'If Mr. Tower did as you requested, it'll be written at the end of the board fence, Forty-sixth Street side. That was brilliant, by the way.'
'Get the number… and get the date, too,' Roland said. 'We have to keep track of the time over there if we can, Eddie's right about that. Get it and come back. Then, after the meeting in the Pavilion, we'll need you to go through the door again.'
'This time to wherever Tower and Deepneau are in New England,' Callahan guessed.
'Yes,' Roland said.
'If you find them, you'll want to talk mostly to Mr. Deepneau,' Jake said. He flushed when they all turned to him, but kept his eyes trained on Callahan's. 'Mr. Tower might be stubborn-'
'That's the understatement of the century,' Eddie said. 'By the time you get there, he'll probably have found twelve used bookstores and God knows how many first editions of
'-but Mr. Deepneau will listen,' Jake went on.
'Issen, Ake,' Oy said, and rolled over onto his back. 'Issen kiyet!'
Scratching Oy's belly, Jake said: 'If anyone can convince Mr. Tower to do something, it'll be Mr. Deepneau.'
'Okay,' Callahan replied, nodding. 'I hear you well.'
The singing children were closer now. Susannah turned but couldn't see them yet; she assumed they were coming up River Street. If so, they'd be in view once they cleared the livery and turned down the high street at Took's General Store. Some of the
Roland, meanwhile, was studying Eddie with a small smile. 'Once when I used the word
Eddie grinned. '
Roland nodded. 'It's a good saying. All the same, I'm going to make an assumption now-pound it like a nail-then hang all our hopes of coming out of this alive on it. I don't like it but see no choice. The assumption is that only Ben Slightman and Andy are working against us. That if we take care of them when the time comes, we can move in secrecy.'
'Don't kill him,' Jake said in a voice almost too low to hear. He had drawn Oy close and was petting the top of his head and his long neck with a kind of compulsive, darting speed. Oy bore this patiently.
'Cry pardon, Jake,' Susannah said, leaning forward and tipping a hand behind one ear. 'I didn't-'
'Don't
Eddie reached out and cupped the nape of the boy's neck gently. 'Jake, Benny Slightman's Da' is willing to send a hundred kids off into Thunderclap with the Wolves, just to spare his own. And you know how they'd come back.'
'Yeah, but in his eyes he doesn't have any choice because-'
'His choice could have been to stand with us,' Roland said. His voice was dull and dreadful. Almost dead.
'But-'
But what? Jake didn't know. He had been over this and over this and he still didn't know. Sudden tears spilled from his eyes and ran down his cheeks. Callahan reached out to touch him. Jake pushed his hand away.
Roland sighed. 'We'll do what we can to spare him. That much I promise you. I don't know if it will be a mercy or not- the Slightmans are going to be through in this town, if there's a town left after the end of next week-but perhaps they'll go north or south along the Crescent and start some sort of new life. And Jake, listen: there's no need for Ben Slightman to ever know you overheard Andy and his father last night.'
Jake was looking at him with an expression that didn't quite dare to be hope. He didn't care a hill of beans about Slightman the Elder, but he didn't want Benny to know it was him. He supposed that made him a coward, but he didn't want Benny to know. 'Really? For sure?'
'Nothing about this is for sure, but-'
Before he could finish, the singing children swept around the corner. Leading them, silver limbs and golden body gleaming mellowly in the day's subdued light, was Andy the Messenger Robot. He was walking backward. In one hand was a bah-bolt wrapped in banners of bright silk. To Susannah he looked like a parade-marshal on the Fourth of July. He waved his baton extravagantly from side to side, leading the children in their song while a reedy bagpipe accompaniment issued from the speakers in his chest and head.
'Holy shit,' Eddie said. 'It's the Pied Piper of Hamelin.'
Andy sang this part alone, then pointed his baton at the crowd of children. They joined in boisterously.
Gleeful laughter. There weren't as many kids as Susannah would have thought, given the amount of noise they were putting out. Seeing Andy there at their head, after hearing Jake's story, chilled her heart. At the same time, she felt an angry pulse begin to beat in her throat and her left temple. That he should lead them down the street like this! Like the Pied Piper, Eddie was right-like the Pied Piper of Hamelin.
Now he pointed his makeshift baton at a pretty girl who looked thirteen or fourteen. Susannah thought she was one of the Anselm kids, from the smallhold just south of Tian Jaffords's place. She sang out the next verse bright and clear to that same heavily rhythmic beat, which was almost (but not quite) a skip-rope chant:
Then, as the others joined in again, Susannah realized that the group of children was bigger than she'd thought when they came around the corner, quite a bit bigger. Her ears had told her truer than her eyes, and there was a perfectly good reason for that.
'
The group looked smaller at first glance because so many of the faces were the same-the face of the Anselm girl, for instance, was nearly the face of the boy next to her. Her twin brother. Almost all the kids in Andy's group were twins. Susannah suddenly realized how eerie this was, like all the strange doublings they'd encountered caught in a bottle. Her stomach turned over. And she felt the first twinge of pain above her left eye. Her hand began to rise toward the tender spot.
Andy pointed his baton at a strutting, pudgy little boy who couldn't have been more than eight. He sang the words out in a high and childish treble that made the other kids laugh.
To which the chorus replied:
Andy saw Roland's ka-tet and waved his baton cheerily. So did the children… half of whom would come back drooling and roont if the parade- marshal had his way. They would grow to the size of giants, screaming with pain, and then die early.
'Wave back,' Roland said, and raised his hand. 'Wave back, all of you, for the sake of your fathers.'
Eddie flashed Andy a happy, toothy grin. 'How you doing, you cheapshit Radio Shack dickweed?' he asked. The voice coming through his grin was low and savage. He gave Andy a double thumbs-up. 'How you doing, you robot psycho? Say fine? Say thankya! Say bite my bag!'
Jake burst out laughing at that. They all continued waving and smiling. The children waved and smiled back. Andy also waved. He led his merry band down the high street, chanting
'They love him,' Callahan said. There was a strange, sick expression of disgust on his face. 'Generations of children have loved Andy.'
'That,' Roland remarked, 'is about to change.'
FOUR
'Further questions?' Roland asked when Andy and the children were gone. 'Ask now if you will. It could be your last chance.'