I was feeling
restless. Clients had come and gone, mostly gone and Sheri was immersed in her
books. When she drank she didn’t like interrupting. When she read it was worse.
When she read and drank it was time to find another room in another city – and burn
the phone.
Outside the sky
fluttered, its light sinking in darkness and heat. Skimmers flashed and
vanished like predatory fish; slower craft weaved between slender chimneys,
copper and glass buildings, and the debris of earlier times. There was a smell
in the air, the stench of rat-like men and damp cannibal steam condensing on
ancient brick and dribbling slime to black ponds below. I closed the windows,
switched on the desk lamp. Poured myself four fingers of bourbon. I held the glass to
the lamp, enjoying the fragmented diamond twinkle of cut crystal, the rust
coloured glow of the bourbon it held and downed it in one. It was time to find
Sheri…time to start dreaming.
I walked along
corridors, shelves groaning with books - on dark nights they screamed – past lesser
shelves, whispering in parchment and shadow. Eventually I reached the main
library, where Sheri holed up when she’d been hitting the booze.
The library was
cavernous, books lining the walls from ceiling to floor. Walnut cabinets gleamed
in dim lighting, each holding neatly rolled parchments and maps, yellowing
Playboys, Penthouses and Hustle, Glocks, Smith and Wessons, Mausers, Rugers, all
loaded and ready for use. I’d pretty much got the room the way I liked. I hoped
Sheri wasn’t drinking. It seemed a pity to move
In the corner
squatted a low obsidian table, books scattered across it like pirate doubloons; some calf-skin covered and crumbling with age; others bound in pale leather
and inscribed with small patterned diamonds. They gleamed emerald and dark ruby
as my torch skimmed across them and settled on Miss Lamour, lost in a world of
her own.
“What gives?”
Sheri Lamour
sighed and closed the book, stroked its front cover with a pale finger tipped
in magenta. There wasn’t a bottle in sight and I ended her sigh with one of my
own. One of relief.
“Oh, Clay,” she
breathed. She breathed again and I breathed with her, wondering who would be
the first to give up. She had that look in her eye, one I hadn’t seen for some
time. She was in love and it wasn’t with me.
“What’s his name? ”I snarled. I hadn’t snarled for
some time. There’d been little need. Maybe it’s my face or the fact that a
punch works best without warning.
“Xander Daltry.”
She said, without a trace of apology. Dames.
She said, without a trace of apology. Dames.
Her lips twitched in what may have been a smile. “And
there’s one here for you…Luisa Tavares. She’s your kind of girl, Clay. She’s my
kind of girl.”
This had possibilities – except for one thing.
And Sheri read minds.
“Xander Daltry – he’s a dream man, Clay. . .You’re the
real thing.”
11 comments:
Aw, Sheri Lamour has a heart of gold.
Thank you for the lovely write-up. Clever as always.
Thanks, Maria. It helps keep Sheri and Clay fresh in my mind - somewhere in a Blade-runner future. Poor, doomed Djinn
Fabulous. Both your post and Maria's book. Fabulous.
Now that's a fantastic way to share the allure of Mistress of the Stone. Great job, Mike.
LD, Angela - Many thanks for the generous words. I like to think of Clay and Sheri as Muppets with attitude
RE your comment on my post...
...and yet
...despite your irritation with no reply
...you are yourself a no-reply blogger
(scratches head)
I always reply. Scratches own head
Mistress of the Stone is very nice movie.
Consider removing your no-reply setting.
I enjoy reading your comments...but the no-reply is a pain in the butt.
I'd love to but I don't understand. I just assumed that if someone makes a comment I reply to them. End of story. Clearly I'm missing something but I don't know what : (
http://rmacwheeler.blogspot.com/2012/09/no-reply-im-ticked-at-bloggerand.html
Post a Comment