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"Where is she?"
"I don't know," Chia said.
He wore a black, long-coated suit, b.u.t.toned high. Like something from an old movie, but new and expensive-looking. He seemed to notice that he was still holding her wrist; now he let it go.
"I'll carry it for you," he said. "We'll find her."
Chia didn't know what to do. "Maryalice wanted me to carry it."
"You did. Now I'll carry it." He took it from her.
"Are you Maryalice's boyfriend? Eddie?" The corner of his mouth twitched.
"You could say that," he said.
Eddie's car was a Daihatsu Graceland with the steering wheel on the wrong side. Chia knew that because Rez had ridden in the back of one in a video, except that that one had had a bath in it, black marble, big gold faucets shaped like tropical fish. People had posted that that was an ironic take on money, on the really ugly things you could do with it if you had too much. Chia had told her mother about that. Her mothet said there wasn't much point in worrying what you might do if you had too much, because most people never even had enough. She said it was better to try to figure out what "enough" actually meant.
But Eddie had one, a Graceland, all black and chrome. From the outside it looked sort of like a cross between an RV and one of those long, wedge-shaped Hummer limousines. Chia couldn't imagine there'd be much of a j.a.panese market; the cars here all looked like little candy-colored lozenges.
The Graceland was meshback pure and simple, designed to sell to the kind of American who made a point of trying not to buy imports. Which, when it came to cars, def initely narrowed your options. (Hester Chen's mother had one of those really ugly Canadian trucks that cost a fortune but were guaranteed to last for eighty-five years; that was supposed to be better for the ecology.)
Inside, the Graceland was all burgundy velour, puffed up in diamonds, with little chrome nubs where the points of the diamonds met. It was about the tackiest thing Chia had ever seen, and she guessed Maryalice thought so too, because Maryalice, seated next to her, was explaining that it was an "image" thing, that Eddie had this very hot, very popular country-music club called Whiskey Clone, so he'd gotten the Graceland to go with that, and he'd also started dressing the way they did in Nashville. Maryalice thought that look suited him, she said.
Chia nodded. Eddie was driving, talking in j.a.panese on a speakerphone. They'd found Maryalice at a tiny little bar, just off the arrivals area. It was the third one they'd looked in, Chia got the feeling that Eddie wasn't very happy to see Maryalice, but Maryalice hadn't seemed to care.
It was Maryalice's idea that they give Chia a ride into Tokyo. She said the train was too crowded and it cost a lot anyway. She said she wanted to do Chia a &vor, because Chia had carried her bag for her. (Chia had noticed that Eddie had put one bag in the Graceland's trunk, but kept the one with the Nissan County sticker up front, next to him, beside the driver's seat.)
Chia wasn't really listening to Maryalice now; it was some time at night and the jet lag was too weird and they were on this big bridge that seemed to be made out of neon, with however many lanes of traffic around them, the little cars like strings of bright beads, all of them s.h.i.+ny and new.
There were screens that kept blurring past, tall and narrow, with j.a.panese writing jumping around on some of them, and people on others, faces, smiling as they sold something.
And then a woman's face: Itei Toei, the idoru Rez wanted to marry. And gone.
04 William Gibson "Rice Daniels, Mr. Lane>'. Out of control." Pressing a card of some kind to the opposite side of the scratched plastic that walled the room called Visitors away from those who gave it its name.
Laney had tried to read it, but the attempt at focusing had driven an atrocious spike of pain between his eyes. He'd looked at Rice Daniels instead, through tears of pain: close-cropped dark hair, close-fitting sungla.s.ses with small oval lenses, the black frames gripping the man's head like some kind of surgical clamp.
Nothing at all about Rice Daniels appeared to be out of control.
"The series," he said. "'Out of Control.' As in: aren't the media? Out of Control: the cutting edge of counter-investigative journalism."
Laney had gingerly tried touching the tape across the bridge of his nose: a mistake. "Counter- investigative?"
"You're a quant, Mr. Laney." A quant.i.tative a.n.a.lyst. He wasn't, really, but that was technically his job description, "For Slitscan."
Laney didn't respond.
"The girl was the focus of intensive surveillance. Slitscan was all over her. You know why. We believe a case can be made here for Slitscan's culpability in the death of Alison s.h.i.+res."
Lane>' looked down at his running shoes, their laces removed by the Deputies. "She killed
herself," he said.
"But we know why." 3
0.
2.
05.
9. Out of Control "No," Laney said, meeting the black ovals again, "I don't, Not exactly." The nodal point. Protocols of some other realm entirely.
"You're going to need help, Lane>'. You might be looking at a manslaughter charge. Abetting a suicide. They'll want to know why you were up there."
"I'll tell them why."
"Our producers managed to get me in here first, Lane>'. It wasn't easy. There's a spin-control team from Slitscan out there now, waiting to talk with you. If you let them, they'll turn it all around. They'll get you off, because they have to, in order to cover the show. They can do it, with enough money and the right lawyers. But ask yourself this: do you want to let them do it?"
Daniels still had his business card thumbed up against the plastic. Trying to focus on it again, Laney saw that someone had scratched something in from the other side, in small, uneven mirror- letters, so that he could read it left to right:
I NO U DIDIT.
'i've never heard of Out of Control."
"Our hour-long pilot is in production as we speak, Mr. Lane>'." A measured pause. "We're all very excited."
"Why?"
"Out of Control isn't just a series. We think of it as an entirely new paradigm. A new way to do television. Your story-Alison s.h.i.+res' story-is precisely what we intend to get out there. Our producers are people who want to give something back to the audience. They've done well, they're established, they've proven themselves; now they want to give something back-to restore a degree of honesty, a new opportunity for perspective." The black ovals drew slightly closer to the scratched plastic. "Our producers are the producers of 'Cops in Trouble' and 'A Calm and Deliberate Fas.h.i.+on."
"A what?"
"Factual accounts of premeditated violence in the global fas.h.i.+on industry."
06 ~AiEtha.n G~bsnn . . .
"Counter-investigative'?" Yamazaki's pen hovered over the notebook.
"It was a show about shows like Slitscan," Laney explained. "Supposed abuses." There were no stools at the bar, which might have been ten feet long. You stood. Aside from the bartender, in some kind of Kabuki drag, they had the place to themselves. By virtue of filling it, basically. It was probably the smallest freestanding commercial structure Lane>' had ever seen, and it seemed to have been there forever, like a survival from ancient Edo, a city of shadows and minute dark lanes. The walls were s.h.i.+ngled with faded postcards, gone a uniform sepia under a glaze of acc.u.mulated nicotine and cooking smoke.
"Ah," Yamazaki said at last, "a meta-tabloid.'"
The bartender was broiling two sardines on a doll's hotplate. He flipped them with a pair of steel chopsticks, transferred them to a tiny plate, garnished them with some kind of colorless, translucent pickle, and presented them to Laney.
"Thanks," Lane>' said. The bartender ducked his shaven eyebrows.
In spite of the modest decor, there were dozens of bottles of expensive-looking whiskey arranged behind the bar, each one with a hand-written brown paper sticker: the owner's name in j.a.panese.
Yamazaki had explained that you bought one and they kept it there for you. Blackwell was on his second tumbler of the local vodka-a.n.a.log, on the rocks, Yamazaki was sticking to c.o.ke Lire. Laney had an untouched shot of surrealistically expensive Kentucky srraight bourbon whiskey in front of him, and wondered vaguely what it would do to his jet lag if he were actually to drink it.
"So," Blackwell said, draining the tumbler, ice clinking against his prosthetic, "they get you out so they can have a go at these other