| Story
so far: On
the lam from the Battle of the Fifteen Armies, Yancey Slide, Idimmu
Demon of the Tenth Continuum, makes it to an Earth Urban C21, but with
bounty hunters in hot pursuit. He appropriates the body of a speedfreak
called Johnny Yuma, and seeks help from the legendary Doc Zen. Unfortunately,
Slide has not moved fast enough among the all the random time variables,
and his one time lover, but now implacable enemy, Nuygen von Bulow catches
up with him at the pool hall where Doc Zen has made his home.
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Episode
Four- Life On Mars?
The
weapon-weight of the Desert Eagle he had taken from the Blimp was hard
and metallic against Slide's back, but no way could he put a hand to
the gun. Inside Art's Snooker, on the second floor, Nuygen von Bulow
and her Sharkboy sidekick
totally had the drop on him. The exact nature of Nuygen von Bulow had
always been a mystery to Slide. She was perhaps a succubus with ambition,
or a mutant demon of a kind he had never previously encountered. On
their first meeting, long parsecs in the past, aboard the ancient Moche
airship, he had known she wasn't human, that was for sure, and later,
in the perfumed confines of her private state room, she
Illustration
courtesy of Jeanette (Moxie Graphix©).xxxxxxxxxxxihadn't
smelled
demon either, but
then the bomb planted by Good-time Charlie Christmas and his Sky Pirates
had detonated, the airship had been blown clean in half, and he had
been deprived of any further chance to investigate. In the present,
the needle gun in Nuygen von Bulow's right hand, the breathy Hanoi street-edge
in her voice, and the Mossberg toted by her boy companion told him that,
whatever she might really be, he should move with extreme circumspection.
"I suggest that you and your people step away from Slide,
and make no let or hindrance while we take him, and claim the completely
outrageous price on his suddenly very valuable head."
Slide moved just slightly. "Perhaps, before we go any further,
someone would like to explain to me why my head has quite so high a
fucking price on it."
Nuygen von Bulow looked Slide up and down. "I would have
taken you without any financial incentive, Yancey Slide. You've fucked
with me too many times for me to feel anything but an extreme and unpleasant
delight in watching you suffer all the way to your limits, and well
beyond. I haven't forgotten what you did to me at the Kremlin."
Slide shrugged and raised his hands. "I know you and I have
a somewhat problematic history, Nuygen, but I really would like to know
why I've suddenly become so damned valuable."
Sharkboy hefted the shotgun and looked eagerly at von Bulow.
Slide knew the kid wanted to blow someone apart so bad he could taste
it. "He's just stalling, ma'am. Doc Zen gotta have filled him in already."
Despite the predicament, Slide was not only able to look
Sharkboy directly in the eye, but also raise an amused eyebrow. "That
shows how little you know of Doc Zen, kid."
Von Bulow glanced at Slide. "I think we know enough about
Doc Zen to assume he's not going to get in the way when we take you
out of here. Isn't that right, Doc?."
Zen moved further away from Slide, closer to the pool table.
"I'm sorry, Yance, but you're just too damned hot to have around."
Slide's lip curled. "Thanks Doc. With friends like you,
what the fuck do I need with parasites?"
Von Bulow gestured with the needle gun. "Are you going to
come quietly?"
Before Slide could answer, the door to the stairs swung
violently open, and two cops, in blue uniforms, and with drawn guns,
squinting in the comparative darkness of the pool hall, were suddenly
a new factor in the equation of showdown. "Everyone stand right where
they are and don't move as much as a muscle."
In the first fraction of a second, all the players in the
room froze as instructed, and the officers moved forward. "Put your
hands on the back of your head, Yuma. Fingers laced."
As far as Slide could tell, Sharkboy was the first to break
the deadlock brought about by this new Johnny Yuma problem. He turned
with the clear intent of blowing away the intruding policemen. Slide
was the second to join the play. The Desert Eagle was in his hand, and,
without conscious thought, he fired the big .50 caliber automatic with
a deafening report in the enclosed space. It was alleged that a bullet
from a Desert Eagle could crack the engine block of a Mac truck. Sharkboy
staggered forward with a massive wound in his back where the hollow
point had torn into it. The cops, being mere humans, were no problem
in terms of response. Compared with an idimmu at full stretch, they
were infinitely slow. Nuygen was another matter. She had the needle
gun pointed straight at him. Although she couldn't kill him, she could
have maimed him with a blast of razor-sharp steel micro-shards to the
point that his immediate future would be exceedingly uncomfortable,
complicated and immobile. Her hesitation stemmed from her not wanting
him maimed. She wished him alive and walking, and ready to suffer at
her hands, and in that small but crucial moment, as she was divided
between desire for sweet revenge and practicality, Slide saw his chance.
He tossed her an illusion. Slide and Nuygen were suddenly
somewhere else. Balanced,
legs braced like surfers, they were each on a flying disc about five
feet in diameter, she was a buxom blonde in a bikini and boots, and
he was a somewhat epicene young man, stripped to the waist, with a wide
and studded Spartacus belt. The two of them were going at each other
with long, snaking electric whips, and swords hung from their belts,
that would supposedly come into play if they moved closer to each other.
Slide had no idea where or when they were, but a vast and roaring crowd
way below then indicated that they were the current attraction at some
ultra-extreme, stadium sporting event. He knew he had never been in
any situation or place like it before, and he could only assume the
context of the vision had come from her memory rather than his. He still
had the edge, however, having instigated the distracting phantasm. His
whip shot sparks and coiled around von Bulow's knees and thighs, pulling
her off balance. For a moment, she screamed and teetered, and then began
to plummet to the stadium below.
Slide cut the illusion as fast as he had started it and,
back in Art's Snooker, his hand was around Nuygen's thin right wrist.
He twisted, she cried out, and the needle gun went flying. The fifty
caliber was up beside her head. Slide fired again, but she was not the
target. Again the busting of the cap was a hazard to eardrums, but it
was worse for the first native cop who went flying backwards, effectively
headless, with blood, brains, and skull fragments sprayed over an elliptical
area being him. Slide fired again, and the second cop replicated his
companion's arc of final flight. Only then did he step back and place
the muzzle of the huge automatic hard against Nuygen's left temple.
"So, my dear, what were you saying about taking my head?"
Slide could not recall ever seeing Nuygen von Bulow looking
apprehensive before, and even then it only lasted for a split second.
Her previous combination of loathing and contempt returned almost immediately.
"I can't be killed."
Slide smiled unpleasantly. "I know that, but one of these
hollow points could fuck you up royally for a while. You'd be living
without a head."
Doc Zen moved towards the two of them. "Let her go Yancey."
"I don't know about that."
Doc ignored Slide. "Just get out of here, Nuygen. Walk out
of here, back to you limo and your Humiliation, and don't say a word.
Slide isn't going to shoot you."
"I'm not?"
Zen returned Slide's glance with a look of one who knows
he will be calling the shots for there on in. "No, you're not. You have
more than enough troubles already."
With a shrug, Slide withdrew the pistol and slid it into
the back of his pants. "Whatever you say, Doc."
As Nuygen von Bulow walked stiffly to the door, the body
of Sharkboy slowly dematerialized, fading to nothing and leaving no
trace. When she was gone, with the double doors slapping behind her,
Doc Zen whistled. "Man, she really had that kid in the full thrall.
Even dead, he doesn't even exist without her."
The blonde who had been playing nine ball with Zen looked
round the pool room with an expression of distaste. "This joint is really
messed up."
Zen snapped his fingers. "Ernst, get a bucket and mop."
One of the synthetics scowled. "Why do I always have to
do the grue-wipe?"
"You're a synthetic aren't you? Why else would I have acquired
you."
"You don't have to rub it in.
The blonde sighed. "We've still got two dead cops here."
Doc Zen failed to catch the drift of her argument. "It's
their own fault for walking in here when they did."
"Whoever might or might not be at fault, the bodies still
have to be disposed of."
Now it was Zen's turn to shrug. "So someone will drive them
out to the storm sewers and feed them to the CHUDs."
"CHUDs?"
"Cannibalistic Humanoid Underground Dwellers."
Slide blinked. "I didn't know you had CHUDs in this C21."
"How do you think we keep the Mole People at bay?"
Zen busied himself setting his team to work at cleaning
up all evidence of the mayhem in the pool hall. Then, when everything
in motion to his satisfaction, he slipped on his frock coat and turned
his attention to Slide. "I guess you see by now that you can't possibly
stay here. I'm not being inhospitable, but what just happened could
become a constant condition of life if you stick around."
"I seem to be attracting more than my fair share of attention."
"What I mean is, old friend, that you have to get the fuck
out of here like now. This minute."
Slide sighed. "I'm hardly in any shape to be leaping from
one fucking dimension to the next with bounty hunters all around me.
I'm telling you, Doc. I need a hole-in-the-wall for a spell of recuperation.
If I have to lam out the hard way, it's only going to be a matter of
time before one or more of them catches up to me. Then I'm for the Negative
Zone or even the Edge of Entropy. If that's all I have to look forward
to, I might as well make my last stand right here and save myself a
whole mess of hard traveling."
Zen looked sideways at Slide. "You're threatening me? You're
threatening me with deliberately staying and having a showdown right
on my turf?"
Slide shook his head. "No, man, I'm just tired, and it's
the only card I have left to play.."
Doc Zen thought for a while. "Mars might be a good place
to hole up."
"Mars? What the fuck are you talking about. There's nothing
on Mars but rocks."
"Stop thinking so temporally, my boy. Eight million years
ago Mars was fucking humming."
Slide frowned. Eight million years ago on a clearly defined
Other Planet was a stretch
by any standard of reality-jump. He groped for what he recalled about
Mars eight million years in the past. He was relieved when Doc Zen helped
him out. "It was when The Slimy Things were tossing their time-cylinders
full of fighting machines at Earth and Venus, and the Jedwars and warlords
were fighting among themselves. The neo-Victorians are there already.
They have themselves a nice little Raj going."
"I'm not sure it's what I'm looking for."
"You're not choosing a vacation, Yancey old son. You're
looking for a place to hide. It would seem to be a point on the Martian
timeline when they went about their own business without too much truck
with Imperial entanglements. And besides, I heard that Miss Mina Murray
is up there."
Slide's eyes narrowed. "Mina Murray that..."
"Mina Harker that was."
"She who mind melded with Count Dracula?"
Zen nodded with an express of inscrutable amusement. "The
very same."
"No bullshit?"
"No bullshit."
"So they've got vampires up on Mars?"
"They're Victorians aren't they?"
They both knew how Slide felt about vampires. They both
knew that Slide was intrigued, but form dictated he should raise one
more objection. "How the fuck am I supposed to get to Mars in the shape
I'm in? Not to mention the almighty goddamned timeleap."
Doc Zen trumped the problem "We have a Carter Machine out
back."
"A Carter Machine?"
"Right."
Now Slide was really impressed. "Where the fuck did you
get a Carter Machine?"
"I bought it from a traveling Gnostic who was a Dealer
in Devices.
"You're kidding me?"
"How do you think I got Ernst and the other Hormad synthetics?"
Slide and Zen exited by a rear door and descended into a
sub-basement by means of a freight elevator. Doc Zen's domicile was
also larger on the inside than the out, and the basement was like that
of a major museum, with irregular lines and groupings of large and dusty,
drop-cloth shrouded objects, and long ranks of warehouse style selves
on which the smaller items were stacked in piles. Doc Zen had a reputation
for hoarding all manner of stuff and especially devices of arcane obscurity,
and usually of little or no relevance to the time period in which he
was residing. For a minute or more he stood frowning, as though unable
to recollect where the hell he had put the damned thing. Then memory
seemed to reassert itself. He walked with increasing confidence among
the remarkable and extensive collection of junk, finally halting in
front of something looked like a sheeted-up hotdog stand with its parasol
still open. With a collector's pride, he whipped away the cover, revealing
the umbrella canopy of a Gridley Wave generator above a comfortable
19th century style, padded leather armchair with a hinged set of brass
and crystal controls that could be swung in front of the seated operator/passenger.
Slide stared at it a slightly bemused expression even for
a demon who had seen most things. "That is definitely a Carter Machine."
"I just have to find the power source."
Doc Zen rummaged and eventually located a light absorbing
cube that appeared uncomfortable in the relative space it occupied.
Slide took a step back. "Is that what I think it is?"
"A simple little matter/anti-matter unit."
"You're messing round with matter/anti-matter in the middle
of a highly populated city?
Doc Zen didn't seem at all concerned. "Fuck 'em if they
can't take a cosmic joke. And anyway, I'm careful."
Slide seated himself in the chair of the Carter Machine,
trying it for size, but, at the same time, he couldn't help remembering
that, as far as his information went, the Carter Machine didn't have
an exactly unblemished safety record. He had heard tales of how people
had checked out under the spinning canopy but then never checked in
again. "I'm still not sure I can do this without tetradetoxin, Doc."
Doc Zen's voice took on a tone of provoked impatience. "Fuck,
Yancey, don't you ever stop creating problems? You seriously think Doc
Zen is without tetradetoxin?
After Slide had been suitably drugged and otherwise prepared
for his departure through space and time, and deprived of his weapon
because the Gridley Wave would never support even that mass of metal,
Doc Zen leaned in and made sure his seat belt was securely fastened,
and then stepped back to a safe distance. "The coordinates are all set.
You need only to press forward on the main control lever."
Still Slide hesitated. "I don't know, Doc. I don't know
about any of this."
"Fuck you, Yancey, get going, or I'll turn you in to the
IIA myself."
With his brain now awash in tetradetoxin, Slide could only
do as he was told and go. He pressed forward on the main control lever,
and then looked up as the canopy commenced to turn, allowing
himself to be hypnotized by its accelerating rotation. Initially the
hallucinations were routine, flapping wings leaving rainbow contrails,
and stars streaming down the curvature of space-time like a sparkling
mercury fountain, then, fleetingly, as the intergalactic dust clouds
rushed past, he crossed the space lanes of the Great Ships of the Ancients,
the star-hammers and death-asteroids in which the Shining Ones waged
their majestic war on The Great Chalcedon, the Destroyer of Worlds,
and he was hurried witness to the carnage and conflagration that resulted
when the absolute masters of planetary systems, and the lords of vast
gas nebulae clashed in a conflict that he knew would drag on for countless
millennia. As he sped across a hundred or more million miles and eighty
thousand human centuries, riding the impossible Gridley Wave like the
course of the Starchild, he also briefly traversed the black vacuum
ranges where the squid-like hydrogen feeders, conceived in the fiery
afterbirth of the Big Bang, grazed on the void as they probably would
all the way to an approximation of infinity, but then, in an instant
he had entered quadrants of light and sound that were impossible to
describe even for an idimmu, and where ethereal voices whispered galactic
conspiracy in a language he had never encountered before in all his
long days, but whose tone was precise enough for Slide to recognize
an overpowering evil intent.
When it came, his arrival at his destination was in abrupt
and in untoward contrast to the strange and awesome magnificence of
the transit. Without warning, he was slammed sideways into hard hot
red sand with the force of a dead fall of maybe ten or fifteen feet.
For an few moments, Yancey Slide lay stunned and winded, unable to accurately
recognize so much as up, light headed in the thin atmosphere, and cautious
to make his first move in the reduced gravity. He also realized very
quickly that the Carter Machine had not landed with him, and neither
had the clothes he had been wearing. He was as bare ass naked as a new
born human, without so much as a shirt to cover himself, or any of the
small and useful items he had secreted in his pockets before his departure
from Doc Zen's. It was more that sufficient to cause him to curse out
loud.
"Fuck this for unacceptable shit."
"You must have been extremely drunk."
"What?" The perfect incongruity of the shrill squeaky and
over-sibilant voice, with it's slightly affected and decidedly campy
English lisp, fitted with the rest of Slide's current predicament so
exactly that he moved his head enough to observe that the speaker, was
small, barely eighteen inches tall, and resembled a Maine lobster on
spindly tripod legs.
"This far down the canal and bareass naked."
"What?"
"I said you must have been extremely drunk to get all this
way out of town and lose your clothes into the bargain. You sure must
have tied one on."
"Did you see how I got here?"
"No memory?"
Slide was getting tried of this crustacean assuming he was
a mislaid drunk. "Just answer the question."
The lobster boy made a negatory gesture with a antennae.
"No. I didn't see how you got here. You were fully here when I came
sashaying by, out cold in your birthday suit."
"I came a long way to be here. All the fucking way from
Earth."
"Are you telling me you're John Carter? Because, if you
are, I'm flatly not going to believe you."
"I'm not John Carter, and neither am I Ulysses Paxton,
but I arrived here by a similar means of transport."
"So welcome to Malecandra, or Barsoom, or Mars if you prefer
it."
"Mars will do."
"My name is Mahdjfb.
"I'm pleased to meet you Mahdjfb. My named is Yancey Slide."
The tripod didn't seem to attache any significance to the
name. "I'm afraid your only hope is to make it to the city.
"The city?
"The moons will be up soon and the banths and corphals
will be out."
"What?"
"We could both end up as chow."
"What city are you talking about?"
"Extrosylvania."
"What?"
"City of Queen Mina."
"What?"
"Made herself Queen didn't she? After the assassination
of Dejah Thoris by the Gorthans in Aaanthor Plaza. Made the place the
capital of the Victorian Raj, and Claims she's last bastion of the vertebrates
against The Slimy Things."
"But you're exoskeletal."
"That counts."
"It does?"
"The Victorians need all the help they can get, right now.
If you've got a bone of any kind, they'll take you, even with those
humorless fucking Treens growing a new Mekon in the their tanks."
Now Slide was really surprised. "You've got Treens here?"
"'Tis but a short hop from Venus. I mean, Mars and Venus
really started talking after the attack of the Volan Hives from the
Red Moon, and the fall of the 17th. Mekon."
"I'm starting to feel a little dizzy."
"There's no air plants this far out, dearie. You need to
get back to the city."
"How do I do that?"
"You follow the Grand Canal for about ten clicks and you're
there."
"What?"
"The Grand Canal. It's right beside you, for pity's sake.
You really should take a look around at your immediate surroundings.
What are you going to do when people ask you for your first impressions?
Tell them you don't have any because you lay your back and stared straight
up because like Snoopy on his doghouse because you didn't like the situation
in which you found yourself?"
Mahdjfb seemed an excellent judge of the situation so Slide
made the effort, struggled into a sitting position and looked to his
right. And there was the Grand Canal. The Martian Grand Canal, for fuck
sake. The legendary construction required a moment of pause, in which
all thoughts of Slide's own ongoing predicament were temporarily driven
from his mind as he stared in unashamed awe. "Holy shit."
Essentially the canal was a vast trench that ran in a gentle
curve to the orange horizon and beyond. It was maybe a half mile across,
and lined with gargantuan slabs of raw, red and blue veined marble,
each one flawlessly fitted to the others that surrounded it, without
the use of cement of filler. No wonder that, millions of years in the
future, the Grand Canal would still be visible from space when it was
nothing more than a dry and eroded, ruined legacy. Its construction
was the kind of public works project that usually followed long and
monumentally epic wars. He could personally recall how many a mogul,
and all descriptions of despots had redeployed their no longer required
soldiers to labor dawn to dusk on some backbreaking wonder of the world
in question. Sometimes it would be grandiose calendars or implausible
tombs, but the first favorite was always a colossal irrigation project.
And thus it had been with Ras Thavas and the Jeddaks of Thark after
the Wars on Consolidation and the Time of the Flying Death. The newly
arrived visitor might have anticipated bright flowing water in the canal,
but that was not the case. Slide already knew the Martian canals held
the water they moved from the poles to the equator enclosed in pipes,
but no second hand weird tales of the Red Planet had prepared him for
what he saw. Each pipe was maybe ten feet across, dark blue, and there
were countless thousands of them. He also
would have expected that such a massed multitude of pipework to have
been laid according to an orderly and geometric design, but these pipes
undulated and intertwined, in and out, and over and under, and each
individual one seemed to conform to what would have been the natural
flow of the water in motion.
"I looks like the intestinal track of some gargantuan planet
sized creature."
Mahdjfb fluttered his antennae. "In some respects it is,
but we still drink the water."
Slide could only repeat himself. "Holy shit." He really
was on Mars, sometime in the Golden Age, and no matter how jaded he
might have become, that was something that could not be easily taken
as routine.
Mahdjfb, however, was becoming snippy and impatient. "I
know you're impressed with your first sight of the Grand canal, but
you really do have to start for the city."
"Could you show me the way?"
"Yes, yes, I'm going that way, but we must hurry."
"The banths and corphals will be out?"
"At least you remember what you're told."
Slide got slowly his feet. "Okay, Mahdjfb. Lead the fucking
way.
He reflected, however, as he started following the crustacean
that a naked man walking into a Victorian city might receive a very
mixed reception.
TO
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