Suddenly, in an utter blast of horror, Roland realizes what the whitish-pink chunks of meat Eddie has been feeding him have been. He cannot speak; revulsion robs him of what little voice he has managed to get back. But Eddie sees everything he wants to say on his face.
'What did you think I was doing?' he nearly snarls. 'Calling Red Lobster for take-out?'
'They're poison,' Roland whispers. 'That's why?'
'Yeah, that's why you're
Eddie smiles.
'I like to think maybe I got one of the ones that ate Jack. I like to think I'm eating that dink. It, like, eases my mind, you know?'
'One of them ate part of me, too,' the gunslinger husks out. 'Two fingers, one toe.'
'That's also cool,' Eddie keeps smiling. His face is pallid, sharklike … but some of that ill look has gone now, and the smell of shit and death which has hung around him like a shroud seems to be going away.
'Fuck yourself,' the gunslinger husks.
'Roland shows a flash of spirit!' Eddie cries. 'Maybe you ain't gonna die after all! Dahling! I think that's
'Live,' Roland says. The husk has become a whisper again. The fishhooks are returning to his throat.
'Yeah?' Eddie looks at him, then nods and answers his own question. 'Yeah. I think you mean to. Once I thought you were going and once I thought you were gone. Now it looks like you're going to get better. The antibiotics are helping, I guess, but mostly I think you're
'You and your fucking Tower,' Eddie says, starts to turn away, and then turns back, surprised, as Roland's hand clamps on his arm like a manacle.
They look into each others' eyes and Eddie says, 'All right. All
'How do you
shuffle
being dragged along, bounced and bumped, his head lolling helplessly from one side to the other, bound to some kind of a weird
But before he can ask anything
shuffle
Eddie, who has been nearly dozing, now looks up. 'What are you laughing about?' he asks.
The gunslinger waves a dismissive hand and shakes his head. Because he's wrong, he realizes. Cort wouldn't bash Eddie for the
The main supports were two cottonwood branches of approximately the same length and thickness. A blowdown, the gunslinger presumed. He had used smaller branches as supports, attaching them to the support poles with a crazy conglomeration of stuff: gunbelts, the glue-string that had held the devil-powder to his chest, even the rawhide thong from the gunslinger's hat and his, Eddie's, own sneaker laces. He had laid the gunslinger's bedroll over the supports.
Cort would not have struck him because, sick as he was, Eddie had at least done more than squat on his hunkers and bewail his fate. He had made
And Cort might have offered one of his abrupt, almost grudging compliments because, crazy as the thing looked, it
'You see any of them?' Eddie asks. The sun is going down, beating an orange path across the water, and so the gunslinger reckons he has been out better than six hours this time. He feels stronger. He sits up and looks down to the water. Neither the beach nor the land sweeping to the western slope of the mountains have changed much; he can see small variations of landscape and detritus (a dead seagull, for instance, lying in a little heap of blowing feathers on the sand about twenty yards to the left and thirty or so closer to the water), but these aside, they might as well be right where they started.
'No,' the gunslinger says. Then: 'Yes. There's one.'
He points. Eddie squints, then nods. As the sun sinks lower and the orange track begins to look more and more like blood, the first of the lobstrosities come tumbling out of the waves and begin crawling up the beach.
Two of them race clumsily toward the dead gull. The winner pounces on it, rips it open, and begins to stuff the rotting remains into its maw.
Roland's gun puts an end to the second creature's questions. Eddie walks down to it and grabs it by the back, keeping a wary eye on its fellow as he does so. The other offers no trouble, however; it is busy with the gull.