Lastly, I want to thank my family, Mary, Mike, Holly, and Maddy, who were the most patient of all, who loved me, and who, for long periods during the writing of this book, put up with my going away both to write and to find America—which turned out, when I eventually found it, to have been in America all along.
APPENDIX
P
eople were walking around beside him, in his mind or out of it. Some of the people he seemed to recognize, others were strangers.“And what’s a stranger but a friend you haven’t met yet?” said someone to him, passing him a drink.
He took the drink, walked with the person down a light brown corridor. They were in a Spanish-style building, and they moved from adobe corridor to open courtyard to corridor once more, while the sun beat down on the water gardens and the fountains.
“It might be an enemy you’ve not met yet too,” said Shadow.
“Bleak, Shadow, very bleak,” said the man. Shadow sipped his drink. It was a brackish red wine.
“It’s been a bleak few months,” said Shadow. “It’s been a bleak few years.”
The man was slender, tanned, of medium height, and he looked up at Shadow with a gentle, empathetic smile. “How’s the vigil going, Shadow?”
“The tree?” Shadow had forgotten that he was hanging from the silver tree. He wondered what else he had forgotten. “It hurts.”
“Suffering is sometimes cleansing,” said the man. His clothes were casual, but expensive. “It can purify.”
“It can also fuck you up,” said Shadow.
The man led Shadow into a vast office. There was no desk in there, though. “Have you thought about what it means to be a god?” asked the man. He had a beard and a baseball cap. “It means you give up your mortal existence to become a meme: something that lives forever in people’s minds, like the tune of a nursery rhyme. It means that everyone gets to re-create you in their own minds. You barely have your own identity any more. Instead, you’re a thousand aspects of what people need you to be. And everyone wants something different from you. Nothing is fixed, nothing is stable.”
Shadow sat in a comfortable leather chair, by the window. The man sat on the enormous sofa. “Great place you’ve got here,” said Shadow.
“Thanks. Be honest now, how’s the wine?”
Shadow hesitated. “Kind of sour, I’m afraid.”
“Sorry. That’s the trouble with wine. Okay wine I can do easily, but
“It’s fine, really,” said Shadow, and he swallowed the rest of the wine in one long gulp. He could feel it burning in his empty stomach, feel the bubbles of drunkenness rising at the back of his head.
“And then this whole deal of new gods, old gods,” said his friend. “You ask me, I welcome new gods. Bring them on. The god of the guns. The god of bombs. All the gods of ignorance and intolerance, of self-righteousness, idiocy and blame. All the stuff they try and land me with. Take a lot of the weight off my shoulders.” He sighed.
“But you’re so successful,” said Shadow. “Look at this place.” He gestured, indicating the paintings on the walls, the hardwood floor, the fountain in the courtyard below them.