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"You are lucky man," the Russian said to Eddie. "We are honor
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269.
42.Checking Out ing our agreement. Isotope to be delivered. But we are wanting no more the business with you."
There was a click, and another, and Chia watched as the big man with no left ear folded his axe, collapsing it smoothly into itself without looking at it. 'That thing you're holding is a heavy crime, Rozzer. Your fan-club turnout's bringing the police. Better let me be in possession."
Rez looked at the big man. "I'll carry it myself, Keithy."
Chia thought she saw a sudden sadness in the big man's eyes. "Well then," he said. "Time to go." He slipped the folded weapon inside his jacket. "Come on, then. You two." Gesturing Chia and Masahiko toward the door. Rez followed Masahiko, the Russian close behind him, but Chia saw that the room key was on top of the little fridge. She ran over and grabbed it. Then she stopped, looking down at Maryalice.
Maryalice's mouth, with her lipstick gone, looked old and sad. It was a mouth that must've been hurt a lot, Chia thought. "Come with us," Chia said.
Maryalice looked at her.
"Come on," Chia said. "The police are coming."
"I can't," Maryalice said. "I have to take care of Eddie."
"Tell your Eddie," Blackwell said, reaching Chia in two steps, "that if he whines to anyone about any of this, he'll be grabbed and his shoe size shortened."
But Maryalice didn't seem to hear, or if she did, she didn't look up, and the big man pulled Chia out of the room, closed the door, and then Chia was following the back of the Russian's tan suit down the narrow corridor, his fancy cowboy boots illuminated by the ankle-high light-strips.
Rez was stepping into the elevator with Masahiko and the Russian when the big man caught his shoulder. "You're staying with me," he said, shoving Chia into the elevator.
Masahiko pushed the b.u.t.ton. "You are having vehicle?" the Russian asked Masahiko.
270 "No," Masahiko said.
The Russian grunted. His cologne was making Chia's stomach turn over. The door opened on the little lobby. The Russian pushed past her, looking around. Chia and Masahi~o followed. The elevator door closed. "Looking for vehicle," the Russian said. "Come." They followed him through the sliding gla.s.s door, into the parking area, where Eddie's Graceland seemed to take up at least half the available s.p.a.ce. Beside it was a silver-gray j.a.panese sedan, and Chia wondered if that was Rez's. Someone had put black plastic rectangles over the license plates of both cars.
She heard the gla.s.s door hiss open again and turned to see Rez coming out, the nanotech unit tucked beneath his arm like a football. The big man was behind him.
Then a really angry man in a s.h.i.+ny white tuxedo burst through the pink plastic strips that hung down across the entrance. He had a smaller man by the collar of his jacket, and the smaller man was trying to get away. Then the smaller man saw them there and shouted "Blackwell!" and actually managed to slip right out of his jacket, but the man in the white tuxedo reached out with the other hand and caught him by the belt.
The Russian was yelling in Russian now and the man in the white tuxedo seemed to see him for the first time. He let go of the other man's belt.
"We've got the van," the other man said.
The big man with the missing ear stepped up really close to the man in the white tuxedo, glared at him, and took the other man's jacket. "Okay, Rozzer," he said, turning to Rez. "You know the drill this one. Old hat. Same as leaving that house in St. Kilda with the b.a.s.t.a.r.d Melbourne tabs outside, right?" He draped the jacket over Rez's head and shoulders, slapped him encouragingly on the upper arm. He walked over to the pink strips and drew one aside, looking out. "f.u.c.king h.e.l.l," he said. "Right then, all of you. It's move fast, stay together, Rez in the center, and into the van. On my count of three."
271.
43.Toecutters Breakfast "You aren't eating," Blackwell said, after he'd cleared his second plate of links and eggs. He'd appropriated this dining room on one of the Elf Hat's executive floors, and insisted Laney join him. The view was similar to the one from Laney's room, six floors below, and sunlight was glinting from the distant parapets of the new buildings.
"Who put out the word that Rez was dead, Blackwell? The
idoru?"
"Her? Why d'you think she would?" He was using the edge of a
triangle of toast to squeegee his plate.
"I don't know," Laney said, "but she seems to like to do things.
And they aren't necessarily that easy to understand."
"It wasn't her," Blackwell said. "We're checking it out. Looks as though some fan of his in Mexico went berserk; used some fairly drastic sort of 'ware-weapon on the Tokyo club's central site. Took that over from a converted corporate website in the States and issued the bulletin. Called on every fan local to Tokyo to get up immediately and go to that love hotel." He popped the toast into his mouth, swallowed, and wiped his lips with a thick white napkin.
"But Rez was there," Laney said.
Blackwell shrugged. "We're looking into it. We have more than enough on our hands, now. Have to dissociate Lo/Rez from this death hoax, rea.s.sure his audience. Legal's flying in from London and New York for talks with Starkov and his people. Her people too," he added. "Going to be busy."
273.
"Who were those kids?" Laney asked. "The little redhead and the j.a.panese hippie?"
"Rez says they're okay. Have 'em here in the hotel. Arleigh's sorting it out."
"Where's the nanotech unit?"
"You didn't say that," Blackwell said. "Now don't say it again. The official truth of the night's events is currently being formulated, rnd that will never be a part of it. Am I understood?"
Laney nodded. He looked out at the new buildings again. Either the angle of light had changed or that parapet had s.h.i.+fted slightly. He looked at Blackwell. "Is it my imagination, or has your att.i.tude on all this undergone some kind of change? I thought you were adamantly opposed to Rez and the idoru getting together."
Blackwell sighed. "I was. But it's starting to look like something of a done deal now, isn't it? De facto relations.h.i.+p, really. I suppose I'm old-fas.h.i.+oned, but I'd hoped that he might eventually wind up with a bit of the ordinary. Someone to polish his gun, pick up his socks, have a baby or two. But it isn't going to happen, is it?"
"I guess not."
"In which case," Blackwell said, "I have two options. Either I leave the silly b.a.s.t.a.r.d to his own resources, or I stay and I do my job and try to adjust to whatever it is this is going to become. And at the end of the b.l.o.o.d.y day, Laney, regardless, I have to remember where I'd be if he hadn't come behind the walls at Pentridge to give that solo concert. Aren't you going to eat that?" Looking at the scrambled eggs going cold on Laney's plate.
"My job's done," Laney said. "It didn't work out the way you wanted it to, but I did it. Agreed?"
"No question."
"Then I'd better go. Get me paid off, I'm out of here today."
Blackwell looked at him with new interest. "That fast, eh? What's your hurry? Don't find us agreeable?'
"No," Laney said. "It's just that that way's better all round.
"Not what Yama's saying. Rez either. Not to mention her other- 274 ness, who no doubt will voice an opinion in that regard. I'd say you were set to become the court prognosticator, Laney. Unless, of course, that whole business with the Kombinat turns out to be absolute b.o.l.l.o.c.ks, and it's discovered that you simply make that nodal nonsense up-which I for one would actually find quite amusing. But no, your services are very much desired now, you might even say required, and none of us would currently be happy to see you go."
"I have to," Laney said. "I'm being blackmailed."
This brought Blackwell's lids to half-mast. He leaned slightly forward. The pink worm of scar tissue squirmed in his eyebrow. "Are you?" he said softly, as though Laney had just ventured to confess some unusual s.e.xual complication. "And may I ask who by?"
"Slitscan. Kathy Torrance. It's sort of personal, for her."
"Tell me about it. Tell me all about it. Do."