Part 34 (1/2)
Jack and Bagabond had stopped at a Terrific Pizza for takeout drinks. Both of them were parched. ”Your syrup's low,” said Jack to the counterman. He grimaced at the taste of his drink.
”Tough t.i.tty,” said the counterman. ”You don't like it, try the immigrant soda jerk down the block.”
”Let's go,” said Bagabond, mentally urging six hundred rats from the alley in back to slip into the back of the Terrific Pizza and check out the dough and cheese storage.
Out on the sidewalk, Jack said, ”Oh my G.o.d!”
”What's wrong?”
”Come on.” Jack led her toward the snake dancers. The line had started to break up. Apparently misshapen dancers, some of whom wore even more grotesque costumes, straggled toward them.
Jack confronted one of the dancers. The man was tall and dark, skin virtually blue-black in the mercury-vapor glare and the flickering fire-scatter. He wore a parody of tribal gear, beads and feathers in profusion. His skin was covered with a sheen of sweat. The droplets running down his face, however, were beads of blood from slashes run-nelled into his cheeks. The slashes were cut in regular chevrons, slanting down along the planes of his cheekbones. His eyes were infinitely deep caverns ringed by white makeup.
He wore a red Bozo the Clown nose.
”Dieu!” Jack said. ”Jean-Jacques? Is it you?”
The dancer stopped and stared at Jack. Bagabond came up to them and watched.
”You recognized me,” said Jean-Jacques sadly. ”I am sorry, my friend. Now that I am not human, I thought no one would know who I am.”
”I recognize you.” Jack reached out tentatively, checked the motion. ”Your face-what have you done?”
”Do I not look more like a joker?”
”You're not a joker,” said Jack. ”You are my friend. You are ill, but you are my friend.”
”I am a joker,” said Jean-Jacques firmly. ”I have a sentence of death laid across me.”
Jack stared at him mutely.
The black man looked back at him, then brushed the tips of his fingers across Jack's face. The motion was fleeting and tender. Others of the dance line had gathered around them. Jack saw they were all normals dressed in outlandish garb, some bright and desperately garish, others muted and more subtly grotesque.
”Good-bye, friend Jack. I shall miss you.” Jean-Jacques turned away and started to chant the letters, ”H, T, L, V!” The others took it up: ”H, T, L, V!” roared along the street.
”HTLV?” Bagabond said to Jack as the pair stood there while Jean-Jacques and the other dancers whirled frenetically away.
”The AIDS virus,” said Jack flatly.
”Oh.” Bagabond looked at him strangely. ”Jean-Jacques-that's his name?”
Jack nodded.
”You and he? . . .”
”Friends,” said Jack. ”Very good friends.”
”More than just friends?” than just friends?”
He nodded.
”We need to talk,” said Bagabond. ”We'll talk when this is over.”
”I'm sorry,” said Jack, starting to turn away.
”For what?” She took his arm again. ”Come on. I mean it. We'll talk.” She reached up and touched him as Jean-Jacques had. His face was rough with stubble. ”Come on,” she said again. ”We've still got to find Cordelia.”
Their eyes met. Each thought, things things are are going going to to be be different different now now. But neither knew just how.
The shower was hot, but that was the way Spector liked it. The water spattered off him and ran down his thin body. He opened his mouth and let it fill up, then swished the water around and spat it out. His foot still hurt, but he was used to pain. At least it was clean now.
He turned off the shower and walked across the cold tile floor to the locker area, still favoring his foot. He whistled the beginning of ”Take Me Out to the Ballgame,” then stopped. The sound echoed off the walls. The locker room was less impressive than he'd expected. Plain showers and lockers; wooden benches to sit on. Not that different from high school.
He walked over to a basket filled with dirty baseball uniforms and started sorting through them, looking for something close to his size. Most of it was much too big and he hated pinstripes. Better than his shot-up suit, though. If anybody asked, he could just say he was in costume. He managed to find a uniform that didn't fit him like a tent and got dressed.
He wandered into the equipment room, past the caged-off s.p.a.ce that held bats and gloves and beat-up practice b.a.l.l.s, into the trainer's area. He picked an elastic bandage off the floor. Spector took a breath, then started wrapping his broken half-foot. He had to stop twice, it hurt so much, but after a few minutes he had it fairly well covered. He put his foot down and s.h.i.+fted a little weight onto it. A sharp pain ran up his leg, but he could stand that. He walked back toward the dressing area, trying to limp as little as possible.
Spector dug out a pair of tennis shoes and shoved a sock in the end of the one, then painfully slipped his mangled half-foot in. He tied the laces loosely and slipped on the other shoe.
”Outside, Demise. Right now. I'm waiting.”
Spector looked up. The Astronomer's image was floating a few feet in front of him. The projection didn't have the normal knife-edge clarity Spector was used to. It was faint, colorless, and ghosted around the edges. The old f.u.c.k must be low on power.
”Where are you, uh, exactly?” Spector asked.
”In the parking lot. Look for the limo. I want you now now.”
”On my way.”
The Astronomer's image vanished.
Spector picked up his suit and headed for the exit. He rubbed his forehead. The old man's energy was down; if he was going to do anything now was the time. He flipped off the lights in the locker room and started whistling ”The Party's Over.”
CHAPTER 20.
1:00 a.m. a.m.
The limo was running low on gas and Jennifer could see that Brennan was running low on patience. An hour had pa.s.sed and they had seen no sign of anyone who might be Demise carrying the books. They had seen plenty of suspicious and strange and downright weird sights, but nothing that was of any use to them.
”We might as well forget it,” Brennan said. He checked his watch. ”I want to get some equipment that's at my apartment. Then we can plan our next move.”
As they headed toward Jokertown the streets became even more crowded with late-night revelers.