Sunday, June 17, 2012

12. Fool (Part 1/4)


Ryan walk out of the bathroom, drying off his hair as he padded across the carpet. Night, he thought. Why is it always night? What are we, thieves? Ryan had once prided himself on being able to maintain a healthy sleep schedule in an age when most people relied on sleeping pills and stimulants. He had abandoned it when he became a Watcher, and had never fully recovered.

He sat down on a worn recliner, and picked up the unusual object he had pilfered. He turned it over in his hands, feeling its weight, watching as the rich amber lights played off its highly-polished brass exterior. Twisting it, he felt a faint turning and clicking inside it, as some unseen component carried the inertia he imparted to it. Small, raised buttons peppered its surface in clusters, alongside a few ornate dials and riveted windows. The windows revealed nothing but an inky blackness to him; holding one of them up to the light proved to be fruitless. Frustrated, Ryan dug under a pile of paper scraps, pulled up a small laser pointer, and directed the pencil-thin beam of red light into one of the onyx facets. Multi-colored whisps of light emitted from the other windows, dancing and slithering slightly in the air as he held the sphere with an unsteady hand. Emboldened, he tentatively prodded and twisted the buttons and dials, keeping the laser aimed into the device as he did. He found a combination of button-presses and dial-turnings that made the lights flicker and change color, but little more. He tried other combinations when the device began to vibrate slightly, its dials turning on their own. The lights flickered about more and more quickly, overlapping and tracing arcs through the air as the sphere trembled with increasing fervor. For a fraction of a second, a face appeared in the lights. Ryan gaped at the image, and, forgetting all about holding the laser pointer, dropped it. No sooner did the laser turn off than did the device quickly cease to hum, and the hologram disappear.

Ryan leaned back, frowning. He glanced at the laser pointer on the floor, feeling foolish. The clock on the wall chimed twice, reminding him that it was half past the hour, and that he needed to see Cohen soon. Curmudgeonly old fart, Ryan thought glumly. He stuffed the sphere into his bag, paused briefly, and threw a shirt over it. No need to get interrogated by both of them. He slung the bag over his shoulder, snapped up his keys and walked briskly out the door towards his car.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
“You're late,” quipped Cohen, not looking up from his screen as Ryan entered.

“I'm– uh, I don't think that I am, my–“

“Can it. I'm not your babysitter. You're not working for me anyway. Here, give this to Sciarpa when you see her. Don't fucking open it, don't fucking look at it. We'll both know if you do.”

He handed Ryan a thin manilla envelope, sealed shut. Ryan felt the slight shift of papers inside it. He frowned, looking at Cohen. He was a plump man, but possessed the kind of thickness that hinted at a muscular past. His bushy eyebrows bunched together when he was irritated, as he was now.

“Why couldn't you just send these to her mobile? She'd get them faster.” Ryan asked.

“Oh, sorry boss,” Cohen said, finally looking away from his monitor. “I can't believe that idea slipped my mind, it's such a good one. Why, maybe you should be in charge instead of me, now there's a swell idea!”

Ryan turned red, and began to stammer an apology.

“Shut up. Don't ask questions. God, how she stands you, I can't understand. Do you know what your problem is, Kesseler? You know what your fucking problem is?”

“No, sir.”

“You don't think, particularly before you speak. You're small-time, low-rank. You do what you're told until you prove you're good enough at that to start thinking on your own. This is highly delicate shit we're doing, Ryan. This thing here, with Sciarpa? This is your chance. You fuck this up, there won't be any more. So when I tell you to jump, what do you think you should do?”

Ryan thought for a moment before answering. “Jump, sir.”

“Yeah. Preferably after asking 'How high, sir?' or 'Off which bridge, sir?' Now, when you go to Sciarpa's, try not to take the same route each time.”

“Er, why is that, exactly?”

“Enemies of the state, Kesseler. Enemies of the state. Dismissed.” replied Cohen, returning to his screen.

Ryan left, muttering his impotent rage under his breath. Slamming the door to his car, he sped off towards Sciarpa's office, doing his best to respect the posted speed limits.