name on that mirror knew better. And so do we. I'll tell you more in the car.”
“Car?” Timothy said.
“My God, I hope you have a passport!”
“Uh… yes.”
“I'm coming by with a car to take you to the airport. I want you to go to California, Dr. Flyte.”
“But—”
“Tonight. There's an available seat on a flight from Heathrow. I've reserved it in your name.”
“But I can't afford—”
“Your publisher is paying all expenses. Don't worry. You
“But would it be right for me to rush in there now?”
“What do you mean?” Sandler asked.
“Would it be proper?” Timothy asked worriedly, “Wouldn't it appear as if I were attempting to cash in on a terrible tragedy?”
“Listen, Dr. Flyte, there are going to be a hundred hustlers in Snowfield, all with book contracts in their back pockets. They'll rip off your material. If you don't write the
“But hundreds are dead,” Timothy said. He felt ill. “Hundreds. The pain, the tragedy…”
Sandier was clearly impatient with the professor's hesitancy. “Well… okay, okay. Maybe you're right. Maybe I haven't really stopped to think about the horror of it. But don't you see — that's why you
“Well…”
Seizing on Timothy’s hesitation, Sandler said, “Good. Pack a suitcase fast. I'll be there in half an hour.”
Sandler hung up, and Timothy sat for a moment, holding the receiver, listening to the dead line. Stunned.
In the taxi's headlights, the rain was silvery. It slanted on the wind, like thousands of thin streamers of glittering Christmas tinsel. On the pavement, it puddled in quicksilver pools.
The cabdriver was reckless. The car careened along the slick streets. With one hand, Timothy held tightly to the safety bar on the door. Evidently Burt Sandler had promised a very large tip as a reward for speed.
Sitting next to the professor, Sandier said, “There'll be a layover in New York, but not too long. One of our people will meet you and shepherd you through. We won't alert the media in New York. We'll save the press conference for San Francisco. So be prepared to face an army of eager reporters when you get off the plane there.”
“Couldn't I just go quietly to Santa Mira and present myself to the authorities there?” Timothy asked unhappily.
“No, no, no!” Sandier said, clearly horrified by the very thought, “We've got to have a press conference. You're the only one with the
“I haven't even begun to write the book yet.”
“God, I know. And by the time we publish, the demand will be phenomenal!”
The cab turned a corner. Tires squealed. Timothy was thrown against the door.
“A publicist will meet you at the plane in San Francisco. He'll guide you through the press conference,” Sandler said. “One way or another he'll get you to Santa Mira. It's a fairly long drive, so maybe it can be done by helicopter.”
“Helicopter?” Timothy said, astonished.
The taxi sped through a deep puddle, casting up plumes of silvery water.
The airport was within sight.
Burt Sandler had been talking nonstop since Timothy had gotten into the cab. Now he said, “One more thing. At your press conference, tell them the stories you told me this morning. About the disappearing Mayans. And three thousand Chinese infantrymen who vanished. And be sum to make any references you possibly can to mass disappearances that took place in the U S. — even before there was a United States, even in previous geological eras. That'll appeal to the American press. Local ties. That always helps. Didn't the Just British colony in America vanish without a trace?”
“Yes. The Roanoke Island colony.”
“Be sure to mention it.”
“But I can't say conclusively that the disappearance of the Roanoke colony is connected with the ancient enemy.”
“Is there any chance whatsoever that it might've been?”
Fascinated, as always, by this subject, Timothy was able, for the first time, to wrench his mind away from the suicidal behavior of the cabdriver. “When a British expedition, funded by Sir Walter Raleigh, returned to the Roanoke colony in March of 1590, they found everyone gone. One hundred and twenty people had vanished without a trace. Countless theories have been advanced regarding their fate. For example, the most popular theory holds that the people at Roanoke Island fell victim to the Croatonn Indians, who lived nearby. The only message left by the colonists, slashed into the bark of a tree. But the Croatoans professed to know nothing about the disappearance. And they were peaceful Indians. Not the least bit warlike. Indeed, they had initially helped the colonists settle in. Further, there were no signs of violence at the settlement. No bodies were ever found. No bones. No graves. So you see, even the most widely accepted theory raises a greater number of questions than it answers.”
The taxi swept around another curve, braked abruptly to avoid colliding with a truck.
But now Timothy was only passingly aware of the driver's daredevil conduct. He continued:
“It occurred to me that the word the colonists had carved into that tree-
“I gather you've researched Croatoan religious beliefs,” Burt Sandler said.
“Yes,” Timothy said, “Not an easy subject, for the tribe has been extinct itself for many, many years. What I've found is that the Croatoans were spiritualists. They believed that the spirit endured and walked the earth even after the death of the body, and they believed there were 'greater spirits' that manifested themselves in the elements — wind, earth, fire, water, and so forth. Most important of all — as far as we're concerned — they also believed in an
“My God,” Sandler said. “That's not a bad description of the ancient enemy.”
“Sometimes there are truths hidden in superstitions. The Croatoans believed that both the wildlife and the colonists had been taken away by He Who Can Be Anything Yet is Nothing. So… while I cannot say conclusively that the ancient enemy had something to do with the disappearance of the Roanoke Islanders, it seems to me sufficient reason to consider the possibility.”