"Take your bottle and go," O'Beronne shouted, thrusting it into his hands.
Another two decades passed. James drove up in a Mustang convertible and entered the shop. The place reeked of patchouli incense, and Day-Glo posters covered the walls. Racks of demented comic books loomed beside tables littered with hookahs and handmade clay pipes.
Mr. O'Beronne dragged himself from behind a hanging beaded curtain. "You again," he croaked.
"Right on," said James, looking around. "I like the way you've kept the place up to date, man. Groovy."
O'Beronne gave him a poisonous glare. "You're a hundred and forty years old. Hasn't the burden of unnatural life become insupportable?"
James looked at him, puzzled. "Are you kidding?"
"Haven't you learned a lesson about the blessings of mortality? About how it's better not to outlive your own predestined time?"
"Huh?" James said. He shrugged. "I did learn something about material possessions, though... Material things only tie a cat down. You can't have the car this time, it's rented." He dug a hand- stitched leather wallet from his bell-bottom jeans. "I have some fake ID and credit cards." He shook them out over the counter.
Mr. O'Beronne stared unbelieving at the meager loot. "Is this your idea of a joke?"
"Hey, it's all I possess," James said mildly. "I could have bought Xerox at fifteen, back in the '50s. But last time I talked to you, you didn't seem interested. I figured it was like, you know, not the bread that counts, but the spirit of the thing."
Mr. O'Beronne clutched his heart with a liver-spotted hand. "Is this never going to end? Why did I ever leave Europe? They know how to respect a tradition there...." He paused, gathering bile. "Look at this place! It's an insult! Call this a magic shop?" He snatched up a fat mushroom- shaped candle and flung it to the floor.
"You're overwrought," James said. "Look, you're the one who said a bargain's a bargain. There's no need for us to go on with this any longer. I can see your heart's not in it. Why not put me in touch with your wholesaler?"
"Never!" O'Beronne swore. "I won't be beaten by some coldblooded... bookkeeper."
"I never thought of this as a contest," James said with dignity. "Sorry to see you take it that way, man." He picked up his bottle and left.
The allotted time elapsed, and James repeated his pilgrimage to the magic shop. The neighborhood had declined. Women in spandex and net hose lurked on the pavement, watched from the corner by men in broad-brimmed hats and slick polished shoes. James carefully locked the doors of his BMW.
The magic shop's once-curtained windows had been painted over in black. A neon sign above the door read ADULT PEEP 25$.
Inside, the shop's cluttered floor space had been cleared. Shrink-wrapped magazines lined the walls, their fleshy covers glaring under the bluish corpse-light of overhead fluorescents. The old counter had been replaced by a long glass-fronted cabinet displaying knotted whips and flavored lubricants. The bare floor clung stickily to the soles of James's Gucci shoes.
A young man emerged from behind a curtain. He was tall and bony, with a small, neatly trimmed mustache. His smooth skin had a waxy subterranean look. He gestured fluidly. "Peeps in the back," he said in a high voice, not meeting James's eyes. "You gotta buy tokens. Three bucks."
"I beg your pardon?" James said.
"Three bucks, man!"
"Oh." James produced the money. The man handed over a dozen plastic tokens and vanished at once behind the curtains.
"Excuse me?" James said. No answer. "Hello?"
The peep machines waited in the back of the store, in a series of curtained booths. The vinyl cushions inside smelled of sweat and butyl nitrate. James inserted a token and watched.
He then moved to the other machines and examined them as well. He returned to the front of the shop. The shopkeeper sat on a stool, ripping the covers from unsold magazines and watching a small television under the counter.
"Those films," James said. "That was Charlie Chaplin. And Douglas Fairbanks. And Gloria Swanson...."
The man looked up, smoothing his hair. "Yeah, so? You don't like silent films?"
James paused. "I can't believe Charlie Chaplin did porn."
"I hate to spoil a magic trick," the shopkeeper said, yawning. "But they're genuine peeps, pal. You ever hear of Hearst Mansion? San Simeon? Old Hearst, he liked filming his Hollywood guests on the sly. All the bedrooms had spy holes."
"Oh," James said. "I see. Ah, is Mr. O'Beronne in?"
The man showed interest for the first time. "You know the old guy? I don't get many nowadays who knew the old guy. His clientele had pretty special tastes, I hear."
James nodded. "He should be holding a bottle for me."
"Well, I'll check in the back. Maybe he's awake."
The shopkeeper vanished again. He reappeared minutes later with a brownish vial. "Got some love-potion here."
James shook his head. "Sorry, that's not it."
"It's the real stuff, man! Works like you wouldn't believe!" The shopkeeper was puzzled. "You young guys are usually into love-potions. Well, I guess I'll have to rouse the old guy for you. Though I kind of hate to disturb him."
Long minutes passed, with distant rustling and squeaking. Finally the shopkeeper backed through the curtains, tugging a wheelchair. Mr. O'Beronne sat within it, wrapped in bandages, his wrinkled head shrouded in a dirty nightcap. "Oh," he said at last. "So it's you again."
"Yes, I've returned for my--"
"I know, I know." Mr. O'Beronne stirred fitfully on his cushions. "I see you've met my... associate. Mr. Ferry."
"I kind of manage the place, these days," said Mr. Ferry. He winked at James, behind Mr. O'Beronne's back.
"I'm James Abernathy," James said. He offered his hand.
Ferry folded his arms warily. "Sorry, I never do that."
O'Beronne cackled feebly and broke into a fit of coughing. "Well, my boy," he said finally, "I was hoping I'd last long enough to see you one more time... Mr. Ferry! There's a crate, in the back, under those filthy movie posters of yours...."
"Sure, sure," Ferry said indulgently. He left.
"Let me look at you," said O'Beronne. His eyes, in their dry, leaden sockets, had grown quite lizardlike. "Well, what do you think of the place? Be frank."
"It's looked better," James said. "So have you."
"But so has the world, eh?" O'Beronne said. "He does bang-up business, young Ferry. You should see him manage the books...." He waved one hand, its tiny knuckles warped with arthritis. "It's such a blessing, not to have to care anymore."
Ferry reappeared, lugging a wooden crate, crammed with dusty six-packs of pop-top aluminum cans. He set it gently on the counter.
Every can held Youthing Water. "Thanks," James said, his eyes widening. He lifted one pack reverently, and tugged at a can.
"Don't," O'Beronne said. "This is for you, all of it. Enjoy it, son. I hope you're satisfied."
James lowered the cans, slowly. "What about our arrangement?"
O'Beronne's eyes fell, in an ecstasy of humiliation. "I humbly apologize. But I simply can't keep up our bargain any longer. I don't have the strength, you see. So this is yours now. It's all I could find."
"Yeah, this must be pretty much the last of it," nodded Ferry, inspecting his nails. "It hasn't moved well for some time -- I figure the bottling plant shut up shop."
"So many cans, though...."James said thoughtfully. He produced his wallet. "I brought a nice car for you, outside...."
"None of that matters now," said Mr. O'Beronne. "Keep all of it, just consider it my forfeit." His voice fell. "I never thought it would come to this, but you've beaten me, I admit it. I'm done in." His head sagged limply.
Mr. Ferry took the wheelchair's handles. "He's tired now," he said soothingly. "I'll just wheel him back out of our way, here...." He held the curtains back and shoved the chair through with his foot. He turned to James. "You can take that case and let yourself out. Nice doing business -- goodbye." He nodded briskly.