She tapped out the query with her red nails. ‘They got Pookie Hits the Trail,’ she said.
‘Really? Who’s in it?’
The tolerant computer knew this too. ‘Cash Jones and Lorne Guyland.’
‘Come on. Who do you like best?’
‘I don’t know,’ she said. ‘They both suck.’
I looked in on a crepuscular but definitely non-gogo bar on Fiftieth Street. For a while I read my ticket. On the next stool a trembling executive sank three dark cocktails quickly and hurried off with a dreadful sigh… White wine, me: trying to stay in shape here. It’s my first piece of alcohol for — what? — nearly two days. After all that tearful confusion, after feeling like a one-year-old out on the street last night, I couldn’t get anything down me. I tried. It tasted of poison, of hemlock. So I just sacked out with a fistful of Serafim. I don’t know what J would have done without the old guy in his boiler suit. I really think I might have died, without that human touch . .. Thoughtfully chewing on a pretzel, I suddenly skewered my dodgy back tooth. Knowledge is painful, and I knew then beyond all question that Selina had some other prong on her books. Come on, of course she has. She’s smart. She’s practical. She’ll have some property developer or spaced-out rich kid, some moneyman. She might not even be banging him yet, just keeping him quiet with the odd spangled glimpse of her underwear, the odd audience at the bathtub — yeah, and the odd handjob too, no doubt. After all, this was how she processed me to begin with, when she still had her sugar-daddy ad-exec, plus a twenty-year-old location researcher on the side. Selina knows how to fend them off fondly, she knows how to keep them stacked above her tarmac — she is an old hand at air-traffic control. Then, one day, you get the lot… Where is she now? It is six o’clock over there, when the dark conies down. She is dressing herself for the evening, and she is worried. She is worried. The night is young over there, but Selina Street is not so young, not any longer. You know something? I’ve got to marry her, marry Selina Street. If I don’t, probably no one else will, and I’ll have ruined another life.
I finished my wine and settled the tab — surprisingly high. But then it seemed I had had six glasses, or vases, of the friendly Californian cordial. I walked back to the hotel through the crowds (here they come again) of Manhattan groundlings, extras and understudies, walk-ons and bit-part players, these unknown Earthlings. Hugely the cast swelled into the street. Incensed cabs cussed and sulked. Then I saw banners—brits out of belfast and i love the ira and who killed bobby sands? Bobby Sands, the dead hunger-striker. Hunger-striking must look particularly dire to these guys, each of whom has a neck like a birthday cake. ‘You talking to me?’ I shouted at one of them. ‘Stay out of it. Yeah, what do you know.’ Then I remembered that the Prince of Wales was in town too. It was probably him they had in mind. Some of the banners actually said as much, I now saw. Well, hang on to it, Prince, I thought. Don’t listen to these bums. You’re all right, I reckon — yeah, you’ll do.
Back at the hotel I firmed up a deal with the man behind the desk. In exchange for ten bucks and as many minutes’ chat about Lorne Guyland and Caduta Massi, he gave me my room until six without charging an extra day’s whack. A lifelong Caduta fan, he also had a lot of time for old Lorne. ‘He’s been at the top for thirty-five years,’ he explained. ‘That’s what he’s got my respect for.’ The unloved room looked on in quiet martyrdom as I packed my stuff. Mindful of my meeting with Martina, and determined to keep up the good work of the last two days, I had lugged back a quart of Chablis to keep me lightly fuelled throughout the afternoon. But the room was full of scotch and gin and brandy, and I deplore waste. Why, an African family could stay drunk for a month on the gear I’d be leaving behind. I didn’t try Selina. I wanted to give her a nice surprise.