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The Imp Copyright (c) 1993, Ed Davis All rights reserved "She did it again, Sir." "Which she, Fred. We have a rather large selection of shes around here. And what did she do?" "The Imp, sir. She snuck out again, with that last group." "Good Lord!" "He's here, sir. In Emergency Receiving. A bus load of Seventh Day Adventist's missed a curve. Seems there were several decks of playing cards, two very raunchy books and a fifth of scotch whiskey in the luggage. Some of the folks wanted assurance that they had passed through the correct gates." The tall man ran his fingers through his wavy blonde hair and smiled. "Boys will be boys. At least they weren't Church of God. They would have insisted on sending the poor man elsewhere." "It seems the luggage belonged to one of the women, sir." "Well... I hope he's not too rough on her. He's begun to let all the things people say about him go to his head. But then, he's young. Maybe I'll send him back again. He could stand a bit more humility. Do we have an opening in Watts, or Iran, or Lebanon?" "Certainly, sir. New born or fully developed?" "Neither, right now. But if he keeps getting a big head..." "Yes, sir." "In a woman's bag, you say?" "Yes, sir." The amused smile faded and was replaced with a more pensive look. Fred could see that The Boss, as everyone called Him, was still thinking about the Imp. She had done this sort of thing before and had generated all sorts of disruptions. She had caused friction between a king and his most trusted knight, led an army into battle, and generally raised hob with carefully laid plans for thousands of years. Now, in her fully actualized state, there was no telling what trouble she would get into. Fred sat quietly, fully expecting one of the rages that make oceans dry up and continents vanish. The Boss frowned once and turned to leave. "She certainly is living up to her name. This must be her ninth or tenth trip this millennia." The frown evaporated and the world was spared. "Did anyone get wind of her intentions before she left?" "Her roommate said she was talking about kicking butts and taking names, what ever that means." "She's been reading those shoot-em-up police stories again. Well... Don't we have a group who need a strong lesson in morality?" "Yes, sir. We have what is called The United States of America. They have slipped a little, here lately." "Well, let her get settled, and remind me in a while. Maybe I can nudge her in their direction. She takes instructions rather poorly." "How long, before I remind you, sir?" "Oh... a year will do. She'll be acclimated by then. What does she look like, this time?" "Her roommate said she was a twenty year old female, and what they presently call a fox. In my day it was a flapper. Strange isn't it sir, how they use such unusual names to signify beauty?" "Just a phase, Fred. Just a phase. You certainly didn't look like anything that flapped." Fred flushed slightly, recalling his last trip. He had always thought he had been a Hot Mama or at least a Tootsie. Oh well, if he just hadn't gotten involved with that bunch of ruffians he might still be there. Not to worry, he chided himself. You can go back, someday. Fred ended his remembrances when The Boss turned again to leave. He stopped at the entrance to the Dispatch and Acceptance area and addressed the chief dispatcher again. "Keep me posted, Fred. We don't need her shot full of holes like you were." Fred blushed furiously. "Only one hole, sir." He was very sensitive about the way he had returned. "Yes, Fred. But what good is a beautiful young woman with a big bullet hole in her tit? You really need to be more careful." Fred nodded. He had been so ashamed of his wounded body he had asked for and received a complete change. The other body had been left behind. Ashes to ashes... Fred mused. He watched as The Boss left the area, but failed to see the transition from handsome blonde man to rotund, dark skinned man with a nose to rival Jimmy Durante's. The Boss took the corridor leading to the Jewish pavilion. He didn't mind changing forms, and thankfully these were not Orthodox Jews. Then, He would have had to put up with an itchy beard and one of those scratchy black suits. The many faces... and all that. Fred was amazed as usual with The Boss's ability to juggle thousands of problems at the same time. He had a feeling, however, that this most recent expedition of the Imp's would try even His patience. He returned to his work, managing the incoming and outgoing souls. The pages of the thick book of records turned easily at his mental command. Fred smiled his pleasure with the new system. Turning pages by hand became a real strain after two or three hundred years. The only thing better would require occasional service, and IBM was still only world wide. Something for the future. Darkness greeted The Imp. The sliver of moon did nothing to brighten the velvet blackness of the western Maryland forest. She knew she was standing less than a hundred yards from a major highway but was hidden from any passing motorists. Wouldn't do, she grinned, to drop in on these folks suddenly. They tended to group such arrivals under the broad umbrella of Visitors From Outer Space. She smiled and brushed a few autumn leaves from her short, auburn hair. She was impatient to begin and strode purposefully toward the highway. Baltimore was waiting, two hundred miles to the east. Ronald Hall, one of the few remaining independent truckers after the most recent round of fuel cost increases, eased his big Kenworth into a lower gear and sat back in his seat for the slow descent of the long grade. He didn't mind complying with the Maryland law requiring slow speeds on mountain slopes. He had no urge to ride a sixty thousand pound roller coaster down an eight mile plunge to disaster. He liked living too much. His constant concern was the rising cost of fuel. He was slowly being forced out of the trucking business. His wife, Jennette, held a steady job and they made ends meet. They both enjoyed the times they had together, but both wished they could travel together all the time. Their children were grown and they had planned a life of contented wandering wherever the loads took them. His frustration grew with each passing month, as the cost of fuel crept ever higher. "Be thankful we're healthy and the kids are doing well. Our time will come." Jennette would say. Her words soothed him, but each time he refueled he cursed the circumstances that kept them apart. The high beams probed the darkness and suddenly illuminated the form of a young woman standing alongside the road. She was waving, as if she knew his truck. "Where did you come from, little lady?" Ron asked the distant figure, as he applied his air brakes and eased onto the shoulder of the road. The Imp climbed onto the big truck and smiled through the open window. "Thanks for stopping. I got dropped a little way back and need a lift." "Come on in. I'm goin' to Hagerstown. Where you headed?" "Baltimore, but I can catch a bus out of Hagerstown." Conversation flowed easily, as miles slid under the truck. The Imp learned first hand that Ron Hall was a good man. He had not ignored the fact that her jump suit fit like a second skin, or that she was a well developed woman. Her good looks and deeply exposed cleavage simply did not tempt him. The thought crossed his mind and The Imp almost blushed when she read his thoughts. He decided that he wouldn't risk hurting Jennette over a quickie on a Maryland mountainside. She sure looked good, though. Hagerstown, nearly as dark at two in the morning as the forest she had left three hours before, marked their reluctant parting. He shook her hand and wished her well. "Thanks for the lift, Ron. And for the good wishes. I'm sure you'll find a way to start traveling with your wife, real soon." "Well, that's real sweet. You just be careful in Baltimore. There are some mighty ugly people there." "I'll be fine. My Father taught me some special tricks." The young woman smiled and stepped down from the truck. The middle aged man felt his smile lingering longer than he expected. She was that kind of person, made people want to smile. From his driver's seat, Ron could not see the tiny trickle coming from the passenger side fuel tank. The Imp had been a little careless when she ordered the tank to keep itself full from now on. It was her first effort at interference in many years. The Kenworth seemed to sparkle, as it passed under a street lamp and two small dents in the left fender popped out. The Imp smiled at her handiwork and waved to the man and his air horn. She knew he would accept her gift and begin to travel with his wife. She was glad. They would only have three years. The Boss had plans for them. They had discussed the idea of giving the two good people a short period of mortal pleasure, when they had planned her trip. Everyone knew He worked in many mysterious ways, they just did not know how well planned the mysteries were. A teenager, cruising the darkened streets way beyond what should have been his bed time, honked his horn at the image of feminine abundance. His horn relay fused and within minutes a police officer had him pulled over and answering some very pointed questions about his breath and the late hour. The Imp walked the three blocks to the small Greyhound station and bought a ticket. She rested on one of the wooden benches and feigned sleep, hoping to snare a mugger or purse snatcher. Her efforts were wasted. Hagerstown was too small for a full-time mugger. Baltimore, like all large cities, was both modern and aged. The wealthy lived in the new and shining parts, while the poor eked out their existences in the battered sections. There was a common ground, however, based on a white powder, pills of various colors, and a green weed like substance. Vincent Cararro, one time supplicant to J. Edgar Hoover's organization, was the pivot point around which the major sales of certain substances were hinged. He had decided years earlier that being on one side of the law was the only way to live. He had simply changed sides. He gave up his quest to be an agent for the F.B.I., when he discovered the wealth waiting in the sale of certain powders, tablets, and grasses. His beginnings were humble but he soon became another American success story. Vinny worked the streets for two years while building his customer list and the staff he needed to feed their demands. He risked everything on one gigantic purchase, betting on the greed of his suppliers. His demand to meet The Man was eased by the size of the purchase. Besides, The Man liked to see youngsters with the courage to improve themselves. The initial meeting led to more encounters and eventually to Vinny meeting The Man's family. Marriage into the Family was almost predetermined. Margerete was attractive and undemanding. Vinny still had the freedom to visit his girls. He stayed away from the house her father had given them, for days at a time. Life was good. Vinny bought his drugs at a fraction of the street price and sold them to local businessmen for thousands of dollars. The quality of the women he visited improved and his clothes reflected the latest fashion. He never missed a Sunday in church. He and Margerete were front row Catholics, she constantly and he at least on Sundays and holidays. Vinny was content. Outside the Greyhound station, a pimp, black of skin and slow of wit, invited The Imp to "See Baltimore with Me, Baby." She agreed, needing time to get accustomed to the streets and the feel of the city after having just arrived. The glossy Cadillac, its chrome sparkling in overabundance, moved through the streets like a well fed lion. The Imp listened to the ages old pitch the pimp was making and nodded at the appropriate places. He was practically beaming at his good fortune. With this one he moved out of the twenty dollar a toss bracket, into the world of three or four hundred dollar tricks. She was a smooth piece of material and looked green as grass. She was speechless with all the big city wonders he was flashing on her. Now all he needed was a good meal inside her belly and him in her drawers. Tomorrow or the next day she would be anxious to help him. His fantasy knew no limits. "How about if we eat, Baby?" "Certainly." "You gonna' need a place to stay, got enough bread?" The Imp nodded. The pimp flinched. He liked the ones who showed up broke. They were easier. This one might be tougher, but she was worth the effort. "Why not save your cash, Baby, and spend the night with me?" "I wouldn't want to put you out. You might not have room for the two of us." "No Baby. I got lots of room. You can have your own room, even. I got anything else you might need, too." "Well...O.K. But, only if your sure you are ready for what might happen." "Baby, you won't be no problem at all and what ever you wanna' do is fine with me." The Cadillac swerved into the left hand lane and the pimp rushed toward his apartment. He would eat after he had a chance to get this one in bed. She seemed more than ready. The screech of tires signaled their arrival. The apartment was small and contained one bedroom. "Where is the room you promised me?" "Right there, with me to keep away the cold." The air in the shabby room seemed to crackle for an instant and the pimp wondered what was going on. He could smell the ozone in the air, as he moved his hands to his ears, against the sudden noise. He felt much more hair than he should have. He looked into the cracked mirror over the mantle and nearly fainted. The face of a woman looked back, an unbelievably ugly woman. The face followed all the moves he made. That ugly broad in the mirror was him. He jerked his head back toward the woman he was planning to seduce and found the room empty. He searched the apartment. He was alone. He stripped, having difficulty with the unfamiliar buttons and snaps. He looked down toward his toes and saw breasts, if anything that baggy and small could count as breasts. The belly below the first discovery was fully rounded, in fact looked uncomfortably pregnant. But pregnancy bulged a woman's belly and this mass of wrinkles was far from smooth. The legs holding the hideous mass erect were like black pipe cleaners. The pimp rushed to the bath room to view the entire mess in the full length mirror. He recognized the lunch he had eaten earlier, as he flushed the results of his sudden sickness. He was still himself, inside. Whatever the hell that meant. Except now he looked like a fifty cent chippy from the Grey Panther gatherings in the park. "Oh God, what did I do?" "It wasn't me. Ask The Imp." The pimp didn't hear the reply, she was busy being sick again. The Imp walked down the street smiling and singing a line from Peace In The Valley. "...and I'll be changed, changed from this fool that I am." Monday dawned soft and warm. Vincent Cararro drive his burgundy Lincoln Continental carefully and headed for his office. He nodded and waved to his neighbors and friends in the plush suburb where his wife and children lived. He still preferred the spicier flavor of the streets. He disliked the tiny tit and tight ass attitude of the people who lived behind the stone walls of their palatial estates. He slowed for the light at the corner of Barthalemew and Walden and watched with mild interest as the sleek looking woman walked across Walden. Her full figure was accentuated by the plunging neckline of her shimmering jumpsuit. No tiny tits there. Her full breasts moved with a sensuousness that turned his mild interest into the beginnings of an erection. He was startled, when the car behind him honked with impatience. He jerked forward awkwardly and raced down Walden to the first turnaround. Tires screeched and several people wondered why Mr. Cararro would behave in such an uncouth manner. The Lincoln dashed back to the intersection to find the startling vision of femininity walking down Walden. Vinny muttered a silent prayer that no one else would pick her up, and waited impatiently for the light to allow him access to the road he had just traversed. "Need a ride, Miss?" The Imp looked him over, she wanted to be sure she had the right man. Lots of people in the area drove maroon Lincolns. He looked like the images she had seen yesterday and his sleek smile looked like he needed a lesson even if he were the wrong one. She was not, after all, on a strict schedule. She smiled and leaned down, affording Vinny an even better view of her unzipped cleavage. "I wouldn't want to put you out of your way." "No problem, where are you headed?" "Downtown. I'm looking for work." "Climb in, I'll have you there in no time." The Imp opened the door and slid into the plush interior. Her arm touched his on the armrest and neither of them moved to break the contact. "What sort of work do you do?" "Model. At least that's what I did back in Omaha." "You been in town long?" "Just got in. Haven't even found a place to stay yet." Vinny smiled like an undertaker who was witnessing a seventeen car pile up. He knew this was going to be a good day. "I might be able to help you with both problems. I have friends in the modeling world and my company manages a lot of apartments. Why don't you come along with me and let me see what I can do?" "That sounds like a lot of bother for you. I don't want to put you to all the trouble." "No trouble. In fact, I insist. You can rent one of the apartments we manage and if you find a job, we can celebrate together. Unless, of course, you have friends in town." "No. No friends here. In fact, you are only the second person I've met in this big place. The first was not the best experience for me. I hope you're more sincere and more of a gentleman then he was." "My intentions are nothing but honorable. An apartment and a job and you can go your own way. Unless, of course, you decide to let me help you celebrate." Traffic built and driving took Vinny out of the conversation mood. He despised the traffic and would have worked at home, if his wife hadn't been there. He went into the office only to keep up a front for neighbors and the Internal Revenue Service. He also had three secretaries who helped distract him when he was bored. Like a roller coaster, the streamlined Lincoln dove into the darkness that signaled a parking garage. The narrow passageway led to a stall marked V. Cararro. Vinny pulled smoothly into the parking place and switched off the engine. He turned to the young woman and smiled. "Shall we go up?" "I suppose so, I really don't want you to be put out." "That is silly. I'm glad to help a stranger to town." Three hours later, with only a small nudge from Vinny, two modeling agencies wanted to use her and one apartment house had a new resident. The Cararro's approval was enough to get her started. The apartment manager had taken Vinny's word for a deposit and she was ready to move into a furnished apartment. Suddenly, Vincent was the focus of her life. Lunch time became a celebration that he promised was only the beginning. They ate and drank and laughed. They were both pleased with the way things were moving. The Imp, Madeline Warren to the apartment manager, looked down on the bed and the boxes she had just dropped there. Vinny had insisted that she buy some clothes so they could dress in style for their up coming evening. He escorted her to several very posh shops and helped her select a red dress that looked like spray paint on her full figured body. The underthings and the shoes were quite ordinary, expensive but normal. She would be dressed in the height of fashion and be escorted by a man who was as handsome as he was rotten. The Imp walked out of the bathroom and was confronted by a huge bottle of champagne and Vinny. Wrapped in a towel, she was a vision of feminine abundance. The small sprinkling of freckles across her shoulders and the tops of her full breasts were frosting on the delicate paleness of her skin. Unflustered, she continued drying her hair with one corner of her towel. "Well, this is a surprise, Mr. Cararro. We had a date for eight and it can't be later than six thirty. As you can see, I'm not ready to leave." Vincent smiled. "I was hoping we were beyond Mr. Cararro. My friends call me Vinny. I wish you would." "Perhaps later. Right now I want to get dressed and fix my hair. You will have to leave." "I could wait out there," Vinny nodded toward the living room. The Imp shook her head. Vinny left, the apartment door slamming. The evening was a whirl of pleasant sensations. Excellent food and drink, followed by three nightclubs with animated dancers, breath stealing comedy, and a sensuous stage show to close the evening. The stage show would have been pornographic in Omaha, but in Baltimore it was only stimulating. The Imp knew Vinny was much more stimulated than she, despite his hope that the opposite would be true. The Imp accepted a kiss at her door and would allow no further imprecations from the aroused man. She wanted him thinking about nothing but his passion. With two weeks of modeling in daylight and fending off Vinny's advances during the dark hours, The Imp brought Vincent Cararro to a full boil. She knew that this was the night. She dressed with special care and waited for his distinctive knock. A soft smile marked her face. She was enjoying the tenseness she had watched growing along with the passion. On the mark of eight, Vinny rapped his knuckles on the white painted panel of her door. He stood admiring the new manicure he had just gotten and waiting for her to answer. Tonight, he promised to himself. Tonight you loose those fancy drawers, Babe. Better get ready to enjoy. His visions of the evening's pleasures brought a sinister smile to his lips. The Imp opened the door and smiled to her ardent suitor. "Good to see you, Vinny." Vincent stalked into the apartment, deciding in that instant to try the strong man routine since his gentle approach had failed. He fitted a look of restrained fury on his face and turned to the wonderfully sexy creature before him. "You've driven me to a difficult situation. I have been patient and waited for you. Tonight we will be together, or I'll be obliged to make some phone calls and withdraw my support for your modeling work and this apartment." Vinny waited for her reply. He knew she liked the good life they had been sampling so fully for the last weeks. Wordlessly, The Imp reached behind her and slowly unzipped her dress. The hiss of the zipper erased the lines of ferocity from the angry man's face and magically replaced them with a smile. Vinny began removing his jacket and never took his eyes from the fantastic form being revealed before him. His excitement swelled the front of his trousers. That reaction seemed to stimulate him even more. The Imp had indeed dressed with special care. She stood before the man clad only in a skimpy pair of panties, a pair of almost transparent hose and a garter belt that matched her panties. Her swelling breasts were the focus of the now perspiring man before her. "Is this what you want, Vincent Cararro?" "Yes. Dear God, yes. I want you more than anything in the world." "Well, at least get out of that ruffled shirt." Vinny peeled the shirt from his sweating body so swiftly that several buttons popped off onto the floor and rolled under a chair. "I've waited for you, ever since I met you." "Well, before you get me I want something too." "What? What do you want, money?" "Of course not. I want the list of people you sell drugs to." Vincent felt his erection stop growing, he felt his slacks relax back down to their normal drape. This was a bizarre situation, one that should have no place between a woman who was nearly naked and a man who was swelling with desire. What the hell did she need with a list of his customers? Forget her list, what she needed was a few hours in a big bed. "Why don't we talk about that later?" Vinny felt himself leave the floor. He hadn't jumped, the floor had simply moved out from under his feet. The woman was still on the floor. He was several feet above the carpeting, in a room that smelled faintly like there had been a rainstorm inside the apartment. "What the hell... What's going on?" "When I get the list you can come back down." "Why?" "My business. Are you ready to give me the list.?" "Not this life time." The words were the last thing to pass through his lips, going out or coming in. He grasped his throat and began writhing almost instantly. Within a minute his actions were frantic. His supply of oxygen was gone and what little he had held in his lungs was nearly used up. The Imp waited patiently. Frantically, Vinny nodded his wordless willingness. The Imp allowed him to breathe and restated her demand. "There is a book, in my jacket pocket. The names are there. But they are all untouchable." "Not from me. You'll descend in ten minutes. Do not endeavor to follow me or find me. If you do I'll make you the most miserable man since Job. I would advise you to find a more respectable occupation, Mr. Cararro. I'll be watching." Speechless, Vinny watched while the sultry looking woman slipped into the skin tight jumpsuit she had been wearing when he first met her. She left the front zipper enticingly low and left the room. Vinny watched the clock on the mantle click off the minutes and was waiting as his feet gently returned to the floor. He dashed to the telephone and began calling his drug customers. After the third call, Vinny realized his mistake. He had told the people that someone, possibly connected with the law, had the names of all his customers. Two of the customers were suddenly terse in their replies and hung up. The third one promised to get Vinny and left the phone off the hook. Vincent Cararro died in a fiery explosion two weeks later. The police bomb experts said that there must have been twenty sticks of dynamite planted in the car. They were confused, however; they could not figure why the second and third bomb had not detonated. The investigation was narrowing the list of suspects and they expected an arrest shortly. None of the reporters believed a thing about the press release, except the part about the other bombs. Nearly two hundred doctors, lawyers and prominent business men left Baltimore, committed suicide, or died from natural causes in the weeks following Vinny's death. Life insurance company computers discarded the data of these deaths, they all seemed unnatural, despite the police reports. Claims went unpaid and unchallenged in the courts. Drug addicts in Baltimore are still having difficulty getting drugs. Many moved away, some reformed, and some died from the agonies of withdrawal. White powder, other than Domino sugar, was very scarce at the parties of the affluent. The only person who noticed The Imp when she left was a trucker who picked up a beautiful woman on The Beltway. She needed a lift to Washington. He carried her to the outskirts of the capital city and continued toward Virginia and the son whom he discovered was suddenly cured of the leukemia that had been eating him alive. The trucker was already one of the faithful at his small church and credited the recovery with his prayers. He may have been right. The Imp was last seen walking into Washington, D.C. smiling and humming. She was obviously looking forward to her next tasks. Fred looked up from his book and noticed that The Boss seemed happier than usual. He was pleased that The Boss derived joy from the few glimmers of hope coming from Earth. There seemed to be a few more souls returning as well. No matter, Fred mused. There's room for everyone.