file:///F|/rah/Piers%20Anthony/Anthony,%20Piers%20-%20Incarnations%201%20-%20On%20A%20Pale%20Horse.txt
stone glowed brightly again as the other man took it; he had found his romance, outwitting fate.
The Wealth stone, in contrast, was huge and dull and ugly, with the star hardly showing.
Zane could not repress the feeling that he had made a colossal error. He should have
mortgaged his whole life to buy the Love stone. For evidently this heiress-girl Angelica had the
resources and willingness to pay off such a debt offhandedly, and was a very fine creature in her
own right. Love and wealth: he could have had it all.
The girl was drawing with loving possessiveness on the proprietor's arm, and she was all
soft and eager in her new emotion. "Must go," the Mess o' Pottage man said, delivering to Zane a
kind of salute. Then they were gone, walking toward the chauffeured limousine that awaited them.
Zane stood watching the elegant contours of the girl's backside, experiencing an awful,
helpless regret. What kind of fool had he been, to throw away romance untried? Somehow he knew he
would never again have an opportunity like this. Such things occurred only once in a lifetime, if
that often, and he had thrown his chance away. A kind of grief suffused him, like that for a
cruelly dead lover.
Well, it was hardly the first time he had blundered disastrously! His soul was weighted
with evil he should have avoided, and his life blighted with foolish error. At least he possessed
the Wealth stone, and with proper management he would soon be a rich man, able to attract and hold
whatever type of woman he craved, or to buy a compliant female android or a luscious magical
nymph.
He didn't need Angelica! He had to believe that, for it was his only present buffer
against overwhelming despair.
Zane knew himself to be a headstrong young idiot with delusions of artistry and literacy,
whose good impulses were too often mismanaged into liabilities. Thus he had lost his dear mother,
and his loving girlfriend long ago, and had sunk himself in debt. Good intentions were not enough;
they had to be rationally implemented.
He could not even afford the fare for the subway home. He had the penny from his shoe, but
that was not enough. He had the Wealth stone, but he refused to use it here on the darkening
street; some criminal would mug him for it. Zane stuck his hands deep in his pockets, clasping the
stone out of sight, and walked toward the dingy quarter where his sleazy apartment lurked.
Walking was a good time for thinking; it took a person's mind off the drudgery of the
feet. But Zane's thoughts were not uplifting. Here he was, in the ultimate age of magic and
science, where jet planes vied with flying carpets, and he was traveling afoot, without the
benefit of either.
Magic had always existed, of course, as had science, however limited the benefits of
either might be for those who were broke. But it hadn't been until the time of Newton that the
basic principles of the twin disciplines had been seriously explored. Newton had made great
strides in formulating the fundamental laws of science in his early years, contributing more than
perhaps any other man. In his later years he had performed similarly for magic.
But for reasons not clear to Zane-he had never been an apt scholar-greater progress had
been made at first in science. Only recently had the enormous explosion in applied magic come. Of
course, neither science nor magic had affected history much until the past century, as there had
been a popular prejudice against both, but science had broken out first. Now, however, the rapidly
increasing sophistication of magic had brought back supposedly extinct monsters of many types,
especially dragons. Whether science or magic would win out in the end was anybody's guess.
A fine drizzle developed, perhaps condensation from the cloud-mall above: not enough
moisture to clean air or street, just enough to turn the dust to grease and make his footing
treacherous. Cars skidded through stoplights, narrowly avoiding collisions; probably only the
mandatory anti-wreck charms saved their fenders from harm.
Now it was dusk. The street had gradually become deserted. No one walked through this
section of town at this hour if he could avoid it. The buildings were old, and age had weathered
them from their original Technicolor to their present monochrome. This region had come to be known
as Ghost town, and at twilight sometimes the ghost appeared. But it was best not to look, because -
-
In fact, there she was now. Zane heard the wooden wheel of the wheelbarrow first, and
stepped into a grimy doorway alcove so as not to disturb the apparition. A person could see the
ghost, and even photograph her, but if the ghost saw the person --
Molly Malone came down the street, her wheelbarrow piled with shellfish. She was a sweet-
faced young woman, pretty despite her ragged garments and heavy clogs. Women thought spiked heels
and nylon stockings made their legs pretty, but legs like Molly's needed no such enhancements.
"Cockles and mussels!" she cried sweetly. "Alive! Alive O!"
Zane smiled, his black mood lightening somewhat. The shellfish might be alive, but surely
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