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Chapter 2:
Light
filtered back, filling his closed eyes with a membrane of illuminated
redness. He opened his eyes, lifted his head to look around him. To search
out Heather or the doctor.
He lay alone
in the room. No one else. A bureau with a cracked vanity mirror, ugly old
light fixtures jutting from the grease-saturated walls. And from somewhere
nearby the blare of a TV set.
He was not
in a hospital.
And Heather
was not with him; he experienced her absence, the total emptiness of
everything, because of her.
God, he
thought. What's happened?
The pain in
his chest had vanished, along with so much else. Shakily, he pushed back
the soiled wool blanket, sat up, rubbed his forehead reflexively, gathered
together his vitality.
This is a
hotel room, he realized. A lousy, bug-infested cheap wino hotel. No
curtains, no bathroom. Like he had lived in years ago, at the start of his
career. Back when he had been unknown and had no money. The dark days he
always shut out of his memory as best he could.
Money. He
groped at his clothes, discovered that he no longer wore the hospital gown
but had back, in wrinkled condition, his hand-tailored silk suit. And, in
the inner coat pocket, the wad of high-denomination bills, the money he
had intended to take to Vegas.
At least he
had that.
Swiftly, he
looked around for a phone. No, of course not. But there'd be one in the
lobby. But whom to call? Heather? AI Bliss, his agent? Mory Mann, the
producer of his TV show? His attorney, Bill Wolfer? Or all of them, as
soon as possible, perhaps.
Unsteadily,
he managed to get to his feet; he stood swaying, cursing for reasons he
did not understand. An animal instinct held him; he readied himself, his
strong six body, to fight. But he could not discern the antagonist, and
that frightened him. For the first time in as long as he could remember he
felt panic.
Has a lot of
time passed? he asked himself. He could not tell; he had no sense of it
either way. Daytime. Quibbles zooming and bleating in the skies outside
the dirty glass of his window. He looked at his watch; it read ten-thirty.
So what? It could be a thousand years off, for all he knew. His watch
couldn't help him.
But the
phone would. He made his way out into the dust saturated corridor, found
the stairs, descended step by step, holding on to the rail until at last
he stood in the depressing, empty lobby with its ratty old overstuffed
chairs.
Fortunately
he had change. He dropped a one-dollar gold piece into the slot, dialed Al
Bliss's number.
"Bliss
Talent Agency," Al's voice came presently.
"Listen,"
Jason said. "I don't know where I am. In the name of Christ come and get
me; get me out of here; get me someplace else. You understand, Al? Do
you?"
Silence from
the phone. And then in a distant, detached voice Al Bliss said, "Who am I
talking to?"
He snarled
his answer.
"I don't
know you, Mr. Jason Taverner," Al Bliss said, again in his most neutral,
uninvolved voice. "Are you sure you have the right number? Who did you
want to talk to?"
"To you, Al.
Al Bliss, my agent. What happened in the hospital? How'd I get out of
there into here? Don't you know?" His panic ebbed as he forced control on
himself; he made his words come out reasonably. "Can you get hold of
Heather for me?"
"Miss Hart?"
AI said, and chuckled. And did not answer.
"You," Jason
said savagely, "are through as my agent. Period. No matter what the
situation is. You are out."
In his ear
AI Bliss chuckled again and then, with a click, the line became dead. Al
Bliss had hung up.
I'll kill
the son of a bitch, Jason said to himself. I'll tear that fat balding
little bastard into inch- square pieces.
What was he
trying to do to me? I don't understand. What all of a sudden does he have
against me? What the hell did I do to him, for chrissakes? He's been my
friend and agent nineteen years. And nothing like this has ever happened
before.
I'll try
Bill Wolfer, he decided. He's always in his office or on call; I'll be
able to get hold of him and find out what this is all about. He dropped a
second gold dollar into the phone's slot and, from memory, once more
dialed.
"Wolfer and
Blaine, Attorneys-at-law," a female receptionist's voice sounded in his
ear.
"Let me talk
to Bill," Jason said "This is Jason Taverner. You know who I am."
The
receptionist said, "Mr. Wolfer is in court today. Would you care to speak
to Mr. Blaine instead, or shall I have Mr. Wolfer call you back when he
returns to the office later on this afternoon?"
"Do you know
who I am?" Jason said. "Do you know who Jason Taverner is? Do you watch
TV?" His voice almost got away from him at that point; he heard it break
and rise. With great effort he regained control over it, but he could not
stop his hands from shaking; his whole body, in fact, shook.
"I'm sorry,
Mr. Taverner," the receptionist said. "I really can't talk for Mr. Wolfer
or -"
"Do you
watch TV?" he said.
"Yes."
"And you
haven't heard of me? The Jason Taverner Show, at nine on Tuesday nights?"
"I'm sorry,
Mr. Taverner. You really must talk directly to Mr. Wolfer. Give me the
number of the phone you're calling from and I'll see to it that he calls
you back sometime today."
He hung up.
I'm insane,
he thought. Or she's insane. She and AI Bliss, that son of a bitch.
God. He moved shakily away from the phone, seated himself in one of the
faded overstuffed chairs. It felt good to sit; he shut his eyes and
breathed slowly and deeply. And pondered.
I have five
thousand dollars in government high-denomination bills, he told himself.
So I'm not completely helpless. And that thing is gone from my chest,
including its feeding tubes. They must have been able to get at them
surgically in the hospital. So at least I'm alive; I can rejoice over
that. Has there been a time lapse? he asked himself. Where's a newspaper?
He found an
L.A. Times on a nearby couch, read the date. October 12, 1988. No time
lapse. This was the day after his show and the day Marilyn had sent him,
dying, to the hospital.
An idea came
to him. He searched through the sections of newspaper until he found the
entertainment column. Currently he was appearing nightly at the Persian
Room of the Hollywood Hilton - had been in fact for three weeks, but of
course less Tuesdays because of his show.
The ad for
him which the hotel people had been running during the past three weeks
did not seem to be on the page anywhere. He thought groggily, maybe it's
been moved to another page. He thereupon combed that section of the paper
thoroughly. Ad after ad for entertainers but no mention of him. And his
face had been on the entertainment page of some newspaper or another for
ten years. Without an ellipsis.
I'll make
one more try, he decided. I'll try Mory Mann.
Fishing out
his wallet, he searched for the slip on which he had written Mory's
number.
His wallet
was very thin.
All his
identification cards were gone. Cards that made it possible for him to
stay alive. Cards that got him through pol and nat barricades without
being shot or thrown into a forced-labor camp.
I can't live
two hours without my ID, he said to himself. I don't even dare walk out of
the lobby of this rundown hotel and onto the public sidewalk. They'll
assume I'm a student or teacher escaped from one of the campuses. I'll
spend the rest of my life as a slave doing heavy manual labor. I am what
they call an unperson.
So my first
job, he thought, is to stay alive. The hell with Jason Taverner as a
public entertainer; I can worry about that later.
He could
feel within his brain the powerful six-determined constituents moving
already into focus. I am not like other men, he told himself. I will
get out of this, whatever it is. Somehow.
For example,
he realized, with all this money I have on me I can get myself down to
Watts and buy phony ID cards. A whole walletful of them. There must be a
hundred little operators scratching away at that, from what I've heard.
But I never thought I'd be using one of them. Not Jason Taverner. Not a
public entertainer with an audience of thirty million.
Among all
those thirty million people, he asked himself, isn't there one who
remembers me? If "remember" is the right word. I'm talking as if a lot of
time has passed, that I'm an old man now, a has-been, feeding off former
glories. And that's not what's going on.
Returning to
the phone, he looked up the number of the birth-registration control
center in Iowa; with several gold coins he managed to reach them at last,
after much delay.
"My name is
Jason Taverner," he told the clerk. "I was born in Chicago at Memorial
Hospital on December 16,1946. Would you please confirm and release a copy
of my certificate of birth? I need it for a job I'm applying for."
"Yes, sir."
The clerk put the line on hold; Jason waited.
The clerk
clicked back on. "Mr. Jason Taverner, born in Cook County on December 16,
1946."
"Yes," Jason
said.
"We have no
birth registration form for such a person at that time and place. Are you
absolutely sure of the facts, sir?"
"You mean do
I know my name and when and where I was born?" His voice again managed to
escape his control, but this time he let it; panic flooded him. "Thanks,"
he said and hung up, shaking violently, now. Shaking in his body and in
his mind.
I don't
exist, he said to himself. There is no Jason Taverner. There never was and
there never will be. The hell with my career; I just want to live. If
someone or something wants to eradicate my career, okay; do it. But aren't
I going to be allowed to exist at all? Wasn't I even born?
Something
stirred in his chest. With terror he thought, they didn't get the feed
tubes out entirely; some of them are still growing and feeding inside of
me. That goddamn tramp of a no- talent girl. I hope she winds up walking
the streets for two bits a try.
After what I
did for her: getting her those two auditions for A and R people. But hell
- I did get to lay her a lot. I suppose it comes out even.
***
Returning to
his hotel room, he took a good long look at himself in the flyspecked
vanity mirror. His appearance hadn't changed, except that he needed a
shave. No older. No more lines, no gray hair visible. The good shoulders
and biceps. The fat-free waist that let him wear the current form fitting
men's clothing.
And that's
important to your image, he said to himself. What kind of suits you can
wear, especially those tucked-in- waist numbers. I must have fifty of
them, he thought. Or did have. Where are they now? he asked himself. The
bird is gone, and in what meadow does it now sing? Or however that goes.
Something from the past, out of his days at school. Forgotten until this
moment. Strange, he thought, what drifts up into your mind when you're in
an unfamiliar and ominous situation. Sometimes the most trivial stuff
imaginable.
If wishes
were horses then beggars might fly. Stuff like that. It's enough to drive
you crazy.
He wondered
how many pol and nat check stations there were between this miserable
hotel and the closest ID forger in Watts? Ten? Thirteen? Two? For me, he
thought, all it takes is one. One random check by a mobile vehicle and
crew of three. With their damn radio gear connecting them to pol-nat data
central in Kansas City. Where they keep the dossiers.
He rolled
back his sleeve and examined his forearm. Yes, there it was: his tattooed
ident number. His somatic license plate, to be carried by him throughout
his life, buried at last with him in his longed-for grave.
Well, the
pols and nats at the mobile check station would read off the ident number
to Kansas City and then - what then? Was his dossier still there or was it
gone, too, like his birth certificate? And if it wasn't there, what would
the pol- nat bureaucrats think it meant?
A clerical
error. Somebody misfiled the microfilm packet that made up the dossier.
It'll turn up. Someday, when it doesn't matter, when I've spent ten years
of my life in a quarry on Luna using a manual pickax. If the dossier isn't
there, he mused, they'll assume I'm an escaped student, because it's only
students who don't have pol-nat dossiers, and even some of them, the
important ones, the leaders - they're in there, too.
I am at the
bottom of life, he realized. And I can't even climb my way up to mere
physical existence. Me, a man who yesterday had an audience of thirty
million. Someday, somehow, I will grope my way back to them. But not now.
There are other things that come first. The bare bones of existence that
every man is born with: I don't even have that. But I will get it; a six
is not an ordinary. No ordinary could have physically or psychologically
survived what's happened to me - especially the uncertainty - as I have.
A six, no
matter what the external circumstances, will always prevail. Because
that's the way they genetically defined us.
He left his
hotel room once more, walked downstairs and up to the desk. A middle-aged
man with a thin mustache was reading a copy of Box magazine; he did not
look up but said, "Yes, sir."
Jason
brought out his packet of government bills, laid a five-hundred-dollar
note on the counter before the clerk. The clerk glanced at it, glanced
again, this time with wide-opened eyes. Then he cautiously looked up into
Jason's face, questioningly.
"My ident
cards were stolen," Jason said. "That five hundred-dollar bill is yours if
you can get me to someone who can replace them. If you're going to do it,
do it right now; I'm not going to wait." Wait to be picked up by a pol or
a nat, he thought. Caught here in this rundown dingy hotel.
"Or caught
on the sidewalk in front of the entrance," the clerk said. "I'm a telepath
of sorts. I know this hotel isn't much, but we have no bugs. Once we had
Martian sand fleas, but no more." He picked up the five-hundred-dollar
bill. "I'll get you to someone who can help you," he said. Studying
Jason's face intently, he paused, then said, "You think you're
world-famous. Well, we get all kinds."
"Let's go,"
Jason said harshly. "Now."
"Right now,"
the clerk said, and reached for his shiny plastic coat.
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