All of Us. A. F. Carter
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Название: All of Us

Автор: A. F. Carter

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Триллеры

Серия:

isbn: 9780802149459

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СКАЧАТЬ long-term psychiatric hospital is little more than a prison. The biggest difference? There’s no definite sentence, no time to be served after which you must be released. You can be held for a month or for the rest of your miserable, shitty life. Any stumble is your own fault because you are, by definition, your own worst enemy. Else why the fuck would you be here?

      Bottom line, you’re doin’ it to yourself and you need to stop. Or maybe submit to a twice-daily dose of Clozapine and spend the hours with drool runnin’ down your chin, your heart rate so fast you think your chest’s about to explode.

      Eleni’s on my side, Serena, too. But not the prunes, Victoria and Martha. If they knew what I was doing, they’d try to stop me. Just like they’re doin’ everything they can to get rid of me. Maybe they’re afraid I’ll grow a cock and leave them, for a change, the odd girls out. Just like I’ve been the odd boy out for years and years and years. My rare lovers confined to lesbians who think I’m a woman.

      I leave the apartment, cross the hallway and knock on Marshal’s door. It takes a few minutes but he finally answers, bleary eyed. He’s wearing royal-blue boxers and a Sex Pistols T-shirt with GOD SAVE THE QUEEN written across Queen Elizabeth’s face. No socks, no shoes.

      “Hey, Kirk, wha’sup?”

      “Need a few minutes, man.”

      “Cool.” He steps back to let me pass, then follows me inside. Marshal knows all about us, from me and from Eleni, who’s hauled his ashes a few times. He doesn’t care. Simple as that. Marshal may be a loser, but he’s also the most accepting human being on the planet.

      “Sorry to get in your business this late,” I tell him as I find a seat between the lumps on his couch. “But I don’t get around much anymore.”

      “Yeah, Duke Ellington.”

      “Huh.”

      “‘Don’t Get Around Much Anymore.’ Duke Ellington wrote the tune. Back in the day.”

      I’m supposed to recognize Duke Ellington’s name. Marshal’s tone makes that much clear. Everyone’s supposed to recognize Duke Ellington’s name. But I don’t.

      “You want a beer? You wanna hit the bong?” Marshal asks. “Both maybe?”

      Actually, what I really want to do is run over to a club I know on West Twenty-Eighth Street, a lezzie hangout where I pass for a dyke.

      “Let’s have a hit on the bong.”

      “A hit or ten.” Marshal’s thirty years old, still young, but his scraggly beard is already turning gray. “Why limit your future before it happens?”

      I lean back in the couch as Marshal prepares the bong. I don’t have to guess about the quality of his weed because it’s always the same, good but not great. Marshal’s been selling ganja for more than a decade and he’s got enough loyal customers to keep a roof over his head, food in the refrigerator, clothes on his back. So what if there’s nothing left at the end of the month? Marshal once told me that he doesn’t let himself want anything he doesn’t already have.

      Marshal loads the bong and passes it to me, along with a little torch. Five minutes later, I’m blissed out.

      “Hey, Marshal, you once told me about your business.” I gesture to the bong. “Where you buy, remember? Somethin’ about the dark web?”

      “Yeah, so what—”

      “Well, I’m not prying, bro. I got a reason for asking, so if you’d refresh my memory …”

      Marshal pauses long enough to hit the bong. He holds the smoke in his lungs for a minute, then blows it toward the ceiling.

      “Hey, man, this bit about the dark web, which is actually the deep web? That shit is way over the top. Like, it’s just a lot of websites that haven’t been indexed, so they can’t be found by a search engine. Mostly, the sites belong to private clubs or managers in a large company. Just for example, VPs at Exxon don’t use the public website, the one you can find with a Google search, to communicate. They have a web address that’s not indexed. So, what I’m saying is that most of the deep web is legit. Only a small percentage of sites operate illegally.”

      I smile. “And that’s where you come in?”

      “What could I say, Kirk? I send an email that can’t be traced back to me because it’s encrypted at least three times by a virtual private network. I send it to a computer that might be anywhere on the planet and two days later I get a delivery, usually from a man or woman I’ve never seen before. No guns, no threats, no fucking paranoia. It’s the new way.”

      Marshal’s nodding happily because he’s found the sweet spot. If his suppliers get busted and turn snitch, they have to rat up the ladder, not down to him. As for his own customers, he sells them half ounces in a city where a half ounce isn’t even a misdemeanor. No, the only thing Marshal really fears is legalization. Which is on the way.

      “So, Kirk, what’s up? I know you’re here for somethin’ specific, so spit it out. If I can help …”

      I describe what I need as best I can. On my own, when it comes to computers, I can barely get online. Victoria’s pretty good, but my siblings and I don’t necessarily share memories. For example, Martha is a great cook, but Eleni has trouble boiling water. We don’t know why this is true, but there it is, another stacked card in a stacked deck.

      “Acquirin’ what you want, my man, is not gonna be your biggest problem,” Marshal finally says. “The problem’s gonna be installing the malware into another computer.”

      “I’ll worry about that later. You say you can get me what I want?”

      “Yeah, definitely, on a thumb drive.” He spreads his hands. “There’s tons of malware for sale if you know where to look.”

      “Great, Marshal. So, give me a ballpark figure. How much will it cost?”

      I’m bracing myself for bad news—I have very little access to money—when Marshal, his expression quizzical, reaches out to squeeze my breast.

       TINA

      When you’re a little kid, grownups can do anything they want to you. Anything. My daddy told me that’s the law. Grownups can do anything they want to you, no matter how much it hurts.

       KIRK

      I watch myself react, watch my right-hand curl into a fist, watch the fist slam into Marshal’s left eye, watch Marshal jerk backward as I reach into the pocket of my sweats to grasp the handle of a paring knife. The knife has an ultrasharp ceramic blade shielded by a plastic sheath. Because I’ve practiced the move, I know that if I press the sheath against my thigh, the blade will slide free.

      It doesn’t come to that. Marshal covers his eye with his hand, then sinks into his chair. “Fuck, dude, you couldn’t maybe say, ‘Keep your hands to yourself?’”

      That’s СКАЧАТЬ