with mothers pushing strollers, young kids riding scooters, surly teens, and old people on afternoon walks.
And every time I got someone alone, if they were from around here, I talked to their deep down parts, and I asked them what was wrong with this place.
I didn't find out anything unusual. Oh, there were crimes — this
I have trouble adapting my mind to the shortness of human time scales, sometimes.
It was late afternoon when I went past Ike Train's place. He had a tidy little house, and a bigger yard than most. His porch was shadowed, but I could see the big man sitting on a creaking wooden swing, messing with something in his hands. I was going to hello the house, but Ike hailed me first. 'You're new!' he shouted. 'Come over!'
'Mr Train,' I said, delighted, because I do love meeting people, especially ones who love meeting me. 'I've heard about you.' I passed through the bushes, which overgrew his walk, and went up to his porch. He held a little man-shaped figure made of twisted wire and pipe cleaners in his hands. He set the thing aside and rose, reaching out to shake my hand. His grip was strong, but not a macho show-off strong, just the handshake of a man who wrestled with pipe wrenches on a regular basis.
'You're staying with Miss Li,' he said, sitting down, and gesturing for me to take a cane chair by his front door. 'Her nephew?'
'I'm Reva. More of a grand-nephew from the other side of the family, but yeah.'
'What brings you to town?' He went back to twisting the wire, giving the little man an extra set of arms, like a Hindu deity.
'I've been travelling for a few years,' I said. 'Thought I might try settling here.' Maybe I would, for a while, if I could find a way to get rid of the bad thing making the whole street's aura stink. Being in a body again was nice, and even on our short acquaintance there was something about Sadie I wanted to know better, like she was a flavour I'd been craving for ages.
'It's a nice enough place,' Ike said.
'So tell me,' I said, leaning forward. 'Are you from around here?'
Ike's hands went still, the wire forgotten. 'Oh, yeah,' he said, and his voice was different now, slower and thicker. 'This is my home. Nobody knows how hard I work to keep it clean, how filthy it gets. The whole fucking city is circling the drain. Dirty, nasty, rotten, wretched…'
I frowned. That was his deep down self talking, but it didn't sound like him. 'Ike, what do you —»
'We have to twist their heads all the way around,' he said, his voice oddly placid, and turned the little wire man in his hands, twisting its round loop of a head tighter and tighter until it snapped and came off in his fingers. 'Break them and sweep them up. Clean up the trash, keep things clean. Yeah. I'm from
'Ike,' I said, careful, because there were sinkholes in this man's mind, and I didn't know how deep they were, or what might be hidden inside them. 'Maybe you and me can work something out.'
'No,' he said, and crushed the little man. 'There's nothing to work out. Everything's already been worked out.' He stared at me, through me, and his eyes were wet with tears. 'There's nothing you can offer me.'
I stood up and stepped back. He was from around here, I was talking to his deep down self, but Ike wouldn't work something out with me. I didn't understand this refusal. It was like water refusing to freeze in winter, like leaves refusing to fall in autumn, a violation of everything I understood about natural law. 'Don't worry about it, Ike. Let's just forget we had this talk, huh?'
Ike looked down at the broken wire thing in his hands. 'Nice meeting you, ah, buddy,' he said. 'Say hi to Miss Li for me.'
I headed back down the street towards Miss Li's, thinking maybe Ike was crazy. Maybe he had something to do with the badness here. Maybe he
'Hey, Reva,' Sadie said when I answered the door. 'You busy?'
It was Monday, and the street was quiet, most everybody off about their business. 'Not for you,' I said, leaning against the doorjamb.
'Could you come up to my place and help me with something?'
I grinned, and grinning felt good; I'd forgotten that about bodies, that genuinely smiling actually caused chemical changes and improved the mood. 'I'm at your service.' I pulled the door shut and followed Sadie down the steps and up the street. I didn't bother locking the door — nobody would rob the place while I was staying there.
'What do you know about spiders?' she said, leading me into the lobby of the apartment building. The floor was black tile with gold flecks, and there was a wall of old-fashioned brass and glass mailboxes. I liked it. The place had personality.
'Hmm. Eight legs. Mythologically complex — sometimes tricksters, sometimes creators, sometimes monsters, depending on who you ask.'
She looked at me, half-smiling, as if she wasn't sure if I was joking. She opened a door, revealing an elevator with a sliding grate. We went inside, and she rattled the gate closed. Back in the old days there would have been a uniformed attendant to run the elevator. This must have been a classy place in its day. 'Can you recognize poisonous spiders? I've heard there are some nasty ones out here, black widows and brown recluses, stuff like that. There's a spider in my tub and it's freaking me out a little.'
'It's probably gone by now, right?' The elevator rattled and hummed as it ascended.
'I don't think it can get out. It keeps trying to climb the sides of the tub and sliding back down.'
She was standing a little closer to me than she had to. I wondered if I should read anything into that. 'So you want me to get rid of it?'
'If it was a snake or a rat or something, I'd do it myself. Most things like this don't bother me. But spiders…' She shuddered. 'Especially when I don't know if they're poisonous or not. I heard the bite of a brown recluse can make your skin rot away. Bleah. Vicious little things.'
I shrugged. 'They're just trying to get by. Besides, there aren't any brown recluses in California.'
She frowned. 'But everybody says there are.'
'It's a common misconception. Only a handful of brown recluses have ever been found here, and they all came with shipments from the south or midwest. They aren't native anywhere west of the Rockies. Hundreds of people go to their doctors in California every year saying they've been bitten by recluses, but the bites are always from some other bug, or they're just rashes or something.' The fear of brown recluse spiders in California was an oddly persistent one. I'd once seen a billboard in San Francisco, with a several-million-times-life-size depiction of a fiddleback spider, and a strident warning in Spanish. People do tend toward the fearful, even without cause.
Sadie gave me a new, appraising look. 'No shit? You're, like, a spider expert or something?'
I laughed. How could I explain that I just had a
'My hero,' she said, and touched my arm. It was the first time I'd been touched in this body, other than a handshake and Miss Li's friendly embrace, and I had to stop myself from taking Sadie in my arms right then. Having a body again was wonderful. Why had I gone without for so long?
She let me into her apartment, which was furnished in student-poverty-chic, mismatched furniture and beat-up bookcases overflowing with texts, prints of fine art hung alongside real art of the student-show variety. The apartment was big, though, for a single person in Oakland, with a nice sized living room, a little kitchen separated by a counter, and a short hallway leading to other doors. 'This is a nice place.'
'I know!' she said, and I liked how sincere she sounded. 'It's crazy cheap, too. I looked at a lot of apartments when I first moved here, and they were all way more than I could afford, but this one's half as much