The Big Time Fritz Leiber (best romance novels of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Fritz Leiber
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He was right about the backstage part. The Place is a regular theater-in-the-round with the Void for an audience, the Voidâs gray hardly disturbed by the screens masking Surgery (Ugh!), Refresher and Stores. Between the last two are the bar and kitchen and Beauâs piano. Between Surgery and the sector where the Door usually appears are the shelves and taborets of the Art Gallery. The control divan is stage center. Spaced around at a fair distance are six big low couchesâ âone with its curtains now shooting up into the grayâ âand a few small tables. It is like a ballet set and the crazy costumes and characters that turn up donât ruin the illusion. By no means. Diaghilev would have hired most of them for the Ballet Russe on first sight, without even asking them whether they could keep time to music.
II A Right-Hand GloveLast week in Babylon,
Last night in Rome,
Beau had gone behind the bar and was talking quietly at Doc, but with his eyes elsewhere, looking very sallow and professional in his white, and I thoughtâ âDamballa!â âIâm in the French Quarter. I couldnât see the New Girl. Sid was at last getting to the New Boy after the fuss about Mark. He threw me a sign and I started over with Erich in tow.
âWelcome, sweet lad. Sidney Lessinghamâs your host, and a fellow Englishman. Born in Kingâs Lynn, 1564, schooled at Cambridge, but London was the life and death of me, though I outlasted Bessie, Jimmie, Charlie, and Ollie almost. And what a life! By turns a clerk, a spy, a bawdâ âthe two trades are hand in gloveâ âa poet of no account, a beggar, and a peddler of resurrection tracts. Beau Lassiter, our throats are tinder!â
At the word âpoet,â the New Boy looked up, but resentfully, as if he had been tricked into it.
âAnd to spare your throat for drinking, sweet gallant, Iâll be so bold as to guess and answer one of your questions,â Sid rattled on. âYes, I knew Will Shakespeareâ âwe were of an ageâ âand he was such a modest, mind-your-business rogue that we all wondered whether he really did write those plays. Your pardon, âfaith, but that scratch might be looked to.â
Then I saw that the New Girl hadnât lost her head, but gone to Surgery (Ugh!) for a first-aid tray. She reached a swab toward the New Boyâs sticky cheek, saying rather shrilly, âIf I mightâ ââ âŠâ
Her timing was bad. Sidâs last words and Erichâs approach had darkened the look in the young Soldierâs face and he angrily swept her arm aside without even glancing at her. Erich squeezed my arm. The tray clattered to the floorâ âand one of the drinks that Beau was bringing almost followed it. Ever since the New Girlâs arrival, Beau had been figuring that she was his responsibility, though I donât think the two of them had reached an agreement yet. Beau was especially set on it because I was thick with Sid at the time and Maud with Doc, she loving tough cases.
âEasy now, lad, and you love me!â Sid thundered, again shooting Beau the âHold itâ look. âSheâs just a poor pagan trying to comfort you. Swallow your bile, you black villain, and perchance it will turn to poetry. Ah, did I touch you there? Confess, you are a poet.â
There isnât much gets by Sid, though for a second I forgot my psychology and wondered if he knew what he was doing with his insights.
âYes, Iâm a poet, all right,â the New Boy roared. âIâm Bruce Marchant, you bloody Zombies. Iâm a poet in a world where even the lines of the King James and your precious Will whom you use for laughs arenât safe from Snakesâ slime and the Spidersâ dirty legs. Changing our history, stealing our certainties, claiming to be so blasted all-knowing and best intentioned and efficient, and what does it lead to? This bloody S.I. glove!â
He held up his black-gloved left hand which still held the mate and he shook it.
âWhatâs wrong with the Spider Issue gauntlet, heart of gold?â Sid demanded. âAnd you love us, tell us.â While Erich laughed, âConsider yourself lucky, Kamerad. Mark and I didnât draw any gloves at all.â
âWhatâs wrong with it?â Bruce yelled. âThe bloody things are both lefts!â He slammed it down on the floor.
We all howled, we couldnât help it. He turned his back on us and stamped off, though I guessed he would keep out of the Void. Erich squeezed my arm and said between gasps, âMein Gott, Liebchen, what have I always told you about Soldiers? The bigger the gripe, the smaller the cause! It is infallible!â
One of us didnât laugh. Ever since the New Girl heard the name Bruce Marchant, sheâd had a look in her eyes like sheâd been given the sacrament. I was glad sheâd got interested in something, because sheâd been pretty much of a snoot and a wet blanket up until now, although sheâd come to the Place with the recommendation of having been a real whoopee girl in London and New York in the Twenties. She looked disapprovingly at us as she gathered up the tray and stuff, not forgetting the glove, which she placed on the center of the tray like a holy relic.
Beau cut over and tried to talk to her, but she ghosted past him and once again he couldnât do anything because of the tray in his hands. He came over and got rid of the drinks quick. I took a big gulp right away because I saw the New Girl stepping through the screen into Surgery and I hate to be reminded we have it and Iâm glad Doc is too drunk to use it, some of the Arachnoid surgical techniques being very sickening as I know only too well from a personal experience that is number one on my list of things to be forgotten.
By that time, Bruce had
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