Kelly was yanking him up out of the water, which washed sluggishly across the floor of the joker's body. Air. Gulp it down, taste it, revel in the cool rush that filled his starved and aching lungs. Molly unlocked the shackles. They were cheering, laughing, suddenly he was captured in their embrace. A ten-headed animal with twenty arms holding and- caressing him. Blaise realized he was, crying and he couldn't figure out why. But it must have been okay because several other jumpers were crying, too.
Blaise became aware of a mental barrier. It whispered of terror, death, loss, loneliness. He blocked it. The jumpers were shifting nervously. Molly soothed them with a constant soft murmur.
"Just a little more. Almost there."
"What the fuck is that?" asked Blaise. "Bloat," came the terse reply.
Kent suddenly jumped to his feet. He was whispering as he shuffled toward one moist gelatinous wall. Blaise grabbed his wrist, forced him down next to him.
"Sit down! You can take it. It's just a stupid mind power. And a pretty wimpy one at that."
The jumpers were regarding him with awe. All except Molly. She looked pissed.
"No wonder the Prime wanted you," breathed Kelly. "Who's the Prime?"
Bolt tersely replied, "You'll find out. Someday. Maybe." Charon gave a little lurch as if all the thousands of cilia had pushed against the muddy bed of the river. They were rising. Water cascaded off Charon's back. They had arrived.
Once on shore, Blaise folded his arms across his chest and gazed across Ellis Island. The trees covered it like spikes on a dinosaur's back, and above the shadowy foliage loomed massive buildings topped with turrets and fanciful cupolas. It reminded Blaise of the Takisian fairy tales Tachyon used to tell. Lost kingdoms that existed only in the clouds and mist. Elaborate palaces that lured a man to explore their treasuries and ballrooms only to fall to his death with the sunrise.
But it wasn't a palace. It wasn't even livable. At least Blaise didn't think so. They had led him through the darkness to the main immigration center, and now they stood in one of the side rooms. There were, a couple of cots, and twenty or thirty sleeping bags. Some were rolled like somnolent caterpillars against the walls, others were spread out on the stained and buckled tile floor. Candy wrappers, crumpled snack-chip sacks, empty Vienna sausage cans littered the room and formed junk drifts in the corners.
Gray-green paint peeled like a bad sunburn from the wooden walls. High overhead, filthy windows barely indicated the presence of a waxing moon. Some were broken, the shattered glass like jagged fangs embedded in petrified jaws.
"Pick a place," said Molly with a broad, gracious sweep of the arm.
"Do I get a sleeping bag?" asked Blaise.
"You can share mine," offered Kelly as she sidled up next to hirn. "Until we can get one for you," she hastened to add, wilting a bit under his cold stare.
"Better rest, Blaisy Daisy," said Molly. "You're gonna need it."
Blaise pivoted slowly to face her. "Don't… ever… call me that
… again."
Arms militantly akimbo, Molly sneered in a singsong tone, "Or what?"
"I'll kill you."
The matter-of-fact tone left the girl gaping. She suddenly recalled herself. The watching jumpers, eyes bright like a hunting rat pack, eagerly waiting for the fight. Molly tossed her head and laughed.
"You'can try, Blai-" The word cut off and she whirled and exited.
"She's a quick learner. I like that in a slit."
The boys laughed. The girls shifted uncomfortably and exchanged glances.
Yes, Blaise decided. This was fun.
The lights made interesting effects on her face. At times it seemed as still as a white marble effigy. At others it was soft and vulnerable.
Tach hugged his briefcase to his chest. Winced as a bus released its air brakes with a sound like a dying pig. "This was not necessary. Riggs could have driven me."
"I wanted to," said Cody.
She drove as smoothly as she did everything else. No wasted movement, hands lightly gripping the wheel, the tiniest wrist movements as she wove through the beltway traffic.
" I wanted to make sure you got on that plane," she continued, and Tach forced himself back from a rapt contemplation of her hands.
"I'm not going to collapse from a broken nose."
"It's not your health that concerns me."
"Thank you." A little ironic and she caught it. She cocked her head to get a better look at him out of her one eye. "Should you be driving?" Tachyon suddenly asked.
"Little late to worry now. And as for the plane. I was afraid you'd take it into your head to go looking for Blaise, and frankly, funding the clinic is a hell of a lot more important."
"You can be very cold."
"No, I just know when to cut my losses."
The cars up ahead suddenly braked and the red flare of their taillights punctuated and underscored Tach's sharp reply. "I don't think he's a loss!"
"Then you're a delusional fool."
Tachyon dropped his head briefly into his hand. "All right, I don't want to think that."
Cody spun the wheel and they shot up the ramp and under a sign marked DEPARTING PASSENGERS.
"Better. God damn it, Tachyon, in maybe twenty or thirty years I'll have you past the guilt, out of the wallow of self-pity, and you'll have figured out when to shut up."
"Thank heaven I'm a big enough man to listen to this catalog of my flaws."
Cody's eye raked his diminutive form. "Well, your ego is big enough to handle it."
"I'm also highly encouraged."
"By what?"
"That you are willing to devote your life to the reclamation of my mind, body, and spirit."
The seat belt nearly cut Tach in half as Cody slammed on the brakes in front of the terminal.
"I don't think my original statement went quite that way."
"It was implicit."
Tach closed the prosthetic hand around the handle and pushed open the door. Cody moved to the trunk and pulled out his two big suitcases.
"How long are you going to be gone?" she asked. "Three days."
"You've got enough here for a round-the-world cruise."
"But, my dear, one must dress."
He was smiling bravely up at her, but inside he suddenly felt like he was filled with broken glass. Tears sprang to his eyes, and he muttered a curse.
Cody laid her hands on his shoulders. "What is it? You look stricken."
"I don't know. Nothing." Tach shook his head. "I am suddenly just so very, very unhappy."
For a long moment she looked at him, then bending down, she placed a soft feather-light kiss at the corner of his mouth. Tachyon stared at her in amazement.
"Smile for me, kid," she said, a crooked smile curving her own lips.
Tachyon burst out, "Cody, come with me to Washington."
"What? You're crazy. I've got no ticket, I don't have any luggage, what about my kid-" She paused for breath. "And who's going to run the clinic?"
People were shouldering past them as the couple blocked the automatic doors into the terminal.
"Please, I am frightened for you."
"I'll holler if I need you."
"It will be too far to come."
"You're hysterical. It's the pain pills talking."
"Cody, he means to harm us."
"Do you or don't you want me to call the police and have them search for Blaise?"
"No." Tach stared seriously up at her. "For if he's found, I shall surely have to kill him."
When you're stark naked and dressed only in a scarlet robe that had obviously been ripped off from some local Episcopalian church choir, you can feel like a real dork.
Add to that the fact that nerves were giving Blaise the most amazing hard-on it had ever been his pleasure to experience. Or maybe he just got off on big black candles and a droning tape of Tibetan monastery chants, he thought ironically as Molly led him into the dark, echoing room. Molly glanced down at his penis thrusting aggressively from between the folds of his gown, and grinned. "You're gonna do just fine," she muttered as if to herself, but intending for Blaise to hear.