"Okay," the gun says. "A red car."
"Okay," the mouth says.
I couldn't be more not excited. I say, Just give me the miracle.
And Fertility gives me the miracle. The biggest miracle of my career.
And she's right.
And there will be chaos.
There will be complete pandemonium.
At eleven o'clock the next morning, the agent is still alive.
The agent's alive at eleven-ten and at eleven-fifteen.
The agent's alive at eleven-thirty and eleven forty-five.
At eleven-fifty, the events coordinator chauffeurs me from the hotel to the stadium.
With everyone always around us, the coordinators and reps and managers, I can't ask the agent if he's brought a bottle of Truth, The Fragrance, and when he plans to sniff it next. I can't just tell him not to sniff any cologne today. That it's poison. That the brother I don't have and that I've never seen has got into the agent's luggage and set a trap. Every time I see the agent, every time he disappears into the bathroom or I have to turn my back for a minute, it could be the last time I see him.
It's not that I love the agent that much. I can easily enough picture myself at his funeral, what I'd wear, what I'd say in eulogy. Giggling. Then I see Fertility and me doing the Argentine Tango on his grave.
I just don't want to be on trial for mass murder.
It's what the caseworker would call an approach/avoidance situation.
Whatever I say about cologne, the entourage will repeat to the police if he turns up choked to death.
At four-thirty, we're backstage at the stadium with the folding tables and catered food and the rented wardrobe, the tuxes and the wedding dress hanging on racks, and the agent is still alive and asking me what I plan to proclaim as my big half time miracle.
I'm not telling.
"But is it big?" the agent wants to know.
It's big.
It's big enough to make every man in this stadium want to kick my ass.
The agent looks at me, one eyebrow raised, frowning.
The miracle I have is so big it will take every policeman in this city to keep the crowds from killing me. I don't tell the agent that. I don't say how that's the idea. The police will have their hands so full keeping me alive, they won't be able to arrest me for murder. I don't tell the agent that part.
At five o'clock, the agent is still alive, and I'm getting strapped into a white tuxedo with a white bow tie. The justice of the peace comes up and tells me everything is under control. All I have to do is breathe in and out.
The bride comes over in her wedding dress, rubbing petroleum jelly up and down her ring finger, and says, "My name is Laura."
This isn't the girl who was in the limo from the day before.
"That was Trisha," the bride says. Trisha got sick so Laura is being her understudy. It's okay. I'll still be married to Trisha even though she's not here. Trisha is the one the agent still wants.
Laura says, "The cameras won't know." She's wearing a veil.
People are eating the food brought in by the caterer. Near the steel doors that open onto the sidelines, people from the florist are ready to hustle the altar out onto the football field. The candelabras. The bowers covered with white silk flowers. Roses and peonies and white sweet peas and stock, all of them brittle and sticky with hair spray to keep them stiff. The armload of silk bouquet for the bride to carry is silk gladioli and white poly-silk dahlias and tulips trailing yards of white silk honeysuckle.
All of it looks beautiful and real if you're far enough away.
The field lights are bright, the makeup artist says, and gives me a huge red mouth.
At six o'clock, the Super Bowl begins. It's football. It's the Cardinals against the Colts.
Five minutes into the first quarter, it's Colts six, Cardinals zero, and the agent is still alive.
Near the steel doors that open into the stadium are the altar boys and bridesmaids dressed as angels, flirting and smoking cigarettes.
With the Colts on their forty-yard line, it's their second down and six, and the post-event scheduler is briefing me how I'll spend my honeymoon on a seventeen-city tour to promote the books, the games, the dashboard statuette. Founding my own major world religion isn't out of the picture. A world tour is in the works now that the pesky question about my having sex is covered. The plan includes goodwill tours to Europe, Japan, China, Australia, Singapore, South Africa, Argentina, the British Virgin Islands, and New Guinea, with me getting back to the United States in time to see my first child born.
Just so there's nothing left to guesswork, the coordinator tells me the agent has taken certain liberties to make sure my wife will have our first child at the end of my nine-month tour.
Long-range planning calls for my wife to have six, maybe seven children, a model Creedish family.
The events coordinator says I won't have to lift a finger.
This will be immaculate conception, as far as I'm involved.
The field lights are way too bright, the makeup artist says, and smears my cheeks with red.
At the end of the first quarter, the agent comes by to make me sign some papers. Profit-sharing documents, the agent tells me. The party known as Tender Branson, to be hereafter known as The Victim, grants the party hereafter known as The Agent the power to receive and distribute all monies payable to the Tender Branson Media and Merchandising Syndicate, including but not limited to book sales, broadcast programming, artwork, live performances, and cosmetics, namely men's cologne.
"Sign here," the agent says.
And here.
Here.
And here.
Someone is pinning a white rose to my lapel. Someone is on his knees shining my shoes. The makeup artist is still blending.
The agent now owns the copyright to my image. And my name.
It's the end of the first quarter with the game tied seven to seven, and the agent's still alive.
The personal fitness trainer needles me with 10 cc's of adrenaline to put some sparkle in my eyes.
The senior events coordinator says all I have to do is walk the fifty-yard line out to where the wedding party is standing in the center of the stadium. The bride will walk in from the opposing side. We'll all of us be standing on a platform of wooden boxes with five thousand white doves hidden underneath. The audio for the ceremony was all prerecorded in a studio, so that's what the audience will hear. I don't have to say a word until my prediction.
When I step on a switch hidden by my foot, that will release the doves. Walk. Talk. Doves. It's a cinch.
The wardrobe supervisor announces that we need to use the corset to get the silhouette we're after and tells me to hurry and strip in front of everybody. The angels, the staff, the caterers, the florist people. The agent. Now. Everything except my shorts and socks. Now. The wardrobe supervisor stands with the rubber-and-wire torture of the corset ready for me to step into, and says here's my last chance to take a leak for the next three hours.
"You wouldn't have to wear that monster," the agent tells me, "if you could keep the weight off."
It's four minutes into the second quarter and nobody can find the wedding ring.
The agent blames the events coordinator blames the wardrobe supervisor blames the properties manager blames the jeweler who was supposed to donate a ring in return for advertising time on the blimp circling the stadium. Outside, the blimp is going around the sky flashing the jeweler's name. Inside the agent is threatening to sue for breach of contract and trying to radio the blimp.
The events coordinator is telling me, "Fake the ring."
They'll have the cameras do a head-and-shoulders on me and the bride. Just fake putting a ring on Trisha's finger.
The bride says she's not Trisha.
"And remember," the coordinator says, "just mouth the words, it's all prerecorded."
It's nine minutes into the second quarter and the agent is still alive and yelling into his phone.