A sequence of unbearable images unfolded in the doctor"s mind, even as the robot carrion turned from the gurney and walked to the instrument table: the sheriff"s arrival just after dawn, alone of course, since Craven always took thought for his deputies" rest and because on this errand he would want privacy to consider any indiscretion on behalf of the miners" survivors that the situation might call for; Craven"s finding his old friend, supine and alarmingly weak; his hurrying over, his leaning near. Then, somewhat later, a police car containing a rack of still wet bones might plunge off the highway above some deep spot in the gorge.
The corpse took an evidence box from the table and put the scalpel in it. Then it turned and retrieved the mortuary knife from the floor and put that in as well, saying as it did so, without turning, "The sheriff will come in the morning. You spoke like close friends. He will probably come alone."
The coincidence with his thoughts had to be accident, but the intent to terrify and appall him was clear. The tone and timing of that patched-up voice were unmistakably deliberate sly probes that sought his anguish specifically, sought his mind"s personal center. He watched the corpse over at the table dipping an apish but accurate hand and plucking up rib shears, scissors, clamps, adding all to the box. He stared, momentarily emptied by shock of all but the will to know finally the full extent of the horror that had appropriated his life. Joe Allen"s body carried the box to the worktable beside the gurney, and the expressionless eyes met the doctor"s.
"I have gambled. A grave gamble. But now I have won. At risk of personal discovery we are obliged to disconnect, contract, hide as well as possible in the host-body. Suicide in effect. I disregarded situational imperatives, despite starvation before disinterment and subsequent autopsy being all but certain. I caught up with the crew, tackled Pollock and Jackson microseconds before the blast. I computed five days" survival from this cache. I could disconnect at limit of my strength to do so, but otherwise I would chance autopsy, knowing the doctor was an alcoholic incompetent. And now see my gain. You are a prize host. Through you I can feed with near impunity even when killing is too dangerous. Safe meals are delivered to you still warm."
The corpse had painstakingly aligned the gurney parallel to the worktable but offset, the table"s foot extending past the gurney"s, and separated from it by a distance somewhat less than the reach of Joe Allen"s right arm. Now the dead hands distributed the implements along the right edge of the table, save for the scissors and the box. These the corpse took to the table"s foot, where it set down the box and slid the scissors"s jaws round one strap of its overalls. It began to speak again, and as it did, the scissors dismembered its cerements in unhesitating strokes.
"The cut must be medical, forensically right, though a smaller one is easier. I must be careful of the pectoral muscles or these arms will not convey me. I am no larva anymore over fifteen hundred grams."
To ease the nightmare"s suffocating pressure, to thrust out some flicker of his own will against its engulfment, the doctor flung a question, his voice more cracked than the other"s now was: "Why is my arm free?"
"The last, fine neural splicing needs a sensory-motor standard, to perfect my brain"s fit to yours. Lacking this eye-hand coordinating check, only a much coa.r.s.er control of the host"s characteristic motor patterns is possible. This done, I flush out the paralytic, unbind us, and we are free together."
The grave-clothes had fallen in a puzzle of fragments, and the cadaver stood naked, its dark gas-rounded contours making it seem some sleek marine creature, ruddered with the black-veined gas-distended s.e.x. Again the voice had teased for his fear, had uttered the last word with a savoring protraction, and now the doctor"s cup of anguish brimmed over; horror and outrage wrenched his spirit in brutal alternation as if trying to tear it naked from its captive frame. He rolled his head in this deadlock, his mouth beginning to split with the slow birth of a mind-emptying outcry.
The corpse watched this, giving a single nod that might have been approbation. Then it mounted the worktable and, with the concentrated caution of some practiced convalescent reentering his bed, lay on its back. The dead eyes again sought the living and found the doctor staring back, grinning insanely.
"Clever corpse!" the doctor cried. "Clever, carnivorous corpse! Able alien! Please don"t think I"m criticizing. Who am I to criticize? A mere arm and shoulder, a talking head, just a small piece of a pathologist. But I"m confused." He paused, savoring the monster"s attentive silence and his own buoyancy in the hysterical levity that had unexpectedly liberated him. "You"re going to use your puppet there to pluck you out of itself and put you on me. But once he"s pulled you from your driver"s seat, won"t he go dead, so to speak, and drop you? You could get a nasty knock. Why not set a plank between the tables the puppet opens the door, and you scuttle, ooze, lurch, flop, slither, as the case may be, across the bridge. No messy spills. And in any case, isn"t this an odd, rather clumsy way to get around among your cattle? Shouldn"t you at least carry your own scalpels when you travel? There"s always the risk you"ll run across that one host in a million that isn"t carrying one with him."
He knew his gibes would be answered to his own despair. He exulted, but solely in the momentary bafflement of the predator in having, for just a moment, mocked its gloating a.s.surance to silence and marred its feast.
Its right hand picked up the postmortem knife beside it, and the left wedged a roll of gauze beneath Allen"s neck, lifting the throat to a more prominent arch. The mouth told the ceiling: "We retain larval form till entry of the host. As larvae we have locomotor structures, and sense buds usable outside our ships" sensory amplifiers. I waited coiled round Joe Allen"s bed leg till night, entered by his mouth as he slept." Allen"s hand lifted the knife, held it high above the dull, quick eyes, turning it in the light. "Once lodged, we have three instars to adult form," the voice continued absently the knife might have been a mirror from which the corpse read its features. "Larvally we have only a sketch of our full neural tap. Our metamorphosis is cued and determined by the host"s endosomatic ecology. I matured in three days." Allen"s wrist flexed, tipping the knife"s point downmost. "Most supreme adaptations are purchased at the cost of inessential capacities." The elbow p.r.o.nated and slowly flexed, hooking the knife bodyward. "Our hosts are all sentients, ecodominants, are already carrying the baggage of coping structures for the planetary environment we find them in. Limbs, sensory portals" the fist planted the fang of its tool under the chin, tilted it and rode it smoothly down the throat, the voice proceeding unmarred from under the furrow that the steel ploughed "somatic envelopes, instrumentalities" down the sternum, diaphragm, abdomen the stainless blade painted its stripe of gaping, muddy tissue "with a host"s brain we inherit all these, the mastery of any planet, netted in its dominant"s cerebral nexus. Thus our genetic codings are now all but disenc.u.mbered of such provisions."
So swiftly that the doctor flinched, Joe Allen"s hand slashed four lateral cuts from the great wound"s axis. The seeming butchery left two flawlessly drawn thoracic flaps cleanly outlined. The left hand raised the left flap"s hem, and the right coaxed the knife into the aperture, deepening it with small stabs and slices. The posture was a man"s who searches a breast pocket, with the dead eyes studying the slow recoil of flesh. The voice, when it resumed, had geared up to an intenser pitch: "Galactically, the chordate nerve/brain paradigm abounds, and the neural labyrinth is our dominion. Are we to make plank bridges and worm across them to our food? Are c.o.c.kroaches greater than we for having legs to run up walls and antennae to grope their way? All the quaint, hinged crutches that life sports! The stilts, fins, fans, springs, stalks, flippers, and feathers, all in turn so variously terminating in hooks, clamps, suckers, scissors, forks, or little cages of digits! And besides all the gadgets it concocts for wrestling through its worlds, it is all k.n.o.bbed, whiskered, crested, plumed, vented, spiked, or measeled over with perceptual gear for combing pittances of noise or color from the environing plent.i.tude."
Invincibly calm and sure, the hands traded tool and tasks. The right flap eased back, revealing ropes of ingeniously spared muscle while promising a genuine appearance once sutured back in place. Helplessly the doctor felt his delirious defiance bleed away and a bleak fascination rebind him.
"We are the taps and relays that share the host"s aggregate of afferent nerve-impulse precisely at its nodes of integration. We are the brains that peruse these integrations, integrate them with our existing banks of host-specific data, and, lastly, let their consequences flow down the motor pathway either the consequences they seek spontaneously, or those we wish to graft upon them. We are besides a streamlined alimentary/circulatory system and a reproductive apparatus. And more than this we need not be."
The corpse had spread its b.l.o.o.d.y vest, and the feculent hands now took up the rib shears. The voice"s sinister coloration of pitch and stress grew yet more marked the phrases slid from the tongue with a cobra"s seeking sway, winding their liquid rhythms round the doctor till a gap in his resistance should let them pour through to slaughter the little courage left him.
"For in this form we have inhabited the densest brainweb of three hundred races, lain intricately snug within them like thriving vine on trelliswork. We"ve looked out from too many variously windowed masks to regret our own vestigial senses. None read their worlds definitively. Far better then our nomad"s range and choice than an unvarying tenancy of one poor set of structures. Far better to slip on as we do whole living beings and wear at once all of their limbs and organs, memories and powers wear all these as tightly congruent to our wills as a glove is to the hand that fills it."
The shears clipped through the gristle, stolid, b.l.o.o.d.y jaws monotonously feeding, stopping short of the sternoclavicular joint in the manubrium where the muscles of the pectoral girdle have an important anchorage.
"No consciousness of the chordate type that we have found has been impermeable to our finesse no dendritic pattern so elaborate we could not read its st.i.tchwork and thread ourselves to match, precisely map its each synaptic seam till we could loosen it and retailor all to suit ourselves. We have strutted costumed in the bodies of planetary autarchs, venerable manikins of moral fashion, but cut of the universal cloth: the weave of fleet electric filaments of experience that we easily reshuttled to the warp of our wishes. Whereafter newly hemmed and gathered their living fabric hung obedient to our bias, investing us with honor and influence unlimited."
The tricky verbal melody, through the corpse"s deft, unfaltering self-dismemberment the sheer neuromuscular orchestration of the compound activity struck Dr Winters with the detached enthrallment great keyboard performers could bring him. He glimpsed the alien"s perspective a Gulliver waiting in a Brobdingnagian grave, then marshaling a dead giant against a living, like a dwarf in a huge mechanical crane, feverishly programming combat on a battery of levers and pedals, waiting for the robot arms" enactments, the remote, t.i.tanic impact of the foes and he marveled, filled with a bleak wonder at life"s infinite strategy and plasticity. Joe Allen"s hands reached into his half-opened abdominal cavity, reached deep below the uncut anterior muscle that was exposed by the shallow, spurious incision of the epidermis, till by external measure they were extended far enough to be touching his thighs. The voice was still as the forearms advertised a delicate rummaging with the buried fingers. The shoulders drew back. As the steady withdrawal brought the wrists into view, the dead legs tremored and quaked with diffuse spasms.
"You called your kind our food and drink, Doctor. If you were merely that, an elementary usurpation of your motor tracts alone would satisfy us, give us perfect cattle-control for what rarest word or subtlest behavior is more than a flurry of varied muscles? That trifling skill was ours long ago. It is not mere blood that feeds this l.u.s.t I feel now to tenant you, this craving for an intimacy that years will not stale. My truest feast lies in compelling you to feed in that way. It lies in the utter deformation of your will this will involve. Had gross nourishment been my prime need, then my grave-mates Pollock and Jackson could have eked out two weeks of life for me or more. But I scorned a cowardly parsimony in the face of death. I reinvested more than half the energy that their blood gave me in fabricating chemicals to keep their brains alive, and fluid-bathed with oxygenated nutriment."
The corpse reached into its gaping abdomen, and out of its cloven groin the smeared hands pulled two long skeins of silvery filament. The material looked like ma.s.ses of nerve fiber, tough and scintillant for the weave of it glittered with a slight incessant movement of each single thread. These nerve skeins were contracting. They thickened into two swollen nodes, while at the same time the corpse"s legs tremored and faintly twitched, as the bright vermiculate roots of the parasite withdrew from within Allen"s musculature. When the nodes lay fully contracted the doctor could just see their tips within the abdomen then the legs lay still as death.
"I had accessory neural taps only to spare, but I could access much memory, and all of their cognitive responses, and having in my banks all the organ of Corti"s electrochemical conversions of English words, I could whisper anything to them directly into the eighth cranial nerve. Those are our true feast, Doctor, such bodiless electric storms of impotent cognition as I tickled up in those two little bone globes. I was forced to drain them just before disinterment, but they lived till then and understood everything everything I did to them."
When the voice paused, the dead and living eyes were locked together. They remained so a moment, and then the dead face smiled.
It recapitulated all the horror of Allen"s first resurrection this waking of expressive soul in that purple death mask. And it was a demon-soul the doctor saw awaken: the smile was barbed with fine, sharp hooks of cruelty at the corners of the mouth, while the barbed eyes beamed fond, languorous antic.i.p.ation of his pain. Remotely, Dr Winters heard the flat sound of his own voice asking: "And Joe Allen?"
"Oh, yes, Doctor. He is with us now, has been throughout. I grieve to abandon so rare a host! He is a true hermit-philosopher, well-read in four languages. He is writing a translation of Marcus Aurelius he was, I mean, in his free time..."
Long minutes succeeded of the voice accompanying the surreal self-autopsy, but the doctor lay resigned, emptied of reactive power. Still, the full understanding of his fate reverberated in his mind as the parasite sketched his future for him in that borrowed voice. And it did not stop haunting Winters, the sense of what a virtuoso this ent.i.ty was, how flawlessly this ma.s.s of neural fibers played the tricky instrument of human speech. As flawlessly as it had puppeteered the corpse"s face into that ghastly smile. And with the same artistic aim: to waken, to amplify, to ripen its host-to-be"s outrage and horror. The voice, with ever more melody and gloating verve, sent waves of realization through the doctor, amplifications of the Unspeakable.
The parasite"s race had traced and tapped the complex interface between the cortical integration of sense input and the neural output governing response. It had interposed its brain between, sharing consciousness while solely commanding the pathways of reaction. The host, the bottled personality, was mute and limbless for any least expression of its own will, while h.e.l.lishly articulate and agile in the service of the parasite"s. It was the host"s own hands that bound and wrenched the life half out of his prey, his own loins that experienced the repeated o.r.g.a.s.ms crowning his other despoliations of their bodies. And when they lay, bound and shrieking still, ready for the consummation, it was his own strength that hauled the smoking entrails from them, and his own intimate tongue and guzzling mouth he plunged into the rank, palpitating feast.
And the doctor had glimpses of the racial history that underlay the aliens" predatory present. Glimpses of a dispa.s.sionate, inquiring breed so advanced in the a.n.a.lysis of its own mental fabric that, through scientific commitment and genetic self-sculpting, it had come to embody its own model of perfected consciousness. It had grown streamlined to permit its entry of other beings and its direct acquisition of their experiential worlds. All strictest scholarship at first, until there matured in the disembodied scholars their long-germinal and now blazing, jealous hatred for all "lesser" minds rooted and clothed in the soil and sunlight of solid, particular worlds. The parasite spoke of the "cerebral music," the "symphonies of agonized paradox" that were its invasion"s chief plunder. The doctor felt the truth behind this grandiloquence: the parasite"s actual harvest from the systematic violation of encoffined personalities was the experience of a barren supremacy of means over lives more primitive, perhaps, but vastly wealthier in the vividness and pa.s.sionate concern with which life for them was imbued.
The corpse had reached into its thorax and with its dead hands aided the parasite"s retraction of its upper-body root system. More and more of its livid ma.s.s had gone dead, until only its head and the arm nearer the doctor remained animate, while the silvery worming ma.s.s grew in its bleeding abdominal nest.
Then Joe Allen"s face grinned, and his hand hoisted up the nude, regathered parasite from his sundered gut and held it for the doctor to view his tenant-to-be. Winters saw that from the squirming ma.s.s of nerve cord one thick filament still draped down, remaining anch.o.r.ed in the canyoned chest toward the upper spine. This, he understood, would be the remote-control line by which it could work at a distance the crane of its old host"s body, transferring itself to Winters by means of a giant apparatus it no longer inhabited. This, he knew, was his last moment. Before his own personal horror should begin, and engulf him, he squarely met the corpse"s eyes and said: "Goodbye, Joe Allen. Eddie Sykes, I mean. I hope he gave you strength, the Golden Marcus. I love him too. You are guiltless. Peace be with you at the last."
The demon smile stayed fixed, but, effortlessly, Winters looked through it to the real eyes, those of the encoffined man. Tormented eyes forseeing death, and craving it. The grinning corpse reached out its viscid cargo a seething, rippling, multi-nodular lump that completely filled the erstwhile logger"s roomy palm. It reached this across and laid it on the doctor"s groin. He watched the hand set the bright medusa"s head his new self on his own skin, but felt nothing.
He watched the dead hand return to the table, take up the scalpel, reach back over, and make a twelve-inch incision up his abdomen, along his spinal axis. It was a deep, slow cut sectioning, just straight down through the abdominal wall and it proceeded in the eerie, utter absence of physical sensation. The moment this was done, the fiber that had stayed anch.o.r.ed in the corpse snapped free, whipped back across the gap, and rejoined the main body that now squirmed toward the incision, its port of entry.
The corpse collapsed. Emptied of all innervating energy, it sagged slack and flaccid, of course. Or had it...? Why was it...? That nearer arm was supinated. Both elbow and wrist at the full upturned twist. The palm lay open, offering. The scalpel still lay in the palm.
Simple death would have dropped the arm earthward, it would now hang slack. With a blaze, like a nova of light, Winters understood. The man, Sykes, had for a microsecond before his end repossessed himself. Had flung a dying impulse of his will down through his rotten, fading muscles and had managed a single independent gesture in the narrow interval between the demon"s departure and his own death. He had clutched the scalpel and flung out his arm, locking the joints as life left him.
It rekindled Winters"s own will, lit a fire of rage and vengefulness. He had caught hope from his predecessor.
How precariously the scalpel lay on the loosened fingers! The slightest tremor would unfix the arm"s joints, it would fall and hang and drop the scalpel down farther than h.e.l.l"s deepest recess from his grasp. And he could see that the scalpel was just only just in the reach of his fingers at his forearm"s fullest stretch from the bound elbow. The horror crouched on him and, even now slowly feeding its trunk line into his groin incision, at first stopped the doctor"s hand with a pang of terror. Then he reminded himself that, until implanted, the enemy was a senseless ma.s.s, bristling with plugs, with input jacks for senses, but, until installed in the physical amplifiers of eyes and ears, an utterly deaf, blind monad that waited in a perfect solipsism between two captive sensory envelopes.
He saw his straining fingers above the bright tool of freedom, thought with an insane smile of G.o.d and Adam on the Sistine ceiling, and then, with a life span of surgeon"s fine control, plucked up the scalpel. The arm fell and hung.
"Sleep," the doctor said. "Sleep revenged."
But he found his retaliation harshly reined in by the alien"s careful provisions. His elbow had been fixed with his upper arm almost at right angles to his body"s long axis; his forearm could reach his hand inward and present it closely to the face, suiting the parasite"s need of an eye-hand coordinative check, but could not, even with the scalpel"s added reach, bring its point within four inches of his groin. Steadily the parasite fed in its tapline. It would usurp motor control in three or four minutes at most, to judge by the time its extrication from Allen had taken.
Frantically the doctor bent his wrist inward to its limit, trying to pick through the strap where it crossed his inner elbow. Sufficient pressure was impossible, and the hold so awkward that even feeble attempts threatened the loss of the scalpel. Smoothly the root of alien control sank into him. It was a defenseless thing of jelly against which he lay lethally armed, and he was still doomed a preview of all his thrall"s impotence-to-be.
But of course there was a way. Not to survive. But to escape, and to have vengeance. For a moment he stared at his captor, hardening his mettle in the blaze of hate it lit in him. Then, swiftly, he determined the order of his moves, and began.
He reached the scalpel to his neck and opened his superior thyroid vein his inkwell. He laid the scalpel by his ear, dipped his finger in his blood, and began to write on the metal surface of the gurney, beginning by his thigh and moving toward his armpit. Oddly, the incision of his neck, though this was muscularly awake, had been painless, which gave him hopes that raised his courage for what remained to do.
When he had done the message read: ALIEN.
IN.
ME.
CUT.
KILL.
He wanted to write goodbye to his friend, but the alien had begun to pay out smaller auxiliary filaments collaterally with the main one, and all now lay in speed.
He took up the scalpel, rolled his head to the left, and plunged the blade deep in his ear.
Miracle! Last accidental mercy! It was painless. Some procedural, highly specific anesthetic was in effect. With careful plunges, he obliterated the right inner ear and then thrust silence, with equal thoroughness, into the left. The slashing of the vocal cords followed, then the tendons in the back of the neck that hold it erect. He wished he were free to unstring knees and elbows too, but it could not be. But blinded, deaf, with centers of balance lost, with only rough motor control all these conditions should fetter the alien"s escape, should it in the first place manage the reanimation of a bloodless corpse in which it had not yet achieved a fine-tuned interweave. Before he extinguished his eyes, he paused, the scalpel poised above his face, and blinked them to clear his aim of tears. The right, then the left, both retinas meticulously carved away, the yolk of vision quite scooped out of them. The scalpel"s last task, once it had tilted the head sideways to guide the blood flow absolutely clear of possible effacement of the message, was to slash the external carotid artery.
When this was done, the old man sighed with relief and laid his scalpel down. Even as he did so, he felt the deep inward p.r.i.c.kle of an alien energy something that flared, crackled, flared, groped for, but did not quite find its purchase. And inwardly, as the doctor sank toward sleep cerebrally, as a voiceless man must speak he spoke to the parasite these carefully chosen words: "Welcome to your new house. I"m afraid there"s been some vandalism the lights don"t work, and the plumbing has a very bad leak. There are some other things wrong as well the neighborhood is perhaps a little too quiet, and you may find it hard to get around very easily. But it"s been a lovely home to me for fifty-seven years, and somehow I think you"ll stay..."
The face, turned toward the body of Joe Allen, seemed to weep scarlet tears, but its last movement before death was to smile.
The Belonging Kind.
William Gibson and John Shirley.
William Gibson (1948) is an American-Canadian writer who has been called the "noir prophet" of the cyberpunk subgenre. John Shirley (1953) is an American writer of novels, short stories, and film scripts, a.s.sociated with both cyberpunk and splatterpunk. Gibson met Shirley at a science convention in the early 1980s and they became good friends. "The Belonging Kind" (1981) originally appeared in Charles Grant"s cla.s.sic Shadows anthology series and seems to synthesize the best of Gibson"s and Shirley"s solo work. It"s a wonderful weird form of speculative fiction, creepy and thought-provoking and also the only collaborative story in The Weird.
It might have been in Club Justine, or Jimbo"s, or Sad Jack"s, or the Rafters; Coretti could never be sure where he"d first seen her. At any time, she might have been in any one of those bars. She swam through the submarine half-life of bottles and gla.s.sware and the slow swirl of cigarette smoke...She moved through her natural element, one bar after another.
Now, Coretti remembered their first meeting as if he saw it through the wrong end of a powerful telescope, small and clear and very far away.
He had noticed her first in the Backdoor Lounge. It was called the Backdoor because you entered through a narrow back alley. The alley"s walls crawled with graffiti, its caged lights ticked with moths. Flakes from its white-painted bricks crunched underfoot. And then you pushed through into a dim s.p.a.ce inhabited by a faintly confusing sense of the half-dozen other bars that had tried and failed in the same room under different managements. Coretti sometimes went there because he liked the weary smile of the black bartender, and because the few customers rarely tried to get chummy.
He wasn"t very good at conversation with strangers, not at parties and not in bars. He was fine at the community college where he lectured in introductory linguistics; he could talk with the head of his department about sequencing and options in conversational openings. But he could never talk to strangers in bars or at parties. He didn"t go to many parties. He went to a lot of bars.
Coretti didn"t know how to dress. Clothing was a language and Coretti a kind of sartorial stutterer, unable to make the kind of basic coherent fashion statement that would put strangers at their ease. His ex-wife told him he dressed like a Martian; that he didn"t look as though he belonged anywhere in the city. He hadn"t liked her saying that, because it was true.
He hadn"t ever had a girl like the one who sat with her back arched slightly in the undersea light that splashed along the bar in the Backdoor. The same light was screwed into the lenses of the bartender"s gla.s.ses, wound into the necks of the rows of bottles, splashed dully across the mirror. In that light her dress was the green of young corn, like a husk half stripped away, showing back and cleavage and lots of thigh through the slits up the side. Her hair was coppery that night. And, that night, her eyes were green.
He pushed resolutely between the empty chrome and Formica tables until he reached the bar, where he ordered a straight bourbon. He took off his duffle coat, and wound up holding it on his lap when he sat down one stool away from her. Great, he screamed to himself, she"ll think you"re hiding an erection. And he was startled to realize that he had one to hide. He studied himself in the mirror behind the bar, a thirtyish man with thinning dark hair and a pale, narrow face on a long neck, too long for the open collar of the nylon shirt printed with engravings of 1910 automobiles in three vivid colors. He wore a tie with broad maroon and black diagonals, too narrow, he supposed, for what he now saw as the grotesquely long points of his collar. Or it was the wrong color. Something.
Beside him, in the dark clarity of the mirror, the green-eyed woman looked like Irma La Douce. But looking closer, studying her face, he shivered. A face like an animal"s. A beautiful face, but simple, cunning, two-dimensional. When she senses you"re looking at her, Coretti thought, she"ll give you the smile, disdainful amus.e.m.e.nt or whatever you"d expect.
Coretti blurted, "May I, um, buy you a drink?" At moments like these, Coretti was possessed by an agonizingly stiff, schoolmasterish linguistic tic. Um. He winced. Um.
"You would, um, like to buy me a drink? Why, how kind of you," she said, astonishing him. "That would be very nice." Distantly, he noticed that her reply was as stilted and insecure as his own. She added, "A Tom Collins, on this occasion, would be lovely."
On this occasion? Lovely? Rattled, Coretti ordered two drinks and paid.
A big woman in jeans and an embroidered cowboy shirt bellied up to the bar beside him and asked the bartender for change. "Well, hey," she said. Then she strutted to the jukebox and punched for Conway and Loretta"s "You"re the Reason Our Kids Are Ugly." Coretti turned to the woman in green, and murmured haltingly: "Do you enjoy country-and-western music?" Do you enjoy...? He groaned secretly at his phrasing, and tried to smile.
"Yes indeed," she answered, the faintest tw.a.n.g edging her voice, "I sure do."
The cowgirl sat down beside him and asked her, winking, "This li"l terror here givin" you a hard time?"
And the animal-eyed lady in green replied, "Oh, h.e.l.l no, honey, I got my eye on "im." And laughed. Just the right amount of laugh. The part of Coretti that was dialectologist stirred uneasily; too perfect a shift in phrasing and inflection. An actress? A talented mimic? The word mimetic rose suddenly in his mind, but he pushed it aside to study her reflection in the mirror; the rows of bottles occluded her b.r.e.a.s.t.s like a gown of gla.s.s.
"The name"s Coretti," he said, his verbal poltergeist shifting abruptly to a totally unconvincing tough-guy mode, "Michael Coretti."
"A pleasure," she said, too softly for the other woman to hear, and again she had slipped into the lame parody of Emily Post.
"Conway and Loretta," said the cowgirl, to no one in particular.
"Antoinette," said the woman in green, and inclined her head. She finished her drink, pretended to glance at a watch, said thank-you-for-the-drink too d.a.m.n politely, and left.
Ten minutes later Coretti was following her down Third Avenue. He had never followed anyone in his life and it both frightened and excited him.
Forty feet seemed a discreet distance, but what should he do if she happened to glance over her shoulder?
Third Avenue isn"t a dark street, and it was there, in the light of a streetlamp, like a stage light, that she began to change. The street was deserted.
She was crossing the street. She stepped off the curb and it began. It began with tints in her hair at first he thought they were reflections. But there was no neon there to cast the blobs of color that appeared, color sliding and merging like oil slicks. Then the colors bled away and in three seconds she was white-blond. He was sure it was a trick of the light until her dress began to writhe, twisting across her body like shrink-wrap plastic. Part of it fell away entirely and lay in curling shreds on the pavement, shed like the skin of some fabulous animal. When Coretti pa.s.sed, it was green foam, fizzing, dissolving, gone. He looked back up at her and the dress was another dress, green satin, shifting with reflections. Her shoes had changed too. Her shoulders were bare except for thin straps that crossed at the small of her back. Her hair had become short, spiky.
He found that he was leaning against a jeweler"s plate-gla.s.s window, his breath coming ragged and harsh with the damp of the autumn evening. He heard the disco"s heartbeat from two blocks away. As she neared it, her movements began subtly to take on a new rhythm a shift in emphasis in the sway of her hips, in the way she put her heels down on the sidewalk. The doorman let her pa.s.s with a vague nod. He stopped Coretti and stared at his driver"s license and frowned at his duffle coat. Coretti anxiously scanned the wash of lights at the top of a milky plastic stairway beyond the doorman. She had vanished there, into robotic flashing and redundant thunder.
Grudgingly the man let him pa.s.s, and he pounded up the stairs, his haste disturbing the lights beneath the translucent plastic steps.
Coretti had never been in a dis...o...b..fore; he found himself in an environment designed for complete satisfaction-in-distraction. He waded nervously through the motion and the fashions and the mechanical urban chants booming from the huge speakers. He sought her almost blindly on the pose-clotted dance floor, amid strobe lights.
And found her at the bar, drinking a tall, lurid cooler and listening to a young man who wore a loose shirt of pale silk and very tight black pants. She nodded at what Coretti took to be appropriate intervals. Coretti ordered by pointing at a bottle of bourbon. She drank five of the tall drinks and then followed the young man to the dance floor.
She moved in perfect accord with the music, striking a series of poses; she went through the entire prescribed sequence, gracefully but not artfully, fitting in perfectly. Always, always fitting in perfectly. Her companion danced mechanically, moving through the ritual with effort.
When the dance ended, she turned abruptly and dived into the thick of the crowd. The shifting throng closed about her like something molten.
Coretti plunged in after her, his eyes never leaving her and he was the only one to follow her change. By the time she reached the stair, she was auburn-haired and wore a long blue dress. A white flower blossomed in her hair, behind her right ear; her hair was longer and straighter now. Her b.r.e.a.s.t.s had become slightly larger, and her hips a shade heavier. She took the stairs two at a time, and he was afraid for her then. All those drinks.
But the alcohol seemed to have had no effect on her at all.
Never taking his eyes from her, Coretti followed, his heartbeat outspeeding the disco-throb at his back, sure that at any moment she would turn, glare at him, call for help.
Two blocks down Third she turned in at Lothario"s. There was something different in her step now. Lothario"s was a quiet complex of rooms hung with ferns and Art Deco mirrors. There were fake Tiffany lamps hanging from the ceiling, alternating with wooden-bladed fans that rotated too slowly to stir the wisps of smoke drifting through the consciously mellow drone of conversation. After the disco, Lothario"s was familiar and comforting. A jazz pianist in pinstriped shirt sleeves and loosely knotted tie competed softly with talk and laughter from a dozen tables.
She was at the bar; the stools were only half taken, but Coretti chose a wall table, in the shadow of a miniature palm, and ordered bourbon.
He drank the bourbon and ordered another. He couldn"t feel the alcohol much tonight.
She sat beside a young man, yet another young man with the usual set of bland, regular features. He wore a yellow golf shirt and pressed jeans. Her hip was touching his, just a little. They didn"t seem to be speaking, but Coretti felt they were somehow communing. They were leaning toward one another slightly, silent. Coretti felt odd. He went to the rest room and splashed his face with water. Coming back, he managed to pa.s.s within three feet of them. Their lips didn"t move till he was within earshot.
They took turns murmuring realistic palaver: " saw his earlier films, but"
"But he"s rather self-indulgent, don"t you think?"
"Sure, but in the sense that..."
And for the first time, Coretti knew what they were, what they must be. They were the kind you see in bars who seem to have grown there, who seem genuinely at home there. Not drunks, but human fixtures. Functions of the bar. The belonging kind.