<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2199471594749562374</id><updated>2011-04-21T18:20:56.866-07:00</updated><category term='Short Stories'/><title type='text'>Reader's Paradise</title><subtitle type='html'></subtitle><link rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#feed' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://readers-zone.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/2199471594749562374/posts/default?max-results=100'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://readers-zone.blogspot.com/'/><link rel='hub' href='http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/'/><author><name>Dharam</name><uri>http://www.blogger.com/profile/03857848683920887553</uri><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><generator version='7.00' uri='http://www.blogger.com'>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>2</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>100</openSearch:itemsPerPage><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2199471594749562374.post-1239541386858958445</id><published>2009-04-21T01:46:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2009-04-21T01:59:54.303-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town</title><content type='html'>&lt;span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town&lt;br /&gt;Cory Doctorow&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Alan sanded the house on Wales Avenue. It took six months, and the whole time it&lt;br /&gt;was the smell of the sawdust, ancient and sweet, and the reek of chemical stripper&lt;br /&gt;and the damp smell of rusting steel wool.&lt;br /&gt;Alan took possession of the house on January 1, and paid for it in full by means&lt;br /&gt;of an e-gold transfer. He had to do a fair bit of hand-holding with the realtor to&lt;br /&gt;get her set up and running on e-gold, but he loved to do that sort of thing, loved&lt;br /&gt;to sit at the elbow of a novitiate and guide her through the clicks and taps and&lt;br /&gt;forms. He loved to break off for impromptu lectures on the underlying principles&lt;br /&gt;of the transaction, and so he treated the poor realtor lady to a dozen addresses&lt;br /&gt;on the nature of international currency markets, the value of precious metal as a&lt;br /&gt;kind of financial lingua franca to which any currency could be converted, the&lt;br /&gt;poetry of vault shelves in a hundred banks around the world piled with the&lt;br /&gt;heaviest of metals, glinting dully in the fluorescent tube lighting, tended by&lt;br /&gt;gnomish bankers who spoke a hundred languages but communicated with one another by&lt;br /&gt;means of this universal tongue of weights and measures and purity.&lt;br /&gt;The clerks who'd tended Alan's many stores -- the used clothing store in the&lt;br /&gt;Beaches, the used book-store in the Annex, the collectible tin-toy store in&lt;br /&gt;Yorkville, the antique shop on Queen Street -- had both benefited from and had&lt;br /&gt;their patience tried by Alan's discursive nature. Alan had pretended never to&lt;br /&gt;notice the surreptitious rolling of eyes and twirling fingers aimed templewise&lt;br /&gt;among his employees when he got himself warmed up to a good oration, but in truth&lt;br /&gt;very little ever escaped his attention. His customers loved his little talks,&lt;br /&gt;loved the way he could wax rhapsodic about the tortured prose in a Victorian&lt;br /&gt;potboiler, the nearly erotic curve of a beat-up old table leg, the voluminous&lt;br /&gt;cuffs of an embroidered silk smoking jacket. The clerks who listened to Alan's&lt;br /&gt;lectures went on to open their own stores all about town, and by and large, they&lt;br /&gt;did very well.&lt;br /&gt;He'd put the word out when he bought the house on Wales Avenue to all his&lt;br /&gt;protégés: Wooden bookcases! His cell-phone rang every day, bringing news of&lt;br /&gt;another wooden bookcase found at this flea market, that thrift store, this rummage&lt;br /&gt;sale or estate auction.&lt;br /&gt;He had a man he used part-time, Tony, who ran a small man-with-van service, and&lt;br /&gt;when the phone rang, he'd send Tony over to his protégé's shop with his big panel&lt;br /&gt;van to pick up the case and deliver it to the cellar of the house on Wales Avenue,&lt;br /&gt;which was ramified by cold storages, root cellars, disused coal chutes and storm&lt;br /&gt;cellars. By the time Alan had finished with his sanding, every nook and cranny of&lt;br /&gt;the cellar was packed with wooden bookcases of every size and description and&lt;br /&gt;repair.&lt;br /&gt;Alan worked through the long Toronto winter at his sanding. The house had been&lt;br /&gt;gutted by the previous owners, who'd had big plans for the building but had been&lt;br /&gt;tempted away by a job in Boston. They'd had to sell fast, and no amount of realtor&lt;br /&gt;magic -- flowers on the dining-room table, soup simmering on the stove -- could&lt;br /&gt;charm away the essential dagginess of the gutted house, the exposed timbers with&lt;br /&gt;sagging wires and conduit, the runnels gouged in the floor by careless draggers of&lt;br /&gt;furniture. Alan got it for a song, and was delighted by his fortune.&lt;br /&gt;He was drunk on the wood, of course, and would have paid much more had the realtor&lt;br /&gt;noticed this, but Alan had spent his whole life drunk on trivial things from&lt;br /&gt;others' lives that no one else noticed and he'd developed the alcoholic's knack of&lt;br /&gt;disguising his intoxication. Alan went to work as soon as the realtor staggered&lt;br /&gt;off, reeling with a New Year's Day hangover. He pulled his pickup truck onto the&lt;br /&gt;frozen lawn, unlocked the Kryptonite bike lock he used to secure the camper bed,&lt;br /&gt;and dragged out his big belt sander and his many boxes of sandpaper of all grains&lt;br /&gt;and sizes, his heat strippers and his jugs of caustic chemical peeler. He still&lt;br /&gt;had his jumbled, messy place across town in a nondescript two-bedroom on the&lt;br /&gt;Danforth, would keep on paying the rent there until his big sanding project was&lt;br /&gt;done and the house on Wales Avenue was fit for habitation.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's sanding project: First, finish gutting the house. Get rid of the&lt;br /&gt;substandard wiring, the ancient, lead-leaching plumbing, the cracked tile and&lt;br /&gt;water-warped crumbling plaster. He filled a half-dozen dumpsters, working with&lt;br /&gt;Tony and Tony's homie Nat, who was happy to help out in exchange for cash on the&lt;br /&gt;barrelhead, provided that he wasn't required to report for work on two consecutive&lt;br /&gt;days, since he'd need one day to recover from the heroic drinking he'd do&lt;br /&gt;immediately after Alan laid the cash across his palm.&lt;br /&gt;Once the house was gutted to brick and timber and delirious wood, the plumbers and&lt;br /&gt;the electricians came in and laid down their straight shining ducts and pipes and&lt;br /&gt;conduit.&lt;br /&gt;Alan tarped the floors and brought in the heavy sandblaster and stripped the age&lt;br /&gt;and soot and gunge off of the brickwork throughout, until it glowed red as a&lt;br /&gt;golem's ass.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's father, the mountain, had many golems that called him home. They lived&lt;br /&gt;round the other side of his father and left Alan and his brothers alone, because&lt;br /&gt;even a golem has the sense not to piss off a mountain, especially one it lives in.&lt;br /&gt;Then Alan tackled the timbers, reaching over his head with palm-sanders and&lt;br /&gt;sandpaper of ever finer grains until the timbers were as smooth as Adirondack&lt;br /&gt;chairs, his chest and arms and shoulders athrob with the agony of two weeks' work.&lt;br /&gt;Then it was the floorwork, but *not the floors themselves*, which he was saving&lt;br /&gt;for last on the grounds that they were low-hanging fruit.&lt;br /&gt;This materialized a new lecture in his mind, one about the proper role of lowhanging&lt;br /&gt;fruit, a favorite topic of MBAs who'd patronize his stores and his person,&lt;br /&gt;giving him unsolicited advice on the care and feeding of his shops based on the&lt;br /&gt;kind of useless book-learning and jargon-slinging that Fortune 100 companies&lt;br /&gt;apparently paid big bucks for. When an MBA said "low-hanging fruit," he meant&lt;br /&gt;"easy pickings," something that could and should be snatched with minimal effort.&lt;br /&gt;But *real* low-hanging fruit ripens last, and should be therefore picked as late&lt;br /&gt;as possible. Further, picking the low-hanging fruit first meant that you'd have to&lt;br /&gt;carry your bushel basket higher and higher as the day wore on, which was plainly&lt;br /&gt;stupid. Low-hanging fruit was meant to be picked last. It was one of the ways that&lt;br /&gt;he understood people, and one of the kinds of people that he'd come to understand.&lt;br /&gt;That was the game, after all -- understanding people.&lt;br /&gt;So the floors would come last, after the molding, after the stairs, after the&lt;br /&gt;railings and the paneling. The railings, in particular, were horrible bastards to&lt;br /&gt;get clean, covered in ten or thirty coats of enamel of varying colors and&lt;br /&gt;toxicity. Alan spent days working with a wire brush and pointed twists of steel&lt;br /&gt;wool and oozing stinging paint stripper, until the grain was as spotless and&lt;br /&gt;unmarked as the day it came off the lathe.&lt;br /&gt;*Then* he did the floors, using the big rotary sander first. It had been years&lt;br /&gt;since he'd last swung a sander around -- it had been when he opened the tin-toy&lt;br /&gt;shop in Yorkville and he'd rented one while he was prepping the place. The&lt;br /&gt;technique came back to him quickly enough, and he fell into a steady rhythm that&lt;br /&gt;soon had all the floors cool and dry and soft with naked, exposed woody heartmeat.&lt;br /&gt;He swept the place out and locked up and returned home.&lt;br /&gt;The next day, he stopped at the Portuguese contractor-supply on Ossington that he&lt;br /&gt;liked. They opened at five a.m., and the men behind the counter were always happy&lt;br /&gt;to sketch out alternative solutions to his amateur construction problems, they&lt;br /&gt;never mocked him for his incompetence, and always threw in a ten percent&lt;br /&gt;"contractor's discount" for him that made him swell up with irrational pride that&lt;br /&gt;confused him. Why should the son of a mountain need affirmation from runty&lt;br /&gt;Portugees with pencil stubs behind their ears and scarred fingers? He picked up a&lt;br /&gt;pair of foam-rubber knee pads and a ten-kilo box of lint-free shop rags and&lt;br /&gt;another carton of disposable paper masks.&lt;br /&gt;He drove to the house on Wales Avenue, parked on the lawn, which was now starting&lt;br /&gt;to thaw and show deep muddy ruts from his tires. He spent the next twelve hours&lt;br /&gt;crawling around on his knees, lugging a tool bucket filled with sandpaper and&lt;br /&gt;steel wool and putty and wood-crayons and shop rags. He ran his fingertips over&lt;br /&gt;every inch of floor and molding and paneling, feeling the talc softness of the&lt;br /&gt;sifted sawdust, feeling for rough spots and gouges, smoothing them out with his&lt;br /&gt;tools. He tried puttying over the gouges in the flooring that he'd seen the day he&lt;br /&gt;took possession, but the putty seemed like a lie to him, less honest than the&lt;br /&gt;gouged-out boards were, and so he scooped the putty out and sanded the grooves&lt;br /&gt;until they were as smooth as the wood around them.&lt;br /&gt;Next came the beeswax, sweet and shiny. It almost broke his heart to apply it,&lt;br /&gt;because the soft, newly exposed wood was so deliciously tender and sensuous. But&lt;br /&gt;he knew that wood left to its own would eventually chip and splinter and yellow.&lt;br /&gt;So he rubbed wax until his elbows ached, *massaged* the wax into the wood, buffed&lt;br /&gt;it with shop rags so that the house shone.&lt;br /&gt;Twenty coats of urethane took forty days -- a day to coat and a day to dry. More&lt;br /&gt;buffing and the house took on a high shine, a slippery slickness. He nearly broke&lt;br /&gt;his neck on the slippery staircase treads, and the Portuguese helped him out with&lt;br /&gt;a bag of clear grit made from ground walnut shells. He used a foam brush to put&lt;br /&gt;one more coat of urethane on each tread of the stairs, then sprinkled granulated&lt;br /&gt;walnut shells on while it was still sticky. He committed a rare error in judgment&lt;br /&gt;and did the stairs from the bottom up and trapped himself on the third floor, with&lt;br /&gt;its attic ceilings and dormer windows, and felt like a goddamned idiot as he&lt;br /&gt;curled up to sleep on the cold, hard, slippery, smooth floor while he waited for&lt;br /&gt;his stairs to dry. The urethane must be getting to his head.&lt;br /&gt;The bookcases came out of the cellar one by one. Alan wrestled them onto the front&lt;br /&gt;porch with Tony's help and sanded them clean, then turned them over to Tony for&lt;br /&gt;urethane and dooring.&lt;br /&gt;The doors were UV-filtering glass, hinged at the top and surrounded by felt on&lt;br /&gt;their inside lips so that they closed softly. Each one had a small brass prop-rod&lt;br /&gt;on the left side that could brace it open. Tony had been responsible for measuring&lt;br /&gt;each bookcase after he retrieved it from Alan's protégés' shops and for sending&lt;br /&gt;the measurements off to a glazier in Mississauga.&lt;br /&gt;The glazier was technically retired, but he'd built every display case that had&lt;br /&gt;ever sat inside any of Alan's shops and was happy to make use of the small&lt;br /&gt;workshop that his daughter and son-in-law had installed in his garage when they&lt;br /&gt;retired him to the burbs.&lt;br /&gt;The bookcases went into the house, along each wall, according to a system of&lt;br /&gt;numbers marked on their backs. Alan had used Tony's measurements and some CAD&lt;br /&gt;software to come up with a permutation of stacking and shouldering cases that had&lt;br /&gt;them completely covering every wall -- except for the wall by the mantelpiece in&lt;br /&gt;the front parlor, the wall over the countertop in the kitchen, and the wall beside&lt;br /&gt;the staircases -- to the ceiling.&lt;br /&gt;He and Tony didn't speak much. Tony was thinking about whatever people who drive&lt;br /&gt;moving vans think about, and Alan was thinking about the story he was building the&lt;br /&gt;house to write in.&lt;br /&gt;May smelled great in Kensington Market. The fossilized dog shit had melted and&lt;br /&gt;washed away in the April rains, and the smells were all springy ones, loam and&lt;br /&gt;blossoms and spilled tetrapak fruit punch left behind by the pan-ethnic streethockey&lt;br /&gt;league that formed up spontaneously in front of his house. When the winds&lt;br /&gt;blew from the east, he smelled the fish stalls on Spadina, salty and redolent of&lt;br /&gt;Chinese barbecue spices. When it blew from the north, he smelled baking bread in&lt;br /&gt;the kosher bakeries and sometimes a rare whiff of roasting garlic from the pizzas&lt;br /&gt;in the steaming ovens at Massimo's all the way up on College. The western winds&lt;br /&gt;smelled of hospital incinerator, acrid and smoky.&lt;br /&gt;His father, the mountain, had attuned Art to smells, since they were the leading&lt;br /&gt;indicators of his moods, sulfurous belches from deep in the caverns when he was&lt;br /&gt;displeased, the cold non-smell of spring water when he was thoughtful, the newmown&lt;br /&gt;hay smell from his slopes when he was happy. Understanding smells was&lt;br /&gt;something that you did, when the mountain was your father.&lt;br /&gt;Once the bookcases were seated and screwed into the walls, out came the books,&lt;br /&gt;thousands of them, tens of thousands of them.&lt;br /&gt;Little kids' books with loose signatures, ancient first-edition hardcovers,&lt;br /&gt;outsized novelty art books, mass-market paperbacks, reference books as thick as&lt;br /&gt;cinderblocks. They were mostly used when he'd gotten them, and that was what he&lt;br /&gt;loved most about them: They smelled like other people and their pages contained&lt;br /&gt;hints of their lives: marginalia and pawn tickets, bus transfers gone yellow with&lt;br /&gt;age and smears of long-ago meals. When he read them, he was in three places: his&lt;br /&gt;living room, the authors' heads, and the world of their previous owners.&lt;br /&gt;They came off his shelves at home, from the ten-by-ten storage down on the&lt;br /&gt;lakeshore, they came from friends and enemies who'd borrowed his books years&lt;br /&gt;before and who'd "forgotten" to return them, but Alan *never* forgot, he kept&lt;br /&gt;every book in a great and deep relational database that had begun as a humble&lt;br /&gt;flatfile but which had been imported into successive generations of industrialgrade&lt;br /&gt;database software.&lt;br /&gt;This, in turn, was but a pocket in the Ur-database, The Inventory in which Alan&lt;br /&gt;had input the value, the cost, the salient features, the unique identifiers, and&lt;br /&gt;the photographic record of every single thing he owned, from the socks in his sock&lt;br /&gt;drawer to the pots in his cupboard. Maintaining The Inventory was serious&lt;br /&gt;business, no less important now than it had been when he had begun it in the&lt;br /&gt;course of securing insurance for the bookshop.&lt;br /&gt;Alan was an insurance man's worst nightmare, a customer from hell who'd messenger&lt;br /&gt;over five bankers' boxes of detailed, cross-referenced Inventory at the slightest&lt;br /&gt;provocation.&lt;br /&gt;The books filled the shelves, row on row, behind the dust-proof, light-proof glass&lt;br /&gt;doors. The books began in the foyer and wrapped around the living room, covered&lt;br /&gt;the wall behind the dining room in the kitchen, filled the den and the master&lt;br /&gt;bedroom and the master bath, climbed the short walls to the dormer ceilings on the&lt;br /&gt;third floor. They were organized by idiosyncratic subject categories, and&lt;br /&gt;alphabetical by author within those categories.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's father was a mountain, and his mother was a washing machine -- he kept a&lt;br /&gt;roof over their heads and she kept their clothes clean. His brothers were: a dead&lt;br /&gt;man, a trio of nesting dolls, a fortune teller, and an island. He only had two or&lt;br /&gt;three family portraits, but he treasured them, even if outsiders who saw them&lt;br /&gt;often mistook them for landscapes. There was one where his family stood on his&lt;br /&gt;father's slopes, Mom out in the open for a rare exception, a long tail of&lt;br /&gt;extension cords snaking away from her to the cave and the diesel generator's&lt;br /&gt;three-prong outlet. He hung it over the mantel, using two hooks and a level to&lt;br /&gt;make sure that it came out perfectly even.&lt;br /&gt;Tony helped Alan install the shallow collectibles cases along the house's twostory&lt;br /&gt;stairwell, holding the level while Alan worked the cordless powerdriver.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's glazier had built the cases to Alan's specs, and they stretched from the&lt;br /&gt;treads to the ceiling. Alan filled them with Made-in-Occupied-Japan tin toys, felt&lt;br /&gt;tourist pennants from central Florida gator farms, a stone from Marie Laveau's&lt;br /&gt;tomb in the St. Louis I Cemetery in New Orleans, tarnished brass Zippos, small&lt;br /&gt;framed comic-book bodybuilding ads, carved Polynesian coconut monkeys, melamine&lt;br /&gt;transistor radios, Bakelite snow globes, all the tchotchkes he'd accumulated over&lt;br /&gt;a lifetime of picking and hunting and digging.&lt;br /&gt;They were gloriously scuffed and non-mint: he'd always sold off the sterile mintin-&lt;br /&gt;package goods as quickly as he could, squirreling away the items that were&lt;br /&gt;marked with "Property of Freddy Terazzo" in shaky ballpoint, the ones with tooth&lt;br /&gt;marks and frayed boxes taped shut with brands of stickytape not offered for sale&lt;br /&gt;in fifty years.&lt;br /&gt;The last thing to go in was the cellar. They knocked out any wall that wasn't&lt;br /&gt;load-bearing, smeared concrete on every surface, and worked in a loose mosaic of&lt;br /&gt;beach glass and beach china, smooth and white with spidery blue illustrations pale&lt;br /&gt;as a dream. Three coats of urethane made the surfaces gleam.&lt;br /&gt;Then it was just a matter of stringing out the cables for the clip-on halogens&lt;br /&gt;whose beams he took care to scatter off the ceilings to keep the glare to a&lt;br /&gt;minimum. He moved in his horsehair sofa and armchairs, his big old bed, his pots&lt;br /&gt;and pans and sideboard with its novelty decanters, and his entertainment totem.&lt;br /&gt;A man from Bell Canada came out and terminated the data line in his basement, in a&lt;br /&gt;room that he'd outfitted with an uninterruptible power supply, a false floor, dry&lt;br /&gt;fire extinguishers and a pipe-break sensor. He installed and configured the&lt;br /&gt;router, set up his modest rack and home servers, fished three four-pair wires&lt;br /&gt;through to the living room, the den, and the attic, where he attached them to&lt;br /&gt;unobtrusive wireless access points and thence to weatherproofed omnidirectional&lt;br /&gt;antennae made from copper tubing and PVC that he'd affixed to the building's&lt;br /&gt;exterior on short masts, aimed out over Kensington Market, blanketing a whole&lt;br /&gt;block with free Internet access.&lt;br /&gt;He had an idea that the story he was going to write would require some&lt;br /&gt;perambulatory cogitation, and he wanted to be able to take his laptop anywhere in&lt;br /&gt;the market and sit down and write and hop online and check out little factoids&lt;br /&gt;with a search engine so he wouldn't get hung up on stupid details.&lt;br /&gt;The house on Wales Avenue was done. He'd repainted the exterior a lovely robin'segg&lt;br /&gt;blue, fixed the front step, and planted a low-maintenance combination of&lt;br /&gt;outsized rocks from the Canadian Shield and wild grasses on the front lawn. On&lt;br /&gt;July first, Alan celebrated Canada Day by crawling out of the attic window onto&lt;br /&gt;the roof and watching the fireworks and listening to the collective sighs of the&lt;br /&gt;people densely packed around him in the Market, then he went back into the house&lt;br /&gt;and walked from room to room, looking for something out of place, some spot still&lt;br /&gt;rough and unsanded, and found none. The books and the collections lined the walls,&lt;br /&gt;the fans whirred softly in the ceilings, the filters beneath the open windows&lt;br /&gt;hummed as they sucked the pollen and particulate out of the rooms -- Alan's retail&lt;br /&gt;experience had convinced him long ago of the selling power of fresh air and street&lt;br /&gt;sounds, so he refused to keep the windows closed, despite the fantastic volume of&lt;br /&gt;city dust that blew in.&lt;br /&gt;The house was perfect. The ergonomic marvel of a chair that UPS had dropped off&lt;br /&gt;the previous day was tucked under the wooden sideboard he'd set up as a desk in&lt;br /&gt;the second-floor den. His brand-new computer sat centered on the desk, a top-ofthe-&lt;br /&gt;line laptop with a wireless card and a screen big enough to qualify as a home&lt;br /&gt;theater in some circles.&lt;br /&gt;Tomorrow, he'd start the story.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan rang the next-door house's doorbell at eight a.m. He had a bag of coffees&lt;br /&gt;from the Greek diner. Five coffees, one for each bicycle locked to the wooden&lt;br /&gt;railing on the sagging porch plus one for him.&lt;br /&gt;He waited five minutes, then rang the bell again, holding it down, listening for&lt;br /&gt;the sound of footsteps over the muffled jangling of the buzzer. It took two&lt;br /&gt;minutes more, he estimated, but he didn't mind. It was a beautiful summer day,&lt;br /&gt;soft and moist and green, and he could already smell the fish market over the&lt;br /&gt;mellow brown vapors of the strong coffee.&lt;br /&gt;A young woman in long johns and a baggy tartan T-shirt opened the door. She was&lt;br /&gt;excitingly plump, round and a little jiggly, the kind of woman Alan had always&lt;br /&gt;gone for. Of course, she was all of twenty-two, and so was certainly not an&lt;br /&gt;appropriate romantic interest for him, but she was fun to look at as she ungummed&lt;br /&gt;her eyes and worked the sleep out of her voice.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes?" she said through the locked screen door. Her voice brooked no nonsense,&lt;br /&gt;which Alan also liked. He'd hire her in a second, if he were still running a shop.&lt;br /&gt;He liked to hire sharp kids like her, get to know them, try to winkle out their&lt;br /&gt;motives and emotions through observation.&lt;br /&gt;"Good morning!" Alan said. "I'm Alan, and I just moved in next door. I've brought&lt;br /&gt;coffee!" He hefted his sack in her direction.&lt;br /&gt;"Good morning, Alan," she said. "Thanks and all, but --"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, no need to thank me! Just being neighborly. I brought five -- one for each of&lt;br /&gt;you and one for me."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that's awfully nice of you --"&lt;br /&gt;"Nothing at all. Nice morning, huh? I saw a robin just there, on that tree in the&lt;br /&gt;park, not an hour ago. Fantastic."&lt;br /&gt;"Great." She unlatched the screen door and opened it, reaching for the sack.&lt;br /&gt;Alan stepped into the foyer and handed it to her. "There's cream and sugar in&lt;br /&gt;there," he said. "Lots -- don't know how you folks take it, so I just figured&lt;br /&gt;better sure than miserable, better to err on the side of caution. Wow, look at&lt;br /&gt;this, your place has a completely different layout from mine. I think they were&lt;br /&gt;built at the same time, I mean, they look a lot alike. I don't really know much&lt;br /&gt;about architecture, but they really do seem the same, don't they, from the&lt;br /&gt;outside? But look at this! In my place, I've got a long corridor before you get to&lt;br /&gt;the living room, but your place is all open. I wonder if it was built that way, or&lt;br /&gt;if someone did that later. Do you know?"&lt;br /&gt;"No," she said, hefting the sack.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, I'll just have a seat while you get your roommates up, all right? Then we&lt;br /&gt;can all have a nice cup of coffee and a chat and get to know each other."&lt;br /&gt;She dithered for a moment, then stepped back toward the kitchen and the stairwell.&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded and took a little tour of the living room. There was a very nice media&lt;br /&gt;totem, endless shelves of DVDs and videos, including a good selection of Chinese&lt;br /&gt;kung-fu VCDs and black and white comedies. There was a stack of guitar magazines&lt;br /&gt;on the battered coffee table, and a cozy sofa with an afghan folded neatly on one&lt;br /&gt;arm. Good kids, he could tell that just by looking at their possessions.&lt;br /&gt;Not very security-conscious, though. She should have either kicked him out or&lt;br /&gt;dragged him around the house while she got her roomies out of bed. He thought&lt;br /&gt;about slipping some VCDs into his pocket and returning them later, just to make&lt;br /&gt;the point, but decided it would be getting off on the wrong foot.&lt;br /&gt;She returned a moment later, wearing a fuzzy yellow robe whose belt and seams were&lt;br /&gt;gray with grime and wear. "They're coming down," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Terrific!" Alan said, and planted himself on the sofa. "How about that coffee,&lt;br /&gt;hey?"&lt;br /&gt;She shook her head, smiled a little, and retrieved a coffee for him. "Cream?&lt;br /&gt;Sugar?"&lt;br /&gt;"Nope," Alan said. "The Greek makes it just the way I like it. Black and strong&lt;br /&gt;and aromatic. Try some before you add anything -- it's really fantastic. One of&lt;br /&gt;the best things about the neighborhood, if you ask me."&lt;br /&gt;Another young woman, rail-thin with a shaved head, baggy jeans, and a tight tshirt&lt;br /&gt;that he could count her ribs through, shuffled into the living room. Alan&lt;br /&gt;got to his feet and extended his hand. "Hi there! I'm Adam, your new neighbor! I&lt;br /&gt;brought coffees!"&lt;br /&gt;She shook his hand, her long fingernails sharp on his palm. "Natalie," she said.&lt;br /&gt;The other young woman passed a coffee to her. "He brought coffees," she said. "Try&lt;br /&gt;it before you add anything to it." She turned to Alan. "I thought you said your&lt;br /&gt;name was Alan?"&lt;br /&gt;"Alan, Adam, Andy. Doesn't matter, I answer to any of them. My mom had a hard time&lt;br /&gt;keeping our names straight."&lt;br /&gt;"Funny," Natalie said, sipping at her coffee. "Two sugars, three creams," she&lt;br /&gt;said, holding her hand out. The other woman silently passed them to her.&lt;br /&gt;"I haven't gotten your name yet," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Right," the other one said. "You sure haven't."&lt;br /&gt;A young man, all of seventeen, with straggly sideburns and a shock of pink hair&lt;br /&gt;sticking straight up in the air, shuffled into the room, wearing cutoffs and an&lt;br /&gt;unbuttoned guayabera.&lt;br /&gt;"Adam," Natalie said, "this is Link, my kid brother. Link, this is Arthur -- he&lt;br /&gt;brought coffees."&lt;br /&gt;"Hey, thanks, Arthur," Link said. He accepted his coffee and stood by his sister,&lt;br /&gt;sipping reverently.&lt;br /&gt;"So that leaves one more," Alan said. "And then we can get started."&lt;br /&gt;Link snorted. "Not likely. Krishna doesn't get out of bed before noon."&lt;br /&gt;"Krishna?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"My boyfriend," the nameless woman said. "He was up late."&lt;br /&gt;"More coffee for the rest of us, I suppose," Alan said. "Let's all sit and get to&lt;br /&gt;know one another, then, shall we?"&lt;br /&gt;They sat. Alan slurped down the rest of his coffee, then gestured at the sack. The&lt;br /&gt;nameless woman passed it to him and he got the last one, and set to drinking.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm Andreas, your new next-door neighbor. I've just finished renovating, and I&lt;br /&gt;moved in last night. I'm really looking forward to spending time in the&lt;br /&gt;neighborhood -- I work from home, so I'll be around a bunch. Feel free to drop by&lt;br /&gt;if you need to borrow a cup of sugar or anything."&lt;br /&gt;"That's so nice of you," Natalie said. "I'm sure we'll get along fine!"&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks, Natalie. Are you a student?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yup," she said. She fished in the voluminous pockets of her jeans, tugging them&lt;br /&gt;lower on her knobby hips, and came up with a pack of cigarettes. She offered one&lt;br /&gt;to her brother -- who took it -- and one to Alan, who declined, then lit up.&lt;br /&gt;"Studying fashion design at OCAD. I'm in my last year, so it's all practicum from&lt;br /&gt;now on."&lt;br /&gt;"Fashion! How interesting," Alan said. "I used to run a little vintage clothes&lt;br /&gt;shop in the Beaches, called Tropicál."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I *loved* that shop," she said. "You had the *best* stuff! I used to sneak&lt;br /&gt;out there on the streetcar after school." Yup. He didn't remember *her*, exactly,&lt;br /&gt;but her *type*, sure. Solo girls with hardcover sketch books and vintage clothes&lt;br /&gt;home-tailored to a nice fit.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, I'd be happy to introduce you to some of the people I know -- there's a&lt;br /&gt;vintage shop that a friend of mine runs in Parkdale. He's always looking for&lt;br /&gt;designers to help with rehab and repros."&lt;br /&gt;"That would be so cool!"&lt;br /&gt;"Now, Link, what do you study?"&lt;br /&gt;Link pulled at his smoke, ashed in the fireplace grate. "Not much. I didn't get&lt;br /&gt;into Ryerson for electrical engineering, so I'm spending a year as a bike courier,&lt;br /&gt;taking night classes, and reapplying for next year."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that'll keep you out of trouble at least," Alan said. He turned to the&lt;br /&gt;nameless woman.&lt;br /&gt;"So, what do you do, *Apu*?" she said to him, before he could say anything.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I'm retired, Mimi," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Mimi?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Why not? It's as good a name as any."&lt;br /&gt;"Her name is --" Link started to say, but she cut him off.&lt;br /&gt;"Mimi is as good a name as any. I'm unemployed. Krishna's a bartender."&lt;br /&gt;"Are you looking for work?"&lt;br /&gt;She smirked. "Sure. Whatcha got?"&lt;br /&gt;"What can you do?"&lt;br /&gt;"I've got three-quarters of a degree in environmental studies, one year of&lt;br /&gt;kinesiology, and a half-written one-act play. Oh, and student debt until the year&lt;br /&gt;3000."&lt;br /&gt;"A play!" he said, slapping his thighs. "You should finish it. I'm a writer, too,&lt;br /&gt;you know."&lt;br /&gt;"I thought you had a clothing shop."&lt;br /&gt;"I did. And a bookshop, and a collectibles shop, and an antique shop. Not all at&lt;br /&gt;the same time, you understand. But now I'm writing. Going to write a story, then I&lt;br /&gt;imagine I'll open another shop. But I'm more interested in *you*, Mimi, and your&lt;br /&gt;play. Why half-finished?"&lt;br /&gt;She shrugged and combed her hair back with her fingers. Her hair was brown and&lt;br /&gt;thick and curly, down to her shoulders. Alan adored curly hair. He'd had a clerk&lt;br /&gt;at the comics shop with curly hair just like hers, an earnest and bright young&lt;br /&gt;thing who drew her own comics in the back room on her breaks, using the receiving&lt;br /&gt;table as a drawing board. She'd never made much of a go of it as an artist, but&lt;br /&gt;she did end up publishing a popular annual anthology of underground comics that&lt;br /&gt;had captured the interest of the *New Yorker* the year before. "I just ran out of&lt;br /&gt;inspiration," Mimi said, tugging at her hair.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, there you are. Time to get inspired again. Stop by any time and we'll talk&lt;br /&gt;about it, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;"If I get back to it, you'll be the first to know."&lt;br /&gt;"Tremendous!" he said. "I just know it'll be fantastic. Now, who plays the&lt;br /&gt;guitar?"&lt;br /&gt;"Krishna," Link said. "I noodle a bit, but he's really good."&lt;br /&gt;"He sure is," Alan said. "He was in fine form last night, about three a.m.!" He&lt;br /&gt;chuckled pointedly.&lt;br /&gt;There was an awkward silence. Alan slurped down his second coffee. "Whoops!" he&lt;br /&gt;said. "I believe I need to impose on you for the use of your facilities?"&lt;br /&gt;"What?" Natalie and Link said simultaneously.&lt;br /&gt;"He wants the toilet," Mimi said. "Up the stairs, second door on the right. Jiggle&lt;br /&gt;the handle after you flush."&lt;br /&gt;The bathroom was crowded with too many towels and too many toothbrushes. The sink&lt;br /&gt;was powdered with blusher and marked with lipstick and mascara residue. It made&lt;br /&gt;Alan feel at home. He liked young people. Liked their energy, their resentment,&lt;br /&gt;and their enthusiasm. Didn't like their guitar-playing at three a.m.; but he'd&lt;br /&gt;sort that out soon enough.&lt;br /&gt;He washed his hands and carefully rinsed the long curly hairs from the bar before&lt;br /&gt;replacing it in its dish, then returned to the living room.&lt;br /&gt;"Abel," Mimi said, "sorry if the guitar kept you up last night."&lt;br /&gt;"No sweat," Alan said. "It must be hard to find time to practice when you work&lt;br /&gt;nights."&lt;br /&gt;"Exactly," Natalie said. "Exactly right! Krishna always practices when he comes&lt;br /&gt;back from work. He blows off some steam so he can get to bed. We just all learned&lt;br /&gt;to sleep through it."&lt;br /&gt;"Well," Alan said, "to be honest, I'm hoping I won't have to learn to do that. But&lt;br /&gt;I think that maybe I have a solution we can both live with."&lt;br /&gt;"What's that?" Mimi said, jutting her chin forward.&lt;br /&gt;"It's easy, really. I can put up a resilient channel and a baffle along that wall&lt;br /&gt;there, soundproofing. I'll paint it over white and you won't even notice the&lt;br /&gt;difference. Shouldn't take me more than a week. Happy to do it. Thick walls make&lt;br /&gt;good neighbors."&lt;br /&gt;"We don't really have any money to pay for renovations," Mimi said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan waved his hand. "Who said anything about money? I just want to solve the&lt;br /&gt;problem. I'd do it on my side of the wall, but I've just finished renovating."&lt;br /&gt;Mimi shook her head. "I don't think the landlord would go for it."&lt;br /&gt;"You worry too much," he said. "Give me your landlord's number and I'll sort it&lt;br /&gt;out with him, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;"All right!" Link said. "That's terrific, Albert, really!"&lt;br /&gt;"All right, Mimi? Natalie?"&lt;br /&gt;Natalie nodded enthusiastically, her shaved head whipping up and down on her thin&lt;br /&gt;neck precariously. Mimi glared at Natalie and Link. "I'll ask Krishna," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"All right, then!" Alan said. "Let me measure up the wall and I'll start shopping&lt;br /&gt;for supplies." He produced a matte black, egg-shaped digital tape measure and&lt;br /&gt;started shining pinpoints of laser light on the wall, clicking the egg's buttons&lt;br /&gt;when he had the corners tight. The Portuguese clerks at his favorite store had&lt;br /&gt;dissolved into hysterics when he'd proudly shown them the $300 gadget, but they&lt;br /&gt;were consistently impressed by the exacting CAD drawings of his projects that he&lt;br /&gt;generated with its output. Natalie and Link stared in fascination as he did his&lt;br /&gt;thing with more showmanship than was technically necessary, though Mimi made a&lt;br /&gt;point of rolling her eyes.&lt;br /&gt;"Don't go spending any money yet, cowboy," she said. "I've still got to talk to&lt;br /&gt;Krishna, and *you've* still got to talk with the landlord."&lt;br /&gt;He fished in the breast pocket of his jean jacket and found a stub of pencil and a&lt;br /&gt;little steno pad, scribbled his cell phone number, and tore off the sheet. He&lt;br /&gt;passed the sheet, pad, and pencil to Mimi, who wrote out the landlord's number and&lt;br /&gt;passed it back to him.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay!" Alan said. "There you go. It's been a real pleasure meeting you folks. I&lt;br /&gt;know we're going to get along great. I'll call your landlord right away and you&lt;br /&gt;call me once Krishna's up, and I'll see you tomorrow at ten a.m. to start&lt;br /&gt;construction, God willin' and the crick don't rise."&lt;br /&gt;Link stood and extended his hand. "Nice to meet you, Albert," he said. "Really.&lt;br /&gt;Thanks for the muds, too." Natalie gave him a bony hug, and Mimi gave him a limp&lt;br /&gt;handshake, and then he was out in the sunshine, head full of designs and logistics&lt;br /&gt;and plans.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The sun set at nine p.m. in a long summertime blaze. Alan sat down on the twigchair&lt;br /&gt;on his front porch, pulled up the matching twig table, and set down a wine&lt;br /&gt;glass and the bottle of Niagara Chardonnay he'd brought up from the cellar. He&lt;br /&gt;poured out a glass and held it up to the light, admiring the new blister he'd&lt;br /&gt;gotten on his pinky finger while hauling two-by-fours and gyprock from his truck&lt;br /&gt;to his neighbors' front room. Kids rode by on bikes and punks rode by on&lt;br /&gt;skateboards. Couples wandered through the park across the street, their murmurous&lt;br /&gt;conversations clear on the whispering breeze that rattled the leaves.&lt;br /&gt;He hadn't gotten any writing done, but that was all right. He had plenty of time,&lt;br /&gt;and once the soundwall was in, he'd be able to get a good night's sleep and really&lt;br /&gt;focus down on the story.&lt;br /&gt;A Chinese girl and a white boy walked down the sidewalk, talking intensely. They&lt;br /&gt;were all of six, and the boy had a Russian accent. The Market's diversity always&lt;br /&gt;excited Alan. The boy looked a little like Alan's brother Doug (Dan, David,&lt;br /&gt;Dearborne) had looked when he was that age.&lt;br /&gt;Doug was the one he'd help murder. All the brothers had helped with the murder,&lt;br /&gt;even Charlie (Clem, Carlos, Cory), the island, who'd opened a great fissure down&lt;br /&gt;his main fault line and closed it up over Doug's corpse, ensuring that their&lt;br /&gt;parents would be none the wiser. Doug was a stubborn son-of-a-bitch, though, and&lt;br /&gt;his corpse had tunneled up over the next six years, built a raft from the bamboo&lt;br /&gt;and vines that grew in proliferation on Carlos's west coast. He sailed the raft&lt;br /&gt;through treacherous seas for a year and a day, beached it on their father's gentle&lt;br /&gt;slope, and presented himself to their mother. By that time, the corpse had decayed&lt;br /&gt;and frayed and worn away, so that he was little more than a torso and stumps, his&lt;br /&gt;tongue withered and stiff, but he pled his case to their mother, and she was so&lt;br /&gt;upset that her load overbalanced and they had to restart her. Their father was so&lt;br /&gt;angry that he quaked and caved in Billy (Bob, Brad, Benny)'s room, crushing all&lt;br /&gt;his tools and all his trophies.&lt;br /&gt;But a lot of time had gone by and the brothers weren't kids anymore. Alan was&lt;br /&gt;nineteen, ready to move to Toronto and start scouting for real estate. Only Doug&lt;br /&gt;still looked like a little boy, albeit a stumpy and desiccated one. He hollered&lt;br /&gt;and stamped until his fingerbones rattled on the floor and his tongue flew across&lt;br /&gt;the room and cracked on the wall. When his anger was spent, he crawled atop their&lt;br /&gt;mother and let her rock him into a long, long slumber.&lt;br /&gt;Alan had left his father and his family the next morning, carrying a rucksack&lt;br /&gt;heavy with gold from under the mountain and walked down to the town, taking the&lt;br /&gt;same trail he'd walked every school day since he was five. He waved to the people&lt;br /&gt;that drove past him on the highway as he waited at the bus stop. He was the first&lt;br /&gt;son to leave home under his own power, and he'd been full of butterflies, but he&lt;br /&gt;had a half-dozen good books that he'd checked out of the Kapuskasing branch&lt;br /&gt;library to keep him occupied on the 14-hour journey, and before he knew it, the&lt;br /&gt;bus was pulling off the Gardiner Expressway by the SkyDome and into the midnight&lt;br /&gt;streets of Toronto, where the buildings stretched to the sky, where the blinking&lt;br /&gt;lights of the Yonge Street sleaze-strip receded into the distance like a landing&lt;br /&gt;strip for a horny UFO.&lt;br /&gt;His liquid cash was tight, so he spent that night in the Rex Hotel, in the worst&lt;br /&gt;room in the house, right over the cymbal tree that the jazz-drummer below hammered&lt;br /&gt;on until nearly two a.m.. The bed was small and hard and smelled of bleach and&lt;br /&gt;must, the washbasin gurgled mysteriously and spat out moist sewage odors, and he'd&lt;br /&gt;read all his books, so he sat in the window and watched the drunks and the&lt;br /&gt;hipsters stagger down Queen Street and inhaled the smoky air and before he knew&lt;br /&gt;it, he'd nodded off in the chair with his heavy coat around him like a blanket.&lt;br /&gt;The Chinese girl abruptly thumped her fist into the Russian boy's ear. He clutched&lt;br /&gt;his head and howled, tears streaming down his face, while the Chinese girl ran&lt;br /&gt;off. Alan shook his head, got up off his chair, went inside for a cold washcloth&lt;br /&gt;and an ice pack, and came back out.&lt;br /&gt;The Russian boy's face was screwed up and blotchy and streaked with tears, and it&lt;br /&gt;made him look even more like Doug, who'd always been a crybaby. Alan couldn't&lt;br /&gt;understand him, but he took a guess and knelt at his side and wiped the boy's&lt;br /&gt;face, then put the ice pack in his little hand and pressed it to the side of his&lt;br /&gt;little head.&lt;br /&gt;"Come on," he said, taking the boy's other hand. "Where do your parents live? I'll&lt;br /&gt;take you home."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan met Krishna the next morning at ten a.m., as Alan was running a table saw on&lt;br /&gt;the neighbors' front lawn, sawing studs up to fit the second wall. Krishna came&lt;br /&gt;out of the house in a dirty dressing gown, his short hair matted with gel from the&lt;br /&gt;night before. He was tall and fit and muscular, his brown calves flashing through&lt;br /&gt;the vent of his housecoat. He was smoking a hand-rolled cigarette and clutching a&lt;br /&gt;can of Coke.&lt;br /&gt;Alan shut down the saw and shifted his goggles up to his forehead. "Good morning,"&lt;br /&gt;he said. "I'd stay on the porch if I were you, or maybe put on some shoes.&lt;br /&gt;There're lots of nails and splinters around."&lt;br /&gt;Krishna, about to step off the porch, stepped back. "You must be Alvin," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yup," Alan said, going up the stairs, sticking out his hand. "And you must be&lt;br /&gt;Krishna. You're pretty good with a guitar, you know that?"&lt;br /&gt;Krishna shook briefly, then snatched his hand back and rubbed at his stubble. "I&lt;br /&gt;know. You're pretty fucking loud with a table saw."&lt;br /&gt;Alan looked sheepish. "Sorry about that. I wanted to get the heavy work done&lt;br /&gt;before it got too hot. Hope I'm not disturbing you too much -- today's the only&lt;br /&gt;sawing day. I'll be hammering for the next day or two, then it's all wet work --&lt;br /&gt;the loudest tool I'll be using is sandpaper. Won't take more than four days, tops,&lt;br /&gt;anyway, and we'll be in good shape."&lt;br /&gt;Krishna gave him a long, considering look. "What are you, anyway?"&lt;br /&gt;"I'm a writer -- for now. Used to have a few shops."&lt;br /&gt;Krishna blew a plume of smoke off into the distance. "That's not what I mean. What&lt;br /&gt;*are* you, Adam? Alan? Andrew? I've met people like you before. There's something&lt;br /&gt;not right about you."&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't know what to say to that. This was bound to come up someday.&lt;br /&gt;"Where are you from?"&lt;br /&gt;"Up north. Near Kapuskasing," he said. "A little town."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't believe you," Krishna said. "Are you an alien? A fairy? What?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan shook his head. "Just about what I seem, I'm afraid. Just a guy."&lt;br /&gt;"Just about, huh?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Just about."&lt;br /&gt;"There's a lot of wiggle room in *just about*, Arthur. It's a free country, but&lt;br /&gt;just the same, I don't think I like you very much. Far as I'm concerned, you could&lt;br /&gt;get lost and never come back."&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry you feel that way, Krishna. I hope I'll grow on you as time goes by."&lt;br /&gt;"I hope that you won't have the chance to," Krishna said, flicking the dog end of&lt;br /&gt;his cigarette toward the sidewalk.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't like or understand Krishna, but that was okay. He understood the&lt;br /&gt;others just fine, more or less. Natalie had taken to helping him out after her&lt;br /&gt;classes, mudding and taping the drywall, then sanding it down, priming, and&lt;br /&gt;painting it. Her brother Link came home from work sweaty and grimy with road dust,&lt;br /&gt;but he always grabbed a beer for Natalie and Alan after his shower, and they'd sit&lt;br /&gt;on the porch and kibbitz.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi was less hospitable. She sulked in her room while Alan worked on the&lt;br /&gt;soundwall, coming downstairs only to fetch her breakfast and coldly ignoring him&lt;br /&gt;then, despite his cheerful greetings. Alan had to force himself not to stare after&lt;br /&gt;her as she walked into the kitchen, carrying yesterday's dishes down from her&lt;br /&gt;room; then out again, with a sandwich on a fresh plate. Her curly hair bounced as&lt;br /&gt;she stomped back and forth, her soft, round buttocks flexing under her long-johns.&lt;br /&gt;On the night that Alan and Natalie put the first coat of paint on the wall, Mimi&lt;br /&gt;came down in a little baby-doll dress, thigh-high striped tights, and chunky&lt;br /&gt;shoes, her face painted with swaths of glitter.&lt;br /&gt;"You look wonderful, baby," Natalie told her as she emerged onto the porch. "Going&lt;br /&gt;out?"&lt;br /&gt;"Going to the club," she said. "DJ None Of Your Fucking Business is spinning and&lt;br /&gt;Krishna's going to get me in for free."&lt;br /&gt;"Dance music," Link said disgustedly. Then, to Alan, "You know this stuff? It's&lt;br /&gt;not playing music, it's playing *records*. Snore."&lt;br /&gt;"Sounds interesting," Alan said. "Do you have any of it I could listen to? A CD or&lt;br /&gt;some MP3s?"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, *that's* not how you listen to this stuff," Natalie said. "You have to go to&lt;br /&gt;a club and *dance*."&lt;br /&gt;"Really?" Alan said. "Do I have to take ecstasy, or is that optional?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's mandatory," Mimi said, the first words she'd spoken to him all week. "Great&lt;br /&gt;fistfuls of E, and then you have to consume two pounds of candy necklaces at an&lt;br /&gt;after-hours orgy."&lt;br /&gt;"Not really," Natalie said, *sotto voce*. "But you *do* have to dance. You should&lt;br /&gt;go with, uh, Mimi, to the club. DJ None Of Your Fucking Business is *amazing*."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't think Mimi wants company," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"What makes you say that?" Mimi said, making a dare of it with hipshot body&lt;br /&gt;language. "Get changed and we'll go together. You'll have to pay to get in,&lt;br /&gt;though."&lt;br /&gt;Link and Natalie exchanged a raised eyebrow, but Alan was already headed for his&lt;br /&gt;place, fumbling for his keys. He bounded up the stairs, swiped a washcloth over&lt;br /&gt;his face, threw on a pair of old cargo pants and a faded Steel Pole Bathtub Tshirt&lt;br /&gt;he'd bought from a head-shop one day because he liked the words'&lt;br /&gt;incongruity, though he'd never heard the band, added a faded jean jacket and a&lt;br /&gt;pair of high-tech sneakers, grabbed his phone, and bounded back down the stairs.&lt;br /&gt;He was convinced that Mimi would be long gone by the time he got back out front,&lt;br /&gt;but she was still there, the stripes in her stockings glowing in the slanting&lt;br /&gt;light.&lt;br /&gt;"Retro chic," she said, and laughed nastily. Natalie gave him a thumbs up and a&lt;br /&gt;smile that Alan uncharitably took for a simper, and felt guilty about it&lt;br /&gt;immediately afterward. He returned the thumbs up and then took off after Mimi,&lt;br /&gt;who'd already started down Augusta, headed for Queen Street.&lt;br /&gt;"What's the cover charge?" he said, once he'd caught up.&lt;br /&gt;"Twenty bucks," she said. "It's an all-ages show, so they won't be selling a lot&lt;br /&gt;of booze, so there's a high cover."&lt;br /&gt;"How's the play coming?"&lt;br /&gt;"Fuck off about the play, okay?" she said, and spat on the sidewalk.&lt;br /&gt;"All right, then," he said. "I'm going to start writing my story tomorrow," he&lt;br /&gt;said.&lt;br /&gt;"Your story, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yup."&lt;br /&gt;"What's that for?"&lt;br /&gt;"What do you mean?" he asked playfully.&lt;br /&gt;"Why are you writing a story?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, I have to! I've completely redone the house, built that soundwall -- it'd&lt;br /&gt;be a shame not to write the story now."&lt;br /&gt;"You're writing a story about your house?"&lt;br /&gt;"No, *in* my house. I haven't decided what the story's about yet. That'll be job&lt;br /&gt;one tomorrow."&lt;br /&gt;"You did all that work to have a place to write? Man, I thought *I* was into&lt;br /&gt;procrastination."&lt;br /&gt;He chuckled self-deprecatingly. "I guess you could look at it that way. I just&lt;br /&gt;wanted to have a nice, creative environment to work in. The story's important to&lt;br /&gt;me, is all."&lt;br /&gt;"What are you going to do with it once you're done? There aren't a whole lot of&lt;br /&gt;places that publish short stories these days, you know."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I know it! I'd write a novel if I had the patience. But this isn't for&lt;br /&gt;publication -- yet. It's going into a drawer to be published after I die."&lt;br /&gt;"*What*?"&lt;br /&gt;"Like Emily Dickinson. Wrote thousands of poems, stuck 'em in a drawer, dropped&lt;br /&gt;dead. Someone else published 'em and she made it into the canon. I'm going to do&lt;br /&gt;the same."&lt;br /&gt;"That's nuts -- are you dying?"&lt;br /&gt;"Nope. But I don't want to put this off until I am. Could get hit by a bus, you&lt;br /&gt;know."&lt;br /&gt;"You're a goddamned psycho. Krishna was right."&lt;br /&gt;"What does Krishna have against me?"&lt;br /&gt;"I think we both know what that's about," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"No, really, what did I ever do to him?"&lt;br /&gt;Now they were on Queen Street, walking east in the early evening crowd, surrounded&lt;br /&gt;by summertime hipsters and wafting, appetizing smells from the bistros and&lt;br /&gt;Jamaican roti shops. She stopped abruptly and grabbed his shoulders and gave him a&lt;br /&gt;hard shake.&lt;br /&gt;"You're full of shit, Ad-man. I know it and you know it."&lt;br /&gt;"I really don't know what you're talking about, honestly!"&lt;br /&gt;"Fine, let's do this." She clamped her hand on his forearm and dragged him down a&lt;br /&gt;side street and turned down an alley. She stepped into a doorway and started&lt;br /&gt;unbuttoning her Alice-blue babydoll dress. Alan looked away, embarrassed, glad of&lt;br /&gt;the dark hiding his blush.&lt;br /&gt;Once the dress was unbuttoned to her waist, she reached around behind her and&lt;br /&gt;unhooked her white underwire bra, which sagged forward under the weight of her&lt;br /&gt;heavy breasts. She turned around, treating him to a glimpse of the full curve of&lt;br /&gt;her breast under her arm, and shrugged the dress down around her waist.&lt;br /&gt;She had two stubby, leathery wings growing out of the middle of her back, just&lt;br /&gt;above the shoulder blades. They sat flush against her back, and as Alan watched,&lt;br /&gt;they unfolded and flexed, flapped a few times, and settled back into their&lt;br /&gt;position, nested among the soft roll of flesh that descended from her neck.&lt;br /&gt;Involuntarily, he peered forward, examining the wings, which were covered in fine&lt;br /&gt;downy brown hairs, and their bases, roped with muscle and surrounded by a mess of&lt;br /&gt;ugly scars.&lt;br /&gt;"You...*sewed*...these on?" Alan said, aghast.&lt;br /&gt;She turned around, her eyes bright with tears. Her breasts swung free of her&lt;br /&gt;unhooked bra. "No, you fucking idiot. I sawed them off. Four times a year. They&lt;br /&gt;just grow back. If I don't cut them, they grow down to my ankles."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Mimi was curiously and incomprehensibly affectionate after she had buttoned up her&lt;br /&gt;dress and resumed walking toward the strip of clubs along Richmond Street. She put&lt;br /&gt;her hand on his forearm and murmured funny commentary about the outlandishly&lt;br /&gt;attired club kids in their plastic cowboy hats, Sailor Moon outfits, and plastic&lt;br /&gt;tuxedoes. She plucked a cigarette from his lips, dragged on it, and put it back&lt;br /&gt;into his mouth, still damp with her saliva, an act that sent a shiver down Alan's&lt;br /&gt;neck and made the hair on the backs of his hands stand up.&lt;br /&gt;She seemed to think that the wings were self-explanatory and needed no further&lt;br /&gt;discussion, and Alan was content to let them stay in his mind's eye, bat-shaped,&lt;br /&gt;powerful, restless, surrounded by their gridwork of angry scars.&lt;br /&gt;Once they got to the club, Shasta Disaster, a renovated brick bank with robotic&lt;br /&gt;halogen spots that swept the sidewalk out front with a throbbing penis logomark,&lt;br /&gt;she let go of his arm and her body stiffened. She said something in the doorman's&lt;br /&gt;ear, and he let her pass. When Alan tried to follow her, the bouncer stopped him&lt;br /&gt;with a meaty hand on his chest.&lt;br /&gt;"Can I help you sir," he said flatly. He was basically a block of fat and muscle&lt;br /&gt;with a head on top, arms as thick as Alan's thighs barely contained in a silver&lt;br /&gt;button-down short-sleeve shirt that bound at his armpits.&lt;br /&gt;"Do I pay the cover to you?" Alan asked, reaching for his wallet.&lt;br /&gt;"No, you don't get to pay a cover. You're not coming in."&lt;br /&gt;"But I'm with her," Alan said, gesturing in the direction Mimi had gone. "I'm&lt;br /&gt;Krishna's and her neighbor."&lt;br /&gt;"She didn't mention it," the bouncer said. He was smirking now.&lt;br /&gt;"Look," Alan said. "I haven't been to a club in twenty years. Do you guys still&lt;br /&gt;take bribes?"&lt;br /&gt;The bouncer rolled his eyes. "Some might. I don't. Why don't you head home, sir."&lt;br /&gt;"That's it, huh?" Alan said. "Nothing I can say or do?"&lt;br /&gt;"Don't be a smart guy," the bouncer said.&lt;br /&gt;"Good night, then," Alan said, and turned on his heel. He walked back up to Queen&lt;br /&gt;Street, which was ablaze with TV lights from the open studio out front of the&lt;br /&gt;CHUM-City building. Hordes of teenagers in tiny, outrageous outfits milled back&lt;br /&gt;and forth from the coffee shops to the studio window, where some band he'd never&lt;br /&gt;heard of was performing, generally ambling southward to the clubs. Alan bought&lt;br /&gt;himself a coffee with a sixteen-syllable latinate trade name ("Moch-a-latt-ameraican-&lt;br /&gt;a-spress-a-chino," he liked to call them) at the Second Cup and hailed a&lt;br /&gt;taxi.&lt;br /&gt;He felt only the shortest moment of anger at Mimi, but it quickly cooled and then&lt;br /&gt;warmed again, replaced by bemusement. Decrypting the mystical deeds of young&lt;br /&gt;people had been his hobby and avocation since he hired his first cranky-but-bright&lt;br /&gt;sixteen-year-old. Mimi had played him, he knew that, deliberately set him up to be&lt;br /&gt;humiliated. But she'd also wanted a moment alone with him, an opportunity to&lt;br /&gt;confront him with her wings -- wings that were taking on an air of the erotic now&lt;br /&gt;in his imagination, much to his chagrin. He imagined that they were soft and&lt;br /&gt;pliable as lips but with spongy cartilage beneath that gave way like livid nipple&lt;br /&gt;flesh. The hair must be silky, soft, and slippery as a pubic thatch oiled with&lt;br /&gt;sweat and juices. Dear oh dear, he was really getting himself worked into a&lt;br /&gt;lather, imagining the wings drooping to the ground, unfolding powerfully in his&lt;br /&gt;living room, encircling him, enveloping him as his lips enveloped the tendons on&lt;br /&gt;her neck, as her vagina enveloped him... Whew!&lt;br /&gt;The taxi drove right past his place and that gave Alan a much-needed distraction,&lt;br /&gt;directing the cabbie through the maze of Kensington Market's one-way streets back&lt;br /&gt;around to his front door. He tipped the cabbie a couple of bucks over his&lt;br /&gt;customary ten percent and bummed a cigarette off him, realizing that Mimi had&lt;br /&gt;asked him for a butt but never returned the pack.&lt;br /&gt;He puffed and shook his head and stared up the street at the distant lights of&lt;br /&gt;College Street, then turned back to his porch.&lt;br /&gt;"Hello, Albert," two voices said in unison, speaking from the shadows on his&lt;br /&gt;porch.&lt;br /&gt;"Jesus," he said, and hit the remote on his keyring that switched on the porch&lt;br /&gt;light. It was his brother Edward, the eldest of the nesting dolls, the bark of&lt;br /&gt;their trinity, coarse and tough and hollow. He was even fatter than he'd been as a&lt;br /&gt;little boy, fat enough that his arms and legs appeared vestigial and unjointed. He&lt;br /&gt;struggled, panting, to his tiny feet -- feet like undersized exclamation points&lt;br /&gt;beneath the tapered Oh of his body. His face, though doughy, had not gone to&lt;br /&gt;undefined softness. Rather, every feature had acquired its own rolls of fat, rolls&lt;br /&gt;that warred with one another to define his appearance -- nose and cheekbones and&lt;br /&gt;brow and lips all grotesque and inflated and blubbery.&lt;br /&gt;"Eugene," Alan said. "It's been a very long time."&lt;br /&gt;Edward cocked his head. "It has, indeed, big brother. I've got bad news."&lt;br /&gt;"What?"&lt;br /&gt;Edward leaned to the left, the top half of his body tipping over completely,&lt;br /&gt;splitting at his narrow leather belt, so that his trunk, neck, and head hung&lt;br /&gt;upside down beside his short, cylindrical legs and tiny feet.&lt;br /&gt;Inside of him was Frederick, the perennial middle child. Frederick planted his&lt;br /&gt;palms on the dry, smooth edges of his older brother's waist and levered himself&lt;br /&gt;up, stepping out of Ed's legs with the unconscious ease of a lifetime's practice.&lt;br /&gt;"It's good to see you, Andy," he said. He was pale and wore his habitual owlish&lt;br /&gt;expression of surprise at seeing the world without looking through his older&lt;br /&gt;brother's eyes.&lt;br /&gt;"It's nice to see you, too, Frederick," Alan said. He'd always gotten along with&lt;br /&gt;Frederick, always liked his ability to play peacemaker and to lend a listening&lt;br /&gt;ear.&lt;br /&gt;Frederick helped Edward upright, methodically circumnavigating his huge belly,&lt;br /&gt;retucking his grimy white shirt. Then he hitched up his sweatshirt over the hairy&lt;br /&gt;pale expanse of his own belly and tipped to one side.&lt;br /&gt;Alan had been expecting to see Gregory, the core, but instead, there was nothing&lt;br /&gt;inside Frederick. The Gregory-shaped void was empty. Frederick righted himself and&lt;br /&gt;hitched up his belt.&lt;br /&gt;"We think he's dead," Edward said, his rubbery features distorted into a Greek&lt;br /&gt;tragedy mask. "We think that Doug killed him." He pinwheeled his round arms and&lt;br /&gt;then clapped his hands to his face, sobbing. Frederick put a hand on his arm. He,&lt;br /&gt;too, was crying.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Once upon a time, Alan's mother gave birth to three sons in three months. Birthing&lt;br /&gt;sons was hardly extraordinary -- before these three came along, she'd already had&lt;br /&gt;four others. But the interval, well, that was unusual.&lt;br /&gt;As the eldest, Alan was the first to recognize the early signs of her pregnancy.&lt;br /&gt;The laundry loads of diapers and play clothes he fed into her belly unbalanced&lt;br /&gt;more often, and her spin cycle became almost lackadaisical, so the garments had to&lt;br /&gt;hang on the line for days before they stiffened and dried completely. Alan liked&lt;br /&gt;to sit with his back against his mother's hard enamel side while she rocked and&lt;br /&gt;gurgled and churned. It comforted him.&lt;br /&gt;The details of her conception were always mysterious to Alan. He'd been walking&lt;br /&gt;down into town to attend day school for five years, and he'd learned all about the&lt;br /&gt;birds and the bees, and he thought that maybe his father -- the mountain --&lt;br /&gt;impregnated his mother by means of some strange pollen carried on the gusts of&lt;br /&gt;winds from his deep and gloomy caves. There was a gnome, too, who made sure that&lt;br /&gt;the long hose that led from Alan's mother's back to the spring pool in his&lt;br /&gt;father's belly remained clear and unfouled, and sometimes Alan wondered if the&lt;br /&gt;gnome dove for his father's seed and fed it up his mother's intake. Alan's life&lt;br /&gt;was full of mysteries, and he'd long since learned to keep his mouth shut about&lt;br /&gt;his home life when he was at school.&lt;br /&gt;He attended all three births, along with the smaller kids -- Bill and Donald&lt;br /&gt;(Charlie, the island, was still small enough to float in the middle of their&lt;br /&gt;father's heart-pool) -- waiting on tenterhooks for his mother's painful offbalance&lt;br /&gt;spin cycle to spend itself before reverently opening the round glass door&lt;br /&gt;and removing the infant within.&lt;br /&gt;Edward was fat, even for a baby. He looked like an elongated soccer ball with a&lt;br /&gt;smaller ball on top. He cried healthily, though, and gave hearty suck to their&lt;br /&gt;mother's exhaust valve once Alan had cleaned the soap suds and fabric softener&lt;br /&gt;residue from his little body. His father gusted proud, warm, blustery winds over&lt;br /&gt;them and their little domestic scene.&lt;br /&gt;Alan noticed that little Edward, for all his girth, was very light, and wondered&lt;br /&gt;if the baby was full of helium or some other airy substance. Certainly he hardly&lt;br /&gt;appeared to be full of *baby*, since everything he ate and drank passed through&lt;br /&gt;him in a matter of seconds, hardly digested at all. Alan had to go into town twice&lt;br /&gt;to buy new twelve-pound boxes of clean white shop rags to clean up the slime trail&lt;br /&gt;the baby left behind him. Drew, at three, seemed to take a perverse delight in the&lt;br /&gt;scummy water, spreading it around the cave as much as possible. The grove in front&lt;br /&gt;of the cave mouth was booby trapped with clothesline upon clothesline, all hung&lt;br /&gt;with diapers and rags drying out in the early spring sunlight.&lt;br /&gt;Thirty days later, Alan came home from school to find the younger kids surrounding&lt;br /&gt;his mother as she rocked from side to side, actually popping free of the grooves&lt;br /&gt;her small metal feet had worn in the cave floor over the years.&lt;br /&gt;Two babies in thirty days! Such a thing was unheard of in their father's cave.&lt;br /&gt;Edward, normally a sweet-tempered baby, howled long screams that resonated through&lt;br /&gt;Alan's milk teeth and made his testicles shrivel up into hard stones. Alan knew&lt;br /&gt;his mother liked to be left alone when she was in labor, but he couldn't just&lt;br /&gt;stand there and watch her shake and shiver.&lt;br /&gt;He went to her and pressed his palms to her top, tried to soothe and restrain her.&lt;br /&gt;Bill, the second eldest and still only four years old, followed suit. Edward's&lt;br /&gt;screams grew even louder, loud and hoarse and utterly terrified, echoing off their&lt;br /&gt;father's walls and back to them. Soon Alan was sobbing, too, biting his lip to&lt;br /&gt;keep the sounds inside, and so were the other children. Dillon wrinkled his brow&lt;br /&gt;and screamed a high-pitched wail that could have cut glass.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's mother rocked harder, and her exhaust hose dislodged itself. A highpressure&lt;br /&gt;jet of cold, soapy water spurted from her back parts, painting the cave&lt;br /&gt;wall with suds. Edward crawled into the puddle it formed and scooped small&lt;br /&gt;handsful of the liquid into his mouth between howls.&lt;br /&gt;And then, it stopped. His mother stopped rocking, stopped shaking. The stream&lt;br /&gt;trailed off into a trickle. Alan stopped crying, and soon the smaller kids&lt;br /&gt;followed suit, even Edward. The echoes continued for a moment, and then they, too,&lt;br /&gt;stopped. The silence was as startling -- and nearly as unbearable -- as the&lt;br /&gt;cacophony had been.&lt;br /&gt;With a trembling hand, Alan opened his mother's door and extracted little&lt;br /&gt;Frederick. The baby was small and cyanotic blue. Alan tipped the baby over and&lt;br /&gt;shook him gently, and the baby vomited up a fantastic quantity of wash water, a&lt;br /&gt;prodigious stream that soaked the front of Alan's school trousers and his worn&lt;br /&gt;brown loafers. Finally it ended, and the baby let out a healthy yowl. Alan shifted&lt;br /&gt;the infant to one arm and gingerly reconnected the exhaust hose and set the baby&lt;br /&gt;down alongside of its end. The baby wouldn't suck, though.&lt;br /&gt;Across the cave, from his soggy seat in the puddle of waste water, Edward watched&lt;br /&gt;the new baby with curious eyes. He crawled across the floor and nuzzled his&lt;br /&gt;brother with his high forehead. Frederick squirmed and fussed, and Edward shoved&lt;br /&gt;him to one side and sucked. His little diaper dripped as the liquid passed&lt;br /&gt;directly through him.&lt;br /&gt;Alan patiently picked dripping Edward up and put him over one shoulder, and gave&lt;br /&gt;Frederick the tube to suck. Frederick gummed at the hose's end, then fussed some&lt;br /&gt;more, whimpering. Edward squirmed in his arms, nearly plummeting to the hard stone&lt;br /&gt;floor.&lt;br /&gt;"Billy," Alan said to the solemn little boy, who nodded. "Can you take care of&lt;br /&gt;Edward for a little while? I need to clean up." Billy nodded again and held out&lt;br /&gt;his pudgy arms. Alan grabbed some clean shop rags and briskly wiped Frederick&lt;br /&gt;down, then laid another across Billy's shoulder and set Edward down. The baby&lt;br /&gt;promptly set to snoring. Danny started screaming again, with no provocation, and&lt;br /&gt;Alan took two swift steps to bridge the distance between them and smacked the&lt;br /&gt;child hard enough to stun him silent.&lt;br /&gt;Alan grabbed a mop and bucket and sloshed the puddles into the drainage groove&lt;br /&gt;where his mother's waste water usually ran, out the cave mouth and into a stand of&lt;br /&gt;choking mountain-grass that fed greedily and thrived riotous in the phosphates&lt;br /&gt;from the detergent.&lt;br /&gt;Frederick did not eat for thirty days, and during that time he grew so thin that&lt;br /&gt;he appeared to shrivel like a raisin, going hard and folded in upon himself. Alan&lt;br /&gt;spent hours patiently spooning sudsy water into his little pink mouth, but the&lt;br /&gt;baby wouldn't swallow, just spat it out and whimpered and fussed. Edward liked to&lt;br /&gt;twine around Alan's feet like a cat as he joggled and spooned and fretted over&lt;br /&gt;Frederick. It was all Alan could do not to go completely mad, but he held it&lt;br /&gt;together, though his grades slipped.&lt;br /&gt;His mother vibrated nervously, and his father's winds grew so unruly that two of&lt;br /&gt;the golems came around to the cave to make their slow, peevish complaints. Alan&lt;br /&gt;shoved a baby into each of their arms and seriously lost his shit upon them,&lt;br /&gt;screaming himself hoarse at them while hanging more diapers, more rags, more&lt;br /&gt;clothes on the line, tossing his unfinished homework in their faces.&lt;br /&gt;But on the thirtieth day, his mother went into labor again -- a labor so frenzied&lt;br /&gt;that it dislodged a stalactite and sent it crashing and chundering to the cave&lt;br /&gt;floor in a fractious shivering of flinders. Alan took a chip in the neck and it&lt;br /&gt;opened up a small cut that nevertheless bled copiously and ruined, *ruined* his&lt;br /&gt;favorite T-shirt, with Snoopy sitting atop his doghouse in an aviator's helmet,&lt;br /&gt;firing an imaginary machine gun at the cursed Red Baron.&lt;br /&gt;That was nearly the final straw for Alan, but he held fast and waited for the&lt;br /&gt;labor to pass and finally unlatched the door and extracted little George, a peanut&lt;br /&gt;of a child, a lima-bean infant, curled and fetal and eerily quiet. He set the&lt;br /&gt;little half-baby down by the exhaust hose, where he'd put shriveled Frederick in a&lt;br /&gt;hopeless hope that the baby would suck, would ingest, finally.&lt;br /&gt;And ingest Frederick did. His dry and desiccated jaw swung open like a snake's,&lt;br /&gt;unhinged and spread wide, and he *swallowed* little George, ate him up in three&lt;br /&gt;convulsive swallows, the new baby making Frederick's belly swell like a balloon.&lt;br /&gt;Alan swallowed panic, seized Frederick by the heels, and shook him upside down.&lt;br /&gt;"Spit him out," Alan cried, "Spat him free!"&lt;br /&gt;But Frederick kept his lips stubbornly together, and Alan tired of the terrible&lt;br /&gt;business and set the boy with the newest brother within down on a pile of hay he'd&lt;br /&gt;brought in to soak up some of Edward's continuous excretions. Alan put his hands&lt;br /&gt;over his face and sobbed, because he'd failed his responsibilities as eldest of&lt;br /&gt;their family and there was no one he could tell his woes to.&lt;br /&gt;The sound of baby giggles stopped his crying. Edward had belly-crawled to&lt;br /&gt;Frederick's side and he was eating *him*, jaw unhinged and gorge working. He was&lt;br /&gt;up to Frederick's little bottom, dehydrated to a leathery baby-jerky, and then he&lt;br /&gt;was past, swallowing the arms and the chin and the *head*, the giggling, smiling&lt;br /&gt;head, the laughing head that had done nothing but whine and fuss since Alan had&lt;br /&gt;cleared it of its volume of detergenty water, fresh from their mother's belly.&lt;br /&gt;And then Frederick was gone. Horrified, Alan rushed over and picked up Edward --&lt;br /&gt;now as heavy as a cannonball -- and pried his mouth open, staring down his gullet,&lt;br /&gt;staring down into *another mouth*, Frederick's mouth, which gaped open, revealing&lt;br /&gt;a *third* mouth, George's. The smallest mouth twisted and opened, then shut.&lt;br /&gt;Edward squirmed furiously and Alan nearly fumbled him. He set the baby down in the&lt;br /&gt;straw and watched him crawl across to their mother, where he sucked hungrily.&lt;br /&gt;Automatically, Alan gathered up an armload of rags and made ready to wipe up the&lt;br /&gt;stream that Edward would soon be ejecting.&lt;br /&gt;But no stream came. The baby fed and fed, and let out a deep burp in three-part&lt;br /&gt;harmony, spat up a little, and drank some more. Somehow, Frederick and George were&lt;br /&gt;in there feeding, too. Alan waited patiently for Edward to finish feeding, then&lt;br /&gt;put him over his shoulder and joggled him until he burped up, then bedded him down&lt;br /&gt;in his little rough-hewn crib -- the crib that the golems had carved for Alan when&lt;br /&gt;he was born -- cleaned the cave, and cried again, leaned up against their mother.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Frederick huddled in on himself, half behind Edward on the porch, habitually&lt;br /&gt;phobic of open spaces. Alan took his hand and then embraced him. He smelled of&lt;br /&gt;Edward's clammy guts and of sweat.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you two hungry?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;Edward grimaced. "Of course we're hungry, but without George there's nothing we&lt;br /&gt;can do about it, is there?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan shook his head. "How long has he been gone?"&lt;br /&gt;"Three weeks," Edward whispered. "I'm so hungry, Alan."&lt;br /&gt;"How did it happen?"&lt;br /&gt;Frederick wobbled on his feet, then leaned heavily on Edward. "I need to sit&lt;br /&gt;down," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan fumbled for his keys and let them into the house, where they settled into the&lt;br /&gt;corners of his old overstuffed horsehide sofa. He dialed up the wall sconces to a&lt;br /&gt;dim, homey lighting, solicitous of Frederick's sensitive eyes. He took an Apollo 8&lt;br /&gt;Jim Beam decanter full of stunning Irish whiskey off the sideboard and poured&lt;br /&gt;himself a finger of it, not offering any to his brothers.&lt;br /&gt;"Now, how did it happen?"&lt;br /&gt;"He wanted to speak to Dad," Frederick said. "He climbed out of me and wandered&lt;br /&gt;down through the tunnels into the spring pool. The goblin told us that he took off&lt;br /&gt;his clothes and waded in and started whispering." Like most of the boys, George&lt;br /&gt;had believed that their father was most aware in his very middle, where he could&lt;br /&gt;direct the echoes of the water's rippling, shape them into words and phrases in&lt;br /&gt;the hollow of the great cavern.&lt;br /&gt;"So the goblin saw it happen?"&lt;br /&gt;"No," Frederick said, and Edward began to cry again. "No. George asked him for&lt;br /&gt;some privacy, and so he went a little way up the tunnel. He waited and waited, but&lt;br /&gt;George didn't come back. He called out, but George didn't answer. When he went to&lt;br /&gt;look for him, he was gone. His clothes were gone. All that he could find was&lt;br /&gt;this." He scrabbled to fit his chubby hand into his jacket's pocket, then fished&lt;br /&gt;out a little black pebble. Alan took it and saw that it wasn't a pebble, it was a&lt;br /&gt;rotted-out and dried-up fingertip, pierced with unbent paperclip wire.&lt;br /&gt;"It's Dave's, isn't it?" Edward said.&lt;br /&gt;"I think so," Alan said. Dave used to spend hours wiring his dropped-off parts&lt;br /&gt;back onto his body, gluing his teeth back into his head. "Jesus."&lt;br /&gt;"We're going to die, aren't we?" Frederick said. "We're going to starve to death."&lt;br /&gt;Edward held his pudgy hands one on top of the other in his lap and began to rock&lt;br /&gt;back and forth. "We'll be okay," he lied.&lt;br /&gt;"Did anyone see Dave?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;"No," Frederick said. "We asked the golems, we asked Dad, we asked the goblin, but&lt;br /&gt;no one saw him. No one's seen him for years."&lt;br /&gt;Alan thought for a moment about how to ask his next question. "Did you look in the&lt;br /&gt;pool? On the bottom?"&lt;br /&gt;"*He's not there!*" Edward said. "We looked there. We looked all around Dad. We&lt;br /&gt;looked in town. Alan, they're both gone."&lt;br /&gt;Alan felt a sear of acid jet up esophagus. "I don't know what to do," he said. "I&lt;br /&gt;don't know where to look. Frederick, can't you, I don't know, *stuff* yourself&lt;br /&gt;with something? So you can eat?"&lt;br /&gt;"We tried," Edward said. "We tried rags and sawdust and clay and bread and they&lt;br /&gt;didn't work. I thought that maybe we could get a *child* and put him inside,&lt;br /&gt;maybe, but God, Albert, I don't want to do that, it's the kind of thing Dan would&lt;br /&gt;do."&lt;br /&gt;Alan stared at the softly glowing wood floors, reflecting highlights from the soft&lt;br /&gt;lighting. He rubbed his stocking toes over the waxy finish and felt its shine.&lt;br /&gt;"Don't do that, okay?" he said. "I'll think of something. Let me sleep on it. Do&lt;br /&gt;you want to sleep here? I can make up the sofa."&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks, big brother," Edward said. "Thanks."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan walked past his study, past the tableau of laptop and desk and chair, felt&lt;br /&gt;the pull of the story, and kept going, pulling his housecoat tighter around&lt;br /&gt;himself. The summer morning was already hotting up, and the air in the house had a&lt;br /&gt;sticky, dewy feel.&lt;br /&gt;He found Edward sitting on the sofa, with the sheets and pillowcases folded neatly&lt;br /&gt;next to him.&lt;br /&gt;"I set out a couple of towels for you in the second-floor bathroom and found an&lt;br /&gt;extra toothbrush," Alan said. "If you want them."&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks," Edward said, echoing in his empty chest. The thick rolls of his face&lt;br /&gt;were contorted into a caricature of sorrow.&lt;br /&gt;"Where's Frederick?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;"Gone!" Edward said, and broke into spasms of sobbing. "He's gone he's gone he's&lt;br /&gt;gone, I woke up and he was gone."&lt;br /&gt;Alan shifted the folded linens to the floor and sat next to Edward. "What&lt;br /&gt;happened?"&lt;br /&gt;"You *know* what happened, Alan," Edward said. "You know as well as I do! Dave&lt;br /&gt;took him in the night. He followed us here and he came in the night and stole him&lt;br /&gt;away."&lt;br /&gt;"You don't know that," Alan said, softly stroking Edward's greasy fringe of hair.&lt;br /&gt;"He could have wandered out for a walk or something."&lt;br /&gt;"Of course I know it!" Edward yelled, his voice booming in the hollow of his great&lt;br /&gt;chest. "Look!" He handed Alan a small, desiccated lump, like a black bean pierced&lt;br /&gt;with a paperclip wire.&lt;br /&gt;"You showed me this yesterday --" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's from a *different finger*!" Edward said, and he buried his face in Alan's&lt;br /&gt;shoulder, sobbing uncontrollably.&lt;br /&gt;"Have you looked for him?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;"I've been waiting for you to get up. I don't want to go out alone."&lt;br /&gt;"We'll look together," Alan said. He got a pair of shorts and a T-shirt, shoved&lt;br /&gt;his feet into Birkenstocks, and led Edward out the door.&lt;br /&gt;The previous night's humidity had thickened to a gray cloudy soup, swift&lt;br /&gt;thunderheads coming in from all sides. The foot traffic was reduced to sparse,&lt;br /&gt;fast-moving umbrellas, people rushing for shelter before the deluge. Ozone&lt;br /&gt;crackled in the air and thunder roiled seemingly up from the ground, deep and&lt;br /&gt;sickening.&lt;br /&gt;They started with a circuit of the house, looking for footprints, body parts. He&lt;br /&gt;found a shred of torn gray thrift-store shirt, caught on a rose bramble near the&lt;br /&gt;front of his walk. It smelled of the homey warmth of Edward's innards, and had a&lt;br /&gt;few of Frederick's short, curly hairs stuck to it. Alan showed it to Edward, then&lt;br /&gt;folded it into the change pocket of his wallet.&lt;br /&gt;They walked the length of the sidewalk, crossed Wales, and began to slowly cross&lt;br /&gt;the little park. Edward circumnavigated the little cement wading pool, tracing the&lt;br /&gt;political runes left behind by the Market's cheerful anarchist taggers, painfully&lt;br /&gt;bent almost double at his enormous waist.&lt;br /&gt;"What are we looking for, Alan?"&lt;br /&gt;"Footprints. Finger bones. Clues."&lt;br /&gt;Edward puffed back to the bench and sat down, tears streaming down his face. "I'm&lt;br /&gt;so *hungry*," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan, crawling around the torn sod left when someone had dragged one of the picnic&lt;br /&gt;tables, contained his frustration. "If we can find Daniel, we can get Frederick&lt;br /&gt;and George back, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"All right," Edward snuffled.&lt;br /&gt;The next time Alan looked up, Edward had taken off his scuffed shoes and grimygray&lt;br /&gt;socks, rolled up the cuffs of his tent-sized pants, and was wading through&lt;br /&gt;the little pool, piggy eyes cast downward.&lt;br /&gt;"Good idea," Alan called, and turned to the sandbox.&lt;br /&gt;A moment later, there was a booming yelp, almost lost in the roll of thunder, and&lt;br /&gt;when Alan turned about, Edward was gone.&lt;br /&gt;Alan kicked off his Birks and splashed up to the hems of his shorts in the wading&lt;br /&gt;pool. In the pool's center, the round fountainhead was a twisted wreck, the&lt;br /&gt;concrete crumbled and the dry steel and brass fixtures contorted and ruptured.&lt;br /&gt;They had long streaks of abraded skin, torn shirt, and blood on them, leading down&lt;br /&gt;into the guts of the fountain.&lt;br /&gt;Cautiously, Alan leaned over, looking well down the dark tunnel that had been&lt;br /&gt;scraped out of the concrete centerpiece. The thin gray light showed him the rough&lt;br /&gt;walls, chipped out with some kind of sharp tool. "Edward?" he called. His voice&lt;br /&gt;did not echo or bounce back to him.&lt;br /&gt;Tentatively, he reached down the tunnel, bending at the waist over the rough lip&lt;br /&gt;of the former fountain. Deep he reached and reached and reached, and as his&lt;br /&gt;fingertips hit loose dirt, he leaned farther in and groped blindly, digging his&lt;br /&gt;hands into the plug of soil that had been shoveled into the tunnel's bend a few&lt;br /&gt;feet below the surface. He straightened up and climbed in, sinking to the waist,&lt;br /&gt;and tried to kick the dirt out of the way, but it wouldn't give -- the tunnel had&lt;br /&gt;caved in behind the plug of earth.&lt;br /&gt;He clambered out, feeling the first fat drops of rain on his bare forearms and the&lt;br /&gt;crown of his head. *A shovel*. There was one in the little coach house in the back&lt;br /&gt;of his place, behind the collapsed boxes and the bicycle pump. As he ran across&lt;br /&gt;the street, he saw Krishna, sitting on his porch, watching him with a hint of a&lt;br /&gt;smile.&lt;br /&gt;"Lost another one, huh?" he said. He looked as if he'd been awake all night, now&lt;br /&gt;hovering on the brink of sleepiness and wiredness. A roll of thunder crashed and a&lt;br /&gt;sheet of rain hurtled out of the sky.&lt;br /&gt;Alan never thought of himself as a violent person. Even when he'd had to throw the&lt;br /&gt;occasional troublemaker out of his shops, he'd done so with an almost cordial&lt;br /&gt;force. Now, though, he trembled and yearned to take Krishna by the throat and ram&lt;br /&gt;his head, face first, into the column that held up his front porch, again and&lt;br /&gt;again, until his fingers were slick with the blood from Krishna's shattered nose.&lt;br /&gt;Alan hurried past him, his shoulders and fists clenched. Krishna chuckled nastily&lt;br /&gt;and Alan thought he knew who got the job of sawing off Mimi's wings when they grew&lt;br /&gt;too long, and thought, too, that Krishna must relish the task.&lt;br /&gt;"Where you going?" Krishna called.&lt;br /&gt;Alan fumbled with his keyring, desperate to get in and get the keys to the coach&lt;br /&gt;house and to fetch the shovel before the new tunnels under the park collapsed.&lt;br /&gt;"You're too late, you know," Krishna continued. "You might as well give up. Too&lt;br /&gt;late, too late!"&lt;br /&gt;Alan whirled and shrieked, a wordless, contorted war cry, a sound from his bestial&lt;br /&gt;guts. As his eyes swam back into focus, he saw Mimi standing beside Krishna,&lt;br /&gt;barefoot in a faded housecoat. Her eyes were very wide, and as she turned away&lt;br /&gt;from him, he saw that her stubby wings were splayed as wide as they'd go, forming&lt;br /&gt;a tent in her robe that pulled it up above her knees. Alan bit down and clamped&lt;br /&gt;his lips together and found his keys. He tracked mud over the polished floors and&lt;br /&gt;the ancient, threadbare Persian rugs as he ran to the kitchen, snatching the&lt;br /&gt;coach-house keys from their hook over the sink.&lt;br /&gt;He ran back across the street to the little park, clutching his shovel. He jammed&lt;br /&gt;his head into the centerpiece and tried to see which way the tunnel had curved off&lt;br /&gt;when it turned, but it was too dark, the dirt too loose. He pulled himself out and&lt;br /&gt;took the shovel in his hands like a spear and stabbed it into the concrete bed of&lt;br /&gt;the wading pool, listening for a hollowness in the returning sound like a man&lt;br /&gt;thudding for a stud under drywall.&lt;br /&gt;The white noise of the rain was too high, the rolling thunder too steady. His&lt;br /&gt;chest heaved and his tears mingled with the rain streaking down his face as he&lt;br /&gt;stabbed, again and again, at the pool's bottom. His mind was scrambled and&lt;br /&gt;saturated, his vision clouded with the humid mist rising off his exertion-heated&lt;br /&gt;chest and the raindrops caught in his eyelashes.&lt;br /&gt;He splashed out of the wading pool and took the shovel to the sod of the park's&lt;br /&gt;lawn, picking an arbitrary spot and digging inefficiently and hysterically, the&lt;br /&gt;bent shovel tip twisting with each stroke.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly strong hands were on his shoulders, another set prizing the shovel from&lt;br /&gt;his hands. He looked up and blinked his eyes clear, looking into the face of two&lt;br /&gt;young Asian police officers. They were bulky from the Kevlar vests they wore under&lt;br /&gt;their rain slickers, with kind and exasperated expressions on their faces.&lt;br /&gt;"Sir," the one holding the shovel said, "what are you doing?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan breathed himself into a semblance of composure. "I..." he started, then&lt;br /&gt;trailed off. Krishna was watching from his porch, grinning ferociously, holding a&lt;br /&gt;cordless phone.&lt;br /&gt;The creature that had howled at Krishna before scrambled for purchase in Alan's&lt;br /&gt;chest. Alan averted his eyes from Krishna's shit-eating, 911-calling grin. He&lt;br /&gt;focused on the cap of the officer in front of him, shrouded in a clear plastic&lt;br /&gt;shower cap to keep its crown dry. "I'm sorry," he said. "It was a -- a dog. A&lt;br /&gt;stray, or maybe a runaway. A little Scottie dog, it jumped down the center of the&lt;br /&gt;fountain there and disappeared. I looked down and thought it had found a tunnel&lt;br /&gt;that caved in on it."&lt;br /&gt;The officer peered at him from under the brim of his hat, dubiousness writ plain&lt;br /&gt;on his young, good-looking face. "A tunnel?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan wiped the rain from his eyes, tried to regain his composure, tried to find&lt;br /&gt;his charm. It wasn't to be found. Instead, every time he reached for something&lt;br /&gt;witty and calming, he saw the streaks of blood and torn clothing, dark on the&lt;br /&gt;loose soil of the fountain's center, and no sooner had he dispelled those images&lt;br /&gt;than they were replaced with Krishna, sneering, saying, "Lost another one, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;He trembled and swallowed a sob.&lt;br /&gt;"I think I need to sit down," he said, as calmly as he could, and he sank slowly&lt;br /&gt;to his knees. The hands on his biceps let him descend.&lt;br /&gt;"Sir, do you live nearby?" one of the cops asked, close in to his ear. He nodded&lt;br /&gt;into his hands, which he'd brought up to cover his face.&lt;br /&gt;"Across the street," he said. They helped him to his feet and supported him as he&lt;br /&gt;tottered, weak and heaving, to his porch. Krishna was gone once they got there.&lt;br /&gt;The cops helped him shuck his drenched shoes and socks and put him down on the&lt;br /&gt;overstuffed horsehide sofa. Alan recovered himself with an effort of will and gave&lt;br /&gt;them his ID.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm sorry, you must think I'm an absolute lunatic," he said, shivering in his wet&lt;br /&gt;clothes.&lt;br /&gt;"Sir," the cop who'd taken the shovel from him said, "we see absolute lunatics&lt;br /&gt;every day. I think you're just a little upset. We all go a little nuts from time&lt;br /&gt;to time."&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said. "Yeah. A little nuts. I had a long night last night. Family&lt;br /&gt;problems."&lt;br /&gt;The cops shifted their weight, showering the floor with raindrops that beaded on&lt;br /&gt;the finish.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you going to be all right on your own? We can call someone if you'd like."&lt;br /&gt;"No," Alan said, pasting on a weak smile. "No, that's all right. I'll be fine. I'm&lt;br /&gt;going to change into some dry clothes and clean up and, oh, I don't know, get some&lt;br /&gt;sleep. I think I could use some sleep."&lt;br /&gt;"That sounds like an excellent idea," the cop who'd taken the shovel said. He&lt;br /&gt;looked around at the bookcases. "You've read all of these?" he asked.&lt;br /&gt;"Naw," Alan said, falling into the rote response from his proprietorship of the&lt;br /&gt;bookstore. "What's the point of a bunch of books you've already read?" The joke&lt;br /&gt;reminded him of better times and he smiled a genuine smile.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Though the stinging hot shower revived him somewhat, he kept quickening into panic&lt;br /&gt;at the thought of David creeping into his house in the night, stumping in on&lt;br /&gt;desiccated black child-legs, snaggled rictus under mummified lips.&lt;br /&gt;He spooked at imagined noises and thudding rain and the dry creaking of the old&lt;br /&gt;house as he toweled off and dressed.&lt;br /&gt;There was no phone in the mountain, no way to speak to his remaining brothers, the&lt;br /&gt;golems, his parents. He balled his fists and stood in the center of his bedroom,&lt;br /&gt;shaking with impotent worry.&lt;br /&gt;David. None of them had liked David very much. Billy, the fortune-teller, had been&lt;br /&gt;born with a quiet wisdom, an eerie solemnity that had made him easy for the young&lt;br /&gt;Alan to care for. Carlos, the island, had crawled out of their mother's womb and&lt;br /&gt;pulled himself to the cave mouth and up the face of their father, lying there for&lt;br /&gt;ten years, accreting until he was ready to push off on his own.&lt;br /&gt;But Daniel, Daniel had been a hateful child from the day he was born. He was&lt;br /&gt;colicky, and his screams echoed through their father's caverns. He screamed from&lt;br /&gt;the moment he emerged and Alan tipped him over and toweled him gently dry and he&lt;br /&gt;didn't stop for an entire year. Alan stopped being able to tell day from night,&lt;br /&gt;lost track of the weeks and months. He'd developed a taste for food, real people&lt;br /&gt;food, that he'd buy in town at the Loblaws Superstore, but he couldn't leave Davey&lt;br /&gt;alone in the cave, and he certainly couldn't carry the howling, shitting, puking,&lt;br /&gt;pissing, filthy baby into town with him.&lt;br /&gt;So they ate what the golems brought them: sweet grasses, soft berries, frozen&lt;br /&gt;winter fruit dug from the base of the orchards in town, blind winter fish from the&lt;br /&gt;streams. They drank snowmelt and ate pine cones and the baby Davey cried and cried&lt;br /&gt;until Alan couldn't remember what it was to live in a world of words and&lt;br /&gt;conversations and thought and reflection.&lt;br /&gt;No one knew what to do about Davey. Their father blew warm winds scented with coal&lt;br /&gt;dust and loam to calm him, but still Davey cried. Their mother rocked him on her&lt;br /&gt;gentlest spin cycle, but still Davey cried. Alan walked down the slope to Carl's&lt;br /&gt;landmass, growing with the dust and rains and snow, and set him down on the soft&lt;br /&gt;grass and earth there, but still Davey cried, and Carlos inched farther and&lt;br /&gt;farther toward the St. Lawrence seaway, sluggishly making his way out to the ocean&lt;br /&gt;and as far away from the baby as possible.&lt;br /&gt;After his first birthday, David started taking breaks from his screaming, learning&lt;br /&gt;to crawl and then totter, becoming a holy terror. If Alan left his schoolbooks&lt;br /&gt;within reach of the boy, they'd be reduced to shreds of damp mulch in minutes. By&lt;br /&gt;the time he was two, his head was exactly at Alan's crotch height and he'd greet&lt;br /&gt;his brother on his return from school by charging at full speed into Alan's nuts,&lt;br /&gt;propelled at unlikely speed on his thin legs.&lt;br /&gt;At three, he took to butchering animals -- the rabbits that little Bill kept in&lt;br /&gt;stacked hutches outside of the cave mouth went first. Billy rushed home from his&lt;br /&gt;grade-two class, eyes crazed with precognition, and found David methodically&lt;br /&gt;wringing the animals' necks and then slicing them open with a bit of sharpened&lt;br /&gt;chert. Billy had showed David how to knap flint and chert the week before, after&lt;br /&gt;seeing a filmstrip about it in class. He kicked the makeshift knife out of Davey's&lt;br /&gt;hand, breaking his thumb with the toe of the hard leather shoes the golems had&lt;br /&gt;made for him, and left Davey to bawl in the cave while Billy dignified his pets'&lt;br /&gt;corpses, putting their entrails back inside their bodies and wrapping them in&lt;br /&gt;shrouds made from old diapers. Alan helped him bury them, and then found Davey and&lt;br /&gt;taped his thumb to his hand and spanked him until his arm was too tired to deal&lt;br /&gt;out one more wallop.&lt;br /&gt;Alan made his way down to the living room, the floor streaked with mud and water.&lt;br /&gt;He went into the kitchen and filled a bucket with soapy water and gathered up an&lt;br /&gt;armload of rags from the rag bag. Methodically, he cleaned away the mud. He turned&lt;br /&gt;his sopping shoes on end over the grate and dialed the thermostat higher. He made&lt;br /&gt;himself a bowl of granola and a cup of coffee and sat down at his old wooden&lt;br /&gt;kitchen table and ate mindlessly, then washed the dishes and put them in the&lt;br /&gt;drying rack.&lt;br /&gt;He'd have to go speak to Krishna.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Natalie answered the door in a pretty sun dress, combat boots, and a baseball hat.&lt;br /&gt;She eyed him warily.&lt;br /&gt;"I'd like to speak to Krishna," Alan said from under the hood of his poncho.&lt;br /&gt;There was an awkward silence. Finally, Natalie said, "He's not home."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't believe you," Alan said. "And it's urgent, and I'm not in the mood to&lt;br /&gt;play around. Can you get Krishna for me, Natalie?"&lt;br /&gt;"I told you," she said, not meeting his eyes, "he's not here."&lt;br /&gt;"That's enough," Alan said in his boss voice, his more-in-anger-than-in-sorrow&lt;br /&gt;voice. "Get him, Natalie. You don't need to be in the middle of this -- it's not&lt;br /&gt;right for him to ask you to. Get him."&lt;br /&gt;Natalie closed the door and he heard the deadbolt turn. *Is she going to fetch&lt;br /&gt;him, or is she locking me out?*&lt;br /&gt;He was on the verge of hammering the buzzer again, but he got his answer. Krishna&lt;br /&gt;opened the door and stepped onto the dripping porch, bulling Alan out with his&lt;br /&gt;chest.&lt;br /&gt;He smiled grimly at Alan and made a well-go-on gesture.&lt;br /&gt;"What did you see?" Alan said, his voice tight but under control.&lt;br /&gt;"Saw you and that fat guy," Krishna said. "Saw you rooting around in the park. Saw&lt;br /&gt;him disappear down the fountain."&lt;br /&gt;"He's my brother," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"So what, he ain't heavy? He's fat, but I expect there's a reason for that. I've&lt;br /&gt;seen your kind before, Adam. I don't like you, and I don't owe you any favors." He&lt;br /&gt;turned and reached for the screen door.&lt;br /&gt;"No," Alan said, taking him by the wrist, squeezing harder than was necessary.&lt;br /&gt;"Not yet. You said, 'Lost another one.' What other one, Krishna? What else did you&lt;br /&gt;see?"&lt;br /&gt;Krishna gnawed on his neatly trimmed soul patch. "Let go of me, Andrew," he said,&lt;br /&gt;almost too softly to be heard over the rain.&lt;br /&gt;"Tell me what you saw," Alan said. "Tell me, and I'll let you go." His other hand&lt;br /&gt;balled into a fist. "Goddammit, *tell me*!" Alan yelled, and twisted Krishna's arm&lt;br /&gt;behind his back.&lt;br /&gt;"I called the cops," Krishna said. "I called them again and they're on their way.&lt;br /&gt;Let me go, freak show."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't like you, either, Krishna," Alan said, twisting the arm higher. He let go&lt;br /&gt;suddenly, then stumbled back as Krishna scraped the heel of his motorcycle boot&lt;br /&gt;down his shin and hammered it into the top of his foot.&lt;br /&gt;He dropped to one knee and grabbed his foot while Krishna slipped into the house&lt;br /&gt;and shot the lock. Then he hobbled home as quickly as he could. He tried to pace&lt;br /&gt;off the ache in his foot, but the throbbing got worse, so he made himself a drippy&lt;br /&gt;ice pack and sat on the sofa in the immaculate living room and rocked back and&lt;br /&gt;forth, holding the ice to his bare foot.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;At five, Davey graduated from torturing animals to beating up on smaller children.&lt;br /&gt;Alan took him down to the school on the day after Labor Day, to sign him up for&lt;br /&gt;kindergarten. He was wearing his stiff new blue jeans and sneakers, his knapsack&lt;br /&gt;stuffed with fresh binders and pencils. Finding out about these things had been&lt;br /&gt;Alan's first experience with the wide world, a kindergartner sizing up his&lt;br /&gt;surroundings at speed so that he could try to fit in. David was a cute kid and had&lt;br /&gt;the benefit of Alan's experience. He had a foxy little face and shaggy blond hair,&lt;br /&gt;all clever smiles and awkward winks, and for all that he was still a monster.&lt;br /&gt;They came and got Alan twenty minutes after classes started, when his new homeroom&lt;br /&gt;teacher was still briefing them on the rules and regulations for junior high&lt;br /&gt;students. He was painfully aware of all the eyes on his back as he followed the&lt;br /&gt;office lady out of the portable and into the old school building where the&lt;br /&gt;kindergarten and the administration was housed.&lt;br /&gt;"We need to reach your parents," the office lady said, once they were alone in the&lt;br /&gt;empty hallways of the old building.&lt;br /&gt;"You can't," Alan said. "They don't have a phone."&lt;br /&gt;"Then we can drive out to see them," the office lady said. She smelled of&lt;br /&gt;artificial floral scent and Ivory soap, like the female hygiene aisle at the&lt;br /&gt;drugstore.&lt;br /&gt;"Mom's still real sick," Alan said, sticking to his traditional story.&lt;br /&gt;"Your father, then," the office lady said. He'd had variations on this&lt;br /&gt;conversation with every office lady at the school, and he knew he'd win it in the&lt;br /&gt;end. Meantime, what did they want?&lt;br /&gt;"My dad's, you know, gone," he said. "Since I was a little kid." That line always&lt;br /&gt;got the office ladies, "since I was a little kid," made them want to write it down&lt;br /&gt;for their family Christmas newsletters.&lt;br /&gt;The office lady smiled a powdery smile and put her hand on his shoulder. "All&lt;br /&gt;right, Alan, come with me."&lt;br /&gt;Davey was sitting on the dusty sofa in the vice principal's office. He punched the&lt;br /&gt;sofa cushion rhythmically. "Alan," he said when the office lady led him in.&lt;br /&gt;"Hi, Dave," Alan said. "What's going on?"&lt;br /&gt;"They're stupid here. I hate them." He gave the sofa a particularly vicious punch.&lt;br /&gt;"I'll get Mr Davenport," the office lady said, and closed the door behind her.&lt;br /&gt;"What did you do?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;"She wouldn't let me play!" David said, glaring at him.&lt;br /&gt;"Who wouldn't?"&lt;br /&gt;"A girl! She had the blocks and I wanted to play with them and she wouldn't let&lt;br /&gt;me!"&lt;br /&gt;"What did you hit her with?" Alan asked, dreading the answer.&lt;br /&gt;"A block," David said, suddenly and murderously cheerful. "I hit her in the eye!"&lt;br /&gt;Alan groaned. The door opened and the vice principal, Mr. Davenport, came in and&lt;br /&gt;sat behind his desk. He was the punishment man, the one that no one wanted to be&lt;br /&gt;sent in to see.&lt;br /&gt;"Hello, Alan," he said gravely. Alan hadn't ever been personally called before Mr.&lt;br /&gt;Davenport, but Billy got into some spot of precognitive trouble from time to time,&lt;br /&gt;rushing out of class to stop some disaster at home or somewhere else in the&lt;br /&gt;school. Mr. Davenport knew that Alan was a straight arrow, not someone he'd ever&lt;br /&gt;need to personally take an interest in.&lt;br /&gt;He crouched down next to Darren, hitching up his slacks. "You must be David," he&lt;br /&gt;said, ducking down low to meet Davey's downcast gaze.&lt;br /&gt;Davey punched the sofa.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm Mr. Davenport," he said, and extended a hand with a big class ring on it and&lt;br /&gt;a smaller wedding band.&lt;br /&gt;Davey kicked him in the nose, and the vice principal toppled over backward,&lt;br /&gt;whacking his head on the sharp corner of his desk. He tumbled over onto his side&lt;br /&gt;and clutched his head. "Mother*fucker*!" he gasped, and Davey giggled maniacally.&lt;br /&gt;Alan grabbed Davey's wrist and bent his arm behind his back, shoving him across&lt;br /&gt;his knee. He swatted the little boy on the ass as hard as he could, three times.&lt;br /&gt;"Don't you ever --" Alan began.&lt;br /&gt;The vice principal sat up, still clutching his head. "That's enough!" he said,&lt;br /&gt;catching Alan's arm.&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry," Alan said. "And David's sorry, too, right?" He glared at David.&lt;br /&gt;"You're a stupid mother*fucker*!" David said, and squirmed off of Alan's lap.&lt;br /&gt;The vice principal's lips tightened. "Alan," he said quietly, "take your brother&lt;br /&gt;into the hallway. I am going to write a note that your mother will have to sign&lt;br /&gt;before David comes back to school, after his two-week suspension."&lt;br /&gt;David glared at them each in turn. "I'm not coming back to this mother*fucker*&lt;br /&gt;place!" he said.&lt;br /&gt;He didn't.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The rain let up by afternoon, leaving a crystalline, fresh-mown air hanging over&lt;br /&gt;the Market.&lt;br /&gt;Andrew sat in his office by his laptop and watched the sun come out. He needed to&lt;br /&gt;find Ed, needed to find Frank, needed to find Grant, but he was out of practice&lt;br /&gt;when it came to the ways of the mountain and its sons. Whenever he tried to&lt;br /&gt;imagine a thing to do next, his mind spun and the worldless howling thing inside&lt;br /&gt;him stirred. The more he tried to remember what it was like to be a son of the&lt;br /&gt;mountain, the more he felt something he'd worked very hard for, his delicate&lt;br /&gt;normalcy, slipping away.&lt;br /&gt;So he put his soaked clothes in the dryer, clamped his laptop under his arm, and&lt;br /&gt;went out. He moped around the park and the fountain, but the stroller moms whose&lt;br /&gt;tots were splashing in the wading pool gave him sufficient dirty looks that he&lt;br /&gt;walked up to the Greek's, took a table on the patio, and ordered a murderously&lt;br /&gt;strong cup of coffee.&lt;br /&gt;He opened up the screen and rotated around the little café table until the screen&lt;br /&gt;was in the shade and his wireless card was aligned for best reception from the&lt;br /&gt;yagi antenna poking out of his back window. He opened up a browser and hit&lt;br /&gt;MapQuest, then brought up a street-detailed map of the Market. He pasted it into&lt;br /&gt;his CAD app and started to mark it up, noting all the different approaches to his&lt;br /&gt;house that Davey might take the next time he came. The maps soothed him, made him&lt;br /&gt;feel like a part of the known world.&lt;br /&gt;Augusta Avenue and Oxford were both out; even after midnight, when the stores were&lt;br /&gt;all shuttered, there was far too much foot traffic for Davey to pass by unnoticed.&lt;br /&gt;But the alleys that mazed the back ways were ideal. Some were fenced off, some&lt;br /&gt;were too narrow to pass, but most of them -- he'd tried to navigate them by&lt;br /&gt;bicycle once and found himself utterly lost. He'd had to turn around slowly until&lt;br /&gt;he spotted the CN Tower and use it to get his bearings.&lt;br /&gt;He poked at the map, sipping the coffee, then ordering another from the Greek's&lt;br /&gt;son, who hadn't yet figured out that he was a regular and so sneered at his laptop&lt;br /&gt;with undisguised contempt. "Computers, huh?" he said. "Doesn't anyone just read a&lt;br /&gt;book anymore?"&lt;br /&gt;"I used to own a bookstore," Alan said, then held up a finger and moused over to&lt;br /&gt;his photo album and brought up the thumbnails of his old bookstore. "See?"&lt;br /&gt;The Greek's son, thirty with a paunch and sweat-rings under the pits of his white&lt;br /&gt;"The Greek's" T-shirt, sat down and looked at the photos. "I remember that place,&lt;br /&gt;on Harbord Street, right?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan smiled. "Yup. We lost the store when they blew up the abortion clinic next&lt;br /&gt;door," he said. "Insurance paid out, but I wasn't ready to start over with another&lt;br /&gt;bookstore."&lt;br /&gt;The Greek's son shook his head. "Another coffee, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"Right," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan went back to the map, realigning the laptop for optimal reception again.&lt;br /&gt;"You got a wireless card in that?" a young guy at the next table asked. He was&lt;br /&gt;dressed in Kensington Market crusty-punk chic, tatts and facial piercings, filthgray&lt;br /&gt;bunchoffuckinggoofs tee, cutoffs, and sweaty high boots draped with chains.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said. He sighed and closed the map window. He wasn't getting&lt;br /&gt;anywhere, anyway.&lt;br /&gt;"And you get service here? Where's your access point?" Crusty-punk or no, he&lt;br /&gt;sounded as nerdy as any of the Web-heads you'd find shopping for bargains on CD&lt;br /&gt;blanks on College Street.&lt;br /&gt;"Three blocks that way," Alan said, pointing. "Hanging off my house. The network&lt;br /&gt;name is 'walesave.'"&lt;br /&gt;"Shit, that's you?" the kid said. "Goddammit, you're clobbering our access&lt;br /&gt;points!"&lt;br /&gt;"What access point?"&lt;br /&gt;"Access *points*. ParasiteNet." He indicated a peeling sticker on the lapel of his&lt;br /&gt;cut-down leather jacket showing a skull with crossed radio towers underneath it.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm trying to get a mesh-net running though all of the Market, and you're&lt;br /&gt;hammering me. Jesus, I was ready to rat you out to the radio cops at the Canadian&lt;br /&gt;Radio and Television Commission. Dude, you've got to turn down the freaking *gain*&lt;br /&gt;on those things."&lt;br /&gt;"What's a mesh-net?"&lt;br /&gt;The kid moved his beer over to Alan's table and sat down. "Okay, so pretend that&lt;br /&gt;your laptop is the access point. It radiates more or less equally in all&lt;br /&gt;directions, depending on your antenna characteristics and leaving out the RF&lt;br /&gt;shadows that microwaves and stucco and cordless phones generate." He arranged the&lt;br /&gt;coffee cup and the beer at equal distances from the laptop, then moved them around&lt;br /&gt;to demonstrate the coverage area. "Right, so what happens if I'm out of range,&lt;br /&gt;over *here* --" he put his beer back on his own table -- "and you want to reach&lt;br /&gt;me? Well, you could just turn up the gain on your access point, either by&lt;br /&gt;increasing the power so that it radiates farther in all directions, or by focusing&lt;br /&gt;the transmissions so they travel farther in a line of sight."&lt;br /&gt;"Right," Alan said, sipping his coffee.&lt;br /&gt;"Right. So both of those approaches suck. If you turn up the power, you radiate&lt;br /&gt;over everyone else's signal, so if I've got an access point *here*" -- he held his&lt;br /&gt;fist between their tables -- "no one can hear it because you're drowning it out.&lt;br /&gt;It's like you're shouting so loud that no one else can carry on a conversation."&lt;br /&gt;"So why don't you just use my network? I want to be able to get online anywhere in&lt;br /&gt;the Market, but that means that anyone can, right?"&lt;br /&gt;The crusty-punk waved his hand dismissively. "Sure, whatever. But what happens if&lt;br /&gt;your network gets shut down? Or if you decide to start eavesdropping on other&lt;br /&gt;people? Or if someone wants to get to the printer in her living room? It's no&lt;br /&gt;good."&lt;br /&gt;"So, what, you want me to switch to focused antennae?"&lt;br /&gt;"That's no good. If you used a focused signal, you're going to have to be&lt;br /&gt;perfectly aligned if you're going to talk back to your base, so unless you want to&lt;br /&gt;provide a connection to one tiny pinpoint somewhere a couple kilometers away, it&lt;br /&gt;won't do you any good."&lt;br /&gt;"There's no solution, then? I should just give up?"&lt;br /&gt;The crusty-punk held up his hands. "Hell, no! There's just no *centralized*&lt;br /&gt;solution. You can't be Superman, blanketing the whole world with wireless using&lt;br /&gt;your almighty antennaprick, but so what? That's what mesh networks are for. Check&lt;br /&gt;it out." He arranged the beer and the laptop and the coffee cup so that they were&lt;br /&gt;strung out along a straight line. "Okay, you're the laptop and I'm the coffee cup.&lt;br /&gt;We both have a radio and we want to talk to each other.&lt;br /&gt;"We *could* turn up the gain on our radios so that they can shout loud enough to&lt;br /&gt;be heard at this distance, but that would drown out this guy here." He gestured at&lt;br /&gt;the now-empty beer. "We *could* use a focused antenna, but if I move a little bit&lt;br /&gt;off the beam" -- he nudged the coffee cup to one side --Doesn't&lt;br /&gt;"we're dead. But there's a third solution."&lt;br /&gt;"We ask the beer to pass messages around?"&lt;br /&gt;"Fucking right we do! That's the mesh part. Every station on the network gets&lt;br /&gt;*two* radios -- one for talking in one direction, the other for relaying in the&lt;br /&gt;other direction. The more stations you add, the lower the power on each radio --&lt;br /&gt;and the more pathways you get to carry your data."&lt;br /&gt;Alan shook his head.&lt;br /&gt;"It's a fuckin' mind-blower, isn't it?"&lt;br /&gt;"Sure," Alan said. "Sure. But does it work? Don't all those hops between point *a*&lt;br /&gt;and point *b* slow down the connection?"&lt;br /&gt;"A little, sure. Not so's you'd notice. They don't have to go that far -- the&lt;br /&gt;farthest any of these signals has to travel is 151 Front Street."&lt;br /&gt;"What's at 151 Front?"&lt;br /&gt;"TorEx -- the main network interchange for the whole city! We stick an antenna out&lt;br /&gt;a window there and downlink it into the cage where UUNet and PSINet meet -- voila,&lt;br /&gt;instant 11-megabit city-wide freenet!"&lt;br /&gt;"Where do you get the money for that?"&lt;br /&gt;"Who said anything about money? How much do you think UUNet and PSI charge each&lt;br /&gt;other to exchange traffic with one another? Who benefits when UUNet and PSI crossconnect?&lt;br /&gt;Is UUNet the beneficiary of PSI's traffic, or vice versa? Internet access&lt;br /&gt;only costs money at the *edge* -- and with a mesh-net, there is no edge anymore.&lt;br /&gt;It's penetration at the center, just like the Devo song."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm Adrian," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm Kurt," the crusty-punk said. "Buy me a beer, Adrian?"&lt;br /&gt;"It'd be my pleasure," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt lived in the back of a papered-over storefront on Oxford. The front twothirds&lt;br /&gt;were a maze of peeling, stickered-over stamped-metal shelving units piled&lt;br /&gt;high with junk tech: ancient shrink-wrapped software, stacked up low-capacity hard&lt;br /&gt;drives, cables and tapes and removable media. Alan tried to imagine making sense&lt;br /&gt;of it all, flowing it into The Inventory, and felt something like vertigo.&lt;br /&gt;In a small hollow carved out of the back, Kurt had arranged a cluttered desk, a&lt;br /&gt;scuffed twin bed and a rack of milk crates filled with t-shirts and underwear.&lt;br /&gt;Alan picked his way delicately through the store and found himself a seat on an&lt;br /&gt;upturned milk crate. Kurt sat on the bed and grinned expectantly.&lt;br /&gt;"So?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"So what?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"So what is *this*! Isn't it great?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, you sure have a lot of *stuff,* I'll give you that," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's all dumpstered," Kurt said casually.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, you dive?" Alan said. "I used to dive." It was mostly true. Alan had always&lt;br /&gt;been a picker, always on the lookout for bargoons, even if they were sticking out&lt;br /&gt;of someone's trash bin. Sometimes *especially* if they were sticking out of&lt;br /&gt;someone's trash bin -- seeing what normal people threw away gave him a rare&lt;br /&gt;glimpse into their lives.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt walked over to the nearest shelving unit and grabbed a PC mini-tower with the&lt;br /&gt;lid off. "But did you ever do this?" He stuck the machine under Alan's nose and&lt;br /&gt;swung the gooseneck desk lamp over it. It was a white-box PC, generic commodity&lt;br /&gt;hardware, with a couple of network cards.&lt;br /&gt;"What's that?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's a junk access point! I made it out of trash! The only thing I bought were&lt;br /&gt;the network cards -- two wireless, one Ethernet. It's running a FreeBSD&lt;br /&gt;distribution off a CD, so the OS can never get corrupted. It's got lots of sweet&lt;br /&gt;stuff in the distro, and all you need to do is plug it in, point the antennae in&lt;br /&gt;opposite directions, and you're up. It does its own power management, it&lt;br /&gt;automagically peers with other access points if it can find 'em, and it does its&lt;br /&gt;own dynamic channel selection to avoid stepping on other access points."&lt;br /&gt;Alan turned his head this way and that, making admiring noises. "You made this,&lt;br /&gt;huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"For about eighty bucks. It's my fifteenth box. Eventually, I wanna have a couple&lt;br /&gt;hundred of these."&lt;br /&gt;"Ambitious," Alan said, handing the box back. "How do you pay for the parts you&lt;br /&gt;have to buy? Do you have a grant?"&lt;br /&gt;"A grant? Shit, no! I've got a bunch of street kids who come in and take digital&lt;br /&gt;pix of the stuff I have no use for, research them online, and post them to eBay. I&lt;br /&gt;split the take with them. Brings in a couple grand a week, and I'm keeping about&lt;br /&gt;fifty street kids fed besides. I go diving three times a week out in Concord and&lt;br /&gt;Oakville and Richmond Hill, anywhere I can find an industrial park. If I had room,&lt;br /&gt;I'd recruit fifty more kids -- I'm bringing it in faster than they can sell it."&lt;br /&gt;"Why don't you just do less diving?"&lt;br /&gt;"Are you kidding me? It's all I can do not to go out every night! You wouldn't&lt;br /&gt;believe the stuff I find -- all I can think about is all the stuff I'm missing out&lt;br /&gt;on. Some days I wish that my kids were less honest; if they ripped off some stuff,&lt;br /&gt;I'd have room for a lot more."&lt;br /&gt;Alan laughed. Worry for Edward and Frederick and George nagged at him, impotent&lt;br /&gt;anxiety, but this was just so fascinating. Fascinating and distracting, and, if&lt;br /&gt;not normal, at least not nearly so strange as he could be. He imagined the city&lt;br /&gt;gridded up with junk equipment, radiating Internet access from the lakeshore to&lt;br /&gt;the outer suburbs. The grandiosity took his breath away.&lt;br /&gt;"Look," Kurt said, spreading out a map of Kensington Market on the unmade bed.&lt;br /&gt;"I've got access points here, here, here, and here. Another eight or ten and I'll&lt;br /&gt;have the whole Market covered. Then I'm going to head north, cover the U of T&lt;br /&gt;campus, and push east towards Yonge Street. Bay Street and University Avenue are&lt;br /&gt;going to be tough -- how can I convince bankers to let me plug this by their&lt;br /&gt;windows?"&lt;br /&gt;"Kurt," Alan said, "I suspect that the journey to University Avenue is going to be&lt;br /&gt;a lot slower than you expect it to be."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt jutted his jaw out. "What's that supposed to mean?"&lt;br /&gt;"There's a lot of real estate between here and there. A lot of trees and highrises,&lt;br /&gt;office towers and empty lots. You're going to have to knock on doors every&lt;br /&gt;couple hundred meters -- at best -- and convince them to let you install one of&lt;br /&gt;these boxes, made from garbage, and plug it in, to participate in what?"&lt;br /&gt;"Democratic communication!" Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Ah, well, my guess is that most of the people who you'll need to convince won't&lt;br /&gt;really care much about that. Won't be able to make that abstract notion concrete."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt mumbled into his chest. Alan could see that he was fuming.&lt;br /&gt;"Just because you don't have the vision to appreciate this --"&lt;br /&gt;Alan held up his hand. "Stop right there. I never said anything of the sort. I&lt;br /&gt;think that this is big and exciting and looks like a lot of fun. I think that&lt;br /&gt;ringing doorbells and talking people into letting me nail an access point to their&lt;br /&gt;walls sounds like a *lot* of fun. Really, I'm not kidding.&lt;br /&gt;"But this is a journey, not a destination. The value you'll get out of this will&lt;br /&gt;be more in the doing than the having done. The having done's going to take&lt;br /&gt;decades, I'd guess. But the doing's going to be something." Alan's smile was so&lt;br /&gt;broad it ached. The idea had seized him. He was drunk on it.&lt;br /&gt;The buzzer sounded and Kurt got up to answer it. Alan craned his neck to see a&lt;br /&gt;pair of bearded neohippies in rasta hats.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you Kurt?" one asked.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah, dude, I'm Kurt."&lt;br /&gt;"Marcel told us that we could make some money here? We're trying to raise bus fare&lt;br /&gt;to Burning Man? We could really use the work?"&lt;br /&gt;"Not today, but maybe tomorrow," Kurt said. "Come by around lunchtime."&lt;br /&gt;"You sure you can't use us today?"&lt;br /&gt;"Not today," Kurt said. "I'm busy today."&lt;br /&gt;"All right," the other said, and they slouched away.&lt;br /&gt;"Word of mouth," Kurt said, with a jingling shrug. "Kids just turn up, looking for&lt;br /&gt;work with the trash."&lt;br /&gt;"You think they'll come back tomorrow?" Alan was pretty good at evaluating kids&lt;br /&gt;and they hadn't looked very reliable.&lt;br /&gt;"Those two? Fifty-fifty chance. Tell you what, though: there's always enough kids&lt;br /&gt;and enough junk to go around."&lt;br /&gt;"But you need to make arrangements to get your access points mounted and powered.&lt;br /&gt;You've got to sort it out with people who own stores and houses."&lt;br /&gt;"You want to knock on doors?" Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"I think I would," Alan said. "I suspect it's a possibility. We can start with the&lt;br /&gt;shopkeepers, though."&lt;br /&gt;"I haven't had much luck with merchants," Kurt said, shrugging his shoulders. His&lt;br /&gt;chains jingled and a whiff of armpit wafted across the claustrophobic hollow.&lt;br /&gt;"Capitalist pigs."&lt;br /&gt;"I can't imagine why," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"Wales Avenue, huh?" Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;They were walking down Oxford Street, and Alan was seeing it with fresh eyes,&lt;br /&gt;casting his gaze upward, looking at the lines of sight from one building to&lt;br /&gt;another, mentally painting in radio-frequency shadows cast by the transformers on&lt;br /&gt;the light poles.&lt;br /&gt;"Just moved it on July first," Alan said. "Still getting settled in."&lt;br /&gt;"Which house?"&lt;br /&gt;"The blue one, with the big porch, on the corner."&lt;br /&gt;"Sure, I know it. I scored some great plumbing fixtures out of the dumpster there&lt;br /&gt;last winter."&lt;br /&gt;"You're welcome," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;They turned at Spadina and picked their way around the tourist crowds shopping the&lt;br /&gt;Chinese importers' sidewalk displays of bamboo parasols and Hello Kitty slippers,&lt;br /&gt;past the fogged-up windows of the dim-sum restaurants and the smell of fresh pork&lt;br /&gt;buns. Alan bought a condensed milk and kiwi snow-cone from a sidewalk vendor and&lt;br /&gt;offered to treat Kurt, but he declined.&lt;br /&gt;"You never know about those places," Kurt said. "How clean is their ice, anyway?&lt;br /&gt;Where do they wash their utensils?"&lt;br /&gt;"You dig around in dumpsters for a living," Alan said. "Aren't you immune to&lt;br /&gt;germs?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt turned at Baldwin, and Alan followed. "I don't eat garbage, I pick it," he&lt;br /&gt;said. He sounded angry.&lt;br /&gt;"Hey, sorry," Alan said. "Sorry. I didn't mean to imply --"&lt;br /&gt;"I know you didn't," Kurt said, stopping in front of a dry-goods store and&lt;br /&gt;spooning candied ginger into a baggie. He handed it to the age-hunched matron of&lt;br /&gt;the shop, who dropped it on her scale and dusted her hands on her black dress.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt handed her a two-dollar coin and took the bag back. "I'm just touchy, okay?&lt;br /&gt;My last girlfriend split because she couldn't get past it. No matter how much I&lt;br /&gt;showered, I was never clean enough for her."&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry," Alan said again.&lt;br /&gt;"I heard something weird about that blue house on the corner," Kurt said. "One of&lt;br /&gt;my kids told me this morning, he saw something last night when he was in the&lt;br /&gt;park."&lt;br /&gt;Alan pulled up short, nearly colliding with a trio of cute university girls in&lt;br /&gt;wife-beaters pushing bundle-buggies full of newspaper-wrapped fish and bags of&lt;br /&gt;soft, steaming bagels. They stepped around him, lugging their groceries over the&lt;br /&gt;curb and back onto the sidewalk, not breaking from their discussion.&lt;br /&gt;"What was it?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt gave him a sideways look. "It's weird, okay? The kid who saw it is never all&lt;br /&gt;that reliable, and he likes to embellish."&lt;br /&gt;"Okay," Alan said. The crowd was pushing around them now, trying to get past. The&lt;br /&gt;dry-goods lady sucked her teeth in annoyance.&lt;br /&gt;"So this kid, he was smoking a joint in the park last night, really late, after&lt;br /&gt;the clubs shut down. He was alone, and he saw what he thought was a dog dragging a&lt;br /&gt;garbage bag down the steps of your house."&lt;br /&gt;"Yes?"&lt;br /&gt;"So he went over to take a look, and he saw that it was too big to be a garbage&lt;br /&gt;bag, and the dog, it looked sick, it moved wrong. He took another step closer and&lt;br /&gt;he must have triggered a motion sensor because the porch light switched on. He&lt;br /&gt;says..."&lt;br /&gt;"What?"&lt;br /&gt;"He's not very reliable. He says it wasn't a dog, he said it was like a dried-out&lt;br /&gt;mummy or something, and it had its teeth sunk into the neck of this big, fat,&lt;br /&gt;naked guy, and it was dragging the fat guy out into the street. When the light&lt;br /&gt;came on, though, it gave the fat guy's neck a hard shake, then let go and turned&lt;br /&gt;on this kid, walking toward him on stumpy little feet. He says it made a kind of&lt;br /&gt;growling noise and lifted up its hand like it was going to slap the kid, and the&lt;br /&gt;kid screamed and ran off. When he got to Dundas, he turned around and saw the fat&lt;br /&gt;guy get dragged into an alley between two of the stores on Augusta."&lt;br /&gt;"I see," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's stupid, I know," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;Natalie and Link rounded the corner, carrying slices of pizza from Pizzabilities,&lt;br /&gt;mounded high with eggplant and cauliflower and other toppings that were never&lt;br /&gt;intended for use in connection with pizza. They startled on seeing Alan and Kurt,&lt;br /&gt;then started to walk away.&lt;br /&gt;"Wait," Alan called. "Natalie, Link, wait." He smiled apologetically at Kurt. "My&lt;br /&gt;neighbors," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Natalie and Link had stopped and turned around. Alan and Kurt walked to them.&lt;br /&gt;"Natalie, Link, this is Kurt," he said. They shook hands all around.&lt;br /&gt;"I wanted to apologize," Alan said. "I didn't mean to put you between Krishna and&lt;br /&gt;me. It was very unfair."&lt;br /&gt;Natalie smiled warily. Link lit a cigarette with a great show of indifference.&lt;br /&gt;"It's all right," Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"No, it's not," Alan said. "I was distraught, but that's no excuse. We're going to&lt;br /&gt;be neighbors for a long time, and there's no sense in our not getting along."&lt;br /&gt;"Really, it's okay," Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah, fine," Link said.&lt;br /&gt;"Three of my brothers have gone missing," Alan said. "That's why I was so upset.&lt;br /&gt;One disappeared a couple of weeks ago, another last night, and one this morning.&lt;br /&gt;Krishna..." He thought for a moment. "He taunted me about it. I really wanted to&lt;br /&gt;find out what he saw."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shook his head. "Your brother went missing last night?"&lt;br /&gt;"From my house."&lt;br /&gt;"So what the kid saw..."&lt;br /&gt;Alan turned to Natalie. "A friend of Kurt's was in the park last night. He says he&lt;br /&gt;saw my brother being carried off."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shook his head. "Your brother?"&lt;br /&gt;"What do you mean, 'carried off'?" Natalie said. She folded her slice in half to&lt;br /&gt;keep the toppings from spilling.&lt;br /&gt;"Someone is stalking my brothers," Alan said. "Someone very strong and very&lt;br /&gt;cunning. Three are gone that I know about. There are others, but I could be next."&lt;br /&gt;"Stalking?" Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"My family is a little strange," Alan said. "I grew up in the north country, and&lt;br /&gt;things are different there. You've heard of blood feuds?"&lt;br /&gt;Natalie and Link exchanged a significant look.&lt;br /&gt;"I know it sounds ridiculous. You don't need to be involved. I just wanted to let&lt;br /&gt;you know why I acted so strangely last night."&lt;br /&gt;"We have to get back," Natalie said. "Nice to meet you, Kurt. I hope you find your&lt;br /&gt;brother, Andy."&lt;br /&gt;"Brothers," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Brothers," Natalie said, and walked away briskly.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan was the oldest of the brothers, and that meant that he was the one who blazed&lt;br /&gt;all the new trails in the family.&lt;br /&gt;He met a girl in the seventh grade. Her name was Marci, and she had just&lt;br /&gt;transferred in from Scotland. Her father was a mining engineer, and she'd led a&lt;br /&gt;gypsy life that put her in stark contrast to the third-generation homebodies that&lt;br /&gt;made up most of the rest of their class.&lt;br /&gt;She had red hair and blue eyes and a way of holding her face in repose that made&lt;br /&gt;her look cunning at all times. No one understood her accent, but there was a wiry&lt;br /&gt;ferocity in her movement that warned off any kid who thought about teasing her&lt;br /&gt;about it.&lt;br /&gt;Alan liked to play in a marshy corner of the woods that bordered the playground&lt;br /&gt;after school, crawling around in the weeds, catching toads and letting them go&lt;br /&gt;again, spying on the crickets and the secret lives of the larvae that grubbed in&lt;br /&gt;the milkweed. He was hunkered down on his haunches one afternoon when Marci came&lt;br /&gt;crunching through the tall grass. He ducked down lower, then peered out from his&lt;br /&gt;hiding spot as she crouched down and he heard the unmistakable patter of urine as&lt;br /&gt;she peed in the rushes.&lt;br /&gt;His jaw dropped. He'd never seen a girl pee before, had no idea what the squatting&lt;br /&gt;business was all about. The wet ground sucked at his sneaker and he tipped back on&lt;br /&gt;his ass with a yelp. Marci straightened abruptly and crashed over to him, kicking&lt;br /&gt;him hard in the ribs when she reached him, leaving a muddy toeprint on his fall&lt;br /&gt;windbreaker.&lt;br /&gt;She wound up for another kick and he hollered something wordless and scurried&lt;br /&gt;back, smearing marsh mud across his jeans and jacket.&lt;br /&gt;"You pervert!" she said, pronouncing it Yuh peervurrt!&lt;br /&gt;"I am not!" he said, still scooting back.&lt;br /&gt;"Watching from the bushes!" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"I wasn't -- I was already here, and you -- I mean, what were *you* doing? I was&lt;br /&gt;just minding my own business and you came by, I just didn't want to be bothered,&lt;br /&gt;this is *my* place!"&lt;br /&gt;"You don't own it," she said, but she sounded slightly chastened. "Don't tell&lt;br /&gt;anyone I had a piss here, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;"I won't," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She sat down beside him, unmindful of the mud on her denim skirt. "Promise," she&lt;br /&gt;said. "It's so embarrassing."&lt;br /&gt;"I promise," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Swear," she said, and poked him in the ribs with a bony finger.&lt;br /&gt;He clutched his hands to his ribs. "Look," he said, "I swear. I'm good at&lt;br /&gt;secrets."&lt;br /&gt;Her eyes narrowed slightly. "Oh, aye? And I suppose you've lots of secrets, then?"&lt;br /&gt;He said nothing, and worked at keeping the smile off the corners of his mouth.&lt;br /&gt;She poked him in the ribs, then got him in the stomach as he moved to protect his&lt;br /&gt;chest. "Secrets, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;He shook his head and clamped his lips shut. She jabbed a flurry of pokes and&lt;br /&gt;prods at him while he scooted back on his butt, then dug her clawed hands into his&lt;br /&gt;tummy and tickled him viciously. He giggled, then laughed, then started to hiccup&lt;br /&gt;uncontrollably. He shoved her away roughly and got up on his knees, gagging.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I like you," she said, "just look at that. A wee tickle and you're ready to&lt;br /&gt;toss your lunch." She tenderly stroked his hair until the hiccups subsided, then&lt;br /&gt;clawed at his belly again, sending him rolling through the mud.&lt;br /&gt;Once he'd struggled to his feet, he looked at her, panting. "Why are you doing&lt;br /&gt;this?"&lt;br /&gt;"You're not serious! It's the most fun I've had since we moved to this terrible&lt;br /&gt;place."&lt;br /&gt;"You're a sadist!" He'd learned the word from a book he'd bought from the ten-cent&lt;br /&gt;pile out front of the used bookstore. It had a clipped-out recipe for liver&lt;br /&gt;cutlets between the pages and lots of squishy grown-up sex things that seemed&lt;br /&gt;improbable if not laughable. He'd looked "sadist" up in the class dictionary.&lt;br /&gt;"Aye," she said. "I'm that." She made claws of her hands and advanced on him&lt;br /&gt;slowly. He giggled uncontrollably as he backed away from her. "C'mere, you, you've&lt;br /&gt;more torture comin' to ye before I'm satisfied that you can keep a secret."&lt;br /&gt;He held his arms before him like a movie zombie and walked toward her. "Yes,&lt;br /&gt;mathter," he said in a monotone. Just as he was about to reach her, he dodged to&lt;br /&gt;one side, then took off.&lt;br /&gt;She chased him, laughing, halfway back to the mountain, then cried off. He stopped&lt;br /&gt;a hundred yards up the road from her, she doubled over with her hands planted on&lt;br /&gt;her thighs, face red, chest heaving. "You go on, then," she called. "But it's more&lt;br /&gt;torture for you at school tomorrow, and don't you forget it!"&lt;br /&gt;"Only if you catch me!" he called back.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I'll catch you, have no fear."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She caught him at lunch. He was sitting in a corner of the schoolyard, eating from&lt;br /&gt;a paper sack of mushrooms and dried rabbit and keeping an eye on Edward-Frederick-&lt;br /&gt;George as he played tag with the other kindergartners. She snuck up behind him and&lt;br /&gt;dropped a handful of gravel down the gap of his pants and into his underpants. He&lt;br /&gt;sprang to his feet, sending gravel rattling out the cuffs of his jeans.&lt;br /&gt;"Hey!" he said, and she popped something into his mouth. It was wet and warm from&lt;br /&gt;her hand and it squirmed. He spat it out and it landed on the schoolyard with a&lt;br /&gt;soft splat.&lt;br /&gt;It was an earthworm, thick with loamy soil.&lt;br /&gt;"You!" he said, casting about for a curse of sufficient vehemence. "You!"&lt;br /&gt;She hopped from foot to foot in front of him, clearly delighted with this&lt;br /&gt;reaction. He reached out for her and she danced back. He took off after her and&lt;br /&gt;they were chasing around the yard, around hopscotches and tag games and sand&lt;br /&gt;castles and out to the marshy woods. She skidded through the puddles and he leapt&lt;br /&gt;over them. She ducked under a branch and he caught her by the hood of her&lt;br /&gt;windbreaker.&lt;br /&gt;Without hesitating, she flung her arms in the air and slithered out of the&lt;br /&gt;windbreaker, down to a yellow T-shirt that rode up her back, exposing her pale&lt;br /&gt;freckles and the knobs of her spine, the fingers of her ribs. She took off again&lt;br /&gt;and he balled the windbreaker up in his fist and took off after her.&lt;br /&gt;She stepped behind a bushy pine, and when he rounded the corner she was waiting&lt;br /&gt;for him, her hands clawed, digging at his tummy, leaving him giggling. He pitched&lt;br /&gt;back into the pine needles and she followed, straddling his waist and tickling him&lt;br /&gt;until he coughed and choked and gasped for air.&lt;br /&gt;"Tell me!" she said. "Tell me your secrets!"&lt;br /&gt;"Stop!" Alan said. "Please! I'm going to piss myself!"&lt;br /&gt;"What's that to me?" she said, tickling more vigorously.&lt;br /&gt;He tried to buck her off, but she was too fast. He caught one wrist, but she&lt;br /&gt;pinned his other arm with her knee. He heaved and she collapsed on top of him.&lt;br /&gt;Her face was inches from his, her breath moist on his face. They both panted, and&lt;br /&gt;he smelled her hair, which was over his face and neck. She leaned forward and&lt;br /&gt;closed her eyes expectantly.&lt;br /&gt;He tentatively brushed his lips across hers, and she moved closer, and they&lt;br /&gt;kissed. It was wet and a little gross, but not altogether unpleasant.&lt;br /&gt;She leaned back and opened her eyes, then grinned at him. "That's enough torture&lt;br /&gt;for one day," she said. "You're free to go."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She "tortured" him at morning and afternoon recess for the next two weeks, and&lt;br /&gt;when he left school on Friday afternoon after the last bell, she was waiting for&lt;br /&gt;him in the schoolyard.&lt;br /&gt;"Hello," she said, socking him in the arm.&lt;br /&gt;"Hi," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Why don't you invite me over for supper this weekend?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Supper?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes. I'm your girlfriend, yeah? So you should have me around to your place to&lt;br /&gt;meet your parents. Next weekend you can come around my place and meet my dad."&lt;br /&gt;"I can't," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"You can't."&lt;br /&gt;"No."&lt;br /&gt;"Why not?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's a secret," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Oooh, a secret," she said. "What kind of secret?"&lt;br /&gt;"A family secret. We don't have people over for dinner. That's the way it is."&lt;br /&gt;"A secret! They're all child molesters?"&lt;br /&gt;He shook his head.&lt;br /&gt;"Horribly deformed?"&lt;br /&gt;He shook his head.&lt;br /&gt;"What, then? Give us a hint?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's a secret."&lt;br /&gt;She grabbed his ear and twisted it. Gently at first, then harder. "A secret?" she&lt;br /&gt;said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," he gasped. "It's a secret, and I can't tell you. You're hurting me."&lt;br /&gt;"I should hope so," she said. "And it will go very hard for you indeed if you&lt;br /&gt;don't tell me what I want to know."&lt;br /&gt;He grabbed her wrist and dug his strong fingers into the thin tendons on their&lt;br /&gt;insides, twisting his fingertips for maximal effect. Abruptly, she released his&lt;br /&gt;ear and clenched her wrist hard, sticking it between her thighs.&lt;br /&gt;"Owwww! That bloody hurt, you bastard. What did you do that for?"&lt;br /&gt;"My secrets," Alan said, "are secret."&lt;br /&gt;She held her wrist up and examined it. "Heaven help you if you've left a bruise,&lt;br /&gt;Alvin," she said. "I'll kill you." She turned her wrist from side to side. "All&lt;br /&gt;right," she said. "All right. Kiss it better, and you can come to my place for&lt;br /&gt;supper on Saturday at six p.m.." She shoved her arm into his face and he kissed&lt;br /&gt;the soft skin on the inside of her wrist, putting a little tongue in it.&lt;br /&gt;She giggled and punched him in the arm. "Saturday, then!" she called as she ran&lt;br /&gt;off.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Edward-Felix-Gerald were too young to give him shit about his schoolyard romance,&lt;br /&gt;and Brian was too sensitive, but Dave had taken to lurking about the schoolyard,&lt;br /&gt;spying on the children, and he'd seen Marci break off from a clench with Alan,&lt;br /&gt;take his hand, and plant it firmly on her tiny breast, an act that had shocked&lt;br /&gt;Danny to the core.&lt;br /&gt;"Hi, pervert," David said, as he stepped into the cool of the cave. "Pervert" was&lt;br /&gt;Davey's new nickname for him, and he had a finely honed way of delivering it so&lt;br /&gt;that it dripped with contempt. "Did you have sex with your *girlfriend* today,&lt;br /&gt;*pervert*?"&lt;br /&gt;Allan turned away from him and helped E-F-G take off his shoes and roll up the&lt;br /&gt;cuffs of his pants so that he could go down to the lake in the middle of their&lt;br /&gt;father and wade in the shallows, listening to Father's winds soughing through the&lt;br /&gt;great cavern.&lt;br /&gt;"Did you touch her boobies? Did she suck your pee-pee? Did you put your finger in&lt;br /&gt;her?" The litany would continue until Davey went to bed, and even then he wasn't&lt;br /&gt;safe. One night, Allen had woken up to see Darren standing over him, hands planted&lt;br /&gt;on his hips, face twisted into an elaborate sneer. "Did you put your penis inside&lt;br /&gt;of her?" he'd hissed, then gone back to bed.&lt;br /&gt;Alby went out again, climbing the rockface faster than Doug could keep up with&lt;br /&gt;him, so that by the time he'd found his perch high over the woodlands, where he&lt;br /&gt;could see the pines dance in the wind and the ant-sized cars zooming along the&lt;br /&gt;highways, Doug was far behind, likely sat atop their mother, sucking his thumb and&lt;br /&gt;sulking and thinking up new perversions to accuse Alan of.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Saturday night arrived faster than Alan could have imagined. He spent Saturday&lt;br /&gt;morning in the woods, picking mushrooms and checking his snares, then headed down&lt;br /&gt;to town on Saturday afternoon to get a haircut and to haunt the library.&lt;br /&gt;Converting his father's gold to cash was easier than getting a library card&lt;br /&gt;without an address. There was an old assayer whom the golems had described to him&lt;br /&gt;before his first trip to town. The man was cheap but he knew enough about the&lt;br /&gt;strangeness on the mountain not to cheat him too badly. The stern librarian who&lt;br /&gt;glared at him while he walked the shelves, sometimes looking at the titles,&lt;br /&gt;sometimes the authors, and sometimes the Dewey Decimal numbers had no such fear.&lt;br /&gt;The Deweys were fascinating. They traced the fashions in human knowledge and&lt;br /&gt;wisdom. It was easy enough to understand why the arbiters of the system placed&lt;br /&gt;subdivided Motorized Land Vehicles (629.2) into several categories, but here in&lt;br /&gt;the 629.22s, where the books on automobiles were, you could see the planners'&lt;br /&gt;deficiencies. Automobiles divided into dozens of major subcategories (taxis and&lt;br /&gt;limousines, buses, light trucks, cans, lorries, tractor trailers, campers,&lt;br /&gt;motorcycles, racing cars, and so on), then ramified into a combinatorial explosion&lt;br /&gt;of sub-sub-sub categories. There were Dewey numbers on some of the automotive book&lt;br /&gt;spines that had twenty digits or more after the decimal, an entire Dewey Decimal&lt;br /&gt;system hidden between 629.2 and 629.3.&lt;br /&gt;To the librarian, this shelf-reading looked like your garden-variety screwing&lt;br /&gt;around, but what really made her nervous were Alan's excursions through the card&lt;br /&gt;catalogue, which required constant tending to replace the cards that errant&lt;br /&gt;patrons made unauthorized reorderings of.&lt;br /&gt;The subject headings in the third bank of card drawers were the most interesting&lt;br /&gt;of all. They, too, branched and forked and rejoined themselves like the&lt;br /&gt;meanderings of an ant colony on the march. He'd go in sequence for a while, then&lt;br /&gt;start following cross-references when he found an interesting branch, keeping&lt;br /&gt;notes on scraps of paper on top of the file drawer. He had spent quite some time&lt;br /&gt;in the mythology categories, looking up golems and goblins, looking up changelings&lt;br /&gt;and monsters, looking up seers and demigods, but none of the books that he'd taken&lt;br /&gt;down off the shelves had contained anything that helped him understand his family&lt;br /&gt;better.&lt;br /&gt;His family was uncatalogued and unclassified in human knowledge.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He rang the bell on Marci's smart little brick house at bang-on six, carrying some&lt;br /&gt;daisies he'd bought from the grocery store, following the etiquette laid down in&lt;br /&gt;several rather yucky romance novels he'd perused that afternoon.&lt;br /&gt;She answered in jeans and a T-shirt, and punched him in the arm before he could&lt;br /&gt;give her the flowers. "Don't you look smart?" she said. "Well, you're not fooling&lt;br /&gt;anyone, you know." She gave him a peck on the cheek and snatched away the daisies.&lt;br /&gt;"Come along, then, we're eating soon."&lt;br /&gt;Marci sat him down in the living room, which was furnished with neutral sofas and&lt;br /&gt;a neutral carpet and a neutral coffee table. The bookcases were bare. "It's&lt;br /&gt;horrible," she said, making a face. She was twittering a little, dancing from foot&lt;br /&gt;to foot. Alan was glad to know he wasn't the only one who was uncomfortable.&lt;br /&gt;"Isn't it? The company put us up here. We had a grand flat in Scotland."&lt;br /&gt;"It's nice," Alan said, "but you look like you could use some books."&lt;br /&gt;She crossed her eyes. "Books? Sure -- I've got *ten boxes* of them in the&lt;br /&gt;basement. You can come by and help me unpack them."&lt;br /&gt;"Ten *boxes?*" Alan said. "You're making that up." *Ten boxes of books!* Things&lt;br /&gt;like books didn't last long under the mountain, in the damp and with the everinquisitive,&lt;br /&gt;ever-destructive Davey exploring every inch of floor and cave and&lt;br /&gt;corridor in search of opportunities for pillage.&lt;br /&gt;"I ain't neither," she said. "At least ten. It was a grand flat and they were all&lt;br /&gt;in alphabetical order, too."&lt;br /&gt;"Can we go see?" Alan asked, getting up from the sofa.&lt;br /&gt;"See boxes?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," Alan said. "And look inside. We could unbox them after dinner, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"That's more of an afternoon project," said a voice from the top of the stairs.&lt;br /&gt;"That's my Da," she said. "Come down and introduce yourself to Alan, Da," she&lt;br /&gt;said. "You're not the voice of God, so you can bloody well turn up and show your&lt;br /&gt;face."&lt;br /&gt;"No more sass, gel, or it will go very hard for you," said the voice. The accent&lt;br /&gt;was like Marci's squared, thick as oatmeal, liqueur-thick. Nearly&lt;br /&gt;incomprehensible, but the voice was kind and smart and patient, too.&lt;br /&gt;"You'll have a hard time giving me any licks from the top of the stairs, Da, and&lt;br /&gt;Alan looks like he's going to die if you don't at least come down and say hello."&lt;br /&gt;Alan blushed furiously. "You can come down whenever you like, sir," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"That's all right."&lt;br /&gt;"That's mighty generous of you, young sir," said the voice. "Aye. But before I&lt;br /&gt;come down, tell me, are your intentions toward my daughter honorable?"&lt;br /&gt;His cheeks grew even hotter, and his ears felt like they were melting with&lt;br /&gt;embarrassment. "Yes, sir," he said in a small voice.&lt;br /&gt;"He's a dreadful pervert, Da," Marci said. "You should see the things he tries,&lt;br /&gt;you'd kill him, you would." She grinned foxish and punched him in the shoulder. He&lt;br /&gt;sank into the cushions, face suddenly drained of blood.&lt;br /&gt;"*What*?" roared the voice, and there was a clatter of slippers on the neutral&lt;br /&gt;carpet of the stairs. Alan didn't want to look but found that he couldn't help&lt;br /&gt;himself, his head inexorably turned toward the sound, until a pair of thick legs&lt;br /&gt;hove into sight, whereupon Marci leapt into his lap an threw her arms around his&lt;br /&gt;neck.&lt;br /&gt;"Ge'orff me, pervert!" she said, as she began to cover his face in darting,&lt;br /&gt;pecking kisses.&lt;br /&gt;He went rigid and tried to sink all the way into the sofa.&lt;br /&gt;"All right, all right, that's enough of that," her father said. Marci stood and&lt;br /&gt;dusted herself off. Alan stared at his knees.&lt;br /&gt;"She's horrible, isn't she?" said the voice, and a great, thick hand appeared in&lt;br /&gt;his field of vision. He shook it tentatively, noting the heavy class ring and the&lt;br /&gt;thin, plain wedding band. He looked up slowly.&lt;br /&gt;Marci's father was short but powerfully built, like the wrestlers on the other&lt;br /&gt;kids' lunchboxes at school. He had a shock of curly black hair that was flecked&lt;br /&gt;with dandruff, and a thick bristling mustache that made him look very fierce,&lt;br /&gt;though his eyes were gentle and bookish behind thick glasses. He was wearing wool&lt;br /&gt;trousers and a cable-knit sweater that was unraveling at the elbows.&lt;br /&gt;"Pleased to meet you, Albert," he said. They shook hands gravely. "I've been after&lt;br /&gt;her to unpack those books since we moved here. You could come by tomorrow&lt;br /&gt;afternoon and help, if you'd like -- I think it's the only way I'll get herself to&lt;br /&gt;stir her lazy bottom to do some chores around here."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, *Da*!" Marci said. "Who cooks around here? Who does the laundry?"&lt;br /&gt;"The take-away pizza man does the majority of the cooking, daughter. And as for&lt;br /&gt;laundry, the last time I checked, there were two weeks' worth of laundry to do."&lt;br /&gt;"Da," she said in a sweet voice, "I love you Da," she said, wrapping her arms&lt;br /&gt;around his trim waist.&lt;br /&gt;"You see what I have to put up with?" her father said, snatching her up and&lt;br /&gt;dangling her by her ankles.&lt;br /&gt;She flailed her arms about and made outraged choking noises while he swung her&lt;br /&gt;back and forth like a pendulum, releasing her at the top of one arc so that she&lt;br /&gt;flopped onto the sofa in a tangle of thin limbs.&lt;br /&gt;"It's a madhouse around here," her father continued as Marci righted herself,&lt;br /&gt;knocking Alan in the temple with a tennis shoe, "but what can you do? Once she's a&lt;br /&gt;little bigger, I can put her to work in the mines, and then I'll have a little&lt;br /&gt;peace around here." He sat down on an overstuffed armchair with a fussy&lt;br /&gt;antimacassar.&lt;br /&gt;"He's got a huge life-insurance policy," Marci said conspiratorially. "I'm just&lt;br /&gt;waiting for him to kick the bucket and then I'm going to retire."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, aye," her father said. "Retire. Your life is an awful one, it is. Junior high&lt;br /&gt;is a terrible hardship, I know."&lt;br /&gt;Alan found himself grinning.&lt;br /&gt;"What's so funny?" Marci said, punching him in the shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;"You two are," he said, grabbing her arm and then digging his fingers into her&lt;br /&gt;tummy, doubling her over with tickles.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;There were *twelve* boxes of books. The damp in the basement had softened the&lt;br /&gt;cartons to cottage-cheese mush, and the back covers of the bottom layer of&lt;br /&gt;paperbacks were soft as felt. To Alan, these seemed unremarkable -- all paper&lt;br /&gt;under the mountain looked like this after a week or two, even if Doug didn't get&lt;br /&gt;to it -- but Marci was heartbroken.&lt;br /&gt;"My books, my lovely books, they're roont!" she said, as they piled them on the&lt;br /&gt;living room carpet.&lt;br /&gt;"They're fine," Alan said. "They'll dry out a little wobbly, but they'll be fine.&lt;br /&gt;We'll just spread the damp ones out on the rug and shelve the rest."&lt;br /&gt;And that's what they did, book after book -- old books, hardcover books, boardback&lt;br /&gt;kids' books, new paperbacks, dozens of green- and orange-spined Penguin&lt;br /&gt;paperbacks. He fondled them, smelled them. Some smelled of fish and chips, and&lt;br /&gt;some smelled of road dust, and some smelled of Marci, and they had dog ears where&lt;br /&gt;she'd stopped and cracks in their spines where she'd bent them around. They fell&lt;br /&gt;open to pages that had her favorite passages. He felt wobbly and drunk as he&lt;br /&gt;touched each one in turn.&lt;br /&gt;"Have you read all of these?" Alan asked as he shifted the John Mortimers down one&lt;br /&gt;shelf to make room for the Ed McBains.&lt;br /&gt;"Naw," she said, punching him in the shoulder. "What's the point of a bunch of&lt;br /&gt;books you've already read?"&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She caught him in the schoolyard on Monday and dragged him by one ear out to the&lt;br /&gt;marshy part. She pinned him down and straddled his chest and tickled him with one&lt;br /&gt;hand so that he cried out and used the other hand to drum a finger across his&lt;br /&gt;lips, so that his cries came out "bibble."&lt;br /&gt;Once he'd bucked her off, they kissed for a little while, then she grabbed hold of&lt;br /&gt;one of his nipples and twisted.&lt;br /&gt;"All right," she said. "Enough torture. When do I get to meet your family?"&lt;br /&gt;"You can't," he said, writhing on the pine needles, which worked their way up the&lt;br /&gt;back of his shirt and pricked him across his lower back, feeling like the bristles&lt;br /&gt;of a hairbrush.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, I can, and I will," she said. She twisted harder.&lt;br /&gt;He slapped her hand away. "My family is really weird," he said. "My parents don't&lt;br /&gt;really ever go out. They're not like other people. They don't talk." All of it&lt;br /&gt;true.&lt;br /&gt;"They're mute?"&lt;br /&gt;"No, but they don't talk."&lt;br /&gt;"They don't talk much, or they don't talk at all?" She pronounced it a-tall.&lt;br /&gt;"Not at all."&lt;br /&gt;"How did you and your brothers learn to talk, then?"&lt;br /&gt;"Neighbors." Still true. The golems lived in the neighboring caves. "And my&lt;br /&gt;father, a little." True.&lt;br /&gt;"So you have neighbors who visit you?" she asked, a triumphant gleam in her eye.&lt;br /&gt;*Damn*. "No, we visit them." Lying now. Sweat on the shag of hair over his ears,&lt;br /&gt;which felt like they had coals pressed to them.&lt;br /&gt;"When you were a baby?"&lt;br /&gt;"No, my grandparents took care of me when I was a baby." Deeper. "But they died."&lt;br /&gt;Bottoming out now.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't believe you," she said, and he saw tears glisten in her eyes. "You're too&lt;br /&gt;embarrassed to introduce me to your family."&lt;br /&gt;"That's not it." He thought fast. "My brother. David. He's not well. He has a&lt;br /&gt;brain tumor. We think he'll probably die. That's why he doesn't come to school.&lt;br /&gt;And it makes him act funny. He hits people, says terrible things." Mixing truth&lt;br /&gt;with lies was a *lot* easier. "He shouts and hurts people and he's the reason I&lt;br /&gt;can't ever have friends over. Not until he dies."&lt;br /&gt;Her eyes narrowed. "If that's a lie," she said, "it's a terrible one. My Ma died&lt;br /&gt;of cancer, and it's not something anyone should make fun of. So, it better not be&lt;br /&gt;a lie."&lt;br /&gt;"It's not a lie," he said, mustering a tear. "My brother David, we don't know how&lt;br /&gt;long he'll live, but it won't be long. He acts like a monster, so it's hard to&lt;br /&gt;love him, but we all try."&lt;br /&gt;She rocked back onto her haunches. "It's true, then?" she asked softly.&lt;br /&gt;He nodded miserably.&lt;br /&gt;"Let's say no more about it, then," she said. She took his hand and traced&lt;br /&gt;hieroglyphs on his palm with the ragged edges of her chewed-up fingernails.&lt;br /&gt;The recess bell rang and they headed back to school. They were about to leave the&lt;br /&gt;marshland when something hard hit Alan in the back of the head. He spun around and&lt;br /&gt;saw a small, sharp rock skitter into the grass, saw Davey's face contorted with&lt;br /&gt;rage, lips pulled all the way back off his teeth, half-hidden in the boughs of a&lt;br /&gt;tree, winding up to throw another rock.&lt;br /&gt;He flinched away and the rock hit the paving hard enough to bounce. Marci whirled&lt;br /&gt;around, but David was gone, high up in the leaves, invisible, malicious, biding.&lt;br /&gt;"What was that?"&lt;br /&gt;"I dunno," Alan lied, and groaned.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt and Alan examined every gap between every storefront on Augusta, no matter&lt;br /&gt;how narrow. Kurt kept silent as Alan fished his arm up to the shoulder along&lt;br /&gt;miniature alleys that were just wide enough to accommodate the rain gutters&lt;br /&gt;depending from the roof.&lt;br /&gt;They found the alley that Frederick had been dragged down near the end of the&lt;br /&gt;block, between a mattress store and an egg wholesaler. It was narrow enough that&lt;br /&gt;they had to traverse it sideways, but there, at the entrance, were two smears of&lt;br /&gt;skin and blood, just above the ground, stretching off into the sulfurous, rottyegg&lt;br /&gt;depths of the alleyway.&lt;br /&gt;They slid along the alley's length, headed for the gloom of the back. Something&lt;br /&gt;skittered away from Alan's shoe and he bent down, but couldn't see it. He ran his&lt;br /&gt;hands along the ground and the walls and they came back with a rime of dried blood&lt;br /&gt;and a single strand of long, oily hair stuck to them. He wiped his palms off on&lt;br /&gt;the bricks.&lt;br /&gt;"I can't see," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Here," Kurt said, handing him a miniature maglight whose handle was corrugated by&lt;br /&gt;hundreds of toothmarks. Alan saw that he was intense, watching.&lt;br /&gt;Alan twisted the light on. "Thanks," he said, and Kurt smiled at him, seemed a&lt;br /&gt;little taller. Alan looked again. There, on the ground, was a sharpened black&lt;br /&gt;tooth, pierced by a piece of pipe-cleaner wire.&lt;br /&gt;He pocketed the tooth before Kurt saw it and delved farther, approaching the&lt;br /&gt;alley's end, which was carpeted with a humus of moldering cardboard, leaves, and&lt;br /&gt;road turds blown or washed there. He kicked it aside as best he could, then&lt;br /&gt;crouched down to examine the sewer grating beneath. The greenish brass screws that&lt;br /&gt;anchored it to the ground had sharp cuts in their old grooves where they had been&lt;br /&gt;recently removed. He rattled the grating, which was about half a meter square,&lt;br /&gt;then slipped his multitool out of his belt holster. He flipped out the Phillips&lt;br /&gt;driver and went to work on the screws, unconsciously putting Kurt's flashlight in&lt;br /&gt;his mouth, his front teeth finding purchase in the dents that Kurt's own had left&lt;br /&gt;there.&lt;br /&gt;He realized with a brief shudder that Kurt probably used this flashlight while&lt;br /&gt;nipple-deep in dumpsters, had an image of Kurt transferring it from his gloved&lt;br /&gt;hands to his mouth and back again as he dug through bags of kitchen and toilet&lt;br /&gt;waste, looking for discarded technology. But the metal was cool and clean against&lt;br /&gt;his teeth and so he bit down and worked the four screws loose, worked his fingers&lt;br /&gt;into the mossy slots in the grate, lifted it out, and set it to one side.&lt;br /&gt;He shone the light down the hole and found another fingerbone, the tip of a thumb,&lt;br /&gt;desiccated to the size of a large raisin, and he pocketed that, too. There was a&lt;br /&gt;lot of blood here, a little puddle that was still wet in the crusted middle.&lt;br /&gt;Frederick's blood.&lt;br /&gt;He stepped over the grating and shone the light back down the hole, inviting Kurt&lt;br /&gt;to have a look.&lt;br /&gt;"That's where they went," he said as Kurt bent down.&lt;br /&gt;"That hole?"&lt;br /&gt;"That hole," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Is that blood?"&lt;br /&gt;"That's blood. It's not easy to fit someone my brother's size down a hole like&lt;br /&gt;that." He set the grate back, screwed it into place, and passed the torch back to&lt;br /&gt;Kurt. "Let's get out of here," he said.&lt;br /&gt;On the street, Alan looked at his blood and moss-grimed palms. Kurt pushed back&lt;br /&gt;his floppy, frizzed-out, bleach-white mohawk and scratched vigorously at the downy&lt;br /&gt;brown fuzz growing in on the sides of his skull.&lt;br /&gt;"You think I'm a nut," Alan said. "It's okay, that's natural."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt smiled sheepishly. "If it's any consolation, I think you're a *harmless* nut,&lt;br /&gt;okay? I like you."&lt;br /&gt;"You don't have to believe me, so long as you don't get in my way," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"But it's easier if you believe me."&lt;br /&gt;"Easier to do what?"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, to get along," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Davey leapt down from a rock outcropping as Alan made his way home that night,&lt;br /&gt;landing on his back. Alan stumbled and dropped his school bag. He grabbed at the&lt;br /&gt;choking arm around his neck, then dropped to his knees as Davey bounced a fistsized&lt;br /&gt;stone off his head, right over his ear.&lt;br /&gt;He slammed himself back, pinning Davey between himself and the sharp stones on the&lt;br /&gt;walkway up to the cave entrance, then mashed backward with his elbows, his head&lt;br /&gt;ringing like a gong from the stone's blow. His left elbow connected with Davey's&lt;br /&gt;solar plexus and the arm around his throat went slack.&lt;br /&gt;He climbed to his knees and looked Davey in the face. He was blue and gasping, but&lt;br /&gt;Alan couldn't work up a lot of sympathy for him as he reached up to the side of&lt;br /&gt;his head and felt the goose egg welling there. His fingertips came back with a few&lt;br /&gt;strands of hair blood-glued to them.&lt;br /&gt;He'd been in a few schoolyard scraps and this was always the moment when a teacher&lt;br /&gt;intervened -- one combatant pinned, the other atop him. What could you do after&lt;br /&gt;this? Was he going to take the rock from Davey's hand and smash him in the face&lt;br /&gt;with it, knocking out his teeth, breaking his nose, blacking his eyes? Could he&lt;br /&gt;get off of Davey without getting back into the fight?&lt;br /&gt;He pinned Davey's shoulders under his knees and took him by the chin with one&lt;br /&gt;hand. "You can't do this, Danny," he said, looking into his hazel eyes, which had&lt;br /&gt;gone green as they did when he was angry.&lt;br /&gt;"Do *what*?"&lt;br /&gt;"Spy on me. Try to hurt me. Try to hurt my friends. Tease me all the time. You&lt;br /&gt;can't do it, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"I'll stab you in your sleep, Andy. I'll break your fingers with a brick. I'll&lt;br /&gt;poke your eyes out with a fork." He was fizzling like a baking-soda volcano,&lt;br /&gt;saliva slicking his cheeks and nostrils and chin, his eyes rolling.&lt;br /&gt;Alan felt helplessness settle on him, weighing down his limbs. How could he let&lt;br /&gt;him go? What else could he do? Was he going to have to sit on Davey's shoulders&lt;br /&gt;until they were both old men?&lt;br /&gt;"Please, Davey. I'm sorry about what I said. I just can't bring her home, you&lt;br /&gt;understand," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Pervert. She's a slut and you're a pervert. I'll tear her titties off."&lt;br /&gt;"Don't, Danny, please. Stop, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;Darren bared his teeth and growled, jerking his head forward and snapping at&lt;br /&gt;Alan's crotch, heedless of the painful thuds his head made when it hit the ground&lt;br /&gt;after each lunge.&lt;br /&gt;Alan waited to see if he would tire himself out, but when it was clear that he&lt;br /&gt;would not tire, Alan waited for his head to thud to the ground and then, abruptly,&lt;br /&gt;he popped him in the chin, leapt off of him turned him on his belly, and wrenched&lt;br /&gt;him to his knees, twisting one arm behind his back and pulling his head back by&lt;br /&gt;the hair. He brought Davey to his feet, under his control, before he he'd&lt;br /&gt;recovered from the punch.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm telling Dad," he said in Davey's ear, and began to frog-march him through to&lt;br /&gt;the cave mouth and down into the lake in the middle of the mountain. He didn't&lt;br /&gt;even slow down when they reached the smooth shore of the lake, just pushed on,&lt;br /&gt;sloshing in up to his chest, Davey's head barely above the water.&lt;br /&gt;"He won't stop," Alan said, to the winds, to the water, to the vaulted ceiling, to&lt;br /&gt;the scurrying retreat of the goblin. "I think he'll kill me if he goes on. He's&lt;br /&gt;torturing me. You've seen it. Look at him!"&lt;br /&gt;Davey was thrashing in the water, his face swollen and bloody, his eyes rattling&lt;br /&gt;like dried peas in a maraca. Alan's fingers, still buried in Davey's shiny blond&lt;br /&gt;hair, kept brushing up against the swollen bruises there, getting bigger by the&lt;br /&gt;moment. "I'll *fucking* kill you!" Davey howled, screaming inchoate into the echo&lt;br /&gt;that came back from his call.&lt;br /&gt;"Shhh," Alan said into his ear. "Shhh. Listen, Davey, please, shhh."&lt;br /&gt;Davey's roar did not abate. Alan thought he could hear the whispers and groans of&lt;br /&gt;their father in the wind, but he couldn't make it out. "Please, shhh," he said,&lt;br /&gt;gathering Davey in a hug that pinned his arms to his sides, putting his lips up&lt;br /&gt;against Davey's ear, holding him still.&lt;br /&gt;"Shhh," he said, and Davey stopped twitching against him, stopped his terrible&lt;br /&gt;roar, and they listened.&lt;br /&gt;At first the sound was barely audible, a soughing through the tunnels, but&lt;br /&gt;gradually the echoes chased each other round the great cavern and across the&lt;br /&gt;still, dark surface of the lake, and then a voice, illusive as a face in the&lt;br /&gt;clouds.&lt;br /&gt;"My boys," the voice said, their father said. "My sons. David, Alan. You must not&lt;br /&gt;fight like this."&lt;br /&gt;"He --!" Davey began, the echoes of his outburst scattering their father's voice.&lt;br /&gt;"Shhh," Alan said again.&lt;br /&gt;"Daniel, you must love your brother. He loves you. I love you. Trust him. He won't&lt;br /&gt;hurt you. I won't let you come to any harm. I love you, son."&lt;br /&gt;Alan felt Danny tremble in his arms, and he was trembling, too, from the icy cold&lt;br /&gt;of the lake and from the voice and the words and the love that echoed from every&lt;br /&gt;surface.&lt;br /&gt;"Adam, my son. Keep your brother safe. You need each other. Don't be impatient or&lt;br /&gt;angry with him. Give him love."&lt;br /&gt;"I will," Alan said, and he relaxed his arms so that he was holding Danny in a hug&lt;br /&gt;and not a pinion. Danny relaxed back into him. "I love you, Dad," he said, and&lt;br /&gt;they trudged out of the water, out into the last warmth of the day's sun, to dry&lt;br /&gt;out on the slope of the mountainside, green grass under their bodies and wispy&lt;br /&gt;clouds in the sky that they watched until the sun went out.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Marci followed him home a week before Christmas break. He didn't notice her at&lt;br /&gt;first. She was cunning, and followed his boot prints in the snow. A blizzard had&lt;br /&gt;blown up halfway through the school day, and by the time class let out, there was&lt;br /&gt;fresh knee-deep powder and he had to lift each foot high to hike through it, the&lt;br /&gt;shush of his snow pants and the huff of his breath the only sounds in the icy&lt;br /&gt;winter evening.&lt;br /&gt;She followed the deep prints of his boots on the fresh snow, stalking him like he&lt;br /&gt;stalked rabbits in the woods. When he happened to turn around at the cave mouth,&lt;br /&gt;he spotted her in her yellow snow-suit, struggling up the mountainside, barely&lt;br /&gt;visible in the twilight.&lt;br /&gt;He'd never seen an intruder on the mountain. The dirt trail that led up to the&lt;br /&gt;cave branched off a side road on the edge of town, and it was too rocky even for&lt;br /&gt;the dirt-bike kids. He stood at the cave-mouth, torn by indecision. He wanted to&lt;br /&gt;keep walking, head away farther uphill, away from the family's den, but now she'd&lt;br /&gt;seen him, had waved to him. His cold-numb face drained of blood and his bladder&lt;br /&gt;hammered insistently at him. He hiked down the mountain and met her.&lt;br /&gt;"Why are you here?" he said, once he was close enough to see her pale, freckled&lt;br /&gt;face.&lt;br /&gt;"Why do you think?" she said. "I followed you home. Where do you live, Alan? Why&lt;br /&gt;can't I even see where you live?"&lt;br /&gt;He felt tears prick at his eyes. "You just *can't*! I can't bring you home!"&lt;br /&gt;"You hate me, don't you?" she said, hands balling up into mittened fists. "That's&lt;br /&gt;it."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't hate you, Marci. I -- I love you," he said, surprising himself.&lt;br /&gt;She punched him hard in the arm. "Shut up." She kissed his cheek with her cold,&lt;br /&gt;dry lips and the huff of her breath thawed his skin, making it tingle.&lt;br /&gt;"Where do you live, Alan?"&lt;br /&gt;He sucked air so cold it burned his lungs. "Come with me." He took her mittened&lt;br /&gt;hand in his and trudged up to the cave mouth.&lt;br /&gt;They entered the summer cave, where the family spent its time in the warm months,&lt;br /&gt;now mostly empty, save for some straw and a few scattered bits of clothing and&lt;br /&gt;toys. He led her through the cave, his eyes adjusting to the gloom, back to the&lt;br /&gt;right-angle bend behind a stalactite baffle, toward the sulfur reek of the hot&lt;br /&gt;spring on whose shores the family spent its winters.&lt;br /&gt;"It gets dark," he said. "I'll get you a light once we're inside."&lt;br /&gt;Her hand squeezed his tighter and she said nothing.&lt;br /&gt;It grew darker and darker as he pushed into the cave, helping her up the gentle&lt;br /&gt;incline of the cave floor. He saw well in the dark -- the whole family did -- but&lt;br /&gt;he understood that for her this was a blind voyage.&lt;br /&gt;They stepped out into the sulfur-spring cavern, the acoustics of their breathing&lt;br /&gt;changed by the long, flat hollow. In the dark, he saw Edward-Frederick-George&lt;br /&gt;playing with his matchbox cars in one corner; Davey leaned up against their&lt;br /&gt;mother, sucking his thumb. Billy was nowhere in sight, probably hiding out in his&lt;br /&gt;room -- he would, of course, have foreseen this visit.&lt;br /&gt;He put her hand against the cave wall, then said, "Wait here." He let go of her&lt;br /&gt;and walked quickly to the heap of winter coats and boots in the corner and dug&lt;br /&gt;through them for the flashlight he used to do his homework by. It was a hand-crank&lt;br /&gt;number, and as he squeezed it to life, he pointed it at Marci, her face wan and&lt;br /&gt;scared in its light. He gave the flashlight a few more pumps to get its flywheel&lt;br /&gt;spinning, then passed it to her.&lt;br /&gt;"Just keep squeezing it," he said. "It doesn't need batteries." He took her hand&lt;br /&gt;again. It was limp.&lt;br /&gt;"You can put your things on the pile," he said, pointing to the coats and boots.&lt;br /&gt;He was already shucking his hat and mittens and boots and snow pants and coat. His&lt;br /&gt;skin flushed with the warm vapors coming off of the sulfur spring.&lt;br /&gt;"You *live* here?" she said. The light from the flashlight was dimming and he&lt;br /&gt;reached over and gave it a couple of squeezes, then handed it back to her.&lt;br /&gt;"I live here. It's complicated."&lt;br /&gt;Davey's eyes were open and he was staring at them with squinted eyes and a frown.&lt;br /&gt;"Where are your parents?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's complicated," he said again, as though that explained everything. "This is&lt;br /&gt;my secret. No one else knows it."&lt;br /&gt;Edward-Frederick-George tottered over to them with an armload of toy cars, which&lt;br /&gt;he mutely offered to Marci, smiling a drooly smile. Alan patted him on the head&lt;br /&gt;and knelt down. "I don't think Marci wants to play cars, okay?" Ed nodded solemnly&lt;br /&gt;and went back to the edge of the pool and began running his cars through the&lt;br /&gt;nearly scalding water.&lt;br /&gt;Marci reached out a hand ahead of her into the weak light, looked at the crazy&lt;br /&gt;shadows it cast on the distant walls. "How can you live here? It's a cave, Alan.&lt;br /&gt;How can you live in a cave?"&lt;br /&gt;"You get used to it," Alan said. "I can't explain it all, and the parts that I can&lt;br /&gt;explain, you wouldn't believe. But you've been to my home now, Marci. I've shown&lt;br /&gt;you where I live."&lt;br /&gt;Davey approached them, a beatific smile on his angelic face.&lt;br /&gt;"This is my brother, Daniel," Alan said. "The one I told you about."&lt;br /&gt;"You're his slut," Davey said. He was still smiling. "Do you touch his peter?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan flinched, suppressing a desire to smack Davey, but Marci just knelt down and&lt;br /&gt;looked him in the eye. "Nope," she said. "Are you always this horrible to&lt;br /&gt;strangers?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes!" Davey said, cheerfully. "I hate you, and I hate *him*," he cocked his head&lt;br /&gt;Alanward. "And you're all *motherfuckers.*"&lt;br /&gt;"But we're not wee horrible shits, Danny," she said. "We're not filthy-mouthed&lt;br /&gt;brats who can't keep a civil tongue."&lt;br /&gt;Davey snapped his head back and then forward, trying to get her in the bridge of&lt;br /&gt;the nose, a favorite tactic of his, but she was too fast for him and ducked it, so&lt;br /&gt;that he stumbled and fell to his knees.&lt;br /&gt;"Your mother's going to be very cross when she finds out how you've been acting.&lt;br /&gt;You'll be lucky if you get any Christmas pressies," she said as he struggled to&lt;br /&gt;his feet.&lt;br /&gt;He swung a punch at her groin, and she caught his wrist and then hoisted him to&lt;br /&gt;his tiptoes by his arm, then lifted him off the floor, bringing his face up level&lt;br /&gt;with hers. "Stop it," she said. "*Now*."&lt;br /&gt;He fell silent and narrowed his eyes as he dangled there, thinking about this.&lt;br /&gt;Then he spat in her face. Marci shook her head slowly as the gob of spit slid down&lt;br /&gt;her eyebrow and over her cheek, then she spat back, nailing him square on the tip&lt;br /&gt;of his nose. She set him down and wiped her face with a glove.&lt;br /&gt;Davey started toward her, and she lifted a hand and he flinched back and then ran&lt;br /&gt;behind their mother, hiding in her tangle of wires and hoses. Marci gave the&lt;br /&gt;flashlight a series of hard cranks that splashed light across the washing machine&lt;br /&gt;and then turned to Alan.&lt;br /&gt;"That's your brother?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, I see why you didn't want me to come home with you, then."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt was properly appreciative of Alan's bookcases and trophies, ran his&lt;br /&gt;fingertips over the wood, willingly accepted some iced mint tea sweetened with&lt;br /&gt;honey, and used a coaster without having to be asked.&lt;br /&gt;"A washing machine and a mountain," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," Alan said. "He kept a roof over our heads and she kept our clothes clean."&lt;br /&gt;"You've told that joke before, right?" Kurt's foot was bouncing, which made the&lt;br /&gt;chains on his pants and jacket jangle.&lt;br /&gt;"And now Davey's after us," Alan said. "I don't know why it's now. I don't know&lt;br /&gt;why Davey does *anything*. But he always hated me most of all."&lt;br /&gt;"So why did he snatch your brothers first?"&lt;br /&gt;"I think he wants me to sweat. He wants me scared, all the time. I'm the eldest.&lt;br /&gt;I'm the one who left the mountain. I'm the one who came first, and made all the&lt;br /&gt;connections with the outside world. They all looked to me to explain the world,&lt;br /&gt;but I never had any explanations that would suit Davey."&lt;br /&gt;"This is pretty weird," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan cocked his head at Kurt. He was about thirty, old for a punk, and had a kind&lt;br /&gt;of greasy sheen about him, like he didn't remember to wash often enough, despite&lt;br /&gt;his protestations about his cleanliness. But at thirty, he should have seen enough&lt;br /&gt;to let him know that the world was both weirder than he suspected and not so weird&lt;br /&gt;as certain mystically inclined people would like to believe.&lt;br /&gt;Arnold didn't like this moment of disclosure, didn't like dropping his carefully&lt;br /&gt;cultivated habit of hiding this, but he also couldn't help but feel relieved. A&lt;br /&gt;part of his mind nagged him, though, and told him that too much of this would&lt;br /&gt;waken the worry for his brothers from its narcotized slumber.&lt;br /&gt;"I've told other people, just a few. They didn't believe me. You don't have to.&lt;br /&gt;Why don't you think about it for a while?"&lt;br /&gt;"What are you going to do?"&lt;br /&gt;"I'm going to try to figure out how to find my brothers. I can't go underground&lt;br /&gt;like Davey can. I don't think I can, anyway. I never have. But Davey's so...&lt;br /&gt;*broken*... so small and twisted. He's not smart, but he's cunning and he's&lt;br /&gt;determined. I'm smarter than he is. So I'll try to find the smart way. I'll think&lt;br /&gt;about it, too."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, I've got to get ready to go diving," Kurt said. He stood up with a jangle.&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks for the iced tea, Adam."&lt;br /&gt;"It was nice to meet you, Kurt," Alan said, and shook his hand.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan woke with something soft over his face. It was pitch dark, and he couldn't&lt;br /&gt;breathe. He tried to reach up, but his arms wouldn't move. He couldn't sit up.&lt;br /&gt;Something heavy was sitting on his chest. The soft thing -- a pillow? -- ground&lt;br /&gt;against his face, cruelly pressing down on the cartilage in his nose, filling his&lt;br /&gt;mouth as he gasped for air.&lt;br /&gt;He shuddered hard, and felt something give near his right wrist and then his arm&lt;br /&gt;was loose from the elbow down. He kept working the arm, his chest afire, and then&lt;br /&gt;he'd freed it to the shoulder, and something bit him, hard little teeth like&lt;br /&gt;knives, in the fleshy underside of his bicep. Flailing dug the teeth in harder,&lt;br /&gt;and he knew he was bleeding, could feel it seeping down his arm. Finally, he got&lt;br /&gt;his hand onto something, a desiccated, mummified piece of flesh. Davey. Davey's&lt;br /&gt;ribs, like dry stones, cold and thin. He felt up higher, felt for the place where&lt;br /&gt;Davey's arm met his shoulder, and then twisted as hard as he could, until the arm&lt;br /&gt;popped free in its socket. He shook his head violently and the pillow slid away.&lt;br /&gt;The room was still dark, and the hot, moist air rushed into his nostrils and mouth&lt;br /&gt;as he gasped it in. He heard Davey moving in the dark, and as his eyes adjusted,&lt;br /&gt;he saw him unfolding a knife. It was a clasp knife with a broken hasp and it swung&lt;br /&gt;open with the sound of a cockroach's shell crunching underfoot. The blade was&lt;br /&gt;rusty.&lt;br /&gt;Alan flung his freed arm across his body and tried to tug himself loose. He was&lt;br /&gt;being held down by his own sheets, which had been tacked or stapled to the bed&lt;br /&gt;frame. Using all his strength, he rolled over, heaving and bucking, and felt/heard&lt;br /&gt;the staples popping free down one side of the bed, just as Davey slashed at where&lt;br /&gt;his face had been a moment before. The knife whistled past his ear, then scored&lt;br /&gt;deeply along his shoulder. His arm flopped uselessly at his side and now they were&lt;br /&gt;both fighting one-armed, though Davey had a knife and Adam was wrapped in a sheet.&lt;br /&gt;His bedroom was singularly lacking in anything that could be improvised into a&lt;br /&gt;weapon -- he considered trying getting a heavy encyclopedia out to use as a&lt;br /&gt;shield, but it was too far a distance and too long a shot.&lt;br /&gt;He scooted back on the bed, trying to untangle the sheet, which was still secured&lt;br /&gt;at the foot of the bed and all along one side. He freed his good arm just as Davey&lt;br /&gt;slashed at him again, aiming for the meat of his thigh, the big arteries there&lt;br /&gt;that could bleed you out in a minute or two. He grabbed for Davey's shoulder and&lt;br /&gt;caught it for an instant, squeezed and twisted, but then the skin he had hold of&lt;br /&gt;sloughed away and Davey was free, dancing back.&lt;br /&gt;Then he heard, from downstairs, the sound of rhythmic pounding at the door. He'd&lt;br /&gt;been hearing it for some time, but hadn't registered it until now. A muffled yell&lt;br /&gt;from below. Police? Mimi? He screamed out, "Help!" hoping his voice would carry&lt;br /&gt;through the door.&lt;br /&gt;Apparently, it did. He heard the sound of the small glass pane over the doorknob&lt;br /&gt;shatter, and Davey turned his head to look in the direction of the sound. Alan&lt;br /&gt;snatched up the pillow that he'd been smothering under and swung it as hard as he&lt;br /&gt;could at Davey's head, knocking him around, and the door was open now, the summer&lt;br /&gt;night air sweeping up the stairs to the second-floor bedroom.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan?" It was Kurt.&lt;br /&gt;"Kurt, up here, he's got a knife!"&lt;br /&gt;Boots on the stairs, and Davey standing again, cornered, with the knife, slashing&lt;br /&gt;at the air toward him and toward the bedroom door, toward the light coming up the&lt;br /&gt;stairs, bobbing, Kurt's maglight, clenched in his teeth, and Davey bolted for the&lt;br /&gt;door with the knife held high. The light stopped moving and there was an instant's&lt;br /&gt;tableau, Davey caught in the light, cracked black lips peeled back from sharp&lt;br /&gt;teeth, chest heaving, knife bobbing, and then Alan was free, diving for his knees,&lt;br /&gt;bringing him down.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt was on them before Davey could struggle up to his good elbow, kicking the&lt;br /&gt;knife away, scattering fingerbones like dice.&lt;br /&gt;Davey screeched like a rusty hinge as Kurt twisted his arms up behind his back and&lt;br /&gt;Alan took hold of his ankles. He thrashed like a raccoon in a trap, and Alan&lt;br /&gt;forced the back of his head down so that his face was mashed against the cool&lt;br /&gt;floor, muffling his cries.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shifted so that his knee and one hand were pinning Davey's wrists, fished in&lt;br /&gt;his pockets, and came out with a bundle of hairy twine. He set it on the floor&lt;br /&gt;next to Alan and then shifted his grip back to Davey's arms.&lt;br /&gt;As soon as Alan released the back of Davey's head, he jerked it up and snapped his&lt;br /&gt;teeth into the top of Kurt's calf, just above the top of his high, chain-draped&lt;br /&gt;boot. Kurt hollered and Adam reached out and took the knife, moving quickly before&lt;br /&gt;he could think, and smashed the butt into Davey's jaw, which cracked audibly.&lt;br /&gt;Davey let go of Kurt's calf and Alan worked quickly to lash his feet together,&lt;br /&gt;using half the bundle of twine, heedless of how he cut into the thin, cracking&lt;br /&gt;skin. He used the knife to snip the string and then handed the roll to Kurt, who&lt;br /&gt;went to work on Danny's wrists.&lt;br /&gt;Alan got the lights and rolled his brother over, looked into his mad eyes. Dale&lt;br /&gt;was trying to scream, but with his jaw hanging limp and his teeth scattered, it&lt;br /&gt;came out in a rasp. Alan stood and found that he was naked, his shoulder and bicep&lt;br /&gt;dripping blood down his side into a pool on the polished floor.&lt;br /&gt;"We'll take him to the basement," he told Kurt, and dug through the laundry hamper&lt;br /&gt;at the foot of the bed for jeans. He found a couple of pairs of boxer shorts and&lt;br /&gt;tied one around his bicep and the other around his shoulder, using his teeth and&lt;br /&gt;chin as a second hand. It took two tries before he had them bound tight enough to&lt;br /&gt;still the throb.&lt;br /&gt;The bedroom looked like someone had butchered an animal in it, and the floor was&lt;br /&gt;gritty with Darrel's leavings, teeth and nails and fingerbones. Picking his way&lt;br /&gt;carefully through the mess, he hauled the sheet off the bed, popping out the&lt;br /&gt;remaining staples, which pinged off the bookcases and danced on the polished wood&lt;br /&gt;of the floor. He folded it double and laid it on the floor next to Davey.&lt;br /&gt;"Help me roll him onto it," he said, and then saw that Kurt was staring down at&lt;br /&gt;his shriveled, squirming, hateful brother in horror, wiping his hands over and&lt;br /&gt;over again on the thighs of his jeans.&lt;br /&gt;He looked up and his eyes were glazed and wide. "I was passing by and I saw the&lt;br /&gt;shadows in the window. I thought you were being attacked --" He hugged himself.&lt;br /&gt;"I was," Alan said. He dug another T-shirt out of his hamper. "Here, wrap this&lt;br /&gt;around your hands."&lt;br /&gt;They rolled Davey into the sheet and then wrapped him in it. He was surprisingly&lt;br /&gt;heavy, dense. Hefting his end of the sheet one-handed, hefting that mysterious&lt;br /&gt;weight, he remembered picking up Ed-Fred-Geoff in the cave that first day,&lt;br /&gt;remembered the weight of the brother-in-the-brother-in-the-brother, and he had a&lt;br /&gt;sudden sickening sense that perhaps Davey was so heavy because he'd eaten them.&lt;br /&gt;Once they had him bound snugly in the sheet, Danny stopped thrashing and became&lt;br /&gt;very still. They carried him carefully down the dark stairs, the walnut-shell grit&lt;br /&gt;echoing the feel of teeth and flakes of skin on the bare soles of Alan's feet.&lt;br /&gt;They dumped him unceremoniously on the cool mosaic of tile on the floor. They&lt;br /&gt;stared at the unmoving bundle for a moment. "Wait here, I'm going to get a chair,"&lt;br /&gt;Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Jesus, don't leave me alone here," Kurt said. "That kid, the one who saw him --&lt;br /&gt;take -- your brother? No one's seen him since." He looked down at Davey with wide,&lt;br /&gt;crazed eyes.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's shoulder throbbed. "All right," he said. "You get a chair from the kitchen,&lt;br /&gt;the captain's chair in the corner with the newspaper recycling stacked on it."&lt;br /&gt;While Kurt was upstairs, Alan unwrapped his brother. Danny's eyes were closed, his&lt;br /&gt;jaw hanging askew, his wrists bound behind him. Alan leaned carefully over him and&lt;br /&gt;took his jaw and rotated it gently until it popped back into place.&lt;br /&gt;"Davey?" he said. The eyes were closed, but now there was an attentiveness, an&lt;br /&gt;alertness to him. Alan stepped back quickly, feeling foolish at his fear of this&lt;br /&gt;pathetic, disjointed bound thing on his floor. No two ways about it, though: Davey&lt;br /&gt;gave him the absolutely willies, making his testicles draw up and the hair on the&lt;br /&gt;back of his arms prickle.&lt;br /&gt;"Set the chair down there," Alan said, pointing. He hoisted Davey up by his dry,&lt;br /&gt;papery armpits and sat him in the seat. He took some duct tape out of a utility&lt;br /&gt;drawer under the basement staircase and used it to gum Danny down in the chair.&lt;br /&gt;"Davey," he said again. "I know you can hear me. Stop pretending."&lt;br /&gt;"That's your brother?" Kurt said. "The one who --"&lt;br /&gt;"That's him," Alan said. "I guess you believe me now, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;Davey grinned suddenly, mirthless. "Still making friends and influencing people,&lt;br /&gt;brother?" he said. His voice was wet and hiccuping, like he was drowning in snot.&lt;br /&gt;"We're not going to play any games here, Davey. You're going to tell me where&lt;br /&gt;Edward, Felix, and Griffin are, or I'm going to tear your fingers off and smash&lt;br /&gt;them into powder. When I run out of fingers, I'll switch to teeth."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt looked at him in alarm. He moaned. "Jesus, Adam --"&lt;br /&gt;Adam whirled on him, something snapping inside. "Don't, Kurt, just don't, okay? He&lt;br /&gt;tried to kill me tonight. He may already have killed my brothers. This is life or&lt;br /&gt;death, and there's no room for sentiment or humanity. Get a hammer out of the&lt;br /&gt;toolbox, on that shelf." Kurt hesitated. "Do it!" Alan said, pointing at the&lt;br /&gt;toolbox.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shrank back, looking as though he'd been slapped. He moved as if in a dream,&lt;br /&gt;opening the toolbox and pawing through it until he came up with a scarred hammer,&lt;br /&gt;one claw snapped off.&lt;br /&gt;Davey shook his head. "You don't scare me, Albert. Not for an instant. I have a&lt;br /&gt;large supply of fingers and teeth -- all I need. And you -- you're like him.&lt;br /&gt;You're a sentimentalist. Scared of yourself. Scared of me. Scared of everything.&lt;br /&gt;That's why you ran away. That's why you got rid of me. Scared."&lt;br /&gt;Alan dug in his pocket for the fingerbones and teeth he'd collected. He found the&lt;br /&gt;tip of a pinky with a curled-over nail as thick as an oyster's shell, crusted with&lt;br /&gt;dirt and blood. "Give me the hammer, Kurt," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Davey's eyes followed him as he set the fingertip down on the tiles and raised the&lt;br /&gt;hammer. He brought it down just to one side of the finger, hard enough to break&lt;br /&gt;the tile. Kurt jumped a little, and Alan held the hammer up again.&lt;br /&gt;"Tell me or this time I won't miss," he said, looking Davey in the eye.&lt;br /&gt;Davey shrugged in his bonds.&lt;br /&gt;Alan swung the hammer again. It hit the fingertip with a jarring impact that&lt;br /&gt;vibrated up his arm and resonated through his hurt shoulder. He raised the hammer&lt;br /&gt;again. He'd expected the finger to crush into powder, but instead it fissured into&lt;br /&gt;three jagged pieces, like a piece of chert fracturing under a hammer-stone.&lt;br /&gt;Davey's eyes were squeezed down to slits now. "You're the scared one. You can't&lt;br /&gt;scare me," he said, his voice choked with phlegm.&lt;br /&gt;Alan sat on the irregular tile and propped his chin in his palm. "Okay, Davey,&lt;br /&gt;you're right. I'm scared. You've kidnapped our brothers, maybe even killed them.&lt;br /&gt;You're terrorizing me. I can't think, I can't sleep. So tell me, Danny, why&lt;br /&gt;shouldn't I just kill you again, and get rid of all that fear?"&lt;br /&gt;"I know where the brothers are," he said instantly. "I know where there are more&lt;br /&gt;people like us. All the answers, Albert, every answer you've ever looked for. I've&lt;br /&gt;got them. And I won't tell you any of them. But so long as I'm walking around and&lt;br /&gt;talking, you think that I might."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan took Marci back to his bedroom, the winter bedroom that was no more than a&lt;br /&gt;niche in the hot-spring cavern, a pile of rags and a sleeping bag for a bed. It&lt;br /&gt;had always been enough for him, but now he was ashamed of it. He took the&lt;br /&gt;flashlight from Marci and let it wind down, so that they were sitting in darkness.&lt;br /&gt;"Your parents --" she said, then broke off.&lt;br /&gt;"It's complicated."&lt;br /&gt;"Are they dead?"&lt;br /&gt;He reached out in the dark and took her hand.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't know how to explain it," he said. "I can lie, and you'll probably think&lt;br /&gt;I'm telling the truth. Or I can tell the truth, and you'll think that I'm lying."&lt;br /&gt;She squeezed his hand. Despite the sweaty heat of the cave, her fingers were cold&lt;br /&gt;as ice. He covered her hand with his free hand and rubbed at her cold fingers.&lt;br /&gt;"Tell me the truth," she whispered. "I'll believe you."&lt;br /&gt;So he did, in mutters and whispers. He didn't have the words to explain it all,&lt;br /&gt;didn't know exactly how to explain it, but he tried. How he knew his father's&lt;br /&gt;moods. How he felt his mother's love.&lt;br /&gt;After keeping this secret all his life, it felt incredible to be letting it out.&lt;br /&gt;His heart thudded in his chest, and his shoulders felt progressively lighter,&lt;br /&gt;until he thought he might rise up off his bedding and fly around the cave.&lt;br /&gt;If it hadn't been dark, he wouldn't have been able to tell it. It was the dark,&lt;br /&gt;and the faint lunar glow of Marci's face that showed no expression that let him&lt;br /&gt;open up and spill out all the secrets. Her fingers squeezed tighter and tighter,&lt;br /&gt;and now he felt like singing and dancing, because surely between the two of them,&lt;br /&gt;they could find a book in the library or maybe an article in the microfilm&lt;br /&gt;cabinets that would *really* explain it to him.&lt;br /&gt;He wound down. "No one else knows this," he said. "No one except you." He leaned&lt;br /&gt;in and planted a kiss on her cold lips. She sat rigid and unmoving as he kissed&lt;br /&gt;her.&lt;br /&gt;"Marci?"&lt;br /&gt;"Alan," she breathed. Her fingers went slack. She pulled her hand free.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly Alan was cold, too. The scant inches between them felt like an&lt;br /&gt;unbridgeable gap.&lt;br /&gt;"You think I'm lying," he said, staring out into the cave.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't know --"&lt;br /&gt;"It's okay," he said. "I can help you get home now, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;She folded her hands on her lap and nodded miserably.&lt;br /&gt;On the way out of the cave, Eddie-Freddie-Georgie tottered over, still holding his&lt;br /&gt;car. He held it out to her mutely. She knelt down solemnly and took it from him,&lt;br /&gt;then patted him on the head. "Merry Christmas, kiddo," she said. He hugged her&lt;br /&gt;leg, and she laughed a little and bent to pick him up. She couldn't. He was too&lt;br /&gt;heavy. She let go of him and nervously pried his arms from around her thigh.&lt;br /&gt;Alan took her down the path to the side road that led into town. The moonlight&lt;br /&gt;shone on the white snow, making the world glow bluish. They stood by the roadside&lt;br /&gt;for a long and awkward moment.&lt;br /&gt;"Good night, Alan," she said, and turned and started trudging home.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;There was no torture at school the next day. She ignored him through the morning,&lt;br /&gt;and he couldn't find her at recess, but at lunch she came and sat next to him.&lt;br /&gt;They ate in silence, but he was comforted by her presence beside him, a warmth&lt;br /&gt;that he sensed more than felt.&lt;br /&gt;She sat beside him in afternoon classes, too. Not a word passed between them. For&lt;br /&gt;Alan, it felt like anything they could say to one another would be less true than&lt;br /&gt;the silence, but that realization hurt. He'd never been able to discuss his life&lt;br /&gt;and nature with anyone and it seemed as though he never would.&lt;br /&gt;But the next morning, in the school yard, she snagged him as he walked past the&lt;br /&gt;climber made from a jumble of bolted-together logs and dragged him into the&lt;br /&gt;middle. It smelled faintly of pee and was a rich source of mysterious roaches and&lt;br /&gt;empty beer bottles on Monday mornings after the teenagers had come and gone.&lt;br /&gt;She was crouched down on her haunches in the snow there, her steaming breath&lt;br /&gt;coming in short huffs. She grabbed him by the back of his knit toque and pulled&lt;br /&gt;his face to hers, kissing him hard on the mouth, shocking the hell out of him by&lt;br /&gt;forcing her tongue past his lips.&lt;br /&gt;They kissed until the bell rang, and as Alan made his way to class, he felt like&lt;br /&gt;his face was glowing like a lightbulb. His homeroom teacher asked him if he was&lt;br /&gt;feeling well, and he stammered out some kind of affirmative while Marci, sitting&lt;br /&gt;in the next row, stifled a giggle.&lt;br /&gt;They ate their lunches together again, and she filled the silence with a running&lt;br /&gt;commentary of the deficiencies of the sandwich her father had packed her, the&lt;br /&gt;strange odors coming from the brown bag that Alan had brought, filled with winter&lt;br /&gt;mushrooms and some soggy bread and cheese, and the hairiness of the mole on the&lt;br /&gt;lunch lady's chin.&lt;br /&gt;When they reached the schoolyard, she tried to drag him back to the logs, but he&lt;br /&gt;resisted, taking her instead to the marsh where he'd first spied her. The ground&lt;br /&gt;had frozen over and the rushes and reeds were stubble, poking out of the snow. He&lt;br /&gt;took her mittened hands in his and waited for her to stop squirming.&lt;br /&gt;Which she did, eventually. He'd rehearsed what he'd say to her all morning: *Do&lt;br /&gt;you believe me? What am I? Am I like you? Do you still love me? Are you still my&lt;br /&gt;friend? I don't understand it any better than you do, but now, now there are two&lt;br /&gt;of us who know about it, and maybe we can make sense of it together. God, it's&lt;br /&gt;such a relief to not be the only one anymore.*&lt;br /&gt;But now, standing there with Marci, in the distant catcalls of the playground and&lt;br /&gt;the smell of the new snow and the soughing of the wind in the trees, he couldn't&lt;br /&gt;bring himself to say it. She either knew these things or she didn't, and if she&lt;br /&gt;didn't, he didn't know what he could do to help it.&lt;br /&gt;"What?" she said at last.&lt;br /&gt;"Do you --" he began, then fell silent. He couldn't say the words.&lt;br /&gt;She looked irritated, and the sounds and the smells swept over him as the moment&lt;br /&gt;stretched. But then she softened. "I don't understand it, Alan," she said. "Is it&lt;br /&gt;true? Is it really how you say it is? Did I see what I saw?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's true," he said, and it was as though the clouds had parted, the world gone&lt;br /&gt;bright with the glare off the snow and the sounds from the playground now joyous&lt;br /&gt;instead of cruel. "It's true, and I don't understand it any more than you do,&lt;br /&gt;Marci."&lt;br /&gt;"Are you...*human*, Alan?"&lt;br /&gt;"I *think* so," he said. "I bleed. I eat. I sleep. I think and talk and dream."&lt;br /&gt;She squeezed his hands and darted a kiss at him. "You kiss," she said.&lt;br /&gt;And it was all right again.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The next day was Saturday, and Marci arranged to meet him at the cave-mouth. In&lt;br /&gt;the lee of the wind, the bright winter sun reflected enough heat off the snow that&lt;br /&gt;some of it melted away, revealing the stunted winter grass beneath. They sat on&lt;br /&gt;the dry snow and listened to the wind whistle through the pines and the hiss of&lt;br /&gt;loose snow blowing across the crust.&lt;br /&gt;"Will I get to meet your Da, then?" she said, after they'd watched a jackrabbit&lt;br /&gt;hop up the mountainside and disappear into the woods.&lt;br /&gt;He sniffed deeply, and smelled the coalface smell of his father's cogitation.&lt;br /&gt;"You want to?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"I do."&lt;br /&gt;And so he led her inside the mountain, through the winter cave, and back and back&lt;br /&gt;to the pool in the mountain's heart. They crept along quietly, her fingers twined&lt;br /&gt;in his. "You have to put out the flashlight now," he said. "It'll scare the&lt;br /&gt;goblin." His voice shocked him, and her, he felt her startle. It was so quiet&lt;br /&gt;otherwise, just the sounds of breathing and of cave winds.&lt;br /&gt;So she let the whirring dynamo in the flashlight wind down, and the darkness&lt;br /&gt;descended on them. It was cool, but not cold, and the wind smelled more strongly&lt;br /&gt;of coalface than ever. "He's in there," Alan said. He heard the goblin scamper&lt;br /&gt;away. His words echoed over the pool around the corner. "Come on." Her fingers&lt;br /&gt;were very cool. They walked in a slow, measured step, like a king and queen of&lt;br /&gt;elfland going for a walk in the woods.&lt;br /&gt;He stopped them at the pool's edge. There was almost no light here, but Alan could&lt;br /&gt;make out the smooth surface of his father's pool.&lt;br /&gt;"Now what?" she whispered, the hissing of her words susurrating over the pool's&lt;br /&gt;surface.&lt;br /&gt;"We can only talk to him from the center," he whispered. "We have to wade in."&lt;br /&gt;"I can't go home with wet clothes," she whispered.&lt;br /&gt;"You don't wear clothes," he said. He let go of her hand and began to unzip his&lt;br /&gt;snowsuit.&lt;br /&gt;And so they stripped, there on his father's shore. She was luminous in the dark, a&lt;br /&gt;pale girl-shape picked out in the ripples of the pool, skinny, with her arms&lt;br /&gt;crossed in front of her chest. Even though he knew she couldn't see him, he was&lt;br /&gt;self-conscious in his nudity, and he stepped into the pool as soon as he was&lt;br /&gt;naked.&lt;br /&gt;"Wait," she said, sounding panicked. "Don't leave me!"&lt;br /&gt;So he held out his hand for her, and then, realizing that she couldn't see it, he&lt;br /&gt;stepped out of the pool and took her hand, brushing her small breast as he did so.&lt;br /&gt;He barely registered the contact, though she startled and nearly fell over.&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry," he said. "Come on."&lt;br /&gt;The water was cold, but once they were in up to their shoulders, it warmed up, or&lt;br /&gt;they went numb.&lt;br /&gt;"Is it okay?" she whispered, and now that they were in the center of the cavern,&lt;br /&gt;the echoes crossed back and forth and took a long time to die out.&lt;br /&gt;"Listen," Andy said. "Just listen."&lt;br /&gt;And as the echoes of his words died down, the winds picked up, and then the words&lt;br /&gt;emerged from the breeze.&lt;br /&gt;"Adam," his father sighed. Marci jumped a foot out of the water, and her&lt;br /&gt;splashdown sent watery ripples rebounding off the cavern walls.&lt;br /&gt;Alan reached out for her and draped his arm around her shoulders. She huddled&lt;br /&gt;against his chest, slick cold naked skin goose-pimpled against his ribs. She&lt;br /&gt;smelled wonderful, like a fox. It *felt* wonderful, and solemn, to stand there&lt;br /&gt;nude, in the heart of his father, and let his secrets spill away.&lt;br /&gt;Her breathing stilled again.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan," his father said.&lt;br /&gt;"We want to understand, Father," Alan whispered. "What am I?" It was the question&lt;br /&gt;he'd never asked. Now that he'd asked it, he felt like a fool: Surely his father&lt;br /&gt;*knew*, the mountain knew everything, had stood forever. He could have found out&lt;br /&gt;anytime he'd thought to ask.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't have the answer," his father said. "There may be no answer. You may never&lt;br /&gt;know."&lt;br /&gt;Adam let go of Marci, let his arms fall to his sides.&lt;br /&gt;"No," he said. "No!" he shouted again, and the stillness was broken. The wind blew&lt;br /&gt;cold and hard, and he didn't care. "*NO!*" he screamed, and Marci grabbed him and&lt;br /&gt;put her hand over his mouth. His ears roared with echoes, and they did not die&lt;br /&gt;down, but rather built atop one another, to a wall of noise that scared him.&lt;br /&gt;She was crying now, scared and openmouthed sobs. She splashed him and water went&lt;br /&gt;up his nose and stung his eyes. The wind was colder now, cold enough to hurt, and&lt;br /&gt;he took her hand and sloshed recklessly for the shore. He spun up the flashlight&lt;br /&gt;and handed it to her, then yanked his clothes over his wet skin, glaring at the&lt;br /&gt;pool while she did the same.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;In the winter cave, they met a golem.&lt;br /&gt;It stood like a statue, brick-red with glowing eyes, beside Alan's mother, hands&lt;br /&gt;at its sides. Golems didn't venture to this side of his father very often, and&lt;br /&gt;almost never in daylight. Marci caught him in the flashlight's beam as they&lt;br /&gt;entered the warm humidity of the cave, shivering in the gusting winds. She fumbled&lt;br /&gt;the flashlight and Alan caught it before it hit the ground.&lt;br /&gt;"It's okay," he said. His chest was heaving from his tantrum, but the presence of&lt;br /&gt;the golem calmed him. You could say or do anything to a golem, and it couldn't&lt;br /&gt;strike back, couldn't answer back. The sons of the mountain that sheltered -- and&lt;br /&gt;birthed? -- the golems owed nothing to them.&lt;br /&gt;He walked over to it and folded his arms.&lt;br /&gt;"What is it?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;The golem bent its head slightly and looked him in the eye. It was man-shaped, but&lt;br /&gt;baggier, muscles like frozen mud. An overhang of belly covered its smooth crotch&lt;br /&gt;like a kilt. Its chisel-shaped teeth clacked together as it limbered up its jaw.&lt;br /&gt;"Your father is sad," it said. Its voice was slow and grinding, like an avalanche.&lt;br /&gt;"Our side grows cold."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't care," Alan said. "*Fuck* my father," he said. Behind him, perched atop&lt;br /&gt;their mother, Davey whittered a mean little laugh.&lt;br /&gt;"You shouldn't --"&lt;br /&gt;Alan shoved the golem. It was like shoving a boulder. It didn't give at all.&lt;br /&gt;"You don't tell me what to do," he said. "You can't tell me what to do. I want to&lt;br /&gt;know what I am, how we're possible, and if you can't help, then you can leave&lt;br /&gt;now."&lt;br /&gt;The winds blew colder, smelling now of the golem's side of the mountain, of clay&lt;br /&gt;and the dry bones of their kills, which they arrayed on the walls of their cavern.&lt;br /&gt;The golem stood stock still.&lt;br /&gt;"Does it...*understand*?" Marci asked. Davey snickered again.&lt;br /&gt;"It's not stupid," Alan said, calming a little. "It's...*slow*. It thinks slowly&lt;br /&gt;and acts slowly. But it's not stupid." He paused for a moment. "It taught me to&lt;br /&gt;speak," he said.&lt;br /&gt;That did it. He began to cry, biting his lip to keep from making a sound, but the&lt;br /&gt;tears rolled down his cheeks and his shoulders shook. The flashlight's beam pinned&lt;br /&gt;him, and he wanted to run to his mother and hide behind her, wanted to escape the&lt;br /&gt;light.&lt;br /&gt;"Go," he said softly to the golem, touching its elbow. "It'll be all right."&lt;br /&gt;Slowly, gratingly, the golem turned and lumbered out of the cave, clumsy and&lt;br /&gt;ponderous.&lt;br /&gt;Marci put her arm around him and he buried his face in her skinny neck, the hot&lt;br /&gt;tears coursing down her collarbones.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Davey came to him that night and pinned him in the light of the flashlight. He&lt;br /&gt;woke staring up into the bright bulb, shielding his eyes. He groped out for the&lt;br /&gt;light, but Darryl danced back out of reach, keeping the beam in his eyes. The air&lt;br /&gt;crackled with the angry grinding of its hand-dynamo.&lt;br /&gt;He climbed out of bed naked and felt around on the floor. He had a geode there,&lt;br /&gt;he'd broken it and polished it by hand, and it was the size of a softball, the top&lt;br /&gt;smooth as glass, the underside rough as a coconut's hide.&lt;br /&gt;Wordless and swift, he wound up and threw the geode as hard as he could at where&lt;br /&gt;he judged Davey's head to be.&lt;br /&gt;There was a thud and a cry, and the light clattered to the ground, growing more&lt;br /&gt;dim as its dynamo whirred to a stop. Green blobs chased themselves across his&lt;br /&gt;vision, and he could only see Darren rolling on the ground by turning his head to&lt;br /&gt;one side and looking out of the corner of his eye.&lt;br /&gt;He groped toward Davey and smelled the blood. Kneeling down, he found Davey's hand&lt;br /&gt;and followed it up to his shoulder, his neck. Slick with blood. Higher, to Davey's&lt;br /&gt;face, his forehead, the dent there sanded ragged by the rough side of the geode.&lt;br /&gt;The blood flowed freely and beneath his other hand Danny's chest heaved as he&lt;br /&gt;breathed, shallowly, rapidly, almost panting.&lt;br /&gt;His vision was coming back now. He took off his T-shirt and wadded it up, pressed&lt;br /&gt;it to Davey's forehead. They'd done first aid in class. You weren't supposed to&lt;br /&gt;move someone with a head injury. He pressed down with the T-shirt, trying to&lt;br /&gt;stanch the blood.&lt;br /&gt;Then, quick as a whip, Davey's head twisted around and he bit down, hard, on&lt;br /&gt;Alan's thumbtip. Albert reeled back, but it was too late: Davey had bitten off the&lt;br /&gt;tip of his right thumb. Alan howled, waking up Ed-Fred-Geoff, who began to cry.&lt;br /&gt;Davey rolled away, scampering back into the cave's depths.&lt;br /&gt;Alan danced around the cave, hand clamped between his thighs, mewling. He fell to&lt;br /&gt;the floor and squeezed his legs together, then slowly brought his hand up before&lt;br /&gt;his face. The ragged stump of his thumb was softly spurting blood in time with his&lt;br /&gt;heartbeat. He struggled to remember his first aid. He wrapped his T-shirt around&lt;br /&gt;the wound and then pulled his parka on over his bare chest and jammed his bare&lt;br /&gt;feet into his boots, then made his way to the cave mouth and scooped up snow under&lt;br /&gt;the moon's glow, awkwardly packing a snowball around his hand. He shivered as he&lt;br /&gt;made his way back into the winter cave and propped himself up against his mother,&lt;br /&gt;holding his hurt hand over his head.&lt;br /&gt;The winter cave grew cold as the ice packed around his hand. Bobby, woken by his&lt;br /&gt;clairvoyant instincts, crept forward with a blanket and draped it over Alan. He'd&lt;br /&gt;foreseen this, of course -- had foreseen all of it. But Bobby followed his own&lt;br /&gt;code, and he kept his own counsel, cleaning up after the disasters he was&lt;br /&gt;powerless to prevent.&lt;br /&gt;Deep in the mountains, they heard the echoes of Davey's tittering laughter.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"It was wrong to bring her here, Adam," Billy said to him in the morning, as he&lt;br /&gt;fed Alan the crusts of bread and dried apples he'd brought him, packing his hand&lt;br /&gt;with fresh snow.&lt;br /&gt;"I didn't bring her here, she followed me," Adam said. His arm ached from holding&lt;br /&gt;it aloft, and his back and tailbone were numb with the ache of a night spent&lt;br /&gt;sitting up against their mother's side. "And besides, why should it be wrong?&lt;br /&gt;Whose rules? What rules? What are the *fucking* rules?"&lt;br /&gt;"You can feel the rules, brother," he said. He couldn't look Alan in the eye, he&lt;br /&gt;never did. This was a major speech, coming from Bobby.&lt;br /&gt;"I can't feel any rules," Alan said. He wondered if it was true. He'd never told&lt;br /&gt;anyone about the family before. Had he know all along that he shouldn't do this?&lt;br /&gt;"I can. She can't know. No one can know. Even we can't know. We'll never&lt;br /&gt;understand it."&lt;br /&gt;"Where is Davey?"&lt;br /&gt;"He's doing a...ritual. With your thumb."&lt;br /&gt;They sat silent and strained their ears to hear the winds and the distant shuffle&lt;br /&gt;of the denizens of the mountain.&lt;br /&gt;Alan shifted, using his good hand to prop himself up, looking for a comfortable&lt;br /&gt;position. He brought his injured hand down to his lap and unwrapped his bloodsoaked&lt;br /&gt;T-shirt from his fist, gently peeling it away from the glue of dried blood&lt;br /&gt;that held it there.&lt;br /&gt;His hand had shriveled in the night, from ice and from restricted circulation, and&lt;br /&gt;maybe from Davey's ritual. Alan pondered its crusty, clawed form, thinking that it&lt;br /&gt;looked like it belonged to someone -- some*thing* -- else.&lt;br /&gt;Buddy scaled the stalactite that served as the ladder up to the lofty nook where&lt;br /&gt;he slept and came back down holding his water bottle. "It's clean, it's from the&lt;br /&gt;pool," he said, another major speech for him. He also had an armload of scavenged&lt;br /&gt;diapers, much-washed and worn soft as flannel. He wet one and began to wipe away&lt;br /&gt;the crust of blood on Alan's arm and hand, working his way up from the elbow, then&lt;br /&gt;tackling the uninjured fingers, then, very gently, gently as a feather-touch, slow&lt;br /&gt;as a glacier, he worked on Alan's thumb.&lt;br /&gt;When he was done, Alan's hand was clean and dry and cold, and the wound of his&lt;br /&gt;thumb was exposed and naked, a thin crust of blood weeping liquid slowly. It&lt;br /&gt;seemed to Alan that he could see the stump of bone protruding from the wound. He&lt;br /&gt;was amazed to see his bones, to get a look at a cross-section of himself. He&lt;br /&gt;wondered if he could count the rings and find out how old he was, as he had never&lt;br /&gt;been really certain on that score. He giggled ghoulishly.&lt;br /&gt;He held out his good hand. "Get me up, okay?" Bobby hauled him to his feet. "Get&lt;br /&gt;me some warm clothes, too?"&lt;br /&gt;And he did, because he was Bobby, and he was always only too glad to help, only&lt;br /&gt;too glad to do what service he could for you, even if he would never do you the&lt;br /&gt;one service that would benefit you the most: telling you of his visions, helping&lt;br /&gt;you avoid the disasters that loomed on your horizon.&lt;br /&gt;Standing up, walking around, being clean -- he began to feel like himself again.&lt;br /&gt;He even managed to get into his snow pants and parka and struggle out to the&lt;br /&gt;hillside and the bright sunshine, where he could get a good look at his hand.&lt;br /&gt;What he had taken for a bone wasn't. It was a skinny little thumbtip, growing out&lt;br /&gt;of the raggedy, crusty stump. He could see the whorl of a fingerprint there, and&lt;br /&gt;narrow, nearly invisible cuticles. He touched the tip of his tongue to it and it&lt;br /&gt;seemed to him that he could feel a tongue rasping over the top of his missing&lt;br /&gt;thumbtip.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"It's disgusting, keep it away," Marci said, shrinking away from his hand in mock&lt;br /&gt;horror. He held his proto-thumb under her nose and waggled it.&lt;br /&gt;"No joking, okay? I just want to know what it *means*. I'm *growing a new thumb*."&lt;br /&gt;"Maybe you're part salamander. They regrow their legs and tails. Or a worm -- cut&lt;br /&gt;a worm in half and you get two worms. It's in one of my Da's books."&lt;br /&gt;He stared at his thumb. It had grown perceptibly, just on the journey into town to&lt;br /&gt;Marci's place. They were holed up in her room, surrounded by watercolors of horses&lt;br /&gt;in motion that her mother had painted. She'd raided the fridge for cold pork pies&lt;br /&gt;and cheese and fizzy lemonade that her father had shipped from the Marks &amp;amp; Spencer&lt;br /&gt;in Toronto. It was the strangest food he'd ever eaten but he'd developed a taste&lt;br /&gt;for it.&lt;br /&gt;"Wiggle it again," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He did, and the thumbtip bent down like a scale model of a thumbtip, cracking the&lt;br /&gt;scab around it.&lt;br /&gt;"We should go to a doctor," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't go to doctors," he said flatly.&lt;br /&gt;"You *haven't* gone to a doctor -- doesn't mean you can't."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't go to doctors." X-ray machines and stethoscopes, blood tests and clever&lt;br /&gt;little flashlights in your ears -- who knew what they'd reveal? He wanted to be&lt;br /&gt;the first to discover it, he didn't want to have to try to explain it to a doctor&lt;br /&gt;before he understood it himself.&lt;br /&gt;"Not even when you're sick?"&lt;br /&gt;"The golems take care of it," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She shook her head. "You're a weirdo, you know that?"&lt;br /&gt;"I know it," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"I thought my family was strange," she said, stretching out on her tummy on the&lt;br /&gt;bed. "But they're not a patch on you."&lt;br /&gt;"I know it."&lt;br /&gt;He finished his fizzy lemonade and lay down beside her, belching.&lt;br /&gt;"We could ask my Da. He knows a lot of strange things."&lt;br /&gt;He put his face down in her duvet and smelled the cotton covers and her nighttime&lt;br /&gt;sweat, like a spice, like cinnamon. "I don't want to do that. Please don't tell&lt;br /&gt;anyone, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;She took hold of his wrist and looked again at the teensy thumb. "Wiggle it&lt;br /&gt;again," she said. He did. She giggled. "Imagine if you were like a worm. Imagine&lt;br /&gt;if your thumbtip was out there growing another *you*."&lt;br /&gt;He sat bolt upright. "Do you think that's possible?" he said. His heart was&lt;br /&gt;thudding. "Do you think so?"&lt;br /&gt;She rolled on her side and stared at him. "No, don't be daft. How could your thumb&lt;br /&gt;grow another *you?*"&lt;br /&gt;"Why wouldn't it?"&lt;br /&gt;She had no answer for him.&lt;br /&gt;"I need to go home," he said. "I need to know."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm coming with," she said. he opened his mouth to tell her no, but she made a&lt;br /&gt;fierce face at him, her foxy features wrinkled into a mock snarl.&lt;br /&gt;"Come along then," he said. "You can help me do up my coat."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The winter cave was deserted. He listened at the mouths of all the tunnels,&lt;br /&gt;straining to hear Davey. From his high nook, Brian watched them.&lt;br /&gt;"Where is he, Billy?" Alan called. "Tell me, godfuckit!"&lt;br /&gt;Billy looked down from him perch with his sad, hollow eyes -- had he been&lt;br /&gt;forgetting to eat again? -- and shook his head.&lt;br /&gt;They took to the tunnels. Even with the flashlight, Marci couldn't match him for&lt;br /&gt;speed. He could feel the tunnels through the soles of his boots, he could smell&lt;br /&gt;them, he could pick them apart by the quality of their echoes. He moved fast,&lt;br /&gt;dragging Marci along with his good hand while she cranked the flashlight as hard&lt;br /&gt;as she could. He heard her panting, triangulated their location from the way that&lt;br /&gt;the shallow noises reflected off the walls.&lt;br /&gt;When they found Davey at last, it was in the golem's cave, on the other side of&lt;br /&gt;the mountain. He was hunkered down in a corner, while the golems moved around him&lt;br /&gt;slowly, avoiding him like he was a boulder or a stalagmite that had sprung up in&lt;br /&gt;the night. Their stony heads turned to regard Marci and Adam as they came upon&lt;br /&gt;them, their luminous eyes lighting on them for a moment and then moving on. It was&lt;br /&gt;an eloquent statement for them: *This is the business of the mountain and his&lt;br /&gt;sons. We will not intervene.*&lt;br /&gt;There were more golems than Alan could remember seeing at once, six, maybe seven.&lt;br /&gt;The golems made more of their kind from the clay they found at the riverbank&lt;br /&gt;whenever they cared to or needed to, and allowed their number to dwindle when the&lt;br /&gt;need or want had passed by the simple expedient of deconstructing one of their own&lt;br /&gt;back to the clay it had come from.&lt;br /&gt;The golems' cave was lined with small bones and skulls, rank and row climbing the&lt;br /&gt;walls, twined with dried grasses in ascending geometries. These were the furry&lt;br /&gt;animals that the golems patiently trapped and killed, skinned, dressed, and&lt;br /&gt;smoked, laying them in small, fur-wrapped bundles in the family's cave when they&lt;br /&gt;were done. It was part of their unspoken bargain with the mountain, and the tiny&lt;br /&gt;bones had once borne the flesh of nearly every significant meal Alan had ever&lt;br /&gt;eaten.&lt;br /&gt;Davey crouched among the bones at the very back of the cave, his back to them,&lt;br /&gt;shoulders hunched.&lt;br /&gt;The golems stood stock still as Marci and he crept up on Davey. So intent was he&lt;br /&gt;on his work that he didn't notice them, even as they loomed over his shoulder,&lt;br /&gt;staring down on the thing he held in his hands.&lt;br /&gt;It was Alan's thumb, and growing out of it -- Allen. Tiny, the size of a pipecleaner&lt;br /&gt;man, and just as skinny, but perfectly formed, squirming and insensate,&lt;br /&gt;face contorted in a tiny expression of horror.&lt;br /&gt;Not so perfectly formed, Alan saw, once he was over the initial shock. One of the&lt;br /&gt;pipe-cleaner-Allen's arms was missing, protruding there from Davey's mouth, and he&lt;br /&gt;crunched it with lip-smacking relish. Alan gawped at it, taking it in, watching&lt;br /&gt;his miniature doppelganger, hardly bigger than the thumb it sprouted from, thrash&lt;br /&gt;like a worm on a hook.&lt;br /&gt;Davey finished the arm, slurping it back like a noodle. Then he dangled the tiny&lt;br /&gt;Allen from the thumb, shaking it, before taking hold of the legs, one between the&lt;br /&gt;thumb and forefinger of each hand, and he gently, almost lovingly pulled them&lt;br /&gt;apart. The Allen screamed, a sound as tiny and tortured as a cricket song, and&lt;br /&gt;then the left leg wrenched free of its socket. Alan felt his own leg twist in&lt;br /&gt;sympathy, and then there was a killing rage in him. He looked around the cave for&lt;br /&gt;the thing that would let him murder his brother for once and for all, but it&lt;br /&gt;wasn't to be found.&lt;br /&gt;Davey's murder was still to come.&lt;br /&gt;Instead, he leapt on Davey's back, arm around his neck, hand gripping his choking&lt;br /&gt;fist, pulling the headlock tighter and tighter. Marci was screaming something, but&lt;br /&gt;she was lost in the crash of the blood-surf that roared in his ears. Davey pitched&lt;br /&gt;over backward, trying to buck him off, but he wouldn't be thrown, and he flipped&lt;br /&gt;Davey over by the neck, so that he landed it a thrash of skinny arms and legs. The&lt;br /&gt;Allen fell to the floor, weeping and dragging itself one-armed and one-legged away&lt;br /&gt;from the melee.&lt;br /&gt;Then Davey was on him, squeezing his injured hand, other thumb in his eye,&lt;br /&gt;screeching like a rusted hinge. Alan tried to see through the tears that sprang&lt;br /&gt;up, tried to reach Davey with his good hand, but the rage was leaking out of him&lt;br /&gt;now. He rolled desperately, but Davey's weight on his chest was like a cannonball,&lt;br /&gt;impossibly heavy.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly Davey was lifted off of him. Alan struggled up into a sitting position,&lt;br /&gt;clutching his injured hand. Davey dangled by his armpits in the implacable hands&lt;br /&gt;of one of the golems, face contorted into unrecognizability. Alan stood and&lt;br /&gt;confronted him, just out of range of his kicking feet and his gnashing teeth, and&lt;br /&gt;Darrel spat in his face, a searing gob that landed in his eye.&lt;br /&gt;Marci took his arm and dragged him back toward the cave mouth. He fought her,&lt;br /&gt;looking for the little Allen, not seeing him. Was that him, there, in the shadows?&lt;br /&gt;No, that was one of the little bone tableaux, a field mouse's dried bones splayed&lt;br /&gt;in an anatomically correct mystic hieroglyph.&lt;br /&gt;Marci hauled him away, out into the bright snow and the bright sun. His thumb was&lt;br /&gt;bleeding anew, dripping fat drops the color of a red crayon into the sun, blood so&lt;br /&gt;hot it seemed to sizzle and sink into the snow.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"You need to tell an adult, Alan," she said, wrapping his new little thumb in&lt;br /&gt;gauze she'd taken from her pocket.&lt;br /&gt;"My father knows. My mother knows." He sat with his head between his knees, not&lt;br /&gt;daring to look at her, in his nook in the winter cave.&lt;br /&gt;She just looked at him, squinting.&lt;br /&gt;"They count," he said. "They understand it."&lt;br /&gt;She shook her head.&lt;br /&gt;"They understand it better than any adult you know would. This will get better on&lt;br /&gt;its own, Marci. Look." He wiggled his thumb at her. It was now the size of the tip&lt;br /&gt;of his pinky, and had a well-formed nail and cuticle.&lt;br /&gt;"That's not all that has to get better," she said. "You can't just let this&lt;br /&gt;fester. Your brother. That *thing* in the cave..." She shook her head. "Someone&lt;br /&gt;needs to know about this. You're not safe."&lt;br /&gt;"Promise me you won't tell anyone, Marci. This is important. No one except you&lt;br /&gt;knows, and that's how it has to be. If you tell --"&lt;br /&gt;"What?" She got up and pulled her coat on. "What, Alan? If I tell and try to help&lt;br /&gt;you, what will you do to me?"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't know," he mumbled into his chest.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, you do whatever you have to do," she said, and stomped out of the cave.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Davey escaped at dawn. Kurt had gone outside to repark his old Buick, the trunk&lt;br /&gt;bungeed shut over his haul of LCD flat panels, empty laser-toner cartridges, and&lt;br /&gt;open gift baskets of pricey Japanese cosmetics. Alan and Davey just glared at each&lt;br /&gt;other, but then Davey closed his eyes and began to snore softly, and even though&lt;br /&gt;Alan paced and pinched the bridge of his nose and stretched out his injured arm,&lt;br /&gt;he couldn't help it when he sat down and closed his eyes and nodded off.&lt;br /&gt;Alan woke with a start, staring at the empty loops of duct tape and twine hanging&lt;br /&gt;from his captain's chair, dried strings of skin like desiccated banana peel fibers&lt;br /&gt;hanging from them. He swore to himself quietly, and shouted Shit! at the low&lt;br /&gt;basement ceiling. He couldn't have been asleep for more than a few seconds, and&lt;br /&gt;the half-window that Davey had escaped through gaped open at him like a sneer.&lt;br /&gt;He tottered to his feet and went out to find Kurt, bare feet jammed into sneakers,&lt;br /&gt;bare chest and bandages covered up with a jacket. He found Kurt cutting through&lt;br /&gt;the park, dragging his heels in the bloody dawn light.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt looked at his expression, then said, "What happened?" He had his fists at his&lt;br /&gt;sides, he looked tensed to run. Alan felt that he was waiting for an order.&lt;br /&gt;"He got away."&lt;br /&gt;"How?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan shook his head. "Can you help me get dressed? I don't think I can get a shirt&lt;br /&gt;on by myself."&lt;br /&gt;They went to the Greek's, waiting out front on the curb for the old man to show up&lt;br /&gt;and unchain the chairs and drag them out around the table. He served them tall&lt;br /&gt;coffees and omelets sleepily, and they ate in silence, too tired to talk.&lt;br /&gt;"Let me take you to the doctor?" Kurt asked, nodding at the bandage that bulged&lt;br /&gt;under his shirt.&lt;br /&gt;"No," Alan said. "I'm a fast healer."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt rubbed at his calf and winced. "He broke the skin," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"You got all your shots?"&lt;br /&gt;"Hell yeah. Too much crap in the dumpsters. I once found a styro cooler of smashed&lt;br /&gt;blood vials in a Red Cross trash."&lt;br /&gt;"You'll be okay, then," Alan said. He shifted in his seat and winced. He grunted a&lt;br /&gt;little ouch. Kurt narrowed his eyes and shook his head at him.&lt;br /&gt;"This is pretty fucked up right here," Kurt said, looking down into his coffee.&lt;br /&gt;"It's only a little less weird for me, if that's any comfort."&lt;br /&gt;"It's not," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that's why I don't usually tell others. You're only the second person to&lt;br /&gt;believe it."&lt;br /&gt;"Maybe I could meet up with the first and form a support group?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan pushed his omelet away. "You can't. She's dead."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Davey haunted the schoolyard. Alan had always treated the school and its grounds&lt;br /&gt;as a safe haven, a place where he could get away from the inexplicable, a place&lt;br /&gt;where he could play at being normal.&lt;br /&gt;But now Davey was everywhere, lurking in the climber, hiding in the trees, peering&lt;br /&gt;through the tinsel-hung windows during class. Alan only caught the quickest&lt;br /&gt;glimpses of him, but he had the sense that if he turned his head around quickly&lt;br /&gt;enough, he'd see him. Davey made himself scarce in the mountain, hiding in the&lt;br /&gt;golems' cave or one of the deep tunnels.&lt;br /&gt;Marci didn't come to class after Monday. Alan fretted every morning, waiting for&lt;br /&gt;her to turn up. He worried that she'd told her father, or that she was at home&lt;br /&gt;sulking, too angry to come to school, glaring at her Christmas tree.&lt;br /&gt;Davey's grin was everywhere.&lt;br /&gt;On Wednesday, he got called into the vice principal's office. As he neared it, he&lt;br /&gt;heard the rumble of Marci's father's thick voice and his heart began to pound in&lt;br /&gt;his chest.&lt;br /&gt;He cracked the door and put his face in the gap, looking at the two men there: Mr.&lt;br /&gt;Davenport, the vice principal, with his gray hair growing out his large ears and&lt;br /&gt;cavernous nostrils, sitting behind his desk, looking awkwardly at Marci's father,&lt;br /&gt;eyes bugged and bagged and bloodshot, face turned to the ground, looking like a&lt;br /&gt;different man, the picture of worry and loss.&lt;br /&gt;Mr. Davenport saw him and crooked a finger at him, looking stern and stony. Alan&lt;br /&gt;was sure, then, that Marci'd told it all to her father, who'd told it all to Mr.&lt;br /&gt;Davenport, who would tell the world, and suddenly he was jealous of his secret,&lt;br /&gt;couldn't bear to have it revealed, couldn't bear the thought of men coming to the&lt;br /&gt;mountain to catalogue it for the subject index at the library, to study him and&lt;br /&gt;take him apart.&lt;br /&gt;And he was... afraid. Not of what they'd all do to him. What Davey would do to&lt;br /&gt;them. He knew, suddenly, that Davey would not abide their secrets being disclosed.&lt;br /&gt;He forced himself forward, his feet dragging like millstones, and stood between&lt;br /&gt;the two men, hands in his pockets, nervously twining at his underwear.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan," Marci's father croaked. Mr. Davenport held up a hand to silence him.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan," Mr. Davenport said. "Have you seen Marci?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan had been prepared to deny everything, call Marci a liar, betray her as she'd&lt;br /&gt;betrayed him, make it her word against his. Protect her. Protect her father and&lt;br /&gt;the school and the town from what Davey would do.&lt;br /&gt;Now he whipped his head toward Marci's father, suddenly understanding.&lt;br /&gt;"No," he said. "Not all week! Is she all right?"&lt;br /&gt;Marci's father sobbed, a sound Alan had never heard an adult make.&lt;br /&gt;And it came tumbling out. No one had seen Marci since Sunday night. Her presumed&lt;br /&gt;whereabouts had moved from a friend's place to Alan's place to runaway to fallen&lt;br /&gt;in a lake to hit by a car and motionless in a ditch, and if Alan hadn't seen her&lt;br /&gt;--&lt;br /&gt;"I haven't," Alan said. "Not since the weekend. Sunday morning. She said she was&lt;br /&gt;going home."&lt;br /&gt;Another new sound, the sound of an adult crying. Marci's father, and his sobs made&lt;br /&gt;his chest shake and Mr. Davenport awkwardly came from behind his desk and set a&lt;br /&gt;box of kleenexes on the hard bench beside him.&lt;br /&gt;Alan caught Mr. Davenport's eye and the vice principal made a shoo and pointed at&lt;br /&gt;the door.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't bother going back to class. He went straight to the golems' cave,&lt;br /&gt;straight to where he knew Davey would be -- must be -- hiding, and found him&lt;br /&gt;there, playing with the bones that lined the walls.&lt;br /&gt;"Where is she?" Alan said, after he'd taken hold of Davey's hair and, without&lt;br /&gt;fanfare, smashed his face into the cold stone floor hard enough to break his nose.&lt;br /&gt;Alan twisted his wrists behind his back and when he tried to get up, Alan kicked&lt;br /&gt;his legs out from under him, wrenching his arms in their sockets. He heard a&lt;br /&gt;popping sound.&lt;br /&gt;"Where is she?" Alan said again, amazing himself with his own calmness. Davey was&lt;br /&gt;crying now, genuinely scared, it seemed, and Alan reveled in the feeling. "I'll&lt;br /&gt;kill you," he whispered in Davey's ear, almost lovingly. "I'll kill you and put&lt;br /&gt;the body where no one will find it, unless you tell me where she is."&lt;br /&gt;Davey spat out a milk tooth, his right top incisor, and cried around the blood&lt;br /&gt;that coursed down his face. "I'm -- I'm *sorry,* Alan," he said. "But it was the&lt;br /&gt;*secret*." His sobs were louder and harsher than Marci's father's had been.&lt;br /&gt;"Where is she?" Alan said, knowing.&lt;br /&gt;"With Caleb," Davey said. "I buried her in Caleb."&lt;br /&gt;He found his brother the island midway down the mountain, sliding under cover of&lt;br /&gt;winter for the seaway. He climbed the island's slope, making for the ring of&lt;br /&gt;footprints in the snow, the snow peppered brown with soil and green with grass,&lt;br /&gt;and he dug with his hands like a dog, tossing snow soil grass through his legs,&lt;br /&gt;digging to loose soil, digging to a cold hand.&lt;br /&gt;A cold hand, protruding from the snow now, from the soil, some of the snow redbrown&lt;br /&gt;with blood. A skinny, freckled hand, a fingernail missing, torn off leaving&lt;br /&gt;behind an impression, an inverse fingernail. A hand, an arm. Not attached to&lt;br /&gt;anything. He set it to one side, dug, found another hand. Another arm. A leg. A&lt;br /&gt;head.&lt;br /&gt;She was beaten, bruised, eyes swollen and two teeth missing, ear torn, hair caked&lt;br /&gt;with blood. Her beautiful head fell from his shaking cold hands. He didn't want to&lt;br /&gt;dig anymore, but he had to, because it was the secret, and it had to be kept, and&lt;br /&gt;--&lt;br /&gt;-- he buried her in Caleb, piled dirt grass snow on her parts, and his eyes were&lt;br /&gt;dry and he didn't sob.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;It was a long autumn and a long winter and a long spring that year, unwiring the&lt;br /&gt;Market. Alan fell into the familiar rhythm of the work of a new venture, rising&lt;br /&gt;early, dossing late, always doing two or three things at once: setting up&lt;br /&gt;meetings, sweet-talking merchants, debugging his process on the fly.&lt;br /&gt;His first victory came from the Greek, who was no pushover. The man was over&lt;br /&gt;seventy, and had been pouring lethal coffee and cheap beer down the throats of&lt;br /&gt;Kensington's hipsters for decades and had steadfastly refused every single&lt;br /&gt;crackpot scheme hatched by his customers.&lt;br /&gt;"Larry," Andy said, "I have a proposal for you and you're going to hate it."&lt;br /&gt;"I hate it already," the Greek said. His dapper little mustache twitched. It was&lt;br /&gt;not even seven a.m. yet, and the Greek was tinkering with the guts of his espresso&lt;br /&gt;delivery system, making it emit loud hisses and tossing out evil congealed masses&lt;br /&gt;of sin-black coffee grounds.&lt;br /&gt;"What if I told you it wouldn't cost you anything?"&lt;br /&gt;"Maybe I'd hate it a little less."&lt;br /&gt;"Here's the pitch," Alan said, taking a sip of the thick, steaming coffee the&lt;br /&gt;Greek handed to him in a minuscule cup. He shivered as the stuff coated his&lt;br /&gt;tongue. "Wow."&lt;br /&gt;The Greek gave him half a smile, which was his version of roaring hilarity.&lt;br /&gt;"Here's the pitch. Me and that punk kid, Kurt, we're working on a community&lt;br /&gt;Internet project for the Market."&lt;br /&gt;"Computers?" the Greek said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yup," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Pah," the Greek said.&lt;br /&gt;Anders nodded. "I knew you were going to say that. But don't think of this as a&lt;br /&gt;computer thing, okay? Think of this as a free speech thing. We're putting in a&lt;br /&gt;system to allow people all over the Market -- and someday, maybe, the whole city&lt;br /&gt;-- to communicate for free, in private, without permission from anyone. They can&lt;br /&gt;send messages, they can get information about the world, they can have&lt;br /&gt;conversations. It's like a library and a telephone and a café all at once."&lt;br /&gt;Larry poured himself a coffee. "I hate when they come in here with computers. They&lt;br /&gt;sit forever at their tables, and they don't talk to nobody, it's like having a&lt;br /&gt;place full of statues or zombies."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, *sure*," Alan said. "If you're all alone with a computer, you're just going&lt;br /&gt;to fall down the rabbit hole. You're in your own world and cut off from the rest&lt;br /&gt;of the world. But once you put those computers on the network, they become a way&lt;br /&gt;to talk to anyone else in the world. For free! You help us with this network --&lt;br /&gt;all we want from you is permission to stick up a box over your sign and patch it&lt;br /&gt;into your power, you won't even know it's there -- and those customers won't be&lt;br /&gt;antisocial, they'll be socializing, over the network."&lt;br /&gt;"You think that's what they'll do if I help them with the network?"&lt;br /&gt;He started to say, *Absolutely*, but bit it back, because Larry's bullshit&lt;br /&gt;antennae were visibly twitching. "No, but some of them will. You'll see them in&lt;br /&gt;here, talking, typing, typing, talking. That's how it goes. The point is that we&lt;br /&gt;don't know how people are going to use this network yet, but we know that it's a&lt;br /&gt;social benefit."&lt;br /&gt;"You want to use my electricity?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, yeah."&lt;br /&gt;"So it's not free."&lt;br /&gt;"Not entirely," Alan said. "You got me there."&lt;br /&gt;"Aha!" the Greek said.&lt;br /&gt;"Look, if that's a deal breaker, I'll personally come by every day and give you a&lt;br /&gt;dollar for the juice. Come on, Larry -- the box we want to put in, it's just a&lt;br /&gt;repeater to extend the range of the network. The network already reaches to here,&lt;br /&gt;but your box will help it go farther. You'll be the first merchant in the Market&lt;br /&gt;to have one. I came to you first because you've been here the longest. The others&lt;br /&gt;look up to you. They'll see it and say, 'Larry has one, it must be all right.'"&lt;br /&gt;The Greek downed his coffee and smoothed his mustache. "You are a bullshit artist,&lt;br /&gt;huh? All right, you put your box in. If my electricity bills are too high, though,&lt;br /&gt;I take it down."&lt;br /&gt;"That's a deal," Andy said. "How about I do it this morning, before you get busy?&lt;br /&gt;Won't take more than a couple minutes."&lt;br /&gt;The Greek's was midway between his place and Kurt's, and Kurt hardly stirred when&lt;br /&gt;he let himself in to get an access point from one of the chipped shelving units&lt;br /&gt;before going back to his place to get his ladder and Makita drill. It took him&lt;br /&gt;most of the morning to get it securely fastened over the sign, screws sunk deep&lt;br /&gt;enough into the old, spongy wood to survive the build up of ice and snow that&lt;br /&gt;would come with the winter. Then he had to wire it into the sign, which took&lt;br /&gt;longer than he thought it would, too, but then it was done, and the idiot lights&lt;br /&gt;started blinking on the box Kurt had assembled.&lt;br /&gt;"And what, exactly, are you doing up there, Al?" Kurt said, when he finally&lt;br /&gt;stumbled out of bed and down the road for his afternoon breakfast coffee.&lt;br /&gt;"Larry's letting us put up an access point," he said, wiping the pigeon shit off a&lt;br /&gt;wire preparatory to taping it down. He descended the ladder and wiped his hands&lt;br /&gt;off on his painter's pants. "That'll be ten bucks, please."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt dug out a handful of coins and picked out enough loonies and toonies to make&lt;br /&gt;ten dollars, and handed it over. "You talked the Greek into it?" he hissed. "How?"&lt;br /&gt;"I kissed his ass without insulting his intelligence."&lt;br /&gt;"Neat trick," Kurt said, and they had a little partner-to-partner high-five. "I'd&lt;br /&gt;better login to that thing and get it onto the network, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Anders said. "I'm gonna order some lunch, lemme get you something."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;What they had done, was they had hacked the shit out of those boxes that Kurt had&lt;br /&gt;built in his junkyard of a storefront of an apartment.&lt;br /&gt;"These work?" Alan said. He had three of them in a big catering tub from his&lt;br /&gt;basement that he'd sluiced clean. The base stations no longer looked like they'd&lt;br /&gt;been built out of garbage. They'd switched to low-power Mini-ATX motherboards that&lt;br /&gt;let them shrink the hardware down to small enough to fit in a 50-dollar allweather&lt;br /&gt;junction box from Canadian Tire.&lt;br /&gt;Adam vaguely recognized the day's street-kids as regulars who'd been hanging&lt;br /&gt;around the shop for some time, and they gave him the hairy eyeball when he had the&lt;br /&gt;audacity to question Kurt. These kids of Kurt's weren't much like the kids he'd&lt;br /&gt;had working for him over the years. They might be bright, but they were a&lt;br /&gt;lot...angrier. Some of the girls were cutters, with knife scars on their forearms.&lt;br /&gt;Some of the boys looked like they'd been beaten up a few times too many on the&lt;br /&gt;streets, like they were spoiling for a fight. Alan tried to unfocus his eyes when&lt;br /&gt;he was in the front of Kurt's shop, to not see any of them too closely.&lt;br /&gt;"They work," Kurt said. He smelled terrible, a combination of garbage and sweat,&lt;br /&gt;and he had the raccoon-eyed jitters he got when he stayed up all night. "I tested&lt;br /&gt;them twice."&lt;br /&gt;"You built me a spare?" Alan said, examining the neat lines of hot glue that&lt;br /&gt;gasketed the sturdy rubberized antennae in place, masking the slightly melted&lt;br /&gt;edges left behind by the drill press.&lt;br /&gt;"You don't need a spare," Kurt said. Alan knew that when he got touchy like this,&lt;br /&gt;he had to be very careful or he'd blow up, but he wasn't going to do another demo&lt;br /&gt;Kurt's way. They'd done exactly one of those, at a Toronto District School Board&lt;br /&gt;superintendents meeting, when Alan had gotten the idea of using schools' flagpoles&lt;br /&gt;and backhaul as test beds for building out the net. It had been a debacle,&lt;br /&gt;needless to say. Two of the access points had been permanently installed on either&lt;br /&gt;end of Kurt's storefront and the third had been in storage for a month since it&lt;br /&gt;was last tested.&lt;br /&gt;One of the street kids, a boy with a pair of improbably enormous raver shoes,&lt;br /&gt;looked up at Alan. "We've tested these all. They work."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt puffed up and gratefully socked the kid in the shoulder. "We did."&lt;br /&gt;"Fine," Adam said patiently. "But can we make sure they work now?"&lt;br /&gt;"They'll work," Kurt had said when Alan told him that he wanted to test the access&lt;br /&gt;points out before they took them to the meeting. "It's practically solid-state.&lt;br /&gt;They're running off the standard distribution. There's almost no configuration."&lt;br /&gt;Which may or may not have been true -- it certainly sounded plausible to Alan's&lt;br /&gt;lay ear -- but it didn't change the fact that once they powered up the third box,&lt;br /&gt;the other two seized up and died. The blinking network lights fell still, and as&lt;br /&gt;Kurt hauled out an old VT-100 terminal and plugged it into the serial ports on the&lt;br /&gt;backs of his big, ugly, bestickered, and cig-burned PC cases, it became apparent&lt;br /&gt;that they had ceased to honor all requests for routing, association,&lt;br /&gt;deassociation, DHCP leases, and the myriad of other networking services provided&lt;br /&gt;for by the software.&lt;br /&gt;"It's practically solid-state," Kurt said, nearly *shouted*, after he'd powered&lt;br /&gt;down the third box and found that the other two -- previously routing and humming&lt;br /&gt;along happily -- refused to come back up into their known-good state. He gave Alan&lt;br /&gt;a dirty look, as though his insistence on preflighting were the root of their&lt;br /&gt;problems.&lt;br /&gt;The street-kid who'd spoken up had jumped when Kurt raised his voice, then cringed&lt;br /&gt;away. Now as Kurt began to tear around the shop, looking through boxes of CDs and&lt;br /&gt;dropping things on the floor, the kid all but cowered, and the other three all&lt;br /&gt;looked down at the table.&lt;br /&gt;"I'll just reinstall," Kurt said. "That's the beauty of these things. It's a&lt;br /&gt;standard distro, I just copy it over, and biff-bam, it'll come right back up. No&lt;br /&gt;problem. Take me ten minutes. We've got plenty of time."&lt;br /&gt;Then, five minutes later, "Shit, I forgot that this one has a different mo-bo than&lt;br /&gt;the others."&lt;br /&gt;"Mo-bo?" Alan said, amused. He'd spotted the signs of something very finicky gone&lt;br /&gt;very wrong and he'd given up any hope of actually doing the demo, so he'd settled&lt;br /&gt;in to watch the process without rancor and to learn as much as he could.&lt;br /&gt;"Motherboard," Kurt said, reaching for a spool of blank CDs. "Just got to patch&lt;br /&gt;the distribution, recompile, burn it to CD, and reboot, and we're on the road."&lt;br /&gt;Ten minutes later, "Shit."&lt;br /&gt;"Yes?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Back off, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"I'm going to call them and let them know we're going to be late."&lt;br /&gt;"We're *not* going to be late," Kurt said, his fingers going into claws on the&lt;br /&gt;keyboard.&lt;br /&gt;"We're already late," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Shit," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Let's do this," Alan said. "Let's bring down the two that you've got working and&lt;br /&gt;show them those, and explain the rest."&lt;br /&gt;They'd had a fight, and Kurt had insisted, as Alan had suspected he would, that he&lt;br /&gt;was only a minute or two away from bringing everything back online. Alan kept his&lt;br /&gt;cool, made mental notes of the things that went wrong, and put together a plan for&lt;br /&gt;avoiding all these problems the next time around.&lt;br /&gt;"Is there a spare?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt sneered and jerked a thumb at his workbench, where another junction box sat,&lt;br /&gt;bunny-ear antennae poking out of it. Alan moved it into his tub. "Great," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Tested, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"All permutations tested and ready to go. You know, you're not the boss around&lt;br /&gt;here."&lt;br /&gt;"I know it," he said. "Partners." He clapped Kurt on the shoulder, ignoring the&lt;br /&gt;damp gray grimy feeling of the clammy T-shirt under his palm.&lt;br /&gt;The shoulder under his palm sagged. "Right," Kurt said. "Sorry."&lt;br /&gt;"Don't be," Alan said. "You've been hard at it. I'll get loaded while you wash up.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt sniffed at his armpit. "Whew," he said. "Yeah, okay."&lt;br /&gt;When Kurt emerged from the front door of his storefront ten minutes later, he&lt;br /&gt;looked like he'd at least made an effort. His mohawk and its fins were slicked&lt;br /&gt;back and tucked under a baseball hat, his black jeans were unripped and had only&lt;br /&gt;one conservative chain joining the wallet in his back pocket to his belt loop.&lt;br /&gt;Throw in a clean t-shirt advertising an old technology conference instead of the&lt;br /&gt;customary old hardcore band and you had an approximation of the kind of geek that&lt;br /&gt;everyone knew was in possession of secret knowledge and hence must be treated with&lt;br /&gt;attention, if not respect.&lt;br /&gt;"I feel like such a dilbert," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"You look totally disreputable," Alan said, hefting the tub of their access points&lt;br /&gt;into the bed of his truck and pulling the bungees tight around it. "Punk as fuck."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt grinned and ducked his head. "Stop it," he said. "Flatterer."&lt;br /&gt;"Get in the truck," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt drummed his fingers nervously on his palms the whole way to Bell offices.&lt;br /&gt;Alan grabbed his hand and stilled it. "Stop worrying," he said. "This is going to&lt;br /&gt;go great."&lt;br /&gt;"I still don't understand why we're doing this," Kurt said. "They're the phone&lt;br /&gt;company. They hate us, we hate them. Can't we just leave it that way?"&lt;br /&gt;"Don't worry, we'll still all hate each other when we get done."&lt;br /&gt;"So why bother?" He sounded petulant and groggy, and Alan reached under his seat&lt;br /&gt;for the thermos he'd had filled at the Greek's before heading to Kurt's place.&lt;br /&gt;"Coffee," he said, and handed it to Kurt, who groaned and swigged and stopped&lt;br /&gt;bitching.&lt;br /&gt;"Why bother is this," Alan said. "We're going to get a lot of publicity for doing&lt;br /&gt;this." Kurt snorted into the thermos. "It's going to be a big deal. You know how&lt;br /&gt;big a deal this can be. We're going to communicate that to the press, who will&lt;br /&gt;communicate it to the public, and then there will be a shitstorm. Radio cops,&lt;br /&gt;telco people, whatever -- they're going to try to discredit us. I want to know&lt;br /&gt;what they're liable to say."&lt;br /&gt;"Christ, you're dragging me out for that? I can tell you what they'll say. They'll&lt;br /&gt;drag out the Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse: kiddie porn, terrorists, pirates,&lt;br /&gt;and the mafia. They'll tell us that any tool for communicating that they can't&lt;br /&gt;tap, log, and switch off us irresponsible. They'll tell us we're stealing from&lt;br /&gt;ISPs. It's what they say every time someone tries this: Philly, New York, London.&lt;br /&gt;All around the world same song."&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded. "That's good background -- thanks. I still want to know *how* they&lt;br /&gt;say it, what the flaws are in their expression of their argument. And I wanted us&lt;br /&gt;to run a demo for some people who we could never hope to sway -- that's a good&lt;br /&gt;audience for exposing the flaws in the show. This'll be a good prep session."&lt;br /&gt;"So I pulled an all-nighter and busted my nuts to produce a demo for a bunch of&lt;br /&gt;people we don't care about? Thanks a lot."&lt;br /&gt;Alan started to say something equally bitchy back, and then he stopped himself. He&lt;br /&gt;knew where this would end up -- a screaming match that would leave both of them&lt;br /&gt;emotionally overwrought at a time when they needed cool heads. But he couldn't&lt;br /&gt;think of what to tell Kurt in order to placate him. All his life, he'd been in&lt;br /&gt;situations like this: confronted by people who had some beef, some grievance, and&lt;br /&gt;he'd had no answer for it. Usually he could puzzle out the skeleton of their&lt;br /&gt;cause, but sometimes -- times like this -- he was stumped.&lt;br /&gt;He picked at the phrase. *I pulled an all-nighter*. Kurt pulled an all-nighter&lt;br /&gt;because he'd left this to the last minute, not because Alan had surprised him with&lt;br /&gt;it. He knew that, of course. Was waiting, then, for Kurt to bust him on it. To&lt;br /&gt;tell him, *This is your fault, not mine.* To tell him *If this demo fails, it's&lt;br /&gt;because you fucked off and left it to the last minute.* So he was angry, but not&lt;br /&gt;at Alan, he was angry at himself.&lt;br /&gt;*A bunch of people we don't care about,* what was that about? Ah. Kurt knew that&lt;br /&gt;they didn't take him seriously in the real world. He was too dirty, too punk-asfuck,&lt;br /&gt;too much of his identity was wrapped up in being alienated and alienating.&lt;br /&gt;But he couldn't make his dream come true without Alan's help, either, and so Alan&lt;br /&gt;was the friendly face on their enterprise, and he resented that -- feared that in&lt;br /&gt;order to keep up his appearance of punk-as-fuckitude, he'd have to go into the&lt;br /&gt;meeting cursing and sneering and that Alan would bust him on that, too.&lt;br /&gt;Alan frowned at the steering wheel. He was getting better at understanding people,&lt;br /&gt;but that didn't make him necessarily better at being a person. What should he say&lt;br /&gt;here?&lt;br /&gt;"That was a really heroic effort, Kurt," he said, biting his lip. "I can tell you&lt;br /&gt;put a lot of work into it." He couldn't believe that praise this naked could&lt;br /&gt;possibly placate someone of Kurt's heroic cynicism, but Kurt's features softened&lt;br /&gt;and he turned his face away, rolled down the window, lit a cigarette.&lt;br /&gt;"I thought I'd never get it done," Kurt said. "I was so sleepy, I felt like I was&lt;br /&gt;half-baked. Couldn't concentrate."&lt;br /&gt;*You were up all night because you left it to the last minute*, Alan thought. But&lt;br /&gt;Kurt knew that, was waiting to be reassured about it. "I don't know how you get as&lt;br /&gt;much done as you do. Must be really hard."&lt;br /&gt;"It's not so bad," Kurt said, dragging on his cigarette and not quite disguising&lt;br /&gt;his grin. "It gets easier every time."&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah, we're going to get this down to a science someday," Alan said. "Something&lt;br /&gt;we can teach anyone to do."&lt;br /&gt;"That would be so cool," Kurt said, and put his boots up on the dash. "God, you&lt;br /&gt;could pick all the parts you needed out of the trash, throw a little methodology&lt;br /&gt;at them, and out would pop this thing that destroyed the phone company."&lt;br /&gt;"This is going to be a fun meeting," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Shit, yeah. They're going to be terrified of us."&lt;br /&gt;"Someday. Maybe it starts today."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The Bell boardroom looked more like a retail operation than a back office, decked&lt;br /&gt;out in brand-consistent livery, from the fabric-dyed rag carpets to the avantgarde&lt;br /&gt;lighting fixtures. They were given espressos by the young secretary-barista&lt;br /&gt;whose skirt-and-top number was some kind of reinterpreted ravewear outfit toned&lt;br /&gt;down for a corporate workplace.&lt;br /&gt;"So this is the new Bell," Kurt said, once she had gone. "Our tax dollars at&lt;br /&gt;work."&lt;br /&gt;"This is good work," Alan said, gesturing at the blown-up artwork of pan-ethnic&lt;br /&gt;models who were extraordinary- but not beautiful-looking on the walls. The Bell&lt;br /&gt;redesign had come at the same time as the telco was struggling back from the brink&lt;br /&gt;of bankruptcy, and the marketing firm they'd hired to do the work had made its&lt;br /&gt;name on the strength of the campaign. "Makes you feel like using a phone is a&lt;br /&gt;really futuristic, cutting-edge activity," he said.&lt;br /&gt;His contact at the semiprivatized corporation was a young kid who shopped at one&lt;br /&gt;of his protégés' designer furniture store. He was a young turk who'd made a name&lt;br /&gt;for himself quickly in the company through a couple of ISP acquisitions at firesale&lt;br /&gt;prices after the dot-bomb, which he'd executed flawlessly, integrating the&lt;br /&gt;companies into Bell's network with hardly a hiccup. He'd been very polite and&lt;br /&gt;guardedly enthusiastic when Alan called him, and had invited him down to meet some&lt;br /&gt;of his colleagues.&lt;br /&gt;Though Alan had never met him, he recognized him the minute he walked in as the&lt;br /&gt;person who had to go with the confident voice he'd heard on the phone.&lt;br /&gt;"Lyman," he said, standing up and holding out his hand. The guy was slightly&lt;br /&gt;Asian-looking, tall, with a sharp suit that managed to look casual and expensive&lt;br /&gt;at the same time.&lt;br /&gt;He shook Alan's hand and said, "Thanks for coming down." Alan introduced him to&lt;br /&gt;Kurt, and then Lyman introduced them both to his colleagues, a gender-parity posse&lt;br /&gt;of young, smart-looking people, along with one graybeard (literally -- he had a&lt;br /&gt;Unix beard of great rattiness and gravitas) who had no fewer than seven devices on&lt;br /&gt;his belt, including a line tester and a GPS.&lt;br /&gt;Once they were seated, Alan snuck a look at Kurt, who had narrowed his eyes and&lt;br /&gt;cast his gaze down onto the business cards he'd been handed. Alan hadn't been&lt;br /&gt;expecting this -- he'd figured on finding himself facing down a group of career&lt;br /&gt;bureaucrats -- and Kurt was clearly thrown for a loop, too.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, Alan, Kurt, it's nice to meet you," Lyman said. "I hear you're working on&lt;br /&gt;some exciting stuff."&lt;br /&gt;"We are," Alan said. "We're building a city-wide mesh wireless network using&lt;br /&gt;unlicensed spectrum that will provide high-speed, Internet connectivity absolutely&lt;br /&gt;gratis."&lt;br /&gt;"That's ambitious," Lyman said, without the skepticism that Alan had assumed would&lt;br /&gt;greet his statement. "How's it coming?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, we've got a bunch of Kensington Market covered," Alan said. "Kurt's been&lt;br /&gt;improving the hardware design and we've come up with something cheap and&lt;br /&gt;reproducible." He opened his tub and handed out the access points, housed in gray&lt;br /&gt;high-impact plastic junction boxes.&lt;br /&gt;Lyman accepted one solemnly and passed it on to his graybeard, then passed the&lt;br /&gt;next to an East Indian woman in horn-rim glasses whose bitten-down fingernails&lt;br /&gt;immediately popped the latch and began lightly stroking the hardware inside,&lt;br /&gt;tracing the connections. The third landed in front of Lyman himself.&lt;br /&gt;"So, what do they do?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded at Kurt. Kurt put his hands on the table and took a breath. "They've&lt;br /&gt;got three network interfaces; we can do any combination of wired and wireless&lt;br /&gt;cards. The OS is loaded on a flash-card; it auto-detects any wireless cards and&lt;br /&gt;auto-configures them to seek out other access points. When it finds a peer, they&lt;br /&gt;negotiate a client-server relationship based on current load, and the client then&lt;br /&gt;associates with the server. There's a key exchange that we use to make sure that&lt;br /&gt;rogue APs don't sneak into the mesh, and a self-healing routine we use to switch&lt;br /&gt;routes if the connection drops or we start to see too much packet loss."&lt;br /&gt;The graybeard looked up. "It izz a radio vor talking to Gott!" he said. Lyman's&lt;br /&gt;posse laughed, and after a second, so did Kurt.&lt;br /&gt;Alan must have looked puzzled, for Kurt elbowed him in the ribs and said, "It's&lt;br /&gt;from Indiana Jones," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Ha," Alan said. That movie had come out long before he'd come to the city -- he&lt;br /&gt;hadn't seen a movie until he was almost 20. As was often the case, the reference&lt;br /&gt;to a film made him feel like a Martian.&lt;br /&gt;The graybeard passed his unit on to the others at the table.&lt;br /&gt;"Does it work?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that's pretty cool," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt blushed. "I didn't write the firmware," he said. "Just stuck it together from&lt;br /&gt;parts of other peoples' projects."&lt;br /&gt;"So, what's the plan?" Lyman said. "How many of these are you going to need?"&lt;br /&gt;"Hundreds, eventually," Alan said. "But for starters, we'll be happy if we can get&lt;br /&gt;enough to shoot down to 151 Front."&lt;br /&gt;"You're going to try to peer with someone there?" The East Indian woman had&lt;br /&gt;plugged the AP into a riser under the boardroom table and was examining its&lt;br /&gt;blinkenlights.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said. "That's the general idea." He was getting a little&lt;br /&gt;uncomfortable -- these people weren't nearly hostile enough to their ideas.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that's very ambitious," Lyman said. His posse all nodded as though he'd&lt;br /&gt;paid them a compliment, though Alan wasn't sure. Ambitious could certainly be code&lt;br /&gt;for "ridiculous."&lt;br /&gt;"How about a demo?" the East Indian woman said.&lt;br /&gt;"Course," Kurt said. He dug out his laptop, a battered thing held together with&lt;br /&gt;band stickers and gaffer tape, and plugged in a wireless card. The others started&lt;br /&gt;to pass him back his access points but he shook his head. "Just plug 'em in," he&lt;br /&gt;said. "Here or in another room nearby -- that'll be cooler."&lt;br /&gt;A couple of the younger people at the table picked up two of the APs and headed&lt;br /&gt;for the hallway. "Put one on my desk," Lyman told them, "and the other at&lt;br /&gt;reception."&lt;br /&gt;Alan felt a sudden prickle at the back of his neck, though he didn't know why --&lt;br /&gt;just a random premonition that they were on the brink of something very bad&lt;br /&gt;happening. This wasn't the kind of vision that Brad would experience, that far&lt;br /&gt;away look followed by a snap-to into the now, eyes filled with certitude about the&lt;br /&gt;dreadful future. More like a goose walking over his grave, a tickle of badness.&lt;br /&gt;The East Indian woman passed Kurt a VGA cable that snaked into the table's guts&lt;br /&gt;and down into the riser on the floor. She hit a button on a remote and an LCD&lt;br /&gt;projector mounted in the ceiling began to hum, projecting a rectangle of white&lt;br /&gt;light on one wall. Kurt wiggled it into the backside of his computer and spun down&lt;br /&gt;the thumbscrews, hit a button, and then his desktop was up on the wall, ten feet&lt;br /&gt;high. His wallpaper was a picture of a group of black-clad, kerchiefed protesters&lt;br /&gt;charging a police line of batons and gas-grenades. A closer look revealed that the&lt;br /&gt;protester running in the lead was probably Kurt.&lt;br /&gt;He tapped at his touchpad and a window came up, showing relative strength signals&lt;br /&gt;for two of the access points. A moment later, the third came online.&lt;br /&gt;"I've been working with this network visualizer app," Kurt said. "It tries to draw&lt;br /&gt;logical maps of the network topology, with false coloring denoting packet loss&lt;br /&gt;between hops -- that's a pretty good proxy for distance between two APs."&lt;br /&gt;"More like the fade," the graybeard said.&lt;br /&gt;"Fade is a function of distance," Kurt said. Alan heard the dismissal in his voice&lt;br /&gt;and knew they were getting into a dick-swinging match.&lt;br /&gt;"Fade is a function of geography and topology," the graybeard said quietly.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt waved his hand. "Whatever -- sure. Geography. Topology. Distance. It's a&lt;br /&gt;floor wax and a dessert topping."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm not being pedantic," the graybeard said.&lt;br /&gt;"You're not just being pedantic," Lyman said gently, watching the screen on which&lt;br /&gt;four animated jaggy boxes were jumbling and dancing as they reported on the&lt;br /&gt;throughput between the routers and the laptop.&lt;br /&gt;"Not just pedantic," the graybeard said. "If you have a *lot* of these boxes in&lt;br /&gt;known locations with known nominal throughput, you can use them as a kind of&lt;br /&gt;sensor array. When throughput drops between point foo and point bar, it will tell&lt;br /&gt;you something about the physical world between foo and bar."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt looked up from his screen with a thoughtful look. "Huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Like, whether a tree had lost its leaves in the night. Or whether there were a&lt;br /&gt;lot of people standing around in a normally desolate area. Or whether there are&lt;br /&gt;lots of devices operating between foo and bar that are interfering with them."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt nodded slowly. "The packets we lose could be just as interesting as the&lt;br /&gt;packets we don't lose," he said.&lt;br /&gt;A light went on in Alan's head. "We could be like jazz critics, listening to the&lt;br /&gt;silences instead of the notes," he said. They all looked at him.&lt;br /&gt;"That's very good," Lyman said. "Like a jazz critic." He smiled.&lt;br /&gt;Alan smiled back.&lt;br /&gt;"What are we seeing, Craig?" Lyman said.&lt;br /&gt;"Kurt," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Right, Kurt," he said. "Sorry."&lt;br /&gt;"We're seeing the grid here. See how the access points go further up the spectrum&lt;br /&gt;the more packets they get? I'm associated with that bad boy right there." He&lt;br /&gt;gestured to the box blinking silently in the middle of the board room table. "And&lt;br /&gt;it's connected to one other, which is connected to a third."&lt;br /&gt;Lyman picked up his phone and dialed a speed-dial number. "Hey, can you unplug the&lt;br /&gt;box on my desk?"&lt;br /&gt;A moment later, one of the boxes on the display winked out. "Watch this," Kurt&lt;br /&gt;said, as the remaining two boxes were joined by a coruscating line. "See that?&lt;br /&gt;Self-healing. Minimal packet loss. Beautiful."&lt;br /&gt;"That's hot," Lyman said. "That makes me all wet."&lt;br /&gt;They chuckled nervously at his crudity. "Seriously."&lt;br /&gt;"Here," Kurt said, and another window popped up, showing twenty or more boxes with&lt;br /&gt;marching ant trails between them. "That's a time-lapse of the Kensington network.&lt;br /&gt;The boxes are running different versions of the firmware, so you can see that in&lt;br /&gt;some edge cases, you get a lot more oscillation between two similar signals. We&lt;br /&gt;fixed that in the new version."&lt;br /&gt;The graybeard said, "How?"&lt;br /&gt;"We flip a coin," Kurt said, and grinned. "These guys in Denmark ran some&lt;br /&gt;simulations, proved that a random toss-up worked as well as any other algorithm,&lt;br /&gt;and it's a lot cheaper, computationally."&lt;br /&gt;"So what's going on just to the northeast of center?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan paid attention to the patch of screen indicated. Three access points were&lt;br /&gt;playing musical chairs, dropping signal and reacquiring it, dropping it again.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shrugged. "Bum hardware, I think. We've got volunteers assembling those&lt;br /&gt;boxes, from parts."&lt;br /&gt;"Parts?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt's grin widened. "Yeah. From the trash, mostly. I dumpster-dive for 'em."&lt;br /&gt;They grinned back. "That's very hot," Lyman said.&lt;br /&gt;"We're looking at normalizing the parts for the next revision," Alan said. "We&lt;br /&gt;want to be able to use a single distro that works on all of them."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, sure," Lyman said, but he looked a little disappointed, and so did Kurt.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay, it works," Lyman said. "It works?" he said, nodding the question at his&lt;br /&gt;posse. They nodded back. "So what can we do for you?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan chewed his lip, caught himself at it, stopped. He'd anticipated a slugfest,&lt;br /&gt;now he was getting strokes.&lt;br /&gt;"How come you're being so nice to us?" Kurt said. "You guys are The Man." He&lt;br /&gt;shrugged at Alan. "Someone had to say it."&lt;br /&gt;Lyman smiled. "Yeah, we're the phone company. Big lumbering dinosaur that is&lt;br /&gt;thrashing in the tarpit. The spazz dinosaur that's so embarrassed all the other&lt;br /&gt;dinosaurs that none of them want to rescue us."&lt;br /&gt;"Heh, spazz dinosaur," the East Indian woman said, and they all laughed.&lt;br /&gt;"Heh," Kurt said. "But seriously."&lt;br /&gt;"Seriously," Lyman said. "Seriously. Think a second about the scale of a telco. Of&lt;br /&gt;this telco. The thousands of kilometers of wire in the ground. Switching stations.&lt;br /&gt;Skilled linesmen and cable-pullers. Coders. Switches. Backhaul. Peering&lt;br /&gt;arrangements. We've got it all. Ever get on a highway and hit a flat patch where&lt;br /&gt;you can't see anything to the horizon except the road and the telephone poles and&lt;br /&gt;the wires? Those are *our wires*. It's a lot of goodness, especially for a big,&lt;br /&gt;evil phone company.&lt;br /&gt;"So we've got a lot of smart hackers. A lot of cool toys. A gigantic budget. The&lt;br /&gt;biggest network any of us could ever hope to manage -- like a model train set the&lt;br /&gt;size of a city.&lt;br /&gt;"That said, we're hardly nimble. Moving a Bell is like shifting a battleship by&lt;br /&gt;tapping it on the nose with a toothpick. It can be done, but you can spend ten&lt;br /&gt;years doing it and still not be sure if you've made any progress. From the&lt;br /&gt;outside, it's easy to mistake 'slow' for 'evil.' It's easy to make that mistake&lt;br /&gt;from the inside, too.&lt;br /&gt;"But I don't let it get me down. It's *good* for a Bell to be slow and plodding,&lt;br /&gt;most of the time. You don't want to go home and discover that we've dispatched the&lt;br /&gt;progress-ninjas to upgrade all your phones with video screens and a hush mode that&lt;br /&gt;reads your thoughts. Most of our customers still can't figure out voice mail. Some&lt;br /&gt;of them can't figure out touch-tone dialing. So we're slow. Conservative. But we&lt;br /&gt;can do lots of killer R&amp;amp;D, we can roll out really hot upgrades on the back end,&lt;br /&gt;and we can provide this essential service to the world that underpins its ability&lt;br /&gt;to communicate. We're not just cool, we're essential.&lt;br /&gt;"So you come in and you show us your really swell and interesting meshing wireless&lt;br /&gt;data boxes, and I say, 'That is damned cool.' I think of ways that it could be&lt;br /&gt;part of a Bell's business plan in a couple decades' time."&lt;br /&gt;"A couple decades?" Kurt squawked. "Jesus Christ, I expect to have a chip in my&lt;br /&gt;brain and a jetpack in a couple decades' time."&lt;br /&gt;"Which is why you'd be an idiot to get involved with us," Lyman said.&lt;br /&gt;"Who wants to get involved with you?" Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"No one," Alan said, putting his hands on the table, grateful that the conflict&lt;br /&gt;had finally hove above the surface. "That's not what we're here for."&lt;br /&gt;"Why are you here, Alvin?" Lyman said.&lt;br /&gt;"We're here because we're going into the moving-data-around trade, in an ambitious&lt;br /&gt;way, and because you folks are the most ambitious moving-data-around tradespeople&lt;br /&gt;in town. I thought we'd come by and let you know what we're up to, see if you have&lt;br /&gt;any advice for us."&lt;br /&gt;"Advice, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah. You've got lots of money and linesmen and switches and users and so forth.&lt;br /&gt;You probably have some kind of well-developed cosmology of connectivity, with best&lt;br /&gt;practices and philosophical ruminations and tasty metaphors. And I hear that you,&lt;br /&gt;personally, are really good at making geeks and telcos play together. Since we're&lt;br /&gt;going to be a kind of telco" -- Kurt startled and Alan kicked him under the table&lt;br /&gt;-- "I thought you could help us get started right."&lt;br /&gt;"Advice," Lyman said, drumming his fingers. He stood up and paced.&lt;br /&gt;"One: don't bother. This is at least two orders of magnitude harder than you think&lt;br /&gt;it is. There aren't enough junk computers in all of Toronto's landfills to blanket&lt;br /&gt;the city in free wireless. The range is nothing but three hundred feet, right?&lt;br /&gt;Less if there are trees and buildings, and this city is all trees and buildings.&lt;br /&gt;"Two: don't bother. The liability here is stunning. The gear you're building is&lt;br /&gt;nice and all, but you're putting it into people's hands and you've got no idea&lt;br /&gt;what they're going to do with it. They're going to hack in bigger antennae and&lt;br /&gt;signal amplifiers. The radio cops will be on your ass day and night.&lt;br /&gt;"What's more, they're going to open it up to the rest of the world and any yahoo&lt;br /&gt;who has a need to hide what he's up to is going to use your network to commit&lt;br /&gt;unspeakable acts -- you're going to be every pirate's best friend and every&lt;br /&gt;terrorist's safest haven.&lt;br /&gt;"Three: don't bother. This isn't going to work. You've got a cute little routing&lt;br /&gt;algorithm that runs with three nodes, and you've got a model that may scale up to&lt;br /&gt;300, but by the time you get to 30 thousand, you're going to be hitting so much&lt;br /&gt;latency and dropping so many packets on the floor and incurring so much signaling&lt;br /&gt;overhead that it'll be a gigantic failure.&lt;br /&gt;"You want my advice? Turn this into a piece of enterprise technology: a cheap way&lt;br /&gt;of rolling out managed solutions in hotels and office towers and condos --&lt;br /&gt;building-wide meshes, not city-wide. Those guys will pay -- they pay a hundred&lt;br /&gt;bucks per punchdown now for wired networking, so they'll gladly cough up a&lt;br /&gt;thousand bucks a floor for these boxes, and you'll only need one on every other&lt;br /&gt;story. And those people *use* networks, they're not joe consumer who doesn't have&lt;br /&gt;the first clue what to do with a network connection."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt had stiffened up when the rant began, and once he heard the word "consumer,"&lt;br /&gt;he began to positively vibrate. Alan gave him a warning nudge with his elbow.&lt;br /&gt;"You're shitting me, right?" Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"You asked me for advice --" Lyman said, mildly.&lt;br /&gt;"You think we're going to bust our balls to design and deploy all this hardware so&lt;br /&gt;that business hotels can save money on cable-pullers? Why the hell would we want&lt;br /&gt;to do that?"&lt;br /&gt;"Because it pays pretty well," Lyman said. He was shaking his head a little,&lt;br /&gt;leaning back from the table, and his posse picked up on it, going slightly&lt;br /&gt;restless and fidgety, with a room-wide rustle of papers and clicking of pens and&lt;br /&gt;laptop latches.&lt;br /&gt;Alan held up his hand. "Lyman, I'm sorry, we've been unclear. We're not doing this&lt;br /&gt;as a money-making venture --" Kurt snorted. "It's about serving the public&lt;br /&gt;interest. We want to give our neighbors access to tools and ideas that they&lt;br /&gt;wouldn't have had before. There's something fundamentally undemocratic about&lt;br /&gt;charging money for communications: It means that the more money you have, the more&lt;br /&gt;you get to communicate. So we're trying to fix that, in some small way. We are&lt;br /&gt;heartily appreciative of your advice, though --"&lt;br /&gt;Lyman held up a hand. "Sorry, Alan, I don't mean to interrupt, but there was&lt;br /&gt;something I wanted to relate to you two, and I've got to go in about five&lt;br /&gt;minutes." Apparently, the meeting was at an end. "And I had made myself a note to&lt;br /&gt;tell you two about this when I discovered it last week. Can I have the floor?"&lt;br /&gt;"Of course," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I took a holiday last week," Lyman said. "Me and my girlfriend. We went to&lt;br /&gt;Switzerland to see the Alps and to visit her sister, who's doing something for the&lt;br /&gt;UN in Geneva. So her sister, she's into, I don't know, saving children from&lt;br /&gt;vampires in Afghanistan or something, and she has Internet access at the office,&lt;br /&gt;and can't see any reason to drop a connection in at home. So there I was,&lt;br /&gt;wandering the streets of Geneva at seven in the morning, trying to find a WiFi&lt;br /&gt;connection so I can get my email and find out how many ways I can enlarge my penis&lt;br /&gt;this week.&lt;br /&gt;"No problem -- outside every hotel and most of the cafés, I can find a signal for&lt;br /&gt;a network called Swisscom. I log on to the network and I fire up a browser and I&lt;br /&gt;get a screen asking me for my password. Well, I don't have one, but after poking&lt;br /&gt;around, I find out that I can buy a card with a temporary password on it. So I&lt;br /&gt;wait until some of the little smoke shops open and start asking them if they sell&lt;br /&gt;Swisscom Internet Cards, in my terrible, miserable French, and after chuckling at&lt;br /&gt;my accent, they look at me and say, 'I have no clue what you're talking about,'&lt;br /&gt;shrug, and go back to work.&lt;br /&gt;"Then I get the idea to go and ask at the hotels. The first one, the guy tells me&lt;br /&gt;that they only sell cards to guests, since they're in short supply. The cards are&lt;br /&gt;in short supply! Three hotels later, they allow as how they'll sell me a 30-minute&lt;br /&gt;card. Oh, that's fine. Thirty whole minutes of connectivity. Whoopee. And how much&lt;br /&gt;will that be? Only about a zillion Swiss pesos. Don't they sell cards of larger&lt;br /&gt;denominations? Oh sure, two hours, 24 hours, seven days -- and each one costs&lt;br /&gt;about double the last, so if you want, you can get a seven day card for about as&lt;br /&gt;much as you'd spend on a day's worth of connectivity in 30-minute increments --&lt;br /&gt;about three hundred dollars Canadian for a week, just FYI.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, paying 300 bucks for a week's Internet is ghastly, but very Swiss, where&lt;br /&gt;they charge you if you have more than two bits of cheese at breakfast, and hell, I&lt;br /&gt;could afford it. But three hundred bucks for a day's worth of 30-minute cards?&lt;br /&gt;Fuck that. I was going to have to find a seven-day card or bust. So I ask at a&lt;br /&gt;couple more hotels and finally find someone who'll explain to me that Swisscom is&lt;br /&gt;the Swiss telco, and that they have a retail storefront a couple blocks away where&lt;br /&gt;they'd sell me all the cards I wanted, in whatever denominations I require.&lt;br /&gt;"By this time, it's nearly nine a.m. and I'm thinking that my girlfriend and her&lt;br /&gt;sister are probably up and eating a big old breakfast and wondering where the fuck&lt;br /&gt;I am, but I've got too much invested in this adventure to give up when I'm so&lt;br /&gt;close to finding the treasure. And so I hied myself off to the Swisscom&lt;br /&gt;storefront, which is closed, even though the sign says they open at nine and by&lt;br /&gt;now it's nine-oh-five, and so much for Swiss punctuality. But eventually this&lt;br /&gt;sneering kid with last year's faux-hawk comes out and opens the door and then&lt;br /&gt;disappears up the stairs at the back of the show room to the second floor, where I&lt;br /&gt;follow him. I get up to his counter and say, '*Pardonnez moi*,' but he holds up a&lt;br /&gt;hand and points behind me and says, 'Numero!' I make an elaborate shrug, but he&lt;br /&gt;just points again and says, '*Numero*!' I shrug again and he shakes his head like&lt;br /&gt;he's dealing with some kind of unbelievable moron, and then he steps out from&lt;br /&gt;behind his counter and stalks over to a little touchscreen. He takes my hand by&lt;br /&gt;the wrist and plants my palm on the touchscreen and a little ribbon of paper with&lt;br /&gt;zero-zero-one slides out. I take it and he goes back behind his counter and says,&lt;br /&gt;'*Numero un*!'&lt;br /&gt;"I can tell this is not going to work out, but I need to go through the motions. I&lt;br /&gt;go to the counter and ask for a seven-day card. He opens his cash drawer and paws&lt;br /&gt;through a pile of cards, then smiles and shakes his head and says, sorry, all sold&lt;br /&gt;out. My girlfriend is probably through her second cup of coffee and reading&lt;br /&gt;brochures for nature walks in the Alps at this point, so I say, fine, give me a&lt;br /&gt;one-day card. He takes a moment to snicker at my French, then says, so sorry, sold&lt;br /&gt;out those, too. Two hours? Nope. Half an hour? Oh, those we got.&lt;br /&gt;"Think about this for a second. I am sitting there with my laptop in hand, at six&lt;br /&gt;in the morning, on a Swiss street, connected to Swisscom's network, a credit card&lt;br /&gt;in my other hand, wishing to give them some money in exchange for the use of their&lt;br /&gt;network, and instead I have to go chasing up and down every hotel in Geneva for a&lt;br /&gt;card, which is not to be found. So I go to the origin of these cards, the Swisscom&lt;br /&gt;store, and they're sold out, too. This is not a T-shirt or a loaf of bread:&lt;br /&gt;there's no inherent scarcity in two-hour or seven-day cards. The cards are just a&lt;br /&gt;convenient place to print some numbers, and all you need to do to make more&lt;br /&gt;numbers is pull them out of thin air. They're just numbers. We have as many of&lt;br /&gt;them as we could possibly need. There's no sane, rational universe in which all&lt;br /&gt;the 'two-hour' numbers sell out, leaving nothing behind but '30-minute' numbers.&lt;br /&gt;"So that's pretty bad. It's the kind of story that net-heads tell about Bell-heads&lt;br /&gt;all around the world. It's the kind of thing I've made it my business to hunt down&lt;br /&gt;and exterminate here wherever I find it. So I just wrote off my email for that&lt;br /&gt;week and came home and downloaded a hundred thousand spams about my cock's&lt;br /&gt;insufficient dimensions and went in to work and I told everyone I could find about&lt;br /&gt;this, and they all smiled nervously and none of them seemed to find it as weird&lt;br /&gt;and ridiculous as me, and then, that Friday, I went into a meeting about our new&lt;br /&gt;high-speed WiFi service that we're piloting in Montreal and the guy in charge of&lt;br /&gt;the program hands out these little packages to everyone in the meeting, a slide&lt;br /&gt;deck and some of the marketing collateral and -- a little prepaid 30-minute access&lt;br /&gt;card.&lt;br /&gt;"That's what we're delivering. Prepaid cards for Internet access. *Complet avec*&lt;br /&gt;number shortages and business travelers prowling the bagel joints of Rue St Urbain&lt;br /&gt;looking for a shopkeeper whose cash drawer has a few seven-day cards kicking&lt;br /&gt;around.&lt;br /&gt;"And you come in here, and you ask me, you ask the ruling Bell, what advice do we&lt;br /&gt;have for your metro-wide free info-hippie wireless dumpster-diver anarcho-network?&lt;br /&gt;Honestly -- I don't have a fucking clue. We don't have a fucking clue. We're a&lt;br /&gt;telephone company. We don't know how to give away free communications -- we don't&lt;br /&gt;even know how to charge for it."&lt;br /&gt;"That was refreshingly honest," Kurt said. "I wanna shake your hand."&lt;br /&gt;He stood up and Lyman stood up and Lyman's posse stood up and they converged on&lt;br /&gt;the doorway in an orgy of handshaking and grinning. The greybeard handed over the&lt;br /&gt;access point, and the East Indian woman ran off to get the other two, and before&lt;br /&gt;they knew it, they were out on the street.&lt;br /&gt;"I liked him," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"I could tell," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Remember you said something about an advisory board? How about if we ask him to&lt;br /&gt;join?"&lt;br /&gt;"That is a *tremendous* and deeply weird idea, partner. I'll send out the invite&lt;br /&gt;when we get home."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt said that the anarchist bookstore would be a slam dunk, but it turned out to&lt;br /&gt;be the hardest sell of all.&lt;br /&gt;"I spoke to them last month, they said they were going to run it down in their&lt;br /&gt;weekly general meeting. They love it. It's anarcho-radio. Plus, they all want&lt;br /&gt;high-speed connectivity in the store so they can webcast their poetry slams. Just&lt;br /&gt;go on by and introduce yourself, tell 'em I sent you."&lt;br /&gt;Ambrose nodded and skewered up a hunk of omelet and swirled it in the live yogurt&lt;br /&gt;the Greek served, and chewed. "All right," he said, "I'll do it this afternoon.&lt;br /&gt;You look exhausted, by the way. Hard night in the salt mines?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt looked at his watch. "I got about an hour's worth of diving in. I spent the&lt;br /&gt;rest of the night breaking up with Monica."&lt;br /&gt;"Monica?"&lt;br /&gt;"The girlfriend."&lt;br /&gt;"Already? I thought you two just got together last month."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shrugged. "Longest fucking month of my life. All she wanted to do was go&lt;br /&gt;clubbing all night. She hated staying over at my place because of the kids coming&lt;br /&gt;by in the morning to work on the access points."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm sorry, pal," Andy said. He never knew what to do about failed romance. He'd&lt;br /&gt;had no experience in that department since the seventh grade, after all. "You'll&lt;br /&gt;find someone else soon enough."&lt;br /&gt;"Too soon!" Kurt said. "We screamed at each other for five hours before I finally&lt;br /&gt;got gone. It was probably my fault. I lose my temper too easy. I should be more&lt;br /&gt;like you."&lt;br /&gt;"You're a good man, Kurt. Don't forget it."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt ground his fists into his eyes and groaned. "I'm such a fuck-up," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan tugged Kurt's hand away from his face. "Stop that. You're an extraordinary&lt;br /&gt;person. I've never met anyone who has the gifts you possess, and I've met some&lt;br /&gt;gifted people. You should be very proud of the work you're doing, and you should&lt;br /&gt;be with someone who's equally proud of you."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt visibly inflated. "Thanks, man." They gripped one another's hands for a&lt;br /&gt;moment. Kurt swiped at his moist eyes with the sleeve of his colorless grey&lt;br /&gt;sweatshirt. "Okay, it's way past my bedtime," he said. "You gonna go to the&lt;br /&gt;bookstore today?"&lt;br /&gt;"Absolutely. Thanks for setting them up."&lt;br /&gt;"It was about time I did some of the work, after you got the nut-shop and the&lt;br /&gt;cheese place and the Salvadoran pupusa place."&lt;br /&gt;"Kurt, I'm just doing the work that you set in motion. It's all you, this project.&lt;br /&gt;I'm just your helper. Sleep well."&lt;br /&gt;Andy watched him slouch off toward home, reeling a little from sleep deprivation&lt;br /&gt;and emotional exhaustion. He forked up the rest of his omelet, looked reflexively&lt;br /&gt;up at the blinkenlights on the AP over the Greek's sign, just above the&lt;br /&gt;apostrophe, where he'd nailed it up two months before. Since then, he'd nailed up&lt;br /&gt;five more, each going more smoothly than the last. At this rate, he'd have every&lt;br /&gt;main drag in the Market covered by summer. Sooner, if he could offload some of the&lt;br /&gt;labor onto one of Kurt's eager kids.&lt;br /&gt;He went back to his porch then, and watched the Market wake up. The traffic was&lt;br /&gt;mostly bicycling bankers stopping for a fresh bagel on their way down to the&lt;br /&gt;business district. The Market was quite restful. It shuffled like an old man in&lt;br /&gt;carpet slippers, setting up streetside produce tables, twiddling the dials of its&lt;br /&gt;many radios looking for something with a beat. He watched them roll past, the&lt;br /&gt;Salvadoran pupusa ladies, Jamaican Patty Kings, Italian butchers, Vietnamese photenders,&lt;br /&gt;and any number of thrift-store hotties, crusty-punks, strung-out&lt;br /&gt;artistes, trustafarians and pretty-boy skaters.&lt;br /&gt;As he watched them go past, he had an idea that he'd better write his story soon,&lt;br /&gt;or maybe never. Maybe never nothing: Maybe this was his last season on earth. Felt&lt;br /&gt;like that, apocalyptic. Old debts, come to be settled.&lt;br /&gt;He shuffled upstairs and turned on the disused computer, which had sat on his desk&lt;br /&gt;for months and was therefore no longer top-of-the-line, no longer nearly so&lt;br /&gt;exciting, no longer so fraught with promise. Still, he made himself sit in his&lt;br /&gt;seat for two full hours before he allowed himself to get up, shower, dress, and&lt;br /&gt;head over to the anarchist bookstore, taking a slow route that gave him the chance&lt;br /&gt;to eyeball the lights on all the APs he'd installed.&lt;br /&gt;The anarchist bookstore opened lackadaisically at 11 or eleven-thirty or sometimes&lt;br /&gt;noon, so he'd brought along a nice old John D. MacDonald paperback with a guntoting&lt;br /&gt;bikini girl on the cover to read. He liked MacDonald's books: You could&lt;br /&gt;always tell who the villainesses were because the narrator made a point of noting&lt;br /&gt;that they had fat asses. It was as good a way as any to shorthand the world, he&lt;br /&gt;thought.&lt;br /&gt;The guy who came by to open the store was vaguely familiar to Alfred, a Kensington&lt;br /&gt;stalwart of about forty, whose thrifted slacks and unraveling sweater weren't hip&lt;br /&gt;so much as they were just plain old down and out. He had a frizzed-out, no-cut&lt;br /&gt;haircut, and carried an enormous army-surplus backpack that sagged with beat-up&lt;br /&gt;lefty books and bags of organic vegetariania.&lt;br /&gt;"Hi there!" Arnold said pocketing the book and dusting off his hands.&lt;br /&gt;"Hey," the guy said into his stringy beard, fumbling with a keyring. "I'll be&lt;br /&gt;opening up in a couple minutes, okay? I know I'm late. It's a bad day. okay?"&lt;br /&gt;Arnold held his hands up, palms out. "Hey, no problem at all! Take as much time as&lt;br /&gt;you need. I'm in no hurry."&lt;br /&gt;The anarchist hustled around inside the shop, turning on lights, firing up the&lt;br /&gt;cash-register and counting out a float, switching on the coffee machine. Alan&lt;br /&gt;waited patiently by the doorway, holding the door open with his toe when the clerk&lt;br /&gt;hauled out a rack of discounted paperbacks and earning a dirty look for his&lt;br /&gt;trouble.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay, we're open," the anarchist said looking Alan in the toes. He turned around&lt;br /&gt;and banged back into the shop and perched himself behind the counter, opening a&lt;br /&gt;close-typed punk newspaper and burying his nose in it.&lt;br /&gt;Adam walked in behind him and stood at the counter, politely, waiting. The&lt;br /&gt;anarchist looked up from his paper and shook his head exasperatedly. "Yes?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan extended his hand. "Hi, I'm Archie, I work with Kurt, over on Augusta?"&lt;br /&gt;The anarchist stared at his hand, then shook it limply.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"So, Kurt mentioned that he'd spoken to your collective about putting a wireless&lt;br /&gt;repeater up over your sign?"&lt;br /&gt;The anarchist shook his head. "We decided not to do that, okay." He went back to&lt;br /&gt;his paper.&lt;br /&gt;Andrew considered him for a moment. "So, what's your name?"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't like to give out my name," the anarchist said. "Call me Waldo, all&lt;br /&gt;right?"&lt;br /&gt;"All right," Andy said smiling. "That's fine by me. So, can I ask why you decided&lt;br /&gt;not to do it?"&lt;br /&gt;"It doesn't fit with our priorities. We're here to make print materials about the&lt;br /&gt;movement available to the public. They can get Internet access somewhere else.&lt;br /&gt;Internet access is for people who can afford computers, anyway."&lt;br /&gt;"Good point," Art said. "That's a good point. I wonder if I could ask you to&lt;br /&gt;reconsider, though? I'd love a chance to try to explain why this should be&lt;br /&gt;important to you."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't think so," Waldo said. "We're not really interested."&lt;br /&gt;"I think you *would* be interested, if it were properly explained to you."&lt;br /&gt;Waldo picked up his paper and pointedly read it, breathing heavily.&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks for your time," Avi said and left.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"That's *bullshit*," Kurt said. "Christ, those people --"&lt;br /&gt;"I assumed that there was some kind of politics," Austin said, "and I didn't want&lt;br /&gt;to get into the middle of it. I know that if I could get a chance to present to&lt;br /&gt;the whole group, that I could win them over."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shook his head angrily. His shop was better organized now, with six access&lt;br /&gt;points ready to go and five stuck to the walls as a test bed for new versions of&lt;br /&gt;the software. A couple of geeky Korean kids were seated at the communal workbench,&lt;br /&gt;eating donuts and wrestling with drivers.&lt;br /&gt;"It's all politics with them. Everything. You should hear them argue about whether&lt;br /&gt;it's cool to feed meat to the store cat! Who was working behind the counter?"&lt;br /&gt;"He wouldn't tell me his name. He told me to call him --"&lt;br /&gt;"Waldo."&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that could be any of about six of them, then. That's what they tell the&lt;br /&gt;cops. They probably thought you were a narc or a fed or something."&lt;br /&gt;"I see."&lt;br /&gt;"It's not total paranoia. They've been busted before -- it's always bullshit. I&lt;br /&gt;raised bail for a couple of them once."&lt;br /&gt;Andrew realized that Kurt thought he was offended at being mistaken for a cop, but&lt;br /&gt;he got that. He was weird -- visibly weird. Out of place wherever he was.&lt;br /&gt;"So they owe me. Let me talk to them some more."&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks, Kurt. I appreciate it."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, you're doing all the heavy lifting these days. It's the least I can do."&lt;br /&gt;Alan clapped a hand on his shoulder. "None of this would exist without you, you&lt;br /&gt;know." He waved his hand to take in the room, the Korean kids, the whole Market.&lt;br /&gt;"I saw a bunch of people at the Greek's with laptops, showing them around to each&lt;br /&gt;other and drinking beers. In the park, with PDAs. I see people sitting on their&lt;br /&gt;porches, typing in the twilight. Crouched in doorways. Eating a bagel in the&lt;br /&gt;morning on a bench. People are finding it, and it's thanks to you."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt smiled a shy smile. "You're just trying to cheer me up," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Course I am," Andy said. "You deserve to be full of cheer."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"Don't bother," Andy said. "Seriously, it's not worth it. We'll just find&lt;br /&gt;somewhere else to locate the repeater. It's not worth all the bullshit you're&lt;br /&gt;getting."&lt;br /&gt;"Screw that. They told me that they'd take one. They're the only ones *I* talked&lt;br /&gt;into it. My contribution to the effort. And they're fucking *anarchists* --&lt;br /&gt;they've *got* to be into this. It's totally irrational!" He was almost crying.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't want you to screw up your friendships, Kurt. They'll come around on their&lt;br /&gt;own. You're turning yourself inside out over this, and it's just not worth it.&lt;br /&gt;Come on, it's cool." He turned around his laptop and showed the picture to Kurt.&lt;br /&gt;"Check it out, people with tails. An entire gallery of them!" There were lots of&lt;br /&gt;pictures like that on the net. None of people without belly buttons, though.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt took a pull off his beer. "Disgusting," he said and clicked through the&lt;br /&gt;gallery.&lt;br /&gt;The Greek looked over their shoulder. "It's real?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's real, Larry," Alan said. "Freaky, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"That's terrible," the Greek said. "Pah." There were five or six other network&lt;br /&gt;users out on the Greek's, and it was early yet. By five-thirty, there'd be fifty&lt;br /&gt;of them. Some of them brought their own power strips so that they could share&lt;br /&gt;juice with their coreligionists.&lt;br /&gt;"You really want me to give up?" Kurt asked, once the Greek had given him a new&lt;br /&gt;beer and a scowling look over the litter of picked-at beer label on the table&lt;br /&gt;before him.&lt;br /&gt;"I really think you should," Alan said. "It's a poor use of time."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt looked ready to cry again. Adam had no idea what to say.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay," Kurt said. "Fine." He finished his beer in silence and slunk away.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;But it wasn't fine, and Kurt wouldn't give it up. He kept on beating his head&lt;br /&gt;against the blank wall, and every time Alan saw him, he was grimmer than the last.&lt;br /&gt;"Let it *go*," Adam said. "I've done a deal with the vacuum-cleaner repair guy&lt;br /&gt;across the street." A weird-but-sweet old Polish Holocaust survivor who'd listened&lt;br /&gt;attentively to Andy's pitch before announcing that he'd been watching all the&lt;br /&gt;hardware go up around the Market and had simply been waiting to be included in the&lt;br /&gt;club. "That'll cover that corner just fine."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm going to throw a party," Kurt said. "Here, in the shop. No, I'll rent out one&lt;br /&gt;of the warehouses on Oxford. I'll invite them, the kids, everyone who's let us put&lt;br /&gt;up an access point, a big mill-and-swill. Buy a couple kegs. No one can resist&lt;br /&gt;free beer."&lt;br /&gt;Alan had started off frustrated and angry with Kurt, but this drew him up and&lt;br /&gt;turned him around. "That is a *fine* idea," he said. "We'll invite Lyman."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Lyman had taken to showing up on Alan's stoop in the morning sometimes, on his way&lt;br /&gt;to work, for a cup of coffee. He'd taken to showing up at Kurt's shop in the&lt;br /&gt;afternoon, sometimes, on his way home from work, to marvel at the kids' industry.&lt;br /&gt;His greybeard had written some code that analyzed packet loss and tried to make&lt;br /&gt;guesses about the crowd density in different parts of the Market, and Lyman took a&lt;br /&gt;proprietary interest in it, standing out by Bikes on Wheels or the Portuguese&lt;br /&gt;furniture store and watching the data on his PDA, comparing it with the actual&lt;br /&gt;crowds on the street.&lt;br /&gt;He'd only hesitated for a second when Andrew asked him to be the inaugural advisor&lt;br /&gt;on ParasiteNet's board, and once he'd said yes, it became clear to everyone that&lt;br /&gt;he was endlessly fascinated by their little adhocracy and its experimental telco&lt;br /&gt;potential.&lt;br /&gt;"This party sounds like a great idea," he said. He was buying the drinks, because&lt;br /&gt;he was the one with five-hundred-dollar glasses and a full-suspension racing bike.&lt;br /&gt;"Lookit that," he said.&lt;br /&gt;From the Greek's front window, they could see Oxford Street and a little of&lt;br /&gt;Augusta, and Lyman loved using his PDA and his density analysis software while he&lt;br /&gt;sat, looking from his colored map to the crowd scene. "Lookit the truck as it goes&lt;br /&gt;down Oxford and turns up Augusta. That signature is so distinctive, I could spot&lt;br /&gt;it in my sleep. I need to figure out how to sell this to someone -- maybe the cops&lt;br /&gt;or something." He tipped Andy a wink.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt opened and shut his mouth a few times, and Lyman slapped his palm down on the&lt;br /&gt;table. "You look like you're going to bust something," he said. "Don't worry. I&lt;br /&gt;kid. Damn, you've got you some big, easy-to-push buttons."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt made a face. "You wanted to sell our stuff to luxury hotels. You tried to get&lt;br /&gt;us to present at the *SkyDome*. You're capable of anything."&lt;br /&gt;"The SkyDome would be a great venue for this stuff," Lyman said settling into one&lt;br /&gt;of his favorite variations of bait-the-anarchist.&lt;br /&gt;"The SkyDome was built with tax-dollars that should have been spent on affordable&lt;br /&gt;housing, then was turned over to rich pals of the premier for a song, who then ran&lt;br /&gt;it into the ground, got bailed out by the province, and then it got turned over to&lt;br /&gt;different rich pals. You can just shut up about the goddamned SkyDome. You'd have&lt;br /&gt;to break both of my legs and *carry me* to get me to set foot in there."&lt;br /&gt;"About the party," Adam said. "About the party."&lt;br /&gt;"Yes, certainly," Lyman said. "Kurt, behave."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt belched loudly, provoking a scowl from the Greek.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The Waldos all showed up in a bunch, with plastic brown liter bottles filled with&lt;br /&gt;murky homemade beer and a giant bag of skunk-weed. The party had only been on for&lt;br /&gt;a couple hours, but it had already balkanized into inward-facing groups:&lt;br /&gt;merchants, kids, hackers. Kurt kept turning the music way up ("If they're not&lt;br /&gt;going to talk with one another, they might as well dance." "Kurt, those people are&lt;br /&gt;old. Old people don't dance to music like this." "Shut up, Lyman." "Make me."),&lt;br /&gt;and Andy kept turning it down.&lt;br /&gt;The bookstore people drifted in, then stopped and moved vaguely toward the middle&lt;br /&gt;of the floor, there to found their own breakaway conversational republic. Lyman&lt;br /&gt;startled. "Sara?" he said and one of the anarchists looked up sharply.&lt;br /&gt;"Lyman?" She had two short ponytails and a round face that made her look teenage&lt;br /&gt;young, but on closer inspection she was more Lyman's age, mid-thirties. She&lt;br /&gt;laughed and crossed the gap to their little republic and threw her arms around&lt;br /&gt;Lyman's neck. "Crispy Christ, what are *you* doing here?"&lt;br /&gt;"I work with these guys!" He turned to Arnold and Kurt. "This is my cousin Sara,"&lt;br /&gt;he said. "These are Albert and Kurt. I'm helping them out."&lt;br /&gt;"Hi, Sara," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Hey, Kurt," she said looking away. It was clear even to Alan that they knew each&lt;br /&gt;other already. The other bookstore people were looking on with suspicion, drinking&lt;br /&gt;their beer out of refillable coffee-store thermos cups.&lt;br /&gt;"It's great to meet you!" Alan said taking her hand in both of his and shaking it&lt;br /&gt;hard. "I'm really glad you folks came down."&lt;br /&gt;She looked askance at him, but Lyman interposed himself. "Now, Sara, these guys&lt;br /&gt;really, really wanted to talk something over with you all, but they've been having&lt;br /&gt;a hard time getting a hearing."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt and Alan traded uneasy glances. They'd carefully planned out a subtle easeway&lt;br /&gt;into this conversation, but Lyman was running with it.&lt;br /&gt;"You didn't know that I was involved, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Surprised the hell outta me," Lyman said. "Will you hear them out?"&lt;br /&gt;She looked back at her collective. "What the hell. Yeah, I'll talk 'em into it."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"It starts with the sinking of the *Titanic*," Kurt said. They'd arranged their&lt;br /&gt;mismatched chairs in a circle in the cramped back room of the bookstore and were&lt;br /&gt;drinking and eating organic crumbly things with the taste and consistency of mudbrick.&lt;br /&gt;Sara told Kurt that they'd have ten minutes, and Alan had told him that he&lt;br /&gt;could take it all. Alan'd spent the day reading on the net, remembering the&lt;br /&gt;arguments that had swayed the most people, talking it over. He was determined that&lt;br /&gt;Kurt would win this fight.&lt;br /&gt;"There's this ship going down, and it's signaling S-O-S, S-O-S, but the message&lt;br /&gt;didn't get out, because the shipping lanes were full of other ships with other&lt;br /&gt;radios, radios that clobbered the *Titanic*'s signal. That's because there were no&lt;br /&gt;rules for radio back then, so anyone could light up any transmitter and send out&lt;br /&gt;any signal at any frequency. Imagine a room where everyone shouted at the top of&lt;br /&gt;their lungs, nonstop, while setting off air horns.&lt;br /&gt;"After that, they decided that fed regulators would divide up the radio spectrum&lt;br /&gt;into bands, and give those bands to exclusive licensees who'd know that their&lt;br /&gt;radio waves would reach their destination without being clobbered, because any&lt;br /&gt;clobberers would get shut down by the cops.&lt;br /&gt;"But today, we've got a better way: We can make radios that are capable of&lt;br /&gt;intelligently cooperating with each other. We can make radios that use databases&lt;br /&gt;or just finely tuned listeners to determine what bands aren't in use, at any given&lt;br /&gt;moment, in any place. They can talk between the gaps in other signals. They can&lt;br /&gt;relay messages for other radios. They can even try to detect the presence of dumb&lt;br /&gt;radio devices, like TVs and FM tuners, and grab the signal they're meant to be&lt;br /&gt;receiving off of the Internet and pass it on, so that the dumb device doesn't even&lt;br /&gt;realize that the world has moved on.&lt;br /&gt;"Now, the original radio rules were supposed to protect free expression because if&lt;br /&gt;everyone was allowed to speak at once, no one would be heard. That may have been&lt;br /&gt;true, but it was a pretty poor system as it went: Mostly, the people who got radio&lt;br /&gt;licenses were cops, spooks, and media barons. There aren't a lot of average people&lt;br /&gt;using the airwaves to communicate for free with one another. Not a lot of free&lt;br /&gt;speech.&lt;br /&gt;"But now we have all this new technology where computers direct the operation of&lt;br /&gt;flexible radios, radios whose characteristics are determined by software, and it's&lt;br /&gt;looking like the scarcity of the electromagnetic spectrum has been pretty grossly&lt;br /&gt;overstated. It's hard to prove, because now we've got a world where lighting up a&lt;br /&gt;bunch of smart, agile radios is a crime against the 'legit' license-holders.&lt;br /&gt;"But Parliament's not going to throw the airwaves open because no elected&lt;br /&gt;politician can be responsible for screwing up the voters' televisions, because&lt;br /&gt;that's the surest-fire way to not get reelected. Which means that when you say,&lt;br /&gt;'Hey, our freedom of speech is being clobbered by bad laws,' the other side can&lt;br /&gt;say, 'Go study some physics, hippie, or produce a working network, or shut up.'&lt;br /&gt;"The radios we're installing now are about one millionth as smart as they could&lt;br /&gt;be, and they use one millionth as much spectrum as they could without stepping on&lt;br /&gt;anyone else's signal, but they're legal, and they're letting more people&lt;br /&gt;communicate than ever. There are people all over the world doing this, and&lt;br /&gt;whenever the policy wonks go to the radio cops to ask for more radio spectrum to&lt;br /&gt;do this stuff with, they parade people like us in front of them. We're like the&lt;br /&gt;Pinocchio's nose on the face of the radio cops: They say that only their big&lt;br /&gt;business buddies can be trusted with the people's airwaves, and we show them up&lt;br /&gt;for giant liars."&lt;br /&gt;He fell silent and looked at them. Adam held his breath.&lt;br /&gt;Sara nodded and broke the silence. "You know, that sounds pretty cool, actually."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt insisted on putting up that access point, while Alan and Lyman steadied the&lt;br /&gt;ladder. Sara came out and joked with Lyman, and Alan got distracted watching them,&lt;br /&gt;trying to understand this notion of "cousins." They had an easy rapport, despite&lt;br /&gt;all their differences, and spoke in a shorthand of family weddings long past and&lt;br /&gt;crotchety relatives long dead.&lt;br /&gt;So none of them were watching when Kurt overbalanced and dropped the Makita,&lt;br /&gt;making a wild grab for it, foot slipping off the rung, and toppled backward. It&lt;br /&gt;was only Kurt's wild bark of panic that got Adam to instinctively move, to hold&lt;br /&gt;out his arms and look up, and he caught Kurt under the armpits and gentled him to&lt;br /&gt;the ground, taking the weight of Kurt's fall in a bone-jarring crush to his rib&lt;br /&gt;cage.&lt;br /&gt;"You okay?" Alan said once he'd gotten his breath back.&lt;br /&gt;"Oof," Kurt said. "Yeah."&lt;br /&gt;They were cuddled together on the sidewalk, Kurt atop him, and Lyman and Sara bent&lt;br /&gt;to help them apart. "Nice catch," Lyman said. Kurt was helped to his feet, and he&lt;br /&gt;declared that he'd sprained his ankle and nothing worse, and they helped him back&lt;br /&gt;to his shop, where a couple of his kids doted over him, getting him an ice pack&lt;br /&gt;and a pillow and his laptop and one of the many dumpster-dived discmen from around&lt;br /&gt;the shop and some of the CDs of old punk bands that he favored.&lt;br /&gt;There he perched, growly as a wounded bear, master of his kingdom, for the next&lt;br /&gt;two weeks, playing online and going twitchy over the missed dumpsters going to the&lt;br /&gt;landfill every night without his expert picking over. Alan visited him every day&lt;br /&gt;and listened raptly while Kurt gave him the stats for the day's network usage, and&lt;br /&gt;Kurt beamed proud the whole while.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;One morning, Alan threw a clatter of toonies down on the Greek's counter and&lt;br /&gt;walked around the Market, smelling the last night's staggering pissers and the&lt;br /&gt;morning's blossoms.&lt;br /&gt;Here were his neighbors, multicolored heads at the windows of their sagging house&lt;br /&gt;adjoining his, Link and Natalie in the adjacent windows farthest from his front&lt;br /&gt;door, Mimi's face suspicious at her window, and was that Krishna behind her,&lt;br /&gt;watching over her shoulder, hand between her wings, fingers tracing the scars&lt;br /&gt;depending from the muscles there?&lt;br /&gt;He waved at them. The reluctant winter made every day feel like the day before a&lt;br /&gt;holiday weekend. The bankers and the retail slaves coming into and out of the&lt;br /&gt;Market had a festive air.&lt;br /&gt;He waved at the neighbors, and Link waved back, and then so did Natalie, and he&lt;br /&gt;hefted his sack of coffees from the Greek's suggestively, and Mimi shut her&lt;br /&gt;curtains with a snap, but Natalie and Link smiled, and a moment later they were&lt;br /&gt;sitting in twig chairs on his porch in their jammies, watching the world go past&lt;br /&gt;as the sun began to boil the air and the coffee tasted as good as it smelled.&lt;br /&gt;"Beautiful day," Natalie said rubbing the duckling fuzz on her scalp and closing&lt;br /&gt;her eyes.&lt;br /&gt;"Found any work yet?" Alan said remembering his promise to put her in touch with&lt;br /&gt;one of his fashionista protégés.&lt;br /&gt;She made a face. "In a video store. Bo-ring."&lt;br /&gt;Link made a rude noise. "You are *so* spoiled. Not just any video store, she's&lt;br /&gt;working at Martian Signal on Queen Street."&lt;br /&gt;Alan knew it, a great shop with a huge selection of cult movies and a brisk trade&lt;br /&gt;in zines, transgressive literature, action figures and T-shirts.&lt;br /&gt;"It must be great there," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She smiled and looked away. "It's okay." She bit her lip. "I don't think I like&lt;br /&gt;working retail," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Ah, retail!" he said. "Retail would be fantastic if it wasn't for the fucking&lt;br /&gt;customers."&lt;br /&gt;She giggled.&lt;br /&gt;"Don't let them get to you," he said. "Get to be really smart about the stock, so&lt;br /&gt;that there's always something you know more about than they do, and when that&lt;br /&gt;isn't true, get them to *teach you* more so you'll be in control the next time."&lt;br /&gt;She nodded.&lt;br /&gt;"And have fun with the computer when it's slow," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"What?"&lt;br /&gt;"A store like that, it's got the home phone number of about seventy percent of the&lt;br /&gt;people in Toronto you'd want to ever hang out with. Most of your school friends,&lt;br /&gt;even the ones you've lost track of. All the things they've rented. All their old&lt;br /&gt;addresses -- you can figure out who's living together, who gave their apartment to&lt;br /&gt;whom, all of that stuff. That kind of database is way more fun than you realize.&lt;br /&gt;You can get lost in it for months."&lt;br /&gt;She was nodding slowly. "I can see that," she said. She upended her coffee and set&lt;br /&gt;it down. "Listen, Arbus --" she began, then bit her lip again. She looked at Link,&lt;br /&gt;who tugged at his fading pink shock of hair.&lt;br /&gt;"It's nothing," he said. "We get emotionally overwrought about friends and family.&lt;br /&gt;I have as much to apologize for as... Well, I owe you an apology." They stared at&lt;br /&gt;the park across the street, at the damaged wading pool where Edward had vanished.&lt;br /&gt;"So, sorries all 'round and kisses and hugs, and now we're all friends again,&lt;br /&gt;huh?" Link said. Natalie made a rude noise and ruffled his hair, then wiped her&lt;br /&gt;hand off on his shirt.&lt;br /&gt;Alan, though, solemnly shook each of their hands in turn, and thanked them. When&lt;br /&gt;he was done, he felt as though a weight had been lifted from him. Next door,&lt;br /&gt;Mimi's window slammed shut.&lt;br /&gt;"What is it you're doing around here, Akin?" Link said. "I keep seeing you running&lt;br /&gt;around with ladders and tool belts. I thought you were a writer. Are you&lt;br /&gt;soundproofing the whole Market?"&lt;br /&gt;"I never told you?" Alan said. He'd been explaining wireless networking to anyone&lt;br /&gt;who could sit still and had been beginning to believe that he'd run it down for&lt;br /&gt;every denizen of Kensington, but he'd forgotten to clue in his own neighbors!&lt;br /&gt;"Right," he said. "Are you seated comfortably? Then I shall begin. When we connect&lt;br /&gt;computers together, we call it a network. There's a *big* network of millions of&lt;br /&gt;computers, called the Internet."&lt;br /&gt;"Even *I* know this," Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"Shush," Alan said. "I'll start at the beginning, where I started a year ago, and&lt;br /&gt;work my way forward. It's weird, it's big and it's cool." And he told them the&lt;br /&gt;story, the things he'd learned from Kurt, the arguments he'd honed on the&lt;br /&gt;shopkeepers, the things Lyman had told him.&lt;br /&gt;"So that's the holy mission," he said at last. "You give everyone a voice and a&lt;br /&gt;chance to speak on a level playing field with the rich and powerful, and you make&lt;br /&gt;democracy, which is good."&lt;br /&gt;He looked at Link and Natalie, who were looking to one another rather intensely,&lt;br /&gt;communicating in some silent idiom of sibling body-language.&lt;br /&gt;"Plate-o-shrimp," Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"Funny coincidence," Link said.&lt;br /&gt;"We were just talking about this yesterday."&lt;br /&gt;"Spectrum?" Alan quirked his eyebrows.&lt;br /&gt;"No, not exactly," Natalie said. "About making a difference. About holy missions.&lt;br /&gt;Wondering if there were any left."&lt;br /&gt;"I mean," Link said, "riding a bike or renting out videos are honest ways to make&lt;br /&gt;a living and all, and they keep us in beer and rent money, but they're not --"&lt;br /&gt;"-- *important*." Natalie said.&lt;br /&gt;"Ah," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Ah?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, that's the thing we all want, right? Making a difference."&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah."&lt;br /&gt;"Which is why you went into fashion," Link said giving her skinny shoulder a&lt;br /&gt;playful shove.&lt;br /&gt;She shoved him back. "And why *you* went into electrical engineering!"&lt;br /&gt;"Okay," Alan said. "It's not necessarily about what career you pick. It's about&lt;br /&gt;how you do what you do. Natalie, you told me you used to shop at Tropicál."&lt;br /&gt;She nodded.&lt;br /&gt;"You liked it, you used to shop there, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah."&lt;br /&gt;"And it inspired you to go into fashion design. It also provided employment for a&lt;br /&gt;couple dozen people over the years. I sometimes got to help out little alternative&lt;br /&gt;girls from North Toronto buy vintage prom dresses at the end of the year, and I&lt;br /&gt;helped Motown revival bands put together matching outfits of red blazers and wide&lt;br /&gt;trousers. Four or five little shops opened up nearby selling the same kind of&lt;br /&gt;thing, imitating me -- that whole little strip down there started with Tropicál."&lt;br /&gt;Natalie nodded. "Okay, I knew that, I guess. But it's not the same as *really*&lt;br /&gt;making a difference, is it?"&lt;br /&gt;Link flicked his butt to the curb. "You're changing people's lives for the better&lt;br /&gt;either way, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"Exactly," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;Then Link grinned. "But there's something pretty, oh, I dunno, *ballsy*, about&lt;br /&gt;this wireless thing, yeah? It's not the same."&lt;br /&gt;"Not the same," Alan said grinning. "Better."&lt;br /&gt;"How can we help?"&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Kurt had an assembly line cranking out his access points now. Half a dozen street&lt;br /&gt;kids worked in the front of his place, in a cleared-out space with a makeshift&lt;br /&gt;workbench made from bowed plywood and scratched IKEA table-legs. It made Alan feel&lt;br /&gt;better to watch them making sense of it all, made him feel a little like he felt&lt;br /&gt;when he was working on The Inventory. The kids worked from noon, when Kurt got&lt;br /&gt;back from breakfast, until 9 or 10, when he went out to dive.&lt;br /&gt;The kids were smart, but screwed up: half by teenaged hormones and half by bad&lt;br /&gt;parents or bad drugs or just bad brain chemistry. Alan understood their type,&lt;br /&gt;trying to carve some atom of individual identity away from family and background,&lt;br /&gt;putting pins through their bodies and affecting unconvincing tough mannerisms.&lt;br /&gt;They were often bright -- the used bookstore had been full of their type, buying&lt;br /&gt;good, beat-up books off the sale rack for 50 cents, trading them back for 20&lt;br /&gt;cents' credit the next day, and buying more.&lt;br /&gt;Natalie and Link were in that morning, along with some newcomers, Montreal street&lt;br /&gt;punks trying their hand at something other than squeegee bumming. The punks and&lt;br /&gt;his neighbors gave each other uneasy looks, but Alan had deliberately put the&lt;br /&gt;sugar for the coffee at the punks' end of the table and the cream in front of&lt;br /&gt;Natalie and the stirs by the bathroom door with the baklava and the napkins, so a&lt;br /&gt;rudimentary social intercourse was begun.&lt;br /&gt;First, one of the punks (who had a rusty "NO FUTURE" pin that Alan thought would&lt;br /&gt;probably go for real coin on the collectors' market) asked Natalie to pass her the&lt;br /&gt;cream. Then Link and another punk (foppy silly black hair and a cut-down private&lt;br /&gt;school blazer with the short sleeves pinned on with rows of safety pins) met over&lt;br /&gt;the baklava, and the punk offered Link a napkin. Another punk spilled her coffee&lt;br /&gt;on her lap, screeching horrendous Quebecois blasphemies as curses, and that&lt;br /&gt;cracked everyone up, and Arnold, watching from near the blanket that fenced off&lt;br /&gt;Kurt's monkish sleeping area, figured that they would get along.&lt;br /&gt;"Kurt," he said pulling aside the blanket, handing a double-double coffee over to&lt;br /&gt;Kurt as he sat up and rubbed his eyes. He was wearing a white T-shirt that was the&lt;br /&gt;grimy grey of everything in his domain, and baggy jockeys. He gathered his&lt;br /&gt;blankets around him and sipped reverently.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt cocked his head and listened to the soft discussions going on on the other&lt;br /&gt;side of the blanket. "Christ, they're at it already?"&lt;br /&gt;"I think your volunteers showed up a couple hours ago -- or maybe they were up all&lt;br /&gt;night."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt groaned theatrically. "I'm running a halfway house for geeky street kids."&lt;br /&gt;"All for the cause," Alan said. "So, what's on the plate for today?"&lt;br /&gt;"You know the church kittycorner from your place?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah?" Alan said cautiously.&lt;br /&gt;"Its spire is just about the highest point in the Market. An omnidirectional up&lt;br /&gt;there..."&lt;br /&gt;"The church?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah."&lt;br /&gt;"What about the new condos at the top of Baldwin? They're tall."&lt;br /&gt;"They are. But they're up on the northern edge. From the bell-tower of that&lt;br /&gt;church, I bet you could shoot half the houses on the west side of Oxford Street,&lt;br /&gt;along with the backs of all the shops on Augusta."&lt;br /&gt;"How are we going to get the church to go along with it. Christ, what are they,&lt;br /&gt;Ukranian Orthodox?"&lt;br /&gt;"Greek Orthodox," Kurt said. "Yeah, they're pretty conservative."&lt;br /&gt;"So?"&lt;br /&gt;"So, I need a smooth-talking, upstanding cit to go and put the case to the pastor.&lt;br /&gt;Priest. Bishop. Whatever."&lt;br /&gt;"Groan," Alex said.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, come on, you're good at it."&lt;br /&gt;"If I get time," he said. He looked into his coffee for a moment. "I'm going to go&lt;br /&gt;home," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Home?"&lt;br /&gt;"To the mountain," he said. "Home," he said. "To my father," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Whoa," Kurt said. "Alone?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan sat on the floor and leaned back against a milk crate full of low-capacity&lt;br /&gt;hard drives. "I have to," he said. "I can't stop thinking of..." He was horrified&lt;br /&gt;to discover that he was on the verge of tears. It had been three weeks since Davey&lt;br /&gt;had vanished into the night, and he'd dreamt of Eugene-Fabio-Greg every night&lt;br /&gt;since, terrible dreams, in which he'd dug like a dog to uncover their hands, their&lt;br /&gt;arms, their legs, but never their heads. He swallowed hard.&lt;br /&gt;He and Kurt hadn't spoken of that night since.&lt;br /&gt;"I sometimes wonder if it really happened," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded. "It's hard to believe. Even for me."&lt;br /&gt;"I believe it," Kurt said. "I won't ever not believe it. I think that's probably&lt;br /&gt;important to you."&lt;br /&gt;Alan felt a sob well up in his chest and swallowed it down again. "Thanks," he&lt;br /&gt;managed to say.&lt;br /&gt;"When are you leaving?"&lt;br /&gt;"Tomorrow morning. I'm going to rent a car and drive up," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"How long?"&lt;br /&gt;"I dunno," he said. He was feeling morose now. "A couple days. A week, maybe. No&lt;br /&gt;longer."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, don't sweat the Bishop. He can wait. Come and get a beer with me tonight&lt;br /&gt;before I go out?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," he said. "That sounds good. On a patio on Kensington. We can peoplewatch."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;How Alan and his brothers killed Davey: very deliberately.&lt;br /&gt;Alan spent the rest of the winter in the cave, and Davey spent the spring in the&lt;br /&gt;golem's cave, and through that spring, neither of them went down to the school, so&lt;br /&gt;that the younger brothers had to escort themselves to class. When the thaws came&lt;br /&gt;and icy meltoff carved temporary streams in the mountainside, they stopped going&lt;br /&gt;to school, too -- instead, they played on the mountainside, making dams and canals&lt;br /&gt;and locks with rocks and imagination.&lt;br /&gt;Their father was livid. The mountain rumbled as it warmed unevenly, as the sheets&lt;br /&gt;of ice slid off its slopes and skittered down toward the highway. The sons of the&lt;br /&gt;mountain reveled in their dark ignorance, their separation from the school and&lt;br /&gt;from the nonsensical and nonmagical society of the town. They snared small animals&lt;br /&gt;and ate them raw, and didn't wash their clothes, and grew fierce and guttural&lt;br /&gt;through the slow spring.&lt;br /&gt;Alan kept silent through those months, becoming almost nocturnal, refusing to talk&lt;br /&gt;to any brother who dared to talk to him. When Ed-Fred-George brought home a note&lt;br /&gt;from the vice principal asking when he thought he'd be coming back to school, Alan&lt;br /&gt;shoved it into his mouth and chewed and chewed and chewed, until the paper was&lt;br /&gt;reduced to gruel, then he spat it by the matted pile of his bedding.&lt;br /&gt;The mountain grumbled and he didn't care. The golems came to parley, and he turned&lt;br /&gt;his back to them. The stalactites crashed to the cave's floor until it was&lt;br /&gt;carpeted in ankle-deep chips of stone, and he waded through them.&lt;br /&gt;He waited and bided. He waited for Davey to try to come home.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"What have we here?" Alan said, as he wandered into Kurt's shop, which had&lt;br /&gt;devolved into joyous bedlam. The shelves had been pushed up against the wall,&lt;br /&gt;clearing a large open space that was lined with long trestle tables. Crusty-punks,&lt;br /&gt;goth kids, hippie kids, geeks with vintage video-game shirts, and even a couple of&lt;br /&gt;older, hard-done-by street people crowded around the tables, performing a&lt;br /&gt;conglomeration of arcane tasks. The air hummed with conversation and coffee&lt;br /&gt;smells, the latter emanating from a catering-sized urn in the corner.&lt;br /&gt;He was roundly ignored -- and before he could speak again, one of the PCs on the&lt;br /&gt;floor started booming out fuzzy, grungy rockabilly music that made him think of&lt;br /&gt;Elvis cassettes that had been submerged in salt water. Half of the assembled mass&lt;br /&gt;started bobbing their heads and singing along while the other half rolled their&lt;br /&gt;eyes and groaned.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt came out of the back and hunkered down with the PC, turning down the volume a&lt;br /&gt;little. "Howdy!" he said, spreading his arms and taking in the whole of his&lt;br /&gt;dominion.&lt;br /&gt;"Howdy yourself," Alan said. "What do we have here?"&lt;br /&gt;"We have a glut of volunteers," Kurt said, watching as an old rummy carefully shot&lt;br /&gt;a picture of a flat-panel LCD that was minus its housing. "I can't figure out if&lt;br /&gt;those laptop screens are worth anything," he said, cocking his head. "But they've&lt;br /&gt;been taking up space for far too long. Time we moved them."&lt;br /&gt;Alan looked around and realized that the workers he'd taken to be at work building&lt;br /&gt;access points were, in the main, shooting digital pictures of junk from Kurt's&lt;br /&gt;diving runs and researching them for eBay listings. It made him feel good --&lt;br /&gt;great, even. It was like watching an Inventory being assembled from out of chaos.&lt;br /&gt;"Where'd they all come from?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shrugged. "I dunno. I guess we hit critical mass. You recruit a few people,&lt;br /&gt;they recruit a few people. It's a good way to make a couple bucks, you get to play&lt;br /&gt;with boss crap, you get paid in cash, and you have colorful co-workers." He&lt;br /&gt;shrugged again. "I guess they came from wherever the trash came from. The city&lt;br /&gt;provides."&lt;br /&gt;The homeless guy they were standing near squinted up at them. "If either of you&lt;br /&gt;says something like, *Ah, these people were discarded by society, but just as with&lt;br /&gt;the junk we rescue from landfills, we have seen the worth of these poor folks and&lt;br /&gt;rescued them from the scrapheap of society,* I'm gonna puke."&lt;br /&gt;"The thought never crossed my mind," Alan said solemnly.&lt;br /&gt;"Keep it up, Wes," Kurt said, patting the man on the shoulder. "See you at the&lt;br /&gt;Greek's tonight?"&lt;br /&gt;"Every night, so long as he keeps selling the cheapest beer in the Market," Wes&lt;br /&gt;said, winking at Alan.&lt;br /&gt;"It's cash in the door," Kurt said. "Buying components is a lot more efficient&lt;br /&gt;than trying to find just the right parts." He gave Alan a mildly reproachful look.&lt;br /&gt;Ever since they'd gone to strictly controlled designs, Kurt had been heartbroken&lt;br /&gt;by the amount of really nice crap that never made its way into an access point.&lt;br /&gt;"This is pretty amazing," Alan said. "You're splitting the money with them?"&lt;br /&gt;"The profit -- anything leftover after buying packaging and paying postage." He&lt;br /&gt;walked down the line, greeting people by name, shaking hands, marveling at the&lt;br /&gt;gewgaws and gimcracks that he, after all, had found in some nighttime dumpster and&lt;br /&gt;brought back to be recycled. "God, I love this. It's like Napster for dumpsters."&lt;br /&gt;"How's that?" Alan asked, pouring himself a coffee and adding some UHT cream from&lt;br /&gt;a giant, slightly dented box of little creamers.&lt;br /&gt;"Most of the music ever recorded isn't for sale at any price. Like 80 percent of&lt;br /&gt;it. And the labels, they've made copyright so strong, no one can figure out who&lt;br /&gt;all that music belongs to -- not even them! Costs a fortune to clear a song. Pal&lt;br /&gt;of mine once did a CD of Christmas music remixes, and he tried to figure out who&lt;br /&gt;owned the rights to all the songs he wanted to use. He just gave up after a year&lt;br /&gt;-- and he had only cleared one song!&lt;br /&gt;"So along comes Napster. It finds the only possible way of getting all that music&lt;br /&gt;back into our hands. It gives millions and millions of people an incentive to rip&lt;br /&gt;their old CDs -- hell, their old vinyl and tapes, too! -- and put them online. No&lt;br /&gt;label could have afforded to do that, but the people just did it for free. It was&lt;br /&gt;like a barn-raising: a library raising!"&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded. "So what's your point -- that companies' dumpsters are being&lt;br /&gt;napstered by people like you?" A napsterized Inventory. Alan felt the *rightness*&lt;br /&gt;of it.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt picked a fragile LCD out of a box of dozens of them and smashed it on the&lt;br /&gt;side of the table. "Exactly!" he said. "This is garbage -- it's like the deleted&lt;br /&gt;music that you can't buy today, except at the bottom of bins at Goodwill or at&lt;br /&gt;yard sales. Tons of it has accumulated in landfills. No one could afford to pay&lt;br /&gt;enough people to go around and rescue it all and figure out the copyrights for it&lt;br /&gt;and turn it into digital files and upload it to the net -- but if you give people&lt;br /&gt;an incentive to tackle a little piece of the problem and a way for my work to help&lt;br /&gt;you..." He went to a shelf and picked up a finished AP and popped its latches and&lt;br /&gt;swung it open.&lt;br /&gt;"Look at that -- I didn't get its guts out of a dumpster, but someone else did,&lt;br /&gt;like as not. I sold the parts I found in my dumpster for money that I exchanged&lt;br /&gt;for parts that someone else found in *her* dumpster --"&lt;br /&gt;"Her?"&lt;br /&gt;"Trying not to be sexist," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Are there female dumpster divers?"&lt;br /&gt;"Got me," Kurt said. "In ten years of this, I've only run into other divers twice&lt;br /&gt;or three times. Remind me to tell you about the cop later. Anyway. We spread out&lt;br /&gt;the effort of rescuing this stuff from the landfill, and then we put our findings&lt;br /&gt;online, and we move it to where it needs to be. So it's not cost effective for&lt;br /&gt;some big corporation to figure out how to use or sell these -- so what? It's not&lt;br /&gt;cost-effective for some big dumb record label to figure out how to keep music by&lt;br /&gt;any of my favorite bands in print, either. We'll figure it out. We're spookily&lt;br /&gt;good at it."&lt;br /&gt;"Spookily?"&lt;br /&gt;"Trying to be more poetic." He grinned and twisted the fuzzy split ends of his&lt;br /&gt;newly blue mohawk around his fingers. "Got a new girlfriend, she says there's not&lt;br /&gt;enough poetry in my views on garbage."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;They found one of Davey's old nests in March, on a day when you could almost&lt;br /&gt;believe that the spring would really come and the winter would go and the days&lt;br /&gt;would lengthen out to more than a few hours of sour greyness huddled around noon.&lt;br /&gt;The reference design for the access point had gone through four more iterations,&lt;br /&gt;and if you knew where to look in the Market's second-story apartments, rooftops,&lt;br /&gt;and lampposts, you could trace the evolution of the design from the clunky PCshaped&lt;br /&gt;boxen in Alan's attic on Wales Avenue to the environment-hardened milspec&lt;br /&gt;surplus boxes that Kurt had rigged from old circuit boxes he'd found in Bell&lt;br /&gt;Canada's Willowdale switching station dumpster.&lt;br /&gt;Alan steadied the ladder while Kurt tightened the wing nuts on the antenna&lt;br /&gt;mounting atop the synagogue's roof. It had taken three meetings with the old rabbi&lt;br /&gt;before Alan hit on the idea of going to the temple's youth caucus and getting&lt;br /&gt;*them* to explain it to the old cleric. The synagogue was one of the oldest&lt;br /&gt;buildings in the Market, a brick-and-stone beauty from 1930.&lt;br /&gt;They'd worried about the fight they'd have over drilling through the roof to punch&lt;br /&gt;down a wire, but they needn't have: The wood up there was soft as cottage cheese,&lt;br /&gt;and showed gaps wide enough to slip the power cable down. Now Kurt slathered&lt;br /&gt;Loctite over the nuts and washers and slipped dangerously down the ladder, toetips&lt;br /&gt;flying over the rungs.&lt;br /&gt;Alan laughed as he touched down, thinking that Kurt's heart was aburst with the&lt;br /&gt;feeling of having finished, at last, at last. But then he caught sight of Kurt's&lt;br /&gt;face, ashen, wide-eyed.&lt;br /&gt;"I saw something," he said, talking out of the sides of his mouth. His hands were&lt;br /&gt;shaking.&lt;br /&gt;"What?"&lt;br /&gt;"Footprints," he said. "There's a lot of leaves that have rotted down to mud up&lt;br /&gt;there, and there were a pair of little footprints in the mud. Like a toddler's&lt;br /&gt;footprints, maybe. Except there were two toes missing from one foot. They were&lt;br /&gt;stamped down all around this spot where I could see there had been a lot of pigeon&lt;br /&gt;nests, but there were no pigeons there, only a couple of beaks and legs -- so&lt;br /&gt;dried up that I couldn't figure out what they were at first.&lt;br /&gt;"But I recognized the footprints. The missing toes, they left prints behind like&lt;br /&gt;unbent paperclips."&lt;br /&gt;Alan moved, as in a dream, to the ladder and began to climb it.&lt;br /&gt;"Be careful, it's all rotten up there," Kurt called. Alan nodded.&lt;br /&gt;"Sure, thank you," he said, hearing himself say it as though from very far away.&lt;br /&gt;The rooftop was littered with broken glass and scummy puddles of meltwater and&lt;br /&gt;little pebbles and a slurry of decomposing leaves, and there, yes, there were the&lt;br /&gt;footprints, just as advertised. He patted the antenna box absently, feeling its&lt;br /&gt;solidity, and he sat down cross-legged before the footprints and the beaks and the&lt;br /&gt;legs. There were no tooth marks on the birds. They hadn't been eaten, they'd been&lt;br /&gt;torn apart, like a label from a beer bottle absently shredded in the sunset. He&lt;br /&gt;pictured Davey sitting here on the synagogue's roof, listening to the evening&lt;br /&gt;prayers, and the calls and music that floated over the Market, watching the grey&lt;br /&gt;winter nights come on and slip away, a pigeon in his hand, writhing.&lt;br /&gt;He wondered if he was catching Bradley's precognition, and if that meant that&lt;br /&gt;Bradley was dead now.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Bradley was born with the future in his eyes. He emerged from the belly of their&lt;br /&gt;mother with bright brown eyes that did not roll aimlessly in the manner of babies,&lt;br /&gt;but rather sought out the corners of the cave where interesting things were&lt;br /&gt;happening, where movement was about to occur, where life was being lived. Before&lt;br /&gt;he developed the muscle strength and coordination necessary to crawl, he mimed&lt;br /&gt;crawling, seeing how it was that he would someday move.&lt;br /&gt;He was the easiest of all the babies to care for, easier even than Carlo, who had&lt;br /&gt;no needs other than water and soil and cooing reassurance. Toilet training: As&lt;br /&gt;soon as he understood what was expected of him -- they used the downstream-most&lt;br /&gt;bend of one of the underground rivers -- Benny could be relied upon to begin&lt;br /&gt;tottering toward the spot in sufficient time to drop trou and do his business in&lt;br /&gt;just the right spot.&lt;br /&gt;(Alan learned to pay attention when Bruce was reluctant to leave home for a walk&lt;br /&gt;during those days -- the same premonition that made him perfectly toilet-trained&lt;br /&gt;at home would have him in fretting sweats at the foreknowledge that he has&lt;br /&gt;destined to soil himself during the recreation.)&lt;br /&gt;His nightmares ran twice: once just before bed, in clairvoyant preview, and again&lt;br /&gt;in the depths of REM sleep. Alan learned to talk him down from these crises, to&lt;br /&gt;soothe the worry, and in the end it worked to everyone's advantage, defusing the&lt;br /&gt;nightmares themselves when they came.&lt;br /&gt;He never forgot anything -- never forgot to have Alan forge a signature on a&lt;br /&gt;permission form, never forgot to bring in the fossil he'd found for show-and-tell,&lt;br /&gt;never forgot his mittens in the cloakroom and came home with red, chapped hands.&lt;br /&gt;Once he started school, he started seeing to it that Alan never forgot anything,&lt;br /&gt;either.&lt;br /&gt;He did very well on quizzes and tests, and he never let the pitcher fake him out&lt;br /&gt;when he was at bat.&lt;br /&gt;After four years alone with the golems, Alan couldn't have been more glad to have&lt;br /&gt;a brother to keep him company.&lt;br /&gt;Billy got big enough to walk, then big enough to pick mushrooms, then big enough&lt;br /&gt;to chase squirrels. He was big enough to play hide-and-go-seek with, big enough to&lt;br /&gt;play twenty questions with, big enough to horse around in the middle of the lake&lt;br /&gt;at the center of the mountain with.&lt;br /&gt;Alan left him alone during the days, in the company of their parents and the&lt;br /&gt;golems, went down the mountain to school, and when he got back, he'd take his kid&lt;br /&gt;brother out on the mountain face and teach him what he'd learned, even though he&lt;br /&gt;was only a little kid. They'd write letters together in the mud with a stick, and&lt;br /&gt;in the winter, they'd try to spell out their names with steaming pee in the snow,&lt;br /&gt;laughing.&lt;br /&gt;"That's a fraction," Brad said, chalking "3/4" on a piece of slate by the side of&lt;br /&gt;one of the snowmelt streams that coursed down the springtime mountain.&lt;br /&gt;"That's right, three-over-four," Alan said. He'd learned it that day in school,&lt;br /&gt;and had been about to show it to Billy, which meant that Brad had remembered him&lt;br /&gt;doing it and now knew it. He took the chalk and drew his own 3/4 -- you had to do&lt;br /&gt;that, or Billy wouldn't be able to remember it in advance.&lt;br /&gt;Billy got down on his haunches. He was a dark kid, dark hair and eyes the color of&lt;br /&gt;chocolate, which he insatiably craved and begged for every morning when Alan left&lt;br /&gt;for school, "Bring me, bring me, bring me!"&lt;br /&gt;He'd found something. Alan leaned in and saw that it was a milkweed pod. "It's an&lt;br /&gt;egg," Bobby said.&lt;br /&gt;"No, it's a weed," Alan said. Bobby wasn't usually given to flights of fancy, but&lt;br /&gt;the shape of the pod was reminiscent of an egg.&lt;br /&gt;Billy clucked his tongue. "I *know* that. It's also an egg for a bug. Living&lt;br /&gt;inside there. I can see it hatching. Next week." He closed his eyes. "It's orange!&lt;br /&gt;Pretty. We should come back and find it once it hatches."&lt;br /&gt;Alan hunkered down next to him. "There's a bug in here?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah. It's like a white worm, but in a week it will turn into an orange bug and&lt;br /&gt;chew its way out."&lt;br /&gt;He was about three then, which made Alan seven. "What if I chopped down the&lt;br /&gt;plant?" he said. "Would the bug still hatch next week?"&lt;br /&gt;"You won't," Billy said.&lt;br /&gt;"I could, though."&lt;br /&gt;"Nope," Brad said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan reached for the plant. Took it in his hand. The warm skin of the plant and&lt;br /&gt;the woody bole of the pod would be so easy to uproot.&lt;br /&gt;He didn't do it.&lt;br /&gt;That night, as he lay himself down to sleep, he couldn't remember why he hadn't.&lt;br /&gt;He couldn't sleep. He got up and looked out the front of the cave, at the&lt;br /&gt;countryside unrolling in the moonlight and the far lights of the town.&lt;br /&gt;He went back inside and looked in on Benji. He was sleeping, his face smooth and&lt;br /&gt;his lips pouted. He rolled over and opened his eyes, regarding Alan without&lt;br /&gt;surprise.&lt;br /&gt;"Told you so," he said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan had an awkward relationship with the people in town. Unaccompanied little&lt;br /&gt;boys in the grocery store, at the Gap, in the library and in toy section of the&lt;br /&gt;Canadian Tire were suspect. Alan never "horsed around" -- whatever that meant --&lt;br /&gt;but nevertheless, he got more than his share of the hairy eyeball from the&lt;br /&gt;shopkeepers, even though he had money in his pocket and had been known to spend it&lt;br /&gt;on occasion.&lt;br /&gt;A lone boy of five or six or seven was suspicious, but let him show up with the&lt;br /&gt;tiny hand of his dark little brother clasped in his, quietly explaining each item&lt;br /&gt;on the shelf to the solemn child, and everyone got an immediate attitude&lt;br /&gt;adjustment. Shopkeepers smiled and nodded, shoppers mouthed, "So cute," to each&lt;br /&gt;other. Moms with babies in snuglis bent to chuckle them under their chins. Store&lt;br /&gt;owners spontaneously gave them candy, and laughed aloud at Bryan's cries of&lt;br /&gt;"Chocolate!"&lt;br /&gt;When Brian started school, he foresaw and avoided all trouble, and delighted his&lt;br /&gt;teachers with his precociousness. Alan ate lunch with him once he reached the&lt;br /&gt;first grade and started eating in the cafeteria with the rest of the nonkindergartners.&lt;br /&gt;Brad loved to play with Craig after he was born, patiently mounding soil and&lt;br /&gt;pebbles on his shore, watering him and patting him smooth, planting wild grasses&lt;br /&gt;on his slopes as he crept toward the mouth of the cave. Those days -- before&lt;br /&gt;Darcy's arrival -- were a long idyll of good food and play in the hot sun or the&lt;br /&gt;white snow and brotherhood.&lt;br /&gt;Danny couldn't sneak up on Brad and kick him in the back of the head. He couldn't&lt;br /&gt;hide a rat in his pillow or piss on his toothbrush. Billy was never one to stand&lt;br /&gt;pat and eat shit just because Davey was handing it out. Sometimes he'd just wind&lt;br /&gt;up and take a swing at Davey, seemingly out of the blue, knocking him down, then&lt;br /&gt;prying open his mouth to reveal the chocolate bar he'd nicked from under Brad's&lt;br /&gt;pillow, or a comic book from under his shirt. He was only two years younger than&lt;br /&gt;Brad, but by the time they were both walking, he hulked over Brad and could lay&lt;br /&gt;him out with one wild haymaker of a punch.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Billy came down from his high perch when Alan returned from burying Marci, holding&lt;br /&gt;out his hands wordlessly. He hugged Alan hard, crushing the breath out of him.&lt;br /&gt;The arms felt good around his neck, so he stopped letting himself feel them. He&lt;br /&gt;pulled back stiffly and looked at Brian.&lt;br /&gt;"You could have told me," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Bram's face went expressionless and hard and cold. Telling people wasn't what he&lt;br /&gt;did, not for years. It hurt others -- and it hurt him. It was the reason for his&lt;br /&gt;long, long silences. Alan knew that sometimes he couldn't tell what it was that he&lt;br /&gt;knew that others didn't. But he didn't care, then.&lt;br /&gt;"You should have told me," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Bob took a step back and squared up his shoulders and his feet, leaning forward a&lt;br /&gt;little as into a wind.&lt;br /&gt;"You *knew* and you didn't *tell me* and you didn't *do anything* and as far as&lt;br /&gt;I'm concerned, you killed her and cut her up and buried her along with Darryl, you&lt;br /&gt;coward." Adam knew he was crossing a line, and he didn't care. Brian leaned&lt;br /&gt;forward and jutted his chin out.&lt;br /&gt;Avram's hands were clawed with cold and caked with mud and still echoing the&lt;br /&gt;feeling of frozen skin and frozen dirt, and balled up into fists, they felt like&lt;br /&gt;stones.&lt;br /&gt;He didn't hit Barry. Instead, he retreated to his niche and retrieved the&lt;br /&gt;triangular piece of flint that he'd been cherting into an arrowhead for school and&lt;br /&gt;a hammer stone and set to work on it in the light of a flashlight.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He sharpened a knife for Davey, there in his room in the cave, as the boys ran&lt;br /&gt;feral in the woods, as the mountain made its slow and ponderous protests.&lt;br /&gt;He sharpened a knife, a hunting knife with a rusty blade and a cracked handle that&lt;br /&gt;he'd found on one of the woodland trails, beside a hunter's snare, not lost but&lt;br /&gt;pitched away in disgust one winter and not discovered until the following spring.&lt;br /&gt;But the nicked blade took an edge as he whetted it with the round stone, and the&lt;br /&gt;handle regained its grippiness as he wound a cord tight around it, making tiny,&lt;br /&gt;precise knots with each turn, until the handle no longer pinched his hand, until&lt;br /&gt;the blade caught the available light from the cave mouth and glinted dully.&lt;br /&gt;The boys brought him roots and fruits they'd gathered, sweets and bread they'd&lt;br /&gt;stolen, small animals they'd caught. Ed-Fred-George were an unbeatable team when&lt;br /&gt;it came to catching and killing an animal, though they were only small, barely out&lt;br /&gt;of the second grade. They were fast, and they could coordinate their actions&lt;br /&gt;without speaking, so that the bunny or the squirrel could never duck or feint in&lt;br /&gt;any direction without encountering the thick, neck-wringing outstretched hands of&lt;br /&gt;the pudgy boys. Once, they brought him a cat. It went in the night's stew.&lt;br /&gt;Billy sat at his side and talked. The silence he'd folded himself in unwrapped and&lt;br /&gt;flapped in the wind of his beating gums. He talked about the lessons he'd had in&lt;br /&gt;school and the lessons he'd had from his big brother, when it was just the two of&lt;br /&gt;them on the hillside and Alan would teach him every thing he knew, the names of&lt;br /&gt;and salient facts regarding every thing in their father's domain. He talked about&lt;br /&gt;the truths he'd gleaned from reading chocolate-bar wrappers. He talked about the&lt;br /&gt;things that he'd see Davey doing when no one else could see it.&lt;br /&gt;One day, George came to him, the lima-bean baby grown to toddling about on two&lt;br /&gt;sturdy legs, fat and crispy red from his unaccustomed time out-of-doors and in the&lt;br /&gt;sun. "You know, he *worships* you," Glenn said, gesturing at the spot in his straw&lt;br /&gt;bedding where Brad habitually sat and gazed at him and chattered.&lt;br /&gt;Alan stared at his shoelaces. "It doesn't matter," he said. He'd dreamt that night&lt;br /&gt;of Davey stealing into the cave and squatting beside him, watching him the way&lt;br /&gt;that he had before, and of Alan knowing, *knowing* that Davey was there, ready to&lt;br /&gt;rend and tear, knowing that his knife with its coiled handle was just under his&lt;br /&gt;pillow, but not being able to move his arms or legs. Paralyzed, he'd watched Davey&lt;br /&gt;grin and reach behind him with agonizing slowness for a rock that he'd lifted high&lt;br /&gt;above his head and Andrew had seen that the rock had been cherted to a razor edge&lt;br /&gt;that hovered a few feet over his breastbone, Davey's arms trembling with the&lt;br /&gt;effort of holding it aloft. A single drop of sweat had fallen off of Davey's chin&lt;br /&gt;and landed on Alan's nose, and then another, and finally he'd been able to open&lt;br /&gt;his eyes and wake himself, angry and scared. The spring rains had begun, and the&lt;br /&gt;condensation was thick on the cave walls, dripping onto his face and arms and legs&lt;br /&gt;as he slept, leaving behind chalky lime residue as it evaporated.&lt;br /&gt;"He didn't kill her," Greg said.&lt;br /&gt;Albert hadn't told the younger brothers about the body buried in Craig, which&lt;br /&gt;meant that Brad had been talking to them, had told them what he'd seen. Alan felt&lt;br /&gt;an irrational streak of anger at Brad -- he'd been blabbing Alan's secrets. He'd&lt;br /&gt;been exposing the young ones to things they didn't need to know. To the&lt;br /&gt;nightmares.&lt;br /&gt;"He didn't stop her from being killed," Alan said. He had the knife in his hand&lt;br /&gt;and hunted through his pile of belongings for the whetstone to hone its edge.&lt;br /&gt;Greg looked at the knife, and Andy followed his gaze to his own white knuckles on&lt;br /&gt;the hilt. Greg took a frightened step back, and Alan, who had often worried that&lt;br /&gt;the smallest brother was too delicate for the real world, felt ashamed of himself.&lt;br /&gt;He set the knife down and stood, stretching his limbs and leaving the cave for the&lt;br /&gt;first time in weeks.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Brad found him standing on the slopes of the gentle, soggy hump of Charlie's&lt;br /&gt;slope, a few feet closer to the seaway than it had been that winter when Alan had&lt;br /&gt;dug up and reburied Marci's body there.&lt;br /&gt;"You forgot this," Brad said, handing him the knife.&lt;br /&gt;Alan took it from him. It was sharp and dirty and the handle was grimed with sweat&lt;br /&gt;and lime.&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks, kid," he said. He reached down and took Billy's hand, the way he'd done&lt;br /&gt;when it was just the two of them. The three eldest sons of the mountain stood&lt;br /&gt;there touching and watched the outside world rush and grind away in the distance,&lt;br /&gt;its humming engines and puffing chimneys.&lt;br /&gt;Brendan tugged his hand free and kicked at the dirt with a toe, smoothing over the&lt;br /&gt;divot he'd made with the sole of his shoe. Andy noticed that the sneaker was worn&lt;br /&gt;out and had a hole in the toe, and that it was only laced up halfway.&lt;br /&gt;"Got to get you new shoes," he said, bending down to relace them. He had to stick&lt;br /&gt;the knife in the ground to free his hands while he worked. The handle vibrated.&lt;br /&gt;"Davey's coming," Benny said. "Coming now."&lt;br /&gt;Alan reached out as in his dream and felt for the knife, but it wasn't there, as&lt;br /&gt;in his dream. He looked around as the skin on his face tightened and his heart&lt;br /&gt;began to pound in his ears, and he saw that it had merely fallen over in the dirt.&lt;br /&gt;He picked it up and saw that where it had fallen, it had knocked away the soil&lt;br /&gt;that had barely covered up a small, freckled hand, now gone black and curled into&lt;br /&gt;a fist like a monkey's paw. Marci's hand.&lt;br /&gt;"He's coming." Benny took a step off the hill. "You won't lose," he said. "You've&lt;br /&gt;got the knife."&lt;br /&gt;The hand was small and fisted, there in the dirt. It had been just below the&lt;br /&gt;surface of where he'd been standing. It had been there, in Clarence's soil, for&lt;br /&gt;months, decomposing, the last of Marci going. Somewhere just below that soil was&lt;br /&gt;her head, her face sloughing off and wormed. Her red hair fallen from her loosened&lt;br /&gt;scalp. He gagged and a gush of bile sprayed the hillside.&lt;br /&gt;Danny hit him at the knees, knocking him into the dirt. He felt the little rotting&lt;br /&gt;fist digging into his ribs. His body bucked of its own accord, and he knocked&lt;br /&gt;Danny loose of his legs. His arm was hot and slippery, and when he looked at it he&lt;br /&gt;saw that it was coursing with blood. The knife in his other hand was bloodied and&lt;br /&gt;he saw that he'd drawn a long ragged cut along his bicep. A fountain of blood&lt;br /&gt;bubbled there with every beat of his heart, blub, blub, blub, and on the third&lt;br /&gt;blub, he felt the cut, like a long pin stuck in the nerve.&lt;br /&gt;He climbed unsteadily to his feet and confronted Danny. Danny was naked and the&lt;br /&gt;color of the red golem clay. His ribs showed and his hair was matted and greasy.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm coming home," Danny said, baring his teeth. His breath reeked of corruption&lt;br /&gt;and uncooked meat, and his mouth was ringed with a crust of dried vomit. "And&lt;br /&gt;you're not going to stop me."&lt;br /&gt;"You don't have a home," Alan said, pressing the hilt of the knife over the wound&lt;br /&gt;in his bicep, the feeling like biting down on a cracked tooth. "You're not&lt;br /&gt;welcome."&lt;br /&gt;Davey was monkeyed over low, arms swinging like a chimp, teeth bared, knees&lt;br /&gt;splayed and ready to uncoil and pounce. "You think you'll stab me with that?" he&lt;br /&gt;said, jerking his chin at the knife. "Or are you just going to bleed yourself out&lt;br /&gt;with it?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan steadied his knife hand before him, unmindful of the sticky blood. He knew&lt;br /&gt;that the pounce was coming, but that didn't help when it came. Davey leapt for him&lt;br /&gt;and he slashed once with the knife, Davey ducking beneath the arc, and then Davey&lt;br /&gt;had his forearm in his hands, his teeth fastened onto the meat of his knife thumb.&lt;br /&gt;Andre rolled to one side and gripped down hard on the knife, tugging his arm&lt;br /&gt;ineffectually against the grip of the cruel teeth and the grasping bony fingers.&lt;br /&gt;Davey had lost his boyish charm, gone simian with filth and rage, and the sore and&lt;br /&gt;weak blows Alan was able to muster with his hurt arm didn't seem to register with&lt;br /&gt;Danny at all as he bit down harder.&lt;br /&gt;Arnold dragged his arm up higher, dragging the glinting knifetip toward Davey's&lt;br /&gt;face. Drew kicked at his shins, planted a knee alongside his groin. Alan whipped&lt;br /&gt;his head back, then brought it forward as fast and hard as he could, hammering his&lt;br /&gt;forehead into the crown of Davey's head so hard that his head rang like a bell.&lt;br /&gt;He stunned Davey free of his hand and stunned himself onto his back. He felt small&lt;br /&gt;hands beneath each armpit, dragging him clear of the hill. Brian. And George. They&lt;br /&gt;helped him to his feet and Breton handed him the knife again. Darren got onto his&lt;br /&gt;knees, and then to his feet, holding the back of his head.&lt;br /&gt;They both swayed slightly, standing to either side of Chris's rise. Alan's knifehand&lt;br /&gt;was red with blood streaming from the bite wounds and his other arm felt&lt;br /&gt;unaccountably heavy now.&lt;br /&gt;Davey was staggering back and forth a little, eyes dropping to the earth.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly, he dropped to one knee and scrabbled in the dirt, then scrambled back&lt;br /&gt;with something in his hand.&lt;br /&gt;Marci's fist.&lt;br /&gt;He waggled it at Andrew mockingly, then charged, crossing the distance between&lt;br /&gt;them with long, loping strides, the fist held out before him like a lance. Alan&lt;br /&gt;forgot the knife in his hand and shrank back, and then Davey was on him again,&lt;br /&gt;dropping the fist to the mud and taking hold of Alan's knife-wrist, digging his&lt;br /&gt;ragged nails into the bleeding bites there.&lt;br /&gt;Now Alan released the knife, so that it, too, fell to the mud, and the sound it&lt;br /&gt;made woke him from his reverie. He pulled his hand free of Davey's grip and&lt;br /&gt;punched him in the ear as hard as he could, simultaneously kneeing him in the&lt;br /&gt;groin. Davey hissed and punched him in the eye, a feeling like his eyeball was&lt;br /&gt;going to break open, a feeling like he'd been stabbed in the back of his eye&lt;br /&gt;socket.&lt;br /&gt;He planted a foot in the mud for leverage, then flipped Danny over so that Alan&lt;br /&gt;was on top, knees on his skinny chest. The knife was there beside Davey's head,&lt;br /&gt;and Alan snatched it up, holding it ready for stabbing.&lt;br /&gt;Danny's eyes narrowed.&lt;br /&gt;Alan could do it. Kill him altogether dead finished yeah. Stab him in the face or&lt;br /&gt;the heart or the lung, somewhere fatal. He could kill Davey and make him go away&lt;br /&gt;forever.&lt;br /&gt;Davey caught his eye and held it. And Alan knew he couldn't do it, and an instant&lt;br /&gt;later, Davey knew it, too. He smiled a crusty smile and went limp.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, don't hurt me, *please*," he said mockingly. "Please, big brother, don't stab&lt;br /&gt;me with your big bad knife!"&lt;br /&gt;Alan hurt all over, but especially on his bicep and his thumb. His head sang with&lt;br /&gt;pain and blood loss.&lt;br /&gt;"Don't hurt me, please!" Davey said.&lt;br /&gt;Billy was standing before him, suddenly.&lt;br /&gt;"That's what Marci said when he took her, 'Don't hurt me, please,'" he said. "She&lt;br /&gt;said it over and over again. While he dragged her here. While he choked her to&lt;br /&gt;death."&lt;br /&gt;Alan held the knife tighter.&lt;br /&gt;"He said it over and over again as he cut her up and buried her. He *laughed.*"&lt;br /&gt;Danny suddenly bucked hard, almost throwing him, and before he had time to think,&lt;br /&gt;Alan had slashed down with the knife, aiming for the face, the throat, the lung.&lt;br /&gt;The tip landed in the middle of his bony chest and skated over each rib, going&lt;br /&gt;*tink, tink, tink* through the handle, like a xylophone. It scored along the&lt;br /&gt;emaciated and distended belly, then sank in just to one side of the smooth patch&lt;br /&gt;where a real person -- where Marci -- would have a navel.&lt;br /&gt;Davey howled and twisted free of the seeking edge, skipping back three steps while&lt;br /&gt;holding in the loop of gut that was trailing free of the incision.&lt;br /&gt;"She said, 'Don't hurt me.' She said, 'Please.' Over and over. He said it, too,&lt;br /&gt;and he laughed at her." Benny chanted it at him, standing just behind him, and the&lt;br /&gt;sound of his voice filled Alan's ears.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly Davey reeled back as a stone rebounded off of his shoulder. They both&lt;br /&gt;looked in the direction it had come from, and saw George, with the tail of his&lt;br /&gt;shirt aproned before him, filled with small, jagged stones from the edge of the&lt;br /&gt;hot spring in their father's depths. They took turns throwing those stones,&lt;br /&gt;skimming them over the water, and Ed and Fred and George had a vicious arm.&lt;br /&gt;Davey turned and snarled and started upslope toward George, and a stone took him&lt;br /&gt;in the back of the neck, thrown by Freddie, who had sought cover behind a thick&lt;br /&gt;pine that couldn't disguise the red of his windbreaker, red as the inside of his&lt;br /&gt;lip, which pouted out as he considered his next toss.&lt;br /&gt;He was downslope, and so Drew was able to bridge the distance between them very&lt;br /&gt;quickly -- he was almost upon Felix when a third stone, bigger and faster than the&lt;br /&gt;others, took him in the back of the head with terrible speed, making a sound like&lt;br /&gt;a hammer missing the nail and hitting solid wood instead.&lt;br /&gt;It was Ernie, of course, standing on Craig's highest point, winding up for another&lt;br /&gt;toss.&lt;br /&gt;The threesome's second volley hit him all at once, from three sides, high, low,&lt;br /&gt;and medium.&lt;br /&gt;"Killed her, cut her up, buried her," Benny chanted. "Sliced her open and cut her&lt;br /&gt;up," he called.&lt;br /&gt;"SHUT UP!" Davey screamed. He was bleeding from the back of his head, the blood&lt;br /&gt;trickling down the knobs of his spine, and he was crying, sobbing.&lt;br /&gt;"KILLED HER, CUT HER UP, SLICED HER OPEN," Ed-Fred-George chanted in unison.&lt;br /&gt;Alan tightened his grip on the cords wound around the handle of his knife, and his&lt;br /&gt;knife hand bled from the puncture wounds left by Davey's teeth.&lt;br /&gt;Davey saw him coming and dropped to his knees, crying. Sobbing.&lt;br /&gt;"Please," he said, holding his hands out before him, palms together, begging.&lt;br /&gt;"Please," he said, as the loop of intestine he'd been holding in trailed free.&lt;br /&gt;"Please," he said, as Alan seized him by the hair, jerked his head back, and&lt;br /&gt;swiftly brought the knife across his throat.&lt;br /&gt;Benny took his knife, and Ed-Fred-George coaxed Clarence into a slow, deep&lt;br /&gt;fissuring. They dragged the body into the earthy crack and Clarence swallowed up&lt;br /&gt;their brother.&lt;br /&gt;Benny led Alan to the cave, where they'd changed his bedding and laid out a halfeaten&lt;br /&gt;candy bar, a shopping bag filled with bramble-berries, and a lock of Marci's&lt;br /&gt;hair, tied into a knot.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan dragged all of his suitcases up from the basement to the living room, from&lt;br /&gt;the tiny tin valise plastered with genuine vintage deco railway stickers to the&lt;br /&gt;steamer trunk that he'd always intended to refurbish as a bathroom cabinet. He&lt;br /&gt;hadn't been home in fifteen years. Nearly half his life. What should he bring?&lt;br /&gt;Clothes were the easiest. It was coming up on the cusp of July and August, and he&lt;br /&gt;remembered boyhood summers on the mountain's slopes abuzz with blackflies and&lt;br /&gt;syrupy heat. White T-shirts, lightweight trousers, high-tech hiking boots that&lt;br /&gt;breathed, a thin jacket for the mosquitoes at dusk.&lt;br /&gt;He decided to pack four changes of clothes, which made a very small pile on the&lt;br /&gt;sofa. Small suitcase. The little rolling carry-on? The wheels would be useless on&lt;br /&gt;the rough cave floor.&lt;br /&gt;He paced and looked at the spines of his books, and paced more, into the kitchen.&lt;br /&gt;It was a beautiful summer day and the tall grasses in the back yard nodded in the&lt;br /&gt;soft breeze. He stepped through the screen door and out into the garden and let&lt;br /&gt;the wild grasses scrape over his thighs. Ivy and wild sunflowers climbed the fence&lt;br /&gt;that separated his yard from his neighbors, and through the chinks in the green&lt;br /&gt;armor, he saw someone moving.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi.&lt;br /&gt;Pacing her garden, neatly tended vegetable beds, some flowering bulbs. Skirt and a&lt;br /&gt;cream linen blazer that rucked up over her shoulders, moving restlessly.&lt;br /&gt;Powerfully.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's breath caught in his throat. Her pale, round calves flashed in the sun. He&lt;br /&gt;felt himself harden, painfully. He must have gasped, or given some sign, or&lt;br /&gt;perhaps she heard his skin tighten over his body into a great goosepimply mass.&lt;br /&gt;Her head turned.&lt;br /&gt;Their eyes met and he jolted. He was frozen in his footsteps by her gaze. One&lt;br /&gt;cheek was livid with a purple bruise, the eye above it slitted and puffed. She&lt;br /&gt;took a step toward him, her jacket opening to reveal a shapeless grey sweatshirt&lt;br /&gt;stained with food and -- blood?&lt;br /&gt;"Mimi?" he breathed.&lt;br /&gt;She squeezed her eyes shut, her face turning into a fright mask.&lt;br /&gt;"Abel," she said. "Nice day."&lt;br /&gt;"Are you all right?" he said. He'd had his girls, his employees, show up for work&lt;br /&gt;in this state before. He knew the signs. "Is he in the house now?"&lt;br /&gt;She pulled up a corner of her lip into a sneer and he saw that it was split, and a&lt;br /&gt;trickle of blood wet her teeth and stained them pink.&lt;br /&gt;"Sleeping," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He swallowed. "I can call the cops, or a shelter, or both."&lt;br /&gt;She laughed. "I gave as good as I got," she said. "We're more than even."&lt;br /&gt;"I don't care," he said. "'Even' is irrelevant. Are you *safe*?"&lt;br /&gt;"Safe as houses," she said. "Thanks for your concern." She turned back toward her&lt;br /&gt;back door.&lt;br /&gt;"Wait," he said. She shrugged and the wings under her jacket strained against the&lt;br /&gt;fabric. She reached for the door. He jammed his fingers into the chain-link near&lt;br /&gt;the top and hauled himself, scrambling, over the fence, landing on all fours in a&lt;br /&gt;splintering of tomato plants and sticks.&lt;br /&gt;He got to his feet and bridged the distance between them.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't believe you, Mimi," he said. "I don't believe you. Come over to my place&lt;br /&gt;and let me get you a cup of coffee and an ice pack and we'll talk about it,&lt;br /&gt;please?"&lt;br /&gt;"Fuck off," she said tugging at the door. He wedged his toe in it, took her wrist&lt;br /&gt;gently.&lt;br /&gt;"Please," she said. "We'll wake him."&lt;br /&gt;"Come over," he said. "We won't wake him."&lt;br /&gt;She cracked her arm like a whip, shaking his hand off her wrist. She stared at him&lt;br /&gt;out of her swollen eye and he felt the jolt again. Some recognition. Some shock.&lt;br /&gt;Some mirror, his face tiny and distorted in her eye.&lt;br /&gt;She shivered.&lt;br /&gt;"Help me over the fence," she said pulling her skirt between her knees -- bruise&lt;br /&gt;on her thigh -- and tucking it behind her into her waistband. She jammed her bare&lt;br /&gt;toes into the link and he gripped one hard, straining calf in one hand and put the&lt;br /&gt;other on her padded, soft bottom, helping her up onto a perch atop the fence. He&lt;br /&gt;scrambled over and then took one bare foot, one warm calf, and guided her down.&lt;br /&gt;"Come inside," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She'd never been in his house. Natalie and Link went in and out to use his&lt;br /&gt;bathroom while they were enjoying the sunset on his porch, or to get a beer. But&lt;br /&gt;Mimi had never crossed his threshold. When she did, it felt like something he'd&lt;br /&gt;been missing there had been finally found.&lt;br /&gt;She looked around with a hint of a smile on her puffed lips. She ran her fingers&lt;br /&gt;over the cast-iron gas range he'd restored, caressing the bakelite knobs. She&lt;br /&gt;peered at the titles of the books in the kitchen bookcases, over the honey wood of&lt;br /&gt;the mismatched chairs and the smoothed-over scars of the big, simple table.&lt;br /&gt;"Come into the living room," Alan said. "I'll get you an ice pack."&lt;br /&gt;She let him guide her by the elbow, then crossed decisively to the windows and&lt;br /&gt;drew the curtains, bringing on twilight. He moved aside his piles of clothes and&lt;br /&gt;stacked up the suitcases in a corner.&lt;br /&gt;"Going somewhere?"&lt;br /&gt;"To see my family," he said. She smiled and her lip cracked anew, dripping a&lt;br /&gt;single dark droplet of blood onto the gleaming wood of the floor, where it beaded&lt;br /&gt;like water on wax paper.&lt;br /&gt;"Home again, home again, jiggety jig," she said. Her nearly closed eye was bright&lt;br /&gt;and it darted around the room, taking in shelves, fireplace, chairs, clothes.&lt;br /&gt;"I'll get you that ice pack," he said. As he went back into the kitchen, he heard&lt;br /&gt;her walking around in the living room, and he remembered the first time he'd met&lt;br /&gt;her, of walking around her living room and thinking about slipping a VCD into his&lt;br /&gt;pocket.&lt;br /&gt;He found her halfway up the staircase with one of the shallow bric-a-brac cabinets&lt;br /&gt;open before her. She was holding a Made-in-Occupied-Japan tin robot, the paint&lt;br /&gt;crazed with age into craquelaire like a Dutch Master painting in a gallery.&lt;br /&gt;"Turn it upside down," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She looked at him, then turned it over, revealing the insides of the tin,&lt;br /&gt;revealing the gaudily printed tuna-fish label from the original can that it had&lt;br /&gt;been fashioned from.&lt;br /&gt;"Huh," she said and peered down into it. He hit the light switch at the bottom of&lt;br /&gt;the stairs so that she could see better. "Beautiful," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Have it," he said surprising himself. He'd have to remove it from The Inventory.&lt;br /&gt;He restrained himself from going upstairs and doing it before he forgot.&lt;br /&gt;For the first time he could remember, she looked flustered. Her unbruised cheek&lt;br /&gt;went crimson.&lt;br /&gt;"I couldn't," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's yours," he said. He went up the stairs and closed the cabinet, then folded&lt;br /&gt;her fingers around the robot and led her by the wrist back down to the sofa. "Ice&lt;br /&gt;pack," he said handing it to her, releasing her wrist.&lt;br /&gt;She sat stiff-spined in on the sofa, the hump of her wings behind her keeping her&lt;br /&gt;from reclining. She caught him staring.&lt;br /&gt;"It's time to trim them," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, yes?" he said, mind going back to the gridwork of old scars by her shoulders.&lt;br /&gt;"When they get too big, I can't sit properly or lie on my back. At least not while&lt;br /&gt;I'm wearing a shirt."&lt;br /&gt;"Couldn't you, I don't know, cut the back out of a shirt?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," she said. "Or go topless. Or wear a halter. But not in public."&lt;br /&gt;"No, not in public. Secrets must be kept."&lt;br /&gt;"You've got a lot of secrets, huh?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Some," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Deep, dark ones?"&lt;br /&gt;"All secrets become deep. All secrets become dark. That's in the nature of&lt;br /&gt;secrets."&lt;br /&gt;She pressed the towel-wrapped bag of ice to her face and rolled her head back and&lt;br /&gt;forth on her neck. He heard pops and crackles as her muscles and vertebrae&lt;br /&gt;unlimbered.&lt;br /&gt;"Hang on," he said. He ran up to his room and dug through his T-shirt drawer until&lt;br /&gt;he found one that he didn't mind parting with. He brought it back downstairs and&lt;br /&gt;held it up for her to see. "Steel Pole Bathtub," he said. "Retro chic. I can cut&lt;br /&gt;the back out for you, at least while you're here."&lt;br /&gt;She closed her eyes. "I'd like that," she said in a small voice.&lt;br /&gt;So he got his kitchen shears and went to work on the back of the shirt, cutting a&lt;br /&gt;sizable hole in the back of the fabric. He folded duct tape around the ragged&lt;br /&gt;edges to keep them from fraying. She watched bemusedly.&lt;br /&gt;"Freakshow Martha Stewart," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He smiled and passed her the shirt. "I'll give you some privacy," he said, and&lt;br /&gt;went back into the kitchen and put away the shears and the tape. He tried not to&lt;br /&gt;listen to the soft rustle of clothing in the other room.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan," she said -- *Alan* and not *Asshole* or *Abel* -- "I could use some help."&lt;br /&gt;He stepped cautiously into the living room and saw there, in the curtained&lt;br /&gt;twilight, Mimi. She was topless, heavy breasts marked red with the outline of her&lt;br /&gt;bra straps and wires. They hung weightily, swaying, and stopped him in the&lt;br /&gt;doorway. She had her arms lifted over her head, tugging her round belly up,&lt;br /&gt;stretching her navel into a cat-eye slit. The T-shirt he'd given her was tangled&lt;br /&gt;in her arms and in her wings.&lt;br /&gt;Her magnificent wings.&lt;br /&gt;They were four feet long each, and they stretched, one through the neck hole and&lt;br /&gt;the other through the hole he'd cut in the T-shirt's back. They were leathery as&lt;br /&gt;he remembered, covered in a downy fur that glowed where it was kissed by the few&lt;br /&gt;shafts of light piercing the gap in the drapes. He reached for the questing,&lt;br /&gt;almost prehensile tip of the one that was caught in the neck hole. It was&lt;br /&gt;muscular, like a strong finger, curling against his palm like a Masonic handshake.&lt;br /&gt;When he touched her wing, she gasped and shivered, indeterminately between erotic&lt;br /&gt;and outraged. They were as he imagined them, these wings, strong and primal and&lt;br /&gt;dark and spicy-smelling like an armpit after sex.&lt;br /&gt;He gently guided the tip down toward the neck hole and marveled at the intricate&lt;br /&gt;way that it folded in on itself, at the play of mysterious muscle and cartilage,&lt;br /&gt;the rustle of bristling hair, and the motility of the skin.&lt;br /&gt;It accordioned down and he tugged the shirt around it so that it came free, and&lt;br /&gt;then he slid the front of the shirt down over her breasts, painfully aware of his&lt;br /&gt;erection as the fabric rustled down over her rounded belly.&lt;br /&gt;As her head emerged through the shirt, she shook her hair out and then unfolded&lt;br /&gt;her wings, slowly and exquisitely, like a cat stretching out, bending forward,&lt;br /&gt;spreading them like sails. He ducked beneath one, feeling its puff of spiced air&lt;br /&gt;on his face, and found himself staring at the hash of scars and the rigid ropes of&lt;br /&gt;hyperextended muscle and joints. Tentatively, he traced the scars with his thumbs,&lt;br /&gt;then, when she made no move to stop him, he dug his thumbs into the muscles, into&lt;br /&gt;their tension.&lt;br /&gt;He kneaded at her flesh, grinding hard at the knots and feeling them give way,&lt;br /&gt;briskly rubbing the spots where they'd been to get the blood going. Her wings&lt;br /&gt;flapped gently around him as he worked, not caring that his body was pretzeled&lt;br /&gt;into a knot of its own to reach her back, since he didn't want to break the spell&lt;br /&gt;to ask her to move over to give him a better angle.&lt;br /&gt;He could smell her armpit and her wings and her hair and he closed his eyes and&lt;br /&gt;worked by touch, following scar to muscle, muscle to knot, working his way the&lt;br /&gt;length and breadth of her back, following the muscle up from the ridge of her&lt;br /&gt;iliac crest like a treasure trail to the muscle of her left wing, which was softly&lt;br /&gt;twitching with pleasure.&lt;br /&gt;She went perfectly still again when he took the wing in his hands. It had its own&lt;br /&gt;geometry, hard to understand and irresistible. He followed the mysterious and&lt;br /&gt;powerful muscles and bones, the vast expanses of cartilage, finding knots and&lt;br /&gt;squeezing them, kneading her as he'd kneaded her back, and she groaned and went&lt;br /&gt;limp, leaning back against him so that his face was in her hair and smelling her&lt;br /&gt;scalp oil and stale shampoo and sweat. It was all he could do to keep himself from&lt;br /&gt;burying his face in her hair and gnawing at the muscles at the base of her skull.&lt;br /&gt;He moved as slow as a seaweed and ran his hands over to her other wing, giving it&lt;br /&gt;the same treatment. He was rock-hard, pressed against her, her wings all around&lt;br /&gt;him. He traced the line of her jaw to her chin, and they were breathing in unison,&lt;br /&gt;and his fingers found the tense place at the hinge and worked there, too.&lt;br /&gt;Then he brushed against her bruised cheek and she startled, and that shocked him&lt;br /&gt;back to reality. He dropped his hands to his sides and then stood, realized his&lt;br /&gt;erection was straining at his shorts, sat back down again in one of the club&lt;br /&gt;chairs, and crossed his legs.&lt;br /&gt;"Well," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi unfolded her wings over the sofa-back and let them spread out, then leaned&lt;br /&gt;back, eyes closed.&lt;br /&gt;"You should try the ice-pack again," he said weakly. She groped blindly for it and&lt;br /&gt;draped it over her face.&lt;br /&gt;"Thank you," she sighed.&lt;br /&gt;He suppressed the urge to apologize. "You're welcome," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"It started last week," she said. "My wings had gotten longer. Too long. Krishna&lt;br /&gt;came home from the club and he was drunk and he wanted sex. Wanted me on the&lt;br /&gt;bottom. I couldn't. My wings. He wanted to get the knife right away and cut them&lt;br /&gt;off. We do it about four times a year, using a big serrated hunting knife he&lt;br /&gt;bought at a sporting-goods store on Yonge Street, one of those places that sells&lt;br /&gt;dud grenades and camou pants and tasers."&lt;br /&gt;She opened her eyes and looked at him, then closed them. He shivered and a goose&lt;br /&gt;walked over his grave.&lt;br /&gt;"We do it in the tub. I stand in the tub, naked, and he saws off the wings right&lt;br /&gt;to my shoulders. I don't bleed much. He gives me a towel to bite on while he cuts.&lt;br /&gt;To scream into. And then we put them in garden trash bags and he puts them out&lt;br /&gt;just before the garbage men arrive, so the neighborhood dogs don't get at them.&lt;br /&gt;For the meat."&lt;br /&gt;He noticed that he was gripping the arm rests so tightly that his hands were&lt;br /&gt;cramping. He pried them loose and tucked them under his thighs.&lt;br /&gt;"He dragged me into the bathroom. One second, we were rolling around in bed,&lt;br /&gt;giggling like kids in love, and then he had me so hard by the wrist, dragging me&lt;br /&gt;naked to the bathroom, his knife in his other fist. I had to keep quiet, so that I&lt;br /&gt;wouldn't wake Link and Natalie, but he was hurting me, and I was scared. I tried&lt;br /&gt;to say something to him, but I could only squeak. He hurled me into the tub and I&lt;br /&gt;cracked my head against the tile. I cried out and he crossed the bathroom and put&lt;br /&gt;his hand over my mouth and nose and then I couldn't breathe, and my head was&lt;br /&gt;swimming.&lt;br /&gt;"He was naked and hard, and he had the knife in his fist, not like for slicing,&lt;br /&gt;but for stabbing, and his eyes were red from the smoke at the club, and the&lt;br /&gt;bathroom filled with the booze-breath smell, and I sank down in the tub, shrinking&lt;br /&gt;away from him as he grabbed for me.&lt;br /&gt;"He -- *growled*. Saw that I was staring at the knife. Smiled. Horribly. There's a&lt;br /&gt;piece of granite we use for a soap dish, balanced in the corner of the tub.&lt;br /&gt;Without thinking, I grabbed it and threw it as hard as I could at him. It broke&lt;br /&gt;his nose and he closed his eyes and reached for his face and I wrapped him up in&lt;br /&gt;the shower curtain and grabbed his arm and bit at the base of his thumb so hard I&lt;br /&gt;heard a bone break and he dropped the knife. I grabbed it and ran back to our room&lt;br /&gt;and threw it out the window and started to get dressed."&lt;br /&gt;She'd fallen into a monotone now, but her wingtips twitched and her knees bounced&lt;br /&gt;like her motor was idling on high. She jiggled.&lt;br /&gt;"You don't have to tell me this," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She took off the ice pack. "Yes, I do," she said. Her eyes seemed to have sunk&lt;br /&gt;into her skull, vanishing into dark pits. He'd thought her eyes were blue, or&lt;br /&gt;green, but they looked black now.&lt;br /&gt;"All right," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"All right," she said. "He came through the door and I didn't scream. I didn't&lt;br /&gt;want to wake up Link and Natalie. Isn't that stupid? But I couldn't get my&lt;br /&gt;sweatshirt on, and they would have seen my wings. He looked like he was going to&lt;br /&gt;kill me. Really. Hands in claws. Teeth out. Crouched down low like a chimp, ready&lt;br /&gt;to grab, ready to swing. And I was back in a corner again, just wearing track&lt;br /&gt;pants. He didn't have the knife this time, though.&lt;br /&gt;"When he came for me, I went limp, like I was too scared to move, and squeezed my&lt;br /&gt;eyes shut. Listened to his footsteps approach. Felt the creak of the bed as he&lt;br /&gt;stepped up on it. Felt his breath as he reached for me.&lt;br /&gt;"I exploded. I've read books on women's self-defense, and they talk about doing&lt;br /&gt;that, about exploding. You gather in all your energy and squeeze it tight, and&lt;br /&gt;then blamo boom, you explode. I was aiming for his soft parts: Balls. Eyes. Nose.&lt;br /&gt;Sternum. Ears. I'd misjudged where he was, though, so I missed most of my targets.&lt;br /&gt;"And then he was on me, kneeling on my tits, hands at my throat. I bucked him but&lt;br /&gt;I couldn't get him off. My chest and throat were crushed, my wings splayed out&lt;br /&gt;behind me. I flapped them and saw his hair move in the breeze. He was sweating&lt;br /&gt;hard, off his forehead and off his nose and lips. It was all so detailed. And&lt;br /&gt;silent. Neither of us made a sound louder than a grunt. Quieter than our sex&lt;br /&gt;noises. *Now* I wanted to scream, *wanted* to wake up Link and Natalie, but I&lt;br /&gt;couldn't get a breath.&lt;br /&gt;"I worked one hand free and I reached for the erection that I could feel just&lt;br /&gt;below my tits, reached as fast as a striking snake, grabbed it, grabbed his balls,&lt;br /&gt;and I yanked and I squeezed like I was trying to tear them off.&lt;br /&gt;"I was.&lt;br /&gt;"Now *he* was trying to get away and I had him cornered. I kept squeezing. That's&lt;br /&gt;when he kicked me in the face. I was dazed. He kicked me twice more, and I ran&lt;br /&gt;downstairs and got a parka from the closet and ran out into the front yard and out&lt;br /&gt;to the park and hid in the bushes until morning.&lt;br /&gt;"He was asleep when I came back in, after Natalie and Link had gone out. I found&lt;br /&gt;the knife beside the house and I went up to our room and I stood there, by the&lt;br /&gt;window, listening to you talk to them, holding the knife."&lt;br /&gt;She plumped herself on the cushions and flapped her wings once, softly, another&lt;br /&gt;puff of that warm air wafting over him. She picked up the tin robot he'd given her&lt;br /&gt;from the coffee table and turned it over in her hands, staring up its skirts at&lt;br /&gt;the tuna-fish illustration and the Japanese ideograms.&lt;br /&gt;"I had the knife, and I felt like I had to use it. You know Chekhov? 'If a gun is&lt;br /&gt;on the mantle in the first act, it must go off in the third.' I write one-act&lt;br /&gt;plays. Wrote. But it seemed to me that the knife had been in act one, when Krishna&lt;br /&gt;dragged me into the bathroom.&lt;br /&gt;"Or maybe act one was when he brought it home, after I showed him my wings.&lt;br /&gt;"And act two had been my night in the park. And act three was then, standing over&lt;br /&gt;him with the knife, cold and sore and tired, looking at the blood crusted on his&lt;br /&gt;face."&lt;br /&gt;Her face and her voice got very, very small, her expression distant. "I almost&lt;br /&gt;used it on myself. I almost opened my wrists onto his face. He liked it when I...&lt;br /&gt;rode... his face. Like the hot juices. Seemed mean-spirited to spill all that hot&lt;br /&gt;juice and deny him that pleasure. I thought about using it on him, too, but only&lt;br /&gt;for a second.&lt;br /&gt;"Only for a second.&lt;br /&gt;"And then he rolled over and his hands clenched into fists in his sleep and his&lt;br /&gt;expression changed, like he was dreaming about something that made him angry. So I&lt;br /&gt;left.&lt;br /&gt;"Do you want to know about when I first showed him these?" she said, and flapped&lt;br /&gt;her wings lazily.&lt;br /&gt;She took the ice pack from her face and he could see that the swelling had gone&lt;br /&gt;down, the discoloration faded to a dim shadow tinged with yellows and umbers.&lt;br /&gt;He did, but he didn't. The breeze of her great wings was strangely intimate, that&lt;br /&gt;smell more intimate than his touches or the moment in which he'd glimpsed her&lt;br /&gt;fine, weighty breasts with their texture of stretch marks and underwire grooves.&lt;br /&gt;He was awkward, foolish feeling.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't think I do," he said at last. "I think that we should save some things to&lt;br /&gt;tell each other for later."&lt;br /&gt;She blinked, slow and lazy, and one tear rolled down and dripped off her nose,&lt;br /&gt;splashing on the red T-shirt and darkening it to wineish purple.&lt;br /&gt;"Will you sit with me?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;He crossed the room and sat on the other end of the sofa, his hand on the seam&lt;br /&gt;that joined the two halves together, crossing the border into her territory, an&lt;br /&gt;invitation that could be refused without awkwardness.&lt;br /&gt;She covered his hand with hers, and hers was cold and smooth but not distant:&lt;br /&gt;immediate, scritching and twitching against his skin. Slowly, slowly, she leaned&lt;br /&gt;toward him, curling her wing round his far shoulder like a blanket or a lover's&lt;br /&gt;arm, head coming to rest on his chest, breath hot on his nipple through the thin&lt;br /&gt;fabric of his T-shirt.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan?" she murmured into his chest.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes?"&lt;br /&gt;"What are we?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Are we human? Where do we come from? How did we get here? Why do I have wings?"&lt;br /&gt;He closed his eyes and found that they'd welled up with tears. Once the first tear&lt;br /&gt;slid down his cheek, the rest came, and he was crying, weeping silently at first&lt;br /&gt;and then braying like a donkey in sobs that started in his balls and emerged from&lt;br /&gt;his throat like vomit, gushing out with hot tears and hot snot.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi enveloped him in her wings and kissed his tears away, working down his cheeks&lt;br /&gt;to his neck, his Adam's apple.&lt;br /&gt;He snuffled back a mouthful of mucus and salt and wailed, "I don't know!"&lt;br /&gt;She snugged her mouth up against his collarbone. "Krishna does," she whispered&lt;br /&gt;into his skin. She tugged at the skin with her teeth. "What about your family?"&lt;br /&gt;He swallowed a couple of times, painfully aware of her lips and breath on his&lt;br /&gt;skin, the enveloping coolth of her wings, and the smell in every breath he took.&lt;br /&gt;He wanted to blow his nose, but he couldn't move without breaking the spell, so he&lt;br /&gt;hoarked his sinuses back into his throat and drank the oozing oyster of self-pity&lt;br /&gt;that slid down his throat.&lt;br /&gt;"My family?"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't have a family, but you do," she said. "Your family must know."&lt;br /&gt;"They don't," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Maybe you haven't asked them properly. When are you leaving?"&lt;br /&gt;"Today."&lt;br /&gt;"Driving?"&lt;br /&gt;"Got a rental car," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Room for one more?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Then take me," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"All right," he said. She raised her head and kissed him on the lips, and he could&lt;br /&gt;taste the smell now, and the blood roared in his ears as she straddled his lap,&lt;br /&gt;grinding her mons -- hot through the thin cotton of her skirt -- against him. They&lt;br /&gt;slid down on the sofa and they groaned into each others' mouths, his voice box&lt;br /&gt;resonating with hers.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He parked the rental car in the driveway, finishing his cell phone conversation&lt;br /&gt;with Lyman and then popping the trunk before getting out. He glanced reflexively&lt;br /&gt;up at Mimi and Krishna's windows, saw the blinds were still drawn.&lt;br /&gt;When he got to the living room, Mimi was bent over a suitcase, forcing it closed.&lt;br /&gt;Two more were lined up beside the door, along with three shopping bags filled with&lt;br /&gt;tupperwares and ziplocs of food from his fridge.&lt;br /&gt;"I've borrowed some of your clothes," she said. "Didn't want to have to go back&lt;br /&gt;for mine. Packed us a picnic, too."&lt;br /&gt;He planted his hands on his hips. "You thought of everything, huh?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;She cast her eyes down. "I'm sorry," she said in a small voice. "I couldn't go&lt;br /&gt;home." Her wings unfolded and folded down again nervously.&lt;br /&gt;He went and stood next to her. He could still smell the sex on her, and on him. A&lt;br /&gt;livid hickey stood out on her soft skin on her throat. He twined her fingers in&lt;br /&gt;his and dropped his face down to her ear.&lt;br /&gt;"It's okay," he said huskily. "I'm glad you did it."&lt;br /&gt;She turned her head and brushed her lips over his, brushed her hand over his&lt;br /&gt;groin. He groaned softly.&lt;br /&gt;"We have to get driving," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," she said. "Load the car, then bring it around the side. I'll lie down on&lt;br /&gt;the back seat until we're out of the neighborhood."&lt;br /&gt;"You've thought about this a lot, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's all I've thought of," she said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She climbed over the back seat once they cleared Queen Street, giggling as her&lt;br /&gt;wings, trapped under her jacket, brushed the roof of the big Crown Victoria he'd&lt;br /&gt;rented. She prodded at the radio and found a college station, staticky and&lt;br /&gt;amateurish, and nodded her head along with the mash-up mixes and concert bootlegs&lt;br /&gt;the DJ was spinning.&lt;br /&gt;Alan watched her in the rearview and felt impossibly old and strange. She'd been&lt;br /&gt;an incredible and attentive lover, using her hands and mouth, her breasts and&lt;br /&gt;wings, her whole body to keep him quivering on the brink of orgasm for what felt&lt;br /&gt;like hours, before finally giving him release, and then had guided him around her&lt;br /&gt;body with explicit instructions and firm hands on his shoulders. When she came,&lt;br /&gt;she squeezed him between her thighs and screamed into his neck, twitching and&lt;br /&gt;shuddering for a long time afterward, holding him tight, murmuring nonsense and&lt;br /&gt;hot breath.&lt;br /&gt;In the dark, she'd seemed older. His age, or some indeterminate age. Now, sitting&lt;br /&gt;next to him, privately spazzing out to the beat, she seemed, oh, 12 or so. A&lt;br /&gt;little girl. He felt dirty.&lt;br /&gt;"Where are we going?" she said, rolling down the window and shouting over the wind&lt;br /&gt;as they bombed up the Don Valley Parkway. The traffic had let up at Sheppard, and&lt;br /&gt;now they were making good time, heading for the faceless surburbs of Richmond Hill&lt;br /&gt;and Thornhill, and beyond.&lt;br /&gt;"North," he said. "Past Kapuskasing."&lt;br /&gt;She whistled. "How long a drive is it?"&lt;br /&gt;"Fifteen hours. Twenty, maybe. Depends on the roads -- you can hit cottage traffic&lt;br /&gt;or a bad accident and get hung up for hours. There are good motels between&lt;br /&gt;Huntsville and North Bay if we get tired out. Nice neon signs, magic fingers beds.&lt;br /&gt;A place I like has 'Swiss Cabins' and makes a nice rosti for dinner."&lt;br /&gt;"God, that's a long trip," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," he said, wondering if she wanted out. "I can pull off here and give you&lt;br /&gt;cab fare to the subway station if you wanna stay."&lt;br /&gt;"No!" she said quickly. "No. Want to go."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She fed him as he drove, slicing cheese and putting it on crackers with bits of&lt;br /&gt;olive or pepper or salami. It appeared that she'd packed his entire fridge in the&lt;br /&gt;picnic bags.&lt;br /&gt;After suppertime, she went to work on an apple, and he took a closer look at the&lt;br /&gt;knife she was using. It was a big, black hunting knife, with a compass built into&lt;br /&gt;the handle. The blade was black except right at the edge, where it gleamed sharp&lt;br /&gt;in the click-clack of the passing highway lights.&lt;br /&gt;He was transfixed by it, and the car drifted a little, sprayed gravel from the&lt;br /&gt;shoulder, and he overcorrected and fishtailed a little. She looked up in alarm.&lt;br /&gt;"You brought the knife," he said, in response to her unasked question.&lt;br /&gt;"Couldn't leave it with him," she said. "Besides, a sharp knife is handy."&lt;br /&gt;"Careful you don't slice anything off, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"I never cut anything *unintentionally*," she said in a silly-dramatic voice, and&lt;br /&gt;socked him in the shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;He snorted and went back to the driving, putting the hammer down, eating up the&lt;br /&gt;kilometers toward Huntsville and beyond.&lt;br /&gt;She fed him slices of apple and ate some herself, then rolls of ham with little&lt;br /&gt;pieces of pear in them, then sips of cherry juice from a glass bottle.&lt;br /&gt;"Enough," he said at last. "I'm stuffed, woman!"&lt;br /&gt;She laughed. "Skinny little fucker -- gotta put some meat on your bones." She&lt;br /&gt;tidied the dinner detritus into an empty shopping bag and tossed it over her&lt;br /&gt;shoulder into the back seat.&lt;br /&gt;"So," she said. "How long since you've been home?"&lt;br /&gt;He stared at the road for a while. "Twenty years," he said. "Never been back since&lt;br /&gt;I left."&lt;br /&gt;She stared straight forward and worked her hand under his thigh, so he was sitting&lt;br /&gt;on it, then wriggled her knuckles.&lt;br /&gt;"I've never been home," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He wrinkled his brow. "What's that mean?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's a long story," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, let's get off the highway and get a room and you can tell me, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"Sure," she said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;They ended up at the Timberline Wilderness Lodge and Pancake House, and Mimi&lt;br /&gt;clapped her hands at the silk-flowers-and-waterbeds ambience of the room, fondled&lt;br /&gt;the grisly jackalope head on the wall, and started running a tub while Alan&lt;br /&gt;carried in the suitcases.&lt;br /&gt;She dramatically tossed her clothes, one item at a time, out the bathroom door,&lt;br /&gt;through the clouds of steam, and he caught a glimpse of her round, full ass,&lt;br /&gt;bracketed by her restless wings, as she poured into the tub the bottle of cheap&lt;br /&gt;bubble-bath she'd bought in the lobby.&lt;br /&gt;He dug a T-shirt and a fresh pair of boxers to sleep in out of his suitcase,&lt;br /&gt;feeling ridiculously modest as he donned them. His feet crunched over cigarette&lt;br /&gt;burns and tangles in the brown shag carpet and he wished he'd brought along some&lt;br /&gt;slippers. He flipped through both snowy TV channels and decided that he couldn't&lt;br /&gt;stomach a televangelist or a thirty-year-old sitcom right then and flicked it off,&lt;br /&gt;sitting on the edge of the bed, listening to the splashing from the bathroom.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi was in awfully good spirits, considering what she'd been through with&lt;br /&gt;Krishna. He tried to think about it, trying to make sense of the day and the girl,&lt;br /&gt;but the splashing from the tub kept intruding on his thoughts.&lt;br /&gt;She began to sing, and after a second he recognized the tune. "White Rabbit," by&lt;br /&gt;the Jefferson Airplane. Not the kind of thing he'd expect her to be giving voice&lt;br /&gt;to; nor she, apparently, for she kept breaking off to giggle. Finally, he poked&lt;br /&gt;his head through the door.&lt;br /&gt;She was folded into the tub, knees and tits above the foamline, wings slick with&lt;br /&gt;water and dripping in the tile. Her hands were out of sight beneath the suds. She&lt;br /&gt;caught his eye and grinned crazily, then her hands shot out of the pool, clutching&lt;br /&gt;the hunting knife.&lt;br /&gt;"*Put on the White Rabbit!*" she howled, cackling fiendishly.&lt;br /&gt;He leapt back and she continued to cackle. "Come back, come back," she choked.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm doing the tub scene from *Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas*. I thought you were&lt;br /&gt;into reading?"&lt;br /&gt;He cautiously peeked around the doorjamb, playing it up for comic effect. "Give me&lt;br /&gt;the knife," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Awww," she said, handing it over, butt first. He set it down on the dresser, then&lt;br /&gt;hurried back to the bathroom.&lt;br /&gt;"Haven't you read all those books?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan grinned. "What's the point of a bunch of books you've already read?" He&lt;br /&gt;dropped his boxers and stripped off his T-shirt and climbed into the tub, sloshing&lt;br /&gt;gallons of water over the scummy tile floor.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;When I was two years old,&lt;br /&gt;(she said, later, as she reclined against the headboard and he reclined against&lt;br /&gt;her, their asses deforming the rusted springs of the mattress so that it sloped&lt;br /&gt;toward them and the tins of soda they'd opened to replenish their bodily fluids&lt;br /&gt;lost in sweat and otherwise threatened to tip over on the slope; she encased him&lt;br /&gt;in her wings, shutting out the light and filling their air with the smell of&lt;br /&gt;cinnamon and pepper from the downy hair)&lt;br /&gt;When I was two years old,&lt;br /&gt;(she said, speaking into the shaggy hair at the back of his neck, as his sore&lt;br /&gt;muscles trembled and as the sweat dried to a white salt residue on his skin, as he&lt;br /&gt;lay there in the dark of the room and the wings, watching the constellation of&lt;br /&gt;reflected clock-radio lights in the black TV screen)&lt;br /&gt;When I was two years old,&lt;br /&gt;(she began, her body tensing from toes to tip in a movement that he felt along the&lt;br /&gt;length of his body, portending the time when lovers close their eyes and open&lt;br /&gt;their mouths and utter the secrets that they hide from everyone, even themselves)&lt;br /&gt;When I was two years old, my wings were the size of a cherub's, and they had&lt;br /&gt;featherlets that were white as snow. I lived with my "aunt," an old Russian lady&lt;br /&gt;near Downsview Air Force Base, a blasted suburb where the shops all closed on&lt;br /&gt;Saturday for Sabbath and the black-hatted Hasids marked the days by walking from&lt;br /&gt;one end to the other on their way to temple.&lt;br /&gt;The old Russian lady took me out for walks in a big black baby buggy the size of a&lt;br /&gt;bathtub. She tucked me in tight so that my wings were pinned beneath me. But when&lt;br /&gt;we were at home, in her little apartment with the wind-up Sputnik that played "The&lt;br /&gt;Internationale," she would let my wings out and light the candles and watch me&lt;br /&gt;wobble around the room, my wings flapping, her chin in her hands, her eyes bright.&lt;br /&gt;She made me mashed up cabbage and seed and beef, and bottles of dilute juice. For&lt;br /&gt;dessert, we had hard candies, and I'd toddle around with my toys, drooling sugar&lt;br /&gt;syrup while the old Russian lady watched.&lt;br /&gt;By the time I was four, the feathers had all fallen out, and I was supposed to go&lt;br /&gt;to school, I knew that. "Auntie" had explained to me that the kids that I saw&lt;br /&gt;passing by were on their way to school, and that I'd go some day and learn, too.&lt;br /&gt;She didn't speak much English, so I grew up speaking a creole of Russian,&lt;br /&gt;Ukranian, Polish and English, and I used my words to ask her, with more and more&lt;br /&gt;insistence, when I'd get to go to class.&lt;br /&gt;I couldn't read or write, and neither could she. But I could take apart gadgets&lt;br /&gt;like nobody's business. Someone -- maybe Auntie's long dead husband -- had left&lt;br /&gt;her a junky tool kit with cracked handles and chipped tips, and I attacked&lt;br /&gt;anything that I could get unplugged from the wall: the big cabinet TV and radio,&lt;br /&gt;the suitcase record player, the Sputnik music box. I unwired the lamps and peered&lt;br /&gt;at the workings of the electric kitchen clock.&lt;br /&gt;That was four. Five was the year I put it all back together again. I started with&lt;br /&gt;the lamps, then the motor in the blender, then the toaster elements. I made the&lt;br /&gt;old TV work. I don't think I knew how any of it *really* worked -- couldn't tell&lt;br /&gt;you a thing about, you know, electrical engineering, but I just got a sense of how&lt;br /&gt;it was *supposed* to go together.&lt;br /&gt;Auntie didn't let me out of the apartment after five. I could watch the kids go by&lt;br /&gt;from the window -- skinny Hasids with side-curls and Filipinos with pretty ribbons&lt;br /&gt;and teenagers who smoked, but I couldn't go to them. I watched *Sesame Street* and&lt;br /&gt;*Mr. Dressup* and I began to soak up English. I began to soak up the idea of&lt;br /&gt;playing with other kids.&lt;br /&gt;I began to soak up the fact that none of the kids on the TV had wings.&lt;br /&gt;Auntie left me alone in the afternoons while she went out shopping and banking and&lt;br /&gt;whatever else it was she did, and it was during those times that I could get&lt;br /&gt;myself into her bedroom and go rooting around her things.&lt;br /&gt;She had a lot of mysterious beige foundation garments that were utterly&lt;br /&gt;inexplicable, and a little box of jewelry that I liked to taste, because the real&lt;br /&gt;gold tasted really rich when I sucked on it, and a stack of old cigarette tins&lt;br /&gt;full of frayed photos.&lt;br /&gt;The pictures were stiff and mysterious. Faces loomed out of featureless black&lt;br /&gt;backgrounds: pop-eyed, jug-eared Russian farm boys, awkward farm girls with&lt;br /&gt;process waves in their hair, everyone looking like they'd been stuffed and&lt;br /&gt;mounted. I guess they were her relatives, because if you squinted at them and&lt;br /&gt;cocked your head, you could kind of see her features in theirs, but not saggy and&lt;br /&gt;wrinkled and three-chinned, but young and tight and almost glowing. They all had&lt;br /&gt;big shoulders and clothing that looked like the kind of thing the Hasids wore,&lt;br /&gt;black and sober.&lt;br /&gt;The faces were interesting, especially after I figured out that one of them might&lt;br /&gt;belong to Auntie, but it was the blackness around them that fascinated me. The&lt;br /&gt;boys had black suits and the girls wore black dresses, and behind them was creased&lt;br /&gt;blackness, complete darkness, as though they'd put their heads through a black&lt;br /&gt;curtain.&lt;br /&gt;But the more I stared at the blackness, the more detail I picked out. I noticed&lt;br /&gt;the edge of a curtain, a fold, in one photo, and when I looked for it, I could&lt;br /&gt;just pick it out in the other photos. Eventually, I hit on the idea of using a&lt;br /&gt;water glass as a magnifying lens, and as I experimented with different levels of&lt;br /&gt;water, more detail leapt out of the old pictures.&lt;br /&gt;The curtains hanging behind them were dusty and wrinkled. They looked like they&lt;br /&gt;were made of crushed velvet, like the Niagara Falls souvenir pillow on Auntie's&lt;br /&gt;armchair in the living room, which had whorls of paisley trimmed into them. I&lt;br /&gt;traced these whorls with my eye, and tried to reproduce them with a ballpoint on&lt;br /&gt;paper bags I found under the sink.&lt;br /&gt;And then, in one of the photos, I noticed that the patterns disappeared behind and&lt;br /&gt;above the shoulders. I experimented with different water levels in my glass to&lt;br /&gt;bring up the magnification, and I diligently sketched. I'd seen a *Polka Dot Door*&lt;br /&gt;episode where the hosts showed how you could draw a grid over an original image&lt;br /&gt;and a matching grid on a sheet of blank paper and then copy over every square,&lt;br /&gt;reproducing the image in manageable, bite-sized chunks.&lt;br /&gt;That's what I did, using the edge of a nail file for a ruler, drawing my grid&lt;br /&gt;carefully on the paper bag, and a matching one on the picture, using the blunt tip&lt;br /&gt;of a dead pen to make a grid of indentations in the surface of the photo.&lt;br /&gt;And I sketched it out, one square at a time. Where the pattern was, where it&lt;br /&gt;wasn't. What shapes the negative absence-of-pattern took in the photos. As I drew,&lt;br /&gt;day after day, I realized that I was drawing the shape of something black that was&lt;br /&gt;blocking the curtain behind.&lt;br /&gt;Then I got excited. I drew in my steadiest hand, tracing each curve, using my&lt;br /&gt;magnifier, until I had the shape drawn and defined, and long before I finished, I&lt;br /&gt;knew what I was drawing and I drew it anyway. I drew it and then I looked at my&lt;br /&gt;paper sack and I saw that what I had drawn was a pair of wings, black and&lt;br /&gt;powerful, spread out and stretching out of the shot.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;She curled the prehensile tips of her wings up the soles of his feet, making him&lt;br /&gt;go, Yeek! and jump in the bed.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you awake?" she said, twisting her head around to brush her lips over his.&lt;br /&gt;"Rapt," he said.&lt;br /&gt;She giggled and her tits bounced.&lt;br /&gt;"Good," she said. "'Cause this is the important part."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Auntie came home early that day and found me sitting at her vanity, with the&lt;br /&gt;photos and the water glass and the drawings on the paper sacks spread out before&lt;br /&gt;me.&lt;br /&gt;Our eyes met for a moment. Her pupils shrank down to tiny dots, I remember it,&lt;br /&gt;remember seeing them vanish, leaving behind rings of yellowed hazel. One of her&lt;br /&gt;hands lashed out in a claw and sank into my hair. She lifted me out of the chair&lt;br /&gt;by my hair before I'd even had a chance to cry out, almost before I'd registered&lt;br /&gt;the fact that she was hurting me -- she'd never so much as spanked me until then.&lt;br /&gt;She was strong, in that slow old Russian lady way, strong enough to grunt ten&lt;br /&gt;sacks of groceries in a bundle-buggy up the stairs to the apartment. When she&lt;br /&gt;picked me up and tossed me, it was like being fired out of a cannon. I rebounded&lt;br /&gt;off the framed motel-room art over the bed, shattering the glass, and bounced&lt;br /&gt;twice on the mattress before coming to rest on the floor. My arm was hanging at a&lt;br /&gt;funny angle, and when I tried to move it, it hurt so much that I heard a high&lt;br /&gt;sound in my ears like a dog whistle.&lt;br /&gt;I lay still as the old lady yanked the drawers out of her vanity and upended them&lt;br /&gt;on the floor until she found an old book of matches. She swept the photos and my&lt;br /&gt;sketches into the tin wastebasket and then lit a match with trembling hands and&lt;br /&gt;dropped it in. It went out. She repeated it, and on the fourth try she got the&lt;br /&gt;idea of using the match to light all the remaining matches in the folder and drop&lt;br /&gt;that into the bin. A moment later, it was burning cheerfully, spitting curling red&lt;br /&gt;embers into the air on clouds of dark smoke. I buried my face in the matted carpet&lt;br /&gt;and tried not to hear that high note, tried to will away the sick grating feeling&lt;br /&gt;in my upper arm.&lt;br /&gt;She was wreathed in smoke, choking, when she finally turned to me. For a moment, I&lt;br /&gt;refused to meet her eye, sure that she would kill me if I did, would see the guilt&lt;br /&gt;and the knowledge in my face and keep her secret with murder. I'd watched enough&lt;br /&gt;daytime television to know about dark secrets.&lt;br /&gt;But when she bent down to me, with the creak of stretching elastic, and she lifted&lt;br /&gt;me to my feet and bent to look me in the eye, she had tears in her eyes.&lt;br /&gt;She went to the pile of oddments and junk jewelry that she had dumped out on the&lt;br /&gt;floor and sorted through it until she found a pair of sewing shears, then she cut&lt;br /&gt;away my T-shirt, supporting my broken arm with her hand. My wings were flapping&lt;br /&gt;nervously beneath the fabric, and it got tangled, and she took firm hold of the&lt;br /&gt;wingtips and folded them down to my back and freed the shirt and tossed it in the&lt;br /&gt;pile of junk on her normally spotless floor.&lt;br /&gt;She had spoken to me less and less since I had fixed the television and begun to&lt;br /&gt;pick up English, and now she was wordless as she gently rotated my fingerbones and&lt;br /&gt;my wristbones, my elbow and my shoulder, minute movements, listening for my&lt;br /&gt;teakettle hiss when she hit the sore spots.&lt;br /&gt;"Is broken," she said. "*Cholera*," she said. "I am so sorry, *lovenu*," she said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"I've never been to the doctor's," she said. "Never had a pap smear or been felt&lt;br /&gt;for lumps. Never, ever had an X-ray. Feel this," she said, and put her upper arm&lt;br /&gt;before his face. He took it and ran his fingertips over it, finding a hard bump&lt;br /&gt;halfway along, opposite her fleshy bicep.&lt;br /&gt;"What's this?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's how a bone sets if you have a bad break and don't get a cast. Crooked."&lt;br /&gt;"Jesus," he said, giving it another squeeze. Now that he knew what it was, he&lt;br /&gt;thought -- or perhaps fancied -- that he could feel how the unevenly splintered&lt;br /&gt;pieces of bone mated together, met at a slight angle and fused together by the&lt;br /&gt;knitting process.&lt;br /&gt;"She made me a sling, and she fed me every meal and brushed my teeth. I had to&lt;br /&gt;stop her from following me into the toilet to wipe me up. And I didn't care: She&lt;br /&gt;could have broken both of my arms if she'd only explained the photos to me, or&lt;br /&gt;left them with me so that I could go on investigating them, but she did neither.&lt;br /&gt;She hardly spoke a word to me."&lt;br /&gt;She resettled herself against the pillows, then pulled him back against her again&lt;br /&gt;and plumped his head against her breasts.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you falling in love with me?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;He startled. The way she said it, she didn't sound like a young adult, she sounded&lt;br /&gt;like a small child.&lt;br /&gt;"Mimi --" he began, then stopped himself. "I don't think so. I mean, I like you&lt;br /&gt;--"&lt;br /&gt;"Good," she said. "No falling in love, all right?"&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Auntie died six months later. She keeled over on the staircase on her way up to&lt;br /&gt;the apartment, and I heard her moaning and thrashing out there. I hauled her up&lt;br /&gt;the stairs with my good arm, and she crawled along on her knees, making gargling&lt;br /&gt;noises.&lt;br /&gt;I got her laid out on the rug in the living room. I tried to get her up on the&lt;br /&gt;sofa, but I couldn't budge her. So I gave her pillows from the sofa and water and&lt;br /&gt;then I tried tea, but she couldn't take it. She threw up once, and I soaked it up&lt;br /&gt;with a tea towel that had fussy roses on it.&lt;br /&gt;She took my hand and her grip was weak, her strong hands suddenly thin and shaky.&lt;br /&gt;It took an hour for her to die.&lt;br /&gt;When she died, she made a rasping, rattling sound and then she shat herself. I&lt;br /&gt;could smell it.&lt;br /&gt;It was all I could smell, as I sat there in the little apartment, six years old,&lt;br /&gt;hot as hell outside and stuffy inside. I opened the windows and watched the Hasids&lt;br /&gt;walk past. I felt like I should *do something* for the old lady, but I didn't know&lt;br /&gt;what.&lt;br /&gt;I formulated a plan. I would go outside and bring in some grown-up to take care of&lt;br /&gt;the old lady. I would do the grocery shopping and eat sandwiches until I was&lt;br /&gt;twelve, at which point I would be grown up and I would get a job fixing&lt;br /&gt;televisions.&lt;br /&gt;I marched into my room and changed into my best clothes, the little Alice-blue&lt;br /&gt;dress I wore to dinner on Sundays, and I brushed my hair and put on my socks with&lt;br /&gt;the blue pom-poms at the ankles, and found my shoes in the hall closet. But it had&lt;br /&gt;been three years since I'd last worn the shoes, and I could barely fit three toes&lt;br /&gt;in them. The old lady's shoes were so big I could fit both feet in either one.&lt;br /&gt;I took off my socks -- sometimes I'd seen kids going by barefoot outside, but&lt;br /&gt;never in just socks -- and reached for the doorknob. I touched it.&lt;br /&gt;I stopped.&lt;br /&gt;I turned around again.&lt;br /&gt;There was a stain forming under Auntie, piss and shit and death-juice, and as I&lt;br /&gt;looked at her, I had a firm sense that it wouldn't be *right* to bring people up&lt;br /&gt;to her apartment with her like this. I'd seen dead people on TV. They were propped&lt;br /&gt;up on pillows, in clean hospital nighties, with rouged cheeks. I didn't know how&lt;br /&gt;far I could get, but I thought I owed it to her to try.&lt;br /&gt;I figured that it was better than going outside.&lt;br /&gt;She was lighter in death, as though something had fled her. I could drag her into&lt;br /&gt;the bathroom and prop her on the edge of the tub. I needed to wash her before&lt;br /&gt;anyone else came up.&lt;br /&gt;I cut away her dress with the sewing shears. She was wearing an elastic girdle&lt;br /&gt;beneath, and an enormous brassiere, and they were too tough -- too tight -- to cut&lt;br /&gt;through, so I struggled with their hooks, each one going *spung* as I unhooked it,&lt;br /&gt;revealing red skin beneath it, pinched and sore-looking.&lt;br /&gt;When I got to her bra, I had a moment's pause. She was a modest person -- I'd&lt;br /&gt;never even seen her legs without tan compression hose, but the smell was&lt;br /&gt;overwhelming, and I just held to that vision of her in a nightie and clean sheets&lt;br /&gt;and, you know, *went for it*.&lt;br /&gt;Popped the hooks. Felt it give way as her breasts forced it off her back. Found&lt;br /&gt;myself staring at.&lt;br /&gt;Two little wings.&lt;br /&gt;The size of my thumbs. Bent and cramped. Broken. Folded. There, over her shoulder&lt;br /&gt;blades. I touched them, and they were cold and hard as a turkey neck I'd once&lt;br /&gt;found in the trash after she'd made soup with it.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"How did you get out?"&lt;br /&gt;"With my wings?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah. With your wings, and with no shoes, and with the old lady dead over the&lt;br /&gt;tub?"&lt;br /&gt;She nuzzled his neck, then bit it, then kissed it, then bit it again. Brushed her&lt;br /&gt;fingers over his nipples.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't know," she breathed, hot in his ear.&lt;br /&gt;He arched his back. "You don't know?"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't know. That's all I remember, for five years."&lt;br /&gt;He arched his back again, and raked his fingertips over her thighs, making her&lt;br /&gt;shudder and jerk her wings back.&lt;br /&gt;That's when he saw the corpse at the foot of the bed. It was George.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He went back to school the day after they buried Davey. He bathed all the brothers&lt;br /&gt;in the hot spring and got their teeth brushed, and he fed them a hot breakfast of&lt;br /&gt;boiled mushroom-and-jerky stew, and he gathered up their schoolbooks from the&lt;br /&gt;forgotten corners of the winter cave and put them into school bags. Then he led&lt;br /&gt;them down the hillside on a spring day that smelled wonderful: loam and cold water&lt;br /&gt;coursing down the mountainside in rivulets, and new grass and new growth drying&lt;br /&gt;out in a hard white sun that seemed to spring directly overhead five minutes after&lt;br /&gt;it rose.&lt;br /&gt;They held hands as they walked down the hill, and then Elliot-Franky-George broke&lt;br /&gt;away and ran down the hill to the roadside, skipping over the stones and holding&lt;br /&gt;their belly as they flew down the hillside. Alan laughed at the impatient jig they&lt;br /&gt;danced as they waited for he and Brad to catch up with them, and Brad put an arm&lt;br /&gt;around his shoulder and kissed him on the cheek in a moment of uncharacteristic&lt;br /&gt;demonstrativeness.&lt;br /&gt;He marched right into Mr. Davenport's office with his brothers in tow.&lt;br /&gt;"We're back," he said.&lt;br /&gt;Mr. Davenport peered at them over the tops of his glasses. "You are, are you?"&lt;br /&gt;"Mom took sick," he said. "Very sick. We had to go live with our aunt, and she was&lt;br /&gt;too far away for us to get to school."&lt;br /&gt;"I see," Mr. Davenport said.&lt;br /&gt;"I taught the littler ones as best as I could," Alan said. He liked Mr. Davenport,&lt;br /&gt;understood him. He had a job to do, and needed everything to be accounted for and&lt;br /&gt;filed away. It was okay for Alan and his brothers to miss months of school,&lt;br /&gt;provided that they had a good excuse when they came back. Alan could respect that.&lt;br /&gt;"And I read ahead in my textbooks. I think we'll be okay."&lt;br /&gt;"I'm sure you will be," Mr. Davenport said. "How is your mother now?"&lt;br /&gt;"She's better," he said. "But she was very sick. In the hospital."&lt;br /&gt;"What was she sick with?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan hadn't thought this far ahead. He knew how to lie to adults, but he was out&lt;br /&gt;of practice. "Cancer," he said, thinking of Marci's mother.&lt;br /&gt;"Cancer?" Mr. Davenport said, staring hard at him.&lt;br /&gt;"But she's better now," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I see. You boys, why don't you get to class? Alan, please wait here a moment."&lt;br /&gt;His brothers filed out of the room. and Alan shuffled nervously, looking at the&lt;br /&gt;class ring on Mr. Davenport's hairy finger, remembering the time that Davey had&lt;br /&gt;kicked him. He'd never asked Alan where Davey was after that, and Alan had never&lt;br /&gt;offered, and it had been as though they shared a secret.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you all right, Alan?" he asked, settling down behind his desk, taking off his&lt;br /&gt;glasses.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes, sir," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"You're getting enough to eat at home? There's a quiet place where you can work?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," Alan said, squirming. "It's fine, now that Mom is home."&lt;br /&gt;"I see," Mr. Davenport said. "Listen to me, son," he said, putting his hands flat&lt;br /&gt;on the desk. "The school district has some resources available: clothes, lunch&lt;br /&gt;vouchers, Big Brother programs. They're not anything you have to be ashamed of.&lt;br /&gt;It's not charity, it's just a little booster. A bit of help. The other children,&lt;br /&gt;their parents are well and they live in town and have lots of advantages that you&lt;br /&gt;and your brothers lack. This is just how we level the playing field. You're a very&lt;br /&gt;bright lad, and your brothers are growing up well, but it's no sin to accept a&lt;br /&gt;little help."&lt;br /&gt;Alan suddenly felt like laughing. "We're not underprivileged," he said, thinking&lt;br /&gt;of the mountain, of the feeling of being encompassed by love of his father, of the&lt;br /&gt;flakes of soft, lustrous gold the golems produced by the handful. "We're very well&lt;br /&gt;off," he said, thinking of home, now free of Davey and his hateful, spiteful&lt;br /&gt;anger. "Thank you, though," he said, thinking of his life unfolding before him,&lt;br /&gt;free from the terror of Davey's bites and spying and rocks thrown from afar.&lt;br /&gt;Mr. Davenport scowled and stared hard at him. Alan met his stare and smiled. "It's&lt;br /&gt;time for classes," he said. "Can I go?"&lt;br /&gt;"Go," Mr. Davenport said. He shook his head. "But remember, you can always come&lt;br /&gt;here if you have anything you want to talk to me about."&lt;br /&gt;"I'll remember," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Six years later, Bradley was big and strong and he was the star goalie of all the&lt;br /&gt;hockey teams in town, in front of the puck before it arrived, making desperate,&lt;br /&gt;almost nonchalant saves that had them howling in the stands, stomping their feet,&lt;br /&gt;and sloshing their Tim Horton's coffee over the bleachers, to freeze into brown&lt;br /&gt;ice. In the summer, he was the star pitcher on every softball team, and the girls&lt;br /&gt;trailed after him like a long comet tail after the games when the other players&lt;br /&gt;led him away to a park to drink illicit beers.&lt;br /&gt;Alan watched his games from afar, with his schoolbooks on his lap, and Eric-Franz-&lt;br /&gt;Greg nearby playing trucks or reading or gnawing on a sucker.&lt;br /&gt;By the ninth inning or the final period, the young ones would be too tired to&lt;br /&gt;play, and they'd come and lean heavily against Alan, like a bag of lead pressing&lt;br /&gt;on him, eyes half open, and Alan would put an arm around them and feel at one with&lt;br /&gt;the universe.&lt;br /&gt;It snowed on the afternoon of the season opener for the town softball league that&lt;br /&gt;year, fat white wet flakes that kissed your cheeks and melted away in an instant,&lt;br /&gt;so soft that you weren't sure they'd be there at all. Bradley caught up with Alan&lt;br /&gt;on their lunch break, at the cafeteria in the high school two blocks from the&lt;br /&gt;elementary school. He had his mitt with him and a huge grin.&lt;br /&gt;"You planning on playing through the snow?" Alan said, as he set down his&lt;br /&gt;cheeseburger and stared out the window at the diffuse white radiance of the April&lt;br /&gt;noontime bouncing off the flakes.&lt;br /&gt;"It'll be gone by tonight. Gonna be *warm*," Bradley said, and nodded at his jock&lt;br /&gt;buddies sitting at their long table, sucking down Cokes and staring at the girls.&lt;br /&gt;"Gonna be a good game. I know it."&lt;br /&gt;Bradley knew. He knew when they were getting shorted at the assayers' when they&lt;br /&gt;brought in the golems' gold, just as he knew that showing up for lunch with a&lt;br /&gt;brown bag full of dried squirrel jerky and mushrooms and lemongrass was a surefire&lt;br /&gt;way to end up social roadkill in the high school hierarchy, as was dressing like&lt;br /&gt;someone who'd been caught in an explosion at the Salvation Army, and so he had&lt;br /&gt;money and he had burgers and he had a pair of narrow-leg jeans from the Gap and a&lt;br /&gt;Roots sweatshirt and a Stussy baseball hat and Reebok sneakers and he looked,&lt;br /&gt;basically, like a real person.&lt;br /&gt;Alan couldn't say the same for himself, but he'd been making an effort since&lt;br /&gt;Bradley got to high school, if only to save his brother the embarrassment of being&lt;br /&gt;related to the biggest reject in the building -- but Alan still managed to exude&lt;br /&gt;his don't-fuck-with-me aura enough that no one tried to cozy up to him and make&lt;br /&gt;friends with him and scrutinize his persona close in, which was just as he wanted&lt;br /&gt;it.&lt;br /&gt;Bradley watched a girl walk past, a cute thing with red hair and freckles and a&lt;br /&gt;skinny rawboned look, and Alan remembered that she'd been sitting next to him in&lt;br /&gt;class for going on two years now and he'd never bothered to learn her name.&lt;br /&gt;And he'd never bothered to notice that she was a dead ringer for Marci.&lt;br /&gt;"I've always had a thing for redheads," Bradley said. "Because of you," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"You and your girlfriend. I mean, if she was good enough for *you*, well, she had&lt;br /&gt;to be the epitome of sophistication and sexiness. Back then, you were like a god&lt;br /&gt;to me, so she was like a goddess. I imprinted on her, like the baby ducks in Bio.&lt;br /&gt;It's amazing how much of who I am today I can trace back to those days. Who knew&lt;br /&gt;that it was all so important?"&lt;br /&gt;He was a smart kid, introspective without being moody. Integrated. Always popping&lt;br /&gt;off these fine little observations in between his easy jokes. The girls adored&lt;br /&gt;him, the boys admired him, the teachers were grateful for him and the way he&lt;br /&gt;bridged the gap between scholarship and athleticism.&lt;br /&gt;"I must have been a weird kid," he said. "All that quiet."&lt;br /&gt;"You were a great kid," Alan said. "It was a lot of fun back then, mostly."&lt;br /&gt;"Mostly," he said.&lt;br /&gt;They both stared at the girl, who noticed them now, and blushed and looked&lt;br /&gt;confused. Bradley looked away, but Alvin held his gaze on her, and she whispered&lt;br /&gt;to a friend, who looked at him, and they both laughed, and then Alan looked away,&lt;br /&gt;too, sorry that he'd inadvertently interacted with his fellow students. He was&lt;br /&gt;supposed to watch, not participate.&lt;br /&gt;"He was real," Bradley said, and Alan knew he meant Davey.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't think the little ones really remember him -- he's more like a bad dream&lt;br /&gt;to them. But he was real, wasn't he?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said. "But he's gone now."&lt;br /&gt;"Was it right?"&lt;br /&gt;"What do you mean?" Alan said. He felt a sear of anger arc along his spine.&lt;br /&gt;"It's nothing," Billy said, mumbling into his tray.&lt;br /&gt;"What do you mean, Brad?" Alan said. "What else should we have done? How can you&lt;br /&gt;have any doubts?"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't," Brad said. "It's okay."&lt;br /&gt;Alan looked down at his hands, which appeared to belong to someone else: white&lt;br /&gt;lumps of dough clenched into hard fists, knuckles white. He made himself unclench&lt;br /&gt;them. "No, it's *not* okay. Tell me about this. You remember what he was like.&lt;br /&gt;What he...did."&lt;br /&gt;"I remember it," Bryan said. "Of course I remember it." He was staring through the&lt;br /&gt;table now, the look he got when he was contemplating a future the rest of them&lt;br /&gt;couldn't see. "But."&lt;br /&gt;Alan waited. He was trembling inside. He'd done the right thing. He'd saved his&lt;br /&gt;family. He knew that. But for six years, he'd found himself turning in his memory&lt;br /&gt;to the little boy on the ground, holding the loops of intestine in through&lt;br /&gt;slippery red fingers. For six years, whenever he'd been somewhere quiet long&lt;br /&gt;enough that his own inner voices fell still, he'd remember the hair in his fist,&lt;br /&gt;the knife's thirsty draught as it drew forth the hot splash of blood from Davey's&lt;br /&gt;throat. He'd remembered the ragged fissure that opened down Clarence's length and&lt;br /&gt;the way that Davey fell down it, so light and desiccated he was almost weightless.&lt;br /&gt;"If you remember it, then you know I did the right thing. I did the only thing."&lt;br /&gt;"*We* did the only thing," Brian said, and covered Alan's hand with his.&lt;br /&gt;Alan nodded and stared at his cheeseburger. "You'd better go catch up with your&lt;br /&gt;friends," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"I love you, Adam," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"I love you, too."&lt;br /&gt;Billy crossed the room, nodding to the people who greeted him from every table,&lt;br /&gt;geeks and jocks and band and all the meaningless tribes of the high school&lt;br /&gt;universe. The cute redhead sprinkled a wiggle-finger wave at him, and he nodded at&lt;br /&gt;her, the tips of his ears going pink.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The snow stopped by three p.m., and the sun came out and melted it away, so that&lt;br /&gt;by the time the game started at five-thirty, its only remnant was the soggy ground&lt;br /&gt;around the bleachers with the new grass growing out of the ragged brown memory of&lt;br /&gt;last summer's lawn.&lt;br /&gt;Alan took the little ones for dinner at the diner after school, letting them order&lt;br /&gt;double chocolate-chip pancakes. At 13, they'd settled into a fatness that made him&lt;br /&gt;think of a foam-rubber toy, the rolls and dimples at their wrists and elbows and&lt;br /&gt;knees like the seams on a doll.&lt;br /&gt;"You're starting high school next year?" Alan said, as they were pouring syrup on&lt;br /&gt;their second helping. He was startled by this -- how had they gotten so old so&lt;br /&gt;quickly?&lt;br /&gt;"Uh-huh," Eli said. "I guess."&lt;br /&gt;"So you're graduating from elementary school this spring?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah." Eli grinned a chocolate smile at him. "It's no big deal. There's a party,&lt;br /&gt;though."&lt;br /&gt;"Where?"&lt;br /&gt;"At some kid's house."&lt;br /&gt;"It's okay," Alan said. "We can celebrate at home. Don't let them get to you."&lt;br /&gt;"We can't go?" Ed suddenly looked a little panicked.&lt;br /&gt;"You're invited?" He blurted it out and then wished he hadn't.&lt;br /&gt;"Of course we're invited," Fred said from inside Ed's throat. "There's going to be&lt;br /&gt;dancing."&lt;br /&gt;"You can dance?" Alan asked.&lt;br /&gt;"We can!" Ed said.&lt;br /&gt;"We learned in gym," Greg said, with the softest, proudest voice, deep within&lt;br /&gt;them.&lt;br /&gt;"Well," Alan said. He didn't know what to say. High school. Dancing. Invited to&lt;br /&gt;parties. No one had invited him to parties when he'd graduated from elementary&lt;br /&gt;school, and he'd been too busy with the little ones to go in any event. He felt a&lt;br /&gt;little jealous, but mostly proud. "Want a milkshake?" he asked, mentally totting&lt;br /&gt;up the cash in his pocket and thinking that he should probably send Brad to dicker&lt;br /&gt;with the assayer again soon.&lt;br /&gt;"No, thank you," Ed said. "We're watching our weight."&lt;br /&gt;Alan laughed, then saw they weren't joking and tried to turn it into a cough, but&lt;br /&gt;it was too late. Their shy, chocolate smile turned into a rubber-lipped pout.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;The game started bang on time at six p.m., just as the sun was setting. The&lt;br /&gt;diamond lights flicked on with an audible click and made a spot of glare that cast&lt;br /&gt;out the twilight.&lt;br /&gt;Benny was already on the mound, he'd been warming up with the catcher, tossing&lt;br /&gt;them in fast and exuberant and confident and controlled. He looked good on the&lt;br /&gt;mound. The ump called the start, and the batter stepped up to the plate, and Benny&lt;br /&gt;struck him out in three pitches, and the little ones went nuts, cheering their&lt;br /&gt;brother on along with the other fans in the bleachers, a crowd as big as any you'd&lt;br /&gt;ever see outside of school, thirty or forty people.&lt;br /&gt;The second batter stepped up and Benny pitched a strike, another strike, and then&lt;br /&gt;a wild pitch that nearly beaned the batter in the head. The catcher cocked his&lt;br /&gt;mask quizzically, and Benny kicked the dirt and windmilled his arm a little and&lt;br /&gt;shook his head.&lt;br /&gt;He tossed another wild one, this one coming in so low that it practically rolled&lt;br /&gt;across the plate. His teammates were standing up in their box now, watching him&lt;br /&gt;carefully.&lt;br /&gt;"Stop kidding around," Alan heard one of them say. "Just strike him out."&lt;br /&gt;Benny smiled, spat, caught the ball, and shrugged his shoulders. He wound up, made&lt;br /&gt;ready to pitch, and then dropped the ball and fell to his knees, crying out as&lt;br /&gt;though he'd been struck.&lt;br /&gt;Alan grabbed the little ones' hand and pushed onto the diamond before Benny's&lt;br /&gt;knees hit the ground. He caught up with Benny as he keeled over sideways, bringing&lt;br /&gt;his knees up to his chest, eyes open and staring and empty.&lt;br /&gt;Alan caught his head and cradled it on his lap and was dimly aware that a crowd&lt;br /&gt;had formed round them. He felt Barry's heart thundering in his chest, and his arms&lt;br /&gt;were stuck straight out to his sides, one hand in his pitcher's glove, the other&lt;br /&gt;clenched tightly around the ball.&lt;br /&gt;"It's a seizure," someone said from the crowd. "Is he an epileptic? It's a&lt;br /&gt;seizure."&lt;br /&gt;Someone tried to prize Alan's fingers from around Barry's head and he grunted and&lt;br /&gt;hissed at them, and they withdrew.&lt;br /&gt;"Barry?" Alan said, looking into Barry's face. That faraway look in his eyes, a&lt;br /&gt;million miles away. Alan knew he'd seen it before, but not in years.&lt;br /&gt;The eyes came back into focus, closed, opened. "Davey's back," Barry said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan's skin went cold and he realized that he was squeezing Barry's head like a&lt;br /&gt;melon. He relaxed his grip and helped him to his feet, got Barry's arm around his&lt;br /&gt;shoulders, and helped him off the diamond.&lt;br /&gt;"You okay?" one of the players asked as they walked past him, but Barry didn't&lt;br /&gt;answer. The little ones were walking beside them now, clutching Barry's hand, and&lt;br /&gt;they turned their back on the town as a family and walked toward the mountain.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;George had come to visit him once before, not long after Alan'd moved to Toronto.&lt;br /&gt;He couldn't come without bringing down Elliot and Ferdinand, of course, but it was&lt;br /&gt;George's idea to visit, that was clear from the moment they rang the bell of the&lt;br /&gt;slightly grotty apartment he'd moved into in the Annex, near the students who were&lt;br /&gt;barely older than him but seemed to belong to a different species.&lt;br /&gt;They were about 16 by then, and fat as housecats, with the same sense of grace and&lt;br /&gt;inertia in their swinging bellies and wobbling chins.&lt;br /&gt;Alan welcomed them in. Edward was wearing a pair of wool trousers pulled nearly up&lt;br /&gt;to his nipples and short suspenders that were taut over his sweat-stained white&lt;br /&gt;shirt. He was grinning fleshily, his hair damp with sweat and curled with the&lt;br /&gt;humidity.&lt;br /&gt;He opened his mouth, and George's voice emerged. "This place is..." He stood with&lt;br /&gt;his mouth open, while inside him, George thought. "*Incredible.* I'd never..." He&lt;br /&gt;closed his mouth, then opened it again. "*Dreamed*. What a..."&lt;br /&gt;Now Ed spoke. "Jesus, figure out what you're going to say before you say it,&lt;br /&gt;willya? This is just plain --"&lt;br /&gt;"Rude," came Fede's voice from his mouth.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm sorry," came George's voice.&lt;br /&gt;Ed was working on his suspenders, then unbuttoning his shirt and dropping his&lt;br /&gt;pants, so that he stood in grimy jockeys with his slick, tight, hairy belly before&lt;br /&gt;Alan. He tipped himself over, and then Alan was face-to-face with Freddy, who was&lt;br /&gt;wearing a T-shirt and a pair of boxer shorts with blue and white stripes. Freddy&lt;br /&gt;was scowling comically, and Alan hid a grin behind his hand.&lt;br /&gt;Freddy tipped to one side and there was George, short and delicately formed and&lt;br /&gt;pale as a frozen french fry. He grabbed Freddy's hips like handles and scrambled&lt;br /&gt;out of him, springing into the air and coming down on the balls of his feet,&lt;br /&gt;holding his soccer-ball-sized gut over his Hulk Underoos.&lt;br /&gt;"It's incredible," he hooted, dancing from one foot to the other. "It's brilliant!&lt;br /&gt;God! I'm never, ever going home!"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, yes?" Alan said, not bothering to hide his smile as Frederick and George&lt;br /&gt;separated and righted themselves. "And where will you sleep, then?"&lt;br /&gt;"Here!" he said, running around the tiny apartment, opening the fridge and the&lt;br /&gt;stove and the toaster oven, flushing the toilet, turning on the shower faucets.&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry," Alan called as he ran by. "No vacancies at the Hotel Anders!"&lt;br /&gt;"Then I won't sleep!" he cried on his next pass. "I'll play all night and all day&lt;br /&gt;in the streets. I'll knock on every door on every street and introduce myself to&lt;br /&gt;every person and learn their stories and read their books and meet their kids and&lt;br /&gt;pet their dogs!"&lt;br /&gt;"You're bonkers," Alan said, using the word that the lunch lady back at school had&lt;br /&gt;used when chastising them for tearing around the cafeteria.&lt;br /&gt;"Easy for you to say," Greg said, skidding to a stop in front of him. "Easy for&lt;br /&gt;you -- you're *here*, you got *away*, you don't have to deal with *Davey* --" He&lt;br /&gt;closed his mouth and his hand went to his lips.&lt;br /&gt;Alan was still young and had a penchant for the dramatic, so he went around to the&lt;br /&gt;kitchen and pulled a bottle of vodka out of the freezer and banged it down on the&lt;br /&gt;counter, pouring out four shots. He tossed back his shot and returned the bottle&lt;br /&gt;to the freezer.&lt;br /&gt;George followed suit and choked and turned purple, but managed to keep his&lt;br /&gt;expression neutral. Fred and Ed each took a sip, then set the drinks down with a&lt;br /&gt;sour face.&lt;br /&gt;"How's home?" Alan said quietly, sliding back to sit on the minuscule counter&lt;br /&gt;surface in his kitchenette.&lt;br /&gt;"It's okay," Ed mumbled, perching on the arm of the Goodwill sofa that came with&lt;br /&gt;the apartment. Without his brothers within him, he moved sprightly and lightly.&lt;br /&gt;"It's fine," Fred said, looking out the window at the street below, craning his&lt;br /&gt;neck to see Bloor Street and the kids smoking out front of the Brunswick House.&lt;br /&gt;"It's awful," Greg said, and pulled himself back up on the counter with them. "And&lt;br /&gt;I'm not going back."&lt;br /&gt;The two older brothers looked balefully at him, then mutely appealed to Alan. This&lt;br /&gt;was new -- since infancy, Earl-Frank-Geoff had acted with complete unity of will.&lt;br /&gt;When they were in the first grade, Alan had wondered if they were really just one&lt;br /&gt;person in three parts -- that was how close their agreements were.&lt;br /&gt;"Brian left last week," Greg said, and drummed his heels on the grease-streaked&lt;br /&gt;cabinet doors. "Didn't say a word to any of us, just left. He comes and goes like&lt;br /&gt;that all the time. Sometimes for weeks."&lt;br /&gt;Craig was halfway around the world, he was in Toronto, and Brian was God-knewwhere.&lt;br /&gt;That left just Ed-Fred-George and Davey, alone in the cave. No wonder they&lt;br /&gt;were here on his doorstep.&lt;br /&gt;"What's he doing?"&lt;br /&gt;"He just sits there and watches us, but that's enough. We're almost finished with&lt;br /&gt;school." He dropped his chin to his chest. "I thought we could finish here. Find a&lt;br /&gt;job. A place to live." He blushed furiously. "A girl."&lt;br /&gt;Ed and Fred were staring at their laps. Alan tried to picture the logistics, but&lt;br /&gt;he couldn't, not really. There was no scenario in which he could see his brothers&lt;br /&gt;carrying on with --&lt;br /&gt;"Don't be an idiot," Ed said. He sounded surprisingly bitter. He was usually a&lt;br /&gt;cheerful person -- or at least a fat and smiling person. Alan realized for the&lt;br /&gt;first time that the two weren't equivalent.&lt;br /&gt;George jutted his chin toward the sofa and his brothers. "They don't know what&lt;br /&gt;they want to do. They think that, 'cause it'll be hard to live here, we should&lt;br /&gt;hide out in the cave forever."&lt;br /&gt;"Alan, talk to him," Fred said. "He's nuts."&lt;br /&gt;"Look," George said. "You're gone. You're *all* gone. The king under the mountain&lt;br /&gt;now is Davey. If we stay there, we'll end up his slaves or his victims. Let him&lt;br /&gt;keep it. There's a whole world out here we can live in.&lt;br /&gt;"I don't see any reason to let my handicap keep me down."&lt;br /&gt;"It's not a handicap," Edward said patiently. "It's just how we are. We're&lt;br /&gt;different. We're not like the rest of them."&lt;br /&gt;"Neither is Alan," George said. "And here he is, in the big city, living with&lt;br /&gt;them. Working. Meeting people. Out of the mountain."&lt;br /&gt;"Alan's more like them than he is like us," Frederick said. "We're not like them.&lt;br /&gt;We can't pass for them."&lt;br /&gt;Alan's jaw hung slack. Handicapped? Passing? Like them? Not like them? He'd never&lt;br /&gt;thought of his brothers this way. They were just his brothers. Just his family.&lt;br /&gt;They could communicate with the outside world. They were people. Different, but&lt;br /&gt;the same.&lt;br /&gt;"You're just as good as they are," he said.&lt;br /&gt;And that shut them up. They all regarded him, as if waiting for him to go on. He&lt;br /&gt;didn't know what to say. Were they, really? Was he? Was he better?&lt;br /&gt;"What are we, Alan?" Edward said it, but Frederick and George mouthed the words&lt;br /&gt;after he'd said them.&lt;br /&gt;"You're my brothers," he said. "You're. . ."&lt;br /&gt;"I want to see the city," George said. "You two can come with me, or you can meet&lt;br /&gt;me when I come back."&lt;br /&gt;"You *can't* go without us," Frederick said. "What if we get hungry?"&lt;br /&gt;"You mean, what if I don't come back, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"No," Frederick said, his face turning red.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, how hungry are you going to get in a couple hours? You're just worried that&lt;br /&gt;I'm going to wander off and not come back. Fall into a hole. Meet a girl. Get&lt;br /&gt;drunk. And you won't ever be able to eat again." He was pacing again.&lt;br /&gt;Ed and Fred looked imploringly at him.&lt;br /&gt;"Why don't we all go together?" Alan said. "We'll go out and do something fun --&lt;br /&gt;how about ice-skating?"&lt;br /&gt;"Skating?" George said. "Jesus, I didn't ride a bus for 30 hours just to go&lt;br /&gt;*skating*."&lt;br /&gt;Edward said, "I want to sleep."&lt;br /&gt;Frederick said, "I want dinner."&lt;br /&gt;Perfect, Alan thought. "Perfect. We'll all be equally displeased with this, then.&lt;br /&gt;The skating's out in front of City Hall. There are lots of people there, and we&lt;br /&gt;can take the subway down. We'll have dinner afterward on Queen Street, then turn&lt;br /&gt;in early and get a good night's sleep. Tomorrow, we'll negotiate something else.&lt;br /&gt;Maybe Chinatown and the zoo."&lt;br /&gt;They are stared at him.&lt;br /&gt;"This is a limited-time offer," Alan said. "I had other plans tonight, you know.&lt;br /&gt;Going once, going twice --"&lt;br /&gt;"Let's go," George said. He went and took his brothers' hands. "Let's go, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;They had a really good time.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;George's body was propped up at the foot of the bed. He was white and wrinkled as&lt;br /&gt;a big toe in a bathtub, skin pulled tight in his face so that his hairline and&lt;br /&gt;eyebrows and cheeks seemed raised in surprise.&lt;br /&gt;Alan smelled him now, a stink like a mouse dead between the gyprock in the walls,&lt;br /&gt;the worst smell imaginable. He felt Mimi breathing behind him, her chest heaving&lt;br /&gt;against his back. He reached out and pushed aside the wings, moving them by their&lt;br /&gt;translucent membranes, fingers brushing the tiny fingerlets at the wingtips,&lt;br /&gt;recognizing in their touch some evolutionary connection with his own hands.&lt;br /&gt;George toppled over as Alan stepped off the bed, moving in the twilight of the&lt;br /&gt;light from under the bathroom door. Mimi came off the bed on the other side and&lt;br /&gt;hit the overhead light switch, turning the room as bright as an icebox, making&lt;br /&gt;Alan squint painfully. She closed the blinds quickly, then went to the door and&lt;br /&gt;shot the chain and the deadbolt closed.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi looked down at him. "Ugly sumbitch, whoever he was."&lt;br /&gt;"My brother," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Oh," she said. She went back around the bed and sat on the edge, facing the wall.&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry." She crossed her leg and jiggled her foot, making the springs squeak.&lt;br /&gt;Alan wasn't listening. He knelt down and touched George's cheek. The skin was soft&lt;br /&gt;and spongy, porous and saturated. Cold. His fingertips came away with shed white&lt;br /&gt;flakes of translucent skin clinging to them.&lt;br /&gt;"Davey?" Alan said. "Are you in here?"&lt;br /&gt;Mimi's foot stilled. They both listened intently. There were night-time sounds in&lt;br /&gt;the motel, distant muffled TVs and car engines and fucking, but no sound of papery&lt;br /&gt;skin thudding on ground-down carpet.&lt;br /&gt;"He must have come up through the drain," Alan said. "In the bathroom." The broad&lt;br /&gt;pale moon of George's belly was abraded in long grey stripes.&lt;br /&gt;He stood and, wiping his hand on his bare thigh, reached for the bathroom&lt;br /&gt;doorknob. The door swung open, revealing the sanitized-for-your-protection&lt;br /&gt;brightness of the bathroom, the water sloshed on the floor by Mimi earlier, the&lt;br /&gt;heaps of damp towels.&lt;br /&gt;"How'd he find us here?"&lt;br /&gt;Mimi, in her outsized blazer and track pants, touched him on his bare shoulder. He&lt;br /&gt;suddenly felt terribly naked. He backed out of the bathroom, shoving Mimi aside,&lt;br /&gt;and numbly pulled on his jeans and a shapeless sweatshirt that smelled of Mimi and&lt;br /&gt;had long curly hairs lurking in the fabric that stuck to his face like cobwebs. He&lt;br /&gt;jammed his feet into his sneakers.&lt;br /&gt;He realized that he'd had to step over his brother's body six times to do this.&lt;br /&gt;He looked at his brother again. He couldn't make sense of what he was seeing. The&lt;br /&gt;abraded belly. The rictus. His balls, shrunk to an albino walnut, his cock&lt;br /&gt;shriveled up to unrecognizability. The hair, curly, matted all over his body,&lt;br /&gt;patchily rubbed away.&lt;br /&gt;He paced in the little run beside the bed, the only pacing room he had that didn't&lt;br /&gt;require stepping over George's body, back and forth, two paces, turn, two paces,&lt;br /&gt;turn.&lt;br /&gt;"I'm going to cover him up," Mimi said.&lt;br /&gt;"Good, fine," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you going to be okay?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yes, fine," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you freaking out?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't say anything.&lt;br /&gt;George looked an awful lot like Davey had, the day they killed him.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Mimi found a spare blanket in the closet, reeking of mothballs and scarred with a&lt;br /&gt;few curdled cigarette burns, and she spread it out on the floor and helped him&lt;br /&gt;lift Grant's body onto it and wind it tightly around him.&lt;br /&gt;"What now?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;He looked down at the wound sheet, the lump within it. He sat down heavily on the&lt;br /&gt;bed. His chest was tight, and his breath came in short *hup*s.&lt;br /&gt;She sat beside him and put an arm around his shoulder, tried to pull his head down&lt;br /&gt;to her bosom, but he stiffened his neck.&lt;br /&gt;"I knew this was coming," he said. "When we killed Darren, I knew."&lt;br /&gt;She stood and lit a cigarette. "This is your family business," she said, "why&lt;br /&gt;we're driving up north?"&lt;br /&gt;He nodded, not trusting his voice, seeing the outlines of Grad's face, outlined in&lt;br /&gt;moth-eaten blanket.&lt;br /&gt;"So," she said. "Let's get up north, then. Take an end."&lt;br /&gt;The night was cold, and they staggered under the weight of the body wound in the&lt;br /&gt;blanket and laid him out in the trunk of the car, shifting luggage and picnic&lt;br /&gt;supplies to the back seat. At two a.m., the motel lights were out and the road was&lt;br /&gt;dark and silent but for the soughing of wind and the distant sounds of night&lt;br /&gt;animals.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you okay to drive?" she said, as she piled their clothes indiscriminately&lt;br /&gt;into the suitcases.&lt;br /&gt;"What?" he said. The cool air on his face was waking him up a little, but he was&lt;br /&gt;still in a dream-universe. The air was spicy and outdoors and it reminded him&lt;br /&gt;powerfully of home and simpler times.&lt;br /&gt;He looked at Mimi without really seeing her.&lt;br /&gt;"Are you okay to drive?"&lt;br /&gt;The keys were in his hands, the car smelling of the detailing-in-a-can mist that&lt;br /&gt;the rental agency sprayed on the upholstery to get rid of the discount traveler&lt;br /&gt;farts between rentals.&lt;br /&gt;"I can drive," he said. Home, and the mountain, and the washing machine, and the&lt;br /&gt;nook where he'd slept for 18 years, and the golems, and the cradle they'd hewn for&lt;br /&gt;him. Another ten or twelve hours' driving and they'd be at the foot of the trail&lt;br /&gt;where the grass grew to waist-high.&lt;br /&gt;"Well, then, *drive*." She got in the car and slammed her door.&lt;br /&gt;He climbed in, started the engine, and put the hertzmobile into reverse.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Two hours later, he realized that he was going to nod off. The thumps of the body&lt;br /&gt;sliding in the trunk and the suitcases rattling around in the back seat had lost&lt;br /&gt;their power to keep him awake.&lt;br /&gt;The body's thumping had hardly had the power to begin with. Once the initial shock&lt;br /&gt;had passed, the body became an object only, a thing, a payload he had to deliver.&lt;br /&gt;Alan wondered if he was capable of feeling the loss.&lt;br /&gt;"You were eleven then," he said. It was suddenly as though no time had past since&lt;br /&gt;they'd sat on the bed and she'd told him about Auntie.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes," she said. "It was as though no time had passed."&lt;br /&gt;A shiver went up his back.&lt;br /&gt;He was wide awake.&lt;br /&gt;"No time had passed."&lt;br /&gt;"Yes. I was living with a nice family in Oakville who were sending me to a nice&lt;br /&gt;girls' school where we wore blazers over our tunics, and I had a permanent note&lt;br /&gt;excusing me from gym classes. In a building full of four hundred girls going&lt;br /&gt;through puberty, one more fat shy girl who wouldn't take her top off was hardly&lt;br /&gt;noteworthy."&lt;br /&gt;"The family, they were nice. WASPy. They called me Cheryl. With a Why. When I&lt;br /&gt;asked them where I'd been before, about 'Auntie,' they looked sad and hurt and&lt;br /&gt;worried for me, and I learned to stop. They hugged me and touched my wings and&lt;br /&gt;never said anything -- and never wiped their hands on their pants after touching&lt;br /&gt;them. They gave me a room with a computer and a CD player and a little TV of my&lt;br /&gt;own, and asked me to bring home my friends.&lt;br /&gt;"I had none.&lt;br /&gt;"But they found other girls who would come to my 'birthday' parties, on May 1,&lt;br /&gt;which was exactly two months after their son's birthday and two months before&lt;br /&gt;their daughter's birthday.&lt;br /&gt;"I can't remember any of their names.&lt;br /&gt;"But they made me birthday cards and they made me breakfast and dinner and they&lt;br /&gt;made me welcome. I could watch them grilling burgers in the back yard by the above&lt;br /&gt;ground pool in the summer from my bedroom window. I could watch them building&lt;br /&gt;forts or freezing skating rinks in the winter. I could listen to them eating&lt;br /&gt;dinner together while I did my homework in my bedroom. There was a place for me at&lt;br /&gt;the dinner-table, but I couldn't sit there, though I can't remember why."&lt;br /&gt;"Wait a second," Alan said. "You don't remember?"&lt;br /&gt;She made a sad noise in her throat. "I was told I was welcome, but I knew I&lt;br /&gt;wasn't. I know that sounds paranoid -- crazy. Maybe I was just a teenager. There&lt;br /&gt;was a reason, though, I just don't know what it was. I knew then. They knew it,&lt;br /&gt;too -- no one blamed me. They loved me, I guess."&lt;br /&gt;"You stayed with them until you went to school?"&lt;br /&gt;"Almost. Their daughter went to Waterloo, then the next year, their son went to&lt;br /&gt;McGill in Montreal, and then it was just me and them. I had two more years of high&lt;br /&gt;school, but it just got unbearable. With their children gone, they tried to take&lt;br /&gt;an interest in me. Tried to make me eat with them. Take me out to meet their&lt;br /&gt;friends. Every day felt worse, more wrong. One night, I went to a late movie by&lt;br /&gt;myself downtown and then got to walking around near the clubs and looking at the&lt;br /&gt;club kids and feeling this terrible feeling of loneliness, and when I was finally&lt;br /&gt;ready to go home, the last train had already gone. I just spent the night out,&lt;br /&gt;wandering around, sitting in a back booth at Sneaky Dee's and drinking Cokes,&lt;br /&gt;watching the sun come up from the top of Christie Pitts overlooking the baseball&lt;br /&gt;diamond. I was a 17-year-old girl from the suburbs wearing a big coat and staring&lt;br /&gt;at her shoelaces, but no one bugged me.&lt;br /&gt;"When I came home the next morning, no one seemed particularly bothered that I'd&lt;br /&gt;been away all night. If anything, the parental people might have been a little&lt;br /&gt;distraught that I came home. 'I think I'll get my own place,' I said. They agreed,&lt;br /&gt;and agreed to put the lease in their name to make things easier. I got a crummy&lt;br /&gt;little basement in what the landlord called Cabbagetown but what was really Regent&lt;br /&gt;Park, and I switched out to a huge, anonymous high school to finish school. Worked&lt;br /&gt;in a restaurant at nights and on weekends to pay the bills."&lt;br /&gt;The night highway rushed past them, quiet. She lit a cigarette and rolled down her&lt;br /&gt;window, letting in the white-noise crash of the wind and the smell of the smoke&lt;br /&gt;mixed with the pine-and-summer reek of the roadside.&lt;br /&gt;"Give me one of those," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;She lit another and put it between his lips, damp with her saliva. His skin came&lt;br /&gt;up in goosepimples.&lt;br /&gt;"Who knows about your wings?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Krishna knows," she said. "And you." She looked out into the night. "The family&lt;br /&gt;in Oakville. If I could remember where they lived, I'd look them up and ask them&lt;br /&gt;about it. Can't. Can't remember their names or their faces. I remember the pool,&lt;br /&gt;though, and the barbecue."&lt;br /&gt;"No one else knows?"&lt;br /&gt;"There was no one else before Krishna. No one that I remember, anyway."&lt;br /&gt;"I have a brother," he said, then swallowed hard. "I have a brother named Brad. He&lt;br /&gt;can see the future."&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah." He pawed around for an ashtray and discovered that it had been removed,&lt;br /&gt;along with the lighter, from the rental car's dashboard. Cursing, he pinched off&lt;br /&gt;the coal of the cigarette and flicked it to the roadside, hoping that it would&lt;br /&gt;burn out quickly, then he tossed the butt over his shoulder at the back seat. As&lt;br /&gt;he did, the body in the trunk rolled while he navigated a curve in the road and he&lt;br /&gt;braked hard, getting the car stopped in time for him to open the door and pitch a&lt;br /&gt;rush of vomit onto the roadway.&lt;br /&gt;"You okay to drive?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah. I am." He sat up and put the car into gear and inched to the shoulder, then&lt;br /&gt;put it in park and set his blinkers. The car smelled of sour food and sharp&lt;br /&gt;cigarettes and God, it smelled of the body in the trunk.&lt;br /&gt;"It's not easy to be precognizant," Alan said, and pulled back onto the road,&lt;br /&gt;signaling even though there were no taillights or headlights for as far as the eye&lt;br /&gt;could see.&lt;br /&gt;"I believe it," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"He stopped telling us things after a while. It just got him into trouble. I'd be&lt;br /&gt;studying for an exam and he'd look at me and shake his head, slowly, sadly. Then&lt;br /&gt;I'd flunk out, and I'd be convinced that it was him psyching me out. Or he'd get&lt;br /&gt;picked for kickball and he'd say. 'What's the point, this team's gonna lose,' and&lt;br /&gt;wander off, and they'd lose, and everyone would hate him. He couldn't tell the&lt;br /&gt;difference between what he knew and what everyone else knew. Didn't know the&lt;br /&gt;difference between the past and the future, sometimes. So he stopped telling us,&lt;br /&gt;and when we figured out how to read it in his eyes, he stopped looking at us.&lt;br /&gt;"Then something really -- Something terrible... Someone I cared about died. And he&lt;br /&gt;didn't say anything about it. I could have -- stopped -- it. Prevented it. I could&lt;br /&gt;have saved her life, but he wouldn't talk."&lt;br /&gt;He drove.&lt;br /&gt;"For real, he could see the future?" she said softly. Her voice had more emotion&lt;br /&gt;than he'd ever heard in it and she rolled down the window and lit another&lt;br /&gt;cigarette, pluming smoke into the roar of the wind.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said. "*A* future or *the* future, I never figured it out. A little&lt;br /&gt;of both, I suppose."&lt;br /&gt;"He stopped talking, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I know what that's like," Mimi said. "I hadn't spoken more than three words in&lt;br /&gt;the six months before I met Krishna. I worked at a direct-mail house, proofreading&lt;br /&gt;the mailing labels. No one wanted to say anything to me, and I just wanted to&lt;br /&gt;disappear. It was soothing, in a way, reading all those names. I'd dropped out of&lt;br /&gt;school after Christmas break, just didn't bother going back again, never paid my&lt;br /&gt;tuition. I threw away my houseplants and flushed my fish down the toilet so that&lt;br /&gt;there wouldn't be any living thing that depended on me."&lt;br /&gt;She worked her hand between his thigh and the seat.&lt;br /&gt;"Krishna sat next to me on the subway. I was leaning forward because my wings were&lt;br /&gt;long -- the longest they've ever been -- and wearing a big parka over them. He&lt;br /&gt;leaned forward to match me and tapped me on the shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;"I turned to look at him and he said, 'I get off at the next stop. Will you get&lt;br /&gt;off with me and have a cup of coffee? I've been riding next to you on the subway&lt;br /&gt;for a month, and I want to find out what you're like.'&lt;br /&gt;"I wouldn't have done it, except before I knew what I was doing, I'd already said,&lt;br /&gt;'I beg your pardon?' because I wasn't sure I'd heard him right. And once I'd said&lt;br /&gt;that, once I'd spoken, I couldn't bear the thought of not speaking again."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;They blew through Kapuskasing at ten a.m., on a grey morning that dawned with&lt;br /&gt;drizzle and bad-tempered clouds low overhead. The little main drag -- which Alan&lt;br /&gt;remembered as a bustling center of commerce where he'd waited out half a day to&lt;br /&gt;change buses -- was deserted, the only evidence of habitation the occasional car&lt;br /&gt;pulling through a donut store drive-through lane.&lt;br /&gt;"Jesus, who divorced me this time?" Mimi said, ungumming her eyes and stuffing a&lt;br /&gt;fresh cigarette into her mouth.&lt;br /&gt;"*Fear and Loathing* again, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's *the* road-trip novel," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"What about *On the Road*?"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, *that*," she said. "Pfft. Kerouac was a Martian on crank. Dope fiend prose&lt;br /&gt;isn't fit for human consumption."&lt;br /&gt;"Thompson isn't a dope fiend?"&lt;br /&gt;"No. That was just a put-on. He wrote *about* drugs, not *on* drugs."&lt;br /&gt;"Have you *read* Kerouac?"&lt;br /&gt;"I couldn't get into it," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He pulled sharply off the road and into a parking lot.&lt;br /&gt;"What's this?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"The library," he said. "Come on."&lt;br /&gt;It smelled just as it had when he was 17, standing among the aisles of the biggest&lt;br /&gt;collection of books he'd ever seen. Sweet, dusty.&lt;br /&gt;"Here," he said, crossing to the fiction section. The fiction section at the&lt;br /&gt;library in town had fit into three spinner racks. Here, it occupied its own corner&lt;br /&gt;of overstuffed bookcases. "Here," he said, running his finger down the plastic&lt;br /&gt;Brodart wraps on the spines of the books, the faded Dewey labels.&lt;br /&gt;H, I, J, K... There it was, the edition he'd remembered from all those years ago.&lt;br /&gt;*On the Road.*&lt;br /&gt;"Come on," he said. "We've got it."&lt;br /&gt;"You can't check that out," she said.&lt;br /&gt;He pulled out his wallet as they drew up closer to the checkout counter. He slid&lt;br /&gt;out the plastic ID holder, flipping past the health card and the driver's license&lt;br /&gt;-- not a very good likeness of his face or his name on either, and then produced a&lt;br /&gt;library card so tattered that it looked like a pirate's map on parchment. He slid&lt;br /&gt;it delicately out of the plastic sleeve, unbending the frayed corner, smoothing&lt;br /&gt;the feltlike surface of the card, the furry type.&lt;br /&gt;He slid the card and the book across the counter. Mimi and the librarian -- a boy&lt;br /&gt;of possibly Mimi's age, who wore a mesh-back cap just like his patrons, but at a&lt;br /&gt;certain angle that suggest urbane irony -- goggled at it, as though Alan had&lt;br /&gt;slapped down a museum piece.&lt;br /&gt;The boy picked it up with such roughness that Alan flinched on behalf of his card.&lt;br /&gt;"This isn't --" the boy began.&lt;br /&gt;"It's a library card," Alan said. "They used to let me use it here."&lt;br /&gt;The boy set it down on the counter again.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi peered at it. "There's no name on that card," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Never needed one," he said.&lt;br /&gt;He'd gotten the card from the sour-faced librarian back home, tricked her out of&lt;br /&gt;it by dragging along Bradley and encouraging him to waddle off into the shelves&lt;br /&gt;and start pulling down books. She'd rolled it into her typewriter and then they'd&lt;br /&gt;both gone chasing after Brad, then she'd asked him again for his name and they'd&lt;br /&gt;gone chasing after Brad, then for his address, and then Brad again. Eventually, he&lt;br /&gt;was able to simply snitch it out of the platen of the humming Selectric and walk&lt;br /&gt;out. No one ever looked closely at it again -- not even the thoroughly&lt;br /&gt;professional staffers at the Kapuskasing branch who'd let him take out a stack of&lt;br /&gt;books to read in the bus station overnight while he waited for the morning bus to&lt;br /&gt;Toronto.&lt;br /&gt;He picked up the card again then set it down. It was the first piece of&lt;br /&gt;identification he ever owned, and in some ways, the most important.&lt;br /&gt;"I have to give you a new card," the mesh-back kid said. "With a bar code. We&lt;br /&gt;don't take that card anymore." He picked it up and made to tear it in half.&lt;br /&gt;"NO!" Alan roared, and lunged over the counter to seize the kid's wrists.&lt;br /&gt;The kid startled back and reflexively tore at the card, but Alan's iron grip on&lt;br /&gt;his wrists kept him from completing the motion. The kid dropped the card and it&lt;br /&gt;fluttered to the carpet behind the counter.&lt;br /&gt;"Give it to me," Alan said. The boy's eyes, wide with shock, began to screw shut&lt;br /&gt;with pain. Alan let go his wrists, and the kid chafed them, backing away another&lt;br /&gt;step.&lt;br /&gt;His shout had drawn older librarians from receiving areas and offices behind the&lt;br /&gt;counter, women with the look of persons accustomed to terminating children's&lt;br /&gt;mischief and ejecting rowdy drunks with equal aplomb. One of them was talking into&lt;br /&gt;a phone, and two more were moving cautiously toward them, sizing them up.&lt;br /&gt;"We should go," Mimi said.&lt;br /&gt;"I need my library card," he said, and was as surprised as anyone at the pout in&lt;br /&gt;his voice, a sound that was about six years old, stubborn, and wounded.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi looked hard at him, then at the librarians converging on them, then at the&lt;br /&gt;mesh back kid, who had backed all the way up to a work surface several paces back&lt;br /&gt;of him. She planted her palms on the counter and swung one foot up onto it,&lt;br /&gt;vaulting herself over. Alan saw the back of her man's jacket bulge out behind her&lt;br /&gt;as her wings tried to spread when she took to the air.&lt;br /&gt;She snatched up the card, then planted her hands again and leapt into the air. The&lt;br /&gt;toe of her trailing foot caught the edge of the counter and she began to tumble,&lt;br /&gt;headed for a face-plant into the greyed-out industrial carpet. Alan had the&lt;br /&gt;presence of mind to catch her, her tit crashing into his head, and gentle her to&lt;br /&gt;the floor.&lt;br /&gt;"We're going," Mimi said. "Now."&lt;br /&gt;Alan hardly knew where he was anymore. The card was in Mimi's hand, though, and he&lt;br /&gt;reached for it, making a keening noise deep in his throat.&lt;br /&gt;"Here," she said, handing it to him. When he touched the felted card stock, he&lt;br /&gt;snapped back to himself. "Sorry," he said lamely to the mesh-back kid.&lt;br /&gt;Mimi yanked his arm and they jumped into the car and he fumbled the key into the&lt;br /&gt;ignition, fumbled the car to life. His head felt like a balloon on the end of a&lt;br /&gt;taut string, floating some yards above his body.&lt;br /&gt;He gunned the engine and the body rolled in the trunk. He'd forgotten about it for&lt;br /&gt;a while in the library and now he remembered it again. Maybe he felt something&lt;br /&gt;then, a twitchy twinge of grief, but he swallowed hard and it went away. The&lt;br /&gt;clunk-clunk of the wheels going over the curb as he missed the curb-cut back out&lt;br /&gt;onto the road, Mimi sucking breath in a hiss as he narrowly avoided getting Tboned&lt;br /&gt;by a rusted-out pickup truck, and then the hum of the road under his wheels.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan?" Mimi said.&lt;br /&gt;"It was my first piece of identification," he said. "It made me a person who could&lt;br /&gt;get a book out of the library."&lt;br /&gt;They drove on, heading for the city limits at a few klicks over the speed limit.&lt;br /&gt;Fast, lots of green lights.&lt;br /&gt;"What did I just say?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"You said it was your first piece of ID," Mimi said. She was twitching worriedly&lt;br /&gt;in the passenger seat. Alan realized that she was air-driving, steering and&lt;br /&gt;braking an invisible set of controls as he veered around the traffic. "You said it&lt;br /&gt;made you a person --"&lt;br /&gt;"That's right," Alan said. "It did."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He never understood how he came to be enrolled in kindergarten. Even in those late&lt;br /&gt;days, there were still any number of nearby farm folk whose literacy was so&lt;br /&gt;fragile that they could be intimidated out of it by a sheaf of school enrollment&lt;br /&gt;forms. Maybe that was it -- the five-year-old Alan turning up at the school with&lt;br /&gt;his oddly accented English and his Martian wardrobe of pieces rescued from&lt;br /&gt;roadside ditches and snitched off of clotheslines, and who was going to send him&lt;br /&gt;home on the first day of school? Surely the paperwork would get sorted out by the&lt;br /&gt;time the first permission-slip field trip rolled around, or possibly by the time&lt;br /&gt;vaccination forms were due. And then it just fell by the wayside.&lt;br /&gt;Alan got the rest of his brothers enrolled, taking their forms home and forging&lt;br /&gt;indecipherable scrawls that satisfied the office ladies. His own enrollment never&lt;br /&gt;came up in any serious way. Permission slips were easy, inoculations could be had&lt;br /&gt;at the walk-in clinic once a year at the fire house.&lt;br /&gt;Until he was eight, being undocumented was no big deal. None of his classmates&lt;br /&gt;carried ID. But his classmates *did* have Big Wheels, catcher's mitts, Batmobiles,&lt;br /&gt;action figures, Fonzie lunchboxes, and Kodiak boots. They had parents who came to&lt;br /&gt;parents' night and sent trays of cupcakes to class on birthdays -- Alan's birthday&lt;br /&gt;came during the summer, by necessity, so that this wouldn't be an issue. So did&lt;br /&gt;his brothers', when their time came to enroll.&lt;br /&gt;At eight, he ducked show-and-tell religiously and skillfully, but one day he got&lt;br /&gt;caught out, empty-handed and with all the eyes in the room boring into him as he&lt;br /&gt;fumfuhed at the front of the classroom, and the teacher thought he was being kind&lt;br /&gt;by pointing out that his hand-stitched spring moccasins -- a tithe of the golems&lt;br /&gt;-- were fit subject for a brief exposition.&lt;br /&gt;"Did your mom buy you any real shoes?" It was asked without malice or calculation,&lt;br /&gt;but Alan's flustered, red-faced, hot stammer chummed the waters and the class&lt;br /&gt;sharks were on him fast and hard. Previously invisible, he was now the subject of&lt;br /&gt;relentless scrutiny. Previously an observer of the playground, he was now a nexus&lt;br /&gt;of it, a place where attention focused, hunting out the out-of-place accent, the&lt;br /&gt;strange lunch, the odd looks and gaps in knowledge of the world. He thought he'd&lt;br /&gt;figured out how to fit in, that he'd observed people to the point that he could be&lt;br /&gt;one, but he was so wrong.&lt;br /&gt;They watched him until Easter break, when school let out and they disappeared back&lt;br /&gt;into the unknowable depths of their neat houses, and when they saw him on the&lt;br /&gt;street headed for a shop or moping on a bench, they cocked their heads quizzically&lt;br /&gt;at him, as if to say, *Do I know you from somewhere?* or, if he was feeling&lt;br /&gt;generous, *I wonder where you live?* The latter was scarier than the former.&lt;br /&gt;For his part, he was heartsick that he turned out not to be half so clever as he'd&lt;br /&gt;fancied himself. There wasn't much money around the mountain that season -- the&lt;br /&gt;flakes he'd brought down to the assayer had been converted into cash for new shoes&lt;br /&gt;for the younger kids and chocolate bars that he'd brought to fill Bradley's little&lt;br /&gt;round belly.&lt;br /&gt;He missed the school library achingly during that week, and it was that lack that&lt;br /&gt;drove him to the town library. He'd walked past the squat brown brick building&lt;br /&gt;hundreds of times, but had never crossed its threshold. He had a sense that he&lt;br /&gt;wasn't welcome there, that it was not intended for his consumption. He slunk in&lt;br /&gt;like a stray dog, hid himself in the back shelves, and read books at random while&lt;br /&gt;he observed the other patrons coming and going.&lt;br /&gt;It took three days of this for him to arrive at his strategy for getting his own&lt;br /&gt;library card, and the plan worked flawlessly. Bradley pulled the books off the&lt;br /&gt;back shelves for the final time, the librarian turned in exasperation for the&lt;br /&gt;final time, and he was off and out with the card in his hand before the librarian&lt;br /&gt;had turned back again.&lt;br /&gt;Credentialed.&lt;br /&gt;He'd read the word in a book of war stories.&lt;br /&gt;He liked the sound of it.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;"What did Krishna do?"&lt;br /&gt;"What do you mean?" She was looking at him guardedly now, but his madness seemed&lt;br /&gt;to have past.&lt;br /&gt;"I mean," he said, reaching over and taking her hand, "what did Krishna do when&lt;br /&gt;you went out for coffee with him?"&lt;br /&gt;"Oh," she said. She was quiet while they drove a narrow road over a steep hill.&lt;br /&gt;"He made me laugh."&lt;br /&gt;"He doesn't seem that funny," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"We went out to this coffee shop in Little Italy, and he sat me down at a tiny&lt;br /&gt;green metal table, even though it was still cold as hell, and he brought out tiny&lt;br /&gt;cups of espresso and a little wax-paper bag of biscotti. Then he watched the&lt;br /&gt;people and made little remarks about them. 'She's a little old to be breeding,' or&lt;br /&gt;'Oh, is that how they're wearing their eyebrow in the old country?' or 'Looks like&lt;br /&gt;he beats his wife with his slipper for not fixing his Kraft Dinner right.' And&lt;br /&gt;when he said it, I *knew* it wasn't just a mean little remark, I *knew* it was&lt;br /&gt;true. Somehow, he could look at these people and know what they were selfconscious&lt;br /&gt;about, what their fears were, what their little secrets were. And he&lt;br /&gt;made me laugh, even though it didn't take long before I guessed that that meant&lt;br /&gt;that he might know my secret."&lt;br /&gt;"So we drank our coffee," she said, and then stopped when the body thudded in the&lt;br /&gt;trunk again when they caught some air at the top of a hill. "We drank it and he&lt;br /&gt;reached across the table and tickled my open palm with his fingertips and he said,&lt;br /&gt;'Why did you come out with me?'&lt;br /&gt;"And I mumbled and blushed and said something like, 'You look like a nice guy,&lt;br /&gt;it's just coffee, shit, don't make a big deal out of it,' and he looked like I'd&lt;br /&gt;just canceled Christmas and said, 'Oh, well, too bad. I was hoping it was a big&lt;br /&gt;deal, that it was because you thought I'd be a good guy to really hang out with a&lt;br /&gt;*lot*, if you know what I mean.' He tickled my palm again. I was a blushing&lt;br /&gt;virgin, literally though I'd had a couple boys maybe possibly flirt with me in&lt;br /&gt;school, I'd never returned the signals, never could.&lt;br /&gt;"I told him I didn't think I could be romantically involved with him, and he&lt;br /&gt;flattened out his palm so that my hand was pinned to the table under it and he&lt;br /&gt;said, 'If it's your deformity, don't let that bother you. I thought I could fix&lt;br /&gt;that for you.' I almost pretended I didn't know what he meant, but I couldn't&lt;br /&gt;really, I knew he knew I knew. I said, 'How?' as in, *How did you know* and *How&lt;br /&gt;can you fix it*? but it just came out in a little squeak, and he grinned like&lt;br /&gt;Christmas was back on and said, 'Does it really matter?'&lt;br /&gt;"I told him it didn't, and then we went back to his place in Kensington Market and&lt;br /&gt;he kissed me in the living room, then he took me upstairs to the bathroom and took&lt;br /&gt;off my shirt and he --"&lt;br /&gt;"He cut you," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"He fixed me," she said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan reached out and petted her wings through her jacket. "Were you broken?"&lt;br /&gt;"Of *course* I was," she snapped, pulling back. "I couldn't *talk* to people. I&lt;br /&gt;couldn't *do* anything. I wasn't a person," she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Right," Alan said. "I'm following you."&lt;br /&gt;She looked glumly at the road unraveling before them, grey and hissing with rain.&lt;br /&gt;"Is it much farther?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"An hour or so, if I remember right," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"I know how stupid that sounds," she said. "I couldn't figure out if he was some&lt;br /&gt;kind of pervert who liked to cut or if he was some kind of pervert who liked girls&lt;br /&gt;like me or if I was lucky or in trouble. But he cut them, and he gave me a towel&lt;br /&gt;to bite on the first time, but I never needed it after that. He'd do it quick, and&lt;br /&gt;he kept the knife sharp, and I was able to be a person again -- to wear cute&lt;br /&gt;clothes and go where I wanted. It was like my life had started over again."&lt;br /&gt;The hills loomed over the horizon now, low and rolling up toward the mountains.&lt;br /&gt;One of them was his. He sucked in a breath and the car wavered on the slick road.&lt;br /&gt;He pumped the brakes and coasted them to a stop on the shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;"Is that it?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"That's it," he said. He pointed. His father was green and craggy and smaller than&lt;br /&gt;he remembered. The body rolled in the trunk. "I feel --" he said. "We're taking&lt;br /&gt;him home, at least. And my father will know what to do."&lt;br /&gt;"No boy has ever taken me home to meet his folks," she said.&lt;br /&gt;Alan remembered the little fist in the dirt. "You can wait in the car if you&lt;br /&gt;want," he said.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Krishna came home,&lt;br /&gt;(she said, as they sat in the parked car at a wide spot in the highway, looking at&lt;br /&gt;the mountains on the horizon)&lt;br /&gt;Krishna came home,&lt;br /&gt;(she said, after he'd pulled off the road abruptly, put the car into park, and&lt;br /&gt;stared emptily at the mountains ahead of them)&lt;br /&gt;Krishna came home,&lt;br /&gt;(she said, lighting a cigarette and rolling down the window and letting the shush&lt;br /&gt;of the passing cars come fill the car, and she didn't look at him, because the&lt;br /&gt;expression on his face was too terrible to behold)&lt;br /&gt;and he came through the door with two bags of groceries and a bottle of wine under&lt;br /&gt;one arm and two bags from a ravewear shop on Queen Street that I'd walked past a&lt;br /&gt;hundred times but never gone into.&lt;br /&gt;He'd left me in his apartment that morning, with his television and his books and&lt;br /&gt;his guitar, told me to make myself at home, told me to call in sick to work, told&lt;br /&gt;me to take a day for myself. I felt...*glorious*. Gloried *in*. He'd been so&lt;br /&gt;attentive.&lt;br /&gt;He'd touched me. No one had touched me in so long. No one had *ever* touched me&lt;br /&gt;that way. He'd touched me with...*reverence*. He's gotten this expression on his&lt;br /&gt;face like, like he was in *church* or something. He'd kept breathing something too&lt;br /&gt;low for me to hear and when he put his lips right to my ear, I heard what he'd&lt;br /&gt;been saying all along, "Oh God, oh God, my God, oh God," and I'd felt a warmness&lt;br /&gt;like slow honey start in my toes and rise through me like sap to the roots of my&lt;br /&gt;hair, so that I felt like I was saturated with something hot and sweet and&lt;br /&gt;delicious.&lt;br /&gt;He came home that night with the makings of a huge dinner with boiled soft-shell&lt;br /&gt;crabs, and a bottle of completely decent Chilean red, and three dresses for me&lt;br /&gt;that I could never, ever wear. I tried to keep the disappointment off my face as&lt;br /&gt;he pulled them out of the bag, because I *knew* they'd never go on over my wings,&lt;br /&gt;and they were *so* beautiful.&lt;br /&gt;"This one will look really good on you," he said, holding up a Heidi dress with a&lt;br /&gt;scoop neck that was cut low across the back, and I felt a hot tear in the corner&lt;br /&gt;of my eye. I'd never wear that dress in front of anyone but him. I couldn't, my&lt;br /&gt;wings would stick out a mile.&lt;br /&gt;I knew what it meant to be different: It meant living in the second floor with the&lt;br /&gt;old Russian Auntie, away from the crowds and their eyes. I knew then what I was&lt;br /&gt;getting in for -- the rest of my life spent hidden away from the world, with only&lt;br /&gt;this man to see and speak to.&lt;br /&gt;I'd been out in the world for only a few years, and I had barely touched it,&lt;br /&gt;moving in silence and stealth, watching and not being seen, but oh, I had *loved&lt;br /&gt;it*, I realized. I'd thought I'd hated it, but I'd loved it. Loved the people and&lt;br /&gt;their dialogue and their clothes and their mysterious errands and the shops full&lt;br /&gt;of goods and every shopper hunting for something for someone, every one of them&lt;br /&gt;part of a story that I would never be part of, but I could be *next to* the&lt;br /&gt;stories and that was enough.&lt;br /&gt;I was going to live in an attic again.&lt;br /&gt;I started to cry.&lt;br /&gt;He came to me. he put his arms around me. He nuzzled my throat and licked up the&lt;br /&gt;tears as they slid past my chin. "Shhh," he said. "Shhh."&lt;br /&gt;He took off my jacket and my sweater, peeled down my jeans and my panties, and ran&lt;br /&gt;his fingertips over me, stroking me until I quietned.&lt;br /&gt;He touched me reverently still, his breath hot on my skin. No one had ever touched&lt;br /&gt;me like that. He said, "I can fix you."&lt;br /&gt;I said, "No one can fix me."&lt;br /&gt;He said, "I can, but you'll have to be brave."&lt;br /&gt;I nodded slowly. I could do brave. He led me by the hand into the bathroom and he&lt;br /&gt;took a towel down off of the hook on the back of the door and folded it into a&lt;br /&gt;long strip. He handed it to me. "Bite down on this," he said, and helped me stand&lt;br /&gt;in the tub and face into the corner, to count the grid of tiles and the greenish&lt;br /&gt;mildew in the grout.&lt;br /&gt;"Hold still and bite down," he said, and I heard the door close behind me.&lt;br /&gt;Reverent fingertips on my wing, unfolding it, holding it away from my body.&lt;br /&gt;"Be brave," he said. And then he cut off my wing.&lt;br /&gt;It hurt so much, I pitched forward involuntarily and cracked my head against the&lt;br /&gt;tile. It hurt so much I bit through two thicknesses of towel. It hurt so much my&lt;br /&gt;legs went to mush and I began to sit down quickly, like I was fainting.&lt;br /&gt;He caught me, under my armpits, and held me up, and I felt something icy pressed&lt;br /&gt;to where my wing had been -- I closed my eyes, but I heard the leathery thump as&lt;br /&gt;my wing hit the tile floor, a wet sound -- and gauzy fabric was wrapped around my&lt;br /&gt;chest, holding the icy towel in place over the wound, once twice thrice, between&lt;br /&gt;my tits.&lt;br /&gt;"Hold still," he said. And he cut off the other one.&lt;br /&gt;I screamed this time, because he brushed the wound he'd left the first time, but I&lt;br /&gt;managed to stay upright and to not crack my head on anything. I felt myself crying&lt;br /&gt;but couldn't hear it, I couldn't hear anything, nothing except a high sound in my&lt;br /&gt;ears like a dog whistle.&lt;br /&gt;He kissed my cheek after he'd wound a second bandage, holding a second cold&lt;br /&gt;compress over my second wound. "You're a very brave girl," he said. "Come on."&lt;br /&gt;He led me into the living room, where he pulled the cushions off his sofa and&lt;br /&gt;opened it up to reveal a hide-a-bed. He helped me lie down on my belly, and&lt;br /&gt;arranged pillows around me and under my head, so that I was facing the TV.&lt;br /&gt;"I got you movies," he said, and held up a stack of DVD rental boxes from Martian&lt;br /&gt;Signal. "We got *Pretty in Pink*, *The Blues Brothers*, *The Princess Bride*, a&lt;br /&gt;Robin Williams stand-up tape and a really funny-looking porno called *Edward&lt;br /&gt;Penishands*."&lt;br /&gt;I had to smile in spite of myself, in spite of the pain. He stepped into his&lt;br /&gt;kitchenette and came back with a box of chocolates. "Truffles," he said. "So you&lt;br /&gt;can laze on the sofa, eating bonbons."&lt;br /&gt;I smiled more widely then.&lt;br /&gt;"Such a beautiful smile," he said. "Want a cup of coffee?"&lt;br /&gt;"No," I said, choking it out past my raw-from-screaming throat.&lt;br /&gt;"All right," he said. "Which video do you want to watch?"&lt;br /&gt;"*Princess Bride*," I said. I hadn't heard of any of them, but I didn't want to&lt;br /&gt;admit it.&lt;br /&gt;"You don't want to start with Edward Penishands?"&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan stood out front of the video shop for a while, watching Natalie wait on her&lt;br /&gt;customers. She was friendly without being perky, and it was clear that the mostly&lt;br /&gt;male clientele had a bit of a crush on her, as did her mooning, cow-eyed co-worker&lt;br /&gt;who was too distracted to efficiently shelve the videos he pulled from the box&lt;br /&gt;before him. Alan smiled. Hiring cute girls for your shop was tricky business. If&lt;br /&gt;they had brains, they'd sell the hell out of your stock and be entertaining as&lt;br /&gt;hell; but a lot of pretty girls (and boys!) had gotten a free ride in life and got&lt;br /&gt;affronted when you asked them to do any real work.&lt;br /&gt;Natalie was clearly efficient, and Alan knew that she wasn't afraid of hard work,&lt;br /&gt;but it was good to see her doing her thing, quickly and efficiently taking&lt;br /&gt;people's money, answering their questions, handing them receipts, counting out&lt;br /&gt;change... He would have loved to have had someone like her working for him in one&lt;br /&gt;of his shops.&lt;br /&gt;Once the little rush at the counter was cleared, he eased himself into the shop.&lt;br /&gt;Natalie *was* working for him, of course, in the impromptu assembly line in Kurt's&lt;br /&gt;storefront. She'd proven herself to be as efficient at assembling and testing the&lt;br /&gt;access points as she was at running the till.&lt;br /&gt;"Alan!" she said, smiling broadly. Her co-worker turned and scowled jealously at&lt;br /&gt;him. "I'm going on break, okay?" she said to him, ignoring his sour puss.&lt;br /&gt;"What, now?" he said petulantly.&lt;br /&gt;"No, I thought I'd wait until we got busy again," she said, not unkindly, and&lt;br /&gt;smiled at him. "I'll be back in ten," she said.&lt;br /&gt;She came around the counter with her cigs in one hand and her lighter in the&lt;br /&gt;other. "Coffee?" she said.&lt;br /&gt;"Absolutely," he said, and led her up the street.&lt;br /&gt;"You liking the job?" he said.&lt;br /&gt;"It's better now," she said. "I've been bringing home two or three movies every&lt;br /&gt;night and watching them, just to get to know the stock, and I put on different&lt;br /&gt;things in the store, the kind of thing I'd never have watched before. Old horror&lt;br /&gt;movies, tentacle porn, crappy kung-fu epics. So now they all bow to me."&lt;br /&gt;"That's great," Alan said. "And Kurt tells me you've been doing amazing work with&lt;br /&gt;him, too."&lt;br /&gt;"Oh, that's just fun," she said. "I went along on a couple of dumpster runs with&lt;br /&gt;the gang. I found the most amazing cosmetics baskets at the Shiseido dumpster.&lt;br /&gt;Never would have thought that I'd go in for that girly stuff, but when you get it&lt;br /&gt;for free out of the trash, it feels pretty macha. Smell," she said, tilting her&lt;br /&gt;head and stretching her neck.&lt;br /&gt;He sniffed cautiously. "Very macha," he said. He realized that the other patrons&lt;br /&gt;in the shop were eyeballing him, a middle-aged man, with his face buried in this&lt;br /&gt;alterna-girl's throat.&lt;br /&gt;He remembered suddenly that he still hadn't put in a call to get her a job&lt;br /&gt;somewhere else, and was smitten with guilt. "Hey," he said. "Damn. I was supposed&lt;br /&gt;to call Tropicál and see about getting you a job. I'll do it right away." He&lt;br /&gt;pulled a little steno pad out of his pocket and started jotting down a note to&lt;br /&gt;himself.&lt;br /&gt;She put her hand out. "Oh, that's okay," she said. "I really like this job. I've&lt;br /&gt;been looking up all my old high school friends: You were right, everyone I ever&lt;br /&gt;knew has an account with Martian Signal. God, you should *see* the movies they&lt;br /&gt;rent."&lt;br /&gt;"You keep that on file, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Sure, everything. It's creepy."&lt;br /&gt;"Do you need that much info?"&lt;br /&gt;"Well, we need to know who took a tape out last if someone returns it and says&lt;br /&gt;that it's broken or recorded over or whatever --"&lt;br /&gt;"So you need, what, the last couple months' worth of rentals?"&lt;br /&gt;"Something like that. Maybe longer for the weirder tapes, they only get checked&lt;br /&gt;out once a year or so --"&lt;br /&gt;"So maybe you keep the last two names associated with each tape?"&lt;br /&gt;"That'd work."&lt;br /&gt;"You should do that."&lt;br /&gt;She snorted and drank her coffee. "I don't have any say in it."&lt;br /&gt;"Tell your boss," he said. "It's how good ideas happen in business -- people&lt;br /&gt;working at the cash register figure stuff out, and they tell their bosses."&lt;br /&gt;"So I should just tell my boss that I think we should change our whole rental&lt;br /&gt;system because it's creepy?"&lt;br /&gt;"Damned right. Tell him it's creepy. You're keeping information you don't need to&lt;br /&gt;keep, and paying to store it. You're keeping information that cops or snoops or&lt;br /&gt;other people could take advantage of. And you're keeping information that your&lt;br /&gt;customers almost certainly assume you're not keeping. All of those are good&lt;br /&gt;reasons *not* to keep that information. Trust me on this one. Bosses love to hear&lt;br /&gt;suggestions from people who work for them. It shows that you're engaged, paying&lt;br /&gt;attention to their business."&lt;br /&gt;"God, now I feel guilty for snooping."&lt;br /&gt;"Well, maybe you don't mention to your boss that you've been spending a lot of&lt;br /&gt;time looking through rental histories."&lt;br /&gt;She laughed. God, he liked working with young people. "So, why I'm here," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"Yes?"&lt;br /&gt;"I want to put an access point in the second-floor window and around back of the&lt;br /&gt;shop. Your boss owns the building, right?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah, but I really don't think I can explain all this stuff to him --"&lt;br /&gt;"I don't need you to -- I just need you to introduce me to him. I'll do all the&lt;br /&gt;explaining."&lt;br /&gt;She blushed a little. "I don't know, Abe..." She trailed off.&lt;br /&gt;"Is that a problem?"&lt;br /&gt;"No. Yes. I don't know." She looked distressed.&lt;br /&gt;Suddenly he was at sea. He'd felt like he was in charge of this interaction, like&lt;br /&gt;he understood what was going on. He'd carefully rehearsed what he was going to say&lt;br /&gt;and what Natalie was likely to say, and now she was, what, afraid to introduce him&lt;br /&gt;to her boss? Because why? Because the boss was an ogre? Then she would have pushed&lt;br /&gt;back harder when he told her to talk to him about the rental records. Because she&lt;br /&gt;was shy? Natalie wasn't shy. Because --&lt;br /&gt;"I'll do it," she said. "Sorry. I was being stupid. It's just -- you come on a&lt;br /&gt;little strong sometimes. My boss, I get the feeling that he doesn't like it when&lt;br /&gt;people come on strong with him."&lt;br /&gt;Ah, he thought. She was nervous because he was so goddamned weird. Well, there you&lt;br /&gt;had it. He couldn't even get sad about it. Story of his life, really.&lt;br /&gt;"Thanks for the tip," he said. "What if I assure you that I'll come on easy?"&lt;br /&gt;She blushed. It had really been awkward for her, then. He felt bad. "Okay," she&lt;br /&gt;said. "Sure. Sorry, man --"&lt;br /&gt;He held up a hand. "It's nothing."&lt;br /&gt;He followed her back to the store and he bought a tin robot made out of a Pepsi&lt;br /&gt;can by some artisan in Vietnam who'd endowed it with huge tin testicles. It made&lt;br /&gt;him laugh. When he got home, he scanned and filed the receipt, took a picture, and&lt;br /&gt;entered it into The Inventory, and by the time he was done, he was feeling much&lt;br /&gt;better.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;They got into Kurt's car at five p.m., just as the sun was beginning to set. The&lt;br /&gt;sun hung on the horizon, *right* at eye level, for an eternity, slicing up their&lt;br /&gt;eyeballs and into their brains.&lt;br /&gt;"Summer's coming on," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"And we've barely got the Market covered," Kurt said. "At this rate, it'll take&lt;br /&gt;ten years to cover the whole city."&lt;br /&gt;Alan shrugged. "It's the journey, dude, not the destination -- the act of&lt;br /&gt;organizing all these people, of putting up the APs, of advancing the art. It's all&lt;br /&gt;worthwhile in and of itself."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shook his head. "You want to eat Vietnamese?"&lt;br /&gt;"Sure," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"I know a place," he said, and nudged the car through traffic and on to the Don&lt;br /&gt;Valley Parkway.&lt;br /&gt;"Where the hell are we *going*?" Alan said, once they'd left the city limits and&lt;br /&gt;entered the curved, identical cookie-cutter streets of the industrial suburbs in&lt;br /&gt;the north end.&lt;br /&gt;"Place I know," Kurt said. "It's really cheap and really good. All the Peel Region&lt;br /&gt;cops eat there." He snapped his fingers. "Oh, yeah, I was going to tell you about&lt;br /&gt;the cop," he said.&lt;br /&gt;"You were," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"So, one night I'd been diving there." Kurt pointed to an anonymous low-slung,&lt;br /&gt;sprawling brown building. "They print hockey cards, baseball cards, monster cards&lt;br /&gt;-- you name it."&lt;br /&gt;He sipped at his donut-store coffee and then rolled down the window and spat it&lt;br /&gt;out. "Shit, that was last night's coffee," he said. "So, one night I was diving&lt;br /&gt;there, and I found, I dunno, fifty, a hundred boxes of hockey cards. Slightly&lt;br /&gt;dented at the corners, in the trash. I mean, hockey cards are just *paper*, right?&lt;br /&gt;The only thing that makes them valuable is the companies infusing them with&lt;br /&gt;marketing juju and glossy pictures of mullet-head, no-tooth jocks."&lt;br /&gt;"Tell me how you really feel," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"Sorry," Kurt said. "The hockey players in junior high were real jerks. I'm&lt;br /&gt;mentally scarred.&lt;br /&gt;"So I'm driving away and the law pulls me over. The local cops, they know me,&lt;br /&gt;mostly, 'cause I phone in B&amp;amp;Es when I spot them, but these guys had never met me&lt;br /&gt;before. So they get me out of the car and I explain what I was doing, and I quote&lt;br /&gt;the part of the Trespass to Property Act that says that I'm allowed to do what I'm&lt;br /&gt;doing, and then I open the trunk and I show him, and he busts a *nut*: 'You mean&lt;br /&gt;you found these in the *garbage?* My kid spends a fortune on these things! In the&lt;br /&gt;*garbage*?' He keeps saying, 'In the garbage?' and his partner leads him away and&lt;br /&gt;I put it behind me.&lt;br /&gt;"But then a couple nights later, I go back and there's someone in the dumpster, up&lt;br /&gt;to his nipples in hockey cards."&lt;br /&gt;"The cop," Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"The cop," Kurt said. "Right."&lt;br /&gt;"That's the story about the cop in the dumpster, huh?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;"That's the story. The moral is: We're all only a c-hair away from jumping in the&lt;br /&gt;dumpster and getting down in it."&lt;br /&gt;"C-hair? I thought you were trying not to be sexist?"&lt;br /&gt;"*C* stands for *cock*, okay?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan grinned. He and Kurt hadn't had an evening chatting together in some time.&lt;br /&gt;When Kurt suggested that they go for a ride, Alan had been reluctant: too much on&lt;br /&gt;his mind those days, too much *Danny* on his mind. But this was just what he&lt;br /&gt;needed. What they both needed.&lt;br /&gt;"Okay," Alan said. "We going to eat?"&lt;br /&gt;"We're going to eat," Kurt said. "The Vietnamese place is just up ahead. I once&lt;br /&gt;heard a guy there trying to speak Thai to the waiters. It was amazing -- it was&lt;br /&gt;like he was a tourist even at home, an ugly fucked-up tourist. People suck."&lt;br /&gt;"Do they?" Alan said. "I quite like them. You know, there's pretty good Vietnamese&lt;br /&gt;in Chinatown."&lt;br /&gt;"This is good Vietnamese."&lt;br /&gt;"Better than Chinatown?"&lt;br /&gt;"Better situated," Kurt said. "If you're going dumpster diving afterward. I'm&lt;br /&gt;gonna take your cherry, buddy." He clapped a hand on Alan's shoulder. Real people&lt;br /&gt;didn't touch Alan much. He didn't know if he liked it.&lt;br /&gt;"God," Alan said. "This is so sudden." But he was happy about it. He'd tried to&lt;br /&gt;picture what Kurt actually *did* any number of times, but he was never very&lt;br /&gt;successful. Now he was going to actually go out and jump in and out of the&lt;br /&gt;garbage. He wondered if he was dressed for it, picturing bags of stinky kitchen&lt;br /&gt;waste, and decided that he was willing to sacrifice his jeans and the old Gap&lt;br /&gt;shirt he'd bought one day after the shirt he'd worn to the store -- the wind-up&lt;br /&gt;toy store? -- got soaked in a cloudburst.&lt;br /&gt;The Vietnamese food was really good, and the family who ran the restaurant greeted&lt;br /&gt;Kurt like an old friend. The place was crawling with cops, a new two or three&lt;br /&gt;every couple minutes, stopping by to grab a salad roll or a sandwich or a go-cup&lt;br /&gt;of pho. "Cops always know where to eat fast and cheap and good," Kurt mumbled&lt;br /&gt;around a mouthful of pork chop and fried rice. "That's how I found this place, all&lt;br /&gt;the cop cars in the parking lot."&lt;br /&gt;Alan slurped up the last of his pho and chased down the remaining hunks of rare&lt;br /&gt;beef with his chopsticks and dipped them in chili sauce before popping them in his&lt;br /&gt;mouth. "Where are we going?" he asked.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt jerked his head in the direction of the great outdoors. "Wherever the fates&lt;br /&gt;take us. I just drive until I get an itch and then I pull into a parking lot and&lt;br /&gt;hit the dumpsters. There's enough dumpsters out this way, I could spend fifty or&lt;br /&gt;sixty hours going through them all, so I've got to be selective. I know how each&lt;br /&gt;company's trash has been running -- lots of good stuff or mostly crap -- lately,&lt;br /&gt;and I trust my intuition to take me to the right places. I'd love to go to the&lt;br /&gt;Sega or Nintendo dumpsters, but they're like Stalag Thirteen -- razorwire and&lt;br /&gt;motion-sensors and armed guards. They're the only companies that take secrecy&lt;br /&gt;seriously." Suddenly he changed lanes and pulled up the driveway of an industrial&lt;br /&gt;complex.&lt;br /&gt;"Spidey-sense is tingling," he said, as he killed his lights and crept forward to&lt;br /&gt;the dumpster. "Ready to lose your virginity?" he said, lighting a cigarette.&lt;br /&gt;"I wish you'd stop using that metaphor," Alan said. "Ick."&lt;br /&gt;But Kurt was already out of the Buick, around the other side of the car, pulling&lt;br /&gt;open Alan's door.&lt;br /&gt;"That dumpster is full of cardboard," he said, gesturing. "It's recycling. That&lt;br /&gt;one is full of plastic bottles. More recycling. This one," he said, *oof*ing as he&lt;br /&gt;levered himself over it, talking around the maglight he'd clenched between his&lt;br /&gt;teeth, "is where they put the good stuff. Looky here."&lt;br /&gt;Alan tried to climb the dumpster's sticky walls, but couldn't get a purchase.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt, standing on something in the dumpster that crackled, reached down and&lt;br /&gt;grabbed him by the wrist and hoisted him up. He scrambled over the dumpster's&lt;br /&gt;transom and fell into it, expecting a wash of sour kitchen waste to break over&lt;br /&gt;him, and finding himself, instead, amid hundreds of five-inch cardboard boxes.&lt;br /&gt;"What's this?" he asked.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt was picking up the boxes and shaking them, listening for the rattle. "This&lt;br /&gt;place is an import/export wholesaler. They throw out a lot of defective product,&lt;br /&gt;since it's cheaper than shipping it all back to Taiwan for service. But my kids&lt;br /&gt;will fix it and sell it on eBay. Here," he said, opening a box and shaking&lt;br /&gt;something out, handing it to him. He passed his light over to Alan, who took it,&lt;br /&gt;unmindful of the drool on the handle.&lt;br /&gt;It was a rubber duckie. Alan turned it over and saw it had a hard chunk of metal&lt;br /&gt;growing out of its ass.&lt;br /&gt;"More of these, huh?" Kurt said. "I found about a thousand of these last month.&lt;br /&gt;They're USB keychain drives, low-capacity, like 32MB. Plug them in and they show&lt;br /&gt;up on your desktop like a little hard drive. They light up in all kinds of&lt;br /&gt;different colors. The problem is, they've all got a manufacturing defect that&lt;br /&gt;makes them glow in just one color -- whatever shade the little gel carousel gets&lt;br /&gt;stuck on.&lt;br /&gt;"I've got a couple thousand of these back home, but they're selling briskly. Go&lt;br /&gt;get me a couple cardboard boxes from that dumpster there and we'll snag a couple&lt;br /&gt;hundred more."&lt;br /&gt;Alan gawped. The dumpster was seven feet cubed, the duckies a few inches on a&lt;br /&gt;side. There were thousands and thousands of duckies in the dumpster: more than&lt;br /&gt;they could ever fit into the Buick. In a daze, he went off and pulled some likely&lt;br /&gt;flattened boxes out of the trash and assembled them, packing them with the duckies&lt;br /&gt;that Kurt passed down to him from atop his crunching, cracking mound of doomed&lt;br /&gt;duckies that he was grinding underfoot.&lt;br /&gt;Once they'd finished, Kurt fussed with moving the boxes around so that everything&lt;br /&gt;with a bootprint was shuffled to the bottom. "We don't want them to know that&lt;br /&gt;we've been here or they'll start hitting the duckies with a hammer before they&lt;br /&gt;pitch 'em out."&lt;br /&gt;He climbed into the car and pulled out a bottle of window cleaner and some paper&lt;br /&gt;towels and wiped off the steering wheel and the dash and the handle of his&lt;br /&gt;flashlight, then worked a blob of hand sanitizer into his palms, passing it to&lt;br /&gt;Alan when he was done.&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't bother to point out that as Kurt had worked, he'd transferred the&lt;br /&gt;flashlight from his mouth to his hands and back again a dozen times -- he thought&lt;br /&gt;he understood that this ritual was about Kurt assuring himself that he was not&lt;br /&gt;sinking down to the level of rummies and other garbage pickers.&lt;br /&gt;As if reading his mind, Kurt said, "You see those old rum-dums pushing a shopping&lt;br /&gt;cart filled with empty cans down Spadina? Fucking *morons* -- they could be out&lt;br /&gt;here pulling LCDs that they could turn around for ten bucks a pop, but instead&lt;br /&gt;they're rooting around like raccoons in the trash, chasing after nickel deposits."&lt;br /&gt;"But then what would you pick?"&lt;br /&gt;Kurt stared at him. "You kidding me? Didn't you *see*? There's a hundred times&lt;br /&gt;more stuff than I could ever pull. Christ, if even one of them had a squint of&lt;br /&gt;ambition, we could *double* the amount we save from the trash."&lt;br /&gt;"You're an extraordinary person," Alan said. He wasn't sure he meant it as a&lt;br /&gt;compliment. After all, wasn't *he* an extraordinary person, too?&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Alan was stunned when they found a dozen hard drives that spun up and revealed&lt;br /&gt;themselves to be of generous capacity and moreover stuffed with confidential&lt;br /&gt;looking information when he plugged them into the laptop that Kurt kept under the&lt;br /&gt;passenger seat.&lt;br /&gt;He was floored when they turned up three slightly elderly Toshiba laptops, each of&lt;br /&gt;which booted into a crufty old flavor of Windows, and only one of which had any&lt;br /&gt;obvious material defects: a starred corner in its LCD.&lt;br /&gt;He was delighted by the dumpsters full of plush toys, by the lightly used office&lt;br /&gt;furniture, by the technical books and the CDs of last year's software. The smells&lt;br /&gt;were largely inoffensive -- Kurt mentioned that the picking was better in winter&lt;br /&gt;when the outdoors was one big fridge, but Alan could hardly smell anything except&lt;br /&gt;the sour smell of an old dumpster and occasionally a whiff of coffee grounds.&lt;br /&gt;They took a break at the Vietnamese place for coconut ice and glasses of sweet&lt;br /&gt;iced coffee, and Kurt nodded at the cops in the restaurant. Alan wondered why Kurt&lt;br /&gt;was so pleasant with these cops out in the boonies but so hostile to the law in&lt;br /&gt;Kensington Market.&lt;br /&gt;"How are we going to get connectivity out of the Market?" Kurt said. "I mean, all&lt;br /&gt;this work, and we've hardly gotten four or five square blocks covered."&lt;br /&gt;"Buck up," Alan said. "We could spend another two years just helping people in the&lt;br /&gt;Market use what we've installed, and it would still be productive." Kurt's mouth&lt;br /&gt;opened, and Alan held his hand up. "Not that I'm proposing that we do that. I just&lt;br /&gt;mean there's plenty of good that's been done so far. What we need is some&lt;br /&gt;publicity for it, some critical mass, and some way that we can get ordinary people&lt;br /&gt;involved. We can't fit a critical mass into your front room and put them to work."&lt;br /&gt;"So what do we get them to do?"&lt;br /&gt;"It's a good question. There's something I saw online the other day I wanted to&lt;br /&gt;show you. Why don't we go home and get connected?"&lt;br /&gt;"There's still plenty of good diving out there. No need to go home anyway -- I&lt;br /&gt;know a place."&lt;br /&gt;They drove off into a maze of cul-de-sacs and cheaply built, gaudy monster homes&lt;br /&gt;with triple garages and sagging rain gutters. The streets had no sidewalks and the&lt;br /&gt;inevitable basketball nets over every garage showed no signs of use.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt pulled them up in front of a house that was indistinguishable from the others&lt;br /&gt;and took the laptop from under the Buick's seat, plugging it into the cigarette&lt;br /&gt;lighter and flipping its lid.&lt;br /&gt;"There's an open network here," Kurt said as he plugged in the wireless card. He&lt;br /&gt;pointed at the dormer windows in the top room.&lt;br /&gt;"How the hell did you find that?" Alan said, looking at the darkened window. There&lt;br /&gt;was a chain-link gate at the side of the house, and in the back an aboveground&lt;br /&gt;pool.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt laughed. "These 'security consultants'" -- he made little quotes with his&lt;br /&gt;fingers -- "wardrove Toronto. They went from one end of the city to the other with&lt;br /&gt;a GPS and a wireless card and logged all the open access points they found, then&lt;br /&gt;released a report claiming that all of those access points represented ignorant&lt;br /&gt;consumers who were leaving themselves vulnerable to attacks and making Internet&lt;br /&gt;connections available to baby-eating terrorists.&lt;br /&gt;"One of the access points they identified was *mine*, for chrissakes, and mine was&lt;br /&gt;open because I'm a crazy fucking anarchist, not because I'm an ignorant 'consumer'&lt;br /&gt;who doesn't know any better, and that got me to thinking that there were probably&lt;br /&gt;lots of people like me around, running open APs. So one night I was out here&lt;br /&gt;diving and I *really* was trying to remember who'd played the Sundance Kid in&lt;br /&gt;Butch Cassidy, and I knew that if I only had a net connection I could google it. I&lt;br /&gt;had a stumbler, an app that logged all the open WiFi access points that I came&lt;br /&gt;into range of, and a GPS attachment that I'd dived that could interface with the&lt;br /&gt;software that mapped the APs on a map of Toronto, so I could just belt the machine&lt;br /&gt;in there on the passenger seat and go driving around until I had a list of all the&lt;br /&gt;wireless Internet that I could see from the street.&lt;br /&gt;"So I got kind of bored and went back to diving, and then I did what I usually do&lt;br /&gt;at the end of the night, I went driving around some residential streets, just to&lt;br /&gt;see evidence of humanity after a night in the garbage, and also because the people&lt;br /&gt;out here sometimes put out nice sofas and things.&lt;br /&gt;"When I got home, I looked at my map and there were tons of access points out by&lt;br /&gt;the industrial buildings, and some on the commercial strips, and a few out here in&lt;br /&gt;the residential areas, but the one with the best signal was right here, and when I&lt;br /&gt;clicked on it, I saw that the name of the network was 'ParasiteNet.'"&lt;br /&gt;Alan said, "Huh?" because ParasiteNet was Kurt's name for his wireless project,&lt;br /&gt;though they hadn't used it much since Alan got involved and they'd gotten halfway&lt;br /&gt;legit. But still.&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Kurt said. "That's what I said -- huh? So I googled ParasiteNet to see&lt;br /&gt;what I could find, and I found an old message I'd posted to toronto.talk.wireless&lt;br /&gt;when I was getting started out, a kind of manifesto about what I planned to do,&lt;br /&gt;and Google had snarfed it up and this guy, whoever he is, must have read it and&lt;br /&gt;decided to name his network after it.&lt;br /&gt;"So I figger: This guy *wants* to share packets with me, for sure, and so I always&lt;br /&gt;hunt down this AP when I want to get online."&lt;br /&gt;"You've never met him, huh?"&lt;br /&gt;"Never. I'm always out here at two a.m. or so, and there's never a light on. Keep&lt;br /&gt;meaning to come back around five some afternoon and ring the bell and say hello.&lt;br /&gt;Never got to it."&lt;br /&gt;Alan pursed his lips and watched Kurt prod at the keyboard.&lt;br /&gt;"He's got a shitkicking net connection, though -- tell you what. Feels like a T1,&lt;br /&gt;and the IP address comes off of an ISP in Waterloo. You need a browser, right?"&lt;br /&gt;Alan shook his head. "You know, I can't even remember what it was I wanted to show&lt;br /&gt;you. There's some kind of idea kicking at me now, though..."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt shifted his laptop to the back seat, mindful of the cords and the antenna.&lt;br /&gt;"What's up?"&lt;br /&gt;"Let's do some more driving around, let it perk, okay? You got more dumpsters you&lt;br /&gt;want to show me?"&lt;br /&gt;"Brother, I got dumpsters for weeks. Months. Years."&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;It was the wardriving, of course. Alan called out the names of the networks that&lt;br /&gt;they passed as they passed them, watching the flags pop up on the map of Toronto.&lt;br /&gt;They drove the streets all night, watched the sun go up, and the flags multiplied&lt;br /&gt;on the network.&lt;br /&gt;Alan didn't even have to explain it to Kurt, who got it immediately. They were&lt;br /&gt;close now, thinking together in the feverish drive-time on the night-dark streets.&lt;br /&gt;"Here's the thing," Kurt said as they drank their coffees at the Vesta Lunch, a&lt;br /&gt;grimy 24-hour diner that Alan only seemed to visit during the smallest hours of&lt;br /&gt;the morning. "I started off thinking, well, the cell companies are screwed up&lt;br /&gt;because they think that they need to hose the whole city from their high towers&lt;br /&gt;with their powerful transmitters, and my little boxes will be lower-power and&lt;br /&gt;smarter and more realistic and grassroots and democratic."&lt;br /&gt;"Right," Alan said. "I was just thinking of that. What could be more democratic&lt;br /&gt;than just encouraging people to use their own access points and their own Internet&lt;br /&gt;connections to bootstrap the city?"&lt;br /&gt;"Yeah," Kurt said.&lt;br /&gt;"Sure, you won't get to realize your dream of getting a free Internet by bridging&lt;br /&gt;down at the big cage at 151 Front Street, but we can still play around with&lt;br /&gt;hardware. And convincing the people who *already* know why WiFi is cool to join up&lt;br /&gt;has got to be easier than convincing shopkeepers who've never heard of wireless to&lt;br /&gt;let us put antennae and boxes on their walls."&lt;br /&gt;"Right," Kurt said, getting more excited. "Right! I mean, it's just ego, right?&lt;br /&gt;Why do we need to *control* the network?" He spun around on his cracked stool and&lt;br /&gt;the waitress gave him a dirty look. "Gimme some apple pie, please," he said. "This&lt;br /&gt;is the best part: it's going to violate the hell out of everyone's contracts with&lt;br /&gt;their ISPs -- they sell you an all-you-can-eat Internet connection and then tell&lt;br /&gt;you that they'll cut off your service if you're too hungry. Well, fuck that! It's&lt;br /&gt;not just community networking, it'll be civil disobedience against shitty serviceprovider&lt;br /&gt;terms of service!"&lt;br /&gt;There were a couple early morning hard-hats in the diner who looked up from their&lt;br /&gt;yolky eggs to glare at him. Kurt spotted them and waved. "Sorry, boys. Ever get&lt;br /&gt;one of those ideas that's so good, you can't help but do a little dance?"&lt;br /&gt;One of the hard-hats smiled. "Yeah, but his wife always turns me down." He socked&lt;br /&gt;the other hard-hat in the shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;The other hard-hat grunted into his coffee. "Nice. Very nice. You're gonna be a&lt;br /&gt;*lot* of fun today, I can tell."&lt;br /&gt;They left the diner in a sleepdep haze and squinted into the sunrise and grinned&lt;br /&gt;at each other and burped up eggs and sausages and bacon and coffee and headed&lt;br /&gt;toward Kurt's Buick.&lt;br /&gt;"Hang on," Alan said. "Let's have a walk, okay?" The city smelled like morning,&lt;br /&gt;dew and grass and car-exhaust and baking bread and a whiff of the distant&lt;br /&gt;Cadbury's factory oozing chocolate miasma over the hills and the streetcar tracks.&lt;br /&gt;Around them, millions were stirring in their beds, clattering in their kitchens,&lt;br /&gt;passing water, and taking on vitamins. It invigorated him, made him feel part of&lt;br /&gt;something huge and all-encompassing, like being in his father the mountain.&lt;br /&gt;"Up there," Kurt said, pointing to a little playground atop the hill that rose&lt;br /&gt;sharply up Dupont toward Christie, where a herd of plastic rocking horses swayed&lt;br /&gt;creakily in the breeze.&lt;br /&gt;"Up there," Alan agreed, and they set off, kicking droplets of dew off the grass&lt;br /&gt;beside the sidewalk.&lt;br /&gt;The sunrise was a thousand times more striking from atop the climber, filtered&lt;br /&gt;through the new shoots on the tree branches. Kurt lit a cigarette and blew plumes&lt;br /&gt;into the shafting light and they admired the effect of the wind whipping it away.&lt;br /&gt;"I think this will work," Alan said. "We'll do something splashy for the press,&lt;br /&gt;get a lot of people to change the names of their networks -- more people will use&lt;br /&gt;the networks, more will create them... It's a good plan."&lt;br /&gt;Kurt nodded. "Yeah. We're smart guys."&lt;br /&gt;Something smashed into Alan's head and bounced to the dirt below the climber. A&lt;br /&gt;small, sharp rock. Alan reeled and tumbled from the climber, stunned, barely&lt;br /&gt;managing to twist to his side before landing. The air whooshed out of his lungs&lt;br /&gt;and tears sprang into his eyes.&lt;br /&gt;Gingerly, he touched his head. His fingers came away wet. Kurt was shouting&lt;br /&gt;something, but he couldn't hear it. Something moved in the bushes, moved into his&lt;br /&gt;line of sight. Moved deliberately into his line of sight.&lt;br /&gt;Danny. He had another rock in his hand and he wound up and pitched it. It hit Alan&lt;br /&gt;in the forehead and his head snapped back and he grunted.&lt;br /&gt;Kurt's feet landed in the dirt a few inches from his eyes, big boots a-jangle with&lt;br /&gt;chains. Davey flitted out of the bushes and onto the plastic rocking-horses,&lt;br /&gt;jumping from the horse to the duck to the chicken, leaving the big springs beneath&lt;br /&gt;them to rock and creak. Kurt took two steps toward him, but Davey was away, under&lt;br /&gt;the chain link fence and over the edge of the hill leading down to Dupont Street.&lt;br /&gt;"You okay?" Kurt said, crouching down beside him, putting a hand on his shoulder.&lt;br /&gt;"Need a doctor?"&lt;br /&gt;"No doctors," Alan said. "No doctors. I'll be okay."&lt;br /&gt;They inched their way back to the car, the world spinning around them. The hardhats&lt;br /&gt;met them on the way out of the Vesta Lunch and their eyes went to Alan's&lt;br /&gt;bloodied face. They looked away. Alan felt his kinship with the woken world around&lt;br /&gt;him slip away and knew he'd never be truly a part of it.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;He wouldn't let Kurt walk him up the steps and put him to bed, so instead Kurt&lt;br /&gt;watched from the curb until Alan went inside, then gunned the engine and pulled&lt;br /&gt;away. It was still morning rush hour, and the Market-dwellers were clacking toward&lt;br /&gt;work on hard leather shoes or piling their offspring into minivans.&lt;br /&gt;Alan washed the blood off his scalp and face and took a gingerly shower. When he&lt;br /&gt;turned off the water, he heard muffled sounds coming through the open windows. A&lt;br /&gt;wailing electric guitar. He went to the window and stuck his head out and saw&lt;br /&gt;Krishna sitting on an unmade bed in the unsoundproofed bedroom, in a grimy&lt;br /&gt;housecoat, guitar on his lap, eyes closed, concentrating on the screams he was&lt;br /&gt;wringing from the instrument's long neck.&lt;br /&gt;Alan wanted to sleep, but the noise and the throb of his head -- going in&lt;br /&gt;counterpoint -- and the sight of Davey, flicking from climber to bush to hillside,&lt;br /&gt;scuttling so quickly Alan was scarce sure he'd seen him, it all conspired to keep&lt;br /&gt;him awake.&lt;br /&gt;He bought coffees at the Donut Time on College -- the Greek's wouldn't be open for&lt;br /&gt;hours -- and brought it over to Kurt's storefront, but the lights were out, so he&lt;br /&gt;wandered slowly home, sucking back the coffee.&lt;br /&gt;#&lt;br /&gt;Benny had another seizure halfway up the mountain, stiffening up and falling down&lt;br /&gt;before they could catch him.&lt;br /&gt;As Billy lay supine in the dirt, Alan heard a distant howl, not like a wolf, but&lt;br /&gt;like a thing that a wolf had caught and is savaging with its jaws. The sound made&lt;br /&gt;his neck prickle and when he looked at the little ones, he saw that their eyes&lt;br /&gt;were rolling crazily.&lt;br /&gt;"Got to get him home," Alan said, lifting Benny up with a grunt. The little ones&lt;br /&gt;tried to help, but they just got tangled up in Benny's long loose limbs and so&lt;br /&gt;Alan shooed them off, telling them to keep a lookout behind him, look for Davey&lt;br /&gt;lurking on an outcropping or in a branch, rock held at the ready.&lt;br /&gt;When they came to the cave mouth again, he heard another one of the screams.&lt;br /&gt;Brendan stirred over his shoulders and Alan set him down, heart thundering,&lt;br /&gt;looking every way for Davey, who had come back.&lt;br /&gt;"He's gone away for the night," Burt said conversationally. He sat up and then&lt;br /&gt;gingerly got to his feet. "He'll be back in the morning, though."&lt;br /&gt;The cave was destroyed. Alan's books, Ern-Felix-Grad's toys were smashed. Their&lt;br /&gt;clothes were bubbling in the hot spring in rags and tatters. Brian's carvings were&lt;br /&gt;broken and smashed. Schoolbooks were ruined.&lt;br /&gt;"You all right?" Alan said.&lt;br /&gt;Brian dusted himself off and stretched his arms and legs out. "I'll be fine," he&lt;br /&gt;said. "It's not me he's after."&lt;br /&gt;Alan stared blankly as the brothers tidied up the cave and made piles of their&lt;br /&gt;belongings. The little ones looked scared, without any of the hardness he&lt;br /&gt;remembered from that day when they'd fought it out on the hillside.&lt;br /&gt;Benny retreated to his perch, but before the sun set and the cave darkened, he&lt;br /&gt;brought a couple blankets down and dropped them beside the nook where Alan slept.&lt;br /&gt;He had his baseball bat with him, and it made a good, solid aluminum sound when he&lt;br /&gt;leaned it against the wall.&lt;br /&gt;Silently, the small ones crossed the cave with a pile of their own blankets,&lt;br /&gt;George bringing up the rear with a torn T-shirt stuffed with sharp stones.&lt;br /&gt;Alan looked at them and listened to the mountain breathe around them. It had been&lt;br /&gt;years since his father had had anything to say to them. It had been years since&lt;br /&gt;their mother had done anything except wash the clothes. Was there a voice in the&lt;br /&gt;cave now? A wind? A smell?&lt;br /&gt;He couldn't smell anything. He couldn't hear anything. Benny propped himself up&lt;br /&gt;against the cave wall with a blanket around his shoulders and the baseball bat&lt;br /&gt;held loose and ready between his knees.&lt;br /&gt;A smell then, on the wind. Sewage and sulfur. A stink of fear.&lt;br /&gt;Alan looked to his brothers, then he got up and left the cave without a look back.&lt;br /&gt;He wasn't going to wait for Davey to come to him.&lt;br /&gt;The night had come up warm, and the highway sounds down at the bottom of the hill&lt;br /&gt;mingled with the spring breeze in the new buds on the trees and the new needles on&lt;br /&gt;the pines, the small sounds of birds and bugs foraging in the new year. Alan&lt;br /&gt;slipped out the cave mouth and looked around into the twilight, hoping for a&lt;br /&gt;glimpse of something out of the ordinary, but apart from an early owl and a&lt;br /&gt;handful of fireflies sparking off like distant stars, he saw nothing amiss.&lt;br /&gt;He padded around the mountainside, stooped down low, stopping every few steps to&lt;br /&gt;listen for footfalls. At the high, small entrance to the golems' cave, he paused,&lt;br /&gt;lay on his belly, and slowly peered around the fissure.&lt;br /&gt;It had been years since Alvin had come up to the golems' cave, years since one had&lt;br /&gt;appeared in their father's cave. They had long ago ceased bringing their kills to&lt;br /&gt;the threshold of the boys' cave, ceased leaving pelts in neat piles on the eve of&lt;br /&gt;the waning moon.&lt;br /&gt;The view from the outcropping was stunning. The village had grown to a town, fast&lt;br /&gt;on its way to being a city. A million lights twinkled. The highway cut a&lt;br /&gt;glistening ribbon of streetlamps through the night, a straight line slicing the&lt;br /&gt;hills and curves. There were thousands of people down there, all connected by a&lt;br /&gt;humming net-work -- a work of nets, cunning knots tied in a cunning grid -- of&lt;br /&gt;wire and radio and civilization.&lt;br /&gt;Slowly, he looked back into the golems' cave. He remembered it as being lined with&lt;br /&gt;ranks of bones, a barbarian cathedral whose arches were decorated with ranked&lt;br /&gt;skulls and interlocked, tiny animal tibia. Now those bones were scattered and&lt;br /&gt;broken, the ossified wainscoting rendered gap-toothed by missing and tumbled&lt;br /&gt;bones.&lt;br /&gt;Alan wondered how the golems had reacted when Darl had ruined their centuries of&lt;br /&gt;careful work. Then, looking more closely, he realized that the bones were dusty&lt;br /&gt;and grimed, cobwebbed and moldering. They'd been lying around for a lot longer&lt;br /&gt;than a couple hours.&lt;br /&gt;Alan crept into the cave now, eyes open, ears straining. Puffs of dust rose with&lt;br /&gt;his footfalls, illuminated in the moonlight and city light streaming in from the&lt;br /&gt;cave mouth. Another set of feet had crossed this floor: small, boyish feet that&lt;br /&gt;took slow, arthritic steps. They'd come in, circled the cave, and gone out again.&lt;br /&gt;Alan listened for the golems and heard nothing. He did his own slow circle of the&lt;br /&gt;cave, peering into the shadows. Where had they gone?&lt;br /&gt;There. A streak of red clay, leading to a mound. Alan drew up alongside of it and&lt;br /&gt;made out the runny outlines of the legs and arms, the torso and the head. The&lt;br /&gt;golem had dragged itself into this corner and had fallen to mud. The dust on the&lt;br /&gt;floor was red. Dried 
