THE DARK TOWER IV
STEPHEN
KING
wizard and
glass
ILLUSTRATIONS BY DAVE
MCKEAN
A PLUME BOOK
PLUME
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New
York, New York 10014, U.S.A. Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ,
England
Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia
Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2 Penguin Books
(N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road, Auckland 10, New Zealand
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England
Published by Plume, an imprint of Dutton
Signet,
a member of Penguin Putnam Inc.
A limited hardcover edition was published by
Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc., Hampton Falls, NH.
First Plume Printing, November, 1997 10 987654321
Copyright © Stephen King, 1997
Illustrations copyright © Dave McKean, 1997
All rights reserved
acknowledgments
The lyrics from "The Green Door,"
words by Marvin Moore, music by Bob Davis,
copyright © 1956 Alley Music Corp. and Trio Music Co., Inc.
Copyright renewed. All
rights reserved. Used by permission. The
lyrics from "Whole Lot-ta Shakin' Goin' On"
by Dave Williams and Sonny David, copyright
© 1957.
^^ REGISTERED TRADEMARK——MARCA REGISTRADA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA:
King, Stephen
Wizard and glass / Stephen King, p. cm. — (The Dark Tower ; 4)
ISBN 0-452-27917-8 I. Series:
King, Stephen. Dark Tower ; 4.
PS3561.I483W59 1997
813'.54—dc21 97-15995
CIP
Printed in the United States of America
Set in Times Roman Designed by Jesse Cohen
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This book is dedicated to Julie Eugley and
Marsha DeFilippo. They answer the mail, and
most of the mail for the last couple of years has
been about Roland of Gilead—the gunslinger.
Basically, Julie and Marsha nagged me back
to the word processor. Julie, you nagged the
most effectively, so your name comes first.
CONTENTS
ARGUEMENT
PROLOGUE
BLAINE
PART ONE
RIDDLES
PART TWO
SUSAN
PART THREE
COME, REAP
PART FOUR
ALL GOD'S CHILLUN GOT SHOES
AFTERWORD
ILLUSTRATIONS
Rose
All hail the crimson king!
Her arms and belly and breasts breaking out
in gooseflesh
Cuthbert, meanwhile, had already reloaded
But he and his love were no longer children
Smiling lips revealed cunning little teeth
There they died together-o
Of the three of them, only Roland saw her
It cut the old man's throat efficiently enough
A flash as the big-bang exploded
The dark tower rearing to the sky
The wicked witch of the East
ARGUEMENT
Wizard and Glass is the
fourth volume of a longer tale inspired by Robert Browning's narrative poem "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower
Came."
The first volume, The Gunslinger, tells how Roland of
Gilead pursues and at last catches Walter,
the man in black, who pretended friendship with Roland's father but who
actually served Marten, a great sorcerer. Catching the half-human Walter is not
Roland's goal but only a means to an end: Roland
wants to reach the Dark Tower, where he hopes the quickening destruction of Mid-World may be halted, perhaps
even reversed.
Roland is a kind of knight, the last of his
breed, and the Tower is his obsession, his only reason for
living when first we meet him. We learn of an early
test of manhood forced upon him by Marten, who has seduced Roland's mother. Marten expects Roland to fail this test
and to be "sent west," his father's guns forever denied him.
Roland, however, lays Marten's plans at nines,
passing the test . . .due mostly to his clever choice of weapon.
We discover that the gunslinger's world is related to our own in
some fundamental and terrible way. This
link is first revealed when Roland meets Jake, a boy from the New York
of 1977, at a desert way station. There are doors
between Roland's world and our own; one of them is death, and that is how
Jake first reaches Mid-World, pushed into Forty-third Street and run over by a car. The pusher was a man named Jack
Mort . . . except the thing hiding inside of Mort's head and guiding his
murderous hands on this particular occasion
was Roland's old enemy, Walter.
Before Jake and Roland reach Walter, Jake
dies again ... this time because the
gunslinger faced with an agonizing choice between this symbolic son and the Dark Tower, chooses the Tower.
Jake's last words before plunging into
the abyss are "Go, then—there are other worlds than these."
The final confrontation between Roland and Walter occurs near the
Western Sea. In a long night of palaver, the man in black tells Roland's future with a strange Tarot deck. Three cards—The
Prisoner, The Lady of the Shadows,
and Death ("but not for you, gunslinger")—are especially called to
Roland's attention.
The second volume, The Drawing of the
Three, begins on the edge of the Western Sea not long after Roland awakens from his confrontation with
his old nemesis and discovers
Walter long dead, only more bones in a place of bones. The exhausted gunslinger is attacked by a horde
of carnivorous "lobstrosities,"
and before he can escape them, he has been seriously wounded, losing the first two fingers of his right hand. He is also
poisoned by their bites, and as he resumes
his trek northward along the Western Sea, Roland is sickening ... perhaps dying.
On his walk he encounters three doors standing freely on the
beach. These open into our city of New York,
at three different whens. From 1987, Roland draws Eddie Dean, a prisoner of heroin. From 1964, he draws
Odetta Susannah Holmes, a woman who
has lost her lower legs in a subway mishap . . . one that was no accident. She is indeed a lady of shadows,
with a vicious second personality hiding within the socially committed
young black woman her friends know. This hidden woman, the violent and crafty
Detta Walker, is determined to kill both Roland and Eddie when the gunslinger draws her into Mid-World.
Between these two in time, once again in
1977, Roland enters the hellish mind of
Jack Mort, who has hurt Odetta/Detta not once but twice. "Death," the
man in black told Roland, "but not for you, gunslinger." Nor is Mort
the third of whom Walter foretold; Roland prevents Mort from murdering Jake Chambers, and shortly afterward Mort dies beneath
the wheels of the same train which took Odetta's legs in 1959. Roland
thus fails to draw the psychotic into Mid-World ... but, he thinks, who would
want such a being in any case?
Yet there's a price to be paid for rebellion against a foretold
future; isn't there always? Ka, maggot, Roland's
old teacher, Cort, might have said; Such
is the great wheel, and always turns. Be not in front of it when it does, or you 'II be crushed under it, and so make an end
to your stupid brains and useless bags of guts and water.
Roland thinks that perhaps he has drawn
three in just Eddie and Odetta, since Odetta is a double personality, yet when Odetta and Detta merge
as one in Susannah (thanks in large part to Eddie Dean's love and courage), the
gunslinger knows it's not so.
He knows something else as well: he is being tormented by thoughts of Jake,
the boy who, dying, spoke of other worlds. Half of the gunslinger's mind, in fact, believes there never was
a boy. In preventing Jack
Mort from pushing Jake in front of the car meant to kill him, Roland has created a temporal paradox which is
tearing him apart. And, in our world, it is tearing Jake Chambers apart as well.
The Wastelands, the third volume of the series, begins with
this paradox. After killing
a gigantic bear named either Mir (by the old people who went in fear of it) or
Shardik (by the Great Old Ones who built it... for
the bear turns out to be a cyborg),
Roland, Eddie, and Susannah backtrack the beast and discover Path of the Beam. There are six of these
beams, running between the twelve portals which mark the edges of
Mid-World. At the point where the beams
cross—at the center of Roland's world, perhaps the center of all worlds—the
gunslinger believes that he and his friends will at last find the Dark Tower.
By now Eddie and Susannah are no longer
prisoners in Roland's world. In love and
well on the way to becoming gunslingers themselves, they are full participants in the quest and follow him
willingly along the Path of the Beam.
In a speaking ring not far from the Portal of the Bear, time is
mended, paradox is ended, and the real third
is at last drawn. Jake reenters Mid-World at the conclusion of a
perilous rite where all four—Jake, Eddie, Susannah, and Roland—remember the faces of their fathers and acquit themselves honorably. Not long after, the quartet becomes a
quintet, when Jake befriends a billy-bumbler. Bumblers, which look like
a combination of badger, raccoon, and dog,
have a limited speaking ability. Jake names his new friend Oy.
The way of the pilgrims leads them toward Lud, an urban wasteland where the degenerate survivors of two old
factions, the Pubes and the Grays, carry
on the vestige of an old conflict. Before reaching the city, they come to a little town called River Crossing, where a few
antique residents still remain. They recognize Roland as a remnant of the old
days, before the world moved on, and honor him and his companions.
After, the old people tell them of a monorail train which may still run from
Lud and into the wastelands, along the Path
of the Beam and toward the Dark Tower.
Jake is frightened by this news, but not really surprised; before
being drawn away from New York, he obtained
two books from a bookstore owned by a man with the thought-provoking
name of Calvin Tower. One is a book of
riddles with the answers torn out. The other, Charlie the Choo-Choo, is
a children's book about a train. An amusing little tale, most might say
. . . but to Jake, there's something about
Charlie that isn't amusing at all. Something frightening. Roland knows something else: in the High Speech of his
world, the word char means
death.
Aunt Talitha, the matriarch of the River Crossing folk, gives
Roland a silver cross to wear, and the
travellers go their course. Before reaching Lud, they discover a downed
plane from our world—a German fighter from the 1930s. Jammed into the cockpit is the mummified corpse of
a giant, almost certainly the
half-mythical outlaw David Quick.
While crossing the dilapidated bridge which
spans the River Send, Jake and Oy
are nearly lost in an accident. While Roland, Eddie, and Susannah are
distracted by this, the party is ambushed by a dying (and very dangerous) outlaw named Gasher. He abducts Jake and takes
him underground to the Tick-Tock
Man, the last leader of the Grays. Tick-Tock's real name is Andrew Quick; he is the great-grandson of the man
who died trying to land an airplane
from another world.
While Roland (aided by Oy) goes after Jake,
Eddie and Susannah find the
Cradle of Lud, where Blaine the Mono awakes. Blaine is the last above-ground tool of the vast computer-system
which lies beneath the city of Lud, and it has only one remaining interest:
riddles. It promises to take the travellers to the monorail's final stop if they can solve a riddle it poses
them. Otherwise,
Blaine says, the only trip they'll be taking will be to the place where the path ends in the clearing ... to their deaths, in other words. In that case
they'll have plenty of company, for Blaine is planning to release stocks of nerve-gas which will kill everyone left in
Lud: Pubes, Grays, and gun-slingers
alike.
Roland rescues Jake, leaving the Tick-Tock
Man for dead ... but Andrew
Quick is not dead. Half blind, hideously wounded about the face, he is rescued by a man who calls himself Richard
Fannin. Fannin, however, also identifies
himself as the Ageless Stranger, a demon of whom Roland has been warned by Walter.
Roland and Jake are reunited with Eddie and
Susannah in the Cradle of Lud, and Susannah—with a
little help from "dat bitch" Detta Walker—is able to solve Blaine's riddle. They gain access to the mono, of
necessity ignoring the horrified
warnings of Blaine's sane but fatally weak undermind (Eddie calls this voice Little Blaine), only to
discover that Blaine means to commit
suicide with them aboard. The fact that the actual mind running the mono exists in computers falling farther and
farther behind them, running beneath
a city which has become a slaughtering-pen, will make no difference when the pink bullet jumps the tracks somewhere
along the line at a speed in excess
of eight hundred miles an hour.
There is only one chance of survival:
Blaine's love of riddles. Roland of Gilead proposes a desperate bargain. It is with this bargain that The
Wastelands ends; it is with this bargain that Wizard
and Glass begins.
romeo: Lady, by yonder blessed moon I vow,
That tips with silver all these fruit-tree
tops—
juliet: O, swear not by the moon, th' inconstant
moon,
That monthly changes in her circled orb,
Lest that thy love prove likewise variable.
romeo: What shall I swear by?
juliet: Do not swear at all.
Or, if thou wilt, swear by thy gracious
self,
Which is the god of my idolatry,
And I'll believe thee.
—Romeo and Juliet William Shakespeare
On the fourth day, to [Dorothy's] great joy,
Oz sent for her, and when
she entered the Throne Room, he greeted her pleasantly.
"Sit down; my dear. I think I have
found a way to get you out
of this country."
"And back to Kansas?" she asked
eagerly.
"Well, I'm not sure about Kansas,"
said Oz, "for I haven't the faintest notion
which way it lies...."
—The Wizard of Oz L. Frank Baum
I asked one
draught of earlier, happier sights,
Ere fitly I
could hope to play my part.
Think first,
fight afterwards—the soldier's art:
One taste of
the old time sets all to rights!
—Childe
Roland to the Dark Tower Came
Robert
Browning
PROLOGUE
BLAINE
"ASK ME A RIDDLE," Blaine invited.
"Fuck you," Roland said. He did not
raise his voice.
"WHAT DO YOU SAY?" In its
clear disbelief, the voice of Big Blaine had
become very close to the voice of its unsuspected twin.
"I said fuck you," Roland said calmly, "but if that
puzzles you, Blaine, I can make it clearer.
No. The answer is no."
There was no reply from Blaine for a long,
long time, and when he did respond, it was not with words. Instead, the walls,
floor, and ceiling began to
lose their color and solidity again. In a space of ten seconds the Barony Coach
once more ceased to exist. They were now flying through the mountain-range they had seen on the
horizon: iron-gray peaks rushed toward them at suicidal speed, then fell away to disclose sterile
valleys where gigantic
beetles crawled about like landlocked turtles. Roland saw something that looked
like a huge snake suddenly uncoil from the mouth of a cave. It seized one of the beetles and yanked it
back into its lair. Roland
had never in his life seen such animals or countryside, and the sight made his skin want to crawl right off
his flesh. Blaine might have transported
them to some other world.
"PERHAPS I SHOULD DERAIL US HERE,"
Blaine said. His voice was
meditative, but beneath it the gunslinger heard a deep, pulsing rage.
"Perhaps you should," the
gunslinger said indifferently.
Eddie's face was frantic. He mouthed the
words What are you DOING? Roland ignored
him; he had his hands full with Blaine, and he knew perfectly well what he was doing.
"YOU ARE RUDE AND ARROGANT," Blaine said. "THESE
MAY SEEM LIKE INTERESTING TRAITS TO YOU, BUT THEY ARE NOT TO ME."
"Oh, I can be much ruder than I have
been."
Roland of Gilead unfolded his hands and got
slowly to his feet. He stood on
what appeared to be nothing, legs apart, his right hand on his hip and his left on the sandalwood grip of his
revolver. He stood as he had so many times before, in the dusty streets of a
hundred forgotten towns, in a score of rocky canyon
killing-zones, in unnumbered dark saloons with their smells of bitter beer and old fried meals. It was just another
showdown in another empty street.
That was all, and that was enough. It was khef, ka, and ka-tet. That
the showdown always came was the central fact of his life and the axle upon which his own ka revolved. That
the battle would be fought with words instead of bullets this time made no
difference; it would be a battle to
the death, just the same. The stench of killing in the air was as clear and definite as the stench of exploded carrion
in a swamp. Then the battle-rage descended, as it always did ... and
he was no longer really there to himself at all.
"I can call you a nonsensical,
empty-headed, foolish machine. I can call you a stupid, unwise creature whose sense is no more than the sound
of a winter wind in a
hollow tree."
"STOP IT."
Roland went on in the same serene tone,
ignoring Blaine completely. "You're what Eddie calls a 'gadget.' Were you
more, I might be ruder yet."
"I AM A GREAT DEAL MORE THAN
JUST—"
"I could call you a sucker of cocks, for instance, but you
have no mouth. I could say you're viler than the vilest beggar who ever crawled
the lowest street in creation, but even such
a creature is better than you; you
have no knees on which to crawl, and would not fall upon them even if you did, for you have no conception of such a
human flaw as mercy. I could even
say you fucked your mother, had you one."
Roland paused for breath. His three
companions were holding theirs. All around
them, suffocating, was Blaine the Mono's thunderstruck silence.
"I can call you a faithless creature who let your only
companion kill herself, a coward who has
delighted in the torture of the foolish and the slaughter of the innocent, a lost and bleating mechanical goblin
who—"
"I COMMAND YOU TO STOP IT OR
I'LL KILL YOU ALL RIGHT HERE!"
Roland's eyes blazed with such wild blue
fire that Eddie shrank away from
him. Dimly, he heard Jake and Susannah gasp.
"Kill if you will, but command me nothing!" the gunslinger roared. "You
have forgotten the faces of those who made you! Now either kill us or be silent
and listen to me, Roland of Gilead, son of Steven, gunslinger, and lord of ancient lands! I have not come across
all the miles and all the years to
listen to your childish prating! Do you understand? Now you will listen
to ME!"
There was another moment of shocked silence.
No one breathed. Roland stared
sternly forward, his head high, his hand on the butt of his gun.
Susannah Dean raised her hand to her mouth
and felt the small smile there
as a woman might feel some strange new article of clothing—a hat, perhaps—to make sure it is still on straight.
She was afraid this was the end of
her life, but the feeling which dominated her heart at that moment was not fear but pride. She glanced to her
left and saw Eddie regarding Roland with an amazed grin. Jake's expression was
even simpler: pure adoration.
"Tell him!" Jake breathed.
"Kick his ass! Right!"
"You better pay attention," Eddie
agreed. "He really doesn't give much of a fuck, Blaine. They don't call him The Mad Dog of Gilead for nothing."
After a long, long moment, Blaine asked:
"DID THEY CALL YOU SO,
ROLAND SON OF STEVEN?"
"They may have," Roland replied,
standing calmly on thin air above the sterile foothills.
"WHAT GOOD ARE YOU TO ME IF YOU WON'T TELL ME RIDDLES?" Blaine asked. Now he sounded like
a grumbling, sulky child who has been
allowed to stay up too long past his usual bedtime.
"I didn't say we wouldn't," Roland
said.
"NO?" Blaine sounded bewildered. "I DO NOT
UNDERSTAND, YET VOICE-PRINT ANALYSIS
INDICATES RATIONAL DISCOURSE. PLEASE
EXPLAIN."
"You said you wanted them right now"
the gunslinger replied. "That was what I was refusing. Your eagerness has made you
unseemly."
"I DON'T UNDERSTAND."
"It has made you rude. Do you understand
that?”
There was a long, thoughtful silence.
Centuries had passed since the computer
had experienced any human responses other than ignorance, neglect, and superstitious subservience. It had
been eons since it had been exposed
to simple human courage. Finally: "IF WHAT I SAID STRUCK YOU AS RUDE, I APOLOGIZE."
"It is accepted, Blaine. But there is a
larger problem."
"EXPLAIN."
"Close the carriage again and I
will." Roland sat down as if further argument—and the prospect of immediate death—was now unthinkable.
Blaine did as he was asked. The walls filled
with color and the nightmare landscape below was once more blotted out. The
blip on the route-map was now
blinking close to the dot marked Candleton.
"All right," Roland said.
"Rudeness is forgivable, Blaine; so I was taught in my youth. But I was also taught that stupidity
is not."
"HOW HAVE I BEEN STUPID, ROLAND OF
GILEAD?" Blame's voice
was soft and ominous. Susannah thought of a cat crouched outside a mouse-hole, tail swishing back and
forth, green eyes shining with malevolence.
"We have something you want,"
Roland said, "but the only reward you offer if we give it to you is death. That's very stupid."
There was a long, long pause as Blaine
thought this over. Then: "WHAT YOU SAY IS TRUE,
ROLAND OF GILEAD, BUT THE QUALITY OF YOUR
RIDDLES IS NOT PROVEN. I WILL NOT REWARD YOU WITH YOUR LIVES FOR BAD
RIDDLES."
Roland nodded. "I understand, Blaine.
Listen, now, and take understanding
from me. I have told some of this to my friends already. When I was a boy in the Barony of Gilead, there were
seven Fair-Days each year—Winter,
Wide Earth, Sowing, Mid-Summer, Full Earth, Reaping, and Year's End. Riddling was an important
part of every Fair-Day, but it was the
most important event of the Fair of Wide Earth and that of Full Earth, for the riddles told were supposed to
augur well or ill for the success of
the crops."
"THAT IS SUPERSTITION WITH NO BASIS AT ALL IN FACT,"
Blaine said. "I FIND IT ANNOYING AND UPSETTING."
"Of course it was superstition,"
Roland agreed, "but you might be surprised at how well the riddles foresaw the crops. For instance,
riddle me this,
Blaine: What is the difference between a grandmother and a granary?"
"THAT IS OLD AND NOT VERY INTERESTING," Blaine said, but he sounded happy to have something to solve,
just the same. "ONE IS ONE'S BORN KIN; THE OTHER IS ONE'S CORN-BIN.
A RIDDLE
BASED ON PHONETIC COINCIDENCE. ANOTHER OF
THIS TYPE, ONE TOLD ON THE
LEVEL WHICH CONTAINS THE BARONY OF NEW YORK,
GOES LIKE THIS: WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
A CAT AND A COMPLEX SENTENCE?"
Jake spoke up. "I know. A cat has claws
at the end of its paws, and a complex
sentence has a pause at the end of its clause."
"YES," Blaine agreed. "A VERY SILLY OLD RIDDLE,
USEFUL ONLY AS A MNEMONIC DEVICE."
"For once I agree with you, Blaine old
buddy," Eddie said.
"I AM NOT YOUR BUDDY, EDDIE OF NEW YORK."
"Well, jeez. Kiss my ass and go to
heaven."
"THERE IS NO HEAVEN."
Eddie had no comeback for that one.
"I WOULD HEAR MORE OF FAIR-DAY RIDDLING
IN GILEAD, ROLAND SON OF
STEVEN."
"At noon on Wide Earth and Full Earth,
somewhere between sixteen and
thirty riddlers would gather in the Hall of the Grandfathers, which was opened for the event. Those were the
only times of year when common folk—merchants and farmers and ranchers and
such—were allowed into the Hall
of the Grandfathers, and on that day they all crowded in."
The gunslinger's eyes were far away and
dreamy; it was the expression
Jake had seen on his face in that misty other life, when Roland had told him of how he and his friends, Cuthbert
and Jamie, had once sneaked into the balcony of that same Hall to watch some
sort of dance-party. Jake and
Roland had been climbing into the mountains when Roland had told him of that time, close on the trail of
Walter.
Marten sat next to my mother and father, Roland had said. I knew them even from so high above—and once she and Marten danced, slowly and
revolvingly, and the others cleared the floor for them and clapped when it was over. But the gunslingers did not
clap....
Jake looked curiously at Roland, wondering
again where this strange man had
come from . . . and why.
"A great barrel was placed in the
center of the floor," Roland went on, "and
into this each riddler would toss a handful of bark scrolls with riddles writ upon them. Many were old, riddles they
had gotten from the elders—even from
books, in some cases—but many others were new, made up for the occasion. Three judges, one always a
gunslinger, would pass on these when they were told aloud, and they were accepted only if the judges deemed them fair."
"YES, RIDDLES MUST BE FAIR,"
Blaine agreed.
"So they riddled," the gunslinger
said. A faint smile touched his mouth as he thought of those days, days when he had been the age of the bruised boy sitting across from him with the
billy-bumbler in his lap. "For hours on end they riddled. A line was formed down the center of the
Hall of the Grandfathers. One's
position in this line was determined by lot, and since it was much better to be at the end of the line
than at the head, everyone hoped
for a high draw, although the winner had to answer at least one riddle correctly.
"OF COURSE."
"Each man or woman—for some of Gilead's best riddlers were women—approached the barrel, drew a riddle, and
if the riddle was still unanswered
after the sands in a three-minute glass had run out, that contestant had to leave the line."
"AND WAS THE SAME RIDDLE ASKED OF THE
NEXT PERSON IN THE
LINE?"
"Yes."
"SO THE NEXT PERSON HAD EXTRA TIME TO
THINK."
"Yes."
"I SEE. IT SOUNDS PRETTY SWELL."
Roland frowned. "Swell?"
"He means it sounds like fun,"
Susannah said quietly.
Roland shrugged. "It was fun for the
onlookers, I suppose, but the contestants
took it very seriously. Quite often there were arguments and fistfights after the contest was over and the
prize awarded."
"WHAT PRIZE WAS THAT, ROLAND SON OF
STEVEN?"
"The largest goose in Barony. And year
after year my teacher, Cort, carried
that goose home."
"I WISH HE WERE HERE," Blaine said
respectfully. "HE MUST HAVE
BEEN A GREAT RIDDLER."
"Indeed he was," Roland said.
"Are you ready for my proposal, Blaine?"
"OF COURSE. I WILL LISTEN WITH GREAT
INTEREST, ROLAND OF
GILEAD."
"Let these next few hours be our
Fair-Day. You will not riddle us, for you wish to hear new riddles, not tell some of those millions you
already know—"
"CORRECT."
"We couldn't solve most of them,
anyway," Roland went on. "I'm sure you know riddles that would have stumped even Cort, had they been pulled out of the barrel." He was not
sure of it at all, but the time to use the fist had passed and the time to use the feather had come.
"OF COURSE," Blaine agreed.
"Instead of a goose, our lives shall be
the prize," Roland said. "We will riddle you as we run, Blaine. If, when we come to Topeka, you have
solved every one of our riddles, you may carry out your original plan and kill us. That is your goose. But if we pose
you—if there is a riddle in either Jake's book or one of our heads which you don't know and can't answer—you must take us to Topeka and then free
us to pursue our quest. That is
our goose."
Silence.
"Do you understand?"
"YES."
"Do you agree?"
More silence from Blaine the Mono. Eddie sat
stiffly with his arm around
Susannah, looking up at the ceiling of the Barony Coach. Susannah's left hand slipped across her belly,
stroking the secret which might be hidden there. Jake stroked Oy's fur lightly, avoiding the bloody
tangles where the
bumbler had been stabbed. They waited while Blaine—the real Blaine, now far behind them, living his
quasi-life beneath a city where all the inhabitants lay dead by his hand—considered Roland's proposal.
"YES," Blaine said at last. "I
AGREE. IF I SOLVE ALL THE RIDDLES
YOU ASK ME, I WILL TAKE YOU WITH ME TO THE PLACE WHERE
THE PATH ENDS IN THE CLEARING. IF ONE OF YOU TELLS
A RIDDLE I CANNOT SOLVE, I WILL SPARE YOUR LIVES AND LEAVE YOU IN
TOPEKA, FROM WHENCE YOU MAY CONTINUE YOUR QUEST FOR THE DARK TOWER, IF YOU SO
CHOOSE. HAVE I UNDERSTOOD THE TERMS AND LIMITS OF YOUR PROPOSAL CORRECTLY, ROLAND SON OF STEVEN?"
"Yes."
"VERY WELL, ROLAND OF GILEAD.
"VERY WELL, EDDIE OF NEW YORK.
"VERY WELL, SUSANNAH OF NEW YORK.
"VERY WELL, JAKE OF NEW YORK.
"VERY WELL, OY OF MID-WORLD."
Oy looked up briefly at the sound of his
name.
"YOU ARE KA-TET; ONE MADE FROM MANY. SO AM I. WHOSE KA-TET IS THE STRONGER IS SOMETHING
WE MUST NOW PROVE."
There was a moment of silence, broken only
by the hard steady throb of the
slo-trans turbines bearing them on across the waste lands, bearing them along the Path of the Beam toward
Topeka, where Mid-World ended
and End-World began.
"SO," cried the voice of Blaine.
"CAST YOUR NETS, WANDERERS! TRY
ME WITH YOUR QUESTIONS, AND LET THE CONTEST BEGIN."
PART
ONE
RIDDLES
CHAPTER 1
beneath the
demon moon (I)
1
The town of Candleton was a poisoned and
irradiated ruin, but not dead; after all the centuries it
still twitched with tenebrous life—trundling beetles
the size of turtles, birds that looked like small, misshapen dragonlets, a few stumbling robots that passed in
and out of the rotten buildings
like stainless steel zombies, their joints squalling, their nuclear eyes flickering.
"Show your pass, pard!" cried the
one that had been stuck in a corner of the lobby of the Candleton Travellers' Hotel for the last two
hundred and thirty-four
years. Embossed on the rusty lozenge of its head was a six-pointed star. It had over the years
managed to dig a shallow concavity in the steel-sheathed wall blocking its way, but that was all.
"Show your pass, pard! Elevated
radiation levels possible south and east of town! Show your pass, pard! Elevated radiation levels possible south and east of town!"
A bloated rat, blind and dragging its guts
behind it in a sac like a rotten placenta, struggled over the posse robot's
feet. The posse robot took no
notice, just went on butting its steel head into the steel wall. "Show your pass, pard! Elevated radiation levels
possible, dad rattit and gods cuss
it!" Behind it, in the hotel bar, the skulls of men and women who had come in here for one last drink before the
cataclysm caught up with them grinned
as if they had died laughing. Perhaps some of them had.
When Blaine the Mono blammed overhead,
running up the night like a
bullet running up the barrel of a gun, windows broke, dust sifted down, and several of the skulls disintegrated like
ancient pottery vases. Outside, a brief hurricane of radioactive dust blew up the street, and the hitching post in front of the Elegant Beef and Pork
Restaurant was sucked into the squally
updraft like smoke. In the town square, the Candleton Fountain split in two, spilling out not water but only
dust, snakes, mutie scorpions, and a few of the blindly trundling
turtle-beetles.
Then the shape which had hurtled above the town was gone as if it had never been, Candleton reverted to the
mouldering activity which had been its substitute for life over the last
two and a half centuries . .. and then the
trailing sonic boom caught up, slamming its thunderclap above the town
for the first time in seven years, causing enough vibration to tumble the mercantile store on the far side of
the fountain. The posse robot tried to voice one final warning:
"Elevated rad—" and then quit for good,
facing into its corner like a child that has been bad.
Two or three hundred wheels outside Candleton, as one travelled
along the Path of the Beam, the radiation levels and concentrations of DEP3 in the soil fell rapidly. Here the mono's
track swooped down to less than ten feet off the ground, and here a doe
that looked almost normal walked prettily
from piney woods to drink from a stream in which the water had three-quarters cleansed itself.
The doe was not normal—a stumpish fifth
leg dangled down from the center
of her lower belly like a teat, waggling bonelessly to and fro when she walked, and a blind third eye peered
milkily from the left side of her muzzle. Yet she was fertile, and her DNA was
in reasonably good order for a twelfth-generation mutie. In her six years of
life she had given birth to
three live young. Two of these fawns had been not just viable but normal—threaded stock, Aunt Talitha of River Crossing would have
called them. The third, a skinless, bawling horror, had been killed quickly by its sire.
The world—this part of it, at any rate—had
begun to heal itself.
The deer slipped her mouth into the water, began to drink, then looked up, eyes wide, muzzle dripping. Off in the
distance she could hear a low humming sound. A moment later it was
joined by an eyelash of light. Alarm flared
in the doe's nerves, but although her reflexes were fast and the light when first glimpsed was still many
wheels away across the desolate
countryside, there was never a chance for her to escape. Before she could even begin to fire her muscles, the
distant spark had swelled to a searing wolf's eye of light that flooded
the stream and the clearing with its glare.
With the light came the maddening hum of Blaine's slo-trans engines,
running at full capacity. There was a blur of pink above the concrete ridge
which bore the rail; a rooster-tail of dust, stones, small dismembered animals, and whirling foliage followed
along after. The doe was killed instantly by the concussion of Blaine's passage.
Too large to be sucked in the mono's wake,
she was still yanked forward almost seventy yards, with water dripping from her muzzle and hoofs. Much of her
hide (and the boneless fifth leg) was torn from her body and pulled after Blaine like a discarded garment.
There was brief silence, thin as new skin or
early ice on a Year's End pond, and then the sonic boom came rushing after like
some noisy creature late for a
wedding-feast, tearing the silence apart, knocking a single mutated bird—it might have been a raven—dead
out of the air. The bird fell
like a stone and splashed into the stream.
In the distance, a dwindling red eye:
Blaine's taillight.
Overhead, a full moon came out from behind a
scrim of cloud, painting the
clearing and the stream in the tawdry hues of pawnshop jewelry. There was a face in the moon, but not one
upon which lovers would wish to look. It seemed the scant
face of a skull, like those in the Candleton Travellers' Hotel; a face which
looked upon those few beings still alive and
struggling below with the amusement of a lunatic. In Gilead, before the world had moved on, the full moon of Year's
End had been called the Demon Moon,
and it was considered ill luck to look directly at it.
Now, however, such did not matter. Now there
were demons everywhere.
2
Susannah looked at the route-map and saw that the green dot
marking their present position was now almost halfway between Candleton and Rilea, Blaine's next stop. Except who's
stopping? she thought.
From the route-map she turned to Eddie. His
gaze was still directed up at the ceiling of the Barony Coach. She followed it
and saw a square which could only be a trapdoor (except when you were dealing
with futuristic shit like a talking train,
she supposed you called it a hatch, or something
even cooler). Stencilled on it was a simple red drawing which showed a man
stepping through the opening. Susannah tried to imagine following the
implied instruction and popping up through that hatch at over eight hundred
miles an hour. She got a quick but clear image of a woman's head being ripped
from her neck like a flower from its stalk; she
saw the head flying backward along the length of the Barony Coach, perhaps bouncing once, and then disappearing
into the dark, eyes staring and
hair rippling.
She pushed the picture away as fast as she
could. The hatch up there was
almost certainly locked shut, anyway. Blaine the Mono had no intention of letting them go. They might win their
way out, but Susannah didn't think
that was a sure thing even if they managed to stump Blaine with a riddle.
Sorry to say this, but you sound like just
one more honky motherfucker to me,
honey, she thought in a mental voice that
was not quite Detta Walker's. I don't
trust your mechanical ass. You apt to be more dangerous beaten than with the blue ribbon pinned to your
memory banks.
Jake was holding his tattered book of
riddles out to the gunslinger as if he no longer wanted the responsibility of carrying it. Susannah knew how the kid must feel; their lives might
very well be in those grimy, well-thumbed pages. She wasn't sure she would want the responsibility of holding onto it, either.
"Roland!" Jake whispered. "Do
you want this?"
"Ont!" Oy said, giving the gunslinger a forbidding
glance. "Olan-ont-iss!" The bumbler fixed his teeth on the book, took
it from Jake's hand, and
stretched his disproportionately long neck toward Roland, offering him Riddle-De-Dum! Brain-Twisters
and Puzzles for Everyone!
Roland glanced at it for a moment, his face
distant and preoccupied, then
shook his head. "Not yet." He looked forward at the route-map. Blaine had no face, so the map had to serve
them as a fixing-point. The flashing
green dot was closer to Rilea now. Susannah wondered briefly what the
countryside through which they were passing looked like, and decided she didn't really want to know. Not
after what they'd seen as they left the
city of Lud.
"Blaine!" Roland called.
"YES."
"Can you leave the room? We need to
confer."
You nuts if you think he's gonna do that, Susannah thought, but Blaine's
reply was quick and eager.
"YES, GUNSLINGER. I WILL TURN OFF ALL MY SENSORS IN THE BARONY COACH. WHEN YOUR CONFERENCE IS DONE
AND YOU ARE READY TO BEGIN THE RIDDLING, I WILL RETURN."
"Yeah, you and General MacArthur,"
Eddie muttered.
"WHAT DID YOU SAY, EDDIE OF NEW YORK?"
"Nothing. Talking to myself, that's
all."
"TO SUMMON ME, SIMPLY TOUCH THE ROUTE-MAP," said Blaine. "AS LONG AS THE MAP IS RED, MY
SENSORS ARE OFF. SEE YOU LATER, ALLIGATOR. AFTER AWHILE, CROCODILE. DON'T FORGET TO WRITE." A pause. Then:
"OLIVE OIL BUT NOT CASTORIA."
The route-map rectangle at the front of the
cabin suddenly turned a red so
bright Susannah couldn't look at it without squinting.
"Olive oil but not castoria?" Jake
asked. "What the heck does that mean?"
"It doesn't matter," Roland said. "We don't have
much time. The mono travels just as fast toward its point of ending whether
Blaine's with us or not."
"You don't really believe he's gone, do
you?" Eddie asked. "A slippery pup like him? Come on, get real. He's peeking, I guarantee
you."
"I doubt it very much," Roland said, and Susannah
decided she agreed with him. For now, at
least. "You could hear how excited he was at the idea of riddling again after all these years. And—"
"And he's confident," Susannah
said. "Doesn't expect to have much trouble with the likes of us."
"Will he?" Jake asked the
gunslinger. "Will he have trouble with us?"
"I don't know," Roland said.
"I don't have a Watch Me hidden up my sleeve, if that's what you're asking. It's a straight game . . . but at least
it's a game I've played before.
We've all played it before, at least to some extent. And there's that." He nodded
toward the book which Jake had taken back from
Oy. "There are forces at work here, big ones, and not all of them are working to keep us away from the
Tower."
Susannah heard him, but it was Blaine she was
thinking of—Blaine who had
gone away and left them alone, like the kid who's been chosen "it" obediently covering his eyes while his playmates
hide. And wasn't that what they were? Blaine's playmates? The thought was
somehow worse than the image she'd had of
trying the escape hatch and having her head torn off.
"So what do we do?" Eddie asked.
"You must have an idea, or you never would have sent him away."
"His great intelligence—coupled with his long period of
loneliness and forced inactivity—may have combined to make him more human than he knows. That's my hope, anyway. First,
we must establish a kind of
geography. We must tell, if we can, where he is weak and where he is strong,
where he is sure of the game and where not so sure. Riddles are not just about the cleverness of the riddler,
never think it. They are also about
the blind spots of he who is riddled."
"Does he have blind spots?" Eddie
asked.
"If he doesn't," Roland said calmly, "we're going
to die on this train."
"I like the way you kind of ease us over
the rough spots," Eddie said with a thin smile. "It's one of your many charms."
"We will riddle him four times to begin
with," Roland said. "Easy, not so easy, quite hard, very hard. He'll answer all four, of that I am
confident, but we will be
listening for how he answers."
Eddie was nodding, and Susannah felt a
small, almost reluctant glimmer of
hope. It sounded like the right approach, all right.
"Then we'll send him away again and hold
palaver," the gunslinger said.
"Mayhap we'll get an idea of what direction to send our horses. These first riddles can come from anywhere,
but"—he nodded gravely toward
the book—"based on Jake's story of the bookstore, the answer we really need should be in there, not in any
memories I have of Fair-Day riddlings.
Must be in there."
"Question," Susannah said.
Roland looked at her, eyebrows raised over his faded, dangerous eyes.
"It's a question we're looking for, not an
answer," she said. "This time
it's the answers that are apt to get us killed."
The gunslinger nodded. He looked
puzzled—frustrated, even—and this was not an expression
Susannah liked seeing on his face. But this time
when Jake held out the book, Roland took it. He held it for a moment (its faded but still gay red cover looked very
strange in his big sunburned hands . . . especially in the right one,
with its essential reduction of two fingers),
then passed it on to Eddie.
"You're easy," Roland said, turning
to Susannah.
"Perhaps," she replied, with a
trace of a smile, "but it's still not a very polite thing to say to a lady, Roland."
He turned to Jake. "You'll go second,
with one that's a little harder. I'll go
third. You'll go last, Eddie. Pick one from the book that looks hard—"
"The hard ones are toward the
back," Jake supplied.
". . . but none of your foolishness, mind. This is life and
death. The time for foolishness is
past."
Eddie looked at him—old long, tall, and
ugly, who'd done God knew how
many ugly things in the name of reaching his Tower—and wondered if Roland had any idea at all of how much
that hurt. Just that casual admonition not
to behave like a child, grinning and cracking jokes, now that their lives were at wager.
He opened his mouth to say something—an Eddie Dean Special, something that would be both funny and stinging at
the same time, the kind of remark that always used to drive his brother
Henry dogshit— and then closed it again.
Maybe long, tall, and ugly was right; maybe it was time to put away the one-liners and dead baby jokes. Maybe it was finally time to grow up.
3
After three more minutes of murmured
consultation and some quick flipping through Riddle-De-Dum! on Eddie's and Susannah's parts (Jake
already knew the one he
wanted to try Blaine with first, he'd said), Roland went to the front of the Barony Coach and
laid his hand on the fiercely glowing rectangle there. The route-map reappeared
at once. Although there was no
sensation of movement now that the coach was closed, the green dot was closer to Rilea than ever.
"SO, ROLAND SON OF STEVEN!" Blaine
said. To Eddie he sounded more
than jovial; he sounded next door to hilarious. "IS YOUR KA-TET READY TO BEGIN?"
"Yes. Susannah of New York will begin
the first round." He turned to her, lowered his voice a little (not that
she reckoned that would do much good if Blaine wanted to listen), and said: "You won't have to step
forward like the rest of us,
because of your legs, but you must speak fair and address him by name each time you talk to
him. If—when—he answers your riddle correctly, say 'Thankee-sai, Blaine,
you have answered true.' Then
Jake will step into the aisle and have his turn. All right?"
"And if he should get it wrong, or not
guess at all?"
Roland smiled grimly. "I think that's
one thing we don't have to worry about just yet." He raised his voice again. "Blaine?"
"YES, GUNSLINGER."
Roland took a deep breath. "It starts
now."
"EXCELLENT!"
Roland nodded at Susannah. Eddie squeezed
one of her hands; Jake patted
the other. Oy gazed at her raptly with his gold-ringed eyes.
Susannah smiled at them nervously, then
looked up at the route-map. "Hello,
Blame."
"HOWDY, SUSANNAH OF NEW YORK."
Her heart was pounding, her armpits were
damp, and here was something
she had first discovered way back in the first grade: it was hard to begin. It was hard to stand up in front of
the class and be first with your song, your joke, your report on how you spent your summer vacation . .
. or your riddle, for that
matter. The one she had decided upon was one from Jake Chambers's crazed English essay, which he had
recited to them almost
verbatim during their long palaver after leaving the old people of River Crossing. The essay, titled "My
Understanding of Truth," had contained two riddles, one of which Eddie had already used on Blaine.
"SUSANNAH? ARE YOU THERE, L’IL
COWGIRL?"
Teasing again, but this time the teasing
sounded light, good-natured. Good-humored. Blaine could be charming when
he got what he wanted. Like certain spoiled children she had known.
"Yes, Blaine, I am, and here is my
riddle. What has four wheels and flies?"
There was a peculiar click, as if Blaine
were mimicking the sound of a man popping his tongue against the roof of his
mouth. It was followed by a
brief pause. When Blaine replied, most of the jocularity had gone out of his voice. "THE TOWN GARBAGE
WAGON, OF COURSE. A CHILD'S
RIDDLE. IF THE REST OF YOUR RIDDLES ARE NO BETTER, I WILL BE EXTREMELY SORRY I SAVED YOUR LIVES FOR EVEN A SHORT WHILE."
The route-map flashed, not red this time but
pale pink. "Don't get him mad,"
the voice of Little Blaine begged. Each time it spoke, Susannah found herself imagining a sweaty little bald
man whose every movement was a kind of cringe. The voice of Big Blaine came
from everywhere (like the
voice of God in a Cecil B. DeMille movie, Susannah thought), but Little Blaine's from only one: the speaker
directly over their heads. "Please don't make him angry, fellows; he's already got the mono
in the red, speedwise, and
the track compensators can barely keep up. The trackage has degenerated terribly since the last time
we came out this way."
Susannah, who had been on her share of humpy
trolleys and subways in her
time, felt nothing the ride was as smooth now as it had been when they had first pulled out of the Cradle of Lud—but she believed
Little Blaine anyway. She guessed that if
they did feel a bump, it would be the last thing any of them would ever feel.
Roland poked an elbow into her side, bringing
her back to her current situation.
"Thankee-sai," she said, and then,
as an afterthought, tapped her throat rapidly three times with the fingers of her right hand. It was what
Roland had done when
speaking to Aunt Talitha for the first time.
"THANK YOU FOR YOUR COURTESY," Blaine said. He sounded amused again, and Susannah reckoned that was good
even if his amusement was at her expense. "I AM NOT FEMALE,
HOWEVER. INSOFAR AS I HAVE A SEX, IT IS
MALE."
Susannah looked at Roland, bewildered.
"Left hand for men," he said.
"On the breastbone." He tapped to demonstrate.
"Oh."
Roland turned to Jake. The boy stood, put Oy
on his chair (which did no good; Oy immediately jumped down and followed after
Jake when he stepped into
the aisle to face the route-map), and turned his attention to Blaine.
"Hello, Blaine, this is Jake. You know,
son of Elmer."
"SPEAK YOUR RIDDLE."
"What can run but never walks, has a
mouth but never talks, has a bed but never sleeps, has a head but never weeps?"
"NOT BAD! ONE HOPES SUSANNAH WILL LEARN FROM YOUR EXAMPLE, JAKE SON OF ELMER. THE ANSWER MUST
BE SELF-EVIDENT TO ANYONE OF ANY INTELLIGENCE AT ALL, BUT A DECENT EFFORT, NEVERTHELESS. A RIVER."
"Thankee-sai, Blaine, you have answered
true." He tapped the bunched fingers of his left hand three times against his breastbone and then
sat down. Susannah put her arm
around him and gave him a brief squeeze. Jake looked at her gratefully.
Now Roland stood up. "Hile,
Blaine," he said.
"HILE, GUNSLINGER." Once again
Blaine sounded amused . . . possibly
by the greeting, which Susannah hadn't heard before. Heil what? she wondered. Hitler came to mind, and that
made her think of the downed plane
they'd found outside Lud. A Focke-Wulf, Jake had claimed. She didn't know about that, but she knew it had
contained one seriously dead harrier, too old even to stink. "SPEAK YOUR RIDDLE, ROLAND, AND LET IT BE HANDSOME."
"Handsome is as handsome does, Blaine.
In any case, here it is: What has
four legs in the morning, two legs in the afternoon, and three legs at night?"
"THAT IS INDEED HANDSOME," Blaine
allowed. "SIMPLE BUT HANDSOME, JUST THE SAME. THE
ANSWER IS A HUMAN BEING, WHO CRAWLS ON HANDS AND KNEES IN BABYHOOD, WALKS ON TWO LEGS DURING ADULTHOOD, AND WHO GOES ABOUT
WITH THE HELP OF A CANE IN OLD AGE."
Blaine sounded positively smug, and Susannah
suddenly discovered a mildly
interesting fact: she loathed the self-satisfied, murderous thing. Machine or not, it or he, she
loathed Blaine. She had an idea she would have felt the same even if he hadn't made them wager their lives in a
stupid riddling contest.
Roland, however, did not look the slightest
put out of countenance. "Thankee-sai,
Blaine, you have answered true." He sat down without tapping his
breastbone and looked at Eddie. Eddie stood up and stepped into the aisle.
"What's happening, Blaine my man?"
he asked. Roland winced and shook his head, putting his
mutilated right hand up briefly to shade his
eyes.
Silence from Blaine.
"Blaine? Are you there?"
"YES, BUT IN NO MOOD FOR FRIVOLITY, EDDIE OF NEW YORK. SPEAK
YOUR RIDDLE. I SUSPECT IT WILL BE DIFFICULT IN SPITE OF YOUR FOOLISH POSES. I
LOOK FORWARD TO IT."
Eddie glanced at Roland, who waved a hand at
him—Go on, for your father's
sake, go on!—and then looked
back at the route-map, where the green dot had just passed the point marked Rilea. Susannah saw that Eddie suspected what she herself all but
knew: Blaine understood they were
trying to test his capabilities with a spectrum of riddles. Blaine knew . . . and welcomed it.
Susannah felt her heart sink as any hopes
they might find a quick and easy
way out of this disappeared.
4
"Well," Eddie said, "I don't
know how hard it'll seem to you, but it struck me as a toughie." Nor did he know the answer, since
that section of Riddle-De-Dum! had
been torn out, but he didn't think that made any difference; their knowing the answers hadn't been part of
the ground-rules.
"I SHALL HEAR AND ANSWER."
"No sooner spoken than broken. What is
it?"
"SILENCE, A THING YOU KNOW LITTLE ABOUT, EDDIE OF NEW YORK," Blaine said with no pause at all,
and Eddie felt his heart drop a
little. There was no need to consult with the others; the answer was self-evident. And having it come back at him so
quickly was the real bummer. Eddie
never would have said so, but he had harbored the hope— almost a secret surety—of bringing Blaine down
with a single riddle, ker-smash,
all the King's horses and all
the King's men couldn't put Blaine together
again. The same secret surety, he supposed, that he had harbored every time he picked up a pair of dice in some
sharpie's back-bedroom crap game,
every time he called for a hit on seventeen while playing blackjack. That feeling that you couldn't go wrong
because you were you, the
best, the one and only.
"Yeah," he said, sighing.
"Silence, a thing I know little about. Thankee-sai, Blaine, you speak truth."
"I HOPE YOU HAVE DISCOVERED SOMETHING
WHICH WILL HELP YOU,"
Blaine said, and Eddie thought: You fucking mechanical liar. The complacent tone had returned to Blaine's
voice, and Eddie found it of some
passing interest that a machine could express such a range of emotion. Had the Great Old Ones built them in,
or had Blaine created an emotional rainbow for himself at
some point? A little dipolar pretty with which
to pass the long decades and centuries? "DO YOU WISH ME TO GO AWAY AGAIN SO YOU MAY CONSULT?"
"Yes," Roland said.
The route-map flashed bright red. Eddie
turned toward the gunslinger. Roland
composed his face quickly, but before he did, Eddie saw a horrible thing: a brief look of complete
hopelessness. Eddie had never seen such a look there before, not when Roland had been dying of the lobstrosities' bites, not when Eddie had been
pointing the gunslinger's own revolver
at him, not even when the hideous Gasher had taken Jake prisoner and disappeared into Lud with him.
"What do we do
next?" Jake asked. "Do another round of the four of us?"
"I think that
would serve little purpose," Roland said. "Blame must know thousands
of riddles—perhaps millions—and that is bad. Worse, far worse, he
understands the how of riddling ... the place the mind has to go to in
order to make them and solve them." He turned to Eddie and Susannah,
sitting once more with their arms about one another. "Am I right about
that?" he asked them. "Do you agree?"
"Yes,"
Susannah said, and Eddie nodded reluctantly. He didn't want to agree . .
. but he did.
"So?" Jake
asked. "What do we do, Roland? I mean, there has to be a way out of
this . . . doesn't there?"
Lie to him, you
bastard, Eddie sent fiercely in Roland's direction.
Roland, perhaps hearing the thought, did the best he could. He touched Jake's
hair with his diminished hand and ruffled through it. "I think there's
always an answer, Jake. The real question is whether or not we'll have time to
find the right riddle. He said it took him a little under nine hours to run his
route—"
"Eight hours,
forty-five minutes," Jake put in. ". . . and that's not much time.
We've already been running almost an hour—"
"And if that
map's right, we're almost halfway to Topeka," Susannah said in a tight
voice. "Could be our mechanical pal's been lying to us about the length of
the run. Hedging his bets a little." "Could be," Roland agreed.
"So what do we do?" Jake repeated.
Roland drew in a deep
breath, held it, let it out. "Let me riddle him alone, for now. I'll ask
him the hardest ones I remember from the Fair-Days of my youth. Then, Jake, if
we're approaching the point of... if we're approaching Topeka at this same
speed with Blaine still unposed, I think you should ask him the last few
riddles in your book. The hardest riddles." He rubbed the side of his face
distractedly and looked at the ice sculpture. This chilly rendering of his own
likeness had now melted to an unrecognizable hulk. "I still think the
answer must be in the book. Why else would you have been drawn to it before
coming back to this world?"
"And us?" Susannah
asked. "What do Eddie and I do?"
"Think, "
Roland said. "Think, for your fathers' sakes."
" 'I do not shoot
with my hand,' " Eddie said. He suddenly felt far away, strange to
himself. It was the way he'd felt when he had seen first the slingshot and then
the key in pieces of wood, just waiting for him to whittle them free ... and at
the same time this feeling was not like that at all.
Roland was looking at
him oddly. "Yes, Eddie, you say true. A gun-slinger shoots with his mind.
What have you thought of?"
"Nothing."
He might have said more, but all at once a strange image—a strange memory—intervened:
Roland hunkering by Jake at one of their stopping-points on the way to Lud.
Both of them in front of an unlit campfire. Roland once more at his everlasting
lessons. Jake's turn this time. Jake with the flint and steel, trying to
quicken the fire. Spark after spark licking out and dying in the dark. And
Roland had said that he was being silly. That he was just being . . . well. . .
silly.
"No," Eddie
said. "He didn't say that at all. At least not to the kid, he
didn't."
"Eddie?"
Susannah. Sounding concerned. Almost frightened.
Well why don't you ask
him what he said, bro? That was Henry's voice, the voice of the Great
Sage and Eminent Junkie. First time in a long time. Ask him, he's
practically sitting right next to you, go on and ask him what he said. Quit
dancing around like a baby with a load in his diapers.
Except that was a bad
idea, because that wasn't the way things worked in Roland's world. In Roland's
world everything was riddles, you didn't shoot with your hand but with
your mind, your motherfucking mind, and what did you say to
someone who wasn't getting the spark into the kindling? Move your flint in
closer, of course, and that's what Roland had said: Move your flint in
closer, and hold it steady.
Except none of that
was what this was about. It was close, yes, but close only counts in
horseshoes, as Henry Dean had been wont to say before he became the Great Sage
and Eminent Junkie. Eddie's memory was jinking a little because Roland had
embarrassed him... shamed him . . . made a joke at his expense . . .
Probably not on
purpose, but... something. Something that had made him feel the way
Henry always used to make him feel, of course it was, why else would Henry be
here after such a long absence?
All of them looking at
him now. Even Oy.
"Go on," he
told Roland, sounding a little waspish. "You wanted us to think, we're
thinking, already." He himself was thinking so hard
(I shoot with my mind )
that his goddam brains
were almost on fire, but he wasn't going to tell old long, tall, and ugly that.
"Go on and ask Blaine some riddles. Do your part."
"As you will,
Eddie." Roland rose from his seat, went forward, and laid his hand on the
scarlet rectangle again. The route-map reappeared at once. The green dot had
moved farther beyond Rilea, but it was clear to Eddie that the mono had slowed
down significantly, either obeying some built-in program or because Blaine was
having too much fun to hurry.
"IS YOUR KA-TET
READY TO CONTINUE OUR FAIR-DAY RIDDLING, ROLAND SON OF STEVEN?"
"Yes,
Blaine," Roland said, and to Eddie his voice sounded heavy. "I will
riddle you alone for awhile now. If you have no objection."
"AS DINH
AND FATHER OF YOUR KA-TET, SUCH IS YOUR RIGHT. WILL THESE BE FAIR-DAY
RIDDLES?"
"Yes."
"GOOD."
Loathsome satisfaction in that voice. "I WOULD HEAR MORE OF THOSE."
"All right."
Roland took a deep breath, then began. "Feed me and I live. Give me to
drink and I die. What am I?"
"FIRE." No
hesitation. Only that insufferable smugness, a tone which said That was old
to me when your grandmother was young, but try again! This is more fun than
I've had in centuries, so try again!
"I pass before
the sun, Blaine, yet make no shadow. What am I?"
"WIND." No
hesitation.
"You speak true,
sai. Next. This is as light as a feather, yet no man can hold it for
long."
"ONE'S
BREATH." No hesitation.
Yet he
did hesitate, Eddie thought suddenly. Jake and Susannah were watching
Roland with agonized concentration, fists clenched, willing him to ask
Blaine the right riddle, the stumper, the one with the Get the Fuck Out of Jail
Free card hidden inside it; Eddie couldn't look at them—Suze, in particular—and
keep his concentration. He lowered his gaze to his own hands, which were also
clenched, and forced them to open on his lap. It was surprisingly hard to do.
From the aisle he heard Roland continuing to trot out the golden oldies of his
youth.
"Riddle me this,
Blaine: If you break me, I'll not stop working. If you can touch me, my work is
done. If you lose me, you must find me with a ring soon after. What am I?"
Susannah's breath
caught for a moment, and although he was looking down, Eddie knew she was
thinking what he was thinking: that was a good one, a damned good one,
maybe—
"THE HUMAN
HEART," Blaine said. Still with not a whit of hesitation. "THIS
RIDDLE IS BASED IN LARGE PART UPON HUMAN POETIC CONCEITS; SEE FOR INSTANCE JOHN
AVERY, SIRONIA HUNTZ, ONDOLA, WILLIAM BLAKE, JAMES TATE, VERONICA MAYS, AND
OTHERS. IT IS REMARKABLE HOW HUMAN BEINGS PITCH THEIR MINDS ON LOVE. YET IT IS
CONSTANT FROM ONE LEVEL OF THE TOWER TO THE NEXT, EVEN IN THESE DEGENERATE
DAYS. CONTINUE, ROLAND OF GILEAD."
Susannah's breath
resumed. Eddie's hands wanted to clench again, but he wouldn't let them. Move
your flint in closer, he thought in Roland's voice. Move your flint in
closer, for your father's sake!
And Blaine the Mono
ran on, southeast under the Demon Moon.
CHAPTER II
THE FALLS OF
THE HOUNDS
1
Jake didn't know how
easy or difficult Blaine might find the last ten puzzlers in Riddle-De-Dum!,
but they looked pretty tough to him. Of course, he reminded himself, he wasn't
a thinking-machine with a citywide bank of computers to draw on. All he could
do was go for it; God hates a coward, as Eddie sometimes said. If the last ten
failed, he would try Aaron Deepneau's Samson riddle (Out of the eater came
forth meat, and so on). If that one also failed, he'd probably . . . shit,
he didn't know what he'd do, or even how he'd feel. The truth is,
Jake thought, I'm fried.
And why not? He had
gone through an extraordinary swarm of emotions in the last eight hours or so.
First, terror: of being sure he and Oy were going to drop off the suspension
bridge and to their deaths in the River Send; of being driven through the
crazed maze that was Lud by Gasher; of having to look into the Tick-Tock Man's
terrible green eyes and try to answer his unanswerable questions about time,
Nazis, and the nature of transitive circuits. Being questioned by Tick-Tock had
been like having to take a final exam in hell.
Then the exhilaration
of being rescued by Roland (and Oy; without Oy he would almost certainly be
toast now), the wonder of all they had seen beneath the city, his awe at the
way Susannah had solved Blaine's gate-riddle, and the final mad rush to get
aboard the mono before Blaine could release the stocks of nerve-gas stored
under Lud.
After surviving all
that, a kind of blissed-out surety had settled over him—of course Roland
would stump Blaine, who would then keep his part of the bargain and set them
down safe and sound at his final stop (whatever passed for Topeka in this
world). Then they would find the Dark Tower and do whatever they were supposed
to do there, right what needed righting, fix what needed fixing. And then? They
Lived Happily Ever After, of course. Like folk in a fairy tale.
Except...
They shared each
other's thoughts, Roland had said; sharing khef was part of what ka-tet
meant. And what had been seeping into Jake's thoughts ever since Roland stepped
into the aisle and began to try Blaine with riddles from his young days was a
sense of doom. It wasn't coming just from the gunslinger; Susannah was sending
out the same grim blue-black vibe. Only Eddie wasn't sending it, and that was
because he'd gone off somewhere, was chasing his own thoughts. That might be
good, but there were no guarantees, and—
—and Jake began to be
scared again. Worse, he felt desperate, like a creature that is pressed deeper
and deeper into its final comer by a relentless foe. His fingers worked
restlessly in Oy's fur, and when he looked down at them, he realized an amazing
thing: the hand which Oy had bitten into to keep from falling off the bridge no
longer hurt. He could see the holes the bumbler's teeth had made, and blood was
still crusted in his palm and on his wrist, but the hand itself no longer hurt.
He flexed it cautiously. There was some pain, but it was low and distant,
hardly there at all.
"Blaine, what may
go up a chimney down but cannot go down a chimney up?"
"A LADY'S
PARASOL," Blaine replied in that tone of jolly complacency which Jake,
too, was coming to loathe.
"Thankee-sai,
Blaine, once again you have answered true. Next—"
"Roland?"
The gunslinger looked
around at Jake, and his look of concentration lightened a bit. It wasn't a
smile, but it went a little way in that direction, at least, and Jake was glad.
"What is it,
Jake?"
"My hand. It was
hurting like crazy, and now it's stopped!"
"SHUCKS,"
Blaine said in the drawling voice of John Wayne. "I COULDN'T WATCH A HOUND
SUFFER WITH A MASHED-UP FOREPAW LIKE THAT, LET ALONE A FINE LITTLE TRAIL HAND
LIKE YOURSELF. SO I FIXED IT UP."
"How?" Jake
asked.
"LOOK ON THE ARM
OF YOUR SEAT."
Jake did, and saw a
faint gridwork of lines. It looked a little like the speaker of
the transistor radio he'd had when he was seven or eight.
"ANOTHER BENEFIT
OF TRAVELLING BARONY CLASS," Blaine went on in his smug voice. It crossed
Jake's mind that Blaine would fit in perfectly at the Piper School. The world's
first slo-trans, dipolar nerd. "THE HAND-SCAN SPECTRUM MAGNIFIER IS A
DIAGNOSTIC TOOL ALSO CAPABLE OF ADMINISTERING MINOR FIRST AID, SUCH AS I HAVE
PERFORMED ON YOU. IT IS ALSO A NUTRIENT DELIVERY SYSTEM, A BRAIN-PATTERN
RECORDING DEVICE, A STRESS-ANALYZER, AND AN EMOTION-ENHANCER WHICH CAN
NATURALLY STIMULATE THE PRODUCTION OF ENDORPHINS. HAND-SCAN IS ALSO CAPABLE OF
CREATING VERY BELIEVABLE ILLUSIONS AND HALLUCINATIONS. WOULD YOU CARE TO HAVE
YOUR FIRST SEXUAL EXPERIENCE WITH A NOTED SEX-GODDESS FROM YOUR LEVEL OF THE TOWER,
JAKE OF NEW YORK? PERHAPS MARILYN MONROE, RAQUEL WELCH, OR EDITH BUNKER?"
Jake laughed. He
guessed that laughing at Blaine might be risky, but this time he just couldn't
help it. "There is no Edith Bunker," he said. "She's just
a character on a TV show. The actress's name is, um, Jean Stapleton. Also, she
looks like Mrs. Shaw. She's our housekeeper. Nice, but not—you know—a
babe."
A long silence from
Blaine. When the voice of the computer returned, a certain coldness had
replaced the jocose ain't-we-having-fun tone of voice.
"I CRY YOUR
PARDON, JAKE OF NEW YORK. I ALSO WITHDRAW MY OFFER OF A SEXUAL
EXPERIENCE."
That'll teach me,
Jake thought, raising one hand to cover a smile. Aloud (and in what he hoped
was a suitably humble tone of voice) he said:
"That's okay,
Blaine. I think I'm still a little young for that, anyway."
Susannah and Roland
were looking at each other. Susannah didn't know who Edith Bunker was—All in
the Family hadn't been on the tube in her when. But she grasped the essence
of the situation just the same;
Jake saw her full lips
form one soundless word and send it to the gun-slinger like a message in a soap
bubble:
Mistake.
Yes. Blaine had made a
mistake. More, Jake Chambers, a boy of eleven, had picked up on it. And if
Blaine had made one, he could make another. Maybe there was hope after all.
Jake decided he would treat that possibility as he had treated the graf
of River Crossing and allow himself just a little.
2
Roland nodded
imperceptibly at Susannah, then turned back to the front of the coach,
presumably to resume riddling. Before he could open his mouth, Jake felt his
body pushed forward. It was funny; you couldn't feel a thing when the mono was
running flat-out, but the minute it began to decelerate, you knew.
"HERE IS
SOMETHING YOU REALLY OUGHT TO SEE," Blaine said. He sounded cheerful
again, but Jake didn't trust that tone; he had sometimes heard his father start
telephone conversations that way (usually with some subordinate who had FUB,
Fucked Up Big), and by the end Elmer Chambers would be up on his feet, bent
over the desk like a man with a stomach cramp and screaming at the top of his
lungs, his cheeks red as radishes and the circles of flesh under his eyes as
purple as an eggplant. "I HAVE TO STOP HERE, ANYWAY, AS I MUST SWITCH TO
BATTERY POWER AT THIS POINT AND THAT MEANS PRE-CHARGING."
The mono stopped with
a barely perceptible jerk. The walls around them once more drained of color and
then became transparent. Susannah gasped with fear and wonder. Roland moved to
his left, felt for the side of the coach so he wouldn't bump his head, then
leaned forward with his hands on his knees and his eyes narrowed. Oy began to
bark again. Only Eddie seemed unmoved by the breathtaking view which had been
provided them by the Barony Coach's visual mode. He glanced around once, face
preoccupied and somehow bleary with thought, and then looked down at his hands
again. Jake glanced at him with brief curiosity, then stared back out.
They were halfway
across a vast chasm and seemed to be hovering on the moon-dusted air. Beyond
them Jake could see a wide, boiling river. Not the Send, unless the rivers in
Roland's world were somehow able to run in different directions at different
points in their courses (and Jake didn't know enough about Mid-World to
entirely discount that possibility); also, this river was not placid but
raging, a torrent that came tumbling out of the mountains like something that
was pissed off and wanted to brawl.
For a moment Jake
looked at the trees which dressed the steep slopes along the sides of this
river, registering with relief that they looked pretty much all right—the sort
of firs you'd expect to see in the mountains of Colorado or Wyoming, say—and
then his eyes were dragged back to the lip of the chasm. Here the torrent broke
apart and dropped in a waterfall so wide and so deep that Jake thought it made
Niagara, where he had gone with his parents (one of three family vacations he
could remember; two had been cut short by urgent calls from his father's
Network), look like the kind you might see in a third-rate theme-park. The air
filling the enclosing semicircle of the falls was further thickened by an up
rushing mist that looked like steam; in it half a dozen moonbows gleamed like
gaudy, interlocking dream-jewelry. To Jake they looked like the overlapping
rings which symbolized the Olympics.
Jutting from the
center of the falls, perhaps two hundred feet below the point where the river
actually went over the drop, were two enormous stone protrusions. Although Jake
had no idea how a sculptor (or a team of them) could have gotten down to where
they were, he found it all but impossible to believe they had simply eroded
that way. They looked like the heads of enormous, snarling dogs.
The Falls of the
Hounds, he thought. There was one more stop beyond
this—Dasherville—and then Topeka. Last stop. Everybody out.
"ONE
MOMENT," Blaine said. "I MUST ADJUST THE VOLUME FOR YOU TO ENJOY THE
FULL EFFECT."
There was a brief,
whispery hooting sound—a kind of mechanical throat clearing—and then they were
assaulted by a vast roar. It was water—a billion gallons a minute, for all
Jake knew—pouring over the lip of the chasm and falling perhaps two thousand
feet into the deep stone basin at the base of the falls. Streamers of mist
floated past the blunt almost-faces of the jutting dogs like steam from the
vents of hell. The level of sound kept climbing. Now Jake's whole head vibrated
with it, and as he clapped his hands over his ears, he saw Roland, Eddie, and
Susannah doing the same. Oy was barking, but Jake couldn't hear him.
Susannah's lips were moving again, and again he could read the words—Stop
it, Blaine, stop it!—but he couldn't hear them any more than he could hear
Oy's barks, although he was sure Susannah was screaming at the top of her
lungs.
And still Blame
increased the sound of the waterfall, until Jake could feel his eyes shaking in
their sockets and he was sure his ears were going to short out like
overstressed stereo speakers.
Then it was over. They
still hung above the moon-misty drop, the moonbows still made their slow and
dreamlike revolutions before the curtain of endlessly falling water, the wet
and brutal stone faces of the dog-guardians continued to jut out of the
torrent, but that world-ending thunder was gone.
For a moment Jake
thought what he'd feared had happened, that he had gone deaf. Then he realized
that he could hear Oy, still barking, and Susannah crying. At first these
sounds seemed distant and flat, as if his ears had been packed with
cracker-crumbs, but then they began to clarify.
Eddie put his arm
around Susannah's shoulders and looked toward the route-map. "Nice guy,
Blaine."
"I MERELY THOUGHT
YOU WOULD ENJOY HEARING THE SOUND OF THE FALLS AT FULL VOLUME," Blaine
said. His booming voice sounded laughing and injured at the same time. "I
THOUGHT IT MIGHT HELP YOU TO FORGET MY REGRETTABLE MISTAKE IN THE MATTER OF
EDITH BUNKER."
My fault,
Jake thought. Blaine may just be a machine, and a suicidal one at that, but
he still doesn’t like to be laughed at.
He sat beside Susannah
and put his own arm around her. He could still hear the Falls of the Hounds,
but the sound was now distant.
"What happens
here?" Roland asked. "How do you charge your batteries?"
"YOU WILL SEE
SHORTLY, GUNSLINGER. IN THE MEANTIME, TRY ME WITH A RIDDLE."
"All right,
Blaine. Here's one of Cort's own making, and has posed many in its time."
"I AWAIT IT WITH
GREAT INTEREST."
Roland, pausing
perhaps to gather his thoughts, looked up at the place where the roof of the
coach had been and where there was now only a starry spill across a black sky
(Jake could pick out Aton and Lydia—Old Star and Old Mother—and was oddly
comforted by the sight of them, still glaring at each other from their
accustomed places). Then the gunslinger looked back at the lighted rectangle
which served them as Blaine's face.
" 'We are very
little creatures; all of us have different features. One of us in glass is set;
one of us you'll find in jet. Another you may see in tin, and a fourth is boxed
within. If the fifth you should pursue, it can never fly from you. What are
we?' "
"A AND E AND I
AND O AND U," Blaine replied. "THE VOWELS OF THE HIGH SPEECH."
Still no hesitation, not so much as a whit. Only that voice, mocking and just
about two steps from laughter; the voice of a cruel little boy watching bugs
run around on top of a hot stove. "ALTHOUGH THAT PARTICULAR RIDDLE IS NOT
FROM YOUR TEACHER, ROLAND OF GILEAD; I KNOW IT FROM JONATHAN SWIFT OF LONDON—A
CITY IN THE WORLD YOUR FRIENDS COME FROM."
"Thankee-sai,"
Roland said, and his sai sounded like a sigh. "Your answer is true,
Blaine, and undoubtedly what you believe of the riddle's origins is true as
well. That Cort knew of other worlds is something I long suspected. I think he
may have held palaver with the manni who lived outside the city."
"I CARE NOT ABOUT
THE MANNI, ROLAND OF GILEAD. THEY WERE ALWAYS A FOOLISH SECT. TRY ME
WITH ANOTHER RIDDLE."
"All right. What
has—"
"HOLD, HOLD. THE
FORCE OF THE BEAM GATHERS. LOOK NOT DIRECTLY AT THE HOUNDS, MY INTERESTING NEW
FRIENDS! AND SHIELD YOUR EYES!"
Jake looked away from
the colossal rock sculptures jutting from the falls, but didn't get his hand up
quite in time. With his peripheral vision he saw those featureless heads
suddenly develop eyes of a fiercely glowing blue. Jagged tines of lightning
leaped out of them and toward the mono. Then Jake was lying on the carpeted
floor of the Barony Coach with the heels of his hands pasted against his closed
eyes and the sound of Oy whining in one faintly ringing ear. Beyond Oy, he heard
the crackle of electricity as it stormed around the mono.
When Jake opened his
eyes again, the Falls of the Hounds were gone;
Blaine had opaqued the
cabin. He could still hear the sound, though—a waterfall of electricity, a
force somehow drawn from the Beam and shot out through the eyes of the stone
heads. Blaine was feeding himself with it, somehow. When we go on, Jake
thought, he 'II be running on batteries. Then Lud really will be behind us.
For good.
"Blaine,"
Roland said. "How is the power of the Beam stored in that place? What
makes it come from the eyes of yon stone temple-dogs? How do you use it?"
Silence from Blaine.
"And who carved
them?" Eddie asked. "Was it the Great Old Ones? It wasn't, was it?
There were people even before them. Or ... were they people?"
More silence from
Blaine. And maybe that was good. Jake wasn't sure how much he wanted to know
about the Falls of the Hounds, or what went on beneath them. He had been in the
dark of Roland's world before, and had seen enough to believe that most of what
was growing there was neither good nor safe.
"Better not to
ask him," the voice of Little Blaine drifted down from over their heads.
"Safer."
"Don't ask him
silly questions, he won't play silly games," Eddie said. That distant,
dreaming look had come onto his face again, and when Susannah spoke his name,
he didn't seem to hear.
3
Roland sat down across
from Jake and scrubbed his right hand slowly up the stubble on his right cheek,
an unconscious gesture he seemed to make only when he was feeling tired or
doubtful. "I'm running out of riddles," he said.
Jake looked back at
him, startled. The gunslinger had posed fifty or more to the computer, and Jake
supposed that was a lot to just yank out of your head with no preparation, but
when you considered that riddling had been such a big deal in the place where
Roland had grown up ...
He seemed to read some
of this on Jake's face, for a small smile, lemon-bitter, touched the comers of
his mouth, and he nodded as if the boy had spoken out loud. "I don't
understand, either. If you'd asked me yesterday or the day before, I would have
told you that I had at least a thousand riddles stored up in the junkbin I keep
at the back of my mind. Perhaps two thousand. But. . ."
He lifted one shoulder
in a shrug, shook his head, rubbed his hand up his cheek again.
"It's not like
forgetting. It's as if they were never there in the first place. What's
happening to the rest of the world is happening to me, I reckon."
"You're moving
on," Susannah said, and looked at Roland with an expression of pity which
Roland could look back at for only a second or two; it was as if he felt burned
by her regard. "Like everything else here."
"Yes, I fear
so." He looked at Jake, lips tight, eyes sharp. "Will you be ready
with the riddles from your book when I call on you?"
"Yes."
"Good. And take
heart. We're not finished yet."
Outside, the dim
crackle of electricity ceased.
"I HAVE FED MY
BATTERIES AND ALL IS WELL," Blaine announced.
"Marvelous,"
Susannah said dryly.
"Luss!" Oy
agreed, catching Susannah's sarcastic tone exactly.
"I HAVE A NUMBER
OF SWITCHING FUNCTIONS TO PERFORM. THESE WILL TAKE ABOUT FORTY MINUTES AND ARE
LARGELY AUTOMATIC. WHILE THIS SWITCHOVER TAKES PLACE AND THE ACCOMPANYING
CHECKLIST IS RUNNING, WE SHALL CONTINUE OUR CONTEST. I AM ENJOYING IT VERY
MUCH."
"It's like when
you have to switch over from electric to diesel on the train to Boston,"
Eddie said. He still sounded as if he wasn't quite with them. "At Hartford
or New Haven or one of those other places where no one in their right fucking
mind would want to live."
"Eddie?"
Susannah asked. "What are you—"
Roland touched her
shoulder and shook his head.
"NEVER MIND EDDIE
OF NEW YORK," Blaine said in his expansive, gosh-but-this-is-fun voice.
"That's
right," Eddie said. "Never mind Eddie of New York."
"HE KNOWS NO GOOD
RIDDLES. BUT YOU KNOW MANY, ROLAND OF GILEAD. TRY ME WITH ANOTHER."
And, as Roland did
just that, Jake thought of his Final Essay. Blaine is a pain, he had
written there. Blaine is a pain and that is the truth. It was the truth,
all right.
The stone
truth.
A little less than an
hour later, Blaine the Mono began to move again.
4
Susannah watched with
dreadful fascination as the flashing dot approached Dasherville, passed it, and
made its final dogleg for home. The dot's movement said that Blaine was moving
a bit more slowly now that it had switched over to batteries, and she fancied
the lights in the Barony Coach were a little dimmer, but she didn't believe it
would make much difference, in the end. Blaine might reach his terminus in
Topeka doing six hundred miles an hour instead of eight hundred, but his last
load of passengers would be toothpaste either way.
Roland was also
slowing down, going deeper and deeper into that mental junkbin of his to find
riddles. Yet he did find them, and he refused to give up. As always.
Ever since he had begun teaching her to shoot, Susannah had felt a reluctant
love for Roland of Gilead, a feeling that seemed a mixture of admiration, fear,
and pity. She thought she would never really like him (and that the Detta
Walker part of her might always hate him for the way he had seized hold of her
and dragged her, raving, into the sun), but her love was nonetheless strong. He
had, after all, saved Eddie Dean's life and soul; had rescued her beloved. She
must love him for that if for nothing else. But she loved him even more, she
suspected, for the way he would never, never give up. The word retreat
didn't seem to be in his vocabulary, even when he was discouraged ... as he so
clearly was now.
"Blaine, where
may you find roads without carts, forests without trees, cities without
houses?"
"ON A MAP."
"You say true,
sai. Next. I have a hundred legs but cannot stand, a long neck but no head; I
eat the maid's life. What am I?"
"A BROOM,
GUNSLINGER. ANOTHER VARIATION ENDS, 'I EASE THE MAID'S LIFE.' I LIKE
YOURS BETTER."
Roland ignored this.
"Cannot be seen, cannot be felt, cannot be heard, cannot be smelt. It lies
behind the stars and beneath the hills. Ends life and kills laughter. What is
it, Blaine?"
"THE DARK."
"Thankee-sai, you
speak true."
The diminished right
hand slid up the right cheek—the old fretful gesture—and the minute scratching
sound produced by the callused pads of his fingers made Susannah shiver. Jake
sat cross-legged on the floor, looking at the gunslinger with a kind of fierce
intensity.
"This thing runs
but cannot walk, sometimes sings but never talks. Lacks arms, has hands; lacks
a head but has a face. What is it, Blaine?"
"A CLOCK."
"Shit," Jake
whispered, lips compressing.
Susannah looked over
at Eddie and felt a passing ripple of irritation. He seemed to have lost
interest in the whole thing—had "zoned out," in his weird 1980s
slang. She thought to throw an elbow into his side, wake him up a little, then
remembered Roland shaking his head at her and didn't. You wouldn't know he was
thinking, not from that slack expression on his face, but maybe he was.
If so, you better
hurry it up a little, precious, she thought. The dot
on the route map was still closer to Dasherville than Topeka, but it would
reach the halfway point within the next fifteen minutes or so.
And still the match
went on, Roland serving questions, Blaine sending the answers whistling right
back at him, low over the net and out of reach.
What builds up castles,
tears down mountains, makes some blind, helps others to see? SAND.
Thankee-sai.
What lives in winter,
dies in summer, and grows with its roots upward? AN ICICLE.
Blaine. you say true.
Man walks over; man
walks under; in time of war he bums asunder? A BRIDGE.
Thankee-sai.
A seemingly endless
parade of riddles marched past her, one after the other, until she lost all
sense of their fun and playfulness. Had it been so in the days of Roland's
youth, she wondered, during the riddle contests of Wide Earth and Full Earth,
when he and his friends (although she had an idea they hadn't all been
his friends, no, not by a long chalk) had vied for the Fair-Day goose? She
guessed that the answer was probably yes. The winner had probably been the one
who could stay fresh longest, keep his poor bludgeoned brains aerated somehow.
The killer was the way
Blaine came back with the answer so damned promptly each time. No matter
how hard the riddle might seem to her, Blaine served it right back to their
side of the court, ka-slam.
"Blaine, what has
eyes yet cannot see?"
"THERE ARE FOUR
ANSWERS," Blaine replied. "NEEDLES, STORMS, POTATOES, AND A TRUE
LOVER."
"Thankee-sai,
Blaine, you speak—"
"LISTEN. ROLAND
OF GILEAD. LISTEN, KA-TET"
Roland fell silent at
once, his eyes narrowing, his head slightly cocked.
"YOU WILL SHORTLY
HEAR MY ENGINES BEGIN TO CYCLE UP," Blaine said. "WE ARE NOW EXACTLY
SIXTY MINUTES OUT OF TOPEKA. AT THIS POINT—"
"If we've been
riding for seven hours or more, I grew up with the Brady Bunch," Jake said.
Susannah looked around
apprehensively, expecting some new terror or small act of cruelty in response
to Jake's sarcasm, but Blaine only chuckled. When he spoke again, the voice of
Humphrey Bogart had resurfaced.
"TIME'S DIFFERENT
HERE, SHWEETHEART. YOU MUST KNOW THAT BY NOW. BUT DON'T WORRY; THE FUNDAMENTAL
THINGS APPLY AS TIME GOES BY. WOULD I LIE TO YOU?"
"Yes," Jake
muttered.
That apparently struck
Blame's funny bone, because he began to laugh again—the mad, mechanical
laughter that made Susannah think of funhouses in sleazy amusement parks and
roadside carnivals. When the lights began to pulse in sync with the laughter,
she shut her eyes and put her hands over her ears.
"Stop it, Blaine!
Stop it!"
"BEG PARDON,
MA'AM," drawled the aw-shucks voice of Jimmy Stewart. "AH'M RIGHT
SORRY IF I RUINT YOUR EARS WITH MY RISABILITY."
"Ruin this,"
Jake said, and hoisted his middle finger at the route-map.
Susannah expected
Eddie to laugh—you could count on him to be amused by vulgarity at any time of
the day or night, she would have said—but Eddie only continued looking down at
his lap, his forehead creased, his eyes vacant, his mouth hung slightly agape.
He looked a little too much like the village idiot for comfort, Susannah
thought, and again had to restrain herself from throwing an elbow into his side
to get that doltish look off his face. She wouldn't restrain herself for much
longer; if they were going to die at the end of Blaine's run, she wanted
Eddie's arms around her when it happened, Eddie's eyes on her, Eddie's mind
with hers.
But for now, better
let him be.
"AT THIS
POINT," Blaine resumed in his normal voice, "I INTEND TO BEGIN WHAT I
LIKE TO THINK OF AS MY KAMIKAZE RUN. THIS WILL QUICKLY DRAIN MY BATTERIES, BUT
I THINK THE TIME FOR CONSERVATION HAS PASSED, DON'T YOU? WHEN I STRIKE THE
TRANSTEEL PIERS AT THE END OF THE TRACK, I SHOULD BE TRAVELLING AT BETTER THAN
NINE HUNDRED MILES AN HOUR—FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY IN WHEELS, THAT IS. SEE YOU
LATER, ALLIGATOR, AFTER AWHILE, CROCODILE, DON'T FORGET TO WRITE. I TELL YOU
THIS IN THE SPIRIT OF FAIR PLAY, MY INTERESTING NEW FRIENDS. IF YOU HAVE BEEN
SAVING YOUR BEST RIDDLES FOR LAST, YOU MIGHT DO WELL TO POSE THEM TO ME
NOW."
The unmistakable greed
in Blaine's voice—its naked desire to hear and solve their best riddles before
it killed them—made Susannah feel tired and old.
"I might not have
time even so to pose you all my very best ones," Roland said in a
casual, considering tone of voice. "That would be a shame, wouldn't
it?"
A pause ensued—brief,
but more of a hesitation than the computer had accorded any of Roland's
riddles—and then Blaine chuckled. Susannah hated the sound of its mad
laughter, but there was a cynical weariness in this chuckle that chilled her
even more deeply. Perhaps because it was almost sane.
"GOOD,
GUNSLINGER. A VALIANT EFFORT. BUT YOU ARE NOT SCHEHERAZADE, NOR DO WE HAVE A
THOUSAND AND ONE NIGHTS IN WHICH TO HOLD PALAVER."
"I don't
understand you. I know not this Scheherazade."
"NO MATTER.
SUSANNAH CAN FILL YOU IN, IF YOU REALLY WANT TO KNOW. PERHAPS EVEN EDDIE. THE
POINT, ROLAND, IS THAT I'LL NOT BE DRAWN ON BY THE PROMISE OF MORE RIDDLES. WE
VIE FOR THE GOOSE. COME TOPEKA, IT SHALL BE AWARDED, ONE WAY OR ANOTHER. DO YOU
UNDERSTAND THAT?"
Once more the
diminished hand went up Roland's cheek; once more Susannah heard the minute
rasp of his fingers against the wiry stubble of his beard.
"We play for
keeps. No one cries off."
"CORRECT. NO ONE
CRIES OFF."
"All right,
Blaine, we play for keeps and no one cries off. Here's the next."
"AS ALWAYS, I
AWAIT IT WITH PLEASURE."
Roland looked down at
Jake. "Be ready with yours, Jake; I'm almost at the end of mine."
Jake nodded.
Beneath them, the
mono's slo-trans engines continued to cycle up-mat beat-beat-beat which
Susannah did not so much hear as feel in the hinges of her jaw, the hollows of
her temples, the pulse-points of her wrists.
It's not going to
happen unless there's a stumper in Jake's book,
she thought. Roland can't pose Blame, and I think he knows it. I think he
knew it an hour ago.
"Blame, I occur
once in a minute, twice in every moment, but not once in a hundred thousand
years. What am I?"
And so the contest
would continue, Susannah realized, Roland asking and Blaine answering with his
increasingly terrible lack of hesitation, like an all-seeing, all-knowing god.
Susannah sat with her cold hands clasped in her lap and watched the glowing dot
draw nigh Topeka, the place where all rail service ended, the place where the
path of their ka-tet would end in the clearing. She thought about the
Hounds of the Falls, how they had jutted from the thundering white billows
below the dark and starshot sky; she thought of their eyes.
Their electric-blue
eyes.
CHAPTER III
the fair-day goose
1
Eddie Dean—who did not
know Roland sometimes thought of him as ka mai, ka's fool—heard all of
it and heard none of it; saw all of it and saw none of it. The only thing to
really make an impression on him once the riddling began in earnest was the
fire flashing from the stone eyes of the Hounds; as he raised his hand to
shield his eyes from that chain-lightning glare, he thought of the Portal of
the Beam in the Clearing of the Bear, how he had pressed his ear against it and
heard the distant, dreamy rumble of machinery.
Watching the eyes of
the Hounds light up, listening as Blaine drew that current into his batteries,
powering up for his final plunge across Mid-World, Eddie had thought: Not
all is silent in the halls of the dead and the rooms of ruin. Even now some
of the stuff the Old Ones left behind still works. And that's really the
horror of it, wouldn’t 't you say? Yes. The exact horror of it.
Eddie had been with
his friends for a short time after that, mentally as well as physically, but
then he had fallen back into his thoughts again. Eddie's zonin. Henry would
have said. Let 'im be.
It was the image of
Jake striking flint and steel that kept recurring; he would allow his mind to
dwell on it for a second or two, like a bee alighting on some sweet flower,
and then he would take off again. Because that memory wasn't what he wanted; it
was just the way in to what he wanted, another door like the ones on the
beach of the Western Sea, or the one he had scraped in the dirt of the speaking
ring before they had drawn Jake.. . only this door was in his mind. What he
wanted was behind it; what he was doing was kind of... well... diddling the
lock.
Zoning, in
Henry-speak.
His brother had spent
most of his time putting Eddie down—because Henry had been afraid of him and
jealous of him, Eddie had finally come to realize—but he remembered one day
when Henry had stunned him by saying something that was nice. Better
than nice, actually; mind-boggling.
A bunch of them had
been sitting in the alley behind Dahlie's, some of them eating Popsicles and
Hoodsie Rockets, some of them smoking Kents from a pack Jimmie Polino—Jimmie
Polio, they had all called him, because he had that fucked-up thing wrong with
him, that clubfoot—had hawked out of his mother's dresser drawer. Henry,
predictably enough, had been one of the ones smoking.
There were certain
ways of referring to things in the gang Henry was a part of (and which Eddie,
as his little brother, was also a part of); the argot of their miserable
little ka-tet. In Henry's gang, you never beat anyone else up; you sent
em home with a fuckin rupture. You never made out with a girl; you
fucked that skag til she cried. You never got stoned; you went on a
fuckin bombin-run. And you never brawled with another gang; you got in a
fuckin pisser.
The discussion that
day had been about who you'd want with you if you got in a fuckin pisser.
Jimmie Polio (he got to talk first because he had supplied the cigarettes,
which Henry's homeboys called the fuckin cancer-sticks) opted for
Skipper Brannigan, because, he said, Skipper wasn't afraid of anyone. One time,
Jimmie said, Skipper got pissed off at this teacher—at the Friday night PAL
dance, this was—and beat the living shit out of him. Sent THE FUCKIN
CHAPERONE home with a fuckin rupture, if you could dig it. That was his
homie Skipper Brannigan.
Everyone listened to
this solemnly, nodding their heads as they ate their Rockets, sucked their
Popsicles, or smoked their Kents. Everyone knew that Skipper Brannigan was a
fuckin pussy and Jimmie was full of shit, but no one said so. Christ, no. If
they didn't pretend to believe Jimmie Polio's outrageous lies, no one would
pretend to believe theirs.
Tommy Fredericks opted
for John Parelli. Georgie Pratt went for Csaba Drabnik, also known around the
nabe as The Mad Fuckin Hungarian. Frank Duganelli nominated Larry McCain, even
though Larry was in Juvenile Detention; Larry fuckin ruled, Frank said.
By then it was around
to Henry Dean. He gave the question the weighty consideration it deserved, then
put his arm around his surprised brother's shoulders. Eddie, he said. My
little bro. He's the man.
They all stared at
him, stunned—and none more stunned than Eddie. His jaw had been almost down to
his belt-buckle. And then Jimmie Polio said. Come on. Henry, stop fuckin
around. This a serious question. Who 'd you want watching your hack if the shit
was gonna come down?
I
am being serious. Henry had replied.
Why Eddie?
Georgie Pratt had asked, echoing the question which had been in Eddie's own
mind. He couldn’t 't fight his way out of a paper bag. A wet one. So
why the fuck?
Henry thought some
more—not, Eddie was convinced, because he didn't know why, but because he had
to think about how to articulate it. Then he said: Because when Eddie's in
that fuckin zone, he could talk the devil into setting himself on fire.
The image of Jake
returned, one memory stepping on another. Jake scraping steel on flint,
flashing sparks at the kindling of their campfire, sparks that fell short and
died before they lit.
He could talk the
devil into setting himself on fire.
Move your flint in
closer, Roland said, and now there was a third memory,
one of Roland at the door they'd come to at the end of the beach, Roland
burning with fever, close to death, shaking like a maraca, coughing, his blue
bombardier's eyes fixed on Eddie, Roland saying, Come a little closer,
Eddie—come a little closer for your father's sake!
Because he wanted to
grab me, Eddie thought. Faintly, almost as if it were
coming through one of those magic doors from some other world, he heard Blaine
telling them that the endgame had commenced; if they had been saving their best
riddles, now was the time to trot them out. They had an hour.
An hour! Only an hour!
His mind tried to fix
on that and Eddie nudged it away. Something was happening inside him (at least
he prayed it was), some desperate game of association, and he couldn't let his
mind get fucked up with deadlines and consequences and all that crap; if he
did, he'd lose whatever chance he had. It was, in a way, like seeing something
in a piece of wood, something you could carve out—a bow, a slingshot, perhaps a
key to open some unimaginable door. You couldn't look too long, though, at
least to start with. You'd lose it if you did. It was almost as if you had to
carve while your own back was turned.
He could feel Blaine's
engines powering up beneath him. In his mind's eye he saw the flint flash
against the steel, and in his mind's ear he heard Roland telling Jake to move
the flint in closer. And don't hit it with the steel, Jake;
scrape it.
Why am I here? If this
isn't what I want, why does my mind keep coming hack to this place?
Because it’s as close
as I can get and still stay out of the hurt-zone. Only a medium-sized hurt,
actually, but it made me think of Henry. Being put down by Henry.
Henry said you could
talk the devil into setting himself on fire.
Yes. I always loved
him for that. That was great.
And now Eddie saw
Roland move Jake's hands, one holding flint and the other steel, closer to the
kindling. Jake was nervous. Eddie could see it; Roland had seen it, too. And in
order to ease his nerves, take his mind off the responsibility of lighting the
fire, Roland had—
He asked the kid a
riddle.
Eddie Dean blew breath
into the keyhole of his memory. And this time the tumblers turned.
2
The green dot was
closing in on Topeka, and for the first time Jake felt vibration ... as if the
track beneath them had decayed to a point where Blaine's compensators could no
longer completely handle the problem. With the sense of vibration there at last
came a feeling of speed. The walls and ceiling of the Barony Coach were still
opaqued, but Jake found he didn't need to see the countryside blurring past to
imagine it. Blaine was rolling full out now, leading his last sonic boom across
the waste lands to the place where Mid-World ended, and Jake also found it easy
to imagine the transteel piers at the end of the monorail. They would be
painted in diagonal stripes of yellow and black. He didn't know how he knew
that, but he did.
"TWENTY-FIVE
MINUTES," Blaine said complacently. "WOULD YOU TRY ME AGAIN,
GUNSLINGER?"
"I think not,
Blaine." Roland sounded exhausted. "I've done with you; you've beaten
me. Jake?"
Jake got to his feet
and faced the route-map. In his chest his heartbeat seemed very slow but very
hard, each pulse like a fist slamming on a drumhead. Oy crouched between his
feet, looking anxiously up into his face.
"Hello,
Blaine," Jake said, and wet his lips.
"HELLO, JAKE OF
NEW YORK." The voice was kindly—the voice, perhaps, of a nice old fellow
with a habit of molesting the children he from time to time leads into the
bushes. "WOULD YOU TRY ME WITH RIDDLES FROM YOUR BOOK? OUR TIME TOGETHER
GROWS SHORT."
"Yes," Jake
said. "I would try you with these riddles. Give me your understanding of
the truth concerning each, Blaine."
"IT IS FAIRLY
SPOKEN, JAKE OF NEW YORK. I WILL DO AS YOU ASK."
Jake opened the book
to the place he had been keeping with his finger. Ten riddles. Eleven,
counting Samson's riddle, which he was saving for last. If Blaine answered them
all (as Jake now believed he probably would), Jake would sit down next to
Roland, take Oy onto his lap, and wait for the end. There were, after all,
other worlds than these.
"Listen, Blaine:
In a tunnel of darkness lies a beast of iron. It can only attack when pulled
back. What is it?"
"A BULLET."
No hesitation.
"Walk on the
living, they don't even mumble. Walk on the dead, they mutter and grumble. What
are they?"
"FALLEN
LEAVES." No hesitation, and if Jake really knew in his heart that the game
was lost, why did he feel such despair, such bitterness, such anger?
Because he's a pain,
that's why. Blaine is a really BIG pain, and I'd like to push his face in it,
just once. I think even making him stop is second to that on my wish-list.
Jake turned the page.
He was very close to Riddle-De-Dum's tom-out answer section now; he
could feel it under his finger, a kind of jagged lump. Very close to the end of
the book. He thought of Aaron Deepneau in the Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind,
Aaron Deepneau telling him to come back anytime, play a little chess, and oh
just by the way, old fatso made a pretty good cup of coffee. A wave of
homesickness so strong it was like dying swept over him. He felt he would have
sold his soul for a look at New York; hell, he would have sold it for one deep
lung-filling breath of Forty-second Street at rush hour.
He fought it off and
went to the next riddle.
"I am emeralds
and diamonds, lost by the moon. I am found by the sun and picked up soon. What
am I?"
"DEW."
Still relentless.
Still unhesitating.
The green dot grew
closer to Topeka, closing the last of the distance on the route-map. One after
another, Jake posed his riddles; one after another, Blaine answered them. When
Jake turned to the last page, he saw a boxed message from the author or editor
or whatever you called someone who put together books like this: We hope
you've enjoyed the unique combination of imagination and logic known as
RIDDLING!
I haven't,
Jake thought. I haven't enjoyed it one little bit, and I hope you choke.
Yet when he looked at the question above the message, he felt a thin thread of
hope. It seemed to him that, in this case, at least, they really had
saved the best for last.
On the route-map, the
green dot was now no more than a finger's width from Topeka.
"Hurry up,
Jake," Susannah murmured.
"Blaine?"
"YES, JAKE OF NEW
YORK."
"With no wings, I
fly. With no eyes, I see. With no arms, I climb. More frightening than any
beast, stronger than any foe. I am cunning, ruthless, and tall; in the end, I
rule all. What am I?"
The gunslinger had
looked up, blue eyes gleaming. Susannah began to turn her expectant face from
Jake to the route-map. Yet Blaine's answer was as prompt as ever: "THE
IMAGINATION OF MAN AND WOMAN."
Jake briefly
considered arguing, then thought, Why waste our time? As always, the
answer, when it was right, seemed almost self-evident. "Thankee-sai,
Blaine, you speak true."
"AND THE FAIR-DAY
GOOSE IS ALMOST MINE, I WOT. NINETEEN MINUTES AND FIFTY SECONDS TO TERMINATION.
WOULD YOU SAY MORE, JAKE OF NEW YORK? VISUAL SENSORS INDICATE YOU HAVE COME TO
THE END OF YOUR BOOK, WHICH WAS NOT, I MUST SAY, AS GOOD AS I HAD HOPED."
"Everybody's a
goddam critic," Susannah said sotto voce. She wiped a tear from the comer
of one eye; without looking directly at her, the gunslinger took her free hand.
She clasped it tightly.
"Yes, Blaine, I
have one more," Jake said.
"EXCELLENT."
"Out of the eater
came forth meat, and out of the strong came sweetness."
"THIS RIDDLE
COMES FROM THE HOLY BOOK KNOWN AS 'OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE OF KING JAMES.'"
Blaine sounded amused, and Jake felt the last of his hope slip away. He thought
he might cry—not so much out of fear as frustration. "IT WAS MADE BY SAMSON
THE STRONG. THE EATER IS A LION; THE SWEETNESS IS HONEY, MADE BY BEES WHICH
HIVED IN THE LION'S SKULL. NEXT? YOU STILL HAVE OVER EIGHTEEN MINUTES,
JAKE."
Jake shook his head.
He let go of Riddle-De-Dum! and smiled when Oy caught it neatly in his
jaws and then stretched his long neck up to Jake, holding it out again.
"I've told them all. I'm done."
"SHUCKS, L’IL TRAILHAND,
THAT'S A PURE-D SHAME," Blaine said. Jake found this drawly John Wayne
imitation all but unbearable in their current circumstances. "LOOKS LIKE
I WIN THAT THAR GOOSE, UNLESS SOMEBODY ELSE CARES TO SPEAK UP. WHAT ABOUT YOU,
OY OF MID-WORLD? GOT ANY RIDDLES, MY LITTLE BUMBLER BUDDY?"
"Oy!" the
billy-bumbler responded, his voice muffled by the book. Still smiling, Jake
took it and sat down next to Roland, who put an arm around him.
"SUSANNAH OF
NEW YORK?"
She shook her head,
not looking up. She had turned Roland's hand over in her own, and was gently
tracing the healed stumps where his first two fingers had been.
"ROLAND SON OF
STEVEN? HAVE YOU REMEMBERED ANY OTHERS FROM THE FAIR-DAY RIDDLINGS OF
GILEAD?"
Roland also shook his
head . . . and then Jake saw that Eddie Dean was raising his. There was a
peculiar smile on Eddie's face, a peculiar shine in Eddie's eyes, and Jake
found that hope hadn't deserted him, after all. It suddenly flowered anew in
his mind, red and hot and vivid. Like . . . well, like a rose. A rose in the
full fever of its summer.
"Blaine?"
Eddie asked in a low tone. To Jake his voice sounded queerly choked.
"YES, EDDIE OF
NEW YORK." Unmistakable disdain.
"I have a couple
of riddles," Eddie said. "Just to pass the time between here and
Topeka, you understand." No, Jake realized, Eddie didn't sound as if he
were choking; he sounded as if he were trying to hold back laughter.
"SPEAK, EDDIE OF
NEW YORK."
3
Sitting and listening
to Jake run through the last of his riddles, Eddie had mused on Roland's tale
of the Fair-Day goose. From there his mind had returned to Henry, travelling
from Point A to Point B through the magic of associative thinking. Or, if you
wanted to get Zen about it, via Trans-Bird Airlines: goose to turkey. He and
Henry had once had a discussion about getting off heroin. Henry had claimed
that going cold turkey wasn't the only way; there was also, he said, such a
thing as going cool turkey. Eddie asked Henry what you called a hype who
had just administered a hot shot to himself, and, without missing a beat, Henry
had said. You call that baked turkey. How they had laughed . . .
but now, all this long, strange time later, it looked very much as if the joke
was going to be on the younger Dean brother, not to mention the younger Dean
brother's new friends. Looked like they were all going to be baked turkey
before much longer.
Unless you can yank it
out of the zone.
Yes.
Then do it, Eddie.
It was Henry's voice again, that old resident of his head, but now Henry
sounded sober and clear-minded. Henry sounded like his friend instead of his
enemy, as if all the old conflicts were finally settled, all the old hatchets
buried. Do it—make the devil set himself on fire. It 'II hurt a little,
maybe, but you've hurt worse. Hell, I hurt you worse myself, and you survived.
Survived just fine. And you know where to look.
Of course. In their
palaver around the campfire Jake had finally managed to light. Roland had
asked the kid a riddle to loosen him up, Jake had struck a spark into the
kindling, and then they had all sat around the fire, talking. Talking and
riddling.
Eddie knew something
else, too. Blaine had answered hundreds of riddles as they ran southeast along
the Path of the Beam, and the others believed that he had answered every single
one of them without hesitation. Eddie had thought much the same . . . but now,
as he cast his mind back over the contest, he realized an interesting thing:
Blaine had hesitated.
Once.
He was pissed, too.
Like Roland was.
The gunslinger,
although often exasperated by Eddie, had shown real anger toward him just a
single time after the business of carving the key, when Eddie had almost
choked. Roland had tried to cover the depth of that anger—make it seem like
nothing but more exasperation—but Eddie had sensed what was underneath. He had
lived with Henry Dean for a long time, and was still exquisitely attuned to all
the negative emotions. It had hurt him, too—not Roland's anger itself, exactly,
but the contempt with which it had been laced. Contempt had always been one of
Henry's favorite weapons.
Why did the dead baby
cross the road? Eddie had asked. Because it was
stapled to the chicken, nyuck-nyuck-nyuck!
Later, when Eddie had
tried to defend his riddle, arguing that it was tasteless but not pointless,
Roland's response had been strangely like Blaine's: / don't care about
taste. It's senseless and unsolvable, and that's what makes it silly. A good
riddle is neither.
But as Jake finished
riddling Blaine, Eddie realized a wonderful, liberating thing: that word good
was up for grabs. Always had been, always would be. Even if the man using it
was maybe a thousand years old and could shoot like Buffalo Bill, that word was
still up for grabs. Roland himself had admitted he had never been very good at
the riddling game. His tutor claimed that Roland thought too deeply; his father
thought it was lack of imagination. Whatever the reason, Roland of Gilead had
never won a Fair-Day riddling. He had survived all his contemporaries, and that
was certainly a prize of sorts, but he had never carried home a prize goose. I
could always haul a gun faster than any of my mates, but I've never been much
good at thinking around corners.
Eddie remembered
trying to tell Roland that jokes were riddles designed to help you build up
that often overlooked talent, but Roland had ignored him. The way, Eddie
supposed, a color-blind person would ignore someone's description of a
rainbow.
Eddie thought Blaine
also might have trouble thinking around comers.
He realized he could
hear Blaine asking the others if they had any more riddles—even asking Oy. He
could hear the mockery in Blaine's voice, could hear it very well. Sure he
could. Because he was coming back. Back from that fabled zone. Back to see if
he could talk the devil into setting himself on fire. No gun would help this
time, but maybe that was all right. Maybe that was all right because—
Because I shoot with
my mind. My mind. God help me to shoot this overblown calculator with my mind.
Help me shoot it from around the corner.
"Blaine?" he
said, and then, when the computer had acknowledged him: "I have a couple
of riddles." As he spoke, he discovered a wonderful thing: he was
struggling to hold back laughter.
4
"SPEAK, EDDIE OF
NEW YORK."
No time to tell the
others to be on their guard, that anything might happen, and from the look of
them, no need, either. Eddie forgot about them and turned his mil attention to
Blaine.
"What has four
wheels and flies?"
"THE TOWN GARBAGE
WAGON, AS I HAVE ALREADY SAID." Disapproval—and dislike? Yeah,
probably—all but oozing out of that voice. "ARE YOU SO STUPID OR
INATTENTIVE THAT YOU DO NOT REMEMBER? IT WAS THE FIRST RIDDLE YOU ASKED
ME."
Yes,
Eddie thought. And what we all missed—because we were fixated on stumping
you with some brain-buster out of Roland's past or Jake's book—is that the
contest almost ended right there.
"You didn't like
that one, did you, Blaine?"
"I FOUND IT
EXCEEDINGLY STUPID," Blaine agreed. "PERHAPS THAT'S WHY YOU ASKED IT
AGAIN. LIKE CALLS TO LIKE, EDDIE OF NEW YORK, IS IT NOT SO?"
A smile lit Eddie's
face; he shook his finger at the route-map. "Sticks and stones may break
my bones, but words will never hurt me. Or, as we used to say back in the
neighborhood, 'You can rank me to the dogs and back, but I'll never lose the
hard-on I use to fuck your mother.' "
"Hurry up!"
Jake whispered at him. "If you can do something, do it!"
"It doesn't like
silly questions," Eddie said. "It doesn't like silly games. And we knew
that. We knew it from Charlie the Choo-Choo. How stupid can you get?
Hell, that was the book with the answers, not Riddle-De-Dum, but
we never saw it."
Eddie searched for the
other riddle that had been in Jake's Final Essay, found it, posed it.
"Blaine: when is
a door not a door?"
Once again, for the
first time since Susannah had asked Blaine what had four legs and flies, there
came a peculiar clicking sound, like a man popping his tongue on the roof of
his mouth. The pause was briefer than the one which had followed Susannah's
opening riddle, but it was still there—Eddie heard it. "WHEN IT'S A JAR,
OF COURSE" Blaine said. He sounded dour, unhappy. "THIRTEEN MINUTES
AND FIVE SECONDS REMAIN BEFORE TERMINATION, EDDIE OF NEW YORK-WOULD YOU DIE
WITH SUCH STUPID RIDDLES IN YOUR MOUTH?"
Eddie sat bolt
upright, staring at the route-map, and although he could feel warm trickles of
sweat running down his back, that smile on his face widened.
"Quit your
whining, pal. If you want the privilege of smearing us all over the landscape,
you'll just have to put up with a few riddles that aren't quite up to your
standards of logic."
"YOU MUST NOT
SPEAK TO ME IN SUCH A MANNER."
"Or what? You'll
kill me? Don't make me laugh. Just play. You agreed to the game; now play
it."
Thin pink light
flashed briefly out of the route-map. "You're making him angry,"
Little Blaine mourned. "Oh, you're making him so angry."
"Get lost,
squirt," Eddie said, not unkindly, and when the pink glow receded, once
again revealing a flashing green dot that was almost on top of Topeka, Eddie
said: "Answer this one, Blaine: the big moron and the little moron were
standing on the bridge over the River Send. The big moron fell off. How come
the little moron didn't fall off, too?"
"THAT IS UNWORTHY
OF OUR CONTEST. I WILL NOT ANSWER." On the last word Blaine's voice actually
dropped into a lower register, making him sound like a fourteen-year-old coping
with a change of voice.
Roland's eyes were not
just gleaming now but blazing. "What do you say, Blaine? I would
understand you well. Are you saying that you cry off?"
"NO! OF COURSE
NOT! BUT—"
"Then answer, if
you can. Answer the riddle."
"IT'S NOT A
RIDDLE!" Blaine almost bleated. "IT'S A JOKE, SOMETHING FOR STUPID
CHILDREN TO CACKLE OVER IN THE PLAY YARD!"
"Answer now or I
declare the contest over and our ka-tet the winner," Roland said.
He spoke in the dryly confident tone of authority Eddie had first heard in the
town of River Crossing. "You must answer, for it is stupidity you
complain of, not transgression of the rules, which we agreed upon
mutually."
Another of those
clicking sounds, but this time it was much louder— so loud, in fact, that Eddie
winced. Oy flattened his ears against his skull. It was followed by the longest
pause yet; three seconds, at least. Then:
"THE LITTLE MORON
DID NOT FALL OFF BECAUSE HE WAS A LITTLE MORE ON." Blaine sounded sulky.
"MORE PHONETIC COINCIDENCE. TO EVEN ANSWER SUCH AN UNWORTHY RIDDLE MAKES
ME FEEL SOILED."
Eddie held up his
right hand. He rubbed the thumb and forefinger together.
"WHAT DOES THAT
SIGNIFY, FOOLISH CREATURE?"
"It's the world's
smallest violin, playing 'My Heart Pumps Purple Piss for You,' " Eddie
said. Jake fell into an uncontrollable fit of laughter. "But never mind
the cheap New York humor; back to the contest. Why do police lieutenants wear
belts?"
The lights in the
Barony Coach began to flicker. An odd thing was happening to the walls, as
well; they began to fade in and out of true, lunging toward transparency,
perhaps, and then opaquing again. Seeing this phenomenon even out of the comer
of his eye made Eddie feel a bit whoopsy.
"Blaine?
Answer."
"Answer,"
Roland agreed. "Answer, or I declare the contest at an end and hold you to
your promise."
Something touched
Eddie's elbow. He looked down and saw Susannah's small and shapely hand. He
took it, squeezed it, smiled at her. He hoped the smile was more confident than
the man making it felt. They were going to win the contest—he was almost sure
of that—but he had no idea what Blaine would do if and when they did.
"TO ... TO HOLD
UP THEIR PANTS?" Blame's voice firmed, and repeated the question as a
statement. "TO HOLD UP THEIR PANTS. A RIDDLE BASED UPON THE EXAGGERATED
SIMPLICITY OF—"
"Right. Good one,
Blaine, but never mind trying to kill time—it won't work. Next—"
"I INSIST YOU
STOP ASKING THESE SILLY—"
"Then stop the
mono," Eddie said. "If you're that upset, stop right here, and I
will."
"NO."
"Okay, then, on
we go. What's Irish and stays out in back of the house, even in the rain?"
There was another of
those clicks, this time so loud it felt like having a blunt spike driven
against his eardrum. A pause of five seconds. Now the flashing green dot on
the route-map was so close to Topeka that it lit the word like neon each time
it flashed. Then: "PADDY O'FURNITURE."
The correct answer to
a joke-riddle Eddie had first heard in the alley behind Dahlie's, or at some
similar gathering-point, but Blaine had apparently paid a price for forcing
his mind into a channel that could conceive it: the Barony Coach lights were
flashing more wildly than ever, and Eddie could hear a low humming from inside
the walls—the kind of sound your stereo amp made just before its shit blew up.
Pink light stuttered
from the route-map. "Stop!" Little Blaine cried, his voice so wavery
it sounded like the voice of a character from an old Warner Bros. cartoon.
"Stop it, you're killing him!"
What do you think he's
trying to do to us, squirt? Eddie thought.
He considered shooting
Blaine one Jake had told while they'd been sitting around the campfire that
night—What's green, weighs a hundred tons, and lives at the bottom of the
ocean? Moby Snot!—and then didn't. He wanted to stick further inside the bounds
of logic than that one allowed . . . and he could do it. He didn't think he
would have to get much more surreal than the level of, say, a third-grader with
a fair-to-good collection of Garbage Pail Kids cards in order to fuck Blaine
up royally ... and permanently. Because no matter how many emotions his fancy
dipolar circuits had allowed him to mimic, he was still an it—a
computer. Even following Eddie this far into riddledom's Twilight Zone had
caused Blaine's sanity to totter.
"Why do people go
to bed, Blaine?"
"BECAUSE ...
BECAUSE ... GODS DAMN YOU, BECAUSE ..."
A low squalling
started up from beneath them, and suddenly the Barony Coach swayed violently
from right to left. Susannah screamed. Jake was thrown into her lap. The
gunslinger grabbed them both.
"BECAUSE THE BED
WON'T COME TO THEM, GODS DAMN YOU! NINE MINUTES AND FIFTY SECONDS!"
"Give up,
Blaine," Eddie said. "Stop before I have to blow your mind
completely. If you don't quit, it's going to happen. We both know it."
"NO!"
"I got a million
of these puppies. Been hearing them my whole life.
They stick to my mind
the way flies stick to flypaper. Hey, with some people it's recipes. So what do
you say? Want to give?"
"NO! NINE MINUTES
AND THIRTY SECONDS!"
"Okay, Blaine.
You asked for it. Here comes the cruncher. Why did the dead baby cross the
road?"
The mono took another
of those gigantic lurches; Eddie didn't understand how it could still stay on
its track after that, but somehow it did. The screaming from beneath them grew
louder; the walls, floor, and ceiling of the car began to cycle madly between
opacity and transparency. At one moment they were enclosed, at the next they
were rushing over a gray daylight landscape that stretched flat and featureless
to a horizon which ran across the world in a straight line.
The voice which came
from the speakers was now that of a panicky child: "I KNOW IT, JUST A
MOMENT, I KNOW IT, RETRIEVAL IN PROGRESS, ALL LOGIC CIRCUITS IN USE—"
"Answer,"
Roland said.
"I NEED MORE
TIME! YOU MUST GIVE IT TO ME!" Now there was a kind of cracked triumph in
that splintered voice. "NO TEMPORAL LIMITS FOR ANSWERING WERE SET, ROLAND
OF GILEAD, HATEFUL GUNSLINGER OUT OF A PAST THAT SHOULD HAVE STAYED DEAD!"
"No," Roland
agreed, "no time limits were set, you are quite right. But you may not
kill us with a riddle still unanswered, Blaine, and Topeka draws nigh.
Answer!"
The Barony Coach
cycled into invisibility again, and Eddie saw what appeared to be a tall and
rusty grain elevator go flashing past; it was in his view barely long enough
for him to identify it. Now he fully appreciated the maniacal speed at which
they were travelling; perhaps three hundred miles faster than a commercial jet
at cruising speed.
"Let him
alone!" moaned the voice of Little Blaine. "You're killing him, I
say! Killing him!"
"Isn't that 'bout
what he wanted?" Susannah asked in the voice of Detta Walker. "To
die? That's what he said. We don't mind, either. You not so bad, Little Blaine,
but even a world as fucked up as this one has to be better with your big
brother gone. It's just him takin us with him we been objectin to all this
time."
"Last
chance," Roland said. "Answer or give up the goose, Blaine."
"I ... I ... YOU
. . . SIXTEEN LOG THIRTY-THREE . . . ALL COSINE SUBSCRIPTS ... ANTI ... ANTI
... IN ALL THESE YEARS . . . BEAM . . . FLOOD . . . PYTHAGOREAN . . . CARTESIAN
LOGIC . . . CAN I ... DARE I ... A PEACH . . . EAT A PEACH ... ALLMAN BROTHERS
. . . PATRICIA . . . CROCODILE AND WHIPLASH SMILE ... CLOCK OF DIALS . . .
TICK-TOCK, ELEVEN O'CLOCK, THE MAN'S IN THE MOON AND HE'S READY TO ROCK . . . INCESSAMENT
. . . INCESSAMENT, MON CHER ... OH MY HEAD . . . BLAINE . . . BLAINE DARES
. . . BLAINE WILL ANSWER ... I ..."
Blaine, now screaming
in the voice of an infant, lapsed into some other language and began to sing.
Eddie thought it was French. He knew none of the words, but when the drums
kicked in, he knew the song perfectly well: "Velcro Fly" by Z.Z. Top.
The glass over the
route-map blew out. A moment later, the route-map itself exploded from its
socket, revealing twinkling lights and a maze of circuit-boards behind it. The
lights pulsed in time to the drums. Suddenly blue fire flashed out, sizzling the
surface around the hole in the wall where the map had been, scorching it black.
From deeper within that wall, toward Blaine's blunt, bullet-shaped snout, came
a thick grinding noise.
"It crossed the
road because it was stapled to the chicken, you dopey fuck!" Eddie yelled.
He got to his feet and started to walk toward the smoking hole where the
route-map had been. Susannah grabbed at the back of his shirt, but Eddie barely
felt it. Barely knew where he was, in fact. The battle-fire had dropped over
him, burning him everywhere with its righteous heat, sizzling his sight, frying
his synapses and roasting his heart in its holy glow. He had Blaine in his
sights, and although the thing behind the voice was already mortally wounded,
he was unable to stop squeezing the trigger: I shoot with my mind.
"What's the
difference between a truckload of bowling balls and a truckload of dead
woodchucks?" Eddie raved. "You can't unload a truck-load of bowling
balls with a pitchfork!"
A terrible shriek of
mingled anger and agony issued from the hole where the route-map had been. It
was followed by a gust of blue fire, as if somewhere forward of Barony Coach an
electric dragon had exhaled violently. Jake called a warning, but Eddie didn't
need it; his reflexes had been replaced with razor-blades. He ducked, and the
burst of electricity went over his right shoulder, making the hair on that side
of his neck stand up. He drew the gun he wore—a heavy .45 with a worn
sandalwood grip, one of two revolvers which Roland had brought out of
Mid-World's ruin. He kept walking as he bore down on the front of the coach ..
. and of course he kept talking. As Roland had said, Eddie would die
talking. As his old friend Cuthbert had done. Eddie could think of many worse
ways to go, and only one better.
"Say, Blaine, you
ugly, sadistic fuck! Since we're talking riddles, what is the greatest riddle
of the Orient? Many men smoke but Fu Manchu! Get it? No? So solly, Cholly! How
about this one? Why'd the woman name her son Seven and a Half? Because she drew
his name out of a hat!"
He had reached the
pulsing square. Now he lifted Roland's gun and the Barony Coach suddenly filled
with its thunder. He put all six rounds into the hole, fanning the hammer with
the flat of his hand in the way Roland had shown them, knowing only that this
was right, this was proper . . . this was ka, goddammit, fucking ka,
it was the way you ended things if you were a gunslinger. He was one of
Roland's tribe, all right, his soul was probably damned to the deepest pit of
hell, and he wouldn't have changed it for all the heroin in Asia.
"I HATE
YOU!" Blaine cried in his childish voice. The splinters were gone from it
now; it was growing soft, mushy. "I HATE YOU FOREVER!"
"It's not dying
that bothers you, is it?" Eddie asked. The lights in the hole where the
route-map had been were fading. More blue fire flashed, but he hardly had to
pull his head back to avoid it; the flame was small and weak. Soon Blaine would
be as dead as all the Pubes and Grays in Lud. "It's losing that
bothers you."
"HATE . . .
FORRRRrmr . . ."
The word degenerated
into a hum. The hum became a kind of stuttery thudding sound. Then it was gone.
Eddie looked around.
Roland was there, holding Susannah with one arm curved around her butt, as one
might hold a child. Her thighs clasped his waist. Jake stood on the
gunslinger's other side, with Oy at his heel.
Drifting out of the
hole where the route-map had been was a peculiar charred smell, somehow not
unpleasant. To Eddie it smelled like burning leaves in October. Otherwise, the
hole was as dead and dark as a corpse's eye. All the lights in there had gone
out.
Your goose is cooked,
Blaine, Eddie thought, and your turkey's baked.
Happy fuckin Thanksgiving.
5
The shrieking from
beneath the mono stopped. There was one final, grinding thud from up front, and
then those sounds ceased, too. Roland felt his legs and hips sway gently
forward and put out his free hand to steady himself. His body knew what had
happened before his head did:
Blaine's engines had
quit. They were now simply gliding forward along the track. But—
"Back," he
said. "All the way. We're coasting. If we're close enough to Blaine's
termination point, we may still crash."
He led them past the
puddled remains of Blaine's welcoming ice sculpture and to the back of the
coach. "And stay away from that thing," he said, pointing at the
instrument which looked like a cross between a piano and a harpsichord. It
stood on a small platform. "It may shift. Gods, I wish we could see where
we are! Lie down. Wrap your arms over your heads."
They did as he told
them. Roland did the same. He lay there with his chin pressing into the nap of
the royal blue carpet, eyes shut, thinking about what had just happened.
"I cry your
pardon, Eddie," he said. "How the wheel of ka turns! Once I
had to ask the same of my friend Cuthbert . . . and for the same reason.
There's a kind of blindness in me. An arrogant blindness."
"I hardly think
there's any need of pardon-crying," Eddie said. He sounded uncomfortable.
"There is. I held
your jokes in contempt. Now they have saved our lives. I cry your pardon. I
have forgotten the face of my father."
"You don't need
any pardon and you didn't forget anybody's face," Eddie said. "You
can't help your nature, Roland."
The gunslinger
considered this carefully, and discovered something which was wonderful and
awful at the same time: that idea had never occurred to him. Not once in his
whole life. That he was a captive of ka— this he had known since
earliest childhood. But his nature ... his very nature. ..
"Thank you,
Eddie. I think—"
Before Roland could
say what he thought, Blaine the Mono crashed to a final bitter halt. All four
of them were thrown violently up Barony Coach's central aisle, Oy in Jake's
arms and barking. The cabin's front wall buckled and Roland struck it
shoulder-first. Even with the padding (the wall was carpeted and, from the
feel, undercoated with some resilient stuff), the blow was hard enough to numb
him. The chandelier swung forward and tore loose from the ceiling, pelting them
with glass pendants. Jake rolled aside, vacating its landing-zone just in time.
The harpsichord-piano flew off its podium, struck one of the sofas, and
overturned, coming to rest with a discordant brrrannnggg sound. The mono
tilted to the right and the gunslinger braced himself, meaning to cover both
Jake and Susannah with his own body if it overturned completely. Then it
settled back, the floor still a little canted, but at rest.
The trip was over.
The gunslinger raised
himself up. His shoulder was still numb, but the arm below it supported him,
and that was a good sign. On his left, Jake was sitting up and picking glass
beads out of his lap with a dazed expression. On his right, Susannah was
dabbing a cut under Eddie's left eye. "All right," Roland said.
"Who's hur—"
There was an explosion
from above them, a hollow Pow! that reminded Roland of the big-bangers
Cuthbert and Alain had sometimes lit and tossed down drains, or into the
privies behind the scullery for a prank. And once Cuthbert had shot some
big-bangers with his sling. That had been no prank, no childish folly. That had
been—
Susannah uttered a
short cry—more of surprise than fear, the gunslinger thought—and then hazy
daylight was shining down on his face. It felt good. The taste of the air coming
in through the blown emergency exit was even better—sweet with the smell of
rain and damp earth.
There was a bony
rattle, and a ladder—it appeared to be equipped with rungs made of twisted
steel wire—dropped out of a slot up there.
"First they throw
the chandelier at you, then they show you the door," Eddie said. He
struggled to his feet, then got Susannah up. "Okay, I know when I'm not
wanted. Let's make like bees and buzz off."
"Sounds good to
me." She reached toward the cut on Eddie's face again. Eddie took her
fingers, kissed them, and told her to stop poking the moichandise.
"Jake?" the
gunslinger asked. "Okay?"
"Yes," Jake
said. "What about you, Oy?"
"Oy!"
"Guess he
is," Jake said. He raised his wounded hand and looked at it ruefully.
"Hurting again,
is it?" the gunslinger asked.
"Yeah. Whatever
Blaine did to it is wearing off. I don't care, though—I 'm just glad to still
be alive."
"Yes. Life is
good. So is astin. There's some of it left."
"Aspirin, you
mean."
Roland nodded. A pill
of magical properties, but one of the words from Jake's world he would never be
able to say correctly.
"Nine out of ten
doctors recommend Anacin, honey," Susannah said, and when Jake only looked
at her quizzically: "Guess they don't use that one anymore in your when, huh?
Doesn't matter. We're here, sugarpie, right here and just fine, and that's what
matters." She pulled Jake into her arms and gave him a kiss between the
eyes, on the nose, and then flush on the mouth. Jake laughed and blushed bright
red. "That's what matters, and right now that's the only thing in the
world that does."
6
"First aid can
wait," Eddie said. He put his arm around Jake's shoulders and led the boy
to the ladder. "Can you use that hand to climb with?"
"Yes. But I can't
bring Oy. Roland, will you?"
"Yes."
Roland picked Oy up and tucked him into his shirt as he had while descending a
shaft under the city in pursuit of Jake and Gasher. Oy peeked out at Jake with
his bright, gold-ringed eyes. "Up you go."
Jake climbed. Roland
followed close enough so that Oy could sniff the kid's heels by stretching out
his long neck.
"Suze?"
Eddie asked. "Need a boost?"
"And get your
nasty hands all over my well-turned fanny? Not likely, white boy!" Then
she dropped him a wink and began to climb, pulling herself up easily with her
muscular arms and balancing with the stumps of her legs. She went fast, but not
too fast for Eddie; he reached up and gave her a soft pinch where the pinching
was good. "Oh, my purity!" Susannah cried, laughing and rolling her
eyes. Then she was gone. Only Eddie was left, standing by the foot of the
ladder and looking around at the luxury coach which he had believed might well
be their ka-tet's coffin.
You did it, kiddo.
Henry said. Made him set himself on fire. I knew you could, fuckin-A.
Remember when I said that to those scag-bags behind Dahlie's? Jimmie Polio and
those guys? And how they laughed? But you did it. Sent him home with a fuckin
rupture.
Well, it worked,
anyway, Eddie thought, and touched the butt of Roland's
gun without even being aware of it. Well enough for us to walk away one more
time.
He climbed two rungs,
then looked back down. The Barony Coach already felt dead. Long dead,
in fact, just another artifact of a world that had moved on.
"Adios,
Blaine," Eddie said. "So long, partner."
And he followed his
friends out through the emergency exit in the roof.
CHAPTER IV
topeka
1
Jake stood on the
slightly tilted roof of Blame the Mono, looking southeast along the Path of
the Beam. The wind riffled his hair (now quite long and decidedly un-Piperish)
back from his temples and forehead in waves. His eyes were wide with surprise.
He didn't know what he
had expected to see—a smaller and more provincial version of Lud, perhaps—but
what he had not expected was what loomed above the trees of a nearby
park. It was a green roadsign (against the dull gray autumn sky, it almost
screamed with color) with a blue shield mounted on it:
Roland joined him,
lifted Oy gently out of his shirt, and put him down. The humbler sniffed the
pink surface of Blaine's roof, then looked toward the front of the mono. Here
the train's smooth bullet shape was broken by crumpled metal which had peeled
back in jagged wings. Two dark slashes—they began at the mono's tip and
extended to a point about ten yards from where Jake and Roland stood—gored the
roof in parallel lines. At the end of each was a wide, flat metal pole painted
in stripes of yellow and black. These seemed to jut from the top of the mono at
a point just forward of the Barony Coach. To Jake they looked a little like
football goalposts.
"Those are the
piers he talked about hitting," Susannah murmured.
Roland nodded.
"We got off
lucky, big boy, you know it? If this thing had been going much faster ..."
"Ka, "
Eddie said from behind them. He sounded as if he might be smiling.
Roland nodded.
"Just so. Ka."
Jake dismissed the
transteel goalposts and turned back toward the sign. He was half convinced it
would be gone, or that it would say something else (mid-world toll road, perhaps, or beware of demons), but it was still there and still said the
same thing.
"Eddie? Susannah?
Do you see that?"
They looked along his
pointing finger. For a moment—one long enough for Jake to fear he was having a
hallucination—neither of them said anything. Then, softly, Eddie said:
"Holy shit. Are we back home? If we are, where are all the people? And if
something like Blaine has been stopping off in Topeka—our Topeka,
Topeka, Kansas—how come I haven't seen anything about it on Sixty
Minutes?"
"What's Sixty
Minutes'?" Susannah asked. She was shading her eyes, looking southeast
toward the sign.
"TV show,"
Eddie said. "You missed it by five or ten years. Old white guys in ties.
Doesn't matter. That sign—"
"It's Kansas, all
right," Susannah said. "Our Kansas. I guess." She had
spotted another sign, just visible over the trees. Now she pointed until Jake,
Eddie, and Roland had all seen it:
"There a Kansas
in your world, Roland?"
"No," Roland
replied, looking at the signs, "we're far beyond the boundaries of the world
I knew. I was far beyond most of the world I knew long before I met you three.
This place . .."
He stopped and cocked
his head to one side, as if he was listening to some sound almost too distant
to hear. And the expression on his face ... Jake didn't like it much.
"Say,
kiddies!" Eddie said brightly. "Today we're studying Wacky Geography
in Mid-World. You see, boys and girls, in Mid-World you start in New York,
travel southeast to Kansas, and then continue along the Path of the Beam until
you come to the Dark Tower . .. which happens to be smack in the middle of
everything. First, fight the giant lobsters! Next, ride the psychotic train!
And then, after a visit to our snackbar for a popkin or two—"
"Do you hear
anything?" Roland broke in. "Any of you?"
Jake listened. He
heard the wind combing through the trees of the nearby park—their leaves had
just begun to turn—and he heard the click of Oy's toenails as he strolled back
toward them along the roof of the Barony Coach. Then Oy stopped, so even that
sound—
A hand seized him by
the arm, making him jump. It was Susannah. Her head was tilted, her eyes wide.
Eddie was also listening. Oy, too; his ears were up and he was whining far down
in his throat.
Jake felt his arms
ripple with gooseflesh. At the same time he felt his mouth tighten in a
grimace. The sound, though very faint, was the auditory version of biting a
lemon. And he'd heard something like it before. Back when he was only five or
six, there had been a crazy guy in Central Park who thought he was a musician .
. . well, there were lots of crazy guys in Central Park who thought they
were musicians, but this was the only one Jake had ever seen who played a
workshop tool. The guy had had a sign beside his upturned hat which read world's greatest SAW-PLAYER!
SOUNDS HAWAIIAN DOESN'T IT! PLEASE CONTRIBUTE TO MY WELFARE!
Greta Shaw had been
with Jake the first time he encountered the saw-player, and Jake remembered how
she had hurried past the guy. Just sitting there like a cellist in a symphony
orchestra he'd been, only with a rust-speckled handsaw spread across his open
legs; Jake remembered the expression of comic horror on Mrs. Shaw's face, and
the quiver of her pressed-together lips, as if—yes, as if she'd just bitten
into a lemon.
This sound wasn't exactly
like the one
(SOUNDS HAWAIIAN
DOESN'T IT)
the guy in the park
had made by vibrating the blade of his saw, but it was close: a wavery,
trembly, metallic sound that made you feel like your sinuses were filling up
and your eyes would shortly begin to gush water. Was it coming from ahead of
them? Jake couldn't tell. It seemed to be coming from everywhere and nowhere;
at the same time, it was so low he might have been tempted to believe the whole
thing was just his imagination, if the others hadn't—
"Watch out!"
Eddie cried. "Help me, you guys! I think he's going to faint!"
Jake wheeled toward
the gunslinger and saw that his face had gone as white as cottage cheese above
the dusty no-color of his shirt. His eyes were wide and blank. One corner of
his mouth twitched spastically, as if an invisible fishhook were buried there.
"Jonas and
Reynolds and Depape," he said. "The Big Coffin Hunters. And her.
The Coos. They were the ones. They were the ones who—"
Standing on the roof
of the mono in his dusty, broken boots, Roland tottered. On his face was the
greatest look of misery Jake had ever seen.
"Oh Susan,"
he said. "Oh, my dear."
2
They caught him, they
formed a protective ring around him, and the gunslinger felt hot with guilt and
self-loathing. What had he done to deserve such enthusiastic protectors? What,
besides tear them out of their known and ordinary lives as ruthlessly as a man
might tear weeds out of his garden?
He tried to tell them
he was all right, they could stand back, he was fine, but no words would come
out; that terrible wavery sound had transported him back to the box canyon
west of Hambry all those years ago. Depape and Reynolds and old limping Jonas.
Yet most of all it was the woman from the hill he hated, and from black depths
of feeling only a very young man can reach. Ah, but how could he have done
aught else but hate them? His heart had been broken. And now, all these years
later, it seemed to him that the most horrible fact of human existence was that
broken hearts mended.
My first thought was,
he lied in every word/That hoary cripple, with malicious eye
...
What words? Whose
poem?
He didn't know, but he
knew that women could lie, too; women who hopped and grinned and saw too much
from the comers of their rheumy old eyes. It didn't matter who had written the
lines of poesy; the words were true words, and that was all that mattered.
Neither Eldred Jonas nor the crone on the hill had been of Marten's stature—nor
even of Walter's—when it came to evil, but they had been evil enough.
Then, after... in the
box canyon west of town . . . that sound . . . that, and the screams of wounded
men and horses . . . for once in his life, even the normally voluble Cuthbert
had been struck silent.
But all that had been
long ago, in another when; in the here and now, the warbling sound was
either gone or had temporarily fallen below the threshold of audibility. They
would hear it again, though. He knew that as well as he knew the fact that he
walked a road leading to damnation.
He looked up at the
others and managed a smile. The trembling at the comer of his mouth had quit,
and that was something.
"I'm all
right," he said. "But hear me well: this is very close to where
Mid-World ends, very close to where End-World begins. The first great course of
our quest is finished. We have done well; we have remembered the faces of our
fathers; we have stood together and been true to one another. But now we have
come to a thinny. We must be very careful."
"A thinny?"
Jake asked, looking around nervously.
"Places where the
fabric of existence is almost entirely worn away. There are more since the
force of the Dark Tower began to fail. Do you remember what we saw below us
when we left Lud?"
They nodded solemnly,
remembering ground which had fused to black glass, ancient pipes which gleamed
with turquoise witchlight, misshapen bird-freaks with wings like great
leathern sails. Roland suddenly could not bear to have them grouped around him
as they were, looking down on him as folk might look down on a rowdy who had
fallen in a barroom brawl.
He lifted his hands to
his friends—his new friends. Eddie took them and helped him to his feet. The
gunslinger fixed his enormous will on not swaying and stood steady.
"Who was
Susan?" Susannah asked. The crease down the center of her forehead
suggested she was troubled, and probably by more than a coincidental
similarity of names.
Roland looked at her,
then at Eddie, then at Jake, who had dropped to one knee so he could scratch
behind Oy's ears.
"I'll tell
you," he said, "but this isn't the place or time."
"You keep sayin
that," Susannah said. "You wouldn't just be putting us off again,
would you?"
Roland shook his head.
"You shall hear my tale—this part of it, at least—but not on top of this
metal carcass."
"Yeah," Jake
said. "Being up here is like playing on a dead dinosaur or something. I
keep thinking Blaine's going to come back to life and start, I don't know,
screwing around with our heads again."
"That sound is
gone," Eddie said. "The thing that sounded like a wah-wah
pedal."
"It reminded me
of this old guy I used to see in Central Park,"
Jake said.
"The man with the
saw?" Susannah asked. Jake looked up at her, his eyes round with surprise,
and she nodded. "Only he wasn't old when I used to see him. It's not just
the geography that's wacky here. Time's kind of funny, too."
Eddie put an arm
around her shoulders and gave her a brief squeeze. "Amen to that."
Susannah turned to
Roland. Her look was not accusing, but there was a level and open
measurement in her eyes that the gunslinger could not help but admire.
"I'm holding you to your promise, Roland. I want to know about this girl
that got my name."
"You shall
hear," Roland repeated. "For now, though, let's get off this
monster's back."
3
That was easier said
than done. Blaine had come to rest slightly askew in an outdoor version of the
Cradle of Lud (a littered trail of torn pink metal lay along one side of this,
marking the end of Blaine's last journey), and it was easily twenty-five feet
from the roof of the Barony Coach to the cement. If there was a
descent-ladder, like the one which had popped conveniently through the
emergency hatch, it had jammed when they crunched to a halt.
Roland unslung his
purse, rummaged, and removed the deerskin harness they used for carrying
Susannah when the going got too rough for her wheelchair. The chair, at least,
would not worry them anymore, the gunslinger reflected; they had left it behind
in their mad scramble to board Blaine.
"What you want
that for?" Susannah asked truculently. She always sounded truculent when
the harness came into view. I hate them honky mahfahs down in Miss'ippi
worse'n I hate that harness, she had once told Eddie in the voice of Detta
Walker, but sometimes it be a close thing, sugar.
"Soft, Susannah
Dean, soft," the gunslinger said, smiling a little. He unbraided the
network of straps which made up the harness, set the seat-piece aside, then
pigtailed the straps back together. He wedded this to his last good hank of
rope with an old-fashioned sheetbend knot. As he worked, he listened for the
warbling of the thinny ... as the four of them had listened for the
god-drums; as he and Eddie had listened for the lobstrosities to begin asking
their lawyerly questions ("Dad-a-cham? Did-a-chee? Dum-a-chum?") as
they came tumbling out of the waves each night.
Ka is a wheel,
he thought. Or, as Eddie liked to say, whatever went around came around.
When the rope was
finished, he fashioned a loop at the bottom of the braided section. Jake
stepped a foot into it with perfect confidence, gripped the rope with one hand,
and settled Oy into the crook of his other arm. Oy looked around nervously,
whined, stretched his neck, licked Jake's face.
"You're not
afraid, are you?" Jake asked the humbler.
" 'Fraid,"
Oy agreed, but he was quiet enough as Roland and Eddie lowered Jake down the
side of the Barony Coach. The rope wasn't quite long enough to take him all the
way down, but Jake had no trouble twisting his foot free and dropping the last
four feet. He set Oy down. The bumbler trotted off, sniffing, and lifted his
leg against the side of the terminal building. This was nowhere near as grand
as the Cradle of Lud, but it had an old-fashioned look that Roland liked—white
boards, overhanging eaves, high, narrow windows, what looked like slate
shingles. It was a Western look. Written in gold gilt on a sign which
stretched above the terminal's line of doors was this message:
ATCHISON, TOPEKA, AND
SANTA FE
Towns, Roland
supposed, and that last one sounded familiar to him; had there not been a Santa
Fe in the Barony of Mejis? But that led back toward Susan, lovely Susan at the
window with her hair unbraided and all down her back, the smell of her like
jasmine and rose and honeysuckle and old sweet hay, smells of which the oracle
in the mountains had been able to make only the palest mimicry. Susan lying
back and looking solemnly up at him, then smiling and putting her hands behind
her head so that her breasts rose, as if aching for his hands.
If you love me,
Roland, then love me . . . bird and bear and hare and fish...
". . .
next?"
He looked around at
Eddie, having to use all of his will to pull himself back from Susan Delgado's
when. There were thinnies here in Topeka, all right, and of many sorts.
"My mind was wandering, Eddie. Cry your pardon."
"Susannah next?
That's what I asked."
Roland shook his head.
"You next, then Susannah. I'll go last."
"Will you be
okay? With your hand and all?"
"I'll be
fine."
Eddie nodded and stuck
his foot into the loop. When Eddie had first come into Mid-World, Roland could
have lowered him easily by himself, two fingers short the full complement or
no, but Eddie had been without his drug for months now, and had put on ten or
fifteen pounds of muscle. Roland accepted Susannah's help gladly enough, and
together they lowered him down.
"Now you,
lady," Roland said, and smiled at her. It felt more natural to smile these
days.
"Yes." But
for the nonce she only stood there, biting her lower lip.
"What is
it?"
Her hand went to her
stomach and rubbed there, as if it ached or griped her. He thought she would
speak, but she shook her head and said, "Nothing."
"I don't believe
that. Why do you rub your belly? Are you hurt? Were you hurt when we
stopped?"
She took her hand off
her tunic as if the flesh just south of her navel had grown hot. "No. I'm
fine."
"Are you?"
Susannah seemed to
think this over very carefully. "We'll talk," she said at last.
"We'll palaver, if you like that better. But you were right before,
Roland—this isn't the place or time."
"All four of us,
or just you and me and Eddie?"
"Just you and me,
Roland," she said, and poked the stump of her leg through the loop.
"Just one hen and one rooster, at least to start with. Now lower away, if
you please."
He did, frowning down
at her, hoping with all his heart that his first idea—the one that had come to
mind as soon as he saw that restlessly rubbing hand—was wrong. Because she had
been in the speaking ring, and the demon that denned there had had its way with
her while Jake was trying to cross between the worlds. Sometimes—often—demonic
contact changed things.
Never for the better,
in Roland's experience.
He pulled his rope
back up after Eddie had caught Susannah around the waist and helped her to the
platform. The gunslinger walked forward to one of the piers which had torn through
the train's bullet snout, fashioning the rope's end into a shake-loop as he
went. He tossed this over the pier, snubbed it (being careful not to twitch the
rope to the left), and then lowered himself to the platform himself, bent at
the waist and leaving boot-tracks on Blaine's pink side.
"Too bad to lose
the rope and harness," Eddie remarked when Roland was beside them.
"I ain't sorry
about that harness," Susannah said. "I'd rather crawl along the
pavement until I got chewin-gum all the way up my arms to the elbows."
"We haven't lost
anything," Roland said. He snugged his hand into the rawhide foot-loop and
snapped it hard to the left. The rope slithered down from the pier, Roland
gathering it in almost as fast as it came down.
"Neat
trick!" Jake said.
"Eat! Rick!"
Oy agreed.
"Cort?"
Eddie asked.
"Cort,"
Roland agreed, smiling.
"The drill
instructor from hell," Eddie said. "Better you than me, Roland.
Better you than me."
4
As they walked toward
the doors leading into the station, that low, liquid warbling sound began
again. Roland was amused to see all three of his cohorts wrinkle their noses
and pull down the comers of their mouths at the same time; it made them look
like blood family as well as ka-tet. Susannah pointed toward the park.
The signs looming over the "trees were wavering slightly, the way things
did in a heat-haze.
"Is that from the
thinny?" Jake asked.
Roland nodded.
"Will we be able
to get around it?"
"Yes. Thinnies
are dangerous in much the way that swamps full of quicksand and saligs are
dangerous. Do you know those things?"
"We know
quicksand," Jake said. "And if saligs are long green things with big
teeth, we know them, too."
"That's what they
are."
Susannah turned to
look back at Blaine one last time. "No silly questions and no silly
games. The book was right about that." From Blaine she turned her eyes to
Roland. "What about Beryl Evans, the woman who wrote Charlie the
Choo-Choo? Do you think she's part of this? That we might even meet her?
I'd like to thank her. Eddie figured it out, but—"
"It's possible, I
suppose," Roland said, "but on measure, I think not. My world is like
a huge ship that sank near enough shore for most of the wreckage to wash up on
the beach. Much of what we find is fascinating, some of it may be useful, if
ka allows, but all of it is still wreckage. Senseless wreckage." He
looked around. "Like this place, I think."
"I wouldn't
exactly call it wrecked," Eddie said. "Look at the paint on the
station—it's a little rusty from the gutters up under the eaves, but it hasn't
peeled anywhere that I can see." He stood in front of the doors and ran
his fingers down one of the glass panels. They left four clear tracks behind.
"Dust and plenty of it, but no cracks. I'd say that this building has been
left unmaintained at most since .. . the start of the summer, maybe?"
He looked at Roland,
who shrugged and nodded. He was listening with only half an ear and paying
attention with only half a mind. The rest of him was fixed upon two things: the
warble of the thinny, and keeping away the memories that wanted to swamp him.
"But Lud had been
going to wrack and ruin for centuries" Susannah said. "This
place ... it may or may not be Topeka, but what it really looks like to me is
one of those creepy little towns on The Twilight Zone. You boys probably
don't remember that one, but—"
"Yes, I do,"
Eddie and Jake said in perfect unison, then looked at each other and laughed.
Eddie stuck out his hand and Jake slapped it.
"They still show
the reruns," Jake said.
"Yeah, all the
time," Eddie added. "Usually sponsored by bankruptcy lawyers who look
like shorthair terriers. And you're right. This place isn't like Lud.
Why would it be? It's not in the same world as Lud. I don't know where
we crossed over, but—" He pointed again at the blue Interstate 70 shield,
as if that proved his case beyond a shadow of a doubt.
"If it's Topeka,
where are the people?" Susannah asked.
Eddie shrugged and
raised his hands—who knows?
Jake put his forehead
against the glass of the center door, cupped his hands to the sides of his
face, and peered in. He looked for several seconds, then saw something that
made him pull back fast. "Oh-oh," he said. "No wonder the town's
so quiet."
Roland stepped up
behind Jake and peered in over the boy's head, cupping his own hands to reduce
his reflection. The gunslinger drew two conclusions before even looking at what
Jake had seen. The first was that although this was most assuredly a train
station, it wasn't really a Blame station . . . not a cradle. The other
was that the station did indeed belong to Eddie's, Jake's, and Susannah's world
.. . but perhaps not to their where.
It's the thinny. We'll
have to be careful.
Two corpses were
leaning together on one of the long benches that filled most of the room; but
for their hanging, wrinkled faces and black hands, they might have been
revellers who had fallen asleep in the station after an arduous party and
missed the last train home. On the wall behind them was a board marked departures, with the names of cities
and towns and baronies marching down it in a line. denver, read one. wichita,
read another. omaha, read
a third. Roland had once known a one-eyed gambler named Omaha; he had died with
a knife in his throat at a Watch Me table. He had stepped into the clearing at
the end of the path with his head thrown back, and his last breath had sprayed
blood all the way up to the ceiling. Hanging down from the ceiling of this room
(which Roland's stupid and laggard mind insisted on thinking of as a stage
rest, as if this were a stop along some half-forgotten road like the one that
had brought him to Tull) was a beautiful four-sided clock. Its hands had
stopped at 4:14, and Roland supposed they would never move again. It was a sad
thought. . . but this was a sad world. He could not see any other dead people,
but experience suggested that where there were two dead, there were likely
four more dead somewhere out of sight. Or four dozen.
"Should we go
in?" Eddie asked.
"Why?" the
gunslinger countered. "We have no business here; it doesn't lie along the
Path of the Beam."
"You'd make a
great tour-guide," Eddie said sourly. " 'Keep up, everyone, and
please don't go wandering off into the—' "
Jake interrupted with
a request Roland didn't understand. "Do either of you guys have a
quarter?" The boy was looking at Eddie and Susannah. Beside him was a
square metal box. Written on it in blue was:
The Topeka
Capital-Journal covers Kansas like no other! Your hometown paper! Read
it every day!
Eddie shook his head,
amused. "Lost all my change at some point. Probably climbing a tree, just
before you joined us, in an all-out effort to avoid becoming snack-food for a
robot bear. Sorry."
"Wait a minute .
. . wait a minute . . ." Susannah had her purse open and was rummaging
through it in a way that made Roland grin broadly in spite of all his
preoccupations. It was so damned womanly, somehow. She turned over
crumpled Kleenex, shook them to make sure there was nothing caught inside,
fished out a compact, looked at it, dropped it back, came up with a comb, dropped
that back—
She was too absorbed
to look up as Roland strode past her, drawing his gun from the docker's clutch
he had built her as he went. He fired a single time. Susannah let out a little
scream, dropping her purse and slapping at the empty holster high up under her
left breast.
"Honky, you
scared the livin Jesus out of me!"
"Take better care
of your gun, Susannah, or the next time someone takes it from you, the hole may
be between your eyes instead of in a ... what is it, Jake? A news-telling
device of some kind? Or does it hold paper?"
"Both." Jake
looked startled. Oy had withdrawn halfway down the platform and was looking at
Roland mistrustfully. Jake poked his finger at the bullet-hole in the center of
the newspaper box's locking device. A little curl of smoke was drifting from
it.
"Go on,"
Roland said. "Open it."
Jake pulled the
handle. It resisted for a moment, then a piece of metal clunked down somewhere
inside, and the door opened. The box itself was empty; the sign on the back
wall read when all papers are gone,
please take display copy. Jake worked it out of its wire holder, and
they all gathered round.
"What in God's
name . . . ?" Susannah's whisper was both horrified and accusing.
"What does it mean? What in God's name happened^"
Below the newspaper's
name, taking up most of the front page's top half, were screaming black
letters:
"CAPTAIN
TRIPS" SUPERFLU RAGES UNCHECKED
Govt.
Leaders May Have Fled Country
Topeka
Hospitals Jammed with Sick, Dying
Millions
Pray for Cure
"Read it
aloud," Roland said. "The letters are in your speech, I cannot make
them all out, and I would know this story very well."
Jake looked at Eddie,
who nodded impatiently.
Jake unfolded the
newspaper, revealing a dot-picture (Roland had seen pictures of this type; they
were called "fottergrafs") which shocked them all: it showed a
lakeside city with its skyline in flames. cleveland
fires burn unchecked, the caption beneath read.
"Read, kid!"
Eddie told him. Susannah said nothing; she was already reading the story—the
only one on the front page—over his shoulder. Jake cleared his throat as if it
were suddenly dry, and began.
5
"The byline says
John Corcoran, plus staff and AP reports. That means a lot of different people
worked on it, Roland. Okay. Here goes. 'America's greatest crisis—and the
world's, perhaps—deepened overnight as the so-called superflu, known as
Tube-Neck in the Midwest and Captain Trips in California, continues to spread.
" 'Although the
death-toll can only be estimated, medical experts say the total at this point
is horrible beyond comprehension: twenty to thirty million dead in the
continental U.S. alone is the estimate given by Dr. Morris Hackford of Topeka's
St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center. Bodies are being burned from Los
Angeles, California, to Boston, Massachusetts, in crematoria, factory
furnaces, and at landfill sites.
" 'Here in
Topeka, the bereaved who are still well enough and strong enough to do so are
urged to take their dead to one of three sites: the disposal plant north of
Oakland Billard Park; the pit area at Heartland Park Race Track; the landfill
on Southeast Sixty-first Street, east of Forbes Field. Landfill users should
approach by Berryton Road; California has been blocked by car wrecks and at
least one downed Air Force transport plane, sources tell us.' "
Jake glanced up at his
friends with frightened eyes, looked behind him at the silent railway station,
then looked back down at the newspaper.
" 'Dr. April
Montoya of the Stormont-Vail Regional Medical Center points out that the
death-toll, horrifying as it is, constitutes only part of this terrible story.
"For every person who has died so far as a result of this new
flu-strain," Montoya said, "there are another six who are lying ill
in their homes, perhaps as many as a dozen. And, so far as we have been able to
determine, the recovery rate is zero." Coughing, she then told this
reporter: "Speaking personally, I'm not making any plans for the
weekend."
" 'In other local
developments:
" 'All commercial
flights out of Forbes and Phillip Billard have been cancelled.
" 'All Amtrak
rail travel has been suspended, not just in Topeka but across all of Kansas.
The Gage Boulevard Amtrak station has been closed until further notice.
" 'All Topeka
schools have also been closed until further notice. This includes Districts
437, 345, 450 (Shawnee Heights), 372, and 501 (metro Topeka). Topeka Lutheran
and Topeka Technical College are also closed, as is KU at Lawrence.
" 'Topekans must
expect brownouts and perhaps blackouts in the days and weeks ahead. Kansas
Power and Light has announced a "slow shutdown" of the Kaw River
Nuclear Plant in Wamego. Although no one in KawNuke's Office of Public
Relations answered this newspaper's calls, a recorded announcement cautions
that there is no plant emergency, that this is a safety measure only. KawNuke
will return to on-line status, the announcement concludes, "when the
current crisis is past." Any comfort afforded by this statement is in
large part negated by the recorded statement's final words, which are not
"Goodbye" or "Thank you for calling" but "God will
help us through our time of trial." ' "
Jake paused, following
the story to the next page, where there were more pictures: a burned-out panel
truck overturned on the steps of the Kansas Museum of Natural History; traffic
on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge stalled bumper to bumper; piles of
corpses in Times Square. One body, Susannah saw, had been hung from a lamppost,
and that brought back nightmarish memories of the run for the Cradle of Lud she
and Eddie had made after parting from the gunslinger; memories of Luster and
Winston and Jeeves and Maud. When the god-drums started up this time, it was
Spanker's stone what came out of the hat, Maud had said. We set him to
dance. Except, of course, what she'd meant was that they had set him to hang.
As they had hung some folks, it seemed, back home in little old New York. When
things got weird enough, someone always found a lynchrope, it seemed.
Echoes. Everything
echoed now. They bounced back and forth from one world to the other, not fading
as ordinary echoes did but growing and becoming more terrible. Like the
god-drums, Susannah thought, and shuddered.
" 'In national
developments,' " Jake read, " 'conviction continues to grow that,
after denying the superflu's existence during its early days, when quarantine
measures might still have had some effect, national leaders have fled to
underground retreats which were created as brain-trust shelters in case of
nuclear war. Vice-President Bush and key members of the Reagan cabinet have not
been seen during the last forty-eight hours. Reagan himself has not been seen
since Sunday morning, when he attended prayer services at Green Valley
Methodist Church in San Simeon.
" ' "They
have gone to the bunkers like Hitler and the rest of the Nazi sewer-rats at the
end of World War II," said Rep. Steve Sloan. When asked if he had any
objection to being quoted by name, Kansas's first-term representative, a
Republican, laughed and said: "Why should I? I've got a real fine case
myself. I'll be so much dust in the wind come this time next week."
" 'Fires, most
likely set, continue to ravage Cleveland, Indianapolis, and Terre Haute.
" 'A gigantic
explosion centered near Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium was apparently not nuclear
in nature, as was first feared, but occurred as the result of a natural gas
buildup caused by unsupervised . . .' "
Jake let the paper
drop from his hands. A gust of wind caught it and blew it the length of the
platform, the few folded sheets separating as they went. Oy stretched his neck
and snagged one of these as it went by. He trotted toward Jake with it in his
mouth, as obedient as a dog with a stick.
"No, Oy, I don't
want it," Jake said. He sounded ill and very young.
"At least we know
where all the folks are," Susannah said, bending and taking the paper from
Oy. It was the last two pages. They were crammed with obituaries printed in the
tiniest type she had ever seen. No pictures, no causes of death, no
announcement of burial services. Just this one died, beloved of so-and-so, that
one died, beloved of Jill-n-Joe, t'other one died, beloved of them-and-those.
All in that tiny, not-quite-even type. It was the jaggedness of the type which
convinced her it was all real.
But how hard they
tried to honor their dead, even at the end, she thought,
and a lump rose in her throat. How hard they tried.
She folded the quarto
together and looked on the back—the last page of the Capital-Journal. It
showed a picture of Jesus Christ, eyes sad, hands outstretched, forehead marked
from his crown of thorns. Below it, three stark words in huge type:
PRAY FOR US
She looked up at
Eddie, eyes accusing. Then she handed him the newspaper, one brown finger
tapping the date at the top. It was June 24, 1986. Eddie had been drawn into
the gunslinger's world a year later.
He held it for a long
time, fingers slipping back and forth across the date, as if the passage of his
finger would somehow cause it to change. Then he looked up at them and shook
his head. "No. I can't explain this town, this paper, or the dead people
in that station, but I can set you straight about one thing—everything was fine
in New York when I left. Wasn't it, Roland?"
The gunslinger looked
a trifle sour. "Nothing in your city seemed very fine to me, but the
people who lived there did not seem to be survivors of such a plague as this,
no."
"There was
something called Legionnaires' disease," Eddie said. "And AIDS, of
course—"
"That's the sex
one, right?" Susannah asked. "Transmitted by fruits and drug addicts?"
"Yes, but calling
gays fruits isn't the done thing in my when," Eddie said. He tried a
smile, but it felt stiff and unnatural on his face and he put it away again.
"So this . . .
this never happened," Jake said, tentatively touching the face of Christ
on the back page of the paper.
"But it
did," Roland said. "It happened in June-sowing of the year one
thousand nine hundred and eighty-six. And here we are, in the aftermath of that
plague. If Eddie's right about the length of time that has gone by, the plague
of this 'superflu' was this past June-sowing. We're in Topeka, Kansas,
in the Reap of eighty-six. That's the when of it. As to the where,
all we know is that it's not Eddie's. It might be yours, Susannah, or yours,
Jake, because you left your world before this arrived." He tapped the date
on the paper, then looked at Jake. "You said something to me once. I doubt
if you remember, but I do; it's one of the most important things anyone has
ever said to me: 'Go, then, there are other worlds than these.' "
"More
riddles," Eddie said, scowling.
"Is it not a fact
that Jake Chambers died once and now stands before us, alive and well? Or do
you doubt my story of his death under the mountains? That you have doubted my
honesty from time to time is something I know. And I suppose you have your
reasons."
Eddie thought it over,
then shook his head. "You lie when it suits your purpose, but I think that
when you told us about Jake, you were too fucked up to manage anything but the
truth."
Roland was startled to
find himself hurt by what Eddie had said—You lie when it suits your purpose—but
he went on. After all, it was essentially true.
"We went back to
time's pool," the gunslinger said, "and pulled him out before he
could drown."
"You
pulled him out," Eddie corrected.
"You helped,
though," Roland said, "if only by keeping me alive, you helped, but
let that go for now. It's beside the point. What's more to it is that there are
many possible worlds, and an infinity of doors leading into them. This is one of
those worlds; the thinny we can hear is one of those doors . . . only one much
bigger than the ones we found on the beach."
"How
big?" Eddie asked. "As big as a warehouse loading door, or as big as
the warehouse?"
Roland shook his head
and raised his hands palms to the sky—who knows?
"This
thinny," Susannah said. "We're not just near it, are we? We
came through it. That's how we got here, to this version of
Topeka."
"We may
have," Roland admitted. "Did any of you feel something strange? A
sensation of vertigo, or transient nausea?"
They shook their
heads. Oy, who had been watching Jake closely, also shook his head this time.
"No," Roland
said, as if he had expected this. "But we were concentrating on the
riddling—"
"Concentrating on
not getting killed," Eddie grunted.
"Yes. So perhaps
we passed through without being aware. In any case, thinnies aren't
natural—they are sores on the skin of existence, able to exist because things
are going wrong. Things in all worlds."
"Because things
are wrong at the Dark Tower," Eddie said.
Roland nodded.
"And even if this place—this when, this where—is not the ka
of your world now, it might become that ka. This plague—or others even
worse—could spread. Just as the thinnies will continue to spread, growing in
size and number. I've seen perhaps half a dozen in my years of searching for
the Tower, and heard maybe two dozen more. The first ... the first one 1 ever
saw was when I was still very young. Near a town called Hambry." He rubbed
his hand up his cheek again, and was not surprised to find sweat amid the
bristles. Love me, Roland. If you love me, then love me.
"Whatever
happened to us, it bumped us out of your world, Roland," Jake said.
"We've fallen off the Beam. Look." He pointed at the sky. The clouds
were moving slowly above them, but no longer in the direction Blame's smashed
snout was pointing. Southeast was still southeast, but the signs of the Beam
which they had grown so used to following were gone.
"Does it
matter?" Eddie asked. "I mean ... the Beam may be gone, but
the Tower exists in all worlds, doesn't it?"
"Yes,"
Roland said, "but it may not be accessible from all worlds."
The year before
beginning his wonderful and fulfilling career as a heroin addict, Eddie had
done a brief and not-very-successful turn as a bicycle messenger. Now he
remembered certain office-building elevators he'd been in while making
deliveries, buildings with banks or investment firms in them, mostly. There
were some floors where you couldn't stop the car and get off unless you had a
special card to swipe through the slot below the numbers. When the elevator
came to those locked-off floors, the number in the window was replaced by an X.
"I think,"
Roland said, "we need to find the Beam again."
"I'm
convinced," Eddie said. "Come on, let's get going." He took a
couple of steps, then turned back to Roland with one eyebrow raised.
"Where?"
"The way we were
going," Roland said, as if that should have been obvious, and walked past
Eddie in his dusty, broken boots, headed for the park across the way.
CHAPTER V
TURNPIKIN’
1
Roland walked to the
end of the platform, kicking bits of pink metal out of his way as he went. At
the stairs, he paused and looked back at them somberly. "Mare dead. Be
ready."
"They're not. . .
um ... runny, are they?" Jake asked.
Roland frowned, then
his face cleared as he understood what Jake meant. "No. Not runny.
Dry."
"That's all
right, then," Jake said, but he held his hand out to Susannah, who was
being carried by Eddie for the time being. She gave him a smile and folded her
fingers around his.
At the foot of the
stairs leading down to the commuter parking lot at the side of the station,
half a dozen corpses lay together like a collapsed cornshock. Two were women,
three were men. The sixth was a child in a stroller. A summer spent dead in the
sun and rain and heat (not to mention at the mercy of any stray cats, coons, or
woodchucks that might be passing) had given the toddler a look of ancient
wisdom and mystery, like a child mummy discovered in an Incan pyramid. Jake
supposed from the faded blue outfit it was wearing that it had been a boy, but
it was impossible to tell for sure. Eyeless, lipless, its skin faded to dusky
gray, it made a joke of gender—why did the dead baby cross the road? Because it
was stapled to the superflu.
Even so, the toddler
seemed to have voyaged through Topeka's empty post-plague months better than
the adults around it. They were little more than skeletons with hair. In a
scrawny bunch of skin-wrapped bones that had once been fingers, one of the men
clutched the handle of a suitcase that looked like the Samsonites Jake's
parents owned. As with the baby (as with all of them), his eyes were
gone; huge dark sockets stared at Jake. Below them, a ring of discolored teeth
jutted in a pugnacious grin. What took you so long, kid? the dead man
who was still clutching his suitcase seemed to be asking. Been waiting for
you, and it's been a long hot summer!
Where were you guys
hoping to go? Jake wondered. Just where in the crispy crap
did you think might be safe enough? Des Moines? Sioux City? Fargo? The moon?
They went down the
stairs, Roland first, the others behind him, Jake still holding Susannah's hand
with Oy at his heels. The long-bodied bumbler seemed to descend each step in
two stages, like a double trailer taking speed-bumps.
"Slow down,
Roland," Eddie said. "I want to check the crip spaces before we go
on. We might get lucky."
"Crip
spaces?" Susannah said. "What're those?"
Jake shrugged. He
didn't know. Neither did Roland.
Susannah switched her
attention to Eddie. "I only ask, sugarpie, because it sounds a little
on-pleasant. You know, like calling Negroes 'blacks' or gay folks 'fruits.' I
know I'm just a poor ignorant pickaninny from the dark ages of 1964, but—"
"There."
Eddie pointed at a rank of signs marking the parking-row closest to the
station. There were actually two signs to a post, the top of each pair blue and
white, the bottom red and white. When they drew a little closer, Jake saw the
one on top was a wheelchair symbol. The one on the bottom was a warning: $200 fine for improper use of handicapped PARKING
SPACE. STRICTLY ENFORCED BY TOPEKA P.D.
"See there!"
Susannah said triumphantly. "They shoulda done that a long time ago! Why,
back in my when, you're lucky if you can get your damn wheelchair through the
doors of anything smaller than the Shop 'n Save. Hell, lucky if you can get it
up over the curbs! And special parking? Forget it, sugar!"
The lot was jammed
almost to capacity, but even with the end of the world at hand, only two cars
that didn't have little wheelchair symbols on their license plates were parked
in the row Eddie had called "the crip spaces."
Jake guessed that
respecting the "crip spaces" was just one of those things that got a
mysterious lifelong hold on people, like putting zip-codes on letters, parting
your hair, or brushing your teeth before breakfast.
"And there it
is!" Eddie cried. "Hold your cards, folks, but I think we have a
Bingo!"
Still carrying
Susannah on his hip—a thing he would have been incapable of doing for any
extended period of time even a month ago—Eddie hurried over to a boat of a
Lincoln. Strapped on the roof was a complicated-looking racing bicycle; poking
out of the half-open trunk was a wheelchair. Nor was this the only one;
scanning the row of "crip spaces," Jake saw at least four more
wheelchairs, most strapped to roof-racks, some stuffed into the backs of vans
or station wagons, one (it looked ancient and fearsomely bulky) thrown into the
bed of a pickup truck.
Eddie set Susannah
down and bent to examine the rig holding the chair in the trunk. There were a
lot of crisscrossing elastic cords, plus some sort of locking bar. Eddie drew
the Ruger Jake had taken from his father's desk drawer. "Fire in the
hole," he said cheerfully, and before any of them could even think of
covering their ears, he pulled the trigger and blew the lock off the
security-bar. The sound went rolling into the silence, then echoed back. The
warbling sound of the thinny returned with it, as if the gunshot had snapped it
awake. Sounds Hawaiian, doesn't it? Jake thought, and grimaced with
distaste. Half an hour ago, he wouldn't have believed that a sound could be as
physically upsetting, as ... well, the smell of rotting meat, say, but he
believed it now. He looked up at the turnpike signs. From this angle he could
see only their tops, but that was enough to confirm that they were shimmering
again. It throws some kind of field, Jake thought. The way mixers and
vacuum cleaners make static on the radio or TV, or the way that cyclotron gadget
made the hair on my arms stand up when Mr. Kingery brought it to class and then
asked for volunteers to come up and stand next to it.
Eddie wrenched the
locking bar aside, and used Roland's knife to cut the elastic cords. Then he
drew the wheelchair out of the trunk, examined it, unfolded it, and engaged the
support which ran across the back at seat-level. "Voila!" he
said.
Susannah had propped
herself on one hand—Jake thought she looked a little like the woman in this
Andrew Wyeth painting he liked, Christina 's World—and was examining
the chair with some wonder.
"God almighty, it
looks so little 'n light!"
"Modem technology
at its finest, darlin," Eddie said. "It's what we fought Vietnam for.
Hop in." He bent to help her. She didn't resist him, but her face was set
and frowning as he lowered her into the seat. Like she expected the chair to
collapse under her, Jake thought. As she ran her hands over the arms of her new
ride, her face gradually relaxed.
Jake wandered off a
little, walking down another row of cars, running his fingers over their hoods,
leaving trails of dust. Oy padded after him, pausing once to lift his leg and
squirt a tire, as if he had been doing it all his life.
"Make you
homesick, honey?" Susannah asked from behind Jake. "Probably thought
you'd never see an honest-to-God American automobile again, am I right?"
Jake considered this
and decided she was not right. It had never crossed his mind that he
would remain in Roland's world forever; that he might never see another car. He
didn't think that would bother him, actually, but he also didn't think it was
in the cards. Not yet, anyway. There was a certain vacant lot in the New York
when he had come from. It was on the comer of Second Avenue and Forty-sixth
Street. Once there had been a deli there—Tom and Gerry's, Party Platters Our
Specialty—but now it was just rubble, and weeds, and broken glass, and ...
... and a rose. Just a
single wild rose growing in a vacant lot where a bunch of condos were scheduled
to go up at some point, but Jake had an idea that there was nothing quite like
it growing anywhere else on Earth. Maybe not on any of those other worlds
Roland had mentioned, either. There were roses as one approached the Dark
Tower; roses by the billion, according to Eddie, great bloody acres of them.
He had seen them in a dream. Still, Jake suspected that his rose was different
even from those . . . and that until its fate was decided, one way or the
other, he was not done with the world of cars and TVs and policemen who wanted to
know if you had any identification and what your parents' names were.
And speaking of
parents, I may not be done with them, either, Jake thought.
The idea hurried his heartbeat with a mixture of hope and alarm.
They stopped halfway
down the row of cars, Jake staring blankly across a wide street (Gage
Boulevard, he assumed) as he considered these things. Now Roland and Eddie
caught up to them.
"This baby's
gonna be great after a couple of months pushing the Iron Maiden," Eddie
said with a grin. "Bet you could damn near puff it along." He
blew a deep breath at the back of the wheelchair to demonstrate. Jake thought
of telling Eddie that there were probably others back there in the "crip
spaces" with motors in them, then realized what Eddie must have known right
away: their batteries would be dead.
Susannah ignored him
for the time being; it was Jake she was interested in. "You didn't answer
me, sug. All these cars get you homesick?"
"Nah. But I was
curious about whether or not they were all cars I knew. I thought maybe . . .
if this version of 1986 grew out of some other world than my 1977, there'd be a
way to tell. But I can't tell. Because things change so dam fast. Even
in nine years .. ." He shrugged, then looked at Eddie. "You
might be able to, though. I mean, you actually lived in 1986."
Eddie grunted. "I
lived through it, but I didn't exactly observe it. I was fucked to the
sky most of the time. Still... I suppose . .."
Eddie started pushing
Susannah along the smooth macadam of the parking lot again, pointing to cars as
they passed them. "Ford Explorer ... Chevrolet Caprice . . . and that one
there's an old Pontiac, you can tell because of the split grille—"
"Pontiac
Bonneville," Jake said. He was amused and a little touched by the wonder
in Susannah's eyes—most of these cars must look as futuristic to her as Buck
Rogers scout-ships. That made him wonder how Roland felt about them, and Jake
looked around.
The gunslinger showed
no interest in the cars at all. He was gazing across the street, into the park,
toward the turnpike . . . except Jake didn't think he was actually looking at
any of those things. Jake had an idea that Roland was simply looking into his
own thoughts. If so, the expression on his face suggested that he wasn't
finding anything good there.
"That's one of
those little Chrysler K's," Eddie said, pointing, "and that's a
Subaru. Mercedes SEL 450, excellent, the car of champions . . . Mustang .. .
Chrysler Imperial, good shape but must be older'n God—"
"Watch it,
boy," Susannah said, with a touch of what Jake thought was real asperity
in her voice. "I recognize that one. Looks new to me."
"Sorry, Suze.
Really. This one's a Cougar . .. another Chevy .. . and one more ... Topeka
loves General Motors, big fuckin surprise there . . . Honda Civic . . . VW
Rabbit... a Dodge ... a Ford . . . a—"
Eddie stopped, looking
at a little car near the end of the row, white with red trim. "A
Takuro," he said, mostly to himself. He went around to look at the trunk.
"A Takuro Spirit, to be exact. Ever hear of that make and model,
Jake of New York?"
Jake shook his head.
"Me,
neither," he said. "Me fucking neither."
Eddie began pushing
Susannah toward Gage Boulevard (Roland with them but still mostly off in his
own private world, walking when they walked, stopping where they stopped). Just
shy of the lot's automated entrance (stop TAKE
TICKET), Eddie halted.
"At this rate,
we'll be old before we get to yonder park and dead before we raise the
turnpike," Susannah said.
This time Eddie didn't
apologize, didn't seem even to hear her. He was looking at the bumper sticker
on the front of a rusty old AMC Pacer. The sticker was blue and white, like the
little wheelchair signs marking the "crip spaces." Jake squatted for
a better look, and when Oy dropped his head on Jake's knee, the boy stroked him
absently. With his other hand he reached out and touched the sticker, as if to
verify its reality. kansas city
monarchs, it said. The 0 in Monarchs was a baseball with speedlines
drawn out behind it, as if it were leaving the park.
Eddie said:
"Check me if I'm wrong on this, sport, because I know almost zilch about
baseball west of Yankee Stadium, but shouldn't that say Kansas City Royals?
You know, George Brett and all that?"
Jake nodded. He knew
the Royals, and he knew Brett, although he had been a young player in Jake's
when and must have been a fairly old one in Eddie's.
"Kansas City Athletics,
you mean," Susannah said, sounding bewildered. Roland ignored it all; he
was still cruising in his own personal ozone layer.
"Not by '86,
darlin," Eddie said kindly. "By '86 the Athletics were in
Oakland." He glanced from the bumper sticker to Jake. "Minor-league
team, maybe?" he asked. "Triple A?"
"The Triple A
Royals are still the Royals," Jake said. "They play in Omaha. Come
on, let's go."
And although he didn't
know about the others, Jake himself went on with a lighter heart. Maybe it was
stupid, but he was relieved. He didn't believe that this terrible plague was
waiting up ahead for his world, because there were no Kansas City Monarchs in
his world. Maybe that wasn't enough information upon which to base a
conclusion, but it felt true. And it was an enormous relief to be able to
believe that his mother and father weren't slated to die of a germ people
called Captain Trips and be burned in a ... a landfill, or something.
Except that wasn't
quite a sure thing, even if this wasn't the 1986 version of his 1977 world.
Because even if this awful plague had happened in a world where there were cars
called Takuro Spirits and George Brett played for the K.C. Monarchs, Roland
said the trouble was spreading . . .that things like the superflu were eating
through the fabric of existence like battery acid eating its way into a piece
of cloth.
The gunslinger had
spoken of time's pool, a phrase which had at first struck Jake as romantic and
charming. But suppose the pool was growing stagnant and swampy? And suppose
these Bermuda Triangle-type things Roland called thinnies, once great rarities,
were becoming the rule rather than the exception? Suppose—oh, and here was a
hideous thought, one guaranteed to keep you lying awake until way past
three—all of reality was sagging as the structural weaknesses of the Dark Tower
grew? Suppose there came a crash, one level falling down into the next... and
the next... and the next... until—
When Eddie grasped his
shoulder and squeezed, Jake had to bite his tongue to keep from screaming.
"You're giving
yourself the hoodoos," Eddie said.
"What do you know
about it?" Jake asked. That sounded rude, but he was mad. From being
scared or being seen into? He didn't know. Didn't much care, either.
"When it comes to
the hoodoos, I'm an old hand," Eddie said. "I don't know exactly
what's on your mind, but whatever it is, this would be an excellent time
to stop thinking about it."
That, Jake decided,
was probably good advice. They walked across the street together. Toward Gage
Park and one of the greatest shocks of Jake's life.
2
Passing under the
wrought-iron arch with gage park written
on it in old-fashioned, curlicued letters, they found themselves on a brick
path leading through a garden that was half English Formal and half Ecuadorian
Jungle. With no one to tend it through the hot Midwestern summer, it had run to
riot; with no one to tend it this fall, it had run to seed. A sign just inside
the arch proclaimed this to be the Reinisch Rose Garden, and there were roses,
all right; roses everywhere. Most had gone over, but some of the wild ones
still throve, making Jake think of the rose in the vacant lot at Forty-sixth and
Second with a longing so deep it was an ache.
Off to one side as
they entered the park was a beautiful old-time carousel, its prancing steeds
and racing stallions now still on their posts. The carousel's very silence, its
flashing lights and steamy calliope music stilled forever, gave Jake a chill.
Hung over the neck of one horse, dangling from a rawhide strip, was some kid's
baseball glove. Jake was barely able to look at it.
Beyond the carousel,
the foliage grew even thicker, strangling the path until the travellers edged
along single-file, like lost children in a fairy-tale wood. Thorns from
overgrown and unpruned rosebushes tore at Jake's clothes. He had somehow gotten
into the lead (probably because Roland was still deep inside his own thoughts),
and that was why he saw Charlie the Choo-Choo first.
His only thought while
approaching the narrow-gauge train-tracks which crossed the path—they were
little more than toy tracks, really— was of the gunslinger saying that ka
was like a wheel, always rolling around to the same place again. We 're
haunted by roses and trains, he thought. Why? I don't know. I guess it's
just another rid—
Then he looked to his
left, and "OhgoodnesstoChrist" fell out of his mouth, all in one
word. The strength ran out of his legs and he sat down. His voice sounded
watery and distant to his own ears. He didn't quite faint, but the color
drained out of the world until the running-to-riot foliage on the west side of
the park looked almost as gray as the autumn sky overhead.
"Jake! Jake,
what's wrong!" It was Eddie, and Jake could hear the genuine concern in
his voice, but it seemed to be coming over a bad long-distance connection. From
Beirut, say, or maybe Uranus. And he could feel Roland's steadying hand on his
shoulder, but it was as distant as Eddie's voice.
"Jake!"
Susannah. "What's wrong, honey? What—"
Then she saw, and
stopped talking at him. Eddie saw, and also stopped talking at him. Roland's
hand fell away. They all stood looking ... except for Jake, who sat
looking. He supposed that strength and feeling would come back into his legs
eventually and he would get up, but right now they felt like limp macaroni.
The train was parked
fifty feet up, by a toy station that mimicked the one across the street.
Hanging from its eaves was a sign which read topeka.
The train was Charlie the Choo-Choo, cowcatcher and all; a 402 Big Boy
Steam Locomotive. And, Jake knew, if he found enough strength to get up on his
feet and go over there, he would find a family of mice nested in the seat where
the engineer (whose name had undoubtedly been Bob Something-or-other) had once
sat. There would he another family, this one of swallows, nested in the
smokestack.
And the dark, oily
tears, Jake thought, looking at the tiny train waiting
in front of its tiny station with his skin crawling all over his body and his
balls hard and his stomach in a knot. At night it cries those dark, oily
tears, and they're rusting the hell out of his fine Stratham headlight. But in
your time, Charlie-boy, you pulled your share of kids, right? Around and around
Gage Park you went, and the kids laughed, except some of them weren't
really laughing; some of them, the ones who were wise to you, were
screaming. The way I'd scream now, if I had the strength.
But his strength was
coming back, and when Eddie put a hand under one of his arms and Roland put one
under the other, Jake was able to get up. He staggered once, then stood steady.
"Just for the
record, I don't blame you," Eddie said. His voice was grim; so was his
face. "I feel a little like falling over myself. That's the one in your
book; that's it to the life."
"So now we know
where Miss Beryl Evans got the idea for Charlie the Choo-Choo"
Susannah said. "Either she lived here, or sometime before 1942, when the
damned thing was published, she visited Topeka—"
"—and saw the
kids' train that goes through Reinisch Rose Garden and around Gage Park,"
Jake said. He was getting over his scare now, and he—not just an only child but
for most of his life a lonely child—felt a burst of love and gratitude for his
friends. They had seen what he had seen, they had understood the source of his
fright. Of course—they were ka-tet.
"It won't answer
silly questions, it won't play silly games," Roland said musingly.
"Can you go on, Jake?"
"Yes."
"You sure?"
Eddie asked, and when Jake nodded, Eddie pushed Susannah across the tracks.
Roland went next. Jake paused a moment, remembering a dream he'd had—he and Oy
had been at a train-crossing, and the bumbler had suddenly leaped onto the
tracks, barking wildly at the oncoming headlight.
Now Jake bent and
scooped Oy up. He looked at the rusting train standing silently in its station,
its dark headlamp like a dead eye. "I'm not afraid," he said in a low
voice. "Not afraid of you."
The headlamp came to
life and flashed at him once, brief but glare-bright, emphatic: I know
different; I know different, my dear little squint.
Then it went out.
None of the others had
seen. Jake glanced once more at the train, expecting the light to flash
again—maybe expecting the cursed thing to actually start up and make a run at
him—but nothing happened.
Heart thumping hard in
his chest, Jake hurried after his companions.
3
The Topeka Zoo (the World
Famous Topeka Zoo, according to the signs) was full of empty cages and dead
animals. Some of the animals that had been freed were gone, but others had died
near to hand. The big apes were still in the area marked Gorilla Habitat, and
they appeared to have died hand-in-hand. That made Eddie feel like crying,
somehow. Since the last of the heroin had washed out of his system, his
emotions always seemed on the verge of blowing up into a cyclone. His old pals
would have laughed.
Beyond Gorilla
Habitat, a gray wolf lay dead on the path. Oy approached it carefully,
sniffed, then stretched out his long neck and began to howl.
"Make him quit
that, Jake, you hear me?" Eddie said gruffly. He suddenly realized he
could smell decaying animals. The aroma was faint, mostly boiled off over the
hot days of the summer just passed, but what was left made him feel like
upchucking. Not that he could precisely remember the last time he'd eaten.
"Oy! To me!"
Oy howled one final
time, then returned to Jake. He stood on the kid's feet, looking up at him with
those spooky wedding-ring eyes of his. Jake picked him up, took him in a circle
around the wolf, and then set him down again on the brick path.
The path led them to a
steep set of steps (weeds had begun to push through the stonework already), and
at the top Roland looked back over the zoo and the gardens. From here they
could easily see the circuit the toy train-tracks made, allowing Charlie's
riders to tour the entire perimeter of Gage Park. Beyond it, fallen leaves
clattered down Gage Boulevard before a rush of cold wind.
"So fell Lord
Perth," murmured Roland.
"And the
countryside did shake with that thunder," Jake finished.
Roland looked down at
him with surprise, like a man awakening from a deep sleep, then smiled and put
an arm around Jake's shoulders. "I have played Lord Perth in my
time," he said.
"Have you?"
"Yes. Very soon
now you shall hear."
4
Beyond the steps was
an aviary full of dead exotic birds; beyond the aviary was a snackbar
advertising (perhaps heartlessly, given the location) topeka's best buffaloburger; beyond the snackbar was another
wrought iron arch with a sign reading come
back to gage park real soon! Beyond this was the curving upslope of a
limited-access-highway entrance ramp. Above it, the green signs they had first
spotted from across the way stood clear.
"Tumpikin' again,"
Eddie said in a voice almost too low to hear. "Goddam." Then he
sighed.
"What's
tumpikin', Eddie?"
Jake didn't think
Eddie was going to answer; when Susannah craned around to look at him as he
stood with his fingers wrapped around the handles of the new wheelchair, Eddie
looked away. Then he looked back, first at Susannah, then at Jake. "It's
not pretty. Not much about my life before Gary Cooper here yanked me across
the Great Divide was."
"You don't have
to—"
"It's also no big
deal. A bunch of us would get together—me, my brother Henry, Bum O'Hara,
usually, 'cause he had a car, Sandra Corbitt, and maybe this friend of Henry's
we called Jimmie Polio—and we'd stick all our names in a hat. The one we drew
out was the ... the trip-guide, Henry used to call him. He—she, if it was
Sandi—had to stay straight. Relatively, anyway. Everyone else got seriously
goobered. Then we'd all pile into Bum's Chrysler and go up 1-95 into
Connecticut or maybe take the Taconic Parkway into upstate New York . . . only
we called it the Catatonic Parkway. Listen to Creedence or Marvin Gaye or maybe
even Elvis 's Greatest Hits on the tape-player.
"It was better at
night, best when the moon was full. We'd cruise for hours sometimes with our
heads stuck out the windows like dogs do when they're riding, looking up at the
moon and watching for shooting stars. We called it tumpikin'." Eddie
smiled. It looked like an effort. "A charming life, folks."
"It sounds sort
of fun," Jake said. "Not the drug part, I mean, but riding around
with your pals at night, looking at the moon and listening to the music . . .
that sounds excellent."
"It was,
actually," Eddie said. "Even stuffed so full of reds we were as apt
to pee on our own shoes as in the bushes, it was excellent." He paused.
"That's the horrible part, don't you get it?"
"Tumpikin',"
the gunslinger said. "Let's do some."
They left Gage Park
and crossed the road to the entrance ramp.
5
Someone had
spray-painted over both signs marking the ramp's ascending curve. On the one
reading st. louis 215, someone
had slashed
in black. On the one
marked next rest area 10 mi.,
had been written in
fat red letters. That scarlet was still bright enough to scream even after an
entire summer. Each had been decorated with a symbol—
"Do you know what
any of that truck means, Roland?" Susannah asked. Roland shook his head,
but he looked troubled, and that introspective look never left his own eyes.
They went on.
6
At the place where the
ramp merged with the turnpike, the two men, the boy, and the bumbler clustered
around Susannah in her new wheelchair. All of them looked east.
Eddie didn't know what
the traffic situation would be like once they cleared Topeka, but here all the
lanes, those headed west as well as the eastbound ones on their side, were
crammed with cars and trucks. Most of the vehicles were piled high with
possessions gone rusty with a season's worth of rain.
But the traffic was
the least of their concerns as they stood there, looking silently eastward. For
half a mile or so on either side of them, the city continued—they could see
church steeples, a strip of fast food places (Arby's, Wendy's, McD's, Pizza
Hut, and one Eddie had never heard of called Boing Boing Burgers), car
dealerships, the roof of a bowling alley called Heartland Lanes. They could see
another turnpike exit ahead, the sign by the ramp reading Topeka State Hospital
and S.W. 6th. Beyond the off-ramp there bulked a massive old red brick edifice
with tiny windows peering like desperate eyes out of the climbing ivy. Eddie
figured a place that looked so much like Attica had to be a hospital,
probably the kind of welfare purgatory where poor folks sat in shitty plastic
chairs for hours on end, all so some doctor could look at them like they were
dogshit.
Beyond the hospital,
the city abruptly ended and the thinny began.
To Eddie, it looked
like flat water standing in a vast marshland. It crowded up to the raised
barrel of 1-70 on both sides, silvery and shimmering, making the signs and
guardrails and stalled cars waver like mirages; it gave off that liquidy
humming sound like a stench.
Susannah put her hands
to her ears, her mouth drawn down. "I don't know as I can stand it.
Really. I don't mean to be spleeny, but already I feel like vomiting, and I
haven't had anything to eat all day."
Eddie felt the same
way. Yet, sick as he felt he could hardly take his eyes away from the thinny.
It was as if unreality had been given . . . what? A face? No. The vast and
humming silver shimmer ahead of them had no face, was the very antithesis of a
face, in fact, but it had a body ... an aspect ... a presence.
Yes; that last was
best. It had a presence, as the demon which had come to the circle of stones
while they were trying to draw Jake had had a presence.
Roland, meanwhile, was
rummaging in the depths of his purse. He appeared to dig all the way to the
bottom before finding what he wanted: a fistful of bullets. He plucked
Susannah's right hand off the arm of her chair, and put two of the bullets in
her palm. Then he took two more and poked them, slug ends first, into his ears.
Susannah looked first amazed, then amused, then doubtful. In the end, she
followed his example. Almost at once an expression of blissful relief filled
her face.
Eddie unshouldered the
pack he wore and pulled out the half-full box of .44s that went with Jake's
Ruger. The gunslinger shook his head and held out his hand. There were still
four bullets in it, two for Eddie and two for Jake.
"What's wrong
with these?" Eddie shook a couple of shells from the box that had come
from behind the hanging files in Elmer Chambers's desk drawer.
"They're from
your world and they won't block out the sound. Don't ask me how I know that; I
just do. Try them if you want, but they won't work."
Eddie pointed at the
bullets Roland was offering. "Those are from our world, too. The gun-shop
on Seventh and Forty-ninth. Clements', wasn't that the name?"
"These didn't
come from there. These are mine, Eddie, reloaded often but originally brought
from the green land. From Gilead."
"You mean the wets?”
Eddie asked incredulously. "The last of the wet shells from the beach?
The ones that really got soaked?"
Roland nodded.
"You said those
would never fire again! No matter how dry they got! That the powder had been ..
. what did you say? 'Flattened.' "
Roland nodded again.
"So why'd you
save them? Why bring a bunch of useless bullets all this way?"
"What did I teach
you to say after a kill, Eddie? In order to focus your mind?"
" 'Father, guide
my hands and heart so that no part of the animal will be wasted.' "
Roland nodded a third
time. Jake took two shells and put them in his ears. Eddie took the last two,
but first he tried the ones he'd shaken from the box. They muffled the sound of
the thinny, but it was still there, vibrating in the center of his forehead,
making his eyes water the way they did when he had a cold, making the bridge of
his nose feel like it was going to explode. He picked them out, and put the
bigger slugs—the ones from Roland's ancient revolvers—in their place. Putting
bullets in my ears, he thought. Ma would shit. But that didn't
matter. The sound of the thinny was gone—or at least down to a distant
drone—and that was what did. When he turned and spoke to Roland, he expected
his own voice to sound muffled, the way it did when you were wearing earplugs,
but he found he could hear himself pretty well.
"Is there
anything you don't know?" he asked Roland.
"Yes,"
Roland said. "Quite a lot."
"What about
Oy?" Jake asked.
"Oy will be fine,
I think," Roland said. "Come on, let's make some miles before
dark."
7
Oy didn't seem
bothered by the warble of the thinny, but he stuck close to Jake Chambers all
that afternoon, looking mistrustfully at the stalled cars which clogged the
eastbound lanes of 1-70. And yet, Susannah saw, those cars did not clog the
highway completely. The congestion eased as the travellers left downtown behind
them, but even where the traffic had been heavy, some of the dead vehicles had
been pulled to one side or the other; a number had been pushed right off the highway
and onto the median strip, which was a concrete divider in the metro area and
grass outside of town.
Somebody's been at
work with a wrecker, that's my guess, Susannah thought. The
idea made her happy. No one would have bothered clearing a path down the
center of the highway while the plague was still raging, and if someone had
done it after—if someone had been around to do it after—that meant the
plague hadn't gotten everyone; those crammed-together obituaries weren't the
whole story.
There were corpses in
some of the cars, but they, like the ones at the foot of the station steps,
were dry, not runny—mummies wearing seat-belts, for the most part. The majority
of the cars were empty. A lot of the drivers and passengers caught in the
traffic jams had probably tried to walk out of the plague-zone, she supposed,
but she guessed that wasn't the only reason they had taken to their feet.
Susannah knew that she
herself would have to be chained to the steering wheel to keep her inside a
car once she felt the symptoms of some fatal disease setting in; if she was
going to die, she would want to do it in God's open air. A hill would be best,
someplace with a little elevation, but even a wheatfield would do, came it to
that. Anything but coughing your last while smelling the air-freshener dangling
from the rearview mirror.
At one time Susannah
guessed they would have been able to see many of the corpses of the fleeing
dead, but not now. Because of the thinny. They approached it steadily, and she
knew exactly when they entered it. A kind of tingling shudder ran through her
body, making her draw her shortened legs up, and the wheelchair stopped for a
moment. When she turned around she saw Roland, Eddie, and Jake holding their
stomachs and grimacing. They looked as if they had all been stricken with the
bellyache at the same time. Then Eddie and Roland straightened up. Jake bent to
stroke Oy, who had been staring at him anxiously.
"You boys all
right?" Susannah asked. The question came out in the half-querulous,
half-humorous voice of Detta Walker. Using that voice was nothing she planned;
sometimes it just came out.
"Yeah," Jake
said. "Feels like I got a bubble in my throat, though." He was
staring uneasily at the thinny. Its silvery blankness was all around them now,
as if the whole world had turned into a flat Norfolk fen at dawn. Nearby, trees
poked out of its silver surface, casting distorted reflections that never
stayed quite still or quite in focus. A little farther away, Susannah could see
a grain-storage tower, seeming to float. The words gaddish feeds were written on the side in pink letters which
might have been red under normal conditions.
"Feels to me like
I got a bubble in my mind," Eddie said. "Man, look at that
shit shimmer."
"Can you still
hear it?" Susannah asked.
"Yeah. But faint.
I can live with it. Can you?"
"Uh-huh. Let's
go."
It was like riding in
an open-cockpit plane through broken clouds, Susannah decided. They'd go for
what felt like miles through that humming brightness that was not quite fog and
not quite water, sometimes seeing shapes (a bam, a tractor, a Stuckey's
billboard) loom out of it, then losing everything but the road, which ran
consistently above the thinny's bright but somehow indistinct surface.
Then, all at once,
they would run into the clear. The humming would fall away to a faint drone;
you could even unplug your ears and not be too bothered, at least until you got
near the other side of the break. Once again there were vistas ...
Well, no, that was too
grand, Kansas didn't exactly have vistas, but there were open fields and
the occasional copse of autumn-bright trees marking a spring or cow-pond. No
Grand Canyon or surf crashing on Portland Headlight, hut at least you could see
a by-God horizon off in the distance, and lose some of that unpleasant
feeling of entombment. Then, back into the goop you went. Jake came closest to
describing it, she thought, when he said that being in the thinny was like
finally reaching the shining water-mirage you could often see far up the
highway on hot days.
Whatever it was and
however you described it, being inside it was claustrophobic, purgatorial, all
the world gone except for the twin barrels of the turnpike and the hulks of the
cars, like derelict ships abandoned on a frozen ocean.
Please help us get out
of this, Susannah prayed to a God in whom she no longer
precisely believed—she still believed in something, but since awakening
to Roland's world on the beach of the Western Sea, her concept of the
invisible world had changed considerably. Please help us find the Beam
again. Please help us escape this world of silence and death.
They ran into the
biggest clear space they had yet come to near a roadsign which read big springs 2 mi. Behind them, in the west, the setting sun shone through
a brief rift in the clouds, skipping scarlet splinters across the top of the
thinny and lighting the windows and taillights of the stalled cars in tones of
fire. On either side of them empty fields stretched away. Full Earth come
and gone, Susannah thought. Reaping come and gone, too. This is what
Roland calls closing the year. The thought made her shiver.
"We'll camp here
for the night," Roland said soon after they had passed the Big Springs
exit ramp. Up ahead they could see the thinny encroaching on the highway
again, but that was miles farther on—you could see a damn long way in eastern
Kansas, Susannah was discovering. "We can get firewood without going too
near the thinny, and the sound won't be too bad. We may even be able to sleep
without bullets stuffed into our ears."
Eddie and Jake climbed
over the guardrails, descended the bank, and foraged for wood along a dry
creekbed, staying together as Roland admonished them to do. When they came
back, the clouds had gulped the sun again, and an ashy, uninteresting twilight
had begun to creep over the world.
The gunslinger
stripped twigs for kindling, then laid his fuel around them in his usual
fashion, building a kind of wooden chimney in the breakdown lane. As he did it,
Eddie strolled across to the median strip and stood there, hands in pockets,
looking east. After a few moments, Jake and Oy joined him.
Roland produced his
flint and steel, scraped fire into the shaft of his chimney, and soon the
little campfire was burning.
"Roland!"
Eddie called. "Suze! Come over here! Look at this!"
Susannah started
rolling her chair toward Eddie, then Roland—after a final check of his
campfire—took hold of the handles and pushed her.
"Look at
what?" Susannah asked.
Eddie pointed. At
first Susannah saw nothing, although the turnpike was perfectly visible even
beyond the point where the thinny closed in again, perhaps three miles ahead.
Then ... yes, she might see something. Maybe. A kind of shape, at the farthest
edge of vision. If not for the fading daylight...
"Is it a building?"
Jake asked. "Cripes, it looks like it's built right across the
highway!"
"What about it,
Roland?" Eddie asked. "You've got the best eyes in the
universe."
For a time the
gunslinger said nothing, only looked up the median strip with his thumbs hooked
in his gunbelt. At last he said, "We'll see it better when we get
closer."
"Oh, come
on!" Eddie said. "I mean, holy shit! Do you know what it is or
not?"
"We'll see it
better when we get closer," the gunslinger repeated ... which was, of
course, no answer at all. He moseyed back across the east-bound lanes to check
on his campfire, bootheels clicking on the pavement. Susannah looked at Jake
and Eddie. She shrugged. They shrugged back . . . and then Jake burst into
bright peals of laughter. Usually, Susannah thought, the kid acted more like
an eighteen-year-old than a boy of eleven, but that laughter made him sound
about nine-going-on-ten, and she didn't mind a bit.
She looked down at Oy,
who was looking at them earnestly and rolling his shoulders in an effort to
shrug.
8
They ate the
leaf-wrapped delicacies Eddie called gunslinger burritos, drawing closer to the
fire and feeding it more wood as the dark drew down. Somewhere south a bird
cried out—it was just about the loneliest sound he had ever heard in his life,
Eddie reckoned. None of them talked much, and it occurred to him that, at this
time of their day, hardly anyone ever did. As if the time when the earth
swapped day for dark was special, a time that somehow closed them off from the
powerful fellowship Roland called ka-tet.
Jake fed Oy small
scraps of dried deermeat from his last burrito; Susannah sat on her bedroll,
legs crossed beneath her hide smock, looking dreamily into the fire; Roland lay
back on his elbows, looking up at the sky, where the clouds had begun to melt
away from the stars. Looking up himself, Eddie saw that Old Star and Old Mother
were gone, their places taken by Polaris and the Big Dipper. This might not be
his world— Takuro automobiles, the Kansas City Monarchs, and a food franchise
called Boing Boing Burgers all suggested it wasn't—but Eddie thought it was too
close for comfort. Maybe, he thought, the world next door.
When the bird cried in
the distance again, he roused himself and looked at Roland. "You had
something you were going to tell us," he said. "A thrilling tale of
your youth, I believe. Susan—that was her name, wasn't it?"
For a moment longer
the gunslinger continued to look up at the sky— now it was Roland who must find
himself adrift in the constellations, Eddie realized—and then he shifted his
gaze to his friends. He looked strangely apologetic, strangely uneasy.
"Would you think I was cozening," he said, "if I asked for one
more day to think of these things? Or perhaps it's a night to dream of them
that I really want. They are old things, dead things, perhaps, but I. . ."
He raised his hands in a kind of distracted gesture. "Some things don't
rest easy even when they're dead. Their bones cry out from the ground."
"There are
ghosts," Jake said, and in his eyes Eddie saw a shadow of the horror he
must have felt inside the house in Dutch Hill. The horror he must have felt
when the Doorkeeper came out of the wall and reached for him. "Sometimes
there are ghosts, and sometimes they come back."
"Yes,"
Roland said. "Sometimes there are, and sometimes they do."
"Maybe it's
better not to brood," Susannah said. "Sometimes—especially when you
know a thing's going to be hard—it's better just to get on your horse and
ride."
Roland thought this
over carefully, then raised his eyes to look at her. "At tomorrow night's
fire I will tell you of Susan," he said. "This I promise on my
father's name."
"Do we need to
hear?" Eddie asked abruptly. He was almost astounded to hear this
question coming out of his mouth; no one had been more curious about the
gunslinger's past than Eddie himself. "I mean, if it really hurts, Roland
. . . hurts big-time . . . maybe..."
"I'm not sure you
need to hear, but I think I need to tell. Our future is the Tower, and to go
toward it with a whole heart, I must put my past to rest as best I may. There's
no way I could tell you all of it—in my world even the past is in motion,
rearranging itself in many vital ways—but this one story may stand for all the
rest."
"Is it a
Western?" Jake asked suddenly.
Roland looked at him,
puzzled. "I don't take your meaning, Jake. Gilead is a Barony of the
Western World, yes, and Mejis as well, but—"
"It'll be a
Western," Eddie said. "All Roland's stories are Westerns, when you
get right down to it." He lay back and pulled his blanket over him.
Faintly, from both east and west, he could hear the warble of the thinny. He
checked in his pocket for the bullets Roland had given him, and nodded with
satisfaction when he felt them. He reckoned he could sleep without them
tonight, but he would want them again tomorrow. They weren't done tumpikin'
just yet.
Susannah leaned over
him, kissed the tip of his nose. "Done for the day, sugar?"
"Yep," Eddie
said, and laced his hands together behind his head. "It's not every day
that I hook a ride on the world's fastest train, destroy the world's smartest
computer, and then discover that everyone's been scragged by the flu. All
before dinner, too. Shit like that makes a man tired." Eddie smiled and
closed his eyes. He was still smiling when sleep took him.
9
In his dream, they
were all standing on the comer of Second Avenue and Forty-sixth Street, looking
over the short board fence and into the weedy vacant lot behind it. They were
wearing their Mid-World clothes—a motley combination of deerskin and old
shirts, mostly held together with spit and shoelaces—but none of the
pedestrians hurrying by on Second seemed to notice. No one noticed the
billy-bumbler in Jake's arms or the artillery they were packing, either.
Because we're ghosts.
Eddie thought. We're ghosts and we don't rest easy.
On the fence there
were handbills—one for the Sex Pistols (a reunion tour, according to the
poster, and Eddie thought that was pretty funny— the Pistols was one group that
was never going to get back together), one for a comic, Adam Sandier,
that Eddie had never heard of, one for a movie called The Craft, about
teenage witches. Beyond that one, written in letters the dusky pink of summer
roses, was this:
See
the bear of fearsome size!
All
the world's within his eyes.
time grows thin, the past's a riddle;
The
tower awaits you in the middle.
"There, "
Jake said, pointing. "The rose. See how it awaits us, there in the
middle of the lot. "
"Yes, it's very
beautiful, " Susannah said. Then she pointed to the
sign standing near the rose and facing Second Avenue. Her voice and her eyes
were troubled. "But what about that? "
According to the sign,
two outfits—Mills Construction and Sombra Real Estate—were going to combine on
something called Turtle Bay Condominiums, said condos to be erected on this
very spot. When? coming soon was
all the sign had to say in that regard.
"I wouldn't
worry about that, " Jake said. "That sign was here before.
It's probably old as the hi—"
At that moment the
revving sound of an engine tore into the air. From beyond the fence, on the
Forty-sixth Street side of the lot, chugs of dirty brown exhaust ascended like
bad-news smoke signals. Suddenly the boards on that side burst open, and a huge
red bulldozer lunged through. Even the blade was red, although the words
slashed across its scoop—all hail the
crimson king—were written in a yellow as bright as panic. Sitting in
the peak-seat, his rotting face leering at them from above the controls, was
the man who had kidnapped Jake from the bridge over the River Send—their old
pal Gasher. On the front of his cocked-back hard-hat, the words lamerk foundry stood out in black.
Above them, a single staring eye had been painted.
Gasher lowered the
'dozer's blade. It tore across the lot on a diagonal, smashing brick,
pulverizing beer and soda bottles to glittering powder, striking sparks from
the rocks. Directly in its path, the rose nodded its delicate head.
"Let's see you
ask some of yer silly questions now!" this unwelcome
apparition cried. "Ask all yer wants, my dear little culls, why not?
Wery fond of riddles is yer old pal Gasher! Just so you understand that, no matter
what yer ask, I'm gointer run that nasty thing over, mash it flat, aye, so I
will! Then back over it I'll go! Root and branch, my dear little culls! Aye,
root and branch!"
Susannah shrieked as
the scarlet bulldozer blade bore down on the rose, and Eddie grabbed for the
fence. He would vault over it, throw himself on the rose, try to protect it...
... except it was too
late. And he knew it.
He looked back up at
the cackling thing in the bulldozer's peak-seat and saw that Gasher was gone.
Now the man at the controls was Engineer Bob, from Charlie the Choo-Choo.
"Stop!"
Eddie screamed. "For Christ's sake, stop!"
"I can't, Eddie.
The world has moved on, and I can't stop. I must move on with it. "
And as the shadow of
the 'dozer fell over the rose, as the blade tore through one of the posts
holding up the sign (Eddie saw coming
soon had changed to coming now), he
realized that the man at the controls wasn't Engineer Bob, either.
It was Roland.
10
Eddie sat up in the
breakdown lane of the turnpike, gasping breath he could see in the air and with
sweat already chilling on his hot skin. He was sure he had screamed, must
have screamed, but Susannah still slept beside him with only the top of her
head poking out of the bedroll they shared, and Jake was snoring softly off to
the left, one arm out of his own blankets and curled around Oy. The bumbler was
also sleeping.
Roland wasn't. Roland
sat calmly on the far side of the dead campfire, cleaning his guns by starlight
and looking at Eddie.
"Bad
dreams." Not a question.
"Yeah."
"A visit from
your brother?"
Eddie shook his head.
"The Tower, then?
The field of roses and the Tower?" Roland's face remained impassive, but
Eddie could hear the subtle eagerness which always came into his voice when
the subject was the Dark Tower. Eddie had once called the gunslinger a Tower
junkie, and Roland hadn't denied it.
"Not this
time."
"What,
then?"
Eddie shivered.
"Cold."
"Yes. Thank your
gods there's no rain, at least. Autumn rain's an evil to be avoided whenever
one may. What was your dream?"
Still Eddie hesitated.
"You'd never betray us, would you, Roland?"
"No man can say
that for sure, Eddie, and I have already played the betrayer more than once. To
my shame. But ... I think those days are over. We are one, ka-tet. If I
betray any one of you—even Jake's furry friend, perhaps—I betray myself. Why do
you ask?"
"And you'd never
betray your quest."
"Renounce the
Tower? No, Eddie. Not that, not ever. Tell me your dream."
Eddie did, omitting
nothing. When he had finished, Roland looked down at his guns, frowning. They
seemed to have reassembled themselves while Eddie was talking.
"So what does it
mean, that I saw you driving that 'dozer at the end? That I still don't trust
you? That subconsciously—"
"Is this
ology-of-the-psyche? The cabala I have heard you and Susannah speak of?"
"Yes, I guess it
is."
"It's shit,"
Roland said dismissively. "Mudpies of the mind. Dreams either mean nothing
or everything—and when they mean everything, they almost always come as
messages from . . . well, from other levels of the Tower." He gazed at
Eddie shrewdly. "And not all messages are sent by friends."
"Something or
someone is fucking with my head? Is that what you mean?"
"I think it
possible. But you must watch me all the same. I bear watching, as you well
know."
"I trust
you," Eddie said, and the very awkwardness with which he spoke lent his
words sincerity. Roland looked touched, almost shaken, and Eddie wondered how
he ever could have thought this man an emotionless robot. Roland might be a
little short on imagination, but he had feelings, all right.
"One thing about
your dream concerns me very much, Eddie."
"The
bulldozer?"
"The machine, yes.
The threat to the rose."
"Jake saw the
rose, Roland. It was fine."
Roland nodded.
"In his when, the when of that particular day, the rose was thriving. But
that doesn't mean it will continue to do so. If the construction the sign
spoke of comes . . . if the bulldozer comes ..."
"There are other
worlds than these," Eddie said. "Remember?"
"Some things may
exist only in one. In one where, in one when." Roland lay
down and looked up at the stars. "We must protect that rose," he
said. "We must protect it at all costs."
"You think it's
another door, don't you? One that opens on the Dark Tower."
The gunslinger looked
at him from eyes that ran with starshine. "I think it may be the
Tower," he said. "And if it's destroyed—"
His eyes closed. He
said no more.
Eddie lay awake late.
11
The new day dawned
clear and bright and cold. In the strong morning sunlight, the thing Eddie had
spotted the evening before was more clearly visible .. . but he still couldn't
tell what it was. Another riddle, and he was getting damned sick of them.
He stood squinting at
it, shading his eyes from the sun, with Susannah on one side of him and Jake on
the other. Roland was back by the camp-fire, packing what he called their gunna,
a word which seemed to mean all their worldly goods. He appeared not to be
concerned with the thing up ahead, or to know what it was.
How far away? Thirty
miles? Fifty? The answer seemed to depend on how far could you see in all this
flat land, and Eddie didn't know the answer. One thing he felt quite sure of
was that Jake had been right on at least two counts—it was some kind of
building, and it sprawled across all four lanes of the highway. It must; how
else could they see it? It would have been lost in the thinny ... wouldn't it?
Maybe it's standing in
one of those open patches—what Suze calls "the holes
in the clouds." Or maybe the
thinny ends before we get that far. Or maybe it's a goddam
hallucination. In any case, you might as well put it out of your mind for the
time being. Got a little more turnpikin' to do.
Still, the building
held him. It looked like an airy Arabian Nights confection of blue and gold .
. . except Eddie had an idea that the blue was stolen from the sky and the gold
from the newly risen sun.
"Roland, come
here a second!"
At first he didn't
think the gunslinger would, but then Roland cinched a rawhide lace on
Susannah's pack, rose, put his hands in the small of his back, stretched, and
walked over to them.
"Gods, one would
think no one in this band has the wit to housekeep but me," Roland said.
"We'll pitch
in," Eddie said, "we always do, don't we? But look at that thing
first."
Roland did, but only
with a quick glance, as if he did not even want to acknowledge it.
"It's glass,
isn't it?" Eddie asked.
Roland took another
brief look. "I wot," he said, a phrase which seemed to mean Reckon
so, partner.
"We've got lots
of glass buildings where I come from, but most of them are office buildings.
That thing up ahead looks more like something from Disney World. Do you know
what it is?"
"No."
"Then why don't
you want to look at it?" Susannah asked.
Roland did take
another look at the distant blaze of light on glass, but once again it was
quick—little more than a peek.
"Because it's
trouble," Roland said, "and it's in our road. We'll get there in time.
No need to live in trouble until trouble comes."
"Will we get
there today?" Jake asked.
Roland shrugged, his
face still closed. "There'll be water if God wills it," he said.
"Christ, you
could have made a fortune writing fortune cookies," Eddie said. He hoped
for a smile, at least, but got none. Roland simply walked back across the road,
dropped to one knee, shouldered his purse and his pack, and waited for the
others. When they were ready, the pilgrims resumed their walk east along
Interstate 70. The gunslinger led, walking with his head down and his eyes on
the toes of his boots.
12
Roland was quiet all
day, and as the building ahead of them neared (trouble, and in our road,
he had said), Susannah came to realize it wasn't grumpiness they were seeing,
or worry about anything which lay any farther ahead of them than tonight. It
was the story he'd promised to tell them that Roland was thinking about, and he
was a lot more than worried.
By the time they
stopped for their noon meal, they could clearly see the building ahead—a
many-turreted palace which appeared to be made entirely of reflective glass.
The thinny lay close around it, but the palace rose serenely above all, its
turrets trying for the sky. Madly strange here in the flat countryside of eastern
Kansas, of course it was, but Susannah thought it the most beautiful building
she had ever seen in her life; even more beautiful than the Chrysler Building,
and that was going some.
As they drew closer,
she found it more and more difficult to look elsewhere. Watching the
reflections of the puffy clouds sailing across the glass castle's blue-sky
wains and walls was like watching some splendid illusion ... yet there was a
solidity to it, as well. An inarguability. Some of that was probably just the
shadow it threw—mirages did not, so far as she knew, create shadows—but not
all. It just was. She had no idea what such a fabulosity was doing out
here in the land of Stuckey's and Hardee's (not to mention Boing Boing
Burgers), but there it was. She reckoned that time would tell the rest.
13
They made camp in
silence, watched Roland build the wooden chimney that would be their fire in
silence, then sat before it in silence, watching the sunset turn the huge glass
edifice ahead of them into a castle of fire. Its towers and battlements glowed
first a fierce red, then orange, then a gold which cooled rapidly to ocher as
Old Star appeared in the firmament above them—
No,
she thought in Delta's voice. Ain't dat one, girl. Not 'tall. That's the
North Star. Same one you seen back home, sittin on yo' daddy's lap.
But it was Old Star
she wanted, she discovered; Old Star and Old Mother. She was astounded to find
herself homesick for Roland's world, and then wondered why she should be so
surprised. It was a world, after all, where no one had called her a nigger
bitch (at least not yet), a world where she had found someone to love . . . and
made good friends as well. That last made her feel a little bit like crying,
and she hugged Jake to her. He let himself be hugged, smiling, his eyes
half-closed. At some distance, unpleasant but bearable even without bullet
earplugs, the thinny warbled its moaning song.
When the last traces
of yellow began to fade from the castle up the road, Roland left them to sit in
the turnpike travel lane and returned to his fire. He cooked more leaf-wrapped
deermeat, and handed the food around. They ate in silence (Roland actually ate
almost nothing, Susannah observed). By the time they were finished, they could
see the Milky Way scattered across the walls of the castle ahead of them,
fierce points of reflection that burned like fire in still water.
Eddie was the one who
finally broke the silence. "You don't have to," he said. "You're
excused. Or absolved. Or whatever the hell it is you need to take that look off
your face."
Roland ignored him. He
drank, tilting the waterskin up on his elbow like some hick drinking moonshine
from a jug, head back, eyes on the stars. The last mouthful he spat to the
roadside.
"Life for your
crop," Eddie said. He did not smile.
Roland said nothing,
but his cheek went pale, as if he had seen a ghost. Or heard one.
14
The gunslinger turned
to Jake, who looked back at him seriously. "I went through the trial of
manhood at the age of fourteen, the youngest of my ka-tel—of my class,
you would say—and perhaps the youngest ever. I told you some of that, Jake. Do
you remember?"
You told
all of us some of that, Susannah thought, but kept her mouth shut, and
warned Eddie with her eyes to do the same. Roland hadn't been himself during
that telling; with Jake both dead and alive within his head, the man had been
fighting madness.
"You mean when we
were chasing Walter," Jake said. "After the way station but before
I... I took my fall."
"That's
right."
"I remember a
little, but that's all. The way you remember the stuff you dream about."
Roland nodded.
"Listen, then. I would tell you more this time, Jake, because you are
older. I suppose we all are."
Susannah was no less
fascinated with the story the second time: how the boy Roland had chanced to
discover Marten, his father's advisor (his father's wizard) in his
mother's apartment. Only none of it had been by chance, of course; the boy
would have passed her door with no more than a glance had Marten not opened it
and invited him in. Marten had told Roland that his mother wanted to see him,
but one look at her rueful smile and downcast eyes as she sat in her low-back
chair told the boy he was the last person in the world Gabrielle Deschain
wanted to see just then.
The flush on her cheek
and the love-bite on the side of her neck told him everything else.
Thus had he been
goaded by Marten into an early trial of manhood, and by employing a weapon his
teacher had not expected—his hawk, David—Roland had defeated Cort, taken his
stick ... and made the enemy of his life in Marten Broadcloak.
Beaten badly, face
swelling into something that looked like a child's goblin mask, slipping toward
a coma, Cort had fought back unconsciousness long enough to offer his newest
apprentice gunslinger counsel: stay away from Marten yet awhile, Cort had said.
"He told me to
let the story of our battle grow into a legend," the gunslinger told
Eddie, Susannah, and Jake. "To wait until my shadow had grown hair on its
face and haunted Marten in his dreams."
"Did you take his
advice?" Susannah asked.
"I never got a
chance," Roland said. His face cracked in a rueful, painful smile. "I
meant to think about it, and seriously, but before I even got started on my
thinking, things ... changed."
"They have a way
of doing that, don't they?" Eddie said. "My goodness, yes."
"I buried my
hawk, the first weapon I ever wielded, and perhaps the finest. Then—and this
part I'm sure I didn't tell you before, Jake—I went into the lower town. That
summer's heat broke in storms full of thunder and hail, and in a room above one
of the brothels where Cort had been wont to roister, I lay with a woman for the
first time."
He poked a stick
thoughtfully into the fire, seemed to become aware of the unconscious symbolism
in what he was doing, and threw it away with a lopsided grin. It landed,
smoldering, near the tire of an abandoned Dodge Aspen and went out.
"It was good. The
sex was good. Not the great thing I and my friends had thought about and
whispered about and wondered about, of course—"
"I think
store-bought pussy tends to be overrated by the young, sugar," Susannah
said.
"I fell asleep
listening to the sots downstairs singing along with the piano and to the sound
of hail on the window. I awoke the next morning in ... well. . . let's just say
I awoke in a way I never would have expected to awake in such a place."
Jake fed fresh fuel to
the fire. It flared up, painting highlights on Roland's cheeks, brushing
crescents of shadow beneath his brows and below his lower lip. And as he
talked, Susannah found she could almost see what had happened on that long-ago
morning that must have smelled of wet cobblestones and rain-sweetened summer
air; what had happened in a whore's crib above a drinking-dive in the lower
town of Gilead, Barony seat of New Canaan, one small mote of land located in
the western regions of Mid-World.
One boy, still aching
from his battle of the day before and newly educated in the mysteries of sex.
One boy, now looking twelve instead of fourteen, his lashes dusting down thick
upon his cheeks, the lids shuttering those extraordinary blue eyes; one boy
with his hand loosely cupping a whore's breast, his hawk-scarred wrist lying
tanned upon the counterpane. One boy in the final instants of his life's last
good sleep, one boy who will shortly be in motion, who will be falling as a
dislodged pebble falls on a steep and broken slope of scree; a falling pebble
that strikes another, and another, and another, those pebbles striking yet
more, until the whole slope is in motion and the earth shakes with the sound of
the landslide.
One boy, one pebble on
a slope loose and ready to slide.
A knot exploded in the
fire. Somewhere in this dream of Kansas, an animal yipped. Susannah watched
sparks swirl up past Roland's incredibly ancient face and saw in that face the
sleeping boy of a summer's mom, lying in a bawd's bed. And then she saw the
door crash open, ending Gilead's last troubled dream.
15
The man who strode in,
crossing the room to the bed before Roland could open his eyes (and before the
woman beside him had even begun to register the sound), was tall, slim, dressed
in faded jeans and a dusty shirt of blue chambray. On his head was a dark gray
hat with a snakeskin band. Lying low on his hips were two old leather holsters.
Jutting from them were the sandalwood grips of the pistols the boy would
someday bear to lands of which this scowling man with the furious blue eyes
would never dream.
Roland was in motion
even before he was able to unseal his eyes, rolling to the left, groping beneath
the bed for what was there. He was fast, so fast it was scary, but—and Susannah
saw this, too, saw it clearly— the man in the faded jeans was faster yet. He
grabbed the boy's shoulder and yanked, turning him naked out of bed and onto
the floor. The boy sprawled there, reaching again for what was beneath the bed,
lightning-quick. The man in the jeans stamped down on his fingers before they
could grasp.
"Bastard!"
the boy gasped. "Oh, you bas—"
But now his eyes were
open, he looked up, and saw that the invading bastard was his father.
The whore was sitting
up now, her eyes puffy, her face slack and petulant. "Here!" she
cried. "Here, here! You can't just be a-comin in like that, so you can't!
Why, if I was to raise my voice—"
Ignoring her, the man
reached beneath the bed and dragged out two gunbelts. Near the end of each was
a bolstered revolver. They were large, and amazing in this largely gunless
world, but they were not so large as those worn by Roland's father, and the
grips were eroded metal plates rather than inlaid wood. When the whore saw the
guns on the invader's hips and the ones in his hands—the ones her young
customer of the night before had been wearing until she had taken him upstairs
and divested him of all weapons save for the one with which she was most
familiar— the expression of sleepy petulance left her face. What replaced it
was the foxlike look of a born survivor. She was up, out of bed, across the
floor, and out the door before her bare bum had more than a brief moment to
twinkle in the morning sun.
Neither the father
standing by the bed nor the son lying naked upon the floor at his feet so much
as looked at her. The man in the jeans held out the gunbelts which Roland had
taken from the fuzer beneath the apprentices' barracks on the previous
afternoon, using Cort's key to open the arsenal door. The man shook the belts
under Roland's very nose, as one might hold a torn garment beneath the nose of
a feckless puppy that has chewed. He shook them so hard that one of the guns
tumbled free. Despite his stupefaction, Roland caught it in midair.
"I thought you
were in the west," Roland said. "In Cressia. After Far-son and
his—"
Roland's father
slapped him hard enough to send the boy tumbling across the room and into a
corner with blood pouring from one comer of his mouth. Roland's first,
appalling instinct was to raise the gun he still held.
Steven Deschain looked
at him, hands on hips, reading this thought even before it was fully formed.
His lips pulled back in a singularly mirthless grin, one that showed all of
his teeth and most of his gums.
"Shoot me if you
will. Why not? Make this abortion complete. Ah, gods, I'd welcome it!"
Roland laid the gun on
the floor and pushed it away, using the back of his hand to do it. All at once
he wanted his fingers nowhere near the trigger of a gun. They were no longer
fully under his control, those fingers. He had discovered that yesterday, right
around the time he had broken Cort's nose.
"Father, I was
tested yesterday. I took Cort's stick. I won. I'm a man."
"You're a
fool," his father said. His grin was gone now; he looked haggard and old.
He sat down heavily on the whore's bed, looked at the gunbelts he still held,
and dropped them between his feet. "You're a fourteen-year-old fool, and
that's the worst, most desperate kind." He looked up, angry all over
again, but Roland didn't mind; anger was better than that look of weariness.
That look of age. "I've known since you toddled that you were no genius,
but I never believed until yestereve that you were an idiot. To let him drive
you like a cow in a chute! Gods! You have forgotten the face of your father!
Say it!"
And that sparked the
boy's own anger. Everything he had done the day before he had done with his
father's face firmly fixed in his mind.
"That's not
true!" he shouted from where he now sat with his bare butt on the
splintery boards of the whore's crib and his back against the wall, the sun
shining through the window and touching the fuzz on his fair, unscarred cheek.
"It is
true, you whelp! Foolish whelp! Say your atonement or I'll strip the hide from
your very—"
"They were
together!" he burst out. "Your wife and your minister— your magician!
I saw the mark of his mouth on her neck! On my mother's neck!" He
reached for the gun and picked it up, but even in his shame and fury was still
careful not to let his fingers stray near the trigger; he held the apprentice's
revolver only by the plain, undecorated metal of its barrel. "Today I end
his treacherous, seducer's life with this, and if you aren't man enough to help
me, at least you can stand aside and let m—"
One of the revolvers
on Steven's hip was out of its holster and in his hand before Roland's eyes saw
any move. There was a single shot, deafening as thunder in the little room; it
was a full minute before Roland was able to hear the babble of questions and
commotion from below. The 'prentice-gun, meanwhile, was long gone, blown out of
his hand and leaving nothing behind but a kind of buzzing tingle. It flew out
the window, down and gone, its grip a smashed ruin of metal and its short turn
in the gunslinger's long tale at an end.
Roland looked at his
father, shocked and amazed. Steven looked back, saying nothing for a long time.
But now he wore the face Roland remembered from earliest childhood: calm and
sure. The weariness and the look of half-distracted fury had passed away like
last night's thunderstorms.
At last his father
spoke. "I was wrong in what I said, and I apologize. You did not forget my
face, Roland. But still you were foolish—you allowed yourself to be driven by
one far slyer than you will ever be in your life. It's only by the grace of the
gods and the working of ka that you have not been sent west, one more
true gunslinger out of Marten's road . . . out of John Farson's road . . . and
out of the road which leads to the creature that rules them." He stood and
held out his arms. "If I had lost you, Roland, I should have died."
Roland got to his feet
and went naked to his father, who embraced him fiercely. When Steven Deschain
kissed him first on one cheek and then the other, Roland began to weep. Then,
in Roland's ear, Steven Deschain whispered six words.
16
"What?"
Susannah asked. "What six words?"
" 'I have known
for two years,' " Roland said. "That was what he whispered."
"Holy Christ,"
Eddie said.
"He told me I
couldn't go back to the palace. If I did, I'd be dead by nightfall. He said,
'You have been born to your destiny in spite of all Marten could do; yet
he has sworn to kill you before you can grow to be a problem to him. It seems
that, winner in the test or no, you must leave Gilead anyway. For only awhile,
though, and you'll go east instead of west. I'd not send you alone, either, or
without a purpose.' Then, almost as an afterthought, he added: 'Or with a pair
of sorry 'prentice revolvers.' "
"What
purpose?" Jake asked. He had clearly been captivated by the story; his
eyes shone nearly as bright as Oy's. "And which friends?"
"These things you
must now hear," Roland said, "and how you judge me will come in
time."
He fetched a sigh—the
deep sigh of a man who contemplates some arduous piece of work—and then tossed
fresh wood on the fire. As the flames flared up, driving the shadows back a
little way, he began to talk. All that queerly long night he talked, not
finishing the story of Susan Delgado until the sun was rising in the east and
painting the glass castle yonder with all the bright hues of a fresh day, and
a strange green cast of light which was its own true color.
PART
TWO
SUSAN
CHAPTER I
.............................
BENEATH
THE
KISSING
MOON
1
A perfect disc of
silver—the Kissing Moon, as it was called in Full Earth—hung above the ragged
hill five miles east of Hambry and ten miles south of Eyebolt Canyon. Below the
hill the late summer heat still held, suffocating even two hours after sundown,
but atop the Coos, it was as if Reap had already come, with its strong breezes
and frost-pinched air. For the woman who lived here with no company but a snake
and one old mutie cat, it was to be a long night.
Never mind, though;
never mind, my dear. Busy hands are happy hands. So they are.
She waited until the
hoofbeats of her visitors' horses had faded, sitting quietly by the window in
the hut's large room (there was only one other, a bedroom little bigger than a
closet). Musty, the six-legged cat, was on her shoulder. Her lap was full of
moonlight.
Three horses, bearing
away three men. The Big Coffin Hunters, they called themselves.
She snorted. Men were
funny, aye, so they were, and the most amusing thing about them was how little
they knew it. Men, with their swaggering, belt-hitching names for themselves.
Men, so proud of their muscles, their drinking capacities, their eating
capacities; so everlastingly proud of their pricks. Yes, even in these times,
when a good many of them could shoot nothing but strange, bent seed that
produced children fit only to be drowned in the nearest well. Ah, but it was
never their fault, was it, dear? No, always it was the woman—her womb, her
fault. Men were such cowards. Such grinning cowards. These three had been no
different from the general run. The old one with the limp might bear
watching—aye, so he might, a clear and overly curious pair of eyes had looked
out at her from his head—but she saw nothing in them she could not deal with,
came it to that.
Men! She could not
understand why so many women feared them. Hadn't the gods made them with the
most vulnerable part of their guts hanging right out of their bodies, like a
misplaced bit of bowel? Kick them there and they curled up like snails. Caress
them there and their brains melted. Anyone who doubted that second bit of
wisdom need only look at her night's second bit of business, the one which
still lay ahead. Thorin! Mayor of Hambry! Chief Guard o' Barony! No fool like
an old fool!
Yet none of these
thoughts had any real power over her or any real malice to them, at least not
now; the three men who called themselves the Big Coffin Hunters had brought her
a marvel, and she would look at it; aye, fill up her eyes with it, so she
would.
The gimp, Jonas, had
insisted she put it away—he had been told she had a place for such things, not
that he wanted to see it himself, not any of her secret places, gods
forbid (at this sally Depape and Reynolds had laughed like trolls)—and so she
had, but the hoofbeats of their horses had been swallowed by the wind now, and
she would do as she liked. The girl whose tits had stolen what little there was
of Hart Thorin's mind would not be here for another hour, at least (the old
woman had insisted that the girl walk from town, citing the purification value
of such a moonlit heel-and-toe, actually just wanting to put a safe bumper of
time between her two appointments), and during that hour she would do as she
liked.
"Oh, it's
beautiful, I'm sure 'tis," she whispered, and did she feel a certain heat
in that place where her ancient bowlegs came together? A certain moisture in
the dry creek which hid there? Gods!
"Aye, even
through the box where they hid it I felt its glam. So beautiful, Musty, like
you." She took the cat from her shoulder and held it in front of her eyes.
The old torn purred and stretched out its pug of a face toward hers. She kissed
its nose. The cat closed its milky gray-green eyes in ecstasy. "So
beautiful, like you—so y'are, so y'are! Hee!"
She put the cat down.
It walked slowly toward the hearth, where a late fire lazed, desultorily eating
at a single log. Musty's tail, split at the tip so it looked like the forked
tail of a devil in an old drawing, switched back and forth in the room's dim
orange air. Its extra legs, dangling from its sides, twitched dreamily. The
shadow which trailed across the floor and grew up the wall was a horror: a
thing that looked like a cat crossed with a spider.
The old woman rose and
went into her sleeping closet, where she had taken the thing Jonas had given
her.
"Lose that and
you'll lose your head," he'd said.
"Never fear me,
my good friend," she'd replied, directing a cringing, servile smile back
over her shoulder, all the while thinking: Men! Foolish strutting creatures
they were!
Now she went to the
foot of her bed, knelt, and passed one hand over the earth floor there. Lines
appeared in the sour dirt as she did. They formed a square. She pushed her
fingers into one of these lines; it gave before her touch. She lifted the
hidden panel (hidden in such a way that no one without the touch would ever be
able to uncover it), revealing a compartment perhaps a foot square and two
feet deep. Within it was an ironwood box. Curled atop the box was a slim green
snake. When she touched its back, its head came up. Its mouth yawned in a
silent hiss, displaying four pairs of fangs—two on top, two on the bottom.
She took the snake up,
crooning to it. As she brought its flat face close to her own, its mouth yawned
wider and it’s hissing became audible. She opened her own mouth; from between
her wrinkled gray lips she poked the yellowish, bad-smelling mat of her tongue.
Two drops of poison— enough to kill an entire dinner-party, if mixed in the
punch—fell on it. She swallowed, feeling her mouth and throat and chest bum, as
if with strong liquor. For a moment the room swam out of focus, and she could
hear voices murmuring in the stenchy air of the hut—the voices of those she
called "the unseen friends." Her eyes ran sticky water down the
trenches time had drawn in her cheeks. Then she blew out a breath and the room
steadied. The voices faded.
She kissed Ermot
between his lidless eyes (time o' the Kissing Moon, all right, she
thought) and then set him aside. The snake slipped beneath her bed, curled
itself in a circle, and watched as she passed her palms over the top of the
ironwood box. She could feel the muscles in her upper arms quivering, and that
heat in her loins was more pronounced. Years it had been since she had felt the
call of her sex, but she felt it now, so she did, and it was not the doing of
the Kissing Moon, or not much.
The box was locked and
Jonas had given her no key, but that was nothing to her, who had lived long and
studied much and trafficked with creatures that most men, for all their bold
talk and strutting ways, would run from as if on fire had they caught even the
smallest glimpse of them. She stretched one hand toward the lock, on which was
inlaid the shape of an eye and a motto in the High Speech (I see who opens me), and then withdrew
it. All at once she could smell what her nose no longer noticed under ordinary
circumstances: must and dust and a dirty mattress and the crumbs of food that
had been consumed in bed; the mingled stench of ashes and ancient incense; the
odor of an old woman with wet eyes and (ordinarily, at least) a dry pussy. She
would not open this box and look at the wonder it contained in here; she would
go outside, where the air was clean and the only smells were sage and mesquite.
She would look by the
light of the Kissing Moon.
Rhea of Coos Hill
pulled the box from its hole with a grunt, rose to her feet with another grunt
(this one from her nether regions), tucked the box under her arm, and left the
room.
2
The hut was far enough
below the brow of the hill to block off the bitterest gusts of the winter wind
which blew almost constantly in these highlands from Reaping until the end of
Wide Earth. A path led to the hill's highest vantage; beneath the full moon it
was a ditch of silver. The old woman toiled up it, puffing, her white hair
standing out around her head in dirty clumps, her old dugs swaying from side to
side under her black dress. The cat followed in her shadow, still giving off
its rusty purr like a stink.
At the top of the
hill, the wind lifted her hair away from her ravaged face and brought her the
moaning whisper of the thinny which had eaten its way into the far end of
Eyebolt Canyon. It was a sound few cared for, she knew, but she herself loved
it; to Rhea of the Coos, it sounded like a lullaby. Overhead rode the moon, the
shadows on its bright skin sketching the faces of lovers kissing ... if you
believed the ordinary fools below, that was. The ordinary fools below saw a
different face or set of faces in each full moon, but the hag knew there was
only one—the face of the Demon. The face of death.
She herself, however,
had never felt more alive.
"Oh, my
beauty," she whispered, and touched the lock with her gnarled fingers. A
faint glimmer of red light showed between her bunched knuckles, and there was a
click. Breathing hard, like a woman who has run a race, she put the box down
and opened it.
Rose-colored light,
dimmer than that thrown by the Kissing Moon but infinitely more beautiful,
spilled out. It touched the ruined face hanging above the box, and for a moment
made it the face of a young girl again.
Musty sniffed, head
stretched forward, ears laid back, old eyes rimmed with that rose light. Rhea
was instantly jealous.
"Get away,
foolish, 'tis not for the likes of you!"
She swatted the cat.
Musty shied back, hissing like a kettle, and stalked in dudgeon to the hummock
which marked the very tip of Coos Hill. There he sat, affecting disdain and
licking one paw as the wind combed ceaselessly through his fur.
Within the box,
peeping out of a velvet drawstring bag, was a glass globe. It was filled with
that rosy light; it flowed in gentle pulses, like the beat of a satisfied
heart. \
"Oh, my lovely
one," she murmured, lifting it out. She held it up before her; let its
pulsing radiance run down her wrinkled face like rain. "Oh, ye live, so ye
do!"
Suddenly the color
within the globe darkened toward scarlet. She felt it thrum in her hands like
an immensely powerful motor, and again she felt that amazing wetness between
her legs, that tidal tug she believed had been left behind long ago.
Then the thrumming
died, and the light in the globe seemed to furl up like petals. Where it had
been there was now a pinkish gloom . . . and three riders coming out of it. At
first she thought it was the men who had brought her the globe—Jonas and the
others. But no, these were younger, even younger than Depape, who was about
twenty-five. The one on the left of the trio appeared to have a bird's skull
mounted on the pommel of his saddle—strange but true.
Then that one and the
one on the right were gone, darkened away somehow by the power of the glass,
leaving only the one in the middle. She took in the jeans and boots he wore,
the flat-brimmed hat that hid the upper half of his face, the easy way he sat
his horse, and her first alarmed thought was Gunslinger! Come east from the
Inner Baronies, aye, perhaps from Gilead itself! But she did not have to
see the upper half of the rider's face to know he was little more than a child,
and there were no guns on his hips. Yet she didn't think the youth came
unarmed. If only she could see a little better .. .
She brought the glass
almost to the tip of her nose and whispered, "Closer, lovie! Closer
still!"
She didn't know what
to expect—nothing at all seemed most likely—but within the dark circle of the
glass, the figure did come closer. Swum closer, almost, like a horse and
rider underwater, and she saw there was a quiver of arrows on his back. Before
him, on the pommel of his saddle, was not a skull but a shortbow. And to the
right side of the saddle, where a gunslinger might have carried a rifle in a
scabbard, there was the feather-fluffed shaft of a lance. He was not one of the
Old People, his face had none of that look ... yet she did not think he was of
the Outer Arc, either.
"But who are
ye, cully?" she breathed. "And how shall I know ye? Ye've got yer hat
pulled down so far I can't see your God-pounding eyes, so ye do! By yer
horse, mayhap ... or p'raps by yer ... get away, Musty! Why do yer trouble me
so? Arrrr!"
The cat had come back
from its lookout point and was twining back and forth between her swollen old
ankles, waowing up at her in a voice even more rusty than its purr. When
the old woman kicked out at him, Musty dodged agilely away . . . then
immediately came back and started in again, looking up at her with moonstruck
eyes and making those soft yowls.
Rhea kicked out at it
again, this one just as ineffectual as the first one, then looked into the
glass once more. The horse and its interesting young rider were gone. The rose
light was gone, as well. It was now just a dead glass ball she held, its only
light a reflection borrowed from the moon.
The wind gusted,
pressing her dress against the ruination that was her body. Musty, undaunted by
the feeble kicks of his mistress, darted forward and began to twine about her
ankles again, crying up at her the whole time.
"There, do ye see
what you've done, ye nasty bag of fleas and disease? The light's gone out of
it, gone out just when I—"
Then she heard a sound
from the cart track which led up to her hut, and understood why Musty had been
acting out. It was singing she heard. It was the girl she heard. The
girl was early.
Grimacing horribly—she
loathed being caught by surprise, and the little miss down there would pay for
doing it—she bent and put the glass back in its box. The inside was lined with
padded silk, and the ball fit as neatly as the breakfast egg in His Lordship's
cup. And still from down the hill (the cursed wind was wrong or she would have
heard it sooner), the sound of the girl singing, now closer than ever:
"Love,
o love, o careless love.
Can't
you see what careless love has done?"
"I'll give'ee
careless love, ye virgin bitch," the old woman said. She could smell the
sour reek of sweat from under her arms, but that other moisture had dried up
again. "I'll give ye payday for walking in early on old Rhea, so I
will!"
She passed her fingers
over the lock on the front of the box, but it wouldn't fasten. She supposed she
had been overeager to have it open, and had broken something inside it when she
used the touch. The eye and the motto seemed to mock her: i see who opens me. It could be put
right, and in a jiffy, but right now even a jiffy was more than she had.
"Pestering cunt!”
She whined, lifting her head briefly toward the approaching voice (almost here
now, by the gods, and forty-five minutes before her time!). Then she closed
the lid of the box. It gave her a pang to do it, because the glass was coming
to life again, filling with that rosy glow, but there was no time for looking
or dreaming now. Later, perhaps, after the object of Thorin's unseemly
late-life prickishness had gone.
And you must restrain
yourself from doing anything too awful to the girl,
she cautioned herself. Remember she's here because of him, and at least
ain't one of those green girls with a bun in the oven and a boyfriend acting
reluctant about the cries o' marriage. It's Thorin 's doing, this one's what he
thinks about after his ugly old crow of a wife is asleep and he takes himself
in his hand and commences the evening milking; it's Thorin's doing, he has the
old law on his side, and he has power. Furthermore, what's in that box is his
man's business, and if Jonas found out ye looked at it... that ye used it.
..
Aye, but no fear of
that. And in the meantime, possession were nine-tenths of the law, were it not?
She hoisted the box
under one arm, hoisted her skirts with her free hand, and ran back along the
path to the hut. She could still run when she had to, aye, though few there
were who'd believe it.
Musty ran at her
heels, bounding along with his cloven tail held high and his extra legs
flopping up and down in the moonlight.
CHAPTER II
proving honesty
1
Rhea darted into her
hut, crossed in front of the guttering fire, then stood in the doorway to her
tiny bedroom, swiping a hand through her hair in a distracted gesture. The
bitch hadn't seen her outside the hut—she surely would have stopped
caterwauling, or at least faltered in it if she had— and that was good, but the
cursed hidey-hole had sealed itself up again, and that was bad. There was no
time to open it again, either. Rhea hurried to the bed, knelt, and pushed the
box far back into the shadows beneath.
Ay, that would do;
until Susy Greengown was gone, it would do very well. Smiling on the right side
of her mouth (the left was mostly frozen), Rhea got up, brushed her dress, and
went to meet her second appointment of the night.
2
Behind her, the
unlocked lid of the box clicked open. It came up less than an inch, but that
was enough to allow a sliver of pulsing rose-colored light to shine out.
3
Susan Delgado stopped
about forty yards from the witch's hut, the sweat chilling on her arms and the
nape of her neck. Had she just spied an old woman (surely the one she had come
to see) dart down that last bit of path leading from the top of the hill? She
thought she had.
Don't stop
singing—when an old lady hurries like that, she doesn't want to be seen. If you
stop singing, she'll likely know she was.
For a moment Susan
thought she'd stop anyway—that her memory would close up like a startled hand
and deny her another verse of the old song which she had been singing since
youngest childhood. But the next verse came to her, and she continued on (with
feet as well as voice):
"Once
my cares were far away,
Yes,
once my cares were far away,
Now
my love has gone from me
And
misery is in my heart to stay."
A bad song for a night
such as this, mayhap, but her heart went its own way without much interest in
what her head thought or wanted; always had^ She was frightened to be out by
moonlight, when werewolves were said to walk, she was frightened of her errand,
and she was frightened by what that errand portended. Yet when she had gained
the Great Road out of Hambry and her heart had demanded she run, she had run—
under the light of the Kissing Moon and with her skirt held above her knees she
had galloped like a pony, with her shadow galloping right beside her. For a
mile or more she had run, until every muscle in her body tingled and the air
she pulled down her throat tasted like some sweet heated liquid. And when she
reached the upland track leading to this high sinister, she had sung. Because
her heart demanded it. And, she supposed, it really hadn't been such a bad
idea; if nothing else, it had kept the worst of her megrims away. Singing was
good for that much, anyway.
Now she walked to the
end of the path, singing the chorus of "Careless Love." As she
stepped into the scant light which fell through the open door and onto the
stoop, a harsh raincrow voice spoke from the shadows: "Stop yer howling,
missy—it catches in my brains like a fishhook!"
Susan, who had been
told all her life that she had a fair singing voice, a gift from her gramma, no
doubt, fell silent at once, abashed. She stood on the stoop with her hands
clasped in front of her apron. Beneath the apron she wore her second-best dress
(she only had two). Beneath it, her heart was thumping very hard.
A cat—a hideous thing
with two extra legs sticking out of its sides like toasting forks—came into the
doorway first. It looked up at her, seemed to measure her, then screwed its
face up in a look that was eerily human: contempt. It hissed at her, then
flashed away into the night.
Well, good evening to
you, too, Susan thought.
The old woman she had
been sent to see stepped into the doorway.
She looked Susan up
and down with that same expression of flat-eyed contempt, then stood back.
"Come in. And mind ye clap the door tight. The wind has a way of blowin it
open, as ye see!"
Susan stepped inside.
She didn't want to close herself into this bad-smelling room with the old
woman, but when there was no choice, hesitation was ever a fault. So her
father had said, whether the matter under discussion was sums and subtractions
or how to deal with boys at barn-dances when their hands became overly
adventurous. She pulled the door firmly to, and heard it latch.
"And here
y'are," the old woman said, and offered a grotesque smile of welcome. It
was a smile guaranteed to make even a brave girl think of stories told in the
nursery—Winter's tales of old women with snaggle teeth and bubbling cauldrons
full of toad-green liquid. There was no cauldron over the fire in this room
(nor was the fire itself much of a shake, in Susan's opinion), but the girl
guessed there had been, betimes, and things in it of which it might be better
not to think. That this woman was a real witch and not just an old lady posing
as one was something Susan had felt sure of from the moment she had seen Rhea
darting back inside her hut with the malformed cat at her heels. It was
something you could almost smell, like the reeky aroma rising off the hag's
skin.
"Yes," she
said, smiling. She tried to make it a good one, bright and unafraid. "Here
I am."
"And it's early
y'are, my little sweeting. Early y'are! Hee!"
"I ran partway.
The moon got into my blood, I suppose. That's what my da would have said."
The old woman's
horrible smile widened into something that made Susan think of the way eels
sometimes seemed to grin, after death and just before the pot. "Aye, but
dead he is, dead these five years, Pat Delgado of the red hair and beard, the
life mashed out of 'im by 'is own horse, aye, and went into the clearing at the
end of the path with the music of his own snapping bones in his ears, so he
did!"
The nervous smile
slipped from Susan's face as if slapped away. She felt tears, always close at
the mere mention of her da's name, bum at the back of her eyes. But she would
not let them fall. Not in this heartless old crow's sight, she wouldn't.
"Let our business
be quick and be done," she said in a dry voice that was far from her usual
one; that voice was usually cheery and merry and ready for fun. But she was Pat
Delgado's child, daughter of the best drover ever to work the Western Drop, and
she remembered his face very well; she could rise to a stronger nature if
required, as it now clearly was. The old woman had meant to reach out and
scratch as deep as she could, and the more she saw that her efforts were
succeeding, the more she would redouble them.
The hag, meanwhile,
was watching Susan shrewdly, her bunch-knuckled hands planted on her hips while
her cat twined around her ankles. Her eyes were rheumy, but Susan saw enough
of them to realize they were the same gray-green shade as the cat's eyes, and
to wonder what sort of fell magic that might be. She felt an urge—a strong
one—to drop her eyes, and would not. It was all right to feel fear, but
sometimes a very bad idea to show it.
"You look at me
pert, missy," Rhea said at last. Her smile was dissolving slowly into a
petulant frown.
"Nay, old
mother," Susan replied evenly. "Only as one who wishes to do the
business she came for and be gone. I have come here at the wish of My Lord
Mayor of Mejis, and at that of my Aunt Cordelia, sister of my father. My dear
father, of whom I would hear no ill spoken."
"I speak as I
do," the old woman said. The words were dismissive, yet there was a trace
of fawning servility in the hag's voice. Susan set no importance on that; it
was a tone such a thing as this had probably adopted her whole life, and came
as automatically as breath. "I've lived alone a long time, with no
mistress but myself, and once it begins, my tongue goes where it will."
"Then sometimes
it might be best not to let it begin at all."
The old woman's eyes
flashed uglily. "Curb your own, stripling girl, lest you find it dead in
your mouth, where it will rot and make the Mayor think twice about kissing you
when he smells its stink, aye, even under such a moon as this!"
Susan's heart filled
with misery and bewilderment. She'd come up here intent on only one thing:
getting the business done as quickly as possible, a barely explained rite that
was apt to be painful and sure to be shameful. Now this old woman was looking
at her with flat and naked hatred. How could things have gone wrong with such
suddenness? Or was it always this way with witches?
"We have begun
badly, mistress—can we start over?" Susan asked suddenly, and held out her
hand.
The hag looked startled,
although she did reach out and make brief contact, the wrinkled tips of her
fingers touching the short-nailed lingers of the sixteen-year-old girl who
stood before her with her clear-skinned face shining and her long hair braided
down her back. Susan had to make a real effort not to grimace at the touch,
brief as it was. The old woman's fingers were as chilly as those of a corpse,
but Susan had touched chilly fingers before ("Cold hands, warm
heart," Aunt Cord sometimes said). The real unpleasantness was in the texture,
the feel of cold flesh spongy and loose on the bones, as if the woman to whom
they were attached had drowned and lain long in some pool.
"Nay, nay,
there's no starting over," the old woman said, "yet may-hap we'll go
on better than we've begun. Ye've a powerful friend in the Mayor, and I'd not
have him for my enemy."
She's honest, at
least, Susan thought, then had to laugh at herself.
This woman would be honest only when she absolutely had to be; left to her own
devices and desires, she'd lie about everything—the weather, the crops, the
flights of birds come Reaping.
"Ye came before I
expected ye, and it's put me out of temper, so it has. Have ye brought me
something, missy? Ye have, I'll warrant!" Her eyes were glittering once
more, this time not with anger.
Susan reached beneath
her apron (so stupid, wearing an apron for an errand on the backside of
nowhere, but it was what custom demanded) and into her pocket. There, tied to a
string so it could not be easily lost (by young girls suddenly moved to run in
the moonlight, perchance), was a cloth bag. Susan broke the binding string and
brought the bag out. She put it in the outstretched hand before her, the palm
so worn that the lines marking it were now little more than ghosts. She was careful
not to touch Rhea again ... although the old woman would be touching her
again, and soon.
"Is it the sound
o' the wind makes ye shiver?" Rhea asked, although Susan could tell her
mind was mostly fixed on the little bag; her fingers were busy tugging out the
knot in the drawstring.
"Yes, the
wind."
"And so it
should. 'Tis the voices of the dead you hear in the wind, and when they scream
so, 'tis because they regret—ah!"
The knot gave. She
loosened the drawstring and tumbled two gold coins into her hand. They were
unevenly milled and crude—no one had made such for generations—but they were
heavy, and the eagles engraved upon them had a certain power. Rhea lifted one
to her mouth, pulled back her lips to reveal a few gruesome teeth, and bit
down. The hag looked at the faint indentations her teeth had left in the gold.
For several seconds she gazed, rapt, then closed her fingers over them tightly.
While Rhea's attention
was distracted by the coins, Susan happened to look through the open door to
her left and into what she assumed was the witch's bedchamber. And here she saw
an odd and disquieting thing: a light under the bed. A pink, pulsing light. It
seemed to be coming from some kind of box, although she could not quite ...
The witch looked up,
and Susan hastily moved her eyes to a comer of the room, where a net containing
three or four strange white fruits hung from a hook. Then, as the old woman
moved and her huge shadow danced ponderously away from that part of the wall,
Susan saw they were not fruits at air, but skulls. She felt a sickish drop in
her stomach.
"The fire needs
building up, missy. Go round to the side of the house and bring back an armload
of wood. Good-sized sticks are what's wanted, and never mind whining ye can't
lug 'em. Ye're of a strappin good size, so ye are!"
Susan, who had quit
whining about chores around the time she had quit pissing into her clouts, said
nothing . . . although it did cross her mind to ask Rhea if everyone who
brought her gold was invited to lug her wood. In truth, she didn't mind; the
air outside would taste like wine after the stench of the hut.
She had almost reached
the door when her foot struck something hot and yielding. The cat yowled. Susan
stumbled and almost fell. From behind her, the old woman issued a series of
gasping, choking sounds which Susan eventually recognized as laughter.
"Watch Musty, my
little sweet one! Tricksy, he is! And tripsy as well, betimes, so he is!
Hee!" And off she went, in another gale.
The cat looked up at
Susan, its ears laid back, its gray-green eyes wide. It hissed at her. And
Susan, unaware she was going to do it until it was done, hissed back. Like its
expression of contempt, Musty's look of surprise was eerily—and, in this case,
comically—human. It turned and fled for Rhea's bedroom, its split tail lashing.
Susan opened the door and went outside to get the wood. Already she felt as if
she had been here a thousand years, and that it might be a thousand more before
she could go home.
4
The air was as sweet
as she had hoped, perhaps even sweeter, and for a moment she only stood on the
stoop, breathing it in, trying to cleanse her lungs . . . and her mind.
After five good
breaths, she got herself in motion. Around the side of the house she went...
but it was the wrong side, it seemed, for there was no woodpile here. There was
a narrow excuse for a window, however, half-buried in some tough and unlovely
creeper. It was toward the back of the hut, and must look in on the old woman's
sleeping closet.
Don't look in there,
whatever she's got under her bed isn't your business, and if she were to catch
you. . .
She went to the window
despite these admonitions, and peeked in.
It was unlikely that
Rhea would have seen Susan's face through the dense overgrowth of pig ivy even
if the old besom had been looking in that direction, and she wasn't. She was on
her knees, the drawstring bag caught in her teeth, reaching under the bed.
She brought out a box
and opened its lid, which was already ajar. Her face was flooded with soft pink
radiance, and Susan gasped. For one moment it was the face of a young girl—but
one filled with cruelty as well as youth, the face of a self-willed child
determined to learn all the wrong things for all the wrong reasons. The face of
the girl this hag once had been, mayhap. The light appeared to be coming from
some sort of glass ball.
The old woman looked
at it for several moments, her eyes wide and fascinated. Her lips moved as if
she were speaking to it or perhaps even singing to it; the little bag Susan had
brought from town, its string still clamped in the hag's mouth, bobbed up and
down as she spoke. Then, with what appeared to be great effort of will, she
closed the box, cutting off the rosy light. Susan found herself relieved—there
was something about it she didn't like.
The old woman cupped
one hand over the silver lock in the middle of the lid, and a brief scarlet
light spiked out from between her fingers. All this with the drawstring bag
still hanging from her mouth. Then she put the box on the bed, knelt, and began
running her hands over the dirt just beneath the bed's edge. Although she
touched only with her palms, lines appeared as if she had used a drawing tool.
These lines darkened, becoming what looked like grooves.
The wood, Susan! Gel
the wood before she wakes up to how long you've been gone! For your father's
sake!
Susan pulled the skirt
of her dress all the way up to her waist—she did not want the old woman to
see dirt or leaves on her clothing when she came back inside, did not want to
answer the questions the sight of such smuts might provoke—and crawled beneath
the window with her white cotton drawers flashing in the moonlight. Once she
was past, she got to her feet again and hurried quietly around to the far side
of the hut. Here she found the woodpile under an old, moldy-smelling hide. She
took half a dozen good-sized chunks and walked back toward the front of the
house with them in her arms.
When she entered,
turning sideways to get her load through the doorway without dropping any, the
old woman was back in the main room, staring moodily into the fireplace, where
there was now little more than embers; Of the drawstring bag there was no sign.
"Took; you long
enough, missy," Rhea said. She continued to look into the fireplace, as if
Susan were of no account... but one foot tapped below the dirty hem of her
dress, and her eyebrows were drawn together.
Susan crossed the
room, peering over the load of wood in her arms as well as she could while she
walked. It wouldn't surprise her a bit to spy the cat lurking near, hoping to
trip her up. "I saw a spider," she said. "I flapped my apron at
it to make it run away. I hate the look of them, so I do."
"Ye'll see
something ye like the look of even less, soon enough," Rhea said, grinning
her peculiar one-sided grin. "Out of old Thorin's nightshirt it'll come,
stiff as a stick and as red as rhubarb! Hee! Hold a minute, girl; ye gods,
ye've brought enough for a Fair-Day bonfire."
Rhea took two fat logs
from Susan's pile and tossed them indifferently onto the coals. Embers
spiraled up the dark and faintly roaring shaft of the chimney. There, ye've
scattered what's left of yer fire, ye silly old thing, and will likely have to
rekindle the whole mess, Susan thought. Then Rhea reached into the
fireplace with one splayed hand, spoke a guttural word, and the logs blazed up
as if soaked in oil.
"Put the rest
over there," she said, pointing at the woodbox. "And mind ye not be a
scatterbark, missy."
What, and dirty all
this neat? Susan thought. She bit the insides of her cheeks
to kill the smile that wanted to rise on her mouth.
Rhea might have sensed
it, however; when Susan straightened again, the old woman was looking at her
with a dour, knowing expression.
"All right,
mistress, let's do our business and have it done. Do ye know why you're
here?"
"I am here at
Mayor Thorin's wish," Susan repeated, knowing that was no real answer. She
was frightened now—more frightened than when she had looked through the window
and seen the old woman crooning to the glass ball. "His wife has come
barren to the end of her courses. He wishes to have a son before he is also
unable to—"
"Pish-tush, spare
me the codswallop and pretty words. He wants tits and arse that don't squish in
his hands and a box that'll grip what he pushes. If he's still man enough to
push it, that is. If a son come of it, aye, fine, he'll give it over to ye to
keep and raise until it's old enough to school, and after that ye'll see it no
more. If it's a daughter, he'll likely take it from ye and give it to his new
man, the one with the girl's hair and the limp, to drown in the nearest
cattle-wallow."
Susan stared at her,
shocked out of all measure.
The old woman saw the
look and laughed. "Don't like the sound of the truth, do yer? Few do,
missy. But that's neither here nor there; yer auntie was ever a trig one, and
she'll have done all right out of Thorin and Thorin's treasury. What gold
you see of it's none o' mine . . . and won't be none o' yours, either, if
you don't watch sharp! Hee! Take off that dress!"
I
won't was what rose to her lips, but what then? To be turned out of this
hut (and to be turned out pretty much as she had come, and not as a lizard or a
hopping toad would probably be the best luck she could hope for) and sent west
as she was now, without even the two gold coins she'd brought up here? And that
was only the small half of it. The large was that she had given her word. At
first she had resisted, but when Aunt Cord had invoked her father's name, she
had given in. As she always did. Really, she had no choice.'' And when there
was no choice, hesitation was ever a fault.
She brushed the front
of her apron, to which small bits of bark now clung, then untied it and took it
off. She folded it, laid it on a small, grimy hassock near the hearth, and
unbuttoned her dress to the waist. She shivered it from her shoulders, and
stepped out. She folded it and laid it atop the apron, trying not to mind the
greedy way Rhea of Coos was staring at her in the firelight. The cat came
sashaying across the floor, grotesque extra legs hobbling, and sat at Rhea's
feet. Outside, the wind gusted. It was warm on the hearth but Susan was cold
just the same, as if that wind had gotten inside her, somehow.
"Hurry, girl, for
yer father's sake!"
Susan pulled her shift
over her head, folded it atop the dress, then stood in only her drawers, with
her arms folded over her bosom. The fire painted warm orange highlights along
her thighs; black circles of shadow in the tender folds behind her knees.
"And still she's
not nekkid!" the old crow laughed. "Ain't we lah-di-dah! Aye, we are,
very fine! Take off those drawers, mistress, and stand as ye slid from yer
mother! Although ye had not so many goodies as to interest the likes of Hart
Thorin then, did ye? Hee!"
Feeling caught in a
nightmare, Susan did as she was bid. With her mound and bush uncovered, her
crossed arms seemed foolish. She lowered them to her sides.
"Ah, no wonder he
wants ye!" the old woman said." 'Tis beautiful ye are, and true! Is
she not, Musty?"
The cat waowed.
"There's
dirt on yer knees," Rhea said suddenly. "How came it
there?" \
Susan felt a moment of
awful panic. She had lifted her skirts to crawl beneath the hag's window . . .
and hung herself by doing it.
Then an answer rose to
her lips, and she spoke it calmly enough. "When I came in sight of your
hut, I grew fearful. I knelt to pray, and raised my skirt so as not to soil
it."
"I'm touched—to
want a clean dress for the likes o' me! How good y'are! Don't you agree,
Musty?"
The cat waowed,
then began to lick one of its forepaws.
"Get on with
it," Susan said. "You've been paid and I'll obey, but stop teasing
and have done."
"You know what it
is I have to do, mistress."
"I don't,"
Susan said. The tears were close again, burning the backs of her eyes, but she
would not let them fall. Would not. "I have an idea, but when I
asked Aunt Cord if I was right, she said that you'd 'take care of my education
in that regard.' "
"Wouldn't dirty
her mouth with the words, would she? Well, that's all right. Yer Aunt Rhea's
not too nice to say what yer Aunt Cordelia won't. I'm to make sure that ye're
physically and spiritually intact, missy.
Proving honesty is
what the old ones called it, and it's a good enough name. So it is. Step to
me."
Susan took two
reluctant steps forward, so that her bare toes were almost touching the old
woman's slippers and her bare breasts were almost touching the old woman's
dress.
"If a devil or
demon has polluted yer spirit, such a thing as might taint the child you'll
likely bear, it leaves a mark behind. Most often it's a suck-mark or a lover's
bite, but there's others . .. open yer mouth!"
Susan did, and when
the old woman bent closer, the reek of her was so strong that the girl's
stomach clenched. She held her breath, praying this would be over soon.
"Run out yer
tongue."
Susan ran out her
tongue.
"Now send yer
breezes into my face."
Susan exhaled her held
breath. Rhea breathed it in and then, mercifully, pulled her head away a
little. She had been close enough for Susan to see the lice hopping in her
hair.
"Sweet
enough," the old woman said. "Aye, good's a meal. Now turn
around."
Susan did, and felt
the old witch's fingers trail down her back and to her buttocks. Their tips
were cold as mud.
"Bend over and
spread yer cheeks, missy, be not shy, Rhea's seen more than one pultry in her
time!"
Face flushing—she
could feel the beat of her heart in the center of her forehead and in the
hollows of her temples—Susan did as told. And then she felt one of those
corpselike fingers prod its way into her anus. Susan bit her lips to keep from
screaming.
The invasion was
mercifully short ... but there would be another, Susan feared.
"Turn
around."
She turned. The old
woman passed her hands over Susan's breasts, flicked lightly at the nipples
with her thumbs, then examined the undersides carefully. Rhea slipped a finger
into the cup of the girl's navel, then hitched up her own skirt and dropped to
her knees with a grunt of effort. She passed her hands down Susan's legs, first
front, then back. She seemed to take special pains with the area just below the
calves, where the tendons ran.
"Lift yer right
foot, girl."
Susan did, and uttered
a nervous, screamy laugh as Rhea ran a thumbnail down her instep to her heel.
The old woman parted her toes, looking between each pair.
After this process had
been repeated with the other foot, the old woman—still on her knees—said:
"You know what comes next."
"Aye." The
word came out of her in a little trembling rush.
"Hold ye still,
missy—all else is well, clean as a willow-strip, ye are, but now we've come to
the cozy nook that's all Thorin cares for; we've come to where honesty must
really be proved. So hold ye still!"
Susan closed her eyes
and thought of horses running along the Drop—nominally they were the Barony's
horse, overlooked by Rimer, Thorin's Chancellor and the Barony's Minister of
Inventory, but the horses didn't know that; they thought they were free, and if
you were free in your mind, what else mattered?
Let me be free in my
mind, as free as the horses along the Drop, and don't let her hurt me. Please,
don't let her hurt me. And if she does, please help me to bear it in decent
silence.
Cold fingers parted
the downy hair below her navel; there was a pause, and then two cold fingers
slipped inside her. There was pain, but only a moment of it, and not
bad; she'd hurt herself worse stubbing her toe or barking her shin on the way
to the privy in the middle of the night. The humiliation was the bad part, and
the revulsion of Rhea's ancient touch.
"Caulked tight,
ye are!" Rhea cried. "Good as ever was! But Thorin'll see to that, so
he will! As for you, my girl, I'll tell yer a secret yer prissy aunt with her
long nose 'n tight purse 'n little goosebump tits never knew: even a girl who's
intact don't need to lack for a shiver now 'n then, if she knows how!"
The hag's withdrawing
fingers closed gently around the little nubbin of flesh at the head of Susan's
cleft. For one terrible second Susan thought they would pinch that sensitive
place, which sometimes made her draw in a breath if it rubbed just so against
the pommel of her saddle when she was riding, but instead the fingers caressed
. . . then pressed ... and the girl was horrified to feel a heat which was far
from unpleasant kindle in her belly.
"Like a little
bud o' silk," the old woman crooned, and her meddling fingers moved
faster. Susan felt her hips sway forward, as if with a mind and life of their
own, and then she thought of the old woman's greedy, self-willed face, pink as
the face of a whore by gaslight as it hung over the open box; she thought of
the way the drawstring bag with the gold pieces in it had hung from the
wrinkled mouth like some disgorged piece of flesh, and the heat she felt was
gone. She drew back, trembling, her arms and belly and breasts breaking out in
gooseflesh.
"You've finished
what you were paid to do," Susan said. Her voice was dry and harsh.
Rhea's face knotted.
"Ye'll not tell me aye, no, yes, or maybe, impudent stripling of a girl!
I know when I'm done, I, Rhea, the Weirding of Coos, and—"
"Be still, and be
on your feet before I kick you into the fire, unnatural thing."
The old woman's lips
wriggled back from her few remaining teeth in a doglike sneer, and now, Susan
realized, she and the witch-woman were back where they had been at the start:
ready to claw each other's eyes out.
"Raise hand or
foot to me, you impudent cunt, and what leaves my house will leave handless,
footless, and blind of eye."
"I do not much
doubt you could do it, but Thorin should be vexed," Susan said. It was the
first time in her life she had ever invoked a man's name for protection.
Realizing this made her feel ashamed . . . small, somehow. She didn't know why
that should be, especially since she had agreed to sleep in his bed and bear
his child, but it was.
The old woman stared,
her seamed face working until it folded into a parody of a smile that was worse
than her snarl. Puffing and pulling at the, arm of her chair, Rhea got to her
feet. As she did, Susan quickly began to dress.
"Aye, vexed he
would be. Perhaps you know best after all, missy;
I've had a strange
night, and it's wakened parts of me better left asleep. Anything else that
might have happened, take it as a compliment to yer youth'n purity . . . and to
yer beauty as well. Aye. You're a beautiful thing, and there's no doubtin it.
Yer hair, now . . . when yer let it down, as ye will for Thorin, I wot, when ye
lay with him ... it glows like the sun, doesn't it?"
Susan did not want to
force the old hag out of her posturing, but she didn't want to encourage these
fawning compliments, either. Not when she could still see the hate in Rhea's
rheumy eyes, not when she could feel the old woman's touch still crawling like
beetles on her skin. She said nothing, only stepped into her dress, set it on
her shoulders, and began to button up the front.
Rhea perhaps
understood the run of her thoughts, for the smile dropped off her mouth and her
manner grew businesslike. Susan found this a great relief.
"Well, never mind
it. Ye've proved honest; ye may dress yerself and go. But not a word of what
passed between us to Thorin, mind ye! Words between women need trouble no man's
ear, especially one as great as he." Yet at this Rhea could not forbear a
certain spasming sneer. Susan didn't know if the old woman was aware of it or
not. "Are we agreed?"
Anything, anything,
just as long as I can be out of here and away.
"You declare me
proved?"
"Aye, Susan,
daughter of Patrick. So I do. But it's not what I say that matters. Now
... wait... somewhere here ..."
She scrabbled along
the mantel, pushing stubs of candles stuck on cracked saucers this way and
that, lifting first a kerosene lantern and then a battery flashlight, looking
fixedly for a moment at a drawing of a young boy and then putting it aside.
"Where .. . where
.. . arrrrr.. . here!"
She snatched up a pad
of paper with a sooty cover (citgo stamped
on it in ancient gold letters) and a stub of pencil. She paged almost to the
end of the pad before finding a blank sheet. On it she scrawled something, then
tore the sheet off the spiral of wire at the top of the pad. She held the sheet
out to Susan, who took it and looked at it. Scrawled there was a word she did
not understand at first:
Below it was a symbol:
"What's
this?" she asked, tapping the little drawing. "Rhea, her mark. Known
for six Baronies around, it is, and can't be copied. Show that paper to yer
aunt. Then to Thorin. If yer aunt wants to take it and show it to Thorin
herself—I know her, y'see, and her bossy ways—tell her no, Rhea says no, she's
not to have the keeping of it." "And if Thorin wants it?"
Rhea shrugged
dismissively. "Let him keep it or bum it or wipe his bum with it, for all
of me. It's nothing to you, either, for you knew you were honest all along, so
you did. True?"
Susan nodded. Once,
walking home after a dance, she had let a boy slip his hand inside her shirt
for a moment or two, but what of that? She was honest. And in more ways than
this nasty creature meant.
"But don't lose
that paper. Unless you'd see me again, that is, and go through the same
business a second time."
Gods perish even the
thought, Susan thought, and managed not to shudder. She
put the paper in her pocket, where the drawstring bag had been.
"Now, come to the
door, missy." She looked as if she wanted to grasp Susan's arm, then
thought better of it. The two of them walked side by side to the door, not
touching in such a careful way that it made them look awkward. Once there, Rhea
did grip Susan's arm. Then, with her other hand, she pointed to the bright
silver disc hanging over the top of the Coos.
"The Kissing
Moon," Rhea said. " 'Tis midsummer."
"Yes."
"Tell Thorin he's
not to have you in his bed—or in a haystack, or on the scullery floor, or
anywhere else—until Demon Moon rises full in the sky."
"Not until
Reaping?" That was three months—a lifetime, it seemed to her. Susan tried
not to show her delight at this reprieve. She'd thought Thorin would put an end
to her virginity by moonrise the next night. She wasn't blind to the way he
looked at her.
Rhea, meanwhile, was
looking at the moon, seeming to calculate. Her hand went to the long tail of
Susan's hair and stroked it. Susan bore this as well as she could, and just
when she felt she could bear it no longer, Rhea dropped her hand back to her
side and nodded. "Aye, not just Reaping, but true fin de ano—Fair-Night,
tell him. Say that he may have you after the bonfire. You understand?"
"True fin de ano,
yes." She could barely contain her joy.
"When the fire in
Green Heart bums low and the last of the red-handed men are ashes," Rhea
said. "Then and not until then. You must tell him so."
"I will."
The hand came out and
began to stroke her hair again. Susan bore it.
After such good news,
she thought, it would have been mean-spirited to do otherwise. "The time
between now and Reaping you will use to meditate, and to gather your forces to
produce the male child the Mayor wants ... or mayhap just to ride along the
Drop and gather the last flowers of your maidenhood. Do you understand?"
"Yes." She
dropped a curtsey. "Thankee-sai."
Rhea waved this off as
if it were a flattery. "Speak not of what passed between us, mind.
"Tis no one's affair but our own."
"I won't. And our
business is done?"
"Well ... mayhap
there's one more small thing ..." Rhea smiled to show it was indeed
small, then raised her left hand in front of Susan's eyes with three fingers
together and one apart. Glimmering in the fork between was a silver medallion,
seemingly produced from nowhere. The girl's eyes fastened on it at once. Until
Rhea spoke a single guttural word, that was.
Then they closed.
5
Rhea looked at the
girl who stood asleep on her stoop in the moonlight. As she replaced the
medallion within her sleeve (her fingers were old and bunchy, but they moved
dexterously enough when it was required, oh, aye), the businesslike expression
fell from her face, and was replaced by a look of squint-eyed fury. Kick me
into the fire, would you, you trull? Tattle to Thorin? But her threats and
impudence weren't the worst. The worst had been the expression of revulsion on
her face when she had pulled back from Rhea's touch.
Too good for Rhea, she
was! And thought herself too good for Thorin as well, no doubt, she with
sixteen years' worth of fine blonde hair hanging down from her head, hair
Thorin no doubt dreamed of plunging his hands into even as he plunged and
reared and plowed down below.
She couldn't hurt the
girl, much as she wanted to and much as the girl deserved it; if nothing else,
Thorin might take the glass ball away from her, and Rhea couldn't bear that.
Not yet, anyway. So she could not hurt the girl, but she could do
something that would spoil his pleasure in her, at least for awhile.
Rhea leaned close to
the girl, grasped the long braid which lay down her back, and began to slip it
through her fist, enjoying its silky smoothness.
"Susan," she
whispered. "Do'ee hear me, Susan, daughter of Patrick?"
"Yes." The
eyes did not open.
"Then
listen." The light of the Kissing Moon fell on Rhea's face and turned it
into a silver skull. "Listen to me well, and remember. Remember in the
deep cave where yer waking mind never goes."
She pulled the braid
through her hand again and again. Silky and
?| smooth. Like the little bud between her legs.
"Remember,"
the girl in the doorway said.
"Aye. There's
something ye'll do after he takes yer virginity. Ye'll do it right away,
without even thinking about it. Now listen to me, Susan, daughter of Patrick,
and hear me very well."
Still stroking the
girl's hair, Rhea put her wrinkled lips to the smooth cup of Susan's ear and
whispered in the moonlight.
C
H A P T E R III
A
MEETING ON
THE ROAD
1
She had never in her
life had such a strange night, and it was probably not surprising that she
didn't hear the rider approaching from behind until he was almost upon her.
The thing that
troubled her most as she made her way back toward town was her new
understanding of the compact she had made. It was good to have a
reprieve—months yet before she would have to live up to her end of the
bargain—but a reprieve didn't change the basic fact: when the Demon Moon was full,
she would lose her virginity to Mayor Thorin, a skinny, twitchy man with fluffy
white hair rising like a cloud around the bald spot on top of his head. A man
whose wife regarded him with a certain weary sadness that was painful to look
at. Hart Thorin was a man who laughed uproariously when a company of players
put on an entertainment involving head-knocking or pretend punching or rotten
fruit-throwing, but who only looked puzzled at a story which was pathetic or
tragical. A knuckle-cracker, a back-slapper, a dinner-table belcher, a man who
had a way of looking anxiously toward his Chancellor at almost every other
word, as if to make sure he hadn't offended Rimer in some way.
Susan had observed all
these things often; her father had for years been in charge of the Barony's
horse and had gone to Seafront often on business. Many times he had taken his
much loved daughter with him. Oh, she had seen a lot of Hart Thorin over the
years, and he had seen a lot of her, as well. Too much, mayhap! For what now seemed
the most important fact about him was that he was almost fifty years older
than the girl who would perhaps bear his son.
She had made the
bargain lightly enough—
No, not lightly, that
was being unfair to herself... but she had lost little sleep over it, that much
was true. She had thought, after listening to all Aunt Cord's arguments: Well,
it's little enough, really, to have the indenture off the lands; to finally
own our little piece of the Drop in fact as well as in tradition . . . to
actually have papers, one in our house and one in Rimer's files, saying it's
ours. Aye, and to have horses again. Only three, 'tis true, but that's three
more than we have now. And against that? To lie with him a time or two, and to
bear a child, which millions of women have done before me with no harm. 'Tis
not, after all, a mutant or a leper I'm being asked to partner with but just an
old man with noisy knuckles. 'Tis not forever, and, as Aunt Cord says, I may
still marry, if time and ka decree; I should not be the first woman to
come to her husband's bed as a mother. And does it make me a whore to do such?
The law says not, but never mind that; my heart's law is what matters, and my
heart says that if I may gain the land that was my da's and three horses to run
on it by being such, then it's a whore I'll be.
There was something
else: Aunt Cord had capitalized—rather ruthlessly, Susan now saw—on a child's
innocence. It was the baby Aunt Cord had harped on, the cunning
little baby she would have. Aunt Cord had known that Susan, the dolls of
her childhood put aside not all that long ago, would love the idea of her own
baby, a little living doll to dress and feed and sleep with in the heat of the
afternoon.
What Cordelia had
ignored (perhaps she's too innocent even to have considered it, Susan
thought, but didn't quite believe) was what the hag-woman had made brutally
clear to her this evening: Thorin wanted more than a child.
He wants tits and arse
that don't squish in his hands and a box that 'll grip what he pushes.
Just thinking of those
words made her face throb as she walked through the post-moonset dark toward
town (no high-spirited running this time; no singing, either). She had agreed
with vague thoughts of how managed livestock mated—they were allowed to go at it
"until the seed took," then separated again. But now she knew that
Thorin might want her again and again, probably would want her again and
again, and common law going back like iron for two hundred generations said
that he could continue to lie with her until she who had proved the consort
honest should prove her honestly with child as well, and that child honest in
and of itself . . . not, that was, a mutant aberration. Susan had made discreet
enquiries and knew that this second proving usually came around the fourth
month of pregnancy ... around the time she would begin to show, even with her
clothes on. It would be up to Rhea to make the judgment... and Rhea didn't like
her.
Now that it was too
late—now that she had accepted the compact formally tendered by the
Chancellor, now that she had been proved honest by yon strange bitch—she rued
the bargain. Mostly what she thought of was how Thorin would look with his
pants off, his legs white and skinny, like the legs of a stork, and how, as
they lay together, she would hear his long bones crackling: knees and back and
elbows and neck.
And knuckles. Don't
forget his knuckles.
Yes. Big old man's
knuckles with hair growing out of them. Susan chuckled at the thought, it was
that comical, but at the same time a warm tear ran unnoticed from the comer of
one eye and tracked down her cheek. She wiped it away without knowing it, any
more than she heard the clip-clip of approaching hoofs in the soft road-dust.
Her mind was still far away, returning to the odd thing she had seen through
the old woman's bedroom window—the soft but somehow unpleasant light coming
from the pink globe, the hypnotized way the hag had been looking down at it...
When Susan at last
heard the approaching horse, her first alarmed thought was that she must get
into the copse of trees she was currently passing and hide. The chances of
anyone aboveboard being on the road this late seemed small to her, especially
now that such bad times had come to Mid-World—but it was too late for that.
The ditch, then, and
sprawled flat. With the moon down, there was at least a chance that whoever it
was would pass without—
But before she could
even begin in that direction, the rider who had sneaked up behind her while she
was thinking her long and rueful thoughts had hailed her. "Goodeven, lady,
and may your days be long upon the earth."
She turned, thinking: What
if it's one of the new men always lounging about Mayor's House or in the
Travellers' Rest? Not the oldest one, the voice isn't wavery like his, but
maybe one of the others . . . it could be the one they call Depape...
"Goodeven,"
she heard herself saying to the man shape on the tall horse. "May yours be
long also."
Her voice didn't
tremble, not that she could hear. She didn't think it was Depape, or the one
named Reynolds, either. The only thing she could tell about the fellow for sure
was that he wore a flat-brimmed hat, the sort she associated with men of the
Inner Baronies, back when travel between east and west had been more common
than it was now. Back before John Farson came—the Good Man—and the bloodletting
began.
As the stranger came
up beside her, she forgave herself a little for not hearing him approach—there
was no buckle or bell on his gear that she could see, and everything was tied
down so as not to snap or flap. It was almost the rig of an outlaw or a harrier
(she had the idea that Jonas, he of the wavery voice, and his two friends might
have been both, in other times and other climes) or even a gunslinger. But this
man bore no guns, unless they were hidden. A bow on the pommel of his saddle
and what looked like a lance in a scabbard, that was all. And there had never,
she reckoned, been a gunslinger as young as this.
He clucked sidemouth
at the horse just as her da had always done (and she herself, of course), and
it stopped at once. As he swung one leg over his saddle, lifting it high and
with unconscious grace, Susan said:
"Nay, nay, don't
trouble yerself, stranger, but go as ye would!"
If he heard the alarm
in her voice, he paid no heed to it. He slipped off the horse, not bothering
with the tied-down stirrup, and landed neatly in front of her, the dust of the
road puffing about his square-toed boots. By starlight she saw that he was
young indeed, close to her own age on one side or the other. His clothes were
those of a working cowboy, although new.
"Will Dearborn,
at your service," he said, then doffed his hat, extended a foot on one
bootheel, and bowed as they did in the Inner Baronies.
Such absurd
courtliness out here in the middle of nowhere, with the acrid smell of the oil
patch on the edge of town already in her nostrils, startled her out of her fear
and into a laugh. She thought it would likely offend him, but he smiled
instead. A good smile, honest and artless, its inner part lined with even
teeth.
She dropped him a
little curtsey, holding out one side of her dress. "Susan Delgado, at
yours."
He tapped his throat
thrice with his right hand. "Thankee-sai, Susan Delgado. We're well met, I
hope. I didn't mean to startle you—"
"Ye did, a little."
"Yes, I thought I
had. I'm sorry."
Yes.
Not aye but yes. A young man, from the Inner Baronies, by the
sound. She looked at him with new interest.
"Nay, ye need not
apologize, for I was deep in my own thoughts," she said. "I'd been to
see a ... friend ... and hadn't realized how much time had passed until I saw
the moon was down. If ye stopped out of concern, I thankee, stranger, but ye
may be on yer way as I would be on mine. It's only to the edge of the village I
go—Hambry. It's close, now."
"Pretty speech
and lovely sentiments," he answered with a grin, "but it's late,
you're alone, and I think we may as well pass on together. Do you ride,
sai?"
"Yes, but
really—"
"Step over and
meet my friend Rusher, then. He shall carry you the last two miles. He's
gelded, sai, and gentle."
She looked at Will
Dearborn with a mixture of amusement and irritation. The thought which crossed
her mind was If he calls me sai again, as though I were a schoolteacher or
his doddery old great aunt, I'm going to take off this stupid apron and swat
him with it. "I never minded a bit of temper in a horse docile enough
to wear a saddle. Until his death, my father managed the Mayor's horses ...
and the Mayor in these parts is also Guard o' Barony. I've ridden my whole
life."
She thought he might
apologize, perhaps even stutter, but he only nodded with a calm thoughtfulness
that she rather liked. "Then step to the stirrup, my lady. I'll walk
beside and trouble you with no conversation, if you'd rather not have it. It's
late, and talk palls after moonset, some say."
She shook her head,
softening her refusal with a smile. "Nay. I thank ye for yer kindness, but
it would not be well, mayhap, for me to be seen riding a strange young man's
horse at eleven o' the clock. Lemon-juice won't take the stain out of a lady's
reputation the way it will out of a shirtwaist, you know."
"There's no one
out here to see you," the young man said in a maddeningly reasonable
voice. "And that you're tired, I can tell. Come, sai—"
"Please don't
call me that. It makes me feel as ancient as a . . ." She hesitated for a
brief moment, rethinking the word
(witch)
that first came to her
mind. ". . . as an old woman."
"Miss Delgado,
then. Are you sure you won't ride?"
"Sure as can be.
I'd not ride cross-saddle in a dress in any case, Mr. Dearborn—not even if you
were my own brother. 'Twouldn't be proper."
He stood in the
stirrup himself, reached over to the far side of his saddle (Rusher stood
docilely enough at this, only flicking his ears, which Susan would have been
happy to flick herself had she been Rusher—they were that beautiful), and
stepped back down with a rolled garment in his hands. It was tied with a
rawhide hank. She thought it was a poncho.
"You may spread
this over your lap and legs like a duster," he said. "There's quite
enough of it for decorum's sake—it was my father's, and he's taller than
me." He looked off toward the western hills for a moment, and she saw he
was handsome, in a hard sort of way that jagged against his youth. She felt a
little shiver inside her, and wished for the thousandth time that the foul old
woman had kept her hands strictly on her business, as unpleasant as that
business had been. Susan didn't want to look at this handsome stranger and
remember Rhea's touch.
"Nay," she
said gently. "Thankee again, I recognize yer kindness, but I must
refuse."
"Then I'll walk
along beside, and Rusher'll be our chaperone," he said cheerfully.
"As far as the edge of town, at least, there'll be no eyes to see and
think ill of a perfectly proper young woman and a more-or-less proper young
man. And once there, I'll tip my hat and wish you a very good night."
"I wish ye
wouldn't. Really." She brushed a hand across her forehead. "Easy for
you to say there are no eyes to see, but sometimes there are eyes even where
there shouldn't be. And my position is ... a little delicate just now."
"I'll walk with
you, however," he repeated, and now his face was somber. "These are
not good times. Miss Delgado. Here in Mejis you are far from the worst of the
troubles, but sometimes trouble reaches out."
She opened her
mouth—to protest again, she supposed, perhaps to tell him that Pat Delgado's
daughter could take care of herself—and then she thought of the Mayor's new
men, and the cold way they had run their eyes over her when Thorin's attention
had been elsewhere. She had seen those three this very night as she left on her
way to the witch's hut. Them she had heard approaching, and in plenty of
time for her to leave the road and rest behind a handy pinon tree (she refused
to think of it as hiding, exactly). Back toward town they had gone, and she
supposed they were drinking at the Travellers' Rest right now—and would
continue to until Stanley Ruiz closed the bar—but she had no way of knowing
that for sure. They could come back.
"If I can't
dissuade ye, very well," she said, sighing with a vexed resignation she
didn't really feel. "But only to the first mailbox—Mrs. Beech's. That
marks the edge of town."
He tapped his throat
again, and made another of those absurd, enchanting bows—foot stuck out as if
he would trip someone, heel planted in the dirt. "Thankee, Miss
Delgado!"
At least he didn’t 't
call me sai, she thought. That's a start.
2
She thought he'd
chatter away like a magpie in spite of his promise to be silent, because that
was what boys did around her—she was not vain of her looks, but she thought she
was good-looking, if only because the boys could not shut up or stop
shuffling their feet when they were around her. And this one would be full of
questions the town boys didn't need to ask—how old was she, had she always
lived in Hambry, were her parents alive, half a hundred others just as
boring—but they would all circle in on the same one: did she have a steady
fellow?
But Will Dearborn of
the Inner Baronies didn't ask her about her schooling or family or friends (the
most common way of approaching any romantic rivals, she had found). Will
Dearborn simply walked along beside her, one hand wrapped around Rusher's
bridle, looking off east toward the Clean Sea. They were close enough to it now
so that the teary smell of salt mingled with the tarry stench of oil, even
though the wind was from the south.
They were passing
Citgo now, and she was glad for Will Dearborn's presence, even if his silence
was a little irritating. She had always found the oil patch, with its skeletal
forest of gantries, a little spooky. Most of those steel towers had stopped
pumping long since, and there was neither the parts, the need, nor the
understanding to repair them. And those which did still labor along—nineteen
out of about two hundred—could not be stopped. They just pumped and pumped, the
supplies of oil beneath them seemingly inexhaustible. A little was still used,
but a very little—most simply ran back down into the wells beneath the dead
pumping stations. The world had moved on, and this place reminded her of a
strange mechanical graveyard where some of the corpses hadn't quite—
Something cold and
smooth nuzzled the small of her back, and she wasn't quite able to stifle a
little shriek. Will Dearborn wheeled toward her, his hands dropping toward his
belt. Then he relaxed and smiled.
"Rusher's way of
saying he feels ignored. I'm sorry, Miss Delgado."
She looked at the
horse. Rusher looked back mildly, then dipped his head as if to say he was also
sorry for having startled her.
Foolishness, girl,
she thought, hearing the hearty, no-nonsense voice of her father. He wants
to know why you 're being so standoffy, that's all. And so do I. 'Tisn't like
you, so it's not.
"Mr. Dearborn,
I've changed my mind," she said. "I'd like to ride."
3
He turned his back and
stood looking out at Citgo with his hands in his pockets while Susan first laid
the poncho over the cantle of the saddle (the plain black saddle of a working
cowboy, without a Barony brand or even a ranch brand to mark it), and then
mounted into the stirrup. She lifted her skirt and glanced around sharply, sure
he would be stealing a peek, but his back was still to her. He seemed
fascinated with the rusty oil derricks.
What's so interesting
about them, cully? she thought, a trifle crossly— it was
the lateness of the hour and the residue of her stirred-up emotions, she
supposed. Filthy old things have been there six centuries and more, and I've
been smelling their stink my whole life.
"Stand easy now,
my boy," she said once she had her foot fixed in the stirrup. One hand
held the top of the saddle's pommel, the other the reins. Rusher, meanwhile,
flicked his ears as if to say he would stand easy all night, were that what she
required.
She swung up, one long
bare thigh flashing in the starlight, and felt the exhilaration of being horsed
that she always felt . . . only tonight it seemed a little stronger, a little
sweeter, a little sharper. Perhaps because the horse was such a beauty, perhaps
because the horse was a stranger .. .
Perhaps because the
horse's owner is a stranger, she thought, and
fair.
That was nonsense, of
course . . . and potentially dangerous nonsense. Yet it was also true. He was
fair.
As she opened the
poncho and spread it over her legs, Dearborn began to whistle. And she
realized, with a mixture of surprise and superstitious fear, what the tune
was: "Careless Love." The very lay she had been singing on her way up
to Rhea's hut.
Mayhap it's
ka, girl, her father's voice whispered.
No such thing,
she thought right back at him. I'll not see ka in every
passing wind and shadow, like the old ladies who gather in Green Heart of a
summer's evening. It's an old tune: everyone knows it.
Mayhap better if
you're right. Pat Delgado's voice returned. For if it's
ka, it 'II come like a wind, and your plans will stand before it no more
than my da's barn stood before the cyclone when it came.
Not ka; she
would not be seduced by the dark and the shadows and the grim shapes of the oil
derricks into believing it was. Not ka but only a chance meeting with a
nice young man on the lonely road back to town.
"I've made myself
decent," she said in a dry voice that didn't sound much like her own.
"Ye may turn back if you like, Mr. Dearborn."
He did turn and gazed
at her. For a moment he said nothing, but she could see the look in his eyes
well enough to know that he found her fair as well. And although this
disquieted her—perhaps because of what he'd been whistling—she was also glad.
Then he said, "You look well up there. You sit well."
"And I shall have
horses of my own to sit before long," she said. Now the questions will
come, she thought.
But he only nodded, as
though he had known this about her already, and began to walk toward town again.
Feeling a little disappointed and not knowing exactly why, she clucked
sidemouth at Rusher and twitched her knees at him. He got moving, catching up
with his master, who gave Rusher's muzzle a companionable little caress.
"What do they
call that place yonder?" he asked, pointing at the derricks.
"The oil patch?
Citgo."
"Some of the
derricks still pump?"
"Aye, and no way
to stop them. Not that anyone still knows."
"Oh," he
said, and that was all—just oh. But he left his place by Rusher's head
for a moment when they came to the weedy track leading into Citgo, walking
across to look at the old disused guard-hut. In her childhood there had been a
sign on it reading authorized personnel
only, but it had blown away in some windstorm or other. Will Dearborn
had his look and then came ambling back to the horse, boots puffing up summer
dust, easy in his new clothes.
They went toward town,
a young walking man in a flat-crowned hat, a young riding woman with a poncho
spread over her lap and legs. The starlight rained down on them as it has on
young men and women since time's first hour, and once she looked up and saw a
meteor flash overhead—a brief and brilliant orange streak across the vault of
heaven. Susan thought to wish on it, and then, with something like panic,
realized she had no idea what to wish for. None at all.
4
She kept her own
silence until they were a mile or so from town, and then asked the question
which had been on her mind. She had planned to ask hers after he had begun
asking his, and it irked her to be the one to break the silence, but in the end
her curiosity was too much.
"Where do ye come
from, Mr. Dearborn, and what brings ye to our little bit o' Mid-World ... if ye
don't mind me asking?"
"Not at
all," he said, looking up at her with a smile. "I'm glad to talk and
was only trying to think how to begin. Talk's not a specialty of mine." Then
what is. Will Dearborn? she wondered. Yes, she wondered very much, for in
adjusting her position on the saddle, she had put her hand on the rolled
blanket behind . . . and had touched something hidden inside that blanket.
Something that felt like a gun. It didn't have to be, of course, but she
remembered the way his hands had dropped instinctively toward his belt when she
had cried out in surprise.
"I come from the
In-World. I've an idea you probably guessed that much on your own. We have our
own way of talking."
"Aye. Which
Barony is yer home, might I ask?"
"New
Canaan."
She felt a flash of
real excitement at that. New Canaan! Center of the Affiliation! That did not
mean all it once had, of course, but still—
"Not
Gilead?" she asked, detesting the hint of a girlish gush she heard in her
voice. And more than just a hint, mayhap.
"No," he
said with a laugh. "Nothing so grand as Gilead. Only Hemphill, a village
forty or so wheels west of there. Smaller than Hambry, I wot."
Wheels,
she thought, marvelling at the archaism. He said wheels.
"And what brings
ye to Hambry, then? May ye tell?"
"Why not? I've
come with two of my friends, Mr. Richard Stock-worth of Pennilton, New Canaan,
and Mr. Arthur Heath, a hilarious young man who actually does come from Gilead.
We're here at the order of the Affiliation, and have come as counters."
"Counters of
what?"
"Counters of
anything and everything which may aid the Affiliation in the coming
years," he said, and she heard no lightness in his voice now. " The
business with the Good Man has grown serious."
"Has it? We hear
little real news this far to the south and east of the hub."
He nodded. "The
Barony's distance from the hub is the chief reason we're here. Mejis has been
ever loyal to the Affiliation, and if supplies need to be drawn from this part
of the Outers, they'll be sent. The question that needs answering is how much
the Affiliation can count on."
"How much of
what?"
"Yes," he
agreed, as if she'd made a statement instead of asking a question. "And
how much of what."
"Ye speak as
though the Good Man were a real threat. He's just a bandit, surely, frosting
his thefts and murders with talk of 'democracy' and 'equality'?"
Dearborn shrugged, and
she thought for a moment that would be his only comment on the matter, but then
he said, reluctantly: " 'Twas once so, perhaps. Times have changed. At
some point the bandit became a general, and now the general would become a ruler
in the name of the people." He paused, then added gravely, "The
Northern and West'rd Baronies are in flames, lady."
"But those are
thousands of miles away, surely!" This talk was upsetting, and yet
strangely exciting, too. Mostly it seemed exotic, after the pokey
all-days-the-same world of Hambry, where someone's dry well was good for three
days of animated conversation.
"Yes," he
said. Not aye but yes—the sound was both strange and pleasing to
her ear. "But the wind is blowing in this direction." He turned to
her and smiled. Once more it softened his hard good looks, and made him seem no
more than a child, up too late after his bedtime. "But I don't think we'll
see John Farson tonight, do you?"
She smiled back.
"If we did, Mr. Dearborn, would ye protect me from him?"
"No doubt,"
he said, still smiling, "but I should do so with greater enthusiasm, I
wot, if you were to let me call you by the name your father gave you."
"Then, in the
interests of my own safety, ye may do so. And I suppose I must call ye Will, in
those same interests."
" 'Tis both wise
and prettily put," he said, the smile becoming a grin, wide and engaging.
"I—" Then, walking as he was with his face turned back and up to her,
Susan's new friend tripped over a rock Jutting out of the road and almost fell.
Rusher whinnied through his nose and reared a little. Susan laughed merrily.
The poncho shifted, revealing one bare leg, and she took a moment before
putting matters right again. She liked him, aye, so she did. And what harm
could there be in it? He was only a boy, after all. When he smiled, she could
see he was only a year or two removed from jumping in haystacks. (The thought
that she had recently graduated from haystack-jumping herself had somehow fled
her mind.)
"I'm usually not
clumsy," he said. "I hope I didn't startle you."
Not at all. Will; boys
have been stubbing their toes around me ever since I grew my breasts.
"Not at
all," she said, and returned to the previous topic. It interested her
greatly. "So ye and yer friends come at the behest of the Affiliation to
count our goods, do you?"
"Yes. The reason
I took particular note of yon oil patch is because one of us will have to come
back and count the working derricks—"
"I can spare ye
that, Will. There are nineteen."
He nodded. "I'm
in your debt. But we'll also need to make out—if we can—how much oil those
nineteen pumps are bringing up."
"Are there so
many oil-fired machines still working in New Canaan that such news matters? And
do ye have the alchemy to change the oil into the stuff yer machines can
use?"
"It's called
refinery rather than alchemy in this case—at least I think so—and I believe
there is one that still works. But no, we haven't that many machines, although
there are still a few working filament-lights in the Great Hall at Gilead."
"Fancy it!"
she said, delighted. She had seen pictures of filament-lights and electric
flambeaux, but never the lights themselves. The last ones in Hambry (they had
been called "spark-lights" in this part of the world, but she felt sure
they were the same) had burned out two generations ago.
"You said your
father managed the Mayor's horses until his death," Will Dearborn said.
"Was his name Patrick Delgado? It was, wasn't it?"
She looked down at
him, badly startled and brought back to reality in an instant. "How do ye
know that?"
"His name was in
our lessons of calling. We're to count cattle, sheep, pigs, oxen . . . and
horses. Of all your livestock, horses are the most important. Patrick Delgado
was the man we were to see in that regard. I'm sorry to hear he's come to the
clearing at the end of the path, Susan. Will you accept my condolence?"
"Aye, and with
thanks."
"Was it an
accident?"
"Aye."
Hoping her voice said what she wanted it to say, which was leave this
subject, ask no more.
"Let me be honest
with you," he said, and for the first time she thought she heard a false
note there. Perhaps it was only her imagination. Certainly she had little
experience of the world (Aunt Cord reminded her of this almost daily), but she
had an idea that people who set on by saying Let me be honest with you
were apt to go on by telling you straight-faced that rain fell up, money
grew on trees, and babies were brought by the Grand Featherex.
"Aye, Will
Dearborn," she said, her tone just the tiniest bit dry. "They say
honesty's the best policy, so they do."
He looked at her a bit
doubtfully, and then his smile shone out again. That smile was dangerous, she
thought—a quicksand smile if ever there was one. Easy to wander in; perhaps
more difficult to wander back out.
"There's not much
Affiliation in the Affiliation these days. That's part of the reason Parson's
gone on as long as he has; that's what has allowed his ambitions to grow. He's
come a far way from the harrier who began as a stage-robber in Garlan and
Desoy, and he'll come farther yet if the Affiliation isn't revitalized. Maybe
all the way to Mejis."
She couldn't imagine
what the Good Man could possibly want with her own sleepy little town in the
Barony which lay closest to the Clean Sea, but she kept silent.
"In any case, it
wasn't really the Affiliation that sent us," he said. "Not all this
way to count cows and oil derricks and hectares of land under
cultivation."
He paused a moment,
looking down at the road (as if for more rocks in the way of his boots) and
stroking Rusher's nose with absentminded gentleness. She thought he was
embarrassed, perhaps even 'shamed. "We were sent by our fathers."
"Yer—" Then
she understood. Bad boys, they were, sent out on a make-work quest that wasn't
quite exile. She guessed their real job in Hambry might be to rehabilitate
their reputations. Well, she thought, it certainly explains the
quicksand smile, doesn't it? 'Ware this one, Susan; he's the sort to burn
bridges and upset mail-carts, then go on his merry way
without a single look back. Not in meanness but in plain old boy-carelessness.
That made her think of
the old song again, the one she'd been singing, the one he'd been whistling.
"Our fathers,
yes."
Susan Delgado had cut
a caper or two (or perhaps it was two dozen) other own in her time, and she
felt sympathy for Will Dearborn as well as caution. And interest. Bad boys
could be amusing ... up to a point. The question was, how bad had Will and his
cronies been?
"Helling?"
she asked.
"Helling,"
he agreed, still sounding glum but perhaps brightening just a bit about the
eyes and mouth. "We were warned; yes, warned very well. There was ... a
certain amount of drinking."
And a few girls to
squeeze with the hand not busy squeezing the ale-pot?
It was a question no nice girl could outright ask, but one that couldn't help
occurring to her mind.
Now the smile which
had played briefly around the comers of his mouth dropped away. "We pushed
it too far and the fun stopped. Fools have a way of doing that. One night there
was a race. One moonless night. After midnight. All of us drunk. One of
the horses caught his hoof in a gopher-hole and snapped a foreleg. He had to be
put down."
Susan winced. It
wasn't the worst thing she could think of, but bad enough. And when he opened
his mouth again, it got worse.
"The horse was a
thoroughbred, one of just three owned by my friend Richard's father, who is not
well-to-do. There were scenes in our households which I haven't any desire to
remember, let alone talk about. I'll make a long story short and say that,
after much talk and many proposals for punishment, we were sent here, on this
errand. It was Arthur's father's idea. I think Arthur's da has always been a
bit appalled by Arthur. Certainly Arthur's ructions didn't come from George
Heath's side."
Susan smiled to
herself, thinking of Aunt Cordelia saying, "She certainly doesn't get it
from our side of the family." Then the calculated pause, followed
by: "She had a great-aunt on her mother's side who ran crazy . . . you
didn't know? Yes! Set herself on fire and threw herself over the Drop. In the
year of the comet, it was."
"Anyway,"
Will resumed, "Mr. Heath set us on with a saying from his own father—'One
should meditate in purgatory.' And here we are."
"Hambry's far
from purgatory."
He sketched his funny
little how again. "If it were, all should want to be bad enough to
come here and meet the pretty denizens."
"Work on that one
a bit," she said in her driest voice. "It's still rough, 1 fear.
Perhaps—"
She fell silent as a
dismaying realization occurred to her: she was going to have to hope this boy
would enter into a limited conspiracy with her. Otherwise, she was apt to be
embarrassed.
"Susan?"
"I was just
thinking. Are you here yet, Will? Officially, I mean?"
"No," he
said, taking her meaning at once. And likely already seeing where this was
going. He seemed sharp enough, in his way. "We only arrived in Barony
this afternoon, and you're the first person any of us has spoken to ... unless,
that is, Richard and Arthur have met folks. I couldn't sleep, and so came out
to ride and to think things over a little. We're camped over there." He
pointed to the right. "On that long slope that runs toward the sea."
"Aye, the Drop,
it's called." She realized that Will and his mates might even be camped on
what would be her own land by law before much more time had passed. The thought
was amusing and exciting and a little startling.
"Tomorrow we ride
into town and present our compliments to My Lord Mayor, Hart Thorin. He's a bit
of a fool, according to what we were told before leaving New Canaan."
"Were ye indeed
told so?" she asked, raising one eyebrow.
"Yes—apt to
blabber, fond of strong drink, even more fond of young girls," Will said.
"Is it true, would you say?"
"I think ye must
judge for yerself," said she, stifling a smile with some effort.
"In any case,
we'll also be presenting to the Honorable Kimba Rimer, Thorin's Chancellor, and
I understand he knows his beans. And counts his beans, as well."
"Thorin will have
ye to dinner at Mayor's House," Susan said. "Perhaps not tomorrow
night, but surely the night after."
"A dinner of
state in Hambry," Will said, smiling and still stroking Rusher's nose.
"Gods, how shall I bear the agony of my anticipation?"
"Never mind yer
nettlesome mouth," she said, "but only listen, ifye'd be my friend.
This is important."
His smile dropped
away, and she saw again—as she had for a moment or two before—the man he'd be
before too many more years had passed. The hard face, the concentrated eyes,
the merciless mouth. It was a frightening face, in a way—a frightening prospect—and
yet, still, the place the old hag had touched felt warm and she found it
difficult to take her eyes off him. What, she wondered, was his hair like under
that stupid hat he wore?
"Tell me,
Susan."
"If you and yer
friends come to table at Thorin's, ye may see me. If ye see me, Will, see me
for the first time. See Miss Delgado, as I shall see Mr. Dearborn. Do'ee take
my meaning?"
"To the
letter." He was looking at her thoughtfully. "Do you serve? Surely,
if your father was the Barony's chief drover, you do not—"
"Never mind what
I do or don't do. Just promise that if we meet at Seafront, we meet for the
first time."
"I promise.
But—"
"No more
questions. We've nearly come to the place where we must part ways, and I want
to give ye a warning—fair payment for the ride on this nice mount of yours,
mayhap. If ye dine with Thorin and Rimer, ye'll not be the only new folk at his
table. There'll likely be three others, men Thorin has hired to serve as
private guards o' the house."
"Not as Sheriff'
s deputies?"
"Nay, they answer
to none but Thorin ... or, mayhap, to Rimer. Their names are Jonas, Depape, and
Reynolds. They look like hard boys to me ... although Jonas's boyhood is so
long behind him that I imagine he's forgot he ever had one."
"Jonas is the
leader?"
"Aye. He limps,
has hair that falls to his shoulders pretty as any girl's, and the quavery
voice of an old gaffer who spends his days polishing the chimney-comer... but I
think he's the most dangerous of the three all the same. I'd guess these three
have forgot more about helling than you and yer friends will ever learn."
Now why had she told
him all that? She didn't know, exactly. Gratitude, perhaps. He had promised to
keep the secret of this late-night meeting, and he had the look of a
promise-keeper, in hack with his father or not.
"I'll watch them.
And I thank you for the advice." They were now climbing a long, gentle
slope. Overhead, Old Mother blazed relentlessly. "Bodyguards," he
mused. "Bodyguards in sleepy little Hambry. It's strange times, Susan.
Strange indeed."
"Aye." She
had wondered about Jonas, Depape, and Reynolds herself, and could think of no
good reason for them to be in town. Had they been Rimer's doing. Rimer's
decision? It seemed likely—Thorin wasn't the sort of man to even think
about bodyguards, she would have said; the High Sheriff had always done well
enough for him—but still... why?
They breasted the
hill. Below them lay a nestle of buildings—the village of Hambry. Only a few
lights still shone. The brightest cluster marked the Travellers' Rest. From
here, on the warm breeze, she could hear the piano beating out "Hey
Jude" and a score of drunken voices gleefully murdering the chorus. Not
the three men of whom she had warned Will Dearborn, though; they would be
standing at the bar, watching the room with their flat eyes. Not the singing
type were those three. Each had a small blue coffin-shape tattooed on his right
hand, burned into the webbing between thumb and forefinger. She thought to
tell Will this, then realized he'd see for himself soon enough. Instead, she
pointed a little way down the slope, at a dark shape which overhung the road on
a chain. "Do ye see that?"
''Yes." He heaved
a large and rather comical sigh. "Is it the object I fear beyond all
others? Is it the dread shape of Mrs. Beech's mailbox?"
"Aye. And it's
there we must part."
"If you say we
must, we must. Yet I wish—" Just then the wind shifted, as it sometimes
did in the summer, and blew a strong gust out of the west. The smell of
sea-salt was gone in an instant, and so was the sound of the drunken, singing
voices. What replaced them was a sound infinitely more sinister, one that never
failed to produce a scutter of gooseflesh up her back: a low, atonal noise,
like the warble of a siren being turned by a man without much longer to live.
Will took a step
backward, eyes widening, and again she noticed his hands take a dip toward his
belt, as if reaching for something not there.
"What in gods'
name is that?"
"It's a thinny,"
she said quietly. "In Eyebolt Canyon. Have ye never heard of such?"
"Heard of, yes,
but never heard until now. Gods, how do you stand it? It sounds alive!"
She had never thought
of it quite like that, but now, in a way listening with his ears instead of her
own, she thought he was right. It was as if some sick part of the night had
gained a voice and was actually trying to sing.
She shivered. Rusher
felt the momentary increased pressure of her knees and whickered softly,
craning his head around to look at her.
"We don't often
hear it so clearly at this time of year," she said. "In the fall, the
men bum it to quiet."
"I don't
understand."
Who did? Who
understood anything anymore? Gods, they couldn't even turn off the few
oil-pumps in Citgo that still worked, although half of them squealed like pigs
in a slaughtering chute. These days you were usually just grateful to find
things that still worked at all.
"In the summer,
when there's time, drovers and cowboys drag loads of brush to the mouth of
Eyebolt," she said. "Dead brush is all right, but live is better, for
it's smoke that's wanted, and the heavier the better. Eye-bolt's a box canyon,
very short and steep-walled. Almost like a chimney lying on its side, you
see?"
"Yes."
"The traditional
time for burning is Reap Mom—the day after the fair and the feast and the
fire."
"The first day of
winter."
"Aye although in
these parts it doesn't feel like winter so soon. In any case it's no tradition;
the brush is sometimes lit sooner, if the winds have been prankish or if the
sound's particularly strong. It upsets the livestock, you know—cows give
poorly when the noise of the thinny's strong—and it makes sleep
difficult."
"I should think
it would." Will was still looking north, and a stronger gust of wind blew
his hat off. It fell to his back, the rawhide tugstring pulling against the
line of his throat. The hair so revealed was a little long, and as black as a
crow's wing. She felt a sudden, greedy desire to run her hands through it, to
let her fingers tell its texture—rough or smooth or silky? And how would it
smell? At this she felt another shiver of heat down low in her belly. He turned
to her as though he had read her mind, and she flushed, grateful that he
wouldn't be able to see the darkening of her cheek.
"How long has it
been there?"
"Since before I
was born," she said, "but not before my da was born. He said that the
ground shook in an earthquake just before it came. Some say the earthquake
brought it, some say that's superstitious nonsense. All I know is that it's
always been there. The smoke quiets it awhile, the way it will quiet a hive of
bees or wasps, but the sound always comes back. The brush piled at the mouth
helps to keep any wandering livestock out, too—sometimes they're drawn to it,
gods know why. But if a cow or sheep does happen to yet in—after the
burning and before the next year's pile has started to grow, mayhap—it doesn't
come back out. Whatever it is, it's hungry."
She put his poncho
aside, lifted her right leg over the saddle without so much as touching the
horn, and slipped off Rusher—all this in a single liquid movement. It was a
stunt made for pants rather than a dress, and she knew from the further
widening of his eyes that he'd seen a good lot of her . . . but nothing she had
to wash with the bathroom door closed, so what of that? And that quick dismount
had ever been a favorite trick of hers when she was in a showoffy mood.
"Pretty!" he
exclaimed.
"I learned it
from my da," she said, responding to the more innocent interpretation of
his compliment. Her smile as she handed him the reins, however, suggested that
she was willing to accept the compliment any way it was meant.
"Susan? Have you
ever seen the thinny?"
"Aye, once or
twice. From above."
"What does it
look like?"
"Ugly," she
responded at once. Until tonight, when she had observed Rhea's smile up close
and endured her twiddling, meddling fingers, she would have said it was the
ugliest thing she had ever seen. "It looks a little like a slow-burning
peat fire, and a little like a swamp full of scummy green water. There's a mist
that rises off it. Sometimes it looks like long, skinny arms. With hands at the
end of em."
"Is it
growing?"
"Aye, they say it
is, that every thinny grows, but it grows slowly. 'Twon't escape Eyebolt Canyon
in your time or mine."
She looked up at the
sky, and saw that the constellations had continued to tilt along their tracks
as they spoke. She felt she could talk to him all night—about the thinny, or
Citgo, or her irritating aunt, or just about anything—and the idea dismayed
her. Why should this happen to her now, for the gods' sake? After three years
of dismissing the Hambry boys, why should she now meet a boy who interested her
so strangely? Why was life so unfair?
Her earlier thought,
the one she'd heard in her father's voice, recurred to her: If it's ka, it'll
come like a wind, and your plans will stand before it no more than a barn
before a cyclone.
But no. And no. And
no. So set she, with all her considerable determination, her mind against the
idea. This was no bam; this was her life.
Susan reached out and
touched the rusty tin of Mrs. Beech's mailbox, as if to steady herself in the
world. Her little hopes and daydreams didn't mean so much, perhaps, but her
father had taught her to measure herself by her ability to do the things she'd
said she would do, and she would not overthrow his teachings simply because she
happened to encounter a good-looking boy at a time when her body and her
emotions were in a stew.
"I'll leave ye
here to either rejoin yer friends or resume yer ride," she said. The
gravity she heard in her voice made her feel a bit sad, for it was an adult
gravity. "But remember yer promise, Will—if ye see me at Seafront—Mayor's
House—and ifye'd be my friend, see me there for the first time. As I'd see
you."
He nodded, and she saw
her seriousness now mirrored in his own face. And the sadness, mayhap.
"I've never asked a girl to ride out with me, or if she'd accept a visit
of me. I'd ask of you, Susan, daughter of Patrick—I'd even bring you flowers to
sweeten my chances—but it would do no good, I think."
She shook her head.
"Nay. Twouldn't."
"Are you promised
in marriage? It's forward of me to ask, I know, but I mean no harm."
"I'm sure ye
don't, but I'd as soon not answer. My position is a delicate one just now, as
I told ye. Besides, it's late. Here's where we part, Will. But stay . . . one
more moment . . ."
She rummaged in the
pocket of her apron and brought out half a cake wrapped in a piece of green
leaf. The other half she had eaten on her way up to the Coos ... in what now
felt like the other half of her life. She held what was left of her little
evening meal out to Rusher, who sniffed it, then ate it and nuzzled her hand.
She smiled, liking the velvet tickle in the cup of her palm. "Aye, thee's
a good horse, so ye are."
She looked at Will
Dearborn, who stood in the road, shuffling his dusty boots and gazing at her
unhappily. The hard look was gone from his face, now; he looked her age again,
or younger. "We were well met, weren't we?" he asked.
She stepped forward,
and before she could let herself think about what she was doing, she put her
hands on his shoulders, stood on her toes, and kissed him on the mouth. The
kiss was brief but not sisterly.
"Aye, very well
met. Will." But when he moved toward her (as thoughtlessly as a flower
turning its face to follow the sun), wishing to repeat the experience, she
pushed him back a step, gently but firmly.
"Nay, that was
only a thank-you, and one thank-you should be enough for a gentleman. Go yer
course in peace, Will."
He took up the reins
like a man in a dream, looked at them for a moment as if he didn't know what
in the world they were, and then looked hack at her. She could see him working
to clear his mind and emotions of the impact her kiss had made. She liked him
for it. And she was very glad she had done it.
"And you
yours," he said, swinging into the saddle. "I look forward to meeting
you for the first time."
He smiled at her, and
she saw both longing and wishes in that smile. Then he gigged the horse, turned
him, and started back the way they'd come—to have another look at the oil
patch, mayhap. She stood where she was, by Mrs. Beech's mailbox, willing him to
turn around and wave so she could see his face once more. She felt sure he
would . . . but he didn't. Then, just as she was about to turn away and start
down the hill to town, he did turn, and his hand lifted, fluttering for
a moment in the dark like a moth.
Susan lifted her own
in return and then went her way, feeling happy and unhappy at the same time.
Yet—and this was perhaps the most important thing—she no longer felt soiled.
When she had touched the boy's lips, Rhea's touch seemed to have left her skin.
A small magic, perhaps, but she welcomed it.
She walked on, smiling
a little and looking up at the stars more frequently than was her habit when
out after dark.
CHAPTER IV
LONG AFTER MOONSET
1
He rode restlessly for
nearly two hours back and forth along what she called the Drop, never pushing
Rusher above a trot, although what he wanted to do was gallop the big gelding
under the stars until his own blood began to cool a little.
It'll cool plenty if
you draw attention to yourself, he thought, and
likely you won't even have to cool it yourself. Fools are the only folk on the
earth who can absolutely count on getting what they deserve. That old
saying made him think of the scarred and bowlegged man who had been his life's
greatest teacher, and he smiled.
At last he turned his
horse down the slope to the trickle of brook which ran there, and followed it a
mile and a half upstream (past several gathers of horse; they looked at Rusher
with a kind of sleepy, wall-eyed surprise) to a grove of willows. From the
hollow within, a horse whickered softly. Rusher whickered in return, stamping
one hoof and nodding his head up and down.
His rider ducked his
own head as he passed through the willow fronds, and suddenly there was a
narrow and inhuman white face hanging before him, its upper half all but
swallowed by black, pupilless eyes.
He dipped for his
guns—the third time tonight he'd done that, and for the third time there was
nothing there. Not that it mattered; already he recognized what was hanging
before him on a string: that idiotic rook's skull.
The young man who was
currently calling himself Arthur Heath had taken it off his saddle (it amused
him to call the skull so perched their lookout, "ugly as an old gammer,
but perfect cheap to feed") and hung it here as a prank greeting. Him and
his jokes! Rusher's master batted it aside hard enough to break the string and
send the skull flying into the dark.
"Fie,
Roland," said a voice from the shadows. It was reproachful, but
there was laughter bubbling just beneath ... as there always was. Cuthbert was
his oldest friend—the marks of their first teeth had been embedded on many of
the same toys—but Roland had in some ways never understood him. Nor was it just
his laughter; on the long-ago day when Hax, the palace cook, was to be hung for
a traitor on Gallows Hill, Cuthbert had been in an agony of terror and remorse.
He'd told Roland he couldn't stay, couldn't watch . . . but in the end he had
done both. Because neither the stupid jokes nor the easy surface emotions were
the truth of Cuthbert Allgood.
As Roland entered the
hollow at the center of the grove, a dark shape stepped out from behind the
tree where it had been keeping. Halfway across the clearing, it resolved itself
into a tall, narrow-hipped boy who was barefooted below his jeans and
bare-chested above them. In one hand he held an enormous antique revolver—a
kind which was sometimes called a beer-barrel because of the cylinder's size.
"Fie,"
Cuthbert repeated, as if he liked the sound of this word, not archaic only in
forgotten backwaters like Mejis. "That's a fine way to treat the guard o'
the watch, smacking the poor thin-faced fellow halfway to the nearest
mountain-range!"
"If I'd been
wearing a gun, I likely would have blown it to smithereens and woken half the
countryside."
"I knew you
wouldn't be going about strapped," Cuthbert answered mildly. "You're
remarkably ill-looking, Roland son of Steven, but nobody's fool even as you
approach the ancient age of fifteen."
"I thought we
agreed we'd use the names we're travelling under. Even among ourselves."
Cuthbert stuck out his
leg, bare heel planted in the turf, and bowed with his arms outstretched and
his hands strenuously bent at the wrist—an inspired imitation of the sort of
man for whom court has become career. He also looked remarkably like a heron
standing in a marsh, and Roland snorted laughter in spite of himself. Then he
touched the inside of his left wrist to his forehead, to see if he had a fever.
He felt feverish enough inside his head, gods knew, but the skin above his
eyes felt cool.
"I cry your
pardon, gunslinger," Cuthbert said, his eyes and hands still turned humbly
down.
The smile on Roland's
face died. "And don't call me that again, Cuthbert. Please. Not here, not
anywhere. Not if you value me."
Cuthbert dropped his
pose at once and came quickly to where Roland sat his horse. He looked honestly
humbled.
"Roland—Will—I'm
sorry."
Roland clapped him on
the shoulder. "No harm done. Just remember from here on out. Mejis may be
at the end of the world . . . but it still is the world. Where's
Alain?"
"Dick, do you
mean? Where do you think?" Cuthbert pointed across the clearing, to where
a dark hulk was either snoring or slowly choking to death.
"That one,"
Cuthbert said, "would sleep through an earthquake."
"But you heard me
coming and woke."
"Yes,"
Cuthbert said. His eyes were on Roland's face, searching it with an intensity
that made Roland feel a little uneasy. "Did something happen to you? You
look different."
"Do I?"
"Yes. Excited.
Aired out, somehow."
If he was going to
tell Cuthbert about Susan, now was the time. He decided without really thinking
about it (most of his decisions, certainly the best of them, were made in this
same way) not to tell. If he met her at Mayor's House, it would be the first
time as far as Cuthbert and Alain knew, as well. What harm in that?
"I've been
properly aired, all right," he said, dismounting and bending to uncinch
the girths of his saddle. "I've seen some interesting things, too."
"Ah? Speak,
companion of my bosom's dearest tenant."
"I'll wait until
tomorrow, I think, when yon hibernating bear is finally awake. Then I only have
to tell once. Besides, I'm tired. I'll share you one thing, though: there are
too many horses in these parts, even for a Barony renowned for its horseflesh.
Too many by far."
Before Cuthbert could
ask any questions, Roland pulled the saddle from Rusher's back and set it down
beside three small wicker cages which had been bound together with rawhide,
making them into a carrier which could be secured to a horse's back. Inside,
three pigeons with white rings around their necks cooed sleepily. One took his
head out from beneath his wing, had a peek at Roland, and then tucked himself
away again.
"These fellows
all right?" Roland asked.
"Fine. Pecking
and shitting happily in their straw. As far as they're concerned, they're on
vacation. What did you mean about—"
"Tomorrow,"
Roland said, and Cuthbert, seeing that there would be no more, only nodded and
went to find his lean and bony lookout.
Twenty minutes later,
Rusher unloaded and rubbed down and set to forage with Buckskin and Glue Boy
(Cuthbert could not even name his horse as a normal person would), Roland lay
on his back in his bedroll, looking up at the late stars overhead. Cuthbert had
gone back to sleep as easily as he had awakened at the sound of Rusher's hoofs,
but Roland had never felt less sleepy in his life.
His mind turned back a
month, to the whore's room, to his father sitting on the whore's bed and
watching him dress. The words his father had spoken—I have known for two
years—had reverberated like a struck gong in Roland's head. He suspected
they might continue to do so for the rest of his life.
But his father had had
much more to say. About Marten. About Roland's mother, who was, perhaps, more
sinned against than sinning. About harriers who called themselves patriots. And
about John Farson, who had indeed been in Cressia, and who was gone from that
place now—vanished, as he had a way of doing, like smoke in a high wind. Before
leaving, he and his men had burned Indrie, the Barony seat, pretty much to the
ground. The slaughter had been in the hundreds, and perhaps it was no surprise
that Cressia had since repudiated the Affiliation and spoken for the Good Man.
The Barony Governor, the Mayor of Indrie, and the High Sheriff had all ended
the early summer day which concluded Farson's visit with their heads on the
wall guarding the town's entrance. That was, Steven Deschain had said,
"pretty persuasive politics."
It was a game of
Castles where both armies had come out from behind their Hillocks and the
final moves had commenced, Roland's father had said, and as was so often the
case with popular revolutions, that game was apt to be over before many in the
Baronies of Mid-World had begun to realize that John Farson was a serious
threat... or, if you were one of those who believed passionately in his vision
of democracy and an end to what he called "class slavery and ancient
fairy-tales," a serious agent of change.
His father and his
father's small ka-tet of gunslingers, Roland was amazed to learn, cared
little about Farson in either light; they looked upon him as small cheese.
Looked upon the Affiliation itself as small cheese; come to that.
I'm going to send you
away, Steven had said, sitting there on the bed and
looking somberly at his only son. the one who had lived. There is no true
safe place left in Mid- World, hut the Barony of Mejis on the Clean Sea is as
close to true safety as any place may be these days . . . so it's there you'll
go, along with at least two of your mates. Alain, I suppose, for one. Just not
that laughing boy for the other, I beg of you. You 'd be better off with a
barking dog.
Roland, who on any
other day in his life would have been overjoyed at the prospect of seeing some
of the wider world, had protested hotly. If the final battles against the Good
Man were at hand, he wanted to fight them at his father's side. He was a
gunslinger now, after all, if only a 'prentice, and—
His father had shaken
his head, slowly and emphatically. No, Roland. You don't understand. You
shall, however; as well as possible, you shall.
Later, the two of them
had walked the high battlements above Mid-World's last living city—green and
gorgeous Gilead in the morning sun, with its pennons flapping and the vendors
in the streets of the Old Quarter and horses trotting on the bridle paths which
radiated out from the palace standing at the heart of everything. His father
had told him more (not everything), and he had understood more (far from
everything—nor did his father understand everything). The Dark Tower had not
been mentioned by either of them, but already it hung in Roland's mind, a
possibility like a storm cloud far away on the horizon.
Was the Tower what all
of this was really about? Not a jumped-up harrier with dreams of ruling
Mid-World, not the wizard who had enchanted his mother, not the glass ball
which Steven and his posse had hoped to find in Cressia . . . but the Dark
Tower?
He hadn't asked.
He hadn't dared
ask.
Now he shifted in his
bedroll and closed his eyes. He saw the girl's face at once; he felt her lips
pressed firmly against his own again, and smelled the scent of her skin. He was
instantly hot from the top of his head to the base of his spine, cold from the
base of his spine to the tips of his toes. Then he thought of the way her legs
had flashed as she slid from Rusher's back (also the glimmer of the
undergarments beneath her briefly raised dress), and his hot half and cold half
changed places.
The whore had taken
his virginity but wouldn't kiss him; had turned her face aside when he tried to
kiss her. She'd allowed him to do whatever else he wanted, but not that. At the
time he'd been bitterly disappointed. Now he was glad.
The eye of his
adolescent mind, both restless and clear, considered (he braid which fell down
her back to her waist, the soft dimples which had formed at the comers of her
mouth when she smiled, the lilt of her voice, her old-fashioned way of saying
aye and nay, ye and yer and da. He thought of how her hands had felt on his
shoulders as she stretched up to kiss him, and thought he would give everything
he owned to feel her hands there again, so light and so firm. And her mouth on
his. It was a mouth that knew only a little about kissing, he guessed, but that
was a little more than he knew himself.
Be careful,
Roland—don't let your feeling for this girl tip anything over. She's not free,
anyway—she said as much. Not married, but spoken for in some other way.
Roland was far from
the relentless creature he would eventually become, but the seeds of that
relentlessness were there—small, stony things that would, in their time, grow
into trees with deep roots . . . and bitter fruit. Now one of these seeds
cracked open and sent up its first sharp blade.
What's been spoken for
may be unspoken, and what's done may be undone. Nothing's sure, but . . . I
want her.
Yes. That was the one
thing he did know, and he knew it as well as he knew the face of his father: he
wanted her. Not as he had wanted the whore when she lay naked on her bed with
her legs spread and her half-lidded eyes looking up at him, but in the way he
wanted food when he was hungry or water when he was thirsty. In the way, he
supposed, that he wanted to drag Marten's dusty body behind his horse down
Gilead's High Road in payment for what the wizard had done to his mother.
He wanted her; he
wanted the girl Susan.
Roland turned over on
his other side, closed his eyes, and fell asleep. His rest was thin and lit by
the crudely poetic dreams only adolescent boys have, dreams where sexual
attraction and romantic love come together and resonate more powerfully than
they ever will again. In these thirsty visions Susan Delgado put her hands on
Roland's shoulders over and over, kissed his mouth over and over, told him over
and over to come to her for the first time, to be with her for the first time,
to see her for the first time, to see her very well.
2
Five miles or so from
where Roland slept and dreamed his dreams, Susan Delgado lay in her bed and
looked out her window and watched Old Star begin to grow pale with the
approaching dawn. Sleep was no closer now than it had been when she lay down,
and there was a throb between her legs where the old woman had touched her. It
was distracting but no longer unpleasant, because she now associated it with
the boy she'd met on the road and impulsively kissed by starlight. Every time
she shifted her legs, that throb flared into a brief sweet ache.
When she'd got home,
Aunt Cord (who would have been in her own bed an hour before on any ordinary
night) had been sitting in her rocking chair by the fireplace—dead and cold and
swept clean of ashes at this time of year—with a lapful of lace that looked
like wave-froth against her dowdy black dress. She was edging it with a speed
that seemed almost supernatural to Susan, and she hadn't looked up when the door
opened and her niece came in on a swirl of breeze.
"I expected ye an
hour ago," Aunt Cord said. And then, although she didn't sound it: "I
was worried."
"Aye?" Susan
said, and said no more. She thought that on any other night she would have
offered one of her fumbling excuses which always sounded like a lie to her own
ears—it was the effect Aunt Cord had had on her all her life—but this hadn't
been an ordinary night. Never in her life had there been a night like this. She
found she could not get Will Dearborn out of her mind.
Aunt Cord had looked
up then, her close-set, rather beady eyes sharp and inquisitive above her
narrow blade of a nose. Some things hadn't changed since Susan had set out for
the Coos; she had still been able to feel her aunt's eyes brushing across her
face and down her body, like little whisk-brooms with sharp bristles.
"What took ye so
long?" Aunt Cord had asked. "Was there trouble?"
"No
trouble," Susan had replied, but for a moment she thought of how the witch
had stood beside her in the doorway, pulling her braid through the gnarled tube
of one loosely clenched fist. She remembered wanting to go, and she remembered
asking Rhea if their business was done.
Mayhap there's one
more little thing, the old woman had said ... or so Susan
thought. But what had that one more little thing been? She couldn't remember.
And, really, what did it matter? She was shut of Rhea until her belly began to
rise with Thorin's child . . . and if there could be no baby-making until
Reap-Night, she'd not be returning to the Coos until late winter at the
soonest. An age! And it would be longer than that, were she slow to kindle . .
.
"I walked slowly
coming home, Aunt. That's all."
"Then why look ye
so?" Aunt Cord had asked, scant brows knitting toward the vertical line
which creased her brow.
"How so?"
Susan had asked, taking off her apron and knotting the strings and hanging it
on the hook just inside the kitchen door.
"Flushy. Frothy.
Like milk fresh out of the cow."
She'd almost laughed.
Aunt Cord, who knew as little about men as Susan did about the stars and
planets, had struck it directly. Flushy and frothy was exactly how she felt.
"Only the night air, I suppose," she had said. "I saw a meteor,
Aunt. And heard the thinny. The sound's strong tonight."
"Aye?" her
aunt asked without interest, then returned to the subject which did interest
her. "Did it hurt?"
"A little."
"Did ye
cry?"
Susan shook her head.
"Good. Better
not. Always better. She likes it when they cry, I've heard. Now, Sue—did she
give you something? Did the old pussy give you something?"
"Aye." She
reached into her pocket and brought out the paper with
written upon it. She
held it out and her aunt snatched it away with a greedy look. Cordelia had been
quite the sugarplum over the last month or so, but now that she had what she
wanted (and now that Susan had come too far and promised too much to have a
change of heart), she'd reverted to the sour, supercilious, often suspicious
woman Susan had grown up with; the one who'd been driven into almost weekly
bouts of rage by her phlegmatic, life-goes-as-'twill brother. In a way, it was
a relief. It had been nervewracking to have Aunt Cord playing Cybilla
Good-Sprite day after day.
"Aye, aye,
there's her mark, all right," her aunt had said, tracing her fingers over
the bottom of the sheet. "A devil's hoof's what it means, some say, but
what do we care, eh. Sue? Nasty, horrid creature that she is, she's still made
it possible for two women to get on in the world a little longer. And ye'll
only have to see her once more, probably around Year's End, when ye've caught
proper."
"It will be later
than that," Susan had told her. "I'm not to lie with him until the
full of the Demon Moon. After the Reaping Fair and the bonfire."
Aunt Cord had stared,
eyes wide, mouth open. "Said she so?"
Are you calling me a
liar. Auntie? she had thought with a sharpness that wasn't
much like her; usually her nature was more like her father's.
"Aye."
"But why? Why so long?"
Aunt Cord was obviously upset, obviously disappointed. There had so far been
eight pieces of silver and four of gold out of this; they were tucked up
wherever it was that Aunt Cord squirreled her money away (and Susan suspected
there was a fair amount of it, although Cordelia liked to plead poverty at
every opportunity), and twice that much was still owed ... or would be, once
the bloodstained sheet went to the Mayor's House laundress. That same amount
would be paid yet again when Rhea had confirmed the baby, and the baby's
honesty. A lot of money, all told. A great lot, for a little place like
this and little folk like them. And now, to have the paying of it put back so
far . . .
Then came a sin Susan
had prayed over (although without much enthusiasm) before getting into her
bed: she had rather enjoyed the cheated, frustrated look on Aunt Cord's
face—the look of the thwarted miser.
"Why so long?"
she repeated.
"I suppose you
could go up the Coos and ask her."
Cordelia Delgado's
lips, thin to begin with, had pressed together so tightly they almost
disappeared. "Are you pert, missy? Are you pert with me?"
"No. I'm much too
tired to be pert with anyone. I want to wash—I can still feel her hands on me,
so I can—and go to bed."
"Then do so.
Perhaps in the morning we can discuss this in more ladylike fashion. And we must
go and see Hart, of course." She folded the paper Rhea had given Susan,
looking pleased at the prospect of visiting Hart Thorin, and moved her hand
toward her dress pocket.
"No," Susan
said, and her voice had been unusually sharp—enough so to freeze her aunt's
hand in midair. Cordelia had looked at her, frankly startled. Susan had felt a
little embarrassed by that look, but she hadn't dropped her eyes, and when she
held out her own hand, it had been steady enough.
"I'm to have the
keeping of that. Aunt."
"Who tells ye to
speak so?" Aunt Cord had asked, her voice almost whining with outrage—it
was close to blasphemy, Susan supposed, but for a moment Aunt Cord's voice had
reminded her of the sound the thinny made. "Who tells ye to speak so to
the woman who raised a motherless girl? To the sister of that girl's poor dead
father?"
"You know
who," Susan said. She still held her hand out. "I'm to keep it, and
I'm to give it to Mayor Thorin. She said she didn't care what happened to it
then, he could wipe his bum with it for all of her," (the flush which
suffused her aunt's face at that had been very enjoyable) "but until
then, it was to be in my keeping."
"I never heard of
such a thing," Aunt Cordelia had huffed . . . but she had handed the grimy
scrap of paper back. "Giving the keep of such an important document to a
mere scrap of a girl."
Yet not too mere a
scrap to be his gilly, am I? To lie under him and listen to his bones creak and
take his seed and mayhap bear his child.
She'd dropped her eyes
to her pocket as she put the paper away again, not wanting Aunt Cord to see the
resentment in them.
"Go up,"
Aunt Cord had said, brushing the froth of lace off her lap and into her
workbasket, where it lay in an unaccustomed tangle. "And when you wash, do
your mouth with especial care. Cleanse it of its impudence and disrespect
toward those who have given up much for love of its owner."
Susan had gone
silently, biting back a thousand retorts, mounting the stairs as she had so
often, throbbing with a mixture of shame and resentment.
And now here she was,
in her bed and still awake as the stars paled away and the first brighter
shades began to color the sky. The events of the night just past slipped
through her mind in a kind of fantastical blur, like shuffled playing cards—and
the one which turned up with the most persistence was the face of Will
Dearborn. She thought of how that face could be hard at one moment and soften
so unexpectedly at the next. And was it a handsome face? Aye, she thought so.
For herself, she knew so.
I've never asked a
girl to ride out with me, or if she would accept a visit of me. I would ask
you, Susan, daughter of Patrick.
Why now? Why should I
meet him now, when no good can come of it?
If it's
ka, it 'll come like a wind. Like a cyclone.
She tossed from one
side of the bed to the other, then at last rolled onto her back again. There
would be no sleep for her in what remained of this night, she thought. She
might as well walk out on the Drop and watch the sun come up.
Yet she continued to
lie in bed, feeling somehow sick and well at the same time, looking into the
shadows and listening to the first cries of the morning birds, thinking of how
his mouth had felt against hers, the tender grain of it and the feeling of his
teeth below his lips; the smell of his skin, the rough texture of his shirt
under her palms.
She now put those
palms against the top of her shift and cupped her breasts with her fingers. The
nipples were hard, like little pebbles. And when she touched them, the heat
between her legs flared suddenly and urgently.
She could
sleep, she thought. She could, if she took care of that heat. If she knew how.
And she did. The old
woman had shown her. Even a girl who's intact don't need to lack for a
shiver now 'n then... Like a little bud o' silk, so it is.
Susan shifted in bed
and slipped a hand deep beneath the sheet. She forced the old woman's bright
eyes and hollow cheeks out of her mind— it wasn't hard to do at all once you
set your mind to it, she discovered— and replaced it with the face of the boy
with the big gelding and the silly flat-crowned hat. For a moment the vision of
her mind became so clear and so sweet that it was real, and all the rest of her
life only a drab dream. In this vision he kissed her over and over, their
mouths widening, their tongues touching; what he breathed out, she breathed in.
She burned. She burned
in her bed like a torch. And when the sun finally came over the horizon some
short time later, she lay deeply asleep, with a faint smile on her lips and her
unbraided hair lying across the side of her face and her pillow like loose
gold.
3
In the last hour
before dawn, the public room of the Travellers' Rest was as quiet as it ever
became. The gaslights which turned the chandelier into a brilliant jewel until
two of the clock or so on most nights were now turned down to guttering blue
points, and the long, high room was shadowy and spectral.
In one corner lay a
jumble of kindling—the remains of a couple of chairs smashed in a fight over a
Watch Me game (the combatants were currently residing in the High Sheriff's
drunk-cell). In another comer was a fairly large puddle of congealing puke. On
the raised platform at the east end of the room stood a battered piano; propped
against its bench was the ironwood club which belonged to Barkie, the saloon's
bouncer and all-around tough man. Barkie himself, the naked mound of his
scarred stomach rising above the waistband of his corduroy pants like a clot
of bread dough, lay under the bench, snoring. In one hand he held a playing
card: the deuce of diamonds.
At the west end of the
room were the card tables. Two drunks lay with their heads on one of these,
snoring and drooling on the green felt, their outstretched hands touching.
Above them, on the wall, was a picture of Arthur, the Great King of Eld astride
his white stallion, and a sign which read (in a curious mixture of High and Low
Speech): ARGYOU NOT ABOUT THE HAND YOU
ARE DELT IN CARDS OR LIFE.
Mounted behind the
bar, which ran the length of the room, was a monstrous trophy: a two-headed elk
with a rack of antlers like a forest grove and four glaring eyes. This beast
was known to local habitués of the Travellers' as The Romp. None could have
said why. Some wit had carefully drawn a pair of sow-titty condoms over the
prongs of two of its antlers. Lying on the bar itself and directly beneath The
Romp's disapproving gaze was Pettie the Trotter, one of the Travellers'
dancers and gilly-girls . . . although Pettie's actual girlhood was well behind
her now, and soon she would be reduced to doing her business on her knees
behind the Travellers' rather than upstairs in one of the tiny cribs. Her plump
legs were spread, one dangling over the bar on the inside, one on the outside,
the filthy tangle of her skirt frothed up between. She breathed in long snores,
occasionally twitching at the feet and fat fingers. The only other sounds were
the hot summer wind outside and the soft, regular snap of cards being turned
one by one.
A small table stood by
itself near the batwing doors which gave upon the Hambry High Street; it was
here that Coral Thorin, owner of the Travellers' Rest (and the Mayor's
sister), sat on the nights when she descended from her suite "to be a
part of the company." When she came down, she came down early—when there were
still more steaks than whiskey being served across the old scratched bar—and
went back up around the time that Sheb, the piano player, sat down and began to
pound his hideous instrument. The Mayor himself never came in lit nil, although
it was well-known that he owned at least a half-interest in the Travellers'.
Clan Thorin enjoyed the money the place brought in; they just didn't enjoy the
look of it after midnight, when the sawdust spread on the floor began to soak
up the spilled beer and the spilled blood. Yet there was a hard streak in
Coral, who had twenty years before been what was called "a wild
child." She was younger than her political brother, not so thin, and
good-looking in a large-eyed, weasel-headed way. No one sat at her table during
the saloon's operating hours—Barkie would have put a stop to anyone who tried,
and double-quick—but operating hours were over now, the drunks mostly gone or
passed out upstairs, Sheb curled up and fast asleep in the comer behind his
piano. The softheaded boy who cleaned the place had been gone since two o' the
clock or so (chased out by jeers and insults and a few flying beer-glasses, as
he always was; Roy Depape in particular had no love in his heart for that
particular lad). He would be back around nine or so, to begin readying the old
party-palace for another night of hilarity, but until then the man sitting at
Mistress Thorin's table had the place to himself.
A game of Patience was
laid out before him: black on red, red on black, the partially formed Square o'
Court above all, just as it was in the affairs of men. In his left hand the
player held the remains of the deck. As he flipped the cards up, one by one,
the tattoo on his right hand moved. It was disconcerting somehow, as if the
coffin were breathing. The card-player was an oldish fellow, not as thin as the
Mayor or his sister, but thin. His long white hair straggled down his back. He
was deeply tanned, except for his neck, where he always burned; the flesh
there hung in scant wattles. He wore a mustache so long the ragged white ends
hung nearly to his jaw—a sham gunslinger's mustache, many thought it, but no
one used the word "sham" to Eldred Jonas's face. He wore a white silk
shirt, and a black-handled revolver hung low on his hip. His large, red-rimmed
eyes looked sad on first glance. A second, closer look showed them only to be
watery. Of emotion they were as dead as the eyes of The Romp.
He turned up the Ace
of Wands. No place for it. "Pah, you bugger," he said in an odd,
reedy voice. It quavered, as well, like the voice of a man on the verge of
tears. It fit perfectly with his damp and red-rimmed eyes. He swept the cards
together.
Before he could
reshuffle, a door opened and closed softly upstairs. Jonas put the cards aside
and dropped his hand to the butt of his gun.
Then, as he recognized
the sound of Reynolds's boots coming along the gallery, he let go of the gun
and drew his tobacco-pouch from his belt instead. The hem of the cloak
Reynolds always wore came into view, and then he was coming down the stairs,
his face freshly washed and his curly red hair hanging about his ears. Vain of
his looks was dear old Mr. Reynolds, and why not? He'd sent his cock on its
exploring way up more damp and cozy cracks than Jonas had ever seen in his
life, and Jonas was twice his age.
At the bottom of the
stairs Reynolds walked along the bar, pausing to squeeze one of Pettie's plump
thighs, and then crossed to where Jonas sat with his makings and his deck of
cards.
"Evening,
Eldred."
"Morning,
Clay." Jonas opened the sack, took out a paper, and sprinkled tobacco
into it. His voice shook, but his hands were steady. "Like a smoke?"
"I could do with
one."
Reynolds pulled out a
chair, turned it around, and sat with his forearms crossed on its back. When
Jonas handed him the cigarette, Reynolds danced it along the backs of his
fingers, an old gunslinger trick. The Big Coffin Hunters were full of old
gunslinger tricks.
"Where's Roy?
With Her Nibs?" They had been in Hambry a little over a month now, and in
that time Depape had conceived a passion for a fifteen-year-old whore named
Deborah. Her bowlegged clumping walk and her way of squinting off into the
distance led Jonas to suspect she was just another cowgirl from a long line of
them, but she had high-hat ways. It was Clay who had started calling the girl
Her Nibs, or Her Majesty, or sometimes (when drunk) "Roy's Coronation
Cunt."
Reynolds now nodded.
"It's like he's drunk on her."
"He'll be all
right. He ain't throwing us over for some little snuggle-bunny with pimples on
her tits. Why, she's so ignorant she can't spell cat. Not so much as cat, no. I
asked her."
Jonas made a second
cigarette, drew a sulfur match from the sack, and popped it alight with his
thumbnail. He lit Reynolds's first, then his own.
A small yellow cur
came in under the batwing doors. The men watched it in silence, smoking. It
crossed the room, first sniffed at the curdled vomit in the comer, then began
to eat it. Its stub of a tail wagged back and forth as it dined.
Reynolds nodded toward
the admonition not to argue about the cards you were dealt. "That
mutt'd understand that, I'd say."
"Not at all, not
at all," Jonas demurred. "Just a dog is all he is, a spew-eating dog.
I heard a horse twenty minutes ago. First on the come, then on the go. Would it
have been one of our hired watchmen?"
"You don't miss a
trick, do you?"
"Don't pay to,
no, don't pay a bit. Was it?"
"Yep. Fellow who
works for one of the small freeholders out along the east end of the Drop. He
seen 'em come in. Three. Young. Babies." Reynolds pronounced this last as
they did in the North'rd Baronies: babbies. "Nothing to worry
of."
"Now, now, we
don't know that," Jonas said, his quavering voice making him sound like a
temporizing old man. "Young eyes see far, they say."
"Young eyes see
what they're pointed at," Reynolds replied. The dog trotted past him,
licking its chops. Reynolds helped it on its way with a kick the cur was not
quite quick enough to avoid. It scuttled back out under the batwings, uttering
little yike-yike sounds that made Barkie snort thickly from his place of
rest beneath the piano bench. His hand opened and the playing card dropped out
of it.
"Maybe so, maybe
not," Jonas said. "In any case, they're Affiliation brats, sons of
big estates off in the Green Somewhere, if Rimer and that fool he works for
have it straight. That means we'll be very, very careful. Walk easy, like on
eggshells. Why, we've got three more months here, at least! And those young'uns
may be here that whole time, counting this 'n counting that and putting it all
down on paper. Folks counting things ain't good for us right now. Not for men
in the resupply business."
"Come on! It's
make-work, that's all—a slap on the wrist for getting in trouble. Their
daddies—"
"Their daddies
know Farson's in charge of the whole Southwest Edge now, and sitting on high
ground. The brats may know the same—that playtime's purt' near over for the
Affiliation and all its pukesome royalty. Can't know, Clay. With folks like
these, you can't know which way they'll jump. At the very least, they may try
to do a half-decent job just to try and get on the good side o' their parents
again. We'll know better when we see em, but I tell you one thing: we can't
just put guns to the backs of their heads and drop them like broke-leg bosses
if they see the wrong thing. Their daddies might be mad at em alive, but I
think they'd be very tender of em dead—that's just the way daddies are. We'll
want to be trig, Clay; as trig as we can be."
"Better leave
Depape out of it, then."
"Roy will be fine,"
Jonas said in his quavery voice. He dropped the stub of his cigarette to the
floor and crushed it under his bootheel. He looked up at The Romp's glassy eyes
and squinted, as if calculating. "Tonight, your friend said? They arrived
tonight, these brats?"
"Yep."
"They'll be in to
see Avery tomorrow, then, I reckon." This was Herk Avery, High Sheriff of
Mejis and Chief Constable of Hambry, a large man who was as loose as a trundle
of laundry.
"Reckon so,"
Clay Reynolds said. "To present their papers 'n all."
"Yes, sir, yes
indeedy. How-d'you-do, and how-d'you-do, and how-d'you-do again."
Reynolds said nothing.
He often didn't understand Jonas, but he had been riding with him since the age
of fifteen, and knew it was usually better not to ask for enlightenment. If
you did, you were apt to end up listening to a cult-manni lecture about the
other worlds the old buzzard had visited through what he called "the
special doors." As far as Reynolds was concerned, there were enough
ordinary doors in the world to keep him busy.
"I'll speak to
Rimer and Rimer'll talk to the Sheriff about where they should stay,"
Jonas said. "I think the bunkhouse at the old Bar K ranch. You know where
I mean?"
Reynolds did. In a
Barony like Mejis, you got to know the few landmarks in a hurry. The Bar K was
a deserted spread of land northwest of town, not too far from that weird
squalling canyon. They burned at the mouth of the canyon every fall, and once,
six or seven years ago, the wind had shifted and gone back wrong and burned most
of the Bar K to the ground—barns, stables, the home place. It had spared the
bunkhouse, however, and that would be a good spot for three tenderfeet from the
Inners. It was away from the Drop; it was also away from the oil patch.
"Ye like it,
don't ye?" Jonas asked, putting on a hick Hambry accent. "Aye, ye
like it very much, I can see ye do, my cully. Ye know what they say in Cressia?
'Ifye'd steal the silver from the dining room, first put the dog in the
pantry.' "
Reynolds nodded. It
was good advice. "And those trucks? Those what-do-you-callums,
tankers?"
"Fine where they
are," Jonas said. "Not that we could move em now without attracting
the wrong kind of attention, eh? You and Roy want to go out there and cover
them with brush. Lay it on nice and thick. Day after tomorrow you'll do
it."
"And where will
you be while we're flexing our muscles out at Citgo?"
"By daylight?
Preparing for dinner at Mayor's House, you clod—the dinner Thorin will be
giving to introduce his guests from the Great World to the shitpicky society of
the smaller one." Jonas began making another cigarette. He gazed up at The
Romp rather than at what he was doing, and still spilled barely a scrap of
tobacco. "A bath, a shave, a trim of these tangled old man's locks ... I
might even wax my mustache, Clay, what do you say to that?"
"Don't strain
yourself, Eldred."
Jonas laughed, the
sound shrill enough to make Barkie mutter and Pettie stir uneasily on her
makeshift bar-top bed. "So Roy and I aren't invited to this fancy
do." "You'll be invited, oh yes, you'll be invited very warmly,"
Jonas said, and handed Reynolds the fresh cigarette. He began making another
for himself. "I'll offer your excuses. I'll do you boys proud, count on
me. Strong men may weep."
"All so we can
spend the day out there in the dust and stink, covering those hulks. You're too
kind, Jonas."
"I'll be asking
questions, as well," Jonas said dreamily. "Drifting here and there .
. . looking spruce, smelling of baybemes . . . and asking my little questions.
I've known folks in our line of trade who'll go to a fat, jolly fellow to find
out the gossip—a saloon-keeper or bartender, perhaps a livery stable owner or
one of the chubby fellows who always hangs about the jail or the courthouse
with his thumbs tucked into his vest pockets. As for myself. Clay, I find that
a woman's best, and the narrower the better—one with more nose than tits
sticking off her. I look for one who don't paint her lips and keeps her hair
scrooped back against her head."
"You have someone
in mind?"
"Yar. Cordelia
Delgado's her name."
"Delgado?"
"You know the
name, it's on the lips of everyone in this town, I reckon. Susan Delgado, our
esteemed Mayor's soon-to-be gilly. Cordelia's her auntie. Now here's a fact of
human nature I've found: folk are more apt to talk to someone like her, who
plays them close, than they are to the local jolly types who'll buy you a
drink. And that lady plays them close. I'm going to slip in next to her at that
dinner, and I'm going to compliment her on the perfume I doubt like hell
she'll be wearing, and I'm going to keep her wineglass full. Now, how sounds
that for a plan?"
"A plan for what?
That's what I want to know."
"For the game of
Castles we may have to play," Jonas said, and all the lightness dropped
out of his voice. "We're to believe that these boys have been sent here
more as punishment than to do any real job of work. It sounds plausible, too.
I've known rakes in my time, and it sounds plausible, indeed. I believe it
each day until about three in the morning, and then a little doubt sets in. And
do you know what, Clay?"
Reynolds shook his
head.
"I'm right
to doubt. Just as I was right to go with Rimer to old man Thorin and convince
him that Farson's glass would be better with the witch-woman, for the nonce.
She'll keep it in a place where a gunslinger couldn't find it, let alone
a nosy lad who's yet to have his first piece of arse. These are strange times.
A storm's coming. And when you know the wind is going to blow, it's best to
keep your gear battened down."
He looked at the
cigarette he had made. He had been dancing it along the backs of his knuckles,
as Reynolds had done earlier. Jonas pushed back the fall of his hair and tucked
the cigarette behind his ear.
"I don't want to
smoke," he said, standing up and stretching. His back made small crackling
sounds. "I'm crazy to smoke at this hour of the morning. Too many
cigarettes are apt to keep an old man like me awake."
He walked toward the
stairs, squeezing Pettie's bare leg as he went by, also as Reynolds had done. At
the foot of the stairs he looked back.
"I don't want to
kill them. Things are delicate enough without that. I'll smell quite a little
wrong on them and not lift a finger, no, not a single finger of my hand. But .
. .I'd like to make them clear on their place in the great scheme o'
things."
"Give them a sore
paw."
Jonas brightened.
"Yessir, partner, maybe a sore paw's just what I'd like to give them. Make
them think twice about tangling with the Big Coffin Hunters later on, when it
matters. Make them swing wide around us when they see us in their road. Yessir,
that's something to think about. It really is."
He started up the
stairs, chuckling a little, his limp quite pronounced— it got worse late at
night. It was a limp Roland's old teacher, Cort, might have recognized, for
Cort had seen the blow which caused it. Cort's own father had dealt it with an
ironwood club, breaking Eldred Jonas's leg in the yard behind the Great Hall of
Gilead before taking the boy's weapon and sending him west, gunless, into exile.
Eventually, the man
the boy had become had found a gun, of course; the exiles always did, if they
looked hard enough. That such guns could never be quite the same as the big
ones with the sandalwood grips might haunt them for the rest of their lives, but
those who needed guns could still find them, even in this world.
Reynolds watched until
he was gone, then took his seat at Coral Thorin's desk, shuffled the cards, and
continued the game which Jonas had left half-finished.
Outside, the sun was
coming up.
CHAPTER V
WELCOME TO TOWN
1
Two nights after
arriving in the Barony of Mejis, Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain rode their mounts
beneath an adobe arch with the words come
in peace inscribed above it. Beyond was a cobblestone courtyard lit with
torches. The resin which coated these had been doctored somehow so that the
torches glowed different colors: green, orangey-red, a kind of sputtery pink
that made Roland think of fireworks. He could hear the sound of guitars, the
murmur of voices, the laughter of women. The air was redolent of those smells
which would always remind him of Mejis: sea-salt, oil, and pine.
"I don't know if
I can do this," Alain muttered. He was a big boy with a mop of unruly
blond hair spilling out from under his stockman's hat. He had cleaned up
well—they all had—but Alain, no social butterfly under the best of
circumstances, looked scared to death. Cuthbert was doing better, but Roland
guessed his old friend's patina of insouciance didn't go very deep. If there
was to be leading done here, he would have to do it.
"You'll be
fine," he told Alain. "Just—"
"Oh, he looks
fine," Cuthbert said with a nervous laugh as they crossed the courtyard.
Beyond it was Mayor's House, a sprawling, many-winged adobe hacienda that
seemed to spill light and laughter from every window. "White as a sheet,
ugly as a—"
"Shut up,"
Roland said curtly, and the teasing smile tumbled off Cuthbert's face at once.
Roland noted this, then turned to Alain again. "Just don't drink anything
with alcohol in it. You know what to say on that account. Remember the rest of
our story, too. Smile. Be pleasant. Use what social graces you have. Remember
how the Sheriff fell all over himself to make us feel welcome."
Alain nodded at that,
looking a little more confident.
"In the matter of
social graces," Cuthbert said, "they won't have many themselves, so
we should all be a step ahead."
Roland nodded, then
saw that the bird's skull was back on the horn of Cuthbert's saddle. "And
get rid of that!"
Looking guilty,
Cuthbert stuffed "the lookout" hurriedly into his saddlebag. Two men
wearing white jackets, white pants, and sandals were coming forward, bowing
and smiling.
"Keep your
heads," Roland said, lowering his voice. "Both of you. Remember why
you're here. And remember the faces of your fathers." He clapped Alain,
who still looked doubtful, on the shoulder. Then he turned to the hostlers.
"Goodeven, gents," he said. "May your days be long upon the
earth."
They both grinned,
their teeth flashing in the extravagant torchlight. The older one bowed.
"And your own as well, young masters. Welcome to Mayor's House."
2
The High Sheriff had
welcomed them the day before every bit as happily as the hostlers.
So far everyone
had greeted them happily, even the carters they had passed on their way into
town, and that alone made Roland feel suspicious and on his guard. He told
himself he was likely being foolish—of course the locals were friendly
and helpful, that was why they had been sent here, because Mejis was both
out-of-the-way and loyal to the Affiliation—and it probably was
foolish, but he thought it best to be on close watch, just the same. To be a
trifle nervous. The three of them were little more than children, after all,
and if they fell into trouble here, it was apt to be as a result of taking
things at face value.
The combined Sheriff's
office and jail o' Barony was on Hill Street, overlooking the bay. Roland
didn't know for sure, but guessed that few if any hungover drunks and
wife-beaters anywhere else in Mid-World woke up to such picturesque views: a
line of many-colored boathouses to the south, the docks directly below, with
boys and old men line-fishing while the women mended nets and sails; beyond
them, Hambry's small fleet moving back and forth on the sparkling blue water of
the bay, setting their nets in the morning, pulling them in the afternoon.
Most buildings on the
High Street were adobe, but up here, overlooking Hambry's business section,
they were as squat and bricky as any narrow lane in Gilead’s Old Quarter. Well
kept, too, with wrought-iron gates in front of most and tree-shaded paths. The
roofs were orange tile, the shutters closed against the summer sun. It was hard
to believe, riding down this street with their horses' hoofs clocking on the
swept cobbles, that the northwestern side of the Affiliation—the ancient land
of Eld, Arthur's kingdom—could be on fire and in danger of falling.
The jailhouse was just
a larger version of the post office and land office; a smaller version of the
Town Gathering Hall. Except, of course, for the bars on the windows facing down
toward the small harbor.
Sheriff Herk Avery was
a big-bellied man in a lawman's khaki pants and shirt. He must have been
watching them approach through the spy hole in the center of the jail's
iron-banded front door, because the door was thrown open before Roland could
even reach for the turn-bell in the center. Sheriff Avery appeared on the
stoop, his belly preceding him as a bailiff may precede My Lord Judge into
court. His arms were thrown wide in the most amiable of greetings.
He bowed deeply to
them (Cuthbert said later he was afraid the man might overbalance and go
rolling down the steps; perhaps go rolling all the way down to the harbor) and
wished them repeated goodmorns, tapping away at the base of his throat like a
madman the whole while. His smile was so wide it looked as if it might cut his
head clean in two. Three deputies with a distinctly farmerish look about them,
dressed in khaki like the Sheriff, crowded into the door behind Avery and gawked.
That was what it was, all right, a gawk; there was just no other word for that
sort of openly curious and totally unselfconscious stare.
Avery shook each boy
by the hand, continuing to bow as he did so, and nothing Roland said could get
him to stop until he was done. When he finally was, he showed them inside. The
office was delightfully cool in spite of the beating midsummer sun. That was
the advantage of brick, of course. It was big as well, and cleaner than any
High Sheriff's office Roland had ever been in before . . . and he had been in
at least half a dozen over the last three years, accompanying his father on
several short trips and one longer patrol-swing.
There was a rolltop
desk in the center, a notice-board to the right of the door (the same sheets of
foolscap had been scribbled on over and over; paper was a rare commodity in
Mid-World), and, in the far comer, two rifles in a padlocked case. These were
such ancient blunderbusses that Roland wondered if there was ammunition for
them. He wondered if they would fire, come to that. To the left of the
gun-case, an open door gave on the jail itself—three cells on each side of a
short corridor, and a smell of strong lye soap drifting out.
They've cleaned for
our coming, Roland thought. He was amused, touched, and
uneasy. Cleaned it as though we were a troop of Inner Barony horse—career
soldiers who might want to stage a hard inspection instead of three lads
serving punishment detail.
But was such nervous
care on the part of their hosts really so strange? They were from New Canaan,
after all, and folk in this tucked-away corner of the world might well see
them as a species of visiting royalty.
Sheriff Avery
introduced his deputies. Roland shook hands with all of them, not trying to
memorize their names. It was Cuthbert who took care of names, and it was a rare
occasion when he dropped one. The third, a bald fellow with a monocle hanging
around his neck on a ribbon, actually dropped to one knee before them.
"Don't do that,
ye great idiot!" Avery cried, yanking him back up by the scruff of his
neck. "What kind of a bumpkin will they think ye? Besides, you've
embarrassed them, so ye have!"
"That's all
right," Roland said (he was, in fact, very embarrassed, although trying
not to show it). "We're really nothing at all special, you know—"
"Nothing
special!" Avery said, laughing. His belly, Roland noticed, did not shake
as one might have expected it to do; it was harder than it looked. The same
might be true of its owner. "Nothing special, he says! Five hundred mile
or more from the In-World they've come, our first official visitors from the
Affiliation since a gunslinger passed through on the Great Road four year ago,
and yet he says they're nothing special! Would ye sit, my boys? I've got graf,
which ye won't want so early in the day— p'raps not at all, given your ages
(and if you'll forgive me for statin so bald the obvious fact of yer youth, for
youth's not a thing to be ashamed of, so it's not, we were all young once), and
I also have white iced tea, which I recommend most hearty, as Dave's wife makes
it and she's a dab hand with most any potable."
Roland looked at
Cuthbert and Alain, who nodded and smiled (and tried not to look all at sea),
then back at Sheriff Avery. White tea would go down a treat in a dusty throat,
he said.
One of the deputies
went to fetch it, chairs were produced and set in a row at one side of Sheriff
Avery’s rolltop, and the business of the day commenced.
"You know who ye
are and where ye hail from, and I know the same," Sheriff Avery said,
sitting down in his own chair (it uttered a feeble groan beneath his bulk but
held steady). "I can hear In-World in yer voices, but more important, I
can see it in yer faces.
"Yet we hold to
the old ways here in Hambry, sleepy and rural as we may be; aye, we hold to our
course and remember the faces of our fathers as well's we can. So, although I'd
not keep yer long from yer duties, and if ye'll forgive me for the
impertinence, I'd like a look at any papers and documents of passage ye might
just happen to've brought into town with ye."
They just
"happened" to have brought all of their papers into town with
them, as Roland was sure Sheriff Avery well knew they would. He went through
them quite slowly for a man who'd promised not to hold them from their duties,
tracing the well-folded sheets (the linen content so high that the documents
were perhaps closer to cloth than paper) with one pudgy finger, his lips
moving. Every now and then the finger would reverse as he reread a line. The
two other deputies stood behind him, looking sagely down over his large
shoulders. Roland wondered if either could actually read.
William Dearborn.
Drover's son.
Richard Stockworth.
Rancher's son.
Arthur Heath.
Stockline breeder's son.
The identification
document belonging to each was signed by an attestor—James Reed (of Hemphill)
in the case of Dearborn, Piet Raven-head (of Pennilton) in the case of
Stockworth, Lucas Rivers (of Gilead) in the case of Heath. All in order,
descriptions nicely matched. The papers were handed back with profuse thanks.
Roland next handed Avery a letter which he took from his wallet with some care.
Avery handled it in the same fashion, his eyes growing wide as he saw the frank
at the bottom. " 'Pon my soul, boys! 'Twas a gunslinger wrote this!"
"Aye, so it
was," Cuthbert agreed in a voice of wonder. Roland kicked his
ankle—hard—without taking his respectful eyes from Avery's face.
The letter above the
frank was from one Steven Deschain of Gilead, a gunslinger (which was to say a
knight, squire, peacemaker, and Baron . . . the last title having almost no
meaning in the modem day, despite all John Farson's ranting) of the
twenty-ninth generation descended from Arthur of Eld, on the side line of
descent (the long-descended gel of one of Arthur's many gillies, in other
words). To Mayor Hartwell Thorin, Chancellor Kimba Rimer, and High Sheriff
Herkimer Avery, it sent greetings and recommended to their notice the three
young men who delivered this document, Masters Dearborn, Stockworth, and Heath.
These had been sent on special mission from the Affiliation to serve as
counters of all materials which might serve the Affiliation in time of need
(the word war was omitted from the document, but glowed between every
line). Steven Deschain, on behalf of the Affiliation of Baronies, exhorted
Misters Thorin, Rimer, and Avery to afford the Affiliation's nominated counters
every help in their service, and to be particularly careful in the enumerations
of all livestock, all supplies of food, and all forms of transport. Dearborn,
Stockworth, and Heath would be in Mejis for at least three months, Deschain
wrote, possibly as long as a year. The document finished by inviting any or all
of the addressed public officials to "write us word of these young men and
their deportment, in all detail as you shall imagine of interest to us."
And, it begged, "Do not stint in this matter, if you love us."
Tell us if they
behaved themselves, in other words. Tell us if they've learned their lesson.
The deputy with the
monocle came back while the High Sheriff was perusing this document. He carried
a tray loaded with four glasses of white tea and bent down with it like a
butler. Roland murmured thanks and handed the glasses around. He took the last
for himself, raised it to his lips, and saw Alain looking at him, his blue eyes
bright in his stolid face.
Alain shook his glass
slightly—just enough to make the ice tinkle— and Roland responded with the
barest sliver of a nod. He had expected cool tea from a jug kept in a nearby
springhouse, but there were actual chunks of ice in the glasses. Ice in high
summer. It was interesting.
And the tea was, as
promised, delicious.
Avery finished the
letter and handed it back to Roland with the air of one passing on a holy
relic. "Ye want to keep that safe about yer person, Will Dearborn—aye,
very safe indeed!"
"Yes, sir."
He tucked the letter and his identification back into his purse. His friends
"Richard" and "Arthur" were doing the same.
"This is
excellent white tea, sir," Alain said. "I've never had better."
"Aye," Avery
said, sipping from his own glass. " 'Tis the honey that makes it so
fearsome. Eh, Dave?"
The deputy with (he
monocle smiled from his place by the notice-hoard. "1 believe so, but Judy
don't like to say. She had the recipe from her mother."
"Aye, we must
remember the faces of our mothers, too, so we must." Sheriff Avery looked
sentimental for a moment, but Roland had an idea that the face of his mother
was the furthest thing from the big man's mind just then. He turned to Alain, and
sentiment was replaced by a surprising shrewdness.
"Ye're wondering
about the ice, Master Stockworth."
Alain started.
"Well, I..."
"Ye expected no
such amenity in a backwater like Hambry, I'll warrant," Avery said, and
although there was a joshing quality on top of his voice, Roland thought there
was something else entirely underneath.
He doesn't like us. He
doesn't like what he thinks of as our "city ways. " He hasn't known
us long enough to know what kind of ways we have, if any at all, but already he
doesn't like them. He thinks we're a trio of snotnoses; that we see him and
everyone else here as country bumpkins.
"Not just
Hambry," Alain said quietly. "Ice is as rare in the Inner Arc these
days as anywhere else, Sheriff Avery. When I grew up, I saw it mostly as a
special treat at birthday parties and such."
"There was always
ice on Glowing Day," Cuthbert put in. He spoke with very un-Cuthbertian
quiet. "Except for the fireworks, that's what we liked about it
most."
"Is that so, is
that so," Sheriff Avery said in an amazed, wonders-will-never-cease tone.
Avery perhaps didn't like them riding in like this, didn't like having to take
up what he would probably call "half the damn morning" with them; he
didn't like their clothes, their fancy identification papers, their accents,
or their youth. Least of all their youth. Roland could understand all that, but
wondered if it was the whole story. If there was something else going on here,
what was it?
"There's a
gas-fired refrigerator and stove in the Town Gathering Hall," Avery said.
"Both work. There's plenty of earth-gas out at Citgo— that's the oil patch
east of town. Yer passed it on yer way in, I wot."
They nodded.
"Stove's nobbut a
curiosity these days—a history lesson for the schoolchildren—but the refrigerator
comes in handy, so it does." Avery held up his glass and looked through
the side. " 'Specially in summer."
He sipped some tea,
smacked his lips, and smiled at Alain, "You see? No mystery."
"I'm surprised
you haven't found use for the oil," Roland said. "No generators in
town, Sheriff?"
"Aye, there be
four or five," Avery said. "The biggest is out at Francis Lengyll's
Rocking B ranch, and I recall when it useter run. It's HONDA. Do ye kennit that
name, boys? HONDA?"
"I've seen it
once or twice," Roland said, "on old motor-driven bicycles."
"Aye? In any
case, none of the generators will run on the oil from the Citgo patch. Tis too
thick. Tarry goo, is all. We have no refineries here."
"I see,"
Alain said. "In any case, ice in summer's a treat. However it comes to the
glass." He let one of the chunks slip into his mouth, and crunched it
between his teeth.
Avery looked at him a
moment longer, as if to make sure the subject was closed, then switched his
gaze back to Roland. His fat face was once more radiant with his broad,
untrustworthy smile.
"Mayor Thorin has
asked me to extend ye his very best greetings, and convey his regrets for not
bein here today—very busy is our Lord Mayor, very busy indeed. But he's laid on
a dinner-party at Mayor's House tomorrow evening—seven o' the clock for most
folk, eight for you young fellows ... so you can make a bit of an entrance, I
imagine, add a touch o' drama, like. And I need not tell such as yourselves,
who've probably attended more such parties than I've had hot dinners, that it
would be best to arrive pretty much on the dot."
"Is it
fancy-dress?" Cuthbert asked uneasily. "Because we've come a long
way, almost four hundred wheels, and we didn't pack formal wear and sashes,
none of us."
Avery was
chuckling—more honestly this time, Roland thought, perhaps because he felt
"Arthur" had displayed a streak of unsophistication and insecurity.
"Nay, young master, Thorin understands ye've come to do a job—next door to
workin cowboys, ye be! 'Ware they don't have ye out draggin nets in the bay
next!"
From the comer,
Dave—the deputy with the monocle—honked unexpected laughter. Perhaps it was
the sort of joke you had to be local to understand, Roland thought.
"Wear the best ye
have, and ye'll be fine. There'll be no one there in sashes, in any case—that's
not how things are done in Hambry." Again
Roland was struck by
the man's constant smiling denigration of his town ;iiul Barony . . . and the
resentment of the outsiders which lay just beneath it.
"In any case,
ye'll find yerselves working more than playing tomorrow night, I imagine.
Hart's invited all the large ranchers, stockliners, and livestock owners from
this part of the Barony ... not that there's so many, you understand, bein as
how Mejis is next door to desert once you get west o' the Drop. But everyone
whose goods and chattel you've been sent to count will be there, and I think
you'll find all of them loyal Affiliation men, ready and eager to help.
There's Francis Lengyll of the Rocking B ... John Croydon of the Piano Ranch ..
. Henry Wertner, who's the Barony's stockliner as well as a horsebreeder in his
own right . .. Hash Renfrew, who owns the Lazy Susan, the biggest horse-ranch
in Mejis (not that it's much by the standards you fellows are used to, I wot) .
. . and there'll be others, as well. Rimer'll introduce you, and get you about
your business right smart."
Ronald nodded and
turned to Cuthbert. "You'll want to be on your mettle tomorrow
night."
Cuthbert nodded.
"Don't fear me, Will, I'll note em all."
Avery sipped more tea,
eyeing them over his glass with a roguish expression so false it made Roland
want to squirm.
"Most of em's got
daughters of marriageable age, and they'll bring em. You boys want to look
out."
Roland decided he'd
had enough tea and hypocrisy for one morning. He nodded, emptied his glass,
smiled (hoping his looked more genuine than Avery's now looked to him), and got
to his feet. Cuthbert and Alain took the cue and did likewise.
"Thank you for
the tea, and for the welcome," Roland said. "Please send a message to
Mayor Thorin, thanking him for his kindness and telling him that he'll see us
tomorrow, at eight o' the clock, prompt."
"Aye. So I
will."
Roland then turned to
Dave. That worthy was so surprised to be noticed again that he recoiled,
almost bumping his head on the notice-board. "And please thank your wife
for the tea. It was wonderful."
"I will.
Thankee-sai."
They went back
outside, High Sheriff Avery herding them along like a genial, overweight
sheepdog.
"As to where
you'll locate—" he began as they descended the steps and
started down the walk. As soon as they hit the sunshine, he began to
sweat.
"Oh, land, I
forgot to ask you about that," Roland said, knocking the heel of his hand
against his forehead. "We've camped out on that long slope, lots of horses
as you go down the turf, I'm sure you know where I mean—"
"The Drop,
aye."
"—but without
permission, because we don't yet know who to ask."
"That'd be John
Croydon's land, and I'm sure he wouldn't begrudge ye, but we mean to do ye
better than that. There's a spread northwest of here, the Bar K. Used to b'long
to the Garber family, but they gave it up and moved on after a fire. Now it
b'longs to the Horsemen's Association—that's a little local group of farmers
and ranchers. I spoke to Francis Lengyll about you fellows—he's the H.A.
president just current—and he said 'We'll put em out to the old Garber place,
why not?' "
"Why not?"
Cuthbert agreed in a gentle, musing voice. Roland shot him a sharp glance, but
Cuthbert was looking down at the harbor, where the small fishing boats
skittered to and fro like waterbugs.
"Aye, just what I
said, 'Why not, indeed?' I said. The home place burned to a cinder, but the
bunkhouse still stands; so does the stable and the cook-shack next door to it.
On Mayor Thorin's orders, I've taken the liberty of stocking the larder and
having the bunkhouse swept out and spruced up a little. Ye may see the
occasional bug, but nothing that'll bite or sting . . . and no snakes, unless
there's a few under the floor, and if there are, let em stay there's what I
say. Hey, boys? Let em stay there!"
"Let em stay
there, right under the floor where they're happy," Cuthbert agreed, still
gazing down at the harbor with his arms folded over his chest.
Avery gave him a
brief, uncertain glance, his smile flickering a bit at the comers. Then he
turned back to Roland, and the smile shone out strongly once more.
"There's no holes in the roof, lad, and if it rains, ye'll be dry. What
think ye of that? Does it sound well to ye?"
"Better than we
deserve. I think that you've been very efficient and Mayor Thorin's been far
too kind." And he did think that. The question was why. "But
we appreciate his thoughtfulness. Don't we, boys?"
Cuthbert and Alain
made vigorous assent.
"And we accept
with thanks."
Avery nodded.
"I'll tell him. Go safely, boys."
They had reached the
hitching rail. Avery once more shook hands all around, this time saving his
keenest looks for their horses.
"Until tomorrow
night, then, young gents?"
"Tomorrow
night," Roland agreed.
"Will ye be able
to find the Bar K on your own, do yer think?"
Again Roland was
struck by the man's unspoken contempt and unconscious condescension. Yet
perhaps it was to the good. If the High Sheriff thought they were stupid, who
knew what might come of it?
"We'll find
it," Cuthbert said, mounting up. Avery was looking suspiciously at the
rook's skull on the horn of Cuthbert's saddle. Cuthbert saw him looking, but
for once managed to keep his mouth shut. Roland was both amazed and pleased by
this unexpected reticence. "Fare you well, Sheriff."
"And you,
boy."
He stood there by the
hitching post, a large man in a khaki shirt with sweat-stains around the
armpits and black boots that looked too shiny for a working sheriff's feet. And
where's the horse that could support him through a day of range-riding?
Roland thought. I'd like to see the cut of that Cayuse.
Avery waved to them as
they went. The other deputies came down the walk, Deputy Dave in the forefront.
They waved, too.
3
The moment the
Affiliation brats mounted on their fathers' expensive horseflesh were around
the comer and headed downhill to the High Street, the sheriff and the deputies
stopped waving. Avery turned to Dave Hollis, whose expression of slightly
stupid awe had been replaced by one marginally more intelligent.
"What think ye,
Dave?"
Dave lifted his
monocle to his mouth and began to nibble nervously at its brass edging, a habit
about which Sheriff Avery had long since ceased to nag him. Even Dave's wife,
Judy, had given up on that score, and Judy Hollis—Judy Wertner that was—was a
fair engine when it came to getting her own way.
"Soft," Dave
said. "Soft as eggs just dropped out of a chicken's ass."
"Mayhap,"
Avery said, putting his thumbs in his belt and rocking enormously back and forth,
"but the one did most of the talking, him in the flathead hat, he doesn't think
he's soft."
"Don't matter
what he thinks," Dave said, still nibbling at his eyeglass.
"He's in Hambry, now. He may have to change his way of thinking to
our'n."
Behind him, the other
deputies laughed. Even Avery smiled. They would leave the rich boys alone if
the rich boys left them alone—those were orders, straight from Mayor's
House—but Avery had to admit that he wouldn't mind a little dust-up with them,
so he wouldn't. He would enjoy putting his boot into the balls of the one with
that idiotic bird's skull on his saddle-horn—standing there and mocking him,
he'd been, thinking all the while that Herk Avery was too country-dumb to know
what he was up to—but the thing he'd realty enjoy would be beating the
cool look from the eyes of the boy in the flathead preacher's hat, seeing a
hotter expression of fear rise up in them as Mr. Will Dearborn of Hemphill
realized that New Canaan was far away and his rich father couldn't help him.
"Aye," he
said, clapping Dave on the shoulder. "Mayhap he'll have to change his way
of thinking." He smiled—one very different from any of those he had shown
the Affiliation counters. "Mayhap they all will."
4
The three boys rode in
single file until they were past the Travellers' Rest (a young and obviously
retarded man with kinky black hair looked up from scrubbing the brick stoop and
waved to them; they waved back). Then they moved up abreast, Roland in the
middle.
"What did you
think of our new friend, the High Sheriff?" Roland asked.
"I have no
opinion," Cuthbert said brightly. "No, none at all. Opinion is
politics, and politics is an evil which has caused many a fellow to be hung
while he's still young and pretty." He leaned forward and tapped the
rook's skull with his knuckles. "The lookout didn't care for him, though.
I'm sorry to say that our faithful lookout thought Sheriff Avery a fat bag of
guts without a trustworthy bone in his body."
Roland turned to
Alain. "And you, young Master Stockworth?"
Alain considered it
for some time, as was his way, chewing a piece of grass he'd bent oversaddle to
pluck from his side of the road. At last he said: "If he came upon us
burning in the street, I don't think he'd piss on us to put us out."
Cuthbert laughed
heartily at that. "And you, Will? How do you say, dear captain?"
"He doesn't
interest me much ... but one thing he said does. Given that the horse-meadow
they call the Drop has to be at least thirty wheels long and runs five or more
to the dusty desert, how do you suppose Sheriff Avery knew we were on the part
of it that belongs to Croydon's Piano Ranch?"
They looked at him,
first with surprise, then speculation. After a moment Cuthbert leaned forward
and rapped once more on the rook's skull. "We're being watched, and you
never reported it? No supper for you, sir, and it'll be the stockade the next
time it happens!"
But before they had
gone much farther, Roland's thoughts of Sheriff Avery gave way to more pleasant
ones of Susan Delgado. He would see her the following night, of that he was
sure. He wondered if her hair would be down.
He couldn't wait to
find out.
5
Now here they were, at
Mayor's House. Let the game begin, Roland thought, not clear on what
that meant even as the phrase went through his mind, surely not thinking of
Castles . . . not then.
The hostlers led their
mounts away, and for a moment the three of them stood at the foot of the
steps—huddled, almost, as horses do in unfriendly weather—their beardless
faces washed by the light of the torches. From inside, the guitars played and
voices were raised in a fresh eddy of laughter.
"Do we
knock?" Cuthbert asked. "Or just open and march in?"
Roland was spared
answering. The main door of the had was thrown open and two women
stepped out, both wearing long white-collared dresses that reminded all three
boys of the dresses stockmen's wives wore in their own part of the world. Their
hair was caught back in snoods that sparkled with some bright diamondy stuff in
the light of the torches.
The plumper of the two
stepped forward, smiling, and dropped them a deep curtsey. Her earrings, which
looked like square-cut firedims, flashed and bobbed. "You are the young
men from the Affiliation, so you are, and welcome you are, as well. Goodeven, sirs,
and may your days be long upon the earth!"
They bowed in unison,
boots forward, and thanked her in an unintended chorus that made her laugh and
clap her hands. The tall woman beside her offered them a smile as spare as her
frame.
"I am Olive
Thorin," the plump woman said, "the Mayor's wife. This is my
sister-in-law, Coral."
Coral Thorin, still
with that narrow smile (it barely creased her lips and touched her eyes not at
all), dipped them a token curtsey. Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain bowed again over
their outstretched legs.
"I welcome you to
Seafront," Olive Thorin said, her dignity leavened and made pleasant by
her artless smile, her obvious dazzlement at the appearance of her young
visitors from In-World. "Come to our house with joy. I say so with all my heart,
so I do."
"And so we will,
madam," Roland said, "for your greeting has made us joyful." He
took her hand, and, with no calculation whatever, raised it to his lips and
kissed it. Her delighted laughter made him smile. He liked Olive Thorin on sight,
and it was perhaps well he met someone of that sort early on, for, with the
problematic exception of Susan Delgado, he met no one else he liked, no one
else he trusted, all that night.
6
It was warm enough
even with the seabreeze, and the cloak- and coat-collector in the foyer looked
as though he'd had little or no custom. Roland wasn't entirely surprised to see
that it was Deputy Dave, his remaining bits of hair slicked back with some
sort of gleaming grease and his monocle now lying on the snow-white breast of a
houseman's jacket. Roland gave him a nod. Dave, his hands clasped behind his
back, returned it.
Two men—Sheriff Avery
and an elderly gent as gaunt as Old Doctor Death in a cartoon—came toward them.
Beyond, through a pair of double doors now open wide, a whole roomful of people
stood about with crystal punch-cups in their hands, talking and taking little
bits of food from the trays which were circulating.
Roland had time for
just one narrow-eyed glance toward Cuthbert:
Everything. Every
name, every face . . . every nuance. Especially those.
Cuthbert raised an
eyebrow—his discreet version of a nod—and then Roland was pulled, willy-nilly,
into the evening, his first real evening of service as a working gunslinger.
And he had rarely worked harder.
Old Doctor Death
turned out to be Kimba Rimer, Thorin's Chancellor and Minister of Inventory
(Roland suspected the title had been made up special for their visit). He was
easily five inches taller than Roland, who was considered tall in Gilead, and
his skin was pale as candlewax. Not unhealthy-looking; just pale. Wings of
iron-gray hair floated away from either side of his head, gossamer as cobwebs.
The top of his skull was completely bald. Balanced on his whelk of a nose was a
pince-nez.
"My boys!"
he said, when the introductions had been made. He had the smooth, sadly sincere
voice of a politician or an undertaker. "Welcome to Mejis! To Hambry! And
to Seafront, our humble Mayor's House!"
"If this is
humble, I should wonder at the palace your folk might build," Roland said.
It was a mild enough remark, more pleasantry than witticism (he ordinarily left
the wit to Bert), but Chancellor Rimer laughed hard. So did Sheriff Avery.
"Come,
boys!" Rimer said, when he apparently felt he had expressed enough
amusement. "The Mayor awaits you with impatience, I'm sure."
"Aye," said
a timid voice from behind them. The skinny sister-in-law, Coral, had
disappeared, but Olive Thorin was still there, looking up at the newcomers with
her hands decorously clasped before that area of her body which might once have
been her waist. She was still smiling her hopeful, pleasant smile. "Very
eager to meet you, Hart is, very eager, indeed. Shall I conduct them, Kimba,
or—"
"Nay, nay, you
mustn't trouble yourself with so many other guests to attend," Rimer said.
"I suppose you're
right." She curtseyed to Roland and his companions a final time, and
although she still smiled and although the smile looked completely genuine to
Roland, he thought: She's unhappy about something, all the same. Desperately
so, I think.
"Gentlemen?"
Rimer asked. The teeth in his smile were almost disconcertingly huge.
"Will ye come?"
He led them past the
grinning Sheriff and into the reception hall.
7
Roland was hardly
overwhelmed by it; he had, after all, been in the Great Hall of Gilead—the Hall
of the Grandfathers, it was sometimes called—and had even peeped down on the
great party which was held there each year, the so-called Dance of Easterling,
which marked the end of Wide Earth and the advent of Sowing. There were five
chandeliers in the Great Hall instead of just one, and lit with electric bulbs
rather than oil lamps. The dress of the partygoers (many of them expensive
young men and women who had never done a hand's turn of work in their lives, a
fact of which John Farson spoke at every opportunity) had been richer, the
music had been fuller, the company of older and nobler lines which grew closer
and closer together as they stretched back toward Arthur Eld, he of the white
horse and unifying sword.
Yet there was life
here, and plenty of it. There was a robustness that had been missing in Gilead,
and not just at Easterling, either. The texture he felt as he stepped into the
Mayor's House reception room was the sort of thing, Roland reflected, that you
didn't entirely miss when it was gone, because it slipped away quietly and
painlessly. Like blood from a vein cut in a tub filled with hot water.
The room—almost but
not quite grand enough to be a hall—was circular, its panelled walls decorated
by paintings (most quite bad) of previous Mayors. On a raised stand to the
right of the doors leading into the dining area, four grinning guitarists in tati
jackets and sombreros were playing something that sounded like a waltz with
pepper on it. In the center of the floor was a table supporting two cut-glass
punchbowls, one vast and grand, the other smaller and plainer. The
white-jacketed fellow in charge of the dipping-out operations was another of
Avery's deputies.
Contrary to what the
High Sheriff had told them the day before, several of the men were wearing
sashes of various colors, but Roland didn't feel too out of place in his white
silk shirt, black string tie, and one pair of stovepipe dress trousers. For
every man wearing a sash, he saw three wearing the sort of dowdy, box-tailed
coats that he associated with stockmen at church, and he saw several others
(younger men, for the most part) who weren't wearing coats at all. Some of the
women wore jewelry (though nothing so expensive as sai Thorin's firedim
earrings), and few looked as if they'd missed many meals, but they also wore
clothes Roland recognized: the long, round-collared dresses, usually with the
lace fringe of a colored underskirt showing below the hem, the dark shoes with
low heels, the snoods (most sparkling with gem-dust, as those of Olive and
Coral Thorin had been).
And then he saw one
who was very different.
It was Susan Delgado,
of course, shimmering and almost too beautiful to look at in a blue silk dress
with a high waist and a square-cut bodice which showed the tops of her breasts.
Around her neck was a sapphire pendant that made Olive Thorin's earrings look
like paste. She stood next to a man wearing a sash the color of coals in a hot
woodfire. That deep orange-red was the Barony's color, and Roland supposed that
the man was their host, but for the moment Roland barely saw him. His eye was
held by Susan Delgado: the blue dress, the tanned skin, the triangles of color,
too pale and perfect to be makeup, which ran lightly up her cheeks; most of all
her hair, which was unbound tonight and fell to her waist like a shimmer of
palest silk. He wanted her, suddenly and completely, with a desperate depth of
feeling that felt like sickness. Everything he was and everything he had come
for, it seemed, was secondary to her.
She turned a little,
then, and spied him. Her eyes (they were gray, he saw) widened the tiniest bit.
He thought that the color in her cheeks deepened a little. Her lips—lips that
had touched his as they stood on a dark road, he thought with wonder—parted a
little. Then the man standing next to Thorin (also tall, also skinny, with a
mustache and long white hair lying on the dark shoulders of his coat) said
something, and she turned back to him. A moment later the group around Thorin
was laughing, Susan included. The man with the white hair didn't join them,
but smiled thinly.
Roland, hoping his
face did not give away the fact that his heart was pounding like a hammer, was
led directly to this group, which stood close to the punchbowls. Distantly, he
could feel Rimer's bony confederation of fingers clamped to his arm above the
elbow. More clearly he could smell mingled perfumes, the oil from the lamps on
the walls, the aroma of the ocean. And thought, for no reason at all, Oh, I
am dying. I am dying.
Take hold of yourself,
Roland of Gilead. Stop this foolishness, for your father's sake. Take hold!
He tried ... to some
degree succeeded. . . and knew he would be lost the next time she looked at
him. It was her eyes. The other night, in the dark, he hadn't been able to see
those fog-colored eyes. I didn't know how lucky I was, he thought
wryly.
"Mayor
Thorin?" Rimer asked. "May I present our guests from the Inner
Baronies?"
Thorin turned away
from the man with the long white hair and the woman standing next to him, his
face brightening. He was shorter than his Chancellor but just as thin, and his
build was peculiar: a short and narrow-shouldered upper body over impossibly
long and skinny legs, He looked, Roland thought, like the sort of bird you should
glimpse in a marsh at dawn, bobbing for its breakfast.
"Aye, you
may!" he cried in a strong, high voice. "Indeed you may, we've been
waiting with impatience, great impatience, for this moment! Well met we
are, very well met! Welcome, sirs! May your evening in this house of which I am
the fleeting proprietor be happy, and may your days be long upon the
earth!"
Roland took the bony
outstretched hand, heard the knuckles crack beneath his grip, looked for an
expression of discomfort on the Mayor's face, and was relieved to see none. He
bowed low over his outstretched leg.
"William
Dearborn, Mayor Thorin, at your service. Thank you for your welcome, and may
your own days be long upon the earth."
"Arthur
Heath" made his manners next, then "Richard Stockworth."
Thorin's smile widened at each deep bow. Rimer did his best to beam, but looked
unused to it. The man with the long white hair took a glass of punch, passed it
to his female companion, and continued to smile thinly. Roland was aware that
everyone in the room—the guests numbered perhaps fifty in all—was looking at
them, but what he felt most upon his skin, beating like a soft wing, was her
regard. He could see the blue silk of her dress from the side of one eye, but
did not dare look at her more directly.
"Was your trip
difficult?" Thorin was asking. "Did you have adventures and
experience perils? We would hear all the details at dinner, so we would, for we
have few guests from the Inner Arc these days." His eager, slightly
fatuous smile faded; his tufted brows drew together. "Did ye encounter
patrols of Farson?"
"No,
Excellency," Roland said. "We—"
"Nay, lad, nay—no
Excellency, I won't have it, and the fisherfolk and hoss-drovers I serve
wouldn't, even if I would. Just Mayor Thorin, if you please."
"Thank you. We
saw many strange things on our journey, Mayor Thorin, but no Good Men."
"Good Men!"
Rimer jerked out, and his upper lip lifted in a smile which made him look
doglike. "Good Men, indeed!"
"We would hear it
all, every word," Thorin said. "But before I forget my manners in my
eagerness, young gentlemen, let me introduce you to these close around me.
Kimba you've met; this formidable fellow to my left is Eldred Jonas, chief of
my newly installed security staff." Thorin's smile looked momentarily embarrassed.
"I'm not convinced that I need extra security, Sheriff Avery's always been
quite enough to keep the peace in our comer of the world, but Kimba insists.
And when Kimba insists, the Mayor must bow."
"Very wise,
sir," Rimer said, and bowed himself. They all laughed, save for Jonas, who
simply held onto his narrow smile.
Jonas nodded.
"Pleased, gents, I'm sure." The voice was a reedy quaver. He then
wished them long days upon the earth, all three, coming to Roland last in his
round of handshaking. His grip was dry and firm, utterly untouched by the
tremor in his voice. And now Roland noticed the queer blue shape tattooed on
the back of the man's right hand, in the webbing between thumb and first
finger. It looked like a coffin.
"Long days,
pleasant nights," Roland said with hardly a thought. It was a greeting
from his childhood, and it was only later that he would realize it was one more
apt to be associated with Gilead than with any such rural place as Hemphill.
Just a small slip, but he was beginning to believe that their margin for such
slips might be a good deal less than his father had thought when he had sent
Roland here to get him out of Marten's way.
"And to
you," Jonas said. His bright eyes measured Roland with a thoroughness that
was close to insolence, still holding his hand. Then he released it and stepped
back.
"Cordelia
Delgado," Mayor Thorin said, next bowing to the woman who had been
speaking to Jonas. As Roland also bowed in her direction, he saw the family
resemblance . . . except that what looked generous and lovely on Susan's face
looked pinched and folded on the face before him now. Not the girl's mother;
Roland guessed that Cordelia Delgado was a bit too young for that.
"And our especial
friend, Miss Susan Delgado," Thorin finished, sounding flustered (Roland
supposed she would have that effect on any man, even an old one like the
Mayor). Thorin urged her forward, bobbing his head and grinning, one of his
knuckle-choked hands pressed against the small of her back, and Roland felt an
instant of poisonous jealousy. Ridiculous, given this man's age and his plump,
pleasant wife, but it was there, all right, and it was sharp. Sharp as a bee's
ass, Cort would have said.
Then her face tilted
up to his, and he was looking into her eyes again.
He had heard of
drowning in a woman's eyes in some poem or story, and thought it ridiculous. He
still thought it ridiculous, but understood it was perfectly possible,
nonetheless. And she knew it. He saw concern in her eyes, perhaps even fear.
Promise me that if we
meet at Mayor's House, we meet for the first time.
The memory of those
words had a sobering, clarifying effect, and seemed to widen his vision a
little. Enough for him to be aware that the woman beside Jonas, the one who
shared some of Susan's features, was looking at the girl with a mixture of
curiosity and alarm.
He bowed low, but did
little more than touch her ringless outstretched hand. Even so, he felt
something like a spark jump between their fingers. From the momentary widening
of those eyes, he thought that she felt it, too.
"Pleased to meet
you, sai," he said. His attempt to be casual sounded tinny and false in
his own ears. Still, he was begun, it felt like the whole world was watching
him (them), and there was nothing to do but go on with it. He tapped his
throat three times. "May your days be long—"
"Aye, and yours,
Mr. Dearborn. Thankee-sai."
She turned to Alain
with a rapidity that was almost rude, then to Cuthbert, who bowed, tapped, then
said gravely: "Might I recline briefly at your feet, miss? Your beauty has
loosened my knees. I'm sure a few moments spent looking up at your profile from
below, with the back of my head on these cool tiles, would put me right."
They all laughed at
that—even Jonas and Miss Cordelia. Susan blushed prettily and slapped the back
of Cuthbert's hand. For once Roland blessed his friend's relentless sense of
foolery.
Another man joined the
party by the punchbowl. This newcomer was blocky and blessedly un-thin in his
boxtail coat. His cheeks burned with high color that looked like windburn
rather than drink, and his pale eyes lay in nets of wrinkles. A rancher; Roland
had ridden often enough with his father to know the look.
"There'll be
maids a-plenty to meet you boys tonight," the newcomer said with a friendly
enough smile. "Ye'll find y'selves drunk on perfume if ye're not careful.
But I'd like my crack at you before you meet em. Fran Lengyll, at your
service."
His grip was strong
and quick; no bowing or other nonsense went with it.
"I own the
Rocking B ... or it owns me, whichever way ye want to look at it. I'm also boss
of the Horsemen's Association, at least until they fire me. The Bar K was my
idea. Hope it's all right."
"It's perfect,
sir," Alain said. "Clean and dry and room for twenty. Thank you. You've
been too kind."
"Nonsense,"
Lengyll said, looking pleased all the same as he knocked back a glass of punch.
"We're all in this together, boy. John Farson's but one bad straw in a
field of wrong-headedness these days. The world's moved on, folks say. Huh! So
it has, aye, and a good piece down the road to hell is where it's moved on to.
Our job is to hold the hay out of the furnace as well as we can, as long as we
can. For the sake of our children even more than for that of our fathers."
"Hear,
hear," Mayor Thorin said in a voice that strove for the high ground of
solemnity and fell with a splash into fatuity instead. Roland noticed the
scrawny old fellow was gripping one of Susan's hands (she seemed almost unaware
of it; was looking intently at Lengyll instead), and suddenly he understood:
the Mayor was either her uncle or perhaps a cousin of some close degree.
Lengyll ignored both, looking at the three newcomers instead, scrutinizing each
in turn and finishing with Roland.
"Anything us in
Mejis can do to help, lad, just ask—me, John Croydon, Hash Renfrew, Jake White,
Hank Wertner, any or all. Ye'll meet em tonight, aye, their wives and sons and
daughters as well, and ye need only ask. We may be a good piece out from the
hub of New Canaan here, but we're strong for the Affiliation, all the same.
Aye, very strong."
"Well
spoken," Rimer said quietly.
"And now,"
Lengyll said, "we'll toast your arrival proper. And ye've had to wait too
long already for a dip of punch. It's dry as dust ye must be."
He turned to the
punchbowls and reached for the ladle in the larger and more ornate of the two,
waving off the attendant, clearly wanting to honor them by serving them
himself.
"Mr.
Lengyll," Roland said quietly. Yet there was a force of command in that
voice; Fran Lengyll heard it and turned.
"The smaller bowl
is soft punch, is it not?"
Lengyll considered
this, at first not understanding. Then his eyebrow went up. For the first time
he seemed to consider Roland and the others not as living symbols of the
Affiliation and the Inner Baronies, but as actual human beings. Young ones.
Only boys, when you got right down to it.
"Aye?"
"Draw ours from
that, if you'd be so kind." He felt all eyes upon them now. Her
eyes particularly. He kept his own firmly fixed on the rancher, but his
peripheral vision was good, and he was very aware that Jonas's thin smile had
resurfaced. Jonas knew what this was about already. Roland supposed Thorin and
Rimer did, as well. These country mice knew a lot. More than they should, and
he would need to think about that carefully later. It was the least of his
concerns at the current moment, however.
"We have
forgotten the faces of our fathers in a matter that has some bearing on our
posting to Hambry." Roland was uncomfortably aware that he was now making
a speech, like it or not. It wasn't the whole room he was addressing—thank the
gods for little blessings—but the circle of listeners had grown well beyond the
original group. Yet there was nothing for it but to finish; the boat was
launched. "I needn't go into details—nor would you expect them, I know—but
I should say that we promised not to indulge in spirits during our time here.
As penance, you see."
Her gaze. He could
still feel it on his skin, it seemed.
For a moment there was
complete quiet in the little group around the punchbowls, and then Lengyll
said: "Your father would be proud to hear ye speak so frank, Will
Dearborn—aye, so he would. And what boy worth his salt didn't get up to a
little noise 'n wind from time to time?" He clapped Roland on the
shoulder, and although the grip of his hand was firm and his smile looked
genuine, his eyes were hard to read, only gleams of speculation deep in those
beds of wrinkles. "In his place, may I be proud for him?"
"Yes,"
Roland said, smiling in return. "And with my thanks."
"And mine,"
Cuthbert said.
"Mine as
well," Alain said quietly, taking the offered cup of soft punch and bowing
to Lengyll.
Lengyll filled more
cups and handed them rapidly around. Those already holding cups found them
plucked away and replaced with fresh cups of the soft punch. When each of the
immediate group had one, Lengyll turned, apparently intending to offer the
toast himself. Rimer tapped him on the shoulder, shook his head slightly, and
cut his eyes toward the Mayor. That worthy was looking at them with his eyes
rather popped and his jaw slightly dropped. To Roland he looked like an enthralled
playgoer in a penny seat; all he needed was a lapful of orange-peel. Lengyll
followed the Chancellor's glance and then nodded.
Rimer next caught the
eye of the guitar player standing at the center of the musicians. He stopped
playing; so did the others. The guests looked that way, then back to the center
of the room when Thorin began speaking. There was nothing ridiculous about his
voice when he put it to use as he now did—it was carrying and pleasant.
"Ladies and
gentlemen, my friends," he said. "I would ask you to help me in
welcoming three new friends—young men from the Inner Baronies, fine
young men who have dared great distances and many perils on behalf of the
Affiliation, and in the service of order and peace."
Susan Delgado set her
punch-cup aside, retrieved her hand (with some difficulty) from her uncle's
grip, and began to clap. Others joined in. The applause which swept the room
was brief but warm. Eldred Jonas did not, Roland noticed, put his cup aside to
join in.
Thorin turned to
Roland, smiling. He raised his cup. "May I set you on with a word, Will
Dearborn?"
"Aye, so you may,
and with thanks," Roland said. There was laughter and fresh applause at
his usage.
Thorin raised his cup
even higher. Everyone else in the room followed suit; crystal gleamed like
starpoints in the light of the chandelier.
"Ladies and
gentlemen, I give you William Dearborn of Hemphill, Richard Stockworth of
Pennilton, and Arthur Heath of Gilead."
Gasps and murmurs at
that last, as if their Mayor had announced Arthur Heath of Heaven.
"Take of them
well, give to them well, make their days in Mejis sweet, and their memories
sweeter. Help them in their work and to advance the causes which are so dear
to all of us. May their days be long upon the earth. So says your Mayor."
"SO SAY WE
ALL!" they thundered back.
Thorin drank; the rest
followed his example. There was fresh applause. Roland turned, helpless to
stop himself, and found Susan's eyes again at once. For a moment she looked at
him fully, and in her frank gaze he saw that she was nearly as shaken by his
presence as he was by hers. Then the older woman who looked like her bent and
murmured something into her ear. Susan turned away, her face a composed mask .
. . but he had seen her regard in her eyes. And thought again that what was
done might be undone, and what was spoken might be unspoken.
8
As they passed into
the dining hall, which had tonight been set with four long trestle tables (so
close there was barely room to move between them), Cordelia tugged her niece's
hand, pulling her back from the Mayor and Jonas, who had fallen into
conversation with Fran Lengyll.
"Why looked you
at him so, miss?" Cordelia whispered furiously. The vertical line had
appeared on her forehead. Tonight it looked as deep as a trench. "What
ails thy pretty, stupid head?" Thy. Just that was enough to tell
Susan that her aunt was in a fine rage.
"Looked at who?
And how?" Her tone sounded right, she thought, but oh, her heart—
The hand over hers
clamped down, hurting. "Play no fiddle with me, Miss Oh So Young and
Pretty! Have ye ever seen that fine-turned row of pins before? Tell me the
truth!"
"No, how could I?
Aunt, you're hurting me."
Aunt Cord smiled
balefully and clamped down harder. "Better a small hurt now than a large
one later. Curb your impudence. And curb your flirtatious eyes."
"Aunt, I don't
know what you—"
"I think you
do," Cordelia said grimly, pressing her niece close to the wood panelling
to allow the guests to stream past them. When the rancher who owned the
boathouse next to theirs said hello, Aunt Cord smiled pleasantly at him and
wished him goodeven before turning back to Susan.
"Mind me,
miss—mind me well. If I saw yer cow's eyes, ye may be sure that half the
company saw. Well, what's done is done, but it stops now. Your time for such
child-maid games is over. Do you understand?"
Susan was silent, her
face setting in those stubborn lines Cordelia hated most of all; it was an
expression that always made her feel like slapping her headstrong niece until
her nose bled and her great gray doe's eyes gushed tears.
"Ye've made a vow
and a contract. Papers have been passed, the weird-woman has been consulted,
money has changed hands. And ye've given your promise. If that means
nothing to such as yerself, girl, remember what it'd mean to yer father."
Tears rose in Susan's
eyes again, and Cordelia was glad to see them. Her brother had been an
improvident irritation, capable of producing only this far too pretty
womanchild ... but he had his uses, even dead.
"Now promise
ye'll keep yer eyes to yourself, and that if ye see that boy coming, ye'll
swing wide—aye, wide's you can—to stay out of his way."
"I promise.
Aunt," Susan whispered. "I do."
Cordelia smiled. She
was really quite pretty when she smiled. "It's well, then. Let's go in.
We're being looked at. Hold my arm, child!"
Susan clasped her
aunt's powdered arm. They entered the room side by side, their dresses rustling,
the sapphire pendant on the swell of Susan's breast flashing, and many there
were who remarked upon how alike they looked, and how well pleased poor old Pat
Delgado would have been with them.
9
Roland was seated near
the head of the center table, between Hash Renfrew (a rancher even bigger and
blockier than Lengyll) and Thorin's rather morose sister, Coral. Renfrew had
been handy with the punch; now, as the soup was brought to table, he set about
proving himself equally adept with the ale.
He talked about the
fishing trade ("not what it useter be, boy, although it's less muties
they pull up in their nets these days, 'n that's a blessin"), the farming
trade ("folks round here can grow most anythin, long's it's corn or
beans"), and finally about those things clearly closest to his heart:
horsin, coursin, and ranchin. Those businesses went on as always, aye, so they
did, although times had been hard in the grass-and-sea-coast Baronies for forty
year or more.
Weren't the bloodlines
clarifying? Roland asked. For they had begun to do so where he came from.
Aye, Renfrew agreed,
ignoring his potato soup and gobbling barbecued beef-strips instead. These he
scooped up with a bare hand and washed down with more ale. Aye, young master,
bloodlines was clarifying wonderful well, indeed they were, three colts out of
every five were threaded stock—in thoroughbred as well as common lines,
kennit—and the fourth could be kept and worked if not bred. Only one in five
these days born with extra legs or extra eyes or its guts on the outside, and
that was good. But the birthrates were way down, so they were; the stallions
had as much ram as ever in their ramrods, it seemed, but not as much powder and
ball.
"Beggin your
pardon, ma'am," Renfrew said, leaning briefly across Roland to Coral
Thorin. She smiled her thin smile (it reminded Roland of Jonas's), trudged her
spoon through her soup, and said nothing. Renfrew emptied his ale-cup, smacked
his lips heartily, and held the cup out again. As it was recharged, he turned back
to Roland.
Things weren't good,
not as they once had been, but they could be worse. Would be worse, if
that bugger Farson had his way. (This time he didn't bother excusing himself to
sai Thorin.) They all had to pull together, that was the ticket—rich and poor,
great and small, while pulling could still do some good. And then he seconded
Lengyll, telling Roland that whatever he and his friends wanted, whatever they
needed, they had only to name it.
"Information
should be enough," Roland said. "Numbers of things."
"Aye, can't be a
counter without numbers," Renfrew agreed, and sprayed beery laughter. On
Roland's left hand, Coral Thorin nibbled a bit of green (the beef-strips she
had not so much as touched), smiled her narrow smile, and went on boating with
her spoon. Roland guessed there was nothing wrong with her ears, though, and
that her brother might get a complete report of their conversation. Or possibly
it would be Rimer to get the report. For, while it was too early to say for
sure, Roland had an idea that Rimer might be the real force here. Along,
perhaps, with sai Jonas.
"For
instance," Roland said, "how many riding horses do you think we may
be able to report back to the Affiliation?"
"Tithe or
total?"
"Total."
Renfrew put his cup
down and appeared to calculate. As he did, Roland looked across the table and
saw Lengyll and Henry Wertner, the Barony's stockliner, exchange a quick
glance. They had heard. And he saw something else as well, when he returned his
attention to his seatmate: Hash Renfrew was drunk, but likely not as drunk as
he wanted young Will Dearborn to believe.
"Total, ye
say—not just what we owe the Affiliation, or might be able to send along in a
pinch."
"Yes."
"Well, let's see,
young sai. Fran must run a hundred'n forty head; John Croydon's got near a
hundred. Hank Wertner's got forty on his own hook, and must run sixty more out
along the Drop for the Barony. Gov'mint hossflesh, Mr. Dearborn."
Roland smiled. "I
know it well. Split hoofs, low necks, no speed, bottomless bellies."
Renfrew laughed hard
at that, nodding .. . but Roland found himself wondering if the man was really
amused. In Hambry, the waters on top and the waters down below seemed to run in
different directions.
"As for myself,
I've had a bad ten or twelve year—sand-eye, brain fever, cabbards. At one time
there was two hundred head of running horses out there on the Drop with the
Lazy Susan brand on em; now there can't be more than eighty."
Roland nodded.
"So we're speaking of four hundred and twenty head."
"Oh, more'n that,"
Renfrew said with a laugh. He went to pick up his ale-cup, struck it with the
side of one work- and weather-reddened hand, knocked it over, cursed, picked it
up, then cursed the aleboy who came slow to refill it.
"More than
that?" Roland prompted, when Renfrew was finally cocked and locked and
ready to resume action.
"Ye have to
remember, Mr. Dearborn, that this is hoss-country more than it's
fisher-country. We josh each other, we and the fishers, but there's many a
scale-scraper got a nag put away behind his house, or in the Barony stables if
they have no roof of their own to keep the rain off a boss's head. 'Twas her
poor da useter keep the Barony stables."
Renfrew nodded toward
Susan, who was seated across and three seats up from Roland himself—just a
table's turn from the Mayor, who was, of course, seated at the head. Roland
found her placement there passing peculiar, especially given the fact that the
Mayor's missus had been seated almost all the way at the far end of the table,
with Cuthbert on one side of her and some rancher to whom they had not yet been
introduced on her other.
Roland supposed an old
fellow like Thorin might like to have a pretty young relation near at hand to
help draw attention to him, or to cheer up his own eye, but it still seemed
odd. Almost an insult to one's wife. If he was tired of her conversation, why
not put her at the head of another table?
They have their own
customs, that's all, and the customs of the country aren't your concern. This
man's crazy horse-count is your concern.
"How many other
running horses, would you say?" he asked Renfrew. "In all?"
Renfrew gazed at him
shrewdly. "An honest answer'll not come back to haunt me, will it, sonny?
I'm an Affiliation man—so I am, Affiliation to the core, they'll carve Excalibur
on my gravehead, like as not—but I'd not see Hambry and Mejis stripped of all
its treasure."
"That won't
happen, sai. How could we force you to give up what you don't want to in any
case? Such forces as we have are all committed in the north and west, against
the Good Man."
Renfrew considered
this, then nodded.
"And may I not be
Will to you?"
Renfrew brightened,
nodded, and offered his hand a second time. He grinned broadly when Roland this
time shook it in both of his, the over-and-under grip preferred by drovers and
cowboys.
"These're bad
times we live in, Will, and they've bred bad manners. I'd guess there are
probably another hundred and fifty head of horse in and about Mejis. Good ones
is what I mean."
"Big-hat
stock."
Renfrew nodded,
clapped Roland on the back, ingested a goodly quaff of ale. "Big-hats,
aye."
From the top of their
table there came a burst of laughter. Jonas had apparently said something
funny. Susan laughed without reservation, her head tilted back and her hands
clasped before the sapphire pendant. Cordelia, who sat with the girl on her
left and Jonas on her right, was also laughing. Thorin was absolutely
convulsed, rocking back and forth in his chair, wiping his eyes with a napkin.
"Yon's a lovely
girl," Renfrew said. He spoke almost reverently. Roland could not quite
swear that a small sound—a womanly hmmpf, perhaps—had come from his
other side. He glanced in that direction and saw sai Thorin still sporting with
her soup. He looked back toward the head of the table.
"Is the Mayor her
uncle, or perhaps her cousin?" Roland asked.
What happened next had
a heightened clarity in his memory, as if someone had turned up all the colors
and sounds of the world. The velvet swags behind Susan suddenly seemed a
brighter red; the caw of laughter which came from Coral Thorin was the sound of
a breaking branch. It was surely loud enough to make everyone in the vicinity
stop their conversations and look at her, Roland thought . . . except only
Renfrew and the two ranchers across the table did.
"Her uncle!"
It was her first conversation of the evening. "Her uncle, that's
good. Eh, Rennie?"
Renfrew said nothing,
only pushed his ale-cup away and finally began to eat his soup.
"I'm surprised at
ye, young man, so I am. Ye may be from the In-World, but oh goodness, whoever
tended to your education of the real world—the one outside of books 'n
maps—stopped a mite short, I'd say. She's his—" And then a word so thick
with dialect that Roland had no idea what it was. Seefin, it sounded, or
perhaps sheevin.
"I beg
pardon?" He was smiling, but the smile felt cold and false on his mouth.
There was a heaviness in his belly, as if the punch and the soup and the single
beef-strip he had eaten for politeness' sake had all lumped together in his
stomach. Do you serve? he'd asked her, meaning did she serve at table.
Mayhap she did serve, but likely she did it in a room rather more
private than this. Suddenly he wanted to hear no more; had not the slightest
interest in the meaning of the word the Mayor's sister had used.
Another burst of
laughter rocked the top of the table. Susan laughed with her head back, her
cheeks glowing, her eyes sparkling. One strap of her dress had slipped down her
arm, disclosing the tender hollow of her shoulder. As he watched, his heart full
of fear and longing, she brushed it absently back into place with the palm of
her hand.
"It means 'quiet
little woman,' " Renfrew said, clearly uncomfortable. "It's an old
term, not used much these days—"
"Stop it,
Rennie," said Coral Thorin. Then, to Roland: "He's just an old
cowboy, and can't quit shovelling horseshit even when he's away from his
beloved nags. Sheevin means side-wife. In the time of my
great-grandmother, it meant whore . . . but one of a certain kind." She
looked with a pale eye at Susan, who was now sipping ale, then turned back to
Roland. There was a species of baleful amusement in her gaze, an expression
that Roland liked little. "The kind of whore you had to pay for in coin,
the kind too fine for the trade of simple folk."
"She's his
gilly?" Roland asked through lips which felt as if they had been iced.
"Aye," Coral
said. "Not consummated, not until the Reap—and none too happy about that
is my brother, I'll warrant—but bought and paid for just as in the old days. So
she is." Coral paused, then said, "Her father would die of shame if
he could see her." She spoke with a kind of melancholy satisfaction.
"I hardly think
we should judge the Mayor too harshly," Renfrew said in an embarrassed,
pontificating voice.
Coral ignored him. She
studied the line of Susan's jaw, the soft swell of her bosom above the silken
edge of her bodice, the fall of her hair. The thin humor was gone from Coral
Thorin's face. In it now was a somehow chilling species of contempt.
In spite of himself,
Roland found himself imagining the Mayor's knuckle-bunchy hands pushing down
the straps of Susan's dress, crawling over her naked shoulders, plunging like
gray crabs into the cave beneath her hair. He looked away, toward the table's
lower end, and what he saw there was no better. It was Olive Thorin that his
eye found—Olive, who had been relegated to the foot of the table, Olive,
looking up at the laughing folk who sat at its head. Looking up at her husband,
who had replaced her with a beautiful young girl, and gifted that girl with a
pendant which made her own firedim earrings look dowdy by comparison. There was
none of Coral's hatred and angry contempt on her face. Looking at her might
have been easier if that were so. She only gazed at her husband with eyes that
were humble, hopeful, and unhappy. Now Roland understood why he had thought
her sad. She had every reason to be sad.
More laughter from the
Mayor's party; Rimer had leaned over from the next table, where he was
presiding, to contribute some witticism. It must have been a good one. This
time even Jonas was laughing. Susan put a hand to her bosom, then took her
napkin and raised it to wipe a tear of laughter from the comer of her eye.
Thorin covered her other hand. She looked toward Roland and met his eyes, still
laughing. He thought of Olive Thorin, sitting down there at the foot of the
table, with the salt and spices, an untouched bowl of soup before her and that
unhappy smile on her face. Seated where the girl could see her, as well. And he
thought that, had he been wearing his guns, he might well have drawn one and
put a bullet in Susan Delgado's cold and whoring little heart.
And thought: Who do
you hope to fool?
Then one of the
serving boys was there, putting a plate offish in front of him. Roland thought
he had never felt less like eating in his life .. . but he would eat,
just the same, just as he would turn his mind to the questions raised by his
conversation with Hash Renfrew of the Lazy Susan Ranch. He would remember the
face of his father.
Yes, I'll remember it
very well, he thought. If only I could forget the one
above yon sapphire.
10
The dinner was
interminable, and there was no escape afterward. The table at the center of the
reception room had been removed, and when l lie guests came back that way—like
a tide which has surged as high as it can and now ebbs—they formed two adjacent
circles at the direction of a sprightly little redhaired man whom Cuthbert
later dubbed Mayor Thorin's Minister of Fun.
The boy-girl,
boy-girl, boy-girl circling was accomplished with much laughter and some
difficulty (Roland guessed that about three-quarters of (lie guests were now
fairly well shottered), and then the guitarists struck up a quesa. This
proved to be a simple sort of reel. The circles revolved in opposite
directions, all holding hands, until the music stopped for a moment. Then the
couple created at the place where the two circles touched danced at the center
of the female partner's circle, while everyone else clapped and cheered.
The lead musician
managed this old and clearly well-loved tradition with a keen eye to the
ridiculous, stopping his muchachos in order to create the most amusing
couples: tall woman-short man, fat woman-skinny man, old woman-young man
(Cuthbert ended up side-kicking with a woman as old as his great-granddame, to
the sai's breathless cackles and the company's general roars of approval).
Then, just when Roland
was thinking this stupid dance would never end, the music stopped and he found
himself facing Susan Delgado.
For a moment he could
do nothing but stare at her, feeling that his eyes must burst from their
sockets, feeling that he could move neither of his stupid feet. Then she raised
her arms, the music began, the circle (this one included Mayor Thorin and the
watchful, narrowly smiling Eldred Jonas) applauded, and he led her into the
dance.
At first, as he spun
her through a figure (his feet moved with all their usual grace and precision,
numb or not), he felt like a man made of glass. Then he became aware of her
body touching his, and the rustle of her dress, and he was all too human again.
She moved closer for
just a moment, and when she spoke, her breath tickled in his ear. He wondered
if a woman could drive you mad—literally mad. He wouldn't have believed so
before tonight, but tonight everything had changed.
"Thank you for
your discretion and your propriety," she whispered.
He pulled back from
her a little and at the same time twirled her, his hand against the small of
her back—palm resting on cool satin, fingers touching warm skin. Her feet
followed his with never a pause or stutter; they moved with perfect grace,
unafraid of his great and booted clod-stompers even in their flimsy silk
slippers.
"I can be
discreet, sai," he said. "As for propriety? I'm amazed you even know
the word."
She looked up into his
cold face, her smile fading. He saw anger come in to fill it, but before anger
there was hurt, as if he had slapped her. He felt both glad and sorry at the
same time.
"Why do you speak
so?" she whispered.
The music stopped
before he could answer ... although how he might have answered, he had no idea.
She curtseyed and he bowed, while those surrounding them clapped and whistled.
They went back to their places, to their separate circles, and the guitars
began again. Roland felt his hands grasped on either side and began to turn
with the circle once more.
Laughing. Kicking.
Clapping on the beat. Feeling her somewhere behind him, doing the same.
Wondering if she wanted as badly as he did to be out of here, to be in the
dark, to be alone in the dark, where he could put his false face aside before
the real one beneath could grow hot enough to set it afire.
CHAPTER VI
sheemie
1
Around ten o' the
clock, the trio of young men from the Inner Baronies made their manners to host
and hostess, then slipped off into the fragrant summer night. Cordelia Delgado,
who happened to be standing near Henry Wertner, the Barony's stockliner,
remarked that they must be tired. Wertner laughed at this and replied in an
accent so thick it was almost comic: "Nay, ma'am, byes that age're like
rats explorin en woodpile after hokkut rain, so they are. It'll be hours yet
before the bunks out'ta Bar K sees em."
Olive Thorin left the
public rooms shortly after the boys, pleading a headache. She was pale enough
to be almost believable.
By eleven, the Mayor,
his Chancellor, and the chief of his newly inaugurated security staff were
conversing in the Mayor's study with the last few late-staying guests (all
ranchers, all members of the Horsemen's Association). The talk was brief but
intense. Several of the ranchers present expressed relief that the
Affiliation's emissaries were so young. Eldred Jonas said nothing to this, only
looked down at his pale, long-fingered hands and smiled his narrow smile.
By midnight, Susan was
at home and undressing for bed. She didn't have the sapphire to worry about, at
least; that was a Barony jewel, and had been tucked back into the strongbox at
Mayor's House before she left, despite what Mr. Ain't-We-Fine Will Dearborn
might think about it and her. Mayor Thorin (she couldn't bring herself to call
him Hart, although he had asked her to do so—not even to herself could she do
it) had taken it back from her himself. In the hallway just off from the
reception room, that had been, by the tapestry showing Arthur Eld carrying his
sword out of the pyramid in which it had been entombed. And he (Thorin, not the
Eld) had taken the opportunity to kiss her mouth and have a quick fumble at her
breasts—a part of her that had felt much too naked during that entire
interminable evening. "1 burn for Reaping," he had whispered
melodramatically in her ear. His breath had been redolent of brandy. "Each
day of this summer seems an age."
Now, in her room,
brushing her hair with harsh, quick strokes and looking out at the waning moon,
she thought she had never been so angry in her life as she was at this moment:
angry at Thorin, angry at Aunt Cord, furious with that self-righteous
prig of a Will Dearborn. Most of all, however, she was angry at herself.
"There's three
things ye can do in any situation, girl," her father had told her once.
"Ye can decide to do a thing, ye can decide not to do a thing ...
or ye can decide not to decide." That last, her da had never quite come
out and said (he hadn't needed to) was the choice of weaklings and fools. She
had promised herself she would never elect it herself. . . and yet she had
allowed herself to drift into this ugly situation. Now all the choices seemed
bad and honorless, all the roads either filled with rocks or hub-deep in mud.
In her room at Mayor's
House (she had not shared a chamber with Hart for ten years, or a bed, even
briefly, for five), Olive sat in a night-dress of undecorated white cotton,
also looking out at the waning moon. After closing herself into this safe and
private place, she had wept. . . but not for long. Now she was dry-eyed, and
felt as hollow as a dead tree.
And what was the
worst? That Hart didn't understand how humiliated she was, and not just for
herself. He was too busy strutting and preening (also too busy trying to look
down the front of sai Delgado's dress at every opportunity) to know that
people—his own Chancellor among them—were laughing at him behind his back. That
might stop when the girl had returned to her aunt's with a big belly, but that
wouldn't be for months yet. The witch had seen to that. It would be even longer
if the girl kindled slowly. And what was the silliest, most humiliating thing
of all? That she, John Haverty's daughter Olive, still loved her husband. Hart
was an overweening, vainglorious, prancing loon of a man, but she still loved
him.
There was something
else, something quite apart from the matter of Hart's turning into George o'
Goats in his late middle age: she thought there was an intrigue of some sort
going on, something dangerous and quite likely dishonorable. Hart knew a little
about it, but she guessed he knew only what Kimba Rimer and that hideous
limping man wanted him to know.
There was a time, and
not so long ago, when Hart wouldn't have allowed himself to be fobbed off in
such fashion by the likes of Rimer, a time when he would have taken one look at
Eldred Jonas and his friends and sent them west ere they had so much as a
single hot dinner in them. But that was before Hart had become besotted with
sai Delgado's gray eyes. high bosom, and flat belly.
Olive turned down the
lamp, blew out the flame, and crept off to bed, where she would lie wakeful
until dawn.
By one o' the clock,
no one was left in the public rooms of Mayor's House except for a quartet of
cleaning women, who performed their chores silently (and nervously) beneath the
eye of Eldred Jonas. When one of them looked up and saw him gone from the
window-seat where he had been sitting and smoking, she murmured softly to her
friends, and they all loosened up a little. But there was no singing, no
laughter. Il spectra, the man with the blue coffin on his hand,
might only have stepped hack into the shadows. He might still be watching.
By two o' the clock,
even the cleaning women were gone. It was an hour at which a party in Gilead
would just have been reaching its apogee of glitter and gossip, but Gilead was
far away, not just in another Barony hut almost in another world. This was the
Outer Arc, and in the Outers, even gentry went to bed early.
There was no gentry on
view at the Travellers' Rest, however, and beneath the all-encompassing gaze of
The Romp, the night was still fairly young.
2
At one end of the
saloon, fishermen still wearing their rolled-down boots drank and played Watch
Me for small stakes. To their right was a poker table; to their left, a knot of
yelling, exhorting men—cowpokes, mostly— stood along Satan's Alley, watching
the dice bounce down the velvet incline. At the room's other end, Sheb McCurdy
was pounding out jagged boogie, right hand flying, left hand pumping, the sweat
pouring down his neck and pale cheeks. Beside and above him, standing drunk on
a stool, Pettie the Trotter shook her enormous bottom and bawled out the words
to the song at the top of her voice: "Come on over, baby, we got
chicken in the hum, what hum. whose barn, my burn! Come on over, baby, baby got
the bull by the horns ..."
Sheemie stopped beside
the piano, the camel bucket in one hand, grinning up at her and attempting to
sing along. Pettie swatted him on his way, never missing a word, bump, or
grind, and Sheemie went with his peculiar laugh, which was shrill but somehow
not unpleasant.
A game of darts was in
progress; in a booth near the back, a whore who styled herself Countess Jillian
of Up'ard Killian (exiled royalty from distant Garlan, my dears, oh how special
we are) was managing to give two handjobs at the same time while smoking a
pipe. And at the bar, a whole line of assorted toughs, drifters, cowpunchers,
drovers, drivers, carters, wheelwrights, stagies, carpenters, conmen, stockmen,
boatmen, and gunmen drank beneath The Romp's double head.
The only real
gunmen in the place were at the end of the bar, a pair drinking by themselves.
No one attempted to join them, and not just because they wore shooting irons
in holsters that were slung low and tied down gunslinger fashion. Guns were
uncommon but not unknown in Mejis at that time, and not necessarily feared, but
these two had the sullen look of men who have spent a long day doing work they
didn't want to do—the look of men who would pick a fight on no account at all,
and be glad to end their day by sending some new widow's husband home in a
hurry-up wagon.
Stanley the bartender
served them whiskey after whiskey with no attempt to make conversation, not so
much as a "Hot day, gents, wa'n't it?" They reeked of sweat, and
their hands were pitchy with pine-gum. Not enough to keep Stanley from being
able to see the blue coffin-shapes tattooed on them, though. Their friend, the
old limping buzzard with the girl's hair and the gimp leg, wasn't here, at
least. In Stanley's view, Jonas was easily the worst of the Big Coffin Hunters,
but these two were bad enough, and he had no intention of getting aslant of
them if he could help it. With luck, no one would; they looked tired enough to
call it a night early.
Reynolds and Depape
were tired, all right—they had spent the day out at Citgo, camouflaging a line
of empty steel tankers with nonsense words (texaco,
citgo, sunoco, exxon) printed on their sides, a billion pine-boughs
they'd hauled and stacked, it seemed—but they had no consequent plans to
finish their drinking early. Depape might have done so if Her Nibs had been
available, but that young beauty (actual name: Gert Moggins) had a ranch-job
and wouldn't be back until two nights hence. "And it'll be a week if
there's hard cash on offer," Depape said morosely. He pushed his
spectacles up on his nose.
"Fuck her,"
Reynolds said.
"That's just what
I'd do if I could, but I can't."
"I'm going to get
me a plate of that free lunch," Reynolds said, pointing down to the other
end of the bar, where a tin bucket of steamed clams had just come out of the
kitchen. "You want some?"
"Them look like
hocks of snot and go down the same way. Bring me a strip of beef jerky."
"All right,
partner." Reynolds went off down the bar. People gave him wide passage;
gave even his silk-lined cloak wide passage.
Depape, more morose
than ever now that he had thought of Her Nibs gobbling cowboy spareribs out
there at the Piano Ranch, downed his drink, winced at the stench of pine-gum on
his hand, then held his glass out in Stanley Ruiz's direction. "Fill this
up, you dog!" he shouted. A cowhand leaning with his back, butt, and
elbows against the bar jerked forward at the sound of Depape's bellow, and that
was all it took to start trouble.
Sheemie was bustling
toward the pass through from which the steamers had just appeared, now holding
the camel bucket out before him in both hands. Later, when the Travellers'
began to empty out, his job would he to clean up. For now, however, it was
simply to circulate with the camel bucket, dumping in every unfinished drink he
found. This combined elixir ended up in a jug behind the bar. The jug was
labelled fairly enough—camel piss—and
a double shot could be obtained for three pennies. It was a drink only for the
reckless or the impecunious, but a fair number of both passed beneath the stem
gaze of The Romp each night; Stanley rarely had a problem emptying the jug. And
if it wasn't empty at the end of the night, why, there was always a fresh night
coming along. Not to mention a fresh supply of thirsty fools.
But on this occasion
Sheemie never made it to the Camel Piss jug behind the end of the bar. He
tripped over the boot of the cowboy who had jerked forward, and went to his
knees with a grunt of surprise. The contents of the bucket sloshed out ahead
of him, and, following Satan's First Law of Malignity—to wit, if the worst can
happen, it usually will—they drenched Roy Depape from the knees down in an eye
watering mixture of beer, graf, and white lightning.
Conversation at the
bar stopped, and that stopped the talk of the men gathered around the
dice-chute. Sheb turned, saw Sheemie kneeling before one of Jonas's men, and
stopped playing. Pettie, her eyes squeezed shut as she poured her entire soul
into her singing, continued on a capella for three or four bars before
registering the silence which was spreading out like a ripple. She stopped
singing and opened her eyes. That sort of silence usually meant that someone
was going to be killed. If so, she didn't intend to miss it.
Depape stood perfectly
still, inhaling the raw stench of alcohol as it rose. He didn't mind the smell;
on the whole, it had the stink of pine-gum beat six ways to the Peddler. He
didn't mind the way his pants were sticking to his knees, either. It might
have been a bit of an irritation if some of that joy-juice had gotten down
inside his boots, but none had.
His hand fell to the
butt of his gun. Here, by god and by goddess, was something to take his mind
off his sticky hands and absent whore. And good entertainment was ever worth a
little wetting.
Silence blanketed the
place now. Stanley stood as stiff as a soldier behind the bar, nervously
plucking at one of his arm-garters. At the bar's other end, Reynolds looked
back toward his partner with bright interest. He took a clam from the steaming
bucket and cracked it on the edge of the bar like a boiled egg. At Depape's
feet, Sheemie looked up, his eyes big and fearful beneath the wild snarl of his
black hair. He was trying his best to smile.
"Well now,
boy," Depape said. "You have wet me considerable."
"Sorry, big
fella, I go trippy-trip." Sheemie jerked a hand back over his shoulder; a
little spray of camel piss flew from the tips of his fingers. Somewhere someone
cleared his throat nervously—raa-aach! The room was full of eyes, and
quiet enough so that they all could hear both the wind in the eaves and the
waves breaking on the rocks of Hambry Point, two miles away.
"The hell you
did," said the cowpoke who had jerked. He was about twenty, and suddenly
afraid he might never see his mother again. "Don't you go tryin to put
your trouble off on me, you damned feeb."
"I don't care how
it happened," Depape said. He was aware he was playing for an audience,
and knew that what an audience mostly wants is to be entertained. Sai R. B.
Depape, always a trouper, intended to oblige.
He pinched the
corduroy of his pants above the knees and pulled the legs up, revealing the
toes of his boots. They were shiny and wet.
"See there. Look
at what you got on my boots."
Sheemie looked up at
him, grinning and terrified.
Stanley Ruiz decided
he couldn't let this happen without at least trying to stop it. He had known
Dolores Sheemer, the boy's mother; there was even a possibility that he himself
was the boy's father. In any case, he liked Sheemie. The boy was foolish, but
his heart was good, he never took a drink, and he always did his work. Also, he
could find a smile for you even on the coldest, foggiest winter's day. That was
a talent many people of normal intelligence did not have.
"Sai
Depape," he said, taking a step forward and speaking in a low, respectful
tone. "I'm very sorry about that. I'll be happy to buy your drinks for the
rest of the evening if we can just forget this regrettable—"
Depape's movement was
a blur almost too fast to see, but that wasn't what amazed the people who were
in the Rest that night; they would have expected a man running with Jonas to be
fast. What amazed them was the fact that he never looked around to set his
target. He located Stanley by his voice alone.
Depape drew his gun
and swept it to the right in a rising arc. It struck Stanley Ruiz dead in the
mouth, mashing his lips and shattering three of his teeth. Blood splashed the
backbar mirror; several high-flying drops decorated the tip of The Romp's
lefthand nose. Stanley screamed, clapped his hands to his face, and staggered
back against the shelf behind him. In the silence, the chattery clink of the
bottles was very loud.
Down the bar, Reynolds
cracked another clam and watched, fascinated. Good as a play, it was.
Depape turned his
attention back to the kneeling boy. "Clean my boots," he said.
A look of muddled
relief came onto Sheemie's face. Clean his boots! Yes! You bet! Right away! He
pulled the rag he always kept in his back pocket. It wasn't even dirty yet. Not
very, at least.
"No," Depape
said patiently. Sheemie looked up at him, gaping and puzzled. "Put that
nasty clout back where it come from—I don't even want to look at it."
Sheemie tucked it into
his back pocket again.
"Lick em,"
Depape said in that same patient voice. "That's what I want. You lick my
boots until they're dry again, and so clean you can see your stupid rabbit's
face in em."
Sheemie hesitated, as
if still not sure what was required of him. Or perhaps he was only processing
the information.
"I'd do it,
boy," Barkie Callahan said from what he hoped was a safe place behind
Sheb's piano. "If you want to see the sun come up, I'd surely do it."
Depape had already
decided the mush-brain wasn't going to see another sunrise, not in this
world, but kept quiet. He had never had his boots licked. He wanted to see what
it felt like. If it was nice—kind of sexy-like—he could maybe try Her Nibs out
on it.
"Does I have
to?" Sheemie's eyes were filling with tears. "Can't just I-sorry and
polish em real good?"
"Lick,
you feeble-minded donkey," Depape said.
Sheemie's hair fell
across his forehead. His tongue poked tentatively out between his lips, and as
he bent his head toward Depape's boots, the first of his tears fell.
"Stop it, stop
it, stop it," a voice said. It was shocking in the silence— not because it
was sudden, and certainly not because it was angry. It was shocking because it
was amused. "I simply can't allow that. Nope. I would if I could, but I
can't. Unsanitary, you see. Who knows what disease might be spread in such
fashion? The mind quails! Ab-so-lutely cuh-wails!”
Standing just inside
the batwing doors was the purveyor of this idiotic and potentially fatal
screed: a young man of middling height, his flat-crowned hat pushed back to
reveal a tumbled comma of brown hair. Except young man didn't really
cover him, Depape realized; young man was drawing it heavy. He was only
a kid. Around his neck, gods knew why, he wore a bird's skull like an enormous
comical pendant. It was hung on a chain that ran through the eyeholes. And in
his hands was not a gun (where would an unwhiskered dribble like him get a
gun in the first place? Depape wondered) but a goddam slingshot. Depape
burst out laughing.
The kid laughed as
well, nodding as if he understood how ridiculous the whole thing looked, how
ridiculous the whole thing was. His laughter was infectious; Pettie,
still up on her stool, tittered herself before clapping her hands over her
mouth.
"This is no place
for a boy such as you," Depape said. His revolver, an old five-shooter,
was still out; it lay in his fist on the bar, with Stanley Ruiz's blood
dripping off the gunsight. Depape, without raising it from the ironwood,
waggled it slightly. "Boys who come to places like this learn
had habits, kid. Dying is apt to be one of them. So I give you this one chance.
Get out of here."
"Thank you, sir,
1 appreciate my one chance," the boy said. He spoke with great and winning
sincerity . . . but didn't move. Still he stood just inside the batwing doors,
with the wide elastic strap of his sling pulled hack. Depape couldn't quite
make out what was in the cup, but it glittered in the gaslight. A metal ball of
some sort.
"Well,
then?" Depape snarled. This was getting old, and fast.
"I know I'm being
a pain in the neck, sir—not to mention an ache in (he ass and a milky drip from
the tip of a sore dick—but if it's all the same to you, my dear friend, I'd
like to give my chance to the young fellow on his knees before you. Let him
apologize, let him polish your boots with his clout until you are entirely
satisfied, and let him go on living his life."
There was an unfocused
murmur of approval at this from the area where the card-players were watching.
Depape didn't like the sound of it at all, and he made a sudden decision. The
boy would die as well, executed for the crime of impertinence. The swabby who
had spilled the bucket of dregs on him was clearly retarded. Yon brat had not
even that excuse. He just thought he was funny.
From the comer of his
eye, Depape saw Reynolds moving to flank the boy, smooth as oiled silk. Depape
appreciated the thought, but didn't believe he'd need much help with the
slingshot specialist.
"Boy, I think
you've made a mistake," he said in a kindly voice. "I really
believe—" The cup of the slingshot dipped a little ... or Depape fancied
it did. He made his move.
3
They talked about it
in Hambry for years to come; three decades after the fall of Gilead and the end
of the Affiliation, they were still talking. By that time there were better
than five hundred old gaffers (and a few old gammers) claiming that they were
drinking a beer in the Rest that night, and saw it all.
Depape was young, and
had the speed of a snake. Nevertheless, he never came close to getting a shot
off at Cuthbert Allgood. There was a thip-TWANG! as the elastic was
released, a steel gleam that drew itself across the saloon's smoky air like a
line on a slateboard, and then Depape screamed. His revolver tumbled to the
floor, and a foot spun it away from him across the sawdust (no one would claim
that foot while the Big Coffin Hunters were still in Hambry; hundreds claimed
it after they were gone). Still screaming—he could not bear pain—Depape raised
his bleeding hand and looked at it with agonized, unbelieving eyes. Actually,
he had been lucky. Cuthbert's ball had smashed the tip of the second finger and
torn off the nail. Lower, and Depape would have been able to blow smoke-rings through
his own palm.
Cuthbert, meanwhile,
had already reloaded the cup of his slingshot and drawn the elastic back again.
"Now," he said, "if I have your attention, good sir—"
"I can't speak
for his," Reynolds said from behind him, "but you got mine, partner.
I don't know if you're good with that thing or just shitass lucky, but either
way, you're done with it now. Relax the draw on it and put it down. That table
in front of you's the place I want to see it."
"I've been
blindsided," Cuthbert said sadly. "Betrayed once more by my own
callow youth."
"I don't know
nothing about your callow youth, brother, but you've been blindsided, all
right," Reynolds agreed. He stood behind and slightly to the left of
Cuthbert, and now he moved his gun forward until the boy could feel the muzzle
against the back of his head. Reynolds thumbed the hammer. In the pool of
silence which the Travellers' Rest had become, the sound was very loud.
"Now put that twanger down."
"I think, good
sir, that I must offer my regrets and decline."
"What?"
"You see, I've
got my trusty sling aimed at your pleasant friend's head—" Cuthbert began,
and when Depape shifted uneasily against the bar, Cuthbert's voice rose in a
whipcrack that did not sound callow in the least. "Stand still! Move
again and you 're a dead man!"
Depape subsided,
holding his bloody hand against his pine-tacky shirt. For the first time he
looked frightened, and for the first time that night—for the first time since
hooking up with Jonas, in fact—Reynolds felt mastery of a situation on the
verge of slipping away ... except how could it be? How could it be when he'd
been able to circle around this smart-talking squint and get the drop on him?
This should be over.
Lowering his voice to
its former conversational—not to say playful—pitch, Cuthbert said: "If
you shoot me, the ball flies and your friend dies, too."
"I don't believe
that," Reynolds said, but he didn't like what he heard in
his own voice. It sounded like doubt. "No man could make a shot like
that."
"Why don't we let
your friend decide?" Cuthbert raised his voice in a good-humored hail.
"Hi-ho, there, Mr. Spectacles! Would you like your pal to shoot me?"
"No!"
Depape's cry was shrill, verging on panic. "No, Clay! Don't
shoot!"
"So it's a
standoff," Reynolds said, bemused. And then bemusement changed to horror
as he felt the blade of a very large knife slip against his throat. It pressed
the tender skin just over his adam's apple.
"No, it's
not," Alain said softly. "Put the gun down, my friend, or I'll cut
your throat."
4
Standing outside the
batwing doors, having arrived by simple good fortune in time for this Pinch
and Jilly show, Jonas watched with amazement, contempt, and something close to
horror. First one of the Affiliation brats gets the drop on Depape, and when
Reynolds covers that one, the big kid with the round face and the plowboy's
shoulders puts a knife to Reynolds's throat. Neither of the brats a day over
fifteen, and neither with a gun. Marvelous. He would have thought it better
than a travelling circus, if not for the problems that would follow if this
were not put right. What sort of work could they do in Hambry if it got around
that the boogeymen were afraid of the children, instead of vice-versa?
There's time to stop
this before there's killing, mayhap. If you want to.
Do you?
Jonas decided he did;
that they could walk out winners if they played it just right. He also decided
the Affiliation brats would not, unless they were very lucky indeed, be leaving
Mejis Barony alive.
Where's the other one?
Dearborn?
A good question. An important
question. Embarrassment would become outright humiliation if he found himself
trumped in the same fashion as Roy and Clay.
Dearborn wasn't in the
bar, and that was sure. Jonas turned on his heels, scanning the South High
Street in both directions. It was almost day-bright under a Kissing Moon only
two nights past the full. No one there, not in the street, not on the far side,
where Hambry's mercantile store stood. The mercantile had a porch, but there
was nothing on it save for a line of carved totems illustrating Guardians of
the Beam: Bear, Turtle, Fish, Eagle, Lion, Bat, and Wolf. Seven of twelve,
bright as marble in the moonlight, and no doubt great favorites of the kiddies.
No men over there, though. Good. Lovely.
Jonas peered hard into
the thread of alley between the mercantile and the butcher's, glimpsed a shadow
behind a tumble of cast-off boxes, tensed, then relaxed as he saw a cat's
shining green eyes. He nodded and turned to the business at hand, pushing back the
lefthand batwing and stepping into the Travellers' Rest. Alain heard the squeak
of a hinge, but Jonas's gun was at his temple before he could even begin to
turn.
"Sonny, unless
you're a barber, I think you'd better put that pigsticker down. You don't get a
second warning."
"No," Alain
said.
Jonas, who had
expected nothing but compliance and had been prepared for nothing else, was
thunderstruck. "What? "
"You heard
me," Alain said. "I said no."
5
After making their
manners and excusing themselves from Seafront, Roland had left his friends to
their own amusements—they would finish up at the Travellers' Rest, he supposed,
but wouldn't stay long or get into much trouble when they had no money for
cards and could drink nothing more exciting than cold tea. He had ridden into
town another way, tethered his mount at a public post in the lower of the two
town squares (Rusher had offered a single puzzled nicker at this treatment, but
no more), and had since been tramping the empty, sleeping streets with his hat
yanked low over his eyes and his hands clasped into an aching knot at the small
of his back.
His mind was full of
questions—things were wrong here, very wrong. At first he'd thought that was
just his imagination, the childish part of him finding make-believe troubles
and storybook intrigue because he had been removed from the heart of the real
action. But after his talk with "Rennie" Renfrew, he knew better.
There were questions, outright mysteries, and the most hellish thing of all
was that he couldn't concentrate on them, let alone go any distance toward
making sense of them. Every time he tried, Susan Delgado's face intruded ...
her face, or the sweep of her hair, or even the pretty, fearless way her
silk-slippered feet had followed his boots in the dance, never lagging or
hesitating. Again and again he heard the last thing he had said to her,
speaking in the stilted, priggish voice of a boy preacher. He would have given
almost anything to take back both the tone and the words themselves. She'd be
on Thorin's pillow come Reap-tide, and kindle him a child before the first snow
flew, perhaps a male heir, and what of it? Rich men, famous men, and
well-blooded men had taken gilly-girls since the beginning of time; Arthur Eld
had had better than forty himself, according to the tales. So, really, what was
it to him?
I think I've gone and
fallen in love with her. That's what it is to me.
A dismaying idea, but
not a dismissible one; he knew the landscape of his own heart too well. He
loved her, very likely it was so, but part of him also hated her, and held to
the shocking thought he'd had at dinner: that he could have shot Susan Delgado
through the heart if he'd come armed. Some of this was jealousy, but not all;
perhaps not even the greater part. He had made some indefinable but powerful
connection between Olive Thorin—her sad but game little smile from the foot of
the table—and his own mother. Hadn't some of that same woeful, rueful look been
in his mother's eyes on the day when he had come upon her and his father's
advisor? Marten in an open-throated shirt, Gabrielle Deschain in a sacque that
had slipped off one shoulder, the whole room reeking of what they had been up
to that hot morning?
His mind, tough as it
already was, shrank from the image, horrified. It returned instead to that of
Susan Delgado—her gray eyes and shining hair. He saw her laughing, chin
uptilted, hands clasped before the sapphire Thorin had given her.
Roland could forgive
her the gilly business, he supposed. What he could not forgive, in spite of his
attraction to Susan, was that awful smile on Olive Thorin's face as she watched
the girl sitting in what should have been her place. Sitting in her place and
laughing.
These were the things
that chased through his head as he paced off acres of moonlight. He had no
business with such thoughts, Susan Delgado was not the reason he was here, nor
was the ridiculous knuckle-cracking Mayor and his pitiable country-Mary of a
wife . . . yet he couldn't put them away and get to what was his
business. He had forgotten the face of his father, and walked in the
moonlight, hoping to find it again.
In such fashion he
came along the sleeping, silver-gilded High Street, walking north to south,
thinking vaguely that he would perhaps stand Cuthbert and Alain to a taste of
something wet and toss the dice down Satan's Alley a time or two before going
back to get Rusher and call it a night. And so it was that he happened to spy
Jonas—the man's gaunt figure and fall of long white hair were impossible to
mistake—standing outside the batwings of the Travellers' Rest and peering in.
Jonas did this with one hand on the butt of his gun and a tense set of body
that put everything else from Roland's mind at once. Something was going on,
and if Bert and Alain were in there, it might involve them. They were the
strangers in town, after all, and it was possible—even likely—that not everyone
in Hambry loved the Affiliation with the fervor that had been professed at
tonight's dinner. Or perhaps it was Jonas's friends who were in trouble. Something
was brewing, in any case.
With no clear thought
as to why he was doing it, Roland went softly up the steps to the mercantile's
porch. There was a line of carved animals there (and probably spiked firmly to
the boards, so that drunken wags from the saloon across the street couldn't
carry them away, chanting the nursery rhymes of their childhood as they went).
Roland stepped behind the last one in line—it was the Bear—and bent his knees
so that the crown of his hat wouldn't show. Then he went as still as the
carving. He could see Jonas turn, look across the street, then look to his
left, peering at something—
Very low, a sound: Waow!
Waow!
It's a cat. In the
alley.
Jonas looked a moment
longer, then stepped into the Rest. Roland was out from behind the carved bear,
down the steps, and into the street at once. He hadn't Alain's gift of the
touch, but he had intuitions that were sometimes very strong. This one was
telling him he must hurry.
Overhead, the Kissing
Moon drifted behind a cloud.
6
Pettie the Trotter
still stood on her stool, but she no longer felt drunk and singing was the last
thing on her mind. She could hardly believe what she was seeing: Jonas had the
drop on a boy who had the drop on Reynolds who had the drop on another
boy (this last one wearing a bird's skull around his neck on a chain) who had
the drop on Roy Depape. Who had, in fact, drawn some of Roy Depape's
blood. And when Jonas had told the big boy to put down the knife he was holding
to Reynolds's throat, the big boy had refused.
You can blow my lights
out and send me to the clearing at the end of the path,
thought Pettie, for now I've seen it all, so I have. She supposed she
should get off the stool—there was apt to be shooting any second now, and
likely a great lot of it—but sometimes you just had to take your chances.
Because some things
were just too good to miss.
7
"We're in this
town on Affiliation business," Alain said. He had one hand buried deep in
Reynolds's sweaty hair; the other maintained a steady pressure on the knife at
Reynolds's throat. Not quite enough to break the skin. "If you harm us,
the Affiliation will take note. So will our fathers. You'll be hunted like dogs
and hung upside down, like as not, when you're caught."
"Sonny, there's
not an Affiliation patrol within two hundred wheels of here, probably three
hundred," Jonas said, "and I wouldn't care a fart in a windstorm if
there was one just over yon hill. Nor do your fathers mean a squitter to me.
Put that knife down or I'll blow your fucking brains out."
"No."
"Future
developments in this matter should be quite wonderful," Cuthbert said
cheerily . . . although there was now a beat of nerves under his prattle. Not
fear, perhaps not even nervous-ness, just nerves. The good kind, more likely
than not, Jonas thought sourly. He had underestimated these boys at meat; if
nothing else was clear, that was. "You shoot Richard, and Richard cuts Mr.
Cloak's throat just as Mr. Cloak shoots me; my poor dying fingers release my
sling's elastic and put a steel ball in what passes for Mr. Spectacles's brain.
You'll walk away, at least, and I suppose that will be a great comfort
to your dead friends."
"Call it a
draw," Alain said to the man with the gun at his temple.
"We all stand
back and walk away."
"No, sonny,"
Jonas said. His voice was patient, and he didn't think his anger showed, but it
was rising. Gods, to be outfaced like this, even temporarily! "No one does
like that to the Big Coffin Hunters. This is your last chance to—"
Something hard and
cold and very much to the point pressed against the back of Jonas's shirt, dead
center between the shoulderblades. He knew what it was and who held it at once,
understood the game was lost, but couldn't understand how such a ludicrous,
maddening turn of events could have happened.
"Holster the
gun," the voice behind the sharp tip of metal said. It was empty,
somehow—not just calm, but emotionless. "Do it now, or this goes in your
heart. No more talk. Talking's done. Do it or die."
Jonas heard two things
in that voice: youth and truth. He bolstered his gun.
"You with the
black hair. Take your gun out of my friend's ear and put it back in your
holster. Now."
Clay Reynolds didn't
have to be invited twice, and he uttered a long, shaky sigh when Alain took the
blade off his throat and stood back. Cuthbert did not look around, only stood
with the elastic of his slingshot pulled and his elbow cocked.
"You at the
bar," Roland said. "Holster up."
Depape did so,
grimacing with pain as he bumped his hurt finger against his gunbelt. Only when
this gun was put away did Cuthbert relax his hold on his sling and drop the
ball from the cup into the palm of his hand.
The cause of all this
had been forgotten as the effects played themselves out. Now Sheemie got to
his feet and pelted across the room. His cheeks were wet with tears. He grasped
one of Cuthbert's hands, kissed it several times (loud smacking noises that
would have been comic under other circumstances), and held the hand to his
cheek for a moment. Then he dodged past Reynolds, pushed open the righthand
batwing, and flew right into the arms of a sleepy-eyed and still half-drunk
Sheriff. Avery had been fetched by Sheb from the jailhouse, where the Sheriff
o' Barony had been sleeping off the Mayor's ceremonial dinner in one of his own
cells.
8
"This is a nice
mess, isn't it?"
Avery speaking. No one
answering. He hadn't expected they would, not if they knew what was good for
them.
The office area of the
jail was too small to hold three men, three strapping not-quite-men, and one
extra-large Sheriff comfortably, so Avery had herded them into the nearby Town
Gathering Hall, which echoed to the soft flutter of the pigeons in the rafters
and the steady beat-beat-beat of the grandfather clock behind the podium.
It was a plain room,
but an inspired choice all the same. It was where the townsfolk and Barony
landowners had come for hundreds of years to make their decisions, pass their
laws, and occasionally send some especially troublesome person west. There was
a feeling of seriousness in its moon-glimmered darkness, and Roland thought
even the old man, Jonas, felt a little of it. Certainly it invested Sheriff
Herk Avery with an authority he might not otherwise have been able to project.
The room was filled
with what were in that place and time called "bareback benches"—oaken
pews with no cushions for either butt or back. There were sixty in all,
thirty on each side of a wide center aisle. Jonas, Depape, and Reynolds sat on
the front bench to the left of the aisle. Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain sat
across from them on the right. Reynolds and Depape looked sullen and
embarrassed; Jonas looked remote and composed. Will Dearborn's little crew was
quiet. Roland had given Cuthbert a look which he hoped the boy could read: One
smart remark and I'll rip the tongue right out of your head. He thought the
message had been received. Bert had stowed his idiotic "lookout"
somewhere, which was a good sign.
"A nice
mess," Avery repeated, and blew liquor-scented wind at them in a deep
sigh. He was sitting on the edge of the stage with his short legs hanging down,
looking at them with a kind of disgusted wonder.
The side door opened
and in came Deputy Dave, his white service jacket laid aside, his monocle
tucked into the pocket of his more usual khaki shirt. In one hand he carried a
mug; in the other a folded scrap of what looked to Roland like birch-bark.
"Did ye boil the
first half, David?" Avery asked. He now wore a put-upon expression.
"Aye."
"Boiled it
twice?"
"Aye, twice."
"For that was the
directions."
"Aye," Dave
repeated in a resigned voice. He handed Avery the cup and dumped the remaining
contents of the birch-bark scrap in when the Sheriff held the cup out for them.
Avery swirled the
liquid, peered in with a doubtful, resigned expression, then drank. He grimaced.
"Oh, foul!" he cried. "What's so nasty as this?"
"What is
it?" Jonas asked.
"Headache powder.
Hangover powder, ye might say. From the old witch. The one who lives up
the Coos. Know where I mean?" Avery gave Jonas a knowing look. The old
gunny pretended not to see it, but Roland thought he had. And what did it mean?
Another mystery.
Depape looked up at
the word Coos, then went back to sucking his wounded finger. Beyond
Depape, Reynolds sat with his cloak drawn about him, looking grimly down at his
lap.
"Does it
work?" Roland asked.
"Aye, boy, but ye
pay a price for witch's medicine. Remember that: ye always pay. This 'un takes
away the headache if ye drink too much of Mayor Thorin's damned punch, but it
gripes the bowels somethin fierce, so it does. And the farts—!" He waved a
hand in front of his face to demonstrate, took another sip from the cup, then
set it aside. He returned to his former gravity, but the mood in the room had
lightened just a little; they all felt it. "Now what are we to do about this
business?"
Herk Avery swept them
slowly with his eyes, from Reynolds on his far right to Alain—"Richard
Stockworth"—on his far left. "Eh, boys? We've got the Mayor's men on
one side and the Affiliation's . . . men ... on the other, six fellows at the point
of murder, and over what? A halfwit and a spilled bucket of slops." He
pointed first at the Big Coffin Hunters, then to the Affiliation's counters.
"Two powderkegs and one fat sheriff in the middle. So what's yer thoughts
on't? Speak up, don't be shy, you wasn't shy in Coral's whoreden down the road,
don't be shy in here!"
No one said anything.
Avery sipped some more of his foul drink, then set it down and looked at them
decisively. What he said next didn't surprise Roland much; it was exactly what
he would have expected of a man like Avery, right down to the tone which
implied that he considered himself a man who could make the hard decisions
when he had to, by the gods.
"I'll tell yer
what we're going to do: We're going to forget it."
He now assumed the air
of one who expects an uproar and is prepared to handle it. When no one spoke or
even shuffled a foot, he looked discomfited. Yet he had a job to do, and the
night was growing old. He squared his shoulders and pushed on.
"I'll not spend
the next three or four months waiting to see who among you's killed who. Nay!
Nor will I be put in a position where I might have to take the punishment for
your stupid quarrel over that halfwit Sheemie.
"I appeal to your
practical natures, boys, when I point out that I may he either your
friend or your enemy during your time here . . . but I'd be wrong if 1 didn't
also appeal to your more noble natures, which I am sure are both large and
sensitive."
The Sheriff now tried
on an exalted expression, which was not, in Roland's estimation, notably
successful. Avery turned his attention to Jonas.
"Sai, I can't
believe ye'll want to be causin trouble for three young men from the
Affiliation—the Affiliation that's been like mother's milk and father's
shelterin hand since aye or oh fifty generations back; ye'd not be so
disrespectful as all that, would ye?"
Jonas shook his head,
smiling his thin smile.
Avery nodded again.
Things were going along well, that nod said. "Ye've all yer own cakes to
bake and oats to roll, and none of ye wants something like this to get in the
way of doin yer jobs, do yer?"
They all shook their
heads this time.
"So what I want
you to do is to stand up, face each other, shake hands, and cry each other's
pardon. If ye don't do that, ye can all ride west out of town by sunrise, far
as I'm concerned."
He picked up the mug
and took a bigger drink this time. Roland saw that the man's hand was trembling
the tiniest bit, and wasn't surprised. It was all bluff and blow, of course.
The Sheriff would have understood that Jonas, Reynolds, and Depape were beyond
his authority as soon as he saw the small blue coffins on their hands; after
tonight, he must feel the same way about Dearborn, Stockworth, and Heath. He
could only hope that all would see where their self-interest lay. Roland did.
So, apparently, did Jonas, for even as Roland got up, Jonas did the same.
Avery recoiled a
little bit, as if expecting Jonas to go for his gun and Dearborn for the knife
in his belt, the one he'd been holding against Jonas's back when Avery came
puffing up to the saloon.
There was no gun or
knife drawn, however. Jonas turned toward Roland and held out his hand.
"He's right,
lad," Jonas said in his reedy, quavering voice.
"Yes."
"Will you shake
with an old man, and vow to start over?"
"Yes." Roland
held out his hand.
Jonas took it. "I
cry your pardon."
"I cry your own,
Mr. Jonas." Roland tapped left-hand at his throat, as was proper when
addressing an elder in such fashion.
As the two of them sat
down, Alain and Reynolds rose, as neatly as men in a prerehearsed ceremony.
Last of all, Cuthbert and Depape rose. Roland was all but positive that
Cuthbert's foolishness would pop out like Jack from his box—the idiot would
simply not be able to help himself, although he must surely realize that
Depape was no man to make sport of tonight.
"Cry your
pardon," Bert said, with an admirable lack of laughter in his voice.
"Cryerown,"
Depape mumbled, and held out his bloodstreaked hand. Roland had a nightmare
vision of Bert squeezing down on it as hard as he could, making the redhead
yowl like an owl on a hot stove, but Bert's grip was as restrained as his
voice.
Avery sat on the edge
of the stage with his pudgy legs hanging down, watching it all with avuncular
good cheer. Even Deputy Dave was smiling.
"Now I propose to
shake hands with yer all myself, 'n then send yer on yer ways, for the hour's
late, so it is, and such as me needs my beauty rest." He chuckled, and
again looked uncomfortable when no one joined in. But he slipped off the stage
and began to shake hands, doing so with the enthusiasm of a minister who has
finally succeeded in marrying a headstrong couple after a long and stormy
courtship.
9
When they stepped
outside, the moon was down and the first lightening in the sky had begun to
show at the far edge of the Clean Sea. "Mayhap we'll meet again,
sai," Jonas said. "Mayhap we will," Roland said, and swung up
into his saddle.
10
The Big Coffin Hunters
were staying in the watchman's house about a mile south of Seafront—five miles
out of town, this was.
Halfway there, Jonas
stopped at a turnout beside the road. From here the land made a steep, rocky
descent to the brightening sea.
"Get down,
mister," he said. It was Depape he was looking at.
"Jonas...Jonas,
I..."
"Get down."
Biting his lip nervously,
Depape got down.
"Take off your
spectacles."
"Jonas, what's
this about? I don't—"
"Or if you want
em broke, leave em on. It's all the same to me."
Biting his lip harder
now, Depape took off his gold-rimmed spectacles. They were barely in his hand
before Jonas had fetched him a terrific clip on the side of the head. Depape
cried out and reeled toward the drop. Jonas drove forward, moving as fast as he
had struck, and seized him by the shirt just before he went tumbling over the
edge. Jonas twisted his hand into the shirt material and yanked Depape toward
him. He breathed deep, inhaling the scent of pine-tar and Depape's sweat.
"I ought to toss
you right over the edge," he breathed. "Do you know how much harm
you've done?"
"I... Jonas, I
never meant... just a little fun is all I... how was we supposed to know they
..."
Slowly, Jonas's hand
relaxed. That last bit of babble had gone home. How was they supposed to know,
that was ungrammatical but right. And if not for tonight, they might not
have known. If you looked at it that way, Depape had actually done them a
favor. The devil you knew was always preferable to the devil you didn't. Still,
word would get around, and people would laugh. Maybe even that was all right,
though. The laughter would stop in due time.
"Jonas, I cry
your pardon."
"Shut up,"
Jonas said. In the east, the sun would shortly heave itself over the horizon,
casting its first gleams on a new day in this world of toil and sorrow. "I
ain't going to toss you over, because then I'd have to toss Clay over and
follow along myself. They got the drop on us the same as you, right?"
Depape wanted to
agree, but thought it might be dangerous to do so. He was prudently silent.
"Get down here,
Clay."
Clay slid off his
mount.
"Now
hunker."
The three of them
hunkered on their bootsoles, heels up. Jonas plucked a shoot of grass and put
it between his lips. "Affiliation brats is what we were told, and we had
no reason not to believe it," he said. "The bad boys are sent all the
way to Mejis, a sleepy Barony on the Clean Sea, on a make-work detail that's
two pans penance and three parts punishment. Ain't that what we were
told?"
They nodded.
"Either of you
believe it after tonight?"
Depape shook his head.
So did Clay.
"They may be rich
boys, but that's not all they are," Depape said. "The way they were
tonight . . . they were like . . ." He trailed off, not quite willing to
finish the thought. It was too absurd.
Jonas was willing.
"They acted like gunslingers."
Neither Jonas nor
Reynolds replied at first. Then Clay Reynolds said, "They're too young,
Eldred. Too young by years."
"Not too young to
be 'prentices, mayhap. In any case, we're going to find out." He turned to
Depape. "You've got some riding to do, cully."
"Aww,
Jonas—!"
"None of us
exactly covered ourselves with glory, but you were the fool that started the
pot boiling." He looked at Depape, but Depape only looked down at the
ground between them. "You're going to ride their backtrail, Roy, and
you're going to ask questions until you've got the answers you think will
satisfy my curiosity. Clay and I are mostly going to wait. And watch. Play
Castles with em, if you like. When I feel like enough time's gone by for us to
be able to do a little snooping without being trigged, mayhap we'll do
it."
He bit on the piece of
grass in his mouth. The larger piece tumbled out and lay between his boots.
"Do you know why
I shook his hand? That boy Dearborn's damned hand? Because we can't rock the
boat, boys. Not just when it's edging in toward harbor. Latigo and the folks
we've been waiting for will be moving toward us very soon, now. Until they get
into these parts, it's in our interest to keep the peace. But I tell you this:
no one puts a knife to Eldred Jonas's back and lives. Now listen, Roy. Don't
make me tell you any of this twice."
Jonas began to speak,
leaning forward over his knees toward Depape as he did. After awhile, Depape
began to nod. He might like a little trip, actually. After the recent comedy in
the Travellers' Rest, a change of air might be just the ticket.
11
The boys were almost
back to the Bar K and the sun was coming over the horizon before Cuthbert broke
the silence. "Well! That was an amusing and instructive evening, was it
not?" Neither Roland nor Alain replied, so Cuthbert leaned over to the
rook's skull, which he had returned to its former place on the horn of his
saddle. "What say you, old friend? Did we enjoy our evening?
Dinner, a circle-dance, and almost killed to top things off. Did you
enjoy?"
The lookout only
stared ahead of Cuthbert's horse with its great dark eyes.
"He says he's too
tired for talk," Cuthbert said, then yawned. "So'm I, actually."
He looked at Roland. "I got a good look into Mr. Jonas's eyes after he
shook hands with you, Will. He means to kill you."
Roland nodded.
"They mean to
kill all of us," Alain said.
Roland nodded again.
"We'll make it hard for them, but they know more about us now than they
did at dinner. We'll not get behind them that way again."
He stopped, just as
Jonas had stopped not three miles from where they now were. Only instead of
looking directly out over the Clean Sea, Roland and his friends were looking
down the long slope of the Drop. A herd of horses was moving from west to east,
barely more than shadows in this light.
"What do you see,
Roland?" Alain asked, almost timidly.
"Trouble,"
Roland said, "and in our road." Then he gigged his horse and rode on.
Before they got back to the Bar K bunkhouse, he was thinking about Susan
again. Five minutes after he dropped his head on his flat burlap pillow, he was
dreaming of her.
CHAPTER VII
ON THE DROP
1
Three weeks had passed
since the welcoming dinner at Mayor's House and the incident at the Travellers'
Rest. There had been no more trouble between Roland's ka-tet and
Jonas's. In the night sky, Kissing Moon had waned and Peddler's Moon had made
its first thin appearance. The days were bright and warm; even the oldtimers
admitted it was one of the most beautiful summers in memory.
On a mid-morning as
beautiful as any that summer, Susan Delgado galloped a two-year-old rosillo
named Pylon north along the Drop. The wind dried the tears on her cheeks and
yanked her unbound hair out behind her as she went. She urged Pylon to go
faster yet, lightly thumping his sides with her spurless boots. Pylon turned it
up a notch at once, ears flattening, tail flagging. Susan, dressed in jeans and
the faded, oversized khaki shirt (one of her da's) that had caused all the
trouble, leaned over the light practice saddle, holding to the horn with one
hand and rubbing the other down the side of the horse's strong, silky neck.
"More!" she
whispered. "More and faster! Go on, boy!"
Pylon let it out yet
another notch. That he had at least one more in him she knew; that he had even
one more beyond that she suspected.
They sped along the
Drop's highest ridge, and she barely saw the magnificent slope of land below
her, all green and gold, or the way it faded into the blue haze of the Clean
Sea. On any other day the view and the cool, salt-smelling breeze would have
uplifted her. Today she only wanted to hear the steady low thunder of Pylon's
hoofs and feel the flex of his muscles beneath her; today she wanted to outrun
her own thoughts.
And all because she
had come downstairs this morning dressed for riding in one of her father's old
shirts.
2
Aunt Cord had been at
the stove, wrapped in her dressing gown and with her hair still netted. She
dished herself up a bowl of oatmeal and brought it to the table. Susan had
known things weren't good as soon as her aunt I timed toward her, bowl in hand;
she could see the discontented twitch of Aunt Cord's lips, and the disapproving
glance she shot at the orange Susan was peeling. Her aunt was still rankled by
the silver and gold she had expected to have in hand by now, coins which would
be withheld yet awhile due to the witch's prankish decree that Susan should
remain a virgin until autumn.
But that wasn't the
main thing, and Susan knew it. Quite simply put, the two of them had had enough
of each other. The money was only one of Aunt Cord's disappointed expectations;
she had counted on having the house at the edge of the Drop to herself this
summer . . . except, perhaps, (or the occasional visit from Mr. Eldred Jonas,
with whom Cordelia seemed quite taken. Instead, here they still were, one woman
growing toward the end of her courses, thin, disapproving lips in a thin,
disapproving face, tiny apple-breasts under her high-necked dresses with their
choker collars (The Neck, she frequently told Susan, is the First Thing to Go),
her hair losing its former chestnut shine and showing wire-threads of gray; the
other young, intelligent, agile, and rounding toward the peak of her physical
beauty. They grated against each other, each word seeming to produce a spark,
and that was not surprising. The man who had loved them both enough to make
them love each other was gone.
"Are ye going out
on that horse?" Aunt Cord had said, putting her bowl down and sitting in a
shaft of early sun. It was a bad location, one she never would have allowed
herself to be caught in had Mr. Jonas been in attendance. The strong light made
her face look like a carved mask. There was a cold-sore growing at one corner
other mouth; she always got them when she was not sleeping well.
"Aye," Susan
said.
"Ye should eat
more'n that, then. 'Twon't keep ye til nine o' the clock, girl."
"It'll keep me
fine," Susan had replied, eating the sections of orange faster. She could
see where this was tending, could see the look of dislike and disapproval in
her aunt's eyes, and wanted to get away from the table before trouble could
begin.
"Why not let me
get ye a dish of this?" Aunt Cord asked, and plopped her spoon into her
oatmeal. To Susan it sounded like a horse's hoof stamping down in mud—or
shit—and her stomach clenched. "It'll hold ye to lunch, if ye plan to ride
so long. I suppose a fine young lady such as yerself can't be bothered with
chores—"
"They're
done." And you know they 're done, she did not add. I did
em while you were sitting before your glass, poking at that sore on your mouth.
Aunt Cord dropped a
chunk of creamery butter into her muck—Susan had no idea how the woman stayed
so thin, really she didn't—and watched it begin to melt. For a moment it seemed
that breakfast might end on a reasonably civilized note, after all.
Then the shirt
business had begun.
"Before ye go
out, Susan, I want ye to take off that rag you're wearing and put on one of
the new riding blouses Thorin sent ye week before last. It's the least ye can
do to show yer—"
Anything her aunt
might have said past that point would have been lost in anger even if Susan
hadn't interrupted. She passed a hand down the sleeve of her shirt, loving its
texture—it was almost velvety from so many washings. "This rag
belonged to my father!"
"Aye,
Pat's." Aunt Cord sniffed. "It's too big for ye, and worn out, and
not proper, in any case. When you were young it was mayhap all right to wear a
man's button-shirt, but now that ye have a woman's bustline ..."
The riding blouses
were on hangers in the comer; they had come four days ago and Susan hadn't even
deigned to take them up to her room. There were three of them, one red, one
green, one blue, all silk, all undoubtedly worth a small fortune. She loathed
their pretension, and the overblown, blushy-frilly look of them: full sleeves to
flutter artistically in the wind, great floppy foolish collars . . . and, of
course, the low-scooped fronts which were probably all Thorin would see if she
appeared before him dressed in one. As she wouldn't, if she could possibly help
it.
"My 'woman's bust-line,'
as you call it, is of no interest to me and can't possibly be of any interest
to anyone else when I'm out riding," Susan said.
"Perhaps, perhaps
not. If one of the Barony's drovers should see you—even Rennie, he's out that
way all the time, as ye well know—it wouldn't hurt for him to mention to Hart
that he saw yer wearing one of the camisas that he so kindly gave to ye. Now would it? Why do ye have lo he
such a stiffkins, girl? Why always so unwilling, so unfair?"
"What does it
matter to ye, one way or t'other?" Susan had asked. "Ye have the
money, don't ye? And ye'll have more yet. After he fucks me."
Aunt Cord, her face
white and shocked and furious, had leaned across the table and slapped her.
"How dare thee use that word in my house, ye malhablada? How dare
ye?"
That was when her
tears began to flow—at hearing her call it her house. "It was my
father's house! His and mine! Ye were all on yer own with no real place to
go, except perhaps to the Quarters, and he took ye in! He took ye in, Aunt!"
The last two orange
sections were still in her hand. She threw them into her aunt's face, then
pushed herself back from the table so violently that her chair tottered,
tipped, and spilled her to the floor. Her aunt's shadow fell over her. Susan
crawled frantically out of it, her hair hanging, her slapped cheek throbbing,
her eyes burning with tears, her throat swelled and hot. At last she found her
feet.
"Ye ungrateful
girl," her aunt said. Her voice was soft and so full of venom it was
almost caressing. "After all I have done for thee, and all Hart Thorin has
done for thee. Why, the very nag ye mean to ride this morning was Hart's gift
of respect to—"
"PYLON WAS
OURS!" she shrieked, almost maddened with fury at this
deliberate blurring of the truth. "ALL OF THEM WERE! THE HORSES, THE
LAND—THEY WERE OURS! "
"Lower thy
voice," Aunt Cord said.
Susan took a deep
breath and tried to find some control. She swept her hair back from her face,
revealing the red print of Aunt Cord's hand on her cheek. Cordelia flinched a
little at the sight of it.
"My father never
would have allowed this," Susan said. "He never would have allowed me
to go as Hart Thorin's gilly. Whatever he might have felt about Hart as the
Mayor ... or as his patrono ... he never would have allowed this. And ye
know it. Thee knows it."
Aunt Cord rolled her
eyes, then twirled a finger around her ear as if Susan had gone mad. "Thee
agreed to it yerself, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty. Aye, so ye did. And if yer
girlish megrims now cause ye to want to cry off what's been done—"
"Aye," Susan
agreed. "I agreed to the bargain, so I did. After ye'd dunned me about it
day and night, after ye'd come to me in tears—"
"I never
did!" Cordelia cried, stung.
"Have ye
forgotten so quick. Aunt? Aye, I suppose. As by tonight ye'll have forgotten
slapping me at breakfast. Well, I haven't forgotten. Thee cried, all right,
cried and told me ye feared we might be turned off the land, since we had no
more legal right to it, that we'd be on the road, thee wept and said—"
"Stop calling me
that!" Aunt Cord shouted. Nothing on earth maddened
her so much as having her own thees and thous turned back at her. "Thee
has no more right to the old tongue than thee has to thy stupid sheep's
complaints! Go on! Get out!"
But Susan went on. Her
rage was at the flood and would not be turned aside.
"Thee wept and
said we'd be turned out, turned west, that we'd never see my da's homestead or
Hambry again . . . and then, when I was frightened enough, ye talked of the
cunning little baby I'd have. The land that was ours to begin with given back
again. The horses that were ours likewise given back. As a sign of the Mayor's
honesty, I have a horse I myself helped to foal. And what have I
done to deserve these things that would have been mine in any case, but for the
loss of a single paper? What have I done so that he should give ye money? What
have I done save promise to fuck him while his wife of forty year sleeps down
the hall?"
"Is it the money
ye want, then?" Aunt Cord asked, smiling furiously. "Do ye and do ye
and aye? Ye shall have it, then. Take it, keep it, lose it, feed it to the
swine, I care not!"
She turned to her
purse, which hung on a post by the stove. She began to fumble in it, but her
motions quickly lost speed and conviction. There was an oval of mirror mounted
to the left of the kitchen doorway, and in it Susan caught sight other aunt's
face. What she saw there—a mixture of hatred, dismay, and greed—made her heart
sink.
"Never mind,
Aunt. I see thee's loath to give it up, and I wouldn't have it, anyway. It's
whore's money."
Aunt Cord turned back
to her, face shocked, her purse conveniently forgotten. " 'Tis not
whoring, ye stupid get! Why, some of the greatest women in history have been
gillys, and some of the greatest men have been born of gillys. 'Tis
not whoring!"
Susan ripped the red
silk blouse from where it hung and held it up. The shirt moulded itself to her
breasts as if it had been longing all the while to touch them. "Then why
does he send me these whore's clothes?"
"Susan!"
Tears stood in Aunt Cord's eyes.
Susan flung the shirt
at her as she had the orange slices. It landed on her shoes. "Pick it up
and put it on yerself, if ye fancy. You spread yer legs for him, if ye
fancy."
She turned and hurled
herself out the door. Her aunt's half-hysterical shriek had followed her:
"Don't thee go off thinking foolish thoughts, Susan! Foolish thoughts
lead to foolish deeds, and it's too late for either! Thee's agreed!"
She knew that. And
however fast she rode Pylon along the Drop, she could not outrace her knowing.
She had agreed, and no matter how horrified Pat Delgado might have been at the
fix she had gotten herself into, he would have seen one thing clear—she had
made a promise, and promises must be kept. Hell awaited those who would not do
so.
3
She eased the rosillo
back while he still had plenty of wind. She looked behind her, saw that she had
come nearly a mile, and brought him down further—to a canter, a trot, a fast
walk. She took a deep breath and let it out. For the first time that morning
she registered the day's bright beauty—gulls circling in the hazy air off to
the west, high grasses all around her, and flowers in every shaded cranny:
cornflowers and lupin and phlox and her favorites, the delicate blue
silkflowers. From everywhere came the somnolent buzz of bees. The sound
soothed her, and with the high surge of her emotions subsiding a little, she
was able to admit something to herself... admit it, and then voice it aloud.
"Will
Dearborn," she said, and shivered at the sound of his name on her lips,
even though there was no one to hear it but Pylon and the bees. So she said it
again, and when the words were out she abruptly turned her own wrist inward to
her mouth and kissed it where the blood beat close to the surface. The action
shocked her because she hadn't known she was going to do it, and shocked her
more because the taste of her own skin and sweat aroused her immediately. She
felt an urge to cool herself off as she had in her bed after meeting him. The
way she felt, it would be short work.
Instead, she growled
her father's favorite cuss—"Oh, bite it!"—and spat past her boot.
Will Dearborn had been responsible for all too much upset in her life these
last three weeks; Will Dearborn with his unsettling blue
eyes, his dark tumble of hair, and his stiff-necked. judgmental attitude. I
can be discreet, madam. As for propriety? I'm amazed you even know the word.
Every time she thought
of that, her blood sang with anger and shame. Mostly anger. How dare he presume
to make judgments? He who had grown up possessing every luxury, no doubt with
servants to tend his every whim and so much gold that he likely didn't even
need it—he would be given the things he wanted free, as a way of currying
favor. What would a boy like that—for that was all he was, really, just a boy—
know about the hard choices she had made? For that matter, how could such as
Mr. Will Dearborn of Hemphill understand that she hadn't really made those
choices at all? That she had been carried to them the way a mother cat carries
a wayward kitten back to the nesting-box, by the scruff of the neck?
Still, he wouldn't
leave her mind; she knew, even if Aunt Cord didn't, that there had been an
unseen third present at their quarrel this morning.
She knew something
else as well, something that would have upset her aunt to no end.
Will Dearborn hadn't
forgotten her, either.
4
About a week after the
welcoming dinner and Dearborn's disastrous, hurtful remark to her, the retarded
slops-fella from the Travellers' Rest— Sheemie, folks called him—had appeared
at the house Susan and her aunt shared. In his hands he held a large bouquet,
mostly made up of the wild-flowers that grew out on the Drop, but with a
scattering of dusky wild roses, as well. They looked like pink punctuation
marks. On the boy's face there had been a wide, sunny grin as he swung the gate
open, not waiting for an invitation.
Susan had been
sweeping the front walk at the time; Aunt Cord had been out back, in the
garden. That was fortunate, but not very surprising;
these days the two of
them got on best when they kept apart as much as they could.
Susan had watched
Sheemie come up the walk, his grin beaming out from behind his upheld freight
of flowers, with a mixture of fascination and horror.
"G'day, Susan
Delgado, daughter of Pat," Sheemie said cheerfully. "I come to you on
an errand and cry yer pardon at any troubleation I be, oh aye, for I am a
problem for folks, and know it same as them. These be for you. Here."
He thrust them out,
and she saw a small, folded envelope tucked amongst them.
"Susan?"
Aunt Cord's voice, from around the side of the house . . . and getting closer.
"Susan, did I hear the gate?"
"Yes, Aunt!"
she called back. Curse the woman's sharp ears! Susan nimbly plucked the
envelope from its place among the phlox and daisies. Into her dress pocket it
went.
"They from my
third-best friend," Sheemie said. "I got three different friends now.
This many." He held up two fingers, frowned, added two more, and then
grinned splendidly. "Arthur Heath my first-best friend, Dick Stockworth my
second-best friend. My third-best friend—"
"Hush!"
Susan said in a low, fierce voice that made Sheemie's smile fade. "Not a
word about your three friends."
A funny little flush,
almost like a pocket fever, raced across her skin—it seemed to run down her
neck from her cheeks, then slip all the way to her feet. There had been a lot
of talk in Hambry about Sheemie's new friends during the past week—talk about
little else, it seemed. The stories she had heard were outlandish, but if they
weren't true, why did the versions told by so many different witnesses sound so
much alike?
Susan was still trying
to get herself back under control when Aunt Cord swept around the comer.
Sheemie fell back a step at the sight of her, puzzlement becoming outright
dismay. Her aunt was allergic to beestings, and was presently swaddled from the
top of her straw 'brera to the hem of her faded garden dress in gauzy
stuff that made her look peculiar in strong light and downright eerie in shade.
Adding a final touch to her costume, she carried a pair of dirt-streaked garden
shears in one gloved hand.
She saw the bouquet
and bore down on it, shears raised. When she reached her niece, she slid the
scissors into a loop on her belt (almost reluctantly, it seemed to the niece
herself) and parted the veil on her face. "Who sent ye those?"
"I don't know.
Aunt," Susan said, much more calmly than she felt. "This is the young
man from the inn—"
"Inn!" Aunt
Cord snorted.
"He doesn't seem
to know who sent him," Susan carried on. If only she could get him out of
here! "He's, well, I suppose you'd say he's—"
"He's a fool,
yes, I know that." Aunt Cord cast Susan a brief, irritated look, then bent
her attention on Sheemie. Talking with her gloved hands upon her knees,
shouting directly into his face, she asked: "WHO . . . SENT . . . THESE
. . . FLOWERS . . . YOUNG... MAN? "
The wings of her
face-veil, which had been pushed aside, now fell back into place. Sheemie took
another step backward. He looked frightened.
"WAS IT . . .
PERHAPS . . . SOMEONE FROM... SEAFRONT? . . . FROM . . . MAYOR . . . THORIN? .
. . TELL ...ME... AND . . . I'LL . . . GIVE... YOU . . . A PENNY. "
Susan's heart sank,
sure he would tell—he'd not have the wit to understand he'd be getting her into
trouble. Will, too, likely.
But Sheemie only shook
his head. "Don't 'member. I got a empty head, sai, so I do. Stanley says I
a bugwit."
His grin shone out
again, a splendid thing full of white, even teeth. Aunt Cord answered it with a
grimace. "Oh, foo! Be gone, then. Straight back to town, too—don't be
hanging around hoping for a goose-feather. For a boy who can't remember
deserves not so much as a penny! And don't you come back here again, no matter
who wants you to carry flowers for the young sai. Do you hear me?"
Sheemie had nodded
energetically. Then: "Sai?"
Aunt Cord glowered at
him. The vertical line on her forehead had been very prominent that day.
"Why you all
wropped up in cobwebbies, sai?"
"Get out of here,
ye impudent cull!" Aunt Cord cried. She had a good loud voice when she
wanted to use it, and Sheemie jumped back from her in alarm. When she was sure
he was headed back down the High Street toward town and had no intention of
returning to their gate and hanging about in hopes of a tip, Aunt Cord had
turned to Susan.
"Get those in
some water before they wilt, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty, and don't go mooning
about, wondering who yer secret admirer might be."
Then Aunt Cord had
smiled. A real smile. What hurt Susan the most, confused her the most,
was that her aunt was no cradle-story ogre, no witch like Rhea of the Coos.
There was no monster here, only a maiden lady with some few social pretensions,
a love of gold and silver, and a tear of being turned out, penniless, into the
world.
"For folks such
as us, Susie-pie," she said, speaking with a terrible heavy kindness,
" 'tis best to stick to our housework and leave dreams to them as can
afford them."
5
She had been sure the
flowers were from Will, and she was right. His note was written in a hand which
was clear and passing fair.
Dear
Susan Delgado,
I
spoke out of turn the other night, and cry your pardon. May I see you and speak
to you? It must be private. This is
a matter of importance. If you will see me, get a message to the boy who
brings this. He is safe.
Will Dearborn
A matter of
importance. Underlined. She felt a strong desire to know what was so important
to him, and cautioned herself against doing anything foolish. Perhaps he was
smitten with her ... and if so, whose fault was that? Who had talked to him,
ridden his horse, showed him her legs in a flashy carnival dismount? Who had
put her hands on his shoulders and kissed him?
Her cheeks and
forehead burned at the thought of that, and another hot ring seemed to go
slipping down her body. She wasn't sure she regretted the kiss, but it had
been a mistake, regrets or no regrets. Seeing him again now would be a worse
one.
Yet she wanted to see
him, and knew in her deepest heart that she was ready to set her anger at him
aside. But there was the promise she had made.
The wretched promise.
That night she lay
sleepless, tossing about in her bed, first thinking it would be better, more
dignified, just to keep her silence, then composing mental notes anyway—some
haughty, some cold, some with a lace-edge of flirtation.
When she heard the
midnight bell ring, passing the old day out and calling the new one in, she
decided enough was enough. She'd thrown herself from her bed, gone to her door,
opened it, and thrust her head out into the hall. When she heard Aunt Cord's
flutelike snores, she had closed her door again, crossed to her little desk by
the window, and lit her lamp. She took one of her sheets of parchment paper
from the top drawer, tore it in half (in Hambry, the only crime greater than wasting
paper was wasting threaded stockline), and then wrote quickly, sensing that the
slightest hesitation might condemn her to more hours of indecision. With no
salutation and no signature, her response took only a breath to write:
I
may not see you. 'Twould not be proper.
She had folded it
small, blew out her lamp, and returned to bed with the note safely tucked under
her pillow. She was asleep in two minutes. The following day, when the
marketing took her to town, she had gone by the Travellers' Rest, which, at
eleven in the morning, had all the charm of something which has died badly at
the side of the road.
The saloon's door-yard
was a beaten dirt square bisected by a long hitching rail with a watering
trough beneath. Sheemie was trundling a wheelbarrow along the rail, picking up
last night's horse-droppings with a shovel. He was wearing a comical pink sombrero,
and singing "Golden Slippers." Susan doubted if many of the Rest's
patrons would wake up feeling as well as Sheemie obviously did this morning ...
so who, when you came right down to it, was more soft-headed?
She looked around to
make sure no one was paying heed to her, then went over to Sheemie and tapped
him on the shoulder. He looked frightened at first, and Susan didn't blame
him—according to the stories she'd been hearing, Jonas's friend Depape had
almost killed the poor kid for spilling a drink on his boots.
Then Sheemie
recognized her. "Hello, Susan Delgado from out there by the edge of
town," he said companionably. "It's a good day I wish you, sai."
He bowed—an amusing
imitation of the Inner Baronies bow favored by his three new friends. Smiling,
she dropped him a bit of curtsey (wearing jeans, she had to pretend at the
skirt-holding part, but women in Mejis got used to curtseying in pretend
skirts).
"See my flowers,
sai?" he asked, and pointed toward the unpainted side of the Rest. What
she saw touched her deeply: a line of mixed blue and white silkflowers growing
along the base of the building. They looked both brave and pathetic, flurrying
there in the faint morning breeze with the bald, turd-littered yard before them
and the splintery public house behind them.
"Rid you grow
those, Sheemie?"
"Aye, so I did.
And Mr. Arthur Heath of Gilead has promised me yellow ones."
"I've never seen
yellow silkflowers."
"Noey-no, me
neither, but Mr. Arthur Heath says they have them in Gilead." He looked at
Susan solemnly, the shovel held in his hands as a soldier would hold a gun or
spear at port arms. "Mr. Arthur Heath saved my life. I'd do anything for
him."
"Would you,
Sheemie?" she asked, touched.
"Also, he has a
lookout! It's a bird's head! And when he talks to it, tendy-pretend, do I
laugh? Aye, fit to split!"
She looked around
again to make sure no one was watching (save for the carved totems across the
street), then removed her note, folded small, from her jeans pocket.
"Would you give
this to Mr. Dearborn for me? He's also your friend, is he not?"
"Will? Aye!"
He took the note and put it carefully into his own pocket.
"And tell no
one."
"Shhhhh!" he
agreed, and put a finger to his lips. His eyes had been amusingly round beneath
the ridiculous pink lady's straw he wore. "Like when I brought you the
flowers. Hushaboo!"
"That's right,
hushaboo. Fare ye well, Sheemie."
"And you, Susan
Delgado."
He went back to his
cleanup operations. Susan had stood watching him for a moment, feeling uneasy
and out of sorts with herself. Now that the note was successfully passed, she
felt an urge to ask Sheemie to give it back, to scratch out what she had written,
and promise to meet him. If only to see his steady blue eyes again, looking
into her face.
Then Jonas's other
friend, the one with the cloak, came sauntering out of the mercantile. She was
sure he didn't see her—his head was down and he was rolling a cigarette—but she
had no intention of pressing her luck. Reynolds talked to Jonas, and Jonas
talked—all too much!—to Aunt Cord. If Aunt Cord heard she had been passing the
time of day with the boy who had brought her the flowers, there were apt to be
questions. Ones she didn't want to answer.
6
All that's history now,
Susan—water under the bridge. Best to get your thoughts out of the past.
She brought Pylon to a
stop and looked down the length of the Drop at the horses that moved and grazed
there. Quite a surprising number of them this morning.
It wasn't working. Her
mind kept turning back to Will Dearborn.
What bad luck meeting
him had been! If not for that chance encounter on her way back down from the
Coos, she might well have made peace with her situation by now—she was a
practical girl, after all, and a promise was a promise. She certainly never
would have expected herself to get all goosy-gushy over losing her maidenhead,
and the prospect of carrying and bearing a child actually excited her.
But Will Dearborn had
changed things; had gotten into her head and now lodged there, a tenant who
defied eviction. His remark to her as they danced stayed with her like a song
you can't stop humming, even though you hate it. It had been cruel and stupidly
self-righteous, that remark ... but was there not also a grain of truth in it?
Rhea had been right about Hart Thorin, of that much Susan no longer had any
doubt. She supposed that witches were right about men's lusts even when they
were wrong about everything else. Not a happy thought, but likely a true one.
It was Will Be Damned
to You Dearborn who had made it difficult for her to accept what needed
accepting, who had goaded her into arguments in which she could hardly
recognize her own shrill and desperate voice, who came to her in her
dreams—dreams where he put his arms around her waist and kissed her, kissed
her, kissed her.
She dismounted and
walked downhill a little way with the reins looped in her fist. Pylon followed
willingly enough, and when she stopped to look off into the blue haze to the
southwest, he lowered his head and began to crop again.
She thought she needed
to see Will Dearborn once more, if only to give her innate practicality a
chance to reassert itself. She needed to see him at his right size, instead of
the one her mind had created for him in her warm thoughts and warmer dreams.
Once that was done, she could get on with her life and do what needed doing.
Perhaps that was why she had taken this path—the same one she'd ridden
yesterday, and the day before yesterday, and the day before that.
He rode this part of the Drop; that much she had heard in the lower market.
She turned away from
the Drop, suddenly knowing he would be there, as if her thought had called
him—or her ka.
She saw only blue sky
and low ridgeline hills that curved gently like the line of a woman's thigh and
hip and waist as she lies on her side in bed. Susan felt a bitter
disappointment fill her. She could almost taste it in her mouth, like wet tea
leaves.
She started back to
Pylon, meaning to return to the house and take care of the apology she reckoned
she must make. The sooner she did it, the sooner it would be done. She reached
for her left stirrup, which was twisted a little, and as she did, a rider came
over the horizon, breaking against the sky at the place which looked to her
like a woman's hip. He sat there, only a silhouette on horseback, but she knew
who it was at once.
Run!
she told herself in a sudden panic. Mount and gallop! Get out of here!
Quickly! Before something terrible happens . . . before it really is ka, come
like a wind to take you and all your plans over the sky and far away!
She didn't run. She
stood with Pylon's reins in one hand, and murmured to him when the rosillo
looked up and nickered a greeting to the big bay-colored gelding coming down
the hill.
Then Will was there,
first above her and looking down, then dismounted in an easy, liquid motion
she didn't think she could have matched, for all her years of horsemanship.
This time there was no kicked-out leg and planted heel, no hat swept over a
comically solemn bow; this time the gaze he gave her was steady and serious and
disquietingly adult.
They looked at each
other in the Drop's big silence, Roland of Gilead and Susan of Mejis, and in
her heart she felt a wind begin to blow. She feared it and welcomed it in equal
measure.
7
"Goodmorn,
Susan," he said. "I'm glad to see you again."
She said nothing,
waiting and watching. Could he hear her heart beating as clearly as she could?
Of course not; that was so much romantic twaddle. Yet it still seemed to her
that everything within a fifty-yard radius should be able to hear that
thumping.
Will took a step
forward. She took a step back, looking at him mistrustfully. He lowered his
head for a moment, then looked up again, his lips set.
"I cry your
pardon," he said.
"Do you?"
Her voice was cool.
"What I said that
night was unwarranted."
At that she felt a
spark of real anger. "I care not that it was unwarranted; I care that it
was unfair. That it hurt me."
A tear overbrimmed her
left eye and slipped down her cheek. She wasn't all cried out after all, it
seemed.
She thought what she
said would perhaps shame him, but although faint color came into his cheeks,
his eyes remained firmly on hers.
"I fell in love
with you," he said. "That's why I said it. It happened even before
you kissed me, I think."
She laughed at that .
. . but the simplicity with which he had spoken made her laughter sound false
in her own ears. Tinny. "Mr. Dearborn—"
"Will.
Please."
"Mr. Dearborn,"
she said, patiently as a teacher working with a dull student, "the idea is
ridiculous. On the basis of one single meeting? One single kiss? A sister's
kiss?" Now she was the one who was blushing, but she hurried on.
"Such things happen in stories, but in real life? I think not."
But his eyes never
left hers, and in them she saw some of Roland's truth: the deep romance of his
nature, buried like a fabulous streak of alien metal in the granite of his
practicality. He accepted love as a fact rather than a flower, and it rendered
her genial contempt powerless over both of them.
"I cry your
pardon," he repeated. There was a kind of brute stubbornness in him. It
exasperated her, amused her, and appalled her, all at the same time. "I
don't ask you to return my love, that's not why I spoke. You told me your
affairs were complicated . .." Now his eyes did leave hers, and he looked
off toward the Drop. He even laughed a little. "I called him a bit of a
fool, didn't I? To your face. So who's the fool, after all?"
She smiled; couldn't
help it. "Ye also said ye'd heard he was fond of strong drink and
berry-girls."
Roland hit his
forehead with the heel of his hand. If his friend Arthur Heath had done that,
she would have taken it as a deliberate, comic gesture. Not with Will. She had
an idea he wasn't much for comedy.
Silence between them
again, this time not so uncomfortable. The two horses, Rusher and Pylon,
cropping contentedly, side by side. If we were horses, all this would be
much easier, she thought, and almost giggled.
"Mr. Dearborn, ye
understand that I have agreed to an arrangement?"
"Aye." He
smiled when she raised her eyebrows in surprise. "It's not mockery but the
dialect. It just. . . seeps in."
"Who told ye of
my business?"
"The Mayor's
sister."
"Coral." She
wrinkled her nose and decided she wasn't surprised. And she supposed there were
others who could have explained her situation even more crudely. Eldred Jonas,
for one. Rhea of the Coos, for another. Best to leave it. "So if ye
understand, and if ye don't ask me to return your . . . whatever it is ye think
ye feel . . . why are we talking? Why do ye seek me out? I think it makes ye
passing uncomfortable—"
"Yes," he
said, and then, as if stating a simple fact: "It makes me uncomfortable,
all right. I can barely look at you and keep my head."
"Then mayhap it'd
be best not to look, not to speak, not to think!" Her voice was both sharp
and a little shaky. How could he have the courage to say such things, to just
state them straight out and starey-eyed like that? "Why did ye send me the
bouquet and that note? Are ye not aware of the trouble ye could've gotten me
into? If y'knew my aunt. . . ! She's already spoken to me about ye, and if she
knew about the note ... or saw us together out here ..."
She looked around,
verifying that they were still unobserved. They were, at least as best she
could tell. He reached out, touched her shoulder. She looked at him, and he
pulled his fingers back as if he had put them on something hot.
"I said what I
did so you'd understand," he said. "That's all. I feel how I feel,
and you're not responsible for that."
But I am,
she thought. I kissed you. I think I'm more than a little responsible for
how we both feel. Will.
"What I said
while we were dancing I regret with all my heart. Won't you give me your
pardon?"
"Aye," she
said, and if he had taken her in his arms at that moment, she would have let
him, and damn the consequences. But he only took off his hat and made her a
charming little bow, and the wind died.
"Thankee-sai."
"Don't call me
that. I hate it. My name is Susan."
"Will you call me
Will?" '
She nodded.
"Good. Susan, I
want to ask you something—not as the fellow who insulted you and hurt you
because he was jealous. This is something else entirely. May I?"
"Aye, I
suppose," she said warily.
"Are you for the
Affiliation?"
She looked at him,
flabbergasted. It was the last question in the world she had expected . . . but
he was looking at her seriously.
"I'd expected ye
and yer friends to count cows and guns and spears and boats and who knows what
else," she said, "but I didn't think thee would also count
Affiliation supporters."
She saw his look of
surprise, and a little smile at the comers of his mouth. This time the smile
made him look older than he could possibly be. Susan thought back across what
she'd just said, realized what must have struck him, and gave a small,
embarrassed laugh. "My aunt has a way of lapsing into thee and thou. My
father did, too. It's from a sect of the Old People who called themselves
Friends."
"I know. We have
the Friendly Folk in my part of the world still."
"Do you?"
"Yes ... or aye,
if you like the sound of that better; I'm coming to. And I like the way the
Friends talk. It has a lovely sound."
"Not when my aunt
uses it," Susan said, thinking back to the argument over the shirt.
"To answer your question, aye—I'm for the Affiliation, I suppose. Because
my da was. If ye ask am I strong for the Affiliation, I suppose not. We
see and hear little enough of them, these days. Mostly rumors and stories
carried by drifters and far-travelling drummers. Now that there's no railway
..." She shrugged.
"Most of the
ordinary day-to-day folk I've spoken to seem to feel the same. And yet your
Mayor Thorin—"
"He's not my
Mayor Thorin," she said, more sharply than she had intended.
"And yet the Barony's
Mayor Thorin has given us every help we've asked for, and some we haven't. I
have only to snap my fingers, and Kimba Rimer stands before me."
"Then don't snap
them," she said, looking around in spite of herself. She tried to smile
and show it was a joke, but didn't make much success of it.
" The townsfolk,
the fisherfolk, the farmers, the cowboys . . . they all speak well of the
Affiliation, but distantly. Yet the Mayor, his Chancellor, and the members of
the Horsemen's Association, Lengyll and Garber and that lot—"
"I know
them," she said shortly.
"They're
absolutely enthusiastic in their support. Mention the Affiliation to Sheriff
Avery and he all but dances. In every ranch parlor we're offered a drink from
an Eld commemorative cup, it seems."
"A drink of
what?" she asked, a trifle roguishly. "Beer? Ale? Graf?"
"Also wine,
whiskey, and pettibone," he said, not responding to her smile. "It's
almost as if they wish us to break our vow. Does that strike you as
strange?"
"Aye, a little;
or just as Hambry hospitality. In these parts, when someone—especially a young
man—says he's taken the pledge, folks tend to think him coy, not serious."
"And this joyful
support of the Affiliation amongst the movers and the shakers? How does that
strike you?"
"Queer."
And it did. Pat
Delgado's work had brought him in almost daily contact with these landowners
and horsebreeders, and so she, who had tagged after her da any time he would
let her, had seen plenty of them. She thought them a cold bunch, by and large.
She couldn't imagine John Croydon or Jake White waving an Arthur Eld stein in a
sentimental toast... especially not in the middle of the day, when there was
stock to be run and sold.
Will's eyes were full
upon her, as if he were reading these thoughts.
"But you probably
don't see as much of the big fellas as you once did," he said.
"Before your father passed, I mean."
"Perhaps not. . .
but do bumblers learn to speak backward?"
No cautious smile this
time; this time he outright grinned. It lit his whole face. Gods, how handsome
he was! "I suppose not. No more than cats change their spots, as we say.
And Mayor Thorin doesn't speak of such as us—me and my friends—to you when you
two are alone? Or is that question beyond what I have a right to ask? I
suppose it is."
"I care not about
that," she said, tossing her head pertly enough to make her long braid
swing. "I understand little of propriety, as some have been good enough to
point out." But she didn't care as much for his downcast look and flush
of embarrassment as she had expected. She knew girls who liked to tease as well
as flirt and to tease hard, some of them- but it seemed she had no taste for
it. Certainly she had no desire to set her claws in him, and when she went on,
she spoke gently. "I'm not alone with him, in any case."
And oh how ye do lie,
she thought mournfully, remembering how Thorin had embraced her in the hall on
the night of the party, groping at her breasts like a child trying to get his
hand into a candy-jar; telling her that he burned for her. Oh ye great liar.
"In any case,
Will, Hart's opinion of you and yer friends can hardly concern ye, can it? Ye
have a job to do, that's all. If he helps ye, why not just accept and be
grateful?"
"Because something's
wrong here," he said, and the serious, almost somber quality of his voice
frightened her a little.
"Wrong? With the
Mayor? With the Horsemen's Association? What are ye talking about?"
He looked at her
steadily, then seemed to decide something. "I'm going to trust you,
Susan."
"I'm not sure I
want thy trust any more than I want thy love," she said.
He nodded. "And
yet, to do the job I was sent to do, I have to trust someone. Can you
understand that?"
She looked into his
eyes, then nodded.
He stepped next to
her, so close she fancied she could feel the warmth of his skin. "Look
down there. Tell me what you see."
She looked, then
shrugged. "The Drop. Same as always." She smiled a little. "And
as beautiful. This has always been my favorite place in all the world."
"Aye, it's
beautiful, all right. What else do you see?"
"Horses, of
courses." She smiled to show this was a joke (an old one of her da's, in
fact), but he didn't smile back. Fair to look at, and courageous, if the
stories they were already telling about town were true— quick in both thought
and movement, too. Really not much sense of humor, though. Well, there were
worse failings. Grabbing a girl's bosom when she wasn't expecting it might be
one of them.
"Horses. Yes. But
does it look like the right number of them? You've been seeing horses on
the Drop all your life, and surely no one who's not in the Horsemen's
Association is better qualified to say."
"And ye don't
trust them?"
"They’ve given us
everything we've asked for, and they're as friendly as dogs under the
dinner-table, but no—1 don't think 1 do."
"Yet ye'd trust
me."
He looked at her
steadily with his beautiful and frightening eyes—a darker blue than they would
later be, not yet faded out by the suns of ten thousand drifting days. "I
have to trust someone," he repeated.
She looked down,
almost as though he had rebuked her. He reached out, put gentle fingers beneath
her chin, and tipped her face up again. "Does it seem the right number?
Think carefully!"
But now that he'd
brought it to her attention, she hardly needed to think about it at all. She
had been aware of the change for some time, she supposed, but it had been
gradual, easy to overlook.
"No," she
said at last. "It's not right."
"Too few or too
many? Which?"
She paused for a moment.
Drew in breath. Let it out in a long sigh. "Too many. Far too many."
Will Dearborn raised
his clenched fists to shoulder-height and gave them a single hard shake. His
blue eyes blazed like the spark-lights of which her grand-da had told her.
"I knew it," he said. "I knew it."
8
"How many horses
are down there?" he asked.
"Below us? Or on
the whole Drop?"
"Just below
us."
She looked carefully,
making no attempt to actually count. That didn't work; it only confused you.
She saw four good-sized groups of about twenty horses each, moving about on the
green almost exactly as birds moved about in the blue above them. There were
perhaps nine smaller groups, ranging from octets to quartets ... several pairs
(they reminded her of lovers, but everything did today, it seemed) ... a few
galloping loners—young stallions, mostly . . .
"A hundred and
sixty?" he asked in a low, almost hesitant voice.
She looked at him,
surprised. "Aye. A hundred sixty's the number I had in mind. To a
pin."
"And how much of
the Drop are we looking at? A quarter? A third?"
"Much less."
She tilted him a small smile. "As I think thee knows. A sixth of the total
open graze, perhaps."
"If there are a
hundred and sixty horses free-grazing on each sixth, that comes to .. ."
She waited for him to
come up with nine hundred and sixty. When he did, she nodded. He looked down a
moment longer, and grunted with surprise when Rusher nosed him in the small of
the back. Susan put a curled hand to her mouth to stifle a laugh. From the
impatient way he pushed the horse's muzzle away, she guessed he still saw
little that was funny.
"How many more
are stabled or training or working, do you reckon?" he asked.
"One for every
three down there. At a guess."
"So we'd be
talking twelve hundred head of horses. All threaded stock, no muties."
She looked at him with
faint surprise. "Aye. There's almost no mutie stock here in Mejis ... in any
of the Outer Baronies, for that matter."
"You true-breed
more than three out of every five?"
"We breed em all!
Of course every now and then we get a freak that has to be put down, but—"
"Not one freak
out of every five livebirths? One out of five born with—" How had Renfrew
put it? "With extra legs or its guts on the outside?"
Her shocked look was
enough answer. "Who's been telling ye such?"
"Renfrew. He also
told me that there was about five hundred and seventy head of threaded stock
here in Mejis."
"That's just . .
." She gave a bewildered little laugh. "Just crazy! If my da was
here—"
"But he's
not," Roland said, his tone as dry as a snapping twig. "He's
dead."
For a moment she
seemed not to register the change in that tone. Then, as if an eclipse had
begun to happen somewhere inside her head, her entire aspect darkened. "My
da had an accident. Do you understand that, Will Dearborn? An accident.
It was terribly sad, but the sort of thing that happens, sometimes. A horse
rolled on him. Ocean Foam. Fran says Foam saw a snake in the grass."
"Fran
Lengyll?"
"Aye." Her
skin was pale, except for two wild roses—pink, like those in the bouquet he'd
sent her by way of Sheemie—glowing high up on her cheekbones. "Fran rode
many miles with my father. They weren't great friends—they were of different
classes, for one thing—but they rode together. I've a cap put away somewhere
that Fran's first wife made for my christening. They rode the trail together. 1
can't believe Fran Lengyll would lie about how my da died, let alone that he
had ... anything to do with it."
Yet she looked
doubtfully down at the running horses. So many. Too many. Her da would
have seen. And her da would have wondered what she was wondering now: whose
brands were on the extras?
"It so happens
Fran Lengyll and my friend Stockworth had a discussion about horses,"
Will said. His voice sounded almost casual, but there was nothing casual on his
face. "Over glasses of spring water, after beer had been offered and
refused. They spoke of them much as I did with Renfrew at Mayor Thorin's
welcoming dinner. When Richard asked sai Lengyll to estimate riding horses, he
said perhaps four hundred."
"Insane."
"It would seem
so," Will agreed.
"Do they not
kennit the horses are out here where ye can see em?"
"They know we've
barely gotten started," he said, "and that we've begun with the
fisherfolk. We'll be a month yet, I'm sure they think, before we start to
concern ourselves with the horseflesh hereabouts. And in the meantime, they
have an attitude about us of... how shall I put it? Well, never mind how I'd
put it. I'm not very good with words, but my friend Arthur calls it 'genial
contempt.' They leave the horses out in front of our eyes, I think, because
they don't believe we'll know what we're looking at. Or because they think we
won't believe what we're seeing. I'm very glad I found you out here."
Just so I could give
you a more accurate horse-count? Is that the only reason?
"But ye will
get around to counting the horses. Eventually. I mean, that must surely be one
of the Affiliation's main needs."
He gave her an odd
look, as if she had missed something that should have been obvious. It made her
feel self-conscious.
"What? What is
it?"
"Perhaps they
expect the extra horses to be gone by the time we get around to this side of
the Barony's business."
"Gone where?”
"I don't know.
But I don't like this. Susan, you will keep this just between the two of us,
won't you?"
She nodded. She'd
be insane to tell anyone she had been with Will Dearborn,
unchaperoned except by Rusher and Pylon, out on the Drop.
"It may all turn
out to be nothing, but if it doesn't, knowing could be dangerous."
Which led back to her
da again. Lengyll had told her and Aunt Cord that Pat had been thrown, and that
Ocean Foam had then rolled upon him. Neither of them had had any reason to
doubt the man's story. But Fran Lengyll had also told Will's friend that there
were only four hundred head of riding stock in Mejis, and that was a bald lie.
Will turned to his
horse, and she was glad.
Part of her wanted him
to stay—to stand close to her while the clouds sent their long shadows flying
across the grassland—but they had been together out here too long already.
There was no reason to think anyone would come along and see them, but instead
of comforting her, that idea for some reason made her more nervous than ever.
He straightened the
stirrup hanging beside the scabbarded shaft of his lance (Rusher whickered way
back in his throat, as if to say About time we got going), then turned
to her again. She felt actually faint as his gaze fell upon her, and now the
idea of ka was almost too strong to deny. She tried to tell herself it
was just the dim—that feeling of having lived a thing before—but it wasn't the
dim; it was a sense of finding a road one had been searching for all along.
"There's
something else I want to say. I don't like returning to where we started, but I
must."
"No," she said
faintly. "That's closed, surely."
"I told you that
I loved you, and that I was jealous," he said, and for the first time his
voice had come unanchored a little, wavering in his throat. She was alarmed to
see that there were tears standing in his eyes. "There was more. Something
more."
"Will, I don't
want to—" She turned blindly for her horse. He took her shoulder and
turned her back. It wasn't a harsh touch, but there was an inexorability to it
that was dreadful. She looked helplessly up into his face, saw that he was
young and far from home, and suddenly understood she could not stand against
him for long. She wanted him so badly that she ached with it. She would have
given a year of her life just to be able to put her palms on his cheeks and
feel his skin.
"You miss your
father, Susan?"
"Aye," she
whispered. "With all my heart I do."
"I miss my mother
the same way." He held her by both shoulders now. One eye overbrimmed; one
tear drew a silver line down his cheek.
"Is she
dead?"
"No, but
something happened. About her. To her. Shit! How can I talk about it
when I don't even know how to think about it? In a way, she did
die. For me."
"Will, that's
terrible."
He nodded. "The
last time I saw her, she looked at me in a way that will haunt me to my grave.
Shame and love and hope, all of them bound up together. Shame at what I'd seen
and knew about her, hope, maybe, that I'd understand and forgive . . ." He
took a deep breath. "The night of the party, toward the end of the meal,
Rimer said something funny. You all laughed—"
"If I did, it was
only because it would have looked strange if I was the only one who
didn't," Susan said. "I don't like him. I think he's a schemer and a
conniver."
"You all laughed,
and I happened to look down toward the end of the table. Toward Olive Thorin.
And for a moment—only a moment—I thought she was my mother. The expression was
the same, you see. The same one I saw on the morning when I opened the wrong
door at the wrong time and came upon my mother and her—"
"Stop it!"
she cried, pulling back from his hands. Inside her, everything was suddenly in
motion, all the mooring-lines and buckles and clamps she'd been using to hold
herself together seeming to melt at once. "Stop it, just stop it, I can't
listen to you talk about her!"
She groped out for
Pylon, but now the whole world was wet prisms. She began to sob. She felt his
hands on her shoulders, turning her again, and she did not resist them.
"I'm so
ashamed," she said. ''I'm so ashamed and so frightened and I'm sorry. I've
forgotten my father's face and . . . and ..."
And I'll never be able
to find it again, she wanted to say, but she didn't have
to say anything. He stopped her mouth with his kisses. At first she just let
herself be kissed . . . and then she was kissing him back, kissing him almost
furiously. She wiped the wetness from beneath his eyes with soft little sweeps
of her thumbs, then slipped her palms up his cheeks as she had longed to do.
The feeling was exquisite; even the soft rasp of the stubble close to the skin
was exquisite. She slid her arms around his neck, her open mouth on his,
holding him and kissing him as hard as she could, kissing him there between the
horses, who simply looked at each other and then went back to cropping grass.
9
They were the best
kisses of his whole life, and never forgotten: the yielding pliancy of her
lips and the strong shape of her teeth under them, urgent and not shy in the
least; the fragrance of her breath, the sweet line of her body pressed against
his. He slipped a hand up to her left breast, squeezed it gently, and felt her
heart speeding under it. His other hand went to her hair and combed along the
side of it, silk at her temple. He never forgot its texture.
Then she was standing
away from him, her face flaming with blush and passion, one hand going to her
lips, which he had kissed until they were swollen. A little trickle of blood
ran from the comer of the lower one. Her eyes, wide on his. Her bosom rising
and falling as if she had just run a race. And between them a current that was
like nothing he had ever felt in his life. It ran like a river and shook like a
fever.
"No more,"
she said in a trembling voice. "No more, please. If you really do love me,
don't let me dishonor myself. I've made a promise. Anything might come later,
after that promise was fulfilled, I suppose .. . if you still wanted me . .
."
"I would wait
forever," he said calmly, "and do anything for you but stand away and
watch you go with another man."
"Then if you love
me, go away from me. Please, Will!"
"Another
kiss."
She stepped forward at
once, raising her face trustingly up to his, and he understood he could do
whatever he wanted with her. She was, at least for the moment, no longer her
own mistress; she might consequently be his. He could do to her what Marten had
done to his own mother, if that was his fancy.
The thought broke his
passion apart, turned it to coals that fell in a bright shower, winking out one
by one in a dark bewilderment. His father's acceptance
(I have
known for two years)
was in many ways the
worst part of what had happened to him this year; how could he fall in love
with this girl—any girl—in a world where such evils of the heart seemed
necessary, and might even be repeated?
Yet he did love her.
Instead of the
passionate kiss he wanted, he placed his lips lightly on the corner of her
mouth where the little rill of blood flowed. He kissed, tasting salt like the
taste of his own tears. He closed his eyes and shivered when her hand stroked
the hair at the nape of his neck.
"I'd not hurt
Olive Thorin for the world," she whispered in his ear. "No more than
I'd hurt thee, Will. I didn't understand, and now 'tis too late to be put
right. But thank you for not... not taking what you could. And I'll remember
you always. How it was to be kissed by you. It's the best thing that ever
happened to me, I think. Like heaven and earth all wrapped up together,
aye."
"I'll remember,
too." He watched her swing up into the saddle, and remembered how her bare
legs had flashed in the dark on the night he had met her. And suddenly he
couldn't let her go. He reached forward, touched her boot.
"Susan—"
"No," she
said. "Please."
He stood back.
Somehow.
"This is our
secret," she said. "Yes?"
"Aye."
She smiled at that ...
but it was a sad smile. "Stay away from me from now on, Will. Please. And
I'll stay away from you."
He thought about it.
"If we can."
"We must, Will.
We must."
She rode away fast.
Roland stood beside Rusher's stirrup, watching her go. And when she was out of
sight over the horizon, still he watched.
10
Sheriff Avery, Deputy
Dave, and Deputy George Riggins were sitting on the porch in front of the
Sheriff's office and jail when Mr. Stockworth and Mr. Heath (the latter with
that idiotic bird's skull still mounted on the horn of his saddle) went past at
a steady walk. The bell o' noon had rung fifteen minutes before, and Sheriff
Avery reckoned they were on their way to lunch, perhaps at The Millbank, or
perhaps at the Rest, which put on a fair noon meal. Popkins and such. Avery
liked something a little more filling; half a chicken or a haunch of beef
suited him just fine.
Mr. Heath gave them a
wave and a grin. "Good day, gents! Long life! Gentle breezes! Happy
siestas!"
They waved and smiled
back. When they were out of sight, Dave said: "They spent all mornin down
there on the piers, countin nets. Nets! Do you believe it?"
"Yessir,"
Sheriff Avery said, lifting one massive cheek a bit out of his rocker and
letting off a noisy pre-luncheon fart. "Yessir, I do. Aye."
George said: "If
not for them facing off Jonas's boys the way they done, I'd think they was a
pack of fools."
"Nor would they
likely mind," Avery said. He looked at Dave, who was twirling his monocle
on the end of its ribbon and looking off in the direction the boys had taken.
There were folks in town who had begun calling the Affiliation brats Little
Coffin Hunters. Avery wasn't sure what to make of that. He'd soothed it down
between them and Thorin's hard boys, and had gotten both a commendation and a
piece of gold from Rimer for his efforts, but still. . . what to make of them?
"The day they
came in," he said to Dave, "ye thought they were soft. How do ye say
now?"
"Now?" Dave
twirled his monocle a final time, then popped it in his eye and stared at the
Sheriff through it. "Now I think they might have been a little harder than
I thought, after all."
Yes indeed,
Avery thought. But hard don't mean smart, thank the gods. Aye, thank the
gods for that.
"I'm hungry as a
bull, so I am," he said, getting up. He bent, put his hands on his knees,
and ripped off another loud fart. Dave and George looked at each other. George
fanned a hand in front of his face. Sheriff Herkimer Avery, Barony Sheriff,
straightened up, looking both relieved and anticipatory. "More room out
than there is in," he said. "Come on, boys. Let's go downstreet and
tuck into a little."
11
Not even sunset could
do much to improve the view from the porch of the Bar K bunkhouse. The
building—except for the cook-shack and the stable, the only one still standing
on what had been the home acre—was L-shaped, and the porch was built on the
inside of the short arm. Left for them on it had been just the right number of
seats: two splintery rockers and a wooden crate to which an unstable board back
had been nailed.
On this evening. Alain
sat in one of the rockers and Cuthbert sat on the box-seat, which he seemed to
fancy. On the rail, peering across the beaten dirt of the dooryard and toward
the burned-out hulk of the Garber home place, was the lookout.
Alain was bone-tired,
and although both of them had bathed in the stream near the west end of the
home acre, he thought he still smelled fish and seaweed on himself. They had
spent the day counting nets. He was not averse to hard work, even when it was
monotonous, but he didn't like pointless work. Which this was. Hambry came in
two parts: the fishers and the horse-breeders. There was nothing for them among
the fishers, and after three weeks all three of them knew it. Their answers
were out on the Drop, at which they had so far done no more than look. At
Roland's order.
The wind gusted, and
for a moment they could hear the low, grumbling, squealing sound of the
thinny.
"I hate that
sound," Alain said.
Cuthbert, unusually
silent and introspective tonight, nodded and said only "Aye." They
were all saying that now, not to mention So you do and So I am
and So it is. Alain suspected the three of them would have Hambry on
their tongues long after they had wiped its dust from their boots.
From behind them,
inside the bunkhouse door, came a less unpleasant sound—the cooing of pigeons.
And then, from around the side of the bunkhouse, a third, for which he and
Cuthbert had unconsciously been listening as they sat watching the sun go down:
horse's hoofs. Rusher's.
Roland came around the
comer, riding easy, and as he did, something happened that struck Alain as
oddly portentous ... a kind of omen. There was a flurry-flutter of wings, a
dark shape in the air, and suddenly a bird was roosting on Roland's shoulder.
He didn't jump; barely
looked around. He rode up to the hitching rail and sat there, holding out his
hand. "Hile," he said softly, and the pigeon stepped into his palm.
Bound to one of its legs was a capsule. Roland removed it, opened it, and took
out a tiny strip of paper, which had been rolled tight. In his other hand he
held the pigeon out.
"Hile,"
Alain said, holding out his own hand. The pigeon flew to it. As Roland
dismounted, Alain took the pigeon into the bunkhouse, where the cages had been
placed beneath an open window. He ungated the center one and held out his
hand. The pigeon which had just arrived hopped in; the pigeon in the cage
hopped out and into his palm. Alain shut the cage door, latched it, crossed the
room, and turned up the pillow of Bert's bunk. Beneath it was a linen envelope
containing a number of blank paper strips and a tiny storage-pen. He took one
of the strips and the pen, which held its own small reservoir of ink and did
not have to be dipped. He went back out on the porch. Roland and Cuthbert were
studying the unrolled strip of paper the pigeon had delivered from Gilead. On
it was a line of tiny geometric shapes:
"What does it
say?" Alain asked. The code was simple enough, but he could not get it by
heart or read it on sight, as Roland and Bert had been able to, almost immediately.
Alain's talents—his ability to track, his easy access to the touch—lay in other
directions.
" 'Farson moves
east,' " Cuthbert read. " 'Forces split, one big, one small. Do you
see anything unusual.' " He looked at Roland, almost offended. "Anything
unusual, what does that mean?"
Roland shook his head.
He didn't know. He doubted if the men who had sent the message—of whom his own
father was almost surely one— did, either.
Alain handed Cuthbert
the strip and the pen. With one finger Bert stroked the head of the softly
cooing pigeon. It ruffled its wings as if already anxious to be off to the
west.
"What shall I
write?" Cuthbert asked. "The same?"
Roland nodded.
"But we have
seen things that are unusual!" Alain said. "And we know things are
wrong here! The horses ... and at that small ranch way south ... I can't
remember the name . . ."
Cuthbert could.
"The Rocking H."
"Aye, the Rocking
H. There are oxen there. Oxen! My gods, I've never seen them,
except for pictures in a book!"
Roland looked alarmed.
"Does anyone know you saw?"
Alain shrugged
impatiently. "I don't think so. There were drovers about—three, maybe
four—"
"Four, aye,"
Cuthbert said quietly.
"—but they paid
no attention to us. Even when we see things, they think we don't."
"And that's the
way it must stay." Roland's eyes swept them, but there was a kind of
absence in his face, as if his thoughts were far away. He turned to look toward
the sunset, and Alain saw something on the collar of his shirt. He plucked it,
a move made so quickly and nimbly that not even Roland felt it. Bert
couldn't have done that, Alain thought with some pride.
"Aye, but—"
"Same
message," Roland said. He sat down on the top step and looked off toward
the evening redness in the west. "Patience, Mr. Richard Stock-worth and
Mr. Arthur Heath. We know certain things and we believe certain other things.
But would John Farson come all this way simply to resupply horses? I don't
think so. I'm not sure, horses are valuable, aye, so they are . . . but I'm not
sure. So we wait."
"All right, all
right, same message." Cuthbert smoothed the scrap of paper flat on the
porch rail, then made a small series of symbols on it. Alain could read this
message; he had seen the same sequence several times since they had come to
Hambry. "Message received. We are fine. Nothing to report at this
time."
The message was put in
the capsule and attached to the pigeon's leg. Alain went down the steps, stood
beside Rusher (still waiting patiently to be unsaddled), and held the bird up
toward the fading sunset. "Hile!"
It was up and gone in
a flutter of wings. For a moment only they saw it, a dark shape against the
deepening sky.
Roland sat looking
after. The dreamy expression was still on his face. Alain found himself
wondering if Roland had made the right decision this evening. He had never in
his life had such a thought. Nor expected to have one.
"Roland?"
"Hmmm?" Like
a man half-awakened from some deep sleep.
"I'll unsaddle
him, if you want." He nodded at Rusher. "And rub him down."
No answer for a long
time. Alain was about to ask again when Roland said, "No. I'll do it. In a
minute or two." And went back to looking at the sunset.
Alain climbed the
porch steps and sat down in his rocker. Bert had resumed his place on the
box-seat. They were behind Roland now, and Cuthbert looked at Alain with his
eyebrows raised. He pointed to Roland and then looked at Alain again.
Alain passed over what
he had plucked from Roland's collar. Although it was almost too fine to
be seen in this light, Cuthbert’s eyes were gunslinger's eyes, and he took it
easily, with no fumbling.
It was a long strand
of hair, the color of spun gold. He could see from Bert's, face that Bert knew
whose head it had come from. Since arriving in Hambry, they'd met only one girl
with long blonde hair. The two boys' eyes met. In Bert's Alain saw dismay and
laughter in equal measure.
Cuthbert Allgood
raised his forefinger to his temple and mimed pulling the trigger.
Alain nodded.
Sitting on the steps
with his back to them, Roland looked toward the dying sunset with dreaming
eyes.
CHAPTER VIII
BENEATH THE
PEDDLER’S MOON
1
The town of Ritzy,
nearly four hundred miles west of Mejis, was anything but. Roy Depape reached
it three nights before the Peddler's Moon— called Late-summer's Moon by some—came
full, and left it a day later.
Ritzy was, in fact, a
miserable little mining village on the eastern slope of the Vi Castis
Mountains, about fifty miles from Vi Castis Cut. The town had but one street;
it was engraved with iron-hard wheelruts now, and would become a lake of mud
roughly three days after the storms of autumn set in. There was the Bear and
Turtle Mercantile & Sundrie Items, where miners were forbidden by the Vi
Castis Company to shop, and a company store where no one but grubbies would
shop; there was a combined jailhouse and Town Gathering Hall with a
windmill-cum-gallows out front; there were six roaring barrooms, each more
sordid, desperate, and dangerous than the last.
Ritzy was like an ugly
lowered head between a pair of huge shrugged shoulders—the foothills. Above
town to the south were the clapped-out shacks where the Company housed its
miners; each puff of breeze brought the stench of their unlimed communal
privies. To the north were the mines themselves: dangerous, undershored scratch
drifts that went down fifty feet or so and then spread like fingers clutching
for gold and silver and copper and the occasional nest of firedims. From the
outside they were just holes punched into the bare and rocky earth, holes like
staring eyes, each with its own pile of till and scrapings beside the adit.
Once there had been
freehold mines up there, but they were all gone, regulated out by the Vi Castis
Company. Depape knew all about it, because the Big Coffin Hunters had been a
part of that little spin and raree. Just after he'd hooked up with Jonas and
Reynolds, that had been. Why, they had gotten those coffins tattooed on their
hands not fifty miles from here, in the town of Wind, a mudpen even less ritzy
than Ritzy. How long ago? He couldn't rightly say, although it seemed to
him that he should be able to. But when it came to reckoning times past, Depape
often felt lost. It was hard even to remember how old he was. Because the world
had moved on, and time was different, now. Softer.
One thing he had no
trouble remembering at all—his recollection was refreshed by the miserable
flare of pain he suffered each time he bumped his wounded finger. That one
thing was a promise to himself that he would see Dearborn, Stockworth, and
Heath laid out dead in a row, hand to outstretched hand like a little girl's
paper dolls. He intended to unlimber the part of him which had longed so
bootlessly for Her Nibs these last three weeks and use it to hose down their
dead faces. The majority of his squirt would be saved for Arthur Heath of
Gilead, New Canaan. That laughing chatterbox motherfucker had a serious
hosing-down coming.
Depape rode out the
sunrise end of Ritzy's only street, trotted his horse up the flank of the first
hill, and paused at the top for a single look back. Last night, when he'd been
talking to the old bastard behind Hattigan's, Ritzy had been roaring. This
morning at seven, it looked as ghostly as the Peddler's Moon, which still hung
in the sky above the rim of the plundered hills. He could hear the mines
tink-tonking away, though. You bet. Those babies tink-tonked away seven days a
week. No rest for the wicked . . . and he supposed that included him. He
dragged his horse's head around with his usual unthinking and ham-handed force,
booted its flanks, and headed east, thinking of the old bastard as he went. He
had treated the old bastard passing fair, he reckoned. A reward had been
promised, and had been paid for information given.
"Yar,"
Depape said, his glasses flashing in the new sun (it was a rare morning when he
had no hangover, and he felt quite cheerful), "I reckon the old bugger
can't complain."
Depape had had no
trouble following the young culls' backtrail; they had come east on the Great
Road the whole way from New Canaan, it appeared, and at every town where they
had stopped, they had been marked. In most they were marked if they did no more
than pass through. And why not? Young men on good horses, no scars on their
faces, no regulator tattoos on their hands, good clothes on their backs,
expensive hats on their heads. They were remembered especially well at the inns
and saloons, where they had stopped to refresh themselves but had drunk no hard
liquor. No beer or graf, either, for that matter. Yes, they were remembered.
Boys on the road, boys that seemed almost to shine. As if they had come from an
earlier, better time.
Piss in their faces,
Depape thought as he rode. One by one. Mr. Arthur "Ha-Ha " Heath
last. I'll save enough so it 'd drown you, were you not already at the end of
the path and into the clearing.
They had been noticed,
all right, but that wasn't good enough—if he went back to Hambry with no more
than that, Jonas would likely shoot his nose off. And he would deserve it. They
may be rich boys, but that's not all they are. Depape had said that
himself. The question was, what else were they? And finally, in the
shit-and-sulfur stench of Ritzy, he had found out. Not everything, perhaps, but
enough to allow him to turn his horse around before he found himself all the
way back in fucking New Canaan.
He had hit two other
saloons, sipping watered beer in each, before rolling into Hattigan's. He
ordered yet another watered beer, and prepared to engage the bartender in
conversation. Before he even began to shake the tree, however, the apple he
wanted fell off and dropped into his hand, neat as you please.
It was an old man's
voice (an old bastard's voice), speaking with the shrill, head-hurting
intensity which is the sole province of old bastards in their cups. He was
talking about the old days, as old bastards always did, and about how the world
had moved on, and how things had been ever so much better when he was a boy.
Then he had said something which caused Depape's ears to prick up: something
about how the old days might be coming again, for hadn't he seen three young
lords not two months a-gone, mayhap less, and even bought one of them a drink,
even if 'twas only sasparilly soda?
"You wouldn't
know a young lord from a young turd," said a miss who appeared to have all
of four teeth left in her charming young head.
There was general
laughter at this. The old bastard looked around, offended. "I know, all
right," he said. "I've forgot more than you'll ever learn, so I have.
One of them at least came from the Eld line, for I saw his father in his face .
. . just as clear as I see your saggy tits, Jolene." And then the old
bastard had done something Depape rather admired—yanked out the front of the
saloon-whore's blouse and poured the remainder of his beer down it. Even the
roars of laughter and heavy applause which greeted this couldn't entirely drown
the girl's caw of rage, or the old man's cries when she began to slap and punch
him about the head and shoulders. These latter cries were only indignant at
first, but when the girl grabbed the old bastard's own beer-stein and
shattered it against the side of his head, they became screams of pain.
Blood—mixed with a few watery dregs of beer—began to run down the old
bastard's face.
"Get out of
here!" she yelled, and gave him a shove toward the door. Several healthy
kicks from the miners in attendance (who had changed sides as easily as the
wind changes directions) helped him along. "And don't come back! I can
smell the weed on your breath, you old cock-sucker! Get out and take your gods-cussed
stories of old days and young lords with you!"
The old bastard was in
such manner conveyed across the room, past the tootling trumpet-player who
served as entertainment for the patrons of Hattigan's (that young bowler-hatted
worthy added his own kick in the seat of the old bastard's dusty trousers
without ever missing so much as a single note of "Play, Ladies,
Play"), and out through the batwing doors, where he collapsed face-first
into the street.
Depape had sauntered
after him and helped him up. As he did so, he smelled an acrid odor—not beer—on
the old man's breath, and saw the telltale greenish-gray discolorations at the
comers of his lips. Weed, all right. The old bastard was probably just getting
started on it (and for the usual reason: devil-grass was free in the hills,
unlike the beer and whiskey that was sold in town), but once they started, the
finish came quick.
"They got no
respect," the old bastard said thickly. "Nor understanding,
either."
"Aye, so they
don't," said Depape, who had not yet gotten the accents of the seacoast
and the Drop out of his speech.
The old bastard stood
swaying, looking up at him, wiping ineffectually at the blood which ran down
his wrinkled cheeks from his lacerated scalp. "Son, do you have the price
of a drink? Remember the face of your father and give an old soul the price of
a drink!"
"I'm not much for
charity, old-timer," Depape said, "but mayhap you could earn yourself
the price of a drink. Step on over here, into my office, and let's us
see."
He'd led the old bastard
out of the street and back to the boardwalk, angling well to the left of the
black batwings with their golden shafts of light spilling out above and below.
He waited for a trio of miners to go by, singing at the top of their lungs ("Woman
I love... is long and tall... she moves her body... like a cannonball...
"), and then, still holding the old bastard by the elbow, hail guided
him into the alley between Hattigan's and the undertaking establishment next
door. For some people, Depape mused, a visit to Ritzy could damn near amount
to one-stop shopping: get your drink, get your bullet, get laid out next door.
"Yer
office," the old bastard cackled as Depape led him down the alley toward
the board fence and the heaps of rubbish at the far end. The wind blew,
stinging Depape's nose with odors of sulfur and carbolic from the mines. From
their right, the sounds of drunken revelry pounded through the side of
Hattigan's. "Your office, that's good."
"Aye, my
office."
The old man gazed at
him in the light of the moon, which rode the slot of sky above the alley.
"Are you from Mejis? Or Tepachi?"
"Maybe one, maybe
t'other, maybe neither."
"Do I know
you?" The old bastard was looking at him even more closely, standing on
tiptoe as if hoping for a kiss. Ugh.
Depape pushed him
away. "Not so close, dad." Yet he felt marginally encouraged. He and
Jonas and Reynolds had been here before, and if the old man remembered
his face, likely he wasn't talking through his hat about fellows he'd seen much
more recently.
"Tell me about
the three young lords, old dad." Depape rapped on the wall of Hattigan's.
"Them in there may not be interested, but I am."
The old bastard looked
at him with a bleary, calculating eye. "Might there be a bit o' metal in
it for me?"
"Yar,"
Depape said. "If you tell me what I want to hear, I'll give you
metal."
"Gold?"
"Tell me, and
we'll see."
"No, sir. Dicker
first, tell second."
Depape seized him by
the arm, whirled him around, and yanked a wrist which felt like a bundle of
sticks up to the old bastard's scrawny shoulderblades. "Fuck with me, dad,
and we'll start by breaking your arm."
"Let go!"
the old bastard screamed breathlessly. "Let go, I'll trust to your
generosity, young sir, for you have a generous face! Yes! Yes indeed!"
Depape let him go. The
old bastard eyed him warily, rubbing his shoulder. In the moonlight the blood
drying on his cheeks looked black.
"Three of them,
there were," he said. "Fine-born lads."
"Lads or lords?
Which is it, dad?"
The old bastard had
taken the question thoughtfully. The whack on the head, the night air, and
having his arm twisted seemed to have sobered him up, at least temporarily.
"Both, I do
believe," he said at last. "One was a lord for sure, whether them in
there believe it or not. For I saw his father, and his father bore the guns.
Not such poor things such as you wear—beggin your pardon, I know they're the
best to be had these days—but real guns, such as were seen when my own
dad was a boy. The big ones with the sandalwood grips."
Depape had stared at
the old man, feeling a rise of excitement . . . and a species of reluctant awe,
as well. They acted like gunslingers, Jonas had said. When Reynolds
protested they were too young, Jonas had said they might be apprentices, and
now it seemed the boss had likely been right.
"Sandal-wood
grips?" he had asked. "Sandalwood grips, old dad?"
"Yep." The
old man saw his excitement, and his belief. He expanded visibly.
"A gunslinger,
you mean. This one young fellow's father carried the big irons."
"Yep, a
gunslinger. One of the last lords. Their line is passing, now, but my dad knew
him well enough. Steven Deschain, of Gilead. Steven, son of Henry."
"And this one you
saw not long ago—"
"His son. Henry
the Tail's grandson. The others looked well-born, as if they might also come
from the line of lords, but the one I saw come down all the way from Arthur
Eld, by one line or another. Sure as you walk on two legs. Have I earned my
metal yet?"
Depape thought to say
yes, then realized he didn't know which of the three culls this old bastard was
talking about.
"Three young
men," he mused. "Three high-borns. And did they have guns?"
"Not out where
the drift-diggers of this town could see em," the old bastard said,
and laughed nastily. "But they had em, all right. Probably hid in their
bedrolls. I'd set my watch and warrant on it."
"Aye,"
Depape said. "I suppose you would. Three young men, one the son of a lord.
Of a gunslinger, you think. Steven of Gilead." And the name was
familiar to him, aye, it was.
"Steven Deschain
of Gilead, that's it."
"And what name
did he give, this young lord?"
The old bastard had
screwed his face up alarmingly in an effort to remember. "Deerfield?
Deerstine? I don't quite remember—"
"That's all
right, I know it. And you've earned your metal."
"Have I?"
the old bastard had edged close again, his breath gagging-sweet with the weed.
"Gold or silver? Which is it, my friend?"
"Lead,"
Depape replied, then hauled leather and shot the old man twice in the chest.
Doing him a favor, really.
Now he rode back
toward Mejis—it would be a faster trip without having to stop in every dipshit
little town and ask questions.
There was a flurry of
wings close above his head. A pigeon—dark gray, it was, with a white ring
around its neck—fluttered down on a rock just ahead of him, as if to rest. An
interesting-looking bird. Not, Depape thought, a wild pigeon. Someone's escaped
pet? He couldn't imagine anyone in this desolate quarter of the world keeping
anything but a half-wild dog to bite the squash off any would-be robber
(although what these folks might have worth robbing was another question he
couldn't answer), but he supposed anything was possible. In any case, roast
pigeon would go down a treat when he stopped for the night.
Depape drew his gun,
but before he could cock the hammer, the pigeon was off and flying east.
Depape took a shot after it, anyway. Sometimes you got lucky, but apparently
not this time; the pigeon dipped a little, then straightened out and
disappeared in the direction Depape himself was going. He sat astride his
horse for a moment, not much put out of countenance; he thought Jonas was going
to be very pleased with what he had found out.
After a bit, he booted
his horse in the sides and began to canter east along the Barony Sea Road, back
toward Mejis, where the boys who had embarrassed him were waiting to be dealt
with. Lords they might be, sons of gunslingers they might be, but in these
latter days, even such as those could die. As the old bastard himself would
undoubtedly have pointed out, the world had moved on.
2
On a late afternoon
three days after Roy Depape left Ritzy and headed his horse toward Hambry
again, Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain rode north and west of town, first down the
long swell of the Drop, then into the freeland Hambry folk called the Bad Grass,
then into deserty waste lands. Ahead of them and clearly visible once they were
back in the open were crumbled and eroded bluffs. In the center of these was a
dark, almost vaginal cleft; its edges so splintered it looked as if it had been
whacked into reality by an ill-tempered god wielding a hatchet.
The distance between
the end of the Drop and the bluffs was perhaps six miles. Three quarters of the
way across, they passed the flatlands' only real geographic feature: a jutting
upthrust of rock that looked like a finger bent at the first knuckle. Below it
was a small, boomerang-shaped greensward, and when Cuthbert gave a ululating
yell to hear his voice bounce back at him from the bluffs ahead, a pack of
chattering billy-bumblers broke from this greenplace and went racing back
southeast, toward the Drop.
"That's Hanging
Rock," Roland said. "There's a spring at the base of it—only one in
these parts, they say."
It was all the talk
that passed between them on the ride out, but a look of unmistakable relief
passed between Cuthbert and Alain behind Roland's back. For the last three
weeks they had pretty much marched in place as summer rolled around them and
past them. It was all well for Roland to say they must wait, they must pay
greatest attention to the things that didn't matter and count the things which
did from the comers of their eyes, but neither of them quite trusted the
dreamy, disconnected air which Roland wore these days like his own special
version of Clay Reynolds's cloak. They didn't talk about this between
themselves; they didn't have to. Both knew that if Roland began courting the
pretty girl whom Mayor Thorin meant for his gilly (and who else could that long
blonde hair have belonged to?), they would be in very bad trouble. But Roland
showed no courting plumage, neither of them spied any more blonde hairs on his
shirt-collars, and tonight he seemed more himself, as if he had put that cloak
of abstraction aside. Temporarily, mayhap. Permanently, if they were lucky.
They could only wait and see. In the end, ka would tell, as it always
did.
A mile or so from the
bluffs, the strong sea breeze which had been at their backs for the whole ride
suddenly dropped, and they heard the low, atonal squalling from the cleft that
was Eyebolt Canyon. Alain pulled up, grimacing like a man who has bitten into a
fruit of extravagant sourness. All he could think of was a handful of sharp
pebbles, squeezed and ground together in a strong hand. Buzzards circled above
the canyon as if drawn to the sound.
"The lookout don't
like it. Will." Cuthbert said, knocking his knuckles on the skull.
"I don't like it much, either. What are we out here for?"
"To count,"
Roland said. "We were sent to count everything and see everything, and
this is something to count and see."
"Oh, aye,"
Cuthbert said. He held his horse in with some effort; the low, grinding wail of
the thinny had made it skittish. "Sixteen hundred and fourteen fishing
nets, seven hundred and ten boats small, two hundred and fourteen boats large,
seventy oxen that nobody will admit to, and, on the north of town, one thinny.
Whatever the hell that is."
"We're going to
find out," Roland said.
They rode into the
sound, and although none of them liked it, no one suggested they go back. They
had come all the way out here, and Roland was right—this was their job.
Besides, they were curious.
The mouth of the
canyon had been pretty well stopped up with brush, as Susan had told Roland it
would be. Come fall, most of it would probably be dead, but now the stacked
branches still bore leaves and made it hard to see into the canyon. A path led
through the center of the brush-pile, but it was narrow for the horses (who
might have balked at going through, anyway), and in the failing light Roland
could make out hardly anything.
"Are we going
in?" Cuthbert asked. "Let the Recording Angel note that I'm against,
although I'll offer no mutiny."
Roland had no
intention of taking them through the brush and toward the source of that sound.
Not when he had only the vaguest idea of what a thinny was. He had asked a few
questions about it over the last few weeks, and gotten little useful response.
"I'd stay away," was the extent of Sheriff Avery's advice. So far his
best information was still what he had gotten from Susan on the night he met
her.
"Sit easy, Bert.
We're not going in."
"Good,"
Alain said softly, and Roland smiled.
There was a path up
the canyon's west side, steep and narrow, but passable if they were careful.
They went single file, stopping once to clear a rockfall, pitching splintered
chunks of shale and hornfels into the groaning trench to their right. When
this was done and just as the three of them were preparing to mount up again, a
large bird of some sort—perhaps a grouse, perhaps a prairie chicken—rose above
the lip of the canyon in an explosive whir of feathers. Roland dipped for his
guns, and saw both Cuthbert and Alain doing the same. Quite funny, considering
that their firearms were wrapped in protective oilcloth and secreted beneath
the floorboards of the Bar K bunkhouse.
They looked at each
other, said nothing (except with their eyes, which said plenty), and went on.
Roland found that the effect of being this close to the thinny was
cumulative—it wasn't a sound you could get used to. Quite the contrary, in
fact: the longer you were in the immediate vicinity of Eye-bolt Canyon, the
more that sound scraped away at your brain. It got into your teeth as well as
your ears; it vibrated in the knot of nerves below the breastbone and seemed to
eat at the damp and delicate tissue behind the eyes. Most of all, though, it
got into your head, telling you that everything you had ever been afraid of was
just behind the next curve of the trail or yonder pile of tumbled rock, waiting
to snake out of its place and get you.
Once they got to the
flat and barren ground at the top of the path and the sky opened out above them
again it was a little better, but by then the light was almost gone, and when
they dismounted and walked to the canyon's crumbling edge, they could see
little but shadows.
"No good,"
Cuthbert said disgustedly. "We should have left earlier, Roland . . .
Will, I mean. What dummies we are!"
"I can be Roland
to you out here, if you like. And we'll see what we came to see and count what
we came to count—one thinny, just as you said. Only wait."
They waited, and not
twenty minutes later the Peddler's Moon rose above the horizon—a perfect summer
moon, huge and orange. It loomed in the darkening violet swim of the sky like a
crashing planet. On its face, as clear as anyone had ever seen it, was the
Peddler, he who came out of Nones with his sackful of squealing souls. A
hunched figure made of smudged shadows with a pack clearly visible over one
cringing shoulder. Behind it, the orange light seemed to flame like hellfire.
"Ugh," Cuthbert
said. "That's an ill sight to see with that sound coming up from
below."
Yet they held their
ground (and their horses, which periodically yanked back on their reins as if
to tell them they should already be gone from this place), and the moon rose in
the sky, shrinking a little as it went and turning silver. Eventually it rose
enough to cast its bony light into Eyebolt Canyon. The three boys stood looking
down. None of them spoke. Roland didn't know about his friends, but he didn't
think he himself could have spoken even if called on to do so.
A box canyon, very
short and steep-sided, Susan had said, and the description was
perfectly accurate. She'd also said Eyebolt looked like a chimney lying on its
side, and Roland supposed that was also true, if you allowed that a falling
chimney might break up a little on impact, and lie with one crooked place in
its middle.
Up to that crook, the
canyon floor looked ordinary enough; even the litter of bones the moon showed
them was not extraordinary. Many animals which wandered into box canyons
hadn't the wit to find their way hack out again, and with Eyebolt the
possibility of escape was further reduced by the choke of brush piled at the
canyon's mouth. The sides were much too steep to climb except maybe for one
place, just before that crooked little jog. There Roland saw a kind of groove
running up the canyon wall, with enough jutting spurs inside it
to—maybe!—provide handholds. There was no real reason for him to note this; he
just did, as he would go on noting potential escape-routes his entire life.
Beyond the jag in the
canyon floor was something none of them had ever seen before ... and when they
got back to the bunkhouse several hours later, they all agreed that they
weren't sure exactly what they had seen. The latter part of Eyebolt
Canyon was obscured by a sullen, silvery liquescence from which snakes of smoke
or mist were rising in streamers. The liquid seemed to move sluggishly, lapping
at the walls which held it in. Later, they would discover that both liquid and
mist were a light green; it was only the moonlight that had made them look
silver.
As they watched, a
dark flying shape—perhaps it was the same one that had frightened them
before—skimmed down toward the surface of the thinny. It snatched something out
of the air—a bug? another, smaller, bird?—and then began to rise again. Before
it could, a silvery arm of liquid rose from the canyon's floor. For a moment
that soupy, grinding grumble rose a notch, and became almost a voice. It
snatched the bird out of the air and dragged it down. Greenish light, brief and
unfocused, flashed across the surface of the thinny like electricity, and was
gone.
The three boys stared
at each other with frightened eyes.
Jump in, gunslinger,
a voice suddenly called. It was the voice of the thinny; it was the voice of
his father; it was also the voice of Marten the enchanter, Marten the seducer.
Most terrible of all, it was his own voice.
Jump in and let all
these cares cease. There is no love of girls to worry you here, and no mourning
of lost mothers to weigh your child's heart. Only the hum of the growing cavity
at the center of the universe; only the punky sweetness of rotting flesh.
Come, gunslinger. Be
apart of the thinny.
Dreamy-faced and
blank-eyed, Alain began walking along the edge of the drop, his right boot so
close to it that the heel puffed little clouds of dust over the chasm and sent
clusters of pebbles down into it. Before he could get more than five steps,
Roland grabbed him by the belt and yanked him roughly back.
"Where do you
think you're going?"
Alain looked at him
with sleepwalker's eyes. They began to clear, but slowly. "I don't . . .
know, Roland."
Below them, the thinny
hummed and growled and sang. There was a sound, as well: an oozing, sludgy
mutter.
"I know,"
Cuthbert said. "I know where we're all going. Back to the Bar K. Come on,
let's get out of here." He looked pleadingly at Roland. "Please. It's
awful."
"All right."
But before he led them
back to the path, he stepped to the edge and looked down at the smoky silver
ooze below him. "Counting," he said with a kind of clear defiance.
"Counting one thinny." Then, lowering his voice: "And be damned
to you."
3
Their composure
returned as they rode back—the sea-breeze in their faces was wonderfully restorative
after the dead and somehow baked smell of the canyon and the thinny.
As they rode up the
Drop (on a long diagonal, so as to save the horses a little), Alain said:
"What do we do next, Roland? Do you know?"
"No. As a matter
of fact, I don't."
"Supper would be
a start," Cuthbert said brightly, and tapped the lookout's hollow skull
for emphasis.
"You know what I
mean."
"Yes,"
Cuthbert agreed. "And I'll tell you something, Roland—"
"Will, please.
Now that we're back on the Drop, let me be Will."
"Aye, fine. I'll
tell you something, Will: we can't go on counting nets and boats and looms and
wheel-irons much longer. We're running out of things that don't matter. I
believe that looking stupid will become a good deal harder once we move to the
horse-breeding side of life as it's lived in Hambry."
"Aye,"
Roland said. He stopped Rusher and looked back the way they had come. He was
momentarily enchanted by the sight of horses, apparently infected with a kind
of moon-madness, frolicking and racing across the silvery grass. "But I
tell you both again, this is not just about horses. Does Farson need
them? Aye, mayhap. So does the Affiliation. Oxen as well. But there are horses
everywhere—perhaps not as good as these, I'll admit, but any port does in a
storm, so they say. So, if it's not horses, what is it? Until we know, or
decide we'll never know, we go on as we are."
Part of the answer was
waiting for them back at the Bar K. It was perched on the hitching rail and
flicking its tail saucily. When the pigeon hopped into Roland's hand, he saw
that one of its wings was oddly frayed. Some animal—likely a cat—had crept up
on it close enough to pounce, he reckoned.
The note curled
against the pigeon's leg was short, but it explained a good deal of what they
hadn't understood.
I'll have to see her
again, Roland thought after reading it, and felt a
surge of gladness. His pulse quickened, and in the cold silver light of the
Peddler's Moon, he smiled.
CHAPTER
IX
citgo
1
The Peddler's Moon
began to wane; it would take the hottest, fairest part of the summer with it
when it went. On an afternoon four days past the full, the old mozo from
Mayor's House (Miguel had been there long before Hart Thorin's time and would
likely be there long after Thorin had gone back to his ranch) showed up at the
house Susan shared with her aunt. He was leading a beautiful chestnut mare by a
hack'. It was the second of the three promised horses, and Susan recognized
Felicia at once. The mare had been one other childhood's favorites.
Susan embraced Miguel
and covered his bearded cheeks with kisses. The old man's wide grin would have
showed every tooth in his head, if he'd had any left to show. "Gracias,
gracias, a thousand thanks, old father," she told him.
"Da nada, "
he replied, and handed her the bridle. "It is the Mayor's earnest
gift."
She watched him away,
the smile slowly fading from her lips. Felicia stood docilely beside her, her
dark brown coat shining like a dream in the summer sunlight. But this was no
dream. It had seemed like one at first— that sense of unreality had been
another inducement to walk into the trap, she now understood—but it was no
dream. She had been proved honest; now she found herself the recipient of
"earnest gifts" from a rich man. The phrase was a sop to conventionality,
of course ... or a bitter joke, depending on one's mood and outlook. Felicia
was no more a gift than Pylon had been—they were step-by-step fulfillments of
the contract into which she had entered. Aunt Cord could express shock, but
Susan knew the truth: what lay directly ahead was whoring, pure and simple.
Aunt Cord was in the
kitchen window as Susan walked her gift (which was really just returned
property, in her view) to the stable. She called out something passing cheery
about how the horse was a good thing, that caring for it would give Susan less
time for her megrims. Susan felt a hot reply rise to her lips and held it back.
There had been a wary truce between the two of them since the shouting match
about the shirts, and Susan didn't want to be the one to break it. There was
too much on her mind and heart. She thought that one more argument with her
aunt and she might simply snap like a dry twig under a boot. Because often
silence is best, her father had told her when, at age ten or so, she had
asked him why he was always so quiet. The answer had puzzled her then, but now
she understood better.
She stabled Felicia
next to Pylon, rubbed her down, fed her. While the mare munched oats, Susan
examined her hooves. She didn't care much for the look of the iron the mare was
wearing—that was Seafront for you—and so she took her father's shoebag from its
nail beside the stable door, slung the strap over her head and shoulder so the
bag hung on her hip, and walked the two miles to Hockey's Stable and Fancy
Livery. Feeling the leather bag bang against her hip brought back her father in
a way so fresh and clear that grief pricked her again and made her feel like
crying. She thought he would have been appalled at her current situation,
perhaps even disgusted. And he would have liked Will Dearborn, of that she was
sure—liked him and approved of him for her. It was the final miserable touch.
2
She had known how to
shoe most of her life, and even enjoyed it, when her mood was right; it was
dusty, elemental work, with always the possibility of a healthy kick in the
slats to relieve the boredom and bring a girl back to reality. But of making
shoes she knew nothing, nor wished to. Brian Hookey made them at the forge
behind his barn and hostelry, however; Susan easily picked out four new ones
of the right size, enjoying the smell of horseflesh and fresh hay as she did.
Fresh paint, too. Hockey's Stable & Smithy looked very well, indeed.
Glancing up, she saw not so much as a single hole in the barn roof. Times had
been good for Hookey, it seemed.
He wrote the new shoes
up on a beam, still wearing his blacksmith's apron and squinting horribly out
of one eye at his own figures. When Susan began to speak haltingly to him
about payment, he laughed, told her he knew she'd settle her accounts as soon
as she could, gods bless her, yes. 'Sides, they weren't any of them going
anywhere, were they? Nawp, nawp. All the time gently propelling her through the
fragrant smells of hay and horses toward the door. He would not have treated
even so small a matter as four iron shoes in such a carefree manner a year ago,
but now she was Mayor Thorin's good friend, and things had changed.
The afternoon sunlight
was dazzling after the dimness of Hockey's barn, and she was momentarily blinded,
groping forward toward the street with the leather bag bouncing on her hip and
the shoes clashing softly inside. She had just a moment to register a shape
looming in the brightness, and then it thumped into her hard enough to rattle
her teeth and make Felicia's new shoes clang. She would have fallen, but for
strong hands that quickly reached out and grasped her shoulders. By then her
eyes were adjusting and she saw with dismay and amusement that the young man
who had almost knocked her sprawling into the dirt was one of Will's friends—
Richard Stockworth.
"Oh, sai, your
pardon!" he said, brushing the arms of her dress as if he had
knocked her over. "Are you well? Are you quite well?"
"Quite
well," she said, smiling. "Please don't apologize." She felt a
sudden wild impulse to stand on tiptoe and kiss his mouth and say, Give that
to Will and tell him to never mind what I said! Tell him there are a thousand
more where that came from! Tell him to come and get every one!
Instead, she fixed on
a comic image: this Richard Stockworth smacking Will full on the mouth and
saying it was from Susan Delgado. She began to giggle. She put her hands to
her mouth, but it did no good. Sai Stockworth smiled back at her . . .
tentatively, cautiously. He probably thinks I'm mad . . . and I am! I am!
"Good day, Mr.
Stockworth," she said, and passed on before she could embarrass herself
further.
"Good day, Susan
Delgado," he called in return.
She looked back once,
when she was fifty yards or so farther up the street, but he was already gone.
Not into Hockey's, though; of that she was quite sure. She wondered what Mr.
Stockworth had been doing at that end of town to begin with.
Half an hour later, as
she took the new iron from her da's shoebag, she found out. There was a folded
scrap of paper tucked between two of the shoes, and even before she unfolded
it, she understood that her collision with Mr. Stockworth hadn't been an
accident.
She recognized Will's
handwriting at once from the note in the bouquet.
Susan,
Can you meet me at
Citgo this evening or tomorrow evening? Very important. Has to do with what we
discussed before. Please.
W.
P.S. Best you bum this
note.
She burned it at once,
and as she watched the flames first flash up and then die down, she murmured
over and over the one word in it which had struck her the hardest: Please.
3
She and Aunt Cord ate
a simple, silent evening meal—bread and soup— and when it was done, Susan rode
Felicia out to the Drop and watched the sun go down. She would not be meeting
him this evening, no. She already owed too much sorrow to impulsive, unthinking
behavior. But tomorrow?
Why Citgo?
Has to do with what we
discussed before.
Yes, probably. She did
not doubt his honor, although she had much come to wonder if he and his friends
were who they said they were. He probably did want to see her for some reason
which bore on his mission (although how the oilpatch could have anything to do
with too many horses on the Drop she did not know), but there was something
between them now, something sweet and dangerous. They might start off talking
but would likely end up kissing ... and kissing would just be the start.
Knowing didn't change feeling, though; she wanted to see him. Needed to see
him.
So she sat astride her
new horse—another of Hart Thorin's payments-in-advance on her virginity—and
watched the sun swell and turn red in the west. She listened to the faint
grumble of the thinny, and for the first time in her sixteen years was truly
torn by indecision. All she wanted stood against all she believed of honor, and
her mind roared with conflict. Around all, like a rising wind around an
unstable house, she felt the idea of ka growing. Yet to give over one's
honor for that reason was so easy, wasn't it? To excuse the fall of virtue by
invoking all-powerful ka. It was soft thinking.
Susan felt as blind as
she'd been when leaving the darkness of Brian Hockey's bam for the brightness
of the street. At one point she cried silently in frustration without even
being aware of it, and pervading her every effort to think clearly and
rationally was her desire to kiss him again, and to feel his hand cupping her
breast.
She had never been a
religious girl, had little faith in the dim gods of Mid-World, so at the last
of it, with the sun gone and the sky above its point of exit going from red to
purple, she tried to pray to her father. And an answer came, although whether
from him or from her own heart she didn't know.
Let
ka mind itself, the voice in her mind said. It will, anyway; it always
does. If ka. should overrule your honor, so it will be; in the meantime,
Susan, there's no one to mind it but yourself. Let ka go and mind the
virtue of your promise, hard as that may be.
"All right,"
she said. In her current state she discovered that any decision—even one that
would cost her another chance to see Will—was a relief. "I'll honor my
promise. Ka can take care of itself."
In the gathering
shadows, she clucked sidemouth to Felicia and turned for home.
4
The next day was
Sanday, the traditional cowboys' day of rest. Roland's little band took this
day off as well. "It's fair enough that we should," Cuthbert said,
"since we don't know what the hell we're doing in the first place."
On this particular
Sanday—their sixth since coming to Hambry— Cuthbert was in the upper market
(lower market was cheaper, by and large, but too fishy-smelling for his
liking), looking at brightly colored scrapes and trying not to cry. For
his mother had a serape, it was a great favorite others, and thinking of
how she would ride out sometimes with it flowing back from her shoulders had
filled him with homesickness so strong it was savage. "Arthur Heath,"
Roland's ka-mai, missing his mama so badly his eyes were wet! It was a
joke worthy of... well, worthy of Cuthbert Allgood.
As he stood so,
looking at the serapes and a hanging rack of dolina blankets with
his hands clasped behind his back like a patron in an art gallery (and blinking
back tears all the while), there came a light tap on his shoulder. He turned,
and there was the girl with the blonde hair.
Cuthbert wasn't
surprised that Roland was smitten with her. She was nothing short of
breathtaking, even dressed in jeans and a farmshirt. Her hair was tied back
with a series of rough rawhide hanks, and she had eyes of the brightest gray
Cuthbert had ever seen. Cuthbert thought it was a wonder that Roland had been
able to continue with any other aspect of his life at all, even down to the
washing of his teeth. Certainly she came with a cure for Cuthbert; sentimental
thoughts of his mother disappeared in an instant.
"Sai," he
said. It was all he could manage, at least to start with.
She nodded and held
out what the folk of Mejis called a corvette— "little packet"
was the literal definition; "little purse" was the practical one.
These small leather accessories, big enough for a few coins but not much more,
were more often carried by ladies than gentlemen, although that was not a
hard-and-fast rule of fashion.
"Ye dropped this,
cully," she said.
"Nay,
thankee-sai." This one well might have been the property of a man—plain
black leather, and unadorned by foofraws—but he had never seen it before. Never
carried a corvette, for that matter.
"It's
yours," she said, and her eyes were now so intense that her gaze felt hot
on his skin. He should have understood at once, but he had been blinded by her
unexpected appearance. Also, he admitted, by her cleverness. You somehow
didn't expect cleverness from a girl this beautiful; beautiful girls did not,
as a rule, have to be clever. So far as Bert could tell, all beautiful girls
had to do was wake up in the morning. "It is."
"Oh, aye,"
he said, almost snatching the little purse from her. He could feel a foolish
grin overspreading his face. "Now that you mention it, sai—"
"Susan." Her
eyes were grave and watchful above her smile. "Let me be Susan to you, I
pray."
"With pleasure. I
cry your pardon, Susan, it's just that my mind and memory, realizing it's
Sanday, have joined hands and gone off on holiday together—eloped, you might
say—and left me temporarily without a brain in my head."
He might well have
rattled on like that for another hour (he had before; to that both Roland and
Alain could testify), but she stopped him with the easy briskness of an older
sister. "I can easily believe ye have no control over yer mind,
Mr. Heath—or the tongue hung below it- but perhaps ye'll take better care of
yer purse in the future. Good day." She was gone before he could get
another word out.
5
Bert found Roland
where he so often was these days: out on the part of the Drop that was called
Town Lookout by many of the locals. It gave a fair view of Hambry, dreaming
away its Sanday afternoon in a blue haze, but Cuthbert rather doubted the
Hambry view was what drew his oldest friend back here time after time. He
thought that its view of the Delgado house was the more likely reason.
This day Roland was
with Alain, neither of them saying a word. Cuthbert had no trouble accepting
the idea that some people could go long periods of time without talking to each
other, but he did not think he would ever understand it.
He came riding up to
them at a gallop, reached inside his shirt, and pulled out the corvette.
"From Susan Delgado. She gave it to me in the upper market. She's
beautiful, and she's also as wily as a snake. I say that with utmost
admiration."
Roland's face filled
with light and life. When Cuthbert tossed him the corvette, he caught it
one-handed and pulled the lace-tie with his teeth. Inside, where a travelling
man would have kept his few scraps of money, there was a single folded piece of
paper. Roland read this quickly, the light going out of his eyes, the smile
fading off his mouth.
"What does it
say?" Alain asked.
Roland handed it to
him and then went back to looking out at the Drop. It wasn't until he saw the
very real desolation in his friend's eyes that Cuthbert fully realized how far
into Roland's life—and hence into all their lives—Susan Delgado had come.
Alain handed him the
note. It was only a single line, two sentences:
It's best we don't
meet. I'm sorry.
Cuthbert read it
twice, as if rereading might change it, then handed it back to Roland. Roland
put the note back into the corvette, tied the lace, and then tucked the
little purse into his own shirt.
Cuthbert hated silence
worse than danger (it was danger, to his mind), but every conversational
opening he tried in his mind seemed callow and unfeeling, given the look on his
friend's face. It was as if Roland had been poisoned. Cuthbert was disgusted at
the thought of that lovely young girl bumping hips with the long and bony Mayor
of Hambry, but the look on Roland's face now called up stronger emotions. For
that he could hate her.
At last Alain spoke
up, almost timidly. "And now, Roland? Shall we have a hunt out there at
the oilpatch without her?"
Cuthbert admired that.
Upon first meeting him, many people dismissed Alain Johns as something of a
dullard. That was very far from the truth. Now, in a diplomatic way Cuthbert
could never have matched, he had pointed out that Roland's unhappy first
experience with love did not change their responsibilities.
And Roland responded,
raising himself off the saddle-horn and sitting up straight. The strong golden
light of that summer's afternoon lit his face in harsh contrasts, and for a
moment that face was haunted by the ghost of the man he would become. Cuthbert
saw that ghost and shivered—not knowing what he saw, only knowing that it was
awful.
"The Big Coffin
Hunters," he said. "Did you see them in town?"
"Jonas and
Reynolds," Cuthbert answered. "Still no sign of Depape. I think Jonas
must have choked him and thrown him over the sea cliffs in a fit of pique after
that night in the bar."
Roland shook his head.
"Jonas needs the men he trusts too much to waste them—he's as far out on
thin ice as we are. No, Depape's just been sent off for awhile."
"Sent
where?" Alain asked.
"Where he'll have
to shit in the bushes and sleep in the rain if the weather's bad." Roland
laughed shortly, without much humor. "Jonas has got Depape running our
backtrail, more likely than not."
Alain grunted softly,
in surprise that wasn't really surprise. Roland sat easily astride Rusher,
looking out over the dreamy depths of land, at the grazing horses. With one
hand he unconsciously rubbed the corvette he had tucked into his shirt.
At last he looked around at them again.
"We'll wait a bit
longer," he said. "Perhaps she'll change her mind."
"Roland—"
Alain began, and his tone was deadly in its gentleness.
Roland raised his
hands before Alain could go on. "Doubt me not, Alain—I speak as my
father's son."
"All right."
Alain reached out and briefly gripped Roland's shoulder. As for Cuthbert, he
reserved judgment. Roland might or might not be acting as his father's son;
Cuthbert guessed that at this point Roland hardly knew his own mind at all.
"Do you remember
what Cort used to say was the primary weakness of maggots such as us?"
Roland asked with a trace of a smile.
" 'You run
without consideration and fall in a hole,' " Alain quoted in a gruff
imitation that made Cuthbert laugh aloud.
Roland's smile
broadened a touch. "Aye. They're words I mean to remember, boys. I'll not
upset this cart in order to see what's in it ... not unless there's no other
choice. Susan may come around yet, given time to think. I believe she would
have agreed to meet me already, if not for ... other matters between us."
He paused, and for a
little while there was quiet among them.
"I wish our
fathers hadn't sent us," Alain said at last... although it was Roland's
father who had sent them, and all three knew it. "We're too young for
matters such as these. Too young by years."
"We did all right
that night in the Rest," Cuthbert said.
"That was
training, not guile—and they didn't take us seriously. That won't happen
again."
"They wouldn't
have sent us—not my father, not yours—if they'd known what we'd find,"
Roland said. "But now we've found it, and now we're for it. Yes?"
Alain and Cuthbert
nodded. They were for it, all right—there no longer seemed any doubt of that.
"In any case,
it's too late to worry about it now. We'll wait and hope for Susan. I'd rather
not go near Citgo without someone from Hambry who knows the lay of the place
... but if Depape comes back, we'll have to take our chance. God knows what he
may find out, or what stories he may invent to please Jonas, or what Jonas may
do after they palaver. There may be shooting."
"After all this
creeping around, I'd almost welcome it," Cuthbert said.
"Will you send
her another note, Will Dearborn?" Alain asked.
Roland thought about
it. Cuthbert laid an interior bet with himself on which way Roland would go.
And lost.
"No," he
said at last. "We'll have to give her time, hard as that is. And hope her
curiosity will bring her around."
With that he turned
Rusher toward the abandoned bunkhouse which now served them as home. Cuthbert
and Alain followed.
6
Susan, worked herself
hard the rest of that Sanday, mucking out the stables, carrying water, washing
down all the steps. Aunt Cord watched all this in silence, her expression one
of mingled doubt and amazement. Susan cared not a bit for how her aunt
looked—she wanted only to exhaust herself and avoid another sleepless night. It
was over. Will would know it as well now, and that was to the good. Let done be
done.
"Are ye daft,
girl?" was all Aunt Cord asked her as Susan dumped her last pail of dirty
rinse-water behind the kitchen. "It's Sanday!"
"Not daft a
bit," she replied shortly, without looking around.
She accomplished the
first half of her aim, going to bed just after moonrise with tired arms, aching
legs, and a throbbing back—but sleep still did not come. She lay in bed
wide-eyed and unhappy. The hours passed, the moon set, and still Susan couldn't
sleep. She looked into the dark and wondered if there was any possibility, even
the slightest, that her father had been murdered. To stop his mouth, to close
his eyes.
Finally she reached
the conclusion Roland had already come to: if there had been no attraction for
her in those eyes of his, or the touch of his hands and lips, she would have
agreed in a flash to the meeting he wanted. If only to set her troubled mind to
rest.
At this realization,
relief overspread her and she was able to sleep.
7
Late the next
afternoon, while Roland and his friends were at fives in the Travellers' Rest
(cold beef sandwiches and gallons of white iced tea—not as good as that made by
Deputy Dave's wife, but not bad), Sheemie came in from outside, where he had
been watering his flowers. He was wearing his pink sombrero and a wide
grin. In one hand he held a little packet.
"Hello, there,
you Little Coffin Hunters!" he cried cheerfully, and made a bow which was
an amusingly good imitation of their own. Cuthbert particularly enjoyed seeing
such a bow done in gardening sandals. "How be you? Well, I'm hoping, so I
do!"
"Right as
rainbarrels," Cuthbert said, "but none of us enjoys being called
Little Coffin Hunters, so maybe you could just play soft on that, all
right?"
"Aye,"
Sheemie said, as cheerful as ever. "Aye, Mr. Arthur Heath, good fella who
saved my life!" He paused and looked puzzled for a moment, as if unable
to remember why he had approached them in the first place. Then his eyes
cleared, his grin shone out, and he held the packet out to Roland. "For
you, Will Dearborn!"
"Really? What is
it?"
"Seeds! So they
are!"
"From you,
Sheemie?"
"Oh, no."
Roland took the packet—just
an envelope which had been folded over and sealed. There was nothing written on
the front or back, and the tips of his fingers felt no seeds within.
"Who from,
then?"
"Can't
remember," said Sheemie, who then cast his eyes aside. His brains had been
stirred just enough, Roland reflected, so that he would never be unhappy for
long, and would never be able to lie at all. Then his eyes, hopeful and timid,
came back to Roland's. "I remember what I was supposed to say to you,
though."
"Aye? Then say
it, Sheemie."
Speaking as one who
recites a painfully memorized line, both proud and nervous, he said:
"These are the seeds you scattered on the Drop."
Roland's eyes blazed
so fiercely that Sheemie stumbled back a step. He gave his sombrero a
quick tug, turned, and hurried back to the safety of his flowers. He liked Will
Dearborn and Will's friends (especially Mr. Arthur Heath, who sometimes said
things that made Sheemie laugh fit to split), but in that moment he saw
something in Will-sai's eyes that frightened him badly. In that instant he
understood that Will was as much a killer as the one in the cloak, or the one
who had wanted Sheemie to lick his boots clean, or old white-haired Jonas with
the trembly voice.
As bad as them, or
even worse.
8
Roland slipped the
"seed-packet" into his shirt and didn't open it until the three of
them were back on the porch of the Bar K. In the distance, the thinny grumbled,
making their horses twitch their ears nervously.
"Well?"
Cuthbert asked at last, unable to restrain himself any longer. Roland took the
envelope from inside his shirt, and tore it open. As he did, he reflected that
Susan had known exactly what to say. To a nicety.
The others bent in,
Alain (mm his left and Cuthbert from his right, as he unfolded the single scrap
of paper. Again he saw her simple, neatly made writing, the message not much
longer than the previous one. Very different in content, however.
There is an orange
grove a mile off the road on the town side of Citgo. Meet me there at moonrise.
Come alone. S.
And below that,
printed in emphatic little letters: burn
this.
"We'll keep a
lookout," Alain said.
Roland nodded.
"Aye. But from a distance."
Then he burned the
note.
9
The orange grove was a
neatly kept rectangle of about a dozen rows at the end of a partly overgrown
cart-track. Roland arrived there after dark but still a good half hour before
the rapidly thinning Peddler would haul himself over the horizon once more.
As the boy wandered
along one of the rows, listening to the somehow skeletal sounds from the
oilpatch to the north (squealing pistons, grinding gears, thudding
driveshafts), he was struck by deep homesickness. It was the fragile fragrance
of orange-blossoms—a bright runner laid over the darker stench of oil—that
brought it on. This toy grove was nothing like the great apple orchards of New
Canaan . . . except somehow it was. There was the same feeling of dignity and
civilization here, of much time devoted to something not strictly necessary.
And in this case, he suspected, not very useful, either. Oranges grown this
far north of the warm latitudes were probably almost as sour as lemons. Still,
when the breeze stirred the trees, the smell made him think of Gilead with
bitter longing, and for the first time he considered the possibility that he
might never see home again—that he had become as much a wanderer as old Peddler
Moon in the sky.
He heard her, but not
until she was almost on top of him—if she'd been an enemy instead of a friend,
he might still have had time to draw and fire, but it would have been close. He
was filled with admiration, and as he saw her face in the starlight, he felt
his heart gladden.
She halted when he
turned and merely looked at him, her hands linked before her at her waist in a
way that was sweetly and unconsciously childlike. He took a step toward her and
they came up in what he took for alarm. He stopped, confused. But he had
misread her gesture in the chancy light. She could have stopped then, but chose
not to. She stepped toward him deliberately, a tall young woman in a split
riding skirt and plain black boots. Her sombrero hung down on her back,
against the bound rope of her hair.
"Will Dearborn,
we are met both fair and ill," she said in a trembling voice, and then he
was kissing her; they burned against one another as the Peddler rose in the
famine of its last quarter.
10
Inside her lonely hut
high on the Coos, Rhea sat at her kitchen table, bent over the glass the Big
Coffin Hunters had brought her a month and a half ago. Her face was bathed in
its pink glow, and no one would have mistaken it for the face of a girl any
longer. She had extraordinary vitality, and it had carried her for many years
(only the longest-lived residents of Hambry had any idea of how old Rhea of the
Coos actually was, and they only the vaguest), but the glass was finally
sapping it—sucking it out of her as a vampire sucks blood. Behind her, the
hut's larger room was even dingier and more cluttered than usual. These days
she had no time for even a pretense of cleaning; the glass ball took up all her
time. When she wasn't looking into it, she was thinking of looking into
it ... and, oh! Such things she had seen!
Ermot twined around
one of her scrawny legs, hissing with agitation, but she barely noticed him.
Instead she bent even closer into the ball's poison pink glow, enchanted by
what she saw there.
It was the girl who
had come to her to be proved honest, and the young man she had seen the first
time she'd looked into the ball. The one she had mistaken for a gunslinger,
until she had realized his youth.
The foolish girl, who
had come to Rhea singing and left in a more proper silence, had proved honest,
and might well be honest yet (certainly she kissed and touched the boy with a
virgin's mingled greed and timidity), but she wouldn't be honest much longer
if they kept on the way they were going. And wouldn't Hart Thorin be in for a
surprise when he took his supposedly pure young gilly to bed? There were ways
to fool men about that (men practically begged to be fooled about that),
a thimble of pig's blood would serve nicely, but she wouldn't know that.
Oh, this was too good! And to think she could watch Miss Haughty brought low,
right here, in this wonderful glass! Oh, it was too good! Too wonderful!
She leaned closer
still, the deep sockets of her eyes filling with pink fire. Ermot, sensing that
she remained immune to his blandishments, crawled disconsolately away across
the floor, in search of bugs. Musty pranced away from him, spitting feline
curses, his six-legged shadow huge and misshapen on the firestruck wall.
11
Roland sensed the
moment rushing at them. Somehow he managed to step away from her, and she
stepped back from him, her eyes wide and her cheeks flushed—he could see that
flush even in the light of the newly risen moon. His balls were throbbing. His
groin felt full of liquid lead.
She half-turned away
from him, and Roland saw that her sombrero had gone askew on her back.
He reached out one trembling hand and straightened it. She clasped his fingers
in a brief but strong grip, then bent to pick up her riding gloves, which she
had stripped off in her need to touch him skin to skin. When she stood again,
the wash of blood abruptly left her face, and she reeled. But for his hands on
her shoulders, steadying her, she might have fallen. She turned toward him,
eyes rueful.
"What are we to
do? Oh, Will, what are we to do?"
"The best we
can," he said. "As we both always have. As our fathers taught
us."
"This is
mad."
Roland, who had never
felt anything so sane in his life—even the deep ache in his groin felt sane and
right—said nothing.
"Do ye know how
dangerous 'tis?" she asked, and went on before he could reply. "Aye,
ye do. I can see ye do. If we were seen together at all, 'twould be serious. To
be seen as we just were—"
She shivered. He
reached for her and she stepped back. "Best ye don't, Will. If ye do,
won't be nothing done between us but spooning. Unless that was your
intention?"
"You know it
wasn't."
She nodded. "Have
ye set your friends to watch?"
"Aye," he
said, and then his face opened in that unexpected smile she loved so well.
"But not where they can watch us."
"Thank the gods
for that," she said. and laughed rather distractedly. Then she stepped
closer to him, so close that he was hard put not to take her in his arms again.
She looked curiously up into his face. "Who are you, really. Will?"
"Almost who I say
I am. That's the joke of this, Susan. My friends and I weren't sent here
because we were drunk and belling, but we weren't sent here to uncover any fell
plot or secret conspiracy, either. We were just boys to be put out of the way
in a time of danger. All that's happened since—" He shook his head to
show how helpless he felt, and Susan thought again of her father saying ka
was like a wind—when it came it might take your chickens, your house, your bam.
Even your life.
"And is Will
Dearborn your real name?"
He shrugged. "One
name's as good as another, I wot, if the heart that answers to it is true.
Susan, you were at Mayor's House today, for my friend Richard saw you ride
up—"
"Aye,
fittings," she said. "For I am to be this year's Reaping Girl— it's
Hart's choice, nothing I ever would have had on my own, mark I say it. A lot of
foolishness, and hard on Olive as well, I warrant."
"You will make
the most beautiful Reap-Girl that ever was," he said, and the clear
sincerity in his voice made her tingle with pleasure; her cheeks grew warm
again. There were five changes of costume for the Reaping Girl between the noon
feast and the bonfire at dusk, each more elaborate than the last (in Gilead
there would have been nine; in that way, Susan didn't know how lucky she was),
and she would have worn all five happily for Will, had he been the Reaping Lad.
(This year's Lad was Jamie McCann, a pallid and whey-faced stand-in for Hart
Thorin, who was approximately forty years too old and gray for the job.) Even
more happily would she have worn the sixth—a silvery shift with wisp-thin
straps and a hem that stopped high on her thighs. This was a costume no one but
Maria, her maid, Conchetta, her seamstress, and Hart Thorin would ever see. It
was the one she would be wearing when she went to the old man's couch as his
gilly, after the feast was over.
"When you were up
there, did you see the ones who call themselves the Big Coffin Hunters?"
"I saw Jonas and
the one with the cloak, standing together in the courtyard and talking,"
she said. "Not Depape? The redhead?" She shook her head.
"Do you know the
game Castles. Susan?"
"Aye. My father
showed me when I was small."
"Then you know
how the red pieces stand at one end of the board and the white at the other.
How they come around the Hillocks and creep toward each other, setting screens
for cover. What's going on here in Ham-Dry is very like that. And, as in the
game, it has now become a question of who will break cover first. Do you
understand?"
She nodded at once.
"In the game, the first one around his Hillock is vulnerable."
"In life, too.
Always. But sometimes even staying in cover is difficult. My friends and I have
counted nearly everything we dare count. To count the rest—"
"The horses on
the Drop, for instance."
"Aye, just so. To
count them would be to break cover. Or the oxen we know about—"
Her eyebrows shot up.
"There are no oxen in Hambry. Ye must be mistaken about that."
"No mistake."
"Where?"
"The Rocking
H."
Now her eyebrows drew
back down, and knitted in a thoughtful frown. "That's Laslo Rimer's
place."
"Aye—Kimba's
brother. Nor are those the only treasures hidden away in Hambry these days.
There are extra wagons, extra tack hidden in barns belonging to members of the
Horsemen's Association, extra caches of feed—"
"Will, no!"
"Yes. All that
and more. But to count them—to be seen counting them—is to break cover.
To risk being Castled. Our recent days have been pretty nightmarish—we try to
look profitably busy without moving over to the Drop side of Hambry, where most
of the danger lies. It's harder and harder to do. Then we received a
message—"
"A message? How?
From whom?"
"Best you not
know those things, I think. But it's led us to believe that some of the answers
we're looking for may be at Citgo."
"Will, d'ye think
that what's out here may help me to know more about what happened to my
da?"
"I don't know.
It's possible, I suppose, but not likely. All I know for sure is that I finally
have a chance to count something that matters and not be seen doing it."
His blood had cooled enough for him to hold out his hand to her; Susan's had
cooled enough for her to take it in good confidence. She had put her glove
back on again, however. Better safe than sorry.
"Come on,"
she said. "I know a path."
12
In the moon's pale
half-light, Susan led him out of the orange grove and toward the thump and
squeak of the oilpatch. Those sounds made Roland's back prickle; made him wish
for one of the guns hidden under the bunk-house floorboards back at the Bar K.
"Ye can trust me,
Will, but that doesn't mean I'll be much help to ye," she said in a voice
just a notch above a whisper. "I've been within hearing distance of Citgo
my whole life, but I could count the number of times I've actually been in it
on the fingers of both hands, so I could. The first two or three were on dares
from my friends."
"And then?"
"With my da. He
were always interested in the Old People, and my Aunt Cord always said he'd
come to a bad end, meddling in their leavings." She swallowed hard.
"And he did come to a bad end, although I doubt it were the Old People
responsible. Poor Da."
They had reached a
smoothwire fence. Beyond it, the gantries of the oil wells stood against the
sky like sentinels the size of Lord Perth. How many had she said were still
working? Nineteen, he thought. The sound of them was ghastly—the sound of
monsters being choked to death. Of course it was the kind of place that kids
dared each other to go into; a kind of open-air haunted house.
He held two of the
wires apart so she could slip between them, and she did the same for him. As he
passed through, he saw a line of white porcelain cylinders marching down the
post closest to him. A fencewire went through each.
"You understand
what these are? Were?" he asked Susan, tapping one of the cylinders.
"Aye. When there
was electricity, some went through here." She paused, then added shyly:
"It's how I feel when you touch me."
He kissed her cheek
just below her ear. She shivered and pressed a hand briefly against his check
before drawing away. "I hope your friends will watch well."
"They will." "Is there a signal?"
"The whistle of
the nighthawk. Let's hope we don't hear it." "Aye, be it so."
She took his hand and drew him into the oilpatch.
13
The first time the
gas-jet flared ahead of them, Will spat a curse under his breath (an obscenely
energetic one she hadn't heard since her father died) and dropped the hand not
holding hers to his belt.
"Be easy! It's
only the candle! The gas-pipe!"
He relaxed slowly.
"That they use, don't they?"
"Aye. To run a
few machines—little more than toys, they are. To make ice, mostly."
"I had some the
day we met the Sheriff."
When the flare licked
out again—bright yellow with a bluish core— he didn't jump. He glanced at the
three gas-storage tanks behind what Hambry-folk called "the candle"
without much interest. Nearby was a stack of rusty canisters in which the gas
could be bottled and carried.
"You've seen such
before?" she asked.
He nodded.
"The Inner
Baronies must be very strange and wonderful," Susan said. •
"I'm beginning to
think they're no stranger than those of the Outer Arc," he said, turning
slowly. He pointed. "What's yon building down there? Left over from the
Old People?"
"Aye."
To the east of Citgo,
the ground dropped sharply down a thickly wooded slope with a lane cut through
the middle of it—this lane was as clear in the moonlight as a part in hair. Not
far from the bottom of the slope was a crumbling building surrounded by rubble.
The tumble-and-strew was the detritus of many fallen smokestacks—that much
could be extrapolated from the one which still stood. Whatever else the Old
People had done, they had made lots of smoke.
"There were
useful things in there when my da was a child," she said.
"Paper and
such—even a few ink-writers that would still work ... for a little while, at
least. If you shook them hard." She pointed to the left of the building,
where there was a vast square of crumbled paving, and a few rusting hulks that
had been the Old People's weird, horseless mode of travel. "Once there
were things over there that looked like the gas-storage tanks, only much, much
larger. Like huge silver cans, they were. They didn't rust like those that are
left. I can't think what became of them, unless someone hauled them off for
water storage. I never would. 'Twould be unlucky, even if they weren't
contaminated."
She turned her face up
to his, and he kissed her mouth in the moonlight.
"Oh, Will. What a
pity this is for you."
"What a pity for
both of us," he said, and then passed between them one of those long and
aching looks of which only teenagers are capable. They looked away at last and
walked on again, hand-in-hand.
She couldn't decide
which frightened her more—the few derricks that were still pumping or those
dozens which had fallen silent. One thing she knew for sure was that no power
on the face of the earth could have gotten her within the fence of this place
without a friend close beside her. The pumps wheezed; every now and then a
cylinder screamed like someone being stabbed; at periodic intervals "the
candle" would fire off with a sound like dragon's breath, throwing their
shadows out long in front of them. Susan kept her ears pitched for the
nighthawk's piercing two-note whistle, and heard nothing.
They came to a wide
lane—what had once undoubtedly been a maintenance road—that split the oilpatch
in two. Running down the center was a steel pipe with rusting joints. It lay in
a deep concrete trough, with the upper arc of its rusty circumference
protruding above ground level.
"What's
this?" he asked.
"The pipe that
took the oil to yon building, I reckon. It means nothing, 'tis been dry for
years."
He dropped to one
knee, slid his hand carefully into the space between the concrete sleeve and
the pipe's rusty side. She watched him nervously, biting her lip to keep
herself from saying something which would surely come out sounding weak or
womanish: What if there were biting spiders down there in the forgotten dark?
Or what if his hand got stuck? What would they do then?
Of that latter there
had been no chance, she saw when he pulled his hand free. It was slick and
black with oil.
"Dry for
years?" he asked with a little smile.
She could only shake
her head, bewildered.
14
They followed the pipe
toward a place where a rotten gate barred the road. The pipe (she could now see
oil bleeding out of its old joints, even in the weak moonlight) ducked under
the gate; they went over it. She thought his hands rather too intimate for polite
company in their helping, and rejoiced at each touch. If he doesn't stop,
the top of my head will explode like "the candle, " she thought,
and laughed.
"Susan?"
" 'Tis nothing,
Will, only nerves."
Another of those long
glances passed between them as they stood on the far side of the gate, and then
they went down the hill together. As they walked, she noticed an odd thing:
many of the pines had been stripped of their lower branches. The hatchet marks
and scabs of pine resin were clear in the moonlight, and looked new. She
pointed this out to Will, who nodded but said nothing.
At the bottom of the
hill, the pipe rose out of the ground and, supported on a series of rusty
steel cradles, ran about seventy yards toward the abandoned building before
stopping with the ragged suddenness of a battlefield amputation. Below this
stopping point was what looked like a shallow lake of drying, tacky oil. That
it had been there for awhile Susan could tell from the numerous corpses of
birds she could see scattered across it—they had come down to investigate,
become stuck, and stayed to die in what must have been an unpleasantly
leisurely fashion.
She stared at this
with wide, uncomprehending eyes until Will tapped her on the leg. He had
hunkered down. She joined him knee-to-knee and followed the sweeping movement
of his finger with growing disbelief and confusion. There were tracks here.
Very big ones. Only one thing could have made them.
"Oxen," she
said.
"Aye. They came
from there." He pointed at the place where the pipe ended. "And they
go—" He turned on the soles of his boots, still hunkered, and pointed
back toward the slope where the woods started. Now that he pointed them out,
she easily saw what she should have seen at once, horseman's daughter that she
was. A perfunctory effort had been made to hide the tracks and the churned-up
ground where something heavy had been dragged or rolled. Time had smoothed away
more of the mess, but the marks were still clear. She even thought she knew
what the oxen had been dragging, and she could see that Will knew, as well.
The tracks split off
from the end of the pipe in two arcs. Susan and "Will Dearborn"
followed the right-hand one. She wasn't surprised to see ruts mingled in with
the tracks of the oxen. They were shallow—it had been a dry summer, by and
large, and the ground was nearly as hard as concrete—but they were there. To
still be able to see them at all meant that some goodly amount of weight had
been moved. And aye, of course; why else would oxen be needed?
"Look," Will
said as they neared the hem of forest at the foot of the slope. She finally saw
what had caught his attention, but she had to get down on her hands and knees
to do it—how sharp his eyes were! Almost supernaturally so. There were
boot-tracks here. Not fresh, but they were a lot newer than the tracks of the
oxen and the wheelruts.
"This was the one
with the cape," he said, indicating a clear pair of tracks.
"Reynolds."
"Will! Thee can't
know it!"
He looked surprised,
then laughed. "Sure I can. He walks with one foot turned in a little—the
left foot. And here it is." He stirred the air over the tracks with the
tip of his finger, then laughed again at the way she was looking at him.
" 'Tisn't sorcery, Susan daughter of Patrick; only trailcraft."
"How do ye know
so much, so young?" she asked. "Who are ye, Will?"
He stood up and looked
down into her eyes. He didn't have to look far; she was tall for a girl.
"My name's not Will but Roland," he said. "And now I've put my
life in your hands. That I don't mind, but mayhap I've put your own life at
risk, as well. You must keep it a dead secret."
"Roland,"
she said wonderingly. Tasting it.
"Aye. Which do
you like better?"
"Your real
one," she said at once. " 'Tis a noble name, so it is."
He grinned, relieved,
and this was the grin that made him look young again.
She raised herself on
her toes and put her lips on his. The kiss, which was chaste and close-mouthed
to begin with, bloomed like a flower: became open and slow and humid. She felt
his tongue touch her lower lip and met it, shyly at first, with her own. His
hands covered her back, then slipped around to her front. He touched her
breasts, also shy to begin with, then slid his palms up their lower slopes to
their tips. He uttered a small, moaning sigh directly into her mouth. And as he
drew her closer and began to trail kisses down her neck, she felt the stone
hardness of him below the buckle of his belt, a slim, warm length which exactly
matched the melting she felt in the same place; those two places were meant for
each other, as she was for him and he for her. It was ka, after all—ka
like the wind, and she would go with it willingly, leaving all honor and
promises behind.
She opened her mouth
to tell him so, and then a queer but utterly persuasive sensation enfolded
her: they were being watched. It was ridiculous, but it was there; she even
felt she knew who was watching. She stepped back from Roland, her booted heels
rocking unsteadily on the half-eroded oxen tracks. "Get out, ye old
bitch," she breathed. "If ye be spying on us in some way, I know not
how, get thee gone!”
15
On the hill of the
Coos, Rhea drew back from the glass, spitting curses in a voice so low and
harsh that she sounded like her own snake. She didn't know what Susan had
said—no sound came through the glass, only sight—but she knew that the girl had
sensed her. And when she did, all sight had been wiped out. The glass had
flashed a brilliant pink, then had gone dark, and none of the passes she made
over it would serve to brighten it again.
"Aye, fine, let
it be so," she said at last, giving up. She remembered the wretched,
prissy girl (not so prissy with the young man, though, was she?) standing
hypnotized in her doorway, remembered what she had told the girl to do after
she had lost her maidenhead, and began to grin, all her good humor restored.
For if she lost her maidenhead to this wandering boy instead of to Hart Thorin,
Lord High Mayor of Mejis, the comedy would be even greater, would it not?
Rhea sat in the
shadows of her stinking hut and began to cackle.
16
Roland stared at her,
wide-eyed, and as Susan explained about Rhea a little more fully (she left out
the humiliating final examinations which lay at the heart of "proving
honesty"), his desire cooled just enough for him to reassert control. It
had nothing to do with jeopardizing the position he and his friends were trying
to maintain in Hambry (or so he told himself) and everything to do with
maintaining Susan's—her position was important, her honor even more so.
"I imagine it was
your imagination," he said when she had finished.
"I think
not." With a touch of coolness.
"Or conscience,
even?"
At that she lowered
her eyes and said nothing.
"Susan, I would
not hurt you for the world."
"And ye love
me?" Still without looking up.
"Aye, I do."
"Then it's best
you kiss and touch me no more—not tonight. I can't stand it if ye do."
He nodded without
speaking and held out his hand. She took it, and they walked on in the
direction they had been going when they had been so sweetly distracted.
While they were still
ten yards from the hem of the forest, both saw the glimmer of metal despite the
dense foliage—too dense, she thought. Too dense by far.
It was the
pine-boughs, of course; the ones which had been whacked from the trees on the
slope. What they had been interlaced to camouflage were the big silver cans now
missing from the paved area. The silver storage containers had been dragged
over here—by the oxen, presumably— and then concealed. But why?
Roland inspected along
the line of tangled pine branches, then stopped and plucked several aside. This
created an opening like a doorway, and he gestured her to go through. "Be
sharp in your looks," he said. "I doubt if they've bothered to set
traps or tripwires, but 'tis always best to be careful."
Behind the
camouflaging boughs, the tankers had been as neatly lined up as toy soldiers at
the end of the day, and Susan at once saw one reason why they had been hidden:
they had been re-equipped with wheels, well-made ones of solid oak which came
as high as her chest. Each had been rimmed with a thin iron strip. The wheels
were new, so were the strips, and the hubs had been custom-made. Susan knew
only one blacksmith in Barony capable of such fine work: Brian Hookey, to whom
she had gone for Felicia's new shoes. Brian Hookey, who had smiled and clapped
her on the shoulder like a compadre when she had come in with her da's
shoebag hanging on her hip. Brian Hookey, who had been one of Pat Delgado's
best friends.
She recalled looking
around and thinking that times had been good for sai Hookey, and of course she
had been right. Work in the blacksmithing line had been plentiful. Hookey had
been making lots of wheels and rims, for one thing, and someone must have been
paying him to do it. Eldred Jonas was one possibility; Kimba Rimer an even
better one. Hart? She simply couldn't believe that. Hart had his mind—what
little there was of it—fixed on other matters this summer.
There was a kind of
rough path behind the tankers. Roland walked slowly along it, pacing like a preacher
with his hands clasped at the small of his back, reading the incomprehensible
words writ upon the tankers' rear decks: citgo.
sunoco. exxon. conoco. He paused once and read aloud, haltingly:
"Cleaner fuel for a better tomorrow." He snorted softly. "Rot! This
is tomorrow."
"Roland—Will, I
mean—what are they for? "
He didn't answer at
first, but turned and walked back down the line of bright steel cans. Fourteen
on this side of the mysteriously reactivated oil-supply pipe, and, she assumed,
a like number on the other. As he walked, he rapped his fist on the side of
each. The sound was dull and clunky. They were full of oil from the Citgo
oilpatch.
"They were
trigged quite some time ago, I imagine," he said. "I doubt if the Big
Coffin Hunters did it all themselves, but they no doubt oversaw it ... first
the fitting of the new wheels to replace the old rotten rubber ones, then the
filling. They used the oxen to line them up here, at the base of the hill,
because it was convenient. As it's convenient to let the extra horses run free
out on the Drop. Then, when we came, it seemed prudent to take the precaution
of covering these up. Stupid babies we might be, but perhaps smart enough to
wonder about twenty-eight loaded oil-carts with new wheels. So they came out
here and covered them."
"Jonas, Reynolds,
and Depape."
"Aye."
"But why?"
She took him by the arm and asked her question again. "What are they for?
"
"For
Parson," Roland said with a calm he didn't feel. "For the Good Man.
The Affiliation knows he's found a number of war-machines; they come either
from the Old People or from some other where. Yet the Affiliation fears them
not, because they don't work. They're silent. Some feel Farson has gone mad to
put his trust in such broken things, but..."
"But mayhap
they're not broken. Mayhap they only need this stuff. And mayhap Farson knows
it."
Roland nodded.
She touched the side
of one of the tankers. Her fingers came away oily. She rubbed the tips
together, smelled them, then bent and picked up a swatch of grass to wipe her
hands. "This doesn't work in our machines. It's been tried. It clogs
them."
Roland nodded again.
"My fa—my folk in the Inner Crescent know that as well. And count on it.
But if Farson has gone to this trouble—and split aside a troop of men to
come and get these tankers, as we have word he has done—he either knows a way
to thin it to usefulness, or he thinks he does. If he's able to lure the forces
of the Affiliation into a battle in some close location where rapid retreat is
impossible, and if he can use machine-weapons like the ones that go on treads,
he could win more than a battle. He could slaughter ten thousand horse-mounted
fighting men and win the war."
"But surely yer
fathers know this .. . ?"
Roland shook his head
in frustration. How much their fathers knew was one question. What they made of
what they knew was another. What forces drove them—necessity, fear, the
fantastic pride which had also been handed down, father to son, along the line
of Arthur Eld—was yet a third. He could only tell her his clearest surmise.
"I think they
daren't wait much longer to strike Farson a mortal blow. If they do, the
Affiliation will simply rot out from the inside. And if that happens, a good
deal of Mid-World will go with it."
"But . . ."
She paused, biting her lip, shaking her head. "Surely even Farson must
know . .. understand ..." She looked up at him with wide eyes. "The
ways of the Old People are the ways of death. Everyone knows that, so they
do."
Roland of Gilead found
himself remembering a cook named Hax, dangling at the end of a rope while the
rooks pecked up scattered breadcrumbs from beneath the dead man's feet. Hax
had died for Farson. But before that, he had poisoned children for Farson.
"Death," he
said, "is what John Parson's all about."
17
In the orchard again.
It seemed to the
lovers (for so they now were, in all but the most physical sense) that hours
had passed, but it had been no more than forty-live minutes. Summer's last
moon, diminished but still bright, continued to shine above them.
She led him down one
of the lanes to where she had tied her horse. Pylon nodded his head and
whickered softly at Roland. He saw the horse had been rigged for silence—every
buckle padded, and the stirrups themselves wrapped in felt.
Then he turned to
Susan.
Who can remember the
pangs and sweetness of those early years? We remember our first real love no
more clearly than the illusions that caused us to rave during a high fever. On
that night and beneath that fading moon, Roland Deschain and Susan Delgado were
nearly torn apart by their desire for each other; they floundered for what was
right and ached with feelings that were both desperate and deep.
All of which is to say
that they stepped toward each other, stepped back, looked into each other's eyes
with a kind of helpless fascination, stepped forward again, and stopped. She
remembered what he had said with a kind of horror: that he would do anything
for her but share her with another man. She would not—perhaps could
not—break her promise to Mayor Thorin, and it seemed that Roland would not (or could
not) break it for her. And here was the most horrible thing of all: strong as
the wind of ka might be, it appeared that honor and the promises they
had made would prove stronger.
"What will ye do
now?" she asked through dry lips.
"I don't know. I
must think, and I must speak with my friends. Will you have trouble with your
aunt when you go home? Will she want to know where you've been and what you've
been doing?"
"Is it me you're
concerned about or yourself and yer plans, Willy?"
He didn't respond,
only looked at her. After a moment, Susan dropped her eyes.
"I'm sorry, that
was cruel. No, she'll not tax me. I often ride at night, although not often so
far from the house."
"She won't know
how far you've ridden?"
"Nay. And these
days we tread carefully around each other. It's like having two powder
magazines in the same house." She reached out her hands. She had tucked
her gloves into her belt, and the fingers which grasped his fingers were cold.
"This'll have no good end," she said in a whisper.
"Don't say that,
Susan."
"Aye, I do. I
must. But whatever comes, I love thee, Roland."
He took her in his
arms and kissed her. When he released her lips, she put them to his ear and
whispered, "If you love me, then love me. Make me break my promise."
For a long moment when
her heart didn't beat, there was no response from him, and she allowed herself
to hope. Then he shook his head—only the one time, but firmly. "Susan, I
cannot."
"Is yer honor so
much greater than yer professed love for me, then? Aye? Then let it be
so." She pulled out of his arms, beginning to cry, ignoring his hand on
her boot as she swung up into the saddle—his low call to wait, as well. She
yanked free the slipknot with which Pylon had been tethered and turned him with
one spurless foot. Roland was still calling to her, louder now, but she flung
Pylon into a gallop and away from him before her brief flare of rage could go
out. He would not take her used, and her promise to Thorin had been made before
she knew Roland walked the face of the earth. That being so, how dare he insist
that the loss of honor and consequent shame be hers alone? Later, lying in her
sleepless bed, she would realize he had insisted nothing. And she was not even
clear of the orange grove before raising her left hand to the side of her face,
feeling the wetness there, and realizing that he had been crying, too.
18
Roland rode the lanes
outside town until well past moonset, trying to get his roaring emotions under
some kind of control. He would wonder for awhile what he was going to do about
their discovery at Citgo, and then his thoughts would shift to Susan again. Was
he a fool for not taking her when she wanted to be taken? For not sharing what
she wanted to share? If you love me, then love me. Those words had
nearly torn him open. Yet in the deep rooms of his heart rooms where the
clearest voice was that of his father he felt he had not been wrong. Nor was it
just a matter of honor, whatever she might think. But let her think that if she
would; better she should hate him a little, perhaps, than realize how deep the
danger was for both of them.
Around three o' the
clock, as he was about to turn for the Bar K, he heard the rapid drumming of
hoofbeats on the main road, approaching from the west. Without thinking about
why it seemed so important to do so, Roland swung back in that direction, then
brought Rusher to a stop behind a high line of run-to-riot hedges. For nearly
ten minutes the sound of the hoofbeats continued to swell—sound carried far in
the deep quiet of early morning—and that was quite enough time for Roland to
feel he knew who was riding toward Hambry hell-for-leather just two hours before
dawn. Nor was he mistaken. The moon was down, but he had no trouble, even
through the brambly interstices of the hedge, recognizing Roy Depape. By dawn
the Big Coffin Hunters would be three again.
Roland turned Rusher
back the way he had been heading, and rode to rejoin his own friends.
CHAPTER X
BIRD AND BEAR
AND
HARE AND FISH
1
The most important day
of Susan Delgado's life—the day upon which her life turned like a stone upon a
pivot—came about two weeks after her moonlit tour of the oilpatch with Roland.
Since then she had seen him only half a dozen times, always at a distance, and
they had raised their hands as passing acquaintances do when their errands
bring them briefly into sight of one another. Each time this happened, she felt
a pain as sharp as a knife twisting in her ... and though it was no doubt cruel,
she hoped he felt the same twist of the knife. If there was anything good about
those two miserable weeks, it was only that her great fear—that gossip might
begin about herself and the young man who called himself Will Dearborn—subsided,
and she found herself actually sorry to feel it ebb. Gossip? There was nothing
to gossip about.
Then, on a day between
the passing of the Peddler's Moon and the rise of the Huntress, ka
finally came and blew her away—house and barn and all. It began with someone at
the door.
2
She had been finishing
the washing—a light enough chore with only two women to do it for—when the
knock came.
"If it's the
ragman, send him away, ye mind!" Aunt Cord called from the other room,
where she was turning bed linen.
But it wasn't the ragman.
It was Maria, her maid from Seafront, looking woeful. The second dress Susan
was to wear on Reaping Day—the silk meant for luncheon at Mayor's House and the
Conversational after-ward—was ruined, Maria said, and she was in hack because
of it. Would be sent back to Onnie's Ford if she wasn't lucky, and she the only
support of her mother and father— oh, it was hard, much too hard, so it was.
Could Susan come? Please?
Susan was happy to
come—was always happy to get out of the house these days, and away from her
aunt's shrewish, nagging voice. The closer Reaping came, the less she and Aunt
Cord could abide each other, it seemed.
They took Pylon, who
was happy enough to carry two girls riding double through the morning cool, and
Maria's story was quickly told. Susan understood almost at once that Maria's
position at Seafront wasn't really in much jeopardy; the little dark-haired
maid had simply been using her innate (and rather charming) penchant for
creating drama out of what was really not very dramatic at all.
The second Reaping
dress (which Susan thought of as Blue Dress With Beads; the first, her
breakfast dress, was White Dress With High Waist and Puffed Sleeves) had been
kept apart from the others—it needed a bit of work yet—and something had gotten
into the first-floor sewing room and gnawed it pretty much to rags. If this had
been the costume she was to wear to the bonfire lighting, or the one she was to
wear to the ballroom dance after the bonfire had been lit, the matter would
indeed have been serious. But Blue Dress With Beads was essentially just a
fancified day receiving dress, and could easily be replaced in the two months
between now and the Reap. Only two! Once—on the night the old witch had
granted her her reprieve—it had seemed like eons before she would have to begin
her bed-service to Mayor Thorin. And now it was only two months! She twisted in
a kind of involuntary protest at the thought.
"Mum?" Maria
asked. Susan wouldn't allow the girl to call her sai, and Maria, who seemed
incapable of calling her mistress by her given name, had settled on this
compromise. Susan found the term amusing, given the fact that she was only
sixteen, and Maria herself probably just two or three years older. "Mum,
are you all right?"
"Just a crick in
my back, Maria, that's all."
"Aye, I get
those. Fair bad, they are. I've had three aunts who've died of the wasting
disease, and when I get those twinges, I'm always afeard that—"
"What kind of
animal chewed up Blue Dress? Do ye know?"
Maria leaned forward
so she could speak confidentially into her mistress's ear, as if they were in
a crowded marketplace alley instead of on the road to Seafront. "It's put
about that a raccoon got in through a window that 'us opened during the heat of
the day and was then forgot at day's end, but I had a good sniff of that
room, and Kimba Rimer did, too, when he came down to inspect. Just before he
sent me after you, that was."
"What did you
smell?"
Maria leaned close
again, and this time she actually whispered, although there was no one on the
road to overhear: "Dog farts."
There was a moment of
thunderstruck silence, and then Susan began to laugh. She laughed until her
stomach hurt and tears went streaming down her cheeks.
"Are ye saying
that W-W-Wolf... the Mayor's own d-d-dog ... got into the downstairs
seamstress's closet and chewed up my Conversational d-d—" But she couldn't
finish. She was simply laughing too hard.
"Aye," Maria
said stoutly. She seemed to find nothing unusual about Susan's laughter . . .
which was one of the things Susan loved about her. "But he's not to be
blamed, so I say, for a dog will follow his natural instincts, if the way is
open for him to do so. The downstairs maids—" She broke off. "You'd
not tell the Mayor or Kimba Rimer this, I suppose, Mum?"
"Maria, I'm
shocked at you—ye play me cheap."
"No, Mum, I play
ye dear, so I do, but it's always best to be safe. All I meant to say was that,
on hot days, the downstairs maids sometimes go into that sewing closet for
their fives. It lies directly in the shadow of the watchtower, ye know, and is
the coolest room in the house—even cooler than the main receiving rooms."
"I'll remember
that," Susan said. She thought of holding the Luncheon and Conversational
in the seamstress's beck beyond the kitchen when the great day came, and began
to giggle again. "Go on."
"No more to say,
Mum," Maria told her, as if all else were too obvious for conversation.
"The maids eat their cakes and leave the crumbs. I reckon Wolf smelled em
and this time the door was left open. When the crumbs was gone, he tried the
dress. For a second course, like."
This time they laughed
together.
3
But she wasn't
laughing when she came home.
Cordelia Delgado, who
thought the happiest day of her life would be the one when she finally saw her
troublesome niece out the door and the annoying business other defloration
finally over, bolted out other chair and hurried to the kitchen window when she
heard the gallop of approaching hoofs about two hours after Susan had left
with that little scrap of a maid to have one of her dresses refitted. She never
doubted that it was Susan returning, and she never doubted it was trouble. In
ordinary circumstances, the silly twist would never gallop one of her beloved
horses on a hot day.
She watched, nervously
dry-washing her hands, as Susan pulled Pylon up in a very unDelgado-like
scrunch, then dismounted in an unladylike leap. Her braid had come half
undone, spraying that damned blonde hair that was her vanity (and her curse) in
all directions. Her skin was pale, except for twin patches of color flaring
high on her cheekbones. Cordelia didn't like the look of those at all. Pat had
always flared in that same place when he was scared or angry.
She stood at the sink,
now biting her lips as well as working her hands. Oh, 'twould be so good to see
the back of that troublesome she. "Ye haven't made trouble, have ye?"
she whispered as Susan pulled the saddle from Pylon's back and then led him
toward the barn. "You better not have, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty. Not at
this late date. You better not have."
4
When Susan came in
twenty minutes later, there was no sign of her aunt's strain and rage; Cordelia
had put them away as one might store a dangerous weapon—a gun, say—on a high
closet shelf. She was back in her rocker, knitting, and the face she turned to
Susan's entry had a surface serenity. She watched the girl go to the sink,
pump cold water into the basin, and then splash it on her face. Instead of
reaching for a towel to pat herself dry, Susan only looked out the window with
an expression that frightened Cordelia badly. The girl no doubt fancied that
look haunted and desperate; to Cordelia, it looked only childishly willful.
"All right,
Susan," she said in a calm, modulated voice. The girl would never know
what a strain it was to achieve that tone, let alone maintain it. Unless she
was faced with a willful teenager of her own one day, that was. "What's
fashed thee so?"
Susan turned to
her—Cordelia Delgado, just sitting there in her rocker, calm as a stone. In
that moment Susan felt she could fly at her aunt and claw her thin,
self-righteous face to strings, screaming This is your fault! Yours! All
yours! She felt soiled—no, that wasn't strong enough; she felt filthy,
and nothing had really happened. In a way, that was the horror of it. Nothing
had really happened yet.
"It shows?"
was all she said.
"Of course it
does," Cordelia replied. "Now tell me, girl. Has he been on
thee?"
"Yes ... no ...
no."
Aunt Cord sat in her
chair, knitting in her lap, eyebrows raised, waiting for more.
At last Susan told her
what had happened, speaking in a tone that was mostly flat—a little tremble
intruded toward the end, but that was all. Aunt Cord began to feel a cautious
sort of relief. Perhaps more goose-girl nerves was all it came down to, after
all!
The substitute gown,
like all the substitutes, hadn't been finished off; there was too much else to
do. Maria had therefore turned Susan over to blade-faced Conchetta Morgenstem,
the chief seamstress, who had led Susan into the downstairs sewing room without
saying anything—if saved words were gold, Susan had sometimes reflected,
Conchetta would be as rich as the Mayor's sister was reputed to be.
Blue Dress With Beads
was draped over a headless dressmaker's dummy crouched beneath one low eave,
and although Susan could see ragged places on the hem and one small hole around
to the back, it was by no means the tattered ruin she had been expecting.
"Can it not be
saved?" she asked, rather timidly.
"No,"
Conchetta said curtly. "Get out of those trousers, girl. Shirt, too."
Susan did as she was
bid, standing barefoot in the cool little room with her arms crossed over her
bosom .. . not that Conchetta had ever shown the slightest interest in what she
had, back or front, above or below.
Blue Dress With Beads
was to be replaced by Pink Dress With Applique, it seemed. Susan stepped into
it, raised the straps, and stood patiently while Conchetta bent and measured
and muttered, sometimes using a bit of chalk to write numbers on a wall-stone,
sometimes grabbing a swag of material and pulling it tighter against Susan's
hip or waist, checking the look in the full-length mirror on the far wall. As
always during this process, Susan slipped away mentally, allowing her mind to
go where it wanted. Where it wanted to go most frequently these days was into a
daydream of riding along the Drop with Roland, the two of them side by side,
finally stopping in a willow grove she knew that overlooked Hambry Creek.
"Stand there
still as you can," Conchetta said curtly. "I be back."
Susan was hardly aware
she was gone; was hardly aware she was in Mayor's House at all. The part of her
that really mattered wasn't there. That part was in the willow grove
with Roland. She could smell the faint half-sweet, half-acrid perfume of the
trees and hear the quiet gossip of the stream as they lay down together
forehead to forehead. He traced the shape of her face with the palm of his hand
before taking her in his arms .. .
This daydream was so
strong that at first Susan responded to the arms which curled around her waist
from behind, arching her back as they first caressed her stomach and then rose
to cup her breasts. Then she heard a kind of plowing, snorting breath in her
ear, smelled tobacco, and understood what was happening. Not Roland touching
her breasts, but Hart Thorin's long and skinny fingers. She looked in the
mirror and saw him looming over her left shoulder like an incubus. His eyes
were bulging, there were big drops of sweat on his forehead in spite of the
room's coolness, and his tongue was actually hanging out, like a dog's on a
hot day. Revulsion rose in her throat like the taste of rotten food. She tried
to pull away and his hands tightened their hold, pulling her against him. His
knuckles cracked obscenely, and now she could feel the hard lump at the center
of him.
At times over the last
few weeks, Susan had allowed herself to hope that, when the time came, Thorin
would be incapable—that he would be able to make no iron at the forge. She had
heard this often happened to men when they got older. The hard, throbbing
column which lay against her bottom disabused her of that wistful notion in a
hurry.
She had managed at
least a degree of diplomacy by simply putting her hands over his and attempting
to draw them off her breasts instead of pulling away from him again (Cordelia,
impassive, not showing the great relief she felt at this).
"Mayor
Thorin—Hart—you mustn't—this is hardly the place and not yet the time—Rhea
said—"
"Balls to her and
all witches!" His cultured politician's tones had been replaced by an
accent as thick as that in the voice of any back-country farmhand from Onnie's
Ford. "I must have something, a bonbon, aye, so I must. Balls to the
witch, I say! Owlshit to 'er!" The smell of tobacco a thick
reek around her head. She thought that she would vomit if she had to smell
it much longer. "Just stand still, girl. Stand still, my temptation. Mind
me well!"
Somehow she did. There
was even some distant part of her mind, a part totally dedicated to
self-preservation, that hoped he would mistake her shudders of revulsion for
maidenly excitement. He had drawn her tight against him, hands working
energetically on her breasts, his respiration a stinky steam-engine in her
ear. She stood back to him, her eyes closed, tears squeezing out from beneath
the lids and through the fringes of her lashes.
It didn't take him
long. He rocked back and forth against her, moaning like a man with stomach
cramps. At one point he licked the lobe of her ear, and Susan thought her skin
would crawl right off her body in its revulsion. Finally, thankfully, she felt
him begin to spasm against her.
"Oh, aye, get
out, ye damned poison!" he said in a voice that was almost a squeal. He
pushed so hard she had to brace her hands against the wall to keep from being
driven face-first into it. Then he at last stepped back.
For a moment Susan
only stood as she was, with her palms against the rough cold stone of the
sewing room wall. She could see Thorin in the mirror, and in his image she saw
the ordinary doom that was rushing at her, the ordinary doom of which this was
but a foretaste: the end of girlhood, the end of romance, the end of dreams
where she and Roland lay together in the willow grove with their foreheads
touching. The man in the mirror looked oddly like a boy himself, one who's been
up to something he wouldn't tell his mother about. Just a tall and gangly lad
with strange gray hair and narrow twitching shoulders and a wet spot on the
front of his trousers. Hart Thorin looked as if he didn't quite know where he
was. In that moment the lust was flushed out of his face, but what replaced it
was no better—that vacant confusion. It was as if he were a bucket with a hole
in the bottom: no matter what you put in it, or how much, it always ran out
before long.
He 'II do it again,
she thought, and felt an immense tiredness creep over her. Now that he's
done it once, he 'II do it every chance he gets, likely. From now on coming up
here is going to be like . . . well . . .
Like Castles. Like
playing at Castles.
Thorin looked at her a
moment longer. Slowly, like a man in a dream, he pulled the tail of his billowy
white shirt out of his pants and let it drop around him like a skirt, covering
the wet spot. His chin gleamed; he had drooled in his excitement. He seemed to
feel this and wiped the wetness away with the heel of one hand, looking at her
with those empty eyes all the while. Then some expression at last came into
them, and without another word he turned and left the room.
There was a little
scuffling thud in the hall as he collided with someone out there. Susan heard
him mutter "Sorry! Sorry!" under his breath (it was more apology than
he'd given her, muttered or not), and then Conchetta stepped back into the
room. The swatch of cloth she'd gone after was draped around her shoulders
like a stole. She took in Susan's pale face and tearstained cheeks at once. She'll
say nothing, Susan thought. None of them will, just as none of them will
lift a finger to help me off this stick I've run myself on. "Ye sharpened
it yourself, gilly," they'd say if I called for help, and that'll be their
excuse for leaving me to wriggle.
But Conchetta had
surprised her. "Life's hard, missy, so it is. Best get used to it."
5
Susan's voice—dry, by
now pretty much stripped of emotion—at last ceased. Aunt Cord put her knitting
aside, got up, and put the kettle on for tea.
"Ye dramatize,
Susan." She spoke in a voice that strove to be both kind and wise, and
succeeded at neither. "It's a trait ye get from your Manchester side—half
of them fancied themselves poets, t'other half fancied themselves painters,
and almost all of them spent their nights too drunk to tapdance. He grabbed yer
titties and gave yer a dry-hump, that's all. Nothing to be so upset over.
Certainly nothing to lose sleep over."
"How would you
know?" Susan asked. It was disrespectful, but she was beyond caring. She
thought she'd reached a point where she could bear anything from her aunt
except that patronizing worldly-wise tone of voice. It stung like a fresh
scrape.
Cordelia raised an
eyebrow and spoke without rancor. "How ye do love to throw that up to me!
Aunt Cord, the dry old stick. Aunt Cord the spinster. Aunt Cord the graying
virgin. Aye? Well, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty, virgin I might be, but I
had a lover or two back when I was young . . . before the world moved on, ye
might say. Mayhap one was the great Fran Lengyll."
And mayhap not,
Susan thought; Fran Lengyll was her aunt's senior by at least fifteen years,
perhaps as many as twenty-five.
"I've felt old Tom's
goat on my backside a time or two, Susan. Aye, and on my frontside as
well."
"And were any of
these lovers sixty, with bad breath and knuckles that cracked when they
squeezed your titties, Aunt? Did any of them try to push you through the
nearest wall when old Tom began to wag his beard and say baa-baa-baa?"
The rage she expected
did not come. What did was worse—an expression close to the look of emptiness
she had seen on Thorin's face in the mirror. "Deed's done, Susan." A
smile, short-lived and awful, nickered like an eyelid on her aunt's narrow
face. "Deed's done, aye."
In a kind of terror
Susan cried: "My father would have hated this! Hated it! And hated
you for allowing it to happen! For encouraging it to happen!"
"Mayhap,"
Aunt Cord said, and the awful smile winked at her again. "Mayhap so. And
the only thing he'd hate more? The dishonor of a broken promise, the shame of
a faithless child. He would want thee to go on with it, Susan. If thee would
remember his face, thee must go on with it."
Susan looked at her,
mouth drawn down in a trembling arc, eyes filling with tears again. I've
met someone I love! That was what she would have told her if she could. Don't
you understand how that changes things? I've met someone I love! But if
Aunt Cord had been the sort of person to whom she could have said such a thing,
Susan would likely never have been impaled on this stick to begin with. So she
turned and stumbled from the house without saying anything, her streaming eyes
blurring her vision and filling the late summer world with rueful color.
6
She rode with no
conscious idea of where she was going, yet some part of her must have had a
very specific destination in mind, because forty minutes after leaving her
house, she found herself approaching the very grove of willows she had been
daydreaming about when Thorin had crept up behind her like some bad elf out of
a gammer's story.
It was blessedly cool
in the willows. Susan tied Felicia (whom she had ridden out bareback) to a
branch, then walked slowly across the little clearing which lay at the heart of
the grove. Here the stream passed, and here she sat on the springy moss which
carpeted the clearing. Of course she had come here; it was where she had
brought all her secret griefs and joys since she had discovered the clearing at
the age of eight or nine. It was here she had come, time and time again, in the
nearly endless days after her father's death, when it had seemed to her that
the very world—her version of it, at least—had ended with Pat Delgado. It was
only this clearing that had heard the full and painful measure of her grief;
to the stream she had spoken it, and the stream had carried it away.
Now a fresh spate of
tears took her. She put her head on her knees and sobbed—loud, unladylike
sounds like the caw of squabbling crows. In that moment she thought she would
have given anything—everything— to have her father back for one minute,
to ask him if she must go on with this.
She wept above the
brook, and when she heard the sound of a snapping branch, she started and
looked back over her shoulder in terror and chagrin. This was her secret place
and she didn't want to be found here, especially not when she was bawling like
a kiddie who has fallen and bumped her head. Another branch snapped. Someone was
here, all right, invading her secret place at the worst possible time.
"Go away!"
she screamed in a tear-clotted voice she barely recognized. "Go away,
whoever ye are, be decent and leave me alone!"
But the figure—she
could now see it—kept coming. When she saw who it was, she at first thought
that Will Dearborn (Roland, she thought, his real name is Roland)
must be a figment of her overstrained imagination. She wasn't entirely sure he
was real until he knelt and put his arms around her. Then she hugged him with
panicky tightness. "How did you know I was—"
"Saw you riding
across the Drop. I was at a place where I go to think sometimes, and I saw you.
I wouldn't have followed, except I saw that you were riding bareback. I thought
something might be wrong."
"Everything's
wrong."
Deliberately, with his
eyes wide open and serious, he began kissing her cheeks. He had done it several
times on both sides of her face before she realized he was kissing her tears
away. Then he took her by the shoulders and held her back from him so he could
look into her eyes.
"Say it again and
I will, Susan. I don't know if that's a promise or a warning or both at the
same time, but... say it again and I will."
There was no need to
ask him what he meant. She seemed to feel the ground move beneath her, and
later she would think that for the first and only time in her life she had
actually felt ka, a wind that came not from the sky but from the earth. It
has come to me, after all, she thought. My ka, for good or ill.
"Roland!"
"Yes,
Susan."
She dropped her hand
below his belt-buckle and grasped what was there, her eyes never leaving his.
"If you love me,
then love me."
"Aye, lady. I
will."
He unbuttoned his
shirt, made in a part of Mid-World she would never see, and took her in his arms.
7
Ka:
They helped each other
with their clothes; they lay naked in each other's arms on summer moss as soft
as the finest goosedown. They lay with their foreheads touching, as in her
daydream, and when he found his way into her, she felt pain melt into sweetness
like some wild and exotic herb that may only be tasted once in each lifetime.
She held that taste as long as she could, until at last the sweetness overcame
it and she gave in to that, moaning deep in her throat and rubbing her forearms
against the sides of his neck. They made love in the willow grove, questions of
honor put aside, promises broken without so much as a look back, and at the end
of it Susan discovered there was more than sweetness; there was a kind of
delirious clinching of the nerves that began in the part of her that had opened
before him like a flower; it began there and then filled her entire body. She
cried out again and again, thinking there could not be so much pleasure in the
mortal world; she would die of it. Roland added his voice to hers, and the
sound of water rushing over stones wrapped around both. As she pulled him
closer to her, locking her ankles together behind his knees and covering his
face with fierce kisses, his going out rushed after hers as if trying to catch
up. So were lovers joined in the Barony of Mejis, near the end of the last
great age, and the green moss beneath the place where her thighs joined turned
a pretty red as her virginity passed; so were they joined and so were they
doomed.
Ka.
8
They lay together in
each other's arms, sharing afterglow kisses beneath Felicia's mild gaze, and
Roland felt himself drowsing. This was understandable—the strain on him that
summer had been enormous, and he had been sleeping badly. Although he didn't
know it then, he would sleep badly for the rest of his life.
"Roland?"
Her voice, distant. Sweet, as well.
“Yes?"
"Will thee take
care of me?"
"Yes."
"I can't go to
him when the time comes. I can bear his touching, and his little thefts—if I
have you, I can—but I can't go to him on Reap Night. I don't know if I've
forgotten the face of my father or not, but I cannot go lo Hart Thorin's bed.
There are ways the loss of a girl's virginity can be concealed, I think, but I
won't use them. I simply cannot go to his bed."
"All right,"
he said, "good." And then, as her eyes widened in startlement, he
looked around. No one was there. He looked back at Susan, fully awake now.
"What? What is it?"
"I might already
be carrying your child," she said. "Has thee thought of that?"
He hadn't. Now he did.
A child. Another link in the chain stretching hack into the dimness where
Arthur Eld had led his gunslingers into battle with the great sword Excalibur
raised above his head and the crown of All-World on his brow. But never mind
that; what would his father think? Ur Gabrielle, to know she had become a
grandmother?
A little smile had
formed at the comers of his mouth, but the thought of his mother drove it away.
He thought of the mark on her neck. When his mother came to his mind these days,
he always thought of the mark he'd seen on her neck when he came
unexpected into her apartment. And the small, rueful smile on her face.
"If you carry my
child, such is my good fortune," he said.
"And mine."
It was her turn to smile, but it had a sad look to it all the same, that smile.
"We're too young, I suppose. Little more than kiddies ourselves."
He rolled onto his
back and looked up at the blue sky. What she said might be true, but it didn't
matter. Truth was sometimes not the same as reality—this was one of the
certainties that lived in the hollow, cavey place at the center of his divided
nature. That he could rise above both and willingly embrace the insanity of
romance was a gift from his mother. All else in his nature was humorless . . .
and, perhaps more important, without metaphor. That they were too young to be
parents? What of that? If he had planted a seed, it would grow.
"Whatever comes,
we'll do as we must. And I'll always love you, no matter what comes."
She smiled. He said it
as a man would state any dry fact: sky is up, earth is down, water flows south.
"Roland, how old are
you?" She was sometimes troubled by the idea that, young as she herself
was, Roland was even younger. When he was concentrating on something, he could
look so hard he frightened her. When he smiled, he looked not like a lover but
a kid brother.
"Older than I was
when I came here," he said. "Older by far. And if I have to stay in
sight of Jonas and his men another six months, I'll be hobbling and needing a
boost in the arse to get aboard my horse."
She grinned at that,
and he kissed her nose.
"And thee'll take
care of me?"
"Aye," he
said, and grinned back at her. Susan nodded, then also turned on her back. They
lay that way, hip to hip, looking up at the sky. She took his hand and placed
it on her breast. As he stroked the nipple with his thumb, it raised its head,
grew hard, and began to tingle. This sensation slipped quickly down her body to
the place that was still throbbing between her legs. She squeezed her thighs together
and was both delighted and dismayed to find that doing so only made matters
worse.
"Ye must
take care of me," she said in a low voice. "I've pinned everything on
you. All else is cast aside."
"I'll do my
best," he said. "Never doubt it. But for now, Susan, you must go on
as you have been. There's more time yet to pass; I know that because Depape is
back and will have told his tale, but they still haven't moved in any way
against us. Whatever he found out, Jonas still thinks it's in his interest to
wait. That's apt to make him more dangerous when he does move, but for
now it's still Castles."
"But after the
Reaping Bonfire—Thorin—"
"You'll never go
to his bed. That you can count on. I set my warrant on it."
A little shocked at
her own boldness, she reached below his waist. "Here's a warrant ye can
set on me, if ye would," she said.
He would. Could. And
did.
When it was over (for
Roland it had been even sweeter than the first time, if that was possible), he
asked her: "That feeling you had out at Citgo, Susan—of being watched. Did
you have it this time?"
She looked at him long
and thoughtfully. "I don't know. My mind was in other places, ye
ken." She touched him gently, then laughed as he jumped—the nerves in the
half-hard, half-soft place where her palm stroked were still very lively, it
seemed.
She took her hand away
and looked up at the circle of sky above the grove. "So beautiful
here," she murmured, and her eyes drifted closed.
Roland also felt
himself drifting. It was ironic, he thought. This time she hadn't had that
sensation of being watched ... but the second time, he had. Yet he would have
sworn there was no one near this grove.
No matter. The
feeling, megrim or reality, was gone now. He took Susan's hand, and felt her
fingers slip naturally through his, entwining.
He closed his eyes.
9
All of this Rhea saw
in the glass, and wery interesting viewing it made, aye, wery interesting,
indeed. But she'd seen shagging before—sometimes with three or four or even
more doing it all at the same time (sometimes with partners who were not
precisely alive)—and the hokey-pokey wasn't very interesting to her at her
advanced age. What she was interested in was what would come after the
hokey-pokey.
Is our business done?
the girl had asked.
Mayhap there's one
more little thing, Rhea had responded, and then she told
the impudent trull what to do.
Aye, she'd given the
girl very clear instructions as the two of them stood in the hut doorway, the
Kissing Moon shining down on them as Susan Delgado slept the strange sleep and
Rhea stroked her braid and whispered instructions in her ear. Now would come
the fulfillment of that interlude . . . and that was what she wanted to see,
not two babbies shagging each other like they were the first two on earth to
discover how 'twas done.
Twice they did it with
hardly a pause to natter in between (she would have given a good deal to hear
that natter, too). Rhea wasn't surprised; at his young age, she supposed the
brat had enough spunkum in his sack to give her a week's worth of doubles, and
from the way the little slut acted, that might be to her taste. Some of them
discovered it and never wanted aught else; this was one, Rhea thought.
But let's see how sexy
you feel in a few minutes, you snippy bitch, she thought,
and leaned deeper into the pulsing pink light thrown from the glass. She could
sometimes feel that light aching in the very bones of her face . . . but it was
a good ache. Aye, wery good indeed.
They were at last done
... for the time being, at least. They clasped hands and drifted off to sleep.
"Now," Rhea
murmured. "Now, my little one. Be a good girl and do as ye were
told."
As if hearing her,
Susan's eyes opened—but there was nothing in them. They woke and slept at the
same time. Rhea saw her gently pull her hand free of the boy's. She sat up,
bare breasts against bare thighs, and looked around. She got to her feet—
That was when Musty,
the six-legged cat, jumped into Rhea's lap, waowing for either food or
affection. The old woman shrieked with surprise, and the wizard's glass at
once went dark—puffed out like a candle-flame in a gust of wind.
Rhea shrieked again,
this time with rage, and seized the cat before it could flee. She hurled it
across the room, into the fireplace. That was as dead a hole as only a summer
fireplace can be, but when Rhea cast a bony, misshapen hand at it, a yellow
gust of flame rose from the single half-charred log lying in there. Musty
screamed and fled from the hearth with his eyes wide and his split tail smoking
like an indifferently butted cigar.
"Run, aye!"
Rhea spat after him. "Begone, ye vile cusk!"
She turned back to the
glass and spread her hands over it, thumb to thumb. But although she
concentrated with all her might, willed until her heart was beating with a sick
fury in her chest, she could do no more than bring back the ball's natural pink
glow. No images appeared. This was bitterly disappointing, but there was
nothing to be done. And in time she would be able to see the results with her
own two natural eyes, if she cared to go to town and do so.
Everybody
would be able to see.
Her good humor
restored, Rhea returned the ball to its hiding place.
10
Only moments before he
would have sunk too deep in sleep to have heard it, a warning bell went off in
Roland's mind. Perhaps it was the faint realization that her hand was no longer
entwined with his; perhaps it was raw intuition. He could have ignored that
faint bell, and almost did, but in the end his training was too strong. He came
up from the threshold of real sleep, fighting his way back to clarity as a
diver kicks for the surface of a quarry. It was hard at first, but became
easier; as he neared wakefulness, his alarm grew.
He opened his eyes and
looked to his left. Susan was no longer there. He sat up, looked to his right,
and saw nothing above the cut of the stream ... yet he felt that she was in
that direction, all the same.
"Susan?"
No response. He got
up, looked at his pants, and Cort—a visitor he never would have expected in
such a romantic bower as this—spoke up gruffly in his mind. No time, maggot.
He walked naked to the
bank and looked down. Susan was there, all right, also naked, her back to him.
She had unbraided her hair. It hung, loose gold, almost all the way to the lyre
other hips. The chill air rising from the surface of the stream shivered the
tips of it like mist.
She was down on one
knee at the edge of the running water. One arm was plunged into it almost to
the elbow; she searched for something, it seemed.
"Susan!"
No answer. And now a
cold thought came to him: She's been infested by a demon. While I slept,
heedless, beside her, she's been infested by a demon. Yet he did not think
he really believed that. If there had been a demon near this clearing, he
would have felt it. Likely both of them would have felt it; the horses, too.
But something was wrong with her.
She brought an object
up from the streambed and held it before her eyes in her dripping hand. A
stone. She examined it, then tossed it back— plunk. She reached in
again, head bent, two sheafs of her hair now actually floating on the water,
the stream prankishly tugging them in the direction it flowed. "Susan!"
No response. She
plucked another stone out of the stream. This one was a triangular white
quartz, shattered into a shape that was almost like the head of a spear. Susan
tilted her head to the left and took a sheaf of her hair in her hand, like a
woman who means to comb out a nest of tangles. But there was no comb, only the
rock with its sharp edge, and for a moment longer Roland remained on the bank,
frozen with horror, sure that she meant to cut her own throat out of shame and
guilt over what they'd done. In the weeks to come, he was haunted by a clear
knowledge: if it had been her throat she'd intended, he wouldn't have
been in time to stop her.
Then the paralysis
broke and he hurled himself down the bank, unmindful of the sharp stones that
gouged the soles of his feet. Before he reached her, she had already used the
edge of the quartz to cut off part of the golden tress she held.
Roland seized her wrist
and pulled it back. He could see her face clearly now. What could have been
mistaken for serenity from the top of the bank now looked like what it really
was: vacuity, emptiness.
When he took hold of
her, the smoothness of her face was replaced by a dim and fretful smile; her
mouth quivered as if she felt distant pain, and an almost formless sound of
negation came from her mouth:
"Nnnnnnnnn—"
Some of the hair she
had cut off lay on her thigh like gold wire; most had fallen into the stream
and been carried away. Susan pulled against Roland's hand, trying to get the
sharp edge back to her hair, wanting to continue her mad barbering. The two of
them strove together like arm-wrestlers in a barroom contest. And Susan was
winning. He was physically the stronger, but not stronger than the enchantment
which held her. Little by little the white triangle of quartz moved back
toward her hanging hair. That frightening sound—Nnnnnnnnnn—kept drifting
from her mouth.
"Susan! Stop it!
Wake up!"
"Nnnnnnnn— "
Her bare arm quivering
visibly in the air, the muscles bunched like hard little rocks. And the quartz
moving closer and closer to her hair, her cheek, the socket of her eye.
Without thinking about
it—it was the way he always acted most successfully—Roland moved his face
close to the side others, giving up another four inches to the fist holding
the stone in order to do it. He put his lips against the cup of her ear and
then clucked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. Clucked sidemouth, in
fact.
Susan jerked back from
that sound, which must have gone through
her head like a spear. Her eyelids fluttered rapidly, and the pressure
she was exerting against Roland's grip eased a little. He took the chance and
twisted her wrist.
"Ow!Owwww!"
The stone flew out of
her opening hand and splashed into the water. Susan gazed at him, now fully
awake, her eyes filled with tears and bewilderment. She was rubbing her wrist.
. . which, Roland thought, was likely to swell.
"Ye hurt me,
Roland! Why did ye hurt m ..."
She trailed off,
looking around. Now not just her face but the whole set other body expressed
bewilderment. She moved to cover herself with her hands, then realized they
were still alone and dropped them to her sides. She glanced over her shoulder
at the footprints—all of them bare— leading down the bank.
"How did I get
down here?" she asked. "Did thee carry me, after I fell asleep? And
why did thee hurt me? Oh, Roland, I love thee—why did ye hurt me?"
He picked up the
strands of hair that still lay on her thigh and held them in front of her.
"You had a stone with a sharp edge. You were trying to cut yourself with
it, and you didn't want to stop. I hurt you because I was scared. I'm just glad
I didn't break your wrist ... at least, I don't think I did."
Roland took it and
rotated it gently in either direction, listening for the grate of small bones.
He heard nothing, and
the wrist turned freely. As Susan watched, stunned and confused, he raised it
to his lips and kissed the inner part, above the delicate tracery of veins.
11
Roland had tied Rusher
just far enough into the willows so the big gelding could not be seen by
anyone who happened to come riding along the Drop.
"Be easy,"
Roland said, approaching. "Be easy a little longer, good-heart."
Rusher stamped and
whickered, as if to say he could be easy until the end of the age, if that was
what were required.
Roland nipped open his
saddlebag and took out the steel utensil that served as either a pot or a
frypan, depending on his needs. He started away, then turned back. His bedroll
was tied behind Pusher's saddle he had planned to spend the night camped out on
the Drop, thinking. There had been a lot to think about, and now there was even
more.
He pulled one of the
rawhide ties, reached inside the blankets, and pulled out a small metal box.
This he opened with a tiny key he drew from around his neck. Inside the box was
a small square locket on a fine silver chain (inside the locket was a
line-drawing of his mother), and a handful of extra shells—not quite a dozen.
He took one, closed it in his fist, and went back to Susan. She looked at him
with wide, frightened eyes.
"I don't remember
anything after we made love the second time," she said. "Only looking
up at the sky and thinking how good I felt and going to sleep. Oh, Roland, how
bad does it look?"
"Not bad, I
should think, but you'll know better than I. Here."
He dipped his cooker
full of water and set it on the bank. Susan bent over it apprehensively, laying
the hair on the left side of her head across her forearm, then moving the arm
slowly outward, extending the tress in a band of bright gold. She saw the
ragged cut at once. She examined it carefully, then let it drop with a sigh
more relieved than rueful.
"I can hide
it," she said. "When it's braided, no one will know. And after all,
'tis only hair—no more than woman's vanity. My aunt has told me so often
enough, certainly. But Roland, why? Why did I do it?"
Roland had an idea. If
hair was a woman's vanity, then hair-chopping would likely be a woman's bit of
nastiness—a man would hardly think of it at all. The Mayor's wife, had it been
her? He thought not. It seemed more likely that Rhea, up there on her height of
land looking north toward the Bad Grass, Hanging Rock, and Eyebolt Canyon, had
set this ugly trap. Mayor Thorin had been meant to wake up on the morning after
the Reap with a hangover and a bald-headed gilly.
"Susan, can I try
something?"
She gave him a smile.
"Something ye didn't try already up yonder? Aye, what ye will."
"Nothing like
that." He opened the hand he had held closed, showing the shell. "I
want to try and find out who did this to you, and why." And other things,
too. He just didn't know what they were yet.
She looked at the
shell. Roland began to move it along the back of his hand, dancing it back and
forth in a dexterous weaving. His knuckles rose and fell like the heddles of a
loom. She watched this with a child's fascinated delight. "Where did ye
learn that?"
"At home. It
doesn't matter."
"Ye'd hypnotize
me?"
"Aye ... and I
don't think it would be for the first time." He made the shell dance a bit
faster—now east along his rippling knuckles, now west. "May I?"
"Aye," she
said. "If you can."
12
He could, all right;
the speed with which she went under confirmed that this had happened to Susan
before, and recently. Yet he couldn't get what lie wanted from her. She was
perfectly cooperative (some sleep eager, fort would have said), but
beyond a certain point she would not go. It wasn't decorum or modesty,
either—as she slept open-eyed before the stream, she told him in a far-off but
calm voice about the old woman's examination, and the way Rhea had tried to
"fiddle her up." (At this Poland's fists clenched so tightly his
nails bit into his palms.) But there came a point where she could no longer
remember.
She and Rhea had gone
to the door of the hut, Susan said, and there they had stood with the Kissing
Moon shining down on their faces. The old woman had been touching her hair,
Susan remembered that much. The touch revolted her, especially after the witch's
previous touches, but Susan had been unable to do anything about it. Arms too
heavy to raise; tongue too heavy to speak. She could only stand there while the
witch whispered in her ear.
"What?"
Roland asked. "What did she whisper?"
"I don't
know," Susan said. "The rest is pink."
"Pink?
What do you mean?"
"Pink," she
repeated. She sounded almost amused, as if she believed Roland was being
deliberately dense. "She says, 'Aye, lovely, just so, it's a good girl
y'are,' then everything's pink. Pink and bright."
"Bright."
"Aye, like the
moon. And then . . ." She paused. "Then I think it becomes
the moon. The Kissing Moon, mayhap. A bright pink Kissing Moon, as round and
full as a grapefruit."
He tried other ways
into her memory with no success—every path he tried ended in that bright
pinkness, first obscuring her recollection and then coalescing into a full
moon. It meant nothing to Roland; he'd heard of blue moons, but never pink
ones. The only thing of which he was sure was that the old woman had given Susan
a powerful command to forget.
He considered taking
her deeper—she would go—but didn't dare. Most of his experience came from
hypnotizing his friends—classroom exercises that were larky and occasionally
spooky. Always there had been Cort or Vannay present to make things right if
they went off-track. Now there were no teachers to step in; for better or
worse, the students had been left in charge of the school. What if he took her
deep and couldn't get her back up again? And he had been told there were demons
in the below-mind as well. If you went down to where they were, they sometimes
swam out of their caves to meet you . . .
All other
considerations aside, it was getting late. It wouldn't be prudent to stay here
much longer.
"Susan, do you
hear me?"
"Aye, Roland, I
hear you very well."
"Good. I'm going
to say a rhyme. You'll wake up as I say it. When I'm done, you'll be wide awake
and remember everything we've said. Do you understand?"
"Aye."
"Listen: Bird and
bear and hare and fish, Give my love her fondest wish."
Her smile as she rose
to consciousness was one of the most beautiful things he had ever seen. She
stretched, then put her arms around his neck and covered his face with kisses.
"You, you, you, you," she said. "You're my fondest wish, Roland.
You're my only wish. You and you, forever and ever."
They made love again
there on the bank, beside the babbling stream, holding each other as tightly as
they could, breathing into each other's mouths and living on each other's
breath. You, you, you, you.
13
Twenty minutes later,
he boosted her onto Felicia's back. Susan leaned down, took his face in her
hands, and kissed him soundly.
"When will I see
ye again?" she asked.
"Soon. But we
must be careful."
"Aye. Careful as
two lovers ever were, I think. Thank God thee's clever."
"We can use
Sheemie, if we don't use him too often."
"Aye. And,
Roland—do ye know the pavilion in Green Heart? Close to where they serve
tea and cakes and things when the weather's fair?"
Roland did. Fifty
yards or so up Hill Street from the jail and the Town Gathering Hall, Green
Heart was one of the most pleasant places in town, with its quaint paths,
umbrella-shaded tables, grassy dancing pavilion, and menagerie.
"There's a rock
wall at the back," she said. "Between the pavilion and the menagerie.
If you need me badly—"
"I'll always need
you badly," he said.
She smiled at his
gravity. "There's a stone on one of the lower courses—a reddish one.
You'll see it. My friend Amy and I used to leave messages there for each other
when we were little girls. I'll look there when I can. Ye do the same."
"Aye."
Sheemie would work for awhile, if they were careful. The red rock might also
work for awhile, if they were careful. But no matter how careful they were,
they would slip eventually, because the Big Coffin Hunters now probably knew
more about Roland and his friends than Roland ever would have wished. But he
had to see her, no matter what the risks. If he didn't, he felt he might die.
And he only had to look at her to know she felt the same.
"Watch special
for Jonas and the other two," he said.
"I will. Another
kiss, if ye favor?"
He kissed her gladly,
and would just as gladly have pulled her off the mare's back for a fourth
go-round . .. but it was time to stop being delirious and start being careful.
"Fare you well,
Susan. I love y—" He paused, then smiled. "I love thee."
"And I thee,
Roland. What heart I have is yours."
She had a great heart,
he thought as she slipped through the willows, and already he felt its burden
on his own. He waited until he felt sure she must be well away. Then he went to
Rusher and rode off in the opposite direction, knowing that a new and dangerous
phase of the game had begun.
14
Not too long after
Susan and Roland had parted, Cordelia Delgado stepped out of the Hambry
Mercantile with a box of groceries and a troubled mind. The troubled mind was
caused by Susan, of course, always Susan, and Cordelia's fear that the girl
would do something stupid before Reaping finally came around.
These thoughts were
snatched out of her mind just as hands—strong ones—snatched the box of
groceries from her arms. Cordelia cawed in surprise, shaded her eyes against
the sun, and saw Eldred Jonas standing there between the Bear and Turtle
totems, smiling at her. His hair, long and white (and beautiful, in her
opinion), lay over his shoulders. Cordelia felt her heart beat a little faster.
She had always been partial to men like Jonas, who could smile and banter their
way to the edge of risqueness . . . but who carried their bodies like blades.
"I startled you.
I cry your pardon, Cordelia."
"Nay," she
said, sounding a little breathless to her own ears. "It's just the sun—so
bright at this time of day—"
"I'd help you a
bit on your way, if you give me leave. I'm only going up High as far as the
comer, then I turn up the Hill, but may I help you that far?"
"With
thanks," she said. They walked down the steps and up the board sidewalk,
Cordelia looking around in little pecking glances to see who was observing
them—she beside the handsome sai Jonas, who just happened to be carrying her
goods. There was a satisfying number of onlookers. She saw Millicent Ortega,
for one, looking out of Ann's Dresses with a satisfying 0 of surprise on her
stupid cow's puss.
"I hope you don't
mind me calling you Cordelia." Jonas shifted the box, which she'd needed
two hands to carry, casually under one arm. "I feel, since the welcoming
dinner at Mayor Thorin's house, that I know you."
"Cordelia's
fine."
"And may I be
Eldred to you?"
"I think 'Mr.
Jonas' will do a bit longer," she said, then favored him with what she
hoped was a coquettish smile. Her heart beat faster yet. (It did not occur to
her that perhaps Susan was not the only silly goose in the Delgado family.)
"So be it,"
Jonas said, with a look of disappointment so comic that she laughed. "And
your niece? Is she well?"
"Quite well,
thank ye for asking. A bit of a trial, sometimes—"
"Was there ever a
girl of sixteen who wasn't?"
"I suppose
not."
"Yet you have
additional burdens regarding her this fall. I doubt if \he realizes
that, though."
Cordelia said
nothing—'twouldn't be discreet—but gave him a meaningful look that said much.
"Give her my
best, please."
"I will."
But she wouldn't. Susan had conceived a great (and irrational, in Cordelia's
view) dislike for Mayor Thorin's regulators. Trying to talk her out of these
feelings would likely do no good; young girls thought they knew everything. She
glanced at the star peeking unobtrusively out from beneath the flap of Jonas's
vest. "I understand ye've taken on an additional responsibility in our
undeserving town, sai Jonas."
"Aye, I'm helping
out Sheriff Avery," he agreed. His voice had a reedy little tremble which
Cordelia found quite endearing, somehow. "One of his deputies—Claypool,
his name is—"
"Frank Claypool,
aye."
"—fell out of his
boat and broke his leg. How do you fall out of a boat and break your leg,
Cordelia?"
She laughed merrily
(the idea that everyone in Hambry was watching them was surely wrong ... but it
felt that way, and the feeling was not unpleasant) and said she didn't know.
He stopped on the
comer of High and Camino Vega, looking regretful. "Here's where I
turn." He handed the box back to her. "Are you sure you can carry
that? I suppose I could go on with you to your house—"
"No need, no
need. Thank you. Thank you, Eldred." The blush which crept up her
neck and cheeks felt as hot as fire, but his smile was worth every degree of
heat. He tipped her a little salute with two fingers and sauntered up the hill
toward the Sheriff's office.
Cordelia walked on
home. The box, which had seemed such a burden when she stepped out of the
mercantile, now seemed to weigh next to nothing. This feeling lasted for half a
mile or so, but by the time her house came into view, she was once again aware
of the sweat trickling down her sides, and the ache in her arms. Thank the gods
summer was almost over ... and wasn't that Susan, just leading her mare in
through the gate?
"Susan!" she
called, now enough returned to earth for her former irritation with the girl to
sound clear in her voice. "Come and help me, 'fore I drop this and break
the eggs!"
Susan came, leaving
Felicia to crop grass in the front yard. Ten minutes earlier, Cordelia would
have noticed nothing of how the girl looked— her thoughts had been too wrapped
up in Eldred Jonas to admit of much else. But the hot sun had taken some of the
romance out of her head and returned her feet to earth. And as Susan took the
box from her (handling it almost as easily as Jonas had done), Cordelia thought
she didn't much care for the girl's appearance. Her temper had changed, for one
thing— from the half-hysterical confusion in which she'd left to a pleasant and
happy-eyed calmness. That was the Susan of previous years to the sleeve and
seam . . . but not this year's moaning, moody breast-beater. There was nothing
else Cordelia could put her finger on, except—
But there was,
actually. One thing. She reached out and grasped the girl's braid, which looked
uncharacteristically sloppy this afternoon. Of course Susan had been riding;
that could explain the mess. But it didn't explain how dark her hair was, as if
that bright mass of gold had begun to tarnish. And she jumped, almost guiltily,
when she felt Cordelia's touch. Why, pray tell, was that?
"Yer hair's damp,
Susan," she said. "Have ye been swimming somewhere?"
"Nay! I stopped
and ducked my head at the pump outside Hockey's barn. He doesn't mind—'tis a
deep well he has. It's so hot. Perhaps there'll be a shower later. I hope so. I
gave Felicia to drink as well."
The girl's eyes were
as direct and as candid as ever, but Cordelia thought there was something off
in them, just the same. She couldn't say what. The idea that Susan might be
hiding something large and serious did not immediately cross Cordelia's mind;
she would have said her niece was incapable of keeping a secret any greater
than a birthday present or a surprise party . . . and not even such secrets as
those for more than a day or two. And yet something was off here.
Cordelia dropped her fingers to the collar of the girl's riding shirt.
"Yet this is
dry."
"I was
careful," she said, looking at her aunt with a puzzled eye. "Dirt
sticks worse to a wet shirt. You taught me that, Aunt."
"Ye flinched when
I touched yer hair, Susan."
"Aye," Susan
said, "so I did. The weird-woman touched it just that same way. I haven't
liked it since. Now may I take these groceries in and get my horse out of the
hot sun?"
"Don't be pert,
Susan." Yet the edginess in her niece's voice actually eased her in some
strange way. That feeling that Susan had changed, somehow—that feeling of
offness—began to subside.
"Then don't be
tiresome."
"Susan! Apologize
to me!"
Susan took a deep
breath, held it, then let it out. "Yes, Aunt. I do. But it's hot."
"Aye. Put those
in the pantry. And thankee."
Susan went on toward
the house with the box in her arms. When the girl had enough of a lead so they
wouldn't have to walk together, Cordelia followed. It was all foolishness on
her part, no doubt—suspicions brought on by her flirtation with Eldred—but the
girl was at a dangerous age, and much depended on her good behavior over the
next seven weeks. After that she would be Thorin's problem, but until then she
was Cordelia's. Cordelia thought that, in the end, Susan would be true to her
promise, but until Reaping Fair she would bear close watching. About such
matters as a girl's virginity, it was best to be vigilant.
INTERLUDE
KANSAS,
SOMEWHERE,
SOMEWHEN
Eddie stirred. Around
them the thinny still whined like an unpleasant mother-in-law; above them the
stars gleamed as bright as new hopes . . . or bad intentions. He looked at
Susannah, sitting with the stumps of her legs curled beneath her; he looked at
Jake, who was eating a burrito; he looked at Oy, whose snout rested on Jake's
ankle and who was looking up at the boy with an expression of calm adoration.
The fire was low, but
still it burned. The same was true of Demon Moon, far in the west.
"Roland."
His voice sounded old and rusty to his own ears.
The gunslinger, who
had paused for a sip of water, looked at him with his eyebrows raised.
"How can you know
every comer of this story?"
Roland seemed amused.
"I don't think that's what you really want to know, Eddie."
He was right about
that—old long, tall, and ugly made a habit of being right. It was, as far as
Eddie was concerned, one of his most irritating characteristics. "All
right. How long have you been talking? That's what I really want to
know."
"Are you
uncomfortable? Want to go to bed?"
He's making fun of me,
Eddie thought . . . but even as the idea occurred to him, he knew it wasn't
true. And no, he wasn't uncomfortable. There was no stiffness in his
joints, although he had been sitting cross-legged ever since Roland had begun
by telling them about Rhea and the glass ball, and he didn't need to go to the
toilet. Nor was he hungry. Jake was munching the single leftover burrito, but
probably for the same reason folks climbed Mount Everest ... because it was
there. And why should he be hungry or sleepy or stiff? Why, when
the fire still burned and the moon was not yet down?
He looked at Roland's
amused eyes and saw the gunslinger was reading his thoughts.
"No, I don't want
to go to bed. You know I don't. But, Roland . . . you've been talking a long
time." He paused, looked down at his hands, then looked up again, smiling
uneasily. "Days, I would have said."
"But time is
different here. I've told you that; now you see for yourself. Not all nights
are the same length just recently. Days, either . . . but we notice time more
at night, don't we? Yes, I think we do."
"Is the thinny
stretching time?" And now that he had mentioned it, Eddie could hear it in
all its creepy glory—a sound like vibrating metal, or maybe the world's biggest
mosquito.
"It might be
helping, but mostly it's just how things are in my world."
Susannah stirred like
a woman who rises partway from a dream that holds her like sweet quicksand. She
gave Eddie a look that was both distant and impatient. "Let the man talk,
Eddie."
"Yeah," Jake
said. "Let the man talk."
And Oy, without
raising his snout from Jake's ankle: "An. Awk."
"All right,"
Eddie said. "No problem."
Roland swept them with
his eyes. "Are you sure? The rest is . . ." He didn't seem able to
finish, and Eddie realized that Roland was scared.
"Go on,"
Eddie told him quietly. "Let the rest be what it is. What it was." He
looked around. Kansas, they were in Kansas. Somewhere, somewhen. Except he felt
that Mejis and those people he had never seen— Cordelia and Jonas and Brian
Hookey and Sheemie and Pettie the Trotter and Cuthbert Allgood—were very close
now. That Roland's lost Susan was very close now. Because reality was thin
here—as thin as the seat in an old pair of blue jeans—and the dark would hold
for as long as Roland needed it to hold. Eddie doubted if Roland even noticed
the dark, particularly. Why would he? Eddie thought it had been night inside
of Roland's mind for a long, long time . . . and dawn was still nowhere near.
He reached out and
touched one of those callused killer's hands. Gently he touched it, and with
love.
"Go on, Roland.
Tell your tale. All the way to the end."
"All the way to
the end," Susannah said dreamily. "Cut the vein." Her eyes were
full of moonlight.
"All the way to
the end," Jake said.
"End," Oy
whispered.
Roland held Eddie's
hand for a moment, then let it go. He looked into the guttering fire without
immediately speaking, and Eddie sensed him trying to find the way. Trying
doors, one after another, until he found one that opened. What he saw behind it
made him smile and look up at Eddie.
"True love is
boring," he said.
"Say what?”
"True love is
boring," Roland repeated. "As boring as any other strong and
addicting drug. And, as with any other strong drug . . ."
PART
THREE
COME,
REAP
CHAPTER 1
BENEATH THE
huntress moon
1
True love, like any
other strong and addicting drug, is boring—once the tale of encounter and
discovery is told, kisses quickly grow stale and caresses tiresome . . .
except, of course, to those who share the kisses, who give and take the
caresses while every sound and color of the world seems to deepen and brighten
around them. As with any other strong drug, true first love is really only
interesting to those who have become its prisoners.
And, as is true of any
other strong and addicting drug, true first love is dangerous.
2
Some called Huntress
the last moon of summer; some called it the first of fall. Whichever it was, it
signaled a change in the life of the Barony. Men put out into the bay wearing
sweaters beneath their oilskins as the winds began to turn more and more firmly
into autumn's east-west alley, and to sharpen as they turned. In the great
Barony orchards north of Hambry (and in smaller orchards owned by John Croydon,
Henry Wertner, Jake White, and the morose but wealthy Coral Thorin), the
pickers began to appear in the rows, carrying their odd, off-kilter ladders;
they were followed by horse-drawn carts full of empty barrels. Downwind of the
cider-houses—especially downwind of the great Barony cider-mansion a mile north
of Seafront—the breezy air was filled with the sweet tang of blems being
pressed by the basketload. Away from the shore of the Clean Sea, the days
remained warm as the Huntress waxed, skies were clear day and night, but
summer's real heat had departed with the Peddler. The last cutting of hay
began and was finished in the run of a week—that last one was always scant, and
ranchers and freeholders alike would curse it, scratching their heads and
asking themselves why they even bothered ... but come rainy, blowsy old March,
with the bam lofts and bins rapidly emptying, they always knew. In the Barony's
gardens—the great ones of the ranchers, the smaller ones of the freeholders,
and the tiny backyard plots of the townsfolk—men and women and children
appeared in their old clothes and boots, their sombreros and sombreros.
They came with the legs of their pants tied down firmly at the ankles, for in
the time of the Huntress, snakes and scorpions in plentiful numbers wandered
east from the desert. By the time old Demon Moon began to fatten, a line of
rattlers would hang from the hitching posts of both the Travellers' Rest and
the mercantile across the street. Other businesses would similarly decorate
their hitching posts, but when the prize for the most skins was given on Reaping
Day, it was always the inn or the market that won it. In the fields and
gardens, baskets to pick into were cast along the rows by women with their hair
tied up in kerchiefs and reap-charms hidden in their bosoms. The last of the
tomatoes were picked, the last of the cucumbers, the last of the corn, the last
of the parey and mingo. Waiting behind them, as the days sharpened and the
autumn storms began to near, would come squash, sharproot, pumpkins, and
potatoes. In Mejis the time of reaping had begun, while overhead, clearer and
clearer on each starry night, the Huntress pulled her bow and looked east over
those strange, watery leagues no man or woman of Mid-World had ever seen.
3
Those in the grip of a
strong drug—heroin, devil grass, true love—often find themselves trying to
maintain a precarious balance between secrecy and ecstasy as they walk the
tightrope of their lives. Keeping one's balance on a tightrope is difficult
under the soberest circumstances; doing so while in a state of delirium is all
but impossible. Completely impossible, in the long run.
Roland and Susan were
delirious, but at least had the thin advantage of knowing it. And the secret
would not have to be kept forever, but only until Reaping Day Fair, at the very
longest. Things might end even sooner than that, if the Big Coffin Hunters
broke cover. The actual first move might be made by one of the other players,
Roland thought, but no matter who moved first, Jonas and his men would be
there, a part of it. The part apt to be most dangerous to the three boys.
Roland and Susan were
careful—as careful as delirious people could be, at any rate. They never met in
the same place twice in a row, they never met at the same time twice in a row,
they never skulked on their way to their trysts. In Hambry, riders were common
but skulkers were noticed. Susan never tried to cover her "riding
out" by enlisting the help of a friend (although she had friends who would
have done her this service); people who needed alibis were people keeping
secrets. She had a sense that Aunt Cord was growing increasingly uneasy about
her rides— particularly the ones she took in the early evenings—but so far she
accepted Susan's oft-repeated reason for them: she needed time to be solitary,
to meditate on her promise and to accept her responsibility. Ironically, these
suggestions had originally come from the witch of the Coos.
They met in the willow
grove, in several of the abandoned boathouses which stood crumbling at the
northern hook of the bay, in a herder's hut far out in the desolation of the
Coos, in an abandoned squatter's shack hidden in the Bad Grass. The settings
were, by and large, as sordid as any of those in which addicts come together to
practice their vice, but Susan and Roland didn't see the rotting walls of the
shack or the holes in the roof of the hut or smell the mouldering nets in the
comers of the old soaked boathouses. They were drugged, stone in love, and to
them, every scar on the face of the world was a beauty-mark.
Twice, early on in
those delirious weeks, they used the red rock in the wall at the back of the
pavilion to arrange meetings, and then some deep voice spoke inside Roland's
head, telling him there must be no more of it—the rock might have been just the
thing for children playing at secrets, but he and his love were no longer
children; if they were discovered, banishment would be the luckiest punishment
they could hope for. The red rock was too conspicuous, and writing things
down—even messages that were unsigned and deliberately vague—was horribly
dangerous.
Using Sheemie felt
safer to both of them. Beneath his smiling light-mindedness there was a
surprising depth of ... well, discretion. Roland had thought long and hard
before settling on that word, and it was the right word: an ability to keep
silent that was more dignified than mere cunning. Cunning was out of Sheemie's
reach in any case, and always would be—a man who couldn't tell a lie without
shifting his eyes away from yours was a man who would never be considered
cunning.
They used Sheemie half
a dozen times over the five weeks when their physical love burned at its
hottest—three of those times were to make meetings, two were to change
meeting-places, and one was to cancel a tryst when Susan spied riders from the
Piano Ranch sweeping for strays near the shack in the Bad Grass.
That deep, warning
voice never spoke to Roland about Sheemie as it had about the dangers of the
red rock . . . but his conscience spoke to him, and when he finally mentioned
this to Susan (the two of them wrapped in a saddle-blanket and lying naked in
each other's arms), he found that her conscience had been troubling her, as
well. It wasn't fair to put the boy in the way of their possible trouble. After
coming to that conclusion, Roland and Susan arranged their meetings strictly between
the two of them. If she could not meet him, Susan said, she would hang a red
shirt over the sill of her window, as if to dry. If he could not meet her, he
was to leave a white stone in the northeast comer of the yard, diagonally
across the road from Hockey's Livery, where the town pump stood. As a last
resort, they would use the red rock in the pavilion, risky or not, rather than
bringing Sheemie into their affairs—their affair—again.
Cuthbert and Alain
watched Roland's descent into addiction first with disbelief, envy, and uneasy
amusement, then with a species of silent horror. They had been sent to what
was supposed to have been safety and had discovered a place of conspiracy,
instead; they had come to take census in a Barony where most of the aristocracy
had apparently switched its allegiance to the Affiliation's bitterest enemy;
they had made personal enemies of three hard men who had probably killed
enough folks to populate a fair-sized graveyard. Yet they had felt equal to the
situation, because they had come here under the leadership of their friend, who
had attained near-mythic status in their minds by besting Cort—with a hawk as
his weapon!—and becoming a gunslinger at the unheard-of age of fourteen. That
they had been given guns themselves for this mission had meant a great deal to
them when they set out from Gilead, and nothing at all by the time they began
to realize the scope of what was going on in Hambry-town and the Barony of
which it was a part. When that realization came, Roland was the weapon they
counted on. And now—
"He's like a
revolver cast into water!" Cuthbert exclaimed one evening, not long after
Roland had ridden away to meet Susan. Beyond the bunkhouse porch, Huntress rose
in her first quarter. "Gods know if it'll ever fire again, even if it's
fished out and dried off."
"Hush,
wait," Alain said, and looked toward the porch rail. Hoping to jolly
Cuthbert out of his bad temper (a task that was quite easy under ordinary
circumstances), Alain said: "Where's the lookout? Gone to bed early for
once, has he?"
This only irritated
Cuthbert more. He hadn't seen the rook's skull in days—he couldn't exactly say
how many—and he took its loss as an ill omen. "Gone, but not to bed,"
he replied, then looked balefully to the west, where Roland had disappeared
aboard his big old galoot of a horse. "Lost, I reckon. Like a certain
fellow's mind and heart and good sense."
"He'll be all
right," Alain said awkwardly. "You know him as well as I do,
Bert—known him our whole lives, we have. He'll be all right."
Quietly, without even
a trace of his normal good humor, Cuthbert said: "I don't feel I know him
now."
They had both tried to
talk to Roland in their different ways; both received a similar response,
which was no real response at all. The dreamy (and perhaps slightly troubled)
look of abstraction in Roland's eyes during these one-sided discussions would
have been familiar to anyone who has ever tried to talk sense to a drug addict.
It was a look that said Roland's mind was occupied by the shape of Susan's
face, the smell of Susan'-s skin, the feel of Susan's body. And occupied
was a silly word for it, one that fell short. It wasn't an occupation but an
obsession.
"I hate her a
little for what she's done," Cuthbert said, and there was a note in his
voice Alain had never heard before—a mixture of jealousy, frustration, and
fear. "Perhaps more than a little."
"You
mustn't!" Alain tried not to sound shocked, but couldn't help it.
"She isn't responsible for—"
"Is she not? She
went out to Citgo with him. She saw what he saw. God knows how much else he's
told her after they've finished making the beast with two backs. And she's all
the way around the world from stupid. Just the way she's managed her side of
their affair shows that." Bert was thinking, Alain guessed, of her tidy
little trick with the corvette. "She must know she's become part of
the problem herself. She must know that!"
Now his bitterness was
fiighteningly clear. He's jealous of her for stealing his best friend,
Alain thought, but it doesn't stop there. He's jealous of his best friend,
as well, because his best friend has won the most beautiful girl any of us have
ever seen.
Alain leaned over and
grasped Cuthbert's shoulder. When Bert turned away from his morose examination
of the dooryard to look at his friend, he was startled by the grimness on
Alain's face. "It's ka," Alain said.
Cuthbert almost
sneered. "If I had a hot dinner for every time someone blamed theft or
lust or some other stupidity on ka—"
Alain's grip tightened
until it became painful. Cuthbert could have pulled away but didn't. He watched
Alain closely. The joker was, temporarily, at least, gone. "Blame is
exactly what we two can't afford," Alain said. "Don't you see that?
And if it's ka that's swept them away, we needn't blame. We can't
blame. We must rise above it. We need him. And we may need her, too."
Cuthbert looked into
Alain's eyes for what seemed to be a very long time. Alain saw Bert's anger at
war with his good sense. At last (and perhaps only for the time being), good
sense won out.
"All right, fine.
It's ka, everybody's favorite whipping-boy. That's what the great unseen
world's for, after all, isn't it? So we don't have to take the blame for our
acts of stupidity? Now let go of me, Al, before you break my shoulder."
Alain let go and sat
back in his chair, relieved. "Now if we only knew what to do about the
Drop. If we don't start counting there soon—"
"I've had an idea
about that, actually," Cuthbert said. "It just needs a little working
out. I'm sure Roland could help ... if either of us can get his attention for a
few minutes, that is."
They sat for awhile
without speaking, looking out at the dooryard. Inside the bunkhouse, the
pigeons—another bone of contention between Roland and Bert these days—cooed.
Alain rolled himself a smoke. It was slow work, and the finished product looked
rather comical, but it held together when he lit it.
"Your father
would stripe you raw if he saw that in your hand," Cuthbert remarked, but
he spoke with a certain admiration. By the time the following year's Huntress
came around, all three of them would be confirmed smokers, tanned young men
with most of the boyhood slapped out of their eyes.
Alain nodded. The
strong Outer Crescent tobacco made him swimmy in the head and raw in the
throat, but a cigarette had a way of calming his nerves, and right now his
nerves could use some calming. He didn't know about Bert, but these days he
smelled blood on the wind. Possibly some of it would be their own. He wasn't
exactly frightened—not yet, at least— but he was very, very worried.
4
Although they had been
honed like hawks toward the guns since early childhood, Cuthbert and Alain
still carried an erroneous belief common to many boys their age: that their
elders were also their betters, at least in such matters as planning and wit;
they actually believed that grownups knew what they were doing. Roland knew
better, even in his love-sickness, but his friends had forgotten that in the
game of Castles, both sides wear the blindfold. They would have been
surprised to find that at least two of the Big Coffin Hunters had grown
extremely nervous about the three young men from In-World, and extremely tired
of the waiting game both sides had been playing.
One early morning, as
the Huntress neared the half, Reynolds and Depape came downstairs together from
the second floor of the Travellers' Rest. The main public room was silent
except for various snores and phlegmy wheezings. In Hambry's busiest bar, the
party was over for another night.
Jonas, accompanied by
a silent guest, sat playing Chancellors' Patience at Coral's table to the left
of the batwing doors. Tonight he was wearing his duster, and his breath smoked
faintly as he bent over his cards. It wasn't cold enough to frost—not quite
yet—but the frost would come soon. The chill in the air left no doubt of that.
The breath of his
guest also smoked. Kimba Rimer's skeletal frame was all but buried in a gray
serape lit with faint bands of orange. The two of them had been on the edge of
getting down to business when Roy and Clay (Pinch and Jilly, Rimer
thought) showed up, their plowing and planting in the second-floor cribs also
apparently over for another night.
"Eldred,"
Reynolds said, and then: "Sai Rimer."
Rimer nodded back,
looking from Reynolds to Depape with thin distaste. "Long days and
pleasant nights, gentlemen." Of course the world had moved on, he thought.
To find such low culls as these two in positions of importance proved it.
Jonas himself was only a little better.
"Might we have a
word with you, Eldred?" Clay Reynolds asked. "We've been talking, Roy
and I—"
"Unwise,"
Jonas remarked in his wavery voice. Rimer wouldn't be surprised to find, at the
end of his life, that the Death Angel had such a voice. "Talking can lead
to thinking, and thinking's dangerous for such as you boys. Like picking your
nose with bullet-heads."
Depape donkeyed his
damned hee-haw laughter, as if he didn't realize the joke was on him.
"Jonas,
listen," Reynolds began, and then looked uncertainly at Rimer.
"You can talk in
front of sai Rimer," Jonas said, laying out a fresh line of cards.
"He is, after all, our chief employer. I play at Chancellors' Patience in
his honor, so I do."
Reynolds looked
surprised. "I thought . . . that is to say, I believed that Mayor Thorin
was ..."
"Hart Thorin
wants to know none of the details of our arrangement with the Good Man,"
Rimer said. "A share of the profits is all he requires in that line, Mr.
Reynolds. The Mayor's chief concern right now is that the Reaping Day Fair go
smoothly, and that his arrangements with the young lady be ... smoothly
consummated."
"Aye, that's a
diplomatic turn o' speech for ye," Jonas said in a broad Mejis accent.
"But since Roy looks a little perplexed, I'll translate. Mayor Thorin
spends most of his time in the jakes these days, yanking his willy-pink and
dreaming his fist is Susan Delgado's box. I'm betting that when the shell's
finally opened and her pearl lies before him, he'll never pluck it—his heart'll
explode from excitement, and he'll drop dead atop her, so he will. Yar!"
More donkey laughter
from Depape. He elbowed Reynolds. "He's got it down, don't he, Clay?
Sounds just like em!"
Reynolds grinned, but
his eyes were still worried. Rimer managed a smile as thin as a scum of
November ice, and pointed at the seven which had just popped out of the pack.
"Red on black, my dear Jonas."
"I ain't your
dear anything," Jonas said, putting the seven of diamonds on an eight of
shadows, "and you'd do well to remember that." Then, to Reynolds and
Depape: "Now what do you boys want? Rimer 'n me was just going to have us
a little palaver."
"Perhaps we could
all put our heads together," Reynolds said, putting a hand on the
back of a chair. "Kind of see if our thinking matches up."
"I think
not," Jonas said, sweeping his cards together. He looked irritated, and
Clay Reynolds took his hand off the back of the chair in a hurry. "Say
your say and be done with it. It's late."
"We was thinking
it's time to go on out there to the Bar K," Depape said. "Have a look
around. See if there's anything to back up what the old fella in Ritzy
said."
"And see what
else they've got out there," Reynolds put in. "It's getting close
now, Eldred, and we can't afford to take chances. They might have—"
"Aye? Guns?
Electric lights? Fairy-women in bottles? Who knows? I'll think about it.
Clay."
"But—"
"I said I'll
think about it. Now go on upstairs, the both of you, back to your own
fairy-women."
Reynolds and Depape
looked at him, looked at each other, then backed away from the table. Rimer watched
them with his thin smile.
At the foot of the
stairs, Reynolds turned back. Jonas paused in the act of shuffling his cards
and looked at him, tufted eyebrows raised.
"We
underestimated em once and they made us look like monkeys. I don't want it to
happen again. That's all."
"Your ass is
still sore over that, isn't it? Well, so is mine. And I tell you again, they'll
pay for what they did. I have the bill ready, and when the time comes, I'll
present it to them, with all interest duly noted. In the meantime, they aren't
going to spook me into making the first move. Time is on our side, not
theirs. Do you understand that?"
"Yes."
"Will you try to
remember it?"
"Yes,"
Reynolds repeated. He seemed satisfied.
"Roy? Do you
trust me?"
"Aye, Eldred. To
the end." Jonas had praised him for the work he had done in Ritzy, and
Depape had rolled in it the way a male dog rolls in the scent of a bitch.
"Then go on up,
the both of you, and let me palaver with the boss and be done with it. I'm too
old for these late nights."
When they were gone,
Jonas dealt out a fresh line of cards, then looked around the room. There were
perhaps a dozen folks, including Sheb the piano-player and Barkie the bouncer,
sleeping it off. No one was close enough to listen to the low-voiced conversation
of the two men by the door, even if one of the snoring drunkards was for some
reason only shamming sleep. Jonas put a red queen on a black knight, then
looked up at Rimer. "Say your say."
"Those two said
it for me, actually. Sai Depape will never be embarrassed by a surplus of
brains, but Reynolds is fairly smart for a gunny, isn't he?"
"Clay's trig when
the moon's right and he's had a shave," Jonas agreed. "Are you saying
you came all the way from Seafront to tell me those three babbies need a closer
looking at?"
Rimer shrugged.
"Perhaps they do,
and I'm the man to do it, if so—right enough. But what's there to find?"
"That's to be
seen," Rimer said, and tapped one of Jonas's cards. "There's a
Chancellor."
"Aye. Near as
ugly as the one I'm sitting with." Jonas put the Chancellor—it was
Paul—above his run of cards. The next draw uncovered Luke, whom he put next to
Paul. That left Peter and Matthew still lurking in the bush. Jonas looked at
Rimer shrewdly. "You hide it better than my pals, but you're as nervous as
they are, underneath. You want to know what's out at that bunkhouse? I'll tell
you: extra boots, pictures of their mommies, socks that stink to high heaven,
stiff sheets from boys who've been taught it's low-class to chase after the
sheep . . . and guns hidden somewhere. Under the floorboards, like
enough."
"You really think
they have guns?"
"Aye, Roy got the
straight of that, all right. They're from Gilead, they're likely from the line
of Eld or from folk who like to think they're from it, and they're likely
'prentices to the trade who've been sent on with guns they haven't earned yet.
I wonder a bit about the tall one with the I-don't-give-a-shit look in his
eyes—he might already be a gunslinger, I suppose—but is it likely? I
don't think so. Even if he is, I could take him in a fair go. I know it, and he
does, too."
"Then why have
they been sent here?"
"Not because
those from the Inner Baronies suspect your treason, sai Rimer—be easy on that
score."
Rimer's head poked out
of his serape as he sat up straight, and his face stiffened. "How
dare you call me a traitor? How dare you?"
Eldred Jonas favored
Hambry's Minister of Inventory with an unpleasant smile. It made the
white-haired man look like a wolverine. "I've called things by their right
names my whole life, and I won't stop now. All that needs matter to you is that
I've never double-crossed an employer."
"If I didn't
believe in the cause of—"
"To hell with
what you believe! It's late and I want to go to bed. The folk in New Canaan and
Gilead haven't the foggiest idea of what does or doesn't go on out here on the
Crescent; there aren't many of em who've ever been here, I'd wager. Them are
too busy trying to keep everything from falling down around their ears to do
much travelling these days. No, what they know is all from the picturebooks
they was read out of when they 'us babbies themselves: happy cowboys galloping
after stock, happy fishermen pulling whoppers into their boats, folks clogging
at bam-raisings and drinking big pots o' graf in Green Heart pavilion.
For the sake of the Man Jesus, Rimer, don't go dense on me—I deal with that day
in and day out."
"They see Mejis
as a place of quiet and safety."
"Aye, bucolic
splendor, just so, no doubt about it. They know that their whole way o' life—all
that nobility and chivalry and ancestor-worship—is on fire. The final battle
may take place as much as two hundred wheels northwest of their borders, but
when Farson uses his fire-carriages and robots to wipe out their army, trouble
will come south fast. There are those from the Inner Baronies who've smelled
this coming for twenty years or more. They didn't send these brats here to
discover your secrets, Rimer; folks such as these don't send their babbies into
danger on purpose. They sent em here to get em out of the way, that's all.
That doesn't make em blind or stupid, but for the sake of the gods, let's be
sane. They're kiddies;'
"What else might
you find, should you go out there?"
"Some way of
sending messages, mayhap. A heliograph's the most likely. And out beyond
Eyebolt, a shepherd or maybe a freeholder susceptible to a bribe—someone
they've trained to catch the message and either flash it on or carry it afoot.
But before long it'll be too late for messages to do any good, won't it?"
"Perhaps, but
it's not too late yet. And you're right. Kiddies or not, they worry me."
"You've no cause,
I tell you. Soon enough, I'll be wealthy and you'll be downright rich. Mayor
yourself, if you want. Who'd stand to stop you? Thorin? He's a joke. Coral?
She'd help you string him up, I wot. Or perhaps you'd like to be a Baron, if
such offices be revived?" He saw a momentary gleam in Rimer's eyes and
laughed. Matthew came out of the deck, and Jonas put him up with the other
Chancellors. "Yar, I see that's what you've got your heart set on. Gems is
nice, and for gold that goes twice, but there's nothing like having folk bow
and scrape before ye, is there?"
Rimer said, "They
should have been on the cowboy side by now."
Jonas's hands stopped
above the layout of cards. It was a thought that had crossed his own mind more
than once, especially over the last two weeks or so.
"How long do you
think it takes to count our nets and boats and chart out the fish-hauls?"
Rimer asked. "They should be over on the Drop, counting cows and horses,
looking through barns, studying the foal-charts. They should have been there
two weeks ago, in fact. Unless they already know what they'd find."
Jonas understood what
Rimer was implying, but couldn't believe it. Wouldn't believe it. Not such
a depth of slyness from boys who only had to shave once a week.
"No," he
said. "That's your own guilty heart talking to you. They're just so
determined to do it right that they're creeping along like old folks with bad
eyes. They'll be over on the Drop soon enough, and counting their little hearts
out."
"And if they're
not?"
A good question. Get
rid of them somehow, Jonas supposed. An ambush, perhaps. Three shots from
cover, no more babbies. There'd be ill feeling afterward—the boys were well
liked in town—but Rimer could handle that until Fair Day, and after the Reap it
wouldn't matter. Still—
"I'll have a look
around out at the Bar K," Jonas said at last. "By myself—I won't
have Clay and Roy tramping along behind me."
"That sounds
fine."
"Perhaps you'd
like to come and lend a hand."
Kimba Rimer smiled his
icy smile. "I think not."
Jonas nodded, and
began to deal again. Going out to the Bar K would be a bit risky, but he didn't
expect any real problem—especially if he went alone. They were only boys,
after all, and gone for much of each day.
"When may I
expect a report, sai Jonas?"
"When I'm ready
to make it. Don't crowd me."
Rimer lifted his thin
hands and held them, palms out, to Jonas. "Cry your pardon, sai," he
said.
Jonas nodded, slightly
mollified. He flipped up another card. It was Peter, Chancellor of Keys. He put
the card in the top row and then stared at it, combing his fingers through his
long white hair as he did. He looked from the card to Rimer, who looked back,
eyebrows raised.
"You smile,"
Rimer said.
"Yar!" Jonas
said, and began to deal again. "I'm happy! All the Chancellors are out. 1
think I'm going to win this game."
5
For Rhea, the time of
the Huntress had been a time of frustration and unsatisfied craving. Her plans
had gone awry, and thanks to her cat's hideously mistimed leap, she didn't know
how or why. The young cull who'd taken Susan Delgado's cherry had likely
stopped her from chopping her scurf. . . but how? And who was he really? She
wondered that more and more, but her curiosity was secondary to her fury. Rhea
of the Coos wasn't used to being balked.
She looked across the
room to where Musty crouched and watched her carefully. Ordinarily he would
have relaxed in the fireplace (he seemed to like the cool drafts that swirled down
the chimney), but since she had singed his fur. Musty preferred the woodpile.
Given Rhea's mood, that was probably wise. "You're lucky I let ye live, ye
warlock," the old woman grumbled.
She turned back to the
ball and began to make passes above it, but the glass only continued to swirl
with bright pink light—not a single image appeared. Rhea got up at last, went
to the door, threw it open, and looked out on the night sky. Now the moon had
waxed a little past the half, and the Huntress was coming clear on its bright
face. Rhea directed the stream of foul language she didn't quite dare to direct
at the glass (who knew what entity might lurk inside it, waiting to take
offense at such talk?) up at the woman in the moon. Twice she slammed her bony
old fist into the door-lintel as she cursed, dredging up every dirty word she
could think of, even the potty-mouth words children throw at each other in the
dust of the play yard. Never had she been so angry. She had given the girl a
command, and the girl, for whatever reasons, had disobeyed. For standing
against Rhea of the Coos, the bitch deserved to die.
"But not right
away," the old woman whispered. "First she should be rolled in the
dirt, then pissed on until the dirt's mud and her fine blonde hair's full of it.
Humiliated ... hurt . . . spat on . . ."
She slammed her fist
against the door's side again, and this time blood flew from the knuckles. It
wasn't just the girl's failure to obey the hypnotic command. There was another
matter, related but much more serious: Rhea herself was now too upset to use
the glass, except for brief and unpredictable periods of time. The hand-passes
she made over it and the incantations she muttered to it were, she knew,
useless; the words and gestures were just the way she focused her will. That
was what the glass responded to—will and concentrated thought. Now, thanks to
the trollop of a girl and her boy lover, Rhea was too angry to summon the
smooth concentration needed to part the pink fog which swirled inside the ball.
She was, in fact, too angry to see.
"How can I make
it like it was?" Rhea asked the half-glimpsed woman in the moon.
"Tell me! Tell me!" But the Huntress told her nothing, and at
last Rhea went back inside, sucking at her bleeding knuckles.
Musty saw her coming and
squeezed into the cobwebby space between the woodpile and the chimney.
CHAPTER II
THE GIRL AT
THE
WINDOW
1
Now the Huntress
"filled her belly," as the old-timers said—even at noon she could be
glimpsed in the sky, a pallid vampire woman caught in bright autumn sunlight.
In front of businesses such as the Travellers' Rest and on the porches of such
large ranch houses as Lengyll's Rocking B and Renfrew's Lazy Susan, stuffy-guys
with heads full of straw above their old overalls began to appear. Each wore
his sombrero; each held a basket of produce cradled in his arms; each
looked out at the emptying world with stitched white-cross eyes.
Wagons filled with
squashes clogged the roads; bright orange drifts of pumpkins and bright magenta
drifts of sharproot lay against the sides of barns. In the fields, the
potato-carts rolled and the pickers followed behind. In front of the Hambry
Mercantile, reap-charms appeared like magic, hanging from the carved Guardians
like wind-chimes.
All over Mejis, girls
sewed their Reaping Night costumes (and sometimes wept over them, if the work
went badly) as they dreamed of the boys they would dance with in the Green
Heart pavilion. Their little brothers began to have trouble sleeping as they
thought of the rides and the games and the prizes they might win at the
carnival. Even their elders sometimes lay awake in spite of their sore hands
and aching backs, thinking about the pleasures of the Reap.
Summer had slipped
away with a final flirt of her greengown; harvest-time had arrived.
2
Rhea cared not a fig
for Reaping dances or carnival games, but she could no more sleep than those
who did. Most nights she lay on her stinking pallet until dawn, her skull
thudding with rage. On a night not long after Jonas's conversation with
Chancellor Rimer, she determined to drink herself into oblivion. Her mood was
not improved when she found that her graf barrel was almost empty; she
blistered the air with her curses.
She was drawing in
breath for a fresh string of them when an idea struck her. A wonderful idea. A brilliant
idea. She had wanted Susan Delgado to cut off her hair. That hadn't worked, and
she didn't know why. . . but she did know something about the girl,
didn't she? Something interesting, aye, so it was, wery interesting, indeed.
Rhea had no desire to
go to Thorin with what she knew; she had a fond (and foolish, likely) hope that
the Mayor had forgotten about his wonderful glass ball. But the girl's aunt,
now . . . suppose Cordelia Delgado were to discover that not only was her
niece's virginity lost, the girl was well on her way to becoming a practiced
trollop? Rhea didn't think Cordelia would go to the Mayor, either—the woman was
a prig but not a fool—yet it would set the cat among the pigeons just the same,
wouldn't it?
"Waow!"
Thinking of cats,
there was Musty, standing on the stoop in the moonlight, looking at her with a
mixture of hope and mistrust. Rhea, grinning hideously, opened her arms.
"Come to me, my precious! Come, my sweet one!"
Musty, understanding
all was forgiven, rushed into his mistress's arms and began to purr loudly as
Rhea licked along his sides with her old and yellowing tongue. That night the
Coos slept soundly for the first time in a week, and when she took the glass
ball into her arms the following morning, its mists cleared for her at once.
She spent the day in thrall to it, spying on people she detested, drinking
little and eating nothing. Around sunset, she came out of her trance enough to
realize she had as yet done nothing about the saucy little jade. But that was
all right; she saw how it could be done . .. and she could watch all the
results in the glass! All the protests, all the shouting and recriminations!
She would see Susan's tears. That would be the best, to see her tears.
"A little harvest
of my own," she said to Ermot, who now came slithering up her leg toward
the place where she liked him best. There weren't many men who could do you
like Ermot could do you, no indeed. Sitting there with a lapful of snake, Rhea
began to laugh.
3
"Remember your
promise," Alain said nervously as they heard the approaching beat of
Rusher's hoofs. "Keep your temper."
"I will,"
Cuthbert said, but he had his doubts. As Roland rode around the long wing of
the bunkhouse and into the yard, his shadow trailing out in the sunset light,
Cuthbert clenched his hands nervously. He willed them to open, and they did.
Then, as he watched Roland dismount, they rolled themselves closed again, the
nails digging into his palms.
Another go-round,
Cuthbert thought. Gods, but I'm sick of them. Sick to death.
Last night's had been
about the pigeons—again. Cuthbert wanted to use one to send a message back west
about the oil tankers; Roland still did not. So they had argued. Except (here
was another thing which infuriated him, that rubbed against his nerves like the
sound of the thinny) Roland did not argue. These days Roland did not deign
to argue. His eyes always kept that distant look, as if only his body was here.
The rest of him— mind, soul, spirit, ka—was with Susan Delgado.
"No," he had
said simply. "It's too late for such."
"You can't know
that," Cuthbert had argued. "And even if it's too late for help
to come from Gilead, it's not too late for advice to come from Gilead.
Are you so blind you can't see that?"
"What advice can
they send us?" Roland hadn't seemed to hear the rawness in Cuthbert's
voice. His own voice was calm. Reasonable. And utterly disconnected, Cuthbert
thought, from the urgency of the situation.
"If we knew
that," he had replied, "we wouldn't have to ask, Roland, would
we?"
"We can only wait
and stop them when they make their move. It's comfort you're looking for,
Cuthbert, not advice."
You mean wait while
you fuck her in as many ways and in as many places as you can imagine,
Cuthbert thought. Inside, outside, rightside up and upside down.
"You're not
thinking clearly about this," Cuthbert had said coldly. He'd heard Alain's
gasp. Neither of them had ever said such a thing to Roland in their lives, and
once it was out, he'd waited uneasily for whatever explosion might follow.
None did.
"Yes," Roland replied, "I am." And he had gone into the
bunkhouse without another word.
Now, watching Roland
uncinch Rusher's girths and pull the saddle from his back, Cuthbert thought: You
're not, you know. But you better think clearly about this. By all the gods,
you 'd better.
"Hile," he
said as Roland carried the saddle over to the porch and set it on the step.
"Busy afternoon?" He felt Alain kick his ankle and ignored it.
"I've been with
Susan," Roland said. No defense, no demur, no excuse. And for a moment
Cuthbert had a vision of shocking clarity: he saw the two of them in a hut
somewhere, the late afternoon sun shining through holes in the roof and
dappling their bodies. She was on top, riding him. Cuthbert saw her knees on
the old, spongy boards, and the tension in her long thighs. He saw how tanned
her arms were, how white her belly. He saw how Roland's hands cupped the globes
of her breasts, squeezing them as she rocked back and forth above him, and he
saw how the sun lit her hair, turning it into a fine-spun net.
Why do you always have
to be first? he cried at Roland in his mind. Why does it
always have to be you? Gods damn you, Roland! Gods damn you!
"We were on the
docks," Cuthbert said, his tone a thin imitation of his usual brightness.
"Counting boots and marine tools and what are called clam-drags. What an
amusing time of it we've had, eh, Al?"
"Did you need me
to help you do that?" Roland asked. He went back to Rusher, and took off
the saddle-blanket. "Is that why you sound angry?"
"If I sound
angry, it's because most of the fishermen are laughing at us behind our backs.
We keep coming back and coming back. Roland, they think we're fools."
Roland nodded.
"All to the good," he said.
"Perhaps,"
Alain said quietly, "but Rimer doesn't think we're fools— it's in the way
he looks at us when we pass. Nor does Jonas. And if they don't think we're
fools, Roland, what do they think?"
Roland stood on the
second step, the saddle-blanket hanging forgotten over his arm. For once they
actually seemed to have his attention, Cuthbert thought. Glory be and will
wonders never cease.
"They think we're
avoiding the Drop because we already know what's there," Roland said.
"And if they don't think it, they soon will."
"Cuthbert has a
plan."
Roland's gaze—mild,
interested, already starting to be not there again—shifted to Cuthbert.
Cuthbert the joker. Cuthbert the 'prentice, who had in no way earned the gun
he'd carried east to the Outer Crescent. Cuthbert the virgin and eternal second.
Gods, I don't want to hate him. I don't, but now it's so easy.
"We two should go
and see Sheriff Avery tomorrow," Cuthbert said. "We will present it
as a courtesy visit. We have already established ourselves as three courteous,
if slightly stupid, young fellows, have we not?"
"To a
fault," Roland agreed, smiling.
"We'll say that
we've finally finished with the seacoast side of Hambry, and we hope to be
every bit as meticulous on the farm and cowboy side. But we certainly don't
want to cause trouble or be in anyone's way. It is, after all, the busiest time
of year—for ranchers as well as farmers— and even citified fools such as
ourselves will be aware of that. So we'll give the good Sheriff a list—"
Roland's eyes lit up.
He tossed the blanket over the porch rail, grabbed Cuthbert around the
shoulders, and gave him a rough hug. Cuthbert could smell a lilac scent around
Roland's collar and felt an insane but powerful urge to clamp his hands around
Roland's throat and try to strangle him. Instead, he gave him a perfunctory
clap on the back in return.
Roland drew away,
grinning widely. "A list of the ranches we'll be visiting," he said.
"Aye! And with forewarning, they can move any stock they'd like us not to
see on to the next ranch, or the last one. The same for tack, feed, equipment.
. . it's masterful, Cuthbert! You're a genius!"
"Far from
that," Cuthbert said. "I've just spared a little time to think about
a problem that concerns us all. That concerns the entire Affiliation, mayhap.
We need to think. Wouldn't you say?"
Alain winced, but
Roland didn't seem to notice. He was still grinning. Even at fourteen, such an
expression on his face was troubling. The truth was that when Roland grinned,
he looked slightly mad. "Do you know, they may even move in a fair number
of muties for us to look at, just so we'll continue to believe the lies they've
already told about the impurity of their stocklines." He paused, seeming
to think, and then said: "Why don't you and Alain go and see the Sheriff,
Bert? That would do very well, I think."
At this point Cuthbert
nearly threw himself at Roland, wanting to scream Yes, why not? Then you
could spend tomorrow morning pronging her as well as tomorrow afternoon! You
idiot! You thoughtless lovestruck idiot!
It was Al who saved
him—saved them all, perhaps.
"Don't be a
fool," he said sharply, and Roland wheeled toward him, looking surprised.
He wasn't used to sharpness from that quarter. "You're our leader,
Roland—seen that way by Thorin, by Avery, by the townsfolk. Seen that way by
us as well."
"No one appointed
me—"
"No one needed
to!" Cuthbert shouted. "You won your guns! These folk would hardly
believe it—I hardly believe it myself just lately—but you are a gunslinger.
You have to go! Plain as the nose on your face! It doesn't matter which of us
accompanies you, but you have to go!" He could say more, much more, but if
he did, where would it end? With their fellowship broken beyond repair, likely.
So he clamped his mouth shut— no need for Alain to kick him this time—and once
again waited for the explosion. Once again, none came.
"All right,"
Roland said in his new way—that mild it-doesn't-much-matter way that made
Cuthbert feel like biting him to wake him up. "Tomorrow morning. You and
I, Bert. Will eight suit you?"
"Down to the
ground," Cuthbert said. Now that the discussion was over and the decision
made, Bert's heart was beating wildly and the muscles in his upper thighs felt
like rubber. It was the way he'd felt after their confrontation with the Big
Coffin Hunters.
"We'll be at our
prettiest," Roland said. "Nice boys from the Inners with good
intentions but not many brains. Fine." And he went inside, no longer
grinning (which was a relief) but smiling gently.
Cuthbert and Alain
looked at each other and let out their breath in a mutual rush. Cuthbert cocked
his head toward the yard, and went down the steps. Alain followed, and the two
boys stood in the center of the dirt rectangle with the bunkhouse at their
backs. To the east, the rising full moon was hidden behind a scrim of
clouds. '
"She's tranced
him," Cuthbert said. "Whether she means to or not, she'll kill us all
in the end. Wait and see if she don't."
"You shouldn't
say such, even in jest."
"All right,
she'll crown us with the jewels of Eld and we'll live forever."
"You have to stop
being angry at him, Bert. You have to."
Cuthbert looked at him
bleakly. "I can't."
4
The great storms of
autumn were still a month or more distant, but the following morning dawned
drizzly and gray. Roland and Cuthbert wrapped themselves in scrapes and
headed for town, leaving Alain to the few home place chores. Tucked in Roland's
belt was the schedule of farms and ranches—beginning with the three small
spreads owned by the Barony—the three of them had worked out the previous
evening. The pace this schedule suggested was almost ludicrously slow—it would
keep them on the Drop and in the orchards almost until Year's End Fair—but it
conformed to the pace they had already set on the docks.
Now the two of them
rode silently toward town, both lost in their own thoughts. Their way took them
past the Delgado house. Roland looked up and saw Susan sitting in her window, a
bright vision in the gray light of that fall morning. His heart leaped up and
although he didn't know it then, it was how he would remember her most clearly
forever after—lovely Susan, the girl at the window. So do we pass the ghosts
that haunt us later in our lives; they sit undramatically by the roadside like
poor beggars, and we see them only from the comers of our eyes, if we see them
at all. The idea that they have been waiting there for us rarely if ever
crosses our minds. Yet they do wait, and when we have passed, they gather up
their bundles of memory and fall in behind, treading in our footsteps and catching
up, little by little.
Roland raised a hand
to her. It went toward his mouth at first, wanting to send her a kiss, but that
would be madness. He lifted the hand before it could touch his lips and ticked
a finger off his forehead instead, offering a saucy little salute.
Susan smiled and
returned it in kind. None saw Cordelia, who had gone out in the drizzle to
check on the last of her squash and sharproot. That lady stood where she was, a
sombrero yanked down on her head almost to the eyeline, half-hidden by
the stuffy-guy guarding the pumpkin patch. She watched Roland and Cuthbert pass
(Cuthbert she barely saw; her interest was in the other one). From the boy on
horseback she looked up to Susan, sitting there in her window, humming as
blithely as a bird in a gilded cage.
A sharp splinter of
suspicion whispered its way into Cordelia's heart. Susan's change of
temperament—from alternating bouts of sorrow and fearful anger to a kind of
dazed but mainly cheerful acceptance—had been so sudden. Mayhap it wasn't acceptance
at all.
"Ye're mad,"
she whispered to herself, but her hand remained tight on the haft of the
machete she held. She dropped to her knees in the muddy garden and abruptly
began chopping sharproot vines, tossing the roots themselves toward the side of
the house with quick, accurate throws. "There's nothing between em. I'd
know. Children of such an age have no more discretion than . . . than the
drunks in the Rest."
But the way they had
smiled. The way they had smiled at each other.
"Perfectly normal,"
she whispered, chopping and throwing. She cut a sharproot nearly in half,
ruining it, not noticing. The whispering was a habit she'd picked up only
recently, as Reap Day neared and the stresses of coping with her brother's
troublesome daughter mounted. "Folks smile at each other, that's
all."
The same for the
salute and Susan's returning wave. Below, the handsome cavalier, acknowledging
the pretty maid; above, the maid herself, pleased to be acknowledged by such as
he. It was youth calling to youth, that was all. And yet...
The look in his eyes .
. . and the look in hers.
Nonsense, of course.
But—
But you saw something
else.
Yes, perhaps. For a
moment it had seemed to her that the young man was going to blow Susan a kiss .
. . then had remembered himself at the last moment and turned it into a salute,
instead.
Even if ye did see
such a thing, it means nothing. Young cavaliers are saucy, especially when out
from beneath the gaze of their fathers. And these three already have a history,
as ye well know.
All true enough, but
none of it removed that chilly splinter from her heart.
5
Jonas answered
Roland's knock and let the two boys into the Sheriff's office. He was wearing
a Deputy's star on his shirt, and looked at them with expressionless eyes.
"Boys," he said. "Come in out of the wet."
He stepped back to
allow them entrance. His limp was more pronounced than Roland had ever seen
it; the wet weather was playing it up, he supposed.
Roland and Cuthbert
stepped in. There was a gas heater in the corner—tilled from "the
candle" at Citgo, no doubt—and the big room, which had been cool on the
day they had first come here, was stuporously hot. The three cells held five
woeful-looking drunks, two pairs of men and a woman in the center cell by
herself, sitting on the bunk with her legs spread wide, displaying a broad
expanse of red drawers. Roland feared that if she got her finger any farther up
her nose, she might never retrieve it. Clay Reynolds was leaning against the
notice-board, picking his teeth with a broomstraw. Sitting at the rolltop desk
was Deputy Dave, stroking his chin and frowning through his monocle at the
board which had been set up there. Roland wasn't at all surprised to see that
he and Bert had interrupted a game of Castles.
"Well, look here,
Eldred!" Reynolds said. "It's two of the In-World boys! Do your
mommies know you're out, fellas?"
"They do,"
Cuthbert said brightly. "And you're looking very well, sai Reynolds. The
wet weather's soothed your pox, has it?"
Without looking at
Bert or losing his pleasant little smile, Roland shot an elbow into his
friend's shoulder. "Pardon my friend, sai. His humor regularly
transgresses the bounds of good taste; he doesn't seem able to help it. There's
no need for us to scratch at one another—we've agreed to let bygones be
bygones, haven't we?"
"Aye, certainly,
all a misunderstanding," Jonas said. He limped back across to the desk and
the game-board. As he sat down on his side of it, his smile turned to a sour
little grimace. "I'm worse than an old dog," he said. "Someone
ought to put me down, so they should. Earth's cold but painless, eh,
boys?"
He looked back at the
board and moved a man around to the side of his Hillock. He had begun to
Castle, and was thus vulnerable . . . although not very, in this case, Roland
thought; Deputy Dave didn't look like much in the way of competition.
"I see you're
working for the Barony salt now," Roland said, nodding at the star on
Jonas's shirt.
"Salt's what it
amounts to," Jonas said, companionably enough. "A fellow went leg-broke.
I'm helping out, that's all."
"And sai
Reynolds? Sai Depape? Are they helping out as well?"
"Yar, I
reckon," Jonas said. "How goes your work among the fisher-folk? Slow,
I hear."
"Done at last.
The work wasn't so slow as we were. But coming here in disgrace was enough for
us—we have no intention of leaving that way. Slow and steady wins the race,
they say."
"So they
do," Jonas agreed. "Whoever 'they' are."
From somewhere deeper
in the building there came the whoosh of a water-stool flushing. All the
comforts of home in the Hambry Sheriff's, Roland thought. The flush was
soon followed by heavy footsteps descending a staircase, and a few moments
later, Herk Avery appeared. With one hand he was buckling his belt; with the
other he mopped his broad and sweaty forehead. Roland admired the man's
dexterity.
"Whew!" the
Sheriff exclaimed. "Them beans I ate last night took the shortcut, I tell
ye." He looked from Roland to Cuthbert and then back to Roland. "Why,
boys! Too wet for net-counting, is it?"
"Sai Dearborn was
just saying that their net-counting days are at an end," Jonas said. He
combed back his long hair with the tips of his fingers. Beyond him, Clay
Reynolds had resumed his slouch against the notice-board, looking at Roland and
Cuthbert with open dislike.
"Aye? Well,
that's fine, that's fine. What's next, youngsters? And is there any way we here
can help ye? For that's what we like to do best, lend a hand where a hand's
needed. So it is."
"Actually, you could
help us," Roland said. He reached into his belt and pulled out the list.
"We have to move on to the Drop, but we don't want to inconvenience
anyone."
Grinning hugely,
Deputy Dave slid his Squire all the way around his own Hillock. Jonas Castled
at once, ripping open Dave's entire left flank. The grin faded from Dave's
face, leaving a puzzled emptiness. "How'd ye manage that?"
"Easy."
Jonas smiled, then pushed back from the desk to include the others in his
regard. "You want to remember, Dave, that I play to win. I can't help it;
it's just my nature." He turned his full attention to Roland. His smile
broadened. "Like the scorpion said to the maiden as she lay dying, 'You
knowed I was poison when you picked me up.' "
6
When Susan came in
from feeding the livestock, she went directly to the cold-pantry for the juice,
which was her habit. She didn't see her aunt standing in the chimney comer and
watching her, and when Cordelia spoke, Susan was startled badly. It wasn't just
the unexpectedness of the voice; it was the coldness of it.
"Do ye know him?"
The juice-jug slipped
in her fingers, and Susan put a steadying hand beneath it. Orange juice was too
precious to waste, especially this late in the year. She turned and saw her
aunt by the woodbox. Cordelia had hung her sombrero on a hook in the
entryway, but she still wore her serape and muddy boots. Her cuchillo
lay on top of the stacked wood, with green strands of sharproot vine still
trailing from its edge. Her tone was cold, but her eyes were hot with
suspicion.
A sudden clarity
filled Susan's mind and all of her senses. If you say "No, "
you're damned, she thought. If you even ask who, you may be damned. You
must say—
"I know them
both," she replied in offhand fashion. "I met them at the party. So
did you. Ye frightened me, Aunt."
"Why did he salute
ye so?"
"How can I know?
Perhaps he just felt like it."
Her aunt bolted
forward, slipped in her muddy boots, regained her balance, and seized Susan by
the arms. Now her eyes were blazing. "Be'n't insolent with me, girl!
Be'n't haughty with me, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty, or I'll—"
Susan pulled backward
so hard that Cordelia staggered and might have fallen again, if the table had
not been handy to grab. Behind her, muddy foot-tracks stood out on the clean
kitchen floor like accusations. "Call me that again and I'll . . . I'll
slap thee!" Susan cried. "So I will!"
Cordelia's lips drew
back from her teeth in a dry, ferocious smile. "Ye'd slap your father's
only living blood kin? Would ye be so bad?"
"Why not? Do ye
not slap me, Aunt?"
Some of the heat went
out of her aunt's eyes, and the smile left her mouth. "Susan! Hardly ever!
Not half a dozen times since ye were a toddler who would grab anything her
hands could reach, even a pot of boiling water on the—"
"It's with thy
mouth thee mostly hits nowadays," Susan said. "I've put up with
it—more fool me—but am done with it now. I'll have no more. If I'm old enough
to be sent to a man's bed for money, I'm old enough for ye to keep a civil
tongue when ye speak to me."
Cordelia opened her
mouth to defend herself—the girl's anger had startled her, and so had her
accusations—and then she realized how cleverly she was being led away from the
subject of the boys. Of the boy.
"Ye only know him
from the party, Susan? It's Dearborn I mean." As I think ye well know.
"I've seen him
about town," Susan said. She met her aunt's eyes steadily, although it
cost her an effort; lies would follow half-truths as dark followed dusk.
"I've seen all three of them about town. Are ye satisfied?" No, Susan
saw with mounting dismay, she was not. "Do ye swear to me, Susan—on your
father's name—that ye've not been meeting this boy Dearborn?"
All the rides in the
late afternoon, Susan thought. All the excuses. All
the care that no one should see us. And it all comes down to a careless wave on
a rainy morning. That easily all's put at risk. Did we think it could be
otherwise? Were we that foolish?
Yes ... and no. The
truth was they had been mad. And still were. Susan kept remembering the look of
her father's eyes on the few occasions when he had caught her in a fib. That
look of half-curious disappointment. The sense that her fibs, innocuous as
they might be, had hurt him like the scratch of a thorn.
"I will swear to
nothing," she said. "Ye've no right to ask it of me."
"Swear!" Cordelia cried shrilly. She groped out for the table again
and grasped it, as if for balance. "Swear it! Swear it! This is no game of
jacks or tag or Johnny-jump-my-pony! Thee's not a child any longer! Swear to
me! Swear that thee're still pure!"
"No," Susan
said, and turned to leave. Her heart was beating madly, but still that awful
clarity informed the world. Roland would have known it for what it was: she was
seeing with gunslinger's eyes. There was a glass window in the kitchen, looking
out toward the Drop, and in it she saw the ghostly reflection of Aunt Cord
coming toward her, one arm raised, the hand at the end of it knotted into a
fist. Without turning, Susan put up her own hand in a halting gesture.
"Raise that not to me," she said. "Raise it not, ye bitch."
She saw the
reflection's ghost-eyes widen in shock and dismay. She saw the ghost-fist
relax, become a hand again, fall to the ghost-woman's side.
"Susan,"
Cordelia said in a small, hurt voice. "How can ye call me so? What's so
coarsened your tongue and your regard for me?"
Susan went out without
replying. She crossed the yard and entered the bam. Here the smells she had
known since childhood—horses, lumber, hay—filled her head and drove the awful
clarity away. She was tumbled back into childhood, lost in the shadows of her
confusion again. Pylon turned to look at her and whickered. Susan put her head
against his neck and cried.
7
"There!"
Sheriff Avery said when sais Dearborn and Heath were gone. "It's as ye
said—just slow is all they are; just creeping careful." He held the
meticulously printed list up, studied it a moment, then cackled happily.
"And look at this! What a beauty! Har! We can move anything we don't want
em to see days in advance, so we can."
"They're
fools," Reynolds said . . . but he pined for another chance at them, just
the same. If Dearborn really thought bygones were bygones over that little
business in the Travellers' Rest, he was way past foolishness and dwelling in
the land of idiocy.
Deputy Dave said
nothing. He was looking disconsolately through his monocle at the Castles
board, where his white army had been laid waste in six quick moves. Jonas's
forces had poured around Red Hillock like water, and Dave's hopes had been
swept away in the flood.
"I'm tempted to
wrap myself up dry and go over to Seafront with this," Avery said. He was
still gloating over the paper, with its neat list of farms and ranches and
proposed dates of inspection. Up to Year's End and beyond it ran. Gods!
"Why don't ye do
that?" Jonas said, and got to his feet. Pain ran up his leg like bitter
lightning.
"Another game,
sai Jonas?" Dave asked, beginning to reset the pieces.
"I'd rather play
a weed-eating dog," Jonas said, and took malicious pleasure at the flush
that crept up Dave's neck and stained his guileless fool's face. He limped
across to the door, opened it, and went out on the porch. The drizzle had
become a soft, steady rain. Hill Street was deserted, the cobbles gleaming
wetly.
Reynolds had followed
him out. "Eldred—"
"Get away,"
Jonas said without turning.
Clay hesitated a
moment, then went back inside and closed the door.
What the hell's wrong
with you? Jonas asked himself.
He should have been
pleased at the two young pups and their list—as pleased as Avery was, as
pleased as Rimer would be when he heard about this morning's visit. After all,
hadn't he told Rimer not three days ago that the boys would soon be over on the
Drop, counting their little hearts out? Yes. So why did he feel so unsettled?
So fucking jittery? Because there
^Bt still hadn't been any contact from Parson's man, Latigo? Because Reynolds
came back empty from Hanging Rock on one day and Depape came back empty the
next? Surely not. Latigo would come, along with a goodly troop of men, but it
was still too soon for them, and Jonas knew it. Reaping was still almost a
month away.
So is it just the bad
weather working on your leg, stirring up that old wound and making you ugly?
No. The pain was bad,
but it had been worse before. The trouble was his head. Jonas leaned against a
post beneath the overhang, listened to the rain plinking on the tiles, and
thought how, sometimes in a game of Castles, a clever player would peek around
his Hillock for just a moment, then duck back. That was what this felt like—it
was so right it smelled wrong. Crazy idea, but somehow not crazy at all.
"Are you trying
to play Castles with me, sprat?" Jonas murmured. "If so, you'll soon
wish you'd stayed home with your mommy. So you will."
8
Roland and Cuthbert
headed back to the Bar K along the Drop—there would be no counting done today.
At first, in spite of the rain and the gray skies, Cuthbert's good humor was
almost entirely restored.
"Did you see
them?" he asked with a laugh. "Did you see them, Roland . . . Will, I
mean? They bought it, didn't they? Swallowed that honey whole, they did!"
"Yes."
"What do we do
next? What's our next move?"
Roland looked at him
blankly for a moment, as if startled out of a doze. "The next move is
theirs. We count. And we wait."
Cuthbert's good cheer
collapsed in a puff, and he once more found himself having to restrain a flood
of recrimination, all whirling around two basic ideas: that Roland was shirking
his duty so he could continue to wallow in the undeniable charms of a certain
young lady, and—more important—that Roland had lost his wits when all of
Mid-World needed them the most.
Except what duty was
Roland shirking? And what made him so sure Roland was wrong? Logic? Intuition?
Or just shitty old catbox jealousy? Cuthbert found himself thinking of the
effortless way Jonas had ripped up Deputy Dave's army when Deputy Dave had
moved too soon. But life was not like Castles ... was it? He didn't know. But
he thought he had at least one valid intuition: Roland was heading for
disaster. And so they all were.
Wake up,
Cuthbert thought. Please, Roland, wake up before it's too late.
CHAPTER III
playing castles
1
There followed a week
of the sort of weather that makes folk apt to crawl back into bed after lunch,
take long naps, and wake feeling stupid and disoriented. It was far from
flood-weather, but it made the final phase of the apple-picking dangerous
(there were several broken legs, and in Seven-Mile Orchard a young woman fell
from the top of her ladder, breaking her back), and the potato-fields became
difficult to work; almost as much time was spent freeing wagons stuck in the
gluey rows as was spent actually picking. In Green Heart, what decorations had
been done for the Reaping Fair grew sodden and had to be pulled down. The work
volunteers waited with increasing nervousness for the weather to break so they
could begin again.
It was bad weather for
young men whose job it was to take inventory, although they were at least able
to begin visiting barns and counting stock. It was good weather for a young man
and young woman who had discovered the joys of physical love, you would have
said, but Roland and Susan met only twice during the run of gray weather. The
danger of what they were doing was now almost palpable.
The first time was in
an abandoned boathouse on the Seacoast Road. The second was in the far end of
the crumbling building below and to the east of Citgo—they made love with
furious intensity on one of Roland's saddle-blankets, which was spread on the
floor of what had once been the oil refinery's cafeteria. As Susan climaxed,
she shrieked his name over and over. Startled pigeons filled the old, shadowy
rooms and crumbling hallways with their soft thunder.
2
Just as it seemed that
the drizzle would never end and the grinding sound of the thinny in the still
air would drive everyone in Hambry insane, a strong wind—almost a gale—blew in
off the ocean and puffed the clouds away. The town awoke one day to a sky as
bright as blue steel and a sun that turned the bay to gold in the morning and
white fire in the afternoon. That sense of lethargy was gone. In the potato
fields the carts rolled with new vigor. In Green Heart an army of women began
once more to bedeck with flowers the podium where Jamie McCann and Susan
Delgado would he acclaimed this year's Reaping Lad and Girl.
Out on the part of the
Drop closest to Mayor's House, Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain rode with renewed
purpose, counting the horses which ran with the Barony brand on their flanks.
The bright skies and brisk winds filled them with energy and good cheer, and
for a course of days—three, or perhaps four—they galloped together in a
whooping, shouting, laughing line, their old good fellowship restored.
On one of these brisk
and sunny days, Eldred Jonas stepped out of the Sheriff's office and walked up
Hill Street toward Green Heart. He was free of both Depape and Reynolds this
morning—they had ridden out to Hanging Rock together, looking for Latigo's
outriders, who must come soon, now—and Jonas's plan was simple: to have a glass
of beer in the pavilion, and watch the preparations that were going on there:
the digging of the roasting-pits, the laying of faggots for the bonfire, the
arguments over how to set the mortars that would shoot off the fireworks, the
ladies flowering the stage where this year's Lad and Girl would be offered for
the town's adulation. Perhaps, Jonas thought, he might take a likely-looking
flower-girl off for an hour or two of recreation. The maintenance of the saloon
whores he left strictly to Roy and Clay, but a fresh young flower-girl of
seventeen or so was a different matter.
The pain in his hip
had faded with the damp weather; the painful, lurching stride with which he had
moved for the last week or so had become a mere limp again. Perhaps just a
beer or two in the open air would be enough, but the thought of a girl wouldn't
quite leave his head. Young, clear-skinned, high-breasted. Fresh, sweet breath.
Fresh, sweet lips—
"Mr. Jonas?
Eldred?"
He turned, smiling, to
the owner of the voice. No dewy-complexioned flower-girl with wide eyes and
moist, parted lips stood there, but a skinny woman edging into late middle
age—flat chest, flat bum, tight pale lips, hair scrooped so tight against her
skull that it fair screamed. Only the wide eyes corresponded with his daydream.
I believe I've made a conquest, Jonas thought sardonically.
"Why,
Cordelia!" he said, reaching out and taking one of her hands in both of
his. "How lovely you look this morning!"
Thin color came up in
her cheeks and she laughed a little. For a moment she looked forty-five
instead of sixty. And she's not sixty, Jonas thought. The lines
around her mouth and the shadows under her eyes . . . those are new.
"You're very
kind," she said, "but I know better. I haven't been sleeping, and
when women my age don't sleep, they grow old rapidly."
"I'm sorry to
hear you're sleeping badly," he said. "But now that the weather's
changed, perhaps—"
"It's not the
weather. Might I speak to you, Eldred? I've thought and thought, and you're the
only one I dare turn to for advice."
His smile widened. He
placed her hand through his arm, then covered it with his own. Now her blush
was like fire. With all that blood in her head, she might talk for hours. And
Jonas had an idea that every word would be interesting.
3
With women of a
certain age and temperament, tea was more effective than wine when it came to
loosening the tongue. Jonas gave up his plans for a lager (and, perhaps, a
flower-girl) without so much as a second thought. He seated sai Delgado in a
sunny comer of the Green Heart pavilion (it was not far from a red rock Roland
and Susan knew well), and ordered a large pot of tea; cakes, too. They watched
the Reaping Fair preparations go forward as they waited for the food and drink.
The sunswept park was full of hammering and sawing and shouts and bursts of
laughter.
"All Fair-Days
are pleasant, but Reaping turns us all into children again, don't you
find?" Cordelia asked.
"Yes,
indeed," said Jonas, who hadn't felt like a child even when he had been
one.
"What I still
like best is the bonfire," she said, looking toward the great pile of
sticks and boards that was being constructed at the far end of the park,
eater-corner from the stage. It looked like a large wooden tepee. "I love
it when the townsfolk bring their stuffy-guys and throw them on. Barbaric, but
it always gives me such a pleasant shiver."
"Aye," Jonas
said, and wondered if it would give her a pleasant shiver to know that three of
the stuffy-guys thrown onto the Reap Night bonfire this year were apt to smell
like pork and scream like harpies as they burned. If his luck was in, the one
that screamed the longest would be the one with the pale blue eyes.
The tea and cakes
came, and Jonas didn't so much as glance at the girl's full bosom when she bent
to serve. He had eyes only for the fascinating sai Delgado, with her nervous
little shifting movements and odd, desperate look.
When the girl was
gone, he poured out, put the teapot back on its trivet, then covered her hand
with his. "Now, Cordelia," he said in his warmest tone. "I can
see something troubles you. Out with it. Confide in your friend Eldred."
Her lips pressed so
tightly together that they almost disappeared, but not even that effort could
stop their trembling. Her eyes filled with tears; swam with them; overspilled.
He took his napkin and, leaning across the table, wiped the tears away.
"Tell me,"
he said tenderly.
"I will. I must
tell somebody or go mad. But you must make one promise, Eldred."
"Of course,
molly." He saw her blush more furiously than ever at this harmless endearment,
and squeezed her hand. "Anything."
"You mustn't tell
Hart. That disgusting spider of a Chancellor, either, but especially not the
Mayor. If I'm right in what I suspect and he found out, he could send her
west!" She almost moaned this, as if comprehending it as a real fact for
the first time. "He could send us both west!"
Maintaining his
sympathetic smile, he said: "Not a word to Mayor Thorin, not a word to
Kimba Rimer. Promise."
For a moment he
thought that she wouldn't take the plunge ... or perhaps couldn't. Then, in a
low, gaspy voice that sounded like ripping cloth, she said a single word.
"Dearborn."
He felt his heart take
a bump as the name that had been so much in his mind now passed her lips, and
although he continued to smile, he could not forbear a single hard squeeze of
her fingers that made her wince.
"I'm sorry,"
he said. "It's just that you startled me a little. Dearborn ... a
well-spoken enough lad, but 1 wonder if he's entirely trustworthy."
"I fear he's been
with my Susan." Now it was her turn to squeeze, but Jonas didn't mind. He
hardly felt it, in fact. He continued to smile, hoping he did not look as
flabbergasted as he felt. "I fear he's been with her... as a man is with a
woman. Oh, how horrible this is!"
She wept with a silent
bitterness, taking little pecking peeks around as she did to make sure they
were not being observed. Jonas had seen coyotes and wild dogs look around from
their stinking dinners in just that fashion. He let her get as much of it out
of her system as he could—he wanted her calm; incoherencies wouldn't help
him—and when he saw her tears slackening, he held out a cup of tea. "Drink
this."
"Yes. Thank
you." The tea was still hot enough to steam, but she drank it down
greedily. Her old throat must be lined with slate, Jonas thought. She
set the cup down, and while he poured out fresh, she used her frilly panuelo
to scrub the tears almost viciously from her face.
"I don't like
him," she said. "Don't like him, don't trust him, none of those three
with their fancy In-World bows and insolent eyes and strange ways of talking,
but him in particular. Yet if anything's gone on betwixt the two of em (and I'm
so afraid it has), it comes back to her, doesn't it? It's the woman, after all,
who must refuse the bestial impulses."
He leaned over the
table, looking at her with warm sympathy. "Tell me everything,
Cordelia."
She did.
4
Rhea loved everything
about the glass ball, but what she especially loved was the way it unfailingly
showed her people at their vilest. Never in its pink reaches did she see one
child comforting another after a fall at play, or a tired husband with his head
in his wife's lap, or old people supping peacefully together at the end of the
day; these things held no more interest for the glass, it seemed, than they
did for her.
Instead she had seen
acts of incest, mothers beating children, husbands beating wives. She had seen
a gang of boys out west'rds of town (it would have amused Rhea to know these
swaggering eight-year-olds called themselves the Big Coffin Hunters) go about
enticing stray dogs with a bone and then cutting off their tails for a lark.
She had seen robberies, and at least one murder: a wandering man who had
stabbed his companion with a pitchfork after some sort of trivial argument.
That had been on the first drizzly night. The body still lay mouldering in a
ditch beside the Great Road West, covered with a layer of straw and weeds. It
might be discovered before the autumn storms came to drown another year; it
might not.
She also glimpsed Cordelia
Delgado and that hard gun, Jonas, sitting in Green Heart at one of the outside
tables and talking about . . . well, of course she didn't know, did she? But
she could see the look in the spinster bitch's eyes. Infatuated with him, she
was, all pink in the face. Gone all hot and sweet over a backshooter and failed
gunslinger. It was comical, aye, and Rhea thought she would keep an eye on
them, from time to time. Wery entertaining, it would likely be.
After showing her
Cordelia and Jonas, the glass veiled itself once more. Rhea put it back in the
box with the eye on the lock. Seeing Cordelia in the glass had reminded the old
woman that she had unfinished business regarding Cordelia's sluttish niece.
That Rhea still hadn't done that business was ironic but understandable—as soon
as she had seen how to fix the young sai's wagon, Rhea's mind and emotions had
settled again, the images in the ball had reappeared, and in her fascination
with them Rhea had temporarily forgotten that Susan Delgado was alive. Now, however,
she remembered her plan. Set the cat among the pigeons. And speaking of cats—
"Musty! Yoo-hoo,
Musty, where are ye?"
The cat came oiling
out of the woodpile, eyes glowing in the dirty dimness of the hut (when the
weather turned fine again, Rhea had pulled her shutters to), forked tail
waving. He jumped into her lap.
"I've an errand
for ye," she said, bending over to lick the cat. The entrancing taste of
Musty's fur filled her mouth and throat.
Musty purred and
arched his back against her lips. For a six-legged mutie cat, life was good.
5
Jonas got rid of
Cordelia as soon as he could—although not as soon as he would have liked,
because he had to keep the scrawny bint sweetened up. She might come in handy
another time. In the end he had kissed her on the comer of her mouth (which
caused her to turn so violently red he feared she might have a brain-storm) and
told her that he would check into the matter which so concerned her.
"But
discreetly!" she said, alarmed.
Yes, he said, walking
her home, he would be discreet; discretion was his middle name. He knew
Cordelia wouldn't—couldn't—be eased until she knew for sure, but he
guessed it would turn out to be nothing but vapor. Teenagers loved to
dramatize, didn't they? And if the young lass saw that her aunt was afraid of
something, she might well feed auntie's fears instead of allaying them.
Cordelia had stopped
by the white picket fence that divided her garden-plot from the road, an
expression of sublime relief coming over her face. Jonas thought she looked
like a mule having its back scratched with a stiff brush.
"Why, I never
thought of that... yet it's likely, isn't it?"
"Likely
enough," Jonas had said, "but I'll still check into it most carefully.
Better safe than sorry." He kissed the comer of her mouth again. "And
not a word to the fellows at Seafront. Not a hint."
"Thank'ee,
Eldred! Oh, thank'ee!" And she had hugged him before hurrying in, her tiny
breasts pressing like stones against the front of his shirt. "Mayhap I'll
sleep tonight, after all!"
She
might, but Jonas wondered if he would.
He walked toward
Hockey's stable, where he kept his horse, with his head down and his hands
locked behind his back. A gaggle of boys came racing up the other side of the
street; two of them were waving severed dog's tails with blood clotted at the
ends.
"Coffin Hunters!
We're Big Coffin Hunters just like you!" one called impudently across to
him.
Jonas drew his gun and
pointed it at them—it was done in a flash, and for a moment the terrified boys
saw him as he really was: with his eyes blazing and his lips peeled back from
his teeth, Jonas looked like a white-haired wolf in man's clothes.
"Get on, you
little bastards!" he snarled. "Get on before I blow you loose of your
shoes and give your fathers cause to celebrate!"
For a moment they were
frozen, and then they fled in a howling pack. One had left his trophy behind;
the dog's tail lay on the board sidewalk like a grisly fan. Jonas grimaced at
the sight of it, bolstered his gun, locked his hands behind him again, and
walked on, looking like a parson meditating on the nature of the gods. And what
in gods' name was he doing, pulling iron on a bunch of young hellions like
that?
Being upset,
he thought. Being worried.
He was worried, all
right. The titless old biddy's suspicions had upset him greatly. Not on
Thorin's account—as far as Jonas was concerned, Dearborn could fuck the girl in
the town square at high noon of Reaping Fair Day—but because it suggested that
Dearborn might have fooled him about other things.
Crept up behind you
once, he did, and you swore it 'd never happen again. But if he's been diddling
that girl, it has happened again. Hasn't it?
Aye, as they said in
these parts. If the boy had had the impertinence to begin an affair with the
Mayor's gilly-in-waiting, and the incredible sly-ness to get away with it, what
did that do to Jonas's picture of three In-World brats who could barely find
their own behinds with both hands and a candle?
We underestimated em
once and they made us look like monkeys, Clay had said. I
don't want it to happen again.
Had
it happened again? How much, really, did Dearborn and his friends know? How
much had they found out? And who had they told? If Dearborn had been able to
get away with pronging the Mayor's chosen ... to put something that
large over on Eldred Jonas ... on everyone . . .
"Good day, sai
Jonas," Brian Hookey said. He was grinning widely, all but kowtowing
before Jonas with his sombrero crushed against his broad blacksmith's
chest. "Would ye care for fresh graf, sai? I've just gotten the new
pressing, and—"
"All I want is my
horse," Jonas said curtly. "Bring it quick and stop your
quacking."
"Aye, so I will,
happy to oblige, thankee-sai." He hurried off on the errand, taking one
nervous, grinning look back over his shoulder to make sure he wasn't going to
be shot out of hand.
Ten minutes later
Jonas was headed west on the Great Road. He felt a ridiculous but nevertheless
strong desire to simply kick his horse into a gallop and leave all this
foolishness behind him: Thorin the graying goat-boy, Roland and Susan with
their no-doubt mawkish teenage love, Roy and Clay with their fast hands and
slow wits. Rimer with his ambitions, Cordelia Delgado with her ghastly visions
of the two of them in some bosky dell, him likely reciting poetry
while she wove a garland of flowers for his brow.
He had ridden away
from things before, when intuition whispered; plenty of things. But there would
be no riding away this time. He had vowed vengeance on the brats, and while he
had broken a bushel of promises made to others, he'd never broken one made to
himself.
And there was John
Farson to consider. Jonas had never spoken to the Good Man himself (and never
wanted to; Farson was reputed to be whimsically, dangerously insane), but he
had had dealings with George Latigo, who would probably be leading the troop of
Farson's men that would arrive any day now. It was Latigo who had hired the
Big Coffin Hunters in the first place, paying a huge cash advance (which Jonas
hadn't yet shared with Reynolds and Depape) and promising an even larger piece
of war-spoil if the Affiliation's major forces were wiped out in or around the
Shaved Mountains.
Latigo was a
good-sized bug, all right, but nothing to the size of the bug trundling along
behind him. And besides, no large reward was ever achieved without risk. If
they delivered the horses, oxen, wagons of fresh vegetables, the tack, the oil,
the glass—most of all the wizard's glass—all would be well. If they failed, it
was very likely that their heads would end up being whacked about by Farson and
his aides in their nightly polo games. It could happen, and Jonas knew it. No
doubt someday it would happen. But when his head finally parted company
from his shoulders, the divorce wouldn't be caused by any such smarms as
Dearborn and his friends, no matter whose bloodline they had descended
from.
But if he's been
having an affair with Thorin 's autumn treat . . . if he's been able to keep
such a secret as that, what others has he been keeping? Perhaps he
is playing Castles with you.
If so, he wouldn't
play for long. The first time young Mr. Dearborn poked his nose around his
Hillock, Jonas would be there to shoot it off for him.
The question for the
present was where to go first. Out to the Bar K, to take a long overdue look at
the boys' living quarters? He could; they would be counting Barony horses on
the Drop, all three of them. But it wasn't over horses that he might lose his
head, was it? No, the horses were just a small added attraction, as far as the
Good Man was concerned.
Jonas rode for Citgo
instead.
6
First he checked the
tankers. They were just as had been and should be— lined up in a neat row with
their new wheels ready to roll when the time came, and hidden behind their new
camouflage. Some of the screening pine branches were turning yellow at the
tips, but the recent spell of rain had kept most admirably fresh. There had
been no tampering that Jonas could see.
Next he climbed the
hill, walking beside the pipeline and pausing more and more frequently to rest;
by the time he reached the rotting gate between the slope and the oilpatch, his
bad leg was paining him severely. He studied the gate, frowning over the
smudges he saw on the top rung. They might mean nothing, but Jonas thought
someone might have climbed over the gate rather than risk opening it and having
it fall off its hinges.
He spent the next hour
strolling around the derricks, paying especially close attention to those that
still worked, looking for sign. He found plenty of tracks, but it was impossible
(especially after a week of wet weather) to read them with any degree of
accuracy. The In-World boys might have been out here; that ugly little band of
brats from town might have been out here; Arthur Eld and the whole company of
his knights might have been out here. The ambiguity put Jonas in a foul temper,
as ambiguity (other than on a Castles board) always did.
He started back the
way he'd come, meaning to descend the slope to his horse and ride back to town.
His leg was aching like fury, and he wanted a stiff drink to quiet it down. The
bunkhouse at the Bar K could wait another day.
He got halfway to the
gate, saw the weedy spur track tying Citgo to the Great Road, and sighed. There
would be nothing on that little strip of road to see, but now that he'd come
all the way out here, he supposed he should finish the job.
Bugger finishing the
job, I want a damned drink.
But Roland wasn't the
only one who sometimes found his wishes overruled by training. Jonas sighed,
rubbed at his leg, then walked back to the weedy twin ruts. Where, it seemed,
there was something to find after all.
It lay in the grassy
ditch less than a dozen paces from the place where the old road joined the
Great Road. At first he saw only a smooth white shape in the weeds and thought
it was a stone. Then he saw a black round-ness that could only be an eyehole.
Not a stone, then; a skull.
Grunting, Jonas knelt
and fished it out while the few living derricks continued to squeal and thump
behind him. A rook's skull. He had seen it before. Hell, he suspected most of
the town had. It belonged to the showoff, Arthur Heath ... who, like all
showoffs, needed his little props.
"He called it the
lookout," Jonas murmured. "Put it on the horn of his saddle
sometimes, didn't he? And sometimes wore it around his neck like a
pendant." Yes. The youngster had been wearing it so that night in the
Travellers' Rest, when—
Jonas turned the
bird's skull. Something rattled inside like a last lonely thought. Jonas tilted
it, shook it over his open palm, and a fragment of gold chain dropped out. That
was how the boy had been wearing it. At some point the chain had broken, the
skull had fallen in the ditch, and sai Heath had never troubled to go looking
for it. The thought that someone might find it had probably never crossed his
mind. Boys were careless. It was a wonder any ever grew up to be men.
Jonas's face remained
calm as he knelt there examining the bird's skull, but behind the unlined brow
he was as furious as he had ever been in his life. They had been out here, all
right—it was another thing he would have scoffed at just yesterday. He had to
assume they had seen the tankers, camouflage or no camouflage, and if not for
the chance of finding this skull, he never would have known for sure, one way
or the other.
"When I finish
with em, their eyesockets'll be as empty as yours. Sir Rook. I'll gouge em
clean myself."
He started to throw
the skull away, then changed his mind. It might come in handy. Carrying it in
one hand, he started back to where he'd left his horse.
7
Coral Thorin walked
down High Street toward the Travellers' Rest, her head thumping rustily and her
heart sour in her breast. She had been up only an hour, but her hangover was so
miserable it felt like a day already. She was drinking too much of late and she
knew it—almost every night now—but she was very careful not to take more than
one or two (and always light ones) where folks could see. So far, she thought
no one suspected. And as long as no one suspected, she supposed she would keep
on. How else to bear her idiotic brother? This idiotic town? And, of course,
the knowledge that all of the ranchers in the Horsemen's Association and at
least half of the large landowners were traitors? "Fuck the Affiliation,"
she whispered. "Better a bird in the hand."
But did she really
have a bird in the hand? Did any of them? Would 1-arson keep his
promises—promises made by a man named Latigo and passed on by their own
inimitable Kimba Rimer? Coral had her doubts; despots had such a convenient way
of forgetting their promises, and birds in the hand such an irritating way of
pecking your fingers, shitting in your palm, and then flying away. Not that it
mattered now; she had made her bed. Besides, folks would always want to drink
and gamble and rut, regardless of who they bowed their knees to or in whose
name their taxes were collected.
Still, when the voice
of old demon conscience whispered, a few drinks helped to still its lips.
She paused outside
Craven's Undertaking Parlor, looking upstreet at the laughing boys on their
ladders, hanging paper lanterns from high poles and building eaves. These gay
lamps would be lit on the night of the Reap Fair, filling Hambry's main street
with a hundred shades of soft, conflicting light.
For a moment Coral
remembered the child she had been, looking at the colored paper lanterns with
wonder, listening to the shouts and the rattle of fireworks, listening to the
dance-music coming from Green Heart as her father held her hand . . . and, on
his other side, her big brother Hart's hand. In this memory, Hart was proudly
wearing his first pair of long trousers.
Nostalgia swept her,
sweet at first, then bitter. The child had grown into a sallow woman who owned
a saloon and whorehouse (not to mention a great deal of land along the Drop),
a woman whose only sexual partner of late was her brother's Chancellor, a woman
whose chief goal upon arising these days was getting to the hair of the dog
that bit her as soon as possible. How, exactly, had things turned out so? This
woman whose eyes she used was the last woman the child she had been would have
expected to become.
"Where did I go
wrong?" she asked herself, and laughed. "Oh dear Man Jesus, where did
this straying sinner-child go wrong? Can you say hallelujah." She sounded
so much like the wandering preacher-woman that had come through town the year
before—Pittston, her name had been, Sylvia Pittston—that she laughed again,
this time almost naturally. She walked on toward the Rest with a better will.
Sheemie was outside,
tending to the remains of his silkflowers. He waved to her and called a
greeting. She waved back and called something in return. A good enough lad,
Sheemie, and although she could have found another easily enough, she supposed
she was glad Depape hadn't killed him.
The bar was almost
empty but brilliantly lit, all the gas-jets flaring. It was clean, as well.
Sheemie would have emptied the spittoons, but Coral guessed it was the plump
woman behind the bar who had done all the rest. The makeup couldn't hide the
sallowness of that woman's cheeks, the hollow-ness of her eyes, or the way her
neck had started to go all crepey (seeing that sort of lizardy skin on a
woman's neck always made Coral shiver inside).
It was Pettie the
Trotter tending bar beneath The Romp's stem glass gaze, and if allowed to do
so, she would continue until Stanley appeared and banished her. Pettie had said
nothing out loud to Coral—she knew better—but had made her wants clear enough
just the same. Her whoring days were almost at an end. She desperately desired
to go to work tending bar. There was precedent for it, Coral knew—a female
bartender at Forest Trees in Pass o' the River, and there had been another at
Glencove, up the coast in Tavares, until she had died of the pox. What Pettie
refused to see was that Stanley Ruiz was younger by fifteen years and in far
better health. He would be pouring drinks under The Romp long after Pettie was
rotting (instead of Trotting) in a pauper's grave.
"Good even, sai
Thorin," Pettie said. And before Coral could so much as open her mouth,
the whore had put a shot glass on the bar and filled it full of whiskey. Coral
looked at it with dismay. Did they all know, then?
"I don't want
that," she snapped. "Why in Eld's name would I? Sun isn't even down!
Pour it back into the bottle, for yer father's sake, and then get the hell out
of here. Who d'ye think yer serving at five o' the clock, anyway? Ghosts?"
Pettie's face fell a
foot; the heavy coat other makeup actually seemed to crack apart. She took the
funnel from under the bar, stuck it in the neck of the bottle, and poured the
shot of whiskey back in. Some went onto the bar in spite of the funnel; her
plump hands (now ringless; her rings had been traded for food at the mercantile
across the street long since) were shaking. "I'm sorry, sai. So I am. I
was only—"
"I don't care
what ye was only," Coral said, then turned a bloodshot eye on Sheb, who
had been sitting on his piano-bench and leafing through old sheet-music. Now he
was staring toward the bar with his mouth hung open. "And what are you
looking at, ye frog?"
"Nothing, sai
Thorin. I—"
"Then go look at
it somewhere else. Take this pig with'ee. Give her a bounce, why don't ye?
It'll be good for her skin. It might even be good for yer own."
"I-"
"Get out! Are ye
deaf? Both of ye!"
Pettie and Sheb went
away toward the kitchen instead of the cribs upstairs, but it was all the same
to Coral. They could go to hell as far as she was concerned. Anywhere, as long
as they were out of her aching face.
She went behind the
bar and looked around. Two men playing cards over in the far comer. That
hardcase Reynolds was watching them and sipping a beer. There was another man
at the far end of the bar, but he was staring off into space, lost in his own
world. No one was paying any especial attention to sai Coral Thorin, and what
did it matter if they were? If Pettie knew, they all knew.
She ran her finger
through the puddle of whiskey on the bar, sucked it, ran it through again,
sucked it again. She grasped the bottle, but before she could pour, a spidery
monstrosity with gray-green eyes leaped, hissing, onto the bar. Coral shrieked
and stepped back, dropping the whiskey bottle between her feet . . . where, for
a wonder, it didn't break. For a moment she thought her head would break, instead—that
her swelling, throbbing brain would simply split her skull like a rotten
eggshell. There was a crash as the card-players overturned their table getting
up. Reynolds had drawn his gun.
"Nay," she
said in a quavering voice she could hardly recognize. Her eyeballs were pulsing
and her heart was racing. People could die of fright, she realized that
now. "Nay, gentlemen, all's well."
The six-legged freak
standing on the bar opened its mouth, bared its needle fangs, and hissed again.
Coral bent down (and
as her head passed below the level of her waist, she was once more sure it was
going to explode), picked up the bottle, saw that it was still a quarter full,
and drank directly from the neck, no longer caring who saw her do it or what
they thought.
As if hearing her
thought, Musty hissed again. He was wearing a red collar this afternoon—on him
it looked baleful rather than jaunty. Beneath it was tucked a white scrap of
paper.
"Want me to shoot
it?" a voice drawled. "I will if you like. One slug and won't be
nothing left but claws." It was Jonas, standing just inside the batwings,
and although he looked not a whole lot better than she felt, Coral had no doubt
he could do it.
"Nay. The old
bitch'll turn us all into locusts, or something like, if ye kill her
familiar."
"What
bitch?" Jonas asked, crossing the room.
"Rhea Dubativo.
Rhea of the Coos, she's called."
"Ah! Not the
bitch but the witch."
"She's
both."
Jonas stroked the
cat's back. It allowed itself to be petted, even arching against his hand, but
he only gave it the single caress. Its fur had an unpleasant damp feel.
"Would you
consider sharing that?" he asked, nodding toward the bottle. "It's
early, but my leg hurts like a devil sick of sin."
"Your leg, my
head, early or late. On the house."
Jonas raised his white
eyebrows.
"Count yer
blessings and have at it, cully."
She reached toward
Musty. He hissed again, but allowed her to draw the note out from under his
collar. She opened it and read the five words that were printed there:
"Might I see?"
Jonas asked. With the first drink down and warming his belly, the world looked
better.
"Why not?"
She handed him the note. Jonas looked, then handed it back. He had almost
forgotten Rhea, and that wouldn't have done at all. Ah, but it was hard to
remember everything, wasn't it? Just lately Jonas felt less like a hired gun
than a cook trying to make all nine courses of a state dinner come out at the
same time. Luckily, the old hag had reminded him of her presence herself. Gods
bless her thirst. And his own, since it had landed him here at the right time.
"Sheemie!"
Coral bawled. She could also feel the whiskey working; she felt almost human
again. She even wondered if Eldred Jonas might be interested in a dirty evening
with the Mayor's sister ... who knew what might speed the hours?
Sheemie came in
through the batwings, hands grimy, pink sombrera bouncing on his back at
the end of its cuerda. "Aye, Coral Thorin! Here I be!"
She looked past him,
calculating the sky. Not tonight, not even for Rhea; she wouldn't send Sheemie
up there after dark, and that was the end of it.
"Nothing,"
she said in a voice that was gentler than usual. "Go back to yer flowers,
and see that ye cover them well. It bids frosty."
She turned over Rhea's
note and scrawled a single word on it:
tomorrow
This she folded and
handed to Jonas. "Stick it under that stink's collar for me, will ye? I
don't want to touch him."
Jonas did as he was
asked. The cat favored them with a final wild green look, then leaped from the
bar and vanished beneath the batwings.
"Time is
short," Coral said. She hadn't the slightest idea what she meant, but
Jonas nodded in what appeared to be perfect understanding. "Would you care
to go upstairs with a closet drunk? I'm not much in the looks department, but I
can still spread em all the way to the edge of the bed, and I don't just lie
there."
He considered, then
nodded. His eyes were gleaming. This one was as thin as Cordelia Delgado ...
but what a difference, eh? What a difference! "All right."
"I've been known
to say some nasty things—fair warning."
"Dear lady, I
shall be all ears."
She smiled. Her
headache was gone. "Aye. I'll just bet ye will."
"Give me a
minute. Don't move a step." He walked across to where Reynolds sat.
"Drag up a chair,
Eldred."
"I think not.
There's a lady waiting."
Reynolds's gaze
flicked briefly toward the bar. "You're joking."
"I never joke
about women, Clay. Now mark me."
Reynolds sat forward,
eyes intent. Jonas was grateful this wasn't Depape. Roy would do what you
asked, and usually well enough, but only after you'd explained it to him half a
dozen times.
"Go to
Lengyll," he said. "Tell him we want to put about a dozen men—no less
than ten—out at yon oilpatch. Good men who can get their heads down and keep
them down and not snap the trap too soon on an ambush, if
ambushing's required. Tell him Brian Hockey's to be in charge.He's
got a level head, which is more than can be said for most of these poor
things."
Reynolds's eyes were
hot and happy. "You expect the brats?"
"They've been out
there once, mayhap they'll be out again. If so, they're to be crossfired and
knocked down dead. At once and with no warning. You understand?"
"Yar! And the
tale after?"
"Why, that the
oil and the tankers must have been their business," Jonas said with a crooked
smile. "To be taken to Farson, at their command and by confederates
unknown. We'll be carried through the streets on the town's shoulders, come
Reap. Hailed as the men who rooted out the traitors. Where's Roy?"
"Gone back to
Hanging Rock. I saw him at noon. He says they're coming, Eldred; says when the
wind swings into the east, he can hear approaching horse."
"Maybe he only
hears what he wants to hear." But he suspected Depape was right. Jonas's
mood, at rock bottom when he stepped into the Travellers' Rest, was now very
much on the rebound.
"We'll start
moving the tankers soon, whether the brats come or not. At night, and two by
two, like the animals going on board Old Pa's Ark." He laughed at this.
"But we'll leave some, eh? Like cheese in a trap."
"Suppose the mice
don't come?"
Jonas shrugged.
"If not one way, another. I intend to press them a little more tomorrow.
I want them angry, and I want them confused. Now go on about your business. I
have yon lady waiting."
"Better you than
me, Eldred."
Jonas nodded. He
guessed that half an hour from now, he would have forgotten all about his
aching leg. "That's right," he said. "You she'd eat like
fudge."
He walked back to the
bar, where Coral stood with her arms folded. Now she unfolded them and took his
hands. The right she put on her left breast. The nipple was hard and erect
under his fingers. The forefinger of his left hand she put in her mouth, and
bit down lightly.
"Shall we bring
the bottle?" Jonas asked.
"Why not?"
said Coral Thorin.
8
If she'd gone to sleep
as drunk as had been her habit over the last few months, the creak of the
bedsprings wouldn't have awakened her—a bomb-blast wouldn't have awakened her.
But although they'd brought the bottle, it still stood on the night-table of
the bedroom she maintained at the Rest (it was as big as any three of the
whores' cribs put together), the level of the whiskey unchanged. She felt sore
all over her body, but her head was clear; sex was good for that much, anyway.
Jonas was at the
window, looking out at the first gray traces of daylight and pulling his pants
up. His bare back was covered with crisscrossed scars. She thought to ask him
who had administered such a savage flogging and how he'd survived it, then
decided she'd do better to keep quiet.
"Where are ye off
to?" she asked.
"I believe I'm
going to start by finding some paint—any shade will do—and a street-mutt still
in possession of its tail. After that, sai, I don't think you want to
know."
"Very well."
She lay down and pulled the covers up to her chin. She felt she could sleep for
a week.
Jonas yanked on his
boots and went to the door, buckling his gunbelt. He paused with his hand on
the knob. She looked at him, grayish eyes already half-filled with sleep
again.
"I've never had
better," Jonas said.
Coral smiled.
"No, cully," she said. "Nor I."
CHAPTER IV
Roland
AND Cuthbert
1
Roland, Cuthbert, and
Alain came out onto the porch of the Bar K bunkhouse almost two hours after
Jonas had left Coral's room at the Travellers' Rest. By then the sun was well
up over the horizon. They weren't late risers by nature, but as Cuthbert put
it, "We have a certain In-World image to maintain. Not laziness but lounginess."
Roland stretched, arms
spread toward the sky in a wide Y, then bent and grasped the toes of his boots.
This caused his back to crackle.
"I hate that
noise," Alain said. He sounded morose and sleepy. In fact, he had been
troubled by odd dreams and premonitions all night—things which, of the three of
them, only he was prey to. Because of the touch, perhaps—with him it had always
been strong.
"That's why he
does it," Cuthbert said, then clapped Alain on the shoulder. "Cheer
up, old boy. You're too handsome to be downhearted."
Roland straightened,
and they walked across the dusty yard toward the stables. Halfway there, he
came to a stop so sudden that Alain almost ran into his back. Roland was
looking east. "Oh," he said in a funny, bemused voice. He even
smiled a little.
"Oh?"
Cuthbert echoed. "Oh what, great leader? Oh joy, I shall see the perfumed
lady anon, or oh rats, I must work with my smelly male companions all the
livelong day?"
Alain looked down at
his boots, new and uncomfortable when they had left Gilead, now sprung,
trailworn, a little down at the heels, and as comfortable as workboots ever
got. Looking at them was better than looking at his friends, for the time
being. There was always an edge to Cuthbert’s teasing these days; the old sense
of fun had been replaced by something that was mean and unpleasant. Alain kept
expecting Roland to flash up at one of Cuthbert's jibes, like steel that has
been struck by sharp flint, and knock Bert sprawling. In a way, Alain almost
wished for it. It might clear the air.
But not the air of
this morning.
"Just oh,"
Roland said mildly, and walked on.
"Cry your pardon,
for I know you'll not want to hear it, but I'd speak a further word about the
pigeons," Cuthbert said as they saddled their mounts. "I still
believe that a message—"
"I'll make you a
promise," Roland said, smiling.
Cuthbert looked at him
with some mistrust. "Aye?"
"If you still
want to send by flight tomorrow morning, we'll do so. The one you choose shall
be sent west to Gilead with a message of your devising banded to its leg. What
do you say, Arthur Heath? Is it fair?"
Cuthbert looked at him
for a moment with a suspicion that hurt Alain's heart. Then he also smiled.
"Fair," he said. "Thank you."
And then Roland said
something which struck Alain as odd and made that prescient part of him quiver
with disquiet. "Don't thank me yet."
2
"I don't want to
go up there, sai Thorin," Sheemie said. An unusual expression had creased
his normally smooth face—a troubled and fearful frown. "She's a scary
lady. Scary as a beary, she is. Got a wart on her nose, right here." He
thumbed the tip of his own nose, which was small and smooth and well molded.
Coral, who might have
bitten his head off for such hesitation only yesterday, was unusually patient
today. "So true," she said. "But Sheemie, she asked for ye
special, and she tips. Ye know she does, and well."
"Won't help if
she turns me into a beetle," Sheemie said morosely. "Beetles can't
spend coppers."
Nevertheless, he let
himself be led to where Caprichoso, the inn's pack-mule, was tied. Barkie had
loaded two small tuns over the mule's back. One, filled with sand, was just
there for balance. The other held a fresh pressing of the graf Rhea had
a taste for.
"Fair-Day's
coming," Coral said brightly. "Why, it's not three weeks now."
"Aye."
Sheemie looked happier at this. He loved Fair-Days passionately—the lights,
the firecrackers, the dancing, the games, the laughter. When Fair-Day came,
everyone was happy and no one spoke mean.
"A young man with
coppers in his pocket is sure to have a good time at the Fair," Coral
said.
"That's true, sai
Thorin." Sheemie looked like someone who has just discovered one of life's
great principles. "Aye, truey-true, so it is."
Coral put Caprichoso's
rope halter into Sheemie's palm and closed the fingers over it. "Have a
nice trip, lad. Be polite to the old crow, bow yer best bow .. . and make sure
ye're back down the hill before dark."
"Long before,
aye," Sheemie said, shivering at the very thought of still being up in the
Coos after nightfall. "Long before, sure as loaves 'n fishes."
"Good lad."
Coral watched him off, his pink sombrero now clapped on his head,
leading the grumpy old pack-mule by its rope. And, as he disappeared over the
brow of the first mild hill, she said it again: "Good lad."
3
Jonas waited on the
flank of a ridge, belly-down in the tall grass, until the brats were an hour
gone from the Bar K. He then rode to the ridgetop and picked them out, three
dots four miles away on the brown slope. Off to do their daily duty. No sign
they suspected anything. They were smarter than he had at first given them credit
for ... but nowhere near as smart as they thought they were.
He rode to within a
quarter mile of the Bar K—except for the bunk-house and stable, a burned-out
hulk in the bright sunlight of this early autumn day—and tethered his horse in
a copse of cottonwoods that grew around the ranch house spring. Here the boys
had left some washing to dry. Jonas stripped the pants and shirts off the low
branches upon which they had been hung, made a pile of them, pissed on them,
and then went back to his horse.
The animal stamped the
ground emphatically when Jonas pulled the dog's tail from one of his
saddlebags, as if saying he was glad to be rid of it. Jonas would be glad to be
rid of it, too. It had begun giving off an unmistakable aroma. From the other
saddlebag he took a small glass jar of red paint, and a brush. These he had
obtained from Brian Hockey's eldest son, who was minding the livery stable
today. Sai Hookey himself would be out to Citgo by now, no doubt.
Jonas walked to the
bunkhouse with no effort at concealment . . . not that there was much in the
way of concealment to be had out here. And no one to hide from, anyway, now
that the boys were gone.
One of them had left
an actual book— Mercer's Homilies and Meditations- on the seat of a
rocking chair on the porch. Books were things of exquisite rarity in Mid-World,
especially as one travelled out from the center. This was the first one, except
for the few kept in Seafront, that Jonas had seen since coming to Mejis. He
opened it. In a firm woman's hand he read: To my dearest son, from his
loving MOTHER. Jonas tore j (Ins
page out, opened his jar of paint, and dipped the tips of his last two lingers
inside. He blotted out the word MOTHER with the pad of his third linger, then,
using the nail of his pinky as a makeshift pen, printed CUNT above MOTHER. He
poked this sheet on a rusty nailhead where it was sure to be seen, then tore
the book up and stamped on the pieces. Which boy had it belonged to? He hoped
it was Dearborn's, but it didn't really matter.
The first thing Jonas
noticed when he went inside was the pigeons, cooing in their cages. He had
thought they might be using a helio to send (heir messages, but pigeons! My!
That was ever so much more trig!
"I'll get to you
in a few minutes," he said. "Be patient, darlings; peck and shit
while you still can."
He looked around with
some curiosity, the soft coo of the pigeons soothing in his ears. Lads or
lords? Roy had asked the old man in Ritzy. The old man had said maybe both.
Neat lads, at the very least, from the way they kept their quarters, Jonas
thought. Well trained. Three bunks, all made. Three piles of goods at the foot
of each, stacked up just as neat. In each pile he found a picture of a
mother—oh, such good fellows they were—and in one he found a picture of both
parents. He had hoped for names, possibly documents of some kind (even love
letters from the girl, mayhap), but there was nothing like that. Lads or lords,
they were careful enough. Jonas removed the pictures from their frames and
shredded them. The goods he scattered to all points of the compass, destroying
as much as he could in the limited time he had. When he found a linen
handkerchief in the pocket of a pair of dress pants, he blew his nose on it and
then spread it carefully on the toes of the boy's dress boots, so that the
green splat would show to good advantage. What could be more aggravating— more unsettling—than
to come home after a hard day spent tallying stock and find some stranger's
snot on one of your personals?
The pigeons were upset
now; they were incapable of scolding like jays or rooks, but they tried to
flutter away from him when he opened their cages. It did no good, of course. He
caught them one by one and twisted their heads off. That much
accomplished, Jonas popped one bird beneath the strawtick pillow of each boy.
Beneath one of these
pillows he found a small bonus: paper strips and a storage-pen, undoubtedly
kept for the composition of messages. He broke the pen and flung it across the
room. The strips he put in his own pocket. Paper always came in handy.
With the pigeons seen
to, he could hear better. He began walking slowly back and forth on the board
floor, head cocked, listening.
4
When Alain came riding
up to him at a gallop, Roland ignored the boy's strained white face and
burning, frightened eyes. "I make it thirty-one on my side," he said,
"all with the Barony brand, crown and shield. You?"
"We have to go
back," Alain said. "Something's wrong. It's the touch. I've never
felt it so clear."
"Your
count?" Roland asked again. There were times, such as now, when he found
Alain's ability to use the touch more annoying than helpful.
"Forty. Or
forty-one, I forget. And what does it matter? They've moved what they don't
want us to count. Roland, didn't you hear me? We have to go back! Something's
wrong! Something's wrong at our place /"
Roland glanced toward
Bert, riding peaceably some five hundred yards away. Then he looked back at
Alain, his eyebrows raised in a silent question.
"Bert? He's numb
to the touch and always has been—you know it. I'm not. You know I'm not!
Roland, please! Whoever it is will see the pigeons! Maybe find our
guns!" The normally phlegmatic Alain was nearly crying in his
excitement and dismay. "If you won't go back with me, give me leave to go
back by myself! Give me leave, Roland, for your father's sake!"
"For your
father's sake, I give you none," Roland said. "My count is
thirty-one. Yours is forty. Yes, we'll say forty. Forty's a good number— good
as any, I wot. Now we'll change sides and count again."
"What's wrong
with you?" Alain almost whispered. He was looking at Roland as if Roland
had gone mad.
"Nothing."
"You knew!
You knew when we left this morning!"
"Oh, I might have
seen something," Roland said. "A reflection, perhaps, but ... do you
trust me, Al? That's what matters, I think. Do you trust me, or do you think I
lost my wits when I lost my heart? As he does?" He jerked his head in
Cuthbert's direction. Roland was looking at Alain with a faint smile on his
lips, but his eyes were ruthless and distant it was Roland's over-the-horizon
look. Alain wondered if Susan Delgado had seen that expression yet, and if she
had, what she made of it.
"I trust
you." By now Alain was so confused that he didn't know for Mire if that
was a lie or the truth.
"Good. Then
switch sides with me. My count is thirty-one, mind."
"Thirty-one,"
Alain agreed. He raised his hands, then dropped them hack to his thighs with a
slap so sharp his normally stolid mount laid his cars back and jigged a bit
under him. "Thirty-one."
"I think we may
go back early today, if that's any satisfaction to you," Roland said, and
rode away. Alain watched him. He'd always wondered what went on in Roland's
head, but never more than now.
5
Creak. Creak-creak.
Here was what he'd
been listening for, and just as Jonas was about to give up the hunt. He had
expected to find their hidey-hole a little closer to their beds, but they were
trig, all right.
He went to one knee
and used the blade of his knife to pry up the board which had creaked. Under it
were three bundles, each swaddled in dark strips of cotton cloth. These strips
were damp to the touch and smelled fragrantly of gun-oil. Jonas took the
bundles out and unwrapped each, curious to see what sort of calibers the
youngsters had brought. The answer turned out to be serviceable but
undistinguished. Two of the bundles contained single five-shot revolvers of a
type then called (for no reason I know) "carvers." The third
contained two guns, six-shooters of higher quality than the carvers. In fact,
for one heart-stopping moment, Jonas thought he had found the big revolvers of
a gunslinger—true-blue steel barrels, sandalwood grips, bores like mineshafts.
Such guns he could not have left, no matter what the cost to his plans. Seeing
the plain grips was thus something of a relief. Disappointment was never a
thing you looked for, but it had a wonderful way of clearing the mind.
He rewrapped the guns
and put them back, put the board back as well. A gang of ne'er-do-well clots
from town might possibly come out here, and might possibly vandalize the
unguarded bunkhouse, scattering what they didn't tear up, but find a hiding
place such as this? No, my son. Not likely.
Do you really think
they'll believe it was hooligans from town that did this?
They might; just
because he had underestimated them to start with didn't mean he should turn
about-face and begin overestimating them now. And he had the luxury of not
needing to care. Either way, it would make them angry. Angry enough to rush
full-tilt around their Hillock, perhaps. To throw caution to the wind . . . and
reap the whirlwind.
Jonas poked the end of
the severed dog's tail into one of the pigeon-cages, so it stuck up like a
huge, mocking feather. He used the paint to write such charmingly boyish
slogans as
and
on the walls. Then he left, standing on the
porch for a moment to verify he still had the Bar K to himself. Of course he
did. Yet for a blink or two, there at the end, he'd felt uneasy—almost as
though he'd been scented. By some sort of In-World telepathy, mayhap.
There is such; you
know it. The touch, it's called.
Aye, but that was the
tool of gunslingers, artists, and lunatics. Not of boys, be they lords or just
lads.
Jonas went back to his
horse at a near-trot nevertheless, mounted, and rode toward town. Things were
reaching the boil, and there would be a lot to do before Demon Moon rose full
in the sky.
6
Rhea's hut, its stone
walls and the cracked guijarros of its roof slimed with moss, huddled on
the last hill of the Coos. Beyond it was a magnificent view northwest—the Bad
Grass, the desert, Hanging Rock, Eyebolt Canyon—but scenic vistas were the last
thing on Sheemie's mind as he led Capriccioso cautiously into Rhea's yard not
long after noon. He'd been hungry for the last hour or so, but now the pangs
were gone. He hated this place worse than any other in Barony, even more than
Citgo with its big towers always going creakedy-creak and clangety-clang.
"Sai?" he
called, leading the mule into the yard. Capi balked as they neared the hut, planting
his feet and lowering his neck, but when Sheemie tugged the halter, he came on
again. Sheemie was almost sorry.
"Ma'am? Nice old
lady that wouldn't hurt a fly? You therey-air? It's good old Sheemie with your graf."
He smiled and held out his free hand, palm up, to demonstrate his exquisite
harmlessness, but from the hut there was still no response. Sheemie felt his
guts first coil, then cramp. For a moment he thought he was going to shit in
his pants just like a babby; then he passed wind and felt a little better. In
his bowels, at least.
He walked on, liking
this less at every step. The yard was rocky and the straggling weeds yellowish,
as if the hut's resident had blighted the very earth with her touch. There was
a garden, and Sheemie saw that the vegetables still in it—pumpkins and
sharproot, mostly—were muties. Then he noticed the garden's stuffy-guy. It was
also a mutie, a nasty thing with two straw heads instead of one and what
appeared to be a stuffed hand in a woman's satin glove poking out of the chest
area.
Sai Thorin'll never
talk me up here again, he thought. Not for all the pennies
in the world.
The hut's door stood
open. To Sheemie it looked like a gaping mouth. A sickish dank smell drifted
out.
Sheemie stopped about
fifteen paces from the house, and when Capi nuzzled his bottom (as if to ask
what was keeping them), the boy uttered a brief screech. The sound of it almost
set him running, and it was only by exercising all his willpower that he was
able to stand his ground. The day was bright, but up here on this hill, the sun
seemed meaningless. This wasn't his first trip up here, and Rhea's hill had
never been pleasant, but it was somehow worse now. It made him feel the way the
sound of the thinny made him feel when he woke and heard it in the middle of
the night. As if something awful was sliding toward him—something that was all
insane eyes and red, reaching claws.
"S-S-Sai? Is
anyone here? Is—"
"Come
closer." The voice drifted out of the open door. "Come to where I can
see you, idiot boy."
Trying not to moan or
cry, Sheemie did as the voice said. He had an idea that he was never going back
down the hill again. Capriccioso, perhaps, but not him. Poor old Sheemie was
going to end up in the cookpot—hot dinner tonight, soup tomorrow, cold snacks
until Year's End. That's what he would be.
He made his reluctant
way to Rhea's stoop on rubbery legs—if his knees had been closer together, they
would have knocked like castanets. She didn't even sound the same.
"S-Sai? I'm
afraid. So I a-a-am."
"So ye should
be," the voice said. It drifted and drifted, slipping out into the
sunlight like a sick puff of smoke. "Never mind, though—just do as I say.
Come closer, Sheemie, son of Stanley."
Sheemie did so,
although terror dragged at every step he took. The mule followed, head down.
Capi had honked like a goose all the way up here—honked ceaselessly—but now he
had fallen silent.
"So here ye
be," the voice buried in those shadows whispered. "Here ye be,
indeed."
She stepped into the
sunlight falling through the open door, wincing for a moment as it dazzled her
eyes. Clasped in her arms was the empty graf barrel. Coiled around her
throat like a necklace was Ermot.
Sheemie had seen the
snake before, and on previous occasions had never failed to wonder what sort of
agonies he might suffer before he died if he happened to be bitten by such.
Today he had no such thoughts. Compared to Rhea, Ermot looked normal. The old
woman's face had sunken at the cheeks, giving the rest of her head the look of
a skull. Brown spots swarmed out of her thin hair and over her bulging brow
like an army of invading insects. Below her left eye was an open sore, and her
grin showed only a few remaining teeth.
"Don't like the
way I look, do'ee?" she asked. "Makes yer heart cold, don't it?"
"N-No,"
Sheemie said, and then, because that didn't sound right: "I mean
yes!" But gods, that sounded even worse. "You're beautiful,
sai!" he blurted.
She chuffed nearly
soundless laughter and thrust the empty tun into his arms almost hard enough to
knock him on his ass. The touch of her fingers was brief, but long enough to
make his flesh crawl.
"Well-a-day. They
say handsome is as handsome does, don't they?
And that suits me.
Aye, right down to the ground. Bring me my graf, idiot child."
"Y-yes, sai!
Right away, sai!" He took the empty tun back to the mule, set it down,
then fumbled loose the cordage holding the little barrel of graf. He was
very aware of her watching him, and it made him clumsy, hut finally he got the
barrel loose. It almost slid through his grasp, and there was a nightmarish
moment when he thought it would fall to the stony ground and smash, but he
caught his grip again at the last second. He took it to her, had just a second
to realize she was no longer wearing the snake, then felt it crawling on his
boots. Ermot looked up at him, hissing and baring a double set of fangs in an
eerie grin.
"Don't move too
fast, my boy. 'Twouldn't be wise—Ermot's grumpy today. Set the barrel just
inside the door, here. It's too heavy for me. Missed a few meals of late, I
have."
Sheemie bent from the
waist (bow yer best bow, Sai Thorin had said, and here he was, doing
just that), grimacing, not daring to ease the pressure on his back by moving
his feet because the snake was still on them. When he straightened, Rhea was
holding out an old and stained envelope. The flap had been sealed with a blob
of red wax. Sheemie dreaded to think what might have been rendered down to make
wax such as that.
"Take this and
give it to Cordelia Delgado. Do ye know her?"
"A-Aye,"
Sheemie managed. "Susan-sai's auntie."
"That's
right." Sheemie reached tentatively for the envelope, but she held it back
a moment. "Can't read, can ye, idiot boy?"
"Nay. Words 'n
letters go right out of my head."
"Good. Mind ye
show this to no one who can, or some night ye'll find Ermot waiting under yer
pillow. I see far, Sheemie, d'ye mark me? I see far"
It was just an
envelope, but it felt heavy and somehow dreadful in Sheemie's fingers, as if it
were made out of human skin instead of paper. And what sort of letter could
Rhea be sending Cordelia Delgado, anyway? Sheemie thought back to the day he'd
seen sai Delgado's face all covered with cobwebbies, and shivered. The horrid
creature lurking before him in the doorway of her hut could have been the very
creature who'd spun those webs.
"Lose it and I'll
know," Rhea whispered. "Show my business to another, and I'll know.
Remember, son of Stanley, I see far."
"I'll be careful,
sai." It might be better if he did lose the envelope, but he
wouldn't. Sheemie was dim in the head, everyone said so, but not so dim that he
didn't understand why he had been called up here: not to deliver a barrel of
graf, but to receive this letter and pass it on.
"Would ye care to
come in for a bit?" she whispered, and then pointed a ringer at his
crotch. "If I give ye a little bit of mushroom to eat—special to me, it
is—I can look like anyone ye fancy."
"Oh, I
can't," he said, clutching his trousers and smiling a huge broad smile
that felt like a scream trying to get out of his skin. "That pesky thing
fell off last week, that did."
For a moment Rhea only
gawped at him, genuinely surprised for one of the few times in her life, and
then she once more broke out in chuffing bursts of laughter. She held her
stomach in her waxy hands and rocked back and forth with glee. Ermot, startled,
streaked into the house on his lengthy green belly. From somewhere in its
depths, her cat hissed at it.
"Go on,"
Rhea said, still laughing. She leaned forward and dropped three or four pennies
into his shirt pocket. "Get out of here, ye great galoophus! Don't ye
linger, either, looking at flowers!"
"No, sai—"
Before he could say
more, the door clapped to so hard that dust puffed out of the cracks between
the boards.
7
Roland surprised
Cuthbert by suggesting at two o' the clock that they go back to the Bar K. When
Bert asked why, Roland only shrugged and would say nothing more. Bert looked at
Alain and saw a queer, musing expression on the boy's face.
As they drew closer to
the bunkhouse, a sense of foreboding filled Cuthbert. They topped a rise, and
looked down at the Bar K. The bunk-house door stood open.
"Roland!"
Alain cried. He was pointing to the cottonwood grove where the ranch's spring
was. Their clothes, neatly hung to dry when they left, were now scattered
hell-to-breakfast.
Cuthbert dismounted
and ran to them. Picked up a shirt, sniffed it, flung it away. "Pissed
on!" he cried indignantly.
"Come on,"
Roland said. "Let's look at the damage."
8
There was a lot of
damage to look at. As you expected, Cuthbert thought, gazing at Roland.
Then he turned to Alain, who appeared gloomy but not really surprised. As
you both expected.
Roland bent toward one
of the dead pigeons, and plucked at something so fine Cuthbert at first
couldn't see what it was. Then he straightened up and held it out to his
friends. A single hair. Very long, very white. He opened the pinch of his thumb
and forefinger and let it waft to the floor. There it lay amid the shredded
remains of Cuthbert Allgood's mother and father.
"If you knew that
old corbie was here, why didn't we come back and end his breath?" Cuthbert
heard himself ask.
"Because the time
was wrong," Roland said mildly.
"He
would have done it, had it been one of us in his place, destroying his
things."
"We're not like
him," Roland said mildly.
"I'm going to
find him and blow his teeth out the back of his head."
"Not at
all," Roland said mildly.
If Bert had to listen
to one more mild word from Roland's mouth, he would run mad. All thoughts of
fellowship and ka-tet left his mind, which sank back into his body and
was at once obliterated by simple red fury. Jonas had been here. Jonas had
pissed on their clothes, called Alain's mother a cunt, torn up their most
treasured pictures, painted childish obscenities on their walls, killed their
pigeons. Roland had known . . . done nothing . . . intended to continue
doing nothing. Except fuck his gilly-girl. He would do plenty of that, aye,
because now that was all he cared about.
But she won't like the
look of your face the next time you climb into the saddle,
Cuthbert thought. I'll see to that.
He drew back his fist.
Alain caught his wrist. Roland turned away and began picking up scattered
blankets, as if Cuthbert's furious face and cocked fist were simply of no
account to him.
Cuthbert balled up his
other fist, meaning to make Alain let go of him, one way or the other, but the
sight of his friend's round and honest face, so guileless and dismayed, quieted
his rage a little. His argument wasn't with Alain. Cuthbert was sure the other
boy had known something bad was happening here, but he was also sure that
Roland had insisted Alain do nothing until Jonas was gone.
"Come with
me," Alain muttered, slinging an arm around Bert's shoulders.
"Outside. For your father's sake, come. You have to cool off. This is no
time to be fighting among ourselves."
"It's no time for
our leader's brains to drain down into his prick, either," Cuthbert said,
making no effort to lower his voice. But the second time Alain tugged him, Bert
allowed himself to be led toward the door.
I'll stay my rage at
him this one last time, he thought, but I think—I know—that
is all I can manage. I'll have Alain tell him so.
The idea of using
Alain as a go-between to his best friend—of knowing that things had come to
such a pass—filled Cuthbert with an angry, despairing rage, and at the door to
the porch he turned back to Roland. "She has made you a coward, "
he said in the High Speech. Beside him, Alain drew in his breath sharply.
Roland stopped as if
suddenly turned to stone, his back to them, his arms full of blankets. In that
moment Cuthbert was sure Roland would turn and rush toward him. They would
fight, likely until one of them was dead or blind or unconscious. Likely that
one would be him, but he no longer cared.
But Roland never
turned. Instead, in the same speech, he said: "He came to steal our
guile and our caution. With you, he has succeeded. "
"No,"
Cuthbert said, lapsing back into the low speech. "I know that part of you
really believes that, but it's not so. The truth is, you've lost your compass.
You've called your carelessness love and made a virtue of irresponsibility.
I—"
"For gods' sake,
come!" Alain nearly snarled, and yanked him out the door.
9
With Roland out of
sight, Cuthbert felt his rage veering toward Alain in spite of himself; it
turned like a weathervane when the wind shifts. The two of them stood facing
each other in the sunshiny dooryard, Alain looking unhappy and distracted,
Cuthbert with his hands knotted into fists so tight they trembled at his sides.
"Why do you
always excuse him? Why?"
"Out on the Drop,
he asked if I trusted him. I said I did. And I do."
"Then you're a
fool."
"And he's a
gunslinger. It he says we must wait longer, we must."
"He's a
gunslinger by accident! A freak! A mutie!"
Alain stared at him in
silent shock.
"Come with me,
Alain. It's time to end this mad game. We'll find Jonas and kill him. Our ka-tet
is broken. We'll make a new one, you and I."
"It's not broken.
If it does break, it'll be you responsible. And for that I'll never forgive
you."
Now it was Cuthbert's
turn to be silent.
"Go for a ride,
why don't you? A long one. Give yourself time to cool off. So much depends on
our fellowship—"
"Tell him
that!"
"No, I'm telling you.
Jonas wrote a foul word about my mother. Don't you think I'd go with you just
to avenge that, if I didn't think that Roland was right? That it's what Jonas
wants? For us to lose our wits and come charging blindly around our
Hillock?"
"That's right,
but it's wrong, too," Cuthbert said. Yet his hands were slowly unrolling,
fists becoming fingers again. "You don't see and I don't have the words to
explain. If I say that Susan has poisoned the well of our ka-tet, you
would call me jealous. Yet I think she has, all unknowing and unmeaning. She's
poisoned his mind, and the door to hell has opened. Roland feels the heat from
that open door and thinks it's only his feeling for her . . . but we must do
better, Al. We must think better. For him as well as for ourselves and
our fathers."
"Are you calling her
our enemy?"
"No! It would be
easier if she was." He took a deep breath, let it out, took another, let
it out, took a third and let it out. With each one he felt a little saner, a
little more himself. "Never mind. There's no more to say on't for now. Your
advice is good—I think I will take a ride. A long one."
Bert started toward
his horse, then turned back.
"Tell him he's
wrong. Tell him that even if he's right about waiting, he's right for the wrong
reasons, and that makes him all the way wrong." He hesitated. "Tell
him what I said about the door to hell. Say that's my piece of the
touch. Will you tell him?"
"Yes. Stay away
from Jonas, Bert."
Cuthbert mounted up.
"I promise nothing."
"You're not a
man." Alain sounded sorrowful; on the point of tears, in fact. "None
of us are men."
"You better be
wrong about that," Cuthbert said, "because men's work is
coming."
He turned his mount
and rode away at a gallop.
10
He went far up the
Seacoast Road, to begin with trying not to think at all. He'd found that sometimes
unexpected things wandered into your head if you left the door open for them.
Useful things, often.
This afternoon that
didn't happen. Confused, miserable, and without a fresh idea in his head (or
even the hope of one), Bert at last turned back to Hambry. He rode the High
Street from end to end, waving or speaking to people who hiled him. The three
of them had met a lot of good people here. Some he counted as friends, and he
rather felt the common folk of Hambrytown had adopted them—young fellows who
were far from their own homes and families. And the more Bert knew and saw of
these common folk, the less he suspected that they were a part of Rimer's and
Jonas's nasty little game. Why else had the Good Man chosen Hambry in the first
place, if not because it provided such excellent cover?
There were plenty of
folk out today. The farmers' market was booming, the street-stalls were
crowded, children were laughing at a Pinch and Jilly show (Jilly was currently
chasing Pinch back and forth and bashing the poor old longsuffering fellow with
her broom), and the Reaping Fair decorations were going forward at speed. Yet
Cuthbert felt only a little joy and anticipation at the thought of the Fair.
Because it wasn't his own, wasn't Gilead Reaping? Perhaps . . . but mostly just
because his mind and heart were so heavy. If this was what growing up was like,
he thought he could have skipped the experience.
He rode on out of
town, the ocean now at his back, the sun full in his face, his shadow growing
ever longer behind him. He thought he'd soon veer off the Great Road and ride
across the Drop to the Bar K. But before he could, here came his old friend,
Sheemie, leading a mule. Sheemie's head was down, his shoulders slumped, his
pink 'brera askew, his boots dusty. To Cuthbert he looked as though he
had walked all the way from the tip of the earth.
"Sheemie!"
Cuthbert cried, already anticipating the boy's cheery grin and loony patter.
"Long days and pleasant nights! How are y—"
Sheemie lifted his
head, and as the brim of his sombrero came up, Cuthbert fell silent. He
saw the dreadful fear on the boy's face—the pale checks, the haunted eyes, the
trembling mouth.
11
Sheemie could have
been at the Delgado place two hours ago, if he'd wanted, but he had trudged
along at a turtle's pace, the letter inside his shirt seeming to drag at his
every step. It was awful, so awful. He couldn't even think about it, because
his thinker was mostly broken, so it was.
Cuthbert was off his
horse in a flash, and hurrying to Sheemie. He put his hands on the boy's
shoulders. "What's wrong? Tell your old pal. He won't laugh, not a
bit."
At the sound of
"Arthur Heath's" kind voice and the sight of his concerned face,
Sheemie began to weep. Rhea's strict command that he should tell no one flew out
of his head. Still sobbing, he recounted everything that had happened since
that morning. Twice Cuthbert had to ask him to slow down, and when Bert led the
boy to a tree in whose shade the two of them sat together, Sheemie was finally
able to do so. Cuthbert listened with growing unease. At the end of his tale,
Sheemie produced an envelope from inside his shirt.
Cuthbert broke the
seal and read what was inside, his eyes growing large.
12
Roy Depape was waiting
for him at the Travellers' Rest when Jonas returned in good spirits from his
trip to the Bar K. An outrider had finally shown up, Depape announced, and
Jonas's spirits rose another notch. Only Roy didn't look as happy about it as
Jonas would have expected. Not happy at all.
"Fellow's gone on
to Seafront, where I guess he's expected," Depape said. "He wants you
right away. I wouldn't linger here to eat, not even a popkin, if I were you. I
wouldn't take a drink, either. You'll want a clear head to deal with this
one."
"Free with your
advice today, ain't you, Roy?" Jonas said. He spoke in a heavily sarcastic
tone, but when Pettie brought him a tot of whiskey, he sent it back and asked
for water instead. Roy had a bit of a look to him, Jonas decided. Too pale by
half, was good old Roy. And when Sheb sat down at his piano-bench and struck a
chord, Depape jerked in that direction, one hand dropping to the butt of his
gun. Interesting. And a little disquieting.
"Spill it,
son—what's got your back hair up?"
Roy shook his head
sullenly. "Don't rightly know."
"What's this
fellow's name?"
"I didn't ask, he
didn't say. He showed me Farson's sigul, though. You know." Depape
lowered his voice a little. "The eye."
Jonas knew, all right.
He hated that wide-open staring eye, couldn't imagine what had possessed Farson
to pick it in the first place. Why not a mailed fist? Crossed swords? Or a
bird? A falcon, for instance—a falcon would have made a fine sigul. But
that eye—
"All right,"
he said, finishing the glass of water. It went down better than whiskey would
have done, anyway—dry as a bone, he'd been. "I'll find out the rest for
myself, shall I?"
As he reached the
batwing doors and pushed them open, Depape called his name. Jonas turned back.
"He looks like
other people," Depape said. "What do you mean?"
"I don't hardly
know." Depape looked embarrassed and bewildered... but dogged, too.
Sticking to his guns. "We only talked five minutes in all, but once I
looked at him and thought it was the old bastard from Ritzy— the one I shot.
Little bit later I th'ow him a glance and think, 'Hellfire, it's my old pa
standin there.' Then that went by, too, and he looked like himself
again."
"And how's
that?"
"You'll see for
yourself, I reckon. I don't know if you'll like it much, though."
Jonas stood with one
batwing pushed open, thinking. "Roy, 'twasn't Farson himself, was it? The
Good Man in some sort of disguise?" Depape hesitated, frowning, and then
shook his head. "No." "Are you sure? We only saw him the once,
remember, and not close-to." Latigo had pointed him out. Sixteen months
ago that had been, give or take.
"I'm sure. You
remember how big he was?"
Jonas nodded. Farson
was no Lord Perth, but he was six feet or more, and broad across at both brace
and basket.
"This man's
Clay's height, or less. And he stays the same height no matter who he looks
like." Depape hesitated a moment and said: "He laughs like a dead
person. 1 could barely stand to hear him do it."
"What do you
mean, like a dead person?"
Roy Depape shook his
head. "Can't rightly say."
13
Twenty minutes later,
Eldred Jonas was riding beneath come in
peace mid into the courtyard of Seafront, uneasy because he had expected
Latigo . . . and unless Roy was very much mistaken, it wasn't Latigo he was
getting.
Miguel shuffled
forward, grinning his gummy old grin, and took the reins of Jonas's horse.
"Reconocimiento."
"Por nada,
jefe."
Jonas went in, saw
Olive Thorin sitting in the front parlor like a forlorn ghost, and nodded to
her. She nodded back, and managed a wan smile.
"Sai Jonas, how
well you look. If you see Hart—"
"Cry your pardon,
lady, but it's the Chancellor I've come to see," Jonas said. He went on
quickly upstairs toward the Chancellor's suite of rooms, then down a narrow
stone hall lit (and not too well) with gas-jets.
When he reached the
end of the corridor, he rapped on the door waiting there—a massive thing of
oak and brass set in its own arch. Rimer didn't care for such as Susan Delgado,
but he loved the trappings of power; that was what took the curve out of his
noodle and made it straight. Jonas rapped.
"Come in, my
friend," a voice—not Rimer's—called. It was followed by a tittery laugh
that made Jonas's flesh creep. He laughs like a dead person, Roy had
said.
Jonas pushed open the
door and stepped in. Rimer cared for incense no more than he cared for the hips
and lips of women, but there was incense burning in here now—a woody smell
that made Jonas think of court at Gilead, and functions of state in the Great
Hall. The gas-jets were turned high. The draperies—purple velvet, the color of
royalty, Rimer's absolute favorite—trembled minutely in the breath of sea
breeze coming in through the open windows. Of Rimer there was no sign. Or of
anyone else, come to that. There was a little balcony, but the doors giving on
it were open, and no one was out there.
Jonas stepped a little
farther into the room, glancing into a gilt-framed mirror on the far side to
check behind him without turning his head. No one there, either. Ahead and to
the left was a table with places set for two and a cold supper in place, but no
one in either chair. Yet someone had spoken to him. Someone who'd been directly
on the other side of the door, from the sound. Jonas drew his gun.
"Come, now,"
said the voice which had bid him enter. It came from directly behind Jonas's
left shoulder. "No need for that, we're all friends here. All on the same
side, you know."
Jonas whirled on his
heels, suddenly feeling old and slow. Standing there was a man of medium
height, powerfully built from the look of him, with bright blue eyes and the
rosy cheeks of either good health or good wine. His parted, smiling lips
revealed cunning little teeth which must have been filed to points—surely such
points couldn't be natural. He wore a black robe, like the robe of a holy man,
with the hood pushed back. Jonas's first thought, that the fellow was bald, had
been wrong, he saw. The hair was simply cropped so stringently that it was
nothing but fuzz.
"Put the
beanshooter away," the man in black said. "We're friends here, I tell
you—absolutely palsy-walsy. We'll break bread and speak of many things—oxen and
oil-tankers and whether or not Frank Sinatra really was a better crooner
than Der Bingle."
"Who? A better what?"
"No one you know;
nothing that matters." The man in black tittered again. It was, Jonas
thought, the sort of sound one might expect to hear drifting through the barred
windows of a lunatic asylum.
He turned. Looked into
the mirror again. This time he saw the man in black standing there and smiling
at him, big as life. Gods, had he been there all along?
Yes, but you couldn't
see him until he was ready to be seen. I don't know if he's a wizard, but he's
a glamor-man, all right. Mayhap even Farson 's sorcerer.
He turned back. The
man in the priest's robe was still smiling. No pointed teeth now. But they had
been pointed. Jonas would lay his watch and warrant on it.
"Where's
Rimer?"
"I sent him away
to work with young sai Delgado on her Reaping Day catechisms," the man in
black said. He slung a chummy arm around Jonas's shoulders and began leading
him toward the table. "Best we palaver alone, I think."
Jonas didn't want to
offend Farson's man, but he couldn't bear the touch of that arm. He couldn't
say why, but it was unbearable. Pestilential. He shrugged it off and went on
to one of the chairs, trying not to shiver. No wonder Depape had come back from
Hanging Rock looking pale. No damned wonder.
Instead of being
offended, the man in black tittered again (Yes, Jonas thought, he
does laugh like the dead, very like, so he does). For one moment Jonas
thought it was Fardo, Cort's father, in this room with him— that it was the man
who had sent him west all those years ago—and he reached for his gun again.
Then it was just the man in black, smiling at him in an unpleasantly knowing
way, those blue eyes dancing like the flame from the gas-jets.
"See something
interesting, sai Jonas?"
"Aye," Jonas
said, sitting down. "Eats." He took a piece of bread and popped it
into his mouth. The bread stuck to his dry tongue, but he chewed determinedly
all the same.
"Good boy."
The other also sat, and poured wine, filling Jonas's glass first. "Now, my
friend, tell me everything you've done since the three troublesome boys
arrived, and everything you know, and everything you have planned. I would not
have you leave out a single jot."
"First show me
your sigul."
"Of course. How
prudent you are."
The man in black
reached inside his robe and brought out a square of metal—silver, Jonas
guessed. He tossed it onto the table, and it clattered across to Jonas's plate.
Engraved on it was what he had expected—that hideous staring eye.
"Satisfied?"
Jonas nodded.
"Slide it back to
me."
Jonas reached for it,
but for once his normally steady hand resembled his reedy, unstable voice. He
watched the fingers tremble for a moment, then lowered the hand quickly to the
table.
"I... I don't
want to."
No. He didn't want to.
Suddenly he knew that if he touched it, the engraved silver eye would roll...
and look directly at him.
The man in black
tittered and made a come-along gesture with the fingers of his right hand. The
silver buckle (that was what it looked like to Jonas) slid back to him . . .
and up the sleeve of his homespun robe.
"Abracadabra!
Bool! The end! Now," the man in black went on, sipping his wine
delicately, "if we have finished the tiresome formalities..."
"One more,"
Jonas said. "You know my name; I would know yours."
"Call me
Walter," the man in black said, and the smile suddenly fell off his lips.
"Good old Walter, that's me. Now let us see where we are, and where we're
going. Let us, in short, palaver."
14
When Cuthbert came
back into the bunkhouse, night had fallen. Roland and Alain were playing cards.
They had cleaned the place up so that it looked almost as it had (thanks to
turpentine found in a closet of the old foreman's office, even the slogans
written on the walls were just pink ghosts of their former selves), and now
were deeply involved in a game of Casa Fuerte, or Hotpatch, as it was
known in their own part of the world. Either way, it was basically a two-man
version of Watch Me, the card-game which had been played in barrooms and
bunkhouses and around campfires since the world was young.
Roland looked up at
once, trying to read Bert's emotional weather. Outwardly, Roland was as
impassive as ever, had even played Alain to a draw across four difficult hands,
but inwardly he was in a turmoil of pain and indecision. Alain had told him
what Cuthbert had said while the two of them stood talking in the yard, and
they were terrible things to hear from a friend, even when they came at second
hand. Yet what haunted him more was what Bert had said just before leaving: You've
called your carelessness love and made a virtue of irresponsibility. Was
there even a chance he had done such a thing? Over and over he told
himself no—that the course he had ordered them to follow was hard but sensible,
the only course that made sense. Cuthbert's shouting was just so much angry
wind, brought on by nerves .. . and his fury at having their private place
defiled so outrageously. Still. . .
Tell him he's right
for the -wrong reasons, and that makes him all the way wrong.
That couldn't be.
Could it?
Cuthbert was smiling
and his color was high, as if he had galloped most of the way back. He looked
young, handsome, and vital. He looked happy, in fact, almost like the Cuthbert
of old—the one who'd been capable of babbling happy nonsense to a rook's skull
until someone told him lo please, please shut up.
But Roland didn't
trust what he saw. There was something wrong with the smile, the color in
Bert's cheeks could have been anger rather than good health, and the sparkle in
his eyes looked like fever instead of humor. Roland showed nothing on his own
face, but his heart sank. He'd hoped the storm would blow itself out, given a
little time, but he didn't think it had. He shot a glance at Alain, and saw
that Alain felt the same.
Cuthbert, it will be
over in three weeks. If only I could tell you that.
The thought which
returned was stunning in its simplicity: Why can't you?
He realized he didn't
know. Why had he been holding back, keeping his own counsel? For what
purpose? Had he been blind? Gods, had he?
"Hello,
Bert," he said, "did you have a nice r—"
"Yes, very nice,
a very nice ride, an instructive ride. Come outside. I want to show you
something."
Roland liked the thin
glaze of hilarity in Bert's eyes less and less, but he laid his cards in a neat
facedown fan on the table and got up.
Alain pulled at his
sleeve. "No!" His voice was low and panicky. "Do you not see how
he looks?"
"I see,"
Roland said. And felt dismay in his heart.
For the first time, as
he walked slowly toward the friend who no longer looked like a friend, it
occurred to Roland that he had been making decisions in a state close akin to
drunkenness. Or had he been making decisions at all? He was no longer sure.
"What is it you'd
show me, Bert?"
"Something
wonderful," Bert said, and laughed. There was hate in the sound. Perhaps
murder. "You'll want a good close look at this. I know you will."
"Bert, what's
wrong with you?" Alain asked.
"Wrong with me?
Nothing wrong with me, Al—I'm as happy as a dart at sunrise, a bee in a
flower, a fish in the ocean." And as he turned away to go back through the
door, he laughed again.
"Don't go out
there," Alain said. "He's lost his wits."
"If our
fellowship is broken, any chance we might have of getting out of Mejis alive is
gone," Roland said. "That being the case, I'd rather die at the hands
of a friend than an enemy."
He went out. After a
moment of hesitation, Alain followed. On his face was a look of purest misery.
15
Huntress had gone and
Demon had not yet begun to show his face, but the sky was powdered with stars,
and they threw enough light to see by. Cuthbert's horse, still saddled, was
tied to the hitching rail. Beyond it, the square of dusty dooryard gleamed like
a canopy of tarnished silver.
"What is
it?" Roland asked. They weren't wearing guns, any of them. That was to be
grateful for, at least. "What would you show me?"
"It's here."
Cuthbert stopped at a point midway between the bunk-house and the charred remains
of the home place. He pointed with great assurance, but Roland could see
nothing out of the ordinary. He walked over to Cuthbert and looked down.
"I don't
see—"
Brilliant
light—starshine times a thousand—exploded in his head as Cuthbert's fist drove against
the point of his chin. It was the first time, except in play (and as very
small boys), that Bert had ever struck him. Roland didn't lose consciousness,
but he did lose control over his arms and legs. They were there, but
seemingly in another country, flailing like the limbs of a rag doll. He went
down on his back. Dust puffed up around him. The stars seemed strangely in
motion, running in arcs and leaving milky trails behind them. There was a high
ringing in his ears.
From a great distance
he heard Alain scream: "Oh, you fool! You stupid fool!"
By making a tremendous
effort, Roland was able to turn his head. He saw Alain start toward him and saw
Cuthbert, no longer smiling, push him away. "This is between us, Al. You
stay out of it."
"You sucker-punched
him, you bastard!" Alain, slow to anger, was now building toward a rage
Cuthbert might well regret. I have to get up, Roland thought. I
have to get between them before something even worse happens. His arms
and legs began to swim weakly in the dust.
"Yes—that's how
he's played us," Cuthbert said. "I only returned the favor." He
looked down. "That's what I wanted to show you, Roland.
That particular piece
of ground. That particular puff of dust in which you are now lying. Get a good
taste of it. Mayhap it'll wake you up."
Now Roland's own anger
began to rise. He felt the coldness that was seeping into his thoughts, fought
it, and realized he was losing. Jonas ceased to matter; the tankers at Citgo
ceased to matter; the supply conspiracy they had uncovered ceased to matter.
Soon the Affiliation and the ka-tet he had been at such pains to
preserve would cease to matter as well.
The surface numbness
was leaving his feet and legs, and he pushed himself to a sitting position. He
looked up calmly at Bert, his tented hands on the ground, his face set.
Starshine swam in his eyes.
"I love you,
Cuthbert, but I'll have no more insubordination and jealous tantrums. If I
paid you back for all, I reckon you'd finish in pieces, so I'm only going to
pay you for hitting me when I didn't know it was coming."
"And I've no
doubt ye can, cully," Cuthbert said, falling effortlessly into the Hambry
patois. "But first ye might want to have a peek at this." Almost
contemptuously, he tossed a folded sheet of paper. It hit Roland's chest and
bounced into his lap.
Roland picked it up,
feeling the fine point of his developing rage lose its edge. "What is
it?"
"Open and see.
There's enough starlight to read by."
Slowly, with reluctant
fingers, Roland unfolded the sheet of paper and read what was printed there.
He read it twice. The
second time was actually harder, because his hands had begun to tremble. He saw
every place he and Susan had met— the boathouse, the hut, the shack-and now he
saw them in a new light, knowing someone else had seen them, too. How clever he
had believed they were being. How confident of their secrecy and their
discretion. And yet someone had been watching all the time. Susan had been
right. Someone had seen.
I've put everything at
risk. Her life as well as our lives.
Tell him what I said
about the doorway to hell.
And Susan's voice,
too: Ka like a wind . . . if you love me, then love me.
So he had done,
believing in his youthful arrogance that everything would turn out all right
for no other reason—yes, at bottom he had believed this—than that he
was he, and ka must serve his love.
"I've been a
fool," he said. His voice trembled like his hands.
"Yes,
indeed," Cuthbert said. "So you have." He dropped to his knees
in the dust, facing Roland. "Now if you want to hit me, hit away. Hard as
you want and as many as you can manage. I'll not hit back. I've done all I can
to wake you up to your responsibilities. If you still sleep, so be it. Either
way, I still love you." Bert put his hands on Roland's shoulders and briefly
kissed his friend's cheek.
Roland began to cry.
They were partly tears of gratitude, but mostly those of mingled shame and
confusion; there was even a small, dark part of him that hated Cuthbert and
always would. That part hated Cuthbert more on account of the kiss than because
of the unexpected punch on the jaw; more for the forgiveness than the
awakening.
He got to his feet,
still holding the letter in one dusty hand, the other ineffectually brushing
his cheeks and leaving damp smears there. When he staggered and Cuthbert put
out a hand to steady him, Roland pushed him so hard that Cuthbert himself would
have fallen, if Alain hadn't caught hold of his shoulders.
Then, slowly, Roland
went back down again—this time in front of Cuthbert with his hands up and his
head down.
"Roland,
no!" Cuthbert cried.
"Yes,"
Roland said. "I have forgotten the face of my father, and cry your
pardon."
"Yes, all right,
for gods' sake, yes!" Cuthbert now sounded as if he were crying
himself. "Just... please get up! It breaks my heart to see you so!"
And mine to be so,
Roland thought. To be humbled so. But I brought it on myself, didn't I? This
dark yard, with my head throbbing and my heart full of shame and fear. This is
mine, bought and paid for.
They helped him up and
Roland let himself be helped. "That's quite a left, Bert," he said in
a voice that almost passed for normal.
"Only when it's
going toward someone who doesn't know it's coming," Cuthbert replied.
"This letter—how
did you come by it?"
Cuthbert told of
meeting Sheemie, who had been dithering along in his own misery, as if waiting
for ka to intervene ... and, in the person of "Arthur Heath," ka
had.
"From the
witch," Roland mused. "Yes, but how did she know? For she
never leaves the Coos, or so Susan has told me."
"I can't say. Nor
do I much care. What I'm most concerned about right now is making sure that
Sheemie isn't hurt because of what he told me and gave me. After that, I'm
concerned that what old witch Rhea has tried to tell once she doesn't try to
tell again."
"I've made at
least one terrible mistake," Roland said, "but I don't count loving
Susan as another. That was beyond me to change. As it was beyond her. Do you
believe that?"
"Yes," Alain
said at once, and after a moment, almost reluctantly, Cuthbert said, "Aye,
Roland."
"I've been
arrogant and stupid. If this note had reached her aunt, she could have been
sent into exile."
"And we to the
devil, by way of hangropes," Cuthbert added dryly. "Although I know
that's a minor matter to you by comparison."
"What about the
witch?" Alain asked. "What do we do about her?" Roland smiled a
little, and turned toward the northwest. "Rhea," he said.
"Whatever else she is, she's a first-class troublemaker, is she not? And
troublemakers must be put on notice."
He started back toward
the bunkhouse, trudging with his head down. Cuthbert looked at Alain, and saw
that Al was also a little teary-eyed. Bert put out his hand. For a moment Alain
only looked at it. Then he nodded—to himself rather than to Cuthbert, it
seemed—and shook it.
"You did what you
had to," Alain said. "I had my doubts at first, but not now."
Cuthbert let out his
breath. "And I did it the way I had to. If I hadn't surprised him—"
"—he would have
beaten you black and blue."
"So many more
colors than that," Cuthbert said. "I would have looked like a
rainbow."
"The Wizard's
Rainbow, even," Alain said. "Extra colors for your penny."
That made Cuthbert
laugh. The two of them walked back toward the bunkhouse, where Roland was
unsaddling Bert's horse.
Cuthbert turned in that
direction to help, but Alain held him back. "Leave him alone for a little
while," he said. "It's best you do."
They went on ahead,
and when Roland came in ten minutes later, he found Cuthbert playing his hand.
And winning with it.
"Bert," he
said.
Cuthbert looked up.
"We have a spot
of business tomorrow, you and I. Up on the Coos." "Are we going to
kill her?"
Roland thought, and
thought hard. At last he looked up, biting his lip. "We should."
"Aye. We should.
But are we going to?"
"Not unless we
have to, I reckon." Later he would regret this decision—if it was a
decision—bitterly, but there never came a time when he did not understand it.
He had been a boy not much older than Jake Chambers during that Mejis fall,
and the decision to kill does not come easily or naturally to most boys.
"Not unless she makes us."
"Perhaps it would
be best if she did," Cuthbert said. It was hard gunslinger talk, but he
looked troubled as he said it.
"Yes. Perhaps it
would. It's not likely, though, not in one as sly as her. Be ready to get up
early."
"All right. Do
you want your hand back?"
"When you're on
the verge of knocking him out? Not at all."
Roland went past them
to his bunk. There he sat, looking at his folded hands in his lap. He might
have been praying; he might only have been thinking hard. Cuthbert looked at
him for a moment, then turned back to his cards.
16
The sun was just over
the horizon when Roland and Cuthbert left the next morning. The Drop, still
drenched with morning dew, seemed to bum with orange fire in the early light.
Their breath and that of their horses puffed frosty in the air. It was a
morning neither of them ever forgot. For the first time in their lives they
went forth wearing bolstered revolvers; for the first time in their lives they
went into the world as gunslingers.
Cuthbert said not a
word—he knew that if he started, he'd do nothing but babble great streams of
his usual nonsense—and Roland was quiet by nature. There was only one exchange
between them, and it was brief.
"I said I made at
least one very bad mistake," Roland told him. "One that this
note"—he touched his breast pocket—"brought home to me. Do you know
what that mistake was?"
"Not loving
her—not that," Cuthbert said. "You called that ka, and I call
it the same." It was a relief to be able to say this, and a greater one to
believe it. Cuthbert thought he could even accept Susan herself now, not us his
best friend's lover, a girl he had wanted himself the first time he saw her,
but as a part of their entwined fate.
"No," Roland
said. "Not loving her, but thinking that love could somehow be apart from
everything else. That I could live two lives—one with you and Al and our job
here, one with her. I thought that love could lilt me above ka, the way
a bird's wings can take it above all the things that would kill it and eat it,
otherwise. Do you understand?"
"It made you
blind." Cuthbert spoke with a gentleness quite foreign to the young man
who had suffered through the last two months.
"Yes,"
Roland said sadly. "It made me blind . . . but now I see. Come on, a
little faster, if you please. I want to get this over."
17
They rode up the rutty
cart-track along which Susan (a Susan who had known a good deal less about the
ways of the world) had come singing "Careless Love" beneath the light
of the Kissing Moon. Where the track opened into Rhea's yard, they stopped.
"Wonderful
view," Roland murmured. "You can see the whole sweep of the desert
from here."
"Not much to say
about the view right here in front of us, though."
That was true. The
garden was full of unpicked mutie vegetables, the stuffy-guy presiding over
them either a bad joke or a bad omen. The yard supported just one tree, now
moulting sickly-looking fall leaves like an old vulture shedding its feathers.
Beyond the tree was the hut itself, made of rough stone and topped by a single
sooty pot of a chimney with a hex-sign painted on it in sneering yellow. At the
rear comer, beyond one overgrown window, was a woodpile.
Roland had seen plenty
of huts like it—the three of them had passed any number on their way here from
Gilead—but never one that felt as powerfully wrong as this. He saw
nothing untoward, yet there was a feeling, too strong to be denied, of a
presence. One that watched and waited.
Cuthbert felt it, too.
"Do we have to go closer?" lie swallowed. "Do we have to go in?
Because . . . Roland, the door is open. Do you see?"
He saw. As if she
expected them. As if she was inviting them in, wanting them to sit down with
her to some unspeakable breakfast.
"Stay here."
Roland gigged Rusher forward.
"No! I'm
coming!"
"No, cover my
back. If I need to go inside, I'll call you to join me ... but if I need to go
inside, the old woman who lives here will breathe no more. As you said, that
might be for the best."
At every slow step
Rusher took, the feeling of wrongness grew in Roland's heart and mind. There
was a stench to the place, a smell like rotten meat and hot putrefied
tomatoes. It came from the hut, he supposed, but it also seemed to come wafting
out of the very ground. And at every step, the whine of the thinny seemed
louder, as if the atmosphere of this place somehow magnified it.
Susan came up here
alone, and in the dark, he thought. Gods, I'm not sure I
could have come up here in the dark with my friends for company.
He stopped beneath the
tree, looking through the open door twenty paces away. He saw what could have
been a kitchen; the legs of a table, the back of a chair, a filthy hearthstone.
No sign of the lady of the house. But she was there. Roland could feel her eyes
crawling on him like loathsome bugs.
I can't see her
because she's used her art to make herself dim... but she's there.
And just perhaps he did
see her. The air had a strange shimmer just inside the door to the right, as if
it had been heated. Roland had been told that you could see someone who was dim
by turning your head and looking from the comer of your eye. He did that now.
"Roland?"
Cuthbert called from behind him.
"Fine so far,
Bert." Barely paying attention to the words he was saying, because ...
yes! That shimmer was clearer now, and it had almost the shape of a woman. It
could be his imagination, of course, but...
But at that moment, as
if understanding he'd seen her, the shimmer moved farther back into the
shadows. Roland glimpsed the swinging hem of an old black dress, there and then
gone.
No matter. He had not
come to see her but only to give her her single warning . . . which was one
more than any of their fathers would have given her, no doubt.
"Rhea!" His
voice rolled in the harsh tones of old, stem and commanding. Two yellow leaves
fell from the tree, as if shivered loose by that voice, and one fell in his
black hair. From the hut came only a waiting, listening silence . . . and then
the discordant, jeering yowl of a cat.
"Rhea, daughter
of none! I've brought something back to you, woman! Something you must have
lost!" From his shirt he took the folded letter and tossed it to the stony
ground. "Today I've been your friend, Rhea—if this had gone where you had
intended it to go, you would have paid with your life."
He paused. Another
leaf drifted down from the tree. This one landed in Pusher's mane.
"Hear me well,
Rhea, daughter of none, and understand me well. I have come here under the name
of Will Dearborn, but Dearborn is not my name and it is the Affiliation I
serve. More, 'tis all which lies behind the Affiliation—'tis the power of the
White. You have crossed the way of our ka, and I warn you only this
once: do not cross it again. Do you understand?"
Only that waiting
silence.
"Do not touch a
single hair on the head of the boy who carried your had-natured mischief hence,
or you'll die. Speak not another word of those things you know or think you
know to anyone—not to Cordelia Delgado, nor to Jonas, nor to Rimer, nor to
Thorin—or you'll die. Keep your peace and we will keep ours. Break it, and
we'll still you. Do you understand?"
More silence. Dirty
windows peering at him like eyes. A puff of breeze sent more leaves showering
down around him, and caused the stuffy-guy to creak nastily on his pole. Roland
thought briefly of the cook, Hax, twisting at the end of his rope.
"Do you
understand?"
No reply. Not even a
shimmer could he see through the open door now.
"Very well,"
Roland said. "Silence gives consent." He gigged his horse around. As he
did, his head came up a little, and he saw something green shift above him
among the yellow leaves. There was a low hissing sound.
"Roland look out!
Snake!" Cuthbert screamed, but before the second word
had left his mouth, Roland had drawn one of his guns.
He fell sideways in
the saddle, holding with his left leg and heel as Rusher jigged and pranced. He
fired three times, the thunder of the big gun smashing through the still air
and then rolling back from the nearby hills. With each shot the snake flipped
upward again, its blood dotting red across a background of blue sky and yellow
leaves. The last bullet tore off its head, and when the snake fell for good, it
hit the ground in two pieces. From within the hut came a wail of grief and rage
so awful that Roland's spine turned to a cord of ice.
"You
bastard!" screamed a woman's voice from the shadows. "Oh,
you murdering cull! My friend! My friend! "
"If it was your
friend, you oughtn't to have set it on me," Roland said. "Remember,
Rhea, daughter of none."
The voice uttered one
more shriek and fell silent. Roland rode back to Cuthbert, bolstering his gun.
Bert's eyes were round and amazed. "Roland, what shooting! Gods, what
shooting!" "Let's get out of here."
"But we still
don't know how she knew!"
"Do you think
she'd tell?" There was a small but minute shake in Roland's voice. The way
the snake had come out of the tree like that, right at him ... he could still
barely believe he wasn't dead. Thank gods for his hand, which had taken matters
over.
"We could make
her talk," Cuthbert said, but Roland could tell from his voice that Bert
had no taste for such. Maybe later, maybe after years of trail-riding and
gunslinging, but now he had no more stomach for torture than for killing
outright.
"Even if we
could, we couldn't make her tell the truth. Such as her lies as other folks
breathe. If we've convinced her to keep quiet, we've done enough for today.
Come on. I hate this place."
18
As they rode back
toward town, Roland said: "We've got to meet."
"The four of us.
That's what you mean, isn't it?"
"Yes. I want to
tell everything I know and surmise. I want to tell you my plan, such as it is.
What we've been waiting for."
"That would be
very good indeed."
"Susan can help
us." Roland seemed to be speaking to himself. Cuthbert was amused to see
that the lone, crown like leaf was still caught in his dark hair. "Susan
was meant to help us. Why didn't I see that?"
"Because love is
blind," Cuthbert said. He snorted laughter and clapped Roland on the
shoulder. "Love is blind, old son."
19
When she was sure the
boys were gone, Rhea crept out of her door and into the hateful sunshine. She
hobbled across to the tree and fell on her knees by the tattered length of her
snake, weeping loudly.
"Ermot,
Ermot!" she cried. "See what's become of ye!"
There was his head,
the mouth frozen open, the double fangs still dripping poison—clear drops that
shone like prisms in the day's strengthening light. The glazing eyes glared.
She picked Ermot up, kissed the scaly mouth, licked the last of the venom from
the exposed needles, crooning and weeping all the while.
Next she picked up the
long and tattered body with her other hand, moaning at the holes which had been
torn into Ermot's satiny hide; the holes and the ripped red flesh beneath. Twice
she put the head against the body and spoke incantations, but nothing happened.
Of course not. Ermot had gone beyond the aid of her spells. Poor Ermot.
She held his head to
one flattened old dug, and his body to the other. Then, with the last of his
blood wetting the bodice of her dress, she looked in the direction the hateful
boys had gone.
"I'll pay ye
back," she whispered. "By all the gods that ever were, I'll pay ye
back. When ye least expect it, there Rhea will be, and your screams will break
your throats. Do you hear me? Your screams will break your throats!"
She knelt a moment
longer, then got up and shuffled back toward her hut, holding Ermot to her
bosom.
CHAPTER V
wizard's rainbow
1
On an afternoon three
days after Roland's and Cuthbert's visit to the Coos, Roy Depape and Clay
Reynolds walked along the upstairs hallway of the Travellers' Rest to the
spacious bedroom Coral Thorin kept there. Clay knocked. Jonas called for them
to come in, it was open.
The first thing Depape
saw upon entering was sai Thorin herself, in a rocker by the window. She wore a
foamy nightdress of white silk and a red bufanda on her head. She had a
lapful of knitting. Depape looked at her in surprise. She offered him and
Reynolds an enigmatic smile, said "Hello, gents," and returned to her
needlework. Outside there was a rattle of firecrackers (young folks could never
wait until the big day; if they had crackers in their hands, they had to set
match to them), the nervous whinny of a horse, and the raucous laughter of
boys.
Depape turned to
Reynolds, who shrugged and then crossed his arms to hold the sides of his
cloak. In this way he expressed doubt or disapproval or both.
"Problem?"
Jonas was standing in
the doorway to the bathroom, wiping shaving soap from his face with the end of
the towel laid over his shoulder. He was bare to the waist. Depape had seen him
that way plenty of times, but the old white crisscrossings of scars always made
him feel a little sick to his stomach.
"Well... I knew
we was using the lady's room, I just didn't know the lady came with it."
"She does."
Jonas tossed the towel into the bathroom, crossed to the bed, and took his
shirt from where it hung on one of the footposts. Beyond him, Coral glanced
up, gave his naked back a single greedy look, then went back to her work once
more. Jonas slipped into his shirt. "How arc things at Citgo, Clay?"
"Quiet. But it'll
get noisy if certain young vagabundos poke their nosy noses in."
"How many are out
there, and how do they set?" "Ten in the days. A dozen at night. Roy
or I are out once every shift, but like I say, it's been quiet."
Jonas nodded, but he
wasn't happy. He'd hoped to draw the boys out to Citgo before now, just as he'd
hoped to draw them into a confrontation by vandalizing their place and killing
their pigeons. Yet so far they still hid behind their damned Hillock. He felt
like a man in a field with three young bulls. He's got a red rag, this would-be
torero, and he's napping it for all he's worth, and still the toros
refuse to charge. Why? "The moving operation? How goes that?"
"Like
clockwork," Reynolds said. "Four tankers a night, in pairs, the last
four nights. Renfrew's in charge, him of the Lazy Susan. Do you still want to
leave half a dozen as bait?"
"Yar," Jonas
said, and there was a knock at the door. Depape jumped. "Is that—"
"No," Jonas
said. "Our friend in the black robe has decamped. Perhaps he goes to
offer comfort to the Good Man's troops before battle."
Depape barked laughter
at that. By the window, the woman in the nightgown looked down at her knitting
and said nothing. "It's open!" Jonas called.
The man who stepped in
was wearing the sombrero, scrape, and sandalias of a farmer or vaquero,
but the face was pale and the lock of hair peeking out from beneath the sombrero's
brim was blond. It was Latigo. A hard man and no mistake, but a great
improvement over the laughing man in the black robe, just the same.
"Good to see you,
gentlemen," he said, coming in and closing the door. His face—dour,
frowning—was that of a man who hasn't seen anything good in years. Maybe since
birth. "Jonas? Are you well? Do things march?"
"I am and they
do," Jonas said. He offered his hand. Latigo gave it a quick, dry shake.
He didn't do the same for Depape or Reynolds, but glanced at Coral instead.
"Long days and
pleasant nights, lady."
"And may you have
twice the number, sai Latigo," she said without looking up from her
knitting.
Latigo sat on the end
of the bed, produced a sack of tobacco from beneath his scrape, and
began rolling a cigarette.
"I won't stay
long," he said. He spoke in the abrupt, clipped tones of northern
In-World, where—or so Depape had heard—reindeer-fucking was still considered
the chief sport. If you ran slower than your sister, that was. "It
wouldn't be wise. I don't quite fit in, if one looks closely."
"No,"
Reynolds said, sounding amused. "You don't."
Latigo gave him a
sharp glance, then returned his attention to Jonas. "Most of my party is
camped thirty wheels from here, in the forest west of Eyebolt Canyon . . . what
is that wretched noise inside the canyon, by the way? It frightens the
horses."
"A thinny,"
Jonas said.
"It scares the
men, too, if they get too close," Reynolds said. "Best to stay away,
cap'n."
"How many are
you?" Jonas asked.
"A hundred. And
well armed."
"So, it's said,
were Lord Perth's men."
"Don't be an
ass."
"Have they seen
any fighting?"
"Enough to know
what it is," Latigo said, and Jonas knew he was lying. Farson had kept
his veterans in their mountain boltholes. Here was a little expeditionary force
where no doubt only the sergeants were able to do more with their cocks than
run water through them.
"There are a
dozen at Hanging Rock, guarding the tankers your men have brought so far,"
Latigo said.
"More than
needed, likely."
"I didn't risk
coming into this godforsaken shitsplat of a town in order to discuss my
arrangements with you, Jonas."
"Cry your pardon,
sai," Jonas replied, but perfunctorily. He sat on the floor next to
Coral's rocker and began to roll a smoke of his own. She put her knitting aside
and began to stroke his hair. Depape didn't know what there was about her that
Eldred found so fascinating—when he himself looked he saw only an ugly bitch
with a big nose and mosquito-bump tittles.
"As to the three
young men," Latigo said with the air of a fellow going directly to the
heart of the matter. "The Good Man was extremely disturbed to learn there
were visitors from In-World in Mejis. And now you tell me they aren't what they
claim to be. So, just what are they?"
Jonas brushed Coral's
hand away from his hair as though it were ii troublesome insect. Undisturbed,
she returned to her knitting. "They're not young men but mere boys, and if
their coming here is ka—about which I know Farson concerns himself
deeply—then it may be our ka rather than the Affiliation's."
"Unfortunately,
we'll have to forgo enlightening the Good Man with your theological
conclusions," Latigo said. "We've brought radios, but they're either
broken or can't work at this distance. No one knows which. I hate all such
toys, anyway. The gods laugh at them. We're on our own, my friend. For good or
ill."
"No need for
Farson to worry unnecessarily," Jonas said. "The Good Man wants these
lads treated as a threat to his plans. I expect Walter told you the same
thing."
"Aye. And I
haven't forgotten a word. Sai Walter is an unforgettable sort of man."
"Yes,"
Latigo agreed. "He's the Good Man's underliner. The chief reason he came
to you was to underline these boys."
"And so he did.
Roy, tell sai Latigo about your visit to the Sheriff day before
yesterday."
Depape cleared his
throat nervously. "The sheriff . . . Avery—"
"I know him, fat
as a pig in Full Earth, he is," Latigo said. "Go on." "One
of Avery's deputies carried a message to the three boys as they counted horse
on the Drop." "What message?"
"Stay out of town
on Reaping Day; stay off the Drop on Reaping Day; best to stay close to your
quarters on Reaping Day, as Barony folk don't enjoy seeing outlanders, even
those they like, when they keep their festivals."
"And how did they
take it?"
"They agreed
straight away to keep to themselves on Reaping," Depape said.
"That's been their habit all along, to be just as agreeable as pie when
something's asked of em. They know better, course they do—there's no more a
custom here against outlanders on Reaping than there is anyplace else. In
fact, it's quite usual to make strangers a part of the merrymaking, as I'm
sure the boys know. The idea—"
"—is to make them
believe we plan to move on Fair-Day itself, yes, yes," Latigo finished
impatiently. "What I want to know is are they convinced? Can you
take them on the day before Reaping, as you've promised, or will they be
waiting?"
Depape and Reynolds
looked at Jonas. Jonas reached behind him and put his hand on Coral's narrow
but not uninteresting thigh. Here it was, he thought. He would be held to what
he said next, and without grace. If he was right, the Big Coffin Hunters would
be thanked and paid ... perhaps bonused, as well. If he was wrong, they would
likely be hung so high and hard that their heads would pop off when they hit
the end of the rope.
"We'll take them
easy as birds on the ground," Jonas said. "Treason the charge. Three
young men, all high-bom, in the pay of John Parson. Shocking stuff. What could
be more indicative of the evil days we live in?"
"One cry of
treason and the mob appears?"
Jonas favored Latigo
with a wintry smile. "As a concept, treason might be a bit of a reach for
the common folk, even when the mob's drunk and the core's been bought and paid
for by the Horsemen's Association. Murder, though .. . especially that of a
much loved Mayor—"
Depape's startled eyes
flew to the Mayor's sister.
"What a pity it
will be," that lady said, and sighed. "I may be moved to lead the
rabble myself."
Depape thought he
finally understood Eldred's attraction: here was a woman every bit as
cold-blooded as Jonas himself.
"One other
matter," Latigo said. "A piece of the Good Man's property was sent
with you for safekeeping. A certain glass ball?"
Jonas nodded.
"Yes, indeed. A pretty trifle."
"I understand you
left it with the local bruja."
"Yes."
"You should take
it back. Soon."
"Don't teach your
grandpa to suck eggs," Jonas said, a bit testily. "I'm waiting until
the brats are jugged."
Reynolds murmured
curiously, "Have you seen it yourself, sai Latigo?"
"Not close up,
but I've seen men who have." Latigo paused. "One such ran mad and had
to be shot. The only other time I saw anyone in such condition was thirty years
ago, on the edge of the big desert. 'Twas a hut-dweller who'd been bitten by a
rabid coyote."
"Bless the
Turtle," Reynolds muttered, and tapped his throat three times. He was
terrified of rabies.
"You won't bless
anything if the Wizard's Rainbow gets hold of you," Latigo said grimly,
and swung his attention back to Jonas. "You'll want to be even more
careful taking it back than you were in giving it over. The old witch-woman's
likely under its glam by now."
"I intend to send
Rimer and Avery. Avery ain't much of a shake, but Rimer's a trig boy."
"I'm afraid that
won't do," Latigo said.
"Won't it?"
Jonas said. His hand tightened on Coral's leg and he smiled unpleasantly at
Latigo. "Perhaps you could tell your 'umble servant why it won't
do?"
It was Coral who
answered. "Because," said she, "when the piece of the Wizard's
Rainbow Rhea holds is taken back into custody, the Chancellor will be busy
accompanying my brother to his final resting place."
"What's she
talking about, Eldred?" Depape asked.
"That Rimer dies,
too," Jonas said. He began to grin. "Another foul crime to lay at the
feet of John Farson's filthy spyboys."
Coral smiled in sweet
agreement, put her hands over Jonas's, moved it higher on her thigh, and then
picked up her knitting again.
2
The girl, although
young, was married.
The boy, although
fair, was unstable.
She met him one night
in a remote place to tell him their affair, sweet as it had been, must end. He
replied that it would never end, it was written in the stars. She told him that
might be, but at some point the constellations had changed. Perhaps he began
to weep. Perhaps she laughed—out of nervousness, very likely. Whatever the
cause, such laughter was disastrously timed. He picked up a stone and dashed
out her brains with it. Then, coming to his senses and realizing what he had
done, he sat down with his back against a granite slab, drew her poor battered
head into his lap, and cut his own throat as an owl looked on from a nearby
tree. He died covering her face with kisses, and when they were found, their
lips were sealed together with his life's blood and with hers.
An old story. Every
town has its version. The site is usually the local lovers' lane, or a secluded
stretch of riverbank, or the town graveyard. Once the details of what actually
happened have been distorted enough to please the morbidly romantic, songs are
made. These are usually sung by yearning virgins who play guitar or mando badly
and cannot quite stay on key. Choruses tend to include such lachrymose refrains
as My-di-I-de-I-de-o, There they died together-o.
The Hambry version of
this quaint tale featured lovers named Robert and Francesca, and had happened
in the old days, before the world had moved on. The site of the supposed
murder-suicide was the Hambry cemetery, the stone with which Francesca's brains
had been dashed out was a slate marker, and the granite wall against which
Robert had been leaning when he clipped his blowpipe had been the Thorin
mausoleum. (It was doubtful there had been any Thorins in Hambry or Mejis five
generations back, but folk-tales are, at best, generally no more than lies set
in rhyme.)
True or untrue, the
graveyard was considered haunted by the ghosts of the lovers, who could be seen
(it was said) walking hand-in-hand among the markers, covered with blood and
looking wistful. It was thus seldom visited at night, and was a logical spot
for Roland, Cuthbert, Alain, and Susan to meet.
By the time the
meeting took place, Roland had begun to feel increasingly worried . . . even
desperate. Susan was the problem—or, more properly put, Susan's aunt. Even
without Rhea's poisonous letter to help the process along, Cordelia's
suspicions of Susan and Roland had hardened into a near certainty. On a day
less than a week before the meeting in the cemetery, Cordelia had begun
shrieking at Susan almost as soon as she stepped through the house door with
her basket over her arm.
"Ye've been with
him! Ye have, ye bad girl, it's written all over yer face!"
Susan, who had that
day been nowhere near Roland, could at first only gape at her aunt. "Been
with who?"
"Oh, be not coy
with me, Miss Oh So Young and Pretty! Be not coy, I pray! Who does all but
wiggle his tongue at ye when he passes our door? Dearborn, that's who!
Dearborn! Dearborn! I'll say it a thousand times! Oh, shame on ye! Shame! Look
at yer trousers! Green from the grass the two of ye have been rolling in, they
are! I'm surprised they're not torn open at the crutch as well!" By then
Aunt Cord had been nearly shrieking. The veins in her neck stood out like rope.
Susan, bemused, had
looked down at the old khaki pants she was wearing.
"Aunt, it's
paint—don't you see it is? Chetta and I've been making Fair-Day decorations up
at Mayor's House. What's on my bottom got there when Hart Thorin- not Dearborn
but Thorin—came upon me in the shed where the decorations and fireworks
are stored. He decided it was as good a time and place as any to have another
little wrestle. He got on top of me, shot his squirt into his pants again, and
went off happy. Humming, he was." She wrinkled her nose, although the most
she felt for Thorin these days was a kind of sad distaste. Her fear of him had
passed.
Aunt Cord, meanwhile,
had been looking at her with glittery eyes. For the first time, Susan found
herself wondering consciously about Cordelia's sanity.
"A likely
story," Cordelia whispered at last. There were little beads of
perspiration above her eyebrows, and the nestles of blue veins at her temples
ticked like clocks. She even had a smell, these days, no matter if she bathed
or not—a rancid, acrid one. "Did ye work it out together as ye cuddled afterward,
thee and him?"
Susan had stepped
forward, grabbed her aunt's bony wrist, and clapped it to the stain on one of
her knees. Cordelia cried out and tried to pull away, but Susan held fast. She
then raised the hand to her aunt's face, holding it there until she knew
Cordelia had smelled what was on her palm.
"Does thee smell
it. Aunt? Paint! We used it on rice-paper for colored lanterns!"
The tension had slowly
gone out of the wrist in Susan's hand. The eyes looking into hers regained a
measure of clarity. "Aye," she had said at last. "Paint." A
pause. "This time."
Since then, Susan had
all too often turned her head to see a narrow-hipped figure gliding after her
in the street, or one of her aunt's many friends marking her course with
suspicious eyes. When she rode on the Drop, she now always had the sensation of
being watched. Twice before the four of them came together in the graveyard,
she had agreed to meet Roland and his friends. Both times she had been forced
to break off, the second at the very last moment. On that occasion she had seen
Brian Hockey's eldest son watching her in an odd, intent way. It had only been
intuition ... but strong intuition.
What made matters
worse for her was that she was as frantic for a meeting as Roland himself, and
not just for palaver. She needed to see his face, and to clasp one of his hands
between both of hers. The rest, sweet as it was, could wait, but she needed to
see him and touch him; needed to make sure he wasn't Just a dream spun by a
lonely, frightened girl to comfort herself.
In the end, Maria had
helped her—gods bless the little maid, who perhaps understood more than Susan
could ever guess. It was Maria who had gone to Cordelia with a note saying that
Susan would be spending the night in the guest wing at Seafront. The note was
from Olive Thorin, and in spite of all her suspicions, Cordelia could not quite
believe it a forgery. As it was not. Olive had written it, listlessly and
without questions, when Susan asked.
"What's wrong
with my niece?" Cordelia had snapped. "She tired, sai. And with the dolor
de garganta."
"Sore throat? So
close before Fair-Day? Ridiculous! I don't believe it! Susan's never
sick!"
"Dolor de
garganta," Maria repeated, impassive as only a
peasant woman can be in the face of disbelief, and with that Cordelia had to be
satisfied. Maria herself had no idea what Susan was up to, and that was just
the way Susan liked it.
She'd gone over the
balcony, moving nimbly down the fifteen feet of tangled vines growing up the
north side of the building, and through the rear servants' door in the wall.
There Roland had been waiting, and after two warm minutes with which we need
not concern ourselves, they rode double on Rusher to the graveyard, where
Cuthbert and Alain waited, full of expectation and nervous hope.
3
Susan looked first at
the placid blond one with the round face, whose name was not Richard Stockworth
but Alain Johns. Then at the other one—he from whom she had sensed such doubt
of her and perhaps even anger at her. Cuthbert Allgood was his name.
They sat side by side
on a fallen gravestone which had been overrun with ivy, their feet in a little
brook of mist. Susan slid from Rusher's back and approached them slowly. They
stood up. Alain made an In-World bow, leg out, knee locked, heel stiffly planted.
"Lady," he said. "Long days—"
Now the other was
beside him—thin and dark, with a face that would have been handsome had it not
seemed so restless. His dark eyes were really quite beautiful.
"- and pleasant
nights," Cuthbert finished, doubling Alain's bow. I he two of them looked
so like comic courtiers in a Fair-Day sketch that Susan laughed. She couldn't
help herself. Then she curtseyed to them deeply, spreading her arms to mime the
skirts she wasn't wearing. "And may you have twice the number, gentlemen."
Then they simply
looked at each other, three young people who were uncertain exactly how to
proceed. Roland didn't help; he sat astride K usher and only watched carefully.
Susan took a tentative
step forward, not laughing now. There were still dimples at the comers of her
lips, but her eyes were anxious.
"I hope you don't
hate me," she said. "I'd understand it if you did— I've come into
your plans ... and between the three of you, as well—but I couldn't help
it." Her hands were still out at her sides. Now she raised them to Alain
and Cuthbert, palms up. "I love him."
"We don't hate
you," Alain said. "Do we, Bert?"
For a terrible moment
Cuthbert was silent, looking over Susan's shoulder, seeming to study the waxing
Demon Moon. She felt her heart stop. Then his gaze returned to her and he gave
a smile of such sweetness that a confused but brilliant thought (If I'd met
this one first—, it began) shot through her mind like a comet.
"Roland's love is
my love," Cuthbert said. He reached out, took her hands, and drew her
forward so she stood between him and Alain like a sister with her two brothers.
"For we have been friends since we wore cradle-clothes, and we'll continue
as friends until one of us leaves the path and enters the clearing." Then
he grinned like a kid. "Mayhap we'll all find the end of the path
together, the way things are going."
"And soon,"
Alain added.
"Just so
long," Susan Delgado finished, "as my Aunt Cordelia doesn't come
along as our chaperone."
4
"We are ka-tet,"
Roland said. "We are one from many."
He looked at each in
turn, and saw no disagreement in their eyes. They had repaired to the
mausoleum, and their breath smoked from their mouths and noses. Roland squatted
on his hunkers, looking at the other three, who sat in a line on a stone
meditation bench flanked by skeletal bouquets in stone pots. The floor was
scattered with the petals of dead roses. Cuthbert and Alain, on either side of
Susan, had their arms around her in quite unselfconscious fashion. Again Roland
thought of one sister and two protective brothers.
"We're greater
than we were," Alain said. "I feel that very strongly."
"I do, too,"
Cuthbert said. He looked around. "And a fine meeting-place, as well.
Especially for such a ka-tet as ours."
Roland didn't smile;
repartee had never been his strong suit. "Let's talk about what's going on
in Hambry," he said, "and then we'll talk about the immediate
future."
"We weren't sent
here on a mission, you know," Alain said to Susan. "We were sent by
our fathers to get us out of the way, that's all. Roland excited the enmity of
a man who is likely a cohort of John Parson's—"
" 'Excited the
enmity of,' " Cuthbert said. "That's a good phrase. Round. I intend
to remember it and use it at every opportunity."
"Control
yourself," Roland said. "I've no desire to be here all night."
"Cry your pardon,
O great one," Cuthbert said, but his eyes danced in a decidedly
unrepentant way.
"We came with
carrier pigeons for the sending and receiving of messages," Alain went
on, "but I think the pigeons were laid on so our parents could be sure we
were all right."
"Yes,"
Cuthbert said. "What Alain's trying to say is that we've been caught by
surprise. Roland and I have had ... disagreements ... about how to go on. He
wanted to wait. I didn't. I now believe he was right."
"But for the
wrong reasons," Roland said in a dry tone. "In any case, we've
settled our differences."
Susan was looking back
and forth between them with something like alarm. What her gaze settled upon
was the bruise on Roland's lower left jaw, clearly visible even in the faint
light which crept through the half-open sepultura door. "Settled
them how?"
"It doesn't
matter," Roland said. "Farson intends a battle, or perhaps a series
of them, in the Shaved Mountains, to the northwest of Gilead. To the forces of
the Affiliation moving toward him, he will seem trapped. In a more ordinary
course of things, that might even have been true. Farson intends to engage
them, trap them, and destroy them with the weapons of the Old People. These he
will drive with oil from Citgo. The oil in the tankers we saw, Susan."
"Where will it be
refined so Farson can use it?"
"Someplace west
of here along his route," Cuthbert said. "We think very likely the Vi
Castis. Do you know it? It's mining country."
"I've heard of
it, but I've never actually been out of Hambry in my life." She looked
levelly at Roland. "I think that's to change soon."
"There's a good
deal of machinery left over from the days of the Old People in those
mountains," Alain said. "Most is up in the draws and canyons, they
say. Robots and killer lights—razor-beams, such are called, because they'll cut
you clean in half if you run into them. The gods know what else. Some of it's
undoubtedly just legend, but where there's smoke, there's often fire. In any
case, it seems the most likely spot for refining."
"And then they'd
take it on to where Farson's waiting," Cuthbert said. "Not that that
part matters to us; we've got all we can handle right here in Mejis."
"I've been
waiting in order to get it all," Roland said. "Every bit of their
damned plunder."
"In case you
haven't noticed, our friend is just a wee nubbin ambitious," Cuthbert
said, and winked.
Roland paid no
attention. He was looking in the direction of Eyebolt Canyon. There was no
noise from there this night; the wind had shifted onto its autumn course and
away from town. "If we can fire the oil, the rest will go up with it...
and the oil is the most important thing, anyway. I want to destroy it, then I
want to get the hell out of here. The four of us."
"They mean to
move on Reaping Day, don't they?" Susan asked.
"Oh yes, it seems
so," Cuthbert said, then laughed. It was a rich, infectious sound—the
laughter of a child—and as he did it, he rocked back and forth and held his
stomach as a child would.
Susan looked puzzled.
"What? What is it?"
"I can't
tell," he said, chortling. "It's too rich for me. I'll laugh all the
way through it, and Roland will be annoyed. You do it, Al. Tell Susan about our
visit from Deputy Dave."
"He came out to
see us at the Bar K," Alain said, smiling himself. "Talked to us like
an uncle. Told us Hambry-folk don't care for outsiders at their Fairs, and we'd
best keep right to our place on the day of the full moon."
"That's
insane!" Susan spoke indignantly, as one is apt to when one hears one's
hometown unjustly maligned. "We welcome strangers to our fairs, so
we do, and always have! We're not a bunch of... of savages!"
"Soft,
soft," Cuthbert said, giggling. "We know that, but Deputy Dave don't
know we know, do he? He knows his wife makes the best white tea for miles
around, and after that Dave's pretty much at sea. Sheriff Herk knows a leetle
more, I sh'd judge, but not much."
"The pains
they've taken to warn us off means two things," Roland said. "The
first is that they intend to move on Reaping Fair-Day, just as you said, Susan.
The second is that they think they can steal Parson's goods right out from
under our noses."
"And then perhaps
blame us for it afterward," Alain said.
She looked curiously
from one to the other, then said: "What have you planned, then?"
"To destroy what
they've left at Citgo as bait of our own and then to strike them where they
gather," Roland said quietly. "That's Hanging Rock. At least half the
tankers they mean to take west are there already. They'll have a force of men.
As many as two hundred, perhaps, although I think it will turn out to be less.
I intend that all these men should die."
"If they don't,
we will," Alain said.
"How can the four
of us kill two hundred soldiers?"
"We can't. But if
we can start one or two of the clustered tankers burning, we think there'll be
an explosion—mayhap a fearful one. The surviving soldiers will be terrified,
and the surviving leaders infuriated. They'll see us, because we'll let
ourselves be seen ..."
Alain and Cuthbert
were watching him breathlessly. The rest they had either been told or had
guessed, but this part was the counsel Roland had, until now, kept to himself.
"What then?"
she asked, frightened. "What then? "
"I think we can
lead them into Eyebolt Canyon," Roland said. "I think we can lead
them into the thinny."
5
Thunderstruck silence
greeted this. Then, not without respect, Susan said:
"You're
mad."
"No,"
Cuthbert said thoughtfully. "He's not. You're thinking about that little
cut in the canyon wall, aren't you, Roland? The one just before the jog in the
canyon floor."
Roland nodded.
"Four could scramble up that way without too much trouble. At the top,
we'll pile a fair amount of rock. Enough to start a landslide down on any that
should try following us."
"That's
horrible," Susan said.
"It's
survival," Alain replied. "If they're allowed to have the oil and put
it to use, they'll slaughter every Affiliation man that gets in range of their
weapons. The Good Man takes no prisoners."
"I didn't say
wrong, only horrible."
They were silent for a
moment, four children contemplating the murders of two hundred men. Except
they wouldn't all be men; many (perhaps even most) would be boys roughly their
own ages.
At last she said,
"Those not caught in your rockslide will only ride back out of the canyon
again."
"No, they
won't." Alain had seen the lay of the land and now understood the matter
almost completely. Roland was nodding, and there was a trace of a smile on his
mouth.
"Why not?"
"The brush at the
front of the canyon. We're going to set it on fire, aren't we, Roland? And if
the prevailing winds are prevailing that day ... the smoke ..."
"It'll drive them
the rest of the way in," Roland agreed. "Into the thinny."
"How will you set
the brush-pile alight?" Susan asked. "I know it's dry, but surely you
won't have time to use a sulfur match or your flint and steel."
"You can help us
there," Roland said, "just as you can help us set the tankers alight.
We can't count on touching off the oil with just our guns, you know; crude oil
is a lot less volatile than people might think. And Sheemie's going to help
you, I hope."
"Tell me what you
want."
6
They talked another
twenty minutes, refining the plan surprisingly little— all of them seemed to
understand that if they planned too much and things changed suddenly, they
might freeze. Ka had swept them into this; it was perhaps best that they
count on ka—and their own courage—to sweep them back out again.
Cuthbert was reluctant
to involve Sheemie, but finally went along— the boy's part would be minimal, if
not exactly low-risk, and Roland agreed that they could
take him with them when they left Mejis for good. A party of rive was as fine
as a party of four, he said.
"All right,"
Cuthbert said at last, then turned to Susan. "It ought to be you or me who
talks to him."
"I will."
"Make sure he
understands not to tell Coral Thorin so much as a word," Cuthbert said.
"It isn't that the Mayor's her brother; I just don't trust that
bitch."
"I can give ye a
better reason than Hart not to trust her," Susan said. "My aunt says
she's taken up with Eldred Jonas. Poor Aunt Cord! She's had the worst summer of
her life. Nor will the fall be much better, I wot. Folk will call her the aunt
of a traitor."
"Some will know
better," Alain said. "Some always do."
"Mayhap, but my
Aunt Cordelia's the sort of woman who never hears good gossip. No more does she
speak it. She fancied Jonas herself, ye ken."
Cuthbert was
thunderstruck. "Fancied Jonas! By all the fiddling gods! Can you imagine
it! Why, if they hung folk for bad taste in love, your auntie would go early,
wouldn't she?"
Susan giggled, hugged
her knees, and nodded.
"It's time we
left," Roland said. "If something chances that Susan needs to know
right away, we'll use the red stone in the rock wall at Green Heart."
"Good,"
Cuthbert said. "Let's get out of here. The cold in this place eats into
the bones."
Roland stirred,
stretching life back into his legs. "The important thing is that they've
decided to leave us free while they round up and run. That's our edge, and it's
a good one. And now—"
Alain's quiet voice
stopped him. "There's another matter. Very important."
Roland sank back down
on his hunkers, looking at Alain curiously.
"The witch."
Susan started, but
Roland only barked an impatient laugh. "She doesn't figure in our
business, Al—I can't see how she could. I don't believe she's a part of Jonas's
conspiracy—"
"Neither do
I," Alain said.
"—and Cuthbert
and I persuaded her to keep her mouth shut about Susan and me. If we hadn't,
her aunt would have raised the roof by now."
"But don't you
see?" Alain asked. "Who Rhea might have told isn't really the
question. The question is how she knew in the first place."
"It's pink,"
Susan said abruptly. Her hand was on her hair, fingers touching the place where
the cut ends had begun to grow out.
"What's
pink?" Alain asked.
"The moon,"
she said, and then shook her head. "I don't know. I don't know what I'm
talking about. Brainless as Pinch and Jilly, I am ... Roland? What's wrong?
What ails thee?"
For Roland was no
longer hunkering; he had collapsed into a loose sitting position on the
petal-strewn stone floor. He looked like a young man trying not to faint.
Outside the mausoleum there was a bony rattle of fall leaves and the cry of a
nightjar.
"Dear gods,"
he said in a low voice. "It can't be. It can't be true."
His eyes met Cuthbert's.
All the humor had
washed out of the latter young man's face, leaving a ruthless and calculating
bedrock his own mother might not have recognized ... or might not have wanted
to.
"Pink,"
Cuthbert said. "Isn't that interesting—the same word your father happened
to mention just before we left, Roland, wasn't it? He warned us about the pink
one. We thought it was a joke. Almost."
"Oh!"
Alain's eyes flew wide open. "Oh, fuck!" he blurted. He realized
what he had said while sitting leg-to-leg with his best friend's lover and
clapped his hands over his mouth. His cheeks flamed red.
Susan barely noticed.
She was staring at Roland in growing fear and confusion. "What?" she
asked. "What is it ye know? Tell me! Tell me!"
"I'd like to
hypnotize you again, as I did that day in the willow grove," Roland said.
"I want to do it right now, before we talk of this more and drag mud
across what you remember."
Roland had reached
into his pocket while she was speaking. Now he took out a shell, and it began
to dance across the back of his hand once more. Her eyes went to it at once,
like steel drawn to a magnet.
"May I?" he
asked. "By your leave, dear."
"Aye, as ye
will." Her eyes were widening and growing glassy. "I don't know why
ye think this time should be any different, but. . ." She stopped talking,
her eyes continuing to follow the dance of the shell across Roland's hand. When
he stopped moving it and clasped it in his fist, her eyes closed. Her breath
was soft and regular.
"Gods, she went
like a stone," Cuthbert whispered, amazed. "She's been hypnotized
before. By Rhea, I think." Roland paused. Then: "Susan, do you hear
me?"
"Aye, Roland, I
hear ye very well." "I want you to hear another voice, too."
"Whose?"
Roland beckoned to
Alain. If anyone could break through the block in Susan's mind (or find a way
around it), it would be him.
"Mine,
Susan," Alain said, coming to Roland's side. "Do you know it?"
She smiled with her eyes closed. "Aye, you're Alain. Richard Stock-worth
that was."
"That's
right." He looked at Roland with nervous, questioning eyes— What shall
I ask her?—but for a moment Roland didn't reply. He was in two other
places, both at the same time, and hearing two different voices.
Susan, by the stream
in the willow grove: She says, "Aye, lovely, just so, it's a good girl
y'are, " then everything's pink.
His father, in the
yard behind the Great Hall: It's the grapefruit. By which I mean it's the
pink one.
The pink one.
7
Their horses were
saddled and loaded; the three boys stood before them, outwardly stolid,
inwardly feverish to be gone. The road, and the mysteries that lie along it,
calls out to none as it calls to the young.
They were in the
courtyard which lay east of the Great Hall, not far from where Roland had
bested Cort, setting all these things in motion. It was early morning, the sun
not yet risen, the mist lying over the green fields in gray ribbons. At a
distance of about twenty paces, Cuthbert's and Alain's fathers stood sentry
with their legs apart and their hands on the butts of their guns. It was
unlikely that Marten (who had for the time being absented himself from the
palace, and, so far as any knew, from Gilead itself) would mount any sort of
attack on them—not here—but it wasn't entirely out of the question, either.
So it was that only
Roland's father spoke to them as they mounted up to begin their ride east to
Mejis and the Outer Arc.
"One last
thing," he said as they adjusted their saddle girths. "I doubt you'll
see anything that (ouches on our interests—not in Mejis—but I'd have you keep
an eye out for a color of the rainbow. The Wizard's Rain-how, that is." He
chuckled, then added: "It's the grapefruit. By which I mean it's the pink
one."
"Wizard's Rainbow
is just a fairy-tale," Cuthbert said, smiling in response to Steven's
smile. Then—perhaps it was something in Steven Deschain's eyes—Cuthbert's smile
faltered. "Isn't it?"
"Not all the old
stories are true, but I think that of Maerlyn's Rainbow is," Steven replied.
"It's said that once there were thirteen glass balls in it—one for each of
the Twelve Guardians, and one representing the nexus-point of the Beams."
"One for the
Tower," Roland said in a low voice, feeling gooseflesh. "One for the
Dark Tower."
"Aye, Thirteen it
was called when I was a boy. We'd tell stories about the black ball around the
fire sometimes, and scare ourselves silly . . . unless our fathers caught us
at it. My own da said it wasn't wise to talk about Thirteen, for it might hear
its name called and roll your way. But Black Thirteen doesn't matter to you
three ... not now, at least. No, it's the pink one. Maerlyn's Grapefruit."
It was impossible to
tell how serious he was ... or if he was serious at all.
"If the other
balls in the Wizard's Rainbow did exist, most are broken now. Such
things never stay in one place or one pair of hands for long, you know, and
even enchanted glass has a way of breaking. Yet at least three or four bends o'
the Rainbow may still be rolling around this sad world of ours. The blue,
almost certainly. A desert tribe of slow mutants—the Total Hogs, they called
themselves—had that one less than fifty years ago, although it's slipped from
sight again since. The green and the orange are reputed to be in Lud and Dis, respectively.
And, just maybe, the pink one."
"What exactly do
they do?" Roland asked. "What are they good for?"
"For seeing. Some
colors of the Wizard's Rainbow are reputed to look into the future. Others look
into the other worlds—those where the demons live, those where the Old People
are supposed to have gone when they left our world. These may also show the
location of the secret doors which pass between the worlds. Other colors, they
say, can look far in our own world, and see things people would as soon keep
secret. They never see the good; only the ill. How much of this is true and how
much is myth no one knows for sure."
He looked at them, his
smile fading.
"But this we do
know: John Farson is said to have a talisman, something that glows in his tent
late at night ... sometimes before battles, sometimes before large movements of
troop and horse, sometimes before momentous decisions are announced. And it
glows pink."
"Maybe he has an
electric light and puts a pink scarf over it when he prays," Cuthbert
said. He looked around at his friends, a little defensively. "I'm not
joking; there are people who do that."
"Perhaps,"
Roland's father said. "Perhaps that's all it is, or something like. But
perhaps it's a good deal more. All I can say of my own knowledge is that he
keeps beating us, he keeps slipping away from us, and he keeps turning up where
he's least expected. If the magic is in him and not in some talisman he owns,
gods help the Affiliation."
"We'll keep an
eye out, if you like," Roland said, "but Parson's in the north or
west. We're going east." As if his father did not know this.
"If it's a bend
o' the Rainbow," Steven replied, "it could be anywhere—east or
south's as likely as west. He can't keep it with him all the time, you see. No
matter how much it would ease his mind and heart to do so. No one can."
"Why not?"
"Because they're
alive, and hungry," Steven said. "One begins using em; one ends being
used by em. If Farson has a piece of the Rainbow, he'll send it away and
call it back only when he needs it. He understands the risk of losing it, but
he also understands the risk of keeping it too long."
There was a question
which the other two, constrained by politeness, couldn't ask. Roland could, and
did. "You are serious about this. Dad? It's not just a leg-pull, is
it?"
"I'm sending you
away at an age when many boys still don't sleep well if their mothers don't
kiss them goodnight," Steven said. "I expect to see all three of you
again, alive and well—Mejis is a lovely, quiet place, or was when I was a
boy—but I can't be sure of it. As things are these days, no one can be sure of
anything. I wouldn't send you away with a joke and a laugh. I'm surprised you
think it."
"Cry your
pardon," Roland said. An uneasy peace had descended between him and his
father, and he would not rupture it. Still, he was wild to be off. Pusher
jigged beneath him, as if seconding that.
"I don't expect
you boys to see Maerlyn's glass . . . but I didn't expect to be seeing you off at fourteen with
revolvers tucked in your bedrolls, either. Ka's at work here, and where
ka works, anything is possible."
Slowly, slowly, Steven
took off his hat, stepped back, and swept them a bow. "Go in peace, boys.
And return in health."
"Long days and
pleasant nights, sai," Alain said.
"Good fortune,"
Cuthbert said.
"I love
you," Roland said.
Steven nodded.
"Thankee-sai—I love you, too. My blessings, boys." He said this last
in a loud voice, and the other two men—Robert Allgood and Christopher Johns,
who had been known in the days of his savage youth as Burning Chris—added their
own blessings.
So the three of them
rode toward their end of the Great Road, while summer lay all about them,
breathless as a gasp. Roland looked up and saw something that made him forget
all about the Wizard's Rainbow. It was his mother, leaning out of her
apartment's bedroom window: the oval of her face surrounded by the timeless
gray stone of the castle's west wing. There were tears coursing down her
cheeks, but she smiled and lifted one hand in a wide wave. Of the three of
them, only Roland saw her.
He didn't wave back.
8
"Roland!"
An elbow struck him in the ribs, hard enough to dispel these memories,
brilliant as they were, and return him to the present. It was Cuthbert.
"Do something, if you mean to! Get us out of this deadhouse before I
shiver the skin right off my bones!"
Roland put his mouth
close by Alain's ear. "Be ready to help me."
Alain nodded.
Roland turned to
Susan. "After the first time we were together an-tet, you went to
the stream in the grove."
"Aye."
"You cut some of
your hair."
"Aye." That
same dreaming voice. "So I did."
"Would you have
cut it all?"
"Aye, every lick
and lock."
"Do you know who
told you to cut it?"
A long pause. Roland
was about to turn to Alain when she said, "Rhea." Another pause. "She
wanted to fiddle me up."
"Yes, but what
happened later? What happened while you stood in the doorway?"
"Oh, and
something else happened before."
"What?"
"I fetched her
wood," said she, and said no more.
Roland looked at
Cuthbert, who shrugged. Alain spread his hands. Roland thought of asking the
latter boy to step forward, and judged it still wasn't quite time.
"Never mind the
wood for now," he said, "or all that came before. We'll talk of that
later, mayhap, but not just yet. What happened as you were leaving? What did
she say to you about your hair?"
"Whispered in my
ear. And she had a Jesus-man."
"Whispered
what?"
"I don't know.
That part is pink."
Here it was. He nodded
to Alain. Alain bit his lip and stepped forward. He looked frightened, but as
he took Susan's hands in his own and spoke to her, his voice was calm and
soothing.
"Susan? It's
Alain Johns. Do you know me?"
"Aye—Richard
Stockworth that was."
"What did Rhea
whisper in your ear?"
A frown, faint as a
shadow on an overcast day, creased her brow. "I can't see. It's
pink."
"You don't need
to see," Alain said. "Seeing's not what we want right now. Close your
eyes so you can't do it at all."
"They are
closed," she said, a trifle pettishly. She's frightened, Roland
thought. He felt an urge to tell Alain to stop, to wake her up, and restrained
it.
"The ones
inside," Alain said. "The ones that look out from memory. Close
those, Susan. Close them for your father's sake, and tell me not what you see
but what you hear. Tell me what she said."
Chillingly,
unexpectedly, the eyes in her face opened as she closed those in her mind. She
stared at Roland, and through him, with the eyes of an ancient statue. Roland
bit back a scream.
"You were in the
doorway, Susan?" Alain asked.
"Aye. So we both
were."
"Be there
again."
"Aye." A
dreaming voice. Faint but clear. "Even with my eyes closed I can see-the
moon's light. 'Tis as big as a grapefruit."
It's the grapefruit,
Roland thought. By which I mean, it's the pink one.
"And what do you
hear? What does she say?"
"No, I say."
The faintly petulant voice of a little girl. "First I say, Alain. I say
'And is our business done?' and she says 'Mayhap there's one more little
thing,' and then ... then..."
Alain squeezed gently
down on her hands, using whatever it was he had in his own, his touch, sending
it into her. She tried feebly to pull back, but he wouldn't let her. "Then
what? What next?"
"She has a little
silver medal."
"Yes?"
"She leans close
and asks if I hear her. I can smell her breath. It reeks o' garlic. And other
things, even worse." Susan's face wrinkled in distaste. "I say I
hear her. Now I can see. I see the medal she has."
"Very well,
Susan," Alain said. "What else do you see?"
"Rhea. She looks
like a skull in the moonlight. A skull with hair."
"Gods," Cuthbert
muttered, and crossed his arms over his chest.
"She says I
should listen. I say I will listen. She says I should obey. I say I will obey.
She says 'Aye, lovely, just so, it's a good girl y'are.' She's stroking my
hair. All the time. My braid." Susan raised a dreaming, drowning hand,
pale in the shadows of the crypt, to her blonde hair. "And then she says
there's something I'm to do when my virginity's over. 'Wait,' she says, 'until
he's asleep beside ye, then cut yer hair off yer head. Every strand. Right down
to yer very skull.' "
The boys looked at her
in mounting horror as her voice became Rhea's—the growling, whining
cadences of the old woman of the Coos. Even the face—except for the coldly
dreaming eyes—had become a hag's face.
" 'Cut it all,
girl, every whore's strand of it, aye, and go back to him as bald as ye came
from yer mother! See how he likes ye then!' "
She fell silent. Alain
turned his pallid face to Roland. His lips were trembling, but still he held
her hands.
"Why is the moon
pink?" Roland asked. "Why is the moon pink when you try to
remember?"
"It's her
glam." Susan seemed almost surprised, almost gay. Confiding. "She
keeps it under her bed, so she does. She doesn't know I saw it."
"Are you
sure?"
"Aye," Susan
said, then added simply: "She would have killed me if she knew." She
giggled, shocking them all. "Rhea has the moon in a box under her
bed." She lilted this in the singsong voice of a small child.
"A pink
moon," Roland said.
"Aye."
"Under her
bed."
"Aye." This
time she did pull her hands free of Alain's. She made a circle with them in the
air, and as she looked up at it, a dreadful expression of greed passed over
her face like a cramp. "I should like to have it, Roland. So I should.
Lovely moon! I saw it when she sent me for the wood. Through her window. She
looked ... young." Then, once again: "I sh'd like to have such a
thing."
"No—you wouldn't.
But it's under her bed?"
"Aye, in a magic
place she makes with passes."
"She has a piece
of Maerlyn's Rainbow," Cuthbert said in a wondering voice. "The old
bitch has what your da told us about—no wonder she knows all she does!"
"Is there more we
need?" Alain asked. "Her hands have gotten very cold. I don't like
having her this deep. She's done well, but. . ."
"I think we're
done."
"Shall I tell her
to forget?"
Roland shook his head
at once—they were ka-tet, for good or ill. He took hold of her fingers,
and yes, they were cold.
"Susan?"
"Aye, dear."
"I'm going to say
a rhyme. When I finish, you'll remember everything, as you did before. All
right?"
She smiled and closed
her eyes again. "Bird and bear and hare and fish. .."
Smiling, Roland
finished, "Give my love her fondest wish."
Her eyes opened. She
smiled. "You," she said again, and kissed him. "Still you,
Roland. Still you, my love."
Unable to help
himself, Roland put his arms around her.
Cuthbert looked away.
Alain looked down at his boots and cleared his throat.
9
As they rode back
toward Seafront, Susan with her arms around Roland's waist, she asked:
"Will you take the glass from her?"
"Best leave it
where it is for now. It was left in her safekeeping by Jonas, on behalf of
Parson, I have no doubt. It's to be sent west with the rest of the plunder;
I've no doubt of that, either. We'll deal with it when we deal with the tankers
and Parson's men."
"Ye'd take it
with us?"
"Take it or break
it. I suppose I'd rather take it back to my father, but that has its own risks.
We'll have to be careful. It's a powerful glam."
"Suppose she sees
our plans? Suppose she warns Jonas or Kimba Rimer?"
"If she doesn't
see us coming to take away her precious toy, I don't think she'll mind our
plans one way or the other. I think we've put a scare into her, and if the ball
has really gotten a hold on her, watching in it's what she'll mostly want to do
with her time now."
"And hold onto
it. She'll want to do that, too."
"Aye."
Rusher was walking
along a path through the seacliff woods. Through the thinning branches they
could glimpse the ivied gray wall surrounding Mayor's House and hear the
rhythmic roar of waves breaking on the shingle below.
"You can get in
safe, Susan?"
"No fear."
"And you know
what you and Sheemie are to do?"
"Aye. I feel
better than I have in ages. It's as if my mind is finally clear of some old
shadow."
"If so, it's
Alain you have to thank. I couldn't have done it on my own."
"There's magic in
his hands."
"Yes." They
had reached the servants' door. Susan dismounted with fluid ease. He stepped
down himself and stood beside her with an arm around her waist. She was looking
up at the moon.
"Look, it's
fattened enough so you can see the beginning of the Demon's face. Does thee
see it?"
A blade of nose, a
bone of grin. No eye yet, but yes, he saw it.
"It used to
terrify me when I was little." Susan was whispering now, mindful of the
house behind the wall. "I'd pull the blind when the Demon was full. I was
afraid that if he could see me, he'd reach down and take me up to where he was
and eat me." Her lips were trembling. "Children are silly, aren't
they?"
"Sometimes."
He hadn't been afraid of Demon Moon himself as a small child, but he was afraid
of this one. The future seemed so dark, and the way through to the light so
slim. "I love thee, Susan. With all my heart, I do."
"I know. And I
love thee." She kissed his mouth with gentle open lips. Put his hand on
her breast for a moment, then kissed the warm palm. He held her, and she looked
past him at the ripening moon.
"A week until the
Reap," she said. "Fin de ano is what the vaqueros and labradoros
call it. Do they call it so in your land?"
"Near
enough," Roland said. "It's called closing the year. Women go about
giving preserves and kisses."
She laughed softly
against his shoulder. "Perhaps I'll not find things so different, after
all."
"You must save
all your best kisses for me."
"I will."
"Whatever comes,
we'll be together," he said, but above them, Demon Moon grinned into the
starry dark above the Clean Sea, as if he knew a different future.
CHAPTER VI
CLOSING THE YEAR
1
So now comes to Mejis
fin de ano, known in toward the center of Mid-World as closing the year. It
comes as it has a thousand times before ... or ten thousand, or a hundred
thousand. No one can tell for sure; the world has moved on and time has grown
strange. In Mejis their saying is "Time is a face on the water."
In the fields, the
last of the potatoes are being picked by men and women who wear gloves and
their heaviest scrapes, for now the wind has turned firmly, blowing east
to west, blowing hard, and always there's the smell of salt in the chilly air—a
smell like tears. Los campesinos harvest the final rows cheerfully
enough, talking of the things they'll do and the capers they'll cut at Reaping
Fair, but they feel all of autumn's old sadness in the wind; the going of the
year. It runs away from them like water in a stream, and although none speak of
it, all know it very well.
In the orchards, the
last and highest of the apples are picked by laughing young men (in these
not-quite-gales, the final days of picking belong only to them) who bob up and
down like crow's nest lookouts. Above them, in skies which hold a brilliant,
cloudless blue, squadrons of geese fly south, calling their rusty adieux.
The small fishing
boats are pulled from the water; their hulls are scraped and painted by singing
owners who mostly work stripped to the waist in spite of the chill in the air.
They sing the old songs as they work—
I
am a man of the bright blue sea,
All
I see, all I see,
I
am a man of the Barony,
All
I see is mine-o!
I
am a man of the bright blue hay,
All
I say, all I say,
Until
my nets are full I stay
All
I say is fine-o!
—and
sometimes a little cask of graf is tossed from dock to dock. On the bay
itself only the large boats now remain, pacing about the big circles which mark
their dropped nets as a working dog may pace around a flock of sheep. At noon
the bay is a rippling sheet of autumn fire and the men on the boats sit
cross-legged, eating their lunches, and know that all they see is theirs-o ...
at least until the gray gales of autumn come swarming over the horizon, coughing
out their gusts of sleet and snow.
Closing, closing the
year.
Along the streets of
Hambry, the Reap-lights now bum at night, and the hands of the stuffy-guys are
painted red. Reap-charms hang everywhere, and although women often kiss and
are kissed in the streets and in both marketplaces—often by men they do not
know—sexual intercourse has come to an almost complete halt. It will resume
(with a bang, you might say) on Reap-Night. There will be the usual crop of
Full Earth babies the following year as a result.
On the Drop, the
horses gallop wildly, as if understanding (very likely they do) that their time
of freedom is coming to an end. They swoop and then stand with their faces
pointing west when the wind gusts, showing their asses to winter. On the
ranches, porch-nets are taken down and shutters rehung. In the huge ranch
kitchens and smaller farmhouse kitchens, no one is stealing Reap-kisses, and no
one is even thinking about sex. This is the time of putting up and laying by,
and the kitchens fume with steam and pulse with heat from before dawn until
long after dark. There is the smell of apples and beets and beans and sharproot
and curing strips of meat. Women work ceaselessly all day and then sleepwalk
to bed, where they lie like corpses until the next dark morning calls them back
to their kitchens.
Leaves are burned in
town yards, and as the week goes on and Old Demon's face shows ever more
clearly, red-handed stuffy-guys are thrown on the pyres more and more
frequently. In the fields, cornshucks flare like torches, and often stuffies
bum with them, their red hands and white-cross eyes rippling in the heat. Men
stand around these fires, not speaking, their faces solemn. No one will say
what terrible old ways and unspeakable old gods are being propitiated by the
burning of the stuffy-guys, but they all know well enough. From time to time
one of these men will whisper two words under his breath: charyou tree.
They are closing,
closing, closing the year.
The streets rattle
with firecrackers-—and sometimes with a heftier "big-hang" that makes
even placid carthorses rear in their traces—and echo with the laughter of
children. On the porch of the mercantile and across the street at the
Travellers' Rest, kisses—sometimes humidly open and with much sweet lashing of
tongues—are exchanged, but Coral Thorin's whores ("cotton-gillies" is
what the airy-fairy ones like Gert Moggins like to call themselves) are bored.
They will have little custom this week.
This is not Year's
End, when the winterlogs will bum and Mejis will be bam-dances from one end to
the other . . . and yet it is. This is the real year's end, charyou
tree, and everyone, from Stanley Ruiz standing at the bar beneath The Romp
to the farthest of Fran Lengyll's vaqueros out on the edge of the Bad
Grass, knows it. There is a kind of echo in the bright air, a yearning for
other places in the blood, a loneliness in the heart that sings like the wind.
But this year there's
something else, as well: a sense of wrongness that no one can quite voice.
Folks who never had a nightmare in their lives will awake screaming with them
during the week of fin de ano; men who consider themselves peaceful will
find themselves not only in fist-fights but instigating them; discontented boys
who would only have dreamed of running away in other years will this year
actually do it, and most will not come back after the first night spent
sleeping raw.
There is a
sense—inarticulate but very much there—that things have gone amiss this season.
It is the closing of the year; it is also the closing of the peace. For it is
here, in the sleepy Out-World Barony of Mejis, that Mid-World's last great
conflict will shortly begin; it is from here that the blood will begin to flow.
In two years, no more, the world as it has been will be swept away. It starts
here. From its field of roses, the Dark Tower cries out in its beast's voice.
Time is a face on the water.
2
Coral Thorin was
coming down the High Street from the Bayview Hotel when she spied Sheemie,
leading Caprichoso and heading in the opposite direction. The boy was singing
"Careless Love" in a voice both high and sweet. His progress was
slow; the barrels slung over Capi's back were half again as large as the ones
he had carried up to the Coos not long before.
Coral hailed her
boy-of-all-work cheerily enough. She had reason to be cheery; Eldred Jonas had
no use for fin de ano abstinence. And for a man with a bad leg, he could
be very inventive.
"Sheemie!"
she called. "Where go ye? Seafront?"
"Aye,"
Sheemie said. "I've got the graf them asked for. All parties come
Reaping Fair, aye, tons of em. Dance a lot, get hot a lot, drink graf to
cool off a lot! How pretty you look, sai Thorin, cheeks all pinky-pink, so they
are."
"Oh, law! How
kind of you to say, Sheemie!" She favored him with a dazzling smile.
"Go on, now, you flatterer—don't linger."
"Noey-no, off I
go."
Coral stood watching
after him and smiling. Dance a lot, get hot a lot, Sheemie had said.
About the dancing Coral didn't know, but she was sure this year's Reaping would
be hot, all right. Very hot indeed.
3
Miguel met Sheemie at
Seafront's archway, gave him the look of lofty contempt he reserved for the
lower orders, then pulled the cork from first one barrel and then the other.
With the first, he only sniffed from the bung; at the second, he stuck his
thumb in and then sucked it thoughtfully. With his wrinkled cheeks hollowed
inward and his toothless old mouth working, he looked like an ancient bearded
baby.
"Tasty, ain't
it?" Sheemie asked. "Tasty as a pasty, ain't it, good old Miguel,
been here a thousand years?"
Miguel, still sucking
his thumb, favored Sheemie with a sour look. "Andale. Andale, simplon.
"
Sheemie led his mule
around the house to the kitchen. Here the breeze off the ocean was sharp and
shiversome. He waved to the women in the kitchen, but not a one waved back;
likely they didn't even see him. A pot boiled on every trink of the enormous
stove, and the women— working in loose long-sleeved cotton garments like shifts
and wearing their hair tied up in brightly colored clouts—moved about like
phantoms glimpsed in fog.
Sheemie took first one
barrel from Capi's back, then the other. Grunting, he carried them to the huge
oak tank by the back door. He opened the tank's lid, bent over it, and then
backed away from the eye-wateringly strong smell of elderly graf.
"Whew!" he
said, hoisting the first barrel. "Ye could get drunk just on
the smell o' that
lot!"
He emptied in the
fresh graf, careful not to spill. When he was finished, the tank was
pretty well topped up. That was good, for on Reaping Night, apple-beer would
flow out of the kitchen taps like water.
He slipped the empty
barrels into their carriers, looked into the kitchen once more to be sure he
wasn't being observed (he wasn't; Coral's simple-minded tavern-boy was the last
thing on anyone's minds that morning), and then led Capi not back the way
they'd come but along a path which led to Seafront's storage sheds.
There were three of
them in a row, each with its own red-handed stuffy-guy sitting in front. The
guys appeared to be watching Sheemie, and that gave him the shivers. Then he
remembered his trip to crazy old bitch-lady Rhea's house. She had been
scary. These were just old duds stuffed full of straw.
"Susan?" he
called, low. "Are ye here?"
The door of the center
shed was ajar. Now it trundled open a little. "Come in!" she called,
also low. "Bring the mule! Hurry!"
He led Capi into a
shed which smelled of straw and beans and tack ... and something else.
Something sharper. Fireworks, he thought. Shooting-powder, too.
Susan, who had spent
the morning enduring final fittings, was dressed in a thin silk wrapper and
large leather boots. Her hair was done up in curling papers of bright blue and
red.
Sheemie tittered.
"You look quite amusing, Susan, daughter of Pat. Quite a chuckle for me, I
think."
"Yes, I'm a
picture for an artist to paint, all right," Susan said, looking
distracted. "We have to hurry. I have twenty minutes before I'm missed.
I'll be missed before, if that randy old goat is looking for me ...let's be quick!"
They lifted the
barrels from Capi's back. Susan took a broken horse-bit from the pocket of her
wrapper and used the sharp end to pry off one of the tops. She tossed the bit
to Sheemie, who pried off the other. The apple-tart smell of graf filled
the shed.
"Here!" She
tossed Sheemie a soft cloth. "Dry it out as well as you can. Doesn't have
to be perfect, they're wrapped, but it's best to be safe."
They wiped the insides
of the barrels, Susan stealing nervous glances at the door every few seconds.
"All right," she said. "Good. Now ... there's two kinds. I'm
sure they won't be missed; there's enough stuff back there to blow up half the
world." She hurried back into the dimness of the shed, holding the hem of
her wrapper up with one hand, her boots clomping. When she came back, her arms
were full of wrapped packages.
"These are the
bigger ones," she said.
He stored them in one
of the casks. There were a dozen packages in all, and Sheemie could feel round
things inside, each about the size of a child's fist. Big-bangers. By the time
he had finished packing and putting the top back on the barrel, she had
returned with an armload of smaller packages. These he stored in the other
barrel. They were the little 'uns, from the feel, the ones that not only banged
but flashed colored fire.
She helped him resling
the barrels on Capi's back, still shooting those little glances at the shed
door. When the barrels were secured to Caprichoso's sides, Susan sighed with
relief and brushed her sweaty forehead with the backs of her hands. "Thank
the gods that part's over," she said. "Now ye know where ye're to
take them?"
"Aye, Susan
daughter of Pat. To the Bar K. My friend Arthur Heath will put em safe."
"And if anyone
asks what ye're doing out that way?" "Taking sweet graf to the
In-World boys, 'cause they've decided not to come to town for the Fair . . .
why won't they, Susan? Don't they like Fairs?"
"Ye'll know soon
enough. Don't mind it now, Sheemie. Go on—best be on your way."
Yet he lingered.
"What?" she
asked, trying not to be impatient. "Sheemie, what is it?"
"I'd like to take
a fin de ano kiss from ye, so I would." Sheemie's face had gone an
alarming shade of red.
Susan laughed in spite
of herself, then stood on her toes and kissed the comer of his mouth. With
that, Sheemie floated out to the Bar K with his load of fire.
4
Reynolds rode out to
Citgo the following day, galloping with a scarf wrapped around his face so only
his eyes peered out. He would be very glad to get out of this damned place that
couldn't decide if it was ranch-land or seacoast. The temperature wasn't all
that low, but after coming in over the water, the wind cut like a razor. Nor
was that all—there was a brooding quality to Hambry and all of Mejis as the
days wound down toward the Reap; a haunted feeling he didn't care for a bit.
Roy felt it, too. Reynolds could see it in his eyes.
No, he'd be glad to
have those three baby knights so much ash in the wind and this place just a
memory.
He dismounted in the
crumbling refinery parking lot, tied his horse to the bumper of a rusty old
hulk with the mystery-word chevrolet barely
readable on its tailboard, then walked toward the oilpatch. The wind blew hard,
chilling him even through the ranch-style sheepskin coat he wore, and twice he
had to yank his hat down around his ears to keep it from blowing off. On the
whole, he was glad he couldn't see himself; he probably looked like a fucking
farmer.
The place seemed fine,
though . . . which was to say, deserted. The wind made a lonely soughing sound
as it combed through the firs on either side of the pipe. You'd never guess
that there were a dozen pairs of eyes looking out at you as you strolled.
"Hai!" he
called. "Come on out here, pard, and let's have some palaver."
For a moment there was
no response; then Hiram Quint of the Piano Ranch and Barkie Callahan of the
Travellers' Rest came ducking their way out through the trees. Holy shit,
Reynolds thought, somewhere between awe and amusement. There ain't that
much beef in a butcher shop.
There was a wretched
old musketoon stuck into the waistband of Quint's pants; Reynolds hadn't seen
one in years. He thought that if Quint was lucky, it would only misfire when he
pulled the trigger. If he was unlucky, it would blow up in his face and blind
him.
"All quiet?"
he asked.
Quint replied in Mejis
bibble-babble. Barkie listened, then said: "All well, sai. He say he and
his men grow impatient." Smiling cheerfully, his face giving no indication
of what he was saying, Barkie added: "If brains was blackpowder, this ijit
couldn't blow his nose."
"But he's a
trustworthy idiot?"
Barkie shrugged. It
might have been assent.
They went through the
trees. Where Roland and Susan had seen almost thirty tankers, there were now
only half a dozen, and of those six, only two actually had oil in them. Men sat
on the ground or snoozed with their sombreros over their faces. Most had
guns that looked about as trustworthy as the one in Quint's waistband. A few
of the poorer vaqs had bolas. On the whole, Reynolds guessed they
would be more effective.
"Tell Lord Perth
here that if the boys come, it's got to be an ambush, and they'll only have one
chance to do the job right," Reynolds said to Barkie.
Barkie spoke to Quint.
Quint's lips parted in a grin, revealing a scarifying picket of black and yellow
fangs. He spoke briefly, then put his hands out in front of them and closed
them into huge, scarred fists, one above the other, as if wringing the neck of
an invisible enemy. When Barkie began to translate, Clay Reynolds waved it
away. He had caught only one word, but it was enough: muerto.
5
All that pre-Fair
week, Rhea sat in front of the glass, peering into its depths. She had taken
time to sew Ermot's head back onto his body with clumsy stitches of black
thread, and she sat with the decaying snake around her neck as she watched and
dreamed, not noticing the stench that began to arise from the reptile as time
passed. Twice Musty came nigh, mewing for food, and each time Rhea batted the
troublesome thing away without so much as a glance. She herself grew more and
more gaunt, her eyes now looking like the sockets of the skulls stored in the
net by the door to her bedroom. She dozed occasionally as she sat with the ball
in her lap and the stinking snakeskin looped about her throat, her head down, the
sharp point of her chin digging at her chest, runners of drool hanging from the
loose puckers of her lips, but she never really slept. There was too much to
see, far too much to see.
And it was hers for
the seeing. These days she didn't even have to pass her hands above the glass
to open its pink mists. All the Barony's meanness, all its petty (and not so
petty) cruelties, all its cozening and lying lay before her. Most of what she
saw was small and demeaning stuff—masturbating boys peeking through knotholes
at their undressed sisters, wives going through husbands' pockets, looking for
extra money or tobacco, Sheb the piano-player licking the seat of the chair
where his favorite whore had sat for awhile, a maid at Seafront spitting into
Kimba Rimer's pillowcase after the Chancellor had kicked her for being slow in
getting out of his way.
These were all things
which confirmed her opinion of the society she had left behind. Sometimes she
laughed wildly; sometimes she spoke to the people she saw in the glass ball, as
if they could hear her. By the third day of the week before Reaping, she had
ceased her trips to the privy, even though she could carry the ball with her
when she went, and the sour stench of urine began to rise from her.
By the fourth day,
Musty had ceased coming near her. Rhea dreamed in the ball and lost herself in
her dreams, as others had done before her; deep in the petty pleasures of far
seeing, she was unaware that the pink ball was stealing the wrinkled remains
of her anima. She likely would have considered it a fair trade if she
had known. She saw all the things people did in the shadows, and they were the
only things she cared for, and for them she almost certainly would have
considered her life's force a fair trade.
6
"Here," the
boy said, "let me light it, gods damn you." Jonas would have
recognized the speaker; he was the lad who had waved a severed dog's tail
across the street at Jonas and called, We're Big Coffin Hunters just like
you!
The boy to whom this
charming child had spoken tried to hold onto the piece of liver they had copped
from the knacker's behind the Low Market. The first boy seized his ear and
twisted. The second boy howled and held the chunk of liver out, dark blood
running down his grimy knuckles as he did.
"That's better,"
the first boy said, taking it. "You want to remember who the capataz
is, round here."
They were behind a
bakery stall in the Low Market. Nearby, drawn by the smell of hot fresh bread,
was a mangy mutt with one blind eye. He stared at them with hungry hope.
There was a slit in
the chunk of raw meat. Poking out of it was a green big-bang fuse. Below the
fuse, the liver bulged like the stomach of a pregnant woman. The first boy took
a sulfur match, stuck it between his protruding front teeth, and lit it.
"He won't
never!" said a third boy, in an agony of hope and anticipation.
"Thin as he
is?" the first boy said. "Oh yes he will. Bet ye my deck of cards
against yer hosstail."
The third boy thought
it over and shook his head.
The first boy grinned.
"It's a wise child ye are," he said, and lit the big-bang's fuse.
"Hey, cully!" he called to the dog. "Want a bite o' sumpin good?
Here ye go!"
He threw the chunk of
raw liver. The scrawny dog never hesitated at the hissing fuse, but lunged
forward with its one good eye fixed on the first decent food it had seen in
days. As it snatched the liver out of the air, the big-bang the boys had
slipped into it went off. There was a roar and a flash. The dog's head
disintegrated from the jaws down. For a moment it continued to stand there,
dripping, staring at them with its one good eye, and then it collapsed.
"Toadjer!"
the first boy jeered. "Toadjer he'd take it! Happy Reap to us, eh?"
"What are you
boys doing?" a woman's voice called sharply. "Get out of there, ye
ravens!"
The boys fled,
cackling, into the bright afternoon. They did sound like ravens.
7
Cuthbert and Alain sat
their horses at the mouth of Eyebolt. Even with the wind blowing the sound of
the thinny away from them, it got inside your head and buzzed there, rattling
your teeth.
"I hate it,"
Cuthbert said through clenched teeth. "Gods, let's be quick."
"Aye," Alain
said. They dismounted, bulky in their ranch-coats, and tied their horses to the
brush which lay across the front of the canyon. Ordinarily, tethering wouldn't
have been necessary, but both boys could see the horses hated the whining,
grinding sound as much as they did. Cuthbert seemed to hear the thinny in his
mind, speaking words of invitation in a groaning, horribly persuasive voice.
Come on, Bert. Leave
all this foolishness behind: the drums, the pride, the fear of death, the
loneliness you laugh at because laughing's all you can think to do. And the
girl, leave her, too. You love her, don't you? And even if you don't, you want
her. It's sad that she loves your friend instead of you, but if you come to
me, all that will stop bothering you very soon. So come on. What are you
waiting for?
"What am I
waiting for?" he muttered.
"Huh?"
"I said, what are
we waiting for? Let's get this done and get the holy hell out of here."
From their saddlebags
they each took a small cotton bag. These contained gunpowder extracted from
the smaller firecrackers Sheemie had brought them two days before. Alain
dropped to his knees, pulled his knife, and began to crawl backward, digging a
trench as far under the roll of brush as he could.
"Dig it
deep," Cuthbert said. "We don't want the wind to blow it away."
Alain gave him a look
which was remarkably hot. "Do you want to do it? Just so you can make sure
it's done right?"
It's the thinny,
Cuthbert thought. It's working on him, too.
"No, Al," he
said humbly. "You're doing fine for someone who's both blind and soft in
the head. Go on."
Alain looked at him
fiercely a moment longer, then grinned and resumed the trench under the brush.
"You'll die young, Bert."
"Aye,
likely." Cuthbert dropped to his own knees and began to crawl after Alain,
sprinkling gunpowder into the trench and trying to ignore the buzzy, cajoling
voice of the thinny. No, the gunpowder probably wouldn't blow away, not unless
there was a full gale. But if it rained, even the rolls of brush wouldn't be
much protection. If it rained—
Don't think of that,
he told himself. That's ka.
They finished loading
gunpowder trenches under both sides of the brush barrier in only ten minutes,
but it felt longer. To the horses as well, it seemed; they were stamping
impatiently at the far end of their tethers, their ears laid back and their
eyes rolling. Cuthbert and Alain untied them and mounted up. Cuthbert's horse
actually bucked twice . . . except it felt more to Cuthbert as if the poor old
thing were shuddering.
In the middle
distance, bright sunshine twanged of bright steel. The tankers at Hanging Rock.
They had been pulled in as light to the sandstone outcrop as possible, but when
the sun was high, most of the shadow disappeared, and concealment disappeared
with it.
"I really can't
believe it," Alain said as they started back. It would be a long ride,
including a wide swing around Hanging Rock to make sure they weren't seen.
"They must think we're blind."
"It's stupid they
think we are," Cuthbert said, "but I suppose it comes to the
same." Now that Eyebolt Canyon was falling behind them, he felt almost
giddy with relief. Were they going in there a few days from now? Actually going
in, riding to within mere yards of where that cursed puddle started? He
couldn't believe it ... and he made himself stop thinking about it before he
could start believing it.
"More riders
heading out to Hanging Rock," Alain said, pointing back toward the woods
beyond the canyon. "Do you see them?"
They were small as
ants from this distance, but Bert saw them very well. "Changing the guard.
The important thing is that they don't see us— you don't think they can, do
you?"
"Over here? Not
likely."
Cuthbert didn't think
so, either.
"They'll all
be down come Reap, won't they?" Alain asked. "It won't do us much
good to only catch a few."
"Yes—I'm pretty
sure they all will."
"Jonas and his
pals?"
"Them, too."
Ahead of them, the Bad
Grass grew closer. The wind blew hard in their faces, making their eyes water,
but Cuthbert didn't mind. The sound of the thinny was down to a faint drone
behind him, and would soon be gone completely. Right now that was all he needed
to make him happy.
"Do you think
we'll get away with it, Bert?"
"Dunno,"
Cuthbert said. Then he thought of the gunpowder trenches lying beneath the dry
rolls of brush, and grinned. "But I'll tell you one thing, Al: they'll
know we were here."
8
In Mejis, as in every
other Barony of Mid-World, the week before a Fair-Day was a political week.
Important people came in from the farther corners of the Barony, and there
were a good many Conversationals leading up to the main Conversational on
Reaping Day. Susan was expected to be present at these—mostly as a decorative
testimony to the Mayor's continuing puissance. Olive was also present, and, in
a cruelly comic dumb-show that only the women truly appreciated, they sat on
either side of the aging cockatoo, Susan pouring the coffee, Olive passing the
cake, both of them gracefully accepting compliments on food and drink they'd
had no hand in preparing.
Susan found it almost
impossible to look at Olive's smiling, unhappy face. Her husband would never
lie with Pat Delgado's daughter . . . but sai Thorin didn't know that, and
Susan couldn't tell her. She had only to glimpse the Mayor's wife from the
comer other eye to remember what Roland had said that day on the Drop: For a
moment I thought she was my mother. But that was the problem, wasn't it?
Olive Thorin was nobody's mother. That was what had opened the door to this
horrible situation in the first place.
There had been
something much on Susan's mind to do, but with the round of activities at
Mayor's House, it was but three days to Reaping before she got the chance.
Finally, following this latest Conversational, she was able to slip out of Pink
Dress with Applique (how she hated it! how she hated them all!) and jump back
into jeans, a plain riding shirt, and a ranch-coat. There was no time to braid
her hair, as she was expected back for Mayor's Tea, but Maria tied it back for
her and off she had gone to the house she would shortly be leaving forever.
Her business was in
the back room of the stable—the room her father had used as an office—but she
went into the house first and heard what she'd hoped to hear: her aunt's
ladylike, whistling snores. Lovely.
Susan got a slice of
bread and honey and took it out to the barn-stable, protecting it as best she
could from the clouds of dust that blew across the yard in the wind. Her aunt's
stuffy-guy rattled on his post in the garden.
She ducked into the
sweet-smelling shadows of the barn. Pylon and Felicia nickered hello, and she
divided what she hadn't eaten between them. They seemed pleased enough to get
it. She made especially of Felicia, whom she would soon be leaving behind.
She had avoided the
little office since her father died, afraid of exactly the sort of pang that
struck her when she lifted the latch and went in. The narrow windows were now
covered with cobwebs, but they still let in autumn's bright light, more than
enough for her to be able to see the pipe in the ashtray—the red one, his
favorite, the one he called his thinking-pipe— and a bit of tack laid over the
back of his desk chair. He had probably been mending it by gaslight, had put it
by thinking to finish the next day ... then the snake had done its dance under
Foam's hoofs and there had never been a next day. Not for Pat Delgado.
"Oh, Da,"
she said in a small and broken voice. "How I do miss thee."
She crossed to the
desk and ran her fingers along its surface, leaving trails of dust. She sat
down in his chair, listened to it creak under her as it had always creaked
under him, and that pushed her over the edge. For the next five minutes she sat
there and wept, screwing her fists into her eyes as she had as a wee shim. Only
now, of course, there was no Big Pat to come upon her and jolly her out of it,
taking her on his lap and kissing her in that sensitive place under her chin
(especially sensitive to the bristles on his upper lip, it had been) until her
tears turned to giggles. Time was a face on the water, and this time it was the
face of her father.
At last her tears
tapered to sniffles. She opened the desk drawers, one after another, finding
more pipes (many rendered useless by his constant stem-chewing), a hat, one of
her own dolls (it had a broken arm Pat had apparently never gotten around to
putting right), quill-pens, a little flask— empty but with a faint smell of
whiskey still present around its neck. The only item of interest was in the
bottom drawer: a pair of spurs. One still had its star rowel, but the other had
been broken off. These were, she was almost positive, the spurs he had been
wearing on the day he died.
If my da was here,
she had begun that day on the Drop. But he's not, Roland had said. He's
dead.
A pair of spurs, a
broken-off rowel.
She bounced them in
her hand, in her mind's eye seeing Ocean Foam rear, spilling her father (one
spur catches in a stirrup; the rowel breaks free), then stumbling sideways and
falling atop him. She saw this clearly, but she didn't see the snake Fran
Lengyll had told them about. That she didn't see at all.
She put the spurs back
where she had found them, got up, and looked at the shelf to the right of the
desk, handy to Pat Delgado's smart hand. Here was a line of leather-bound
ledgers, a priceless trove of books in a society that had forgotten how to make
paper. Her father had been the man in charge of the Barony's horse for almost
thirty years, and here were his stockline books to prove it.
Susan took down the
last one and began to page through it. This time she almost welcomed the pang
that struck her as she saw her father's familiar hand—the labored script, the
steep and somehow more confident numbers.
Born
of HENRIETTA, (2) foals both well
Stillborn
of DELIA, a roan (MUTANT)
Born
of YOLANDA, a THOROUGHBRED, a GOOD MALE COLT
And, following each,
the date. So neat, he had been. So thorough. So ...
She stopped suddenly,
aware that she had found what she was looking for even without any clear
knowledge of what she was doing in here. I he last dozen pages of her da's
final stockline book had been torn out.
Who had done it? Not
her father; a largely self-taught man, he revered paper the way some people revered
gods or gold.
And why had it been
done?
That she thought she
knew: horses, of courses. There were too many on the Drop. And the
ranchers—Lengyll, Croydon, Renfrew—were lying about the threaded quality of the
stockline. So was Henry Wertner, the man who had succeeded to her father's job.
If my da was here—
But he's not. He's
dead.
She had told Roland
she couldn't believe Fran Lengyll would lie about her father's death . . . but
she could believe it now.
Gods help her, she
could believe it now.
"What are ye
doing in here?"
She gave a little
scream, dropped the book, and whirled around. Cordelia stood there in one of
her rusty black dresses. The top three buttons were undone, and Susan could
see her aunt's collarbones sticking out above the plain white cotton of her
shift. It was only on seeing those protruding bones that Susan realized how
much weight Aunt Cord had lost over the last three months or so. She could see
the red imprint of the pillow on her aunt's left cheek, like the mark of a
slap. Her eyes glittered from dark, bruised-looking hollows of flesh.
"Aunt Cord! You
startled me! You—"
"What are ye
doing in here?" Aunt Cord repeated.
Susan bent and picked
up the book. "I came to remember my father," she said, and put the
book back on the shelf. Who had torn those pages out? Lengyll? Rimer? She
doubted it. She thought it more likely that the woman standing before her right
now had done it. Perhaps for as little as a single piece of red gold. Nothing
asked, nothing told, so all is well, she would have thought, popping the
coin into her money-box, after first biting its edge to make sure it was true.
"Remember him?
It's ask his forgiveness, ye should do. For ye've forgotten his face, so ye
have. Most grievous have ye forgotten it, Sue."
Susan only looked at
her.
"Have ye been
with him today?" Cordelia asked in a brittle, laughing voice. Her
hand went to the red pillow-mark on her cheek and began rubbing it. She had
been getting bad by degrees, Susan realized, but had become ever so much worse
since the gossip about Jonas and Coral Thorin had started. "Have ye been
with sai Dearborn? Is yer crack still dewy from his spend? Here, let me see for
myself!"
Her aunt glided
forward—spectral in her black dress, her bodice open, her slippered feet
peeping—and Susan pushed her back. In her fright and disgust, she pushed hard.
Cordelia struck the wall beside the cobwebbed window.
"Ye should ask
forgiveness yerself," Susan said. "To speak to his daughter so in
this place. In this place." She let her eyes turn to the shelf of
ledgers, then return to her aunt. The look of frightened calculation she saw on
Cordelia Delgado's face told her all she wanted or needed to know. She hadn't
been a party to her brother's murder, that Susan could not believe, but she had
known something of it. Yes, something.
"Ye faithless
bitch," Cordelia whispered.
"No," Susan
said, "I have been true."
And so, she realized,
she had been. A great weight seemed to slip off her shoulders at the thought.
She walked to the door of the office and turned back to her aunt. "I've
slept my last night here," she said. "I'll not listen to more such as
this. Nor look at ye as ye are now. It hurts my heart and steals the love I've
kept for ye since I was little, when ye did the best ye could to be my ma."
Cordelia clapped her
hands over her face, as if looking at Susan hurt her.
"Get out,
then!" she screamed. "Go back to Seafront or wherever it is thee
rolls with that boy! If I never see thy trollop's face again, I'll count my
life good!"
Susan led Pylon from
the stable. When she got him into the yard, she was sobbing almost too hard to
mount up. Yet mount she did, and she couldn't deny that there was relief in her
heart as well as sorrow. When she turned onto the High Street and booted Pylon
into a gallop, she didn't look back.
9
In a dark hour of the
following morning, Olive Thorin crept from the room where she now slept to the
one she had shared for almost forty years with her husband. The floor was cold
under her bare feet and she was shivering by the time she reached the bed ...
but the chilly floor wasn't the only reason she was shivering. She slid in
beside the gaunt, snoring man in the nightcap, and when he turned away from her
(his knees and back crackling loudly as he did), she pressed against him and
hugged him tightly. There was no passion in this, but only a need to share a
bit of his warmth. His chest—narrow but almost as well-known to her as her own
plump one—rose and fell under her hands, and she began to quiet a little. He
stirred, and she thought for a moment he would wake and find her sharing his
bed for the first time in gods knew how long.
Yes, wake,
she thought, do. She didn't dare wake him of her own—all her courage had
been exhausted just getting here, creeping through the dark following one of
the worst dreams she had ever had in her life—but if he woke, she would take it
as a sign and tell him she had dreamed of a vast bird, a cruel golden-eyed roc
that flew above the Barony on wings that dripped blood.
Wherever its shadow
fell, there was blood, she would tell him, and its shadow
fell everywhere. The Barony ran with it, from Hambry all the way out to
Eyebolt. And I swelled big fire in the wind. I ran to tell you and you were
dead in your study, sitting by the hearth with your eyes gouged out and a skull
in your lap.
But instead of waking,
in his sleep he took her hand, as he had used to, do before he had begun to
look at the young girls-—even the serving-wenches—when they passed, and Olive
decided she would only lie here, and be still and let him hold her hand. Let it
be like the old days for a bit, when everything had been right between them.
She slept a little
herself. When she woke, dawn's first gray light was creeping in through the
windows. He had dropped her hand- had, in fact, scooted away from her entirely,
to his edge of the bed. It wouldn't do for him to wake and find her here, she
decided, and the urgency of her nightmare was gone. She turned back the
covers, swung her feet out, then looked at him once more. His nightcap had come
askew. She put it right, her hands smoothing the cloth and the bony brow
beneath. He stirred again. Olive waited until he had quieted, then got up. She
slipped back to her own room like a phantom.
10
The midway booths
opened in Green Heart two days before Reaping-Fair, and the first folks came to
try their luck at the spinning wheel and the bottle-toss and the basket-ring.
There was also a pony-train—a cart filled with laughing children, pulled along
a figure eight of narrow-gauge rails.
("Was the pony
named Charlie?" Eddie Dean asked Roland.
("I think
not," Roland said. "We have a rather unpleasant word that sounds like
that in the High Speech."
("What
word?" Jake asked.
("The one,"
said the gunslinger, "that means death.")
Roy Depape stood
watching the pony plod its appointed rounds for a couple of turns, remembering
with some nostalgia his own rides in such a cart as a child. Of course, most of
his had been stolen.
When he had looked his
fill, Depape sauntered on down to the Sheriff's office and went in. Herk
Avery, Dave, and Frank Claypool were cleaning an odd and fantastical assortment
of guns. Avery nodded at Depape and went back to what he was doing. There was
something strange about the man, and after a moment or two Depape realized what
it was: the Sheriff wasn't eating. It was the first time he'd ever come in here
that the Sheriff didn't have a plate of grub close at hand.
"All ready for
tomorrow?" Depape asked.
Avery gave him a
half-irritated, half-smiling look. "What the hell kind of question is
that?"
"One that Jonas
sent me to ask," Depape said, and at that Avery's queer, nervy smile
faltered a little.
"Aye, we're
ready." Avery swept a meaty arm over the guns. "Don't ye see we
are?"
Depape could have
quoted the old saying about how the proof of the pudding was in the eating, but
what was the point? Things would work out if the three boys were as fooled as
Jonas thought they were; if they weren't fooled, they would likely carve Herk
Avery's fat butt off the top of his legs and feed it to the handiest pack of
wolverines. It didn't make much never mind to Roy Depape one way or the other.
"Jonas also ast
me to remind you it's early."
"Aye, aye, we'll
be there early," Avery agreed. "These two and six more good men. Fran
Lengyll's asked to go along, and he's got a machine-gun." Avery spoke this
last with ringing pride, as if he himself had invented the machine-gun. Then
he looked at Depape slyly. "What about you, coffin-hand? Want to go along?
Won't take me more'n an eyeblink to deputize ye."
"I have another
chore. Reynolds, too." Depape smiled. "There's plenty of work for all
of us. Sheriff—after all, it's Reaping."
11
That afternoon, Susan
and Roland met at the hut in the Bad Grass. She told him about the book with
the torn-out pages, and Roland showed her what he'd left in the hut's north
corner, secreted beneath a mouldering pile of skins.
She looked first at
this, then at him with wide and frightened eyes. "What's wrong? What does
thee suspect is wrong?"
He shook his head. Nothing
was wrong ... not that he could tell, anyway. And yet he had felt a strong
need to do what he'd done, to leave what he'd left. It wasn't the touch,
nothing like it, but only intuition.
"I think
everything is all right ... or as right as things can be when the odds may turn
out fifty of them for each of us. Susan, our only chance is to take them by
surprise. You're not going to risk that, are you? Not planning to go to
Lengyll, waving your father's stockline book around?"
She shook her head. If
Lengyll had done what she now suspected, he'd get his payback two days from
now. There would be reaping, all right. Reaping aplenty. But this ... this
frightened her, and she said so.
"Listen."
Roland took her face in his hands and looked into her eyes. "I'm only
trying to be careful. If things go badly—and they could— you're the one most
likely to get away clean. You and Sheemie. If that happens, Susan, you—thee—must
come here and take my guns. Take them west to Gilead. Find my father. He'll
know thee are who thee says by what thee shows. Tell him what happened here.
That's all."
"If anything
happens to thee, Roland, I won't be able to do anything. Except die."
His hands were still
on her face. Now he used them to make her head shake slowly, from side to side.
"You won't die," he said. There was a coldness in his voice and eyes
that struck her not with fear but awe. She thought of his blood—of how old it
must be, and how cold it must sometimes flow. "Not with this job undone.
Promise me."
"I... I promise,
Roland. I do."
"Tell me aloud
what you promise."
"I'll come here.
Get yer guns. Take them to yer da. Tell him what happened."
He nodded and let go
of her face. The shapes of his hands were printed faintly on her cheeks.
"Ye frightened
me," Susan said, and then shook her head. That wasn't right. "Ye do
frighten me."
"I can't help
what I am."
"And I wouldn't
change it." She kissed his left cheek, his right cheek, his mouth. She put
her hand inside his shirt and caressed his nipple. It grew instantly hard
beneath the tip of her finger. "Bird and bear and hare and fish," she
said, now making soft butterfly kisses all over his face. "Give your love
her fondest wish."
After, they lay
beneath a bearskin Roland had brought along and listened to the wind sough
through the grass.
"I love that
sound," she said. "It always makes me wish I could be part of the
wind ... go where it goes, see what it sees."
"This year, if ka
allows, you will."
"Aye. And with
thee." She turned to him, up on one elbow. Light fell through the ruined
roof and dappled her face. "Roland, I love thee." She kissed him . .
. and then began to cry.
He held her,
concerned. "What is it? Sue, what troubles thee?"
"I don't
know," she said, crying harder. "All I know is that there's a shadow
on my heart." She looked at him with tears still flowing from her eyes.
"Thee'd not leave me, would ye, dear? Thee'd not go without Sue, would
ye?"
"No."
"For I've given
all I have to ye, so I have. And my virginity's the very least of it, thee
knows."
"I'd never leave
you." But he felt cold in spite of the bearskin, and the wind outside—so
comforting a moment ago—sounded like beast's breath. "Never, I
swear."
"I'm frightened,
though. Indeed I am."
"You needn't
be," he said, speaking slowly and carefully ... for suddenly all the
wrong words wanted to come tumbling out of his mouth. We 'II leave this,
Susan—not day after tomorrow, on Reaping, but now, this minute. Dress and we'll
go crosswise to the wind; it's south we'll ride and never look back. We'll be—
—haunted.
That's what they would
be. Haunted by the faces of Alain and Cuthbert; haunted by the faces of all the
men who might die in the Shaved Mountains, massacred by weapons torn from the
armory-crypts where they should have been left. Haunted most of all by the
faces of their fathers, for all the rest of their lives. Not even the South
Pole would be far enough to escape those faces.
"All you need do
day after tomorrow is claim indisposition at lunch." They had gone over
all this before, but now, in his sudden, pointless fright, it was all he could
think of to say. "Go to your room, then leave as you did on the night we
met in the graveyard. Hide up a little. Then, when it's three o' the clock,
ride here, and look under the skins in yon comer. If my guns are gone—and they
will be, I swear they will—then everything's all right. You'll ride to meet us.
Come to the place above the canyon, the one we told you of. We'll—"
"Aye, I know all
that, but something's wrong." She looked at him, touched the side of his
face. "I fear for thee and me, Roland, and know not why."
"All will work
out," he said. "Ka—"
"Speak not to me
of ka!" she cried. "Oh please don't! Ka like a wind, my
father said, it takes what it will and minds the plea of no man or woman.
Greedy old ka, how I hate it!”
"Susan—"
"No, say no more."
She lay back and pushed the bearskin down to her knees, exposing a body that
far greater men than Hart Thorin might have given away kingdoms for. Beads of
sunlight ran over her bare skin like rain. She held her arms out to him. Never
had she looked more beautiful to Roland than she did then, with her hair spread
about her and that haunted look on her face. He would think later: She knew.
Some part of her knew.
"No more
talking," she said. "Talking's done. If you love me, then love
me."
And for the last time,
Roland did. They rocked together, skin to skin and breath to breath, and
outside the wind roared into the west like a tidal wave.
12
That evening, as the
grinning Demon rose in the sky, Cordelia left her house and walked slowly
across the lawn to her garden, detouring around the pile of leaves she had
raked that afternoon. In her arms was a bundle of clothes. She dropped them in
front of the pole to which her stuffy-guy was bound, then looked raptly up at
the rising moon: the knowing wink of the eye, the ghoul's grin; silver as bone
was that moon, a white button against violet silk.
It grinned at
Cordelia; Cordelia grinned back. Finally, with the air of a woman awakening
from a trance, she stepped forward and pulled the stuffy-guy off its pole. His
head lolled limply against her shoulder, like the head of a man who has found
himself too drunk to dance. His red hands dangled.
She stripped off the
guy's clothes, uncovering a bulging, vaguely humanoid shape in a pair of her
dead brother's longhandles. She took one of the things she had brought from the
house and held it up to the moonlight. A red silk riding shirt, one of Mayor
Thorin's presents to Miss Oh So Young and Pretty. One of those she wouldn't
wear. Whore's clothes, she had called them. And what did that make Cordelia
Delgado, who had taken care of her even after her bullheaded da had decided he
must stand against the likes of Fran Lengyll and John Croydon? It made her a
whorehouse madam, she supposed.
This thought led to an
image of Eldred Jonas and Coral Thorin, naked and striving while a honky-tonk
piano planked out "Red Dirt Boogie" below them, and Cordelia moaned
like a dog.
She yanked the silk
shirt over the stuffy's head. Next came one of Susan's split riding skirts.
After the skirt, a pair of her slippers. And last, replacing the sombrero,
one of Susan's spring bonnets.
Presto! The stuffy-guy
was now a stuffy-gal.
"And caught
red-handed ye are," she whispered. "I know. Oh yes, I know. I wasn't
born yesterday."
She carried the stuffy
from the garden to the pile of leaves on the lawn. She laid it close by the
leaves, then scooped some up and pushed them into the bodice of the riding
shirt, making rudimentary breasts. That done, she took a match from her pocket
and struck it alight.
The wind, as if eager
to cooperate, dropped. Cordelia touched the match to the dry leaves. Soon the
whole pile was blazing. She picked the stuffy-gal up in her arms and stood with
it in front of the fire. She didn't hear the rattling firecrackers from town, or
the wheeze of the steam-organ in Green Heart, or the mariachi band playing in
the Low Market; when a burning leaf rose and swirled past her hair, threatening
to set it alight, she didn't seem to notice. Her eyes were wide and blank.
When the fire was at its
height, she stepped to its edge and threw the stuffy on. Flame whumped up
around it in bright orange gusts; sparks and burning leaves swirled skyward in
a funnel.
"So let it be
done!" Cordelia cried. The firelight on her face turned her tears to
blood. "Charyou tree! Aye, just so!"
The thing in the
riding clothes caught fire, its face charring, its red hands blazing, its
white-cross eyes turning black. Its bonnet flared; the face began to bum.
Cordelia stood and
watched, fists clenching and unclenching, heedless of the sparks that lit on
her skin, heedless of the blazing leaves that swirled toward the house. Had the
house caught tire, she would likely have ignored that as well.
She watched until the
stuffy dressed in her niece's clothes was nothing but ashes lying atop more
ashes. Then, as slowly as a robot with rust in its works, she walked back to
the house, lay down on the sofa, and slept like the dead.
13
It was three-thirty in
the morning of the day before Reaping, and Stanley Ruiz thought he was finally
done for the night. The last music had quit twenty minutes ago—Sheb had
outlasted the mariachis by an hour or so, and now lay snoring with his face in
the sawdust. Sai Thorin was upstairs, and there had been no sign of the Big
Coffin Hunters; Stanley had an idea those were up to Seafront tonight. He also
had an idea there was black work on offer, although he didn't know that for
sure. He looked up at the glassy, two-headed gaze of The Romp. "Nor want
to, old pal," he said. "All I want is about nine hours of
sleep—tomorrow comes the real party, and they won't leave till dawn. So—"
A shrill scream rose
from somewhere behind the building. Stanley jerked backward, thumping into the
bar. Beside the piano, Sheb raised his head briefly, muttered
"Wuzzat?" and dropped it back with a thump.
Stanley had absolutely
no urge to investigate the source of the scream, but he supposed he would, just
the same. It had sounded like that sad old bitch Pettie the Trotter. "I'd
like to trot your saggy old ass right out of town," he muttered, then bent
down to look under the bar. There were two stout ashwood clubs here, The Calmer
and The Killer. The Calmer was smooth buried wood, guaranteed to put out the
lights for two hours any time you tapped some boisterous cull's head in the
right place with it.
Stanley consulted his
feelings and took the other club. It was shorter than The Calmer, wider at the
top. And the business end of The Killer was studded with nails.
Stanley went down to
the end of the bar, through the door, and across a dim supply-room stacked with
barrels smelling of graf and whiskey. At the rear was a door giving on
the back yard. Stanley approached it, took a deep breath, and unlocked it. He
kept expecting Pettie to voice another head-bursting scream, but none came.
There was only the sound of the wind.
Maybe you got lucky
and she's kilt, Stanley thought. He opened the door,
stepping back and raising the nail-studded club at the same time.
Pettie wasn't kilt.
Dressed in a stained shift (a Pettie-skirt, one might say), the whore was
standing on the path which led to the back privy, her hands clutched together
above the swell of her bosom and below the drooping turkey-wattles of her neck.
She was looking up at the sky.
"What is
it?" Stanley asked, hurrying down to her. "Near scared ten years off
my life, ye did."
"The moon,
Stanley!" she whispered. "Oh, look at the moon, would ye!"
He looked up, and what
he saw set his heart thumping, but he tried to speak reasonably and calmly.
"Come now, Pettie, it's dust, that's all. Be reasonable, dear, ye know how
the wind's blown these last few days, and no rain to knock down what it
carries; it's dust, that's all."
Yet it didn't look
like dust.
"I know what I
see," whispered Pettie.
Above them, Demon Moon
grinned and winked one eye through what appeared to be a shifting scrim of
blood.
CHAPTER VII
TAKING THE BALL
1
While a certain whore
and certain bartender were still gaping up at the bloody moon, Kimba Rimer
awoke sneezing.
Damn, a cold for
Reaping, he thought. As much as I have to be out over
the next two days, I'll be lucky if it doesn't turn into—
Something fluffed the
end of his nose, and he sneezed again. Coming out of his narrow chest and dry
slot of a mouth, it sounded like a small-caliber pistol-shot in the black room.
"Who's
there?" he cried.
No answer. Rimer
suddenly imagined a bird, something nasty and bad-tempered, that had gotten in
here in daylight and was now flying around in the dark, fluttering against his
face as he slept. His skin crawled—birds, bugs, bats, he hated them all—and he
fumbled so energetically for the gas-lamp on the table by his bed that he
almost knocked it off onto the floor.
As he drew it toward
him, that flutter came again. This time puffing at his cheek. Rimer screamed
and recoiled against the pillows, clutching the lamp to his chest. He turned
the switch on the side, heard the hiss of gas, then pushed the spark. The lamp
lit, and in the thin circle of its radiance, he saw not a fluttering bird but
Clay Reynolds sitting on the edge of the bed. In one hand Reynolds held the
feather with which he had been tickling Mejia’s Chancellor. His other was
hidden in his cloak, which lay in his lap.
Reynolds had disliked
Rimer from their first meeting in the woods far west of town—those same woods,
beyond Eyebolt Canyon, where Far-son's man Latigo now quartered the main
contingent of his troops. It had been a windy night, and as he and the other
Coffin Hunters entered the little glade where Rimer, accompanied by Lengyll
and Croydon, were sitting by a small fire, Reynolds’s cloak swirled around
him. "Sai Manto," Rimer had said, and the other two had
laughed. It had been meant as a harmless joke, but it hadn't seemed harmless to
Reynolds. In many of the lands where he had travelled, manto meant not
"cloak" but "leaner" or "bender." It was, in
fact, a slang term for homosexual. That Rimer (a provincial man under his
veneer of cynical sophistication) didn't know this never crossed Reynolds's
mind. He knew when people were making small of him, and if he could make such a
person pay, he did so.
For Kimba Rimer,
payday had come.
"Reynolds? What
are you doing? How did you get in h—"
"You got to be
thinking of the wrong cowboy," the man sitting on the bed replied.
"No Reynolds here. Just Senor Manto." He took out the hand
which had been under his cloak. In it was a keenly honed cuchillo. Reynolds
had purchased it in Low Market with this chore in mind. He raised it now and
drove the twelve-inch blade into Rimer's chest. It went all the way through,
pinning him like a bug. A bedbug, Reynolds thought.
The lamp fell out of
Rimer's hands and rolled off the bed. It landed on the foot-runner, but did not
break. On the far wall was Kimba Rimer's distorted, struggling shadow. The
shadow of the other man bent over it like a hungry vulture.
Reynolds lifted the
hand which had held the knife. He turned it so the small blue tattooed coffin
between thumb and forefinger was in front of Rimer's eyes. He wanted it to be
the last thing Rimer saw on this side of the clearing.
"Let's hear you
make fun of me now," Reynolds said. He smiled. "Come on. Let's just
hear you."
2
Shortly before five
o'clock, Mayor Thorin woke from a terrible dream. In it, a bird with pink eyes
had been cruising slowly back and forth above the Barony. Wherever its shadow
fell, the grass turned yellow, the leaves fell shocked from the trees, and the
crops died. The shadow was turning his green and pleasant Barony into a waste
land. It may be my Barony, but it's my bird, too, he thought just before
awakening, huddled into a shuddery ball on one side of his bed. My bird, I
brought it here, I let it out of its cage. There
would be no more sleep for him this night, and Thorin knew it. He poured
himself a glass of water, drank it, then walked into his study, absently
picking his nightgown from the cleft of his bony old ass as he went. The puff
on the end of his nightcap bobbed between his shoulder blades; his knees
cracked at every step.
As for the guilty
feelings expressed by the dream . . . well, what was done was done. Jonas and
his friends would have what they'd come for (and paid so handsomely for) in
another day; a day after that, they'd be gone. Fly away, bird with the pink
eyes and pestilent shadow; fly away to wherever you came from and take the Big
Coffin Boys with you. He had an idea that by Year's End he'd be too busy
dipping his wick to think much about such things. Or to dream such dreams.
Besides, dreams
without visible sign were just dreams, not omens.
The visible sign might
have been the boots beneath the study drapes— just the scuffed tips of them
showing—but Thorin never looked in that direction. His eyes were fixed on the
bottle beside his favorite chair. Drinking claret at five in the morning was no
sort of habit to get into, but this once wouldn't hurt. He'd had a terrible
dream, for gods' sake, and after all—
"Tomorrow's
Reaping," he said, sitting in the wing-chair on the edge of the hearth.
"I guess a man can jump a fence or two, come Reap."
He poured himself a
drink, the last he'd ever take in this world, and coughed as the fire hit his
belly and then climbed back up his throat, warming it. Better, aye, much. No
giant birds now, no plaguey shadows. He stretched out his arms, laced his long
and bony fingers together, and cracked them viciously.
"I hate it
when you do that, you scrawny git," spoke a voice directly into Thorin's
left ear.
Thorin jumped. His
heart took its own tremendous leap in his chest. The empty glass flew from his
hand, and there was no foot-runner to cushion its landing. It smashed on the
hearth.
Before Thorin could
scream, Roy Depape brushed off the mayoral nightcap, seized the gauzy remains
of the mayoral mane, and yanked the mayoral head back. The knife Depape held in
his other hand was much humbler than the one Reynolds had used, but it cut the
old man's throat efficiently enough. Blood sprayed scarlet in the dim room.
Depape let go of Thorin's hair, went back to the drapes he had been hiding
behind, and picked something up off the floor. It was Cuthbert's lookout.
Depape brought it back to the chair and put it in the dying Mayor's lap.
"Bird . .."
Thorin gargled through a mouthful of blood. "Bird!"
"Yar, old fella,
and trig o' you to notice at a time like this, I will say." Depape pulled
Thorin's head back again and took the old man's eyes out with two quick flips
of his knife. One went into the dead fireplace; the other hit the wall and slid
down behind the fire-tools. Thorin's right foot trembled briefly and was still.
One more job to do.
Depape looked around,
saw Thorin's nightcap, and decided the ball on the end would serve. He picked
it up, dipped it in the puddle of blood in the Mayor's lap, and drew the Good
Man's sigul—
—on
the wall.
"There," he
murmured, standing back. "If that don't finish em, nothing on earth
will."
True enough. The only
question left unanswered was whether or not Roland's ka-tet could be
taken alive.
3
Jonas had told Fran
Lengyll exactly where to place his men, two inside the stable and six more out,
three of these latter gents hidden behind rusty old implements, two hidden in
the burnt-out remains of the home place, one—Dave Hollis—crouched on top of the
stable itself, spying over the roofpeak. Lengyll was glad to see that the men in
the posse took their job seriously. They were only boys, it was true, but boys
who had on one occasion come off ahead of the Big Coffin Hunters.
Sheriff Avery gave a
fair impression of being in charge of things until they got within a good shout
of the Bar K. Then Lengyll, machine-gun slung over one shoulder (and as
straight-hacked in the saddle as he had been at twenty), took command. Avery,
who looked nervous and sounded out of breath, seemed relieved rather than
offended.
"I'll tell ye
where to go as was (old to me, for it's a good plan, and I've no quarrel with
it," Lengyll had told his posse. In the dark, their faces were little more
than dim blurs. "Only one thing I'll say to ye on my own hook. We don't
need em alive, but it's best we have em so—it's the Barony we want to put paid
to em, the common folk, and so put paid to this whole business, as well. Shut
the door on it, if ye will. So I say this: if there's cause to shoot, shoot.
But I'll flay the skin off the face of any man who shoots without cause. Do ye
understand?"
No response. It seemed
they did.
"All right,"
Lengyll had said. His face was stony. "I'll give ye a minute to make sure
your gear's muffled, and then on we go. Not another' word from here on
out."
4
Roland, Cuthbert, and
Alain came out of the bunkhouse at quarter past six that morning, and stood
a-row on the porch. Alain was finishing his coffee. Cuthbert was yawning and
stretching. Roland was buttoning his shirt and looking southwest, toward the
Bad Grass. He was thinking not of ambushes but of Susan. Her tears. Greedy
old ka, how I hate it, she had said.
His instincts did not
awake; Alain's touch, which had sensed Jonas on the day Jonas had killed the
pigeons, did not so much as quiver. As for Cuthbert—
"One more day of
quiet!" that worthy exclaimed to the dawning sky. "One more day of
grace! One more day of silence, broken only by the lover's sigh and the tattoo
of horses' hoofs!"
"One more day of
your bullshit," Alain said. "Come on."
They set off across
the dooryard, sensing the eight pairs of eyes on them not at all. They walked
into the stable past the two men flanking the door, one hidden behind an
ancient harrow, the other tucked behind an untidy stack of hay, both with guns
drawn.
Only Rusher sensed
something was wrong. He stamped his feet, rolled his eyes, and, as Roland
backed him out of his stall, tried to rear.
"Hey, boy,"
he said, and looked around. "Spiders, I reckon. He hates them."
Outside, Lengyll stood
up and waved both hands forward. Men moved silently toward the front of the
stable. On the roof, Dave Hollis stood with his gun drawn. His monocle was
tucked away in his vest pocket, so it should blink no badly timed reflection.
Cuthbert led his mount
out of the stable. Alain followed. Roland came last, short-leading the nervous,
prancy gelding.
"Look,"
Cuthbert said cheerily, still unaware of the men standing directly behind him
and his friends. He was pointing north. "A cloud in the shape of a bear!
Good luck for—"
"Don't move,
cullies," Fran Lengyll called. "Don't so much as shuffle yer
god-pounding feet."
Alain did begin
to turn—in startlement more than anything else—and there was a ripple of small
clicking sounds, like many dry twigs all snapping at once. The sound of
cocking pistols and musketoons.
"No, Al!"
Roland said. "Don't move! Don't!" In his throat despair rose like
poison, and tears of rage stung at the comers of his eyes ... yet he stood
quiet. Cuthbert and Alain must stand quiet, too. If they moved, they'd be
killed. "Don't move!" he called again. "Either of you!"
"Wise,
cully." Lengyll's voice was closer now, and accompanied by several pairs
of footfalls. "Put yer hands behind ye."
Two shadows flanked
Roland, long in the first light. Judging by the bulk of the one on his left, he
guessed it was being thrown by Sheriff Avery. He probably wouldn't be offering
them any white tea this day. Lengyll would belong to the other shadow.
"Hurry up,
Dearborn, or whatever yer name may be. Get em behind ye. Small of yer back.
There's guns pointed at your pards, and if we end up taking in only two of yer
instead of three, life'll go on."
Not taking any chances
with us, Roland thought, and felt a moment of perverse
pride. With it came a taste of something that was almost amusement. Bitter,
though; that taste continued very bitter.
"Roland!" It
was Cuthbert, and there was agony in his voice. "Roland, don't!"
But there was no
choice. Roland put his hands behind his back. Rusher uttered a small, reproving
whinny as if to say all this was highly improper—and trotted away to stand
beside the bunkhouse porch.
"You're going to
feel metal on your wrists," Lengyll said. "Esposas. "
Two cold circles
slipped over Roland's hands. I here was a click and suddenly the arcs of the
handcuffs were tight against his wrists.
"All right,"
said another voice. "Now you, son,"
"Be damned if I
will!" Cuthbert's voice wavered on the edge of hysteria
There was a thud and a
muffled cry of pain. Roland turned around and saw Alain down on one knee, the
heel of his left hand pressed against his forehead. Blood ran down his face.
"Ye want me to
deal him another 'un?" Jake White asked. He had an old pistol in his hand,
reversed so the butt was forward. "I can, you know; my arm is feeling wery
limber for this early in the day."
"No!"
Cuthbert was twitching with horror and something like grief. Ranged behind him
were three armed men, looking on with nervous avidity.
"Then be a good
boy an' get yer hands behind yer."
Cuthbert, still
fighting tears, did as he was told. Esposas were put on him by Deputy
Bridger. The other two men yanked Alain to his feet. He reeled a little, then
stood firm as he was handcuffed. His eyes met Roland's, and Al tried to smile.
In some ways it was the worst moment of that terrible ambush morning. Roland
nodded back and made himself a promise: he would never be taken like this
again, not if he lived to be a thousand years old.
Lengyll was wearing a
trailscarf instead of a string tie this morning, but Roland thought he was
inside the same box-tail coat he'd worn to the Mayor's welcoming party, all
those weeks ago. Standing beside him, puffing with excitement, anxiety, and
self-importance, was Sheriff Avery.
"Boys," the
Sheriff said, "ye're arrested for transgressing the Barony. The specific
charges are treason and murder."
"Who did we murder?"
Alain asked mildly, and one of the posse uttered a laugh either shocked or
cynical, Roland couldn't tell which.
"The Mayor and
his Chancellor, as ye know quite well," Avery said. "Now—"
"How can you do
this?" Roland asked curiously. It was Lengyll to whom he spoke.
"Mejis is your home place; I've seen the line of your fathers in the town
cemetery. How can you do this to your home place, sai Lengyll?"
"I've no
intention of standing out here and making palaver with ye," Lengyll said.
He glanced over Roland's shoulder. "Alvarez! Get his horse! Boys as trig
as this bunch should have no problem riding with their hands behind
their—"
"No, tell
me," Roland interposed. "Don't hold back, sai Lengyll— these are your
friends you've come with, and not a one who isn't inside your circle. How can
you do it? Would you rape your own mother if you came upon her sleeping with
her dress up?"
Lengyll's mouth
twitched—not with shame or embarrassment but momentary prudish distaste, and
then the old rancher looked at Avery. "They teach em to talk pretty in
Gilead, don't they?"
Avery had a rifle. Now
he stepped toward the handcuffed gunslinger with the butt raised. "I'll
teach 'im how to talk proper to a man of the gentry, so I will! Knock the teef
straight out of his head, if you say aye, Fran!"
Lengyll held him back,
looking tired. "Don't be a fool. I don't want to bring him back laying
over a saddle unless he's dead."
Avery lowered his gun.
Lengyll turned to Roland.
"Ye're not going
to live long enough to profit from advice, Dearborn," he said, "but
I'll give'ee some, anyway: stick with the winners in this world. And know how
the wind blows, so ye can tell when it changes direction."
"You've forgotten
the face of your father, you scurrying little maggot," Cuthbert said
clearly.
This got to Lengyll in
a way Roland's remark about his mother had not—it showed in the sudden bloom of
color in his weathered cheeks.
"Get em
mounted!" he said. "I want em locked up tight within the hour!"
5
Roland was boosted
into Rusher's saddle so hard he almost flew off on the other side—would have,
if Dave Hollis had not been there to steady him and then to wedge Roland's boot
into the stirrup. Dave offered the gunslinger a nervous, half-embarrassed
smile.
"I'm sorry to see
you here," Roland said gravely.
"It's sorry I am
to be here," the deputy said. "If murder was your business, I wish
you'd gotten to it sooner. And your friend shouldn't have been so arrogant as
to leave his calling-card." He nodded toward Cuthbert.
Roland hadn't the slightest
idea what Deputy Dave was referring to, but it didn't matter. It was just part
of the frame, and none of these men believed much of it, Dave likely included.
Although, Roland supposed, they would come to believe it in later years and
tell it to their children and grandchildren as gospel. The glorious day they'd
ridden with the posse and taken down the traitors.
The gunslinger used
his knees to turn Rusher . . . and there, standing by the gate between the Bar
K's dooryard and the lane leading to the Great Road, was Jonas himself. He sat
astride a deep-chested bay, wearing a green felt drover's hat and an old gray
duster. There was a rifle in the scabbard beside his right knee. The left side
of the duster was pulled back to expose the butt of his revolver. Jonas's white
hair, untied today, lay over his shoulders.
He doffed his hat and
held it out to Roland in courtly greeting. "A good game," he said.
"You played very well for someone who was taking his milk out of a tit not
so long ago."
"Old man,"
Roland said, "you've lived too long."
Jonas smiled.
"You'd remedy that if you could, wouldn't you? Yar, I reckon." He
flicked his eyes at Lengyll. "Get their toys, Fran. Look specially sharp
for knives. They've got guns, but not with em. Yet I know a bit more about
those shooting irons than they might think. And funny boy's slingshot. Don't
forget that, for gods' sake. He like to take Roy's head off with it not so long
ago."
"Are you talking
about the carrot-top?" Cuthbert asked. His horse was dancing under him;
Bert swayed back and forth and from side to side like a circus rider to keep
from tumbling off. "He never would have missed his head. His balls, maybe,
but not his head."
"Probably
true," Jonas agreed, watching as the spears and Roland's shortbow were taken
into custody. The slingshot was on the back of Cuthbert's belt, tucked into a
holster he had made for it himself. It was very well for Roy Depape that he
hadn't tried Bert, Roland knew—Bert could take a bird on the wing at sixty
yards. A pouch holding steel shot hung at the boy's left side. Bridger took it,
as well.
While this was going
on, Jonas fixed Roland with an amiable smile. "What's your real name,
brat? Fess up—no harm in telling now; you're going to ride the handsome, and we
both know it."
Roland said nothing.
Lengyll looked at Jonas, eyebrows raised. Jonas shrugged, then jerked his head
in the direction of town. Lengyll nodded and poked Roland with one hard,
chapped finger. "Come on, boy. Let's ride."
Roland squeezed
Rusher's sides; the horse trotted toward Jonas. And suddenly Roland knew
something. As with all his best and truest intuitions, it came from nowhere
and everywhere—absent at one second, all there and fully dressed at the next.
"Who sent you
west, maggot?" he asked as he passed Jonas. "Couldn't have been
Cort—you're too old. Was it his father?"
The look of slightly
bored amusement left Jonas's face—flew from his face, as if slapped
away. For one amazing moment the man with the white hair was a child again:
shocked, shamed, and hurt.
"Yes, Cort's da—I
see it in your eyes. And now you're here, on the Clean Sea ... except you're
really in the west. The soul of a man such as you can never leave the
west."
Jonas's gun was out
and cocked in his hand with such speed that only Roland's extraordinary eyes
were capable of marking the movement. There was a murmur from the men behind
them—partly shock, mostly awe.
"Jonas, don't be
a fool!" Lengyll snarled. "You ain't killin em after we took the time
and risk to hood em and tie their hooks, are ye?"
Jonas seemed to take
no notice. His eyes were wide; the comers of his seamed mouth were trembling.
"Watch your words, Will Dearborn," he said in a low, hoarse voice.
"You want to watch em ever so close. I got two pounds of pressure on a three-pound
trigger right this second."
"Fine, shoot
me," Roland said. He lifted his head and looked down at Jonas.
"Shoot, exile. Shoot, worm. Shoot, you failure. You'll still live in exile
and die as you lived."
For a moment he was
sure Jonas would shoot, and in that moment Roland felt death would be
enough, an acceptable end after the shame of being caught so easily. In that
moment Susan was absent from his mind. Nothing breathed in that moment, nothing
called, nothing moved. The shadows of the men watching this confrontation, both
on foot and on horseback, were printed depthless on the dirt.
Then Jonas dropped the
hammer of his gun and slipped it back into its holster.
"Take em to town
and jug em," he said to Lengyll. "And when I show up, I don't want to
see one hair harmed on one head. If I could keep from killing this one, you can
keep from hurting the rest. Now go on."
"Move,"
Lengyll said. His voice had lost some of its bluff authority. It was now the
voice of a man who realizes (too late) that he has bought chips in a game where
the stakes are likely much too high.
They rode. As they
did, Roland turned one last time. The contempt Jonas saw in those cool young
eyes stung him worse than the whips that had scarred his back in Garlan years
ago.
6
When they were out of
sight, Jonas went into the bunkhouse, pulled up the board which concealed their
little armory, and found only two guns. The matched set of six-shooters with
the dark handles—Dearborn's guns, surely—were gone.
You 're in the west.
The soul of a man such as you can never leave the west. You'll live in exile
and die as you lived.
Jonas's hands went to
work, disassembling the revolvers Cuthbert and Alain had brought west. Alain's
had never even been worn, save on the practice-range. Outside, Jonas threw the
pieces, scattering them every which way. He threw as hard as he could, trying
to rid himself of that cool blue gaze and the shock of hearing what he'd
believed no man had known. Roy and Clay suspected, but even they hadn't known
for sure.
Before the sun went
down, everyone in Mejis would know that Eldred Jonas, the white-haired
regulator with the tattooed coffin on his hand, was nothing but a failed
gunslinger.
You'll live in exile
and die as you lived.
"P'raps," he
said, looking at the burned-out ranch house without really seeing it. "But
I'll live longer than you, young Dearborn, and die long after your bones are
rusting in the ground."
He mounted up and
swung his horse around, sawing viciously at the reins. He rode for Citgo, where
Roy and Clay would be waiting, and he rode hard, but Roland's eyes rode with
him.
7
"Wake up! Wake
up, sai! Wake up! Wake up!"
At first the words
seemed to be coming from far away, drifting down by some magical means to the
dark place where she lay. Even when the voice was joined by a rudely shaking
hand and Susan knew she must wake up, it was a long, hard struggle.
It had been weeks
since she'd gotten a decent night's sleep, and she had expected more of the
same last night. . . especially last night. She had lain awake in her luxurious
bedchamber at Seafront, tossing from side to side, possibilities—none
good—crowding her mind. The nightgown she wore crept up to her hips and bunched
at the small of her back. When she got up to use the commode, she took the
hateful thing off, hurled it into a comer, and crawled back into bed naked.
Being out of the heavy
silk nightgown had done the trick. She dropped off almost at once . . . and in
this case, dropped off was, exactly right: it was less like falling
asleep than falling into some thoughtless, dreamless crack in the earth.
Now this intruding
voice. This intruding arm, shaking her so hard that her head rolled from side
to side on the pillow. Susan tried to slide away from it, pulling her knees up
to her chest and mouthing fuzzy protests, but the arm followed. The shaking
recommenced; the nagging, calling voice never stopped.
"Wake up, sai!
Wake up! In the name of the Turtle and the Bear, wake up!"
Maria's voice. Susan
hadn't recognized it at first because Maria was so upset. Susan had never heard
her so, or expected to. Yet it was so; the maid sounded on the verge of
hysteria.
Susan sat up. For a
moment so much input—all of it wrong—crashed in on her that she was incapable
of moving. The duvet beneath which she had slept tumbled into her lap, exposing
her breasts, and she could do no more than pluck weakly at it with the tips of
her fingers.
The first wrong thing
was the light. It flooded through the windows more strongly than it ever had
before . . . because, she realized, she had never been in this room so late
before. Gods, it had to be ten o' the clock, perhaps later.
The second wrong thing
was the sounds from below. Mayor's House was ordinarily a peaceful place in the
morning; until noon one heard little but casa vaqueros leading the horses
out for their morning exercise, the whicker-whicker-whick of Miguel sweeping
the courtyard, and the constant boom and shush of the waves. This morning
there were shouts, curses, galloping horses, the occasional burst of strange,
jagged laughter. Somewhere outside her room—perhaps not in this wing, but
close— Susan heard the running thud of booted feet.
The wrongest thing of
all was Maria herself, cheeks ashy beneath her olive skin-tone, and her usually
neat hair tangled and unbound. Susan would have guessed only an earthquake
could make her look so, if that.
"Maria, what is
it?"
"You have to go,
sai. Seafront maybe not safe for you just now. Your own house maybe better.
When I don't see you earlier, I think you gone there already. You chose a bad
day to sleep late."
"Go?" Susan
asked. Slowly, she pulled the duvet all the way up to her nose and stared at
Maria over it with wide, puffy eyes. "What do you mean, go?"
"Out the
back." Maria plucked the duvet from Susan's sleep-numbed hands again and
this time stripped it all the way down to her ankles. "Like you did
before. Now, missy, now! Dress and go! Those boys put away, aye, but what if
they have friends? What if they come back, kill you, too?"
Susan had been getting
up. Now all the strength ran out of her legs and she sat back down on the bed
again. "Boys?" she whispered. "Boys kill who? Boys kill
who?"
This was a good
distance from grammatical, but Maria took her meaning.
"Dearborn and his
pinboys," she said.
"Who are they
supposed to have killed?"
"The Mayor and
the Chancellor." She looked at Susan with a kind of distracted sympathy.
"Now get up, I tell you. And get gone. This place gone loco."
"They didn't do
any such thing," Susan said, and only just restrained herself from adding,
It wasn't in the plan.
"Sai Thorin and
sai Rimer jus' as dead, whoever did it." There were more shouts below, and
a sharp little explosion that didn't sound like a firecracker. Maria looked in
that direction, then began to throw Susan her clothes. "The Mayor's eyes,
they gouged right out of his head."
"They couldn't
have! Maria, I know them—"
"Me, I don't know
nothing about them and care less—but I care about you. Get dressed and get out,
I tell you. Quick as you can."
"What's happened
to them?" A terrible thought came to Susan and she leaped to her feet,
clothes falling all around her. She seized Maria by the shoulders. "They
haven't been killed?" Susan shook her. "Say they haven't been
killed!"
"I don't think
so. There's been a t'ousan' shouts and ten t'ousan' rumors go the rounds, but
I think jus' jailed. Only . .."
There was no need for
her to finish; her eyes slipped from Susan's, and that involuntary shift (along
with the confused shouts from below) told all the rest. Not killed yet, but
Hart Thorin had been greatly liked, and from an old family. Roland, Cuthbert,
and Alain were strangers.
Not killed yet ... but
tomorrow was Reaping, and tomorrow night was Reaping Bonfire.
Susan began to dress
as fast as she could.
8
Reynolds, who had been
with Jonas longer than Depape, took one look at the figure cantering toward
them through the skeletal oil derricks, and turned to his partner. "Don't
ask him any questions—he's not in any mood for silly questions this
morning."
"How do you
know?"
"Never mind. Just
keep your ever-fucking gob shut."
Jonas reined up before
them. He sat slumped in his saddle, pale and thoughtful. His look prompted one
question from Roy Depape in spite of Reynolds's caution. "Eldred, are you
all right?"
"Is anyone?"
Jonas responded, then fell silent again. Behind them, Citgo's few remaining
pumpers squalled tiredly.
At last Jonas roused
himself and sat a little straighter in the saddle. "The cubs'll be stored
supplies by now. I told Lengyll and Avery to fire a double set of pistol-shots
if anything went wrong, and there hasn't been any shooting like that."
"We didn't hear
none, either, Eldred," Depape said eagerly. "Nothing atall like
that."
Jonas grimaced.
"You wouldn't, would you? Not out in this noise.
Fool!"
Depape bit his lip,
saw something in the neighborhood of his left stirrup that needed adjusting,
and bent to it.
"Were you boys
seen at your business?" Jonas asked. "This morning, I mean, when you
sent Rimer and Thorin off. Even a chance either of you was seen?"
Reynolds shook his
head for both of them. " 'Twas clean as could be."
Jonas nodded as if the
subject had been of only passing interest to him, then turned to regard the
oilpatch and the rusty derricks. "Mayhap folks are right," he said in
a voice almost too low to hear. "Mayhap the Old People were
devils." He turned back to them. "Well, we're the devils now. Ain't
we. Clay?"
"Whatever you
think, Eldred," Reynolds said.
"I said what I
think. We're the devils now, and by God, that's how we'll behave. What
about Quint and that lot down there?" He cocked his head toward the
forested slope where the ambush had been laid.
"Still there,
pending your word," Reynolds said.
"No need of em
now." He favored Reynolds with a dark look. "That Dearborn's a coozey
brat. I wish I was going to be in Hambry tomorrow night just so I could lay a
torch between his feet. I almost left him cold and dead at the Bar K. Would've
if not for Lengyll. Coozey little brat is what he is."
Slumping as he spoke.
Face growing blacker and blacker, like storm clouds drifting across the sun.
Depape, his stirrup fixed, tossed Reynolds a nervous glance. Reynolds didn't
answer it. What point? If Eldred went crazy now (and Reynolds had seen it
happen before), there was no way they could get out of his killing-zone in
time.
"Eldred, we got
quite a spot more to do."
Reynolds spoke
quietly, but it got through. Jonas straightened. He took off his hat, hung it
on his saddle as if the horn were a coathook, and brushed absently through his
hair with his fingers.
"Yar—quite a spot
is right. Ride down there. Tell Quint to send for oxen to pull those last two
full tankers out to Hanging Rock. He sh'd keep four men with him to hook em up
and take em on to Latigo. The rest can go on ahead."
Reynolds now judged it
safe to ask a question. "When do the rest of Latigo's men get there?"
"Men?" Jonas
snorted. "Don't we wish, cully! The rest of Latigo's boys'll ride
out to Hanging Rock by moonlight, pennons no doubt flying for all the coyotes
and other assorted desert-dogs to see and be awed by. They'll be ready to do
escort duty by ten tomorrow, I sh'd think ... although if they're the sort of
lads I'm expecting, fuck-ups are apt to be the rule of the day. The good news
is that we don't much need em, anyway. Things look well in hand. Now go down
there, get them about their business, and then ride back to me, just as fast's
you can."
Jonas turned and
looked toward the lumpy swell of hills to the northwest.
"We have business
of our own," he said. "Soonest begun, boys, soonest done. I want to shake the dust of fucking Mejis
off my hat and boots as soon as I can. I don't like the way it feels anymore.
Not at all."
9
The woman, Theresa
Maria Dolores O'Shyven, was forty years old, plump, pretty, mother of four,
husband of Peter, a vaquero of laughing temperament. She was also a
seller of rugs and draperies in the Upper Market; many of the prettier and more
delicate appointments at Seafront had passed through Theresa O'Shyven's hands,
and her family was quite well-to-do. Although her husband was a range-rider,
the O'Shyven clan was what would have been called middle-class in another place
and time. Her two oldest children were grown and gone, one right out o' Barony.
The third eldest was sparking and hoping to marry his heart's delight at Year's
End. Only the youngest suspected something was wrong with Ma, and this one had
no idea how close Theresa was to complete obsessional madness.
Soon,
Rhea thought, watching Theresa avidly in the ball. She 'II start doing it
soon, but first she's got to get rid of the brat.
There was no school at
Reaptide, and the stalls opened only for a few hours in the afternoon, so
Theresa sent her youngest daughter off with a pie. A Reaptide gift to a
neighbor, Rhea surmised, although she couldn't hear the soundless instructions
the woman gave her daughter as she pulled a knitted cap down over the girl's
ears. And 'twouldn't be a neighbor too close, either; she'd want time, would
Theresa Maria Dolores O'Shyven, time to be a-choring. It was a good-sized
house, and there were a lot of corners in it that needed cleaning.
Rhea chuckled; the
chuckle turned into a hollow gust of coughing. In the corner, Musty looked at
the old woman hauntedly. Although far from the emaciated skeleton that his
mistress had become, Musty didn't look good at all.
The girl was shown out
with the pie under her arm; she paused to give her mother a single troubled
look, and then the door was shut in her face.
"Now!" Rhea
croaked. "Them comers is waitin! Down on yer knees, woman, and get to
business!"
First Theresa went to
the window. When she was satisfied with what she saw—her daughter out the gate
and down the High Street, likely—she turned back to her kitchen. She walked to
the table and stood there, looking dreamy-eyed into space.
"No, none o'
that, now!" Rhea cried impatiently. She no longer saw her own filthy hut,
she no longer smelled either its rank aromas or her own. She had gone into the
Wizard's Rainbow. She was with Theresa O'Shyven, whose cottage had the cleanest
comers in all Mejis. Mayhap in all Mid-World.
"Hurry,
woman!" Rhea half-screamed. "Get to yer housework!"
As if hearing, Theresa
unbuttoned her housedress, stepped out of it, and laid it neatly over a chair.
She pulled the hem of her clean, mended shift up over her knees, went to the
comer, and got down on all fours. "That's it, my corazon!"
Rhea cried, nearly choking on a phlegmy mixture of coughing and laughter.
"Do yer chores, now, and do em wery pert!"
Theresa O'Shyven poked
her head forward to the full length of her neck, opened her mouth, stuck out her
tongue, and began to lick the corner. She lapped it as Musty lapped his milk.
Rhea watched this, slapping her knee and whooping, her face growing redder and
redder as she rocked from side to side. Oh, Theresa was her favorite, aye! No
doubt! For hours now she would crawl about on her hands and knees with her ass
in the air, licking into the comers, praying to some obscure god—not even the
Man-Jesus God—for forgiveness of who knew what as she did this, her penance.
Sometimes she got splinters in her tongue and had to pause to spit blood into
the kitchen basin. Up until now some sixth sense had always gotten her to her
feet and back into her dress before any of her family returned, but Rhea knew
that sooner or later the woman's obsession would take her too far, and she
would be surprised. Perhaps today would be the day—the little girl would come
back early, perhaps for a coin to spend in town, and discover her mother down
on her knees and licking the comers. Oh, what a spin and raree! How Rhea wanted
to see it! How she longed to—
Suddenly Theresa
O'Shyven was gone. The interior of her neat little cottage was gone. Everything
was gone, lost in curtains of shifting pink light. For the first time in weeks,
the wizard's glass had gone blank.
Rhea picked the ball
up in her scrawny, long-nailed fingers and shook it. "What's wrong with
you, plaguey thing? What's wrong?"
The ball was heavy,
and Rhea's strength was fading. After two or three hard shakes, it slipped in
her grip. She cradled it against the deflated remains of her breasts,
trembling.
"No, no,
lovey," she crooned. "Come back when ye're ready, aye, Rhea lost her
temper a bit but she's got it back now, she never meant to shake ye and she'd
never ever drop ye, so ye just—"
She broke off and
cocked her head, listening. Horses approaching. No, not approaching; here.
Three riders, by the sound. They had crept up on her while she was distracted.
The boys? Those
plaguey boys?
Rhea held the ball
against her bosom, eyes wide, lips wet. Her hands were now so thin that the
ball's pink glow shone through them, faintly illuminating the dark spokes that
were her bones.
"Rhea! Rhea of
the Coos!"
No, not the boys.
"Come out here,
and bring what you were given!"
Worse.
"Farson wants his
property! We've come to take it!"
Not the boys but the
Big Coffin Hunters.
"Never, ye dirty
old white-haired prick," she whispered. "Ye'll never take it."
Her eyes moved from side to side in small, shooting peeks. Scraggle-headed and
tremble-mouthed, she looked like a diseased coyote driven into its final
arroyo.
She looked down at the
ball and a whining noise began to escape her. Now even the pink glow was gone.
The sphere was as dark as a corpse's eyeball.
10
A shriek came from the
hut.
Depape turned to Jonas
with wide eyes, his skin prickling. The thing which had uttered that cry hardly
sounded human.
"Rhea!"
Jonas called again. "Bring it out here now, woman, and hand it over! I've
no time to play games with you!"
The door of the hut
swung open. Depape and Reynolds drew their guns as the old crone stepped out,
blinking against the sunlight like something that's spent its whole life in a
cave. She was holding John Farson's favorite toy high over her head. There were
plenty of rocks in the dooryard she could throw it against, and even if her aim
was bad and she missed them all, it might smash anyway.
This could be bad, and
Jonas knew it—there were some people you just couldn't threaten. He had focused
so much of his attention on the brats (who, ironically, had been taken as easy
as milk) that it had never occurred to him to worry much about this part of it.
And Kimba Rimer, the man who had suggested Rhea as the perfect custodian for
Maerlyn's Rainbow, was dead. Couldn't lay it at Rimer's doorstep if things went
wrong up here, could he?
Then, just to make
things a little worse when he'd have thought they'd gone as far west as they
could without dropping off the cold end of the earth, he heard the cocking
sound of Depape drawing the hammer of his gun.
"Put that away,
you idiot!" he snarled.
"But look at
her!" Depape almost moaned. "Look at her, Eldred!"
He was. The
thing inside the black dress appeared to be wearing the corpse of a putrefying
snake around its throat for a necklace. She was so scrawny that she resembled
nothing so much as a walking skeleton. Her peeling skull was only tufted with
hair; the rest had fallen out. Sores clustered on her cheeks and brow, and
there was a mark like a spider-bite on the left side of her mouth. Jonas
thought that last might be a scurvy-bloom, but he didn't really care one way or
another. What he cared about was the ball upraised in the dying woman's long
and shivering claws.
11
The sunlight so
dazzled Rhea's eyes that she didn't see the gun pointed at her, and when her
vision cleared, Depape had put it away again. She looked at the men lined up
across from her—the bespectacled redhead, the one in the cloak, and Old
White-Hair Jonas—and uttered a dusty croak of laughter. Had she been afraid of
them, these mighty Coffin Hunters? She supposed she had, but for gods' sake,
why? They were men, that was all, just more men, and she had been beating such
all her life. Oh, they thought they ruled the roost, all right—nobody in
Mid-World accused anyone of forgetting the face of his mother—but they
were poor things, at bottom, moved to tears by a sad song, utterly undone by
the sight of a bare breast, and all the more capable of being manipulated simply
because they were so sure they were strong and tough and wise.
The glass was dark,
and as much as she hated that darkness, it had cleared her mind.
"Jonas!" she
cried. "Eldred Jonas!"
"I'm here, old
mother," he said. "Long days and pleasant nights."
"Never mind yer
sops, time's too short for em." She came four steps farther and stopped
with the ball still held over her head. Near her, a gray chunk of stone jutted
from the weedy ground. She looked at it, then back at Jonas. The implication
was unspoken but unmistakable.
"What do you
want?" Jonas asked.
"The ball's gone
dark," she said, answering from the side. "All the time I had it in
my keeping, it was lively—aye, even when it showed nothing I could make out, it
was passing lively, bright and pink—but it fell dark almost at the sound of yer
voice. It doesn't want to go with ye."
"Nevertheless,
I'm under orders to take it." Jonas's voice became soft and conciliating.
It wasn't the tone he used when he was in bed with Coral, but it was close.
"Think a minute, and you'll see my situation. Far-son wants it, and who am
I to stand against the wants of a man who'll be the most powerful in Mid-World
when Demon Moon rises next year? If I come back without it and say Rhea of the
Coos refused me it, I'll be killed."
"If ye come back
and tell him I broke it in yer ugly old face, ye'll be killed, too," Rhea
said. She was close enough for Jonas to see how far her sickness had eaten into
her. Above the few remaining tufts of her hair, the wretched ball was trembling
back and forth. She wouldn't be able to hold it much longer. A minute at most.
Jonas felt a dew of sweat spring out on his forehead.
"Aye, mother. But
d'you know, given a choice of deaths, I'd choose to take the cause of my
problem with me. That's you, darling."
She croaked again—that
dusty replica of laughter—and nodded appreciatively. " 'Twon't do Farson
any good without me in any case," she said. "It's found its mistress,
I wot—that's why it went dark at the sound of yer voice."
Jonas wondered how
many others had believed the ball was just for them. He wanted to wipe the
sweat from his brow before it ran in his eyes, but kept his hands in front of
him, folded neatly on the horn of his saddle.
He didn't dare look at
either Reynolds or Depape. and could only hope they would leave the play to
him. She was balanced on both a physical and mental knife-edge; the smallest
movement would send her tumbling off in one direction or the other.
"Found the one it
wants, has it?" He thought he saw a way out of this. If he was lucky. And
it might be lucky for her, as well. "What should we do about that?"
"Take me with
ye." Her face twisted into an expression of gruesome greed; she looked
like a corpse that is trying to sneeze. She doesn't realize she's dying,
Jonas thought. Thank the gods for that. "Take the ball, but take
me, as well. I'll go with ye to Farson. I'll become his soothsayer, and nothing
will stand before us, not with me to read the ball for him. Take me with
ye!"
"All right,"
Jonas said. It was what he had hoped for. "Although what Farson decides is
none o' mine. You know that?"
"Aye."
"Good. Now give
me the ball. I'll give it back into your keeping, if you like, but I need to
make sure it's whole."
She slowly lowered it.
Jonas didn't think it was entirely safe even cradled in her arms, but he
breathed a little easier when it was, all the same. She shuffled toward him,
and he had to control an urge to gig his horse back from her.
He bent over in the
saddle, holding his hands out for the glass. She looked up at him, her old eyes
still shrewd behind their crusted lids. One of them actually drew down in a
conspirator's wink. "I know yer mind, Jonas. Ye think, 'I'll take the
ball, then draw my gun and kill her, what harm?' Isn't that true? Yet there would
be harm, and all to you and yours. Kill me and the ball will never shine for
Farson again. For someone, aye, someday, mayhap; but not for him . . . and will
he let ye live if ye bring his toy back and he discovers it's broken?"
Jonas had already
considered this. "We have a bargain, old mother. You go west with the
glass ... unless you die beside the trail some night. You'll pardon me for saying
so, but you don't look well."
She cackled. "I'm
better'n I look, oh yar! Years left 'fore this clock o' mine runs down!"
I
think you may be wrong about that, old mother, Jonas thought. But he
kept his peace and only held his hands out for the ball.
For a moment longer
she held it. Their arrangement was made and agreed to on both sides, but in the
end she could barely bring herself to ungrasp the ball. Greed shone in her eyes
like moonlight through fog.
He held his hands out
patiently, saying nothing, waiting for her mind to accept reality—if she let
go, there was some chance. If she held on, very likely everyone in this stony,
weedy yard would end up riding the handsome before long.
With a sigh of regret,
she finally put the ball in his hands. At the instant it passed from her to
him, an ember of pink light pulsed deep in the depths of the glass. A throb of
pain drove into Jonas's head . . . and a shiver of lust coiled in his balls.
As from a great
distance, he heard Depape and Reynolds cocking their pistols.
"Put those
away," Jonas said. "But—" Reynolds looked confused.
"They thought'ee
was going to double-cross Rhea," the old woman said, cackling. "Good
thing ye're in charge rather than them, Jonas ... mayhap you know summat they
don't."
He knew something, all
right—how dangerous the smooth, glassy thing in his hands was. It could take
him in a blink, if it wanted. And in a month, he would be like the witch:
scrawny, raddled with sores, and too obsessed to know or care.
"Put them
away!" he shouted.
Reynolds and Depape
exchanged a glance, then reholstered their guns. "There was a bag for this
thing," Jonas said. "A drawstring bag laid inside the box. Get
it."
"Aye," Rhea
said, grinning unpleasantly at him. "But it won't keep the ball from takin
ye if it wants to. Ye needn't think it will." She surveyed the other two,
and her eye fixed on Reynolds. "There's a cart in my shed, and a pair of
good gray goats to pull it." She spoke to Reynolds, but her eyes kept
turning back to the ball, Jonas noticed .. . and now his damned eyes
wanted to go there, too.
"You don't give
me orders," Reynolds said.
"No, but I
do," Jonas said. His eyes dropped to the ball, both wanting and fearing to
see that pink spark of life deep inside. Nothing. Cold and dark. He dragged his
gaze back up to Reynolds again. "Get the cart."
12
Reynolds heard the
buzzing of flies even before he slipped through the shed's sagging door, and
knew at once that Rhea's goats had finished their days of pulling. They lay
bloated and dead in their pen, legs sticking up and the sockets of their eyes
squirming with maggots. It was impossible to know when Rhea had last fed and
watered them, but Reynolds guessed at least a week, from the smell.
Too busy watching what
goes on in that glass ball to bother, he thought. And
what's she wearing that dead snake around her neck for?
"I don't want to
know," he muttered from behind his pulled-up neckerchief. The only thing
he did want right now was to get the hell out of here.
He spied the cart,
which was painted black and overlaid with cabalistic designs in gold. It
looked like a medicine-show wagon to Reynolds; it also looked a bit like a
hearse. He seized it by the handles and dragged it out of the shed as fast as
he could. Depape could do the rest, by gods. Hitch his horse to the cart and
haul the old woman's stinking freight to ... where? Who knew? Eldred, maybe.
Rhea came tottering
out of her hut with the drawstring bag they'd brought the ball in, but she
stopped, head cocked, listening, when Reynolds asked his question.
Jonas thought it over,
then said: "Seafront to begin, I guess. Yar, that'll do for her, and this
glass bauble as well, I reckon, until the party's over tomorrow."
"Aye, Seafront,
I've never been there," Rhea said, moving forward again. When she reached
Jonas's horse (which tried to shy away from her), she opened the bag. After a
moment's further consideration, Jonas dropped the ball in. It bulged round at
the bottom, making a shape like a teardrop.
Rhea wore a sly smile.
"Mayhap we'll meet Thorin. If so, I might have something to show him in
the Good Man's toy that'd interest him ever so much."
"If you meet
him," Jonas said, getting down to help hitch Depape's horse to the black
cart, "it'll be in a place where no magic is needed to see far."
She looked at him,
frowning, and then the sly smile slowly resurfaced. "Why, I b'lieve our
Mayor's met wiv a accident!"
"Could be,"
Jonas agreed.
She giggled, and soon
the giggle turned into a full-throated cackle. She was still cackling as they
drew out of the yard, cackling and sitting in the little black cart with its
cabalistic decorations like the Queen of Black Places on her throne.
CHAPTER VIII
the
ashes
1
Panic is highly
contagious, especially in situations when nothing is known and everything is in
flux. It was the sight of Miguel, the old mozo, that started Susan down
its greased slope. He was in the middle of Seafront's courtyard, clutching his
broom of twigs against his chest and looking at the riders who passed to and
fro with an expression of perplexed misery. His sombrero was twisted
around on his back, and Susan observed with something like horror that
Miguel—usually brushed and clean and neat as a pin—was wearing his serape
inside out. There were tears on his cheeks, and as he turned this way and that,
following the passing riders, trying to hile those he recognized, she thought
of a child she had once seen toddle out in front of an oncoming stage. The
child had been pulled back in time by his father; who would pull Miguel back?
She started for him,
and a vaquero aboard a wild-eyed spotted roan galloped so close by her
that one stirrup ticked off her hip and the horse's tail flicked her forearm.
She voiced a strange-sounding little chuckle. She had been worried about Miguel
and had almost been run down herself! Funny!
She looked both ways
this time, started forward, then drew back again as a loaded wagon came
careering around the comer, tottering on two wheels at first. What it was
loaded with she couldn't see—the goods in the wagonbed were covered with a tarp
-but she saw Miguel move toward it, still clutching his broom. Susan thought of
the child in front of the stage again and shrieked an inarticulate cry of
alarm. Miguel cringed back at the last moment and the cart flew by him, bounded
and swayed across the courtyard, and disappeared out through the arch.
Miguel dropped his
broom, clapped both hands to his cheeks, fell to his knees, and began to pray
in a loud, lamenting voice. Susan watched him for a moment, her mouth working,
and then sprinted for the stables, no longer taking care to keep against the
side of the building. She had caught the disease that would grip almost all of
Hambry by noon, and although she managed to do a fairly apt job of saddling
Pylon (on any other day there would have been three stable-boys vying for the
chance to help the pretty sai), any ability to think had left her by the time
she heel-kicked the startled horse into a run outside the stable door.
When she rode past
Miguel, still on his knees and praying to the bright sky with his hands
upraised, she saw him no more than any other rider had before her.
2
She rode straight down
the High Street, thumping her spurless heels at Pylon's sides until the big
horse was fairly flying. Thoughts, questions, possible plans of action ... none
of those had a place in her head as she rode. She was but vaguely aware of the
people milling in the street, allowing Pylon to weave his own path through
them. The only thing she was aware of was his name—Roland, Roland, Roland!—ringing
in her head like a scream. Everything had gone upside down. The brave little ka-tet
they had made that night at the graveyard was broken, three of its members
jailed and with not long to live (if they even were still alive), the
last member lost and confused, as crazy with terror as a bird in a barn.
If her panic had held,
things might have turned out in a much different fashion. But as she rode
through the center of town and out the other side, her way took her toward the
house she had shared with her father and her aunt. That lady had been watching
for the very rider who now approached.
As Susan neared, the
door flew open and Cordelia, dressed in black from throat to toe, rushed down
the front walk to the street, shrieking with either horror or laughter. Perhaps
both. The sight of her cut through the foreground haze of panic in Susan's mind
.. . but not because she recognized her aunt.
"Rhea!"
she cried, and drew back on the reins so violently that the horse skidded,
reared, and almost tilted them over backward. That would likely have crushed
the life out of his mistress, but Pylon managed to keep at least his back feet,
pawing at the sky with his front ones and whinnying loudly. Susan slung an arm
around his neck and hung on for dear life.
Cordelia Delgado,
wearing her best black dress and a lace mantilla over her hair, stood in front
of the horse as if in her own parlor, taking no notice of the hooves cutting
the air less than two feet in front other nose. In one gloved hand she held a
wooden box.
Susan belatedly
realized that this wasn't Rhea, but the mistake really wasn't that odd. Aunt
Cord wasn't as thin as Rhea (not yet, anyway), and more neatly dressed (except
for her dirty gloves—why her aunt was wearing gloves in the first place Susan
didn't know, let alone why they looked so smudged), but the mad look in her
eyes was horribly similar.
"Good day t'ye,
Miss Oh So Young and Pretty!" Aunt Cord greeted her in a cracked,
vivacious voice that made Susan's heart tremble. Aunt Cord curtseyed one-handed,
holding the little box curled against her chest with the other. "Where go
ye on this fine autumn day? Where go ye so speedy? To no lover's arms, that
seems sure, for one's dead and the other ta'en!"
Cordelia laughed
again, thin lips drawing back from big white teeth. Horse teeth, almost. Her
eyes glared in the sunlight.
Her mind's broken,
Susan thought. Poor thing. Poor old thing.
"Did
thee put Dearborn up to it?" Aunt Cord asked. She crept to Pylon's side
and looked up at Susan with luminous, liquid eyes. "Thee did, didn't thee?
Aye! Perhaps thee even gave him the knife he used, after runnin yer lips o'er
it for good luck. Ye're in it together—why not admit it? At least admit thee's
lain with that boy, for I know it's true. I saw the way he looked at ye the day
ye were sitting in the window, and the way ye looked back at him!"
Susan said, "If
ye'll have truth, I'll give it to ye. We're lovers. And we'll be man and wife
ere Year's End."
Cordelia raised one
dirty glove to the blue sky and waved it as if saying hello to the gods. She
screamed with mingled triumph and laughter as she waved. "And t'be wed,
she thinks! Ooooo! Ye'd no doubt drink the blood of your victims on the
marriage altar, too, would ye not? Oh, wicked! It makes me weep!" But
instead of weeping she laughed again, a howl of mirth into the blind blue face
of the sky.
"We planned no
murders," Susan said, drawing—if only in her own mind—a line of difference
between the killings at Mayor's House and the trap they had hoped to spring on
Parson's soldiers. "And he did no murders. No, this is the
business of your friend Jonas, I wot. His plan, his filthy work."
Cordelia plunged her
hand into the box she held, and Susan understood at once why the gloves she
wore were dirty: she had been grubbing in the stove.
"I curse thee
with the ashes!" Cordelia cried, flinging a black and gritty cloud of
them at Susan's leg and the hand which held Pylon's reins. "I curse
thee to darkness, both of thee! Be ye happy together, ye faithless! Ye
murderers! Ye cozeners! Ye liars! Ye fornicators! Ye lost and renounced!"
With each cry,
Cordelia Delgado threw another handful of ashes. And with each cry, Susan's
mind grew clearer, colder. She held fast and allowed her aunt to pelt her; in
fact, when Pylon, feeling the gritty rain against his side, attempted to pull
away, Susan gigged him set. There were spectators now, avidly watching this old
ritual of renunciation (Sheemie was among them, eyes wide and mouth quivering),
but Susan barely noticed. Her mind was her own again, she had an idea of what
to do, and for that alone she supposed she owed her aunt some sort of thanks.
"I forgive ye,
Aunt," she said.
The box of
stove-ashes, now almost empty, tumbled from Cordelia's hands as if Susan had
slapped her. "What?" she whispered. "What does thee say?"
"For what ye did
to yer brother and my father," Susan said. "For what ye were a part
of."
She rubbed a hand on
her leg and bent with the hand held out before her. Before her aunt could pull
away, Susan had wiped ashes down one of her cheeks. The smudge stood out there
like a wide, dark scar. "But wear that, all the same," she said.
"Wash it off if ye like, but I think ye'll wear it in yer heart yet
awhile." She paused. "I think ye already do. Goodbye."
"Where does thee
think thee's going?" Aunt Cord was pawing at the soot-mark on her face
with one gloved hand, and when she lunged forward in an attempt to
grasp Pylon's reins, she stumbled over the box and almost fell. It was Susan,
still bent over to her aunt's side, who grasped her shoulder and held her up.
Cordelia pulled back as if from the touch of an adder. "Not to him! Ye'll
not go to him now, ye mad goose!"
Susan turned her horse
away. "None of yer business. Aunt. This is the end between us. But mark
what I say: we'll be married by Year's End. Our firstborn is already
conceived."
"Thee'll be
married tomorrow night if thee goes nigh him' Joined in smoke,
wedded in fire, bedded in the ashes! Bedded in the ashes, do ye hear
me?"
The madwoman advanced
on her, railing, but Susan had no more time to listen. The day was fleeting.
There would be time to do the things that needed doing, but only if she moved
at speed.
"Goodbye,"
she said again, and then galloped away. Her aunt's last words followed her: In
the ashes, do ye hear me?
3
On her way out of town
along the Great Road, Susan saw riders coming toward her, and got off the
highway. This would not, she felt, be a good time to meet pilgrims. There was
an old granary nearby; she rode Pylon behind it, stroked his neck, murmured for
him to be quiet.
It took the riders
longer to reach her position than she would have expected, and when they
finally got there, she saw why. Rhea was with them, sitting in a black cart
covered with magical symbols. The witch had been scary when Susan had seen her
on the night of the Kissing Moon, but still recognizably human; what the girl
saw passing before her now, rocking from side to side in the black cart and
clutching a bag in her lap, was an unsexed, sore-raddled creature that looked
more like a troll than a human being. With her were the Big Coffin Hunters.
"To
Seafront!" the thing in the cart screamed. "Hie you on, and at full
speed! I'll sleep in Thorin's bed tonight or know the reason why! Sleep in it
and piss in it, if I take a notion! Hie you on, I say!"
Depape—it was to his
horse that the cart had been harnessed—turned around and looked at her with
distaste and fear. "Still your mouth."
Her answer was a fresh
burst of laughter. She rocked from side to side, holding a bag on her lap with
one hand and pointing at Depape with the twisted, long-nailed index finger of
the other. Looking at her made Susan feel weak with terror, and she felt the
panic around her again, like some dark fluid that would happily drown her brain
if given half a chance.
She worked against the
feeling as best she could, holding onto her mind, refusing to let it turn into
what it had been before and would be again if she let it—a brainless bird
trapped in a barn, bashing into the walls and ignoring the open window through
which it had entered.
Even when the cart was
gone below the next hill and there was nothing left of them but dust hanging
in the air, she could hear Rhea's wild cackling.
4
She reached the hut in
the Bad Grass at one o' the clock. For a moment she just sat astride Pylon,
looking at it. Had she and Roland been here hardly twenty-four hours ago?
Making love and making plans? It was hard to believe, but when she dismounted
and went in, the wicker basket in which she had brought them a cold meal
confirmed it. It still sat upon the rickety table.
Looking at the hamper,
she realized she hadn't eaten since the previous evening—a miserable supper
with Hart Thorin that she'd only picked at, too aware of his eyes on her body.
Well, they'd done their last crawl, hadn't they? And she'd never have to walk
down another Seafront hallway wondering what door he was going to come
bursting out of like Jack out of his box, all grabbing hands and stiff, randy
prick.
Ashes,
she thought. Ashes and ashes. But not us, Roland. I swear, my darling, not
us.
She was frightened and
tense, trying to put everything she now must do in order—a process to be
followed just as there was a process to be followed when saddling a horse—but
she was also sixteen and healthy. One look at the hamper and she was ravenous.
She opened it, saw
there were ants on the two remaining cold beef sandwiches, brushed them off,
and gobbled the sandwiches down. The bread had gotten rather stiff, but she
hardly noticed. There was a half jar of sweet cider and part of a cake, as
well.
When she had finished
everything, she went to the north comer of the hut and moved the hides someone
had begun to cure and then lost interest in. There was a hollow beneath. Within
it, wrapped in soft leather, were Roland's guns.
If things go badly,
thee must come here and take them west to Gilead. Find my father.
With faint but genuine
curiosity, Susan wondered if Roland had really expected she would ride blithely
off to Gilead with his unborn child in her belly while he and his friends were
roasted, screaming and red-handed, on the Reap-Night bonfire.
She pulled one of the
guns out of its holster. It took her a moment or two to sec how
to get the revolver open, hut then the cylinder rolled out and she saw that
each chamber was loaded. She snapped it back into place and checked the other
one.
She concealed them in
the blanket-roll behind her saddle, just as Roland had, then mounted up and
headed east again. But not toward town. Not yet. She had one more stop to make
first.
5
At around two o' the
clock, word that Fran Lengyll would be speaking at the Town Gathering Hall
began to sweep through the town of Mejis. No one could have said where this
news (it was too firm and specific to be a rumor) began, and no one much cared;
they simply passed it on.
By three o' the clock,
the Gathering Hall was full, and two hundred or more stood outside, listening
as Lengyll's brief address was relayed back to them in whispers. Coral Thorin,
who had begun passing the news of Lengyll's impending appearance at the
Travellers' Rest, was not there. She knew what Lengyll was going to say; had,
in fact, supported Jonas's argument that it should be as simple and direct as
possible. There was no need for rabble-rousing; the townsfolk would be a mob by
sundown of
Reaping Day, a mob
always picked its own leaders, and it always picked the right ones.
Lengyll spoke with his
hat held in one hand and a silver reap-charm hanging from the front of his
vest. He was brief, he was rough, and he was convincing. Most folks in the
crowd had known him all their lives, and didn't doubt a word he said.
Hart Thorin and Kimba
Rimer had been murdered by Dearborn, Heath, and Stockworth, Lengyll told the
crowd of men in denim and women in faded gingham. The crime had come home to
them because of a certain item—a bird's skull—left in Mayor Thorin's lap.
Murmurs greeted this.
Many of Lengyll's listeners had seen the skull, either mounted on the horn of
Cuthbert's saddle or worn jauntily around his neck. They had laughed at his
prankishness. Now they thought of how he had laughed back at them, and realized
he must have been laughing at a different joke all along. Their faces darkened.
The weapon used to
slit the Chancellor's throat, Lengyll continued, had belonged to Dearborn. The
three young men had been taken that morning as they prepared to flee Mejis.
Their motivations were not entirely clear, but they were likely after horses.
If so, they would be for John Farson, who was known to pay well for good nags,
and in cash. They were, in other words, traitors to their own lands and to the
cause of the Affiliation.
Lengyll had planted
Brian Hockey's son Rufus three rows back. Now, exactly on time, Rufus Hookey
shouted out: "Has they confessed?"
"Aye,"
Lengyll said. "Confessed both murders, and spoke it most proud, so they
did."
A louder murmur at
this, almost a rumble. It ran backward like a wave to the outside, where it
went from mouth to mouth: most proud, most proud, they had murdered in the dark
of night and spoke it most proud.
Mouths were tucked
down. Fists clenched.
"Dearborn said
that Jonas and his friends had caught on to what they were doing, and took the
word to Rimer. They killed Chancellor Rimer to shut him up while they finished
their chores, and Thorin in case Rimer had passed word on."
This made little
sense, Latigo had argued. Jonas had smiled and nodded. No, he had said,
not a mite of sense, but it doesn't matter.
Lengyll was prepared
to answer questions, but none were asked. There was only the murmur, the dark
looks, the muted click and clink of reap-charms as people shifted on their
feet.
The boys were in jail.
Lengyll made no statement concerning what would happen to them next, and once
again he was not asked. He said that some of the activities scheduled for the
next day—the games, the rides, the turkey-run, the pumpkin-carving contest, the
pig-scramble, the riddling competition, and the dance—had been cancelled out
of respect for the tragedy. The things that really mattered would go on, of
course, as they always had and must: the cattle and livestock judging, the
horse-pull, the sheep-shearing, the stockline meetings, and the auctions:
horse, pig, cow, sheep. And the bonfire at moonrise. The bonfire and the
burning of the guys. Charyou tree was the end of Reaping Fair-Day, and
had been since time out of mind. Nothing would stop it save the end of the
world.
"The bonfire will
bum and the stuffy-guys will bum on it," Eldred Jonas had told Lengyll.
"That's all you're to say. It's all you need to say."
And he'd been right,
Lengyll saw. It was on every face. Not just the determination to do right, but
a kind of dirty eagerness. There were old ways, old rites of which the
red-handed stuffy-guys were one surviving remnant. There were los
ceremoniosos: Charyou tree. It had been generations since they had been
practiced (except, every once and again, in secret places out in the hills),
but sometimes when the world moved on, it came back to where it had been.
Keep it brief,
Jonas had said, and it had been fine advice, fine advice indeed. He wasn't a
man Lengyll would have wanted around in more peaceful times, but a useful one
in times such as these.
"Gods give you
peace," he said now, stepping back and folding his arms with his hands on
his shoulders to show he had finished. "Gods give us all peace."
"Long days and
peaceful nights," they returned in a low, automatic chorus. And then they
simply turned and left, to go wherever folks went on the afternoon before
Reaping. For a good many of them, Lengyll knew, it would be the Travellers' Rest
or the Bayview Hotel. He raised a hand and mopped his brow. He hated to be out
in front of people, and never so much as today, but he thought it had gone
well. Very well, indeed.
6
The crowd streamed
away without speaking. Most, as Lengyll had foreseen, headed for the saloons.
Their way took them past the jail, but few looked at it... and those few who
did, did so in tiny, furtive glances. The porch was empty (save for a plump
red-handed stuffy sprawled in Sheriff Avery's rocker), and the door stood ajar,
as it usually did on warm and sunny afternoons. The boys were inside, no doubt
about that, but there was no sign that they were being guarded with any
particular zeal.
If the men passing on
their way downhill to the Rest and the Bayview had banded together into one
group, they could have taken Roland and his friends with no trouble whatsoever.
Instead, they went by with their heads down, walking stolidly and with no
conversation to where the drinks were waiting. Today was not the day. Nor
tonight.
Tomorrow, however—
7
Not too far from the
Bar K, Susan saw something on the Barony's long slope of grazing-land that made
her rein up and simply sit in the saddle with her mouth open. Below her and
much farther east of her position, at least three miles away, a band of a dozen
cowboys had rounded up the biggest herd of Drop-runners she had ever seen:
perhaps four hundred head in all. They ran lazily, going where the vaqs
pointed them with no trouble.
Probably think they're
going in for the winter, Susan thought. But they weren't headed
in toward the ranches running along the crest of the Drop; the herd, so large
it flowed on the grass like a cloud-shadow, was headed west, toward Hanging
Rock.
Susan had believed
everything Roland said, but this made it true in a personal way, one she could
relate directly to her dead father. Horses, of courses.
"You
bastards," she murmured. "You horse-thieving bastards." She
turned Pylon and rode for the burned-out ranch. To her right, her shadow was
growing long. Overhead, the Demon Moon glimmered ghostly in the daylight sky.
8
She had worried that
Jonas might have left men at the Bar K—although why he would've she didn't
really know, and the fear turned out to be groundless in any case. The ranch
was as empty as it had been for the five or six years between the fire that had
put paid to it and the arrival of the boys from In-World. She could see signs
of that morning's confrontation, however, and when she went into the bunkhouse
where the three of them had slept, she at once saw the gaping hole in the
floorboards. Jonas had neglected to close it up again after taking Alain's and
Cuthbert's guns.
She went down the
aisle between the bunks, dropped to one knee, and looked into the hole.
Nothing. Yet she doubted if what she had come for had been there in the first
place—the hole wasn't big enough.
She paused, looking at
the three cots. Which was Roland's? She supposed she could find out—her nose
would tell her, she knew the smell of his hair and skin very well—but she
thought she would do better to put such soft impulses behind her. What she
needed now was to be hard and quick—to move without pausing or looking back.
Ashes,
Aunt Cord whispered in her head, almost too faintly to hear. Susan shook her
head impatiently, as if to clear that voice away, and walked out back.
There was nothing
behind the bunkhouse, nothing behind the privy or to either side of it. She
went around to the back of the old cook-shack next, and there she found what
she'd come looking for, placed casually and with no attempt at concealment: the
two small barrels she had last seen slung over Caprichoso's back.
The thought of the
mule summoned the thought of Sheemie, looking down at her from his man's height
and with his hopeful boy's face. I'd like to take a fin de ano kiss
from ye, so I would.
Sheemie, whose life
had been saved by "Mr. Arthur Heath." Sheemie, who had risked the
wrath of the witch by giving Cuthbert the note meant for her aunt. Sheemie, who
had brought these barrels up here. They had been smeared with soot to partially
camouflage them, and Susan got some on her hands and the sleeves of her shirt
as she took off the tops— more ashes. But the firecrackers were still inside:
the round, fist-sized big-bangers and the smaller ladyfingers.
She took plenty of
both, stuffing her pockets until they bulged and carrying more in her arms. She
stowed them in her saddlebags, then looked up at the sky. Three-thirty. She
wanted to get back to Hambry no earlier than twilight, and that meant at least
an hour to wait. There was a little time to be soft, after all.
Susan went back into
the bunkhouse and found the bed which had been Roland's easily enough. She
knelt beside it like a child saying bedtime prayers, put her face against his
pillow, and inhaled deeply.
"Roland,"
she said, her voice muffled. "How I love thee. How I love thee,
dear."
She lay on his bed and
looked toward the window, watching the light drain away. Once she raised her
hands in front of her eyes, examining the barrel-soot on her fingers. She
thought of going to the pump in front of the cookhouse and washing, but decided
not to. Let it stay. They were ka-tet, one from many—strong in purpose
and strong in love.
Let the ashes stay,
and do their worst.
9
My Susie has'er
faults, but she's always on time. Pat Delgado used to
say. Fearful punctual, that girl.
It was true on the
night before Reap. She skirted her own house and rode up to the Travellers' Rest
not ten minutes after the sun had finally gone behind the hills, filling the
High Street with thick mauve shadows.
The street was eerily
deserted, considering it was the night before Reap; the band which had played
in Green Heart every night for the last week was silent; there were periodic
rattles of firecrackers, but no yelling, laughing children; only a few of the
many colored lamps had been lit.
Stuffy-guys seemed to
peer from every shadow-thickened porch. Susan shivered at the sight of their
blank white-cross eyes.
Doings at the Rest
were similarly odd. The hitching-rails were crowded (even more horses had been
tied at the rails of the mercantile across the street) and light shone from
every window—so many windows and so many lights that the inn looked like a vast
ship on a darkened sea—but there was none of the usual riot and jubilation, all
set to the jagtime tunes pouring out of Sheb's piano.
She found she could
imagine the customers inside all too well— a hundred men, maybe more—simply
standing around and drinking. Not talking, not laughing, not chucking the dice
down Satan's Alley and cheering or groaning at the result. No bottoms stroked
or pinched; no Reap-kisses stolen; no arguments started out of loose mouths and
finished with hard fists. Just men drinking, not three hundred yards from where
her love and his friends were locked up. The men who were here wouldn't do
anything tonight but drink, though. And if she was lucky . . . brave and
lucky...
As she drew Pylon up
in front of the saloon with a murmured word, a shape rose out of the shadows.
She tensed, and then the first orangey light of the rising moon caught
Sheemie's face. She relaxed again—even laughed a little, mostly at herself. He
was a part of their ka-tet; she knew he was. Was it surprising that he
should know, as well?
"Susan," he
murmured, taking off his sombrero and holding it against his chest.
"I been waiting for'ee."
"Why?" she
asked.
" 'Cause I knew
ye'd come." He looked back over his shoulder at the Rest, a black bulk
spraying crazy light toward every point of the compass. "We're going to
let Arthur and them free, ain't we?"
"I hope so,"
she said.
"We have to. The
folks in there, they don't talk, but they don't have to talk. I knows,
Susan, daughter of Pat. I knows."
She supposed he did.
"Is Coral inside?"
Sheemie shook his
head. "Gone up to Mayor's House. She told Stanley she was going to help
lay out the bodies for the funeral day after tomorrow, but I don't think
she'll be here for the funeral. I think the Big Coffin Hunters is going and
she'll go with 'em." He raised a hand and swiped at his leaking eyes.
"Your mule, Sheemie—" "All saddled, and I got the long
halter." She looked at him, open-mouthed. "How did ye know—"
"Same way I knew ye'd be coming, Susan-sai. I just knew." He
shrugged, then pointed vaguely. "Capi's around the back. I tied him to the
cook's pump."
"That's good."
She fumbled in the saddlebag where she had put the smaller firecrackers.
"Here. Take some of these. Do'ee have a sulfur or two?"
"Aye." He
asked no questions, simply stuffed the firecrackers into his front pocket. She,
however, who had never been through the bat-wing doors of the Travellers' Rest
in her whole life, had another question for him.
"What do they do
with their coats and hats and scrapes when they come in, Sheemie? They
must take em off; drinking's warm work."
"Oh, aye. They
puts em on a long table just inside the door. Some fights about whose is whose
when they're ready to go home."
She nodded, thinking
hard and fast. He stood before her, still holding his sombrero against
his chest, letting her do what he could not ... at least not in the conventionally
understood way. At last she raised her head again.
"Sheemie, if you
help me, you're done in Hambry ... done in Mejis .. . done in the Outer Arc.
You go with us if we get away. You have to understand that. Do you?"
She saw he did; his
face fairly shone with the idea. "Aye, Susan! Go with you and Will
Dearborn and Richard Stockworth and my best friend, Mr. Arthur Heath! Go to
In-World! We'll see buildings and statues and women in gowns like fairy
princesses and—"
"If we're caught,
we'll be killed."
He stopped smiling,
but his eyes didn't waver. "Aye, killed we'll be if ta'en, most
like."
"Will you still
help me?"
"Capi's all
saddled," he repeated. Susan reckoned that was answer enough. She took
hold of the hand pressing the sombrero to Sheemie's chest (the hat's
crown was pretty well crushed, and not for the first time). She bent, holding
Sheemie's fingers with one hand and the horn of her saddle with the other, and
kissed his cheek. He smiled up at her.
"We'll do our
best, won't we?" she asked him.
"Aye, Susan
daughter of Pat. We'll do our best for our friends. Our very best."
"Yes. Now listen,
Sheemie. Very carefully."
She began to talk, and
Sheemie listened.
10
Twenty minutes later,
as the bloated orange moon struggled above the buildings of the town like a
pregnant woman climbing a steep hill, a lone vaquero led a mule along
Hill Street in the direction of the Sheriff's office. This end of Hill Street
was a pit of shadows. There was a little light around Green Heart, but even the
park (which would have been thronged, noisy, and brilliantly lit in any other
year) was mostly empty. Nearly all the booths were closed, and of those few
that remained open, only the fortune-teller was doing any business. Tonight all
fortunes were bad, but still they came—don't they always?
The vaquero was
wearing a heavy serape; if this particular cowboy had the breasts of a woman,
they were concealed. The vaq wore a large, sweat-stained sombrero;
if this cowboy had the face of a woman, it was likewise concealed. Low, from
beneath that hat's broad brim, came a voice singing "Careless Love."
The mule's small
saddle was buried under the large bundle which had been roped to it—cloth or
clothes of some kind, it might have been, although the deepening shadows made
it impossible to say for sure. Most amusing of all was what hung around the
mule's neck like some peculiar reap-charm: two sombreros and a drover's
hat strung on a length of rope.
As the vaq
neared the Sheriff's office, the singing ceased. The place might have been
deserted if not for the single dim light shining through one window. In the
porch rocker was a comical stuffy-guy wearing one of Herk Avery's embroidered
vests and a tin star. There were no guards; absolutely no sign that the three
most hated men in Mejis were sequestered within. And now, very faintly, the
vaquero could hear the strum of a guitar.
It was blotted out by
a thin rattle of firecrackers. The vaq looked over one shoulder and saw
a dim figure. It waved. The vaquero nodded, waved back, then tied the
mule to the hitching-post—the same one where Roland and his friends had tied
their horses when they had come to introduce themselves to the Sheriff, on a
summer day so long ago.
11
The door opened—no one
had bothered to lock it—while Dave Hollis was trying, for about the two
hundredth time, to play the bridge of "Captain Mills, You Bastard."
Across from him, Sheriff Avery sat rocked back in his desk chair with his hands
laced together on his paunch. The room flickered with mild orange lamplight.
"You keep it up,
Deputy Dave, and there won't have to be any execution," Cuthbert Allgood
said. He was standing at the door of one of the cells with his hands wrapped
around the bars. "We'll kill ourselves. In self-defense."
"Shut up,
maggot," Sheriff Avery said. He was half-dozing in the wake of a four-chop
dinner, thinking of how he would tell his brother (and his brother's wife, who
was killing pretty) in the next Barony about this heroic day. He would be
modest, but he would still get it across to them that he'd played a central
role; that if not for him, these three young ladrones might have—
"Just don't
sing," Cuthbert said to Dave. "I'll confess to the murder of Arthur
Eld himself if you just don't sing."
To Bert's left, Alain
was sitting cross-legged on his bunk. Roland was lying on his with his hands
behind his head, looking up at the ceiling. But at the moment the door's latch
clicked, he swung to a sitting position. As if he'd only been waiting.
"That'll be
Bridger," Deputy Dave said, gladly putting his guitar aside. He hated this
duty and couldn't wait to be relieved. Heath's jokes were the worst. That he
could continue to joke in the face of what was going to happen to them
tomorrow.
"I think it's
likely one of them," Sheriff Avery said, meaning the Big Coffin
Hunters.
In fact, it was
neither. It was a cowboy all but buried in a serape that looked much too
big for him (the ends actually dragged on the boards as he clumped in and shut
the door behind him), and wearing a hat that came way down over his eyes. To
Herk Avery, the fellow looked like somebody's idea of a cowboy stuffy.
"Say,
stranger!" he said, beginning to smile ... for this was surely someone's
joke, and Herk Avery could take a joke as well as any man. Especially after
four chops and a mountain of mashed. "Howdy! What business do ye—"
The hand which hadn't
closed the door had been under the scrape. When it came out, it was
clumsily holding a gun all three of the prisoners recognized at once. Avery
stared at it, his smile slowly fading. His hands unlaced themselves. His feet,
which had been propped up on his desk, came down to the floor.
"Whoa,
partner," he said slowly. "Let's talk about it."
"Get the keys off
the wall and unlock the cells," the vaq said in a hoarse,
artificially deep voice. Outside, unnoticed by all save Roland, more
firecrackers rattled in a dry, popping string.
"I can't hardly
do that," Avery said, easing open the bottom drawer of his desk with his
foot. There were several guns, left over from that morning, inside. "Now,
I don't know if that thing's loaded, but I don't hardly think a traildog like
you—"
The newcomer pointed
the gun at the desk and pulled the trigger. The report was deafening in the
little room, but Roland thought—hoped—that with the door shut, it would sound
like just another firecracker. Bigger than some, smaller than others.
Good girl,
he thought. Oh, good girl—but be careful. For gods' sake, Sue, be careful.
All three of them
standing in a line at the cell doors now, eyes wide and mouths tight.
The bullet struck the
comer of the Sheriff's rolltop and tore off a huge splinter. Avery screamed,
tilted back in his chair again, and went sprawling. His foot remained hooked
under the drawer-pull; the drawer shot out and overturned, spilling three
ancient firearms across the board floor.
"Susan, look
out!" Cuthbert shouted, and then: "No, Dave!"
At the end of his
life, it was duty and not fear of the Big Coffin Hunters which propelled Dave
Hollis, who had hoped to be Sheriff of Mejis himself when Avery retired (and,
he sometimes told his wife, Judy, a better one than Fatso had ever dreamed of
being). He forgot that he had serious questions about the way the boys had been
taken as well as about what they might or might not have done. All he thought
of then was that they were prisoners o' the Barony, and such would not
be taken if he could help it.
He lunged for the
cowboy in the too-big clothes, meaning to tear the gun out of his hands. And
shoot him with it, if necessary.
12
Susan was staring at
the yellow blaze of fresh wood on the comer of the Sheriff's desk, forgetting
everything in her amazement—so much damage inflicted by the single twitch of a
finger!—when Cuthbert's desperate shout awakened her to her position.
She shrank back
against the wall, avoiding Dave's first swipe at the oversized serape,
and, without thinking, pulled the trigger again. There was another loud
explosion, and Dave Hollis—a young man only two years older than she
herself—was flung backward with a smoking hole in his shirt between two points
of the star he wore. His eyes were wide and unbelieving. His monocle lay by one
outstretched hand on its length of black silk ribbon. One of his feet struck
his guitar and knocked it to the floor with a thrum nearly as musical as the
chords he had been trying to make.
"Dave," she
whispered. "Oh Dave, I'm sorry, what did I do?"
Dave tried once to get
up, then collapsed forward on his face. The hole going into the front of him
was small, but the one she was looking at now, the one coming out the back, was
huge and hideous, all black and red and charred edges of cloth ... as if she
had run him through with a blazing hot poker instead of shooting him with a
gun, which was supposed to be merciful and civilized and was clearly neither
one.
"Dave," she
whispered. "Dave, I..."
"Susan look
out!" Roland shouted.
It was Avery. He
scuttled forward on his hands and knees, seized her around the calves, and
yanked her feet out from under her. She came down on her bottom with a
tooth-rattling crash and was face to face with him—his frog-eyed, large-pored
face, his garlic-smelling hole of a mouth.
"Gods, ye're a girl,"
he whispered, and reached for her. She pulled the trigger of Roland's gun
again, setting the front of her serape on fire and blowing a hole in the
ceiling. Plaster dust drifted down. Avery's ham sized hands settled around her
throat, cutting off her wind. Somewhere far away, Roland shrieked her name.
She had one more
chance.
Maybe.
One's enough, Sue,
her father spoke inside of her head. One's all ye need, my dear.
She cocked Roland's
pistol with the side of her thumb, socked the muzzle deep into the flab hanging
from the underside of Sheriff Herk Avery's head, and pulled the trigger.
The mess was
considerable.
13
Avery's head dropped
into her lap, as heavy and wet as a raw roast. Above it, she could feel growing
heat. At the bottom edge of her vision was the yellow flicker of fire.
"On the
desk!" Roland shouted, yanking the door of his cell so hard it rattled in
its frame. "Susan, the water-pitcher! For your father's sake!"
She rolled Avery's
head out of her lap, got to her feet, and staggered to the desk with the front
of the serape burning. She could smell its charred stench and was
grateful in some far comer of her mind that she'd had time, while waiting for
dusk, to tie her hair behind her.
The pitcher was almost
full, but not with water; she could smell the sweet-sour tang of graf.
She doused herself with it, and there was a brisk hissing as the liquid hit the
flames. She stripped the serape off (the oversized sombrero came
with it) and threw it on the floor. She looked at Dave again, a boy she had
grown up with, one she might even have kissed behind the door of Hockey's, once
upon an antique time.
"Susan!" It
was Roland's voice, harsh and urgent. "The keys! Hurry!"
Susan grabbed the
keyring from the nail on the wall. She went to Roland's cell first and thrust
the ring blindly through the bars. The air was thick with smells of gunsmoke,
burned wool, blood. Her stomach clenched helplessly at every breath.
Roland picked the
right key, reached back through the bars with it, and plunged it into the
lockbox. A moment later he was out, and hugging her roughly as her tears broke.
A moment after that, Cuthbert and Alain were out, as well.
"You're an
angel!" Alain said, hugging her himself.
"Not I," she
said, and began to cry harder. She thrust the gun at Roland. It felt filthy in
her hand; she never wanted to touch one again. "Him and me played together
when we were berries. He was one of the good ones—never a braid-puller or a
bully—and he grew up a good one. Now I've ended him, and who'll tell his
wife?"
Roland took her back
into his arms and held her there for a moment. "You did what you had to.
If not him, then us. Does thee not know it?"
She nodded against his
chest. "Avery, him I don't mind so much, but Dave . . ."
"Come on,"
Roland said. "Someone might recognize the gunshots for what they were. Was
it Sheemie throwing firecrackers?"
She nodded. "I've
got clothes for you. Hats and scrapes."
Susan hurried back to
the door, opened it, peeked out in either direction, then slipped into the
growing dark.
Cuthbert took the
charred serape and put it over Deputy Dave's face. "Tough luck,
partner," he said. "You got caught in between, didn't you? I reckon
you wasn't so bad."
Susan came back in,
burdened with the stolen gear which had been tied to Capi's saddle. Sheemie was
already off on his next errand without having to be told. If the inn-boy was a
halfwit, she'd known a lot of folks in her time who were running on quarters
and eighths.
"Where'd you get
this stuff?" Alain asked.
"The Travellers'
Rest. And I didn't. Sheemie did." She held the hats out. "Come on,
hurry."
Cuthbert took the
headgear and passed it out. Roland and Alain had already slipped into the scrapes;
with the hats added and pulled well down over their faces, they could have been
any Drop-vaqs in Barony.
"Where are we
going?" Alain asked as they stepped out onto the porch. The street was
still dark and deserted at this end; the gunshots had attracted no attention.
"Hockey's, to
start with," Susan said. "That's where your horses are."
They went down the
street together in a little group of four. Capi was gone; Sheemie had taken the
mule along. Susan's heart was thudding rapidly and she could feel sweat standing
out on her brow, but she still felt cold. Whether or no what she had done was
murder, she had ended two lives this evening, and crossed a line that could
never be recrossed in the other direction. She had done it for Roland, for her
love, and simply knowing she could have done no different now offered
some consolation.
Be happy together, ye
faithless, ye cozeners, ye murderers. I curse thee with the ashes.
Susan seized Roland's
hand, and when he squeezed, she squeezed back. And as she looked up at Demon
Moon, its wicked face now draining from choleric red-orange to silver, she
thought that when she had pulled the trigger on poor, earnest Dave Hollis, she
had paid for her love with the dearest currency of all—had paid with her soul.
If he left her now, her aunt's curse would be fulfilled, for only ashes would
remain.
CHAPTER IX
REAPING
1
As they stepped into
the stable, which was lit by one dim gas lamp, a shadow moved out of one of the
stalls. Roland, who had belted on both guns, now drew them. Sheemie looked at
him with an uncertain smile, holding a stirrup in one hand. Then the smile
broadened, his eyes flashed with happiness, and he ran toward them.
Roland bolstered his
guns and made ready to embrace the boy, but Sheemie ran past him and threw
himself into Cuthbert's arms.
"Whoa,
whoa," Cuthbert said, first staggering back comically and then lifting
Sheemie off his feet. "You like to knock me over, boy!"
"She got ye
out!" Sheemie cried. "Knew she would, so I did! Good old Susan!"
Sheemie looked around at Susan, who stood beside Roland. She was still pale,
but now seemed composed. Sheemie turned back to Cuthbert and planted a kiss
directly in the center of Bert's forehead.
"Whoa!" Bert
said again. "What's that for?"
" 'Cause I love
you, good old Arthur Heath! You saved my life!"
"Well, maybe I
did," Cuthbert said, laughing in an embarrassed way (his borrowed
sombrero, too large to begin with, now sat comically askew on his head),
"but if we don't get a move on, I won't have saved it for long."
"Horses are all
saddled," Sheemie said. "Susan told me to do it and I did. I did it
just right. I just have to put this stirrup on Mr. Richard Stock-worth's horse,
because the one on there's 'bout worn through."
"That's a job for
later," Alain said, taking the stirrup. He put it aside, then turned to
Roland. "Where do we go?"
Roland's first thought
was that they should return to the Thorin mausoleum.
Sheemie reacted with
instant horror. "The boneyard? And with Demon Moon at the full?" He
shook his head so violently that his sombrero came off and his hair flew
from side to side. "They're dead in there, sai Dearborn, but if ye tease
em during the time of the Demon, they's apt to get up and walk!"
"It's no good,
anyway," Susan said. "The women of the town'll be lining the way from
Seafront with flowers, and filling the mausoleum, too. Olive will be in charge,
if she's able, but my aunt and Coral are apt to be in the company. Those aren't
ladies we want to meet."
"All right,"
Roland said. "Let's mount up and ride. Think about it, Susan. You too,
Sheemie. We want a place where we can hide up until dawn, at least, and it
should be a place we can get to in less than an hour. Off the Great Road, and
in any direction from Hambry but northwest."
"Why not
northwest?" Alain asked.
"Because that's
where we're going now. We've got a job to do ... and we're going to let them
know we're doing it. Eldred Jonas most of all." He offered a thin blade of
smile. "I want him to know the game is over. No more Castles. The real
gunslingers are here. Let's see if he can deal with them."
2
An hour later, with
the moon well above the trees, Roland's ka-tet arrived at the Citgo
oilpatch. They rode out parallel to the Great Road for safety's sake, but, as
it happened, the caution was wasted: they saw not one rider on the road, going
in either direction. It's as if Reaping's been cancelled this year,
Susan thought . .. then she thought of the red-handed stuffies, and shivered.
They would have painted Roland's hands red tomorrow night, and still would, if
they were caught. Not just him, either. All of us.
Sheemie, too.
They left the horses
(and Caprichoso, who had trotted ill-temperedly but nimbly behind them on a
tether) tied to some long-dead pumping equipment in the southeastern comer of
the patch, and then walked slowly toward the working derricks, which were
clustered in the same area. They spoke in whispers when they spoke at all.
Roland doubted if that was necessary, but whispers here seemed natural enough.
To Roland, Citgo was far spookier than the graveyard, and while he doubted that
the dead in that latter place awoke even when Old Demon was full, there were
some very unquiet corpses here, squalling zombies that stood rusty-weird
in the moonlight with their pistons going up and down like marching feet.
Roland led them into
the active part of the patch, nevertheless, past a sign which read how's your
hardhat? and another reading we produce oil, we refine safety. They stopped at
the foot of a derrick grinding so loudly that Roland had to shout in order to
be heard.
"Sheemie! Give me
a couple of those big-bangers!"
Sheemie had taken a
pocketful from Susan's saddlebag and now handed a pair of them over. Roland
took Bert by the arm and pulled him forward. There was a square of rusty fencing
around the derrick, and when the boys tried to climb it, the horizontals
snapped like old bones. They looked at each other in the running shadows
combined of machinery and moonlight, nervous and amused.
Susan twitched
Roland's arm. "Be careful!" she shouted over the rhythmic whumpa-whumpa-whumpa
of the derrick machinery. She didn't look frightened, he saw, only excited and
alert.
He grinned, pulled her
forward, and kissed the lobe of her ear. "Be ready to run," he
whispered. "If we do this right, there's going to be a new candle here at
Citgo. A hellacious big one."
He and Cuthbert ducked
under the lowest strut of the rusty derrick tower and stood next to the
equipment, wincing at the cacophony. Roland wondered that it hadn't torn itself
apart years ago. Most of the works were housed in rusty metal blocks, but he
could see a gigantic turning shaft of some kind, gleaming with oil that must be
supplied by automated jets. Up this close, there was a gassy smell that
reminded him of the jet that flared rhythmically on the other side of the
oilpatch.
"Giant-farts!"
Cuthbert shouted.
"What?"
"I said it smells
like . . . aw, never mind! Let's do it if-we can ... can we? "
Roland didn't know. He
walked toward the machinery crying out beneath metal cowls which were painted
a faded, rusting green. Bert followed with some reluctance. The two of them
slid into a short aisle, smelly and baking hot, that took them almost directly
beneath the derrick. Ahead of them, the shaft at the end of the piston turned
steadily, shedding oily teardrops down its smooth sides. Beside it was a curved
pipe— almost surely an overflow pipe, Roland thought. An occasional drop of
crude oil fell from its lip, and there was a black puddle on the ground
beneath. He pointed at it, and Cuthbert nodded.
Shouting would do no
good in here; the world was a roaring, squealing din. Roland curled one hand
around his friend's neck and pulled Cuthbert's ear to his lips; he held a
big-bang up in front of Bert's eyes with the other.
"Light it and
run," he said. "I'll hold it, give you as much time as I can. That's
for my benefit as much as for yours. I want a clear path back through that
machinery, do you understand?"
Cuthbert nodded
against Roland's lips, then turned the gunslinger's head so he could speak in
the same fashion. "What if there's enough gas here to bum the air when I
make a spark?"
Roland stepped back.
Raised his palms in a "How-do-I-know?" gesture. Cuthbert laughed and
drew out a box of sulfur matches which he had scooped off Avery's desk before
leaving. He asked with his eyebrows if Roland was ready. Roland nodded.
The wind was blowing
hard, but under the derrick the surrounding machinery cut it off and the flame
from the sulfur rose straight. Roland held out the big-banger, and had a
momentary, painful memory of his mother: how she had hated these things, how
she had always been sure that he would lose an eye or a finger to one.
Cuthbert tapped his
chest above his heart and kissed his palm in the universal gesture of good
luck. Then he touched the flame to the fuse. It began to sputter. Bert turned,
pretended to bang off a covered block of machinery—that was Bert, Roland
thought; he would joke on the gallows—and then dashed back down the short
corridor they'd used to get here.
Roland held the round
firework as long as he dared, then lobbed it into the overflow pipe. He winced
as he turned away, half-expecting what Bert was afraid of: that the very air
would explode. It didn't. He ran down the short aisle, came into the clear, and
saw Cuthbert standing just outside the broken bit of fencing. Roland flapped
both hands at him—Go, you idiot, go!—and then the world blew up behind
him.
The sound was a deep,
belching thud that seemed to shove his eardrums inward and suck the breath out
of his throat. The ground rolled under his feet like a wave under a boat, and a
large, warm hand planted itself in the center of his back and shoved him
forward. He thought he ran with it for a step—maybe even two or three steps—and
then he was lifted off his feet and hurled at the fence, where Cuthbert
was no longer standing; Cuthbert was sprawled on his back, staring up at
something behind Roland. The boy's eyes were wide and wondering; his mouth hung
open. Roland could see all this very well, because Citgo was now as bright as
in full daylight. They had lit their own Reaping bonfire, it seemed, a night
early and much brighter than the one in town could ever hope to be.
He went skidding on
his knees to where Cuthbert lay, and grabbed him under one arm. From behind
them came a vast, ripping roar, and now chunks of metal began to fall around
them. They got up and ran toward where Alain stood in front of Susan and
Sheemie, trying to protect them.
Roland took a quick
look back over his shoulder and saw that the remains of the derrick—about half
of it still stood—were glowing blackish red, like a heated horseshoe, around a
flaring yellow torch that ran perhaps a hundred and fifty feet into the sky.
It was a start. He didn't know how many other derricks they could fire before
folk began arriving from town, but he was determined to do as many as possible,
no matter what the risks might be. Blowing up the tankers at Hanging Rock was
only half the job. Farson's source had to be wiped out.
Further firecrackers
dropped down further overflow pipes turned out not to be necessary. There was a
network of interconnected pipes under the oilpatch, most filled with natural
gas that had leaked in through ancient, decaying seals. Roland and Cuthbert
had no more than reached the others when there was a fresh explosion, and a
fresh tower of flame erupted from a derrick to the right of the one they had
set afire. A moment later, a third derrick—this one sixty full yards away from
the first two— exploded with a dragon's roar. The ironwork tore free of its
anchoring concrete pillars like a tooth pulled from a decayed gum. It rose on a
cushion of blazing blue and yellow, attained a height of perhaps seventy feet,
then heeled over and came crashing back down, spewing sparks in every
direction.
Another. Another. And
yet another.
The five young people
stood in their comer, stunned, holding their hands up to shield their eyes from
the glare. Now the oilpatch flared like a birthday cake, and the heat baking
toward them was enormous.
"Gods be
kind," Alain whispered.
If they lingered here
much longer, Roland realized, they would be popped like corn. There were the
horses to consider, too; they were well away from the main focus of the
explosions, but there was no guarantee that the focus would stay where it was;
already he saw two derricks that hadn't even been working engulfed in flames.
The horses would be terrified.
Hell, he was
terrified.
"Come on!"
he shouted.
They ran for the
horses through shifting yellow-orange brilliance.
3
At first Jonas thought
it was going on in his own head—that the explosions were part of their
lovemaking.
Lovemaking, yar.
Lovemaking, horseshit. He and Coral made love no more than donkeys did sums.
But it was something. Oh yes indeed it was.
He'd been with
passionate women before, ones who took you into a kind of oven-place and then
held you there, staring with greedy intensity as they pumped their hips, but
until Coral he'd never been with a woman that sparked such a powerfully
harmonic chord in himself. With sex, he had always been the kind of man who
took it when it came and forgot it when it didn't. But with Coral he only
wanted to take it, take it, and take it some more. When they were together they
made love like cats or ferrets, twisting and hissing and clawing; they bit at
each other and cursed at each other, and so far none of it was even close to
enough. When he was with her, Jonas sometimes felt as if he were being fried in
sweet oil.
Tonight there had been
a meeting with the Horsemen's Association, which had pretty much become the
Farson Association in these latter days. Jonas had brought them up to date, had
answered their idiotic questions, and had made sure they understood what
they'd be doing the next day. With that done, he had checked on Rhea, who had
been installed in Kimba Rimer's old suite. She hadn't even noticed Jonas
peering in at her. She sat in Rimer's high-ceilinged, book-lined study—behind
Rimer's ironwood desk, in Rimer's upholstered chair, looking as out of place as
a whore's bloomers on a church altar. On Rimer's desk was the Wizard's Rainbow.
She was passing her hands back and forth above it and muttering rapidly under
her breath, but the ball remained dark.
Jonas had locked her
in and had gone to Coral. She had been waiting for him in the parlor where
tomorrow's Conversational would have been held. There were plenty of bedrooms
in that wing, but it was to her dead brother's that she had led him ... and not
by accident, either, Jonas was sure. There they made love in the canopied
bed Hart Thorin would never share with his gilly.
It was fierce, as it
had always been, and Jonas was approaching his orgasm when the first oil
derrick blew. Christ, she's something, he thought. There's never in
the whole damned world been a woman like—
Then two more explosions,
in rapid succession, and Coral froze for a moment beneath him before beginning
to thrust her hips again. "Citgo," she said in a hoarse, panting
voice.
"Yar," he
growled, and began to thrust with her. He had lost all interest in making
love, but they had reached the point where it was impossible to stop, even
under threat of death or dismemberment.
Two minutes later he
was striding, naked, toward Thorin's little lick of a balcony, his half-erect
penis wagging from side to side ahead of him like some halfwit's idea of a
magic wand. Coral was a step behind him, as naked as he was.
"Why now?"
she burst out as Jonas thrust open the balcony door. "I could have come
three more times!"
Jonas ignored her. The
countryside looking northwest was a moon-gilded darkness . . . except where the
oilpatch was. There he saw a fierce yellow core of light. It was spreading and
brightening even as he watched; one thudding explosion after another hammered
across the intervening miles.
He felt a curious
darkening in his mind—that feeling had been there ever since the brat,
Dearborn, by the some febrile leap of intuition, had recognized him for who and
what he was. Making love to the energetic Coral melted that feeling a little,
but now, looking at the burning tangle of fire which had five minutes ago been
the Good Man's oil reserves, it came back with debilitating intensity, like a
swamp-fever that sometimes quits the flesh but hides in the bones and never
really leaves. You 're in the west, Dearborn had said. The soul of a
man such as you can never leave the west. Of course it was true, and he
hadn't needed any such titmonkey as Will Dearborn to tell him ... but now that
it had been said, there was a part of his mind that couldn't stop thinking
about it.
Fucking Will Dearborn.
Where, exactly, was he now, him and his pair of good-mannered mates? In Avery's
culabozo? Jonas didn't think so. Not anymore.
Fresh explosions
ripped the night. Down below, men who had run and shouted in the wake of the
early morning's assassinations were running and shouting again.
"It's the biggest
Reaping firework that ever was," Coral said in a low voice.
Before Jonas could
reply, there was a hard hammering on the bedroom door. It was thrown open a
second later, and Clay Reynolds came clumping across the room, wearing a pair
of blue jeans and nothing else. His hair was wild; his eyes were wilder.
"Bad news from
town, Eldred," he said. "Dearborn and the other two In-World
brats"
Three more explosions,
falling almost on top of each other. From the blazing Citgo oilpatch a great
red-orange fireball rose lazily into the black of night, faded, disappeared.
Reynolds walked out onto the balcony and stood between them at the railing,
unmindful of their nakedness. He stared at the fireball with wide, wondering
eyes until it was gone. As gone as the brats. Jonas felt that curious,
debilitating gloom trying to steal over him again.
"How did they get
away?" he asked. "Do you know? Does Avery?"
"Avery's dead.
The deputy who was with him, too. 'Twas another deputy found em, Todd Bridger .
. . Eldred, what's going on out there? What happened?"
"Oh, that's your
boys," Coral said. "Didn't take em long to start their own Reaping
party, did it?"
How much heart do they
have? Jonas asked himself. It was a good
question—maybe the only one that mattered. Were they now done making trouble
... or just getting started?
He once more wanted to
be out of here—out of Seafront, out of Hambry, out of Mejis. Suddenly, more
than anything, he wanted to be miles and wheels and leagues away. He had
bounded around his Hillock, it was too late to go back, and now he felt
horribly exposed.
"Clay."
"Yes, Eldred?"
But the man's eyes—and
his mind—were still on the conflagration at Citgo. Jonas took his shoulder and
turned Reynolds toward him. Jonas felt his own mind starting to pick up speed,
ticking past points and details, and welcomed the feeling. That queer, dark
sense of fatalism faded and disappeared.
"How many men are
here?" he asked.
Reynolds frowned,
thought about it. "Thirty-five." he said. "Maybe."
"How many
armed?"
"With guns?"
"No, with
pea-blowers, you damned fool."
"Probably . .
." Reynolds pulled his lower lip, frowning more fiercely than ever.
"Probably a dozen. That's guns likely to work, you ken."
"The big boys
from the Horsemen's Association? Still all here?"
"I think
so."
"Get Lengyll and
Renfrew. At least you won't have to wake em up; they'll all be up, and
most of em right down there." Jonas jerked a thumb at the courtyard.
"Tell Renfrew to put together an advance party. Armed men. I'd like eight
or ten, but I'll take five. Have that old woman's cart harnessed to the
strongest, hardiest pony this place has got. Tell that old fuck Miguel that if
the pony he chooses dies in the traces between here and Hanging Rock, he'll be
using his wrinkled old balls for earplugs."
Coral Thorin barked
brief, harsh laughter. Reynolds glanced at her, did a double-take at her
breasts, then looked back at Jonas with an effort.
"Where's
Roy?" Jonas asked.
Reynolds looked up.
"Third floor. With some little serving maid."
"Kick him
out," Jonas said. "It's his job to get the old bitch ready to
ride."
"We're
going?"
"Soon as we can.
You and me first, with Renfrew's boys, and Lengyll behind, with the rest of the
men. You just make sure Hash Renfrew's with us, Clay; that man's got sand in
his craw."
"What about the
horses out on the Drop?"
"Never mind the
everfucking horses." There was another explosion at Citgo; another
fireball floated into the sky. Jonas couldn't see the dark clouds of smoke
which must be rushing up, or smell the oil; the wind, out of the east and into
the west, would be carrying both away from town.
"But—"
"Just do as I
say." Jonas now saw his priorities in clear, ascending order. The horses
were on the bottom—Farson could find horses damned near anywhere. Above them
were the tankers gathered at Hanging Rock. They were more important than ever
now, because the source was gone. Lose the tankers, and the Big Coffin Hunters
could forget going home.
Yet most important of
all was Parson's little piece of the Wizard's Rainbow. It was the one truly
irreplaceable item. If it was broken, let it be broken in the care of George
Latigo, not that of Eldred Jonas.
"Get
moving," he told Reynolds. "Depape rides after, with Lengyll's men.
You with me. Go on. Make it happen."
"And me?"
Coral asked.
He reached out and
tugged her toward him. "I ain't forgot you, darlin," he said.
Coral nodded and
reached between his legs, oblivious of the staring Clay Reynolds.
"Aye," she said. "And I ain't forgot you."
4
They escaped Citgo
with ringing ears and slightly singed around the edges but not really hurt,
Sheemie riding double behind Cuthbert and Caprichoso clattering after, at the
end of his long lead.
It was Susan who came
up with the place they should go, and like most solutions, it seemed completely
obvious . . . once someone had thought of it. And so, not long after Reaping
Eve had become Reaping Mom, the five of them came to the hut in the Bad Grass
where Susan and Roland had on several occasions met to make love.
Cuthbert and Alain
unrolled blankets, then sat on them to examine the guns they had liberated from
the Sheriff's office. They had also found Bert's slingshot.
"These're hard
calibers," Alain said, holding one up with the cylinder sprung and peering
one-eyed down the barrel. "If they don't throw too high or wide, Roland, I
think we can do some business with them."
"I wish we had
that rancher's machine-gun," Cuthbert said wistfully.
"You know what
Cort would say about a gun like that?" Roland asked, and Cuthbert burst
out laughing. So did Alain.
"Who's
Cort?" Susan asked.
"The tough man
Eldred Jonas only thinks he is," Alain said. "He was our
teacher."
Roland suggested that
they catch an hour or two of sleep—the next day was apt to be difficult. That
it might also be their last was something he didn't feel he had to say.
"Alain, are you
listening?"
Alain, who knew
perfectly well that Roland wasn't speaking of his ears or his attention-span,
nodded.
"Do you hear
anything?"
"Not yet."
"Keep at
it."
"I will . . . but
I can't promise anything. The touch is flukey. You know that as well as I
do."
"Just keep
trying."
Sheemie had carefully
spread two blankets in the comer next to his proclaimed best friend. "He's
Roland . . . and he's Alain . . . who are you, good old Arthur Heath?
Who are you really?"
"Cuthbert's my
name." He stuck out his hand. "Cuthbert Allgood. How do y'do, and how
do y'do, and how do y'do again?"
Sheemie shook the
offered hand, then began giggling. It was a cheerful, unexpected sound, and
made them all smile. Smiling hurt Roland a little, and he guessed that if he
could see his own face, he'd observe a pretty good bum from being so close to
the exploding derricks.
"Key-youth-bert,"
Sheemie said, giggling. "Oh my! Key-youth-bert, that's a funny name, no
wonder you're such a funny fellow. Key-youth-bert, oh-aha-ha-ha, that's a pip,
a real pip!"
Cuthbert smiled and
nodded. "Can I kill him now, Roland, if we don't need him any
longer?"
"Save him a bit,
why don't you?" Roland said, then turned to Susan, his own smile fading.
"Will thee walk out with me a bit, Sue? I'd talk to thee."
She looked up at him,
trying to read his face. "All right." She held out her hand. Roland
took it, they walked into the moonlight together, and beneath its light, Susan
felt dread take hold of her heart.
5
They walked out in
silence, through sweet-smelling grass that tasted good to cows and horses even
as it was expanding in their bellies, first bloating and then killing them. It
was high—at least a foot taller than Roland's head—and still green as summer.
Children sometimes got lost in the Bad Grass and died there, but Susan had
never feared to be here with Roland, even when there were no sky-markers to
steer by; his sense of direction was uncannily perfect.
"Sue, thee disobeyed
me in the matter of the guns," he said at last.
She looked at him,
smiling, half-amused and half-angry. "Does thee wish to be back in thy
cell, then? Thee and thy friends?"
"No, of course
not. Such bravery!" He held her close and kissed her. When he drew back,
they were both breathing hard. He took her by the arms and looked into her
eyes. "But thee mustn't disobey me this time."
She looked at him
steadily, saying nothing.
"Thee
knows," he said. "Thee knows what I'd tell thee."
"Aye,
perhaps."
"Say. Better you
than me, maybe."
"I'm to stay at
the hut while you and the others go. Sheemie and I are to stay."
He nodded. "Will
you? Will thee?”
She thought of how
unfamiliar and wretched Roland's gun had felt in her hand as she held it
beneath the serape; of the wide, unbelieving look in Dave's eyes as the
bullet she'd fired into his chest flung him backward; of how the first time
she'd tried to shoot Sheriff Avery, the bullet had only succeeded in setting
her own clothing afire, although he had been right there in front of her. They
didn't have a gun for her (unless she took one of Roland's), she couldn't use
one very well in any case ... and, more important, she didn't want to
use one. Under those circumstances, and with Sheemie to think about, too, it was
best she just stay out of the way.
Roland was waiting
patiently. She nodded. "Sheemie and I'll wait for thee. It's my
promise."
He smiled, relieved.
"Now pay me back
with honesty, Roland."
"If I can."
She looked up at the
moon, shuddered at the ill-omened face she saw, and looked back at Roland.
"What chance thee'll come back to me?"
He thought about this
very carefully, still holding to her arms. "Far better than Jonas
thinks," he said at last. "We'll wait at the edge of the Bad Grass
and should be able to mark his coming well enough."
"Aye, the herd o'
horses I saw—"
"He may come
without the horses," Roland said, not knowing how well he had matched
Jonas's thinking, "but his folk will make noise even if they come without
the herd. If there's enough of them, we'll see them, as well—they'll cut a line
through the grass like a part in hair."
Susan nodded. She had
seen this many times from the Drop—the mysterious parting of the Bad Grass as
groups of men rode through it.
"If they're
looking for thee, Roland? If Jonas sends scouts ahead?"
"I doubt he'll
bother." Roland shrugged. "If they do, why, we'll kill them.
Silent, if we can. Killing's what we were trained to do; we'll do it."
She turned her hands
over, and now she was gripping his arms instead of the other way around. She
looked impatient and afraid. "Thee hasn't answered my question. What
chance I'll see thee back?"
He thought it over.
"Even toss," he said at last.
She closed her eyes as
if struck, drew in a breath, let it out, opened her eyes again. "Bad,"
she said, "yet maybe not as bad as I thought. And if thee doesn't come
back? Sheemie and I go west, as thee said before?"
"Aye, to Gilead.
There'll be a place of safety and respect for you there, dear, no matter what .
. . but it's especially important that you go if you don't hear the
tankers explode. Thee knows that, doesn't thee?"
"To warn yer
people—thy ka-tet."
Roland nodded.
"I'll warn them,
no fear. And keep Sheemie safe, too. He's as much the reason we've got this far
as anything I've done."
Roland was counting on
Sheemie for more than she knew. If he and Bert and Alain were killed, it
was Sheemie who would stabilize her, give her reason to go on.
"When does thee
leave?" Susan asked. "Do we have time to make love?"
"We have time,
but perhaps it's best we don't," he said. "It's going to be hard
enough to leave thee again without. Unless you really want to . . ." His
eyes half-pleaded with her to say yes.
"Let's just go
back and lie down a bit," she said, and took his hand. For a moment it
trembled on her lips to tell him that she was kindled with his child, but at
the last moment she kept silent. There was enough for him to think about
without that added, mayhap ... and she didn't want to pass such happy news
beneath such an ugly moon. It would surely be bad luck.
They walked back
through high grass that was already springing together along their path.
Outside the hut, he turned her toward him, put his hands on her cheeks, and
softly kissed her again.
"I will love thee
forever, Susan," he said. "Come whatever storms."
She smiled. The upward
movement of her cheeks spilled a pair of tears from her eyes. "Come
whatever storms," she agreed. She kissed him again, and they went inside.
6
The moon had begun to
descend when a party of eight rode out beneath the arch with come in peace writ
upon it in the Great Letters. Jonas and Reynolds were in the lead. Behind them
came Rhea's black wagon, drawn by a trotting pony that looked strong enough to
go all night and half the next day. Jonas had wanted to give her a driver, but
Rhea refused—"Never was an animal I didn't get on with better than any
man ever could," she'd told him, and that seemed to be true. The reins lay
limp in her lap; the pony worked smart without them. The other five men
consisted of Hash Renfrew, Quint, and three of Renfrew's best vaqueros.
Coral had wanted to
come as well, but Jonas had different ideas. "If we're killed, you can go
on more or less as before," he'd said. "There'll be nothing to tie
you to us."
"Without ye, I'm
not sure there'd be any reason to go on," she said.
"Ar, quit that
schoolgirl shit, it don't become you. You'd find plenty of reasons to keep
staggerin down the path, if you had to put your mind to it. If all goes well—as
I expect it will—and you still want to be with me, ride out of here as soon as
you get word of our success. There's a town west of here in the Vi Castis
Mountains. Ritzy. Go there on the fastest horse you can swing a leg over.
You'll be there ahead of us by days, no matter how smart we're able to push along.
Find a respectable inn that'll take a woman on her own . . . if there is such a
thing in Ritzy. Wait. When we get there with the tankers, you just fall into
the column at my right hand. Have you got it?"
She had it. One woman
in a thousand was Coral Thorin—sharp as Lord Satan, and able to fuck like
Satan's favorite harlot. Now if things only turned out to be as simple as he'd
made them sound.
Jonas fell back until
his horse was pacing alongside the black cart. The ball was out of its bag and
lay in Rhea's lap. "Anything?" he asked. He both hoped and dreaded to
see that deep pink pulse inside it again.
"Nay. It'll speak
when it needs to, though—count on it."
"Then what good
are you, old woman?"
"Ye'll know when
the time comes," Rhea said, looking at him with arrogance (and some fear
as well, he was happy to see).
Jonas spurred his
horse back to the head of the little column. He had decided to take the ball
from Rhea at the slightest sign of trouble. In truth, it had already inserted
its strange, addicting sweetness into his head; he thought about that single
pink pulse of light he'd seen far too much.
Balls,
he told himself. Battlesweat's all I've got. Once this business is over,
I'll be my old self again.
Nice if true, but...
... but he had, in
truth, begun to wonder.
Renfrew was now riding
with Clay. Jonas nudged his horse in between them. His dicky leg was aching
like a bastard; another bad sign.
"Lengyll?"
he asked Renfrew.
"Putting together
a good bunch," Renfrew said, "don't you fear Fran Lengyll. Thirty
men."
"Thirty! God
Harry's body, I told you I wanted forty! Forty at least!"
Renfrew measured him
with a pale-eyed glance, then winced at a particularly vicious gust of the
freshening wind. He pulled his neckerchief up over his mouth and nose. The vaqs
riding behind had already done so. "How afraid of these three boys are
you, Jonas?"
"Afraid for both
of us, I guess, since you're too stupid to know who they are or what they're
capable of." He raised his own neckerchief, then forced his voice into a more
reasonable timbre. It was best he do so; he needed these bumpkins yet awhile
longer. Once the ball was turned over to Latigo, that might change.
"Though mayhap we'll never see them."
"It's likely
they're already thirty miles from here and riding west as fast as their
horses'll take em," Renfrew agreed. "I'd give a crown to know how
they got loose."
What does it matter,
you idiot? Jonas thought, but said nothing.
"As for Lengyll's
men, they'll be the hardest boys he can lay hands on—if it comes to a fight,
those thirty will fight like sixty."
Jonas's eyes briefly
met Clay's. I'll believe it when I see it, Clay's brief glance said, and
Jonas knew again why he had always liked this one better than Roy Depape.
"How many
armed?"
"With guns? Maybe
half. They'll be no more than an hour behind us."
"Good." At
least their back door was covered. It would have to do. And he couldn't wait to
be rid of that thrice-cursed ball.
Oh?
whispered a sly, half-mad voice from a place much deeper than his heart. Oh,
can't you?
Jonas ignored the
voice until it stilled. Half an hour later, they turned off the road and onto
the Drop. Several miles ahead, moving in the wind like a silver sea, was the
Bad Grass.
7
Around the time that
Jonas and his party were riding down the Drop, Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain were
swinging up into their saddles. Susan and Sheemie stood by the doorway to the
hut, holding hands and watching them solemnly.
"Thee'll hear the
explosions when the tankers go, and smell the smoke," Roland said.
"Even with the wind the wrong way, I think thee'll smell it. Then, no more
than an hour later, more smoke. There." He pointed. "That'll be the
brush piled in front of the canyon's mouth."
"And if we don't
see those things?"
"Into the west.
But thee will, Sue. I swear thee will."
She stepped forward,
put her hands on his thigh, and looked up at him in the latening moonlight. He
bent; put his hand lightly against the back of her head; put his mouth on her
mouth.
"Go thy course in
safety," Susan said as she drew back from him.
"Aye,"
Sheemie added suddenly. "Stand and be true, all three." He came
forward himself and shyly touched Cuthbert's boot.
Cuthbert reached down,
took Sheemie's hand, and shook it. "Take care of her, old boy."
Sheemie nodded
seriously. "I will."
"Come on,"
Roland said. He felt that if he looked at her solemn, upturned face again, he
would cry. "Let's go."
They rode slowly away
from the hut. Before the grass closed behind them, hiding it from view, he
looked back a final time.
"Sue, I love
thee."
She smiled. It was a
beautiful smile. "Bird and bear and hare and fish," she said.
The next time Roland
saw her, she was caught inside the Wizard's glass.
8
What Roland and his
friends saw west of the Bad Grass had a harsh, lonely beauty. The wind was lifting
great sheets of sand across the stony desert floor; the moonlight turned these
into foot racing phantoms. At moments Hanging Rock was visible some two wheels
distant, and the mouth of Eyebolt Canyon two wheels farther on. Sometimes both
were gone, hidden by the dust. Behind them, the tall grass made a soughing,
singing sound.
"How do you boys
feel?" Roland asked. "All's well?"
They nodded.
"There's going to
be a lot of shooting, I think."
"We'll remember
the faces of our fathers," Cuthbert said.
"Yes,"
Roland agreed, almost absently. "We'll remember them very well." He
stretched in the saddle. "The wind's in our favor, not theirs— that's one
good thing. We'll hear them coming. We must judge the size of the group. All
right?"
They both nodded.
"If Jonas has
still got his confidence, he'll come soon, in a small party—whatever gunnies he
can put together on short notice—and he'll have the ball. In that case, we'll
ambush them, kill them all, and take the Wizard's Rainbow."
Alain and Cuthbert sat
quiet, listening intently. The wind gusted, and Roland clapped a hand to his
hat to keep it from flying off. "If he fears more trouble from us, I think
he's apt to come later on, and with a bigger party of riders. If that happens,
we'll let them pass . . . then, if the wind is our friend and keeps up, we'll
fall in behind them."
Cuthbert began to
grin. "Oh Roland," he said. "Your father would be proud. Only
fourteen, but cozy as the devil!"
"Fifteen come
next moonrise," Roland said seriously. "If we do it this way, we may
have to kill their drogue riders. Watch my signals, all right?"
"We're going to
cross to Hanging Rock as part of their party?" Alain asked. He had always
been a step or two behind Cuthbert, but Roland didn't mind; sometimes
reliability was better than quickness. "Is that it?"
"If the cards
fall that way, yes."
"If they've got
the pink ball with em, you'd better hope it doesn't give us away," Alain
said.
Cuthbert looked
surprised. Roland bit his lip, thinking that sometimes Alain was plenty quick.
Certainly he had come up with this unpleasant little idea ahead of Bert . . .
ahead of Roland, too.
"We've got a lot
to hope for this morning, but we'll play our cards as they come off the top of
the pack."
They dismounted and
sat by their horses there on the edge of the grass, saying little. Roland
watched the silver clouds of dust racing each other across the desert floor and
thought of Susan. He imagined them married, living in a freehold somewhere
south of Gilead. By then Farson would have been defeated, the world's strange
decline reversed (the childish part of him simply assumed that making an end to
John Farson would somehow see to that), and his gunslinging days would be over.
Less than a year it had been since he had won the right to carry the six-shooters
he wore on his hips—and to carry his father's great revolvers when Steven
Deschain decided to pass them on—and already he was tired of them. Susan's
kisses had softened his heart and quickened him, somehow; had made another
life possible. A better one, perhaps. One with a house, and kiddies, and—
"They're
coming," Alain said, snapping Roland out of his reverie.
The gunslinger stood
up, Rusher's reins in one fist. Cuthbert stood tensely nearby. "Large
party or small? Does thee ... do you know?"
Alain stood facing
southeast, hands held out with the palms up. Beyond his shoulder, Roland saw
Old Star just about to slip below the horizon. Only an hour until dawn, then.
"I can't tell
yet," Alain said.
"Can you at least
tell if the ball—"
"No. Shut up,
Roland, let me listen!"
Roland and Cuthbert
stood and watched Alain anxiously, at the same time straining their ears to
hear the hooves of horses, the creak of wheels, or the murmur of men on the
passing wind. Time spun out. The wind, rather than dropping as Old Star
disappeared and dawn approached, blew more fiercely than ever. Roland looked at
Cuthbert, who had taken out his slingshot and was playing nervously with the
pull. Bert raised one shoulder in a shrug.
"It's a small
party," Alain said suddenly. "Can either of you touch them?"
They shook their
heads.
"No more than
ten, maybe only six."
"Gods!"
Roland murmured, and pumped a fist at the sky. He couldn't help it. "And
the ball?"
"I can't touch
it," Alain said. He sounded almost as though he were sleeping himself.
"But it's with them, don't you think?"
Roland did. A small
party of six or eight, probably travelling with the ball. It was perfect.
"Be ready,
boys," he said. "We're going to take them."
9
Jonas's party made
good time down the Drop and into the Bad Grass. The guide-stars were brilliant
in the autumn sky, and Renfrew knew them all. He had a click-line to measure
between the two he called The Twins, and he stopped the group briefly every
twenty minutes or so to use it. Jonas hadn't the slightest doubt the old cowboy
would bring them out of the tall grass pointed straight at Hanging Rock.
Then, about an hour
after they'd entered the Bad Grass, Quint rode up beside him. "That old
lady, she want to see you, sai. She say it's important."
"Do she, now?"
Jonas asked.
"Aye." Quint
lowered his voice. "That ball she got on her lap all glowy."
"Is that so? I
tell you what. Quint—keep my old trail-buddies company while I see what's
what." He dropped back until he was pacing beside the black cart. Rhea
raised her face to him, and for a moment, washed as it was in the pink light,
he thought it the face of a young girl.
"So," she
said. "Here y'are, big boy. I thought ye'd show up pretty smart." She
cackled, and as her face broke into its sour lines of laughter, Jonas again saw
her as she really was—all but sucked dry by the thing in her lap. Then he
looked down at it himself . . . and was lost. He could feel that pink glow
radiating into all the deepest passages and hollows of his mind, lighting them
up in a way they'd never been lit up before. Even Coral, at her dirty busiest,
couldn't light him up that way.
"Ye like it,
don't ye?" she half-laughed, half-crooned. "Aye, so ye do, so would
anyone, such a pretty glam it is! But what do ye see, sai Jonas?"
Leaning over, holding
to the saddle-horn with one hand, his long hair hanging down in a sheaf, Jonas
looked deeply into the ball. At first he saw only that luscious, labial pink,
and then it began to draw apart. Now he saw a hut surrounded by tall grass. The
sort of hut only a hermit could love. The door—it was painted a peeling but
still bright red—stood open. And sitting there on the stone stoop with her
hands in her lap, her blankets on the ground at her feet, and her unbound hair
around her shoulders was ...
"I'll be
damned!" Jonas whispered. He had now leaned so far out of the saddle that
he looked like a trick rider in a circus show, and his eyes seemed to have
disappeared; there were only sockets of pink light where they had been.
Rhea cackled
delightedly. "Aye, it's Thorin's gilly that never was! Dearborn's
lovergirl!" Her cackling stopped abruptly. "Lovergirl of the young
proddy who killed my Ermot. And he'll pay for it, aye, so he will. Look closer,
sai Jonas! Look closer!"
He did. Everything was
clear now, and he thought he should have seen it earlier. Everything this
girl's aunt had feared had been true. Rhea had known, although why she hadn't
told anyone the girl had been screwing one of the In-World boys, Jonas didn't
know. And Susan had done more than just screw Will Dearborn; she'd helped him
escape, him and his trail-mates, and she might well have killed two lawmen for
him, into the bargain.
The figure in the ball
swam closer. Watching that made him feel a little dizzy, but it was a pleasant
dizziness. Beyond the girl was the hut, faintly lit by a lamp which had been
turned down to the barest core of flame. At first Jonas thought someone was
sleeping in one comer, but on second glance he decided it was only a heap of
hides that looked vaguely human.
"Do'ee spy the
boys?" Rhea asked, seemingly from a great distance. "Do'ee spy em,
m'lord sai?"
"No," he
said, his own voice seeming to come from that same distant place. His eyes were
pinned to the ball. He could feel its light baking deeper and deeper into his
brain. It was a good feeling, like a hot fire on a cold night. "She's
alone. Looks as if she's waiting."
"Aye." Rhea
gestured above the ball—a curt dusting-off movement of the hands—and the pink
light was gone. Jonas gave a low, protesting cry, but no matter; the ball was
dark again. He wanted to stretch his hands out and tell her to make the light
return—to beg her, if necessary—and held himself back by pure force of will. He
was rewarded by a slow return of his wits. It helped to remind himself that Rhea's
gestures were as meaningless as the puppets in a Pinch and Jilly show. The ball
did what it wanted, not what she wanted.
Meanwhile, the ugly
old woman was looking at him with eyes that were perversely shrewd and clear.
"Waiting for what, do'ee suppose?" she asked.
There was only one
thing she could be waiting for. Jonas thought with rising alarm. The
boys. The three beardless sons of bitches from In-World. And if they weren't
with her, they might well be up ahead, doing their own waiting.
Waiting for him.
Possibly even waiting for—
"Listen to
me," he said. "I'll only speak once, and you best answer true. Do
they know about that thing? Do those three boys know about the
Rainbow?"
Her eyes shifted away
from his. It was answer enough in one way, but not in another. She had had
things her way all too long up there on her hill; she had to know who was boss
down here. He leaned over again and grabbed her shoulder. It was horrible—like
grabbing a bare bone that somehow still lived—but he made himself hold on all
the same. And squeeze. She moaned and wriggled, but he held on.
"Tell me, you old
bitch! Run your fucking gob!"
"They might know
of it," she whined. "The girl might've seen something the night she
came to be—am-, let go, ye're killing me!"
"If I wanted to
kill you, you'd be dead." He took another longing glance at the ball, then
sat up straight in the saddle, cupped his hands around his mouth, and called:
"Clay! Hold up!" As Reynolds and Renfrew reined back, Jonas raised a
hand to halt the vaqs behind him.
The wind whispered
through the grass, bending it, rippling it, whipping up eddies of sweet smell.
Jonas stared ahead into the dark, even though he knew it was fruitless to look
for them. They could be anywhere, and Jonas didn't like the odds in an ambush.
Not one bit.
He rode to where Clay
and Renfrew were waiting. Renfrew looked impatient. "What's the problem?
Dawn'll be breaking soon. We ought to get a move-on."
"Do you know the
huts in the Bad Grass?"
"Aye, most.
Why—"
"Do you know one
with a red door?"
Renfrew nodded and
pointed northish. "Old Soony's place. He had some sort of religious
conversion—a dream or a vision or something. That's when he painted the door of
his hut red. He's gone to the Manni-folk these last five years." He no
longer asked why, at least; he had seen something on Jonas's face that had shut
up his questions.
Jonas raised his hand,
looked at the blue coffin tattooed there for a second, then turned and called
for Quint. "You're in charge," Jonas told him.
Quint's shaggy eyebrows
shot up. "Me?"
"Yar. But you're
not going on—there's been a change of plan."
"What—"
"Listen and don't
open your mouth again unless there's something you don't understand. Get that
damned black cart turned around. Put your men around it and hie on back the way
we came. Join up with Lengyll and his men. Tell them Jonas says wait where you
find em until he and Reynolds and Renfrew come. Clear?"
Quint nodded. He
looked bewildered but said nothing.
"Good. Get about
it. And tell the witch to put her toy back in its bag." Jonas passed a
hand over his brow. Fingers which had rarely shaken before had now picked up a
minute tremble. "It's distracting."
Quint started away,
then looked back when Jonas called his name.
"I think those
In-World boys are out here, Quint. Probably ahead of where we are now, but if
they're back the way you're going, they'll probably set on you."
Quint looked nervously
around at the grass, which rose higher than his head. Then his lips tightened
and he returned his attention to Jonas.
"If they attack,
they'll try to take the ball," Jonas continued. "And sai, mark me
well: any man who doesn't die protecting it will wish he had." He lifted
his chin at the vaqs, who sat astride their horses in a line behind the
black cart. "Tell them that."
"Aye, boss,"
Quint said.
"When you reach
Lengyll's party, you'll be safe."
"How long should
we wait for yer if ye don't come?"
"Til hell freezes
over. Now go." As Quint left, Jonas turned to Reynolds and Renfrew.
"We're going to make a little side-trip, boys," he said.
10
"Roland."
Alain's voice was low and urgent. "They've turned around."
"Are you
sure?"
"Yes. There's
another group coming along behind them. A much larger one. That's where they're
headed."
"Safety in
numbers, that's all," Cuthbert said.
"Do they have the
ball?" Roland asked. "Can you touch it yet?"
"Yes, they have
it. It makes them easy to touch even though they're going the other way now.
Once you find it, it glows like a lamp in a mineshaft."
"Does Rhea still
have the keeping of it?"
"I think so. It's
awful to touch her."
"Jonas is afraid
of us," Roland said. "He wants more men around him when he comes.
That's what it is, what it must be." Unaware that he was both right and
badly out in his reckoning. Unaware that for one of the few times since they
had left Gilead, he had lapsed into a teenager's disastrous certainty.
"What do we
do?" Alain asked.
"Sit here.
Listen. Wait. They'll bring the ball this way again if they're going to Hanging
Rock. They'll have to."
"Susan?"
Cuthbert asked. "Susan and Sheemie? What about them? How do we know
they're all right?"
"I suppose that
we don't." Roland sat down, cross-legged, with Pusher's trailing reins in
his lap. "But Jonas and his men will be back soon enough. And when they
come, we'll do what we must."
11
Susan hadn't wanted to
sleep inside—the hut felt wrong to her without Roland. She had left Sheemie
huddled under the old hides in the comer and taken her own blankets outside.
She sat in the hut's doorway for a little while, looking up at the stars and
praying for Roland in her own fashion. When she began to feel a little better,
she lay down on one blanket and pulled the other over her. It seemed an
eternity since Maria had shaken her out of her heavy sleep, and the
open-mouthed, glottal snores drifting out of the hut didn't bother her much.
She slept with her head pillowed on one arm, and didn't wake when, twenty
minutes later, Sheemie came to the doorway, blinked at her sleepily, and then
walked off into the grass to urinate. The only one to notice him was
Caprichoso, who stuck out his long muzzle and took a nip at Sheemie's butt as
the boy passed him. Sheemie, still mostly asleep, reached back and pushed the
muzzle away. He knew Capi's tricks well enough, so he did.
Susan dreamed of the
willow grove—bird and bear and hare and fish—and what woke her wasn't Sheemie's
return from his necessary but a cold circle of steel pressing into her neck.
There was a loud click that she recognized at once from the Sheriff's office: a
pistol being cocked. The willow grove faded from the eye of her mind.
"Shine, little
sunbeam," said a voice. For a moment her bewildered, half-waking mind
tried to believe it was yesterday, and Maria wanted her to get up and out of
Seafront before whoever had killed Mayor Thorin and Chancellor Rimer could come
back and kill her, as well.
No good. It wasn't the
strong light of midmorning that her eyes opened upon, but the ash-pallid glow
of five o'clock. Not a woman's voice but a man's. And not a hand shaking her
shoulder but the barrel of a gun against her neck.
She looked up and saw
a lined, narrow face framed by white hair. Lips no more than a scar. Eyes the
same faded blue as Roland's. Eldred Jonas. The man standing behind him had
bought her own da drinks once upon a happier time: Hash Renfrew. A third man,
one of Jonas's ka-tet, ducked into the hut. Freezing terror filled her
midsection—some for her, some for Sheemie. She wasn't sure the boy would even
understand what was happening to them. These are two of the three men who
tried to kill him, she thought. He'll understand that much.
"Here you are,
Sunbeam, here you come," Jonas said companionably, watching her blink away
the sleepfog. "Good! You shouldn't be napping all the way out here on your
own, not a pretty sai such as yourself. But don't worry, I'll see you get back
to where you belong."
His eyes flicked up as
the redhead with the cloak stepped out of the hut. Alone. "What's she got
in there. Clay? Anything?"
Reynolds shook his
head. "All still on the hoss, I reckon."
Sheemie,
Susan thought. Where are you, Sheemie?
Jonas reached out and
caressed one of her breasts briefly. "Nice," he said. "Tender
and sweet. No wonder Dearborn likes you."
"Get yer filthy
blue-marked hand off me, you bastard."
Smiling, Jonas did as
she bid. He turned "his head and regarded the mule. "I know this one;
it belongs to my good friend Coral. Along with everything else, you've turned
livestock thief! Shameful, shameful, this younger generation. Don't you agree,
sai Renfrew?"
But her father's old
associate said nothing. His face was carefully blank, and Susan thought he
might be just the tiniest tad ashamed of his presence here.
Jonas turned back to
her, his thin lips curved in the semblance of a benevolent smile. "Well,
after murder I suppose stealing a mule comes easy, don't it?"
She said nothing, only
watched as Jonas stroked Capi's muzzle.
"What all were
they hauling, those boys, that it took a mule to put it on?"
"Shrouds,"
she said through numb lips. "For you and all yer friends. A fearful heavy
load it made, too—near broke the poor animal's back."
"There's a saying
in the land I come from," Jonas said, still smiling. "Clever girls
go to hell. Ever heard it?" He went on stroking Capi's nose. The mule
liked it; his neck was thrust out to its full length, his stupid little eyes
half-closed with pleasure. "Has it crossed your mind that fellows who
unload their pack animal, split up what it was carrying, and take the goods
away usually ain't coming back?"
Susan said nothing.
"You've been left
high and dry, Sunbeam. Fast fucked is usually fast forgot, sad to say. Do you
know where they went?"
"Yes," she
said. Her voice was low, barely a whisper.
Jonas looked pleased.
"If you was to tell, things might go easier for you. Would you agree,
Renfrew?"
"Aye," Renfrew
said. "They're traitors, Susan—for the Good Man. If you know where they
are or what they're up to, tell us."
Keeping her eyes fixed
on Jonas, Susan said: "Come closer." Her numbed lips didn't want to
move and it came out sounding like Cung gloser, but Jonas understood and
leaned forward, stretching his neck in a way that made him look absurdly like
Caprichoso. When he did, Susan spat in his face.
Jonas recoiled, lips
twisting in surprise and revulsion. "Arrr! BITCH!" he cried,
and launched a full-swung, open-handed blow that drove her to the ground. She
landed at full length on her side with black stars exploding across her field
of vision. She could already feel her right cheek swelling like a balloon and
thought, If he'd hit an inch or two lower, he might've broken my neck.
Mayhap that would've been best. She raised her hand to her nose and wiped
blood from the right nostril.
Jonas turned to
Renfrew, who had taken a single step forward and then stopped himself.
"Put her on her horse and tie her hands in front of her. Tight." He
looked down at Susan, then kicked her in the shoulder hard enough to send her
rolling toward the hut. "Spit on me, would you? Spit on Eldred Jonas,
would you, you bitch?"
Reynolds was holding
out his neckerchief. Jonas took it, wiped the spittle from his face with it,
then dropped into a hunker beside her. He took a handful of her hair and
carefully wiped the neckerchief with it. Then he hauled her to her feet. Tears
of pain now peeped from the comers of her eyes, but she kept silent.
"I may never see
your friend again, sweet Sue with the tender little titties, but I've got you,
ain't I? Yar. And if Dearborn gives us trouble, I'll give you double. And make
sure Dearborn knows. You may count on it."
His smile faded, and
he gave her a sudden, bitter shove that almost sent her sprawling again.
"Now get mounted,
and do it before I decide to change your face a little with my knife."
12
Sheemie watched from
the grass, terrified and silently crying, as Susan spit in the bad Coffin Hunter's
face and was knocked to the ground, hit so hard the blow might have killed her.
He almost rushed out then, but something—it could have been his friend
Arthur's voice in his head—told him that would only get him killed.
He watched as Susan
mounted. One of the other men—not a Coffin Hunter but a big rancher Sheemie had
seen in the Rest from time to time—tried to help, but Susan pushed him away
with the sole of her boot. The man stood back with a red face.
Don't make em mad,
Susan, Sheemie thought. Oh gods, don't do that,
they'll hit ye some more! Oh, yer poor face! And ye got a nosebleed, so you do!
"Last
chance," Jonas told her. "Where are they, and what do they mean to
do?"
"Go to
hell," she said.
He smiled—a thin,
hurty smile. "Likely I'll find you there when I arrive," he said.
Then, to the other Coffin Hunter: "You checked the place careful?"
"Whatever they
had, they took it," the redhead answered. "Only thing they left was
Dearborn's punch-bunny."
That made Jonas laugh
meany-mean as he climbed on board his own horse. "Come on," he said,
"let's ride."
They went back into
the Bad Grass. It closed around them, and it was as if they had
never been there . . . except that Susan was gone, and so was Capi. The big
rancher riding beside Susan had been leading the mule.
When he was sure they
weren't going to return, Sheemie walked slowly back into the clearing, doing up
the button on top of his pants as he came. He looked from the way Roland and
his friends had gone to the one in which Susan had been taken. Which?
A moment's thought
made him realize there was no choice. The grass out here was tough and springy.
The path Roland and Alain and good old Arthur Heath (so Sheemie still thought
of him, and always would) had taken was gone. The one made by Susan and her
captors, on the other hand, was still clear. And perhaps, if he followed her,
he could do something for her. Help her.
Walking at first, then
jogging as his fear that they might double back and catch him dissipated,
Sheemie went in the direction Susan had been taken. He would follow her most of
that day.
13
Cuthbert—not the most
sanguine of personalities in any situation—grew more and more impatient as the
day brightened toward true dawn. It's Reaping, he thought. Finally
Reaping, and here we sit with our knives sharpened and not a thing in the world
to cut.
Twice he asked Alain
what he "heard." The first time Alain only grunted. The second time
he asked what Bert expected him to hear, with someone yapping away in
his ear like that.
Cuthbert, who did not
consider two enquiries fifteen minutes apart as "yapping away,"
wandered off and sat morosely in front of his horse. After a bit, Roland came
over and sat down beside him.
"Waiting,"
Cuthbert said. "That's what most of our time in Mejis has been about, and
it's the thing I do worst."
"You won't have
to do it much longer," Roland said.
14
Jonas's company
reached the place where Fran Lengyll's party had made a temporary camp about an
hour after the sun had topped the horizon. Quint, Rhea, and Renfrew's vaqs
were already there and drinking coffee, Jonas was glad to see.
Lengyll started
forward, saw Susan riding with her hands tied, and actually drew back a step,
as if he wanted to find a comer to hide in. There were no comers out here,
however, so he stood fast. He did not look happy about it, however.
Susan nudged her horse
forward with her knees, and when Reynolds tried to grab her shoulder, she
dipped it to the side, temporarily eluding him.
"Why, Francis
Lengyll! Imagine meeting you here!"
"Susan, I'm sorry
to see ye so," Lengyll said. His flush crept closer and closer to his
brow, like a tide approaching a seawall. "It's bad company ye've fallen
in with, girl . . . and in the end, bad company always leaves ye to face the
music alone."
Susan actually
laughed. "Bad company!" she said. "Aye, ye'd know about that,
wouldn't ye, Fran?"
He turned, awkward and
stiff in his embarrassment. She raised one booted foot and, before anyone could
stop her, kicked him squarely between the shoulderblades. He went down on his
stomach, his whole face widening in shocked surprise.
"No ye don't, ye
bold cunt!" Renfrew shouted, and fetched her a wallop to the side of the
head—it was on the left, and at least evened things up a bit, she would think
later when her mind cleared and she was capable of thinking. She swayed in the
saddle, but kept her seat. And she never looked at Renfrew, only at Lengyll,
who had now managed to get to his hands and knees. He wore a deeply dazed
expression.
"You killed
my father!" she screamed at him. "You killed my father, you
cowardly, sneaking excuse for a man!" She looked at the party of
ranchers and vaqs, all of them staring at her now. "There he is,
Fran Lengyll, head of the Horsemen's Association, as low a sneak as ever
walked! Low as coyote shit! Low as— "
"That's
enough," Jonas said, watching with some interest as Lengyll scuttled back
to his men—and yes, Susan was bitterly delighted to see, it was a full-fledged
scuttle—with his shoulders hunched. Rhea was cackling, rocking from side to
side and making a sound like fingernails on a piece of slate. The sound shocked
Susan, but she wasn't a bit surprised by Rhea's presence in this company.
"It could never
be enough," she said, looking from Jonas to Lengyll with an expression of
contempt so deep it seemed bottomless. "For him it could never be
enough."
"Well, perhaps,
but you did quite well in the time you had, lady-sai. Few could have done
better. And listen to the witch cackle! Like salt in his wounds, I wot . . .
but we'll shut her up soon enough." Then, turning his head:
"Clay!"
Reynolds rode up.
"Think you can
get Sunbeam back to Seafront all right?"
"I think
so." Reynolds tried not to show the relief he felt at being sent back east
instead of west. He had begun to have a bad feeling about Hanging Rock,
Latigo, the tankers . . . about the whole show, really. God knew why.
"Now?"
"Give it another
minute," Jonas said. "Mayhap there's going to be a spot of killing
right here. Who knows? But it's the unanswered questions that makes it worthwhile
getting up in the morning, even when a man's leg aches like a tooth with a hole
in it. Wouldn't you say so?"
"I don't know,
Eldred."
"Sai Renfrew,
watch our pretty Sunbeam a minute. I have a piece of property to take
back."
His voice carried
well—he had meant that it should—and Rhea's cackles cut off suddenly, as if
severed out of her throat with a hooking-knife. Smiling, Jonas walked his horse
toward the black cart with its jostling show of gold symbols. Reynolds rode on
his left, and Jonas sensed rather than saw Depape fall in on his right. Roy was
a good enough boy, really; his head was a little soft, but his heart was in the
right place, and you didn't have to tell him everything.
For every step forward
Jonas's horse took, Rhea shrank back a little in the cart. Her eyes shifted
from side to side in their deep sockets, looking for a way out that wasn't
there.
"Keep away from
me, ye charry man!" she cried, raising a hand toward him. With the other
she clutched the sack with the ball in it ever more tightly. "Keep away,
or I'll bring the lightning and strike ye dead where ye sit yer horse! Yer
harrier friends, too!"
Jonas thought Roy
hesitated briefly at that, but Clay never did, nor did Jonas himself. He
guessed there was a great lot she could do ... or that there had been, at one
time. But that was before the hungry glass had entered her life.
"Give it up to
me," he said. He reached the side of her wagon and held his hand out for
the bag. "It's not yours and never was. One day you'll doubtless have the
Good Man's thanks for keeping it so well as you have, but now you must give it
up."
She screamed—a sound
of such piercing intensity that several of the vaqueros dropped their
tin coffee-cups and clapped their hands over their ears. At the same time she knotted
her hand through the drawstring and raised the bag over her head. The curved
shape of the ball swung back and forth at the bottom of it like a pendulum.
"I'll not!"
she howled. "I'll smash it on the ground before I give it
up to the likes o' you!"
Jonas doubted if the
ball would break, not hurled by her weak arms onto the trampled, springy mat of
the Bad Grass, but he didn't think he would have occasion to find out, one way
or the other.
"Clay," he
said. "Draw your gun."
He didn't need to look
at Clay to see that he'd done it; he saw the frantic way her eyes shifted to
the left, where Clay sat his horse.
"I'm going to
have a count," Jonas said. "Just a short one; if I get to three and
she hasn't passed that bag over, blow her ugly head off."
"Aye."
"One," Jonas
said, watching the ball pendulum back and forth at the bottom of the upheld
bag. It was glowing; he could see dull pink even through the cloth. "Two.
Enjoy hell, Rhea, goodbye. Thr—"
"Here!"
she screamed, thrusting it out toward him and shielding her face with the
crooked hook of her free hand. "Here, take it! And may it damn you the
way it's damned me!"
"Thankee-sai."
He grabbed the bag
just below the draw top and yanked. Rhea screamed again as the string skinned
her knuckles and tore off one of her nails. Jonas hardly heard. His mind was a
white explosion of exultation. For the first time in his long professional life
he forgot his job, his surroundings, and the six thousand things that could
get him killed on any day. He had it; he had it; by all the graves of all the
gods, he had the fucking thing!
Mine!
he thought, and that was all. He somehow restrained the urge to open the bag
and stick his head inside it, like a horse sticking its head into a bag of
oats, and looped the drawstring over the pommel of his saddle twice instead. He
took in a breath as deep as his lungs would allow, then expelled it. Better. A
little.
"Roy."
"Aye,
Jonas."
It would be good to
get out of this place, Jonas thought, and not for the first time. To get away
from these hicks. He was sick of aye and ye and so it is,
sick to his bones.
"Roy, we'll give
the bitch a ten-count this time. If she isn't out of my sight by then, you have
my permission to blow her ass off. Now, let's see if you can do the counting.
I'll be listening close, so mind you don't skip any!"
"One,"
Depape said eagerly. "Two. Three. Four."
Spitting curses, Rhea
snatched up the reins of the cart and spanked the pony's back with them. The
pony laid its ears back and jerked the cart forward so vigorously that Rhea
went tumbling backward off the cant-board, her feet up, her white and bony
shins showing above her ankle-high black shoes and mismatched wool stockings.
The vaqueros laughed. Jonas laughed himself. It was pretty funny, all
right, seeing her on her back with her pins in the air.
"Fuh-fuh-five,"
Depape said, laughing so hard he was hiccupping. "Sih-sih-six!"
Rhea climbed back up,
flopped onto the cantboard again with all the grace of a dying fish, and peered
around at them, wall-eyed and sneering.
"I curse
ye all!" she screamed. It cut through them, stilling their laughter
even as the cart bounced toward the edge of the trampled clearing. "Every
last one of ye! Ye... and ye... and ye!" Her crooked finger pointed
last at Jonas. "Thief! Miserable thief!"
As though it was
yours, Jonas marveled (although "Mine!" was
the first word to occur to him, once he had taken possession of it). As
though such a wonder could ever belong to a back-country reader of rooster-guts
such as you.
The cart bounced its
way into the Bad Grass, the pony pulling hard with its ears laid back; the old
woman's screams served to drive it better than any whip could have done. The
black slipped into the green. They saw the cart flicker like a conjurer's
trick, and then it was gone. For a long time yet, however, they heard her
shrieking her curses, calling death down upon them beneath the Demon Moon.
15
"Go on,"
Jonas told Clay Reynolds. "Take our Sunbeam back. And if you want to stop
on the way and make some use of her, why, be my guest." He glanced
at Susan as he said this, to see what effect it might be having, but he was
disappointed—she looked dazed, as if the last blow Renfrew had dealt her had
scrambled her brains, at least temporarily. "Just make sure she gets to
Coral at the end of all the fun." "I will. Any message for sai
Thorin?"
"Tell her to keep
the wench someplace safe until she hears from me. And . . . why don't you stay
with her. Clay? Coral, I mean—come tomorrow, I don't think we'll have to worry
about this 'un anymore, but Coral . . . ride with her to Ritzy when she goes.
Be her escort, like."
Reynolds nodded.
Better and better. Seafront it would be, and that was fine. He might like a
little taste of the girl once he got her there, but not on the way. Not under
the ghostly-full daytime Demon Moon. "Go on, then. Get started."
Reynolds led her
across the clearing, aiming for a point well away from the bent swath of grass
where Rhea had made her exit. Susan rode silently, downcast eyes fixed on her
bound wrists.
Jonas turned to face
his men. "The three young fellows from In-World have broken their way out
of jail, with that haughty young bitch's help," he said, pointing at
Susan's departing back.
There was a low,
growling murmur from the men. That "Will Dearborn" and his friends
were free they had known; that sai Delgado had helped them escape they had not
. . . and it was perhaps just as well for her that Reynolds was at that moment
leading her into the Bad Grass and out of sight.
"Never
mind!" Jonas shouted, pulling their attention back to him. He reached out
a stealthy hand and caressed the curve at the bottom of the drawstring bag.
Just touching the ball made him feel as if he could do anything, and with one
hand tied behind his back, at that.
"Never mind her,
and never mind them!" His eyes moved from Lengyll to Wertner to Croydon to
Brian Hookey to Roy Depape. "We're close to forty men, going to join
another hundred and fifty. They're three, and not one a day over sixteen. Are
you afraid of three little boys?"
“No!"
they cried.
"If we run on em,
my cullies, what will we do?"
"KILL THEM!"
The shout so loud that it sent rooks rising up into the morning sun, cawing
their displeasure as they commenced the hunt for more peaceful surroundings.
Jonas was satisfied.
His hand was still on the sweet curve of the ball, and he could feel it pouring
strength into him. Pink strength, he thought, and grinned.
"Come on, boys. I
want those tankers in the woods west of Eyebolt before the home folks light
their Reap-Night Bonfire."
16
Sheemie, crouched down
in the grass and peering into the clearing, was nearly run over by Rhea's black
wagon; the screaming, gibbering witch passed so close to him that he could
smell her sour skin and dirty hair. If she had looked down, she couldn't have
missed seeing him and undoubtedly would have turned him into a bird or a
bumbler or maybe even a mosquito.
The boy saw Jonas pass
custody of Susan to the one in the cloak, and began working his way around the
edge of the clearing. He heard Jonas haranguing the men (many of whom Sheemie
knew; it shamed him to know how many Mejis cowboys were doing that bad Coffin
Hunter's bidding), but paid no attention to what he was saying. Sheemie froze
in place as they mounted up, momentarily scared they would come in his direction,
but they rode the other way, west. The clearing emptied almost as if by magic .
. . except it wasn't entirely empty. Caprichoso had been left behind,
his lead trailing on the beaten grass. Capi looked after the departing riders,
brayed once—as if to tell them they could all go to hell—then turned and made
eye-contact with Sheemie, who was peering out into the clearing. The mule
flicked his ears at the boy, then tried to graze. He lipped the Bad Grass a
single time, raised his head, and brayed at Sheemie, as if to say this was all
the inn-boy's fault.
Sheemie stared
thoughtfully at Caprichoso, thinking of how much easier it was to ride than to
walk. Gods, yes ... but that second bray decided him against it. The mule
might give one of his disgusted cries at the wrong time and alert the man who
had Susan.
"You'll find your
way home, I reckon," Sheemie said. "So long, pal. So long, good old
Capi. See you farther down the path."
He found the path made
by Susan and Reynolds, and began to trot after them once more.
17
"They're coming
again," Alain said a moment before Roland sensed it himself—a brief
flicker in his head like pink lightning. "All of them."
Roland hunkered in
front of Cuthbert. Cuthbert looked back at him without even a suggestion of his
usual foolish good humor.
"Much of it's on
you," Roland said, then tapped the slingshot. "And on that."
"I know."
"How much have
you got in the armory?"
"Almost four
dozen steel balls." Bert held up a cotton bag which had, in more settled
times, held his father's tobacco. "Plus assorted fireworks in my
saddlebag."
"How many
big-bangers?"
"Enough,
Roland." Unsmiling. With the laughter gone from them, he had the hollow
eyes of just one more killer. "Enough."
Roland ran a hand down
the front of the serape he wore, letting his palm reacquaint itself with
the rough weave. He looked at Cuthbert's, then at Alain's, telling himself
again that it could work, yes, as long as they held their nerve and didn't let
themselves think of it in terms of three against forty or fifty, it could work.
"The ones out at
Hanging Rock will hear the shooting once it starts, won't they?" Al asked.
Roland nodded.
"With the wind blowing from us to them, there's no doubt of that."
"We'll have to
move fast, then."
"We'll go as best
we can." Roland thought of standing between the tangled green hedges
behind the Great Hall, David the hawk on his arm and a sweat of terror
trickling down his back. I think you die today, he had told the hawk,
and he had told it true. Yet he himself had lived, and passed his test, and
walked out of the testing corridor facing east. Today it was Cuthbert and
Alain's turn to be tested—not in Gilead, in the traditional place of proving
behind the Great Hall, but here in Mejis, on the edge of the Bad Grass, in the desert,
and in the canyon. Eyebolt Canyon.
"Prove or
die," Alain said, as if reading the run of the gunslinger's thoughts.
"That's what it comes down to."
"Yes. That's what
it always comes down to, in the end. How long before they get here, do you
think?"
"An hour at least,
I'd say. Likely two."
"They'll be
running a 'watch-and-go.' "
Alain nodded. "I
think so, yes."
"That's not
good," Cuthbert said.
"Jonas is afraid
of being ambushed in the grass," Roland said. "Maybe of us setting
fire to it around him. They'll loosen up when they get into the clear."
"You hope,"
Cuthbert said.
Roland nodded gravely.
"Yes. I hope."
18
At first Reynolds was
content to lead the girl along the broken backtrail at a fast walk, but about
thirty minutes after leaving Jonas, Lengyll, and the rest, he broke into a
trot. Pylon matched Reynolds's horse easily, and just as easily when, ten
minutes later, he upped their speed to a light but steady run.
Susan held to the horn
of her saddle with her bound hands and rode easily at Reynolds's right, her
hair streaming out behind her. She thought her face must be quite colorful; the
skin of her cheeks felt raised at least two inches higher than usual, welted
and tender. Even the passing wind stung a little.
At the place where the
Bad Grass gave way to the Drop, Reynolds stopped to give the horses a blow. He
dismounted himself, turned his back to her, and took a piss. As he did, Susan
looked up along the rise of land and saw the great herd, now untended and
unravelling at the edges. They had done that much, perhaps. It wasn't much, but
it was something.
"Do you need to
do the necessary?" Reynolds asked. "I'll help you down if you do, but
don't say no now and whine about it later."
"Ye're afraid.
Big brave regulator that ye are, ye're scared, ain't ye? Aye, coffin tattoo and
all."
Reynolds tried a
contemptuous grin. It didn't fit his face very well this morning. "You ort
to leave the fortune-telling to those that are good at it, missy. Now do you
need a necessary stop or not?"
"No. And ye are
afraid. Of what?"
Reynolds, who only
knew that his bad feeling hadn't left him when he left Jonas, as he'd hoped it
would, bared his tobacco-stained teeth at her. "If you can't talk
sensible, just shut up."
"Why don't ye let
me go? Perhaps my friends will do the same for you, when they catch us
up."
This time Reynolds
grunted laughter which was almost genuine. He swung himself into his saddle,
hawked, spat. Overhead, Demon Moon was a pale and bloated ball in the sky.
"You can dream, miss'sai," he said, "dreaming's free. But you
ain't never going to see those three again. They're for the worms, they are.
Now let's ride."
They rode.
19
Cordelia hadn't gone
to bed at all on Reaping Eve. She sat the night through in her parlor chair,
and although there was sewing on her lap, she had put not a single stitch in
nor picked one out. Now, as morning's light brightened toward ten o' the clock,
she sat in the same chair, looking out at nothing. What was there to look at,
anyway? Everything had come down with a smash—all her hopes of the fortune
Thorin would settle on Susan and Susan's child, perhaps while he still lived,
certainly in his dead-letter; all her hopes of ascending to her proper place in
the community; all her plans for the future. Swept away by two wilful young
people who couldn't keep their pants up.
She sat in her old
chair with her knitting on her lap and the ashes Susan had smeared on her
cheek standing out like a brand, and thought:
They'll find me dead
in this chair, someday—old, poor, and forgotten. That ungrateful child! After
all I did for her!
What roused her was a
weak scratching at the window. She had no idea how long it had been going on
before it finally intruded on her consciousness, but when it did, she laid her
needlework aside and got up to see. A bird, perhaps. Or children playing
Reaping jokes, unaware that the world had come to an end. Whatever it was, she
would shoo it away.
Cordelia saw nothing
at first. Then, as she was about to turn away, she spied a pony and cart at the
edge of the yard. The cart was a little disquieting—black, with gold symbols
overpainted—and the pony in the shafts stood with its head lowered, not
grazing, looking as if it had been run half to death.
She was still frowning
out at this when a twisted, filthy hand rose in the air directly in front of
her and began to scratch at the glass again. Cordelia gasped and clapped both
hands to her bosom as her heart took a startled leap in her
chest. She backed up a step, and gave a little shriek as her calf brushed the
tender of the stove.
The long, dirty nails
scratched twice more, then fell away.
Cordelia stood where
she was for a moment, irresolute, then went to the door, stopping at the
woodbox to pick up a chunk of ash which fitted her hand. Just in case. Then she
jerked the door open, went to the comer of the house, drew in a deep, steadying
breath, and went around to the garden side, raising the ash-chunk as she did.
"Get out, whoever
ye are! Scat before I—"
Her voice was stilled
by what she saw: an incredibly old woman crawling through the frost-killed
flowerbed next to the house—crawling toward her. The crone's stringy white hair
(what remained of it) hung in her face. Sores festered on her cheeks and brow;
her lips had split and drizzled blood down her pointed, warty chin. The corneas
of her eyes had gone a filthy gray-yellow, and she panted like a cracked
bellows as she moved.
"Good woman, help
me," this specter gasped. "Help me if ye will, for I'm about done
up."
The hand holding the
chunk of ash sagged. Cordelia could hardly believe what she was seeing.
"Rhea?" she whispered. "Is it Rhea?"
"Aye," Rhea
whispered, crawling relentlessly through the dead silk-flowers, dragging her
hands through the cold earth. "Help me."
Cordelia retreated a
step, her makeshift bludgeon now hanging at her knee. "No, I... I can't
have such as thee in my house ... I'm sorry to see ye so, but . . . but I have
a reputation, ye ken . . . folk watch me close, so they do ..."
She glanced at the
High Street as she said this, as if expecting to see a line of townspeople
outside her gate, watching eagerly, avid to fleet their wretched gossip on its
lying way, but there was no one there. Hambry was quiet, its walks and byways
empty, the customary joyous noise of Reaping Fair-Day stilled. She looked back
at the thing which had fetched up in her dead flowers.
"Yer niece ...
did this . . ." the thing in the dirt whispered. "All . . . her fault
. . ."
Cordelia dropped the
chunk of wood. It clipped the side of her ankle, but she hardly noticed. Her hands
curled into fists before her.
"Help me,"
Rhea whispered. "I know ... where she is ... we ... we have work, us two
... women's . . . work ..."
Cordelia hesitated a
moment, then went to the woman, knelt, got an arm around her, and somehow got
her to her feet. The smell coming off her was reeky and nauseating—the smell of
decomposing flesh.
Bony fingers caressed
Cordelia's cheek and the side of her neck as she helped the hag into the house.
Cordelia's flesh crawled, but she didn't pull away until Rhea collapsed into a
chair, gasping from one end and farting from the other.
"Listen to
me," the old woman hissed.
"I am."
Cordelia drew a chair over and sat beside her. At death's door she might be,
but once her eye fell on you, it was strangely hard to look away. Now Rhea's
fingers dipped inside the bodice of her dirty dress, brought out a silver charm
of some kind, and began to move it back and forth rapidly, as if telling beads.
Cordelia, who hadn't felt sleepy all night, began to feel that way now.
"The others are
beyond us," Rhea said, "and the ball has slipped my grasp. But she—!
Back to Mayor's House she's been ta'en, and mayhap we could see to her—we could
do that much, aye."
"You can't see to
anything," Cordelia said distantly. "You're dying."
Rhea wheezed laughter
and a trickle of yellowish drool. "Dying? Nay! Just done up and in need of
a refreshment. Now listen to me, Cordelia daughter of Hiram and sister of
Pat!"
She hooked a bony (and
surprisingly strong) arm around Cordelia's neck and drew her close. At the same
time she raised her other hand, twirling the silver medallion in front of
Cordelia's wide eyes. The crone whispered, and after a bit Cordelia began to
nod her understanding.
"Do it,
then," the old woman said, letting go. She slumped back in her chair,
exhausted. "Now, for I can't last much longer as I am. And I'll need a bit
o' time after, mind ye. To revive, like."
Cordelia moved across
the room to the kitchen area. There, on the counter beside the hand-pump, was a
wooden block in which were sheathed the two sharp knives of the house. She took
one and came back. Her eyes were distant and far, as Susan's had been when she
and Rhea stood in the open doorway of Rhea's hut in the light of the Kissing
Moon.
"Would ye pay her
back?" Rhea asked. "For that's why I've come to ye."
"Miss Oh So Young
and Pretty," Cordelia murmured in a barely audible voice. The hand not
holding the knife floated up to her face and touched her ash-smeared cheek.
"Yes. I'd be repaid of her, so I would."
"To the
death?"
"Aye. Hers or
mine."
" 'Twill be
hers," Rhea said, "never fear it. Now refresh me, Cordelia. Give me
what I need!"
Cordelia unbuttoned
her dress down the front, pushing it open to reveal an ungenerous bosom and a
middle which had begun to curve out in the last year or so, making a tidy
little potbelly. Yet she still had the vestige of a waist, and it was here she
used the knife, cutting through her shift and the top layers of flesh beneath.
The white cotton began to bloom red at once along the slit.
"Aye," Rhea
whispered. "Like roses. I dream of them often enough, roses in bloom, and
what stands black among em at the end of the world. Come closer!" She put
her hand on the small of Cordelia's back, urging her forward. She raised her
eyes to Cordelia's face, then grinned and licked her lips. "Good. Good
enough."
Cordelia looked
blankly over the top of the old woman's head as Rhea of the Coos buried her
face against the red cut in the shift and began to drink.
20
Roland was at first
pleased as the muted jingle of harness and buckle drew closer to the place
where the three of them were hunkered down in the high grass, but as the sounds
drew closer still—close enough to hear murmuring voices as well as
soft-thudding hooves—he began to be afraid. For the riders to pass close was
one thing, but if they were, through foul luck, to come right upon them, the
three boys would likely die like a nest of moles uncovered by the blade of a
passing plow.
Ka
surely hadn't brought them all this way to end in such fashion, had it? In all
these miles of Bad Grass, how could that party of oncoming riders possibly
strike the one point where Roland and his friends had pulled up? But still they
closed in, the sound of tack and buckle and men's voices growing ever sharper.
Alain looked at Roland
with dismayed eyes and pointed to the left. Roland shook his head and patted
his hands toward the ground, indicating they would stay put. They had to
stay put; it was too late to move without being heard.
Roland drew his guns.
Cuthbert and Alain did
the same.
In the end, the plow
missed the moles by sixty feet. The boys could actually see the horses and
riders flashing through the thick grass; Roland easily made out that the party
was led by Jonas, Depape, and Lengyll, riding three abreast. They were
followed by at least three dozen others, glimpsed as roan flashes and the
bright red and green of serapes through the grass. They were strung out
pretty well, and Roland thought he and his friends could reasonably hope they'd
string out even more once they reached open desert.
The boys waited for
the party to pass, holding their horses' heads in case one of them took it in
mind to whicker a greeting to the nags so close by. When they were gone, Roland
turned his pale and unsmiling face to his friends.
"Mount up,"
he said. "Reaping's come."
21
They walked their
horses to the edge of the Bad Grass, meeting the path of Jonas's party where
the grass gave way first to a zone of stunted bushes and then to the desert
itself.
The wind howled high
and lonesome, carrying big drifts of gritty dust under a cloudless dark blue
sky. Demon Moon stared down from it like the filmed eye of a corpse. Two
hundred yards ahead, the drogue riders backing Jonas's party were spread out in
a line of three, their sombreros jammed down tight on their heads, their
shoulders hunched, their scrapes blowing.
Roland moved so that
Cuthbert rode in the middle of their trio. Bert had his slingshot in his hand.
Now he handed Alain half a dozen steel balls, and Roland another half-dozen. Then
he raised his eyebrows questioningly. Roland nodded and they began to ride.
Dust blew past them in
rattling sheets, sometimes turning the drogue riders into ghosts, sometimes
obscuring them completely, but the boys closed in steadily. Roland rode tense,
waiting for one of the drogues to turn in his saddle and see them, but none
did—none of them wanted to put his face into that cutting, grit-filled wind.
Nor was there sound to warn them; there was sandy hardpack under the horses'
hooves now, and it didn't give away much.
When they were just
twenty yards behind the drogues, Cuthbert nodded—they were close enough for him
to work. Alain handed him a ball. Bert, sitting ramrod straight in the saddle,
dropped it into the cup of his slingshot, pulled, waited for the wind to drop,
then released. The rider ahead on the left jerked as if stung, raised one hand
a little, then toppled out of his saddle. Incredibly, neither of his two companeros
seemed to notice. Roland saw what he thought was the beginning of a reaction
from the one on the right when Bert drew again, and the rider in the middle collapsed
forward onto his horse's neck. The horse, startled, reared up. The rider
flopped bonelessly backward, his sombrero tumbling off, and fell. The
wind dropped enough for Roland to hear his knee snap as his foot caught in one
of his stirrups.
The third rider now
began to turn. Roland caught a glimpse of a bearded face—a dangling cigarette,
unlit because of the wind, one astonished eye—and then Cuthbert's sling thupped
again. The astonished eye was replaced by a red socket. The rider slid from his
saddle, groping for the horn and missing it.
Three gone,
Roland thought.
He kicked Rusher into
a gallop. The others did the same, and the boys rode forward into the dust a
stirrup's width apart. The horses of the ambushed drogue riders veered off to
the south in a group, and that was good. Riderless horses ordinarily didn't
raise eyebrows in Mejis, but when they were saddled—
More riders up ahead:
a single, then two side by side, then another single.
Roland drew his knife,
and rode up beside the fellow who was now drogue and didn't know it.
"What news?"
he asked conversationally, and when the man turned, Roland buried his knife in
his chest. The vaq's brown eyes widened above the bandanna he'd pulled
up outlaw-style over his mouth and nose, and then he tumbled from his saddle.
Cuthbert and Alain
spurred past him, and Bert, not slowing, took the two riding ahead with his
slingshot. The fellow beyond them heard something in spite of the wind, and
swivelled in his saddle. Alain had drawn his own knife and now held it by the
tip of the blade. He threw hard, in the exaggerated full-arm motion they had
been taught, and although the range was long for such work—twenty feet at
least, and in windy air—his aim was true. The hilt came to rest protruding from
the center of the man's bandanna. The vaq groped for it, making choked
gargling sounds around the knife in his throat, and then he too dropped from
the saddle.
Seven now.
Like the story of the
shoemaker and the flies, Roland thought. His heart was beating
slow and hard in his chest as he caught up with Alain and Cuthbert. The wind
gusted a lonely whine. Dust flew, swirled, then dropped with the wind. Ahead of
them were three more riders, and ahead of them the main party.
Roland pointed at the
next three, then mimed the slingshot. Pointed beyond them and mimed firing a
revolver. Cuthbert and Alain nodded. They rode forward, once again
stirrup-to-stirrup, closing in.
22
Bert got two of the three
ahead of them clean, but the third jerked at the wrong moment, and the steel
ball meant for the back of his head only clipped his earlobe on the way by.
Roland had drawn his gun by then, however, and put a bullet in the man's temple
as he turned. That made ten, a full quarter of Jonas's company before the
riders even realized trouble had begun. Roland had no idea if it would be
enough of an advantage, but he knew that the first part of the job was done.
No more stealth; now it was a matter of raw killing.
"Hile!
Hile!" he screamed in a ringing, carrying voice. "To
me, gunslingers! To me! Ride them down! No prisoners!"
They spurred toward
the main party, riding into battle for the first time, closing like wolves on
sheep, shooting before the men ahead of them had any slight idea of who had
gotten in behind them or what was happening. The three boys had been trained as
gunslingers, and what they lacked in experience they made up for with the keen
eyes and reflexes of the young. Under their guns, the desert east of Hanging
Rock became a killing-floor.
Screaming, not a
single thought among them above the wrists of their deadly hands, they sliced
into the unprepared Mejis party like a three-sided blade, shooting as they
went. Not every shot killed, but not a one went entirely wild, either. Men flew
out of their saddles and were dragged by boots caught in stirrups as their
horses bolted; other men, some dead, some only wounded, were trampled beneath
the feet of their panicky, rearing mounts.
Roland rode with both
guns drawn and tiring, Rusher's reins gripped in his teeth so they wouldn't
fall overside and trip the horse up. Two men dropped beneath his fire on his
left, two more on the right. Ahead of them, Brian Hookey turned in his saddle,
his beard-stubbly face long with amazement. Around his neck, a reap-charm in
the shape of a bell swung and tinkled as he grabbed for the shotgun which hung
in a scabbard over one burly blacksmith's shoulder. Before he could do more
than get a hand on the gunstock, Roland blew the silver bell off his chest and
exploded the heart which lay beneath it. Hookey pitched out of his saddle with
a grunt.
Cuthbert caught up
with Roland on the right side and shot two more men off their horses. He gave
Roland a fierce and blazing grin. "Al was right!" he shouted. "These
are hard calibers!"
Roland's talented
fingers did their work, rolling the cylinders of the guns he held and reloading
at a full gallop—doing it with a ghastly, supernatural speed—and then
beginning to fire again. Now they had come almost all the way through the
group, riding hard, laying men low on both sides and straight ahead as well.
Alain dropped back a little and turned his horse, covering Roland and Cuthbert
from behind.
Roland saw Jonas,
Depape, and Lengyll reining around to face their attackers. Lengyll was clawing
at his machine-gun, but the strap had gotten tangled in the wide collar of the
duster he wore, and every time he grabbed for the stock, it bobbed out of his
reach. Beneath his heavy gray-blond mustache, Lengyll's mouth was twisted with
fury.
Now, riding between
Roland and Cuthbert and these three, holding a huge blued-steel five-shot in
one hand, came Hash Renfrew.
"Gods damn
you!" Renfrew cried. "Oh, you rotten sister-fuckers!" He dropped
his reins and laid the five-shot in the crook of one elbow to steady it. The
wind gusted viciously, wrapping him in an envelope of swirling brown grit.
Roland had no thought
of retreating, or perhaps jigging to one side or the other. He had, in fact, no
thoughts at all. The fever had descended over his mind and he burned with it
like a torch inside a glass sleeve. Screaming through the reins caught in his
teeth, he galloped toward Hash Renfrew and the three men behind him.
23
Jonas had no clear
idea of what was happening until he heard Will Dearborn screaming
(Hile! To me! No
prisoners!)
a battle-cry he knew
of old. Then it fell into place and the rattle of gunfire made sense. He reined
around, aware of Roy doing the same beside him . . . but most aware of the
ball in its bag, a thing both powerful and fragile, swinging back and forth
against the neck of his horse.
"It's those kids!"
Roy exclaimed. His total surprise made him look more stupid than ever.
"Dearborn, you
bastard!" Hash Renfrew spat, and the gun in his hand thundered
a single time.
Jonas saw Dearborn's
sombrero rise from his head, its brim chewed away. Then the kid was firing, and
he was good—better than anyone Jonas had ever seen in his life. Renfrew was
hammered back out of his saddle with both legs kicking, still holding onto his
monster gun, firing it twice at the dusty-blue sky before hitting the ground on
his back and rolling, dead, on his side.
Lengyll's hand dropped
away from the elusive wire stock of his speed-shooter and he only stared,
unable to believe the apparition bearing down on him out of the dust. "Get
back!" he cried. "In the name of the Horsemen's Association, I tell
you—" Then a large black hole appeared in the center of his forehead, just
above the place where his eyebrows tangled together. His hands flew up to his
shoulders, palms out, as if he were declaring surrender. That was how he died.
"Son of a bitch,
oh you little sister-fucking son of a bitch!" Depape howled. He tried to
draw and his revolver got caught in his scrape. He was still trying to
pull it free when a bullet from Roland's gun opened his mouth in a red scream
almost all the way down to his adam's apple.
This can't be
happening, Jonas thought stupidly. It can't, there are
too many of us.
But it was
happening. The In-World boys had struck unerringly at the fracture-line; were
performing what amounted to a textbook example of how gunslingers were supposed
to attack when the odds were bad. And Jonas's coalition of ranchers, cowboys,
and town tough-boys had shattered. Those not dead were fleeing to every point
of the compass, spurring their horses as if a hundred devils paroled from hell
were in pursuit. They were far from a hundred, but they fought like a
hundred. Bodies were scattered in the dust everywhere, and as Jonas watched, he
saw the one serving as their back door—Stockworth—ride down another man, bump
him out of his saddle, and put a bullet in his head as he fell. Gods of the
earth, he thought, that was Croydon, him that owns the Piano Ranch!
Except he didn't own
it anymore.
And now Dearborn was
bearing down on Jonas with his gun drawn.
Jonas snatched the
drawstring looped around the horn of his saddle and unwound it with two fast,
hard snaps of the wrist. He held the bag up in the windy air, his teeth bared
and his long white hair streaming.
"Come any closer
and I'll smash it! I mean it, you damned puppy! Stay where you are!"
Roland never hesitated
in his headlong gallop, never paused to think; his hands did his thinking for
him now, and when he remembered all this later, it was distant and silent and
queerly warped, like something seen in a flawed mirror ... or a wizard's glass.
Jonas thought: Gods,
it's him! It's Arthur Eld himself come to take me!
And as the barrel of
Roland's gun opened in his eye like the entrance to a tunnel or a mineshaft,
Jonas remembered what the brat had said to him in the dusty dooryard of that
burned-out ranch: The soul of a man such as you can never leave the west.
I knew,
Jonas thought. Even then I knew my ka had pretty well run out. But
surely he won't risk the ball . . . he can't risk the ball, he's the dinh
of this ka-tet and he can't risk it...
"To me!"
Jonas screamed. "To me, boys! They're only three, for gods' sake! To
me, you cowards!"
But he was
alone—Lengyll killed with his idiotic machine-gun lying by his side, Roy a
corpse glaring up at the bitter sky, Quint fled, Hookey dead, the ranchers who
had ridden with them gone. Only Clay still lived, and he was miles from here.
"I'll smash
it!" he shrieked at the cold-eyed boy bearing down
on him like death's sleekest engine. "Before all the gods, I'll—"
Roland thumbed back
the hammer of his revolver and fired. The bullet struck the center of the
tattooed hand holding the drawstring cord and vaporized the palm, leaving only
fingers that twitched their random way out of a spongy red mass. For just a
moment Roland saw the blue coffin, and then it was covered by downspilling
blood.
The bag dropped. And,
as Rusher collided with Jonas's horse and slewed it to the side. Roland
caught the bag deftly in the crook of one arm. Jonas, screaming in dismay as
the prize left him, grabbed at Roland, caught his shoulder, and almost
succeeded in turning the gunslinger out of his saddle. Jonas's blood rained
across Roland's face in hot drops.
"Give it back,
you brat!" Jonas clawed under his serape and
brought out another gun. "Give it back, it's mine!"
"Not
anymore," Roland said. And, as Rusher danced around, quick and delicate
for such a large animal, Roland fired two point-blank rounds into Jonas's face.
Jonas's horse bolted out from under him and the man with the white hair landed
spreadeagled on his back with a thump. His arms and legs spasmed, jerked,
trembled, then stilled.
Roland looped the
bag's drawstring over his shoulder and rode back toward Alain and Cuthbert,
ready to give aid ... but there was no need. They sat their horses side by side
in the blowing dust, at the end of a scattered road of dead bodies, their eyes
wide and dazed—eyes of boys who have passed through fire for the first time and
can hardly believe they have not been burned. Only Alain had been wounded; a
bullet had opened his left cheek, a wound that healed clean but left a scar he
bore until his dying day. He could not remember who had shot him, he said later
on, or at what point of the battle. He had been lost to himself during the
shooting, and had only vague memories of what had happened after the charge
began. Cuthbert said much the same.
"Roland,"
Cuthbert said now. He passed a shaky hand down his face. "Hile,
gunslinger."
"Hile."
Cuthbert's eyes were
red and irritated from the sand, as if he had been crying. He took back the
unspent silver slingshot balls when Roland handed them to him without seeming
to know what they were. "Roland, we're alive."
"Yes."
Alain was looking
around dazedly. "Where did the others go?"
"I'd say at least
twenty-five of them are back there," Roland said, gesturing at the road
of dead bodies. "The rest—" He waved his hand, still with a revolver
in it, in a wide half-circle. "They've gone. Had their fill of Mid-World's
wars, I wot."
Roland slipped the
drawstring bag off his shoulder, held it before him on the bridge of his saddle
for a moment, and then opened it. For a moment the bag's mouth
was black, and then it filled with the irregular pulse of a lovely pink light.
It crept up the
gunslinger's smooth cheeks like fingers and swam in his eyes.
"Roland,"
Cuthbert said, suddenly nervous, "I don't think you should play with that.
Especially not now. They'll have heard the shooting out at Hanging Rock. If
we're going to finish what we started, we don't have time for—"
Roland ignored him. He
slipped both hands into the bag and lifted the wizard's glass out. He held it
up to his eyes, unaware that he had smeared it with droplets of Jonas's blood.
The ball did not mind; this was not the first time it had been blood-touched.
It flashed and swirled formlessly for a moment, and then its pink vapors opened
like curtains. Roland saw what was there, and lost himself within it.
CHAPTER X
BENEATH
THE
DEMON
MOON (II)
1
Coral's grip on
Susan's arm was firm but not painful. There was nothing particularly cruel
about the way she was moving Susan along the downstairs corridor, but there
was a relentlessness about it that was disheartening. Susan didn't try to
protest; it would have been useless. Behind the two women were a pair of vaqueros
(armed with knives and bolas rather than guns; the available guns had
all gone west with Jonas). Behind the vaqs, skulking along like a sullen
ghost which lacks the necessary psychic energy to fully materialize itself,
came the late Chancellor's older brother, Laslo. Reynolds, his taste for a spot
of journey's-end rape blunted by his growing sense of disquiet, had either
remained above or gone off to town.
"I'm going to put
ye in the cold pantry until I know better what to do with'ee, dear," Coral
said. "Ye'll be quite safe there ... and warm. How fortunate ye wore a serape.
Then . . . when Jonas gets back ..."
"Ye'll never see
sai Jonas again," Susan said. "He won't ever—"
Fresh pain exploded in
her sensitive face. For a moment it seemed the entire world had blown up. Susan
reeled back against the dressed stone wall of the lower corridor, her vision
first blurred, then slowly clearing. She could feel blood flowing down her
cheek from a wound opened by the stone in Coral's ring when Coral had
backhanded her. And her nose. That cussed thing was bleeding again, too.
Coral was looking at
her in a chilly this-is-all-business-to-me fashion, but Susan believed she saw
something different in the woman's eyes. Fear, mayhap.
"Don't talk to me
about Eldred, missy. He's sent to catch the boys who killed my brother. The
boys you set loose."
"Get off
it." Susan wiped her nose, grimaced at the blood pooled in her palm, and
wiped it on the leg of her pants. "I know who killed Hart as well as ye do
yerself, so don't pull mine and I won't yank yer own." She watched Coral's
hand rise, ready to slap, and managed a dry laugh. "Go on. Cut my face
open on the other side, if ye like. Will that change how ye sleep tonight with
no man to warm the other side of the bed?"
Coral's hand came down
fast and hard, but instead of slapping, it seized Susan's arm again. Hard
enough to hurt, this time, but Susan barely felt it. She had been hurt by
experts this day, and would suffer more hurt gladly, if that would hasten the
moment when she and Roland could be together again.
Coral hauled her the
rest of the way down the corridor, through the kitchen (that great room, which
would have been all steam and bustle on any other Reaping Day, now stood
uncannily deserted), and to the iron-bound door on the far side. This she
opened. A smell of potatoes and gourds and sharproot drifted out.
"Get in there. Go
smart, before I decide to kick yer winsome ass square."
Susan looked her in the
eye, smiling.
"I'd damn ye for
a murderer's bed-bitch, sai Thorin, but ye've already damned yerself. Ye know
it, too—'tis written in yer face, to be sure. So I'll just drop ye a
curtsey"—still smiling, she suited action to the words— "and wish ye
a very good day."
"Get in and shut
up yer saucy mouth!" Coral cried, and pushed Susan into the
cold pantry. She slammed the door, ran the bolt, and turned her blazing eyes
upon the vaqs, who stood prudently away from her.
"Keep her well, muchachos.
Mind ye do."
She brushed between
them, not listening to their assurances, and went up to her late brother's
suite to wait for Jonas, or word of Jonas. The whey-faced bitch sitting down
there amongst the carrots and potatoes knew nothing, but her words
(ye'll never see sai
Jonas again)
were in Coral's head
now; they echoed and would not leave.
2
Twelve o' the clock
sounded from the squat bell-tower atop the Town Gathering Hall. And if the
unaccustomed silence which hung over the rest of Hambry seemed strange as that
Reap morning passed into afternoon, the silence in the Travellers' Rest was
downright eerie. Better than two hundred souls were packed together beneath the
dead gaze of The Romp,, all of them drinking hard, yet there was hardly a sound
among them save for the shuffle of feet and the impatient rap of glasses on the
bar, indicating that another drink was wanted.
Sheb had tried a
hesitant tune on the piano—"Big Bottle Boogie," everyone liked that
one—and a cowboy with a mutie-mark on one cheek had put the tip of a knife in
his ear and told him to shut up that noise if he wanted to keep what passed for
his brains on the starboard side of his eardrum. Sheb, who would be happy to go
on drawing breath for another thousand years if the gods so allowed, quit his
piano-bench at once, and went to the bar to help Stanley and Pettie the Trotter
serve up the booze.
The mood of the
drinkers was confused and sullen. Reaping Fair had been stolen from them, and
they didn't know what to do about it. There would still be a bonfire, and
plenty of stuffy-guys to bum on it, but there were no Reap-kisses today and
would be no dancing tonight; no riddles, no races, no pig-wrestle, no jokes ...
no good cheer, dammit! No hearty farewell to the end of the year! Instead of
joviality there had been murder in the dark, and the escape of the guilty, and
now only the hope of retribution instead of the certainty of it. These folk,
sullen-drunk and as potentially dangerous as stormclouds filled with
lightning, wanted someone to focus on, someone to tell them what to do.
And, of course,
someone to toss on the fire, as in the days of Eld.
It was at this point,
not long after the last toll of noon had faded into the cold air, that the
batwing doors opened and two women came in. A good many knew the crone in the
lead, and several of them crossed their eyes with their thumbs as a ward
against her evil look. A murmur ran through the room. It was the Coos, the old
witch-woman, and although her face was pocked with sores and her eyes sunk so
deep in their sockets they could barely be seen, she gave off a peculiar sense
of vitality. Her lips were red, as if she had been eating winterberries.
The woman behind her
walked slowly and stiffly, with one hand pressed against her midsection. Her
face was as white as the witch-woman's mouth was red.
Rhea advanced to the
middle of the floor, passing the gawking trail-hands at the Watch Me tables
without so much as a glance. When she reached the center of the bar and stood
directly beneath The Romp's glare, she turned to look at the silent drovers and
townsfolk.
"Most of ye know
me!" she cried in a rusty voice which stopped just short of stridency.
"Those of ye who don't have never wanted a love-potion or needed the ram
put back in yer rod or gotten tired of a nagging mother-in-law's tongue. I'm
Rhea, the wise-woman of the Coos, and this lady beside me is aunt to the girl
who freed three murderers last night... this same girl who murdered yer town's
Sheriff and a good young man— married, he was, and with a kid on the way. He
stood before her with 'is defenseless hands raised, pleadin for his life on
behalf of his wife and his babby to come, and still she shot 'im! Cruel, she
is! Cruel and heartless!"
A mutter ran through
the crowd. Rhea raised her twisted old claws and it stilled at once. She turned
in a slow circle to see them all, hands still raised, looking like the world's
oldest, ugliest prizefighter.
"Strangers came
and ye welcomed em in!" she cried in her rusty crow's voice.
"Welcomed em and gave em bread to eat, and it's ruin they've fed ye in
return! The deaths of those ye loved and depended on, spoilage to the time of
the harvest, and gods know what curses upon the time to follow fin de
ano!"
More murmurs, now
louder. She had touched their deepest fear: that this year's evil would spread,
might even snarl the newly threaded stock which had so slowly and hopefully
begun to emerge along the Outer Arc.
"But they've gone
and likely won't be back!" Rhea continued. "Mayhap just as well—why
should their strange blood taint our ground? But there's this other... one
raised among us ... a young woman gone traitor to her town and rogue among her
own kind."
Her voice dropped to a
hoarse whisper on this last phrase; her listeners strained forward to hear,
faces grim, eyes big. And now Rhea pulled the pallid, skinny woman in the rusty
black dress forward. She stood Cordelia in front other like a doll or a
ventriloquist's dummy, and whispered in her ear ... but the whisper travelled,
somehow; they all heard it.
"Come, dear. Tell
em what ye told me."
In a dead, carrying
voice, Cordelia said: "She said she wouldn't be the Mayor's gilly. He
wasn't good enough for such as her, she said. And then she seduced Will
Dearborn. The price of her body was a fine position in Gilead as his consort .
. . and the murder of Hart Thorin. Dearborn paid her price. Lusty as he was for
her, he paid gladly. His friends helped; they may have had the use of 'er as well, for all I know. Chancellor
Rimer must have gotten in their way. Or p'rhaps they just saw him, and felt
like doing him, too."
"Bastards!"
Pettie cried. "Sneaking young culls!"
"Now tell cm
what's needed to clarify the new season before it's sp'iled, dearie," Rhea
said in a crooning voice.
Cordelia Delgado
raised her head and looked around at the men. She took a breath, pulling the
sour, intermingled smells of gray and beer and smoke and whiskey deep into her
spinster's lungs.
"Take her. Ye
must take her. I say it in love and sorrow, so I do."
Silent. Their eyes.
"Paint her
hands."
The glass gaze of the
thing on the wall, looking its stuffed judgment over the waiting room.
"Charyou tree,
" Cordelia whispered.
They did not cry their
agreement but sighed it, like autumn wind through stripped trees.
3
Sheemie ran after the
bad Coffin Hunter and Susan-sai until he could literally run no more—his lungs
were afire and the stitch which had formed in his side turned into a cramp. He
pitched forward onto the grass of the Drop, his left hand clutching his right
armpit, grimacing with pain.
He lay there for some
time with his face deep in the fragrant grass, knowing they were getting
farther and farther ahead but also knowing it would do him no good to get up
and start running again until the stitch was good and gone. If he tried to
hurry the process, the stitch would simply come back and lay him low again. So
he lay where he was, lifting his head to look at the tracks left by Susan-sai
and the bad Coffin Hunter, and he was just about ready to try his feet when
Caprichoso bit him. Not a nip, mind you, but a good healthy chomp. Capi had had
a difficult twenty-four hours, and he hadn't much liked to see the author of
all his misery lying on the grass, apparently taking a nap.
"Yeee-OWWWW-by-damn!"
Sheemie cried, and rocketed to his feet. There was nothing so magical as a good
bite on the ass, a man of more philosophic bent might have reflected; it made
all other concerns, no matter how heavy or sorrowful, disappear like smoke.
He whirled about.
"Why did you do that, you mean old sneak of a Capi?" Sheemie was
rubbing his bottom vigorously, and large tears of pain stood out in his eyes.
"That hurts like . . . like a big old sonovabitch!”
Caprichoso extended
his neck to its maximum length, bared his teeth in the satanic grin which only
mules and dromedaries can command, and brayed. To Sheemie that bray sounded
very like laughter.
The mule's lead still
trailed back between his sharp little hoofs. Sheemie reached for it, and when
Capi dipped his head to inflict another bite, the boy gave him a good hard
whack across the side of his narrow head. Capi snorted and blinked.
"You had that
coming, mean old Capi," Sheemie said. "I'll have to shit from a squat
for a week, so I will. Won't be able to sit on the damned jakes." He
doubled the lead over his fist and climbed aboard the mule. Capi made no
attempt to buck him off, but Sheemie winced as his wounded part settled atop
the ridge of the mule's spine. This was good luck just the same, though, he
thought as he kicked the animal into motion. His ass hurt, but at least he
wouldn't have to walk ... or try to run with a stitch in his side.
"Go on,
stupid!" he said. "Hurry up! Fast as you can, you old
sonovabitch!"
In the course of the
next hour, Sheemie called Capi "you old sonovabitch" as often as
possible—he had discovered, as many others had before him, that only the first
cussword is really hard; after that, there's nothing quite like them for
relieving one's feelings.
4
Susan's trail cut
diagonally across the Drop toward the coast and the grand old adobe that rose
there. When Sheemie reached Seafront, he dismounted outside the arch and only
stood, wondering what to do next. That they had come here, he had no
doubt—Susan's horse, Pylon, and the bad Coffin Hunter's horse were tethered
side by side in the shade, occasionally dropping their heads and blowing in
the pink stone trough that ran along the courtyard's ocean side.
What to do now? The
riders who came and went beneath the arch (mostly white-headed vaqs
who'd been considered too old to form a part of Lengyll's party) paid no
attention to the inn-boy and his mule, but Miguel might be a different story.
The old mozo had never liked him, acted as if he thought Sheemie would
turn thief, given half a chance, and if he saw Coral's slop-and-carry-boy
skulking in the courtyard, Miguel would very likely drive him away.
No, he won't,
he thought grimly. Not today, today I can't let him boss me. I won't go even
if he hollers.
But if the old man did
holler and raised an alarm, what then? The bad Coffin Hunter might come and
kill him. Sheemie had reached a point where he was willing to die for his
friends, but not unless it served a purpose.
So he stood in the
cold sunlight, shifting from foot to foot, irresolute, wishing he was smarter
than he was, that he could think of a plan. An hour passed this way, then two.
It was slow time, each passing moment an exercise in frustration. He sensed any
opportunity to help Susan-sai slipping away, but didn't know what to do about
it. Once he heard what sounded like thunder from the west . . . although a
bright fall day like this didn't seem right for thunder.
He had about decided
to chance the courtyard anyway—it was temporarily deserted, and he might be
able to make it across to the main house—when the man he had feared came
staggering out of the stables.
Miguel Torres was
festooned with reap-charms and was very drunk. He approached the center of the
courtyard in rolling side-to-side loops, the tugstring of his sombrero
twisted against his scrawny throat, his long white hair flying. The front of
his chibosa was wet, as if he had tried to take a leak without
remembering that you had to unlimber your dingus first. He had a small ceramic
jug in one hand. His eyes were fierce and bewildered.
"Who done
this?" Miguel cried. He looked up at the afternoon sky and the Demon Moon
which floated there. Little as Sheemie liked the old man, his heart cringed. It
was bad luck to look directly at old Demon, so it was. "Who done this
thing? I ask that you tell me, senor! Por favor!" A pause, then a
scream so powerful that Miguel reeled on his feet and almost fell. He raised
his fists, as if he would box an answer out of the winking face in the moon,
then dropped them wearily. Corn liquor slopped from the neck of the jug and wet
him further. "Maricon, " he muttered. He staggered to the wall
(almost tripping over the rear legs of the bad Coffin Hunter's horse as he
went), then sat down with his back against the adobe wall. He drank deeply from
the jug, then pulled his sombrero up and settled it over his eyes. His arm
twitched the jug, then settled it back, as if in the end it had proved too
heavy. Sheemie waited until the old man's thumb came unhooked from the
jughandle and the hand flopped onto the cobbles. He started forward, then
decided to wait even a little longer. Miguel was old and Miguel was mean. but
Sheemie guessed Miguel might also be tricky. Lots of folks were, especially the
mean ones.
He waited until he
heard Miguel's dusty snores, then led Capi into the courtyard, wincing at every
clop of the mule's hooves. Miguel never stirred, however. Sheemie tied Capi to
the end of the hitching rail (wincing again as Caprichoso brayed a tuneless
greeting to the horses tied there), then walked quickly across to the main
door, through which he had never in his life expected to pass. He put his hand
on the great iron latch, looked back once more at the old man sleeping against
the wall, then opened the door and tiptoed in.
He stood for a moment
in the oblong of sun the open door admitted, his shoulders hunched all the way
up to his ears, expecting a hand to settle on the scruff of his neck (which
bad-natured folk always seemed able to find, no matter how high you hunched
your shoulders) at any moment; an angry voice would follow, asking what he
thought he was doing here.
The foyer stood empty
and silent. On the far wall was a tapestry depicting vaqueros herding
horses along the Drop; against it leaned a guitar with a broken string.
Sheemie's feet sent back echoes no matter how lightly he walked. He shivered.
This was a house of murder now, a bad place. There were likely ghosts.
Still, Susan was here.
Somewhere.
He passed through the
double doors on the far side of the foyer and entered the reception hall.
Beneath its high ceiling, his footfalls echoed more loudly than ever. Long-dead
mayors looked down at him from the walls; most had spooky eyes that seemed to
follow him as he walked, marking him as an intruder. He knew their eyes were
only paint, but still . . .
One in particular
troubled him: a fat man with clouds of red hair, a bulldog mouth, and a mean
glare in his eye, as if he wanted to ask what some halfwit inn-boy was doing in
the Great Hall at Mayor's House.
"Quit looking at
me that way, you big old sonuvabitch," Sheemie whispered, and felt a
little better. For the moment, at least.
Next came the dining
hall, also empty, with the long trestle tables pushed back against the wall.
There was the remains of a meal on one—a single plate of cold chicken and
sliced bread, half a mug of ale. Looking at those few bits of food on a table
that had served dozens at various fairs and festivals—that should have served
dozens this very day—brought the enormity of what had happened home to Sheemie.
And the sadness of it, too. Things had changed in Hambry, and would likely
never be the same again.
These long thoughts
did not keep him from gobbling the leftover chicken and bread, or from chasing
it with what remained in the alepot. It had been a long, foodless day.
He belched, clapped
both hands over his mouth, eyes making quick and guilty side-to-side darts
above his dirty fingers, and then walked on.
The door at the far
end of the room was latched but unlocked. Sheemie opened it and poked his head
out into the corridor which ran the length of Mayor's House. The way was lit
with gas chandeliers, and was as broad as an avenue. It was empty—at least for
the moment—but he could hear whispering voices from other rooms, and perhaps
other floors, as well. He supposed they belonged to the maids and any other
servants that might be about this afternoon, but they sounded very ghostly to
him, just the same. Perhaps one belonged to Mayor Thorin, wandering the corridor
right in front of him (if Sheemie could but see him . . . which he was glad he
couldn't). Mayor Thorin wandering and wondering what had happened to him, what
this cold jellylike stuff soaking into his nightshirt might be, who—
A hand gripped
Sheemie's arm just above the elbow. He almost shrieked.
"Don't!" a
woman whispered. "For your father's sake!"
Sheemie somehow
managed to keep the scream in. He turned. And there, wearing jeans and a plain
checked ranch-shirt, her hair tied back, her pale face set, her dark eyes
blazing, stood the Mayor's widow.
"S-S-Sai Thorin
... I... I... I..."
There was nothing else
he could think of to say. Now she'll call for the guards o' the watch, if
there be any left, he thought. In a way, it would be a relief
"Have ye come for
the girl? The Delgado girl?"
Grief had been good to
Olive, in a terrible way—had made her face seem less plump, and oddly young.
Her dark eyes never left his, and forbade any attempt at a lie. Sheemie
nodded.
"Good. I can use
your help, boy. She's down below, in the pantry, and she's guarded."
Sheemie gaped, not
believing what he was hearing.
"Do you think I
believe she had anything to do with Hart's murder?" Olive asked, as if
Sheemie had objected to her idea. "I may be fat and not so speedy on my
pins anymore, but I'm not a complete idiot. Come on, now. Seafront's not a good
place for sai Delgado just now—too many people from town know where she
is."
5
"Roland."
He will hear this
voice in uneasy dreams for the rest of his life, never quite remembering what
he has dreamed, only knowing that the dreams leave him feeling ill
somehow—walking restlessly, straightening pictures in loveless rooms, listening
to the call to muzzein in alien town squares.
"Roland
of Gilead."
This voice, which he
almost recognizes; a voice so like his own that a psychiatrist from Eddie's or
Susannah's or Jake's when-and-where would say it is his voice, the voice of his
subconscious, but Roland knows better; Roland knows that often the voices that
sound the most like our own when they speak in our heads are those of the most
terrible outsiders, the most dangerous intruders.
"Roland,
son of Steven."
The ball has taken him
first to Hambry and to Mayor's House, and he would see more of what is
happening there, but then it takes him away— calls him
away in that strangely familiar voice, and he has to go. There is no choice
because, unlike Rhea or Jonas, he is not watching the ball and the creatures
who speak soundlessly within it; he is inside the ball, a part of its
endless pink storm.
"Roland,
come. Roland, see."
And so the storm
whirls him first up and then away. He flies across the Drop, rising and rising
through stacks of air first warm and then cold, and he is not alone in the pink
storm which bears him west along the Path of the Beam. Sheb flies past him, his
hat cocked back on his head; he is singing "Hey Jude " at the top of
his lungs as his nicotine-stained fingers plink keys that are not
there—transported by his tune, Sheb doesn't seem to realize that the storm has
ripped his piano away.
"Roland,
come,"
the voice says—the voice of the storm, the voice
of the glass—and Roland comes. The Romp flies by him, glassy eyes blazing with
pink light. A scrawny man in farmer's overalls goes flying past, his long red
hair streaming out behind him. "Life for you, and for your crop, " he
says—something like that, anyway—and then he's gone. Next, spinning like a
weird windmill, comes an iron chair (to Roland it looks like a torture device)
equipped with wheels, and the boy gunslinger thinks
The Lady of Shadows without knowing why he thinks it, or what it means.
Now the pink storm is
carrying him over blasted mountains, now over a fertile green delta where a
broad river runs its oxbow squiggles like a vein, reflecting a placid blue sky
that turns to the pink of wild roses as the storm passes above. Ahead, Roland
sees an uprushing column of darkness and his heart quails, but this is where
the pink storm is taking him, and this is where he must go.
I want to get out, he
thinks, but he's not stupid, he realizes the truth: he may never get
out. The wizard's glass has swallowed him. He may remain in its stormy,
muddled eye forever.
I'll shoot my way out,
if I have to, he thinks, but no—he has no guns. He is naked in the storm,
rushing bareass toward that virulent blue-black infection that has buried all
the landscape beneath it.
And yet he hears singing.
Faint but beautiful—a
sweet harmonic sound that makes him shiver and think of Susan: bird and bear
and hare and fish.
Suddenly Sheemie's
mule (Caprichoso, Roland thinks, a beautiful
name) goes past, galloping on thin air with his eyes as bright as firedims
in the storm's lumbre fuego. Following him, wearing a sombrera and
riding a broom festooned with fluttering reap-charms, comes Rhea of the Coos.
"I'll get you, my pretty!" she screams at the fleeing mule, and then,
cackling, she is gone, zooming and brooming.
Roland plunges into
the black, and suddenly his breath is gone. The world around him is noxious
darkness; the air seems to creep on his skin like a layer of bugs. He is
buffeted, boxed to and fro by invisible fists, then driven downward in a dive
so violent he fears he will be smashed against the ground: so fell Lord Perth.
Dead fields and
deserted villages roll up out of the gloom; he sees blasted trees that will
give no shade—oh, but all is shade here, all is death here, this is the edge of
End-World, where some dark day he will come, and all is death here.
"Gunslinger,
this is Thunderclap."
"Thunderclap,"
he says.
"Here
are the unbreathing; the white faces."
"The unbreathing.
The white faces. "
Yes. He knows that,
somehow. This is the place of slaughtered soldiers, the cloven helm, the rusty
halberd; from here come the pale warriors. This is Thunderclap, where clocks
run backward and the graveyards vomit out their dead.
Ahead is a tree like a
crooked, clutching hand; on its topmost branch a billy-bumbler has been impaled.
It should be dead, but as the pink storm carries Roland past, it raises its
head and looks at him with inexpressible pain and weariness. "Oy!" it
cries, and then it, too, is gone and not to be remembered for many years.
"Look
ahead, Roland—see your destiny."
Now, suddenly, he
knows that voice—it is the voice of the Turtle. He looks and sees a brilliant
blue-gold glow piercing the dirty darkness of Thunderclap. Before he can do
more than register it, he breaks out of the darkness and into the light like something
coming out of an egg, a creature at last being born.
"Light!
Let there be light!"
the voice of the Turtle cries, and Roland has to
put his hands to his eyes and peek through his fingers to keep from being
blinded. Below him is a field of blood—or so he thinks then, a boy of fourteen
who has that day done his first real killing. This is the
blood that has flowed out of Thunderclap and threatens to drown our side of
the world, he thinks, and it will not be for untold years that he will
finally rediscover his time inside the ball and put this memory together with
Eddie's dream and tell his com-padres, as they sit in the turnpike
breakdown lane at the end of the night, that he was wrong, that he had been
fooled by the brilliance, coming as it did, so hard on the heels of Thunderclap
's shadows. "It wasn't blood but roses, " he tells Eddie, Susannah,
and Jake.
"Gunslinger,
look—look there."
Yes, there it is, a
dusty gray-black pillar rearing on the horizon: the Dark Tower, the place where
all Beams, all lines of force, converge. In its spiraling windows he sees
fitful electric blue fire and hears the cries of all those pent within; he
senses both the strength of the place and the wrong-ness of it; he can feel how
it is spooling error across everything, softening the divisions between the
worlds, how its potential for mischief is growing stronger even as disease
weakens its truth and coherence, like a body afflicted with cancer; this
jutting arm of dark gray stone is the world's great mystery and last awful
riddle.
It is the Tower, the
Dark Tower rearing to the sky, and as Roland rushes toward it in the pink
storm, he thinks: I will enter you, me and my friends, if
ka wills it so; we will enter you and we will conquer the wrong-ness within
you. It may be years yet, but I swear by bird and bear and hare and fish, by
all I love that—
But now the sky fills
with flaggy clouds which flow out of Thunderclap, and the world begins to go
dark; the blue light from the Tower's rising windows shines like mad eyes, and
Roland hears thousands of screaming, wailing voices.
"You
will kill everything and everyone you love,"
says the voice of the Turtle, and now it is a
cruel voice, cruel and hard.
"and
still the Tower will be pent shut against you."
The gunslinger draws
in all his breath and draws together all his force; when he cries his answer to
the Turtle, he does so for all the generations of his blood: "NO! IT WILL
NOT STAND! WHEN I COME HERE IN MY BODY, IT WILL NOT STAND! I SWEAR ON MY FATHER
'S NAME. IT WILL NOT STAND/"
"Then
die,"
the voice says, and Roland is hurled at the
gray-black stone flank of the Tower, to be smashed there like a bug against a
rock. But before that can happen—
6
Cuthbert and Alain
stood watching Roland with increasing concern. He had the piece of Maerlyn’s
Rainbow raised to his face, cupped in his hands as a man might cup a ceremonial
goblet before making a toast. The drawstring bag lay crumpled on the dusty toes
of his boots; his cheeks and forehead were washed in a pink glow that neither boy
liked. It seemed alive, somehow, and hungry.
They thought, as if
with one mind: I can't see his eyes. Where are his eyes?
"Roland?"
Cuthbert repeated. "If we're going to get out to Hanging Rock before
they're ready for us, you have to put that thing away."
Roland made no move to
lower the ball. He muttered something under his breath; later, when Cuthbert
and Alain had a chance to compare notes, they both agreed it had been thunderclap.
"Roland?"
Alain asked, stepping forward. As gingerly as a surgeon slipping a scalpel into
the body of a patient, he slipped his right hand between the curve of the ball
and Roland's bent, studious face. There was no response. Alain pulled back and
turned to Cuthbert.
"Can you touch
him?" Bert asked.
Alain shook his head.
"Not at all. It's like he's gone somewhere far away."
"We have to wake
him up." Cuthbert's voice was dust-dry and shaky at the edges.
"Vannay told us
that if you wake a person from a deep hypnotic trance too suddenly, he can go
mad," Alain said. "Remember? I don't know if I dare—"
Roland stirred. The
pink sockets where his eyes had been seemed to grow. His mouth flattened into
the line of bitter determination they both knew well.
"No! It will not
stand!" he cried in a voice that made gooseflesh ripple
the skin of the other two boys; that was not Roland's voice at all, at least
not as he was now; that was the voice of a man.
"No," Alain
said much later, when Roland slept and he and Cuthbert , sat up before the
campfire. "That was the voice of a king."
Now, however, the two
of them only looked at their absent, roaring friend, paralyzed with fright.
"When I come here
in my body, it will not stand! I swear on my father 's name, IT WILL NOT
STAND!"
Then, as Roland's
unnaturally pink face contorted, like the face of a man who confronts some
unimaginable horror, Cuthbert and Alain lunged forward. It was no longer a
question of perhaps destroying him in an effort to save him; if they didn't do
something, the glass would kill him as they watched.
In the dooryard of the
Bar K, it had been Cuthbert who clipped Roland; this time Alain did the honors,
administering a hard right to the center of the gunslinger's forehead. Roland
tumbled backward, the ball spilling out of his loosening hands and the terrible
pink light leaving his face. Cuthbert caught the boy and Alain caught the ball.
Its heavy pink glow was weirdly insistent, beating at his eyes and pulling at
his mind, but Alain stuffed it resolutely into the drawstring bag again without
looking at it... and as he pulled the cord, yanking the bag's mouth shut, he
saw the pink light wink out, as if it knew it had lost. For the time being, at
least.
He turned back, and
winced at the sight of the bruise puffing up from the middle of Roland's brow.
"Is he—"
"Out cold,"
Cuthbert said.
"He better come
to soon."
Cuthbert looked at him
grimly, with not a trace of his usual amiability. "Yes," he said,
"you're certainly right about that."
7
Sheemie waited at the
foot of the stairs which led down to the kitchen area, shifting uneasily from
foot to foot and waiting for sai Thorin to come back, or to call him. He didn't
know how long she'd been in the kitchen, but it felt like forever. He wanted
her to come back, and more than that—more than anything—he wanted her to bring
Susan-sai with her. Sheemie had a terrible feeling about this place and this
day; a feeling that darkened like the sky, which was now all obscured with
smoke in the west. What was happening out there, or if it had anything to do
with the thundery sounds he'd heard earlier, Sheemie didn't know, but he wanted
to be out of here before the smoke-hazed sun went down and the real Demon
Moon, not its pallid day-ghost, rose in the sky.
One of the swinging
doors between the corridor and the kitchen pushed open and Olive came hurrying
out.. She was alone.
"She's in the
pantry, all right," Olive said. She raked her fingers through her graying
hair. "I got that much out of those two pupuras, but no more. I
knew it was going to be that way as soon as they started talking that stupid
crunk of theirs."
There was no proper
word for the dialect of the Mejis vaqueros, but "crunk" served
well enough among the Barony's higher-born citizens. Olive knew both of the vaqs
guarding the pantry, in the vague way of a person who has once ridden a lot and
passed gossip and weather with other Drop-riders, and she knew damned well
these old boys could do better than crunk. They had spoken it so they could
pretend to misunderstand her, and save both them and her the embarrassment of
an outright refusal. She had gone along with the deception for much the same
reason, although she could have responded with crunk of her own perfectly
well—and called them some names their mothers never used—had she wanted.
"I told them
there were men upstairs," she said, "and I thought maybe they meant
to steal the silver. I said I wanted the maloficios turned out. And
still they played dumb. No habla, sai. Shit. Shit!"
Sheemie thought of
calling them a couple of big old sonuvabitches, and decided to keep silent. She
was pacing back and forth in front of him and throwing an occasional burning
look at the closed kitchen doors. At last she stopped in front of Sheemie
again.
"Turn out your
pockets," she said. "Let's see what you have for hopes and
garlands."
Sheemie did as she
asked, producing a little pocketknife (a gift from Stanley Ruiz) and a
half-eaten cookie from one. From the other he brought out three lady-finger
firecrackers, a big-banger, and a few sulfur matches.
Olive's eyes gleamed
when she saw these. "Listen to me, Sheemie," she said.
8
Cuthbert patted
Roland's face with no result. Alain pushed him aside, knelt, and took the
gunslinger's hands. He had never used the touch this way, but had been told it
was possible—that one could reach another's mind, in at least some cases.
Roland! Roland, wake
up! Please! We need you!
At first there was
nothing. Then Roland stirred, muttered, and pulled his hands out of Alain's. In
the moment before his eyes opened, both of the other two boys were struck by
the same fear of what they might see: no eyes at all, only raving pink light.
But they were Roland's
eyes, all right—those cool blue shooter's eyes.
He struggled to gain
his feet, and failed the first time. He held out his hands. Cuthbert took one,
Alain the other. As they pulled him up, Bert saw a strange and frightening
thing: there were threads of white in Roland's hair. There had been none that
morning; he would have sworn to it. The morning had been a long time ago,
however.
"How long was I
out?" Roland touched the bruise in the center of his forehead with the
tips of his fingers and winced.
"Not long,"
Alain said. "Five minutes, maybe. Roland, I'm sorry I hit you, but I had
to. It was ... I thought it was killing you."
"Mayhap 'twas. Is
it safe?"
Alain pointed wordlessly
to the drawstring bag.
"Good. It's best
one of you carry it for now. I might be . . ." He searched for the right
word, and when he found it, a small, wintry smile touched the comers of his
mouth—"tempted," he finished. "Let's ride for Hanging Rock. We've
got work yet to finish."
"Roland .
.." Cuthbert began.
Roland turned, one
hand on the horn of his horse's saddle.
Cuthbert licked his
lips, and for a moment Alain didn't think he would be able to ask. If you
don't, I will, Alain thought . . . but Bert managed, bringing the words
out in a rush.
"What did you
see?"
"Much,"
Roland said. "I saw much, but most of it is already fading out of my mind,
the way dreams do when you wake up. What I do remember I'll tell you as we
ride. You must know, because it changes everything. We're going back to Gilead,
but not for long."
"Where after
that?" Alain asked, mounting.
"West. In search
of the Dark Tower. If we survive today, that is. Come on. Let's take those
tankers."
9
The two vaqs
were rolling smokes when there was a loud bang from upstairs. They both jumped
and looked at each other, the tobacco from their works-in-progress sifting down
to the floor in small brown flurries. A woman shrieked. The doors burst open.
It was the Mayor's widow again, this time accompanied by a maid. The vaqs
knew her well—Maria Tomas, the daughter of an old compadre from the
Piano Ranch.
"The thieving
bastards have set the place on fire!" Maria cried, speaking to them in
crunk. "Come and help!"
"Maria, sai, we
have orders to guard—"
"A putina
locked in the pantry?" Maria shouted, her eyes blazing. "Come, ye
stupid old donkey, before the whole place catches! Then ye can explain to Senor
Lengyll why ye stood here using yer thumbs for fart-corks while Seafront burned
down around yer ears!"
"Go on!"
Olive snapped. "Are you cowards?"
There were several
smaller bangs as, above them in the great parlor, Sheemie set off the
lady-fingers. He used the same match to light the drapes.
The two viejos
exchanged a glance. "Andelay, " said the older of the two,
then looked back at Maria. He no longer bothered with the crunk. "Watch
this door," he said.
"Like a
hawk," she agreed.
The two old men
bustled out, one gripping the cords of his bolas, the other pulling a
long knife from the scabbard on his belt.
As soon as the women
heard their footsteps on the stairs at the end of the hall, Olive nodded to
Maria and they crossed the room. Maria threw the bolts; Olive pulled the door
open. Susan came out at once, looking from one to the other, then smiling tentatively.
Maria gasped at the sight of her mistress's swelled face and the blood crusted
around her nose.
Susan took Maria's
hand before the maid could touch her face and squeezed her fingers gently.
"Do ye think Thorin would want me now?" she asked, and then seemed to
realize who her other rescuer was. "Olive ... sai Thorin ... I'm sorry. I
didn't mean to be cruel. But ye must believe that Roland, him ye know as Will
Dearborn, would never—"
"I know it
well," Olive said, "and there's no time for this now. Come on."
She and Maria led
Susan out of the kitchen, away from the stairs ascending to the main house and
toward the storage rooms at the far north end of the lower level. In the
drygoods storage room, Olive told the two of them to wait. She was gone for perhaps
five minutes, but to Susan and Maria it seemed an eternity.
When she came back,
Olive was wearing a wildly colored scrape much too big for her—it might
have been her husband's, but Susan thought it looked too big for the late
Mayor, as well. Olive had tucked a piece of it into the side of her jeans to
keep from stumbling over it. Slung over her arm like blankets, she had two
more, both smaller and lighter. "Put these on," she said. "It's
going to be cold."
Leaving the drygoods
store, they went down a narrow servants' passageway toward the back courtyard.
There, if they were fortunate (and if Miguel was still unconscious), Sheemie
would be waiting for them with mounts. Olive hoped with all her heart that they
would be fortunate. She wanted Susan safely away from Hambry before the sun
went down.
And before the moon
rose.
10
"Susan's been
taken prisoner," Roland told the others as they rode west toward Hanging
Rock. "That's the first thing I saw in the glass."
He spoke with such an
air of absence that Cuthbert almost reined up. This wasn't the ardent lover of
the last few months. It was as if Roland had found a dream to ride through the
pink air within the ball, and part of him rode it still. Or is it riding
him? Cuthbert wondered.
"What?"
Alain asked. "Susan taken? How? By whom? Is she all right?'"
"Taken by Jonas.
He hurt her some, but not too badly. She'll heal . . . and she'll live. I'd
turn around in a second if I thought her life was in any real danger."
Ahead of them,
appearing and disappearing in the dust like a mirage, was Hanging Rock.
Cuthbert could see the sunlight pricking hazy sun-stars on the tankers, and he
could see men. A lot of them. A lot of horses, as well. He patted the neck of
his own mount, then glanced across to make sure Alain had Lengyll's
machine-gun. He did. Cuthbert reached around to the small of his back, making
sure of the slingshot. It was there. Also his deerskin ammunition bag, which
now contained a number of the big-bangers Sheemie had stolen as well as steel
shot.
He's using every ounce
of his will to keep from going back, anyway, Cuthbert
thought. He found the realization comforting—sometimes Roland scared him. There
was something in him that went beyond steel. Something like madness. If it was
there, you were glad to have it on your side ... but often enough you wished it
wasn't there at all. On anybody's side.
"Where is
she?" Alain asked.
"Reynolds took
her back to Seafront. She's locked in the pantry ... or was locked
there. I can't say which, exactly, because . . ." Roland paused, thinking.
"The ball sees far, but sometimes it sees more. Sometimes it sees a future
that's already happening."
"How can the
future already be happening?" Alain asked. "I don't know, and I don't
think it was always that way. I think it's more to do with the world than
Maerlyn's Rainbow. Time is strange now. We know that, don't we? How
things sometimes seem to ... slip. It's almost as if there's a thinny
everywhere, breaking things down. But Susan's safe. I know that, and that's
enough for me. Sheemie is going to help her ... or is helping her.
Somehow Jonas missed Sheemie, and he followed Susan all the way back."
"Good for
Sheemie!" Alain said, and pumped his fist into the air.
"Hurrah!" Then: "What about us? Did you see us in this
future?"
"No. This part
was all quick—I hardly snatched more than a glance before the ball took me
away. Flew me away, it seemed. But ... I saw smoke on the horizon. I
remember that. It could have been the smoke of burning tankers, or the brush
piled in front of Eyebolt, or both. I think we're going to succeed."
Cuthbert was looking
at his old friend in a queerly distraught way. The young man so deeply in love
that Bert had needed to knock him into the dust of the courtyard in order to
wake him up to his responsibilities . . . where was that young man, exactly?
What had changed him, given him those disturbing strands of white hair?
"If we survive
what's ahead," Cuthbert said, watching the gunslinger closely,
"she'll meet us on the road. Won't she, Roland?"
He saw the pain on
Roland's face, and now understood: the lover was here, but the ball had taken
away his joy and left only grief. That, and some new purpose—yes, Cuthbert felt
it very well—which had yet to be stated.
"I don't
know," Roland said. "I almost hope not, because we can never be as we
were."
"What? "
This time Cuthbert did rein up.
Roland looked at him
calmly enough, but now there were tears in
his eyes.
"We are fools of
ka" the gunslinger said. "Ka like a wind, Susan calls
it." He looked first at Cuthbert on his left, then at Alain on his right.
"The Tower is our ka; mine especially. But it isn't hers, nor she
mine. No more is John Parson our ka. We're not going toward his men to
defeat him, but only because they're in our way." He raised his hands,
then dropped them again, as if to say, What more do you need me to tell you?
"There is
no Tower, Roland," Cuthbert said patiently. "I don't know what you
saw in that glass ball, but there is no Tower. Well, as a symbol, I
suppose—like Arthur's Cup, or the Cross of the man-Jesus—but not as a real
thing, a real building—"
"Yes,"
Roland said. "It's real."
They looked at him
uncertainly, and saw no doubt on his face. "It's real, and our fathers
know. Beyond the dark land—I can't remember its name now, it's one of the
things I've lost—is End-World, and in End-World stands the Dark Tower. Its
existence is the great secret our fathers keep; it's what has held them
together as ka-tet across all the years of the world's decline. When we
return to Gilead—if we return, and I now think we will—I'll tell them
what I've seen, and they'll confirm what I say."
"You saw all that
in the glass?" Alain asked in an awe-hushed voice.
"I saw
much."
"But not Susan
Delgado," Cuthbert said.
"No. When we
finish with yonder men and she finishes with Mejis, her part in our ka-tet
ends. Inside the ball, I was given a choice: Susan, and my life as her husband
and father of the child she now carries ... or the Tower." Roland wiped
his face with a shaking hand. "I would choose Susan in an instant, if not
for one thing: the Tower is crumbling, and if it falls, everything we know will
be swept away. There will be chaos beyond our imagining. We must go ... and
we will go." Above his young and unlined cheeks, below his young and
unlined brow, were the ancient killer's eyes that Eddie Dean would first
glimpse in the mirror of an airliner's bathroom. But now they swam with
childish tears.
There was nothing
childish in his voice, however.
"I choose the
Tower. I must. Let her live a good life and long with someone else—she will, in
time. As for me, I choose the Tower."
11
Susan mounted on
Pylon, which Sheemie had hastened to bring around to the rear courtyard after
lighting the draperies of the great parlor on fire. Olive Thorin rode one of
the Barony geldings with Sheemie double-mounted behind her and holding onto
Capi's lead. Maria opened the back gate, wished them good luck, and the three
trotted out. The sun was westering now, but the wind had pulled away most of
the smoke that had risen earlier. Whatever had happened in the desert, it was
over now ... or happening on some other layer of the same present time.
Roland, be thee well,
Susan thought. I'll see thee soon, dear . . . as soon as I can.
"Why are we going
north?" she asked after half an hour's silent riding.
"Because Seacoast
Road's best."
"But—"
"Hush! They'll
find you gone and search the house first . . . if t'asn't burned flat, that is.
Not finding you there, they'll send west, along the Great Road." She cast
an eye on Susan that was not much like the dithery, slightly confabulated Olive
Thorin that folks in Hambry knew ... or thought they knew. "If I know
that's the direction you'd choose, so will others we'd do well to avoid."
Susan was silent. She
was too confused to speak, but Olive seemed to know what she was about, and
Susan was grateful for that.
"By the time they
get around to sniffing west, it'll be dark. Tonight we'll stay in one of the
sea-cliff caves five miles or so from here. I grew up a fisherman's daughter,
and I know all those caves, none better." The thought of the caves she'd
played in as a girl seemed to cheer her. "Tomorrow we'll cut west, as you
like. I'm afraid you're going to have a plump old widow as a chaperone for a
bit. Better get used to the idea."
"Thee's too good,"
Susan said. "Ye should send Sheemie and I on alone, sai."
"And go back to
what? Why, I can't even get two old trailhands on kitchen-duty to follow my
orders. Fran Lengyll's boss of the shooting-match now, and I've no urge to wait
and see how he does at it. Nor if he decides he'd be better off with me
adjudged mad and put up safe in a haci with bars on the windows. Or
shall I stay to see how Hash Renfrew does as Mayor, with his boots up on my
tables?" Olive actually laughed.
"Sai, I'm
sorry."
"We shall all be
sorry later on," Olive said, sounding remarkably cheery about it.
"For now, the most important thing is to reach those caves unobserved. It
must seem that we vanished into thin air. Hold up."
Olive checked her
horse, stood in the stirrups, looked around to make sure of her position,
nodded, then twisted in the saddle so she could speak to Sheemie.
"Young man, it's
time for ye to mount yer trusty mule and go back to Seafront. If there are
riders coming after us, ye must turn em aside with a few well-chosen words.
Will'ee do that?"
Sheemie looked
stricken. "I don't have any well-chosen words, sai Thorin, so I don't. I
hardly have any words at all."
"Nonsense,"
Olive said, and kissed Sheemie's forehead. "Go back at a goodish trot.
If'ee spy no one coming after us by the time the sun touches the hills, then
turn north again and follow. We shall wait for ye by the signpost. Do ye know
where I mean?"
Sheemie thought he
did, although it marked the outmost northern boundary of his little patch of
geography. "The red 'un? With the sombrero on it, and the arrow
pointing back for town?"
"The very one. Ye
won't get that far until after dark, but there'll be plenty of moonlight
tonight. If ye don't come right away, we'll wait. But ye must go back, and
shift any men that might be chasing us off our track. Do ye understand?"
Sheemie did. He slid
off Olive's horse, clucked Caprichoso forward, and climbed on board, wincing as
the place the mule had bitten came down. "So it'll be, Olive-sai."
"Good, Sheemie.
Good. Off'ee go, then."
"Sheemie?"
Susan said. "Come to me a moment, please."
He did, holding his
hat in front of him and looking up at her worship-fully. Susan bent and kissed
him not on the forehead but firmly on the mouth. Sheemie came close to
fainting.
"Thankee-sai,"
Susan said. "For everything."
Sheemie nodded. When
he spoke, he could manage nothing above a whisper. " 'Twas only ka,"
he said. "I know that... but I love you, Susan-sai. Go well. I'll see you
soon."
"I look forward
to it."
But there was no soon,
and no later for them, either. Sheemie took one look back as he rode his mule
south, and waved. Susan lifted her own hand in return. It was the last Sheemie
ever saw of her, and in many ways, that was a blessing.
12
Latigo had set pickets
a mile out from Hanging Rock, but the blond boy Roland, Cuthbert, and Alain
encountered as they closed in on the tankers looked confused and unsure of
himself, no danger to anyone. He had scurvy-blossoms around his mouth and nose,
suggesting that the men Farson had sent on this duty had ridden hard and fast,
with little in the way of fresh supplies.
When Cuthbert gave the
Good Man's sigul—hands clasped to the chest, left above right, then both
held out to the person being greeted—the blond picket did the same, and with a
grateful smile.
"What spin and
raree back there?" he asked, speaking with a strong In-World accent—to
Roland, the boy sounded like a Nordite.
"Three boys who
killed a couple of big bugs and then hied for the hills." Cuthbert
replied. He was an eerily good mimic, and gave the boy back his own accent
faultlessly. "'I here were a tight. It be over now, but they did fight
fearful."
"What—"
"No time,"
Roland said brusquely. "We have dispatches." He crossed his hands on
his chest, then held them out. "Hile! Farson!"
"Good Man!"
the blond returned smartly. He gave back the salute with a smile that said he
would have asked Cuthbert where he was from and who he was related to, if there
had been more time. Then they were past him and inside Latigo's perimeter. As
easy as that.
"Remember that
it's hit-and-run," Roland said. "Slow down for nothing. What we
don't get must be left—there'll be no second pass."
"Gods, don't even
suggest such a thing," Cuthbert said, but he was smiling. He pulled his
sling out of its rudimentary holster and tested its elastic draw with a thumb.
Then he licked the thumb and hoisted it to the wind. Not much problem there, if
they came in as they were; the wind was strong, but at their backs.
Alain unslung
Lengyll's machine-gun, looked at it doubtfully, then yanked back the
slide-cock. "I don't know about this, Roland. It's loaded, and I think I
see how to use it, but—"
"Then use
it," Roland said. The three of them were picking up speed now, the hooves
of their horses drumming against the hardpan. The wind gusted, belling the
fronts of their scrapes. "This is the sort of work it was meant
for. If it jams, drop it and use your revolver. Are you ready?"
"Yes,
Roland."
"Bert?"
"Aye,"
Cuthbert said in a wildly exaggerated Hambry accent, "so I am, so I am."
Ahead of them, dust
puffed as groups of riders passed before and behind the tankers, readying the
column for departure. Men on foot looked around at the oncomers curiously but
with a fatal lack of alarm.
Roland drew both
revolvers. "Gilead!" he cried. "Hile! Gilead!"
He spurred Rusher to a
gallop. The other two boys did the same. Cuthbert was in the middle again,
sitting on his reins, slingshot in hand, lucifer matches radiating out of his
tightly pressed lips.
The gunslingers rode
down on Hanging Rock like furies.
13
Twenty minutes after
sending Sheemie back south, Susan and Olive came around a sharp bend and found
themselves face to face with three mounted men in the road. In the
late-slanting sun, she saw that the one in the middle had a blue coffin tattooed
on his hand. It was Reynolds. Susan's heart sank.
The one on Reynolds's
left—he wore a stained white drover's hat and had a lazily cocked eye—she
didn't know, but the one on the right, who looked like a stony-hearted
preacher, was Laslo Rimer. It was Rimer that Reynolds glanced at, after smiling
at Susan.
"Why, Las and I
couldn't even get us a drink to send his late brother, the Chancellor of
Whatever You Want and the Minister of Thank You Very Much, on with a
word," Reynolds said. "We hadn't hardly hit town before we got
persuaded out here. I wasn't going to go, but . . . damn! That old lady's
something. Could talk a corpse into giving a blowjob, if you'll pardon the
crudity. I think your aunt may have lost a wheel or two off her cart, though, sai
Delgado. She—"
"Your friends are
dead," Susan told him.
Reynolds paused,
shrugged. "Well now. Maybe si and maybe no. Me, I think I've
decided to travel on without em even if they ain't. But I might hang around
here one more night. This Reaping business . . . I've heard so much about the
way folks do it in the Outers. 'Specially the bonfire part."
The man with the
cocked eye laughed phlegmily.
"Let us
pass," Olive said. "This girl has done nothing, and neither have
I."
"She helped
Dearborn escape," Rimer said, "him who murdered your own husband and
my brother. I wouldn't call that nothing."
"The gods may
restore Kimba Rimer in the clearing," Olive said, "but the truth is
he looted half of this town's treasury, and what he didn't give over to John
Farson, he kept for himself."
Rimer recoiled as if
slapped.
"Ye didn't know I
knew? Laslo, I'd be angry at how little any of ye thought of me ... except why
would I want to be thought of by the likes of you, anyway? I knew enough to
make me sick, leave it at that. I know that the man you're sitting
beside—"
"Shut up," Rimer muttered.
"—was likely the
one who cut yer brother's black heart open; sai Reynolds was seen that early
morning in that wing, so I've been told—"
"Shut up, you
cunt!"
"—and so I
believe."
"Better do as he
says, sai, and hold your tongue," Reynolds said. Some of the lazy good
humor had left his face. Susan thought: He doesn't like people knowing what
he did. Not even when he's the one on top and what they know can't hurt him.
And he's less without Jonas. A lot less. He knows it, too.
"Let us
pass," Olive said.
"No, sai, I can't
do that."
"I'll help ye,
then, shall I?"
Her hand had crept
beneath the outrageously large serape during the palaver, and now she
brought out a huge and ancient pistola, its handles of yellowed ivory,
its filigreed barrel of old tarnished silver. On top was a brass
powder-and-spark.
Olive had no business
even drawing the thing—it caught on her serape, and she had to fight it
free. She had no business cocking it, either, a process that took both thumbs
and two tries. But the three men were utterly flummoxed by the sight of the
elderly blunderbuss in her hands, Reynolds as much as the other two; he sat his
horse with his jaw hanging slack. Jonas would have wept.
"Get her!"
a cracked old voice shrieked from behind the men blocking the road. "What's
wrong with ye, ye stupid culls? GET HER!"
Reynolds started at
that and went for his gun. He was fast, but he had given Olive too much of a
headstart and was beaten, beaten cold. Even as he cleared leather with the
barrel of his revolver, the Mayor's widow held the old gun out in both hands,
and, squinching her eyes shut like a little girl who is forced to eat something
nasty, pulled the trigger.
The spark flashed, but
the damp powder only made a weary floop sound and disappeared in a puff
of blue smoke. The ball—big enough to have taken Clay Reynolds's head off from
the nose on up, had it fired— stayed in the barrel.
In the next instant
his own gun roared in his fist. Olive's horse reared, whinnying. Olive went off
the gelding head over boots, with a black hole in the orange stripe of her serape—the
stripe which lay above her heart.
Susan heard herself
screaming. The sound seemed to come from very far away. She might have gone on
for some time, but then she heard the clop of approaching pony hooves from
behind the men in the road... and knew. Even before the man with the lazy eye
moved aside to show her, she knew, and her screams stopped.
The galloped-out pony
that had brought the witch back to Hambry had been replaced by a fresh one, but
it was the same black cart, the same golden cabalistic symbols, the same
driver. Rhea sat with the reins in her claws, her head ticking from side to
side like the head of a rusty old robot, grinning at Susan without humor.
Grinning as a corpse grins.
"Hello, my little
sweeting," she said, calling her as she had all those months ago, on the
night Susan had come to her hut to be proved honest. On the night Susan had
come running most of the way, out of simple high spirits. Beneath the light of
the Kissing Moon she had come, her blood high from the exercise, her skin
flushed; she had been singing "Careless Love."
"Yer pallies and
screw-buddies have taken my ball, ye ken," Rhea said, clucking the pony to
a stop a few paces ahead of the riders. Even Reynolds looked down on her with
uneasiness. "Took my lovely glam, that's what those bad boys did. Those
bad, bad boys. But it showed me much while yet I had it, aye. It sees far, and
in more ways than one. Much of it I've forgot ... but not which way ye'd come,
my sweeting. Not which way that precious old dead bitch laying yonder on the
road would bring ye. And now ye must go to town." Her grin widened, became
something unspeakable. "It's time for the fair, ye ken."
"Let me go,"
Susan said. "Let me go, if ye'd not answer to Roland of Gilead."
Rhea ignored her and
spoke to Reynolds. "Bind her hands before her and stand her in the back of
the cart. There's people that'll want to see her. A good look is what they'll
want, and a good look is just what they'll have. If her aunt's done a proper
job, there'll be a lot of them in town. Get her up, now, and be smart about
it."
14
Alain had time for one
clear thought: We could have gone around them— if what Roland said is true, then
only the wizard's glass matters, and we have that. We could have gone around
them.
Except, of course,
that was impossible. A hundred generations of gunslinger blood argued against
it. Tower or no Tower, the thieves must not be allowed to have their prize. Not
if they could be stopped.
Alain leaned forward
and spoke directly into his horse's ear. "Jig or rear when I start
shooting, and I'll knock your fucking brains out."
Roland led them in,
outracing the other two on his stronger horse. The clot of men nearest by—five
or six mounted, a dozen or more on foot and examining a pair of the oxen which
had dragged the tankers out here— gazed at him stupidly until he began to fire,
and then they scattered like quail. He got every one of the riders; their horses
fled in a widening fan, trailing their reins (and, in one case, a dead
soldier). Somewhere someone was shouting, "Harriers! Harriers! Mount up,
you fools!"
"Alain!"
Roland screamed as they bore down. In front of the tankers, a double handful of
riders and armed men were coming together—milling together—in a clumsy
defensive line. "Now! Now!"
Alain raised the
machine-gun, seated its rusty wire stock in the hollow of his shoulder, and
remembered what little he knew about rapid-fire weapons: aim low, swing fast
and smooth.
He touched the trigger
and the speed-shooter bellowed into the dusty air, recoiling against his
shoulder in a series of rapid thuds, shooting bright fire from the end of its
perforated barrel. Alain raked it from left to right, running the sight above
the scattering, shouting defenders and across the high steel hides of the
tankers.
The third tanker
actually blew up on its own. The sound it made was like no explosion Alain had
ever heard: a guttural, muscular ripping sound accompanied by a brilliant flash
of orange-red fire. The steel shell rose in two halves. One of these spun
thirty yards through the air and landed on the desert floor in a furiously
burning hulk; the other rose straight up into a column of greasy black smoke. A
burning wooden wheel spun across the sky like a plate and came back down
trailing sparks and burning splinters.
Men fled,
screaming—some on foot, others laid flat along the necks of their nags, their
eyes wide and panicky.
When Alain reached the
end of the line of tankers, he reversed the track of the muzzle. The
machine-gun was hot in his hands now, but he kept his finger pressed to the
trigger. In this world, you had to use what you could while it still worked.
Beneath him, his horse ran on as if it had understood every word Alain had
whispered in its ear.
Another! I want
another!
But before he could
blow another tanker, the gun ceased its chatter— perhaps jammed, probably
empty. Alain threw it aside and drew his revolver. From beside him there came
the thuppp of Cuthbert's slingshot, audible even over the cries of the
men, the hoofbeats of the horses, the whoosh of the burning tanker.
Alain saw a sputtering big-bang arc into the sky and come down exactly where
Cuthbert had aimed: in the oil puddling around the wooden wheels of a tanker
marked sunoco. For a moment
Alain could clearly see the line of nine or a dozen holes in the tanker's
bright side—holes he had put there with sai Lengyll's speed-shooter—and then
there was a crack and a flash as the big-bang exploded. A moment later, the
holes running along the bright flank of the tanker began to shimmer. The oil
beneath them was on fire.
"Get out!"
a man in a faded campaign hat yelled. "She's gointer blow! They 're all
going to b— "
Alain shot him,
exploding the side of his face and knocking him out of one old, sprung boot. A
moment later the second tanker blew up. One burning steel panel shot out
sidewards, landed in the growing puddle of crude oil beneath a third tanker,
and then that one exploded, as well. Black smoke rose in the air like the fumes
of a funeral pyre; it darkened the day and drew an oily veil across the sun.
15
All six of Parson's
chief lieutenants had been carefully described to Roland—to all fourteen
gunslingers in training—and he recognized the man running for the remuda
at once: George Latigo. Roland could have shot him as he ran, but that,
ironically, would have made possible a getaway that was cleaner than he
wanted.
Instead, he shot the
man who ran to meet him.
Latigo wheeled on the
heels of his boots and stared at Roland with blazing, hate-filled eyes. Then he
ran again, hiling another man, shouting for the riders who were huddled
together beyond the burning zone.
Two more tankers
exploded, whamming at Roland's eardrums with dull iron fists, seeming to suck
the air back from his lungs like a riptide. The plan had been for Alain to
perforate the tankers and for Cuthbert to then shoot in a steady, arcing stream
of big-bangers, lighting the spilling oil. The one big-banger he actually shot
seemed to confirm that the plan had been feasible, but it was the last
slingshot-work Cuthbert did that day.
The ease with which
the gunslingers had gotten inside the enemy's perimeter and the confusion which
greeted their original charge could have been chalked up to inexperience and
exhaustion, but the placing of the tankers had been Latigo's mistake, and his
alone. He had drawn them tight without even thinking about it, and now they
blew tight, one after another. Once the conflagration began, there was no chance
of stopping it. Even before Roland raised his left arm and circled it in the
air, signalling for Alain and Cuthbert to break off, the work was done.
Latigo's encampment was an oily inferno, and John Farson's plans for a
motorized assault were so much black smoke being tattered apart by the fin
de ano wind.
"Ride!"
Roland screamed. "Ride, ride, ride!"
They spurred west,
toward Eyebolt Canyon. As they went, Roland felt a single bullet drone past his
left ear. It was, so far as he knew, the only shot fired at any of them during
the assault on the tankers.
16
Latigo was in an
ecstasy of fury, a perfect brain-bursting rage, and that was probably
merciful—it kept him from thinking of what the Good Man would do when he
learned of this fiasco. For the time being, all Latigo cared about was catching
the men who had ambushed him ... if an ambush in desert country was even
possible.
Men? No.
The boys who
had done this.
Latigo knew who they
were, all right; he didn't know how they had gotten out here, but he knew who
they were, and their run would stop right here, east of the woods and rising
hills.
"Hendricks!"
he bawled. Hendricks had at least managed to hold his men—half a dozen of them,
all mounted—near the remuda. "Hendricks, to me!"
As Hendricks rode
toward him, Latigo spun the other way and saw a huddle of men standing and
watching the burning tankers. Their gaping mouths and stupid young sheep faces
made him feel like screaming and dancing up and down, but he refused to give in
to that. He held a narrow beam of concentration, one aimed directly at the
raiders, who must not under any circumstances be allowed to escape.
"You!"
he shouted at the men. One of them turned; the others did not. Latigo strode to
them, drawing his pistol as he went. He slapped it into the hand of the man who
had turned toward the sound of his voice, and pointed at random to one of those
who had not. "Shoot that fool."
Dazed, his face that
of a man who believes he is dreaming, the soldier raised the pistol and shot
the man to whom Latigo had pointed. That unlucky fellow went down in a heap of
knees and elbows and twitching hands. The others turned.
"Good,"
Latigo said, taking his gun back.
"Sir!"
Hendricks cried. "I see them, sir! I have the enemy in clear view!"
Two more tankers
exploded. A few whickering shards of steel flew in their direction. Some of the
men ducked; Latigo did not so much as twitch. Nor did Hendricks. A good man.
Thank God for at least one such in this nightmare.
"Shall I hie
after them, sir? "
"I'll take your
men and hie after them myself, Hendricks. Mount these hoss-guts before
us." He swept an arm at the standing men, whose doltish attention had been
diverted from the burning tankers to their dead comrade. "Pull in as many
others as you can. Do you have a bugler?"
"Yes, sir,
Raines, sir!" Hendricks looked around, beckoned, and a pimply,
scared-looking boy rode forward. A dented bugle on a frayed strap hung askew on
the front of his shirt.
"Raines,"
Latigo said, "you're with Hendricks."
"Yes, sir."
"Get as many men
as you can, Hendricks, but don't linger over the job. They're headed for that
canyon, and I believe someone told me it's a box. If so, we're going to turn it
into a shooting gallery."
Hendricks's lips
spread in a twisted grin. "Yes, sir."
Behind them, the tankers
continued to explode.
17
Roland glanced back
and was astonished by the size of the black, smoky column rising into the air.
Ahead he could clearly see the brush blocking most of the canyon's mouth. And
although the wind was blowing the wrong way, he could now hear the maddening
mosquito-whine of the thinny.
He patted the air with
his outstretched hands, signalling for Cuthbert and Alain to slow down. While
they were both still looking at him, he took off his bandanna,
whipped it into a rope, and tied it so it would cover his ears. They copied
him. It was better than nothing.
The gunslingers
continued west, their shadows now running out behind them as long as gantries
on the desert floor. Looking back, Roland could see two groups of riders
streaming in pursuit. Latigo was at the head of the first, Roland thought, and
he was deliberately holding his riders back a little, so that the two groups
could merge and attack together.
Good,
he thought.
The three of them rode
toward Eyebolt in a tight line, continuing to hold their own horses in,
allowing their pursuers to close the distance. Every now and then another thud
smote the air and shivered through the ground as one of the remaining tankers
blew up. Roland was amazed at how easy it had been—even after the battle with
Jonas and Lengyll, which should have put the men out here on their mettle, it
had been easy. It made him think of a Reaptide long ago, he and Cuthbert surely
no more than seven years old, running along a line of stuffy-guys with sticks, knocking
them over one after the other, bang-bang-bangety-bang.
The sound of the
thinny was warbling its way into his brain in spite of the bandanna over his
ears, making his eyes water. Behind him, he could hear the whoops and shouts of
the pursuing men. It delighted him. Latigo's men had counted the odds—two dozen
against three, with many more of their own force riding hard to join the
battle—and their peckers were up once more.
Roland faced front and
pointed Rusher at the slit in the brush marking the entrance to Eyebolt Canyon.
18
Hendricks fell in
beside Latigo, breathing hard, cheeks glaring with color. "Sir! Beg to
report!"
"Then do
it."
"I have twenty
men, and there are p'raps three times that number riding hard to join
us."
Latigo ignored all of
this. His eyes were bright blue flecks of ice. Under his mustache was a small,
greedy smile. "Rodney," he said, speaking Hendricks's first name
almost with the caress of a lover.
"Sir?"
"I think they're
going in, Rodney. Yes . . . look. I'm sure of it. Two more minutes and it'll be
too late for them to turn back." He raised his gun, laid the muzzle across
his forearm, and threw a shot at the three riders ahead, mostly in exuberance.
"Yes, sir, very
good, sir." Hendricks turned and waved viciously for his men to close up,
close up.
19
"Dismount!"
Roland shouted when they reached the line of tangled brush. It had a smell that
was at once dry and oily, like a fire waiting to happen. He didn't know if
their failure to ride their horses into the canyon would put Latigo's wind up
or not, and he didn't care. These were good mounts, fine Gilead stock, and over
these last months, Rusher had become his friend. He would not take him or any
of the horses into the canyon, where they would be caught between the fire and
the thinny.
The boys were off the
horses in a flash, Alain pulling the drawstring bag free of his saddle-horn and
slinging it over one shoulder. Cuthbert's and Alain's horses ran at once,
whinnying, parallel to the brush, but Rusher lingered for a moment, looking at
Roland. "Go on." Roland slapped him on the flank. "Run."
Rusher ran, tail
streaming out behind him. Cuthbert and Alain slipped through the break in the
brush. Roland followed, glancing down to make sure that the powder-trail was
still there. It was, and still dry—there had been not a drop of rain since the
day they'd laid it.
"Cuthbert,"
he said. "Matches."
Cuthbert gave him
some. He was grinning so hard it was a wonder they hadn't fallen out of his
mouth. "We warmed up their day, didn't we, Roland? Aye!"
"We did,
indeed," Roland said, grinning himself. "Go on, now. Back to that
chimney-cut."
"Let me do
it," Cuthbert said. "Please, Roland, you go with Alain and let me
stay. I'm a firebug at heart, always have been."
"No," Roland
said. "This part of it's mine. Don't argue with me. Go on. And tell Alain
to mind the wizard's glass, no matter what."
Cuthbert looked at him
for a moment longer, then nodded. "Don't wait too long."
"I won't."
"May your luck
rise, Roland."
"May yours rise
twice."
Cuthbert hurried away,
boots rattling on the loose stone which carpeted the floor of the canyon. He
reached Alain, who lifted a hand to Roland. Roland nodded back, then ducked as
a bullet snapped close enough to his temple to flick his hatbrim.
He crouched to the
left of the opening in the brush and peered around, the wind now striking full
in his face. Latigo's men were closing rapidly. More rapidly than he had
expected. If the wind blew out the lucifers—
Never mind the ifs.
Hold on, Roland. . . hold on... wait for them. . .
He held on, hunkering
with an unlit match in each hand, now peering out through a tangle of
interlaced branches. The smell of mesquite was strong in his nostrils. Not far
behind it was the reek of burning oil. The drone of the thinny filled his head,
making him feel dizzy, a stranger to himself. He thought of how it had been
inside the pink storm, flying through the air ... how he had been snatched away
from his vision of Susan. Thank God for Sheemie, he thought distantly. He'll
make sure she finishes the day someplace safe. But the craven whine of the
thinny seemed somehow to mock him, to ask him if there had been more to see.
Now Latigo and his men
were crossing the last three hundred yards to the canyon's mouth at a full-out
gallop, the ones behind closing up fast. It would be hard for the ones riding
point to stop suddenly without the risk of being ridden down.
It was time. Roland
stuck one of the lucifers between his front teeth and raked it forward. It lit,
spilling one hot and sour spark onto the wet bed of his tongue. Before the
lucifer's head could bum away, Roland touched it to the powder in the trench.
It lit at once, running left beneath the north end of the brush in a bright
yellow thread.
He lunged across the
opening—which might be wide enough for two horses running flank to flank—with
the second lucifer already poised behind his teeth. He struck it as soon as he
was somewhat blocked from the wind, dropped it into the powder, heard the
splutter-hiss, then turned and ran.
20
Mother and father,
was Roland's first shocked thought—memory so deep and unexpected it was like a
slap. At Lake Saroni.
When had they gone
there, to beautiful Lake Saroni in the northern part of Gilead Barony? That
Roland couldn't remember. He knew only that he had been very small, and that
there had been a beautiful stretch of sandy beach for him to play on, perfect
for an aspiring young castle-builder such as he. That was what he had been
doing on one day of their
(vacation? was it a
vacation? did my parents once upon a time actually take a vacation?)
trip, and he had
looked up, something—maybe only the cries of the birds circling over the
lake—had made him look up, and there were his mother and father, Steven and
Gabrielle Deschain, at the water's edge, standing with their backs to him and
their arms around each other's waists, looking out at blue water beneath a blue
summer sky. How his heart had filled with love for them! How infinite was love,
twining in and out of hope and memory like a braid with three strong strands,
so much the Bright Tower of every human's life and soul.
It wasn't love he felt
now, however, but terror. The figures standing before him as he ran back to
where the canyon ended (where the rational part of the canyon ended)
weren't Steven of Gilead and Gabrielle of Arten but his mollies, Cuthbert and
Alain. They didn't have their arms around each other's waists, either, but
their hands were clasped, like the hands of fairy-tale children lost in a
threatening fairy-tale wood. Birds circled, but they were vultures, not gulls,
and the shimmering, mist-topped stuff before the two boys wasn't water.
It was the thinny, and
as Roland watched, Cuthbert and Alain began to walk toward it.
"Stop!"
he screamed. "For your fathers' sakes, stop!"
They did not stop.
They walked hand-in-hand toward the white-edged hem of the smoky green shimmer.
The thinny whined its pleasure, murmured endearments, promised rewards. It
baked the nerves numb and picked at the brain.
There was no time to
reach them, so Roland did the only thing he could think of: raised one of his
guns and fired it over their heads. The report was a hammer-blow in the
canyon's enclosure, and for a moment the ricochet whine was louder than that of
the thinny. The two boys stopped only inches from its sick shimmer. Roland kept
expecting it to reach out and grab them, as it had grabbed the low-flying bird
when they had been here on the night of the Peddler's Moon.
He triggered two more
shots into the air, the reports hitting the walls and rolling back. "Gunslingers!"
he cried. "To me! To me!"
It was Alain who
turned toward him first, his dazed eyes seeming to float in his dust-streaked
face. Cuthbert continued forward another step, the tips of his boots
disappearing in the greenish-silver froth at the edge of the thinny (the
whingeing grumble of the thing rose half a note, as if in anticipation), and
then Alain yanked him back by the tugstring of his sombrero. Cuthbert
tripped over a good-sized chunk of fallen rock and landed hard. When he looked
up, his eyes had cleared.
"Gods!" he
murmured, and as he scrambled to his feet, Roland saw that the toes of his
boots were gone, clipped off neatly, as if with a pair of gardening shears. His
great toes stuck out.
"Roland," he
gasped as he and Alain stumbled toward him. "Roland, we were almost gone.
It talks!"
"Yes. I've heard
it. Come on. There's no time."
He led them to the
notch in the canyon wall, praying that they could get up quick enough to avoid
being riddled with bullets ... as they certainly would be, if Latigo arrived
before they could get up at least part of the way.
A smell, acrid and
bitter, began to fill the air—an odor like boiling juniper berries. And the
first tendrils of whitish-gray smoke drifted past them.
"Cuthbert, you
first. Alain, you next. I'll come last. Climb fast, boys. Climb for your
lives."
21
Latigo's men poured
through the slot in the wall of brush like water pouring into a funnel,
gradually widening the gap as they came. The bottom layer of the dead
vegetation was already on fire, but in their excitement none of them saw these
first low flames, or marked them if they did. The pungent smoke also went
unnoticed; their noses had been deadened by the colossal stench of the burning
oil. Latigo himself, in the lead with Hendricks close behind, had only one
thought; two words that pounded at his brain in a kind of vicious triumph: Box
canyon! Box canyon! Box canyon!
Yet something began to
intrude on this mantra as he galloped deeper into Eyebolt, his horse's hooves
clattering nimbly through the scree of rocks and
(bones)
whitish piles of
cow-skulls and ribcages. This was a kind of low buzzing, a maddening,
slobbering whine, insectile and insistent. It made his eyes water. Yet, strong
as the sound was (if it was a sound; it almost seemed to be coming from inside
him), he pushed it aside, holding onto his mantra
(box canyon box canyon
got em in a box canyon)
instead. He would have
to face Walter when this was over, perhaps Farson himself, and he had no idea
what his punishment would be for losing the tankers ... but all that was for
later. Now he wanted only to kill these interfering bastards.
Up ahead, the canyon
took a jog to the north. They would be beyond that point, and probably not far
beyond, either. Backed up against the canyon's final wall, trying to squeeze
themselves behind what fallen rocks there might be. Latigo would mass what guns
he had and drive them out into the open with ricochets. They would probably
come with their hands up, hoping for mercy. They would hope in vain. After what
they'd done, the trouble they'd caused—
As Latigo rode around
the jog in the canyon's wall, already levelling his pistol, his horse
screamed—like a woman, it screamed—and reared beneath him. Latigo caught the
saddle-horn and managed to stay up, but the horse's rear hooves slid sideways
in the scree and the animal went down. Latigo let go of the horn and threw
himself clear, already aware that the sound which had been creeping into his
ears was suddenly ten times stronger, buzzing loud enough to make his eyeballs
pulse in their sockets, loud enough to make his balls tingle unpleasantly, loud
enough to blot out the mantra which had been beating so insistently in his
head.
The insistence of the
thinny was far, far greater than any George Latigo could have managed.
Horses flashed around
him as he landed in a kind of sprawling squat, horses that were shoved forward
willy-nilly by the oncoming press from behind, by riders that squeezed through
the gap in pairs (then trios as the hole in the brush, now burning all along
its length, widened) and then spread out again once they were past the
bottleneck, none of them clearly realizing that the entire canyon was a
bottleneck.
Latigo got a confused
glimpse of black tails and gray forelegs and dappled fetlocks; he saw chaps,
and jeans, and boots jammed into stirrups. He tried to get up and a horseshoe
clanged against the back of his skull. His hat saved him from unconsciousness,
but he went heavily to his knees with his head down, like a man who means to
pray, his vision full of stars and the back of his neck instantly soaked with
blood from the gash the passing hoof had opened in his scalp.
Now he heard more
screaming horses. Screaming men, as well. He got up again, coughing out the
dust raised by the passing horses (such acrid dust, too; it clawed his throat
like smoke), and saw Hendricks trying to spur his horse south and east against
the oncoming tide of riders. He couldn't do it. The rear third of the canyon
was some sort of swamp, filled with greenish steaming water, and there must be
quicksand beneath it, because Hendricks's horse seemed stuck. It screamed
again, and tried to rear. Its hindquarters slewed sideways. Hendricks crashed
his boots into the animal's sides again and again, attempting to get it in
motion, but the horse didn't—or couldn't—move. That hungry buzzing sound filled
Latigo's ears, and seemed to fill the world.
"Back! Turn
back!"
He tried to scream the
words, but they came out in what was little more than a croak. Still the riders
pounded past him, raising dust that was too thick to be only dust.
Latigo pulled in breath so he could scream louder—they had to go back,
something was dreadfully wrong in Eyebolt Canyon—and hacked it out without
saying anything.
Screaming horses.
Reeking smoke.
And everywhere,
filling the world like lunacy, that whining, whingeing, cringing buzz.
Hendricks's horse went
down, eyes rolling, bit-parted teeth snapping at the smoky air and splattering
curds of foam from its lips. Hendricks fell into the steaming stagnant water,
and it wasn't water at all. It came alive, somehow, as he struck it; grew green
hands and a green, shifty mouth; pawed his cheek and melted away the flesh,
pawed his nose and tore it off, pawed at his eyes and stripped them from their
sockets. It pulled Hendricks under, but before it did, Latigo saw his denuded
jawbone, a bloody piston to drive his screaming teeth.
Other men saw, and
tried to wheel away from the green trap. Those who managed to do so in time
were broadsided by the next wave of men—some of whom were, incredibly, still
yipping or bellowing full-throated battle cries. More horses and riders were
driven into the green shimmer, which accepted them eagerly. Latigo, standing
stunned and bleeding like a man in the middle of a stampede (which was exactly
what he was), saw the soldier to whom he had given his gun. This fellow, who
had obeyed Latigo's order and shot one of his compadres in order to
awaken the rest of them, threw himself from his saddle, howling, and crawled
back from the edge of the green stuff even as his horse plunged in. He tried to
get to his feet, saw two riders bearing down on him, and clapped his hands
across his face. A moment later he was ridden down.
The shrieks of the
wounded and dying echoed in the smoky canyon, but Latigo hardly heard them.
What he heard mostly was that buzzing, a sound that was almost a voice.
Inviting him to jump in. To end it here. Why not? It was over, wasn't it? All
over.
He struggled away
instead, and was now able to make some headway; the stream of riders packing
its way into the canyon was easing. Some of the riders fifty or sixty yards
back from the jog had even been able to turn their horses. But these were
ghostly and confused in the thickening smoke.
The cunning bastards
have set the brush on fire behind us. Gods of heaven, gods of earth, I think we
're trapped in here.
He could give no
commands—every time he drew in breath to try, he coughed it wordlessly back out
again—but he was able to grab a passing rider who looked all of seventeen and
yank him out of his saddle. The boy went down headfirst and smashed his brow
open on a jutting chunk of rock. Latigo was mounted in his place before the
kid's feet had stopped twitching.
He jerked the horse's
head around and spurred for the front of the canyon, but the smoke thickened to
a choking white cloud before he got more than twenty yards. The wind was
driving it this way. Latigo could make out—barely—the shifting orange glare of
the burning brush at the desert end.
He wheeled his new
horse back the way it had come. More horses loomed out of the fog. Latigo
crashed into one of them and was thrown for the second time in five minutes. He
landed on his knees, scrambled to his feet, and staggered back downwind,
coughing and retching, eyes red and streaming.
It was a little better
beyond the canyon's northward jog, but wouldn't be for much longer. The edge of
the thinny was a tangle of milling horses, many with broken legs, and crawling,
shrieking men. Latigo saw several hats floating on the greenish surface of the
whining organism that filled the back of the canyon; he saw boots; he saw
wristlets; he saw neckerchiefs; he saw the bugle-boy's dented instrument, still
trailing its frayed strap.
Come in,
the green shimmer invited, and Latigo found its buzz strangely attractive ...
intimate, almost. Come in and visit, squat and hunker, be at rest, be at
peace, be at one.
Latigo raised his gun,
meaning to shoot it. He didn't believe it could be killed, but he would
remember the face of his father and go down shooting, all the same.
Except he didn't. The
gun dropped from his relaxing fingers and he walked forward—others around him
were now doing the same—into the thinny. The buzzing rose and rose, filling his
ears until there was nothing else.
Nothing else at
all.
22
They saw it all from
the notch, where Roland and his friends had stopped in a strung-out line about
twenty feet below the top. They saw the screaming confusion, the panicky
milling, the men who were trampled, the men and horses that were driven into
the thinny ... and the men who, at the end, walked willingly into it.
Cuthbert was closest
to the top of the canyon's wall, then Alain, then Roland, standing on a
six-inch shelf of rock and holding an outcrop just above him. From their
vantage-point they could see what the men struggling in their smoky hell below
them could not: that the thinny was growing, reaching out, crawling eagerly
toward them like an incoming tide.
Roland, his
battle-lust slaked, did not want to watch what was happening below, but he
couldn't turn away. The whine of the thinny— cowardly and triumphant at the
same time, happy and sad at the same time, lost and found at the same time—held
him like sweet, sticky ropes. He hung where he was, hypnotized, as did his
friends above him, even when the smoke began to rise, and its pungent tang made
him cough dryly.
Men shrieked their
lives away in the thickening smoke below. They struggled in it like phantoms.
They faded as the fog thickened, climbing the canyon walls like water. Horses
whinnied desperately from beneath that acrid white death. The wind swirled its
surface in prankish whirlpools. The thinny buzzed, and above where it lay, the
surface of the smoke was stained a mystic shade of palest green.
Then, at long last,
John Farson's men screamed no more. We killed them, Roland thought with
a kind of sick and fascinated horror. Then: No, not we. I. I killed
them.
How long he might have
stayed there Roland didn't know—perhaps until the rising smoke engulfed him as
well, but then Cuthbert, who had begun to climb again, called down three words
from above him; called down in a tone of surprise and dismay. "Roland! The
moon!”
Roland looked up,
startled, and saw that the sky had darkened to a velvety purple. His friend was
outlined against it and looking east, his face stained fever-orange with the
light of the rising moon.
Yes, orange,
the thinny buzzed inside his head. Laughed inside his head. Orange as
'twas when it rose on the night you came out here to see me and count me.
Orange like afire. Orange like a bonfire.
How can it be almost
dark? he cried inside himself, but he knew—yes, he
knew very well. Time had slipped back together, that was all, like layers of
ground embracing once more after the argument of an earthquake. Twilight had
come. Moonrise had come.
Terror struck Roland
like a closed fist aimed at the heart, making him jerk backward on the small
ledge he'd found. He groped for the horn-shaped outcrop above him, but that act
of rebalancing was far away; most of him was inside the pink storm again,
before he had been snatched away and shown half the cosmos. Perhaps the
wizard's glass had only shown him what stood worlds far away in order to keep
from showing him what might soon befall so close to home.
I'd turn around if I
thought her life was in any real danger, he had said. In a
second.
And if the ball knew
that? If it couldn't lie, might it not misdirect? Might it not take him away
and show him a dark land, a darker tower? And it had shown him something else,
something that recurred to him only now: a scrawny man in farmer's overalls who
had said. . . what? Not quite what he'd thought, not what he had been used to
hearing all his life; not Life for you and life for your crop, but. . .
"Death," he
whispered to the stones surrounding him. "Death for you, life for my crop.
Charyou tree. That's what he said, Charyou tree. Come,
Reap."
Orange, gunslinger,
a cracked old voice laughed inside his head. The voice of the Coos. The
color of bonfires. Charyou tree, fin de ano, these are the old ways of
which only the stuffy-guys with their red hands remain . . . until tonight.
Tonight the old ways are refreshed, as the old ways must be, from time to time.
Charyou tree, you damned babby, Charyou tree: tonight you pay for my
sweet Ermot. Tonight you pay for all. Come, Reap.
"Climb!" he
screamed, reaching up and slapping Alain's behind. "Climb, climb! For your
father's sake, climb!"
"Roland,
what—?" Alain's voice was dazed, but he did begin to climb, going from
handhold to handhold and rattling small pebbles down into Roland's upturned
face. Squinting against their fall, Roland reached and swatted Al's bottom
again, driving him like a horse.
"Climb,
gods damn you!" he cried. "It mayn't be too late, even now!"
But he knew better.
Demon Moon had risen, he had seen its orange light shining on Cuthbert's face
like delirium, arid he knew better. In his head the lunatic buzz of the thinny,
that rotting sore eating through the flesh of reality, joined with the lunatic
laughter of the witch, and he knew better.
Death for you, life
for the crop. Charyou tree.
Oh, Susan—
23
Nothing was clear to
Susan until she saw the man with the long red hair and the straw hat which did
not quite obscure his lamb-slaughterer's eyes; the man with the cornshucks in
his hands. He was the first, just a farmer (she had glimpsed him in the Lower
Market, she thought; had even nodded to him, as countryfolk do, and he back to
her), standing by himself not far from the place where Silk Ranch Road and the
Great Road intersected, standing in the light of the rising moon. Until they
came upon him, nothing was clear; after he hurled his bundle of cornshucks at
her as she passed, standing in the slowly rolling cart with her hands bound in
front of her and her head lowered and a rope around her neck, everything was
clear.
"Charyou tree,
" he called, almost sweetly uttering words of the
Old People she hadn't heard since her childhood, words that meant "Come,
Reap" . . . and something else, as well. Something hidden, something secret,
something to do with that root word, char, that word which meant only
death. As the dried shucks fluttered around her boots, she understood the
secret very well; understood also that there would be no baby for her, no
wedding for her in the fairy-distant land of Gilead, no hall in which she and
Roland would be joined and then saluted beneath the electric lights, no
husband, no more nights of sweet love; all that was over. The world had moved
on and all that was over, done before fairly begun.
She knew that she had
been put in the back of the cart, stood in the back of the cart, and
that the surviving Coffin Hunter had looped a noose around her neck.
"Don't try to sit," he had said, sounding almost apologetic. "I
have no desire to choke you, girly. If the wagon bumps and you fall, I'll try
to keep the knot loose, but if you try to sit, I'll have to give you a
pinching. Her orders." He nodded to Rhea, who sat erect on the seat
of the cart, the reins in her warped hands. "She's in charge
now."
And so she had been;
so, as they neared town, she still was. Whatever the possession of her glam had
done to her body, whatever the loss of it had done to her mind, it had not
broken her power; that seemed to have increased, if anything, as if she'd found
some other source from which she could feed, at least for awhile. Men who could
have broken her over one knee like a stick of kindling followed her commands as
unquestioningly as children.
There were more and
more men as that Reaping afternoon wound its shallow course to night: half a
dozen ahead of the cart, riding with Rimer and the man with the cocked eye, a
full dozen riding behind it with Reynolds, the rope leading to her neck wound
around his tattooed hand, at their head. She didn't know who these men were, or
how they had been summoned.
Rhea had taken this
rapidly increasing party north a little farther, then turned southwest on the
old Silk Ranch Road, which wound back toward town. On the eastern edge of
Hambry, it rejoined the Great Road. Even in her dazed state, Susan had realized
the harridan was moving slowly, measuring the descent of the sun as they went,
not clucking at the pony to hurry but actually reining it in, at least until
afternoon's gold had gone. When they passed the farmer, thin-faced and alone, a
good man, no doubt, with a freehold farm he worked hard from first gleam to
last glow and a family he loved (but oh, there were those lamb-slaughterer eyes
below the brim of his battered hat), she understood this leisurely course of
travel, too. Rhea had been waiting for the moon.
With no gods to pray
to, Susan prayed to her father.
Da? If thee's there,
help me to be strong as lean be, and help me hold to him, to the memory of him.
Help me to hold to myself as well. Not for rescue, not for salvation, but just so
as not to give them the satisfaction of seeing my pain and my fear. And him,
help him as well. . .
"Help keep him
safe," she whispered. "Keep my love safe; take my love safe to where
he goes, give him joy in who he sees, and make him a cause of joy in those who
see him."
"Praying,
dearie?" the old woman asked without turning on the seat. Her croaking
voice oozed false compassion. "Aye, ye'd do well t'make things right with
the Powers while ye still can—before the spit's burned right out of yer throat!"
She threw back her head and cackled, the straggling remains of her broomstraw
hair flying out orange in the light of the bloated moon.
24
Their horses, led by
Rusher, had come to the sound of Roland's dismayed shout. They stood not far
away, their manes rippling in the wind, shaking their heads and whinnying their
displeasure whenever the wind dropped enough for them to get a whiff of the
thick white smoke rising from the canyon.
Roland paid no
attention to the horses or the smoke. His eyes were fixed on the drawstring
sack slung over Alain's shoulder. The ball inside had come alive again; in the
growing dark, the bag seemed to pulse like some weird pink firefly. He held out
his hands for it.
"Give it to
me!"
"Roland, I don't
know if—"
"Give it to me,
damn your face!"
Alain looked at
Cuthbert, who nodded . . . then lifted his hands skyward in a weary,
distracted gesture.
Roland tore the bag
away before Alain could do more than begin to shrug it off his shoulder. The
gunslinger dipped into it and pulled the glass out. It was glowing fiercely, a
pink Demon Moon instead of an orange one.
Behind and below them,
the nagging whine of the thinny rose and fell, rose and fell.
"Don't look
directly into that thing," Cuthbert muttered to Alain. "Don't, for
your father's sake."
Roland bent his face
over the pulsing ball, its light running over his cheeks and brow like liquid,
drowning his eyes in its dazzle.
In Maerlyn’s Rainbow
he saw her—Susan, horse-drover's daughter, lovely girl at the window. He saw
her standing in the back of a black cart decorated with gold symbols, the old
witch's cart. Reynolds rode behind her, holding the end of a rope that was
noosed around her neck. The cart was rolling toward Green Heart, making its way
with processional slow-ness. Hill Street was lined with people of whom the
farmer with the lamb-slaughterer's eyes had been only the first—all those folk
of Hambry and Mejis who had been deprived of their fair but were now given this
ancient dark attraction in its stead: Charyou tree, come, Reap, death
for you, life for our crops.
A soundless whispering
ran through them like a gathering wave, and they began to pelt her—first with
cornhusks, then with rotting tomatoes, then with potatoes and apples. One of
these latter struck her cheek. She reeled, almost fell, then stood straight
again, now raising her swollen but still lovely face so the moon painted it.
She looked straight ahead.
"Charyou tree,
" they whispered. Roland couldn't hear them, but
he could see the words on their lips. Stanley Ruiz was there, and Pettie, and
Gert Moggins, and Frank Claypool, the deputy with the broken leg; Jamie McCann,
who was to have been this year's Reap Lad. Roland saw a hundred people he had
known (and mostly liked) during his time in Mejis. Now these people pelted his
love with cornshucks and vegetables as she stood, hands bound before her, in
the back of Rhea's cart.
The slowly rolling
cart reached Green Heart, with its colored paper lanterns and silent carousel
where no laughing children rode ... no, not this year. The crowd, still
speaking those two words—chanting them now, it appeared—parted. Roland
saw the heaped pyramid of wood that was the unlit bonfire. Sitting around it,
their backs propped on the central column, their lumpy legs outstretched, was
a ring of red-handed stuffy-guys. There was a single hole in the ring; a single
waiting vacancy.
And now a woman
emerged from the crowd. She wore a rusty black dress and held a pail in one
hand. A smear of ash stood out on one of her cheeks like a brand. She—
Roland began to
shriek. It was a single word, over and over again:
No, no, no, no, no,
no! The ball's pink light flashed brighter with
each repetition, as if his horror refreshed and strengthened it. And now, with
each of those pulses, Cuthbert and Alain could see the shape of the
gunslinger's skull beneath his skin.
"We have to take
it away from him," Alain said. "We have to, it's sucking him dry.
It's killing him!"
Cuthbert nodded and
stepped forward. He grabbed the ball, but couldn't take it from Roland's hands.
The gunslinger's fingers seemed welded to it.
"Hit him!"
he told Alain. "Hit him again, you have to!"
But Alain might as
well have been hitting a post. Roland didn't even rock back on his heels. He
continued to cry out that single negative— "No! No! No! No "—and
the ball flashed faster and faster, eating its way into him through the wound
it had opened, sucking up his grief like blood.
25
"Charyou
tree!" Cordelia Delgado cried, darting forward from
where she had been waiting. The crowd cheered her, and beyond her left shoulder
Demon Moon winked, as if in complicity. "Charyou tree, ye faithless
bitch! Charyou tree!"
She flung the pail of
paint at her niece, splattering her pants and dressing her tied hands in a pair
of wet scarlet gloves. She grinned up at Susan as the cart rolled past. The
smear of ash stood out on her cheek; in the center of her pale forehead, a
single vein pulsed like a worm.
"Bitch!"
Cordelia screamed. Her fists were clenched; she danced a kind of hilarious jig,
feet jumping, bony knees pumping beneath her skirt. "Life for the
crops! Death for the bitch! Charyou tree! Come, Reap!"
The cart rolled past
her; Cordelia faded from Susan's sight, just one more cruel phantasm in a dream
that would soon end. Bird and bear and hare and fish, she thought. Be
safe, Roland; go with my love. That's my fondest wish.
"Take her!"
Rhea screamed. "Take this murdering bitch and cook her red-handed! Charyou
tree!"
"Charyou
tree!" the crowd responded. A forest of willing hands
grew in the moonlit air; somewhere firecrackers rattled and children laughed
excitedly.
Susan was lifted from
the cart and handed toward the waiting woodpile above the heads of the crowd,
passed by uplifted hands like a heroine returned triumphantly home from the
wars. Her hands dripped red tears upon their straining, eager faces. The moon
overlooked it all, dwarfing the glow of the paper lanterns.
"Bird and bear
and hare and fish," she murmured as she was first lowered and then
slammed against the pyramid of dry wood, put in the place which had been left
for her—the whole crowd chanting in unison now, "Charyou TREE! Charyou
TREE! Charyou TREE!"
"Bird and bear
and hare and fish."
Trying to remember how
he had danced with her that night. Trying to remember how he had loved with her
in the willow grove. Trying to remember that first meeting on the dark road: Thankee-sai,
we 're well met, he had said, and yes, in spite of everything, in spite of
this miserable ending with the folk who had been her neighbors turned into
prancing goblins by moonlight, in spite of pain and betrayal and what was
coming, he had spoken the truth: they had been well met, they had been very
well met, indeed.
"Charyou TREE!
Charyou TREE! Charyou TREE!"
Women came and piled
dry cornshucks around her feet. Several of them slapped her (it didn't matter;
her bruised and puffy face seemed to have gone numb), and one—it was Misha
Alvarez, whose daughter Susan had taught to ride—spat into her eyes and then
leaped prankishly away, shaking her hands at the sky and laughing. For a moment
she saw Coral Thorin, festooned with reap-charms, her arms filled with dead
leaves which she threw at Susan; they fluttered down around her in a crackling,
aromatic shower.
And now came her aunt
again, and Rhea beside her. Each held a torch. They stood before her, and Susan
could smell sizzling pitch.
Rhea raised her torch
to the moon. "CHARYOU TREE!" she screamed in her rusty old
voice, and the crowd responded, "CHARYOU TREE!"
Cordelia raised her
own torch. "COME, REAP!"
"COME,
REAP!" they cried back to her.
"Now, ye
bitch," Rhea crooned. "Now comes warmer kisses than any yer love ever
gave ye."
"Die, ye
faithless," Cordelia whispered. "Life for the crops, death for
you."
It was she who first
flung her torch into the cornshucks which were piled as high as Susan's knees;
Rhea flung hers a bare second later. The cornshucks blazed up at once, dazzling
Susan with yellow light.
She drew in a final
breath of cool air, warmed it with her heart, and loosed it in a defiant shout:
"ROLAND, I LOVE THEE!"
The crowd fell back,
murmuring, as if uneasy at what they had done, now that it was too late to take
it back; here was not a stuffy-guy but a cheerful girl they all knew, one of
their own, for some mad reason backed up against the Reap-Night bonfire with
her hands painted red. They might have saved her, given another moment—some
might have, anyway—but it was too late. The dry wood caught; her pants caught;
her shirt caught; her long blonde hair blazed on her head like a crown.
"ROLAND, I LOVE
THEE!"
At the end of her life
she was aware of heat but not pain. She had time to consider his eyes, eyes of
that blue which is the color of the sky at first light of morning. She had time
to think of him on the Drop, riding Rusher flat-out with his black hair flying
back from his temples and his neckerchief rippling; to see him laughing with
an ease and freedom he would never find again in the long life which stretched
out for him beyond hers, and it was his laughter she took with her as she went
out, fleeing the light and heat into the silky, consoling dark, calling to him
over and over as she went, calling bird and bear and hare and fish.
26
There was no word, not
even no, in his screams at the end: he howled like a gutted animal, his
hands welded to the ball, which beat like a runaway heart. He watched in it as
she burned.
Cuthbert tried again
to take the cursed thing away, and couldn't. He did the only other thing he
could think of—drew his revolver, pointed it at the ball, and thumbed back the
hammer. He would likely wound Roland, and the flying glass might even blind
him, but there was no other choice. If they didn't do something, the glam would
kill him.
But there was no need.
As if seeing Cuthbert's gun and understanding what it meant, the ball went instantly
dark and dead in Roland's hands. Roland's stiff body, every line and muscle
trembling with horror and outrage, went limp. He dropped like a stone, his
fingers at last letting go of the ball. His stomach cushioned it as he struck
the ground; it rolled off him and trickled to a stop by one of his limp,
outstretched hands. Nothing burned in its darkness now except for one baleful
orange spark—the tiny reflection of the rising Demon Moon.
Alain looked at the
glass with a species of disgusted, frightened awe; looked at it as one might
look at a vicious animal that now sleeps ... but will wake again, and bite when
it does.
He stepped forward,
meaning to crush it to powder beneath his boot. "Don't you dare,"
Cuthbert said in a hoarse voice. He was kneeling beside Roland's limp form but
looking at Alain. The rising moon was in his eyes, two small, bright stones of
light. "Don't you dare, after all the misery and death we've gone through
to get it. Don't you even think of it."
Alain looked at him
uncertainly for a moment, thinking he should destroy the cursed thing,
anyway—misery suffered did not justify misery to come, and as long as the thing
on the ground remained whole, misery was all it would bring anyone. It was a misery-machine,
that was what it was, and it had killed Susan Delgado. He hadn't seen what
Roland had seen in the glass, but he had seen his friend's face, and that had
been enough. It had killed Susan, and it would kill more, if left whole.
But then he thought of
ka and drew back. Later he would bitterly regret doing so.
"Put it in the
bag again," Cuthbert said, "and then help me with Roland. We have to
get out of here."
The drawstring bag lay
crumpled on the ground nearby, fluttering in the wind. Alain picked up the
ball, hating the feel of its smooth, curved surface, expecting it to come alive
under his touch. It didn't, though. He put it in the bag, and looped it over
his shoulder again. Then he knelt beside Roland.
He didn't know how
long they tried unsuccessfully to bring him around—until the moon had risen
high enough in the sky to turn silver again, and the smoke roiling out of the
canyon had begun to dissipate, that was all he knew. Until Cuthbert told him it
was enough; they would have to sling him over Rusher's saddle and ride with him
that way. If they could get into the heavily forested lands west o' Barony
before dawn, Cuthbert said, they would likely be safe . . . but they had to get
at least that far. They had smashed Parson's men apart with stunning ease, but
the remains would likely knit together again the following day. Best they be
gone before that happened.
And that was how they
left Eyebolt Canyon, and the seacoast side of Mejis; riding west beneath the
Demon Moon, with Roland laid across his saddle like a corpse.
27
The next day they
spent in II Bosque, the forest west of Mejis, waiting for Roland to wake up.
When afternoon came and he remained unconscious, Cuthbert said: "See if
you can touch him."
Alain took Roland's
hands in his own, marshalled all his concentration, bent over his friend's
pale, slumbering face, and remained that way for almost half an hour. Finally
he shook his head, let go of Roland's hands, and stood up.
"Nothing?"
Cuthbert asked.
Alain sighed and shook
his head.
They made a travois of
pine branches so he wouldn't have to spend another night riding oversaddle (if
nothing else, it seemed to make Rusher nervous to be carrying his master in
such a way), and went on, not travelling on the Great Road—that would have
been far too dangerous—but parallel to it. When Roland remained unconscious the
following day (Mejis falling behind them now, and both boys feeling a deep tug
of homesickness, inexplicable but as real as tides), they sat on either side
of him, looking at each other over the slow rise and fall of his chest.
"Can an
unconscious person starve, or die of thirst?" Cuthbert asked. "They
can't, can they?"
"Yes," Alain
said. "I think they can."
It had been a long,
nerve-wracking night of travel. Neither boy had slept well the previous day,
but on this one they slept like the dead, with blankets over their heads to
block the sun. They awoke minutes apart as the sun was going down and Demon
Moon, now two nights past the full, was rising through a troubled rack of
clouds that presaged the first of the great autumn storms.
Roland was sitting up.
He had taken the glass from the drawstring bag. He sat with it cradled in his
arms, a darkened bit of magic as dead as the glass eyes of The Romp. Roland's
own eyes, also dead, looked indifferently off into the moonlit corridors of
the forest. He would eat but not sleep. He would drink from the streams they
passed but not speak. And he would not be parted from the piece of Maerlyn's
Rainbow which they had brought out of Mejis at such great price. It did not
glow for him, however. Not, Cuthbert thought once, while Al and I are
awake to see it, anyway.
Alain couldn't get
Roland's hands off the ball, and so he laid his own on Roland's cheeks,
touching him that way. Except there was nothing to touch, nothing there. The
thing which rode west with them toward Gilead was not Roland, or even a ghost
of Roland. Like the moon at the close of its cycle, Roland had gone.
PART
FOUR
ALL
GOD'S
CHILLUN
GOT
SHOES
CHAPTER I
KANSAS IN
THE
MORNING
1
For the first time in
(hours? days?)
the gunslinger fell
silent. He sat for a moment looking toward the building to the east of them
(with the sun behind it, the glass palace was a black shape surrounded by a
gold nimbus) with his forearms propped on his knees. Then he took the waterskin
which lay on the pavement beside him, held it over his face, opened his mouth,
and upended it.
He drank what happened
to go in his mouth—the others could see his adam's apple working as he lay back
in the breakdown lane, still pouring—but drinking didn't seem to be his
primary purpose. Water streamed down his deeply lined forehead and bounced off
his closed eyelids. It pooled in the triangular hollow at the base of his
throat and ran back from his temples, wetting his hair and turning it darker.
At last he put the
waterskin aside and only lay there, eyes closed, arms stretched out high above
his head, like a man surrendering in his sleep. Steam rose in delicate tendrils
from his wet face.
"Ahhh," he
said.
"Feel
better?" Eddie asked.
The gunslinger's lids
rose, disclosing those faded yet somehow alarming blue eyes. "Yes. I do. I
don't understand how that can be, as much as I dreaded this telling . . . but I
do."
"An
ologist-of-the-psyche could probably explain it to you," Susannah said,
"but I doubt you'd listen." She put her hands in the small of her
back, stretched and winced ... but the wince was only reflex. The pain and
stiffness she'd expected weren't there, and although there was one small creak
near the base other spine, she didn't get the satisfying series of snaps,
crackles, and pops she had expected.
"Tell you one
thing," Eddie said, "this gives a whole new meaning to 'Get it off
your chest.' How long have we been here, Roland?"
"Just one
night."
" 'The spirits
have done it all in a single night,' " Jake said in a dreamy voice. His
legs were crossed at the ankles; Oy sat in the diamond shape made by the boy's
bent knees, looking at him with his bright gold-black eyes.
Roland sat up, wiping
at his wet cheeks with his neckerchief and looking at Jake sharply. "What
is it you say?"
"Not me. A guy
named Charles Dickens wrote that. In a story called A Christmas Carol.
All in a single night, huh?"
"Does any part of
your body say it was longer?"
Jake shook his head.
No, he felt pretty much the way he did any morning—better than on some. He had
to take a leak, but his back teeth weren't exactly floating, or anything like
that.
"Eddie?
Susannah?"
"I feel
good," Susannah said. "Surely not as if I stayed up all night, let
alone many of em."
Eddie said, "It
reminds me of the time I spent as a junkie, in a way—"
"Doesn't
everything?" Roland asked dryly.
"Oh, that's
funny," Eddie said. "A real howl. Next train that goes crazy on us, you
can ask it the silly questions. What I meant was that you'd spend so many
nights high that you got used to feeling like ten pounds of shit in a
nine-pound bag when you got up in the morning—bad head, stuffy nose, thumping
heart, glass in the old spine. Take it from your pal Eddie, you can tell just
from the way you feel in the morning how good dope is for you. Anyway, you'd
get so used to that—/did, anyway—that when you actually took a night off,
you'd wake up the next morning and sit there on the edge of the bed, thinking,
'What the flick's wrong with me? Am I sick? I feel weird. Did I have a stroke
in the night?' "
Jake laughed, then
clapped a hand over his mouth so violently that it was as if he wanted not just
to hold the sound in but call it back. "Sorry," he said. "That
made me think of my dad."
"One of my
people, huh?" Eddie said. "Anyway, I expect to be sore, I expect to
be tired, I expect to creak when I walk... but I actually think all I need to
put me right is a quick pee in the bushes."
"And a bite to
eat?" Roland asked.
Eddie had been wearing
a ^mall smile. Now it faded. "No," he said. "After that story,
I'm not all that hungry. In fact, I'm not hungry at all."
2
Eddie carried Susannah
down the embankment and popped her behind a stand of laurel bushes to do her
necessary. Jake was sixty or seventy yards east, in a grove of birches. Roland
had said he would use the remedial strip to do his morning necessary, then
raised his eyebrows when his New York friends laughed.
Susannah wasn't
laughing when she came out of the bushes. Her face was streaked with tears.
Eddie didn't ask her; he knew. He had been fighting the feeling himself. He
took her gently in his arms and she put her face against the side of his neck.
They stayed that way for a little while.
"Charyou tree,
" she said at last, pronouncing it as Roland had:
chair-you tree, with a little upturned vowel at the end.
"Yeah,"
Eddie said, thinking that a Charlie by any other name was still a Charlie. As,
he supposed, a rose was a rose was a rose. "Come, Reap."
She raised her head
and began to wipe her swimming eyes. "To have gone through all that,"
she said, keeping her voice low ... and looking once at the turnpike embankment
to make sure Roland wasn't there, looking down at them. "And at
fourteen."
"Yeah. It makes
my adventures searching for the elusive dime bag in Tompkins Square look pretty
tame. In a way, though, I'm almost relieved."
"Relieved?
Why?"
"Because I
thought he was going to tell us that he killed her himself. For his damned
Tower."
Susannah looked
squarely into his eyes. "But he thinks that's what he did. Don't you
understand that?"
3
When they were back
together again and there was food actually in sight, all of them decided they
could eat a bit, after all. Roland shared out the last of the burritos (Maybe
later today we can stop in at the nearest Boing Boing Burgers and see what
they've got for leftovers, Eddie thought), and they dug in. All of them,
that was, except Roland. He picked up his burrito, looked at it, then looked
away. Eddie saw an expression of sadness on the gunslinger's face that made him
look both old and lost. It hurt Eddie's heart, but he couldn't think what to
do about it.
Jake, almost ten years
younger, could. He got up, went to Roland, knelt beside him, put his arms
around the gunslinger's neck, and hugged him. "I'm sorry you lost your
friend," he said.
Roland's face worked,
and for a moment Eddie was sure he was going to lose it. A long time between
hugs, maybe. Mighty long. Eddie had to look away for a moment. Kansas in the
morning, he told himself. A sight you never expected to see. Dig on that
for awhile, and let the man be.
When he looked back,
Roland had it together again. Jake was sitting beside him, and Oy had his long
snout on one of the gunslinger's boots. Roland had begun to eat his burrito.
Slowly, and without much relish . . . but he was eating.
A cold
hand—Susannah's—crept into Eddie's. He took it and folded his fingers over it.
"One night,"
she marvelled.
"On our
body-clocks, at least," Eddie said. "In our heads . .."
"Who knows?"
Roland agreed. "But storytelling always changes time. At least it does in
my world." He smiled. It was unexpected, as always, and as always, it
transformed his face into something nearly beautiful. Looking at that, Eddie
mused, you could see how a girl might have fallen in love with Roland, once
upon a time. Back when he had been long and going on tall but maybe not so
ugly; back when the Tower hadn't yet got its best hold on him.
"I think it's
that way in all worlds, sugar," Susannah said. "Could I ask you a
couple of questions, before we get rolling?"
"If you
like."
"What happened to
you? How long were you ... gone?"
"I was certainly
gone, you're right about that. I was travelling. Wandering. Not in
Maerlyn's Rainbow, exactly ... I don't think I ever would have returned from
there, if I'd gone into it while I was still . . . sick . . . but everyone has
a wizard's glass, of course. Here." He tapped his forehead gravely, just
above the space between his eyebrows. "That's where I went. That's where I
travelled while my friends travelled east with me. I got better there, little
by little. I held onto the ball, and I travelled inside my head, and I got
better. But the glass never glowed for me until the very end ... when the
battlements of the castle and the towers of the city were actually in sight. If
it had awakened earlier..."
He shrugged.
"If it had
awakened before I'd started to get some of my strength of mind back, I don't
think I'd be here now. Because any world—even a pink one with a glass sky—would
have been preferable to one where there was no Susan. I suppose the force that
gives the glass its life knew that... and waited."
"But when it did
glow for you again, it told you the rest," Jake said. "It must have.
It told you the parts that you weren't there to see."
"Yes. I know as much
of the story as I do because of what I saw in the ball."
"You told us once
that John Farson wanted your head on a pole," Eddie said. "Because
you stole something from him. Something he held dear. It was the glass ball,
wasn't it?"
"Yes. He was more
than furious when he found out. He was insane with rage. In your parlance,
Eddie, he 'went nuclear.' "
"How many more
times did it glow for you?" Susannah asked.
"And what
happened to it?" Jake added.
"I saw in it
three times after we left Mejis Barony," Roland said. "The first was
on the night before we came home to Gilead. That was when I travelled in it the
longest, and it showed me what I've told you. A few things I've only guessed
at, but most I was shown. It showed me these things not to teach or enlighten,
but to hurt and wound. The remaining pieces of the Wizard's Rainbow are all
evil things. Hurt enlivens them, somehow. It waited until my mind was strong
enough to understand and withstand... and then it showed me all the
things I missed in my stupid adolescent complacency. My lovesick daze. My
prideful, murderous conceit."
"Roland,
don't," Susannah said. "Don't let it hurt you still."
"But it does. It
always will. Never mind. It doesn't matter now; that tale is told.
"The second time
I saw into the glass—went into the glass—was three days after I came
home. My mother wasn't there, although she was due that evening. She had gone
into Debaria—a kind of retreat for women—to wait and pray for my return. Nor
was Marten there. He was in Cressia, with Farson."
"The ball,"
Eddie said. "Your father had it by then?"
"No-o,"
Roland said. He looked down at his hands, and Eddie observed a faint flush
rising into his cheeks. "I didn't give it to him at first. 1 found it...
hard to give up."
"I bet,"
Susannah said. "You and everyone else who ever looked into the goddam
thing."
"On the third
afternoon, before we were to be banqueted to celebrate our safe return"
"I bet you were
really in a mood to party, too," Eddie said.
Roland smiled without
humor, still studying his hands. "At around four o' the clock, Cuthbert
and Alain came to my rooms. We were a trio for an artist to paint, I
wot—windburned, hollow-eyed, hands covered with healing cuts and scrapes from
our climb up the side of the canyon, scrawny as scarecrows. Even Alain, who
tended toward stoutness, all but disappeared when he turned sideways. They
confronted me, I suppose you'd say. They'd kept the secret of the ball to that
point—out of respect for me and for the loss I'd suffered, they told me, and I
believed them— but they would keep it no longer than that night's meal. If I
wouldn't give it up voluntarily, it would be a question for our fathers to
decide. They were horribly embarrassed, especially Cuthbert, but they were
determined.
"I told them I'd
give it over to my own father before the banquet— before my mother arrived by
coach from Debaria, even. They should come early and see that I kept my
promise. Cuthbert started to hem and haw and say that wouldn't be necessary,
but of course it was necessary—"
"Yeah,"
Eddie said. He had the look of a man who understood this part of the story
perfectly. "You can go into the crapper on your own, but it's a lot easier
to actually flush all the bad shit down the toilet if you have somebody with
you."
"Alain, at least,
knew it would be better for me—easier—if I didn't have to hand the ball over
alone. He hushed Cuthbert up and said they'd be there. And they were. And I
gave it over, little as I wanted to. My father went as pale as paper when he
looked into the bag and saw what was there, then excused himself and took it
away. When he came back, he picked up his glass of wine and went on talking to
us of our adventures in Mejis as if nothing had happened."
"But between the
time your friends talked to you about it and the time you gave it up, you
looked into it," Jake said. "Went into it. Travelled in it.
What did it show you that time?"
"First the Tower
again," Roland said, "and the beginning of the way there. I saw the
fall of Gilead, and the triumph of the Good Man. We'd put those things back a
mere twenty months or so by destroying the tankers and the oilpatch. I could do
nothing about that, but it showed me something I could do. There was a
certain knife. The blade had been treated with an especially potent poison,
something from a distant Mid-World Kingdom called Garlan. Stuff so strong even
the tiniest cut would cause almost instant death. A wandering singer—in truth,
John Parson's eldest nephew—had brought this knife to court. The man he gave it
to was the castle's chief of domestic staff. This man was to pass the knife on
to the actual assassin. My father was not meant to see the sun come up on the
morning after the banquet." He smiled at them grimly. "Because of
what I saw in the Wizard's Glass, the knife never reached the hand that would
have used it, and there was a new chief of domestics by the end of that week.
These are pretty tales I tell you, are they not? Aye, very pretty,
indeed."
"Did you see the
person the knife was meant for?" Susannah asked. "The actual killer?"
"Yes."
"Anything else?
Did you see anything else?" Jake asked. The plan to murder Roland's father
didn't seem to hold much interest for him.
"Yes."
Roland looked puzzled. "Shoes. Just for a minute. Shoes tumbling through
the air. At first I thought they were autumn leaves. And when I saw what they
really were, they were gone and I was lying on my bed with the ball hugged in
my arms . . . pretty much the way I carried it back from Mejis. My father ...
as I've said, his surprise when he looked inside the bag was very great,
indeed."
You told him who had
the knife with the special poison on it, Susannah thought, Jeeves
the Butler, or whoever, but you didn't tell him who was supposed to actually
use it, did you, sugar? Why not? Because you wanted to take care of
dat little spot o' work yo ownself? But before she could ask, Eddie was
asking a question of his own.
"Shoes? Flying
through the air? Does that mean anything to you now?"
Roland shook his head.
"Tell us about
the rest of what you saw in it," Susannah said.
He gave her a look of
such terrible pain that what Susannah had only suspected immediately solidified
to fact in her mind. She looked away from him and groped for Eddie's hand.
"I cry your
pardon, Susannah, but I cannot. Not now. For now, I've told all I can."
"All right,"
Eddie said. "All right, Roland, that's cool."
"Ool," Oy
agreed.
"Did you ever see
the witch again?" Jake asked.
For a long time it
seemed Roland would not answer this, either, but in the end he did.
"Yes. She wasn't
done with me. Like my dreams of Susan, she followed me. All the way from
Mejis, she followed me."
"What do you
mean?" Jake asked in a low, awed voice. "Cripes, Roland, what do you
mean?"
"Not now."
He got up. "It's time we were on our way again." He nodded to the building
which floated ahead of them; the sun was just now clearing its battlements.
"Yon glitter-dome's a good distance away, but I think we can reach it this
afternoon, if we move brisk. 'Twould be best. It's not a place I'd reach after
nightfall, if that can be avoided."
"Do you know what
it is yet?" Susannah asked.
"Trouble,"
he repeated. "And in our road."
4
For awhile that
morning, the thinny warbled so loudly that not even the bullets in their ears
would entirely stop up the sound; at its worst, Susannah felt as if the bridge
of her nose would simply disintegrate, and when she looked at Jake, she saw he
was weeping copiously—not crying the way people do when they're sad, but the
way they do when their sinuses are in total revolt. She couldn't get the saw-player
the kid had mentioned out of her mind. Sounds Hawaiian, she thought over
and over again as Eddie pushed her grimly along in the new wheelchair, weaving
in and out of the stalled vehicles. Sounds Hawaiian, doesn't it? Sounds
fucking Hawaiian, doesn't it. Miss Oh So Black and Pretty?
On both sides of the
turnpike the thinny lapped all the way up to the embankment, casting its
twitching, misshapen reflections of trees and grain elevators, seeming to watch
the pilgrims pass as hungry animals in a zoo might watch plump children.
Susannah would find herself thinking of the thinny in Eyebolt Canyon, reaching
out hungrily through the smoke for Latigo's milling men, pulling them in (and
some going in on their own, walking like zombies in a horror movie), and then
she would find herself thinking of the guy in Central Park again, the wacko
with the saw. Sounds Hawaiian, doesn't it? Counting one thinny, and it
sounds Hawaiian, doesn't it?
Just when she thought
she could stand it not a moment longer, the thinny began to draw back from 1-70
again, and its humming warble at last began to fade. Susannah was eventually
able to pull the bullets out of her ears. She tucked them into the side-pocket
of her chair with a hand that shook slightly.
"That was a bad
one," Eddie said. His voice sounded clogged and weepy. She looked around
at him and saw his cheeks were wet, his eyes red. "Take it easy,
Suzie-pie," he said. "It's my sinuses, that's all. That sound kills
em."
"Me, too,"
Susannah said.
"My sinuses are
okay, but my head aches," Jake said. "Roland, do you have any more
aspirin?"
Roland stopped,
rummaged, and found the bottle.
"Did you ever see
Clay Reynolds again?" Jake asked, after swallowing the pills with water
from the skin he carried.
"No, but I know
what happened to him. He got a bunch together, some of them deserters from
Parson's army, went to robbing banks ... in toward our part of the world, this
was, but by then bank-thieves and stage-robbers didn't have much to fear from
gunslingers."
"The gunslingers
were busy with Farson," Eddie said.
"Yes. But
Reynolds and his men were trapped by a smart sheriff who turned the main street
of a town called Oakley into a killing-zone. Six of the ten in the gang were
killed outright. The rest were hung. Reynolds was one of those. This was less
than a year later, during the time of Wide Earth." He paused, then said:
"One of those shot dead in the killing-zone was Coral Thorin. She had
become Reynolds's woman; rode and killed with the rest of them."
They went on in
silence for a bit. In the distance, the thinny warbled its endless song. Jake
suddenly ran ahead to a parked camper. A note had been left under the wiper
blade on the driver's side. By standing on his toes, he was just able to reach
it. He scanned it, frowning.
"What does it
say?" Eddie asked.
Jake handed it over.
Eddie looked, then passed it to Susannah, who read it in turn and gave it to
Roland. He looked, then shook his head. "I can make out only a few words—old
woman, dark man. What does the rest say? Read it to me."
Jake took it back.
" 'The old woman from the dreams is in Nebraska. Her name is Abagail.'
" He paused. "Then, down here, it says, 'The dark man is in the west.
Maybe Vegas.' "
Jake looked up at the
gunslinger, the note fluttering in his hand, his face puzzled and uneasy. But
Roland was looking toward the palace which shimmered across the highway—the
palace that was not in the west but in the east, the palace that was light, not
dark.
"In the
west," Roland said. "Dark man, Dark Tower, and always in the
west."
"Nebraska's west
of here, too," Susannah said hesitantly. "I don't know if that
matters, this Abagail person, but..."
"I think she's
part of another story," Roland said.
"But a story
close to this one," Eddie put in. "Next door, maybe. Close enough to
swap sugar for salt... or start arguments."
"I'm sure you're
right," Roland said, "and we may have business with the 'old woman'
and the 'dark man' yet... but today our business is east. Come on."
They began walking
again.
5
"What about
Sheemie?" Jake asked after awhile.
Roland laughed, partly
in surprise at the question, partly in pleased remembrance. "He followed
us. It couldn't have been easy for him, and it must have been damned scary in
places—there were wheels and wheels of wild country between Mejis and Gilead,
and plenty of wild folks, too. Worse than just folks, mayhap. But ka was
with him, and he showed up in time for Year's End Fair. He and that damned
mule."
"Capi," Jake
said.
"Appy,"
Oy repeated, padding along at Jake's heel.
"When we went in
search of the Tower, I and my friends, Sheemie was with us. As a sort of
squire, I suppose you'd say. He . . ." But Roland trailed off, biting at
his lip, and of that he would say no more.
"Cordelia?"
Susannah asked. "The crazy aunt?"
"Dead before the
bonfire had burned down to embers. It might have been a heart-storm, or a
brain-storm—what Eddie calls a stroke."
"Perhaps it was
shame," Susannah said. "Or horror at what she'd done."
"It may have
been," Roland said. "Waking to the truth when it's too late is a
terrible thing. I know that very well."
"Something up
there," Jake said, pointing at a long stretch of road from which the cars
had been cleared. "Do you see?"
Roland did—with his
eyes he seemed to see everything—but it was another fifteen minutes or so
before Susannah began to pick up the small black specks ahead in the road. She
was quite sure she knew what they were, although what she thought was less
vision than intuition. Ten minutes after that, she was sure.
They were shoes. Six
pairs of shoes placed neatly in a line across the eastbound lanes of Interstate
70.
CHAPTER II
SHOES IN THE ROAD
1
They reached the shoes
at mid-morning. Beyond them, clearer now, stood the glass palace. It glimmered
a delicate green shade, like the reflection of a lily pad in still water. There
were shining gates in front of it; red pennons snapped from its towers in a
light breeze.
The shoes were also
red.
Susannah's impression
that there were six pairs was understandable but wrong—there were actually four
pairs and one quartet. This latter— four dark red booties made of supple
leather—was undoubtedly meant for the four-footed member of their ka-tet.
Roland picked one of them up and felt inside it. He didn't know how many
bumblers had worn shoes in the history of the world, but he was willing to
guess that none had ever been gifted with a set of silk-lined leather booties.
"Bally, Gucci,
eat your heart out," Eddie said. "This is great stuff."
Susannah's were
easiest to pick out, and not just because of the feminine, sparkly swoops on
the sides. They weren't really shoes at all—they had been made to fit over the
stumps of her legs, which ended just above the knees.
"Now look at
this," she marvelled, holding one up so the sun could flash on the
rhinestones with which the shoes were decorated ... if they were
rhinestones. She had a crazy notion that maybe they were diamond chips.
"Cappies. After four years of gettin along in what my friend Cynthia
calls 'circumstances of reduced leg-room,' I finally got myself a pair of
cappies. Think of that."
"Cappies,"
Eddie mused. "Is that what they call em?"
"That's what they
call em, sugar."
Jake's were bright red
Oxfords—except for the color, they would have looked perfectly at home in the
well-bred classrooms of The Piper School. He flexed one, then turned it over.
The sole was bright and unmarked. There was no manufacturer's stamp, nor had
he really expected one. His father had maybe a dozen pairs of fine handmade
shoes. Jake knew them when he saw them.
Eddie's were low boots
with Cuban heels {Maybe in this world you call them Mejis heels,
he thought) and pointed toes ... what, back in his other life, had been known
as "street-boppers." Kids from the mid-sixties—an era
Odetta/Detta/Susannah had just missed—might have called them
"Beatle-boots."
Roland's, of course,
were cowboy boots. Fancy ones—you'd go dancing rather than droving in such as
these. Looped stitching, side decorations, narrow, haughty arches. He examined
them without picking them up, then looked at his fellow travellers and frowned.
They were looking at each other. You would have said three people couldn't do
that, only a pair ... but you only would have said it if you'd never been part
of a ka-tet.
Roland still shared khef
with them; he felt the powerful current of their mingled thought, but could
not understand it. Because it's of their world. They come from different
whens of that world, but they see something here that's common to all three of
them.
"What is
it?" he asked. "What do they mean, these shoes?"
"I don't think
any of us know that, exactly," Susannah said.
"No," Jake
said. "It's another riddle." He looked at the weird, blood red Oxford
shoe in his hands with distaste. "Another goddamned riddle."
"Tell what you
know." He looked toward the glass palace again. It was perhaps fifteen New
York miles away, now, shining in the clear day, delicate as a mirage, but as
real as ... well, as real as shoes. "Please, tell me what you know about
these shoes."
"I got shoes, you
got shoes, all God's chillun got shoes," Odetta said. "That's the
prevailin opinion, anyway."
"Well,"
Eddie said, "we got em, anyway. And you're thinking what I'm
thinking, aren't you?"
"I guess I
am."
"You, Jake?"
Instead of answering
with words, Jake picked up the other Oxford (Roland had no doubt that all the
shoes, including Oy's, would fit perfectly) and clapped them briskly together
three times. It meant nothing to Roland, but both Eddie and Susannah reacted
violently, looking around, looking especially at the sky, as if expecting a
storm born out of this bright autumn sunshine. I hey ended up looking at the
glass palace again . . . and then at each other, in that knowing, round-eyed
way that made Roland feel like shaking them both until their teeth rattled. Yet
he waited. Sometimes that was all a man could do.
"After you killed
Jonas, you looked into the ball," Eddie said, turning to him.
"Yes."
"Travelled
in the ball."
"Yes, but I don't
want to talk about that again now; it has nothing to do with these—"
"I think it
does," Eddie said. "You flew inside a pink storm. Inside a pink gale,
you could say. Gale is a word you might use for a storm, isn't it? Especially
if you were making up a riddle."
"Sure," Jake
said. He sounded dreamy, almost like a boy who talks in his sleep. "When
does Dorothy fly over the Wizard's Rainbow? When she's a Gale."
"We ain't in
Kansas anymore, sugar," Susannah said, and then voiced a strange,
humorless bark which Roland supposed was a species of laughter. "May look
a little like it, but Kansas was never . . . you know, this thin:'
"I don't
understand you," Roland said. But he felt cold, and his heart was beating
too fast. There were thinnies everywhere now, hadn't he told them that? Worlds
melting into one another as the forces of the Tower weakened? As the day when
the rose would be plowed under drew nearer?
"You saw things
as you flew," Eddie said. "Before you got to the dark land, the one
you called Thunderclap, you saw things. The piano-player, Sheb. Who turned up
again later in your life, didn't he?"
"Yes, in
Tull."
"And the dweller
with the red hair?"
"Him, too. He had
a bird named Zoltan. But when we met, he and I, we said the normal. 'Life for
you, life for your crop,' that sort of thing. I thought I heard the same when
he flew by me in the pink storm, but he really said something else." He
glanced at Susannah. "I saw your wheel-chair, too. The old one."
"And you saw the
witch."
"Yes. I—"
In a creaky chortle
that reminded Roland unnervingly of Rhea, Jake Chambers cried: "I'll get
you, my pretty! And your little dog, too!"
Roland stared at him,
trying not to gape.
"Only in the
movie, the witch wasn't riding a broom," Jake said. "She was on her
bike, the one with the basket on the back."
"Yeah, no
reap-charms, either," Eddie said. "Would have been a nice touch,
though. I tell you, Jake, when I was a kid, I used to have nightmares about
the way she laughed."
"It was the
monkeys that gave me the creeps," Susannah said. "The flying monkeys.
I'd get thinkin about em, and then have to crawl into bed with my mom and dad.
They'd still be arguin 'bout whose bright idea it was to take me to that show
in the foist place when I fell asleep between em."
"I wasn't worried
about clapping the heels together," Jake said. "Not a bit." It
was Susannah and Eddie he was speaking to; for the time being, it was as if
Roland wasn't even there. "I wasn't wearing them, after all."
"True,"
Susannah said, sounding severe, "but you know what my daddy always used to
say?"
"No, but I have a
feeling we're going to find out," Eddie said.
She gave Eddie a
brief, severe look, then turned her attention back to Jake. " 'Never
whistle for the wind unless you want it to blow,' " she said. "And
it's good advice, no matter what Young Mister Foolish here may think."
"Spanked
again," Eddie said, grinning.
'Tanked!" Oy
said, eyeing Eddie severely.
"Explain this to
me," Roland said in his softest voice. "I would hear. I would share
your khef. And I would share it now.”
2
They told him a story
almost every American child of the twentieth century knew, about a Kansas
farmgirl named Dorothy Gale who had been carried away by a cyclone and
deposited, along with her dog, in the Land of Oz. There was no 1-70 in Oz, but
there was a yellow brick road which served much the same purpose, and there
were witches, both good and bad. There was a ka-tet comprised of
Dorothy, Toto, and three friends she met along the way: the Cowardly Lion, the
Tin Woodman, and the Scarecrow. They each had
(bird and bear and
hare and fish)
a fondest wish, and it
was with Dorothy's that Roland's new friends (and Roland himself, for that
matter) identified the most strongly: she wanted to find her way home again.
"The Munchkins
told her that she had to follow the yellow brick road to Oz," Jake said,
"and so she went. She met the others along the way, sort of like you met
us, Roland—"
"Although you
don't look much like Judy Garland," Eddie put in.
"—and eventually
they got there. To Oz, the Emerald Palace, and the guy who lived in the Emerald
Palace." He looked toward the glass palace ahead of them, greener and
greener in the strengthening light, and then back to Roland.
"Yes, I
understand. And was this fellow, Oz, a powerful dinh? A Baron? Perhaps a
King?"
Again, the three of
them exchanged a glance from which Roland was excluded. "That's
complicated," Jake said. "He was sort of a humbug—"
"A bumhug? What's
that?"
"Humbug, "
Jake said, laughing. "A faker. All talk, no action. But maybe the
important thing is that the Wizard actually came from—"
"Wizard?"
Roland asked sharply. He grasped Jake's shoulder with his diminished right
hand. "Why do you call him so?"
"Because that was
his title, sug," Susannah said. "The Wizard of Oz." She lifted
Roland's hand gently but firmly from Jake's shoulder. "Let him tell it,
now. He don't need you to squeeze it out of him."
"Did I hurt you?
Jake, I cry your pardon."
"Nah, I'm
fine," Jake said. "Don't worry about it. Anyway, Dorothy and her
friends had a lot of adventures before finding out the Wizard was a, you know,
a bumhug." Jake giggled at this with his hands clapped to his forehead and
pushing back his hair, like a child of five. "He couldn't give the Lion
courage, the Scarecrow a brain, or the Tin Woodman a heart. Worst of all, he
couldn't send Dorothy back to Kansas. The Wizard had a balloon, but he went
without her. I don't think he meant to, but he did."
"It seems to me,
from your telling of the tale," Roland said, speaking very slowly,
"that Dorothy's friends had the things they wanted all along."
"That's the moral
of the story," Eddie said. "Maybe what makes it a great story. But
Dorothy was stuck in Oz, you see. Then Glinda showed up. Glinda the Good. And,
as a present for smooshing one of the bad witches under her house and melting
another one, Glinda told Dorothy how to use the ruby slippers. The ones Glinda
gave her."
Eddie raised the red
Cuban-heeled street-boppers which had been left for him on the dotted white
line of 1-70.
"Glinda told
Dorothy to click the heels of the ruby slippers together three times. That
would take her back to Kansas, she said. And it did." "And that's the
end of the tale?"
"Well," Jake
said, "it was so popular that the guy who wrote it went ahead and wrote
about a thousand more Oz stories—"
"Yeah,"
Eddie said. "Everything but Glinda's Guide to Firm Thighs."
"—and there was
this crazy remake called The Wiz, starring black people—"
"Really?"
Susannah asked. She looked bemused. "What a peculiar concept."
"—but the only
one that really matters is the first one, I think," Jake finished.
Roland hunkered and
put his hands into the boots which had been left for him. He lifted them,
looked at them, put them down again. "Are we supposed to put them on, do
you think? Here and now?"
His three friends from
New York looked at each other doubtfully. At last Susannah spoke for them—fed
him the khef which he could feel but not quite share on his own.
"Best not to
right now, maybe. Too many bad-ass spirits here." "Takuro
spirits," Eddie murmured, mostly to himself. Then: "Look, let's just
take em along. If we're supposed to put em on, I think we'll know when the time
comes. In the meantime, I think we ought to beware of bumhugs bearing
gifts."
It cracked Jake up, as
Eddie had known it would; sometimes a word or an image got into your funny bone
like a virus and just lived there awhile. Tomorrow the word "bumhug"
might mean nothing to the kid; for the rest of today, however, he was going to
laugh every time he heard it. Eddie intended to use it a lot, especially when
ole Jake wasn't expecting it.
They picked up the red
shoes which had been left for them in the east-bound lanes (Jake took Oy's) and
moved on again toward the shimmering glass castle.
Oz,
Roland thought. He searched his memory, but he didn't think it was a name he
had ever heard before, or a word of the High Speech that had come in disguise,
as char had come disguised as Charlie. Yet it had a sound that belonged
in this business; a sound more of his world than of Jake's, Susannah's, and
Eddie's, from whence the tale had come.
3
Jake kept expecting
the Green Palace to begin looking normal as they drew closer to it, the way the
attractions in Disney World began to look normal as you drew close to them—not ordinary,
necessarily, but normal, things which were as much a part of the world
as the comer bus stop or mailbox or park bench, stuff you could touch, stuff
you could write fuck piper on, if
you took a notion.
But that didn't
happen, wasn't going to happen, and as they neared the Green Palace,
Jake realized something else: it was the most beautiful, radiant thing he had
ever seen in his life. Not trusting it—and he did not— didn't change the fact.
It was like a drawing in a fairy-tale book, one so good it had become real,
somehow. And, like the thinny, it hummed ... except that this sound was far
fainter, and not unpleasant.
Pale green walls rose
to battlements that jutted and towers that soared, seeming almost to touch the
clouds floating over the Kansas plains. These towers were topped with needles
of a darker, emerald green; it was from these that the red pennants nickered. Upon
each pennant the symbol of the open eye
had been traced in
yellow.
It's the mark of the
Crimson King, Jake thought. It's really his sigul, not
John Farson 's. He didn't know how he knew this (how could he, when
Alabama's Crimson Tide was the only Crimson anything he knew?), but he
did.
"So
beautiful," Susannah murmured, and when Jake glanced at her, he thought
she was almost crying. "But not nice, somehow. Not right. Maybe not
downright bad, the way the thinny is, but.. ."
"But not
nice," Eddie said. "Yeah. That works. Not a red light, maybe, but a
bright yellow one just the same." He rubbed the side of his face (a
gesture he had picked up from Roland without even realizing it) and looked
puzzled. "It feels almost not serious—a practical joke."
"I doubt it's a
joke," Roland said. "Do you think it's a copy of the place where
Dorothy and her ka-tet met the false wizard?"
Again, the three
erstwhile New Yorkers seemed to exchange a single glance of consultation. When
it was over, Eddie spoke for all of them. "Yeah. Yeah, probably. It's not
the same as the one in the movie, but if this thing came out of our minds, it
wouldn't be. Because we see the one from L. Frank Baum's book, too. Both from
the illustrations in the book. . ."
"And the ones
from our imaginations," Jake said.
"But that's
it," Susannah said. "I'd say we're definitely off to see the
Wizard."
"You bet,"
Eddie said. "Because-because-because-because-because—"
"Because of the
wonderful things he does!" Jake and Susannah finished
in unison, then laughed, delighted with each other, while Roland frowned at
them, feeling puzzled and looking left out.
"But I have to
tell you guys," Eddie said, "that it's only gonna take about one more
wonderful thing to send me around to the dark side of the Psycho Moon. Most
likely for good."
4
As they drew closer,
they could see Interstate 70 stretching away into the pale green depths of the
castle's slightly rounded outer wall; it floated there like an optical
illusion. Closer yet, and they could hear the pennants snapping in the breeze
and see their own ripply reflections, like drowned folk who somehow walk at the
bottoms of watery tropical graves.
There was an inner
redoubt of dark blue glass—it was a color Jake associated with the bottles
fountain-pen ink came in—and a rust-hued wall-walk between the redoubt and the
outer wall. That color made Susannah think of the bottles Hires root-beer had
come in when she was a little girl.
The way in was blocked
by a barred gate that was both huge and ethereal: it looked like wrought iron
which had been turned to glass. Each cunningly made stake was a different
color, and these colors seemed to come from the inside, as if the bars
were filled with some bright gas or liquid.
The travellers stopped
before it. There was no sign of the turnpike beyond it; instead of roadway,
there was a courtyard of silver glass—a huge flat mirror, in fact. Clouds
floated serenely through its depths; so did the image of the occasional
swooping bird. Sun reflected off this glass courtyard and ran across the green
castle walls in ripples. Un the far side, the wall of the palace's inner ward
rose in a glimmery green cliff, broken by narrow loophole windows of jet-black
glass. There was also an arched entry in this wall that made Jake think of St.
Patrick's Cathedral.
To the left of the
main doorway was a sentry-box made of cream-colored glass shot through with
hazy orange threads. Its door, painted with red stripes, stood open. The
phone-booth-sized room inside was empty, although there was something on the
floor which looked to Jake like a newspaper.
Above the entry,
flanking its darkness, were two crouching, leering gargoyles of darkest violet
glass. Their pointed tongues poked out like bruises.
The pennants atop the
towers flapped like schoolyard flags.
Crows cawed over empty
cornfields now a week past the Reap.
Distant, the thinny
whined and warbled.
"Look at the bars
of this gate," Susannah said. She sounded breathless and awestruck.
"Look very closely."
Jake bent toward the
yellow bar until his nose nearly touched it and a faint yellow stripe ran down
the middle of his face. At first he saw nothing, and then he gasped. What he
had taken for motes of some kind were creatures—living creatures—imprisoned
inside the bar, swimming in tiny schools. They looked like fish in an aquarium,
but they also (their heads, Jake told himself, I think it's
mostly their heads) looked oddly, disquietingly human. As if, Jake thought,
he were looking into a vertical golden sea, all the ocean in a glass rod—and
living myths no bigger than grains of dust swimming within it. A tiny woman
with a fish's tail and long blonde hair streaming out behind her swam to her
side of the glass, seemed to peer out at the giant boy (her eyes were round,
startled, and beautiful), and then flipped away again.
Jake felt suddenly
dizzy and weak. He closed his eyes until the feeling of vertigo went away,
then opened them again and looked around at the others. "Cripes! Are they
all the same?"
"All different, I
think," said Eddie, who had already peered into two or three. He bent
close to the purple rod, and his cheeks lit up as if in the glow of an
old-fashioned fluoroscope. "These guys here look like birds— little tiny
birds."
Jake looked and saw
that Eddie was right: inside the gate's purple upright were flocks of birds no
bigger than summer minges. They swooped giddily about in their eternal
twilight, weaving over and under one another, their wings leaving tiny silver
trails of bubbles.
"Are they really
there?" Jake asked breathlessly. "Are they, Roland, or are we
only imagining them?"
"I don't know.
But I know what this gate has been made to look like."
"So do I,"
Eddie said. He surveyed the shining posts, each with its own column of
imprisoned light and life. Each of the gate's wings consisted of six colored
bars. The one in the center—broad and flat instead of round, and made to split
in two when the gate was opened—was the thirteenth. This one was dead black,
and in this one nothing moved.
Oh, maybe not that you
can see, but there are things moving around in
there, all right, Jake thought. There's life in there, terrible life.
And maybe there are roses, too. Drowned ones.
"It's a Wizard's
Gate," Eddie said. "Each bar has been made to look like one of the
balls in Maerlyn's Rainbow. Look, here's the pink one."
Jake leaned toward it,
hands propped on his thighs. He knew what would be inside even before he saw
them: horses, of courses. Tiny herds of them, galloping through that strange
pink stuff that was neither light nor liquid. Horses running in search of a
Drop they would never find, mayhap.
Eddie stretched his
hands out to grasp the sides of the central post, the black one.
"Don't!"
Susannah called sharply.
Eddie ignored her, but
Jake saw his chest stop for a moment and his lips tighten as he wrapped his
hands around the black bar and waited for something—some force perhaps sent
Special Delivery all the way from the Dark Tower itself—to change him, or even
to strike him dead. When nothing happened, he breathed deep again, and risked a
smile. "No electricity, but . . ." He pulled; the gate held fast.
"No give, either. I see where it splits down the middle, but I get
nothing. Want to take a shot, Roland?"
Roland reached for the
gate, but Jake put a hand on his arm and stopped him before the gunslinger
could do more than give it a preliminary shake. "Don't bother. That's not
the way."
"Then what
is?"
Instead of answering,
Jake sat down in front of the gate, near the place where this strange version
of 1-70 ended, and began putting on the shoes which had been left for him.
Eddie watched a moment, then sat down beside him. "I guess we ought to try
it," he said to Jake, "even though it'll probably turn out to be just
another bumhug."
Jake laughed, shook
his head, and began to tighten the laces of the blood-red Oxfords. He and Eddie
both knew it was no bumhug. Not this time.
5
"Okay," Jake
said when they had all put on their red shoes (he thought they looked
extraordinarily stupid, especially Eddie's pair). "I'll count to three,
and we'll click our heels together. Like this." He clicked the Oxfords
together once, sharply . . . and the gate shivered like a loosely fastened
shutter blown by a strong wind. Susannah cried out. There followed a low, sweet
chiming sound from the Green Palace, as if the walls themselves had vibrated.
"I guess this'll
do the trick, all right," Eddie said. "I warn you, though, I'm not
singing 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow.' That's not in my contract."
"The rainbow is
here," the gunslinger said softly, stretching his diminished hand out to
the gate.
It wiped the smile off
Eddie's face. "Yeah, I know. I'm a little scared, Roland."
"So am I,"
the gunslinger said, and indeed, Jake thought he looked pale and ill.
"Go on,
sugar," Susannah said. "Count before we all lose our nerve."
"One ... two ... three."
They clicked their
heels together solemnly and in unison: tock, tock, tock. The gate
shivered more violently this time, the colors in the uprights brightening
perceptibly. The chime that followed was higher, sweeter— the sound of fine
crystal tapped with the haft of a knife. It echoed in dreamy harmonics that
made Jake shiver, half with pleasure and half with pain.
But the gate didn't
open.
"What—"
Eddie began.
"I know,"
Jake said. "We forgot Oy."
"Oh Christ,"
Eddie said. "I left the world I knew to watch a kid try to put booties on
a fucked-up weasel. Shoot me, Roland, before I breed."
Roland ignored him,
watching Jake closely as the boy sat down on the turnpike and called, "Oy!
To me!"
The bumbler came
willingly enough, and although he had surely been a wild creature before they
had met him on the Path of the Beam, he allowed Jake to slip the red leather
booties onto his paws without making trouble: in fact, once he got the idea, he
stepped into the last two. When all four of the little red shoes were in place
(they looked, in fact, the most like Dorothy's ruby slippers), Oy sniffed at
one of them, then looked attentively back at Jake.
Jake clicked his heels
together three times, looking at the bumbler as he did so, ignoring the rattle
of the gate and the soft chime from the walls of the Green Palace.
"You, Oy!"
"Oy!"
He rolled over on his
back like a dog playing dead, then simply looked at his own feet with a kind of
disgusted bewilderment. Looking at him, Jake had a sharp memory: trying to pat
his stomach and rub his head at the same time, and his father making fun of him
when he couldn't do it right away.
"Roland, help me.
He knows what he's supposed to do, but he doesn't know how to do it." Jake
glanced up at Eddie. "And don't make any smart remarks, okay?"
"No," Eddie
said. "No smart remarks, Jake. Do you think just Oy has to do it this
time, or is it still a group effort?"
"Just him, I
think."
"But it wouldn't
hurt us to kind of click along with Mitch," Susannah said.
"Mitch who?"
Eddie asked, looking blank.
"Never mind. Go
on, Jake, Roland. Give us a count again."
Eddie grasped Oy's
forepaws. Roland gently grasped the bumbler's rear paws. Oy looked nervous at
this—as if he perhaps expected to be swung briskly into the air and given the
old heave-ho—but he didn't struggle.
"One, two, three."
Jake and Roland gently
patted Oy's forepaws and rear paws together in unison. At the same time they
clicked the heels of their own footwear. Eddie and Susannah did the same.
This time the harmonic
was a deep, sweet bong, like a glass church bell. The black glass bar running
down the center of the gate did not split open but shattered, spraying crumbs
of obsidian glass in all directions.
Some rattled against
Oy's hide. He sprang up in a hurry, yanking out of Jake's and Roland's grip and
trotting a little distance away. He sat on the broken white line between the
travel lane and the passing lane of the highway, his ears laid back, looking
at the gate and panting.
"Come on,"
Roland said. He went to the left wing of the gate and pushed it slowly open. He
stood at the edge of the mirror courtyard, a tall, lanky man in cowpoke jeans,
an ancient shirt of no particular color, and improbable red cowboy boots.
"Let's go in and see what the Wizard of Oz has to say for himself."
"If he's still
here," Eddie said.
"Oh, I think he's
here," Roland murmured. "Yes, I think he's here."
He ambled toward the
main door with the empty sentry-box beside it. The others followed, welded to
their own downward reflections by the red shoes like sets of Siamese twins.
Oy came last, skipping
nimbly along in his ruby slippers, pausing once to sniff down at his own
reflected snout.
"Oy!" he
cried to the humbler floating below him, and then hurried after Jake.
CHAPTER III
the wizard
1
Roland stopped at the
sentry-box, glanced in, then picked up the thing which was lying on the floor.
The others caught up with him and clustered around. It had looked like a
newspaper, and that was just what it was . . . although an exceedingly odd one.
No Topeka Capital-Journal this, and no news of a population-levelling
plague.
The Oy Daily Buzz
Vol.
MDLXVDI No. 96 "Daily Buzz, Daily Buzz, Handsome Iz as Handsome
Duuzz" Weather: Here today, gone tomorrow Lucky Numbers: None Prognosis: Bad
Blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak
yak yak yak blah blah blah good is bad bad is good all the stuffs the same good
is bad bad is good all the stuffs the same go slow past the drawers all the
stuffs the same blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah Blame is a pain all the
stuffs the same yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak yak charyou tree all the
stuffs the same blah yak blah blah yak yak blah blah blah yak yak yak baked
turkey cooked goose all the stuffs the same blah blah yak yak ride a train die
in pain all the stuffs the same blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah blah blame blame blame blame blame blame blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah yak yak blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
(Related story p. 6)
Below this was a
picture of Roland, Eddie, Susannah, and Jake crossing the mirrored courtyard,
as if this had happened the day before instead of only minutes ago. Beneath it
was a caption reading: Tragedy in Oz: Travellers Arrive Seeking Fame and
Fortune; Find Death Instead.
"I like
that," Eddie said, adjusting Roland's revolver in the holster he wore low
on his hip. "Comfort and encouragement after days of confusion. Like a
hot drink on a cold fucking night."
"Don't be afraid
of this," Roland said. "This is a joke."
"I'm not
afraid," Eddie said, "but it's a little more than a joke. I lived
with Henry Dean for a lot of years, and I know when there's a plot to psych me
out afoot. I know it very well." He looked curiously at Roland. "I
hope you don't mind me saying this, but you 're the one who looks
scared, Roland."
"I'm
terrified," Roland said simply.
2
The arched entryway
made Susannah think of a song which had been popular ten years or so before she
had been yanked out of her world and into Roland's. Saw an eyeball peepin
through a smoky cloud behind the Green Door, the lyric went. When I said
"Joe sent me, " someone laughed out loud behind the Green Door.
There were actually two doors here instead of one, and no peephole through
which an eyeball could look in either. Nor did Susannah try that old speakeasy
deal about how Joe had sent her. She did, however, bend forward to read the
sign hanging from one of the circular glass door-pulls. bell out of order, please knock, it said.
"Don't
bother," she said to Roland, who had actually doubled up his fist to do as
the sign said. "It's from the story, that's all."
Eddie pulled her chair
back slightly, stepped in front of it, and took hold of the circular pulls. The
doors opened easily, the hinges rolling in silence. He took a step forward into
what looked like a shadowy green grotto, cupped his hands to his mouth, and
called: "Hey!"
The sound of his voice
rolled away and came back changed... small, echoing, lost. Dying, it seemed.
"Christ,"
Eddie said. "Do we have to do this?"
"If we want to
get back to the Beam, I think so." Roland looked paler than ever, but he
led them in. Jake helped Eddie lift Susannah's chair over the sill (a milky
block of jade-colored glass) and inside. Oy's little shoes flashed dim red on
the green glass floor. They had gone only ten paces when the doors slammed shut
behind them with a no-question-about-it boom that rolled past them and went
echoing away into the depths of the Green Palace.
3
There was no reception
room; only a vaulted, cavernous hallway that seemed to go on forever. The walls
were lit with a faint green glow. This is just like the hallway in the
movie, Jake thought, the one where the Cowardly Lion got so scared when
he stepped on his own tail.
And, adding a little
extra touch of verisimilitude Jake could have done without, Eddie spoke up in a
trembly (and better than passable) Bert Lahr imitation: "Wait a minute,
fellas, I wuz just thinkin—I really don't wanna see the Wizard this much. I
better wait for you outside!"
"Stop it,"
Jake said sharply.
"Oppit!" Oy
agreed. He walked directly at Jake's heel, swinging his head watchfully from
side to side as he went. Jake could hear no sound except for their own passage
... yet he sensed something: a sound that wasn't. It was, he thought,
like looking at a wind-chime that wants only the slightest puff of breeze to
set it tinkling.
"Sorry,"
Eddie said. "Really." He pointed. "Look down there."
About forty yards
ahead of them, the green corridor did end, in a narrow green doorway of
amazing height—perhaps thirty feet from the floor to its pointed tip. And from
behind it, Jake could now hear a steady thrumming sound. As they drew closer
and the sound grew louder, his dread grew. He had to make a conscious effort to
take the last dozen steps to the door. He knew this sound; he knew it from the
run he'd made with Gasher under Lud, and from the run he and his friends had
made on Blaine the Mono. It was the steady beat-beat-beat of slo-trans engines.
"It's like a
nightmare," he said in a small, close-to-tears voice. "We're right
back where we started."
"No, Jake,"
the gunslinger said, touching his hair. "Never think it. What you feel is
an illusion. Stand and be true."
The sign on this door
wasn't from the movie, and only Susannah knew it was from Dante. abandon hope, all ye who enter here, it
said.
Roland reached out
with his two-fingered right hand and pulled the thirty-foot door open.
4
What lay beyond it
was, to the eyes of Jake, Susannah, and Eddie, a weird combination of The
Wizard of Oz and Blaine the Mono. A thick mg (pale blue, like the one in
the Barony Coach) lay on the floor. The chamber was like the nave of a
cathedral, soaring to impenetrable heights of greenish-black. The pillars which
supported the glowing walls were great glass ribs of alternating green and pink
light; the pink was the exact shade of Blaine's hull. Jake saw these supporting
pillars had been carven with a billion different images, none of them
comforting; they jostled the eye and unsettled the heart. There seemed to be a
preponderance of screaming faces.
Ahead of them,
dwarfing the visitors, turning them into creatures that seemed no bigger than
ants, was the chamber's only furnishing: an enormous green glass throne. Jake
tried to estimate its size and was unable— he had no reference-points to help
him. He thought that the throne's back might be fifty feet high, but it could
as easily have been seventy-five or a hundred. It was marked with the open eye
symbol, this time traced in red instead of yellow. The rhythmic thrusting of
the light made the eye seem alive; to be beating like a heart.
Above the throne,
rising like the pipes of a mighty medieval organ, were thirteen great
cylinders, each pulsing a different color. Each, that was, save for the pipe
which ran directly down in back of the throne's center. That one was black as
midnight and as still as death.
"Hey!"
Susannah shouted from her chair. "Anyone here?"
At the sound of her
voice, the pipes flashed so brilliantly that Jake had to shield his eyes. For a
moment the entire throneroom glared like an exploding rainbow. Then the pipes
went out, went dark, went dead, just as the wizard's glass in Roland's story
had done when the glass (or the force inhabiting the glass) decided to shut up
for awhile. Now there was only the column of blackness, and the steady green
pulse of the empty throne.
Next, a somehow tired
humming sound, as of a very old servomechanism being called into use one final
time, began to whine its way into their ears. Panels, each at least six feet
long and two feet wide, slid open in the arms of the throne. From the black
slots thus revealed, a rose-colored smoke began to drift out and up. As it
rose, it darkened to a bright red. And in it, a terribly familiar zigzag line
appeared. Jake knew what it was even before the words
{Lud Candleton Rilea
The Falls of the Hounds Dasherville Topeka)
appeared, glowing
smoke-bright.
It was Blaine's
route-map.
Roland could say all
he wanted about how things had changed, how Jake's feeling of being trapped in
a nightmare
{this is the worst
nightmare of my life, and that is the truth)
was just an illusion
created by his confused mind and frightened heart, but Jake knew better. This
place might look a little bit like the throneroom of Oz the Great and
Terrible, but it was really Blaine the Mono. They were back aboard Blaine, and
soon the riddling would begin all over again.
Jake felt like
screaming.
5
Eddie recognized the
voice that boomed out of the smoky route-map hanging above the green throne,
but he believed it was Blaine the Mono no more than he believed it was the
Wizard of Oz. Some wizard, perhaps, but this wasn't the Emerald City,
and Blaine was just as dead as dogshit. Eddie had sent him home with a fuckin
rupture.
"HELLO THERE
AGAIN, LITTLE TRAILHANDS!"
The smoky route-map
pulsed, but Eddie no longer associated it with the voice, although he guessed
they were supposed to. No, the voice was coming from the pipes.
He glanced down, saw
Jake's paper-white face, and knelt beside him. "If scrap, kid," he
said.
"N-No ... it's
Blaine ... not dead..."
"He's dead, all
right. This is nothing but an amplified version of the after-school
announcements . . . who's got detention and who's supposed to report to Room
Six for Speech Therapy. You dig?"
"What?" Jake
looked up at him, lips wet and trembling, eyes dazed. "What do you—"
"Those pipes are speakers.
Even a pipsqueak can sound big through a twelve-speaker Dolby sound-system;
don't you remember the movie? It has to sound big because it's a bumhug,
Jake—just a bumhug."
"WHAT ARE YOU
TELLING HIM, EDDIE OF NEW YORK? ONE OF YOUR STUPID, NASTY-MINDED LITTLE JOKES?
ONE OF YOUR UNFAIR RIDDLES?"
"Yeah,"
Eddie said. "The one that goes, 'How many dipolar computers does it take
to screw in a lightbulb?' Who are you, buddy? 1 know goddam well you're not
Blaine the Mono, so who are you?"
"I ... AM . . .
Oz!" the voice thundered. The glass columns flashed; so did the pipes
behind the throne. "OZ THE GREAT! OZ THE POWERFUL! WHO ARE YOU?"
Susannah rolled
forward until her wheelchair was at the base of the dull green steps leading up
to a throne that would have dwarfed even Lord Perth.
"I'm Susannah
Dean, the small and crippled," she said, "and I was raised to be
polite, but not to suffer bullshit. We're here because we're s'pozed to
be here—why else did we get left the shoes?"
"WHAT DO YOU WANT
OF ME, SUSANNAH? WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE, LITTLE COWGIRL?"
"You
know," she said. "We want what everyone wants, so far as I know—to go
back home again, 'cause there's no place like home. We—"
"You can't go
home," Jake said. He spoke in a rapid, frightened murmur. "You can't
go home again, Thomas Wolfe said that, and that is the truth."
"It's a lie,
sug," Susannah said. "A flat-out lie. You can go home again.
All you have to do is find the right rainbow and walk under it. We've found it;
the rest is just, you know, footwork."
"WOULD YOU GO
BACK TO NEW YORK, SUSANNAH DEAN? EDDIE DEAN? JAKE CHAMBERS? IS THAT WHAT YOU
ASK OF OZ, THE MIGHTY AND POWERFUL?"
"New York isn't
home for us anymore," Susannah said. She looked very small yet very fearless
as she sat in her new wheelchair at the foot of the enormous, pulsing throne.
"No more than Gilead is home for Roland. Take us back to the Path of the
Beam. That's where we want to go, because that's our way home. Only way home
we got."
"GO AWAY!" cried
the voice from the pipes. "GO AWAY AND COME BACK TOMORROW! WE'LL DISCUSS
THE BEAM THEN! FIDDLE-DE-DEE, SAID SCARLETT, WE'LL TALK ABOUT THE BEAM
TOMORROW, FOR TOMORROW IS ANOTHER DAY!"
"No," Eddie
said. "We'll talk about it now."
"DO NOT AROUSE
THE WRATH OF THE GREAT AND POWERFUL OZ!" the voice cried, and the pipes
flashed furiously with each word. Susannah was sure this was supposed to be
scary, but she found it almost amusing, instead. It was like watching a
salesman demonstrate a child's toy. Hey, kids! When you talk, the pipes
flash bright colors! Try it and see!
"Sugar, you best
listen, now," Susannah said. "What you don't want to do is
arouse the wrath of folks with guns. Especially when you be livin in a glass
house."
"I SAID COME BACK
TOMORROW!"
Red smoke once more
began to boil out of the slots in the arms of the throne. It was thicker now.
The shape which had been Blaine's route-map melted apart and joined it. The
smoke formed a face, this time. It was narrow and hard and watchful, framed by
long hair.
It's the man Roland
shot in the desert, Susannah thought wonderingly. It's
that man Jonas. I know it is.
Now Oz spoke in a
slightly trembling voice: "DO YOU PRESUME TO THREATEN THE GREAT OZ?"
The lips of the huge, smoky face hovering over the throne's seat parted in a
snarl of mingled menace and contempt. "YOU UNGRATEFUL CREATURES! OH, YOU
UNGRATEFUL CREATURES!"
Eddie, who knew smoke
and mirrors when he saw them, had glanced in another direction. His eyes
widened and he gripped Susannah's arm above the elbow. "Look," he
whispered. "Christ, Suze, look at Oy!"
The billy-bumbler had
no interest in smoke-ghosts, whether they were monorail route-maps, dead Coffin
Hunters, or just Hollywood special effects of the pre-World War II variety. He
had seen (or smelled) something that was more interesting.
Susannah grabbed Jake,
turned him, and pointed at the bumbler. She saw the boy's eyes widen with
understanding a moment before Oy reached the small alcove in the left wall. It
was screened from the main chamber by a green curtain which matched the glass
walls. Oy stretched his long neck forward, caught the curtain's fabric in his
teeth, and yanked it back.
6
Behind the curtain red
and green lights flashed; cylinders spun inside glass boxes; needles moved back
and forth inside long rows of lighted dials. Yet Jake barely noticed these
things. It was the man who took all his attention, the one sitting at the
console, his back to them. His filthy hair, streaked with dirt and blood, hung
to his shoulders in matted clumps. He was wearing some sort of headset, and was
speaking into a tiny mike which hung in front of his mouth. His back was to
them, and at first he had no idea that Oy had smelled him out and uncovered his
hiding place.
"GO!"
thundered the voice from the pipes . .. except now Jake saw where it was really
coming from. "COME BACK TOMORROW IF YOU LIKE, BUT GO NOW! I WARN
YOU!"
"It is
Jonas, Roland must not have killed him after all," Eddie whispered, but
Jake knew better. He had recognized the voice. Even distorted by the
amplification of the colored pipes, he had recognized the voice. How could he
have ever believed it to be the voice of Blaine?
"I WARN YOU, IF
YOU REFUSE—"
Oy barked, a sharp and
somehow forbidding sound. The man in the equipment alcove began to turn.
Tell me, cully,
Jake remembered this voice saying before its owner had discovered the dubious
attractions of amplification. Tell me all you know about dipolar computers
and transitive circuits. Tell me and I'll give you a drink.
It wasn't Jonas, and
it wasn't the Wizard of anything. It was David Quick's grandson. It was the
Tick-Tock Man.
7
Jake stared at him,
horrified. The coiled, dangerous creature who had lived beneath Lud with his
mates—Gasher and Hoots and Brandon and Tilly—was gone. This might have been
that monster's ruined father ... or grandfather. His left eye—the one Oy had
punctured with his claws— bulged white and misshapen, partly in its socket and
partly on his unshaven cheek. The right side of his head looked half-scalped,
the skull showing through in a long, triangular strip. Jake had a distant,
panic-darkened memory of a flap of skin falling over the side of Tick-Tock's
face, but he had been on the edge of hysteria by that point... and was again
now.
Oy had also recognized
the man who had tried to kill him and was barking hysterically, head down,
teeth bared, back bowed. Tick-Tock stared at him with wide, stunned eyes.
"Pay no attention
to that man behind the curtain," said a voice from behind them, and then
tittered. "My friend Andrew is having another in a long series of bad
days. Poor boy. I suppose I was wrong to bring him out of Lud, but he just
looked so lost..." The owner of the voice tittered again.
Jake swung around and
saw that there was now a man sitting in the middle of the great throne, with
his legs casually crossed in front of him. He was wearing jeans, a dark jacket
that belted at the waist, and old, rundown cowboy boots. On his jacket was a
button that showed a pig's head with a bullethole between the eyes. In his lap
this newcomer held a drawstring bag. He rose, standing in the seat of the
throne like a child in daddy's chair, and the smile dropped away from his face
like loose skin. Now his eyes blazed, and his lips parted over vast, hungry
teeth.
"Get them,
Andrew! Get them! Kill them! Every sister-fucking one of them!"
"My life for
you!" the man in the alcove screamed, and for the
first time Jake saw the machine-gun propped in the comer. Tick-Tock sprang for
it and snatched it up. "My life for you!"
He turned, and Oy was
on him once again, leaping forward and upward, sinking his teeth deep into
Tick-Tock's left thigh, just below the crotch.
Eddie and Susannah
drew in unison, each raising one of Roland's big guns. They fired in concert,
not even the smallest overlap in the sound of their shots. One of them tore off
the top of Tick-Tock's miserable head, buried itself in the equipment, and
created a loud but mercifully brief snarl of feedback. The other took him in
the throat.
He staggered forward
one step, then two. Oy dropped to the floor and backed away from him, snarling.
A third step took Tick-Tock out into the throneroom proper. He raised his arms
toward Jake, and the boy could read Ticky's hatred in his remaining green eye;
the boy thought he could hear the man's last, hateful thought: Oh, you
fucking little squint—
Then Tick-Tock
collapsed forward, as he had collapsed in the Cradle of the Grays . . . only
this time he would rise no more.
"Thus fell Lord
Perth, and the earth did shake with that thunder," said the man on the
throne.
Except he's not a man,
Jake thought. Not a man at all. We've found the Wizard at last, I think. And
I'm pretty sure I know what's in the bag he has.
"Marten,"
Roland said. He held out his left hand, the one which was still
whole. "Marten Broadcloak. After all these years. After all these centuries.”
"Want this,
Roland?"
Eddie put the gun he
had used to kill the Tick-Tock Man in Roland's hand. A tendril of blue smoke
was still rising from the barrel. Roland looked at the old revolver as if he
had never seen it before, then slowly lifted it and pointed it at the grinning,
rosy-cheeked figure sitting cross-legged on the Green Palace's throne.
"Finally,"
Roland breathed, thumbing back the trigger. "Finally in my sights."
8
"That six-shooter
will do you no good, as I think you know," the man on the throne said.
"Not against me. Only misfires against me, Roland, old
fellow. How's the family, by the way? I seem to have lost touch with them over
the years. I was always such a lousy correspondent. Someone ought to
take a hosswhip to me, aye, so they should!"
He threw back his head
and laughed. Roland pulled the trigger of the gun in his hand. When the hammer
fell there was only a dull click.
"Toadjer,"
the man on the throne said. "I think you must have gotten some of those
wet slugs in there by accident, don't you? The ones with the flat powder? Good
for blocking the sound of the thinny, but not so good for shooting old wizards,
are they? Too bad. And your hand, Roland, look at your hand! Short a
couple of fingers, by the look. My, this has been hard on you, hasn't
it? Things could get easier, though. You and your friends could have a fine,
fruitful life—and, as Jake would say, that is the truth. No more lobstrosities,
no more mad trains, no more disquieting—not to mention dangerous—trips to
other worlds. All you have to do is give over this stupid and hopeless quest
for the Tower."
"No," Eddie
said.
"No,"
Susannah said.
"No," Jake
said.
"No!" Oy
said, and added a bark.
The dark man on the
green throne continued to smile, unperturbed. "Roland?" he asked.
"What about you?" Slowly, he raised the drawstring bag. It looked
dusty and old. It hung from the wizard's fist like a teardrop, and now the
thing in its pouch began to pulse with pink light. "Cry off, and they need
never see what's inside this—they need never see the last scene of that sad
long-ago play. Cry off. Turn from the Tower and go your way."
"No," Roland
said. He began to smile, and as his smile broadened, that of the man sitting on
the throne began to falter. "You can enchant my guns, those of this world,
I reckon," he said.
"Roland, I don't
know what you're thinking of, laddie, but I warn you not to—"
"Not to cross Oz
the Great? Oz the Powerful? But I think I will, Marten ... or Maerlyn ... or
whoever you call yourself now..."
"Flagg,
actually," the man on the throne said. "And we've met before."
He smiled. Instead of broadening his face, as smiles usually did, it contracted
Flagg's features into a narrow and spiteful grimace. "In the wreck of
Gilead. You and your surviving pals—that laughing donkey Cuthbert Allgood made
one of your party, I remember, and DeCurry, the fellow with the birthmark, made
another—were on your way west, to seek the Tower. Or, in the parlance of Jake's
world, you were off to see the Wizard. I know you saw me, but I doubt you knew
until now that I saw you, as well."
"And will again,
I reckon," Roland said. "Unless, that is, I kill you now and put an
end to your interference."
Still holding his own
gun out in his left hand, he went for the one tucked in the waistband of his
jeans—Jake's Ruger, a gun from another world and perhaps immune to this
creature's enchantments—with his right. And he was fast as he had always been
fast, his speed blinding.
The man on the throne
shrieked and cringed back. The bag fell from his lap, and the glass ball—once
held by Rhea, once held by Jonas, once held by Roland himself—slipped out of
its mouth. Smoke, green this time instead of red, billowed from the slots in
the arms of the throne. It rose in obscuring fumes. Yet Roland still might have
shot the figure disappearing into the smoke if he had made a clean draw. He
didn't, however; the Ruger slid in the grip of his reduced hand, then twisted.
The front sight caught on his belt-buckle. It took only an extra quarter-second
for him to free the snag, but that was the quarter-second he had needed. He
pumped three shots into the billowing smoke, then ran forward, oblivious of the
shouts of the others.
He waved the smoke
aside with his hands. His shots had shattered the back of the throne into thick
green slabs of glass, but the man-shaped creature which had called itself Flagg
was gone. Roland found himself already beginning to wonder if he—or it had
been there in the first place.
The ball was still
there, however, unharmed and glowing the same enticing pink he remembered from
so long ago—from Mejis, when he had been young and in love. This survivor of
Maerlyn's Rainbow had rolled almost to the edge of the throne's seat; two more
inches and it would have plunged over and shattered on the floor. Yet it had
not; still it remained, this bewitched thing Susan Delgado had first glimpsed
through the window of Rhea's hut, under the light of the Kissing Moon.
Roland picked it
up—how well it fit his hand, how natural it felt against his palm, even after
all these years—and looked into its cloudy, troubled depths. "You always
did have a charmed life," he whispered to it. He thought of Rhea as he had
seen her in this ball—her ancient, laughing eyes. He thought of the flames
from the Reap-Night bonfire rising around Susan, making her beauty shimmer in
the heat. Making it shiver like a mirage.
Wretched glam!
he thought. If I dashed you to the floor, surely we would drown in the sea
of tears that would pour out of your split belly . . . the tears of all those
you've put to ruin.
And why not do it?
Left whole, the nasty thing might be able to help them back to the Path of the
Beam, but Roland didn't believe they actually needed it. He thought
that Tick-Tock and the creature which had called itself Flagg had been their
last challenge in that regard. The Green Palace was their door back to
Mid-World ... and it was theirs, now. They had conquered it by force of arms.
But you can't go yet,
gunslinger. Not until you've finished your story, told the last scene.
Whose voice was that?
Vannay's? No. Cort's? No. Nor was it the voice of his father, who had once
turned him naked out of a whore's bed. That was the hardest voice, the one he
often heard in his troubled dreams, the one he wanted so to please and so
seldom could. No, not that voice, not this time.
This time what he
heard was the voice of ka—ka like a wind. He had told so much of that
awful fourteenth year ... but he hadn't finished the tale. As with Detta Walker
and the Blue Lady's forspecial plate, there was one more thing. A hidden thing.
The question wasn't, he saw, whether or not the five of them could find their
way out of the Green Palace and recover the Path of the Beam; the question was
whether or not they could go on as ka-tet. If they were to do that,
there could be nothing hidden; he would have to tell them of the final time he
had looked into the wizard's glass in that long-ago year. Three nights past the
welcoming banquet, it had been. He would have to tell them—
No, Roland,
the voice whispered. Not just tell. Not this time. You know better.
Yes. He knew better.
"Come," he
said, turning to them.
They drew slowly
around him, their eyes wide and filling with the ball's flashing pink light.
Already they were half-hypnotized by it, even Oy.
"We are ka-tet,"
Roland said, holding the ball toward them. "We are one from many. I lost
my one true love at the beginning of my quest for the Dark Tower. Now look into
this wretched thing, if you would, and see what I lost not long after. See it
once and for all; see it very well."
They looked. The ball,
cupped in Roland's upraised hands, began to pulse faster. It gathered them in
and swept them away. Caught and whirled in the grip of that pink storm, they
flew over the Wizard's Rainbow to the Gilead that had been.
CHAPTER. IV
the glass
Jake of New York
stands in an upper corridor of the Great Hall of Gilead—more castles, here in
the green land, than Mayor's House. He looks around and sees Susannah and Eddie
standing by a tapestry, their eyes big, their hands tightly entwined. And
Susannah is standing; she has her legs back, at least
for now, and what she called "cappies " have been replaced by a pair
of ruby slippers exactly like those Dorothy wore when she stepped out upon her
version of the Great Road to find the Wizard of Oz, that bumhug.
She has her legs
because this is a dream, Jake thinks, but knows it is no dream. He looks
down and sees Oy looking up at him with his anxious, intelligent, gold-ringed
eyes. He is still wearing the red booties. Jake bends and strokes Oy 's head.
The feel of the humbler's fur under his hand is clear and real. No, this isn't
a dream.
Yet Roland is not
here, he realizes; they are four instead of five. He realizes something else as
well: the air of this corridor is faintly pink, and small pink halos revolve
around the funny, old-fashioned lightbulbs that illuminate the corridor.
Something is going to happen; some story is going to play out in front of
their eyes. And now, as if the very thought had summoned them, the boy hears
the click of approaching footfalls.
It's a story I know, Jake
thinks. One I've been told before.
As Roland comes around
the corner, he realizes what story it is: the one where Marten Broadcloak stops
Roland as Roland passes by on his way to the rooftop, where it will perhaps be
cooler. "You, boy, " Marten will say. "Come in! Don't stand in
the hall! Your mother wants to speak to you. " But of course that isn't
the truth, was never the truth, will never be the
truth, no matter how much time slips and bends. What Marten wants is for the
boy to see his mother, and to understand that Gabrielle Deschain has become the
mistress of his father's wizard. Marten wants to goad the boy into an early
test of manhood while his father is away and can't put a stop to it; he wants
to get the puppy out of his way before it can grow teeth long enough to bite.
Now they will see all
this; the sad comedy will go its sad and preordained course in front of their
eyes. I'm too young, Jake thinks, but of course he
is not too young; Roland will be only three years older when he comes to Mejis
with his friends and meets Susan upon the Great Road. Only three years older
when he loves her; only three years older when he loses her.
I don't care, I don't
want to see it—
And won't, he realizes
as Roland draws closer; all that has already happened. For this is not August,
the time of Full Earth, but late fall or early winter. He can tell by the
serape Roland wears, a souvenir of his trip to the Outer Arc, and by the
vapor that smokes from his mouth and nose each time he exhales: no central
heating in Gilead, and it's cold up here.
There are other
changes as well: Roland is now wearing the guns which are his birthright, the
big ones with the sandalwood grips. His father passed
them on at the banquet, Jake thinks. He doesn't know how he knows this, but
he does. And Roland's face, although still that of a boy, is not the open,
untried face of the one who idled up this same corridor five months before; the
boy who was ensnared by Marten has been through much since then, and his battle
with Cort has been the very least of it.
Jake sees something
else, too: the boy gunslinger is wearing the red cowboy boots.
He doesn't know it, though. Because this isn't really happening.
Yet somehow it is.
They are inside the wizard's glass, they are inside the pink storm (those pink
halos revolving around the light fixtures remind Jake of The Falls of the
Hounds, and the moonbows revolving in the mist), and this is happening all over
again.
"Roland!"
Eddie calls from where he and Susannah stand by the tapestry. Susannah gasps
and squeezes his shoulder, wanting him to be silent, but Eddie ignores her.
"No, Roland! Don't! Bad idea! " "No! Olan!" Oy yaps.
Roland ignores both of
them, and he passes by Jake a hand's breadth away without seeing him. For
Roland, they are not here; red boots or no red boots, this
ka-tet is far in his future.
He stops at a door
near the end of the corridor, hesitates, then raises his fist and knocks. Eddie
starts down the corridor toward him, still holding Susannah's hand... now he
looks almost as if he is dragging her.
"Come on, Jake,
" says Eddie.
"No, I don't want
to."
"It's not about
what you want, and you know it. We're supposed to see. If we can't stop him, we
can at least do what we came here to do. Now come on!"
Heart heavy with
dread, his stomach clenched in a knot, Jake comes along. As they approach
Roland—the guns look enormous on his slim hips, and his unlined but already tired
face somehow makes Jake feel like weeping—the gunslinger knocks again.
"She ain't there,
sugar!" Susannah shouts at him. "She ain't there or she ain't
answering the door, and which one it is don't matter to you! Leave it! Leave
her! She ain't worth it! Just bein your mother don't make her worth it! Go
away!"
But he doesn't hear
her, either, and he doesn't go away. As Jake, Eddie, Susannah, and Oy gather
unseen behind him, Roland tries the door to his mother's room and finds it
unlocked. He opens it, revealing a shadowy chamber decorated with silk
hangings. On the floor is a rug that looks like the Persians beloved of Jake's
mother . . . only this rug, Jake knows, comes from the Province of Kashamin.
On the far side of the
parlor, by a window which has been shuttered against the winter winds, Jake
sees a low-backed chair and knows it is the one she was in on the day of
Roland's manhood test; it is where she was sitting when her son observed the
love-bite on her neck.
The chair is empty
now, but as the gunslinger takes another step into the room and turns to look
toward the apartment's bedroom, Jake observes a pair of shoes—black, not
red—beneath the drapes flanking the shuttered window.
"Roland!" he
shouts. "Roland, behind the drapes! Someone behind the drapes! Look
out!"
But Roland doesn't
hear.
"Mother? "
he calls, and even his voice is the same, Jake would know it anywhere . . . but
it is such a magically freshened version of it! Young and uncracked by all the
years of dust and wind and cigarette smoke. "Mother, it's Roland! I want
to talk to you!"
Still no answer. He
walks down the short hall which leads to the bedroom. Part of Jake wants to
stay here in the parlor, to go to that drape and yank it aside, but he knows
this isn't the way it's supposed to go. Even if he tried, he doubts it would do
any good; his hand would likely pass right through, like the hand of a ghost.
"Come on, "
Eddie says. "Stay with him."
They go in a cluster
that might have been comic under other circumstances. Not under these; here it
is a case of three people desperate for the comfort of friends.
Roland stands looking
at the bed against the room's left wall. He looks at it as if hypnotized.
Perhaps he is trying to imagine Marten in it with his mother; perhaps he is
remembering Susan, with whom he never slept in a proper bed, let alone a
canopied luxury such as this. Jake can see the gunslinger's dim profile in a
three-paneled mirror across the room, in an alcove. This triple glass stands in
front of a small table the boy recognizes from his mother's side of his
parents' bedroom; it is a vanity.
The gunslinger shakes
himself and comes back from whatever thoughts have seized his mind. On his feet
are those terrible boots; in this dim light, they look like the boots of a man
who has walked through a creek of blood.
"Mother!"
He takes a step toward
the bed and actually bends a little, as if he thinks she might be hiding under
it. If she's been hiding, however, it wasn't there; the shoes which Jake saw
beneath the drape were women's shoes, and the shape which now stands at the end
of the short corridor, just outside the bedroom door, is wearing a dress. Jake
can see its hem.
And he sees more than
that. Jake understands Roland's troubled relationship with his mother and
father better than Eddie or Susannah ever could, because Jake's own parents are
peculiarly like them: Elmer Chambers is a gunslinger for the Network, and
Megan Chambers has a long history of sleeping with sick friends. This is
nothing Jake has been told, but he knows, somehow; he has shared
khef with his mother and father, and he knows what he knows.
He knows something
about Roland, as well: that he saw his mother in the wizard's glass. It was
Gabrielle Deschain, fresh back from her retreat in Debaria, Gabrielle who would
confess to her husband the errors of her ways and her thinking after the
banquet, who would cry his pardon and beg to be taken back to his bed. . . and,
when Steven drowsed after their lovemaking, she would bury the knife in his
breast . . . or perhaps only lightly scratch his arm with it, not even waking
him. With that knife, it would come to the same either way.
Roland had seen it all
in the glass before finally turning the wretched thing over to his father, and
Roland had put a stop to it. To save Steven Deschain 's life, Eddie and
Susannah would have said, had they seen so far into the business, but Jake has
the unhappy wisdom of unhappy children and sees further. To save his mother's
life as well. To give her one last chance to recover her sanity, one last
chance to stand at her husband's side and be true. One last chance to repent
of Marten Broadcloak.
Surely she will,
surely she must! Roland saw her face that day, how unhappy she was, and surely
she must! Surely she cannot have chosen the
magician! If he can only make her see . . .
So, unaware that he
has once more lapsed into the unwisdom of the very young—Roland cannot grasp
that unhappiness and shame are often no match for desire—he has come here to
speak to his mother, to beg her to come back to her husband before it's too
late. He has saved her from herself once, he will tell her, but he cannot do it
again.
And if she still won't
go, Jake thinks, or tries to brave it out, pretend she doesn't know what
he's talking about, he'll give her a choice: leave Gilead with his help—now,
tonight—or be clapped in chains tomorrow morning, a traitor so outrageous she
will almost certainly be hung as Hax the cook was hung.
"Mother? "
he calls, still unaware of the shape standing in the shadows behind him. He takes
one further step into the room, and now the shape moves. The shape raises its
hands. There is something in its hands. Not a gun, Jake can tell that much, but
it has a deadly look to it, a snaky look,
somehow—
"Roland, watch
out!" Susannah shrieks, and her voice is like a magical switch. There is
something on the dressing table—the glass, of course;
Gabrielle has stolen
it, it's what she 'II bring to her lover as a consolation prize for the murder
her son prevented—and now it lights as if in response to Susannah's voice. It
sprays brilliant pink light up the triple mirror and casts its glow back into
the room. In that light, in that triple glass, Roland finally sees the figure
behind him.
"Christ!" Eddie
Dean shrieks, horrified. "Oh Christ, Roland! That's not your
mother! That's—"
It's not even a woman,
not really, not anymore; it is a kind of living corpse in a road-filthy black
dress. There are only a few straggling tufts of hair left on her head and
there's a gaping hole where her nose used to be, but her eyes still blaze, and
the snake she holds wriggling between her hands is
very lively. Even in his own horror, Jake has time to wonder if she got it
from under the same rock where she found the one Roland killed.
It is Rhea who has
been waiting for the gunslinger in his mother's apartment; it is the Coos, come
not just to retrieve her glam but to finish with the boy who has caused her so
much trouble.
"Now, ye
trollop's get!" she cries shrilly, cackling. "Now ye'll pay!"
But Roland has seen
her, in the glass he has seen her, Rhea betrayed by the very ball she came to
take back, and now he is whirling, his hands dropping to his new guns with all
their deadly speed. He is fourteen, his reflexes are the sharpest and quickest
they 'II ever be, and he goes off like exploding gunpowder.
"No, Roland,
don't!" Susannah screams. "It's a trick, it's a glam!"
Jake has just time to
look from the mirror to the woman actually standing in the doorway; has just
time to realize he, too, has been tricked.
Perhaps Roland also
understands the truth at the last split-second— that the woman in the doorway
really is his mother after all, that the thing in
her hands isn't a snake but a belt, something she has made for him, a peace
offering, mayhap, that the glass has lied to him in the only way it can...by
reflection.
In any case, it's too
late. The guns are out and thundering, their bright yellow flashes lighting the
room. He pulls the trigger of each gun twice before he can stop, and the four
slugs drive Gabrielle Deschain back into the corridor with the hopeful
can-we-make-peace smile still on her face.
She dies that way,
smiling.
Roland stands where he
is, the smoking guns in his hands, his face cramped in a grimace of surprise
and horror, just beginning to get the truth of what he must carry with him the
rest of his life: he has used the guns of his father to kill his mother.
Now cackling laughter
fills the room. Roland does not turn; he is frozen by the woman in the blue
dress and black shoes who lies bleeding in the corridor of her apartment; the
woman he came to save and has killed, instead. She lies with the hand-woven
belt draped across her bleeding stomach.
Jake turns for him,
and is not surprised to see a green-faced woman in a pointed black hat swimming
inside the hall. It is the Wicked Witch of the East; it is also, he knows, Rhea
of the Coos. She stares at the boy with the guns in his hands and bares her
teeth at him in the most terrible grin Jake has ever seen in his life.
"I've burned the
stupid girl ye loved—aye, burned her alive, I did— and now I've made ye a
matricide. Do ye repent of killing my snake yet, gunslinger? My poor, sweet
Ermot? Do ye regret playing yer hard games with one more trig than ye 'II ever
be in yer miserable life? "
He gives no sign that
he hears, only stares at his lady mother. Soon he will go to her, kneel by her,
but not yet; not yet.
The face in the ball
now turns toward the three pilgrims, and as it does it changes, becomes old and
bald and raddled—becomes, in fact, the face Roland saw in the lying mirror. The
gunslinger has been unable to see his future friends, but Rhea sees them; aye,
she sees them very well.
"Cry it off!
" she croaks—it is the caw of a raven sitting on a leafless branch beneath
a winter-dimmed sky. "Cry it off! Renounce the Tower!"
"Never, you
bitch, " Eddie says.
"Ye see what he
is! What a monster he is! And this is only the beginning of it, ye ken! Ask him
what happened to Cuthbert! To Alain—Alain 's touch, clever as 'twas, saved him
not in the end, so it didn't! Ask him what happened to Jamie De Curry! He never
had a friend he didn't kill, never had a lover who's not dust in the
wind!"
"Go your way,
" Susannah says, "and leave us to ours. "
Rhea's green, cracked
lips twist in a horrible sneer. "He's killed his own mother! What will he
do to you, ye stupid brown-skinned bitch ? "
"He didn't kill
her, " Jake said. "You killed her. Now go!"
Jake takes a step
toward the ball, meaning to pick it up and dash it to the floor . . . and he
can do that, he realizes, for the ball is real. It's the one thing in this
vision that is. But before he can put his hands to it, it flashes a soundless
explosion of pink light. Jake throws his hands up in front of his face to keep
from being blinded, and then he is
(melting I'm melting
what a world oh what a world)
falling, he is being
whirled down through the pink storm, out of Oz and back to Kansas, out of Oz
and back to Kansas, out of Oz and back to—
CHAPTER V
THE PATH OF
THE
BEAM
1
"—home,"
Eddie muttered. His voice sounded thick and punch-drunk to his own ears.
"Back home, because there's no place like home, no indeed."
He tried to open his
eyes and at first couldn't. It was as if they were glued shut. He put the heel
of his hand to his forehead and pushed up, tightening the skin on his face. It
worked; his eyes popped open. He saw neither the throneroom of the Green Palace
nor (and this was what he had really expected) the richly appointed but somehow
claustrophobic bedroom in which he had just been.
He was outside, lying
in a small clearing of winter-white grass. Nearby was a little grove of trees,
some still with their last brown leaves clinging to the branches. And one
branch with an odd white leaf, an albino leaf. There was a pretty trickle of
running water farther into the grove. Standing abandoned in the high grass was
Susannah's new and improved wheelchair. There was mud on the tires, Eddie saw,
and a few late leaves, crispy and brown, caught in the spokes. A few swatches
of grass, too. Overhead was a skyful of still white clouds, every bit as
interesting as a laundry-basket full of sheets.
The sky was clear when
we went inside the Palace, he thought, and realized time had
slipped again. How much or how little, he wasn't sure he wanted to
know—Roland's world was like a transmission with its gear-teeth all but
stripped away; you never knew when time was going to pop into neutral or race
you away in overdrive.
Was
this Roland's world, though? And if it was, how had they gotten back to it?
"How should I
know?" Eddie croaked, and got slowly to his feet, wincing as he did so. He
didn't think he was hungover, but his legs were sore and he felt as if he had
just taken the world's heaviest Sunday afternoon nap.
Roland and Susannah
lay on the ground under the trees. The gunslinger was stirring, but Susannah
lay on her back, arms spread extravagantly wide, snoring in an unladylike way
that made Eddie grin. Jake was nearby, with Oy sleeping on his side by one of
the kid's knees. As Eddie looked at them, Jake opened his eyes and sat up. His
gaze was wide but blank; he was awake, but had been so heavily asleep he didn't
know it yet.
"Gruz," Jake
said, and yawned.
"Yep," Eddie
said, "that works for me." He turned in a slow circle, and had gotten
three quarters of the way back to where he'd started when he saw the Green
Palace on the horizon. From here it looked very small, and its brilliance had
been robbed by the sunless day. Eddie guessed it might be thirty miles away.
Leading toward them from that direction were the tracks of Susannah's
wheelchair.
He could hear the
thinny, but faintly. He thought he could see it, as well—a quicksilver shimmer
like bogwater, stretching across the flat, open land .. . and finally drying up
about five miles away. Five miles west of here? Given the location of the Green
Palace and the fact that they had been travelling east on 1-70, that was the
natural assumption, but who really knew, especially with no visible sun to use
for orientation?
"Where's the
turnpike?" Jake asked. His voice sounded thick and gummy. Oy joined him,
stretching first one rear leg, then the other. Eddie saw he had lost one of his
booties at some point.
"Maybe it was
cancelled due to lack of interest."
"I don't think
we're in Kansas anymore," Jake said. Eddie looked at him sharply, but didn't
believe the kid was consciously riffing on The Wizard of Oz. "Not
the one where the Kansas City Royals play, not the one where the Monarchs play,
either."
"What gives you
that idea?"
Jake hoisted a thumb
toward the sky, and when Eddie looked up, he saw that he had been wrong: it
wasn't all still white overcast, boring as a basket of sheets. Directly
above their heads, a band of clouds was moiling toward the horizon as steadily
as a conveyor belt.
They were back on the
Path of the Beam.
2
"Eddie? Where you
at, sugar?"
Eddie looked down from
the lane of clouds in the sky and saw Susannah sitting up, rubbing the back of
her neck. She looked unsure of where she was. Perhaps even of who she
was. The red cappies she was wearing looked oddly dull in this light, but they
were still the brightest things in Eddie's view ... until he looked down at his
own feet and saw the street-boppers with their Cuban heels. Yet these also
looked dull, and Eddie no longer thought it was just the day's cloudy light
that made them seem so. He looked at Jake's shoes, Oy's remaining three
slippers, Roland's cowboy boots (the gunslinger was sitting up now, arms
crossed around his knees, looking blankly off into the distance). All the same
ruby red, but a lifeless red, somehow. As if some magic essential to
them had been used up.
Suddenly, Eddie wanted
them off his feet.
He sat down beside
Susannah, gave her a kiss, and said: "Good morning, Sleeping Beauty. Or
afternoon, if it's that." Then, quickly, almost hating to touch them (it
was like touching dead skin, somehow), Eddie yanked off the street-boppers. As
he did, he saw that they were scuffed at the toes and muddy at the heels, no
longer new looking. He'd wondered how they'd gotten here; now, feeling the ache
in the muscles of his legs and remembering the wheelchair tracks, he knew. They
had walked, by God. Walked in their sleep.
"That,"
Susannah said, "is the best idea you've had since . . . well, in a long
time." She stripped off the cappies. Close by, Eddie saw Jake taking off
Oy's booties. "Were we there?" Susannah asked him. "Eddie, were
we really there when he..."
"When I killed my
mother," Roland said. "Yes, you were there. As I was. Gods help me, I
was there. I did it." He covered his face with his hands and began to voice
a series of harsh sobs.
Susannah crawled
across to him in that agile way that was almost a version of walking. She put
an arm around him and used her other hand to take his hands away from his face.
At first Roland didn't want to let her do that, but she was persistent, and at
last his hands—those killer's hands—came down, revealing haunted eyes which
swam with tears.
Susannah urged his
face down against her shoulder. "Be easy, Roland," she said. "Be
easy and let it go. This part is over now. You past it."
"A man doesn't
get past such a thing," Roland said. "No, I don't think so. Not
ever."
"You didn't kill
her," Eddie said.
"That's too
easy." The gunslinger's face was still against Susannah's shoulder, but
his words were clear enough. "Some responsibilities can't be shirked. Some
sins can't be shirked. Yes, Rhea was there—in a way, at least—but I
can't shift it all to the Coos, much as I might like to."
"It wasn't her,
either," Eddie said. "That's not what I mean."
Roland raised his
head. "What in hell's name are you talking about?"
"Ka, "
Eddie said. "Ka like a wind."
3
In their packs there
was food none of them had put there—cookies with Keebler elves on the packages,
Saran Wrapped sandwiches that looked like the kind you could get (if you were
desperate, that was) from turnpike vending machines, and a brand of cola
neither Eddie, Susannah, nor Jake knew. It tasted like Coke and came in a red
and white can, but the brand was Nozz-A-La.
They ate a meal with
their backs to the grove and their faces to the distant glam-gleam of the Green
Palace, and called it lunch. If we start to lose the light in an hour or so,
we can make it supper by voice vote, Eddie thought, but he didn't believe
they'd need to. His interior clock was running again now, and that mysterious
but usually accurate device suggested that it was early afternoon.
At one point he stood
up and raised his soda, smiling into an invisible camera. "When I'm
travelling through the Land of Oz in my new Takuro Spirit, I drink
Nozz-A-La!" he proclaimed. "It fills me up but never fills me out! It
makes me happy to be a man! It makes me know God! It gives me the outlook of an
angel and the balls of a tiger! When I drink Nozz-A-La, I say 'Gosh! Ain't I
glad to be alive!' I say—"
"Sit down, you
bumhug," Jake said, laughing.
"Ug," Oy
agreed. His snout was on Jake's ankle, and he was watching the boy's sandwich
with great interest.
Eddie started to sit,
and then that strange albino leaf caught his eye again. That's no leaf,
he thought, and walked over to it. No, not a leaf but a scrap of paper. He
turned it over and saw columns of "blah blah" and "yak yak"
and "all the stuff's the same." Usually newspapers weren't blank on
one side, but Eddie wasn't surprised to find this one was—the Oz Daily
Buzz had only been a prop, after all.
Nor was the blank side
blank. Printed on it in neat, careful letters, was this message:
Below
that, a little drawing:
Eddie brought the note
back to where the others were eating. Each of them looked at it. Roland held it
last, ran his thumb over it thoughtfully, feeling the texture of the paper,
then gave it back to Eddie.
"R.F.,"
Eddie said. "The man who was running Tick-Tock. This is from him, isn't
it?"
"Yes. He must
have brought the Tick-Tock Man out of Lud."
"Sure," Jake
said darkly. "That guy Flagg looked like someone who'd know a first-class
bumhug when he found one. But how did they get here before us? What could be
faster than Blaine the Mono, for cripe's sake?"
"A door,"
Eddie said. "Maybe they came through one of those special doors."
"Bingo,"
Susannah said. She held her hand out, palm up, and Eddie slapped it.
"In any case,
what he suggests is not bad advice," Roland said. "I urge you to
consider it most seriously. And if you want to go back to your world, I will
allow you to go."
"Roland, I can't
believe you," Eddie said. "This, after you dragged me and Suze over
here, kicking and screaming? You know what my brother would say about you? That
you're as contrary as a hog on ice-skates."
"I did what I did
before I learned to know you as friends," Roland said. "Before I
learned to love you as I loved Alain and Cuthbert. And before I was forced to
... to revisit certain scenes. Doing that has ..." He paused, looking down
at his feet (he had put his old boots back on again) and thinking hard. At last
he looked up again. "There was a part of me that hadn't moved or spoken in
a good many years. 1 thought it was dead. It isn't. I have learned to love
again, and I'm aware that this is probably my last chance to love. I'm slow—Vannay
and Cort knew that; so did my father—but I'm not stupid."
"Then don't act
that way," Eddie said. "Or treat us as if we were."
"What you call
'the bottom line,' Eddie, is this: I get my friends killed. And I'm not sure I
can even risk doing that again. Jake especially.. . I... never mind. I don't
have the words. For the first time since I turned around in a dark room and
killed my mother, I may have found something more important than the Tower.
Leave it at that."
"All right, I
guess I can respect that."
"So can I,"
Susannah said, "but Eddie's right about ka." She took the note
and ran a finger over it thoughtfully. "Roland, you can't talk about that—ka,
I mean—then turn around and take it back again, just because you get a little
low on willpower and dedication."
"Willpower and
dedication are good words," Roland remarked. "There's a bad one,
though, that means the same thing. That one is obsession."
She shrugged it away
with an impatient twitch of her shoulders. "Sugarpie, either this whole
business is ka, or none of it is. And scary as ka might be—the
idea of fate with eagle eyes and a bloodhound's nose— I find the idea of no ka
even scarier." She tossed the R.F. note aside on the matted grass.
"Whatever you
call it, you're just as dead if it runs you over," Roland said.
"Rimer . . . Thorin . . . Jonas . . . my mother . . . Cuthbert . . .
Susan. Just ask them. Any of them. If you only could."
"You're missing
the biggest part of this," Eddie said. "You can't send us
back. Don't you realize that, you big galoot? Even if there was a door, we
wouldn't go through it. Am I wrong about that?"
He looked at Jake and
Susannah. They shook their heads. Even Oy shook his head. No, he wasn't wrong.
"We've changed,"
Eddie said. "We..." Now he was the one who didn't know how to go on.
How to express his need to see the Tower . . . and his other need, just as
strong, to go on carrying the gun with the sandal-wood insets. The big iron
was how he'd come to think of it. Like in that old Marty Robbins song about the
man with the big iron on his hip. "It's ka," he said. It was
all he could think of that was big enough to cover it.
"Kaka,"
Roland replied, after a moment's consideration. The three of them stared at
him, mouths open. Roland of Gilead had made a joke.
4
"There's one
thing I don't understand about what we saw," Susannah said hesitantly.
"Why did your mother hide behind that drape when you came in, Roland? Did
she mean to..." She bit her lip, then brought it out. "Did she mean
to kill you?"
"If she'd meant
to kill me, she wouldn't have chosen a belt as her weapon. The very fact that
she had made me a present—and that's what it was, it had my initials woven into
it—suggests that she meant to ask my forgiveness. That she had had a change of
heart."
Is that what you know,
or only what you want to believe? Eddie thought. It was
a question he would never ask. Roland had been tested enough, had won their way
back to the Path of the Beam by reliving that terrible final visit to his
mother's apartment, and that was enough.
"I think she hid
because she was ashamed," the gunslinger said. "Or because
she needed a moment to think of what to say to me. Of how to explain."
"And the
ball?" Susannah asked him gently. "Was it on the vanity table, where
we saw it? And did she steal it from your father?"
"Yes to
both," Roland said. "Although . . . did she steal it?" He
seemed to ask this question of himself. "My father knew a great many
things, but he sometimes kept what he knew to himself."
"Like him knowing
that your mother and Marten were seeing each other," Susannah said.
"Yes."
"But, Roland . ..
you surely don't believe that your father would knowingly have allowed you
to ... to ..."
Roland looked at her
with large, haunted eyes. His tears had gone, but when he tried to smile at her
question, he was unable. "Have knowingly allowed his son to kill his
wife?" he asked. "No, I can't say that. Much as I'd like to, I can't.
That he should have caused such a thing to have happened, to have
deliberately set it in motion, like a man playing Castles . . . that I cannot
believe. But would he allow ka to run its course? Aye, most
certainly."
"What happened to
the ball?" Jake asked.
"I don't know. I
fainted. When I awoke, my mother and 1 were still alone, one dead and one
alive. No one had come to the sound of the shots—the walls of that place were
thick stone, and that wing mostly empty as well. Her blood had dried. The belt
she'd made me was covered with it, but I took it, and I put it on. I wore that
bloodstained gift for many years, and how I lost it is a tale for another
day—I'll tell it to you before we have done, for it bears on my quest for the
Tower.
"But although no
one had come to investigate the gunshots, someone had come for another reason.
While I lay fainted away by my mother's corpse, that someone came in and took
the wizard's glass away."
"Rhea?"
Eddie asked.
"I doubt she was
so close in her body ... but she had a way of making friends, that one. Aye, a
way of making friends. I saw her again, you know." Roland explained no
further, but a stony gleam arose in his eyes. Eddie had seen it before, and
knew it meant killing.
Jake had retrieved the
note from R.F. and now gestured at the little drawing beneath the message.
"Do you know what this means?"
"I have an idea
it's the sigul of a place I saw when I first travelled in the wizard's
glass. The land called Thunderclap." He looked around at them, one by one.
"I think it's there that we'll meet this man—this thing—named Flagg
again."
Roland looked back the
way they had come, sleepwalking in their fine red shoes. "The Kansas we
came through was his Kansas, and the plague that emptied out that land
was his plague. At least, that's what I believe."
"But it might not
stay there," Susannah said.
"It could
travel," Eddie said.
"To our
world," Jake said.
Still looking back
toward the Green Palace, Roland said: "To your world, or any other."
"Who's the
Crimson King?" Susannah asked abruptly.
"Susannah, I know
not."
They were quiet, then,
watching Roland look toward the palace where he had faced a false wizard and a
true memory and somehow opened the door back to his own world by so doing.
Our world,
Eddie thought, slipping an arm around Susannah. Our world now. If we go back
to America, and perhaps we'll have to before this is over, we 'II arrive as strangers
in a strange land, no matter what when it is. This is our world now. The world
of the Beams, and the Guardians, and the Dark Tower.
"We got some
daylight left," he said to Roland, and put a hesitant hand on the
gunslinger's shoulder. When Roland immediately covered it with his own hand,
Eddie smiled. "You want to use it, or what?"
"Yes,"
Roland said. "Let's use it." He bent and shouldered his pack.
"What about the
shoes?" Susannah asked, looking doubtfully at the little red pile they had
made.
"Leave them
here," Eddie said. "They've served their purpose. Into your
wheelchair, girl." He put his arms around her and helped her in.
"All God's
children have shoes," Roland mused. "Isn't that what you said,
Susannah?"
"Well," she
said, settling herself, "the correct dialect adds a soupcon of flavor, but
you've got the essence, honey, yes."
"Then we'll
undoubtedly find more shoes as God wills it," Roland said.
Jake was looking into
his knapsack, taking inventory of the foodstuffs that had been added by some
unknown hand. He held up a chicken leg in a Baggie, looked at it, then looked
at Eddie. "Who do you suppose packed this stuff?"
Eddie raised his
eyebrows, as if to ask Jake how he could possibly be so stupid. "The
Keebler Elves," he said. "Who else? Come on, let's go."
5
They clustered near
the grove, five wanderers on the face of an empty land. Ahead of them, running
across the plain, was a line in the grass which exactly matched the lane of
rushing clouds in the sky. This line was nothing so obvious as a path . . . but
to the awakened eye, the way that everything bent in the same direction was as
clear as a painted stripe.
The Path of the Beam.
Somewhere ahead, where this Beam intersected all the others, stood the Dark
Tower. Eddie thought that, if the wind were right, he would almost be able to
smell its sullen stone.
And roses—the dusky
scent of roses.
He took Susannah's
hand as she sat in her chair; Susannah took Roland's; Roland took Jake's. Oy
stood two paces before them, head up, scenting the autumn air that combed his
fur with unseen fingers, his gold-ringed eyes wide.
"We are ka-tet,"
Eddie said. It crossed his mind to wonder at how much he'd changed; how he had
become a stranger, even to himself. "We are one from many."
"Ka-tet, "
Susannah said. "We are one from many."
"One from
many," Jake said. "Come on, let's go."
Bird and bear and hare
and fish, Eddie thought.
With Oy in the lead,
they once more set out for the Dark Tower, walking along the Path of the Beam.
AFTERWORD
The scene in which
Roland bests his old teacher, Cort, and goes off to roister in the less savory
section of Gilead was written in the spring of 1970. The one in which Roland's
father shows up the following morning was written in the summer of 1996.
Although only sixteen hours pass between the two occurrences in the world of
the story, twenty-six years had passed in the life of the story's
teller. Yet the moment finally came, and I found myself confronting myself
across a whore's bed—the unemployed schoolboy with the long black hair and
beard on one side, the successful popular novelist ("America's
shlockmeister," as I am affectionately known by my legions of admiring
critics) on the other.
I mention this only
because it sums up the essential weirdness of the Dark Tower experience for me.
I have written enough novels and short stories to fill a solar system of the
imagination, but Roland's story is my Jupiter—a planet that dwarfs all the
others (at least from my own perspective), a place of strange atmosphere, crazy
landscape, and savage gravitational pull. Dwarfs the others, did I say? I think
there's more to it than that, actually. I am coming to understand that Roland's
world (or worlds) actually contains all the others of my making; there
is a place in Mid-World for Randall Flagg, Ralph Roberts, the wandering boys
from The Eyes of the Dragon, even Father Callahan, the damned priest
from 'Salem 's Lot, who rode out of New England on a Greyhound Bus and
wound up dwelling on the border of a terrible Mid-World land called
Thunderclap. This seems to be where they all finish up, and why not? Mid-World
was here first, before all of them, dreaming under the blue gaze of Roland's
bombardier eyes.
This book has been too
long in coming—a good many readers who enjoy Roland's adventures have all but
howled in frustration—and for that I apologize. The reason is best summed up
by Susannah's thought as she prepares to tell Blaine the first riddle of their
contest: It is hard to begin. There's nothing in these pages that I
agree with more.
I knew that Wizard
and Glass meant doubling back to Roland's young days, and to his first love
affair, and I was scared to death of that story. Suspense is relatively easy,
at least for me; love is hard. Consequently I dallied, I temporized, I procrastinated,
and the book remained unwritten.
I began at last,
working in motel rooms on my Macintosh PowerBook, while driving cross-country
from Colorado to Maine after finishing my work on the miniseries version of The
Shining. It occurred to me as I drove north through the deserted miles of
western Nebraska (where I also happened to be, driving back from Colorado, when
I got the idea for a story called "Children of the Corn"), that if I
didn't start soon, I would never write the book at all.
But I no longer know
the truth of romantic love, I told myself. I know about marriage,
and mature love, but forty-eight has a way of forgetting the heat and passion
of seventeen.
I will help you with
that part, came the reply. I didn't know who that voice
belonged to on that day outside Thetford, Nebraska, but I do now, because I
have looked into his eyes across a whore's bed in a land that exists very
clearly in my imagination. Roland's love for Susan Delgado (and hers for him)
is what was told to me by the boy who began this story. If it's right, thank
him. If it's wrong, blame whatever got lost in the translation.
Also thank my friend
Chuck Verrill, who edited the book and hung with me every step of the way. His
encouragement and help were invaluable, as was the encouragement of Elaine
Koster, who has published all of these cowboy romances in paperback.
Most thanks of all go
to my wife, who supports me in this madness as best she can and helped me on
this book in a way she doesn't even know. Once, in a dark time, she gave me a
funny little rubber figure that made me smile. It's Rocket J. Squirrel, wearing
his blue aviator's hat and with his arms bravely outstretched. I put that
figure on my manuscript as it grew (and grew ... and grew), hoping some
of the love that came with it would kind of fertilize the work. It must have
worked, at least to a degree; the book is here, after all. I don't know if it's
good or bad—I lost all sense of perspective around page four hundred—but it's
here. That alone seems like a miracle. And I have started to believe I might
actually live to complete this cycle of stories. (Knock on wood.)
There are three more
to be told, I think, two set chiefly in Mid-World and one almost entirely in
our world—that's the one dealing with the vacant lot on the comer of Second and
Forty-sixth, and the rose that grows there. That rose, I must tell you, is in
terrible danger.
In the end; Roland's ka-tet
will come to the nightscape which is Thunderclap . . . and to what lies beyond
it. All may not live to reach the Tower, but I believe that those who do reach
it will stand and be true.
—Stephen
King
Lovell,
Maine, October 27, 1996
STEPHEN
KING, the world's best selling novelist, is the author of more than thirty
books, most recently Desperation, Rose Madder, Insomnia, and The Green
Mile. His four volumes in the Dark Tower series, including The Gunslinger, The
Drawing of the Three, and The Waste Lands, are all available in Plume trade
paperback editions. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha
King.