Colleen trades glances with me. “What do you mean, redeem her?”
An icy jolt of fear ripples through the connection between Maggie and me. I can’t tell whose it is, but I think of her uncle Nathan and sermons on salvation.
“You’re obviously not local,” says the suit. “Devas are worth a great deal around here, but you have to know the ropes, which you clearly don’t. I can act as middleman, pay you for her up front, handle the details of the redemption process myself.”
“Jesus,” says Colleen. “It’s like she’s a beer bottle or something.” Her hands flex on the crossbow as if they are just dying to take this joker out.
His eyes don’t miss this, but he persists. “If you don’t turn her in willingly, he’ll only take her away from you. You might as well derive some profit from it.”
“He?” asks Cal. “He who?”
“The Boss.” He pauses to glance at us askew. “You really are new here. Where are you from?”
“I’m from Chicago,” says Enid. “Before any of this happened. They’re from-”
“Yes, well, this Chicago is subject to the rule of law. That’s what holds it together. Specifically and especially, the law of supply and demand. I work the supply side. And trust me, there is a definite demand for her kind.”
“Why?” asks Cal. “Why her kind?”
The suit looks at Magritte, who moves farther behind me. “She’s a rare commodity, for one thing.”
“Look,” says Enid, before I can ask about the other thing. “I don’t give a shit about your laws or your demand. We’re not selling.”
He sidesteps the suit and moves off down the block. Cal gives the guy a last look and follows, pushing Howard a little ahead of him. The rest of us fall in behind.
When I glance back, the suit is gone. I feel no relief. My eyes brush Colleen’s as I face front again. We share an unlikely moment of accord.
“We might have been able to pry some information out of that guy,” Cal says.
“Yeah, maybe,” counters Colleen, “but could you stand being in the same breathing space with him for that long?”
Adams is less heavily traveled; we zig right onto it and a block later zag left onto LaSalle. We hurry; our eyes miss nothing. I find myself thinking about “the Boss.” My mind combines the historical with the virtual and conjures an image of a computer-generated guy in pinstripes and fedora with a tommy gun. Stupid, huh? I mean, tommy guns don’t even function anymore, except maybe as door stops, and these days all reality is virtual.
I scan the skyline. An impossible task; the buildings go up into a red Forever. But once or twice I think I see something large and shadowy gliding from pillar to post many, many stories above us. I decide I’d prefer it not to be real and sanguinely chalk it up to a mixed state (the bipolar equivalent of a rinse/spin cycle). It does not occur to me to wonder, at that moment, who or what is doing the mixing. I say nothing. I find I’m less afraid of actual mania than I am of having Colleen accuse me of being manic before the world.
“Oh, man, smell that?” asks Enid as we turn onto Randolph.
Food. Cooking. I salivate, remembering that I haven’t eaten since early morning. Ahead of us, people sit in a sidewalk bistro, dining. Chefs in white uniforms grill meat and veggies on barbecues under a green and white striped awning. For a moment I imagine that we really are in Oz.
“I wonder what they use for money besides gold and water?” Cal asks.
We pass by the bistro reluctantly, wistfully, hungrily, and continue east. I notice something. While the bistro’s tables are peopled by the well-groomed and the bold-eyed, there are small knots of bashful bag-carriers clustered around the green wrought-iron perimeter as if waiting.
A little farther up the street curiosity gets the better of me when I spot a pair of the grab-bag people huddled near the doorway of a fragrant place labeled ROSE’S TEAROOM. He is white and twenty-something; she is Asian, a little older, worn and faded. Her skin is more sallow than golden, and there are bluish smudges beneath her dark eyes. The two stand, listless, speechless, shoulder-to-shoulder, looking at nothing, packages piled about their feet.
I plant myself right in front of them. “Excuse me,” I say, when they pay me no notice whatsoever. “We’re from out of town and we were, um, wondering if there might be a place nearby we could spend the night.”
The woman blinks as if a patch of empty air has just spoken, while the guy says, “Huh?” His eyes lift only momentarily to my face, then glance away to my shoe tops.
I smile. “We just got here and, well, uh, all this,” I gesture up and down the street, “is kind of a surprise.”
The two exchange glances. Hers has an element of desperation in it that is only too familiar. I saw it all the time in Manhattan: in the underground, in the streets, in the high rises.
The guy lowers his voice. “Out of town? You came from outside?” For the first time his eyes actually make it to my face. Then they dodge to a spot over my shoulder and he says, “Shit!” and leaps backward, slamming against the stone railing of the tearoom’s porch. The woman, following his gaze, gasps and clutches his arm, her eyes going wide.
It’s Maggie, of course, hovering brightly behind me.
“Look, man,” says the guy. “You just move on, okay? Just… just leave us alone.”
The woman tugs at him. “Sammy, no, they’re from outside. They got in; maybe they know a way out.”
Sammy shakes his head, eyes trying to hold mine. “They’re not really from outside, Lily.” It is a statement of fact, he’s that sure.
Doc and Cal have moved to flank me. Doc says, “I assure
you, my friend Goldie is telling you the truth.” Though he
speaks to Sammy, it’s Lily’s face he’s focused on.
“We’ve come from New York,” says Cal. “It’s taken
months to get here, but we got into Chicago just today.” “Yeah?” Sammy says. “And how’d you manage that?” “Uh, walked over the Jackson Street Bridge,” I say.
Sammy’s smile is completely mirthless. “Through the firewall?”
“The what?” Cal asks.
“When we came through,” says Doc, puzzled, “there was only a red haze. Lily, that’s your name, yes?”
She nods.
“Lily, I am a doctor. Forgive me for the observation, but you do not seem well. Are you often tired? Dehydrated?”
Now she looks at Doc as if he’s just offered to raise her from the dead.
“Don’t listen,” Sammy says. “They’re lying. He’s no doctor. And they’re not from outside, there’s no way.”
“Way,” I protest. “Maybe it looks like fire to you, but it looks like cotton candy to me. It’s neither. It’s an illusion. You know-abracadabra, hocus-pocus, magic?”
Doc slides me a bemused look, then draws Lily a little aside.
“Yeah?” says Sammy. “Some illusion. I saw a guy get third-degree burns from your hocus-pocus, bud.”
I feel Cal’s sudden and intense interest like a hot flash. “What did you say? Third-degree…”
“Burns,” repeats Sammy. “You heard me.”
“But outside,” murmurs Lily, still listening. “If there’s really something left outside-”
“Lily, please,” says Doc, his voice gentle. “Do you have pain here?” His hands are equally gentle as he draws her head back around and probes the sides of her neck just below her jaw.
“There’s nothing outside,” says Sammy.
“Says who?”
He looks at me as if I’m speaking in tongues. “Everybody knows, man. It just is.”
It just is. Resignation? Hypnosis? Mass hysteria? “So what do you do here?” Cal asks.
Sammy glances sideways at Lily. “Mostly wait… and starve. While she’s in there. They really don’t give a shit if you go hungry all day while they screw around.”