The Scream of Eternity, part four
Monday, November 7th, 20113
Dudley Street in the Cheetham Hill area of Manchester had seen many renovation projects over the years and was now playing host to two rows of houses designed by the award-winning architect Giselle de Vann, who had been the architect everyone wanted to work with in the mid 31st century. The houses were designed from traditional brick and mortar but each was over layed with a layer of stucco to make the buildings appear like they were flowing into one-another.
The result had been praised as an excellent example of how the lower value areas of the city were being beautified and made more desirable to live in but the resultant increase in property values had not lasted once the upkeep cost of the buildings became apparent. It was not possible to easily repair any damage to the houses and redecorating made the house in question stick out from the others in its row, unless the exact same colours and swirls the original designer had used were painstakingly reapplied. As a result, wear and tear took its toll on the street, leaving it a hodgepodge of colours and patched up façades.
The earthquake of 3089 had been the final straw on the back of the donkey that was the Dudley Street Restoration Association; which had worked for years to return the street to its former glory. The cost of repairs became far too great and now only seven of the original twenty-eight houses retained its original stucco covering, the others having been victim to collapse during the quake or suffered under the cheap rebuilding that had gone on during the resultant re-housing program.
Number 17 Dudley Street was one of the collapsed houses. Amongst the wasteland where the former building had stood was a cheap prefabricated “two up, two down” home with two white doors, white window frames and grey faux tile roof. Two doorbells were fixed to the wall between the doors and neither had names attached.
Tom Carter pressed both doorbells at the same time and waited for an answer. A light went on upstairs, then another barely illuminated the frosted glass in the left-hand door. Tom heard footsteps coming down a flight of stairs and instinctively put his hand on the hilt of the taser holstered at the small of his back. No use taking chances.
The intercom buzzed by the door. ‘Who is it?’ a woman asked.
‘Tom Carter, Ma’am. Manchester Police. Open up, please.’
‘What’s this about?’
‘We are looking for Carlos García Arroyo. He’s wanted for questioning.’
‘He’s not here.’
‘Open up, Ma’am.’
‘No. I know my rights. You need a warrant.’
Eric stepped forward and put the palm of his right hand against the flat black panel below the intercom. ‘We have a warrant. Now open the door.’
The door opened a crack. Tom pushed it open fully and stepped inside. The woman behind the door was in her early twenties but looked like a life of drink and smoking had already taken her best years. She took one look at Eric and started shouting.
‘I don’t want no fucking robots in here!’
‘There’s no need for bad language, Ma’am,’ said Eric. ‘We’re just here to ask you a few questions.’
‘Get out, you fucking metal freak. Fuck off back to robot land, you metal bastard.’
Tom tried to keep his voice as level as possible while he spoke but he knew he was on to a losing battle. ‘Madam, if you do not quiet down, I will arrest you for obstruction.’
‘And you can fuck off an’ all,’ the woman snarled. ‘What’s wrong, you too soft to come around here without your calculator bum chum to keep you safe?’
‘That’s enough,’ said Tom. ‘I’m arresting you for obstruction of an officer in the course of his duty. You do not have to say anything but it will harm your defence if you fail to mention, when questioned, anything you later rely on in court. You have the right to legal advice prior to questioning.’
He grabbed the woman’s arm and lead her, literally kicking and screaming, to the back of the pool car.
‘Get in. Mind your head. Now stay here and try to be good.’
He slammed the door shut and activated the suspect locks, preventing the woman from opening any of the doors or windows and turning on the barrier between the front and back seats. With the windows closed, the woman’s screams were dulled to a near-inaudible level.
‘You got that warrant fast,’ said Tom, turning back to his partner.
‘Judge Lewis is a cyborg,’ said Eric, as if that explained everything.
Tom shrugged. It was a different world than the one he had lived in when he joined the force.
‘Let’s get the search over with, then. That bloody woman is only going to get more annoying if we leave her to stew for too long.’
The flat was small, barely room enough for one person; or two if they knew each other really well and were the kind who did not mind sharing everything. There were two mugs on the kitchen counter, which was little more than a breakfast bar stuck in one corner of the lounge, and two dirty plates in the sink. The remnants of a baked bean dinner was on both plates; suggesting to Tom that they were from the same meal.
Conversely, the wardrobe only contained a handful of clothes. Four blouses, three pairs of jeans, two short skirts, and a short black jacket. The drawers contained only women’s underwear, a small selection of t-shirts, two jumpers and enough socks to last a week. Two pairs of shoes, both the same size, were under the bed. The bathroom contained one towel on the towel rack, and one toothbrush by the sink.
All indications pointed to a single person living here. A single person could probably account for two dirty mugs in Tom’s world, but not two plates. A hungry person would just re-use the same plate during the same meal. Two plates meant someone else in the house.
So where were they now? Had the woman been entertaining a guest earlier in the evening? It was possible. No wonder she was annoyed to see the police, then. Nobody here for them to have interrupted when they arrived suggested the evening had ended early for Little Miss Belligerent. Still, that was not Tom Carter’s fault.
‘Tom, over here,’ said Eric. He was holding a book in one hand and gazing intently at a set of shelves.
‘What’s the matter?’
‘Take a look at this.’ Eric held up the book so Tom could read the spine.
‘Book of Elbar,’ said Tom, reading the badly worn cover. ‘What is it?’
‘An occult book. It’s banned outside of academic areas. You need a licence to own a copy.’
‘A licenced book? I’ve not heard of one of those before.’
‘And you call yourself a policeman.’
‘Hey bite me, robot man. This is CID. Cults aren’t my area of expertise.’
‘The Book of Elbar is a restricted text because the cults that use it deal in animal sacrifice, ritual murder and mutilation, all kinds of blood magic and generally being nasty bastards. If that woman downstairs has anything to do with this book, it’s no wonder we found weird shit at Collins’ flat.’
Tom nodded. ‘Okay, let’s get forensics over here then we can get our lady friend down the station for a nice, long chat.’
‘I’ll call it in.’
Eric stepped away and took on a blank look as he started talking to the control desk back at the station via the connection in his head. Tom tried to ignore the building feeling of uneasiness at his partner’s newly robotic status. They had been partners for three years, and had known each other in CID for even longer than that. Eric had always been interested in cyborgs but Tom had never expected him to go all the way and become one.
Did it make him any different a person? Not according to the briefing the squad had been given while Eric was away for six weeks for conversion. Even when he came back, he was just the same old Eric, only slightly taller and very definitely better looking. The old Eric, the original Eric, had been a little podgy and his scruffy hair was always there no matter how much he combed or gelled it. Now he had a swimmer’s build and impeccable grooming.
‘Why stay with what you’ve got when you can take the opportunity to improve it?’ Eric had said by way of explanation. Tom could not help but wonder if the guy had “taken the opportunity” to add a couple of inches to the bedroom department while he was at it. Tom would have, that much was certain.
