Brzycki slumps, dead. Lewis is shouting, as if under water, “Nancy, you outta your fuckin’
MIND?” or that’s what Nancy thinks she hears, as she finds herself taking Brzycki’s gun and firing it point-blank into Lewis’s cheek. Lewis huffs out a falsetto vowel of disbelief. Nancy, whom Фshima is suasioning ruthlessly, then finds herself clambering over Holly and onto the passenger seat as Lewis gibbers his last breath. She now cuffs herself to the steering wheel and unlocks the rear doors. As a parting gift, Фshima redacts a broad swath of Nancy’s present perfect and induces unconsciousness before egressing her and ingressing the traumatized Holly. Фshima psychosedates his new host immediately, and I watch Holly in the first person as she puts on her sunglasses, checks her head-wrap, climbs out of the squad car, and calmly walks back up Park Avenue toward the Frick. With a rip of corded feedback Фshima’s voice returns:
Marinus, can you hear me?
I dare feel relief.
Breathtaking,
Ф
shima.
War,subreplies the old warrior,
and now, logistics. We have a retired author in distinctive headgear leaving a patrol car containing two dead fake cops and one living fake cop. Ideas?
Get Holly back here and rejoin your body,I subadvise Фshima.
While you’re doing that, I’ll call L’Ohkna and ask for a catastrophic wipeout of all street cameras on the Upper East Side.
Фshima-in-Holly strides along.
Can that dope fiend do that?
If a way exists, he’ll find it. If no way exists, he’ll make one.
Then what? 119A evidently isn’t the fortress it once was.
Agreed. We’ll go to earth at Unalaq’s. I’ll ask her to come and rescue us. I’m uncording now, see you soon. I open my eyes. My umbrella is still half hiding Фshima’s body and me, but a gray squirrel is sniffing my boot with curiosity. I swivel my foot. The squirrel is gone.
“HOME,” ANNOUNCES UNALAQ. She stops the car level with her front door, next to the Three Lives Bookstore on the corner of Waverly Place and West Tenth Street. Unalaq leaves the hazard lights on and helps me as I guide Holly across the pavement while Фshima stands guard like a monk-assassin. Holly’s still doped from the psychosedation, and we’ve drawn the attention of a tall thin man with a beard and wire-framed glasses. “Hey, Unalaq, is everything okay?”
“All good, Toby,” says Unalaq. “My friend just flew in from Dublin, but she’s terrified of flying, so she took a sleeping pill to knock her out. It worked a bit too well.”
“Sure did. She’s still cruising at twenty thousand feet.”
“Next time she’ll stick with the glass of white, I think.”
“Call down to the shop later. Your books on Sanskrit are in.”
“Will do, Toby, thanks.” Unalaq’s found her keys but Inez has already opened the door. Her face is taut with worry, as if her partner, Unalaq, is the breakable mortal and not her. Inez nods at Фshima and me and peers at Holly’s face with concern.
“She’ll be fine after a few hours’ sleep,” I say.
Inez’s expression says,
I hope you’re right, and she goes to park the car in a nearby underground lot. Unalaq ushers us up the steps, inside, down the hallway, and into the tiny elevator. There’s not enough space for Фshima, who lopes up the stairs. I press up.
A dollar for your thoughts,
subsays Unalaq.
One’s thoughts cost only a penny when I was Yu Leon.
Inflation, shrugs Unalaq, and her hair goes boing.
Could Esther really be alive somewhere inside this head?
I look at Holly’s lined, taut, ergonomic face. She groans like a harried dreamer who can’t wake.
I hope so, Unalaq. If Esther interpreted the Script correctly, then maybe. But I don’t know if I believe
in the Script. Or the Counterscript. I don’t know why Constantin wants Holly dead. Or if Elijah D’Arnoq’s for real. Or if our handling of the Sadaqat issue is wrongheaded.“Truly, I don’t know anything,” I tell my five-hundred-year-old friend.
“At least,” Unalaq blows the end of a strand of copper hair from her nostril, “the Anchorites can’t exploit your overconfidence.”