This site hosted by Free.ProHosting.com
Google

Freakshow

by Richard Jones

"Where should I put the head, Dr. Harper?"

I didn't even bother looking up from the viewscreen. I just waved my hand off to the side. When you're the girl genius running the Freakshow, you get questions like that.

"On the second shelf to your left," I said. "With the rest of the parts. There should already be a box labeled for it. Be careful of the bolts in the neck."

I stared at the viewscreen, thinking murder thoughts. After 37 hours of work, I had just cracked an odd lycanthropic shape-changing outbreak. Infected victims changed into wolves with the full moon and soon thereafter melted into puddles of a particularly viscous goo. Now I just needed to patch together an antidote and find the magical fingerprints of the scumbag who created the cursed Ebola virus.

I looked up, puzzled that I'd heard nothing else from the delivery guy. He was staring in abject horror at something on the floor of the first level, which runs around the center of my lab. The field agents, with their rapier-like wit, nicknamed the place the Arm Pit, then shortened it to the Pit. Small favors.

"What's the matter?" I asked.

My voice kicked the kid back into reality. His scream was ear piercing, high and falsetto. You wouldn't think it from a brawny specimen like him. He turned around, bolted back toward the exit and slammed face first into the door. He collapsed, arms outstretched, consciousness out to lunch.

I scrambled up the ladder to the first level, the tails of my green paisley lab coat flapping out behind me. I skidded to a stop and looked around. I slid my specially modified Quark 10 from its holster and raised it to firing position. The Quark 10 is a weapon of my own design. Basically, the 10 emits a beam that suppresses the negative charge on electrons. With no countervailing charge, the positive-positive reaction blows away any material coherency. It's nasty. I like it.

I looked from left to right and didn't see anything unusual: robot parts, voudon dolls, eyeballs floating in ichor and a severed hand slowly squeezing a squeaking red stress ball.

"Ah. It was you, wasn't it?"

The hand let go of the ball and shrugged, looking sheepish. I know a hand can't shrug. Or look sheepish. This hand did it anyway, all right? Or maybe it's just been hanging around the lab for too long.

I walked over to the delivery boy and knelt down, checking for any obvious wounds. I reached my hand toward his ruggedly handsome face, but I just couldn't make myself touch him. Too many bad memories; too many rejected caresses. He regained consciousness.

"Ugh," he said. "Ooooh, I..."

"Take it easy. I'm an actual medical doctor, too. I'm just checking to make sure you aren't seriously injured."

He sat up and glanced over my shoulder. His eyes widened and I could see him reverting to pure panic. I shifted to the right, cutting off his view.

"It's okay. Really." I talked in my most soothing tones. "What you... Sorry, but what's your name?"

"Um... Joe." He tried to creep backwards and through the door, obviously forgetting what knocked him out in the first place.

"Okay, Joe. You're new here at CurseWerks, right?" He nodded. "First time in the Freakshow laboratory?" He nodded again. "Thought so. Look... No, not there. I was speaking metaphorically. Listen, CurseWerks exists to investigate the supernatural and alleviate the suffering of those who don't think it's so super. With me so far?"

If you want to keep up with Dr. Harper, check out NFG No. 3.

HOME