『Book 1: Revelation at Tikal — Ch. 6: Coffee, Dream, Deadline』のカバーアート

Book 1: Revelation at Tikal — Ch. 6: Coffee, Dream, Deadline

Book 1: Revelation at Tikal — Ch. 6: Coffee, Dream, Deadline

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概要

Episode Description In Chapter 6 of Revelation at Tikal, Cutty wakes inside Rocinante still gripping the fingers of a dream. He is standing in front of a small locked metal case. The long, complicated key in his hand should fit, but the teeth are wrong. It is not his key. It is Floey's. The key stretches and grows new notches as he holds it, until he sees her hiding it in a crevice between two gray stones at the base of a Maya pyramid. She turns and waves at him from the top, a long satin dress moving like water in slow motion. The harder he climbs, the steeper the steps get, until the stone slides out from under his hands. He sits up in the cramped bed, scribbles the dream into his notebook without trying to interpret it — psychoanalysis has always felt like somebody else's religion — and admits only one thing: in both the dream and the waking world, he is reaching for his sister and missing. While Paula sleeps in a rumpled lumberjack shirt, Cutty puts a moka pot on the burner, dropping in a healthy scoop of grounds. "On the ranch we used to crack an egg into the pot to drag the grounds down," he tells her over breakfast. "So instead of an egg you used what," she says, "spite and anxiety?" They eat granola at the dinette, knees brushing, neither of them moving away. Then Paula bends to her pack, and a leather sheath slips loose. A short Damascus-steel blade flashes before she tucks it back into the top of her boot. A graduation present from her father, she says, who told her if she was going out into the world she should have something sharper than her tongue. Cutty files that away. He heads off to the campground showers with his shaving kit and a pocketful of change. The morning is wet and gray, fog weaving tendrils around the bushes. The shower building is a squat blue-gray box. Most of the hot taps are dead, choked with mineral deposits from the spring water, but he finds one near the end of the row that still runs. The water flashes from cold to near-steam, the stall fills with the rotten-egg tang of hydrogen sulfide, and for the first time since he saw the tombstone painting, his thoughts cut clean. He works through the day in his head. Call the gallery manager. Drive to Oxnard. Walk Ayer Dada's yacht. Swing by the DMV and see if paperwork can pry Floey's woody wagon loose. He does not really expect Oxnard to give him the truth. His gut says she is already a long way from Southern California. But the dream key needed a lock, and standing still is not a plan. While he shaves, he can hear Paula singing on the women's side of the wall, in a thin high voice that comes through the vent grate. He thinks about his old crew in the bomb shelter, and how casually he handed Rocinante over to them last year, and how that will not happen again. Alaska put a backbone in him without him noticing. He has stopped measuring every move against what Jerry and Mark would think. It is like dropping a backpack he did not know he was carrying. On the way to the ranger booth, he passes a Mexican family of four camped under a Winnebago awning with a portable black-and-white TV, an electric omelet maker, and an R2-D2-bleeping electronic game for the boys. No fire, no dirt, no myth of simplicity. Just a bubble of circuitry transplanted into the trees. Maybe this is what going native looks like now, he thinks, dragging your machines into a new environment and letting them colonize it for you. The pay phone behind the ranger booth is corroded by salt air and held together by its inner wires. The first dime sticks on a smear of gum. Information answers in the nasal voice of a young woman with a cartoon-character r problem: "You weally can help keep youw phone costs down…" He hangs up, sacrifices more dimes, and finally reaches the gallery manager in Hollywood. The conversation is the chapter's hinge. Eugene Carl has called the gallery. He told the manager he is still Floey's husband, which is technically a lie, and legally — given the children — close enough not to matter. He has heard about the sales. He is moving to have Floey declared legally insane so he can take control of her painting income as her trustee. It is faster, the manager explains, than waiting seven years to have her declared dead. The hearing will land in four to six weeks. If Floey does not appear, Carl wins by default. The manager estimates more than a hundred thousand dollars in sales already, and rising fast. "You know how people are. Once a commodity acquires a notorious reputation and they believe it to be scarce and in demand…" He doesn't have to finish. The idea of Floey turned into a commodity with a notorious reputation makes Cutty's skin crawl. The pay phone keeps his last dime. Cutty steps back, judges the distance, and snaps a clean kick at the chrome plate over the change box. The contraption rattles and spits out a small fortune in dimes and sticky quarters. Karma in coin form. He scoops up the change ...
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