'
Roland nodded and smiled. 'But I and my friends have been far and we have much yet to do and see. Now while we bide, will you open to us if we open to you?'
Eddie felt a chill. He felt Jake's hand tighten on his own.
Before the thought was completed, they had roared their answer: '
'Do you see us for what we are, and accept what we do?'
'Gunslingers!' someone shouted. 'Gunslingers fair and true, say thankee! Say thankee in God's name!'
Roars of approval. A thunder of shouts and applause. Cries of
As they quieted, Eddie waited for him to ask the last question, the most important one: Do you seek aid and succor?
Roland didn't ask it. He said merely, 'We'd go our way for tonight, and put down our heads, for we're tired. But I'd give'ee one final song and a little step-toe before we leave, so I would, for I believe you know both.'
A jubilant roar of agreement met this. They knew it, all right.
'I know it myself, and love it,' said Roland of Gilead. 'I know it of old, and never expected to hear 'The Rice Song' again from any lips, least of all from my own. I am older now, so I am, and not so limber as I once was. Cry your pardon for the steps I get wrong-'
'Gunslinger, we say thankee!' a woman called. 'Such joy we feel, aye!'
'And do I not feel the same?' the gunslinger asked gently. 'Do I not give you joy from my joy, and water I carried with the strength of my arm and my heart?'
'
'Oh my God,' Jake sighed. 'He knows so
'Give you joy of the rice,' Roland said.
He stood for a moment longer in the orange glow, as if gathering his strength, and then he began to dance something that was caught between a jig and a tap routine. It was slow at first, very slow, heel and toe, heel and toe. Again and again his bootheels made that fist-on-coffintop sound, but now it had rhythm.
Susannah rolled up to them. Her eyes were huge, her smile amazed. She clasped her hands tightly between her breasts. 'Oh, Eddie!' she breathed. 'Did you know he could do this? Did you have any slightest idea?'
'No,' Eddie said. 'No idea.'
TEN
Faster moved the gunslinger's feet in their battered and broken old boots. Then faster still. The rhythm becoming clearer and clearer, and Jake suddenly realized he
Around them, people began to clap. Not on the beat, but on the off-beat. They were starting to sway. Those women wearing skirts held them out and swirled them. The expression Jake saw on all the faces, oldest to youngest, was the same: pure joy.
Sweat began to gleam on Roland's face. He lowered his crossed arms and started clapping. When he did, the
Eddie and Susannah had joined in. Benny had joined in. Jake abandoned thought and did the same.
ELEVEN
In the end, Eddie had no real idea what the words to 'The Rice Song' might have been. Not because of the dialect, not in Roland's case, but because they spilled out too fast to follow. Once, on TV, he'd heard a tobacco auctioneer in South Carolina. This was like that. There were hard rhymes, soft rhymes, off-rhymes, even rape-rhymes- words that didn't rhyme at all but were forced to for a moment within the borders of the song. It
What Eddie
Come-come-commala
At least three more verses followed these two. By then Eddie had lost track of the words, but he was pretty sure he got the idea: a young man and woman, planting both rice and children in the spring of the year. The song's tempo, suicidally speedy to begin with, sped up and up until the words were nothing but a jargon-spew and the crowd was clapping so rapidly their hands were a blur. And the heels of Roland's boots had disappeared entirely. Eddie would have said it was impossible for anyone to dance at that speed, especially after having consumed a heavy meal.
Then, on some signal neither Eddie, Susannah, nor Jake understood, Roland and the
Roland swayed, sweat pouring down his cheeks and brow… and tumbled off the stage into the crowd. Eddie's heart took a sharp upward lurch in his chest. Susannah cried out and began to roll her wheelchair forward. Jake stopped her before she could get far, grabbing one of the push-handles.
'I think it's part of the show!' he said.
'Yar, I'm pretty sure it is, too,' Benny Slightman said.
The crowd cheered and applauded. Roland was conveyed through them and above them by willing upraised arms. His own arms were raised to the stars. His chest heaved like a bellows. Eddie watched in a kind of hilarious disbelief as the gunslinger rolled toward them as if on the crest of a wave.
'Roland sings, Roland dances, and to top it all off,' he said, 'Roland stage-dives like Joey Ramone.'
'What are you talking about, sugar?' Susannah asked.