Budayeen Nights

Budayeen Nights by George Alec Effinger

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Authors: George Alec Effinger
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perfectly correct. He had never before been so satisfied by a cup of coffee.
    “I’ll always remember this coffee,” he said.
    “Let’s come back here again next year, darling,” said Costanzia.
    Audran laughed indulgently. “For San Saberio’s new fashions?”
    Costanzia lifted her cup and smiled. “For the coffee,” she said.
    After the advertisement, there was a blackout during which Audran couldn’t see a thing. He wondered briefly who Costanzia was, but he put her out of his mind. }ust as he began to panic, his vision cleared. He felt a ripple of dizziness, and then it was as if he’d awakened from a dream. He was rational and cool and he had a job to do. He had become the Complete Guardian.
    He couldn’t see or hear anything that was happening inside. He assumed that Shaknahyi was making his way quietly through the cafe’s back room. It was up to Audran to give his partner as much support as possible. He jumped the iron railing into the patio, then walked decisively into the interior of the bar.
    The scene inside didn’t look very threatening. Monsieur Gargotier was standing behind the bar, beneath the huge, cracked mirror. His daughter, Maddie, was sitting at a table near the back wall. A young man sat at a table against the west wall, under Gargotier’s collection of faded prints of the Mars colony. The young man’s hands rested on a small box. His head swung to look at Audran. “Get the fuck out,” he shouted, “or this whole place goes up in a big bright bang!”
    “I’m sure he means it, monsieur,” said Gargotier. He sounded terrified.
    “Bet your ass I mean it!” said the young man.
    Being a police officer meant sizing up dangerous situations and being able to make quick, sure judgments. Complete Guardian suggested that in dealing with a mentally disturbed individual, Audran should try to find out why he was upset and then try to calm him. Complete Guardian recommended that Audran not make fun of the individual, show anger, or dare him to carry out his threat. Audran raised his hands and spoke calmly. “I’m not going to threaten you,” Audran said.
    The young man just laughed. He had dirty long hair and a patchy growth of beard, and he was wearing a faded pair of blue jeans and a plaid cotton shirt with its sleeves torn off. He looked a little like Audran had, before Friedlander Bey had raised his standard of living.
    “Mind if I sit and talk with you?” asked Audran.
    “I can set this off any time I want,” said the young man. “You got the guts, sit down. But keep your hands flat on the table.”
    “Sure.” Audran pulled out a chair and sat down. He had his hack to the barkeeper, but out of the corner of his eye he could see Maddie Gargotier. She was quietly weeping.
    “You ain’t gonna talk me out of this,” said the young man.
    Audran shrugged. “I just want to find out what this is all about . What’s your name?”
    “The hell’s that got to do with anything?”
    “My name is Marîd. I was born in Mauretania.”
    “You can call me Al-Muntaqim.” The kid with the bomb had appropriated one of the Ninety-Nine Beautiful Names of God. It meant “The Avenger.”
    “You always lived in the city?” Audran asked him.
    “Hell no. Misr.”
    “That’s the local name for Cairo, isn’t it?” asked Audran.
    Al-Muntaqim jumped to his feet, furious. He jabbed a finger toward Gargotier behind the bar and screamed, “See? See what I mean? That’s just what I’m talkin about! Well, I’m gonna stop it once and for all!” He grabbed the box and ripped open the lid.
    Audran felt a horrible pain all through his body. It was as if all his joints had been yanked and twisted until his bones pulled apart. Every muscle in his body felt torn, and the surface of his skin stung as if it had been sandpapered. The agony went on for a few seconds, and then Audran lost consciousness.
     

    “You all right?”
    No, I didn’t feel all right. On the outside I felt red-hot and glowing, as

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