alcoholic. He was not ready to be drunk. Not yet.
He took a deep breath.
âOkay,â said Shadow. âMy life, which for three years has been a long way from being the greatest life there has ever been, just took a distinct and sudden turn for the worse. Now there are a few things I need to do. I want to go to Lauraâs funeral. I want to say goodbye. I should wind up her stuff. If you still need me, I want to start at five hundred dollars a week.â The figure was a stab in the dark. Wednesdayâs eyes revealed nothing. âIf weâre happy working together, in six monthsâ time you raise it to a thousand a week.â
He paused. It was the longest speech heâd made in years. âYou say you may need people to be hurt. Well, Iâll hurt people if theyâre trying to hurt you. But I donât hurt people for fun or for profit. I wonât go back to prison. Once was enough.â
âYou wonât have to,â said Wednesday.
âNo,â said Shadow. âI wonât.â He finished the last of the mead. He wondered, suddenly, somewhere in the back of his head, whether the mead was responsible for loosening his tongue. But the words were coming out of him like the water spraying from a broken fire hydrant in summer, and he could not have stopped them if he had tried. âI donât like you, Mister Wednesday, or whatever your real name may be. We are not friends. I donât know how you got off that plane without me seeing you, or how you trailed me here. But Iâm at a loose end right now. When weâre done, Iâll be gone. And if you piss me off, Iâll be gone too. Until then, Iâll work for you.â
âVery good,â said Wednesday. âThen we have a compact. And we are agreed.â
âWhat the hell,â said Shadow. Across the room, Mad Sweeney was feeding quarters into the jukebox. Wednesday spat in his hand and extended it. Shadow shrugged. He spat in his own palm. They clasped hands. Wednesday began to squeeze. Shadow squeezed back. After a few seconds his hand began to hurt. Wednesday held the grip a little longer, and then he let go.
âGood,â he said. âGood. Very good. So, one last glass of evil, vile fucking mead to seal our deal, and then we are done.â
âItâll be a Southern Comfort and Coke for me,â said Sweeney, lurching back from the jukebox.
The jukebox began to play the Velvet Undergroundâs âWho Loves the Sun?â Shadow thought it a strange song to find on a jukebox. It seemed very unlikely. But then, this whole evening had become increasingly unlikely.
Shadow took the quarter he had used for the coin toss from the table, enjoying the sensation of a freshly milled coin against his fingers, producing it in his right hand between forefinger and thumb. He appeared to take it into his left hand in one smooth movement, while casually finger-palming it. He closed his left hand on the imaginary quarter. Then he took a second quarter in his right hand, between finger and thumb, and, as he pretended to drop that coin into the left hand, he let the palmed quarter fall into his right hand, striking the quarter he held there on the way. The chink confirmed the illusion that both coins were in his left hand, while they were now both held safely in his right.
âCoin tricks is it?â asked Sweeney, his chin raising, his scruffy beard bristling. âWhy, if itâs coin tricks weâre doing, watch this.â
He took an empty glass from the table. Then he reached out and took a large coin, golden and shining, from the air. He dropped it into the glass. He took another gold coin from the air and tossed it into the glass, where it clinked against the first. He took a coin from the candle flame of a candle on the wall, another from his beard, a third from Shadowâs empty left hand, and dropped them, one by one, into the glass. Then he curled his fingers over the