Read The Talisman Page 72


  "Red Squad Leader Four to the Sunlight Man! Come in, Sunlight Man!"

  "Sunlight Man here, Red Squad Leader Four," Gardener snapped. "What's up?"

  In quick succession Gardener took four gabbling, excited reports that were all exactly the same. There was no intelligence the two of them hadn't seen and felt for themselves--flashes of light, weathercocks at a standstill, something that might have been a ground-tremblor or possibly an earthquake preshock--but Gardener labored with sharp-eyed enthusiasm over each report just the same, asking sharp questions, snapping "Over!" at the end of each transmission, sometimes breaking in with "Say again" or "Roger." Sloat thought he was acting like a bit player in a disaster movie.

  But if it eased him, that was fine with Sloat. It saved him from having to answer Gardener's question . . . and now that he thought about it, he supposed it was just possible that Gardener didn't want his question answered, and that was why he was going through this rigmarole with the radio.

  The Guardians were dead, or out of commission. That was why the weathercocks had stopped, and that's what the flashes of light meant. Jack didn't have the Talisman . . . at least, not yet. If he got that, things in Point Venuti would really shake, rattle, and roll. And Sloat now thought that Jack would get it . . . that he had always been meant to get it. This did not frighten him, however.

  His hand reached up and touched the key around his neck.

  Gardener had run out of overs and rogers and ten-fours. He reshouldered the pack-set and looked at Morgan with wide, frightened eyes. Before he could say a word, Morgan put gentle hands on Gardener's shoulders. If he could feel love for anyone other than his poor dead son, he felt love--of a twisted variety, most certainly--for this man. They went back a long way, both as Morgan of Orris and Osmond and as Morgan Sloat and Robert "Sunlight" Gardener.

  It had been with a rifle much like the one now slung over Gardener's shoulder that Gardener had shot Phil Sawyer in Utah.

  "Listen, Gard," he said calmly. "We are going to win."

  "Are you sure of that?" Gardener whispered. "I think he's killed the Guardians, Morgan. I know that sounds crazy, but I realy think--" He stopped, mouth trembling infirmly, lips sheened with a thin membrane of spittle.

  "We are going to win," Morgan repeated in that same calm voice, and he meant it. There was a sense of clear predestination in him. He had waited many years for this; his resolve had been true; it remained true now. Jack would come out with the Talisman in his arms. It was a thing of immense power . . . but it was fragile.

  He looked at the scoped Weatherbee, which could drop a charging rhino, and then he touched the key that brought the lightning.

  "We're well equipped to deal with him when he comes out," Morgan said, and added, "In either world. Just as long as you keep your courage, Gard. As long as you stick right by me."

  The trembling lips firmed a bit. "Morgan, of course I'll--"

  "Remember who killed your son," Morgan said softly.

  At the same instant that Jack Sawyer had jammed the burning coin into the forehead of a monstrosity in the Territories, Reuel Gardener, who had been afflicted with relatively harmless petit mal epileptic seizures ever since the age of six (the same age at which Osmond's son had begun to show signs of what was called Blasted Lands Sickness), apparently suffered a grand mal seizure in the back of a Wolf-driven Cadillac on I-70, westbound to California from Illinois.

  He had died, purple and strangling, in Sunlight Gardener's arms.

  Gardener's eyes now began to bulge.

  "Remember," Morgan repeated softly.

  "Bad," Gardener whispered. "All boys. Axiomatic. That boy in particular."

  "Right!" Morgan agreed. "Hold that thought! We can stop him, but I want to make damn sure that he can only come out of the hotel on dry land."

  He led Gardener down to the rock where he had been watching Parker. Flies--bloated albino flies--had begun to light on the dead nigger, Morgan observed. That was just as fine as paint with him. If there had been a Variety magazine for flies, Morgan would gladly have bought space, advertising Parker's location. Come one, come all. They would lay their eggs in the folds of his decaying flesh, and the man who had scarred his Twinner's thighs would give birth to maggots. That was fine indeed.

  He pointed out toward the dock.

  "The raft's under there," he said. "It looks like a horse, Christ knows why. It's in the shadows, I know. But you were always a hell of a shot. If you can pick it up, Gard, put a couple of bullets in it. Sink the fucking thing."

  Gardener unshouldered the rifle and peered into the scope. For a long time the muzzle of the big gun wandered minutely back and forth.

  "I see it," Gardener whispered in a gloating voice, and triggered the gun. The echo pealed off across the water in a long curl that at last Dopplered away into nothing. The barrel of the gun rose, then came back down. Gardener fired again. And again.

  "I got it," Gardener said, lowering the gun. He'd got his courage back; his pecker was up again. He was smiling the way he had been smiling when he had come back from that errand in Utah. "It's just a dead skin on the water now. You want a look in the scope?" He offered the rifle to Sloat.

  "No," Sloat said. "If you say you got it, you got it. Now he has to come out by land, and we know what direction he'll be coming in. I think he'll have what's been in our way for so many years."

  Gardener looked at him, shiny-eyed.

  "I suggest that we move up there." He pointed to the old boardwalk. It was just inside the fence where he had spent so many hours watching the hotel and thinking about what was in the ballroom.

  "All r--"

  That was when the earth began to groan and heave under their feet--that subterranean creature had awakened; it was shaking itself and roaring.

  At the same instant, dazzling white light filled every window of the Agincourt--the light of a thousand suns. The windows blew out all at once. Glass flew in diamond showers.

  "REMEMBER YOUR SON AND FOLLOW ME!" Sloat roared. That sense of predestination was clear in him now, clear and undeniable. He was meant to win, after all.

  The two of them began to run up the heaving beach toward the boardwalk.

  8

  Jack moved slowly, filled with wonder, across the hardwood ballroom floor. He was looking up, his eyes sparkling. His face was bathed in a clear white radiance that was all colors--sunrise colors, sunset colors, rainbow colors. The Talisman hung in the air high above him, slowly revolving.

  It was a crystal globe perhaps three feet in circumference--the corona of its glow was so brilliant it was impossible to tell exactly how big it was. Gracefully curving lines seemed to groove its surface, like lines of longitude and latitude . . . and why not? Jack thought, still in a deep daze of awe and amazement. It is the world--ALL worlds--in microcosm. More; it is the axis of all possible worlds.

  Singing; turning; blazing.

  He stood beneath it, bathed in its warmth and clear sense of well-meant force; he stood in a dream, feeling that force flow into him like the clear spring rain which awakens the hidden power in a billion tiny seeds. He felt a terrible joy lift through his conscious mind like a rocket, and Jack Sawyer lifted both hands over his upturned face, laughing, both in response to that joy and in imitation of its rise.

  "Come to me, then!" he shouted,

  and slipped

  (through? across?)

  into

  Jason.

  "Come to me, then!" he shouted again in the sweetly liquid and slightly slippery tongue of the Territories--he cried it laughing, but tears coursed down his cheeks. And he understood that the quest had begun with the other boy and thus must end with him; so he let go and

  slipped

  back

  into

  Jack Sawyer.

  Above him, the Talisman trembled in the air, slowly turning, throwing off light and heat and a sensation of true goodness, of whiteness.

  "Come to me!"

  It began to descend through t
he air.

  9

  So, after many weeks, and hard adventuring, and darkness and despair; after friends found and friends lost again; after days of toil, and nights spent sleeping in damp haystacks; after facing the demons of dark places (not the least of which lived in the cleft of his own soul)--after all these things, it was in this wise that the Talisman came to Jack Sawyer:

  He watched it come down, and while there was no desire to flee, he had an overwhelming sense of worlds at risk, worlds in the balance. Was the Jason-part of him real? Queen Laura's son had been killed; he was a ghost whose name the people of the Territories swore by. Yet Jack decided he was. Jack's quest for the Talisman, a quest that had been meant for Jason to fulfill, had made Jason live again for a little while--Jack really had a Twinner, at least of a sort. If Jason was a ghost, just as the knights had been ghosts, he might well disappear when that radiant, twirling globe touched his upstretched fingers. Jack would be killing him again.

  Don't worry, Jack, a voice whispered. That voice was warm and clear.

  Down it came, a globe, a world, all worlds--it was glory and warmth, it was goodness, it was the coming-again of the white. And, as has always been with the white and must always be, it was dreadfully fragile.

  As it came down, worlds reeled about his head. He did not seem to be crashing through layers of reality now but seeing an entire cosmos of realities, all overlapping one another, linked like a shirt of

  (reality)

  chain-mail.

  You're reaching up to hold a universe of worlds, a cosmos of good, Jack--this voice was his father's. Don't drop it, son. For Jason's sake, don't drop it.

  Worlds upon worlds upon worlds, some gorgeous, some hellish, all of them for a moment illumined in the warm white light of this star that was a crystal globe chased with fine engraved lines. It came slowly down through the air toward Jack Sawyer's trembling, outstretched fingers.

  "Come to me!" he shouted to it as it had sung to him. "Come to me now!"

  It was three feet above his hands, branding them with its soft, healing heat; now two; now one. It hesitated for a moment, rotating slowly, its axis slightly canted, and Jack could see the brilliant, shifting outlines of continents and oceans and ice-caps on its surface. It hesitated . . . and then slowly slipped down into the boy's reaching hands.

  43

  News From Everywhere

  1

  Lily Cavanaugh, who had fallen into a fitful doze after imagining Jack's voice somewhere below her, now sat bolt-upright in bed. For the first time in weeks bright color suffused her waxy yellow cheeks. Her eyes shone with a wild hope.

  "Jason?" she gasped, and then frowned; that was not her son's name. But in the dream from which she had just been startled awake she had had a son by such a name, and in that dream she had been someone else. It was the dope, of course. The dope had queered her dreams to a fare-thee-well.

  "Jack?" she tried again. "Jack, where are you?"

  No answer . . . but she sensed him, knew for sure that he was alive. For the first time in a long time--six months, maybe--she felt really good.

  "Jack-O," she said, and grabbed her cigarettes. She looked at them for a moment and then heaved them all the way across the room, where they landed in the fireplace on top of the rest of the shit she meant to burn later in the day. "I think I just quit smoking for the second and last time in my life, Jack-O," she said. "Hang in there, kid. Your momma loves you."

  And she found herself for no reason grinning a large idiotic grin.

  2

  Donny Keegan, who had been pulling Sunlight Home kitchen duty when Wolf escaped from the box, had survived that terrible night--George Irwinson, the fellow who had been pulling the duty with him, had not been so lucky. Now Donny was in a more conventional orphans' home in Muncie, Indiana. Unlike some of the other boys at the Sunlight Home, Donny had been a real orphan; Gardener had needed to take a token few to satisfy the state.

  Now, mopping a dark upstairs hall in a dim daze, Donny looked up suddenly, his muddy eyes widening. Outside, clouds which had been spitting light snow into the used-up fields of December suddenly pulled open in the west, letting out a single broad ray of sunshine that was terrible and exalting in its isolated beauty.

  "You're right, I DO love him!" Donny shouted triumphantly. It was Ferd Janklow that Donny was shouting to, although Donny, who had too many toys in his attic to accommodate many brains, had already forgotten his name. "He's beautiful and I DO love him!"

  Donny honked his idiot laugh, only now even his laugh was nearly beautiful. Some of the other boys came to their doors and stared at Donny in wonder. His face was bathed in the sunlight from that one clear, ephemeral ray, and one of the other boys would whisper to a close friend that night that for a moment Donny Keegan had looked like Jesus.

  The moment passed; the clouds moved over that weird clear place in the sky, and by evening the snow had intensified into the first big winter storm of the season. Donny had known--for one brief moment he had known--what that feeling of love and triumph actually meant. That passed quickly, the way dreams do upon waking . . . but he never forgot the feeling itself, that almost swooning sensation of grace for once fulfilled and delivered instead of promised and then denied; that feeling of clarity and sweet, marvellous love; that feeling of ecstasy at the coming once more of the white.

  3

  Judge Fairchild, who had sent Jack and Wolf to the Sunlight Home, was no longer a judge of any kind, and as soon as his final appeals ran out, he would be going to jail. There no longer seemed any question that jail was where he would fetch up, and that he would do hard time there. Might never come out at all. He was an old man, and not very healthy. If they hadn't found the damned bodies . . .

  He had remained as cheerful as possible under the circumstances, but now, as he sat cleaning his fingernails with the long blade of his pocketknife in his study at home, a great gray wave of depression crashed over him. Suddenly he pulled the knife away from his thick nails, looked at it thoughtfully for a moment, and then inserted the tip of the blade into his right nostril. He held it there for a moment and then whispered, "Oh shit. Why not?" He jerked his fist upward, sending the six-inch blade on a short, lethal trip, skewering first his sinuses and then his brain.

  4

  Smokey Updike sat in a booth at the Oatley Tap, going over invoices and totting up numbers on his Texas Instruments calculator, just as he had been doing on the day Jack had met him. Only now it was early evening and Lori was serving the evening's first customers. The jukebox was playing "I'd Rather Have a Bottle in Front of Me (Than a Frontal Lobotomy)."

  At one moment everything was normal. At the next Smokey sat bolt-upright, his little paper cap tumbling backward off his head. He clutched his white T-shirt over the left side of his chest, where a hammering bolt of pain had just struck like a silver spike. God pounds his nails, Wolf would have said.

  At the same instant the grill suddenly exploded into the air with a loud bang. It hit a Busch display sign and tore it from the ceiling. It landed with a crash. A rich smell of LP gas filled the area in back of the bar almost at once. Lori screamed.

  The jukebox speeded up: 45 rpms, 78, 150, 400! The woman's seriocomic lament became the speedy gabble of deranged chipmunks on a rocket-sled. A moment later the top blew off the juke. Colored glass flew everywhere.

  Smokey looked down at his calculator and saw a single word blinking on and off in the red window:

  TALISMAN-TALISMAN-TALISMAN-TALISMAN

  Then his eyes exploded.

  "Lori, turn off the gas!" one of the customers screamed. He got down off his stool, and turned toward Smokey. "Smokey, tell her--" The man wailed with fright as he saw blood gushing from the holes where Smokey Updike's eyes had been.

  A moment later the entire Oatley Tap blew sky-high, and before the fire-trucks could arrive from Dogtown and Elmira, most of downtown was in flames.

  No great loss, children, can you say amen.

  5

/>   At Thayer School, where normality now reigned as it always had (with one brief interlude which those on campus remembered only as a series of vague, related dreams), the last classes of the day had just begun. What was light snow in Indiana was a cold drizzle here in Illinois. Students sat dreaming and thoughtful in their classes.

  Suddenly the bells in the chapel began to peal. Heads came up. Eyes widened. All over the Thayer campus, fading dreams suddenly seemed to renew themselves.

  6

  Etheridge had been sitting in advanced-math class and pressing his hand rhythmically up and down against a raging hard-on while he stared unseeingly at the logarithms old Mr. Hunkins was piling up on the blackboard. He was thinking about the cute little townie waitress he would be boffing later on. She wore garter-belts instead of pantyhose, and was more than willing to leave her stockings on while they fucked. Now Etheridge stared around at the windows, forgetting his erection, forgetting the waitress with her long legs and smooth nylons--suddenly, for no reason at all, Sloat was on his mind. Prissy little Richard Sloat, who should have been safely classifiable as a wimp but who somehow wasn't. He thought about Sloat and wondered if he was all right. Somehow he thought that maybe Sloat, who had left school unexcused four days ago and who hadn't been heard from since, wasn't doing so good.

  In the headmaster's office, Mr. Dufrey had been discussing the expulsion of a boy named George Hatfield for cheating with his furious--and rich--father when the bells began to jingle out their unscheduled little tune. When it ended, Mr. Dufrey found himself on his hands and knees with his gray hair hanging in his eyes and his tongue lolling over his lips. Hatfield the Elder was standing by the door--cringing against it, actually--his eyes wide and his jaw agape, his anger forgotten in wonder and fear. Mr. Dufrey had been crawling around on his rug barking like a dog.

  Albert the Blob had just been getting himself a snack when the bells began to ring. He looked toward the window for a moment, frowning the way a person frowns when he is trying to remember something that is right on the tip of his tongue. He shrugged and went back to opening a bag of nacho chips--his mother had just sent him a whole case. His eyes widened. He thought--just for a moment, but a moment was long enough--that the bag was full of plump, squirming white bugs.