BUDAYEEN NIGHTS
GEORGE ALEC EFFINGER
Contents
FOREWORD —
SCHRODINGER'S KITTEN
Marid CHANGES HIS MIND
SLOW, SLOW BURN
Marid AND THE TRAIL OF BLOOD
KING OF THE CYBER RIFLES
Marid THROWS A PARTY
THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT
THE CITY ON THE SAND
THE PLASTIC PASHA
For Nell, Denise, Helen, Valerie,
and all the others without whom
there would be no Budayeen.
Foreword
IT ALWAYS SURPRISED GEORGE WHEN PEOPLE WOULD refer to him as a science fiction writer.
It was a natural perception, of course, of someone who made his debut under the auspices of Damon Knight; and to the end of his days, George used a science-fiction palette to tell fantasy stories. But it wasn’t until he began writing the Budayeen novels —
The setting of the Budayeen came about quite naturally, and is intrinsic to the writing of
He’d hang out in the bars along Chartres and Decatur Streets, nursing a drink, talking to the girls and not- quite-girls, and playing pinball until nearly dawn. He was good friends with a lot of the denizens of that world, including a sexchange named Amber who took the wrong man home one night and ended up being beaten to death and thrown off a balcony.
The New Orleans police being what they were, no investigation was made.
George’s outpouring of outrage and helplessness became
George intended
His protagonist, Marid Audran, fascinates and charms because he, too, is real — or as real as things get in the Budayeen. George said frankly that, like the hapless science-fiction writer Sandor Courane of some of his other tales, Marid is based on himself. It amused George that many readers take Marid at Marid’s own evaluation of himself: cool, clever, street-smart, sharp. But in fact, George said, if you look at what Marid actually
Like George — dearly as I loved him.
George had a lot of trouble working during the last twelve years of his life. Drugs, chronic pain, alcohol, and depression sapped his energy and his ability to focus: there were days when he’d shove the same three or four words around the computer screen, other days when all he would do was spend hours sending long e-mails to friends, or troll around the Internet in the same fashion that he used to go down to the clubs on Chartres Street. It was heartbreaking to watch, and everyone who knew him tried everything they could think of…
And of course, nothing worked. It seldom does.
One of the several tragedies connected with George was how much brilliant potential was wasted: what there could have been.
But what there is, in those three novels and the handful of short stories surrounding them, is unforgettable. Wry and strange and dark, it is a world peopled with folks whose connection with the technological marvels of the twenty-second century are by far the least strange thing about them.
George was above all a very delicate observer of human behavior, fascinated by what people do in their lives and how they do it. The novels tell the main story. These vignettes, these fragments, fill in background to that world — in many ways the most interesting part of the world George created. They are what you see when you sit in the bars and cafes of the Budayeen in the sweltering neon darkness, watching the folks go by on the sidewalk, the way the clueless Ernst Weinraub in “The City on the Sand” watches: the way George would watch folks in the Quarter.
This is the world of