sheâs wearing aqua. Blue invariably means death. Even in poor lost Millicentâs kitchenâyes, Vince, her name is clearly Millicent, do try to keep up! Before she even pricks the meat to slide the garlic in, itâs all been arranged for her. Does death do its thing, in this universe? Yes. Time, in Millicent World? Progressing one second per second, twenty-four and seven and three hundredâodd. Seasons: four. The moon: intact, in orbit, in phase. Green elm, red peony. Seventeen per cent sacrificial success rate under ideal conditions, results not peer reviewed. And of course in stories there is always fate. It goes by the name of foreshadowing and it is the emperor of everybody. Given all these parameters, husband Humphrey should be dead by dessert. See? Itâs only that the answers in most stories are boring because they are supplied by the real world rather thanâwell, something better. Something more stimulating. Sit down with the Greeks and the Romans, and the boring answers get more interesting. Seasons because a girl and a crocus. Death because a girl and an apple. The moon because a girl keeps driving her daft chariot into the sea.
     Itâs all down to girls, one way or another.
     [indistinct]
     All right, all right, Iâm boring you. Iâm babbling. I havenât made up my mind about this one yet. I donât even know how to go about making up my mind. I would rather not have death. I would rather that. Time is terribly tawdry, as well. And letâs see what we can do about that percentage.
     Let us begin properly. This is what Iâm thinking: She came from nowhere. She came from the sea. She came from the dark. The Earth fucked the Sky and made a hundred childrenâor maybe just nine. Mercury, Venus, Mars, the whole ragtag family. And the nine had their own kids: Phobos, Triton, Io, Charon, all the brats. Maybe we can do this like we used to do, way back when. You know I can never quit Vaudeville. Toga up the main cast as the planets and the moons: rings around Saturnâs head; Venus dripping wet; Mars in a cowboy getup; Neptune, I donât know, up on strings like the levitators, maybe? Stupid on af-yun, all heroin eyes and running makeup. Stand them in tableaux against a spangly cloth backdrop. Then they can start killing each other. Itâll be Shakespearian. Barking big knives. Buckets of blood. Blood and callowmilk.
     So the little bastards stab the Sky to death and throw the spangles into the sea, and they turn into the title, and thatâs where she comes from. Out of the words and the water. She can rise up on a clamshell naked and covered with blood and milk. Thatâs what birth looks like, after all. Naked, with a myrtle branch in one hand and a camera in the other.
     I have no ideas for casting. Someone new. I donât want anyone whose face has been someone else. Iâll have to call Richard. Heâll find somebody fresh off the rocket who looks like her. He always knows what I want. So, whoever she is, sheâll look through the camera in her hand at the camera in my hand. The waves hit her and wash her clean. Mostly clean. Leave a mark on her face. Like a wound. Presto: Birth of Venus.
     [indistinct]
     Yes. Severinâs birth, too. No difference.
     But thatâs the last time we use her name, Vince. Whatâs our rule? You canât name the subject. You canât say the word death in a murder mystery after the body gets discovered; no more than you can say love in a romantic flick until the end, until itâs a bullet firing, the bullet youâve had on deck since the scene-one-take-one clapper smacked its lips. You circle it. You stalk it. But you donât call it out.
MAKO: But everyone will know who itâs meant to be. Whatâs the point of being