyes. She’s beating herself silly trying to make all the contradictions and lies in her life add up to something sane. She really believes she’s Hunter’s friend, but the meth fog she lives in lets her justify giving Hunter drugs she knew were bad because someone up the food chain promised her more drugs or more money or the chance to settle a long-standing debt. Whatever her reasons, she feels guilty as hell. The addict self-pity tears start pumping out of her red and bruised eyes. I want to smack her to see if it snaps her brain back into gear, but I just pat her lightly on the shoulder. I keep my voice low, like I’m speaking to a child.

      “Who gave you the special Akira?”

      “I can’t tell you.”

      “Sure you can. Just give me a name, I’ll go, and you can get back to turning your brain to fish food.”

      “Fuck you.”

      She practically spits the words. Her whole body changes. She was a limp jellyfish a second ago and now she’s ready to put her fist through the wall. We’re on to the next step in this soap opera. She’s not thinking like a tame little user now. She’s moved into dealer mode. Hard-core. Defiant.

      “Do you believe in magic, Carolyn?”

      “Get out of my house, faggot.”

      “I don’t mean kid-party magic. I mean the real thing. Witches on brooms. Love potions. Hexes and demons. Do you believe in that?”

      “You know, one phone call and you’ll be smoked before you get back to Hollywood.”

      I run through some ideas. There are a lot of scary things I learned in the arena, but I only used them on Hellions and Lurkers. Ninety-nine percent of what I learned I’ve never tried on a civilian and I don’t particularly want to because I’m pretty sure they’d go off like a gerbil in a microwave.

      Her hands are shaking from the drugs, but she’s past scared and is deep into gangster territory.

      She puts on her best Scarface sneer and says, “You just going to sit there staring at me? I know you. Pussies like you talk and talk, but you won’t do anything. You don’t know the kind of people I know. They have balls.”

      She sniffs and wipes the snot from her nose with the back of her hand.

      I take out Mason’s lighter, thumb it open, and spark a flame. Her eyes flicker to mine and then zero in on the lighter.

      “I’d like to show you a magic trick. Would you like to see a magic trick, Carolyn?”

      She gets up. I grab her arm. She twists and tries to sucker punch me. Puts her whole body into it. I don’t try to stop her. I’m faster than any civilian, so she’s moving in exquisite slo-mo. When she’s a few inches from making contact, I lean back slightly and let her fist sail past. Grab the wrist and twist so her arm bends out like a chicken wing and every muscle and tendon in her shoulder feels like it’s going to snap. Carolyn goes down face-first onto the sofa and rolls herself into a little ball, squeezing her aching shoulder. I wait. Eventually, she sits up. There’s a half-finished cigarette in an ashtray on the arm of the sofa. She takes it, puts it between her lips, and starts looking around for matches. I’m still holding the lighter. I hold the flame out to her. She leans forward. I pull the lighter back and she follows a few inches. When she realizes I’m fucking with her, she stops and gives me a dirty look.

      I say, “Let me get that for you for real.”

      There’s one thing you have to remember about threats: when you make one, mean it. This is especially true with addicts. Their brains aren’t designed to absorb new information and they’re used to being slapped and stomped, so that doesn’t scare them anymore. If you need to impress upon an addict the gravity of their situation, you need to make a threat that doesn’t seem like a threat, but more like God pissing on them from a mountaintop.

      I hold the lighter to my hand and my skin bursts into flames. Fire is fire and this isn’t fun hoodoo, but I can stand the pain long enough to make my point.

      Carolyn jumps back at the sight of my burning mitt. I play it up. Let the meat cook black until it flakes, and crispy skin drifts onto the carpet. I could let it get down to the bone, but I really don’t want to do that. I move my hand toward Carolyn. She presses herself against the back of the sofa, trying to put as much distance as she can between us. I touch the tip of a finger to her cigarette until it glows.

      “This is what I meant by magic. I know worse tricks than this, but let’s focus on this one for the moment. What do you think would happen if I held you with this hand and used you to mop up this messy, messy house? Does that sound like fun? I think it would hurt. Maybe as much as it hurt Hunter when that shit you gave him turned him into a demon’s chew toy. I’m going to ask you one more time, and if you fuck with me, things are going to get drastic. Who gave you the Akira for Hunter?”

      “Cale,” she says.

      She


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