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April 10, 2026
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"Youâre still Brian Duffy. As much as you ever were. But youâre Arthur, too, and that kind of outshines everything else. Brandy and water tastes more like brandy than water, after all."
"Trusting Merlin is like giving a migrant scorpion a lift inside your hat."
"âHow old are you, Brian? You ought to know by now that something always breaks up love affairs unless both parties are willing to compromise themselves. And that compromising is harder to do the older and less flexible and more independent you are. It just isnât in you, Brian. You could no more get married now than you could become a priest, or a sculptor, or a greengrocer.â Duffy opened his mouth to voice angry denials, then one corner turned up and he closed it. âDamn you,â he said wryly. âThen why do I want to, half the time?â Aurelianus shrugged. âItâs the nature of the species. Thereâs a part of a manâs mind that can only relax and go to sleep when heâs with a woman, and that part gets tired of always being tensely awake. It gives orders in so loud a voice that it often drowns out the other components. But when the loud one is asleep at last, the others regain control and chart a new course.â He grinned. âNo equilibrium is possible. If you donât want to put up with the constant seesawing, you must either starve the logical components or bind, gag and lock away in a cellar that one insistent one.â Duffy grimaced and drank some more brandy. âIâm used to the rocking, and I was never one to get motion-sick,â he said. âIâll stay on the seesaw.â Aurelianus bowed. âYou have that option, sir.â"
"When theyâd gone the old man turned around to watch the sunâs slow descent. The Boat of Millions of Years, he thought; the boat of the dying sungod Ra, tacking down the western sky to the source of the dark river that runs through the underworld from west to east, through the twelve hours of the night, at the far eastern end of which the boat will tomorrow reappear, bearing a once again youthful, newly reignited sun. Or, he thought bitterly, removed from us by a distance the universe shouldnât even be able to encompass, itâs a vast motionless globe of burning gas, around which this little ball of a planet rolls like a pellet of dung propelled by a kephera beetle. Take your pick, he told himself as he started slowly down the hill...But be willing to die for your choice."
"Say that again after youâve been in the same spot and acted differently, old buddy. Maybe then Iâll be ashamed."
"Iâve learned that having a lot of money is more fun than not having a lot of money, and that once youâve got it, it tends to grow all by itself, like a fire."
"âYou ever notice, Joe,â he asked, mechanically picking up the mug, âthat it always takes a little more trouble to get something than the thing was really worth?â Joe considered it. âBetter than taking a lot of trouble and getting nothing.â Dundee sipped the coffee. He didnât seem to have heard Joe. âThereâs so much weariness and fatigue in it all. For every action there is an equal...stupefaction. No, that might be bearableâitâs greater than the action.â"
"Certainly no valid answer is ever gained by excluding any factors of the problem; that was the Puritansâ error."
"Some people, he thought, simply have no will to surviveâtheyâre walking hors dâoeuvres waiting for someone who can spare the time to devour them."
"Rivas smiled, remembering his response to his first taking of the Jaybird sacramentâwhile the rest of the recovering communicants had been praising the Lord Jaybush and making sure they knew when the sacrament would be administered again so as not to miss it, young Gregorio Rivas, though stunned, exhausted and glad to have found shelter and company, was coldly appraising the situation. He didnât doubt that the mysterious Norton Jaybush was certainly more than a man and possibly a god, but the prospect of abandoning his individuality in order to âmerge with the Lordâ was profoundly repugnant to him."
"People are so tasty when theyâre truly embittered, truly despairing...and thatâs when they come to Sevatividam. They canât stand the bitter rain, so they run in under one of the two awningsâreligion or dissipationâand guess whoâs waiting for them under both awnings at once..."
"And everybody there thought we were! So who cares? So I careâyou are what people think you are, which is why itâs so important to get them thinking youâre someone who...counts. Gaah."
"âHow does my offer sound? âRivas took a long thoughtful sip. âLetâs see,â he said finally. âIt sounds insincere, impossible, and definitely, absolutely unattractive.â"
"The seas and the weathers are what is; your vessels adapt to them or sink."
"âWhats oâclock?â It wants a quarter to twelve, And to-morrowâs doomsday."
"He was dizzy, and it occurred to him that Newton must have been right when heâd said that light consisted of particles, for today he could feel them hitting him."
"The church has become a more...exclusive club since the founderâs day, itâs clear. No doubt the Devil is more hospitable."
"Every ruler wants to maintain the status quo."
"Processions of priests and religiosi have been for several days past praying for rain; but the gods are either angry, or nature is too powerful."
"The landlord crossed himself when they checked in, but an English ten-pound note for a weekâs lodging overcame whatever superstitious misgivings the man may have had."
"âGod help us,â said Crawford softly. âIf there is one.â Byron grinned. âA whole lot of ghastly things have turned out to be possible, remember.â"
"Sheâs probably only now beginning to be able to think for herself, he thought. And sheâll be hating it. Will she acknowledge the responsibilities that she can now clearly see, or will they be so appalling that sheâll just want to return to the selfless haze?"
"He tried to put more conviction into his voice than he felt, and he mentally cursed any God that there might be, for having made this coming ordeal not only tremendously difficult and dangerous, but possibly pointless too."
"It wasnât fair, but fairness was something you had to go get; it wasnât delivered like the mail."
"Gambling was the place where statistics and profound human consequences met most nakedly, after all, and cards, even more than dice or the numbers on a roulette wheel, seemed able to define and perhaps even dictate a playerâs...luck."
"Iâm really willing to try to believe youâre not crazy, but you gotta help me a little, you know?"
"He thought about crossing his fingers, but clasped her hand instead."
"People in 1900 didnât think that radium could hurt you, just carrying a chip of it in your pocket like a lucky rock, and then one day their legs fell off and they died of cancer. Not believing something is no help if you turn out to be wrong."
"Sukie had always said that the Alice books were the Old and New Testaments for ghostsâwhich Pete had never understood; after all, Lewis Carroll hadnât been dead yet when heâd written them."
"In the early eighties, savvy Japanese had been scouring Melrose for old leather jackets and jukeboxes, and nervous tourists would drive by to look at the punks with green mohawks; now the funny hairstyles looked as if theyâd been done at the Beverly Center. Like a government-subsidized avant-garde, Sullivan had thought as heâd tooled his old van down the crowded avenue, affluent disenfranchisement is just galvanic twitching in a dead frogâs leg."
"Itâs important to feel good about yourself. This morning I met somebody I really likeâme."
"âThis is very pretty,â said Elizalde... âItâs morbid,â snapped Sullivan. âBurying a bunch of dead bodies, and putting a fancy marker over each one so the survivors will know where to go and cry. What if the markers got rearranged? Youâd be weeping over some stranger. Not some stranger, even, some cast-off dead body of a stranger, like a pile of fingernail clippings or old shoes, or the dust from inside an electric razor. Whatâs the difference between coming out here to think about dead Uncle Irving, and thinking about him in your own living room? Okay, here you can sit on the grass and be only six feet above his inert old body. Would it be better if you could dig a hole, and sit only one foot above it?â He was shaking. âEverybody should be cremated, and the ashes should be tossed in the sea with no fanfare at all.â âItâs a sign of respect,â said Elizalde angrily. âAnd itâs a real, tangible link. Think of the Shroud of Turin! Where would we be if they had cremated Jesus?â âI donât knowâweâd have the Ashtray of Turin.â"
"Bradshaw sighed and swallowed, feeling the volatile coldness in his throat and trying to remember what tequila tasted like. Pepper and turpentine, as far as he could recall."
"Cochran recalled that during the French Revolution they had even re-named all the calendar months; the only one he could remember was Thermidor, and he wondered what the others could have been. Fricassee? Jambalaya? Chowder?"
"âMy wife was a psychiatrist,â remarked Pete, âbefore she became a bruja.â"
"An angel, maybe, Cochran thought, but one with a harpoon rather than a harp."
"How, he wondered forlornly, and when, did I become indistinguishable from the bad guys?"
"He wondered if she had actually read his mind or simply knew him well enough to guess his thoughts."
"White seagulls, luminous in the new daylight, were circling high overhead against the blue of the clean sky, whistling and piping in the open, unechoing air as if calling out the news of the soon-returning spring."
"All wrong. The words seemed in this moment to describe Haleâs whole life."
"Your policy here, and in all the Arab states, has been to get out as much oil as you could, before the indigenous peoples looked around and noticed that they were living in the twentieth century."
"Which perspective is true? he thought. Which do I want to be true?"
"Your skull in gold will be more valuable than others, being solid all through."
"Let us quickly be finished with the business of dying, to save the trouble of making dinner."
"He remembered his dismay at finding himself committed to a hand of cards without having honestly looked at the stakes, fourteen years ago. Had he been doing it again? But if the stakes were too frightening to consider, and the game was already lost, what value could there be in clear comprehension?"
"âHey,â Bozzaris said, ânobodyâs human.â It was an old Mossad line, a mixture of ânobodyâs perfectâ and âIâm only human.â"
"Lepidopt didnât know if he was one of those pipe smokers who always had the thing in his mouth and talked around the stem, or one of the ones who was always fiddling with it in his hands, tamping it and relighting it and shoving a pipe cleaner down it; they were different sorts of men."
"âThatâs me, that old guy, that old drunk guy! Who claimed he was my dad? Like, me from the future?â âOne future, not the future. There isnât any the future.â"
"âWeâre going to have a sĂŠance. Oren, open the whisky, if you would, and pour each of us a full glass.â âFirst sensible remark all night,â said Charlotte."
"âWhen you get to where I amââ âIâll never get to where you are. Iâll make better choices.â âChoices! You donât get choices, you get...situations that you react toâthe actual cumulative you reacts, with whatever half-ass wiring youâve got at the time, not some hovering âsoul.â Youâre a mercury switchâif the spring tilts you to the right degree, you complete a circuit, and if itâs got metal fatigue, it tilts you less, and you donât. You donât have free will, sonny.â âOf course I do, of course you do, what kind of excuseââ âBullshit. Ifââ The older Marrity was panting. âIf a scientist could know every last detail of your physiology and life experiences, he could predict with absolute accuracy every âchoiceâ youâd make in any moral quandary.â Quandary! To Marrity the sentence sounded as if it had been prepared ahead of time. Not for talking to me, he thought, this old wretch couldnât have anticipated talking to meâhe must have cooked it up for his own solace. âLaplaceâs determinist manifesto,â came another manâs languid voice from the background. âit overlooks Heisenbergâs uncertainty.â âOkay,â said the older Marrity furiously, âthen itâs probability and statistics that dictate what weâll do! But itâs notââ âItâs a sin,â said Marrity, breathing deeply himself. To Daphne he projected a vague cluster of imagesâhugging her, holding her handâand he was able to have more confidence in his reassurance now. âSaid the fourth domino to the twenty-first!â exclaimed the older Marrity, laughing angrily. ââAh, wilt Thou with predestination round / Enmesh me and impute my fall to sin?ââ"