Bridge Trilogy. Part one

‘You see that door, there?’ Freddie said. ‘What door?’ The lobby of the Morrisey made Rydell want to whisper, like being in church or a funeral home. The carpet was so soft, it made him want to lie down and go to sleep. ‘That black one,’ Freddie said. Rydell saw a black-lacquered rectangle, perfectly plain, not even a knob. Now that he thought about it, it didn’t match anything else in sight. The rest of the place was polished wood, frosted bronze, panels of carved glass. If Freddie hadn’t told him it was a door, exactly, he would have taken it for art or something, some kind of painting. ‘Yeah? What about it?’ io8) ‘That’s a restaurant,’ Freddie said, ‘and it’s so expensive, you can’t even go in there.’ ‘Well,’ Rydell said, ‘there’s lots of those.’ ‘No, man,’ Freddie insisted, ‘I mean even if you were rich, had money out your ass, you could not go in there. Like it’s private. Japanese thing.’ They were standing around by the security desk while Warbaby talked to somebody on a house phone. The three guys on duty at the desk wore IntenSecure uniforms, but really fancy ones, with bronze logo-buttons on their peaked caps. Rydell had parked the Patriot in an underground garage, floors down in the roots of the place. He hadn’t seen anything like that before: teams of people in chef’s whites putting together a hundred plates of some skinny kind of salad, little Sanyo vacuum-cleaners bleeping along in pastel herds, all this back-stage stuff you’d never guess was there if you were just standing here in the lobby. The Executive Suites, where he’d stayed in Knoxville with Karen Mendelsohn, had had these Korean robot bugs that cleaned up when you weren’t looking. They’d even had a special one that ate dust off the wallscreen, but Karen hadn’t been impressed. It just meant the)’ couldn’t afford people, she said. Rydell watched as Warbaby turned, handing the phone to one of the guys in the peaked caps. Warbaby gestured for Freddie and Rydell. Leaned on his cane as they walked toward him. ‘They’ll take us up now,’ he said. The cap Warbaby had handed the phone to came out from behind the counter. He saw Rydell was wearing an IntenSecure shirt with the patches ripped off, but he didn’t say anything. Rydell wondered when he was going to have a chance to buy some clothes, and where he should go to do it. He looked at Freddie’s shirt, thinking Freddie probably wasn’t the guy to ask. T09 ‘This way, sir,’ the cap said to Warbaby. Freddie and Rydell followed Warbaby across the lobby. Rydell saw how he jabbed his cane, hard, into the carpeting, the brace on his leg ticking like a slow clock. Sometimes, when she rode hard, when she could really proj, Chevette got free of everything: the city, her body, even time. That was the messenger’s high, she knew, and though it felt like freedom, it was really the melding-with, the clicking-in, that did it. The bike between her legs was like some hyperevolved alien tail she’d somehow extruded, as though over patient centuries; a sweet and intricate bone-machine, grown Lexan-armored tires, near-frictionless bearings, and gas-filled shocks. She was entirely part of the city then, one wild-ass little dot of energy and matter, and she made her thousand choices, instant to instant, according to how the traffic flowed, how rain glinted on the streetcar tracks, how a secretary’s mahogany hair fell like grace itself, exhausted, to the shoulders of her loden coat. And she was starting to get that now, in spite of everything; if she just let go, quit thinking, let her mind sink down into the machinery of bone and gear-ring and carbon-wound Japanese paper… But Sammy Sal swerved in beside her, bass pumping from his bike’s bone-conduction beatbox. She had to bunny the curb to keep from going over on a BART grate. Her tires left black streaks as the particle-brakes caught, Sammy Sal braking in tandem, his Fluoro-Rimz strohing, fading. ‘Something eating you, little honey?’ His hand on her arm, rough and angry. ‘Like maybe some wonder product makes you smarter, faster? Huh?’ III 13 Tweaking ‘Let me go.’ ‘No way. I got you this job. You’re gonna blow it, I’m gonna know why.’ He slammed his other palm on the black foam around his bars, killing the music. ‘Please, Sammy, I gotta get up to Skinner’s-‘ He let go of her arm. ‘Why?’ She started to cough, caught it, took three deep breaths. ‘You ever steal anything, Sammy Sal? I mean, when you were working?’ Sammy Sal looked at her. ‘No,’ he said, finally, ‘but I been known to fuck the clients.’ Chevette shivered. ‘Not me.’ ‘No,’ Sammy Sal said, ‘but you don’t pull tags all the places I do. ‘Sides, you a girl.’ ‘But I stole something last night. From this guy’s pocket, up at this party at the Hotel Morrisey.’ Sammy Sal licked his lips. ‘How come you had your hand in his pocket? He somebody you know?’ ‘He was some asshole,’ Chevette said. ‘Oh. Him. Think I met him.’ ‘Gave me a hard time. It was sticking out of his pocket.’ ‘You sure it was his pocket this hard time sticking out of?’ ‘Sammy Sal,’ she said, ‘this is serious. I’m scared shitless.’ He was looking at her, close. ‘That it? You scared? Stole some shit, you scared?’ ‘Bunny says some security guys called up Allied, even called up Wilson and everything. Looking for me.’ ‘Shit,’ Sammy Sal said, still studying her, ‘I thought you high, on dancer. Thought Bunny found out. Come after you, gonna chew your little bitch ear off. You just scared?’ She looked at him. ‘That’s right.’ ‘Well,’ he said, digging his fingers into the black foam, ‘what you scared of?’ ‘Scared they’ll come up to Skinner’s and find ’em.’ ‘Find what?’ I 12. ‘These glasses.’ ‘Spy, baby? Shot? Looking, like Alice ‘n’ all?’ He drummed his fingers on the black foam. ‘These black glasses. Like sunglasses, but you can’t see through ’em.’ Sammy Sal tilted his beautiful head to one side. ‘What’s that mean?’ ‘They’re just black.’ ‘Sunglasses?’ ‘Yeah. But just black.’ ‘Huh,’ he said, ‘you had been fucking the clients, but only just the cute ones, like me, you’d know what those are. Tell you don’t have that many upscale boyfriends, pardon me. You date you some architects, some brain-surgeons, you’d know what those are.’ His hand came up, forefinger flicking the corroded ball-chain that dangled from the zip.tab at the neck of Skinner’s jacket. ‘Those VL glasses. Virtual light.’ She’d heard of it, but she wasn’t sure what it was. ‘They expensive, Sammy Sal?’ ‘Shit, yes. ‘Bout as much as a Japanese car. Not all that much more, though. Got these little EMP-drivers around the lenses, work your optic nerves direct. Friend of mine, he’d bring a pair home from the office where he worked. Landscape architects. Put ’em on, you go out walking, everything looks normal, but every plant you see, every tree, there’s this little label hanging there, what its name is, Latin under that. . .’ ‘But they’re solid black.’ ‘Not if you turn ’em on, they aren’t. Turn ’em on, they don’t even look like sunglasses. Just make you look, I dunno, serious.’ He grinned at her. ‘You look too damn’ serious anyway. That your problem.’ She shivered. ‘Come back up to Skinner’s with me, Sammy. Okay?’ ‘I)on’t like heights, much,’ he said. ‘That little box blow right off the top of that hridge, one night.’ 113 ‘Please, Sammy? This thing’s got me tweaking. Be okay, riding with you, but I stop and I start thinking about it, I’m scared I’m gonna freeze up. What’ll I do? Maybe I get there and it’s the cops? What’ll Skinner say, the cops come up there? Maybe I go in to work tomorrow and Bunny cans me. What’ll Ido?’ Sammy Sal gave her the look he’d given her the night she’d asked him to get her on at Allied. Then he grinned. Mean and funny. All those sharp white teeth. ‘Keep it between your legs, then. Come on, you try to keep up.’ He bongoed off the curb, his Fluoro-Rimz flaring neonwhite when he came down pumping. He must have thumbed Play then, because she caught the bass throbbing as she came after him through the traffic. 14 Loveless ‘You want another beer, honey?’ The woman behind the bar had an intricate black tracery along either side of her shaven skull, down to what Yamazaki took to be her natural hairline. The tattoo’s style combined Celtic knots and cartoon lightning-bolts. Her hair, above it, was like the pelt of some nocturnal animal that had fed on peroxide and Vaseline. Her left ear had been randomly pierced, perhaps a dozen times, by a single length of fine steel wire. Ordinarily Yamazaki found this sort of display quite interesting, but now he was lost in composition, his notebook open before him. ‘No,’ he said, ‘thank you.’ ‘Don’t wanna get fucked up, or what?’ Her tone perfectly cheerful. He looked up from the notebook. She was waiting. ‘Yes?’ ‘You wanna sit here, you gotta buy something.’ ‘Beer, please.’ ‘Same?’ ‘Yes, please.’ She opened a bottle of Mexican beer, fragments of ice sliding down the side as she put it down on the bar in front of him, and moved on to the customer to his left. Yamazaki returned to his notebook.

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