work, but it can be done. We'll sleep in shifts, at least for a while. A lot depends on keeping away from the flocks.'
'Which means getting into western New Hampshire and then into Vermont as fast as we can,' Ray said. 'Away from built-up areas.' He shone his light on Denise, who was reclining on the sleeping bags. 'We set, darlin?'
'All set,' she said. 'I just wish you'd let me carry something.'
'You're carryin your kid,' Ray said fondly. 'That's enough. And we can leave the sleepin bags.'
Dan said, 'There are places where driving may actually make sense. Ray thinks some of the back roads could be clear for as much as a dozen miles at a stretch. We've got good maps.' He dropped to one knee and shouldered his pack, looking up at Clay with a small and bitter half-smile as he did it. 'I know the chances aren't good; I'm not a fool, in case you wondered. But we wiped out two of their flocks, killed hundreds of them, and I don't want to wind up on one of those platforms.'
'We've got something else going for us,' Tom said. Clay wondered if Tom realized he'd just put himself in the Hartwick camp. Probably. He was far from stupid. 'They want us alive.'
'Right,' Dan said. 'We might really make it. This is still early times for them, Clay—they're still weaving their net, and I'm betting there are plenty of holes in it.'
'Hell, they haven't even changed their clothes yet,' Denise said. Clay admired her. She looked like she was six months along, maybe more, but she was a tough little thing. He wished Alice could have met her.
'We
Clay shook his head slowly. 'I'm going after my son.'
'Think it over, Clay,' Tom said.
'Let him alone,' Jordan said. 'He's made up his mind.' He put his arms around Clay and hugged him. 'I hope you find him,' he said. 'But even if you do, I guess you'll never find us again.'
'Sure I will,' Clay said. He kissed Jordan on the cheek, then stood back. 'I'll hogtie me a telepath and use him like a compass. Maybe the Raggedy Man himself.' He turned to Tom and held out his hand.
Tom ignored it and put his arms around Clay. He kissed him first on one cheek, then the other. 'You saved my life,' he whispered into Clay's ear. His breath was hot and ticklish. His cheek rasped against Clay's. 'Let me save yours. Come with us.'
'I can't, Tom. I have to do this.'
Tom stood back and looked at him. 'I know,' he said. 'I know you do.' He wiped his eyes. 'Goddam, I
Clay stood beside the junction sign and watched their lights dwindle. He kept his eyes fixed on Jordan's, and it was the last to disappear. For a moment or two it was alone at the top of the first hill to the west, a single small spark in the black, as if Jordan had paused there to look back. It seemed to wave. Then it was also gone, and the darkness was complete. Clay sighed—an unsteady, tearful sound—then shouldered his own pack and started walking north along the dirt shoulder of Route 11. Around quarter to four he crossed the North Berwick town line and left Kent Pond behind.
PHONE-BINGO
There was no reason not to resume a more normal life and start traveling days; Clay knew the phone-people wouldn't hurt him. He was off-limits and they actually
When dawn came up red and cold on the morning after his parting from Tom and Jordan, he was on the outskirts of Springvale. There was a little house, probably a caretaker's cottage, next to the Springvale Logging Museum. It looked cozy. Clay forced the lock on the side door and let himself in. He was delighted to find both a woodstove and a hand-pump in the kitchen. There was also a shipshape little pantry, well stocked and untouched by foragers. He celebrated this find with a large bowl of oatmeal, using powdered milk, adding heaps of sugar, and sprinkling raisins on top.
In the pantry he also found concentrated bacon and eggs in foil packets, stored as neatly on their shelf as paperback books. He cooked one of these and stuffed his pack with the rest. It was a much better meal than he had expected, and once in the back bedroom, Clay fell asleep almost immediately.
There were long tents on both sides of the highway.
This wasn't Route 11 with its farms and towns and open fields, with its pump-equipped convenience store every fifteen miles or so, but a highway somewhere out in the williwags. Deep woods crowded all the way up to the roadside ditches. People stood in long lines on both sides of the white center-stripe.
It sounded a little like the amplified voice of the bingo-caller at the Akron State Fair, but as Clay drew closer, walking up the road's center-stripe, he realized all the amplification was going on in his head. It was the voice of the Raggedy Man. Only the Raggedy Man was just a—what had Dan called him?—just a pseudopod. And what Clay was hearing was the voice of the flock.
Up ahead the two lines curved off to either side like turnpike exit ramps, one going into the tent on the left side of the road, one going into the tent on the right. They were the kind of long tents caterers put up to shade outdoor buffets on hot afternoons. Clay could see that just before each line reached the tents, the people were splitting into ten or a dozen shorter lines. Those people looked like fans waiting to have their tickets ripped so they could go into a concert venue.
Standing in the middle of the road at the point where the double line split and curved off to the right and the left, still wearing his threadbare red hoodie, was the Raggedy Man himself.
That gave Clay a shock, but it was the shock of the known—like the punchline of a good joke you'd heard for the first time ten or twenty years ago. 'Where is this?' he asked the Raggedy Man. 'What are you doing? What the hell is going on?'
But the Raggedy Man didn't look at him, and of course Clay knew why. This was where Route 160 entered Kashwak, and he was visiting it in a dream. As for what was going on . . .