Freedom Incorporated by Peter Tylee (me reader .txt) đ
- Author: Peter Tylee
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He nodded and gnawed off another chunk of the soggy croissant. âYeah.â
âWhat about Claire?â Junior asked. âAre you going to keep two? Do I detect a mĂ©nage Ă trois in the air?â
Esteban cast him another warning glance. âNo. Iâll take care of my loose ends.â
âOh man, what a waste,â Junior moaned, correctly interpreting what Esteban meant. âIâll take her if you donât want her.â
âNo.â Esteban was adamant. âNobody gets her, sheâs mine. If you so much as squeeze her breasts Iâll make sure you permanently lose your sex drive, okay?â He didnât wait for an answer. âItâs time I retired Claire.â
Junior sat, careful not to move his head. Heâd lapsed into sullen silence.
âAnd Jenniferâs going to take her place?â Adrian asked dolefully.
âYep.â Esteban was still chewing and another fleck of food made the journey from his masticating mouth to the bar. âBut she likes to be called âJenâ.â
âWell, whatever she wants you to call her, she doesnât strike me as the sort of person whoâll sit idly by while you use her as a pincushion.â Adrian nudged his glasses back onto the bridge of his nose. âI think we should stick to the original plan: wait for Dan, let him watch, we all get some fun.â Esteban wasnât the only one attracted to Jen. But Adrian had secretly been attracted to her on a deeper level than the others. He didnât want to see her raped, disfigured and killed. He couldnât understand the change in himself and he was too lazy to analyse it, but given his way, heâd set Jen free. How his security slotted into that daydream he had no idea. But he didnât want to see any more women murdered. Heâd seen enough bloodshed to fill two lifetimes. Getting Esteban to wait for Dan was the only way he could save Claire from immediate termination. But that put Jen in peril. How long sheâd live would depend on how good Dan was at tracking. It was a pickle of a situation and he hadnât properly thought his way through it. And Adrian simply wasnât a fast enough thinker to hatch a solution on the spot.
Estebanâs temper was starting to flare. âHow many times do I have to say it before it gets through?â
âOkay, okay.â Adrian held up his hands submissively. âJust thought you might like another opinion.â
âWell Iâve heard it.â Esteban stuffed the last croissant into his mouth and left the room. He didnât notice the look Adrian and Junior shared. It knelled of a time when they might have to turn against their protector. Not now. Not anytime soon. Definitely not until they were thoroughly established in the Guild, but at some point, they might have to bite back.
Esteban meandered toward Claireâs room. She looked almost peaceful, lying on her bed. She was still wearing her white halter and he ogled her breasts, paying particular attention to her tense nipples, which he could see through the thin material. Good girl. He felt nothing akin to affection for her. She was his slave, and he treated her accordingly. Blood rushed to his groin when he thought of his new slave. Sheâll be good⊠she just doesnât know it yet. He pensively pursed his lips. I just need to break her. He acknowledged that Adrian and Junior had a point, but he wasnât accustomed to listening to their advice and he never let logic interrupt his fantasies.
Then his attention snapped back to the present, to Claireâs room. She wasnât the one he wanted, not anymore. Okay, letâs get this over with. It wasnât something he would enjoy; it was a chore. He couldnât have loose ends - Guild rules.
Still, it is a pity⊠she was good while she lasted.
She woke when he inserted the needle into her calf and flinched as he pumped the toxin into her system. It acted slowly compared with the Ravenâs nanotoxin, but it was just as deadly. As far as Esteban was concerned, the main deficiency with the Ravenâs formula was the mess, so he used a toxin that wouldnât rot Claireâs flesh to a pile of puss.
âWhatâs that?â she asked woozily.
âSomething to help you sleep,â he replied, his voice silky. A minuscule part of him vibrated in tune with humanity and he didnât want to sound gruff as she died.
But for all her faults, Claire wasnât stupid. She understood the true meaning behind his innocent-sounding words. âYouâre finally releasing me?â
She had the most unusual smile on her lips, though Esteban couldnât fathom the meaning behind it. It put him on edge. âYes.â
âNo kiss goodbye?â Her eyes danced with mirth. âNo âthanks for your servicesâ?â
Esteban scowled. Sheâs delusional. The drugs are acting faster than I thought. He attributed it to her poor physical constitution.
âYou know⊠thereâs something Iâve wanted⊠to say to you⊠for a long time.â Claire was struggling to breathe, gasping and she snatched air with an exaggerated snapping of her mouth.
âWhatâs that?â He couldnât think of anything else to say.
âYouâre a⊠moron.â She chocked on a laugh before convulsing once and lying limp.
Esteban stood back, not enjoying being alone with a victimâs ghost. He consoled himself with the thought that she wouldâve died long ago if heâd sent her to prison - a cesspool of disease and gang rape. Inmates could expect to live for mere months. Governments around the world had slashed their penal budgets and penal clinics were the first things to suffer. Often inmates had to share medication, which meant prisons tended to brew super-strains of the worldâs deadliest viruses and bacteria. Half an antibiotic course only weakened the microbes and upon recovering from the shock, they returned stronger than before. The World Health Organisation had been lobbying governments to address the problem for decades, but it was already too late. The diseases had spread to the wider community and modern treatment methodology had aggressively evolved to cope with the influx of medication-resistant strains. Some social scientists pointed accusing fingers at Xantex for charging extortionary prices for their drugs. Others blamed governments for ignoring the plethora of warnings.
He checked to see whether Claire had lapsed into a coma, but she wasnât drawing breath. She was better off here anyway. It seemed a strange justification when looking at her corpse, but in Estebanâs mind, he was within his rights for taking her life. Heâd extended it, so it was his to extinguish.
Now, for Dan⊠Heâd launched a program to monitor Danâs progress through the portals and, the last time heâd checked, Dan was still in Australia. Slow Dan, slow. Iâd expected better from you. Esteban intended to be ready when he finally arrived. And then youâll see who the master is.
*
Saturday, September 18, 2066
22:43 Sydney, AustraliaâWhatâs so important?â
Cookie stood and granted him access to the screen. âTake a look for yourself.â
Dan crouched and wearily began reading the records Cookie had left open. Fatigue was gnawing at his patience and the pressure of finding Jen wasnât easing with the passage of time. He didnât want to read the entire record; he wanted a summary. But he played the game anyway.
His attitude changed somewhere in the second paragraph and by the fourth his attention was inextricably bound to the television set. No. Disbelief flooded his mind. It soaked him like petrol so that when he sparked with anger a moment later he exploded into an inferno of rage. He spoke through clenched teeth. âAnd all this time I thought it was random.â
âYou didnât have reason to believe it went this deep. None of us did.â Simon was standing by, feeling uneasy. He wasnât sure how his friend would react, whether heâd start smashing government property or collapse on the spot. Nor was he sure how to act himself. Sorrow? Anger? Pity? He was wondering how best to offer comfort, but comfort was impossible for a man whoâd just discovered someone had paid a million Credits to have his wife murdered.
Danâs eyes glazed, focussing on a point a million miles away, on something only he could see.
Samantha and Cookie were leaning on each other in the far corner, intensely uncomfortable.
Now what? Dan mercilessly chewed his lower lip, ignoring the sting and taste of blood that followed. Does it change anything? Sometimes he hated the truth. Yes. Things wouldâve been easier if heâd never known, but sheltering from the cruelty in the world wouldnât give him peace. No, he was glad that he knew. He was glad to see the face that had orchestrated his misery from the shadows.
âSo Esteban was just following orders.â Simon didnât know what else to say.
Dan nodded. âIt looks like that.â He stabbed Cookie with a pleading look. âAre you sure this is valid?â
âI dunno man. Someone couldâve forged it, but I couldnât imagine why. UniForce believed their network was impenetrable, so why plant misleading information in their own database? Those records were restricted, not everyone in the company had access to them.â
The ex-bounty-hunter nodded at the logic. âI can see why.â There was enough damning evidence in those few records to send powerful people to gaol.
âWhatâre you going to do?â Simon asked nervously.
Dan muffled a snort of amusement. âIâve been asking myself that question.â Everyone felt wretched during the long pause that followed. But Dan shattered the deafening lapse in conversation by saying, âOne thing at a time. Jenâs probably not interested in why they killed Katherine.â
The record that had sparked his despondency was a contract between UniForce and PortaNet. The âtotal transportation solutionâ company had requested Danâs termination, but UniForce had declined. It was bad for business to assassinate cops. UniForce had a delicate relationship with law enforcement communities, why upset the balance for a few million Credits? They had an industry to protect. No, the police were strictly off limits. UniForce lined the pockets of several police commissioners to keep the baying cops away. If they assassinated a detective, nothing would stop the police from tearing UniForce asunder. So a spokesperson for PortaNet had met with a dedicated team of âsolutions expertsâ from UniForce, Esteban included. Itâd been a productive meeting, apparently. Another record in the database provided a full transcript of the discussion, which boiled Danâs blood.
PortaNet had a problem. Dan was pursuing a case that had the potential to embarrass the company and they wanted his energies diverted. By that time, Dan had a well-earned reputation for dogged pursuit of suspects, regardless of their political protection. Together, UniForce and PortaNet had concocted a scheme to kill Danâs wife, thereby distracting him. The contract was signed. Money was transferred. And the deed was done. Esteban had personally volunteered for the project and heâd delighted in slaughtering Danâs wife. So, with the target brutally murdered and Dan declared psychologically unfit for duty, PortaNet transferred the remainder of the fee and was forever in wedlock with the seedier side of big business. The records didnât depict precisely why PortaNet was so nervous, it was UniForceâs policy not to ask.
âHe wasnât just following orders,â Dan said bitterly. âHe sat on the panel that proposed killing her.â
âBut PortaNet paid him to do it,â Simon countered.
âI know, but I can only slay one monster at a time.â Dan wished he were big enough to crush Esteban in the palm of his hand.
âSo youâre going to fight this battle too?â Simon looked sad. He knew his friend would dash himself against forces many times more powerful than he could deal with. And it would lead only to one thing, his grave.
âUp until my last breath,â Dan promised, though the threat sounded hollow. Heâd been skirting a fine edge for too long and felt as if he was finally slipping over. The only thing he could see
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