The American Shore. Samuel R. Delany

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sleep.207 No sooner was he through the locks than his guts knotted up into a Chinese puz­zle.208 Only after he’d unlocked his window and crawled out onto the ledge did he get rid of the bad feelings.209 The city was real. His room was not. The stone ledge was real and his bare buttocks absorbed reality from it. He watched slow movements in enormous distances and pulled his thoughts together.210

      He knew without having to talk to the rest that the murder would never take place.211 The idea had never meant for them what it had meant for him. One pill and they were actors again, content to be images in a mirror.212

      Slowly, as he watched, the city turned itself off. Slowly the dawn divided the sky into an east and a west.213 Had a pedestrian been going past on 58th Street and had that pedestrian looked up, he would have seen the bare soles of a boy’s feet swinging back and forth, angelically.214

      He would have to kill Alyona Ivanovna himself. Nothing else was possible.215

      Back in his bedroom,216 long ago,217 the phone was ringing its fuzzy nighttime ring.218 That would be Tancred (or Amparo?) trying to talk him out of it. He foresaw their arguments. Celeste and Jack couldn’t be trusted now.219 Or, more subtly: they’d all made themselves too visible with their Orfeo.220 If there were even a small investigation, the benches would remember them, remember how well they had danced, and the police would know where to look.221

      But the real reason, which at least Amparo would have been ashamed to mention now that the pill was wearing off,222 was that they’d begun to feel sorry for their victim. They’d got to know him too well over the last month and their resolve had been eroded by compassion.223

      A light came on in Papa’s window. Time to begin.224 He stood up, golden in the sunbeams225 of another perfect day,226 and walked back along the foot-wide ledge to his own window.227 His legs tingled from having sat so long.228

      He waited till Papa was in the shower,229 then tippytoed to the old secretaire in his bedroom (W. & J. Sloan, 1952). Papa’s keychain was coiled atop the walnut veneer. Inside the secretaire’s drawer was an antique Mexican cigar box, and in the cigar box a velvet bag, and in the velvet bag Papa’s replica of a French dueling pistol, circa 1790.230 These precautions were less for his son’s sake than on account of Jimmy Ness, who every so often felt obliged to show he was serious with his suicide threats.231

      He’d studied the booklet carefully when Papa had bought the pistol and was able to execute the loading procedure quickly and without error,232 tamping the premeasured twist of powder down into the barrel and then the lead ball on top of it.233

      He cocked the hammer back a single click.

      He locked the drawer.234 He replaced the keys, just so. He buried, for now, the pistol in the stuffs and cushions of the Turkish corner, tilted upright to keep the ball from rolling out.235 Then with what remained of yesterday’s ebullience he bounced into the bathroom and kissed Papa’s cheek,236 damp with the morning’s allotted two gallons and redolent of 4711.237

      They had a cheery breakfast together in the coffee room,238 which was identical to the breakfast they would have made for themselves except for the ritual of being waited on by a waitress.239 Little Mister Kissy Lips gave an enthusiastic account of the Alexandrians’ performance of Orfeo, and Papa made his best effort of seeming not to condescend. When he’d been driven to the limit of this pretense,240 Little Mister Kissy Lips touched him for a second pill,241 and since it was better for a boy to get these things from his father than from a stranger on the street, he got it.242

      He reached the South Ferry stop at noon,243 bursting with a sense of his own imminent liberation.244 The weather was M-Day all over again,245 as though at midnight out on the ledge he’d forced time to go backwards246 to the point when things had started going wrong.247 He’d dressed in his most anonymous shorts and the pistol hung from his belt in a dun dittybag.248

      Alyona Ivanovna was sitting on one of the benches249 near the aviary, listening to Miss Kraus.250 Her ring hand gripped the poster firmly,251 while the right chopped at the air, eloquently awkward, like a mute’s first words following a miraculous cure.252

      Little Mister Kissy Lips went down the path and squatted in the shadow of his memorial.253 It had lost its magic yesterday, when the statues had begun to look so silly to everyone.254 They still looked silly. Verrazano was dressed like a Victorian industrialist taking a holiday in the Alps. The angel was wearing an angel’s usual bronze nightgown.255

      His good feelings were leaving his head by little and little, like aeolian sandstone attrited by the centuries of wind.256 He thought of calling up Amparo,257 but any comfort she might bring to him would be a mirage so long as his purpose in coming here remained unfulfilled.258

      He looked at his wrist, then remembered he’d left his watch home. The gigantic advertising clock on the facade of the First National Citi-bank said it was fifteen after two.259 That wasn’t possible.260

      Miss Kraus was still yammering away.261

      There was time to watch a cloud move across the sky from Jersey, over the Hudson, and past the sun. Unseen winds nibbled at its wispy edges. The cloud became his life, which would disappear without ever having turned into rain.262

      Later, and263 the old man was walking up the sea promenade toward the Castle.264 He stalked him, for miles.265 And then they were alone, together, at the far end of the park.266

      “Hello,” he said, with the smile reserved for grown-ups of doubtful importance.267

      He looked directly at the dittybag, but Little Mister Kissy Lips didn’t lose his composure. He would be wondering whether to ask for money, which would be kept, if he’d had any, in the bag. The pistol made a noticeable bulge but not the kind of bulge one would ordinarily associate with a pistol.

      “Sorry,” he said coolly. “I’m broke.”268

      “Did I ask?”

      “You were going to.”269

      The old man made as if to return in the other direction, so he had to speak quickly, something that would hold him here.

      “I saw you speaking with Miss Kraus.”270

      He was held.

      “Congratulations—you broke through the ice!”271

      The old man half-smiled, half-frowned. “You know her?”272

      “Mm. You could say that we’re aware of her.”273 The “we” had been a deliberate risk, an hors d’oeuvre. Touching a finger to each side of the strings by which the heavy bag hung from his belt, he urged on it a lazy pendular motion.274 “Do you mind if I ask you a question?”

      There was nothing indulgent now in the man’s face. “I probably do.”275

      His

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