Read American Gods Online

Authors: Neil Gaiman

Tags: #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Fairy Tales; Folk Tales; Legends & Mythology, #Action & Adventure, #Science Fiction, #Fiction

American Gods (14 page)

“Essie Tregowan?” said the stranger.

The widow Richardson looked up, shading her eyes in the May
sunshine. “Do I know you?” she asked. She had not heard him approach.

The man was dressed all in green: dusty green trews, green
jacket, and a dark green coat. His hair was a carroty red, and he grinned at
her all lopsided. There was something about the man that made her happy to look
at him, and something else that whispered of danger. “You might say that you
know me,” he said.

He squinted down at her, and she squinted right back up at
him, searching his moon-face for a clue to his identity. He looked as young as
one of her own grandchildren, yet he had called her by her old name, and there
was a burr in his voice she knew from her childhood, from the rocks and the
moors of her home.

“You’re a Cornishman?” she asked.

“That I am, a Cousin Jack,” said the red:haired man. “Or
rather, that I was, but now I’m here in this new world, where nobody puts out
ale or milk for an honest fellow, or a loaf of bread come harvest time.”

The old woman steadied the bowl of peas upon her lap. “If
you’re who I think you are,” she said, “then I’ve no quarrel with you.” In the
house, she could hear Phyllida grumbling to the housekeeper.

“Nor I with you,” said the red-haired fellow, a little
sadly, “although it was you that brought me here, you and a few like you, into
this land with no time for magic and no place for piskies and such folk.”

“You’ve done me many a good turn,” she said.

“Good and ill,” said the squinting stranger. “We’re like the
wind. We blows both ways.”

Essie nodded.

“Will you take my hand, Essie Tregowan?” And he reached out
a hand to her. Freckled it was, and although Essie’s eyesight was going she
could see each orange hair on the back of his hand, glowing golden in the
afternoon sunlight. She bit her lip. Then, hesitantly, she placed her
blue-knotted hand in his.

She was still warm when they found her, although the life
had fled her body and only half the peas were shelled.

Chapter Five

Madam Life’s apiece in bloom

Death goes dogging everywhere:

She’s the tenant of the room,

He’s the ruffian on the stair.

—W. E. Henley, “Madam Life’s a Piece in Bloom”

 

Only Zorya Utrennyaya was awake to say goodbye to them, that
Saturday morning. She took Wednesday’s forty-five dollars and insisted on
writing him out a receipt for it in wide, looping handwriting, on the back of
an expired soft-drink coupon. She looked quite doll-like in the morning light,
with her old face carefully made Up and her golden hair piled high upon her
head.

Wednesday kissed her hand. ‘Thank you for your hospitality,
dear lady,” he said. “You and your lively sisters remain as radiant as the sky
itself.”

“You are a bad old man,” she told him, and shook a finger at
him. Then she hugged him. “Keep safe,” she told him. “I would not like to hear
that you were gone for good.”

“It would distress me equally, my dear.”

She shook hands with Shadow. “Zorya Polunochnaya thinks very
highly of you,” she said. “I also.”

“Thank you,” said Shadow. “Thanks for the dinner.”

She raised an eyebrow at him. “You liked? You must come
again.”

Wednesday and Shadow walked down the stairs. Shadow put his
hands in his jacket pocket. The silver dollar was cold in his hand. It was
bigger and heavier than any coins he’d used so far. He classic-palmed it, let
his hand hang by his side naturally, then straightened his hand as the coin
slipped down to a front-palm position. It felt natural there, held between his
forefinger and his little finger by the’slightest of pressure.

“Smoothly done,” said Wednesday.

“I’m just learning,” said Shadow. “I can do a lot of the
technical stuff. The hardest part is making people look at the wrong hand.”

“Is that so?”

“Yes,” said Shadow. “It’s called misdirection.” He slipped
his middle fingers under the coin, pushing it into a back palm, and fumbled his
grip on it, ever so slightly. The coin dropped from his hand to the stairwell
with a clatter and bounced down half a flight of stairs. Wednesday reached down
and picked it up.

“You cannot afford to be careless with people’s gifts,” said
Wednesday. “Something like this, you need to hang onto it. Don’t go throwing it
about.” He examined the coin, looking first at the eagle side, then at the face
of Liberty on the obverse. “Ah, Lady Liberty. Beautiful, is she not?” He tossed
the coin to Shadow, who picked it from the air, did a slide vanish—seeming to
drop it into his left hand while actually keeping it in his right—and then appeared
to pocket it with his left hand. The coin sat in the palm of his right hand, in
plain view. It felt comforting there.

“Lady Liberty,” said Wednesday. “Like so many of the gods
that Americans hold dear, a foreigner. In this case, a Frenchwoman, although,
in deference to American sensibilities, the French covered up her magnificent
bosom on that statue they presented to New York. Liberty,” he continued,
wrinkling his nose at the used condom that lay on the bottom flight of steps,
toeing it to the side of the stairs with distaste—”Someone could slip on that.
Break his neck” he muttered, interrupting himself. “Like a banana peel, only
with bad taste and irony thrown in.” He pushed open the door, and the sunlight
hit them. “Liberty,” boomed Wednesday, as they walked to the car, “is a bitch
who must be bedded on a mattress of corpses.”

“Yeah?” said Shadow.

“Quoting,” said Wednesday. “Quoting someone French. That’s
who they have a statue to, in their New York harbor: a bitch who liked to be
fucked on the refuse from the tumbril. Hold your torch as high as you want to,
m’dear, there’s still rats in your dress and cold jism dripping down your leg.”
He unlocked the car, and pointed Shadow to the passenger seat.

“I think she’s beautiful,” said Shadow, holding the coin up
close. Liberty’s silver face reminded him a little of Zor-ya Polunochnaya.

‘That,” said Wednesday, driving off, “is the eternal folly
of man. To be chasing after the sweet flesh, without realizing that it is
simply a pretty cover for the bones. Worm food. At night, you’re rubbing
yourself against worm food. No offense meant.”

Shadow had never seen Wednesday quite so expansive. His new
boss, he decided, went through phases of extroversion followed by periods of
intense quiet. “So you aren’t American?” asked Shadow.

“Nobody’s American,” said Wednesday. “Not originally. That’s
my point.” He checked his watch. “We still have several hours to kill before
the banks close. Good job last night with Czernobog, by the way. I would have
closed him on coming eventually, but you enlisted him more wholeheartedly than
I could ever have.”

“Only because he gets to kill me afterward.”

“Not necessarily. As you yourself so wisely pointed out, he’s
old, and the killing stroke might merely leave you, well, paralyzed for life,
say. A hopeless invalid. So you have much to lobk forward to, should Mister
Czernobog survive the coming difficulties.”

“And there is some question about this?” said Shadow,
echoing Wednesday’s manner, then hating himself for it.

“Fuck yes,” said Wednesday. He pulled up in the parking lot
of a bank. “This,” he said, “is the bank I shall be robbing. They don’t close
for another few hours. Let’s go in and say hello.”

He gestured to Shadow. Reluctantly, Shadow got out of the
car. If the old man was going to do something stupid, Shadow could see no
reason why his face should be on the camera. But curiosity pulled him and he
walked into the bank. He looked down at the floor, rubbed his nose with his
hand, doing his best to keep his face hidden.

“Deposit forms, ma’am?” said Wednesday to the lone teller.

“Over there.”

“Very good. And if I were to need to make a night deposit
... ?”

“Same forms.” She smiled at him. “You know where the night
deposit slot is, hon? Left out the main door, it’s on the wall.”

“My thanks.”

Wednesday picked up several deposit forms. He grinned a
goodbye at the teller, and he and Shadow walked out.

Wednesday stood there on the sidewalk for a moment, scratching
his beard meditatively. Then he walked over to the ATM machine and to the night
safe, set in the side of the wall, and inspected them. He led Shadow across the
road to the supermarket, where he bought a chocolate fudge Popsi-cle for
himself and a cup of hot chocolate for Shadow. There was a pay phone set in the
wall of the entry way, below a notice board with rooms to rent and puppies and
kittens in need of good homes. Wednesday wrote down the telephone number of the
pay phone. They crossed the road once more. “What we need,” said Wednesday,
suddenly, “is snow. A good, driving, irritating snow. Think ‘snow’ for me, will
you?”

“Huh?”

“Concentrate on making those clouds—the ones over there, in
the west—making them bigger and darker. Think gray skies and driving winds
coming down from the arctic. Think snow.”

“I don’t think it will do any good.”

“Nonsense. If nothing else, it will keep your mind occupied,”
said Wednesday, unlocking the car. “Kinko’s next. Hurry up.”

Snow, thought Shadow, in the passenger seat, sipping his hot
chocolate. Huge, dizzying clumps and clusters of snow falling through the air,
patches of white against an iron-gray sky, snow that touches your tongue with
cold and winter, that kisses your face with its hesitant touch before freezing
you to death. Twelve cotton-candy inches of snow, creating a fairy-tale world,
making everything unrecognizably beautiful ...

Wednesday was talking to him.

“I’m sorry?” said Shadow.

“I said we’re here,” said Wednesday. “You were somewhere
else.”

“I was thinking about snow,” said Shadow.

In Kinko’s, Wednesday set about photocopying the deposit
slips from the bank. He had the clerk ipstant-print him two sets of ten
business cards. Shadow’s hdpd had begun to ache, and there was an uncomfortable
feeling between his shoulder blades; he wondered if he had slept wrong, if the
headache was an awkward legacy of the night before’s sofa.

Wednesday sat at the computer terminal, composing a letter,
and, with the clerk’s help, making several large-sized signs.

Snow, thought Shadow. High in the atmosphere, perfect, tiny
crystals that form about a minute piece of dust, each a lacelike work of
fractal art. And the snow crystals clump together into flakes as they fall,
covering Chicago in their white plenty, inch upon inch ...

“Here,” said Wednesday. He handed Shadow a cup of Kinko’s
coffee, a half-dissolved lump of nondairy creamer powder floating on the top, “I
think that’s enough, don’t you?”

“Enough what?”

“Enough snow. Don’t want to immobilize the city, do we?”

The sky was a uniform battleship gray. Snow was coming. Yes.

“I didn’t really do that?” said Shadow. “I mean, I didn’t.
Did I?”

“Drink the coffee,” said Wednesday. “It’s foul stuff, but it
will ease the headache.” Then he said, “Good work.”

Wednesday paid the Kinko’s clerk, and he carried his signs
and letters and cards outside. He opened the trunk of his car, put the papers
in a large black metal case of the kind carried by payroll guards, and closed
the trunk. He passed Shadow a business card.

“Who,” said Shadow, “is A. Haddock, Director of Security, Al
Security Services?”

“You are.”

“A. Haddock?”

“Yes.”

“What does the A. stand for?”

“Alfredo? Alphonse? Augustine? Ambrose? Your call entirely.”

“Oh. I see.”

“I’m James O’Gorman,” said Wednesday. “Jimmy to my friends.
See? I’ve got a card too.”

They got back in the car. Wednesday said, “If you can think ‘A.
Haddock’ as well as you thought ‘snow,’ we should have plenty of lovely money
with which to wine and dine my friends of tonight.”

“I’m not going back to prison.”

“You won’t be.”

“I thought we had agreed that I wouldn’t be doing anything illegal.”

“You aren’t. Possibly aiding and abetting, a little
conspiracy to commit, followed of course by receiving stolen money, but, trust
me, you’ll come out of this smelling like a rose.”

“Is that before or after your elderly Slavic Charles Atlas
crushes my skull with one blow?”

“His eyesight’s going,” said Wednesday. “He’ll probably miss
you entirely. Now, we still have a little time to kill—the bank closes at
midday on Saturdays, after all. Would you like lunch?”

“Yes,” said Shadow. “I’m starving.”

“I know just the place,” said Wednesday. He hummed as he
drove, some cheerful song that Shadow could not identify. Snowflakes began to
fall, just as Shadow had imagined them, and he felt strangely proud. He knew,
rationally, that he had nothing to do with the snow, just as he knew the silver
dollar he carried in his pocket was not and never had been the moon. But still
...

They stopped outside a large shedlike building. A sign said
that the all-U-can-eat lunch buffet was $4.99. “I love this place,” said
Wednesday.

“Good food?” asked Shadow.

“Not particularly,” said Wednesday. “But the ambience is unmissable.”

The ambience that Wednesday loved, it turned out, once lunch
had been eaten—Shadow had the fried chicken, and enjoyed it—was the business
that took up the rear of the shed: it was, the hanging flag across the center
of the room announced, a Bankrupt and Liquidated Stock Clearance Depot.

Wednesday went out to the car and reappeared with a small
suitcase, which he took into the men’s room. Shadow figured he’d learn soon
enough what Wednesday was up to, whether he wanted to or not, and so he prowled
the liquidation aisles, staring at the things for sale: Boxes of coffee “for
use in airline filters only,” Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle toys and Xena:
Warrior Princess harem dolls, teddy bears that played patriotic tunes on the
xylophone when plugged in, cans of processed meat, galoshes and sundry
overshoes, marshmallows, Bill Clinton presidential wristwatches, artificial
miniature Christmas trees, salt and pepper shakers in the shapes of animals,
body parts, fruit, and nuns, and, Shadow’s favorite, a “just add real carrot”
snowman kit with plastic coal eyes, a corncob pipe, and a plastic hat.

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