Donald M.
Grant/Scribner -November4, 2003
Unabridged audiobook - November 4, 2003
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PROLOGUE:
ROONT
ONE
Tian was blessed (though few farmers would have used such a word) with
three patches: River Field, where his family had grown rice since time
out of mind; Roadside Field, where ka-Jaffords had grown sharproot,
pumpkin, and corn for those same long years and generations; and Son of
a Bitch, a thankless tract which mostly grew rocks, blisters, and busted
hopes. Tian wasn't the first Jaffords determined to make something of
the twenty acres behind the home place; his Gran-pere, perfectly sane in
most other respects, had been convinced there was gold there. Tian's Ma
had been equally positive it would grow porin, a spice of great worth.
Tian's particular insanity was madrigal. Of course madrigal would grow
in Son of a Bitch. Must grow there. He'd gotten hold of a thousand seeds
(and a dear penny they had cost him) that were now hidden beneath the
floorboards of his bedroom. All that remained before planting next year
was to break ground in Son of a Bitch. This chore was easier spoken of
than accomplished.
Clan Jaffords was blessed with livestock, including three mules, but a
man would be mad to try using a mule out in Son of a Bitch; the beast
unlucky enough to draw such duty would likely be lying legbroke or stung
to death by noon of the first day. One of Tian's uncles had almost met
this latter fate some years before. He had come running back to the home
place, screaming at the top of his lungs and pursued by huge mutie wasps
with stingers the size of nails.
They had found the nest (well, Andy had found it; Andy wasn't bothered
by wasps no matter how big they were) and burned it with kerosene, but
there might be others. And there were holes. Yer-bugger, plenty o' them,
and you couldn't burn holes, could you? No. Son of a Bitch sat on what
the old folks called "loose ground." It was consequently possessed of
almost as many holes as rocks, not to mention at least one cave that
puffed out draughts of nasty, decay-smelling air. Who knew what boggarts
and speakies might lurk down its dark throat?
And the worst holes weren't out where a man (or a mule) could see them.
Not at all, sir, never think so. The leg-breakers were always concealed
in innocent-seeming nestles of weeds and high grass. Your mule would
step in, there would come a bitter crack like a snapping branch, and
then the damned thing would be lying there on the ground, teeth bared,
eyes rolling, braying its agony at the sky. Until you put it out of its
misery, that was, and stock was valuable in Calla Bryn Sturgis, even
stock that wasn't precisely threaded.
Tian therefore plowed with his sister in the traces. No reason not to.
Tia was roont, hence good for little else. She was a big girl -- the
roont ones often grew to prodigious size -- and she was willing, Man
Jesus love her. The Old Fella had made her a Jesus-tree, what he called
a crusie-fix, and she wore it everywhere. It swung back and forth now,
thumping against her sweating skin as she pulled.
The plow was attached to her shoulders by a rawhide harness. Behind her,
alternately guiding the plow by its old ironwood handles and his sister
by the hame-traces, Tian grunted and yanked and pushed when the blade of
the plow dropped down and verged on becoming stuck. It was the end of
Full Earth but as hot as midsummer here in Son of a Bitch; Tia's
overalls were dark and damp and stuck to her long and meaty thighs. Each
time Tian tossed his head to get his hair out of his eyes, sweat flew
out of the mop in a spray.
"Gee, ye bitch!" he cried. "Yon rock's a plow-breaker, are ye blind?"
Not blind; not deaf, either; just roont. She heaved to the left, and
hard. Behind her, Tian stumbled forward with a neck-snapping jerk and
barked his shin on another rock, one he hadn't seen and the plow had,
for a wonder, missed. As he felt the first warm trickles of blood
running down to his ankle, he wondered (and not for the first time) what
madness it was that always got the Jaffordses out here. In his deepest
heart he had an idea that madrigal would sow no more than the porin had
before it, although you could grow devil-grass; yar, he could've bloomed
all twenty acres with that shit, had he wanted. The trick was to keep it
out, and it was always New Earth's first chore. It --
The plow rocked to the right and then jerked forward, almost pulling his
arms out of their sockets. "Arr!" he cried. "Go easy, girl! I can't grow
em back if you pull em out, can I?"
Tia turned her broad, sweaty, empty face up to a sky full of low-hanging
clouds and honked laughter. Man Jesus, but she even sounded like a
donkey. Yet it was laughter, human laughter. Tian wondered, as he
sometimes couldn't help doing, if that laughter meant anything. Did she
understand some of what he was saying, or did she only respond to his
tone of voice? Did any of the roont ones --
"Good day, sai," said a loud and almost completely toneless voice from
behind him. The owner of the voice ignored Tian's scream of surprise.
"Pleasant days, and may they be long upon the earth. I am here from a
goodish wander and at your service."
Tian whirled around, saw Andy standing there -- all seven feet of him --
and was then almost jerked flat as his sister took another of her large
lurching steps forward. The plow's hame-traces were pulled from his
hands and flew around his throat with an audible snap. Tia, unaware of
this potential disaster, took another sturdy step forward. When she did,
Tian's wind was cut off. He gave a whooping, gagging gasp and clawed at
the straps. All of this Andy watched with his usual large and
meaningless smile.
Tia jerked forward again and Tian was pulled off his feet. He landed on
a rock that dug savagely into the cleft of his buttocks, but at least he
could breathe again. For the moment, anyway. Damned unlucky field!
Always had been! Always would be!
Tian snatched hold of the leather strap before it could pull tight
around his throat again and yelled, "Hold, ye bitch! Whoa up if you
don't want me to twist yer great and useless tits right off the front of
yer!"
Tia halted agreeably enough and looked back to see what was what. Her
smile broadened. She lifted one heavily muscled arm -- it glowed with
sweat -- and pointed. "Andy!" she said. "Andy's come!"
"I ain't blind," Tian said and got to his feet, rubbing his bottom. Was
that part of him also bleeding? Good Man Jesus, he had an idea it was.
"Good day, sai," Andy said to her, and tapped his metal throat three
times with his three metal fingers. "Long days and pleasant nights."
Although Tia had surely heard the standard response to this -- And may
you have twice the number -- a thousand times or more, all she could do
was once more raise her broad idiot's face to the sky and honk her
donkey laugh. Tian felt a surprising moment of pain, not in his arms or
throat or outraged ass but in his heart. He vaguely remembered her as a
little girl: as pretty and quick as a dragonfly, as smart as ever you
could wish. Then --
But before he could finish the thought, a premonition came. He felt a
sinking in his heart. The news would come while I'm out here, he
thought. Out in this godforsaken patch where nothing is well and all
luck is bad. It was time, wasn't it? Overtime.
"Andy," he said.
"Yes!" Andy said, smiling. "Andy, your friend! Back from a goodish
wander and at your service. Would you like your horoscope, sai Tian? It
is Full Earth. The moon is red, what is called the Huntress Moon in
Mid-World that was. A friend will call! Business affairs prosper! You
will have two ideas, one good and one bad -- "
"The bad one was coming out here to turn this field," Tian said. "Never
mind my goddam horoscope, Andy. Why are you here?"
Andy's smile probably could not become troubled -- he was a robot, after
all, the last one in Calla Bryn Sturgis or for miles and wheels around
-- but to Tian it seemed to grow troubled, just the same. The robot
looked like a young child's stick-figure of an adult, impossibly tall
and impossibly thin. His legs and arms were silvery. His head was a
stainless-steel barrel with electric eyes. His body, no more than a
cylinder, was gold. Stamped in the middle -- what would have been a
man's chest -- was this legend:
NORTH CENTRAL POSITRONICS, LTD.
in association with
LaMERK INDUSTRIES
presents
ANDY
Design: MESSENGER (Many Other Functions)
Serial # DNF-44821-V63
Why or how this silly thing had survived when all the rest of the robots
were gone -- gone for generations -- Tian neither knew nor cared. You
were apt to see him anywhere in the Calla (he would not venture beyond
its borders) striding on his impossibly thin silver legs, looking
everywhere, occasionally clicking to himself as he stored (or perhaps
purged -- who knew?) information. He sang songs, passed on gossip and
rumor from one end of town to the other -- a tireless walker was Andy
the Messenger Robot -- and seemed to enjoy the giving of horoscopes
above all things, although there was general agreement in the village
that they meant little.
He had one other function, however, and that meant much.
"Why are ye here, ye bag of bolts and beams? Answer me! Is it the
Wolves? Are they coming from Thunderclap?"
Tian stood there looking up into Andy's stupid smiling metal face, the
sweat growing cold on his skin, praying with all his might that the
foolish thing would say no, then offer to tell his horoscope again, or
perhaps to sing "The Green Corn A-Dayo," all twenty or thirty verses.
But all Andy said, still smiling, was: "Yes, sai."
"Christ and the Man Jesus," Tian said (he'd gotten an idea from the Old
Fella that those were two names for the same thing, but had never
bothered pursuing the question). "How long?"
"One moon of days before they arrive," Andy replied, still smiling.
"From full to full?"
"Close enough, sai."
Thirty days, then, give or take one. Thirty days to the Wolves. And
there was no sense hoping Andy was wrong. No one kenned how the robot
could know they were coming out of Thunderclap so far in advance of
their arrival, but he did know. And he was never wrong.
"Fuck you for your bad news!" Tian cried, and was furious at the waver
he heard in his own voice. "What use are you?"
"I'm sorry that the news is bad," Andy said. His guts clicked audibly,
his eyes flashed a brighter blue, and he took a step backward. "Would
you not like me to tell your horoscope? This is the end of Full Earth, a
time particularly propitious for finishing old business and meeting new
people -- "
"And fuck your false prophecy, too!" Tian bent, picked up a clod of
earth, and threw it at the robot. A pebble buried in the clod clanged
off Andy's metal hide. Tia gasped, then began to cry. Andy backed off
another step, his shadow trailing out long in Son of a Bitch field. But
his hateful, stupid smile remained.
"What about a song? I have learned an amusing one from the Manni far
north of town; it is called 'In Time of Loss, Make God Your Boss.'" From
somewhere deep in Andy's guts came the wavering honk of a pitch-pipe,
followed by a ripple of piano keys. "It goes -- "
Sweat rolling down his cheeks and sticking his itchy balls to his
thighs. The stink-smell of his own foolish obsession. Tia blatting her
stupid face at the sky. And this idiotic, bad-news-bearing robot getting
ready to sing him some sort of Manni hymn.
"Be quiet, Andy." He spoke reasonably enough, but through clamped teeth.
"Sai," the robot agreed, then fell mercifully silent.
Tian went to his bawling sister, put his arm around her, smelled the
large (but not entirely unpleasant) smell of her. No obsession there,
just the smell of work and obedience. He sighed, then began to stroke
her trembling arm.
"Quit it, ye great bawling cunt," he said. The words might have been
ugly but the tone was kind in the extreme, and it was tone she responded
to. She began to quiet. Her brother stood with the flare of her hip
pushing into him just below his ribcage (she was a full foot taller),
and any passing stranger would likely have stopped to look at them,
amazed by the similarity of face and the great dissimilarity of size.
The resemblance, at least, was honestly come by: they were twins.
He soothed his sister with a mixture of endearments and profanities --
in the years since she had come back roont from the east, the two modes
of expression were much the same to Tian Jaffords -- and at last she
ceased her weeping. And when a rustie flew across the sky, doing loops
and giving out the usual series of ugly blats, she pointed and laughed.
A feeling was rising in Tian, one so foreign to his nature that he
didn't even recognize it. "Isn't right," he said. "Nossir. By the Man
Jesus and all the gods that be, it isn't." He looked to the east, where
the hills rolled away into a rising membranous darkness that might have
been clouds but wasn't. It was the edge of Thunderclap.
"Isn't right what they do to us."
"Sure you wouldn't like to hear your horoscope, sai? I see bright coins
and a beautiful dark lady."
"The dark ladies will have to do without me," Tian said, and began
pulling the harness off his sister's broad shoulders. "I'm married, as
I'm sure ye very well know."
"Many a married man has had his jilly," Andy observed. To Tian he
sounded almost smug.
"Not those who love their wives." Tian shouldered the harness (he'd made
it himself, there being a marked shortage of tack for human beings in
most livery barns) and turned toward the home place. "And not farmers,
in any case. Show me a farmer who can afford a jilly and I'll kiss your
shiny ass. Garn, Tia. Lift em up and put em down."
"Home place?" she asked.
"That's right."
"Lunch at home place?" She looked at him in a muddled, hopeful way.
"Taters?" A pause. "Gravy?"
"Shore," Tian said. "Why the hell not?"
Tia let out a whoop and began running toward the house. There was
something almost awe-inspiring about her when she ran. As their father
had once observed, not long before the fall that carried him off,
"Bright or dim, that's a lot of meat in motion."
Tian walked slowly after her, head down, watching for the holes which
his sister seemed to avoid without even looking, as if some deep part of
her had mapped the location of each one. That strange new feeling kept
growing and growing. He knew about anger -- any farmer who'd ever lost
cows to the milk-sick or watched a summer hailstorm beat his corn flat
knew plenty about that -- but this was deeper. This was rage, and it was
a new thing. He walked slowly, head down, fists clenched. He wasn't
aware of Andy following along behind him until the robot said, "There's
other news, sai. Northwest of town, along the Path of the Beam,
strangers from Out-World -- "
"Bugger the Beam, bugger the strangers, and bugger your good self," Tian
said. "Let me be, Andy."
Andy stood where he was for a moment, surrounded by the rocks and weeds
and useless knobs of Son of a Bitch, that thankless tract of Jaffords
land. Relays inside him clicked. His eyes flashed. And he decided to go
and talk to the Old Fella. The Old Fella never told him to bugger his
good self. The Old Fella was always willing to hear his horoscope.
And he was always interested in strangers.
Andy started toward town and Our Lady of Serenity.
TWO
Zalia Jaffords didn't see her husband and sister-in-law come back from
Son of a Bitch; didn't hear Tia plunging her head repeatedly into the
rain-barrel outside the barn and then blowing moisture off her lips like
a horse. Zalia was on the south side of the house, hanging out wash and
keeping an eye on the children. She wasn't aware that Tian was back
until she saw him looking out the kitchen window at her. She was
surprised to see him there at all and much more than surprised by the
look of him. His face was ashy pale except for two bright blots of color
high up on his cheeks and a third glaring in the center of his forehead
like a brand.
She dropped the few pins she was still holding back into her clothes
basket and started for the house.
"Never mind," she said. "Just keep a eye on your ka-babbies."
"Why-yyy?" Hedda whined. She had that whine down to a science. One of
these days she would draw it out a little too long and her mother would
clout her right down dead.
"Because ye're the oldest," she said.
"But -- "
"Shut your mouth, Hedda Jaffords."
"We'll watch em, Ma," Heddon said. Always agreeable was her Heddon;
probably not quite so bright as his sister, but bright wasn't
everything. Far from it. "Want us to finish hanging the wash?"
"Hed-donnnn..." From his sister. That irritating whine again. But Zalia
had no time for them. She just took one glance at the others: Lyman and
Lia, who were five, and Aaron, who was two. Aaron sat naked in the dirt,
happily chunking two stones together. He was the rare singleton, and how
the women of the village envied her on account of him! Because Aaron
would always be safe. The others, however, Heddon and Hedda...Lyman and
Lia...
She suddenly understood what it might mean, him back at the house in the
middle of the day like this. She prayed to the gods it wasn't so, but
when she came into the kitchen and saw the way he was looking out at the
kiddies, she became almost sure it was.
"Tell me it isn't the Wolves," she said in a dry and frantic voice. "Say
it ain't."
"'Tis," Tian replied. "Thirty days, Andy says -- moon to moon. And on
that Andy's never -- "
Before he could go on, Zalia Jaffords clapped her hands to her temples
and shrieked. In the side yard, Hedda jumped up. In another moment she
would have been running for the house, but Heddon held her back.
"They won't take any as young as Lyman and Lia, will they?" she asked
him. "Hedda or Heddon, maybe, but surely not my little ones? Why, they
won't see their sixth for another half-year!"
"The Wolves have taken em as young as three, and you know it," Tian
said. His hands opened and closed, opened and closed. That feeling
inside him continued to grow -- the feeling that was deeper than mere
anger.
She looked at him, tears spilling down her face.
"Mayhap it's time to say no." Tian spoke in a voice he hardly recognized
as his own.
"How can we?" she whispered. "How in the name of the gods can we?"
"Dunno," he said. "But come here, woman, I beg ya."
She came, throwing one last glance over her shoulder at the five
children in the back yard -- as if to make sure they were still all
there, that no Wolves had taken them yet -- and then crossed the living
room. Gran-pere sat in his corner chair by the dead fire, head bent
over, dozing and drizzling from his folded, toothless mouth.
From this room the barn was visible. Tian drew his wife to the window
and pointed. "There," he said. "Do you mark em, woman? Do you see em
very well?"
Of course she did. Tian's sister, six and a half feet tall, now standing
with the straps of her overalls lowered and her big breasts sparkling
with water as she splashed them from the rain barrel. Standing in the
barn doorway was Zalman, Zalia's very own brother. Almost seven feet
tall was he, big as Lord Perth, tall as Andy, and as empty of face as
the girl. A strapping young man watching a strapping young woman with
her breasts out on show like that might well have been sporting a bulge
in his pants, but there was none in Zally's. Nor ever would be. He was
roont.
She turned back to Tian. They looked at each other, a man and a woman
not roont, but only because of dumb luck. So far as either of them knew,
it could just as easily have been Zal and Tia standing in here and
watching Tian and Zalia out by the barn, grown large of body and empty
of head.
"Of course I see," she told him. "Does thee think I'm blind?"
"Don't it sometimes make you wish you was?" he asked. "To see em so?"
Zalia made no reply.
"Not right, woman. Not right. Never has been."
"But since time out of mind -- "
"Bugger time out of mind, too!" Tian cried. "They's children! Our
children!"
"Would you have the Wolves burn the Calla to the ground, then? Leave us
all with our throats cut and our eyes fried in our heads? For it's
happened before. You know it has."
He knew, all right. But who would put matters right, if not the men of
Calla Bryn Sturgis? Certainly there were no authorities, not so much as
a sheriff, either high or low, in these parts. They were on their own.
Even long ago, when the Inner Baronies had glowed with light and order,
they would have seen precious little sign of that bright-life out here.
These were the borderlands, and life here had always been strange. Then
the Wolves had begun coming and life had grown far stranger. How long
ago had it begun? How many generations? Tian didn't know, but he thought
"time out of mind" was too long. The Wolves had been raiding into the
borderland villages when Gran-pere was young, certainly -- Gran-pere's
own twin had been snatched as the two of them sat in the dust, playing
at jacks. "Dey tuk im cos he closer to de rud," Gran-pere had told them
(many times). "If Ah come out of dee house firs' dat day, Ah be closer
to de rud an dey take me, God is good!" Then he would kiss the wooden
crucie the Old Fella had given him, hold it skyward, and cackle.
Yet Gran-pere's own Gran-pere had told him that in his day -- which
would have been five or perhaps even six generations back, if Tian's
calculations were right -- there had been no Wolves sweeping out of
Thunderclap on their gray horses. Once Tian had asked the old man, And
did all but a few of the babbies come in twos back then? Did any of the
old folks ever say? Gran-pere had considered this long, then had shaken
his head. No, he couldn't remember what the old-timers had ever said
about that, one way or the other.
Zalia was looking at him anxiously. "Ye're in no mood to think of such
things, I wot, after spending your morning in that rocky patch."
"My frame of mind won't change when they come or who they'll take," Tian
said.
"Ye'll not do something foolish, T, will you? Something foolish and all
on your own?"
"No," he said.
No hesitation. He's already begun to lay plans, she thought, and allowed
herself a thin gleam of hope. Surely there was nothing Tian could do
against the Wolves -- nothing any of them could do -- but he was far
from stupid. In a farming village where most men could think no further
than planting the next row (or planting their stiffies on Saturday
night), Tian was something of an anomaly. He could write his name; he
could write words that said I LOVE YOU ZALLIE (and had won her by so
doing, even though she couldn't read them there in the dirt); he could
add the numbers and also call them back from big to small, which he said
was even more difficult. Was it possible...?
Part of her didn't want to complete that thought. And yet, when she
turned her mother's heart and mind to Hedda and Heddon, Lia and Lyman,
part of her wanted to hope. "What, then?"
"I'm going to call a Town Gathering. I'll send the feather."
"Will they come?"
"When they hear this news, every man in the Calla will turn up. We'll
talk it over. Mayhap they'll want to fight this time. Mayhap they'll
want to fight for their babbies."
From behind them, a cracked old voice said, "Ye foolish killin."
Tian and Zalia turned, hand in hand, to look at the old man. Killin was
a harsh word, but Tian judged the old man was looking at them -- at him
-- kindly enough.
"Why d'ye say so, Gran-pere?" he asked.
"Men'd go forrad from such a meetin as ye plan on and burn down half the
countryside, were dey in drink," the old man said. "Men sober -- " He
shook his head. "Ye'll never move such."
"I think this time you might be wrong, Grand-pere," Tian said, and Zalia
felt cold terror squeeze her heart. And yet buried in it, warm, was that
hope.
THREE
There would have been less grumbling if he'd given them at least one
night's notice, but Tian wouldn't do that. They didn't have the luxury
of even a single fallow night. And when he sent Heddon and Hedda with
the feather, they did come. He'd known they would.
The Calla's Gathering Hall stood at the end of the village high street,
beyond Took's General Store and cater-corner from the town Pavilion,
which was now dusty and dark with the end of summer. Soon enough the
ladies of the town would begin decorating it for Reap, but they'd never
made a lot of Reaping Night in the Calla. The children always enjoyed
seeing the stuffy-guys thrown on the fire, of course, and the bolder
fellows would steal their share of kisses as the night itself
approached, but that was about it. Your fripperies and festivals might
do for Mid-World and In-World, but this was neither. Out here they had
more serious things to worry about than Reaping Day Fairs.
Things like the Wolves.
Some of the men -- from the well-to-do farms to the west and the three
ranches to the south -- came on horses. Eisenhart of the Rocking B even
brought his rifle and wore crisscrossed ammunition bandoliers. (Tian
Jaffords doubted if the bullets were any good, or that the ancient rifle
would fire even if some of them were.) A delegation of the Manni-folk
came crammed into a bucka drawn by a pair of mutie geldings -- one with
three eyes, the other with a pylon of raw pink flesh poking out of its
back. Most of the Calla men came on donks and burros, dressed in their
white pants and long, colorful shirts. They knocked their dusty
sombreros back on the tugstrings with callused thumbs as they stepped
into the Gathering Hall, looking uneasily at each other. The benches
were of plain pine. With no womenfolk and none of the roont ones, the
men filled fewer than thirty of the ninety benches. There was some talk,
but no laughter at all.
Tian stood out front with the feather now in his hands, watching the sun
as it sank toward the horizon, its gold steadily deepening to a color
that was like infected blood. When it touched the land, he took one more
look up the high street. It was empty except for three or four roont
fellas sitting on the steps of Took's. All of them huge and good for
nothing more than yanking rocks out of the ground. He saw no more men,
no more approaching donkeys. He took a deep breath, let it out, then
drew in another and looked up at the deepening sky.
"Man Jesus, I don't believe in you," he said. "But if you're there, help
me now. Tell God thankee."
Then he went inside and closed the Gathering Hall doors a little harder
than was strictly necessary. The talk stopped. A hundred and forty men,
most of them farmers, watched him walk to the front of the hall, the
wide legs of his white pants swishing, his shor'boots clacking on the
hardwood floor. He had expected to be terrified by this point, perhaps
even to find himself speechless. He was a farmer, not a stage performer
or a politician. Then he thought of his children, and when he looked up
at the men, he found he had no trouble meeting their eyes. The feather
in his hands did not tremble. When he spoke, his words followed each
other easily, naturally, and coherently. They might not do as he hoped
they would -- Gran-pere could be right about that -- but they looked
willing enough to listen.
"You all know who I am," he said as he stood there with his hands
clasped around the reddish feather's ancient stalk. "Tian Jaffords, son
of Luke, husband of Zalia Hoonik that was. She and I have five, two
pairs and a singleton."
Low murmurs at that, most probably having to do with how lucky Tian and
Zalia were to have their Aaron. Tian waited for the voices to die away.
"I've lived in the Calla all my life. I've shared your khef and you have
shared mine. Now hear what I say, I beg."
"We say thankee-sai," they murmured. It was little more than a stock
response, yet Tian was encouraged.
"The Wolves are coming," he said. "I have this news from Andy. Thirty
days from moon to moon and then they're here."
More low murmurs. Tian heard dismay and outrage, but no surprise. When
it came to spreading news, Andy was extremely efficient.
"Even those of us who can read and write a little have almost no paper
to write on," Tian said, "so I cannot tell ye with any real certainty
when last they came. There are no records, ye ken, just one mouth to
another. I know I was well-breeched, so it's longer than twenty years --
"
"It's twenty-four," said a voice in the back of the room.
"Nay, twenty-three," said a voice closer to the front. Reuben Caverra
stood up. He was a plump man with a round, cheerful face. The cheer was
gone from it now, however, and it showed only distress. "They took Ruth,
my sissa, hear me, I beg."
A murmur -- really no more than a vocalized sigh of agreement -- came
from the men sitting crammed together on the benches. They could have
spread out, but had chosen shoulder-to-shoulder instead. Sometimes there
was comfort in discomfort, Tian reckoned.
Reuben said, "We were playing under the big pine in the front yard when
they came. I made a mark on that tree each year after. Even after they
brung her back, I went on with em. It's twenty-three marks and
twenty-three years." With that he sat down.
"Twenty-three or twenty-four, makes no difference," Tian said. "Those
who were kiddies when the Wolves came last time have grown up since and
had kiddies of their own. There's a fine crop here for those bastards. A
fine crop of children." He paused, giving them a chance to think of the
next idea for themselves before speaking it aloud. "If we let it
happen," he said at last. "If we let the Wolves take our children into
Thunderclap and then send them back to us roont."
"What the hell else can we do?" cried a man sitting on one of the middle
benches. "They's not human!" At this there was a general (and miserable)
mumble of agreement.
One of the Manni stood up, pulling his dark-blue cloak tight against his
bony shoulders. He looked around at the others with baleful eyes. They
weren't mad, those eyes, but to Tian they looked a long league from
reasonable. "Hear me, I beg," he said.
"We say thankee-sai." Respectful but reserved. To see a Manni in town
was a rare thing, and here were eight, all in a bunch. Tian was
delighted they had come. If anything would underline the deadly
seriousness of this business, the appearance of the Manni would do it.
The Gathering Hall door opened and one more man slipped inside. He wore
a long black coat. There was a scar on his forehead. None of the men,
including Tian, noticed. They were watching the Manni.
"Hear what the Book of Manni says: When the Angel of Death passed over
Ayjip, he killed the firstborn in every house where the blood of a
sacrificial lamb hadn't been daubed on the doorposts. So says the Book."
"Praise the Book," said the rest of the Manni.
"Perhaps we should do likewise," the Manni spokesman went on. His voice
was calm, but a pulse beat wildly in his forehead. "Perhaps we should
turn these next thirty days into a festival of joy for the wee ones, and
then put them to sleep, and let their blood out upon the earth. Let the
Wolves take their corpses into the east, should they desire."
"You're insane," Benito Cash said, indignant and at the same time almost
laughing. "You and all your kind. We ain't gonna kill our babbies!"
"Would the ones that come back not be better off dead?" the Manni
responded. "Great useless hulks! Scooped-out shells!"
"Aye, and what about their brothers and sisters?" asked Vaughn
Eisenhart. "For the Wolves only take one out of every two, as ye very
well know."
A second Manni rose, this one with a silky-white beard flowing down over
his breast. The first one sat down. The old man, Henchick, looked around
at the others, then at Tian. "You hold the feather, young fella -- may I
speak?"
Tian nodded for him to go ahead. This wasn't a bad start at all. Let
them fully explore the box they were in, explore it all the way to the
corners. He was confident they'd see there were only two alternatives,
in the end: let the Wolves take one of every pair under the age of
puberty, as they always had, or stand and fight. But to see that, they
needed to understand that all other ways out were dead ends.
The old man spoke patiently. Sorrowfully, even. "'Tis a terrible idea,
aye. But think'ee this, sais: if the Wolves were to come and find us
childless, they might leave us alone ever after."
"Aye, so they might," one of the smallhold farmers rumbled -- his name
was Jorge Estrada. "And so they might not. Manni-sai, would you really
kill a whole town's children for what might be?"
A strong rumble of agreement ran through the crowd. Another smallholder,
Garrett Strong, rose to his feet. His pug-dog's face was truculent. His
thumbs were hung in his belt. "Better we all kill ourselves," he said.
"Babbies and grown-ups alike."
The Manni didn't look outraged at this. Nor did any of the other
blue-cloaks around him. "It's an option," the old man said. "We would
speak of it if others would." He sat down.
"Not me," Garrett Strong said. "It'd be like cuttin off your damn head
to save shaving, hear me, I beg."
There was laughter and a few cries of Hear you very well. Garrett sat
back down, looking a little less tense, and put his head together with
Vaughn Eisenhart. One of the other ranchers, Diego Adams, was listening
in, his black eyes intent.
Another smallholder rose -- Bucky Javier. He had bright little blue eyes
in a small head that seemed to slope back from his goateed chin. "What
if we left for awhile?" he asked. "What if we took our children and went
back west? All the way to the west branch of the Big River, mayhap?"
There was a moment of considering silence at this bold idea. The west
branch of the Whye was almost all the way back to Mid-World...where,
according to Andy, a great palace of green glass had lately appeared and
even more lately disappeared again. Tian was about to respond himself
when Eben Took, the storekeeper, did it for him. Tian was relieved. He
hoped to be silent as long as possible. When they were talked out, he'd
tell them what was left.
"Are ye mad?" Eben asked. "Wolves'd come in, see us gone, and burn all
to the ground -- farms and ranches, crops and stores, root and branch.
What would we come back to?"
"And what if they came after us?" Jorge Estrada chimed in. "Do'ee think
we'd be hard to follow, for such as the Wolves? They'd burn us out as
Took says, ride our backtrail, and take the kiddies anyway!"
Louder agreement. The stomp of shor'boots on the plain pine floorboards.
And a few cries of Hear him, hear him!
"Besides," Neil Faraday said, standing and holding his vast and filthy
sombrero in front of him, "they never steal all our children." He spoke
in a frightened let's-be-reasonable tone that set Tian's teeth on edge.
It was this counsel he feared above all others. Its deadly-false call to
reason.
One of the Manni, this one younger and beardless, uttered a sharp and
contemptuous laugh. "Ah, one saved out of every two! And that make it
all right, does it? God bless thee!" He might have said more, but
Henchick clamped a gnarled hand on the young man's arm. The young one
said no more, but he didn't lower his head submissively, either. His
eyes were hot, his lips a thin white line.
"I don't mean it's right," Neil said. He had begun to spin his sombrero
in a way that made Tian feel a little dizzy. "But we have to face the
realities, don't we? Aye. And they don't take em all. Why my daughter,
Georgina, she's just as apt and canny -- "
"Yar, and yer son George is a great empty-headed galoot," Ben Slightman
said. Slightman was Eisenhart's foreman, and he did not suffer fools
lightly. He took off his spectacles, wiped them with a bandanna, and set
them back on his face. "I seen him settin on the steps in front of
Tooky's when I rode downstreet. Seen him very well. Him and some others
equally empty-brained."
"But -- "
"I know," Slightman said. "It's a hard decision. Some empty-brained's
maybe better than all dead." He paused. "Or all taken instead of just
half."
Cries of Hear him and Say thankee as Ben Slightman sat down.
"They always leave us enough to go on with, don't they?" asked a
smallhold farmer whose place was just west of Tian's, near the edge of
the Calla. His name was Louis Haycox, and he spoke in a musing, bitter
tone of voice. Below his mustache, his lips curved in a smile that
didn't have much humor in it. "We won't kill our children," he said,
looking at the Manni. "All God's grace to ye, gentlemen, but I don't
believe even you could do so, came it right down to the killin-floor. Or
not all of ye. We can't pull up bag and baggage and go west -- or in any
other direction -- because we leave our farms behind. They'd burn us
out, all right, and come after the children just the same. They need em,
gods know why.
"It always comes back to the same thing: we're farmers, most of us.
Strong when our hands are in the soil, weak when they ain't. I got two
kiddies of my own, four years old, and I love em both well. Should hate
to lose either. But I'd give one to keep the other. And my farm."
Murmurs of agreement met this. "What other choice do we have? I say
this: it would be the world's worst mistake to anger the Wolves. Unless,
of course, we can stand against them. If 'twere possible, I'd stand. But
I just don't see how it is."
Tian felt his heart shrivel with each of Haycox's words. How much of his
thunder had the man stolen? Gods and the Man Jesus!
Wayne Overholser got to his feet. He was Calla Bryn Sturgis's most
successful farmer, and had a vast sloping belly to prove it. "Hear me, I
beg."
"We say thankee-sai," they murmured.
"Tell you what we're going to do," he said, looking around. "What we
always done, that's what. Do any of you want to talk about standing
against the Wolves? Are any of you that mad? With what? Spears and
rocks, a few bows and bahs? Maybe four rusty old sof' calibers like
that?" He jerked a thumb toward Eisenhart's rifle.
"Don't be making fun of my shooting-iron, son," Eisenhart said, but he
was smiling ruefully.
"They'll come and they'll take the children," Overholser said, looking
around. "Some of em. Then they'll leave us alone again for a generation
or even longer. So it is, so it has been, and I say leave it alone."
Disapproving rumbles rose at this, but Overholser waited them out.
"Twenty-three years or twenty-four, it don't matter," he said when they
were quiet again. "Either way it's a long time. A long time of peace.
Could be you've forgotten a few things, folks. One is that children are
like any other crop. God always sends more. I know that sounds hard. But
it's how we've lived and how we have to go on."
Tian didn't wait for any of the stock responses. If they went any
further down this road, any chance he might have to turn them would be
lost. He raised the opopanax feather and said, "Hear what I say! Would
ye hear, I beg!"
"Thankee-sai," they responded. Overholser was looking at Tian
distrustfully.
And you're right to look at me so, the farmer thought. For I've had
enough of such cowardly common sense, so I have.
"Wayne Overholser is a smart man and a successful man," Tian said, "and
I hate to speak against his position for those reasons. And for another,
as well: he's old enough to be my Da'."
" 'Ware he ain't your Da'," Garrett Strong's only farmhand -- Rossiter,
his name was -- called out, and there was general laughter. Even
Overholser smiled at this jest.
"Son, if ye truly hate to speak agin me, don't ye do it," Overholser
said. He continued to smile, but only with his mouth.
"I must, though," Tian said. He began to walk slowly back and forth in
front of the benches. In his hands, the rusty-red plume of the opopanax
feather swayed. Tian raised his voice slightly so they'd understand he
was no longer speaking just to the big farmer.
"I must because sai Overholser is old enough to be my Da'. His children
are grown, do ye kennit, and so far as I know there were only two to
begin with, one girl and one boy." He paused, then shot the killer.
"Born two years apart." Both singletons, in other words. Both safe from
the Wolves, although he didn't need to say it right out loud. The crowd
murmured.
Overholser flushed a bright and dangerous red. "That's a rotten
goddamned thing to say! My get's got nothing to do with this whether
single or double! Give me that feather, Jaffords. I got a few more
things to say."
But the boots began to thump down on the boards, slowly at first, then
picking up speed until they rattled like hail. Overholser looked around
angrily, now so red he was nearly purple.
"I'd speak!" he shouted. "Would'ee not hear me, I beg?"
Cries of No, no and Not now and Jaffords has the feather and Sit and
listen came in response. Tian had an idea sai Overholser was learning --
and remarkably late in the game -- that there was often a deep-running
resentment of a village's richest and most successful. Those less
fortunate or less canny (most of the time they amounted to the same)
might tug their hats off when the rich folk passed in their buckas or
lowcoaches, they might send a slaughtered pig or cow as a thank-you when
the rich folk loaned their hired hands to help with a house- or
barn-raising, the well-to-do might be cheered at Year End Gathering for
helping to buy the piano that now sat in the Pavilion's musica. Yet the
men of the Calla tromped their shor'boots to drown Overholser out with a
certain savage satisfaction.
Overholser, unused to being balked in such a way -- flabbergasted, in
fact -- tried one more time. "I'd have the feather, do ye, I beg!"
"No," Tian said. "Later if it does ya, but not now."
There were actual cheers at this, mostly from the smallest of the
smallhold farmers and some of their hands. The Manni did not join in.
They were now drawn so tightly together that they looked like a dark
blue inkstain in the middle of the hall. They were clearly bewildered by
this turn. Vaughn Eisenhart and Diego Adams, meanwhile, moved to flank
Overholser and speak low to him.
You've got a chance, Tian thought. Better make the most of it.
He raised the feather and they quieted.
"Everyone will have a chance to speak," he said. "As for me, I say this:
we can't go on this way, simply bowing our heads and standing quiet when
the Wolves come and take our children. They -- "
"They always return them," a hand named Farren Posella said timidly.
"They return husks!" Tian cried, and there were a few cries of Hear him.
Not enough, however, Tian judged. Not enough by far. Not yet.
He lowered his voice again. He did not want to harangue them. Overholser
had tried that and gotten nowhere, a thousand acres or not.
"They return husks. And what of us? What is this doing to us? Some might
say nothing, that the Wolves have always been a part of our life in
Calla Bryn Sturgis, like the occasional cyclone or earthshake. Yet that
is not true. They've been coming for six generations, at most. But the
Calla's been here a thousand years and more."
The old Manni with the bony shoulders and baleful eyes half-rose. "He
says true, folken. There were farmers here -- and Manni-folk among em --
when the darkness in Thunderclap hadn't yet come, let alone the Wolves."
They received this with looks of wonder. Their awe seemed to satisfy the
old man, who nodded and sat back down.
"So in time's greater course, the Wolves are almost a new thing," Tian
said. "Six times have they come over mayhap a hundred and twenty or a
hundred and forty years. Who can say? For as ye ken, time has softened,
somehow."
A low rumble. A few nods.
"In any case, once a generation," Tian went on. He was aware that a
hostile contingent was coalescing around Overholser, Eisenhart, and
Adams. Ben Slightman might or might not be with them -- probably was.
These men he would not move even if he were gifted with the tongue of an
angel. Well, he could do without them, maybe. If he caught the rest.
"Once a generation they come, and how many children do they take? Three
dozen? Four?
"Sai Overholser may not have babbies this time, but I do -- not one set
of twins but two. Heddon and Hedda, Lyman and Lia. I love all four, but
in a month of days, two of them will be taken away. And when those two
come back, they'll be roont. Whatever spark there is that makes a
complete human being, it'll be out forever."
Hear him, hear him swept through the room like a sigh.
"How many of you have twins with no hair except that which grows on
their heads?" Tian demanded. "Raise yer hands!"
Six men raised their hands. Then eight. A dozen. Every time Tian began
to think they were done, another reluctant hand went up. In the end, he
counted twenty-two hands, and of course not everyone who had children
was here. He could see that Overholser was dismayed by such a large
count. Diego Adams had his hand raised, and Tian was pleased to see he'd
moved away a little bit from Overholser, Eisenhart, and Slightman. Three
of the Manni had their hands up. Jorge Estrada. Louis Haycox. Many
others he knew, which was not surprising, really; he knew almost every
one of these men. Probably all save for a few wandering fellows working
smallhold farms for short wages and hot dinners.
"Each time they come and take our children, they take a little more of
our hearts and our souls," Tian said.
"Oh come on now, son," Eisenhart said. "That's laying it on a bit th --
"
"Shut up, Rancher," a voice said. It belonged to the man who had come
late, he with the scar on his forehead. It was shocking in its anger and
contempt. "He's got the feather. Let him speak out to the end."
Eisenhart whirled around to mark who had spoken to him so. He saw, and
made no reply. Nor was Tian surprised.
"Thankee, Pere," Tian said evenly. "I've almost come to the end. I keep
thinking of trees. You can strip the leaves of a strong tree and it will
live. Cut its bark with many names and it will grow its skin over them
again. You can even take from the heartwood and it will live. But if you
take of the heartwood again and again and again, there will come a time
when even the strongest tree must die. I've seen it happen on my farm,
and it's an ugly thing. They die from the inside out. You can see it in
the leaves as they turn yellow from the trunk to the tips of the
branches. And that's what the Wolves are doing to this little village of
ours. What they're doing to our Calla."
"Hear him!" cried Freddy Rosario from the next farm over. "Hear him very
well!" Freddy had twins of his own, although they were still on the tit
and so probably safe.
Tian went on, "You say that if we stand and fight, they'll kill us all
and burn the Calla from east-border to west."
"Yes," Overholser said. "So I do say. Nor am I the only one." From all
around him came rumbles of agreement.
"Yet each time we simply stand by with our heads lowered and our hands
open while the Wolves take what's dearer to us than any crop or house or
barn, they scoop a little more of the heart's wood from the tree that is
this village!" Tian spoke strongly, now standing still with the feather
raised high in one hand. "If we don't stand and fight soon, we'll be
dead anyway! This is what I say, Tian Jaffords, son of Luke! If we don't
stand and fight soon, we'll be roont ourselves!"
Loud cries of Hear him! Exuberant stomping of shor'boots. Even some
applause.
George Telford, another rancher, whispered briefly to Eisenhart and
Overholser. They listened, then nodded. Telford rose. He was
silver-haired, tanned, and handsome in the weatherbeaten way women
seemed to like.
"Had your say, son?" he asked kindly, as one might ask a child if he had
played enough for one afternoon and was ready for his nap.
"Yar, reckon," Tian said. He suddenly felt dispirited. Telford wasn't a
rancher on a scale with Vaughn Eisenhart, but he had a silver tongue.
Tian had an idea he was going to lose this, after all.
"May I have the feather, then?"
Tian thought of holding onto it, but what good would it do? He'd said
his best. Had tried. Perhaps he and Zalia should pack up the kids and go
out west themselves, back toward the Mids. Moon to moon before the
Wolves came, according to Andy. A person could get a hell of a head
start on trouble in thirty days.
He passed the feather.
"We all appreciate young sai Jaffords's passion, and certainly no one
doubts his courage," George Telford said. He spoke with the feather held
against the left side of his chest, over his heart. His eyes roved the
audience, seeming to make eye contact -- friendly eye contact -- with
each man. "But we have to think of the kiddies who'd be left as well as
those who'd be taken, don't we? In fact, we have to protect all the
kiddies, whether they be twins, triplets, or singletons like sai
Jaffords's Aaron."
Telford turned to Tian now.
"What will you tell your children as the Wolves shoot their mother and
mayhap set their Gran-pere on fire with one of their light-sticks? What
can you say to make the sound of those shrieks all right? To sweeten the
smell of burning skin and burning crops? That it's souls we're a-saving?
Or the heart's wood of some make-believe tree?"
He paused, giving Tian a chance to reply, but Tian had no reply to make.
He'd almost had them...but he'd left Telford out of his reckoning.
Smooth-voiced sonofabitch Telford, who was also far past the age when he
needed to be concerned about the Wolves calling into his dooryard on
their great gray horses.
Telford nodded, as if Tian's silence was no more than he expected, and
turned back to the benches. "When the Wolves come," he said, "they'll
come with fire-hurling weapons -- the light-sticks, ye ken -- and guns,
and flying metal things. I misremember the name of those -- "
"The buzz-balls," someone called.
"The sneetches," called someone else.
"Stealthies!" called a third.
Telford was nodding and smiling gently. A teacher with good pupils.
"Whatever they are, they fly through the air, seeking their targets, and
when they lock on, they put forth whirling blades as sharp as razors.
They can strip a man from top to toe in five seconds, leaving nothing
around him but a circle of blood and hair. Do not doubt me, for I have
seen it happen."
"Hear him, hear him well!" the men on the benches shouted. Their eyes
had grown huge and frightened.
"The Wolves themselves are terrible fearsome," Telford went on, moving
smoothly from one campfire story to the next. "They look sommat like
men, and yet they are not men but something bigger and far more awful.
And those they serve in far Thunderclap are more terrible by far.
Vampires, I've heard. Men with the heads of birds and animals, mayhap.
Broken-helm undead ronin. Warriors of the Scarlet Eye."
The men muttered. Even Tian felt a cold scamper of rats' paws up his
back at the mention of the Eye.
"The Wolves I've seen; the rest I've been told," Telford went on. "And
while I don't believe it all, I believe much. But never mind Thunderclap
and what may den there. Let's stick to the Wolves. The Wolves are our
problem, and problem enough. Especially when they come armed to the
teeth!" He shook his head, smiling grimly. "What would we do? Perhaps we
could knock them from their greathorses with hoes, sai Jaffords? D'ee
think?"
Derisive laughter greeted this.
"We have no weapons that can stand against them," Telford said. He was
now dry and businesslike, a man stating the bottom line. "Even if we had
such, we're farmers and ranchers and stockmen, not fighters. We -- "
"Stop that yellow talk, Telford. You ought to be ashamed of yourself."
Shocked gasps greeted this chilly pronouncement. There were cracking
backs and creaking necks as men turned to see who had spoken. Slowly,
then, as if to give them exactly what they wanted, the white-haired
latecomer in the long black coat and turned-around collar rose slowly
from the bench at the very back of the room. The scar on his forehead --
it was in the shape of a cross -- was bright in the light of the
kerosene lamps.
It was the Old Fella.
Telford recovered himself with relative speed, but when he spoke, Tian
thought he still looked shocked. "Beg pardon, Pere Callahan, but I have
the feather -- "
"To hell with your heathen feather and to hell with your cowardly
counsel," Pere Callahan said. He walked down the center aisle, stepping
with the grim gait of arthritis. He wasn't as old as the Manni elder,
nor nearly so old as Tian's Gran-pere (who claimed to be the oldest
person not only here but in Calla Lockwood to the south), and yet he
seemed somehow older than both. Older than the ages. Some of this no
doubt had to do with the haunted eyes that looked out at the world from
below the scar on his forehead (Zalia claimed it had been
self-inflicted). More had to do with the sound of him. Although he had
been here enough years to build his strange Man Jesus church and convert
half the Calla to his way of spiritual thinking, not even a stranger
would have been fooled into believing Pere Callahan was from here. His
alienness was in his flat and nasal speech and in the often obscure
slang he used ("street-jive," he called it). He had undoubtedly come
from one of those other worlds the Manni were always babbling about,
although he never spoke of it and Calla Bryn Sturgis was now his home.
He had the sort of dry and unquestionable authority that made it
difficult to dispute his right to speak, with or without the feather.
Younger than Tian's Gran-pere he might be, but Pere Callahan was still
the Old Fella.
FOUR
Now he surveyed the men of Calla Bryn Sturgis, not even glancing at
George Telford. The feather sagged in Telford's hand. He sat down on the
first bench, still holding it.
Callahan began with one of his slang-terms, but they were farmers and no
one needed to ask for an explanation.
"This is chickenshit."
He surveyed them longer. Most would not return his look. After a moment,
even Eisenhart and Adams dropped their eyes. Overholser kept his head
up, but under the Old Fella's hard gaze, the rancher looked petulant
rather than defiant.
"Chickenshit," the man in the black coat and turned-around collar
repeated, enunciating each syllable. A small gold cross gleamed below
the notch in the backwards collar. On his forehead, that other cross --
the one Zalia believed he'd carved in his flesh with his own thumbnail
in partial penance for some awful sin -- glared under the lamps like a
tattoo.
"This young man isn't one of mine, but he's right, and I think you all
know it. You know it in your hearts. Even you, Mr. Overholser. And you,
George Telford."
"Know no such thing," Telford said, but his voice was weak and stripped
of its former persuasive charm.
"All your lies will cross your eyes, that's what my mother would have
told you." Callahan offered Telford a thin smile Tian wouldn't have
wanted pointed in his direction. And then Callahan did turn to him. "I
never heard it put better than you put it tonight, boy. Thankee-sai."
Tian raised a feeble hand and managed an even more feeble smile. He felt
like a character in a silly festival play, saved at the last moment by
some improbable supernatural intervention.
"I know a bit about cowardice, may it do ya," Callahan said, turning to
the men on the benches. He raised his right hand, misshapen and twisted
by some old burn, looked at it fixedly, then dropped it to his side
again. "I have personal experience, you might say. I know how one
cowardly decision leads to another...and another...and another...until
it's too late to turn around, too late to change. Mr. Telford, I assure
you the tree of which young Mr. Jaffords spoke is not make-believe. The
Calla is in dire danger. Your souls are in danger."
"Hail Mary, full of grace," said someone on the left side of the room,
"the Lord is with thee. Blessed is the fruit of thy womb, J -- "
"Bag it," Callahan snapped. "Save it for Sunday." His eyes, blue sparks
in their deep hollows, studied them. "For this night, never mind God and
Mary and the Man Jesus. Never mind the light-sticks and the buzz-bugs of
the Wolves, either. You must fight. You're the men of the Calla, are you
not? Then act like men. Stop behaving like dogs crawling on their
bellies to lick the boots of a cruel master."
Overholser went dark red at that, and began to stand. Diego Adams
grabbed his arm and spoke in his ear. For a moment Overholser remained
as he was, frozen in a kind of crouch, and then he sat back down. Adams
stood up.
"Sounds good, padrone," Adams said in his heavy accent. "Sounds brave.
Yet there are still a few questions, mayhap. Haycox asked one of em. How
can ranchers and farmers stand against armed killers?"
"By hiring armed killers of our own," Callahan replied.
There was a moment of utter, amazed silence. It was almost as if the Old
Fella had lapsed into another language. At last Diego Adams said --
cautiously, "I don't understand."
"Of course you don't," the Old Fella said. "So listen and gain wisdom.
Rancher Adams and all of you, listen and gain wisdom. Not six days' ride
nor'west of us, and bound southeast along the Path of the Beam, come
three gunslingers and one 'prentice." He smiled at their amazement. Then
he turned to Slightman. "The 'prentice isn't much older than your boy
Ben, but he's already as quick as a snake and as deadly as a scorpion.
The others are quicker and deadlier by far. I have it from Andy, who's
seen them. You want hard calibers? They're at hand. I set my watch and
warrant on it."
This time Overholser made it all the way to his feet. His face burned as
if with a fever. His great pod of a belly trembled. "What children's
goodnight story is this?" he asked. "If there ever were such men, they
passed out of existence with Gilead. And Gilead has been dust in the
wind for a thousand years."
There were no mutterings of support or dispute. No mutterings of any
kind. The crowd was still frozen, caught in the reverberation of that
one mythic word: gunslingers.
"You're wrong," Callahan said, "but we don't need to fight over it. We
can go and see for ourselves. A small party will do, I think. Jaffords
here...myself...and what about you, Overholser? Want to come?"
"There ain't no gunslingers!" Overholser roared.
Behind him, Jorge Estrada stood up. "Pere Callahan, God's grace on you
-- "
" -- and you, Jorge."
" -- but even if there were gunslingers, how could three stand against
forty or sixty? And not forty or sixty normal men, but forty or sixty
Wolves?"
"Hear him, he speaks sense!" Eben Took, the storekeeper, called out.
"And why would they fight for us?" Estrada continued. "We make it from
year to year, but not much more. What could we offer them, beyond a few
hot meals? And what man agrees to die for his dinner?"
"Hear him, hear him!" Telford, Overholser, and Eisenhart cried in
unison. Others stamped rhythmically up and down on the boards.
The Old Fella waited until the stomping had quit, and then said: "I have
books in the rectory. Half a dozen."
Although most of them knew this, the thought of books -- all that paper
-- still provoked a general sigh of wonder.
"According to one of them, gunslingers were forbidden to take reward.
Supposedly because they descend from the line of Arthur Eld."
"The Eld! The Eld!" the Manni whispered, and several raised fists into
the air with the first and fourth fingers pointed. Hook em horns, the
Old Fella thought. Go, Texas. He managed to stifle a laugh, but not the
smile that rose on his lips.
"Are ye speaking of hardcases who wander the land, doing good deeds?"
Telford asked in a gently mocking voice. "Surely you're too old for such
tales, Pere."
"Not hardcases," Callahan said patiently, "gunslingers."
"How can three men stand against the Wolves, Pere?" Tian heard himself
ask.
According to Andy, one of the gunslingers was actually a woman, but
Callahan saw no need to muddy the waters further (although an impish
part of him wanted to, just the same). "That's a question for their
dinh, Tian. We'll ask him. And they wouldn't just be fighting for their
suppers, you know. Not at all."
"What else, then?" Bucky Javier asked.
Callahan thought they would want the thing that lay beneath the
floorboards of his church. And that was good, because that thing had
awakened. The Old Fella, who had once run from a town called Jerusalem's
Lot in another world, wanted to be rid of it. If he wasn't rid of it
soon, it would kill him.
Ka had come to Calla Bryn Sturgis. Ka like a wind.
"In time, Mr. Javier," Callahan said. "All in good time, sai."
Meantime, a whisper had begun in the Gathering Hall. It slipped along
the benches from mouth to mouth, a breeze of hope and fear.
Gunslingers.
Gunslingers to the west, come out of Mid-World.
And it was true, God help them. Arthur Eld's last deadly children,
moving toward Calla Bryn Sturgis along the Path of the Beam. Ka like a
wind.
"Time to be men," Pere Callahan told them. Beneath the scar on his
forehead, his eyes burned like lamps. Yet his tone was not without
compassion. "Time to stand up, gentlemen. Time to stand and be true."