turned to Roland. 'Do you want to see the bookstore?'
'Is there anything to see?'
Jake's face clouded. 'Actually, not much. It's closed.'
'I would see the vacant lot, if there's time before we're sent back,' Roland said. 'And the rose.'
'Do they hurt?' Eddie asked Susannah. He was looking at her closely indeed.
'They feel fine,' she said, laughing. '
'You look different.'
'I bet!' she said, and executed a littie barefoot jig. It had been moons and moons since she had last danced, but the exultancy she so clearly felt made up for any lack of grace. A woman wearing a business suit and swinging a briefcase bore down on the ragged littie party of wanderers, then abruptly veered off, actually taking a few steps into the street to get around them. 'You bet I do, I got
'Just like the song says,' Eddie told her.
'Huh?'
'Never mind,' he said, and slipped an arm around her waist. But again Roland saw him give her that searching, questioning look.
And that was what Eddie did. He kissed the corner of her mouth, then turned to Roland. 'So you want to see the famous vacant lot and the even more famous rose, huh? Well, so do I. Lead on, Jake.'
SEVEN
Jake led them down Second Avenue, pausing only long enough so they could all take a quick peek into The Manhattan Restaurant of the Mind. No one was wasting light in this shop, however, and there really wasn't much to see. Roland was hoping for a look at the menu sign, but it was gone.
Reading his mind in the matter-of-fact way of people who share khef, Jake said, 'He probably changes it every day.'
'Maybe,' Roland said. He looked in through the window a moment longer, saw nothing but darkened shelves, a few tables, and the counter Jake had mentioned-the one where the old fellows sat drinking coffee and playing this world's version of Casdes. Nothing to see, but something to feel, even through the glass: despair and loss. If it had been a smell, Roland thought, it would have been sour and a bit stale. The smell of failure. Maybe of good dreams that never grew. Which made it the perfect lever for someone like Enrico '
'Seen enough?' Eddie asked.
'Yes. Let's go.'
EIGHT
For Roland, the eight-block journey from Second and Fifty-fourth to Second and Forty-sixth was like visiting a country in which he had until that moment only half-believed.
'It's the Rolling Stones,' Jake said, 'but not the one that was playing on the day I saw the rose. That one was 'Paint It Black.' '
'Don't you recognize this one?' Eddie asked.
'Yeah, but I can't remember the title.'
'Oh, but you should,' Eddie said. 'It's 'Nineteenth Nervous Breakdown.''
Susannah stopped, looked around. 'Jake?'
Jake nodded. 'He's right.'
Eddie, meanwhile, had fished a piece of newspaper from the security-gated doorway next to Tower of Power Records. A section of
'Hon, didn't your ma ever teach you that gutter-trolling is generally not practiced by the better class of people?' Susannah asked.
Eddie ignored her. 'Look at this,' he said. 'All of you.'
Roland bent close, half-expecting to see news of another great plague, but there was nothing so shattering. At least not as far as he could tell.
'Read me what it says,' he asked Jake. 'The letters swim in and out of my mind. I think it's because we're todash-caught in between-'
'RHODESIAN FORCES TIGHTEN HOLD ON MOZAMBIQUE VILLAGES,' Jake read, ' TWO CARTER AIDES PREDICT A SAVING OF BILLIONS IN WELFARE PLAN. And down here, CHINESE DISCLOSE THAT 1976 QUAKE WAS DEADLIEST IN FOUR CENTURIES.
Also-'
'Who's Carter?' Susannah asked. 'Is he the President before…
'Never mind Carter,' Eddie said. 'Look at the
Roland tried, but it kept swimming in and out. It would almost settle into Great Letters that he could read, and then fall back into gibberish. 'What is it, for your father's sake?'
'June second,' Jake said. He looked at Eddie. 'But if time's the same here and over on the other side, shouldn't it be June
'But it's
Roland considered. 'If we come here again, it's going to be later each time, isn't it?'
Eddie nodded.
Roland went on, talking to himself as much as to the others. 'Every minute we spend on the other side-the Calla side-a minute and
'No, not two,' Eddie said. 'I'm sure it's not going double-time.' But his uneasy glance back down at the date on the newspaper suggested he wasn't sure at all.
'Even if you're right,' Roland said, 'all we can do now is go forward.'
'Toward the fifteenth of July,' Susannah said. 'When Balazar and his gentlemen stop playing nice.'
'Maybe we ought to just let these Calla-folk do their own thing,' Eddie said. 'I hate to say that, Roland, but maybe we should.'
'We can't do that, Eddie.'
'Why not?'
'Because Callahan's got Black Thirteen,' Susannah said. 'Our help is his price for turning it over. And we need it.'
Roland shook his head. 'He'll turn it over in any case-I thought I was clear about that. He's terrified of it.'
'Yeah,' Eddie said. 'I got that feeling, too.'
'We have to help them because it's the Way of Eld,' Roland told Susannah. 'And because the way of ka is always the way of duty.'
He thought he saw a glitter far down in her eyes, as though he'd said something funny. He supposed he had, but Susannah wasn't the one he had amused. It had been either Detta or Mia who found those ideas funny. The question was which one. Or had it been both?
'I hate how it feels here,' Susannah said. 'That
'It'll be better at the vacant lot,' Jake said. He started walking, and the others followed. 'The rose makes everything better. You'll see.'
NINE
When Jake crossed Fiftieth, he began to hurry. On the downtown side of Forty-ninth, he began to jog. At the corner of Second and Forty-eighth, he began to run. He couldn't help it. He got a little walk help at Forty-eighth, but the sign on the post began to flash red as soon as he reached the far curb.
'Jake, wait up!' Eddie called from behind him, but Jake didn't. Perhaps couldn't. Certainly Eddie felt the pull of the thing; so did Roland and Susannah. There was a hum rising in the air, faint and sweet. It was everything the ugly black feeling around them was not.