Those guys die the day they die.”
“But you’ll have Carolyn forever,” Amelia said.
I paused a little too long. “Of course. And after I die, the people who’ve been jacked to me will remember her too, and pass her down.”
“I wish you wouldn’t talk like that,” Amelia said. Rez, who had known for years that we were together, nodded. “It’s like a boil you keep picking at, like you were getting ready to die all the time.”
I almost lost it. I literally counted to ten. Rez opened his mouth but I interrupted. “Would you rather I just watched people die, felt them die, and came home asking ‘What’s for dinner?’” I dropped to a whisper. “How would you feel about me if that didn’t hurt me?”
“I’m sorry.”
“Don’t. I’m sorry you lost a baby. But that’s not what you are. We go through these things, and then we more or less absorb them, and we become whatever we are becoming.”
“Julian,” Reza said in a warning tone, “perhaps you ought to save this for later?”
“That’s a good idea,” Amelia said, rising. “I have to go on home anyhow.” She signaled the wheelie and it went for her coat and bag.
“Share a cab?” I asked.
“It’s not necessary,” she said in a neutral tone. “End of the month.” She could use leftover entertainment points for a cab ride.
Other people didn’t have points left over, so I bought a lot of wine and beer and whiskey, and drank more than my share. Reza did, too; his car wouldn’t let him drive. He came along with me and my two bodyguard shoes.
I had them drop me at the campus gate, and walked the two kilometers to Amelia’s through a cool mist of rain. No sign of any newsies.
All the lights were out; it was almost two. I let myself in through the back and belatedly thought I should have buzzed. What if she wasn’t alone?
I turned on the kitchen light and harvested cheese and grape juice from the refrigerator. She heard me moving around and shuffled in, rubbing her eyes. “No reporters?” I asked.
“They’re all under the bed.”
She stood behind me and put her hands on my shoulders. “Give them something to write about?” I turned around in the chair and buried my face between her breasts. Her skin had a warm, sleepy smell.
“I’m sorry about earlier.”
“You’ve been through too much. Come on.” I let her lead me into the bedroom and she undressed me like a child. I was still a little drunk, but she had ways of getting around that, mostly patience, but other things, too.
I slept like a creature stunned and woke to an empty house. She’d left a note on the microwave that she had a sequence scheduled at 8:45 and would see me at the lunch group meeting. It was after ten.
A Saturday meeting; science never sleeps. I found some clean clothes in “my” drawer and took a quick shower.
* * *
the day before i went back to Portobello, I had an appointment with the Luxury Allocation Board in Dallas, the people who handle special requests for the nanoforge. I took the Triangle monorail, and so got a glimpse of Fort Worth streaming by. I’d never gotten off there.
It was a half hour to Dallas, but then another hour crawling through traffic out to the LAB, which took up a huge piece of land outside the city limits. They had sixteen nanoforges, and hundreds of tanks and vats and bins that held the raw materials and the various nanos that put them together in millions of ways. I didn’t have time to walk around, but had taken a guided tour of the place with Reza and his friend, the year before. That’s when I got the idea to get something special for Amelia. We didn’t do birthdays or religious holidays, but next week was the second anniversary of the first time we were intimate. (I don’t keep a diary, but could trace the date down through lab reports; we both missed the next day’s sequence.)
The evaluator assigned to my request was a sour-faced man, about fifty. He read the form with a fixed glum expression. “You don’t want this piece of jewelry for yourself. This is for some woman, some lover?”
“Yes, of course.”
“I’ll have to have her name, then.”
I hesitated. “She’s not exactly my—”
“I don’t care about your relationship. I just have to know who will eventually own this object. If I should approve it.”
I wasn’t enthusiastic about having our relationship officially