“Okay.”
Jack wanted to say that the three of them had always done the circus together, but bit it back.
She caught him looking at her.
“What?”
“Nothing,” he said. “We?ll catch up to you later.”
“Okay. You two have fun.”
Jeez, it was like he?d just turned into a little brother.
He watched her and Toliver walk away for a few seconds, then turned to Eddie. “Let?s do the bumper cars. I feel like crashing into something.”
As they waited on line, a guy with a camera came up to them. He had signs pinned front and back on his sweatshirt.
Instant Home Movies!
Only $10!
“You kids want movies of you in the bumper cars?” “We don?t have a projector,” Eddie said.
The guy laughed. “You don?t need one. Got a VHS player?” “Sure.”
He patted the camera. “This baby records straight to a videotape. You just take
it home and plug it into your VCR. Instant home movies! It?s the latest thing!” He looked around. “Where are your folks?”
“Home,” Jack said.
The guy frowned. “Got ten bucks?”
Jack shook his head. “Not for a film of me and him.”
With an immediate loss of interest, the guy moved on to greener pastures.
Instant home movies, Jack thought. What?ll they think of next?
The idea stayed with him through the bumper car ride where he slammed into everyone in sight, and followed him to the end of the midway where they came upon the traditional game of swinging a mallet and trying to ring a bell atop a board.
Jack wasn?t interested. He knew his skinny arms wouldn?t be able to power that ringer to the top, and the prize was a teddy bear. Who wanted a teddy bear?
The sun was gone, leaving the circus an island of light in a sea of deepening darkness. Jack glanced toward the trees bordering the field and saw two points of light in the shadow. They blinked off and then on again.
He thought he could make out a hulking shape within the dark. But then the points blinked off and never came on again.
Eyes? Had something been watching the circus from the pines? It couldn?t have been a person because human eyes didn?t glow like that. And what kind of animal had eyes so far off the ground?
Unless …
He shook it off. That was Weezy territory.
They entered the sideshow and ambled past the freaks.
Only half a dozen present if you counted the Siamese Twins as two: Armando the Armless Saxophonist, Corinda the Cow-faced Woman, Tiny the World?s Fattest Man, and Peter the Pinnochio Boy who was a midget dancing around with elastic strings stretching from the ceiling to his wrists and ankles.
Jack suspected the Siamese twins were tied at the shoulder rather than truly joined. He was watching them closely, looking for evidence of fakery as they juggled—a clever act—when Eddie hurried up and grabbed his arm.
“Jack,” he said, grinning, “you?ve got to see this thing down here. They?re calling it a „machine?
but it doesn?t do anything!”
Jack followed him to a stall where an odd gizmo sat on a rotating platform under a hand-printed sign.
THE MYSTERY MACHINE
The weirdest thing Jack had ever seen: a bunch of odd-colored, odd-shaped pieces—flat, round, oval, irregular, opaque, clear like glass—haphazardly stuck together with no rhyme or reason. Like something a toddler would put together from an alien Tinkertoy set.
“Isn?t it a riot?” Eddie said. “It just sits there.”
He was right. It simply sat and rotated on its stand. Dumb. Jack was turning
away when something caught his eye. He turned back and stared. He could have sworn
…
Nah. Impossible.
He made another move to leave when he saw it again—or thought he did. For an instant—just an instant— the upper half of one of the pieces seemed to
have faded away. It looked fine now, but Jack was sure …
He stared unblinking. If it happened again, he?d catch it.
“What did you see?”
A thin, balding, bookish man to his left had spoken.
“Not sure,” Jack said. “More like what I didn?t see.”
“Something faded in and out of view?”
Jack nodded. “That was how it looked.”
“I didn?t see anything,” Eddie said.
“Only certain people can, and then only out of the corner of the eye.” “What is it?” Eddie said.
The man smiled. “A mystery.”
“Yeah, fine. But it says it?s a machine. What?s it
“It fascinates.”
“The fading in and out of view,” Jack said. “Optical illusion, right?” The man shrugged.
“Perhaps. Or perhaps it goes somewhere.” “?Goes??”
“As in: leaves here and pokes into another place.”
“What other place?”
The man?s smile was almost sad. “That?s the real mystery. I—” “Hey, Prather!” someone said, and the man turned.
“Yes?”
The canvas boss from last night walked up and said, “Little Taber wants t?see
you.”
As the bookish man hurried off, the boss looked at Jack. “Want tickets to the
cycle show?”
“Well—” Jack started to say.
“You would?ve had free passes if you?d pitched in last night,” he said with a sharp
grin. “But now you?ll have to buy them, won?t you?”
Jack pulled out the passes Mr. Drexler had given him. “Not exactly.” The grin vanished.
“Where?d you get those?”
“I?ve got my sources,” Jack said, turning away.
“What?s he talking about?” Eddie said.
Jack told him, keeping watch on the Mystery Machine as they walked away, but
nothing faded away this time.
Jack looked back. “Not that I heard.”
The guy shook his head in what looked like disgust. “We?re doing our part, you
know.”
