Paul Di Filippo was custom-made for an anthology like this. With his wit and wild invention, evidenced in wacky books as The Steampunk Trilogy and Lost Pages (in which a costumed Franz Kafka—yes, I said Kafka—roams the night of Manhattan as the avenger Jackdaw) he's proved himself an able postpunk success the likes of the great Philip Jose Farmer. His story for this book is one of those I d point to when asked what I was looking for for Redshift—it's hilarious, and viciously apt. If you don't think the media is really heading this way—think again. Weeping Walls Paul Di Filippo "I want those fucking teddy bears, and I want them yesterday 1 ." Lisa Dutch bellowed the telephone as if denouncing Trotsky in front of Stalin. Tectonic emotions threate to fracture the perfect makeup landscaping the compact features of her astound-ingly inno yet vaguely insane face. Eruptions of sweat beaded the cornsilk-fme blond hairs lay alongside her delicate ears. Seeking her attention, Jake Pasha was waving a folded newspaper under Lisa's charmi pert nose and toothpaste-blue eyes, and this impudence from her assistant infuriated her more. She glared at Jake like a wrathful goddess, Kali in a Donna Karan suit, but—aside swatting the paper away—she chose to vent her evil temper only on the hapless vendor hol down the other end of her conversation. "Listen, shithead! You promised me those goddamn bears for early-last week, and th not here yet. Do you have any idea how many orders I'm holding up for those bears? I r time-sensitive business here. We're talking thousands of bereaved husbands and w mourning parents and red-eyed grandparents, all hanging fire. They can't process their g thanks to your goddamn incompentence. Not to mention the fucking kids! You can't find nose'? Are you fucking crazy"? Oh, the bears' noses! Well, I don't care if you draw goddamn noses on by hand with a racking pen! Just get me those motherfucking bears!" Lisa smashed the phone into its plastic cradle, where fractures revealed a history of stresses. Now she was free to concentrate on her assistant. "Unless you stop shoving that paper into my face this instant, Jake, I will tear y brand-new asshole. And while your boyfriends might well enjoy that feature, I guarantee th will make wearing your thong at the beach an utter impossibility." Jake stepped warily back from Lisa's desk and nervously brushed a fall of wheat-col hair off his broad brow. "My God, Lisa, you don't have to be such a frightening bitch with I'm already scared every morning when I walk through the door of this madhouse! Anyw was just trying to do my job." Lisa visibly composed herself, her stormy expression ceding to a professional mas good-natured calm. She forced out an apology that evidently tasted sour. "I'm sorry. But t vendors drive me nuts. Our whole business relies on them, and they're nothing but a bunc sleazy asswipes. Balloons, stuffed animals, flowers, wreaths, banners, can suncatchers—you'd think the people who sold such things would be nice, maybe New A people. But they're not. You know who the most up-front guys are? The construction guys. enough manners to fill a thimble, but if they can't deliver a wall, they let you know right a They don't string you along like these other pricks." "Be that as it may, dear, you've got something a tad more crucial to worry about now." flourished the newspaper in a less aggressive manner, and Lisa took it from him. Folded to the business section, the paper glibly offered its salient headline: WEEPING WALLS TO FACE FIRST COMPETITOR Lisa scanned the article with growing rage that wiped away her mask once again. Reac the end, she exclaimed, "Those scum-sucking bastards! They've ripped off all our tradem features. 'Sadness Fences,' my sweet white ass! Even their name's actionable. Our lawyers be all over them like ticks on a Connecticut camper by this afternoon." Jake took the paper back. "I don't know, Lisa. I get a bad feeling over this one. Did you who's backing them?" "TimWarDisVia. So what? You're scared of a conglomerate whose name sounds li neurological disease?" "That's a lot of money and power to go up against—" "I don't give a fuck! We have legal precedence on our side. I invented this whole con five years ago. Everyone knows that. Before me and Weeping Walls, this industry didn't exist. Grief was left to fucking amateurs!" "Granted. But you had to expect competition sooner or later." "Maybe you're right. Maybe we've been getting complacent. This could be good for us. us to kick things up a notch." "How?" "I don't know. But I'll think of something. Meanwhile, I've got to keep all the p spinning. What's next on my schedule?" Jake consulted his Palm Pilot XII. "There's a new wall going up right here in town an from now. Did you want to attend the opening ceremonies?" "What's the occasion?" "Employee shooting yesterday at the downtown post office." "That's handy. How many dead?" "Three." "Sure, I'll go. With that low number of deaths the media coverage should be thin. I think I could handle the stress from the aftermath of a full-scale massacre today. Plus nearby, and I haven't been to one of our openings in a month, since that schoolyard slaughte "We could certainly plan your appearances better if we could only remove the ran factor from our business—" Lisa stood up, smoothing her skirt. "No need for you to be cynical, too, Jake. I've got angle completely covered." Following his superior out of her office, Jake asked, "What's Danny doing these days?" Lisa sighed. "Same as always. Sacrificing himself for his art. It gets mighty old, Jake." "Is he making any money yet?" "Not so you could notice." "Any luck convincing him to come to work here?" "Not likely. He swears he'd kill himself first. He'd have to get pretty desperate. Or els have to offer him some unbelievable deal." "You two are such opposites, I'm amazed you're still together." "I am a pistol in the sack, honey. And Danny's hung more impressively than Abe Linc assassins." "Oh, I don't doubt any of that for one blessed minute, sugar." 'Could I hear from the kazoos again, please?" Danny Simmons, his gangly limbs poised awkwardly as if he were only minding temporarily until their real owner returned, sat in the front row of the shabby theater, direc his motley troupe on the bare stage. He addressed a quartet of actors situated stage left, like harlequins, and standing with kazoos poised at their lips. Before the kazoo-players c comply with the polite request, however, Danny was interrupted by a large-bosomed y woman, hair colored like autumn acorns, seated several rows back. "Danny, I've forgotten my cue." The mild-faced skinny director turned slowly in his seat and said, "You come in w Lester says—'The planet's dying!'—Carol." "He's going to call me by my real name? I thought I was playing Gaia." A long-suffering look washed over Danny's lagomorphic features "No, Carol. He'll say, 'The planet's dying!' " "And then I stand up and face the audience—" "Correct." "—and rip open my shirt—" "Right." "—and I say—I say—" "Your line is 'Gaia lactates no more for cuckoos born of horninid greed!' " Carol's painful expression mimicked that of a pressure-racked semifi-nalist in a nation televised sixth-grade spelling bee. " 'Gaia lacks tits for greedy—' Oh, Danny, it's no use!" "Carol, just calm down. You have another two whole days to practice. I'm sure you' fine." "I've got the shirt-ripping part down pat. Do you want to see?" The males on stage le forward eagerly. Danny yelled, "No, no, don't!" but he was much too late. The rehearsal didn't resume for a confused fifteen minutes spent chasing popped buttons and draping blankets solicitously around Carol's chilly shoulders. Hardly had the drama—script and music by Danny Simmons, directed and produced Danny Simmons—gotten once more well under way when another interruption intervened. One of the set-building crew rocketed onstage, hammer in her hand. "Hey, Danny, ther guy from the electric company fooling around outside at the meter!" At that instant, the theater was plunged into darkness. Yelps and shrieks filled the musty Feet scuffled in panic across the boards, and the sound of a body tumbling down the three s leading from the stage was succeeded by grunts and curses. Eventually Danny Simmons and his troupe found themselves all out in the daylit lo There awaited the theater's landlord, a short irascible fellow who resembled a gnome sire Rumpelstiltskin on one of Cinderella's ugly stepsisters. "Haul ass out of here, you losers. Your freeloading days are over." Danny fought b tears of frustration. "But Mr. Semple, we open on Friday! We'll pay all the back rent the first night's receipts!" "Not likely, pal. I finally caught a rehearsal of this lamebrained farce yesterday. I sitting in the back for the whole damn incomprehensible five acts. No one's going to lay dow plugged nickel to see this shit-" Semple paused to ogle the straining safety pin that labore hold Carol's shirtfront closed. "You do have a couple of good assets, but you can't coun them for everything. No, I figure it's better to cut my losses right now. Clear this p immediately so's I can padlock it, and my boys will pile your stuff on the sidewalk." Defeated, the spiritless actors began to shuffle out of the building, and Danny shamefac followed them. Out on the sidewalk, he turned to face the confusingly abstract poster for show hanging by the ticket office: GAIA'S DAY OFF PRESENTED BY THE DERRIDADAJSTS The sight of the poster seemed to hearten him. He turned to rally his friends. "Gang, I won't let these fat-cat bastards break us up! Whatever it takes, I vow Derridadaists will go on!" "I am so glad," Carol offered cheerfully, "that I have some extra time to practice speech!" "All mourners wearing an official wristband may now step forward." Dewlapped Gove Wittlestoop, suited in enough expensive charcoal wool fabric to clothe a dozen orph despite the hot September sunlight beating down, backed away from the microphone lowered his fat rump onto a creaking folding chair barely up to sustaining its load. Nex the governor on the hastily erected platform sat Lisa Dutch, knees clamped together, primly crossed at the ankles in what Jake Pasha—lingering now obediently close by—o referred to as "the boardroom virgin" pose. Lisa patted the governor's hand. Maintaining her frozen official expression of sob condoling vicarious grief, she murmured, "Did you get the latest envelope okay?" Similarly covert, Wittlestoop replied, "It's already in the bank." "Good. Because I see be facing some new challenges, and I don't want to have to worry about protecting my a my own backyard." "Nothing to fear. Weeping Walls has been awfully good to this state, and the state respond in kind." "Since when did you and the state become synonymous?" "I believe it was at the start o fifth term. By the way, I admired your anecdote today about the relatives you lost in Oklahoma City bombing and how that inspired you years later to found your company. You had the crowd in tears. Tell me confidentially—any of that horseshit true?" "Only the part about me having relatives." Notes of dirgelike classical music sprinkled the air. Among the groundlings, a wavery had formed: those members of the sniffling audience with the requisite wristbands had arr themselves in an orderly fashion across the post office parking lot where the memorial ser for the recently slain was being held. The head of the line terminated at a row of large b plastic bins much like oversize composters. Beside the bins stood several employees Weeping Walls, looking in their black habiliments like postmodern undertakers, save fo bright red WW logo stitched in Gothic cursive on their coats. Now the first mourner was silently and gently urged by a solicitous yet controlling Wee Walls employee to make her choice of sympathy-token. The mourner, a red-eyed wid selected a bouquet of daisies from one of a score of water buckets held on a waist-high stand. The Weeping Walls usher now led the woman expeditiously toward the wall itself. Erected only hours ago, the fresh planks of the official Weeping Wall, branded subtly the WW logo, still emanated a piney freshness. At regular intervals staples secured dang plastic ties similar to a policeman's instant handcuffs or an electrician's cable-bundling str The usher brought the first woman and her bouquet to the leftmost, uppermost tie, and he her secure the flowers with a racheting plastic zip. Then he led the sobbing woman awa efficiently as an Oscar-ceremonies handler, rejoining his fellow workers to process ano person. Once the mechanized ritual was under way, it proceeded as smoothly as a robotic Japa assembly line. From the bins mourners plucked various tokens of their public grief: p teddy bears, miniature sports gear emblazoned with the logos of all the major franch religious icons from a dozen faiths, sentimental greeting cards inscribed with such all-pur designations as "Beloved Son" and "Dearest Daughter." One by one, the bereaved frie neighbors and relatives—anyone, really, who had paid the appropriate fee to Weeping W (family discounts available)—placed their stereotyped fetishes on the official wall returned to their seats. Under the cheerful sun, Lisa watched the whole affair with traces of pride and struggling to break through her artificial funereal demeanor like blackbirds out of a pie. T her attention was snagged by an anomalous audience member: some nerdy guy scribbling n with a stylus on his PDA. Lisa leaned toward Governor Wittlestoop. "See the guy taking notes? Is he a l reporter I don't recognize?" Wittlestoop squinted. "No. And he's not accredited national media either. I've never him before." Lisa got determinedly to her feet. All eyes were focused on the ceremony, and no noticed her swift descent from the stage. Coming up behind the scribbler, Lisa rema practically invisible. She seated herself behind the suspicious fellow and craned for a v over his shoulder. The screen of the man's handy machine was scrolling his notes as he entered them: Offer more choices of victim memorial. Favorite foods of dec'd? Finger food only. M cookies? Call SnackWell's. Sadness Fences line of candy? Her face savage, Lisa stood. She grabbed the man's folding chair and tipped him out o He stumbled forward, caught himself, and turned to face Lisa with a frightened look. "You fucking little spy! Give me that!" Lisa grappled with the man for his PDA, but he tight. Empty chairs tumbled like jackstraws as they struggled. Suddenly Lisa relinquished grip. The spy straightened up, smiling and seemingly victorious. Lisa cocked her well-musc Nautilus-toned arm and socked him across the jaw. The guy went down. Chaos was now in full sway, screams and shouts and frenzied dashes for cover, as i post office shooter himself had suddenly returned. Lisa spiked the PDA with the heel of pump and ground it into the asphalt. Digital cameras had converged on Lisa from the start of the fight and continued to images of her reddened face and disarrayed hair to various news outlets. The Gover entourage of state troopers finally descended on Lisa and her victim. The spy had regained feet and, nursing his jaw, sought revenge. "Arrest her, officers! She assaulted me for no reason!" The troopers turned to Governor Wittlestoop for direction. The Governor nod his head at the spy, and the troopers dragged him off. Lisa sought desperately to explain her actions to the appalled crowd and the invisible m audience. "He was, he was—" Jake had joined her, and, under pretext of comforting her, whispered close to her ear. brightened. "He was a Satanist!" "TimWarDisVia continues to deny all allegations of Satanic activity by any of subsidiaries or their employees. Nevertheless, several senators are insisting on a investigation—" The well-coiffed CNN talking head inhabiting the small all-purpose monitor on the kit counter appeared primed to drone on all night But Lisa moused him out of existence with left hand and then carried the dark amber drink in her right hand up to her plum-glossed lips "Nice save, Leese." Danny stood by the sink, peeling potatoes. He sought to create one single long peel each, and was generally succeeding. Lisa drained her glass. "Thanks, but I can't take all the credit. Jake doesn't know it yet he's in for a fat bonus." Danny sighed. "The productions I could mount if only I had an assistant as competen Jake! The kind of people who will work like dogs week after week for no pay generally come equipped with a lot of, ah—call it smarts? But of course, that's all moot now, with death of our show." Lisa refilled her glass from a bottle of Scotch, spritzed it, and added fresh rocks be turning to Danny. "I might have made a nice recovery today, but this move will hardly Sadness Fences from trying to eat my lunch. It's only a temporary embarrassment for them. I just can't figure out yet how to undercut them! Oh, shit—let's talk about your day again sick of mine. Tell me once more why you won't just take a loan from me to pay off your deb Danny paused from rinsing vegetables to sip from a small glass of white wine. "We ag that the loan you made to us last year so that we could stage Motherfoucaults! would be last. If the Derridadaists can't find other backers interested in avant-garde theater, then I'm running a vanity operation. And I don't want that." "What are you going to do now?" "Finish making our supper. After that, I simply don't know. I want to keep the tro together, but not at the expense of my artistic pride." Lisa kicked off her shoes. "Artistic pride! Tell me about it! That's what hurts me the w you know—that these Sadness Fences bastards are buggering my brainchild." "A disturbing image, Leese, however apt. Do you want mesclun or spinach in your salad "Spinach. Gotta keep the old punching arm in shape." After supper, the big flatscreen in the den displayed Entertainment Hourly to couch-cushioned, cuddling Danny and Lisa. Seated at his minimalist desk, hair and teeth Platonically perfect, as if fashioned by s aliens as a probe, the determinedly somber yet oddly effusive host launched into a report o latest hourly sensation. "Jax Backman led his own jazz funeral today through the streets of Celebration, Flo Diagnosed last month with that nasty new in-curable strain of terminal oral herpes, the pl hornman quickly opted to go out in style. Taking advantage of last year's Supreme C decision in Flynt versus United States Government legalizing assisted suicide and other fo of voluntary euthanasia, Backman received a special, slow-acting lethal injection at the sta the cortege's route. Propped up in his coffin, he was able to enjoy nearly the whole process which included innumerable celebrity mourners. TimWarDisVia even lent out animatronic Louis Armstrong to lead the solemn yet oddly joyous wake." The screen cut to footage of the event: in front of a team of horses, the robotic L Armstrong clunked along with stilted steps, mimicking horn-playing while prerecorded m issued from its belly. The human participants enacted their roles more fluidly, weep laughing, tossing Mardi Gras beads and giving each other high-fives. Upright on his whe bier, a glassy-eyed Backman waved to the watching crowds with steadily diminishing gusto Danny clucked his tongue. "What a production. Debord was so right. Our society is not but spectacle. I wonder if they paid those so-called mourners scale—" Lisa's shriek nearly blew Danny's closest eardrum out. "This is it! This is the futur Weeping Walls!" She threw herself onto Danny and began frantically unbuckling his belt one hand while pawing at his crotch with the other. "Leese, hold on! One minute, please! What's with you?" "You've got to fuck me like you've never fucked me beforel" "But why?" "I want to engrave the minute I realized I was a goddamn genius onto my brain forever!" "Carol—I mean, Zapmama to Deconstructor. Target in sight." The message crackled the walkie-talkie hung at Danny's belt. Danny snatched up the small device and replied. "Deconstructor to Zapmama. Is your weapon ready?" "I think so." "Well, make sure. We can't risk a screwup on our first kill." "Let me ask Gordon. Gor is this what I pull—?" A blast of rifle fire filled the neighborhood's air, and simultaneously replicated in miniature by the communicator's speaker. From his perc command atop the flat roof of a ten-story office building Danny could see small fig struggling to control the bulky weapon At last the automatic rifle ceased firing. "Dan—I mean, Deconstructor?" Danny sighed deeply. "Deconstructor to Zapmama. Go ahead." "My gun works fine." "Acquire target and await the signal. Over." Reslinging his walkie-talkie, Danny walked over to the cameraman sharing the roof him. "Can we edit out those early shots?" "No problem, chief." A bank of jury-rigged monitors showed not only this camera's perspective, but also views from other cameras emplaced on the ground. All the lenses were focused waddling bus, which bore on its side the legend JERUSALEM TOURS. The bus was no into a broad intersection full of traffic and pedestrians. Suddenly, the cars in front and bac the bus seemed to explode. Curiously, no deadly jagged debris flew, nor did any shock w propagate. Only melodramatic plumes of smoke poured from the gimmicked vehicles. The explosion brought the hidden attackers out. Dressed in bur-nooses and ra desert-camouflage gear, the very picture of martyr-mad Arabs, they opened fire on the trap bus. Window glass shattered into a crystal rain, holes pinged open in the bus's chassis, and passengers slumped in contorted postures. One of the terrorists threw a grenade, and the rocked like a low-rider's jalopy. Blood began to waterfall out the door. The assault lasted only ninety seconds, but seemed to go on forever. Mesmerized, D nearly forgot his own role. He fumbled with his walkie-talkie and yelled, "Cut! Cut!" The shooting immediately ceased. Danny hastened down to the street. A line of ambulances had materialized, directed by a few bored cops. The bus opened, and the nonchalant driver jumped awkwardly out, anxious to avoid spotting his s with the synthetic blood in the stairwell. The medicos entered the damaged bus—seen close, a twenty-year-old antique obviously rescued from the scrap-heap and repainted— began to emerge with the victims on sarcophagus-shaped carry-boards. None of the dead people exhibited any wounds. Mostly elderly, with a smattering of y adults and even a teenager or two, they all appeared to have passed away peacefully. Man them had final smiles clinging to their lifeless faces. As the victims were loaded onto the bulances, the bystanders to the attack watched and commented with mournful pride "Uncle Albert went out just the way he imagined." "I thought Aunt Ruth would flinch, but she never did." "I saw Harold wave just before the end!" Danny crunched across the pebbles of safety glass to where the elated mock-terro clumped. Spotting him, they shouted and hooted and applauded their director. Congratula were exchanged all around. "Did those charges go off okay, Danny?" asked an earnest techie. "Just fine." "I triggered the squibs a little late," confessed another. "Next time will be perfect, I'm sure." Stretching her terrorist's shirt to undemocratic proportions, a gloomy C approached. "I'm awfully sorry about that screwup earlier, Danny. Even though they were blanks, I could have frightened the bus away!" Danny regarded Carol silently while he tried to parse her logic. "You do know all this fake, don't you, Carol?" Carol reared back indignantly. "Of course I do! I've never even been to Jerusalem!" All the ambulances had departed. A DPW truck arrived and discharged workers who b brooming up the glass. A large tow truck engaged the derelict bus and begun to winch its wheels up. A car and several vehicles blazoned with the modified WW logo (now rea WW&FE) pulled up, and Lisa and Jake emerged from the lead vehicle. Clad in a tasteful and modest navy shift, the owner of Weeping Walls took swift str over to her husband, pecked his cheek, and then turned to address the crowd. "Thank you, friends, for participating so enthusiastically in the inaugural performanc Fantasy Exits. I'm sure all your loved ones appreciated your attendence today, as we ush them off this earth in the manner they selected. Incidentally, your DVD mementos wil available within the next three days. As for those of you who have preregis-tere commemorate the departure of your loved ones during the accompanying Weeping W ceremony, you may now line up in the space indicated by the temporary stanchions." As the spectators began to herd, Lisa spoke to her crew in lower tones. "Okay, people, shake our butts! Our permits only run until two o'clock." In a short time the standard Weeping Walls arrangement was set up the prefab itself going up quickly on a leased stretch of side-walk where prearranged posth awaited—and the friends and relatives of the chemically slaughtered bus ri were being processed through their relatively restrained and somewhat shell-shocked gr Lisa and Danny moved off to one side, away from their respective employees. Lisa's eyes flashed like the display on an IRS auditor's calculator "Not bad, not bad at Fifteen hundred dollars per staged suicide times sixty, plus the standard Weeping Walls from the survivors.. A nice piece of change. Even after paying your crew and m good money, there's plenty left for you and me, babe." Danny pulled at his chin. "I appreciate having steady employment for my people, Leese. I continue to be troubled by the ethics of this hyper-real simulation—" "Ethics? What ethics? These losers were going to off themselves with or without us. didn't push them into anything. All we did was provide them with a fantasy exi trademarked term already, by the way. They sign the consent and waiver forms, get the juice in their veins, and then sail away into their fondest dreams of public crash-and-b We're like the goddamn Make-A-Wish Foundation, only we follow through with our cl right up to the end." "Okay, granted. Nobody forced these people into our simulation. But some of t scenarios you've got me writing—I just don't know—" "Aren't your guys up to some real acting?" Danny grew affronted. "The Derridadaists can handle anything you throw at them!" Lisa smiled in the manner of a gingerbread-house-ensconced witch with two children sa baking in her oven and a third chowing down out in the fattening pen. "Good, good, becau plan to ride this pony to the bank just as fast and hard as I ride you." "I think you'd better have a look at the deck chairs, Lisa." Jake Pasha stood tentatively at the door to Lisa's office. His boss had one phone pin between her neck and her bunched shoulder, and held another in her right hand while guided a mouse with her left. Lisa wrapped up her conversations with both callers and toggled shut several wind before turning to Jake. "This had better be important." "I think it is." Jake made a beckoning motion, and a worker in paint-splattered overalls carried i old-fashioned wood-and-canvas deckchair. A legend on its side proclaimed it PROPERTY WHYTE STAR LINES TITANICK. "They're all like this," Jake complained. Surprisingly, Lisa did not explode, but remained serene. "Oh, I guess I didn't get aroun telling you. As I might have predicted, the bas-tards at TimWarDisVia wouldn't lease the r to use the real name, so I figured we'd get around them this way. They've still got a hair the of a hawser up their asses since we pulled this end run around their pathetic Sadness Fen Have you seen the price of their stock lately? Their shareholders have to use a ladder to k slug's ass. And I hear they're switching to chain link to cut costs." "But won't our customers complain about the inaccuracy?" "Duh! Our customers, Jake, will be a bunch of romantic idiots just minutes away fro watery grave. If it makes you any happier, we'll just hit them with the hemlock cocktail be they even board our tub, instead of after. They'll be too woozy to recognize their own faces mirror, never mind spotting a frigging historical fuckup. Just make sure you round up en dockside wheelchairs, okay? And don't forget the GPS transponders for the clients. We want to lose any of the stiffs once the ship goes down." "What about the relatives, though? Won't they see the error in their souvenir videos complain?" "Those fucking vultures! Most of them are so happy to see their enfeebled parents and a and uncles going out in a blaze of glory that they couldn't care less about historical accur Remember, Jake— we're selling fantasy here, not something like a TV docudrama that ha adhere to some rigorous standards." Jake dismissed the worker with the historically dubious deck chair and closed the before speaking further. "Is Danny still talking about pulling out?" Lisa frowned. "Not for the past couple of days. But I can still sense he's not exactly a h camper." "Did you apologize to him about Bonnie and Clyde?" "Yes, Dear Abby, I apologized—even though it wasn't my fucking fault! Who knew that our suicides were junkies and that the juice would take longer to work on their dope-tole bodies? So a blood-gushing Bonnie and Clyde kept staggering around yelling 'Ouch!' seeming to be hit by about a million bullets and ruined his precious script! God, he is su fucking perfectionist!" "He's an artist," said Jake. "My Christ, what do I hear? Are you hot for him now? I wish I'd never told you abou fucking massive cock." Jake quelled his irritation. "That's not it at all. I just sympathize with his ambitions." Lisa stood up huffily. "All right. If it'll make you feel any better, I'll pay Danny a visit now, in the middle of my busy workday, just to show I'm a caring kind of bitch." "He is essential to our continued success, after all." "Don't kid yourself, sweetie. The only essential one is me." "It's just no use, Carol. I can't convince myself that helping people die melodramatical art." Perched on the corner of Danny's desk like a concupiscent Kewpie, Carol frowned earnest empathy. "But Danny, what we're doing it's so, it's so—conceptual!" Danny dismissed this palliative jargon. "Oh, sure, that's what I've kept telling myself three long months. We were pushing the envelope on performance art, subverting cul expectations, jamming the news machine, highlighting the hypocrisy of the funeral indu Lord knows, I've tried a dozen formulations of the same excuse. But it all rings hollow to m just can't continue with this Fantasy Exit crap anymore. I thought I could sell out, but I wrong." "But, Danny, for the first time in years, we all have regular work in our chosen artistic f And we're making good money, too." "That was never what the Derridadaists stood for, Carol! We could have all gone commercials, for Christ's sake, if steady employment was all we cared about. No, I fou our troupe in order to perform cutting-edge, avant-garde theater. And now we're me enacting the most banal scenarios, cliched skits out of Hollywood's musty vaults, predige for suicidal Philistines. And this latest one is the final straw. The Titanick If only that d remake hadn't come out last year. Di-Caprio was bad enough in his day, but that Skywalker adolescent—" Danny shivered and mimed nausea. "Uuurrrggg!" Carol seemed ready to cry. "It's me, isn't it? My performances have sucked! Just sa Danny, I can take it." Danny stood to pat Carol's shoulder. "No, no, you've been great." Carol began to sniffle. "Even when I fell off my horse during the Jesse James bit?" "Sure. We just cut away from you." "How about when I knocked down all those buildings before you could even start the Francisco earthquake?" "They were going to go down sooner or later, Carol." "And that accident during the Great Chicago Fire—?" "Insurance covered everything, Carol." Carol squealed and hurled herself into Danny's arms. "Oh, you're just the best dire anyone could ever ask for!" Danny gently disentangled Carol's limbs from his and began to pace the office. "How to Lisa, though? That's what stops me. She has such a temper. I know she loves me—at leas pretty sure she does— but the business comes first with her. Oh, Carol, what can I do?" "Well, I know one thing that generally helps in such situations." "And what might that be?" "A boob job." "Carol, no, please, stop right now. Button yourself right back up." "I know what I'm doing, Danny. You've been so good to me, and now it's my turn to you. Just sit down—there, that's better. Now let me get this zipper and this snap and clasp— No, don't move, I've got plenty of room to kneel right here. There, doesn't that good? Oh I've never seen one that was long enough to pop right out of the top of the groove that!" "Oh! Lisa!" "I don't mind, Danny, you can call me by her name if it helps." "No! She's right here!" From the doorway, Lisa said, "She's already cast, you bastard. And you're supposed to the fucking couch I bought you!" "Hit that glacier with more Windex!" Techies on movable scaffolds, looking like bugs on a windshield, responded to bullhorned instructions by assidulously polishing the floating Perspex glacier anchored no the harbor. On the dock, a cavalcade of wheelchairs held the semi-stupefied, terminall paying customers slated to go down with the fabled luxury liner (an old tugboat wi scaled-down prow and bridge attached that reproduced the famous vessel's foreparts). A of lesser craft held camera and retrieval crews. Near a warehouse, a standard Weeping W and appurtenances awaited the end of the maritime disaster reenactment. Over the whole sc the January sun shed a frosty light. Lisa moved busily among the WW&FE employees, issuing orders. To the captain of tug, she reminded, "Remember, get out past the twelve-mile limit before you sink Finally, she turned to her husband. Danny stood contritely by, his heart and mind obviously elsewhere. out when Lisa rou on him, he snapped to attention. 'Leese, before I set out on this final charade, I just want to say how grateful I am that y allowing me to bow out of this whole enterprise. I just couldn't swallow any more." 'I'm sure that's what your girlfriend was just about to say when I barged in." 'Leese, please! I explained all about that." Lisa laughed, and it sounded like ice floes clinking together. "Oh I'm not angry anymo just couldn't resist a little dig. What a rack! She makes me look like Olive Oyl. Tell me—d feel like getting your dick stuck in the sofa cushions?" Danny made to turn away, but Lisa stopped him. "Okay, I went over the line there. S But look—I had something made up for you just to show I still care." Lisa accepted from the hovering Jake a modern orange life vest. "This is a special vest, Danny, just for you. Look, it's even got your name on it." "Why, thanks, Leese." "Let's see how it fits you." "Gee, do I have to put it on now?" "Yes, you have to put it on now." Danny donned the vest, and Lisa snugged the straps tight, like a conscientious mo adjusting her toddler for kindergarten. "It's very heavy. What's in it? Lead?" "Not exactly. Oh, look—they're loading the wheelchairs now. You'd better get on board Danny aimed a kiss at Lisa's lips, but she offered only her cheek. Danny walked away the top of the gangplank, he turned and waved, bulky in his life-saving gear. Within minutes the whole armada was steaming out to sea, including the iceberg, stripped of its scaffolding and under tow by a second tug. When the fleet disappeared from sight, Lisa said, "Well, that's that." And then she walked slowly to the Weeping Wall, selected a hot pink teddy bear, and it tenderly, her eyes dry as teddy's buttons.