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George R. R. Martin - Deuces Down (Wild Cards, Book 16)

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George R. R. Martin Deuces Down (Wild Cards, Book 16)

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On September 15, 1946, a biological weapon created by an alien race was accidentally detonated above the streets of New York City, killing countless numbers of men, women, and children. But those who survived the initial explosion soon began to wish they had died also, once they discovered they had been forever mutated by the virus unleashed in the blast. . . . When the first volume in the Wild Cards series made its debut in 1986, it caused a sensation in the science fiction and fantasy communities. Here were stories of superpowered beings in a real world setting, detailing the lives of ??Aces???those given superhuman powers by the ??Wild Cards?? virus?and ??Jokers???those whom the virus transformed into freaks and monsters. Over the course of fifteen volumes, the world created by editor George R.R. Martin and some of SF??s most talented writers was explored through the eyes of both Aces and Jokers across the globe. In this all-new collection of Wild Cards stories, the spotlight is on the most unusual Wild Cards of them all?the Deuces. As you??ll discover in this thrilling collection, their role in the Wild Cards Universe is just as important as that of the Aces and the Jokers. In fact, their actions have affected the course of Wild Cards history. Set in an alternate, shared-world universe, Deuces Down is the one place you??ll find such never-before-told tales as John J. Miller??s exciting 1969 World Series between the Baltimore Orioles and the Brooklyn Dodgers; Michael Cassutt??s first moon landing, when the whole world wasn??t watching; Walton Simons?? Great New York City Blackout of 1977; Melinda M. Snodgrass??s account of Grace Kelly??s mysterious disappearance during the filming of The French Lieutenant??s Woman. It??s a strange and terrifying world, where anything can happen. A world of Wild Cards.

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STORMING SPACE

By Michael Cassutt

W ould that be Mr. Cash? the voice behind me said, surprising the hell out of me.

I was in Haugens Bakery on Highway 14 getting my morning cup of coffee, though thats not why I stopped there. I didnt even like coffee much; it made me jittery, and made my heavy lifting, tricky at best, almost impossible. The owner, a joker of indeterminate gender named Fran, was hard on the eyes and nerves.

But Haugens had this waitress named Evelyn. Well, her name was pronounced Evelyn: on her nametag it was written, no fooling, Eva-Lynne. She was tall and slim and blond and about 25 years old, and my purpose in life, that unseasonably hot day in October 1968, was to find out what mistake she made in a past life that dumped her into a bakery in Mojave, California. Until then I, like the truckers passing through, continued to come by for some really bad coffee, questionable pastries, and just a whiff of her perfume. Perhaps a throaty, Thanks for coming in. Good to see you again. (She always seemed on the verge of remembering my name.)

You certainly didnt come to Haugens to have strange foreign men loom up behind you without warning.

Hmm? I said, or something equally articulate.

Mr. Cash Mitchell? The speaker was a man about forty, thin, dark. Indian, I judged, from the lilt to his voice. Not a joker, either.

Speaking, I said, foolishly, as if we were on the telephone. (I was moving closer to my encounter with Eva-Lynne.)

Ah, good. I am Tominbang. I wish to speak with you on a matter of great urgency. He shook my hand a bit too enthusiastically.

And I took another step forward. The customer in front of the customer in front of mea busy-looking woman of 35, almost certainly a real estate professionalsuddenly launched a complicated series of orders at Eva-Lynne, no doubt nosh for some morning meeting. I was trapped.

Im listening, I said to Tominbang. If you saw me, medium height, overweight, glasses, you would not be intimidated. But I had had a good couple of months lifting various items for Mr. Warren Skalko of Lancaster, Las Vegas, and other municipalities, so I felt smug. I could not imagine why this foreign man would be talking to me; more precisely, I suspected that any association between us was not going to make me rich. (This turned out to be painfully true.)

Mr. Warren Skalko recommends you to me, Tominbang said.

I lost probably a third of my attitude at the mention of my mentor. Im always happy to meet a friend of Mr. Skalkos, I said, summoning as much enthusiasm as I could. Just to be safe. Where do you know him from? Mr. Skalko had several sorts of associates, some from his noted (and legitimate) charity work, others from his country club, and a few from being what that same popular press called the crime lord of the southwest.

We were introduced on the first tee at Riviera, Tominbang said, naming Mr. Skalkos Los Angeles country club, and nicely slipping into the second category of Skalko associates. He mentioned your specific abilities as a mass transporter

He was interrupted by a commotion not five feet away. Real Estate Woman was giving my beloved Eva-Lynne a hard time. What the hell do you expect me to do? Carry it all by myself?

The customer in front of me, sensing a longer-than-usual wait for bad coffee, shook his head and departed. At that moment I caught Eva-Lynnes eyeand was struck by something Id never seen there before.

Panic.

She was trying to maneuver a heavy, unbalanced load of hot coffees and pastryenough food for a group of a dozen longshoreman, I judgedwhile behind her a coffee machine somehow managed to boil over and one of the bakers chattered in her ear. Big bad Fran was busy elsewhere. Im sorry, she was saying, Just give me a

Let me help, I said, surprising myself as I edged past the annoying Real Estate Woman and placed a hand on Eva-Lynnes shoulder. This is how my lifting works: physical touch, with mass-to-be-moved proportional to the strength of my grip. The trigger is emotion, and anger or even general annoyance (my usual state), is the most reliable.

You can bet I was gentle. I didnt want hot coffee spewing all over us. Sure enough, the load lightened just enough so that Eva-Lynne didnt have to worry about it. One lovely eyebrow arched in surprise. Out to your car? I said to the Annoying Real Estate Woman.

No, why dont you just carry it over to Joshua Street for me. Ordinarily I have little patience for sarcasm, but being in actual physical contact with Eva-Lynne had a mellowing effect.

Let me help, I whispered to Eva-Lynne, since I had to remain in physical contact to keep lifting. And we glided outside into the gravel parking like a Kern County version of Fred and Ginger.

Thank you, Eva-Lynne told me, once the order was safely deposited on the front seat of a new 1969 Ford LTD, and Annoying Real Estate Woman had departed. I really appreciate it. Her nose sort of crinkled, and she smiled. Your name is Cash, isnt it?

At last! Id made it across the barrier, from vaguely familiar five-day-a-week morning customer to friend-with-a-name! Who knew where this could lead! I was just about to extend my hand when Fran appeared in the doorway. Eva-Lynne, we have customers!

Back to the grind, she said, heading back inside. I followed.

In those brief-but-glorious moments of personal contact, I had forgotten about Tominbang. You are a gentleman, Mr. Mitchell.

Not really, I said, and I wasnt just being modest. What was it you wanted to talk to me about?

Ah, my project, he said, lighting up like a Mojave dawn. I am thinking of making a flight to the Moon.

Nothing less could have torn me away from Eva-Lynne. (And even then, it was close.)

Picture 1

Mr. Tominbangs late model El Dorado was parked outside, right next to my 66 Mustang (the fruit of my first lifting jobs for Mr. Skalko, a shipment of color televisions that somehow fell off their truck). There was some discussion as to whether I would ride with Tominbang (Where are we going, exactly?) or he with me, until we compromised on having me follow him. That was a relief: if Id left the Mustang for, say, two hours, the next place I would have seen it would have been as pieces in one of the Mr. Skalkos other subsidiaries, the Palmdale chop shop.

Tominbang headed north, then west on Highway 58, toward the nether reaches of greater Mojave. This was strange territory for me: I live south of Palmdale, which is itself south of Mojave, in my little rat shack on the slope above Pearblossom Highway. I only found myself frequenting Haugens Bakery on Highway 14 thanks to visits to one of Mr. Skalkos hideoutsexcuse me, residences.

No sooner had we cleared the collection of shacks, trailers and used auto parts lots that is Mojave than I developed second thoughts. Maybe it was the wind, which was blowing hard enough to nudge the Mustang off the centerline. (Did you know that Tehachapi is the windiest municipality in the continental US?) Maybe it was hearing Scott McKenzie singing, If Youre Going to Jokertown for the hundredth time in a week, with its lyrics about taking that longshot when you see it. (A guy like me doesnt have many opportunities with a girl like Eva-Lynne.)

Maybe it was thinking about what Mr. Tominbang said. A flight to the Moon?

I was seven years old when the wild card turned, so aliens from another planet were as real to me as Rin Tin Tin or my Fourth grade teacher. My older brother, Brad, used to force me to play Buck Rogers with himthe times we werent playing Wake Island, that is. We fought marsh creatures on Venus, dust dragons on Mars, and even some weird rock beings on the Moon.

Brad wanted to explore space when he grew up. Who cared that the Takisians had been there first? Human beings would go further, faster! He read all the Tak World novels, which he then passed down to me. (I read them, too, but under duress.)

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