Eddie also had a golden arm. From that moment things had begun to move in the steady and inevitable downward spiral which had ended with Eddie's trip to the Bahamas and Roland's sudden intervention in his life.
Another man, less pragmatic and more introspective than Roland, might have asked (to himself, if not right out loud),
Not only did the gunslinger never ask the question; it never even formulated itself in his mind. Cuthbert would have asked; Cuthbert had questioned everything, had been poisoned with questions, had died with one in his mouth. Now they were gone, all gone. Cort's last gunslingers, the thirteen survivors of a beginning class that had numbered fifty-six, were all dead. All dead but Roland. He was the last gunslinger, going steadily on in a world that had grown stale and sterile and empty.
So he was the last, and perhaps he had survived because the dark romance in his nature was overset by his practicality and simplicity. He understood that only three things mattered: mortality,
Those were enough things to think about.
Eddie finished his tale around four o'clock on the third day of their northward journey up the featureless beach. The beach itself never seemed to change. If a sign of progress was wanted, it could only be obtained by looking left, to the east. There the jagged peaks of the mountains had begun to soften and slump a bit. It was possible that if they went north far enough, the mountains would become rolling hills.
With his story told, Eddie lapsed into silence and they walked without speaking for a half an hour or longer. Eddie kept stealing little glances at him. Roland knew Eddie wasn't aware that he was picking these glances up; he was still too much in himself. Roland also knew what Eddie was waiting for: a response. Some kind of response.
'So? What do you think?'
'I think you're here.'
Eddie stopped, fisted hands planted on his hips. 'That's
'That's all I know,' the gunslinger replied. His missing fingers and toe throbbed and itched. He wished for some of the
'You don't have any opinion on what the hell it all
The gunslinger might have held up his subtracted right hand and said,
'What's
'I don't know about that,' the gunslinger said. 'Here it means duty, or destiny, or, in the vulgate, a place you must go.'
Eddie managed to look dismayed, disgusted, and amused all at the same time. 'Then say it twice, Roland, because words like that sound like shit to this kid.'
The gunslinger shrugged. 'I don't discuss philosophy. I don't study history. All I know is what's past is past, and what's ahead is ahead. The second is
'Yeah?' Eddie looked northward. 'Well all I see ahead is about nine billion miles of this same fucking beach. If
Roland
Eddie looked and saw nothing but the same reach of shell— and rock-studded gray shingle. He looked back at Roland, about to scoff, saw the serene certainty on his face, and looked again. He squinted. He shielded the right side of his face from the westering sun with his right hand. He wanted desperately to see something,
'Crap on me all you want to,' Eddie said slowly, 'but I say it's a goddam mean trick. I put my life on the line for you at Balazar's.'
'I know you did.' The gunslinger smiled?a rarity that lit his face like a momentary flash of sunlight on a dismal luring day. 'That's why I've done nothing but square-deal you, Eddie. It's there. I saw it an hour ago. At first I thought it was only a mirage or wishful thinking, but it's there, all right.'
Eddie looked again, looked until water ran from the corners of his eyes. At last he said, 'I don't see anything up ahead but more beach. And I got twenty-twenty vision.'
'I don't know what that means.'
'It means if there was something there to see, I'd
Maybe a
'You'll see it,' the gunslinger said.
'See
'We won't get there today, but if you see as well as you say, you'll see it before the sun hits the water. Unless you just want to stand here chin-jawing, that is.'
Roland nodded.
'Come on.'
They started walking again, and it was at least a full hour before the sun's lower arc touched the horizon when Eddie Dean began to see the shape in the distance?vague, shimmering, indefinable, but definitely
'Okay,' he said. 'I see it. You must have eyes like Superman.'
'Who?'
'Never mind. You've got a really incredible case of culture lag, you know it?'
'What?'
Eddie laughed. 'Never mind. What is it?'
'You'll see.' The gunslinger started walking again before Eddie could ask anything else.
Twenty minutes later Eddie thought he
Neither of them slept well that night, and they were up and walking an hour before the sun cleared the eroding shapes of the mountains. They reached the door just as the morning sun's first rays, so sublime and so still,