Year's Best Scifi 7

Chapter 41

"All right," the manager repeated. "I"ve blocked this phone so it won"t make long distance calls. Tounblock it, you"d have to have my pa.s.sword."

"I didn"t know you could do that," Jay said.

"Sure. You want out of the deal?"

Jay shook his head.

"Okay, you"ve got the place for half an hour. Longer if you need it, only not past three-thirty. Okay?"



"Okay."

The manager paused at the door. "There"s a booth out here. You know about that?"

Jay nodded. "It won"t accept incoming calls."

"You let them take calls and the dealers hang around and won"t let anybody use it. You a dealer?"

Jay shook his head.

"I didn"t think so." The manager shut the door.

One oh two eight. Seven seven seven three. Oh three two oh. Three rings as before, and the image of the heavyset redhead appeared. "h.e.l.lo. I"m not here right now, but if you"ll leave a message at the tone I"ll call you back as soon as I can."

The tone sounded.

"This is Skeeter again," Jay said. "I"ve got money, and Kincaid said you and I could do some business." He recited the number from the base of the manager"s phone. "If you can give me what I want, this is going to be a nice profitable deal for you." Hoping that she would not, he added, "Ask Kincaid,"

and hung up.

He had slept in a bod mod at the Greyhound station, had left his scant luggage in a storage locker; that luggage was worth nothing, and seemed unlikely to furnish clues to his whereabouts when a criminal gang came looking for him and his hundred thousand.

The forty-five minutes Smith had mentioned had come and gone. His image had appeared in the Studio and millions of houses and apartments.

They might be looking for him already-at the bus station, at the Studio, at any other place they could think of. At the MacKann woman"s.

The phone rang and he picked it up. "Skeeter."

"This"s Jane, Skeeter." The loose shirt was the same, but the dark skirt had given way to Jeens, and her hair was pulled back by a clip. "Kincaid said to call me?"

"That"s right," Jay told her. "He said we might be able to do business, and he gave me your number."

"He must be getting to be a big boy now, that Kincaid."

"He"s bigger than I am," Jay said truthfully.

"How old is Kincaid these days anyway?"

"Nineteen."

"He gave you my address? Or was it just this number?"

"He gave me an address," Jay said carefully. "I can"t say whether it"s right or not. Have you moved recently?"

"What is it?"

Jay hesitated. "All right to read it over the phone?"

"I don"t see why not."

The door opened, and the manager looked in. Jay waved him away.

"What address did he give you?"

Kaydee Nineteen"s paper lay on the desk. Jay held it up so the small woman seated above the telephone could read it.

"The print"s too small," she told him. "You"ll have to say it."

"It doesn"t bother you?"

"Why should it?"

Jay sighed. "I don"t know. When I was in college, I used to play chess. Now I feel like I"m playing chess again and I"ve forgotten how." He reversed the slip of paper. "Building Eighteen, Unit Eight in the Greentree Gardens?"

"That"s it. When will you be here?" The black raincoat had slits above its pockets that let Jay reach the pockets of the camouflage hunting coat under it. Extracting a bill, he held it up. "Can you read this?"

"Sure."

"I"ll give it to you if you"ll pick me up. You"ve seen me and how I"m dressed. I"ll be in that little park at the corner of Sixth and Fortieth."

"No," she said.

"I"ll be there, and I"ll buy. I"ll pay you this just for the ride." He hung up, rose, and left the store, waving to the manager.

There was a hotel down the street; he went in and stood at the front desk, a vast affair of bronze and marble. After five minutes a black woman in a transparent plastic blouse asked, "You checkin" in?"

"I"d like to." Jay laid two hundreds on the counter.

"We can"t take those." She eyed them as though they were snakes. "Got a credit card?"

Jay shook his head.

"You got no bags either."

Jay did not deny it.

"You can"t check in here."

He indicated the hundreds. "I"ll pay in advance."

The black woman lowered her voice. "They don"t let us take anybody like you, even if you got two dots."

In a department store a block away, Jay cornered a clerk. "I want a lightweight bag, about this long."

The clerk yawned. "Three feet, sir?"

"More than that." Jay separated his hands a bit.

The clerk (who probably called himself an a.s.sociate) shook his head and turned away.

"Three and a half, anyway. Forty-two inches."

"Soft-sided?" The clerk clearly hoped Jay would say no.

"Sure," Jay said, and smiled.

"Wait right here." Briefly, the clerk"s fingers drummed the top of a four-suiter. "I"ll be gone a while, you know?"

Jay removed his slouch hat and wiped his forehead with his fingers. The hat had been a comfort in the chill air of the street, but the store was warm.

None of the milling shoppers nearby were giving him any attention, as far as he could judge; but, of course, they would not. If he was being watched, it would be by someone some distance away, or by an electronic device of some kind. Looking around for the device, he found three cameras, none obtrusive but none even cursorily concealed. City cops, store security, and somebody else-for a minute or two Jay tried to think who the third watchers might be,-but no speculation seemed plausible.

Men"s Wear was next to Luggage. He wandered over.

"What do you want?" The clerk was young and scrawny and looked angry.

With your build, you"d better be careful, Jay thought; but he kept the reflection to himself. Aloud he said, "I had to buy this raincoat in a hurry. I thought I might get a better one here."

"Black?"

Jay shook his head. "Another color. What"ve you got?"

"Blue and green, okay?"

"Green," Jay decided, "if it"s not too light."

The clerk stamped over to a rack and held up a coat. "Lincoln green. Okay?"

"Okay," Jay said.

"Only if you turn it inside out, it"s navy. See?"

Jay took the coat from him and examined it "There are slits over the pockets. I like that."

"Same pockets for both colors," the clerk sounded as if he hoped that would kill the sale.

"I"ll take it."

The clerk glanced at a tag. "Large-tall. Okay?" "Okay," Jay said again.

"You want a bag?"

Jay nodded. A stout plastic bag might prove useful.

The clerk was getting one when the clerk from Luggage returned. He frowned until Jay hurried over.

"This"s what we call a wheeled duffel," the luggage clerk explained. "You got a handle there. You can carry it, or you got this handle here that pops out, and wheels on the other end. Forty-four inches, the biggest we"ve got. You got a store card?"

"Cash," Jay told him.

"You want a card? Ten percent off if you take it."

Jay shook his head.

"Up to you. Hear about that guy with all the cash?"

Jay shook his head again. "What guy?"

"On holo. They gave him a wad so somebody"ll rip him off. Only they see what he sees, so I don"t think it"s going to work. They"d have a description."

"They see what he sees?"

"Sure," the clerk said. "It"s his augment, you know? Anytime he sees you they see you."

"Can they spy on people like that?"

"They don"t give a rat"s a.s.s," the clerk said.

The angry Men"s Wear clerk had vanished. Jay"s new reversible raincoat lay on a counter in a plastic bag. He unzipped his new wheeled duffel and put the raincoat inside.

Outside it was growing dark; beggars wielding plastic broomhandles and pieces of conduit were working the shopping crowd, shouting threats at anyone who appeared vulnerable.

The little park was an oasis of peace by comparison. Jay sat down on a bench, the wheeled duffel between his knees, and waited. Traffic crawled past, largely invisible behind the hurrying, steam-breathing pedestrians. Some of the drivers looked as angry as the Men"s Wear clerk; but most were empty-faced, resigned to driving their cubical vanettes and hulking CUVs at four miles per hour or less.

"Ain"t you cold?" An old man with a runny nose had taken the other end of Jay"s bench.

Jay shook his head.

"I am. I"m d.a.m.ned cold."

Jay said nothing.

"They got shelters down there," the old man pointed, "ta keep us off the streets. Only you get ripped off soon"s you go to sleep. Right. An" they don"t give you nothin" ta eat, either. So if you was ta give me somethin", I could get me somethin" an" go down there an" sleep without bein" hungry. Right."

"You could get a bottle of wine, too," Jay said.

"They won"t sell it "less you got the card." The old man was silent for a moment, sucking almost toothless gums. "Only you"re c"rect, I"d like to."