Page 14 of Wolf and Raven


  You do not have to tolerate this, Long Tooth, the Old One snarled in my head. Let me give you my quickness and strength. Then you will show them.

  I shook my head. Ringing the practice field, four watcher spirits monitored the area for magic. For me to invoke the Wolf spirit in a real game would result in my being ejected from the league forever. Here, in practice, it would attract unwanted attention, and it had been agreed upon earlier that such a thing was not a good idea.

  I held my hand out to Babe and backed out of the batter’s box. “Ever have a desire to burn one down the third-base line into those clowns?”

  Jimmy chuckled under his breath. “Yeah, back in double-A when I was starting out. Pitchers can be hell on you because they’re out in the bullpen without adult supervision most of the time.”

  “I know. When I was out there earlier they were teaching me how to spit.”

  “Now there’s a skill for the Fifth World.” Jimmy hooked his fingers through the netting on the cage. “What would you do if Babe was shooting a gun at you?”

  “I’d shoot him back.”

  “Same dif here, only the bullet is bigger and you’re sharing it with him.”

  “Gotcha.” I reached up and turned the helmet off. “I think I’m set now.”

  “Go get ’em.” Jimmy waved at the outfielders to back up. “Longball hitter stepping up, boys. Get on your horses.”

  Babe wound up and delivered a solid fastball. It came straight down the pipe and I swung all the way through the ball. I was late on the swing, so the ball hooked out into foul territory, but it was a long way out in foul territory. That surprised Babe because his next pitch came in high, leaving the count at 1 and 2 on the scoreboard. “Wolf, this’ll be his curve. Tight, golf-shot it.”

  Just as Jimmy predicted, Babe’s curve arced in and broke down. I stepped out and snapped the bat around, connecting rock solid. The ball exploded off my bat and passed just above Williams’ glove as the third baseman leaped up at it. Beyond him it skipped off the turf and tucked itself into the corner of the outfield.

  Behind me Jimmy chuckled. “That’s a double for sure, maybe even a triple. You’ve got good wheels.”

  “You’re being generous.”

  “Never going to fit undercover, Wolf, if you don’t brag a bit.”

  “Just taking my lead from you, Jim.”

  With the rest of his pitches, Babe kept me honest, but I got pieces of more than I missed. As he began to tire and I got into my rhythm, stroking the ball felt really good. Finally, as we both agreed it was to be the last pitch, I pointed toward the outfield. “This time I’m serious.”

  Babe laughed aloud. “Yeah, you and every other curb-climber. No mercy, Wolf.”

  “Asked or given, Babe.”

  Because I’d begun to hit his curve, he came straight at me with a hard fastball. I saw him release it at the top of his arm’s arc and I knew in a split-second that ball would be jetting fat and happy through my strike zone. Pushing off with my left foot, I strode forward. Cranking the bat around, I knew the ball was going places.

  It was, like right into the backstop as my bat missed it by the same margin Christmas misses June.

  With my bat pounding the turf as my swing spun me around, I dropped to my knees. Looking up I saw even Jimmy holding his sides to stop chuckling. “What the hell was that?”

  Babe jogged down from the mound and laughed with a low, sinister voice. “Just a reminder, kid. We’re the pros in this league, and you’re just a promising amateur.” If not for the impish light in his eyes, I’d have figured Babe was mad at me. He slapped Jimmy on the arm and headed into the dugout.

  I slowly regained my feet and brushed my knees off. “That ball broke like a Ferrari on Pothole Road.” Jimmy nodded and kicked some of the balls back out toward the mound. “Yeah, well, Babe was just having some fun with you.”

  “What was that pitch?”

  He kicked a ball toward me and I noticed that dirt clung to part of it. “Babe gave you a spitter.”

  I swore. “And what do you do when somebody pitches you one of those?”

  “Miss like you did . . .” Jimmy shrugged. “Or hit it on the dry side.”

  * * *

  Even though I’d not worked up much of a sweat, the shower felt good. I would have lingered, but Jimmy and I had dates for the evening and the woman I was seeing considered punctuality next to cleanliness in the way of divine attributes. As I was definitely considering dedicating a temple or two to her, I knew better than to keep her waiting.

  A tall, beer-bellied man with a lopsided smile tossed me a thick white towel as I stepped from the shower. “You went after the spitter. ’Sa nasty pitch.” He pounded his own chest proudly. “I’zz able to hit that one.”

  The man’s slightly slurred speech and the partial paralysis of the right side of his body made me uneasy, but I returned his smile. “You’re a better man than I, in that case.”

  Jimmy left the shower and fielded the towel line-drive easily. “That you could, Thumper. You could hit that spitter like it had been in the desert for years.” He jerked a thumb at me. “Wolfgang Kies, meet Al Grater. He used to play under Ted Williams for Seattle about ten years back.”

  My smile broadened. “Yeah, okay, I remember now. You were playing Williams’ 1947 season back in ’39, weren’t you? I actually saw you play. You hit a double, a triple, and a homer in that game.”

  “The Thumper, ’sme.” His brown eyes watched me carefully. “ ’Sa good year.”

  The ragged scar tracking back through his black hair on the left side of his head reminded me of what had happened to him. In the 2040 season he’d been hit by a pitch that, as it turned out, had fractured his skull. He remained up at the plate and hit the next pitch out of the park, but collapsed rounding third. The brain damage hit him as hard as a stroke. The Seadogs management tried to put him back together, but could not, so they let him work around the Dome.

  “It was a good year indeed.” Babe Ruth draped an arm over Thumper’s shoulders. He pointed a fat corona’s glowing tip at me and grinned. “That was the year I entered the team’s AAA Coastal League franchise, and the last year I ever swung at a spitball.” Jimmy rubbed his towel through his closely cropped, kinky black hair. “You had to throw that pitch because you knew Wolf would have hit anything else you threw at him.”

  Babe winked at me. “True enough. A little seasoning, Wolf, and you could play Wildfire Schulte or Footsie Marcum.”

  “Thanks, I think.”

  Jimmy rested his left hand on my right shoulder. “Might want to rethink that, Babe. Wolf isn’t wired and he turned the helmet off. He was hitting you all by his lonesome.”

  Babe blanched a bit, but his jocularity only vanished for a nanosecond. “I’ll get someone to get me my ’16 statsofts[20] and then we’ll give him a real workout.”

  I nodded. “You’re on.” I turned to Jimmy. “We’d best get moving. We don’t want to be late.”

  Jimmy fastened his towel around his slender waist. “I hope you’re right about this woman you’ve got me meeting. I hate blind dates.”

  I frowned. “It’s not really a date. Just drinks and maybe dinner. Wouldn’t do that to her or you.”

  Babe seated himself on the bench by our lockers. “Big night? Where are you going?”

  “It’s a new place.” I grimaced. “It’s called ParVenue.” Babe smiled wryly. “Oh, I think you’ll love that place, Jimmy. Thinking about asking the boys upstairs to get me a membership there as my next signing bonus.”

  Jimmy grunted, but I was unsure if he was still uneasy about having a blind date or if something about the club Valerie had chosen irritated him. I looked at Babe and Thumper. “If you two want to come along, I think my connection can get you in.”

  Babe shook his head. “Not me. Seattle’s governor wants the Sultan at some reception she’s tossing tonight.”

  “Thumper?”

  Al shook his head with a herky-jerky motion. “ ’Sa n
ot for me. ’Sides, I got work to do around here. I’m changing all the burned bulbs in the scoreboard. Want it right for when we beat the San Diego Jaguars.”

  “Another time then.” I opened my locker as they left Jimmy and me alone. I tossed a wink at the picture of Lynn I’d taped to the inside of the door—just keeping with my cover, mind you—and pulled on a pair of khaki slacks. The polo shirt I tugged on over my head was navy blue and had the team’s logo emblazoned on the right breast. Sheathing my feet in a pair of nylon Armani-Nike[21] power trainers and pumping them to snug completed my outfit, then raking a comb through my hair finished my preparations.

  Jimmy took a sidelong glance at me and whistled. “Look lots better now than you did in the batting cage.” I jingled the keys of my car at him. “And we’ll both look better in the Fenris.”

  “Then lead on, my friend.”

  * * *

  The short tunnel from the locker room brought us directly to the parking lot beneath the stadium. Off to the right, the Fenris lurked like a piece of primordial darkness. All smooth and sleek, it reflected none of the garage’s meager light because of a radarbane coating Doctor Raven had sprayed on it. Time seemed to slow as you approached the car, but I figured that was relativity in action because the car looked like it was doing light speed when it was sitting still.

  The Fenris even impressed Jimmy. “ ’Fifty model, with a twelve-cylinder engine, right?”

  I nodded. “Seventy-five hundred klicks on her and still not a dent.”

  Jimmy ran a hand gently over the top. “Doc Raven must pay very well.”

  I smiled and keyed open my door. The automatic locks snapped open and Jimmy settled into the passenger seat. “Actually this was a gift from a friend, but Raven has been known to be generous.” I smiled openly. “You can bet Ms. Lacy-Mitsuto will pay very well if I can solve your little problem here.”

  “You find out who’s been trying to sabotage our drive for the pennant and money will be no object.”

  I punched in the ignition sequence, and the dozen cylinders beneath the Fenris’ hood started hitting like Murderers’ Row. The vehicle’s headlights rotated up into position and I shifted the car into gear. “ParVenue, here we come.”

  Again irritation flickered over Jimmy’s face, but I didn’t know him well enough to guess what the cause might be. He controlled it and forced himself to relax. “Hey, Wolf, that was nice of you to ask Thumper if he wanted to join us.”

  “No big deal. He seems like a nice guy. I thought he’d like time away from the Dome.”

  Jimmy frowned. “He probably would, but I don’t think he can exist away from the Dome or the circus environment. He’s in deep.”

  “Like Babe?”

  “No.” Jimmy shook his head solemnly. “Ken Wilson is in deep by choice. Sure, the Seattle organization planned to draft Babe Ruth and use him, so they wanted someone like Ken whose physiology matched the Babe’s right down to length of thumbs and space between the eyes. Ken was groomed to play Babe Ruth since Little League, so making it to the show is the fulfillment of a dream for him.”

  Coming out of the Dome’s parking garage I waved at Thumper, then steered toward downtown Seattle. “Wilson’s lucky—he looks enough like Babe Ruth to be his clone.”

  “He didn’t when he started.” Jimmy began to scowl.

  “The man’s had more plastic surgery than many elf wannabes. Ken’s in deep because he chooses to be in deep. He lets the statsoft ride all the time, and he wears the Babe’s identity like a mask.”

  “I take it, from your tone of voice, you’ve got a problem with what Ken does?”

  Jimmy waved me off. “Not really a problem, but a difference of opinion. Look, when I started playing ball, I was just like you. I played in the streets with the kids from the neighborhood, then I graduated to Little League on a team sponsored by Renraku. My father is a district manager for them and the corps take care of their own. A scout saw me and I got pumped into the Seattle organization, of which Renraku owns a big chunk.”

  From outside, street lights strobed pinkish highlights on the ebony of Jimmy’s nose and forehead. Humanoid shadows scuttled through the darkness surrounding Fourth Avenue South as we shot around the Renraku Arcology. Try as I might, I couldn’t make out any signs of where the helicopter had crashed during the Night of Fire, but I’d have expected Renraku to clean up fast, so that didn’t surprise me much. By the same token I knew the area of Westlake where I’d seen action that same night had long since been patched up by Tucker and Bors, so the power of corps to heal their wounds was never in question in my mind.

  Jimmy’s lips peeled back from white teeth in a grin laden with irony. “I really love this game. In fact, I have it written into my contract that I can play in pick-up games whenever I want to—unlike others whose playing time is all tied up by contract.”

  “Having your father as a suit in the corp hierarchy must help.”

  “Yeah, it has its advantages.” He stretched, placing his palms flat against the dashboard. “Ken stays statsoft-operational all the time because he really wants to be Babe Ruth. Whatever personality Ken originally had has been smothered by his statsoft. Me? I realize that baseball is my life right now, but it won’t be forever. I only let a statsoft ride when I’m on the field. Other than that, I’m Jimmy Mackelroy.”

  I nodded. The Old One, the fragment of the Wolf spirit lurking in my brain, likewise had to be segregated out of my life. Yes, his power and abilities gave me, through magic, what Jimmy got through wired reflexes and cybered eyes. Still, the Old One, with his wild wishes for combat and killing and blood, brought with him a dark side that I could not let run riot. Like Jimmy, I could not let the Old One control me, or I would lose my personality and end up hurting many people.

  As those thoughts coursed through my brain, I looked out and saw a nearly full moon flashing through the picket fence of skyscrapers in downtown Seattle. The Old One’s howl echoed through my mind. Beware, Longtooth, with the moon comes my power. You retain control for now, but invoke me and I will show you the true way of the warrior.

  I shivered and spoke to deflect my thoughts away from the path blazed by the Old One’s whisper. “So why is Thumper different from Ken Wilson?”

  “Ken has a choice, Thumper doesn’t.” Jimmy’s brown eyes narrowed as bitterness entered his voice. “Al had Ted Williams riding him when his skull was fractured. The brain damage was extensive, and the doctors initially thought he’d never be more than a turnip suitable for organ-harvesting. His sister agreed to pull the plug on him, but she demanded he be allowed to die as Ted Williams. League officials agreed and returned the statsoft to him. That brought Al out of it, though through rehabilitation his personality integrated with that of the statsoft, creating the composite personality of Thumper.

  “The corp meat-mechanics refer to him as the first AI in a wet chip. Bastards.”

  “Amen to that.” I whipped the wheel around and pulled into the semi-circular drive in front of the ParVenue. “We’re here.”

  An ork valet opened my door and helped me out. “Be nice to my car and I’ll be nice to you,” I told him with a smile. He glanced up at me, surly, until he met my eyes. The dark ring surrounding my green irises zapped a little respect into him.

  “Yes, sir. Not a scratch, sir.”

  I nodded happily. What’s the purpose of having Killer Rings in your eyes if you can’t make use of them? A howl from the Old One rose from the depths of my mind, but I stifled it. Not this time, you old tick hound. Nothing and no one to fight here.

  The ParVenue Club had some fairly unique architecture. The drive led to a simple three-story brown-stone façade, much like the one Doctor Raven used as his headquarters. The prefab granite looked suitably weathered to give the building an air of antiquity, and the copper awnings glowed green in an advertisement for building fossilizers. In a high-speed, low-drag world where a venerable genealogy means respectability and virture, this building came off like an old-money f
amily with a virgin daughter.

  The door elf, nattily attired in a long, scarlet wool coat with gold braid, smiled cautiously as Jimmy and I approached his station. “Good evening, gentlemen.” He turned the word into a title that implied his pleasure at seeing us, though his tense stance and sour glance belied his words.

  “Evening, yourself.” I gave him a hey-everything-is-cool-here-chummer smile. “You’ll want to verify our memberships?”

  His tension eased just a microvolt. “Yes, sir, I am afraid I must.” He reached back and touched a brick with a white-gloved hand. A panel slid up and the hole in the wall extruded a blocky lucite sheet. I smiled and pressed my right hand to it. A light passed under it and back, then the beeped verification of membership.

  The elf smiled. “Very good, sir. And this is your guest?”

  I speared the man with a questioning glance. “Guest? Mr. Mackelroy is a member.” Winking at Jimmy, I waved him forward.

  The door elf paled—which is quite a feat for an elf anyway. “I am afraid you might be mistaken, Mr. Kies. He can enter as your guest, but. . .”

  Jimmy hesitated and the door elf looked stricken. “Trust me, gentlemen.” I smiled. “Mr. Mackelroy is a member.”

  “Wolf, I don’t know about this,” Jimmy murmured.

  “Don’t worry, Jimmy. Just imagine you’re running Jackie Robinson’s statsoft.”

  Jimmy pressed his hand to the printscanner, and the elf didn’t hide his surprise at the affirmative beep. He smiled as sheepishly as an elf can. “Welcome to ParVenue, chummers.” He swept the door open and smiled. “Locker room is to your left. Your lockers will be in berths four and seven. I’ve made sure they’re upper units.”

  I stabbed a credstick down into a discreet socket beside the door and zapped him a five-nuyen tip. “ ’Predate it, chummer. Don’t let the corporators get you down.”

  “Slot and run,” he said with a laugh, then let the oak and glass door slide shut behind us.