domestic robot, however, there was no sign.
“All right, enough,” Roland said, after calling Nigel for the third time. “He told us he was
on his last legs; seems that while we slept, he fell off em.”
“He was doing something he didn’t want to do,” Jake said. His face looked pale and puffy.
From sleeping too heavily was Roland’s first thought, and then wondered how he could be
such a fool. The boy had been crying for Pere Callahan.
“Doing what?” Eddie asked, slipping his pack over one shoulder and then hoisting
Susannah onto his hip. “For who? And why?”
“I don’t know,” Jake said. “He didn’twant me to know, and I didn’t feel right about prying.
I know he was just a robot, but with that nice English voice and all, he seemed like more.”
“That’s a scruple you may need to get over,” Roland said, as gently as he could.
“How heavy am I, sugar?” Susannah asked Eddie cheerfully. “Or maybe what I should ask
is ‘How bad you missin that good old wheelchair?’ Not to mention the shoulder-rig.”
“Suze, you hated that piggyback rig from the word go and we both know it.”
“Wasn’t askin about that, andyou know it.”
It always fascinated Roland when Detta crept unheard into Susannah’s voice, or—even
more spooky—her face. The woman herself seemed unaware of these incursions, as her
husband did now.
“I’d carry you to the end of the world,” Eddie said sentimentally, and kissed the tip of her
nose. “Unless you put on another ten pounds or so, that is. Then I might have to leave you
and look for a lighter lady.”
She poked him—not gently, either—and then turned to Roland. “This is a damn big place,
once you’re down underneath. How’re we gonna find the door that goes through to
Thunderclap?”
Roland shook his head. He didn’t know.
“How bout you, Cisco?” Eddie asked Jake. “You’re the one who’s strong in the touch. Can
you use it to find the door we want?”
“Maybe if I knew how to start,” Jake said, “but I don’t.”
And with that, all three of them again looked at Roland. No, make it four, because even the
gods-cursed bumbler was staring. Eddie would have made a joke to dispel any discomfort
he felt at such a combined stare, and Roland actually fumbled for one. Something about
how too many eyes spoiled the pie, maybe? No. That saying, which he’d heard from Susannah, was about cooks and broth. In the end he simply said, “We’ll cast about a little,
the way hounds do when they’ve lost the scent, and see what we find.”
“Maybe another wheelchair for me to ride in,” Susannah said brightly. “This nasty white
boy has got his hands allover my purity.”
Eddie gave her a sincere look. “If it was really pure, hon,” he said, “it wouldn’t be cracked like it is.”
Two
It was Oy who actually took over and led them, but not until they returned to the kitchen.
The humans were poking about with a kind of aimlessness that Jake found rather unsettling
when Oy began to bark out his name:“Ake! Ake-Ake! ”
They joined the bumbler at a chocked-open door that readC-LEVEL . Oy went a little way
along the corridor then looked back over his shoulder, eyes brilliant. When he saw they
weren’t following, he barked his disappointment.
“What do you think?” Roland asked. “Should we follow him?”
“Yes,” Jake said.
“What scent has he got?” Eddie asked. “Do you know?”
“Maybe something from the Dogan,” Jake said. “The real one, on the other side of the
River Whye. Where Oy and I overheard Ben Slightman’s Da’ and the…you know, the
robot.”
“Jake?” Eddie asked. “You okay, kid?”
“Yes,” Jake said, although he’d had a bit of a bad turn, remembering how Benny’s Da’ had
screamed. Andy the Messenger Robot, apparently tired of Slightman’s grumbling, had
pushed or pinched something in the man’s elbow—a nerve, probably—and Slightman had
“hollered like an owl,” as Roland might say (and probably with at least mild contempt).
Slightman the Younger was beyond such things, now, of course, and it was that
realization—a boy, once full of fun and now cool as river-bank clay—which had made the
son of Elmer pause. You had to die, yes, and Jake hoped he could do it at least moderately
well when the hour came. He’d had some training inhow to do it, after all. It was the
thought of all that grave-time that chilled him. That downtime. That
lie-still-and-continue-to-be-
dead time.
Andy’s scent—cold but oily and distinctive—had been all over the Dogan on the far side
of the River Whye, for he and Slightman the Elder had met there many times before the
Wolf raid that had been greeted by Roland and his makeshift posse. This smell wasn’t exactly the same, but it was interesting. Certainly it was the only familiar one Oy had
struck so far, and he wanted to follow it.
“Wait a minute, wait a minute,” Eddie said. “I see something we need.”
He put Susannah down, crossed the kitchen, and returned rolling a stainless-steel table
probably meant for transporting stacks of freshly washed dishes or larger utensils.
“Upsy-daisy, don’t be crazy,” Eddie said, and lifted Susannah onto it.
She sat there comfortably enough, gripping the sides, but looked dubious. “And when we
come to a flight of stairs? What then, sugarboy?”
“Sugarboy will burn that bridge when he comes to it,” Eddie said, and pushed the rolling
table into the hall. “Mush, Oy! On, you huskies!”
“Oy! Husk!” The bumbler hurried briskly along, bending his head every now and again to
dip into the scent but mostly not bothering much. It was too fresh and too wide to need
much attention. It was the smell of the Wolves he had found. After an hour’s walk, they
passed a hangar-sized door markedTO HORSES . Beyond this, the trail led them to a door
which readSTAGING AREA andAUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY . (That they were
followed for part of their hike by Walter o’ Dim was a thing none of them, not even
Jake—strong in the touch though he was—suspected. On the boy, at least, the hooded
man’s “thinking-cap” worked quite well. When Walter was sure where the bumbler was
leading them, he’d turned back to palaver with Mordred—a mistake, as it turned out, but
one with this consolation: he would never make another.)
Oy sat before the closed door, which was the kind that swung both ways, with his cartoon
squiggle of tail tight against his hindquarters, and barked.“Ake, ope-ope! Ope, Ake! ”
“Yeah, yeah,” Jake said, “in a minute. Hold your water.”
“STAGING AREA,” Eddie said. “That sounds at least moderately hopeful.”
They were still pushing Susannah on the stainless-steel table, having negotiated the only
stairway they’d come to (a fairly short one) without too much trouble. Susannah had gone
down first on her butt—her usual mode of descent—while Roland and Eddie carried the
table along behind her. Jake went between the woman and the men with Eddie’s gun raised,
the long scrolled barrel laid into the hollow of his left shoulder, a position known as “the
guard.”
Roland now drew his own gun, laid it in the hollow of his right shoulder, and pushed the
door open. He went through in a slight crouch, ready to dive either way or jump backward
if the situation demanded it.
The situation did not. Had Eddie been first, he might have believed (if only momentarily) that he was being attacked by flying Wolves sort of like the flying monkeys inThe Wizard
of Oz . Roland, however, was not overburdened with imagination, and even though a good
many of the overhead fluorescent light strips in this huge, barnlike space had gone out, he
wasted no time—or adrenaline—in mistaking the suspended objects for anything but what
they actually were: broken robot raiders awaiting repair.
“Come on in,” he said, and his words came echoing back to him. Somewhere, high in the
shadows, came a flutter of wings. Swallows, or perhaps barn-rusties that had found their
way in from outside. “I think all’s well.”
They came, and stood looking up with silent awe. Only Jake’s four-footed friend was
unimpressed. Oy was taking advantage of the break to groom himself, first the left side and
then the right. At last Susannah, still sitting on the rolling steel table, said: “Tell you what, I’ve seen a lot, but I haven’t ever seen anything quite like this.”
Neither had the others. The huge room was thick with Wolves that seemed suspended in
flight. Some wore their green Dr. Doom hoods and capes; others hung naked save for their
steel suits. Some were headless, some armless, and a few were missing either one leg or the
other. Their gray metal faces seemed to snarl or grin, depending on how the light hit them.
Lying on the floor was a litter of green capes and discarded green gauntlets. And about