of disgruntled old-school magicians called the Synth.
From the outside, Neon Nightmare was a dark moun tain of architectural pyramid topped by the pyrotechni cal display of a neon horse at the apex. Inside, it was designed like its ancient Egyptian role models. Once you were past the central open core where the bar and dance floor dominated, hidden paths led to unexpected cham bers. If dead pharaohs didn't await, career-dead magi cians did, brooding over the wrongs of a world that now favored the naked revelation of magical illusions over the ancient tradition that cloaked stage magic in the mystic.
Max found his way to the center of the Synth's secret world, an eternally stuffy Colonial club room, where the stout and storied sat and smoked and sipped and relived old triumphs.
He pushed the pressure point that turned black, unre lieved wall into a featureless door, then moved into a room that glowed the deep claret of a full wineglass. Crimson carpet, black leather, and ruby-stemmed glassware . . . it was like an Edward Gorey illustration, elegantly Edwardian and etched in black, white, and gray, except for the telling blood-red accents.
“Max! We were just talking about you.”
That would do for the opening salvo in a war of words. Having been "just talked about" made one the outsider in an instant. The inconstant lover. The philandering hus band. The betrayer.
“ Where have you been?" the dramatic-looking woman he had nicknamed Carmen demanded before he could answer.
“Certainly not onstage," said the mentalist named Cza rina Catharina. She wore the caftan and turban that hid an aging woman's thinning hair and thickening waist. "No professional demands keeping you away. No excuses," she added coyly.
He shrugged and slipped into an oxblood-red leather chair, happy to fold his telltale six-foot-four height into lounging level. "I have matters to attend to anyway," he said.
“Matters?" Carmen's question was sharp.
“Financial."
“Ah." The portly old gentleman by the bar cart who'd performed as Cosimo Sparks smiled tightly. "He now performs illusions with numbers, in private."
“You must have made an obscene amount of money," Carmen speculated, her husky voice softening with lust, whether for love or money it was hard to tell, but Max's dough would be on the filthy lucre.
“Money isn't everything. And the stock market." Max sighed, spreading his fingers so eloquently that the assembled magicians stared at them as if seeing money melting away.
It had melted away too when he'd poured it into global counterterrorism actions after 9/11. Not into any specific government's efforts, but into the same shadowy, idealis tic nonpartisan group that he and his mentor Gandolph had supported for years.
“You know what we are," Sparks said.
“I think I do. Does anyone ever fully know another?”
“Exactly. But we need to really know you."
“Aren't I enough of an open book for my fellow, and sister, magicians? You all know that I got caught in 'a situation' the night my performing contract closed at the Goliath. I was unfortunately seen too close to a couple of thugs attempting to rob the casino, who inexplicably shot each other. It was flee or face charges. And so my career came to a dramatic end.”
The bitter twist to his mouth on the last sentence was particularly effective, and truly felt. Honesty was always the best disguise among enemies.
“Your career was ruined," Czarina agreed. "But new ones beckon."
“Oh?"
“Join us."
“I thought I had.”
Sparks answered for Czarina this time. "You've been tolerated, man, but remain unproven."
“We require a trifling . . . initiation ritual," the older woman put in.
“I found you in this rats' maze, didn't I?”
Sparks shook his head. Not enough. "We require more than fine discernment. We require risk."
“You're talking to me about risk?"
“ Granted. But perhaps you've grown complacent be hind your anonymity."
“Perhaps. I wouldn't bet on