'No,' Richard said, '- it isn't.'
'Back!' Nancy clutched their packs, yanked them so hard that Baj stumbled.
They retreated over mud and flood-trash.
'Down,' Richard said. 'Lie
'Errol.' Nancy called softly as she could. 'Errol…!'
Now the yellow light and
'Shhh…' Baj whispered in her ear. 'Shhh, sweetheart.' The second time he'd said that foolish thing.
An easy stone's-toss away, Errol stood still, blinking into blazing yellow. There was sudden silence on the limestone road – no heavy rhythmic noises, no motion. Glancing to the left, Baj saw behind the light's shimmering halo, a shape huge as forty Richards.
Time seemed to beat and pulse with the yellow right – from a great mirrored lamp, certainly. Errol stood staring, mouth open, apparently amazed.
Then, barely, by what the lamp allowed of star-light, Baj saw silhouettes of many men – certainly men – climbing down from the big thing. One of them called out, 'Do you question?'
Errol stood staring into the light, and Baj saw a weasel's silver circles of reflection in his eyes.
'Do you
Richard said, as if to himself, 'Jesus-the-Christ,' then heaved to his feet and called,
Silence. Then the man said, 'Come out. And explain why you were hiding from Manifestation.'
Richard muttered, 'Be careful,' as Baj and Nancy stood to join him. '… and ask
'The burning…' Nancy whispered, and once she had, Baj smelled – from the huge thing on the road, the men standing by it – the faintest drift, almost a smoky memory of fire.
Baj considered for an instant taking Nancy and fading back into the dark – then thought of Richard left alone with those people, and decided not. Doubted Nancy would go, in any case. His hand hurt; she'd bitten deep into the meat of his thumb… second time biting him…
He stood and followed Richard over the mud shelf, then stepped down, Nancy right behind, into golden light where a man stood in almost silhouette, other men in the darkness behind him. He held a long, dark, heavy stick – part wood, perhaps part iron.
'Why,' the man said, '- do Persons and a human appear to travel the Demonstration Road?'
Baj saw the man's white beard as he spoke. An old man, holding a weighty, polished stick.
'We didn't know it was your road,' Baj said. 'We intend only to cross it… and mean no harm.'
'To appear to cross it, is to appear to travel it,' the old man said, '- and damage the demonstration.'
'Then,' Nancy said, '- we'll go around.' One of the men behind the lamp's dazzle laughed.
'But this boy -' the old man pointed with his heavy stick, '- this… what is he, a sort of Person? He already appears to stand on it.'
'An offense may be put right,' Richard said.
'It's best put right, apparent Made-man, by ripping up our road and paving again – at least where he seems to stand. And where you three seem to stand.'
'I wish,' Richard said, '- we had time enough to help do that.'
Several of the lamp-shadowed men laughed. 'Your help would not be acceptable,' the old man said, and turned fully into the light to murmur something to a man behind him.
The old man stared at Baj. 'Do you have a question, apparent boy?'
'I'm no boy,' Baj said – then remembered Richard's murmur:
The old man stared at him a few moments more, then said, 'All of you will seem to come and follow us for discussion – but not appearing to walk on our road.'
'And if we prefer to go on our way?' Nancy gripped Errol's arm to hold him still.
'That rudeness,' the old man said, '- so close to real, would call for actual demonstrations by Winchesters, Springfields, and Remingtons.'
Baj supposed those named were the families of the men with him. Fighting men, apparently, and with kinsmen to back them in trouble… The odor of burning was in the night air with the Shadow-men. Their huge road-traveler shifted behind them, gravel ground beneath it.
'Seem to follow,' the old man said. 'But walk to the side of our road. To touch it again, would be the same as a question.' He walked back out of the lamp's harsh yellow light, the others with him, and Baj saw their dark shapes climbing up onto the big thing, which, after no apparent signal, began again that stomping shuffle,
… By star-light and lamp-light, Richard led carefully alongside the roadway, walking fast to keep up with the thing and its burden of men. Nancy kept a grip on Errol's arm.
Baj trotted up beside Richard, murmured, 'Why no questions?'
'Perfect belief admits no questions.'
'Ah… And if we fight these people, then run?'
'We could kill some… but there are more than 'some' riding their thing. Those sticks are not sticks.'
'Then what? Are they the WT
'Shhh… They are pretend-those-guns, made to look as the copybooks show them.'
'Then what keeps us here?'
'The Guard knows those sticks. They have rows of little steel springs inside them that look like leaves. A notched steel rod is forced down into the stick, that catches those springs and bends them against their will.'
Baj found it difficult to keep close with Richard's long striding. '… I see. Then whatever grips the rod, if that's released and the springs spring straight -'
'Yes. Then the rod flies out – and will nail a Person to a tree if it strikes him.'
'That's a serious weapon.'
'Serious, yes – but slow to make work again, and without an arrow's range, or a slung stone's, either… Their spring-sticks aren't the reason the Guard doesn't come this way.'
'Then why?'
'Because,' Richard said, even more softly, '- madness may be caught, as the pox is caught.'
Baj thought of asking more, then decided not to, and dropped back to more comfortable walking.
Nancy poked him, and whispered, 'What were you saying?'
'Saying there is no fighting, then running. The sticks are spring-shooters, and dangerous.'
'I knew that,' Nancy said, not troubling to whisper. 'Everyone knows that.'
Someone called to them from the road-traveling thing – a different voice from the old man's. 'Is there a question?'
'No,' Baj called back, '- there is no question. And we are not touching your road.'
… But there began to be a question as the night wore on, and the road-thing's big wheels turned and turned down the gravel way behind the flare of its yellow lamp. The roadside was graded even, its dirt covered only with