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This work is Copyright ( Michael J. Natale
It is provided here for personal, non commercial use under a
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FIRSTBORN
By Michael Natale
michael@seewhatsinmybrain.com
“You smell that, Raf?” The tall black man shook his head in disgust. He squatted next to the little boy, the leather jacket creaking. He wore a thick golden necklace with the words “Bag Man” molded in gold and picked out in diamonds. It swung side to side like a pendulum. He took the dark glasses off and squinted at the boy.
“If you mean the undeniable stench of corruption, then yes.” The elderly man held a silk handkerchief over his nose. The muffled voice that came from beneath his hand sounded vaguely British. The suit he wore was flawless, meticulously tailored. It looked like it had grown around him like a second skin.
The boy and his sister were completely unaware of them. They stacked large wooden blocks, the older girl perhaps ten, and her brother at most five. He built a tower, alternating red and blue blocks. The blocks were so large they barely fit in his little hand, but he was careful and meticulous with his placement. As he reached out to put another blue block on top of the tower, his hand passed right through Bag Man’s leather jacket.
“Shit! How long has it been, Raf?”
The older man sniffed. “Too bloody short. Again.”
“Damn straight. Maybe we can get someone else to babysit this one for a while?”
“You know the rules, Bagdial.”
Bag Man stood and sighed, slipping his shades back on. “We wait. Verify corruption and then move on.”
The girl giggled and knocked over the tower with her foot. Blocks spilled everywhere. The boy held a blue block in his hand, hovering over the empty space where his tower stood moments ago.
“Whoops,” Bag Man shook his head at the girl, but she only continued laughing, oblivious.
Faster than should have been possible, the boy pounced on the girl, knocking her backwards. He knelt on her chest, raised the block high, and brought it crashing down on her forehead. She screamed, and the boy struck her again, bringing the corner of it down onto her temple with incredible force.
Two more swift strikes and the girl lay still and silent. His hand methodically rose and fell anyway, blood spraying up with every stroke. After ten or twenty more, the girl’s face wasn’t recognizable.
The boy climbed off his sister, perfectly calm, his Wiggles t-shirt splattered with blood. He glanced back towards his house, murder plain in his five-year-old eyes. The block in his hand dripped blood onto the grass as he marched towards the house.
The well-groomed man stepped through the bloody corpse of the girl to follow the boy. “Corruption confirmed.”
Shaking his head, Bag Man followed. “Well, no shit, Raphael. Yank it and let’s get out of here.”
The well-groomed man reached inside his suit coat and withdrew a small black box. He traced the pattern of the runes carved into the wood and a moment later, the box sprang open.
The boy stopped as if he heard someone far away call his name. A thin stream of light surrounded his head, but he was unaware of it. The nimbus coalesced into a twisting, serpentine shape that shot toward the box held in Raphael’s hand. It coiled itself inside the box, and when it had left the boy altogether, the box snapped shut.
“Let’s go.” Raphael tucked the small box inside his jacket, and both he and Bag Man turned to leave. “We’ve got to find another one, and we haven’t much time.”
“Yeah, yeah, I know. The fate of the world rests in our hands, we have a sacred duty, blah, blah, blah. I’ve heard it all before.”
The boy realized something was in his hand. The blood on the block scared him, and he turned back to his sister’s corpse. Terror filled his eyes. He dropped the block and began screaming for his mother.
Raf and the Bag Man entered the diner on Chandler Street at two in the morning. A dozen heads turned and some of them nodded towards them.
A fat man behind the counter leaned on his hands, bored. He looked up as they entered, scowling. Bag Man scowled right back.
Raphael ignored them, and made his way to an empty booth near the back. As they sat, a tall redhead came over, a cloud of cheap perfume at war with the cigarette smoke pouring out of the Camel in her painted mouth. She wore a thin halter-top and a black leather skirt, torn fishnet stockings covering slender, shapely legs.
Raphael groaned as she approached, but Bag Man lit up. “Adnai? Will you look at that, Raf, she’s gone all solid and shit!”
“Its Adia now, Bag Man,” the woman took another pull from the cigarette and put a leg up on the booth’s seat. “Go ahead, touch it.”
“You know very well he can’t touch you,” Raphael frowned.
Adia laughed and sat next to Bag Man. “Still hanging around with this tight-ass?”
Bag Man shrugged. “What can I do? I try to shake him but he just keeps coming back.”
“Very droll, both of you,” Raphael was not amused. He withdrew the little wooden box out of his suit coat, and Adia leaned forward, laughing.
“Cut the shit! Already?” She reached for it, and then pulled her hand back as if afraid of being bitten by something. “Is it in there?”
“Damn straight.” Bag Man told her the story of the boy and the block tower’s bloody collapse. Adia laughed when he told her what the boy had done. She had a musical, infectious laugh, and pretty soon Bag Man was laughing right along with her. He was pantomiming the little boy bashing his sister’s brains in with a wooden block, which only made Adia laugh harder.
“Enough!” Raphael’s voice was suddenly hard, and it drew the attention of the others in the diner. Most were turning their heads and only half looking, doing a poor job of hiding their embarrassment for the two. “You two may find this amusing, but we have a job to do Bagdial. I for one do not plan on spending the next thousand years hauling this around.” He indicated the box.
Adia blew smoke in Raphael’s face. “Raf, you need a good lay. Trust me, it does wonders for the attitude. Too bad you’re not a solid, I’d give you a bounce for old times sake.”
“Charming,” Raf sneered, never taking his eyes off the runes on the lid of the strange box.
Aida took another drag. “You should just do what I did with mine.”
Raphael’s looked up then, his face a mask of disapproval. “Yes, I heard. You abandoned your duty and put it in the body of a comatose child. How very sweet.”
Bag Man snorted. “No way! Dammit, Raf, see that? Adia here’s got this shit all figured out!”
Aida pointed at Raphael. “It’s not like your way is working any better these days, Raf.”
Bag Man nodded. “She’s right, Raf. You gotta give her that! It ain’t like our track record these days is…”
“That’s not our fault,” Raphael snapped.
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