Suddenly he understood something.
“You could play all along, couldn’t you, Duds? You used to peg all crazy just because it made us laugh.” The idea brought fresh tears to his eyes. All those years they’d thought they were playing with Duddits, he had been playing with them. And on that day behind Tracker Brothers, who had found whom? Who had saved whom?
“Twenty-one,” he said. “Thirty-one for two.” From the dreamcatcher. And once again the unseen hand lifted the peg and played it two holes farther on. “He’s blocked to me, Jonesy.” “I know.” Jonesy played a three. Duddits called thirteen, and Jonesy played it out of Duddits’s hand. “But you’re not. You can talk to him.”
Jonesy played his own deuce and pegged two. Duddits played, pegged one for last card, and Jonesy thought:
They pegged their hands, and Duddits was far ahead even though it had been Jonesy’s crib. Jonesy swept the cards together and began to shuffle them.
“What does he want, Jonesy? What does he want besides water?”
“Bacon,” he said. “He does like bacon.”
He began to shuffle the cards… then froze as Duddits filled his mind. The real Duddits, young and strong and ready to fight.
Behind them, in the back seat, Duddits groaned loudly. Henry turned and saw fresh blood, red as byrus, running from his nostrils. His face was twisted in a terrible cramp of concentration. Beneath their closed lids, his eyeballs rolled rapidly back and forth.
“What’s the matter with him?” Owen asked. “I don’t know.”
Duddits began to cough: deep and racking bronchial sounds. Blood flew from between his lips in a fine spray.
“Wake him up, Henry! For Christ’s sake, wake him up!”
Henry gave Owen Underhill a frightened look. They were approaching Kennebunkport now, no more than twenty miles from the New Hampshire border, a hundred and ten from the Quabbin Reservoir. Jonesy had a picture of the Quabbin on the wall of his office; Henry had seen it. And a cottage nearby, in Ware.
Duddits cried out: a single word repeated three times between bursts of coughing. The sprays of blood weren’t heavy, not yet, the stuff was coming from his mouth and throat, but if his lungs began to rupture-
“Wake him up! He says he’s aching! Can’t you hear him-”
“He’s not saying aykin.”
“What, then? What?”
“He’s saying
The entity which now thought of itself as Mr Gray-who thought of
His problem could be best summed up with how he felt about Jonesy… and of course that he felt at all was bad enough. He could think
These things were facts-truth-but they had no savor. What had savor was the idea of going to the door behind which his reluctant host was imprisoned and yelling: “
As for the followers, he wanted to drop Jonesy’s pants and show them Jonesy’s buttocks. This was as senseless as
He was, Mr Gray realized, infected with this world’s byrus. It began with emotion, progressed to sensory awareness (the taste of food, the undeniable savage pleasure of making the State Trooper beat his head in against the tiled bathroom wall-the hollow
Before Mr Gray had shut him up, Jonesy had suggested that he give over his mission and simply enjoy being human. Now he discovered that desire in himself as his previously harmonious mind,
There was bacon. There was “sex with Carla”, which Jonesy’s mind identified as a superlatively enjoyable act, involving both sensory and emotional input. There was fast driving and bumper pool in O'Leary’s Bar near Fenway Park and beer and live bands that played loud and Patty Loveless singing “Blame it on your lyin cheatin cold deadbeatin two-timin double-dealin mean mistreatin lovin heart” (whatever
His problem was that if he didn’t finish this business quickly, he might never finish it at all. He was no longer byrum but Mr Gray. How long before he left Mr Gray behind and became Jonesy?
“
Nevertheless, he quieted it. When the dog went into the water supply, the byrum should still be inside. It would need time to adapt. The dog would drown, but the byrum would live yet awhile, feeding on the dog’s dead body, until it was time. But first he had to get there.
It wouldn’t be long now.
As he drove west on I-90, past little towns
Mr Gray was investigating boxes and boxes of fascinating weaponry-grapeshot, chainshot, minie balls, cannonballs, bayonets, landmines-when a voice intruded.
He pushed the thought aside, although Jonesy’s stomach gurgled. He’d
His stomach gurgled again. Saliva squirted into Jonesy’s mouth and he remembered Dysart’s, the brown and crispy strips on the blue plate, you picked it up with your fingers, the texture was hard, the texture of dead and tasty flesh-
A horn honked irritably, making Mr Gray jump, making Lad whine. He had wandered into the wrong lane, what Jonesy’s mind identified as “the passing lane”, and he pulled over to let one of the big trucks, going faster than the Subaru could go, sweep by. It splashed the small car’s windshield with muddy water, momentarily blinding him, and Mr Gray thought
That one was like a gunshot in his head. He fought it but the strength of it was something entirely new. Could that be Jonesy? Surely not, Jonesy wasn’t that strong. But suddenly he seemed an stomach, and the stomach was hollow, hurting, craving. Surely he could stop long enough to assuage it. If he didn’t he was apt to drive right off the
Mr Gray let out an inarticulate cry, unaware that he’d begun to drool helplessly.
“I hear him,” Henry said suddenly. He put his fists to his temples, as if to contain a headache. “Christ, it hurts. He’s so