Since there were so few visitors the vendors and the shopkeepers descended upon them immediately and began hounding them for their custom. She saw that though most booths had an Eastern look about them, more than a few of the vendors were as white as she. Garvey took out his wallet to pay, fumbling with his badge as he did so, and as soon as the light found the glint of his shield the vendors all calmed somewhat, and some disappeared entirely. He sneaked Samantha a sly grin, and then purchased some sweet, crackly honey cakes and strange, spiced meats on wooden skewers, and paper cups of soup with vegetables and fruits of many colors. They drank spiced wine as they walked through the subterranean marketplace, Garvey ducking through the lanterns as they moved, and he showed her many strange goods and services that could only be found here, or possibly at the shore, he said.
She nodded, believing him entirely. She felt suddenly that Garvey knew the city better than any other living soul, and though to her it offered only lonely, scarred alleyways and skies of gray smoke, for Garvey it behaved differently. He could sweep aside all the loneliness and the struggle and find gems and wonders hidden among its many crooks and niches. He knew its subtle joys and eccentricities as one would know an old, wayward friend. And as he showed her each oddity, rich or poor, tasteful or gaudy, she saw in his eyes that he truly loved this place, this anomalous city on the edge of the world, a hodgepodge of towns and technologies and peoples that should not ever be.
They ascended to find the streets had emptied of cars and a light rain was falling. One by one the street lamps flickered on with an angelic hum, filling the streets with pearly light.
“Sometimes I think this city has a voice,” said Garvey as they walked.
“What does it say?” she asked.
Garvey thought for a long while as they walked back to her apartment. He finally said, “That it’s dying.”
“Dying?”
He nodded.
Samantha thought about this. It seemed an impossible notion after he’d shown her so many colorful veins in the city, still alive and thriving. “Dying of what?” she asked.
“Of itself. Under its own weight. And when it’s done, more than Evesden will hurt.”
“How do you mean?”
He kicked at a pebble in the gutter. “You remember what almost happened in Europe?”
“Yes, of course.”
“Yeah. All those bastards out there are just waiting to get at each other’s throats. The only thing that keeps them from doing it is McNaughton, because the second a shot gets fired, they turn off the tap. No more airships, no more telephones. It’d be bad for commerce. I don’t like your company, Miss Fairbanks, but they’ve made a peace, of a very tense and bastardly sort.”
“You can call me Samantha. And I’m aware of the agreement that was laid down after the Crisis.”
“Yeah. I should have figured that. I’m just venting. Samantha,” he added.
“I know. What do you think we can do?” she asked.
He sniffed, thinking. “We just hope we catch this goddamn killer and end this union nonsense in the cleanest way possible, I guess. It wouldn’t be a victory. And I don’t know if it’d be easy to live with. McNaughton would just keep doing what they’re doing. But it’d keep the blood to a minimum. I hope.”
They came to her apartment and the porter tipped his hat to her. She waved back.
“What time is it?” asked Garvey, searching for his watch.
“It’s half past eight.”
“Hum. Well. Thanks for the dinner.”
“But you paid,” she said.
“I can still thank you, can’t I?”
“I suppose. For going to a Newton restaurant?”
“For having an excuse. Yeah.”
She nodded. “Have you ever seen a Newton apartment?”
Garvey stared at her, dumbstruck. Then he quickly recovered and said, “No. Never have.”
“Would you like to?”
He stepped back and looked up the face of the apartment building. “It’s awful tall.”
“It’s a long way up. But it goes by fast.”
They took the elevator up and she led him to her apartment. It did not yet feel like home to her, but it was a warm, dark place, with honey walls and a carpet a deep shade of red. Yet everything was covered in papers, every surface stacked with khaki reports and files, reams of parchment and miles of writing. She felt she should have cared about this, and wanted to clean up, but that urge was strangely absent.
“You take your work home, huh?” Garvey asked.
“I do.”
She walked over to a cupboard, where she pulled out a bottle of port and poured two glasses without asking. He walked to the balcony and looked out at the buildings across, their faces spectral and luminescent in the night.
“You know, some people would have a thing or two to say about a divorced man being unaccompanied in a woman’s apartment,” he said.
“You’re divorced?” she asked.
“Oh,” he said, sheepish. “Yeah. Yeah, I am.”
“I didn’t know that.”
He nodded.
“People would probably have a lot more to say about you being divorced,” she said, bringing him a glass.
“Yeah. They probably would.”
“But this is the twentieth century, and this is the city of the future, isn’t it?” She sat beside where he stood and crossed her legs. As she did her dress rode up, revealing most of her calf, and the tips of her toes brushed the back of Garvey’s knees.
“I guess.” Suddenly he seemed to falter, and he looked at the glass in his hands, then up at her. “Think this is a good idea?”
“What is?” she asked.
He didn’t say anything. Just stood there handling the little glass of wine.
“Oh,” she said. She blinked and sat up. “I… I suppose I didn’t really think about it.”
“This could fuck a whole lot of stuff up.”
She sighed and put down her glass. “It could, couldn’t it.”
“Yeah.”
They were quiet for a long while, their drinks untouched. Then Garvey said, “It’s snowing.”
They rose and went to the balcony. Small white flakes were spinning down through the air to the street. It looked nothing like the show at the club. Currents formed between the buildings and they could see where the air turned into waves and horns and spheres and slants. As if the atmosphere itself were made of clockwork, telling time or some glyphic truth to only those who would look up and watch. Or perhaps the message was meant for something else. To something external. Invisible and waiting.
“Look,” said Samantha, and pointed up to the tops of the buildings. They could just make out the conduits sitting on the edge of the building crowns, fat and black and round, like strange rooftop fruit. Steam poured out of the cracks in their housing in thin strings that whipped wildly in the flurries.
“They say they glow blue when a storm comes near,” said Samantha.
“I’ve heard that. It’s not true.”
“No?”
“No. But if it’s a really bad storm they will dance and wriggle. And get fucking hot.”
They watched as a small airship trundled down out of the sky and made a slow pass of the rooftops. A spotlight stabbed down and illuminated the conduits for a moment before blinking out. The little ship had to fight the wind and they watched as it nosed along the rooftops, furiously trying to make its way, like a beetle caught in the ocean tide.
“Checking the conduits,” he said. “This must be the first part of a pretty bad one, then.”
“It must be.”
“I suppose I should go.”
“I suppose so.”
He moved away and said, “I had fun tonight.”
“I did, too.”
“Can I see you again?”
She looked at him. “I thought it wasn’t smart.”
He shrugged. His face was painfully motionless.
“I suppose it couldn’t hurt, could it,” she said.
“No,” he said. They went to the front door and she let him out and he bade her goodbye and went back down to his car. She watched from the balcony as he crossed the street. He stopped before the car door, as though struck by a thought, and she wished he would look up at her. But he did not, and climbed into his car, and drove away.