Zoo City
loathsome specimen with slobbery jaws and elongated fingers with my whipblades. I'm already down to 46 per cent health. It's only when Arno comes back, cracking the bottles of Windhoek open with his teeth, and sets mine, foaming, on the table in front of me, that I realise what I've done.
       "Oh thanks, but actually, I'm gonna skip." I barely manage to duck as an arachnidy thing with a wobbly glutinous mass on top, like the bastard love-child of a jellyfish and a spider, spews a cloud of mechanical insects at me. Luckily S'bu is there to liquidise it, and most of the insect cloud terminates in shrieking sparks.
       "Our beer too good for ya?"
       "No, it's just that I don't particularly want to go back to rehab either."
       "No shit, man," Des says. "That place is ill. All full of whining junkies with the shivers."
       "Abnd zombies," Arno adds, hopefully.
       "Don't you guys have some place to be?" S'bu snaps.
       "No, man. We're here for the duration."
       "Seriously, I think I heard your moms calling."
       "Dude. Uncool."
       "Madoda. Take a hint and hamba."
       "Fine. Come on, Arno, let's go aim for hadedas on the fourteenth hole."
       "Bud I like hadedas."
       "Gijima, fatty boomsticks. Can't you see I'm in the middle of an interview?"
       Des grabs the set of clubs leaning against the wall by the fridge, and heads out, not bothering to pull on a shirt. He gives S'bu the finger as he goes. Arno follows, dragging his feet, but taking his beer with him.
       "You guys don't strike me as the golfing type," I say, stomping frantically on the remaining clockwork insects. Unfortunately, not before one bites me. A red haze over my POV indicates that I've been infected. Antibiotics required. "Where's a medpack when you need one?"
       "Yeah, it's all right. I prefer playing on console. Being Tiger Woods and shit? The medpacks are red plastic dropboxes, white cross."
       My health is dwindling, one point at a time. I'm down to 22 per cent. "So which rehab did you go to?"
       "Listen, just 'cos we're both in recovery doesn't make
       us best friends or nothing."
       "I did mine in prison. Involuntary."
       "That where you get the Sloth?"
       "Well, just before. But yeah, close enough. He helped me get through it."
       "There!"
       "What?"
       "Medpack."
       "Got it." I steer awesomely muscular black guy over to the first-aid box handily wall-mounted next to a fire alarm. Nearly missed it, thanks to the red throb of my infection. 'What about your sister?"
       "What about my sister?"
       "I mean, was she there for you?"
       "There for me?" He gives me a skew look, but still manages to frag the tentacle-faced frog creature that pads down the wall. "No. Song's there for herself."
       "So you were just smoking weed? Little hectic to go to rehab for that."
       "Ha. Tell that to Mr Odi."
       "Uh-huh." From his earlier reaction, I thought maybe he'd been to Donkerpoort, or one of the other fundamentalist hellholes that rely on the scare-em-clean-withbeatings-and-a-Bible model of addiction therapy. It's straight cold turkey. Kids chained up outside, naked and shivering out the sweats. Methadone is for weaklings. And if you're really bad, they'll bring out the dogs.
       "Wasn't so bad, I guess. It's the detox therapy the old man's into that kills me. Lentils and colonic cleansing and shit," S'bu says. "Boss!" A grotesque spindly torso lumbers towards us. I lash out with my whipblade, slashing right through its chest and into its ribcage. The split halves reel obscenely, trying to reconnect. Then the cracked ends of the ribcage start lengthening, until the split chest becomes a mouth full of gnashing teeth.
       "Gross. How did Songweza find it?"
       "How does the Song find anything?"
       "You tell me."
       "She was cool with it. You know what they say? I'm only here because of her. That she's the talented one."
       "I don't buy

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