She dug in her toes and spread her arms. Took a deep breath. Maybe I am going to survive after all, she thought. It could be Burton was already halfway-merged into the oceanic mind of Io, and awaiting her to join in an alchemical marriage of personalities. Maybe Iâm going to live forever. Who knows? Anything is possible.
Maybe.
There was a second and more likely possibility. All this could well be nothing more than a hallucination. Nothing but the sound of her brain short-circuiting and squirting bad chemicals in all directions. Madness. One last grandiose dream before dying. Martha had no way of judging.
Whatever the truth might be, though, there were no alternatives, and only one way to find out.
She jumped.
Briefly, she flew.
2
The Dead
Three boy zombies in matching red jackets bussed our table, bringing water, lighting candles, brushing away the crumbs between courses. Their eyes were dark, attentive, lifeless; their hands and faces so white as to be faintly luminous in the hushed light. I thought it in bad taste, but âThis is Manhattan,â Courtney said. âA certain studied offensiveness is fashionable here.â
The blond brought menus and waited for our order.
We both ordered pheasant. âAn excellent choice,â the boy said in a clear, emotionless voice. He went away and came back a minute later with the freshly strangled birds, holding them up for our approval. He couldnât have been more than eleven when he died and his skin was of that sort connoisseurs call âmilk glass,â smooth, without blemish, and all but translucent. He must have cost a fortune.
As the boy was turning away, I impulsively touched his shoulder. He turned back. âWhatâs your name, son?â I asked.
âTimothy.â He might have been telling me the specialite de maison . The boy waited a breath to see if more was expected of him, then left.
Courtney gazed after him. âHow lovely he would look,â she murmured, ânude. Standing in the moonlight by a cliff. Definitely a cliff. Perhaps the very one where he met his death.â
âHe wouldnât look very lovely if heâd fallen off a cliff.â
âOh, donât be unpleasant.â
The wine steward brought our bottle. âChateau La Tour â17.â I raised an eyebrow. The steward had the sort of old and complex face that Rembrandt would have enjoyed painting. He poured with pulseless ease and then dissolved into the gloom. âGood lord, Courtney, you seduced me on cheaper.â
She flushed, not happily. Courtney had a better career going than I. She outpowered me. We both knew who was smarter, better connected, more likely to end up in a corner office with the historically significant antique desk. The only edge I had was that I was a male in a sellerâs market. It was enough.
âThis is a business dinner, Donald,â she said, ânothing more.â
I favored her with an expression of polite disbelief I knew from experience sheâd find infuriating. And, digging into my pheasant, murmured, âOf course.â We didnât say much of consequence until dessert, when I finally asked, âSo whatâs Loeb-Soffner up to these days?â
âStructuring a corporate expansion. Jimâs putting together the financial side of the package, and Iâm doing personnel. Youâre being headhunted, Donald.â She favored me with that feral little flash of teeth she made when she saw something she wanted. Courtney wasnât a beautiful woman, far from it. But there was that fierceness to her, that sense of something primal being held under tight and precarious control that made her hot as hot to me. âYouâre talented, youâre thuggish, and youâre not too tightly nailed to your present position. Those are all qualities weâre looking for.â
She dumped her purse on the table, took out a single folded sheet of paper. âThese are the terms