and Quick were all right even though we couldn't reach your cell phone. The WTCH tower is down?"
"Still standing but shorted out. Dead. The tornado the broken coven summoned is still threatening Emerald City and so is the Wendigo. And Tallgrass, you might want to look into Lili West at the local Sunset City, when this is all done. I think she's the head weather witch around here."
Ric laughed and pulled me closer as Tallgrass looked on, shocked.
"You did some A-one detecting on your solo day in town, Del. And El Demonio and his men in the lobby? How'd you get past them?"
"By being born Black Irish and passing for a CinSim. They're not too tuned into the vintage motion-picture world. They mistook Quick and me for Dorothy and Toto, who are still running loose down there."
Snow's brief bark of laughter startled us.
"What's funny about Delilah being trapped between a supernatural storm and a horde of zombies, Christophe?" Ric demanded.
"This 'Demon' of yours, like all brutal and greedy humans, is also stupid. What would he do with a piece of rare film like Metropolis? He'd be too ignorant to even exploit its characters as CinSims, and the only truly valuable one, the only commercially sexy one, so to speak, is the woman-made-robot."
I resented Snow making light of the monster who'd controlled Ric's childhood. I had to say something.
"El Demonio lives to torture and kill, with drugs and drug money and with his own hand. I think you can imagine what more than three hundred strokes of his bullwhip would feel like."
"Ah." Snow left the shadows to come and face me. "You make that experience so very vivid, Miss Street. Thanks for educating me."
Sunglasses don't offer much eye contact, so I stared at his throat. A white silk aviator scarf, like those he gave away at the end of his rock concerts, concealed the place my mouth had bruised.
Oh, this was awkward.
That's what you get for confusing sex with revenge, Irma twitted me. You owe him again. That look is so dashing young Howard Hughes on him, don't you think?
She couldn't have repulsed me more, which got my brain in gear.
"Snow's right, though," I said, walking past him and Ric to face the movie screen. "I can see that Torbellino would like the same things the Nazis did about this film. The jerky, robotlike workers slaving away belowground like zombies twelve hours a day. The masters lording it in their gleaming towers like Vegas moguls. It's El Demonio's hidden zombie empire, in a way."
"He didn't covet this film for sentimental reasons, Miss Street," Snow said. "It isn't as if he'd need an Oscar award for Best Exploitation of Humankind he could display on a shelf."
Oscar. Hollywood's prized golden statuette.
The movie screen even now was revealing the passionate young girl and worker's salvation, Maria, being "processed" by the masters into a gleaming, unemotional robot, the triumph of scientific method over humanity, losing her life and her heroic young lover. Speaking of which ...
"Ric."
"Here, Delilah." He stepped to my side. "What is it?"
"Did ... you turn the elevator cables silver so the zombies couldn't climb them inside the Emerald City towers?"
"Silver has much mojo," Tallgrass said, his voice definitive in the darkness as the unwinding film flickered over all our faces. "Dog has silver on his collar. Delilah Street wears silver. Mi amigo has been reborn with the Silver Eye."
"I think silver controls zombies," Ric said. "At least it seems to since I've acquired the vision."
"Silver killed vampires in the old lore, as well as were-wolves," Snow mused, as if contributing to the campfire ghost stories.
I was feeling as weary as he sounded. "And black-and-white film used enough silver nitrate that many classic movies were destroyed to strip the silver from them. Is there any way El Demonio could - "
I noticed, in the meantime, that Ric had begun moving slowly down the shallow stairs toward the movie screen, as if in a trance.
"This is one of the most luminous films I've ever seen," he said. "No wonder no complete versions could be found. They would have yielded too much silver to save. And the robot, she's a moon goddess for a technological age. Look at her. She's all silver, an armored Joan of Arc. Think of the concentrated aura her image would have on the black film strip. She'd be blinding. An angel of light."
He walked right up to the screen as if hypnotized, or hypnotizing.
And the silver robot moved to meet