Nightmares and Dreamscapes by Stephen King

Tell hurried down the hall to Tabori Studios.

‘Paul?’

‘What?’ Jannings answered without looking up from the board. Georgie Ronkler was standing off to one side, watching Jannings closely and nibbling a cuticle — cuticles were all he had left to nibble; his fingernails simply did not exist above the point where they parted company with live flesh and hot nerve-endings. He was close to the door. If Jannings began to rant, Georgie would slip through it.

‘I think there might be something wrong in — ‘

Jannings groaned. ‘Something else?’

‘What do you mean?’

‘This drum track is what I mean. It’s badly botched, and I don’t know what we can do about it.’

He flicked a toggle, and drums crashed into the studio. ‘You hear it?’

The snare, you mean?’

‘Of course I mean the snare! It stands out a mile from the rest of the percussion, but it’s married to it!’

‘Yes, but — ‘

‘Yes but Jesus bloody fuck. I hate shit like this! Forty tracks I got here, forty goddam tracks to record a simple bop tune and some IDIOT technician — ‘

From the tail of his eye Tell saw Georgie disappear like a cool breeze.

‘But look, Paul, if you lower the equalization — ‘

‘The eq’s got nothing to do with — ‘

‘Shut up and listen a minute,’ Tell said soothingly — something he could have said to no one else on the face of the earth — and slid a switch. Jannings stopped ranting and started listening.

He asked a question. Tell answered it. Then he asked one Tell couldn’t answer, but Jannings was able to answer it himself, and all of a sudden they were looking at a whole new spectrum of possibilities for a song called ‘Answer to You, Answer to Me’.

After awhile, sensing that the storm had passed, Georgie Ronkler crept back in.

And Tell forgot all about the sneakers.

They returned to his mind the following evening. He was at home, sitting on the toilet in his own bathroom, reading Wise Blood while Vivaldi played mildly from the bedroom speakers (although Tell now mixed rock and roll for a living, he owned only four rock records, two by Bruce Springsteen and two by John Fogerty).

He looked up from his book, somewhat startled. A question of cosmic ludicrousness had suddenly occurred to him: How long has it been since you took a crap in the evening, John?

He didn’t know, but he thought he might be taking them then quite a bit more frequently in the future. At least one of his habits might change, it seemed.

Sitting in the living room fifteen minutes later, his book forgotten in his lap, something else occurred to him: he hadn’t used the third-floor rest room once that day. They had gone across the street for coffee at ten, and he had taken a whiz in the men’s room of Donut Buddy while Paul and Georgie sat at the counter, drinking coffee and talking about overdubs. Then, on his lunch hour, he had made a quick pit-stop at the Brew ‘n Burger . . . and another on the first floor late that afternoon when he had gone down to drop off a bunch of mail that he could have just as easily stuffed into the mail-slot by the elevators.

Avoiding the third-floor men’s? Was that what he’d been doing today without even realizing it? You bet your Reeboks it was. Avoiding it like a scared kid who goes a block out of his way

coming home from school so he won’t have to go past the local haunted house. Avoiding it like the plague.

‘Well, so what?’ he said out loud.

He couldn’t exactly articulate the so-what, but he knew there was one; there was something just a little too existential, even for New York, about getting spooked out of a public bathroom by a pair of dirty sneakers.

Aloud, very clearly, Tell said: ‘This has got to stop.’

But that was Thursday night and something happened on Friday night that changed everything.

That was when the door closed between him and Paul Jannings.

Tell was a shy man and didn’t make friends easily. In the rural Pennsylvania town where he had gone to high school, a quirk of fate had put Tell up on stage with a guitar in his hands — the last place he’d ever expected to be. The bassist of a group called The Satin Saturns fell ill with salmonella the day before a well-paying gig. The lead guitarist, who was also in the school band, knew John Tell could play both bass and rhythm. This lead guitarist was big and potentially violent. John Tell was small, humble, and breakable. The guitarist offered him a choice between playing the ill bassist’s instrument and having it rammed up his ass to the fifth fret. This choice had gone a long way toward clarifying his feelings about playing in front of a large audience.

But by the end of the third song, he was no longer frightened. By the end of the first set he knew he was home. Years after that first gig, Tell heard a story about Bill Wyman, bassist of The Rolling Stones. According to the story, Wyman actually nodded off during a performance — not in some tiny club, mind you, but in a huge hall — and fell from the stage, breaking his collarbone. Tell supposed lots of people thought the story was apocryphal, but he himself had an idea it was true . . . and he was, after all, in a unique position to understand how something like that could happen. Bassists were the invisible men of the rock world. There were exceptions —

Paul McCartney, for one — but they only proved the rule.

Perhaps because of the job’s very lack of glamor, there was a chronic shortage of bass players.

When The Satin Saturns broke up a month later (the lead guitarist and the drummer got into a fist-fight over a girl), Tell joined a band formed by the Saturns’ rhythm man, and his life’s course was chosen, as simply and quietly as that.

Tell liked playing in the band. You were up front, looking down on everyone else, not just at the party but making the party happen; you were simultaneously almost invisible and absolutely essential. Every now and then you had to sing a little back-up, but nobody expected you to make a speech or anything.

He had lived that life — part-time student and full-time band gypsy — for ten years. He was good, but not ambitious — there was no fire in his belly. Eventually he drifted into session work in New York, began fooling with the boards, and discovered he liked life even better on the far side of the glass window. During all that time he had made one good friend: Paul Jannings. That had happened fast, and Tell supposed the unique pressures that went with the job had had something to do with it . . . but not everything. Mostly, he suspected, it had been a combination of two factors: his own essential loneliness and Jannings’s personality, which was so powerful it was almost overwhelming. And it wasn’t so different for Georgie, Tell came to realize following what happened on that Friday night.

He and Paul were having a drink at one of the back tables in McManus’s Pub, talking about the mix, the biz, the Mets, whatever, when all of a sudden Jannings’s right hand was under the table and gently squeezing Tell’s crotch.

Tell moved away so violently that the candle in the center of the table fell over and Jannings’s glass of wine spilled. A waiter came over and righted the candle before it could scorch the tablecloth, then left. Tell stared at Jannings, his eyes wide and shocked.

‘I’m sorry,’ Jannings said, and he did look sorry . . . but he also looked unperturbed.

‘Jesus Christ, Paul!’ It was all he could think of to say, and it sounded hopelessly inadequate.

‘I thought you were ready, that’s all,’ Jannings said. ‘I suppose I should have been a little more subtle.’

‘Ready?’ Tell repeated. ‘What do you mean? Ready for what?’

‘To come out. To give yourself permission to come out.’

‘I’m not that way,’ Tell said, but his heart was pounding very hard and fast. Part of it was outrage, part was fear of the implacable certainty he saw in Jannings’s eyes, most of it was dismay. What Jannings had done had shut him out.

‘Let’s let it go, shall we? We’ll just order and make up our minds that it never happened.’ Until you want it to, those implacable eyes added.

Oh, it happened, all right, Tell wanted to say, but didn’t. The voice of reason and practicality would not allow it . . . would not allow him to risk lighting Paul Jannings’s notoriously short fuse. This was, after all, a good job . . . and the job per se wasn’t all. He could use Roger Daltrey’s tape in his portfolio even more than he could use two more weeks’ salary. He would do well to be diplomatic and save the outraged-young-man act for another time. Besides, did he really have anything to feel outraged about? It wasn’t as if Jannings had raped him, after all.

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