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Wild Cards IV

Page 62

by George R. R. Martin


  I think even Chrysalis will be delighted to return to Jokertown. Clearly she loved England, but given her Anglophile tendencies, that was hardly a surprise. There was one tense moment when she was introduced to Churchill during a reception, and he gruffly inquired as to exactly what she was trying to prove with her affected British accent. It is quite difficult to read expressions on her unique features, but for a moment I was sure she was going to kill the old man right there in front of the Queen, Prime Minister, and a dozen British aces. Thankfully she gritted her teeth and put it down to Lord Winston’s advanced age. Even when he was younger, he was never precisely reticent about expressing his thoughts.

  Hiram Worchester has perhaps suffered more on this trip than any of us. Whatever reserves of strength were left to him burned out in Germany, and since then he has seemed exhausted. He shattered his special custom seat as we were leaving Paris—some sort of miscalculation with his gravity control, I believe, but it delayed us nearly three hours while repairs were made. His temper has been fraying too. During the business with the seat, Billy Ray made one too many fat jokes, and Hiram finally snapped and turned on him in a white rage, calling him (among other things) an “incompetent little guttermouth.” That was all it took. Carnifex just grinned that ugly little grin of his, said, “For that you get your ass kicked, fat man,” and started to get out of his seat. “I didn’t say you could get up,” Hiram replied; he made a fist and trebled Billy’s weight, slamming him right back into the seat cushion. Billy was still straining to get up and Hiram was making him heavier and heavier, and I don’t know where it might have ended if Dr. Tachyon hadn’t broken it up by putting both of them to sleep with his mind control.

  I don’t know whether to be disgusted or amused when I see these world-famous aces squabbling like petty children, but Hiram at least has the excuse of ill health. He looks terrible these days: white-faced, puffy, perspiring, short of breath. He has a huge, hideous scab on his neck, just below the collar line, that he picks at when he thinks no one is watching. I would strongly advise him to seek out medical attention, but he is so surly of late that I doubt my counsel would be welcomed. His short visits to New York during the tour always seemed to do him a world of good, however, so we can only hope that homecoming restores his health and spirits.

  And lastly, me.

  Observing and commenting on my fellow travelers and what they’ve gained or lost, that’s the easy part. Summing up my own experience is harder. I’m older and, I hope, wiser than when we left Tomlin International, and undeniably I am five months closer to death.

  Whether this journal is published or not after my passing, Mr. Ackroyd assures me that he will personally deliver copies to my grandchildren and do everything in his power to make sure that they are read. So perhaps it is to them that I write these last, concluding words … to them, and all the others like them.…

  Robert, Cassie … we never met, you and I, and the blame for that falls as much on me as on your mother and your grandmother. If you wonder why, remember what I wrote about self-loathing and please understand that I was not exempt. Don’t think too harshly of me … or of your mother or grandmother. Joanna was far too young to understand what was happening when her daddy changed, and as for Mary … we loved each other once, and I cannot go to my grave hating her. The truth is, had our roles been reversed, I might well have done the same thing. We’re all only human, and we do the best we can with the hand that fate has dealt us.

  Your grandfather was a joker, yes. But I hope as you read this book you’ll realize that he was something else as well—that he accomplished a few things, spoke up for his people, did some good. The JADL is perhaps as good a legacy as most men leave behind them, a better monument to my mind than the Pyramids, the Taj Mahal, or Jetboy’s Tomb. All in all, I haven’t done so badly. I’ll leave behind some friends who loved me, many treasured memories, much unfinished business. I’ve wet my foot in the Ganges, heard Big Ben sound the hour, and walked on the Great Wall of China. I’ve seen my daughter born and held her in my arms, and I’ve dined with aces and TV stars, with presidents and kings.

  Most important, I think I leave the world a slightly better place for my having been in it. And that’s really all that can be asked of any of us.

  Remember me to your children, if you will.

  My name was Xavier Desmond, and I was a man.

  From The New York Times

  JULY 17, 1987

  XAVIER DESMOND, THE FOUNDER and president emeritus of the Jokers’ Anti-Defamation League (JADL) and a community leader among the victims of the wild card virus for more than two decades, died yesterday at the Blythe van Rensselaer Memorial Clinic, after a long illness.

  Desmond, who was popularly known as the “Mayor of Jokertown,” was the owner of the Funhouse, a well-known Bowery night spot. He began his political activities in 1964, when he founded the JADL to combat prejudice against wild card victims and promote community education about the virus and its effects. In time, the JADL became the nation’s largest and most influential joker rights organization, and Desmond the most widely respected joker spokesman. He sat on several mayors’ advisory committees, and served as a delegate on the recent global tour sponsored by the World Health Organization. Although he stepped down as president of the JADL in 1984, citing age and ill health, he continued to influence the organization’s policies until his death.

  He is survived by his former wife, Mary Radford Desmond, his daughter, Mrs. Joanna Horton, and his grandchildren, Robert Van Ness and Cassandra Horton.

  The Wild Cards Series

  Wild Cards I: Wild Cards

  Wild Cards II: Aces High

  Wild Cards III: Jokers Wild

  Wild Cards IV: Aces Abroad

  Down and Dirty

  Ace in the Hole

  Dead Man’s Hand

  One-Eyed Jacks

  Jokertown Shuffle

  Double Solitaire

  Dealer’s Choice

  Turn of the Cards

  Card Sharks

  Marked Cards

  Black Trump

  Deuces Down

  Death Draws Five

  Inside Straight

  Busted Flush

  Suicide Kings

  Fort Freak

  Lowball

  About the Editor

  GEORGE R. R. MARTIN, editor of the Wild Cards series, is the author of the phenomenally popular A Song of Ice and Fire fantasy series, the basis for the HBO drama Game of Thrones. He lives in New Mexico.

  Copyright Acknowledgments

  “The Tint of Hatred” copyright © 1988 by Stephen Leigh

  “The Journal of Xavier Desmond” copyright © 1988 by George R. R. Martin

  “Beasts of Burden” copyright © 1988 by John J. Miller

  “Blood Rights” copyright © 1988 by Leanne C. Harper

  “Warts and All” © 2014 by Kevin Andrew Murphy

  “Down by the Nile” copyright © 1988 by Gail Gerstner-Miller

  “The Teardrop of India” copyright © 1988 by Walton Simons

  “Down in the Dreamtime” copyright © 1988 by Edward Bryant

  “Zero Hour” copyright © 1988 by Lewis Shiner

  “Always Spring in Prague” © 2014 by Carrie Vaughn

  “Puppets” © 1988 by Victor W. Milán

  “Mirrors of the Soul” copyright © 1988 by Melinda M. Snodgrass

  “Legends” copyright © 1988 by Michael Cassutt

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in these stories are either products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously.

  WILD CARDS IV: ACES ABROAD

  Copyright © 1988 by George R. R. Martin

  Expanded edition © 2014 by George R. R. Martin and the Wild Cards Trust

  All rights reserved.

  Cover art by Michael Komarck

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

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  The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

  ISBN 978-0-7653-3558-6 (trade paperback)

  ISBN 978-1-4668-2436-2 (e-book)

  e-ISBN 9781466824362

  First published in the United States by Bantam Spectra

  First Tor Edition: January 2015

 

 

 


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