were painstakingly checking the identities of anyone who dared to enter or to leave. Their mood was volatile, resentful, tired. Theyâd welcome the chanceâwere it not for the journalists presentâto burst inside to tip some tables over and to crack some heads. The Debitâs clientele was just the sort they hated most. Toffee-nosed and smart-arsed liberals with cash to spare, their lives ring-fenced by bank accounts abroad and properties at home. Provocative women with skin like confirmation cups and catwalk clothes. Men who never had to take the streetcar, or wear a shirt for three shifts in a row, or workâas they themselves were working nowâafter midnight, in the rain, for wages that were âheld upâ by the bank. A daylight robbery. Imagine how the Debitorsâ blood would decorate the fancy tablecloths, or how dramatically those clever, brittle heads would bruise and crack if only someone with a bit of spirit and imagination in the government would give permission for the patriots to Proceed. They wanted their revenge for having to be dutiful when everyone else was having fun, for having to be young and unimportant, for being dull and out of place.
Their corporal, a townie boy though not this town, made a corridor of tables through which Debitors must pass. His comrades crowded around to take offense. Now here was someone that they recognized and did not like. Not Lix. They hadnât seen
him yet. But Freda. âFreedom Freda.â The firebrand lecturer whose rants theyâd had to endure at far too many public meetings, in far too many television interviews. A critic of the army and the police, indeed. There was no mistaking this giraffe. She was a handsome woman, tall and set, to use the current phrase. Frisking her and requiring her to stretch her arms above her head, her fine teeth biting on her documents, was a duty and a luxury. Even Lix could see what satisfaction it was providing them, could sympathize with their wide eyes, their gaping mouths, caused just as much by how she looked as by what she was saying (for she could still create a din, could shout and curse, through her clenched teeth). Theyâd never heard such legal threats, such posturing, such statements of intent, such growls. Theyâd never detained such hair before, such long and capable arms, so willowy a neck, such arrogance, such heavy fabric in the dress, so hectoring a voice. And what good luck! The woman was not carrying an up-to-date ID with her. Sheâd not renewed. On a point of principle, she said. Well, on another point of principle, a legal principle, the corporal had no alternative but to send her to the barracks for some questioning. If only she would show a little more respect and quiet down, then possibly they would allow her to be taken there âwithout handcuffs.â The policemen lookedâand smiledâat Fredaâs narrow wrists, her bangles and her amulets. A pair of extra cuffs would finish her.
What none of the policemen or Lix had spotted was the sudden transfer, just before Fredaâs hands were raised, of her shoulder bag to Mouetta. So he was baffled and relieved when, rather than arguing for her cousinâs immediate release, as he expected,
as she was prone to do, his normally plucky wife simply took his arm and, without a glance back or a word of farewell, steered him through the uniforms, across the terrace, and out into the driving rain. No one tried to stop him, obviously. Too familiar. He was starring every Tuesday night in Doctor D on Channel V&N. He was in the ad for Boulevard Liqueur. Heâd won a celebrated Masters Medal for his solo version of Don Juan. Heâd gone to Hollywood, appeared in several films, and come back almost undefiled. Heâd even had success as a singer: his Hand Baggage: A Travelogue of Songs , recorded fourteen years before, was selling still. He was, as Freda had made clear ten minutes earlier, a threat to