by Melvin L. Clermont
Today was the most smashing Thanksgiving
Day I had ever seen and I thought it would be cold. But it was quite warm, around 50 degrees,
without a cloud in the sky and a welcome breeze. A far cry from what I was used to. Just up the street, the Macy's balloons were
in the air, waiting to be taken for their annual morning walk to entertain all
of these families that had come to see them.
The floats were ready to be taken for a ride so admirers such as myself
could marvel at their presence.
Celebrities got themselves camera-ready while balloon handlers and
marching bands got in formation. Float
drivers also idled their vehicles before the excitement began.
Police allowed tourists to take
photos of the parade stars before they went into action with the American
Museum of Natural History serving as a picturesque and appropriate
background. Further down the street
along the parade route, people lined up on the pavement and the edges of the
streets, camcorders and cameras in hand.
Everyone was smiling and seemed to be happy even though nothing had
happened yet. Small children were
propped up on high shoulders in the back rows.
Almost everyone was dressed down
for the occasion since the weather was being cooperative. People from more tropical climates were easy
to spot though. My tattered knickers and
trench coat, tangled beard, and uncombed hair made me easy to spot too, but I
wasn’t as welcome as they were. Security
kept the streets clear but they allowed people to cross that were still looking
for a good viewing area or that didn't care about the parade at all and had
other destinations in mind.
My destination was the halfway
point of the parade route which is Columbus Circle where the balloons and
floats take a detour onto Broadway before retiring down the street. There is a statue of Christopher Columbus in
the roundabout that serves as a centerpiece for the huge Time Warner Center
behind me. I heard that the city had
decided to start a new tradition in this location. Now they’d start serving a hot Thanksgiving
meal to homeless people like me much to the dismay of people that lived in and
frequent the Center. But having
unsightly trespassers once a year was a sacrifice that the building owners were
willing to put up with for good public relations, I'm sure.
The Salvation Army was sponsoring
the outdoor buffet. Utility tables with
red-and-white plaid table cloths laid upon them encircled the statue. There were two servers behind every table. One of them was the son of one of the
servers. Just a little blonde-haired boy,
probably about two or three-years-old. He
was smiling and had on the cutest little red Salvation Army apron and a Garfield
rucksack while holding a ladle; ready to serve the gravy in front of him on the
table. His nametag said Henry. Such innocence and tact made me proud.
Silver pans of hot food such as
macaroni and cheese, turkey, and cranberry sauce lined the tables as some of
the other homeless of New York slowly began entering the area from the south
corner of the building and from the north where I walked from. Greeters awaited and gave us paper plates and
utensils upon our entrance. No matter
where we may be in the city, the smell of good food will always attract us like
seagulls to the ocean. It had taken me
some months to get here to take care of some business and I wasn’t particularly
accustomed to these recipes. So I
decided to please my palate and lolly about for a spell.
I was only able to see because of
a pair of taped-up spectacles I found in Central Park. Without them, I was no better than a blind
man and my first few months here weren't the most memorable. There were a lot of coppers around our eating
area which happened to be the cold cement ground, but there were no complaints
from any of us because we had sat and slept on worse. One of them approached me and just for a bit,
I wondered why.
"Excuse me. You need to come with me," the officer
told me very close to my ears in a stern tone holding a baton in his right
hand. It was like he knew that my
hearing wasn’t the best in the world. The
homeless sitting around me simply grabbed their plates from the ground and
walked away. I could see in his eyes
that he wasn't in control of himself and I knew I was getting closer to finding
Godfrey.
"And where is it that you'll
be taking me if you don't mind me asking?" And at the finish of that
sentence was when horns began to blare, drums began to beat, and confetti
dropped from the sky as the parade was officially started.
Ever since I had been here, my
voice hadn't been the same. It hurt to
talk and that's why I rarely did. But
the pain would be worth it now that it appeared I had reached the end of my
journey.
"You already know the answer
to that, Elmo," he said in a higher tone so I could hear him over the
festivities. "Just come with me
calmly and don't make a scene." He gently grabbed my left arm to escort me
away. I left my plate on the ground and
it didn't even take a millisecond for someone to start eating from it.
"There a problem,
Murphy?" another copper said to the one that had me by the arm as we
walked to the entrance of the Center.
"Naw, Lewis. I just gotta ask this guy a few questions
about somethin’. No biggie. I got it," he replied.
"Okay. Gimme a holla if he gives you a problem,
a'right?"
"Yep." The officer took
me inside through the spacious lobby where the upper crusts didn't even bother
to stop and stare as if this was an ordinary occurrence. Or maybe they didn't even care because they
had their own matters to tend to.
"So Godfrey, why are you
doing this when you know what I plan on doing once I see you?" I said to
this officer who I guess went by the name Murphy as we waited for a lift. In a place as busy as this, I figured more
people to be waiting here with us, but there was no one. And I quickly figured out why. He grabbed the spectacles off my face and
threw them into an expensive looking wastebasket next to us as we walked
in. A little too much detail for a trash
can in my opinion. Just when I was
soaking in the ambiance of the place my sight was taken away from me. Lucky for me I saw where Murphy kept his gun
before he blinded me.
"Do you think for even half
a second that you'd even be allowed in the interior of such a place if this cop
wasn't with you?" said Murphy in a normal tone since the lift was so quiet. "Don't be a fool, Elmo. You've waited a long time for this moment and
I'm giving it to you on a silver platter.
Just be patient and I'll give you your chance to give me a piece of your
mind," he said in a non-New York voice as he appeared to type in a code
and then pressed a button to take us to a higher floor.
We were on our way up in the
clear glass lift and I was sure the view looking down was spectacular but it
was all a blur without my spectacles. I
was sure someone had to find it weird that Murphy was taking me into the
building rather than out of it.
"I'll save my words for when
I see you since you know how it hurts for me to talk. You’re responsible for that after all."
We came to a stop high up and
switched lifts. When we went up in that
one, we got out on a floor where the carpet and walls were a mixture of light
and dark blue colors that matched the officer’s uniform. Murphy still had me firmly by the arm as we
walked forward through a short hall until we came to a large brown door that
clashed with the blues. Then the door
opened inwards as if we were expected.
My old friend Godfrey welcomed us with the usual smirk on his face.
"Welcome, Elmo. It's been a few months, hasn't it?" He
said, tightening what looked like a white robe as me and Murphy walked in and
sat down on a sofa.
"I can't see that well right
now but I can see well enough to know the strain of controlling us both and the
people in the lobby back then is taking its toll on you. What will you do when your effect on us wears
off? I know what I’ll do," I said,
pointing to Murphy’s gun who still had me by the arm even as we sat.
"When it does, believe me,
you of all people will know," he said, taking a seat across from us in a
recliner which he got comfortable in, waving his long silver hair to the side. "You've come for revenge for my killing
Juni just like before, but you will fail as you did then..."
"He trusted us with the
implant and you betrayed him by using it to kill him? That just can't go unpunished. Not by me.
As long as I’m alive, I’ll avenge him," I said angrily as I tried
to get up to attack him but he was still controlling me and Murphy yanked me
back down.
The Juni he was referring to was
Junichiro, our lab partner in Germany.
He moved there from Japan when he heard of my research in wireless
technology. Ironically, my name was the
same as the man who pioneered it and that was only because my mother was
Italian and insisted upon it. Juni
created a microscopic brain implant that allowed someone referred to as the
master to see through the eyes of and sometimes control another person with a
different implant called the slave. It
was supposed to be used in military applications but Godfrey decided otherwise.
Godfrey was my partner before
Juni came along. He’s from South Africa
and I’m from Great Britain. All of our
loves for science and invention brought us together. We were both blown away by Juni's
creation. It was truly unique. The only problem that existed was that Juni
needed to use it on people rather than animals like he had been to test it to
its full capabilities. Me and Godfrey eagerly
volunteered to be his subjects.
Unfortunately, Juni chose Godfrey as the master. And, the genius that he is, he found an
unknown that allowed the master to control not only the slave but also anyone
else within a still unspecified range of the slave implant.
"Whatever floats your boat, Elmo,”
he said. “You don’t know what I’m
capable of now but you’ll find out soon enough.
And have the pleasure of knowing that you contributed to it." I
could see the smile on his face when he said that. "You created your 'world wireless'
blueprints which are still stamped within your head and that was going to allow
the entire world to be connected for free via the three satellites you need to
build. An admirable feat and your vision
is why I partnered with you to begin with, my friend. That vision is the future. And then along came Juni and his creation."
Godfrey got up and walked over to
what had to be his liquor bar because I could hear the clanging of the glasses
and bottles and it didn't take him long to pour his drink. No one drinks water in that small of an
amount, I don't think.
"Friends don't kill friends
in cold blood," I said.
"He never bled and I never
put my hands on him. And if I did, I
could simply transplant any evidence to clear myself of any wrongdoing, which I
did. So I would’ve been free and clear
either way. Free to move about and
explore the finer things in life. Like
this penthouse. Much better than my
previous quarters, isn't it?" He
sat back down in the recliner.
He was referring to how he used
his transplant technique to get away with murder. He patented a surgical procedure which could
change anyone's identity to fool any biometric scanner; most of which are
located in airports. He fled the country
after Juni was found strangled to death and a homeless man was found to be the
suspect. But I knew that he performed
the technique on himself and transplanted the homeless man's hands with his own.
I called him a genius before and
he's earned the title. How many doctors
can perform surgery on themselves? Especially
with such delicacy. What he does is
transplant the skin. The fingerprints,
eyes, footprints, teeth...the things that can identify a person when scanned or
autopsied. He can even change the bone
structure of a face. Who knows what else
he can do. And he does it so well that
any marks or cuts are completely unnoticeable.
He is amazing. But he is
diabolical. Unlike German authorities, I
knew he was the one who killed Juni. I
knew it in my gut.
He fled the country for reasons
of glory. Because he was off the hook
successfully and he knew he had perfected his technique enough to fool
professionals, he came to the US to profit from it, leaving me with the lab and
all of its debt. I abandoned everything
there and stalked him out of revenge since slaves can backtrace the location of
their masters. When I found him, he was
living in a shanty in Albany. I was
blinded with rage and had completely forgotten what Juni had put inside my
brain. And as a genius and the master,
Godfrey knew I was coming. He knew more
about Juni's creation than Juni did.
I thought his quest for fame,
power, and glory was a failure by the unsightliness of the neighborhood he was
in, but it was all a ruse. He captured
me and performed his technique on me instead of outright killing me to shut me
up and cover his own tracks. I think his
ego may have been a part of it, too.
He had killed the previous resident
of the home and transplanted all of my scannable parts with his and he
reconstructed my face. Next thing I
remembered, I woke up in an alley in Hoboken across the water. My 20/20 vision was gone and finding those spectacles
was a godsend. When I saw myself, I
didn’t know who I had become until I was scanned for the first time. I also had other problems that I didn't have
before. At first I thought his procedure
had failed on me but he knew exactly what he was doing.
"You think I don't know how
you got this place?” I said. “You never
had the money before and you haven't been here long enough to afford such
luxury. You did another transplant
procedure, didn't you bugger? Where’s
the person who really owns this place, hm?"
He finished his drink quickly and
got up from his chair. He walked over to
the window.
"Ah, Guglielmo. Ever observant as usual. It matters not how I got here. All that matters is that I am here.
And so are you. I don't need you.
But I do need you." I didn't know what he meant by that. I could sense weakness in his voice. The strain on him was getting stronger and I
could feel his hold weakening on me.
Murphy's gun was going to be the end of all this. If only I had my spectacles.
"If only you had them indeed,
eh Elmo?"
"What? What are you talking about?"
"Did you know that I found
another use for Juni's implant? The
world isn't wireless yet, but it will be thanks to you. For now though, only certain parts of it
are. I can tap into those
wavelengths. Those same wavelengths that
pass through everyone . That are so
similar to the wavelengths produced by the human brain once manipulated. The brain which holds knowledge...and
memories. Do you think it's a
coincidence that I allowed you to make it this far after all these months, Elmo? That you’d find me here by chance on your
own? Spare me. The only strain on my person is having the
patience to let things play out as they must."
I was baffled by his revelation,
the bastard genius that he is. And for
the moment, I could do nothing. I let
him talk so that I could get more info from him before I made my move on him. A move that would either prove fruitful or
fatal. All the odds in the world were
against me. But if I died, I’d know it
wasn’t without effort.
"Nothing to say now, eh?” he
said. “Do you need a drink for your dry
throat? Or a hearing aid for your weak
ears? Robert Pachenko lived with them
for decades. Why couldn't you just do
the same? You could have prolonged the
inevitable and enjoyed your life while it was still your own, but it’s too late
for that now, isn’t it?"
"Who is this Robert you
speak of?" I tried to play dumb although I knew full well who it was since
I had been scanned multiple times. It
was too late for prolonging anything, so it was a foolish question to ask.
"You’ll agree with me when I
say that I don’t have to answer that one.
It's time, Guglielmo. No more
games. Time for this 'bastard genius' as
you call me to take things to the next level.
To end the charades. I’m ready
now. We’re
ready. Me, you, and Juni. Together again just like old times. Go ahead and take the gun and then you will
be free."
The son of a bitch strung me
along the whole time. I was getting the
feeling that all of this was part of something bigger. But what?
Murphy let me go and pulled out
his gun. He held it out as if he wanted
me to take it. The last thing I wanted
was to be mollycoddled. I could feel no
pressure on my cerebellum from the implant.
Godfrey wasn't controlling me anymore.
"What's your plan,
Godfrey? You claim you need me but you
don't need me? What's that mean? Why don't you face me man to man? I thought you said no more games?" I
said, standing up with my fists clinched.
The sun started shining into the windows hurting my eyes with the
light. I could barely see him standing
against it. Because of my blurred
vision, he looked almost...angelic.
"Why bother when you'll be the
one who ends your own life? You’ll be
seeing me again soon, so why leave on bad terms? Go ahead and take the gun."
I had to think. He knew my memories somehow. He knew what I was thinking. Things that have passed. Things that are present. But what about my future thoughts and actions? What about spontaneity? I grabbed the gun as fast as I could and shot
at him three times but I could still barely see. I heard no glass break so the windows must have
been well constructed. I heard no
screams of pain from him either so I must have missed, even at such close range. I fired no further shots to avoid unwanted
attention.
"Blast you, Godfrey. Don't think for a second that this is
over. I'll be back to finish this,"
I told him running toward a large brown area on the wall that I thought was the
door but it was actually just the wall itself painted brown in that spot.
"The door handle is several
feet to your right, Elmo. I'll allow you
to run to devise another..."
"Cobblers! It's now or never," I yelled, tossing the
gun away. I ran towards what I thought
was him and tackled him. His shiny white
clothes and hair weren’t hard to miss. I
only got in one punch before I stopped and realized it was Murphy that I tackled
and hit. Now he was manipulating my
reality…or was I just barking mad? What
else could he do? He retrieved the
tossed gun and handed it to Murphy as I backed away.
"Go after him, Murphy. And call your comrades below," he said
as Murphy got up chasing me out the door, down the hall, and into the lift. Once inside and on our way down, any
aggression towards me he may have had disappeared. But he put on a stellar voice act that could
have won him an award.
"Lewis, 98 with me on the
first floor and bring backup. That perp
I brought in…he got a little crazy on me and I'm gonna take him in…He's already
popped me once…Hold on, dammit, stop resisting...Lewis..." he yelled with
heavy breathing during the performance, banging against the door and walls for
sound effects before we had to switch lifts so that people wouldn't watch him
doing a one man act.
Once we switched and got low
enough for people to pay attention was when he did a reenactment, but this time
it was a two man show. We struggled with
each other, and below in the lobby I could see several blots of blue in front
of the lift and what had to be a crowd forming behind them. He grabbed me and threw me to the ground and
practically gave me his gun. He pulled
the trigger as I was forced to hold it into his vest-protected belly. He wasn’t dead but he was squirming in pain.
To the crowd, it would appear as
if I did it. But it was actually Godfrey
the entire time and they were none the wiser.
And no stops on the way up or down either time? Him again.
We reached the first floor in the
lobby. The door opened to a bevy of blue
and more noise than a transport train.
Godfrey had no control over me as I walked out with my hands up and the
gun in my right hand. They incessantly ordered
me to drop it and get down on the ground.
As I was going to drop the weapon, although I couldn’t completely
understand what was said, I heard a cry from a woman over everything else.
"Henry, no! Where are you
going? What..." and a small child
holding something orange ran towards me.
I grabbed the child and held him close in my arms and began to run
outside.
“Drop the boy! Drop the boy!
Drop him and you won’t get shot!
Drop him,” is all I could make out from the coppers yelling over one
another.
“Are you daft, boy? Those bobbies will kill us both. This is no place for you to be right now,” I
said maniacally, still running to the exit.
My intention was to protect him
from the situation and they actually let me get all the way out into Columbus
Circle without shooting me. I still had
the gun--like a plank--and the homeless people and servers scattered like cockroaches
with the lights just turned on. The
parade was in mid-swing and was moving through the halfway point. Even with all the coppers yelling and people running
away from the situation, parade viewers across the streets seemed to be in
unawares of the dire straits at hand because it looked to me like they stayed
put. The parade continued and the music
played uninterrupted and I found it quite rummy.
“Run, lad! Run away from here,” I yelled to him, but he
clinged to my coat like glue. He was
close enough to me now that I could see his blonde hair. His little red apron. The Garfield face on his sack. And I could feel his name tag. It was Henry.
And he wasn’t crying even in the slightest during this hecticity. Then it hit me. This was Godfrey’s doing. And he was willing to sacrifice the innocents
in order to use me as a pawn for whatever game he was playing.
I couldn’t even fathom how much
power he had gained from the implant to allow him to orchestrate such a
scene. The thought of never coming here
entered my mind briefly, but all regrets left me in a fit of final rage. The confusion made me forget all of the
obvious signs and I couldn’t recognize any of them when I needed to. The realization that all of this was nothing
more than a demonstration for his ego made me lose control.
“Godfrey, you blinking bastard! Damn you to bloody hell,” I yelled, looking
up into the sky, firing the gun with the boy in hand. The end result of all this was no surprise. I saw Henry’s bloody corpse in front of me as
I lay on the cement. My last visual
before everything went black was of the parade’s Garfield balloon deflating in
the distance as it fell toward the statue and then onto me. I thought all of this some way or another had
to be caught on telly or a security camera.
But if it wasn’t, it would be of no shock to me given what I had just
experienced. Not that it mattered now
anyway because I was dead. I came here
with the intention of doing the bollocking but instead, I was bollocked.
Or so I thought. The very next thing I saw after seeing orange
and black was a very well appointed bathroom.
Where in blazes was I? I thought
I was in heaven but I had no control over my body as I flushed the loo. I could see crystally clear and I saw that I
was wearing something white. I walked
over to wash my hands and caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror as I turned
on the tap. But it didn’t look like
me. When I looked up directly into the
mirror, it wasn’t me at all.
“Yet another use I found for
Juni’s implant, Elmo. Imagine the
possibilities once those satellites are constructed and in orbit,” Godfrey said
with the usual smirk on his face.
No thoughts of malice entered
into my mind which wasn’t my own anymore.
I only remembered what I said to him before about what I would do as
long as I was alive. And technically, I
still was.
The End
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