thing,' Eddie said. This was it, the true beginning of their stand, and now that it had come, Eddie felt calm. His heart was beating slowly and steadily. His vision seemed to have clarified; he could see each shadow cast by each individual blade of grass on the rectory lawn. 'He's strong, from what I've heard. And very quick when he needs to be. Let it be my play.'
'Then why am I here?'
'Insurance,' Eddie said. 'Come on.'
They walked down to the privy. Eddie had used it many times during the last few weeks, and always with pleasure—there were stacks of soft grasses for the clean-up phase, and you didn't have to concern yourself with poison flurry—but he'd not examined the outside closely until now. It was a wood structure, tall and solid, but he had no doubt Andy could demolish it in short order if he really wanted to. If they gave him a chance to.
Rosa came to the back door of her cottage and looked out at them, holding a hand over her eyes to shield them from the sun. 'How do ya, Eddie?'
'Fine so far, Rosie, but you better go back inside. There's gonna be a scuffle.'
'Say true? I've got a stack of plates—'
'I don't think Rizas'd help much in this case,' Eddie said. 'I guess it wouldn't hurt if you stood by, though.'
She nodded and went back inside without another word.
The men sat down, flanking the open door of the privy with its new bolt-lock. Tian tried to roll a smoke. The first one fell apart in his shaking fingers and he had to try again. 'I'm not good at this sort of thing,' he said, and Eddie understood he wasn't talking about the fine art of cigarette-making.
'It's all right.'
Tian peered at him hopefully. 'Do ya say so?'
'I do, so let it be so.'
Promptly at six o'clock (
'Just be cool and let me do the talking,' he said out of the corner of his mouth.
'Yes, all right.'
'Eddie!' Andy cried. 'Tian Jaffords! How good to see you both! And weapons to use against the Wolves! My! Where are they?'
'Stacked in the shithouse,' Eddie said. 'We can get a wagon down here once they're out, but they're heavy… and there isn't much room to move around in there…'
He stood aside. Andy came on. His eyes were flashing, but not in laughter now. They were so brilliant Eddie had to squint— it was like looking at flashbulbs.
'I'm sure I can get them out,' Andy said. 'How good it is to help! How often I've regretted how little my programming allows me to…'
He was standing in the privy door now, bent slightly at the thighs to get his metallic barrel of a head below the level of the jamb. Eddie drew Roland's gun. As always, the sandalwood grip felt smooth and eager against his palm.
'Cry your pardon, Eddie of New York, but I see no guns.'
'No,' Eddie agreed. 'Me either. Actually all I see is a fucking traitor who teaches songs to the kids and then sends them to be—'
Andy turned with terrible liquid speed. To Eddie's ears the hum of the servos in his neck seemed very loud. They were standing less than three feet apart, point-blank range. 'May it do ya fine, you stainless-steel bastard,' Eddie said, and fired twice. The reports were deafening in the evening stillness. Andy's eyes exploded and went dark. Tian cried out.
'
The scrawny stainless-steel arms flew up to the shattered sockets, where blue sparks were now jumping erratically. Andy's legs straightened, and his barrel of a head ripped through the top of the privy's doorway, throwing chunks of board left and right.
'Help me push him, Tian!' Eddie shouted, dropping the gun back into its holster. But Tian was frozen, gawking at the robot (whose head had now vanished inside the broken doorway), and Eddie had no time to wait. He lunged forward and planted his outstretched palms on the plate giving Andy's name, function, and serial number. The robot was amazingly heavy (Eddie's first thought was that it was like pushing a parking garage), but it was also blind, surprised, and off-balance. It stumbled backward, and suddenly the amplified words cut off. What replaced them was an unearthly shrieking siren. Eddie thought it would split his head. He grabbed the door and swung it shut. There was a huge, ragged gap at the top, but the door still closed flush. Eddie ran the new bolt, which was as thick as his wrist.
From within the privy, the siren shrieked and warbled.
Rosa came running with a plate in both hands. Her eyes were huge. 'What is it? In the name of God and the Man Jesus,
Before Eddie could answer, a tremendous blow shook the privy on its foundations. It actually moved to the right, disclosing the edge of the hole beneath it.
'It's Andy,' he said. 'I think he just pulled up a horoscope he doesn't much care f—'
'
Another blow slammed against the side of the privy, and this time two of the stout boards bowed outward. The next one broke them. Andy's arm flashed through, gleaming red in the light, the four jointed fingers at the end opening and closing spasmodically. In the distance, Eddie could hear the crazy barking of dogs.
'He's going to get out, Eddie!' Tian shouted, grabbing Eddie's shoulder. 'He's going to get out!'
Eddie shook the hand off and stepped to the door. There was another crashing blow. More broken boards popped off the side of the privy. The lawn was scattered with them now. But he couldn't shout against the wail of the siren, it was just too loud. He waited, and before Andy hammered the side of the privy again, it cut off.
'
'Andy, Messenger Robot!' Eddie shouted. He had jotted the serial number on one of Callahan's precious scraps of paper, with Callahan's stub of pencil, and now he read it off. 'DNF-44821-V-63! Password!'
The frenzied blows and amplified shouting ceased as soon as Eddie finished giving the serial number, yet even the silence wasn't silent; his ears still rang with the hellish shriek of the siren. There was a clank of metal and the click of relays. Then: 'This is DNF-44821-V-63. Please give password.' A pause, and then, tonelessly: 'You ambushing bastard Eddie Dean of New York. You have ten seconds. Nine…'
'Nineteen,' Eddie said through the door.
'Incorrect password.' And, tin man or not, there was no mistaking the furious pleasure in Andy's voice. 'Eight… seven…'