so
Overholser and Callahan mounted the platform. Eddie was alarmed to see that none of the others of the party which had ridden out to meet them did. Roland walked up the three broad wooden steps without hesitation, however. Eddie followed, conscious that his knees were a little weak.
'You all right?' Susannah murmured in his ear.
'So far.'
To the left of the platform was a round stage with seven men on it, all dressed in white shirts, blue jeans, and sashes. Eddie recognized the instruments they were holding, and although the mandolin and banjo made him think their music would probably be of the shitkicking variety, the sight of them was still reassuring. They didn't hire bands to play at human sacrifices, did they? Maybe just a drummer or two, to wind up the spectators.
Eddie turned to face the crowd with Susannah on his back. He was dismayed to see that the aisle that had begun where the high street ended was indeed gone now. Faces tilted up to look at him. Women and men, old and young. No expression on those faces, and no children among them. These were faces that spent most of their time out in the sun and had the cracks to prove it. That sense of foreboding would not leave him.
Overholser stopped beside a plain wooden table. On it was a large billowy feather. The farmer took it and held it up. The crowd, quiet to begin with, now fell into a silence so disquietingly deep that Eddie could hear the rattling rales in some old party's chest as he or she breathed.
'Put me down, Eddie,' Susannah said quietly. He didn't like to, but he did.
'I'm Wayne Overholser of Seven-Mile Farm,' Overholser said, stepping to the edge of the stage with the feather held before him. 'Hear me now, I beg.'
'We say thankee-sai,' they murmured.
Overholser turned and held one hand out to Roland and his tet, standing there in their travel-stained clothes (Susannah didn't stand, exactly, but rested between Eddie and Jake on her haunches and one propped hand). Eddie thought he had never felt himself studied more eagerly.
'We men of the Calla heard Tian Jaffords, George Telford, Diego Adams, and all others who would speak at the Gathering Hall,' Overholser said. 'There I did speak myself. 'They'll come and take the children,' I said, meaning the Wolves, a'course, 'then they'll leave us alone again for a generation or more. So 'tis, so it's been, I say leave it alone.' I think now those words were mayhap a little hasty.'
A murmur from the crowd, soft as a breeze.
'At this same meeting we heard Pere Callahan say there were gunslingers north of us.'
Another murmur. This one was a little louder.
'It was taken among us that a party should go and see. These are the folk we found, do ya. They claim to be… what Pere Callahan said they were.' Overholser now looked uncomfortable. Almost as if he were suppressing a fart. Eddie had seen this expression before, mostly on TV, when politicians faced with some fact they couldn't squirm around were forced to backtrack. 'They claim to be of the gone world. Which is to say…'
'… which is to say of Eld's line.'
'Gods be praised!' some woman shrieked. 'Gods've sent em to save our babbies, so they have!'
There were shushing sounds. Overholser waited for quiet with a pained look on his face, then went on. 'They can speak for themselves-and must-but I've seen enough to believe they may be able to help us with our problem. They carry good guns-you see em-and they can use em. Set my watch and warrant on it, and say thankya.'
This time the murmur from the crowd was louder, and Eddie sensed goodwill in it. He relaxed a little.
'All right, then, let em stand before'ee one by one, that ye might hear their voices and see their faces very well. This is their dinh.' He lifted a hand to Roland.
The gunslinger stepped forward. The red sun set his left cheek on fire; the right was painted yellow with torchglow. He put out one leg. The thunk of the worn bootheel on the boards was very clear in the silence; Eddie for no reason thought of a fist knocking on a coffintop. He bowed deeply, open palms held out to them. 'Roland of Gilead, son of Steven,' he said. 'The Line of Eld.'
They sighed.
'May we be well-met.' He stepped back, and glanced at Eddie.
This part he could do. 'Eddie Dean of New York,' he said. 'Son of Wendell.'
He stepped back, and Susannah moved forward to the edge of the platform. Back straight, looking out at them calmly, she said, 'I am Susannah Dean, wife of Eddie, daughter of Dan, the Line of Eld, the ka-tet of Nineteen, may we be well-met and do ya fine.' She curtsied, holding out her pretend skirts.
At this there was both laughter and applause.
While she spoke her piece, Roland bent to whisper a brief something in Jake's ear. Jake nodded and then stepped forward confidently. He looked very young and very handsome in the day's end light.
He put out his foot and bowed over it. The poncho swung comically forward with Oy's weight. 'I am Jake Chambers, son of Elmer, the Line of Eld, the ka-tet of the Ninety and Nine.'
But Jake wasn't done. He lifted Oy from the pocket of Benny Slightman's poncho. The crowd murmured at the sight of him. Jake gave Roland a quick glance-
At first Eddie didn't think Jake's furry pal was going to do anything. The people of the Calla-the
Then Oy rose up on his rear legs, stuck one of them forward, and actually bowed over it. He wavered but kept his balance. His little black paws were held out with the palms up, like Roland's. There were gasps, laughter, applause. Jake looked thunderstruck.
'Oy!' said the bumbler. 'Eld! Thankee!' Each word clear. He held the bow a moment longer, then dropped onto all fours and scurried briskly back to Jake's side. The applause was thunderous. In one brilliant, simple stroke, Roland (for who else, Eddie thought, could have taught die bumbler to do that) had made these people into their friends and admirers. For tonight, at least.
So that was the first surprise: Oy bowing to the assembled Calla
This was Eddie's turn to be thunderstruck. Below them, the crowd applauded and stomped appreciatively on the ground. There were cries of
He had time to shoot Roland a single frantic, furious look:
'Cry your pardon if I'm a little slow getting started,' he said.
'We've come miles and wheels and more miles and wheels, and you're the first folks we've seen in many a-'
Many a what? Week, month, year, decade?
Eddie laughed. To himself he sounded like the world's biggest idiot, a fellow who couldn't be trusted to hold his own dick at watering-time, let alone a gun. 'In many a blue moon.'
They laughed at that, and
'We've come from afar,' he said, 'and have far yet to go. Our time here will be short, but we'll do what we can, hear me, I beg.'
'Say on, stranger!' someone called. 'You speak fair!'
A few cries of
'The healers in my barony have a saying,' Eddie told them. 'First, do no harm.' ' He wasn't sure if this was a lawyer-motto or a doctor-motto, but he'd heard it in quite a few movies and TV shows, and it sounded pretty good. 'We would do no harm here, do you ken, but no one ever pulled a bullet, or even a splinter from under a kid's fingernail, without spilling some blood.'
There were murmurs of agreement. Overholser, however, was poker-faced, and in the crowd Eddie saw looks of doubt. He felt a surprising flush of anger. He had no right to be angry at these people, who had done them absolutely no harm and had refused them absolutely nothing (at least so far), but he was, just the same.
'We've got another saying in the barony of New York,' he told them. ' 'There ain't no free lunch.' From what we know of your situation, it's serious. Standing up against these Wolves would be dangerous. But sometimes doing nothing just makes people feel sick and hungry.'
'Hear him, hear him!' the same someone at the back of the crowd called out. Eddie saw Andy the robot back there, and near him a large wagon full of men in voluminous cloaks of either black or dark blue. Eddie assumed that these were the Manni-folk.
'We'll look around,' Eddie said, 'and once we understand the problem, we'll see what can be done. If we think the answer's nothing, we'll tip our hats to you and move along.' Two or three rows back stood a man in a battered white cowboy hat. He had shaggy white eyebrows and a white mustache to match. Eddie thought he looked quite a bit like Pa Cartwright on that old TV show,
'If we can help, we'll help,' he said. His voice was utterly flat now. 'But we won't do it alone, folks. Hear me, I beg. Hear me very well. You better be ready to stand up for what you want. You better be ready to fight for the things you'd keep.'
With that he stuck out a foot in front of him-the moccasin he wore didn't produce the same fist-on-coffintop thud, but Eddie thought of it, all the