Bridge Trilogy. Part three

Tessa had her own special glasses on, and Chevette knew she’d be seeing the output from God’s Little Toy, adjusting angle and focus with her black glove. Creedmore had launched into another song, its tempo faster, and people were tapping their feet and bobbing up and down in time.

Couple of men in those meshback caps, drinking beer out of cans, by that ladder, but she ducked under their arms and climbed up, ignoring the one who laughed and swatted her butt with the flat of his hand.

Up through the square hole, her nose level with dusty, beer-soaked brown carpet. “Tessa. Hey.”

“Chevette?” Tessa didn’t turn, lost in the view in her glasses. “Where’d you go?”

“I saw Carson,” Chevette said, climbing up through the hole. “I took off.” 190 “This is amazing footage,” Tessa said. “The faces on these people.

Like Robert Frank. I’m going to treat it as mono and grain it down-”

“Tessa,” Chevette said, “I think we should get out of here.”

“Who the fuck are you?” said the baldie, turning. He was wearing a sleeveless tube shirt and his upper arms were no thicker than Chevette’s wrists, his bare shoulders looking fragile as the bones of a bird.

“This is Saint Vitus,” Tessa said, as if absently bidding to forestall hostilities, attention elsewhere. “He does the lights in here, but he’s the sound man at two other clubs on the bridge, Cognitive Dissidents and something else Tessa’s hand dancing with itself in the black control glove.

Chevette knew Cog Diss from before. “That’s a dancer bar, Tessa,” she said.

“We’re going over there after this,” Tessa said. “He says it’ll just be getting going, and it’ll be a lot more interesting than this.”

“Anything would,” Saint Vitus said with infinite weariness.

“Blue Ahmed cut a single there,” Tessa said, “called ‘My War Is My

– War.'”

“It sucked,” Chevette said.

“You’re thinking of the Chrome Koran cover,” said Saint Vitus, his voice dripping with contempt. “You’ve never heard Ahmed’s version.”

“How the fuck would you know?” Chevette demanded.

“Because it was never released,” Saint Vitus declared smugly.

“Well, maybe it fucking escaped,” Chevette said, feeling like she wanted to deck this diz-monkey, and thinking it might not be that hard to do, although you never knew what would happen if somebody tightened on dancer got really upset. All those stories about twelve-year-olds getting so dizzed they’d grab the bumper of a cop car and flip the whole

– thing, though these usually involved the kids’ muscles popping out through their skins, which she sincerely hoped was impossible. Had to be: what Carson called urban legends.

Creedmore’s song ended with a steely clash of guitar that drew Chevette’s attention to the stage. Creedmore looked completely tightened now, staring triumphantly out as though across a sea of faces in some vast stadium.

191 The big guitarist unslung his red guitar and handed it to a boy with sideburns and a black leather vest, who passed him a black guitar with a skinnier body.

“This here’s called ‘Pine Box,’ ” Creedmore said, as the big guitarist began to play. Chevette couldn’t catch the words as Creedmore began to sing, except that it sounded old and doleful and was about winding up in a pine box, by which she took him to mean a coffin, like what they used to bury people in, but she guessed it could just as easily apply to this sound booth she was stuck in here, with Tessa and this asshole. She looked around and saw an old chrome stool with its pad of upholstery split and taped over, so she planted herself on that and decided she was just going to keep quiet until Tessa had taped as much as she wanted of Creedmore’s act. Then she’d see about getting them out of here. 192 47. SAl SHING ROAD LIBIA and Paco have shown Laney to a barbershop in Sai Shing Road. He has arrived here, of course, with no knowledge of the route involved; Sai Shing is in the Walled City, and he is a visitor, not a resident. The Walled City’s whereabouts, the conceptual mechanisms by which its citizens have opted to secede from the human datascape at large are the place’s central and most closely held secret. The Walled City is a universe unto itself, a subversive rumor, the stuff of legend.

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