“I never thought about being tailed,” Eddie said. This was the absolute truth. He had seen the tails the first time he looked around. Tails, not tail. He didn’t have to keep looking around to confirm their presence. Out-patients from a sanita- rium for the mentally retarded
would have trouble losing Eddie’s cab on this late May afternoon; traffic on the L.I.E. was
sparse. “I’m a student of traffic patterns, that’s all.”
“Oh,” the cabbie said. In some circles such an odd state- ment would have prompted
questions, but New York cab drivers rarely question; instead they assert, usually in a grand
manner. Most of these assertions begin with the phrase This city! as if the words were a
religious invocation preceding a sermon . . . which they usually were. Instead, this one said:
“Because if you did think we were being tailed, we’re not. I’d know. This city! Jesus! I’ve tailed plenty of people in my time. You’d be surprised how many people jump into my cab
and say ‘Follow that car.’ I know, sounds like something you only hear in the movies, right?
Right. But like they say, art imitates life and life imitates art. It really happens! And as for
shaking a tail, it’s easy if you know how to set the guy up. You …”
Eddie tuned the cabbie down to a background drone, listening just enough so he could nod
in the right places. When you thought about it, the cabbie’s rap was actually quite amusing.
One of the tails was a dark blue sedan. Eddie guessed that one belonged to Customs. The
other was a panel truck with GINELLI’S PIZZA written on the sides. There was also a
picture of a pizza, only the pizza was a smiling boy’s face, and the smiling boy was
smacking his lips, and written under the picture was the slogan “UMMMMM! It’s-a
GOOOOD Pizza!” Only some young urban artist with a spray-can and a rudi- mentary
sense of humor had drawn a line through Pizza and had printed PUSSY above it.
Ginelli. There was only one Ginelli Eddie knew; he ran a restaurant called Four Fathers.
The pizza business was a side- line, a guaranteed stiff, an accountant’s angel. Ginelli and
Balazar. They went together like hot dogs and mustard.
According to the original plan, there was to have been a limo waiting outside the terminal
with a driver ready to whisk him away to Balazar’s place of business, which was a midtown
saloon. But of course the original plan hadn’t included two hours in a little white room, two
hours of steady questioning from one bunch of Customs agents while another bunch first
drained and then raked the contents of Flight 901 ‘s waste-tanks, looking for the big carry
they also suspected, the big carry that would be unflushable, undissolvable.
When he came out, there was no limo, of course. The driver would have had his
instructions: if the mule isn’t out of the terminal fifteen minutes or so after the rest of the
pas- sengers have come out, drive away fast. The limo driver would know better than to use
the car’s telephone, which was actually a radio that could easily be monitored. Balazar
would call people, find out Eddie had struck trouble, and get ready for trouble of his own.
Balazar might have recognized Eddie’s steel, but that didn’t change the fact that Eddie was
a junkie. A junkie could not be relied upon to be a stand-up guy.
This meant there was a possibility that the pizza truck just might pull up in the lane next to
the taxi, someone just might stick an automatic weapon out of the pizza truck’s window,
and then the back of the cab would become something that looked like a bloody
cheese-grater. Eddie would have been more worried about that if they had held him for four
hours instead of two, and seriously worried if it had been six hours instead of four. But only
two … he thought Balazar would trust him to have hung on to his lip at least that long. He
would want to know about his goods.
The real reason Eddie kept looking back was the door.
It fascinated him.
As the Customs agents had half-carried, half-dragged him down the stairs to Kennedy’s administration section, he had looked back over his shoulder and there it had been,
improba- ble but indubitably, inarguably real, floating along at a dis- tance of about three
feet. He could see the waves rolling steadily in, crashing on the sand; he saw that the day
over there was beginning to darken.
The door was like one of those trick pictures with a hidden image in them, it seemed; you
couldn’t see that hidden part for the life of you at first, but once you had, you couldn’t unsee
it, no matter how hard you tried.
It had disappeared on the two occasions when the gunslinger went back without him, and
that had been scary— Eddie had felt like a child whose nightlight has burned out. The first
time had been during the customs interrogation.
I have to go, Roland’s voice had cut cleanly through whatever question they were currently throwing at him. I’ll only be a few moments. Don’t be afraid.
Why?Eddie asked. Why do you have to go?
“What’s wrong?” one of the Customs guys had asked him. “All of a sudden you look
scared.”
All of a sudden he had felt scared, but of nothing thisyo-yo would understand.
He looked over his shoulder, and the Customs men had also turned. They saw nothing but
a blank white wall covered with white panels drilled with holes to damp sound; Eddie saw
the door, its usual three feet away (now it was embedded in the room’s wall, an escape
hatch none of his interrogators could see). He saw more. He saw things coming out of the
waves, things that looked like refugees from a horror movie where the effects are just a little more special than you want them to be, special enough so everything looks real. They
looked like a hideous cross-breeding of prawn, lobster, and spider. They were making
some weird sound.
“You getting the jim-jams?” one of the Customs guys had asked. “Seeing a few bugs
crawling down the wall, Eddie?”
That was so close to the truth that Eddie had almost laughed. He understood why the man
named Roland had to go back, though; Roland’s mind was safe enough—at least for the
time being—but the creatures were moving toward his body, and Eddie had a suspicion
that if Roland did not soon vacate it from the area it currently occupied, there might not be
any body left to go back to.
Suddenly in his head he heard David Lee Roth bawling: Oh lyyyyy . . . ain’t got no body . . .
and this time he did laugh. He couldn’t help it.
“What’s so funny?” the Customs agent who had wanted to know if he was seeing bugs
asked him.
“This whole situation,” Eddie had responded. “Only in the sense of peculiar, not hilarious.
I mean, if it was a movie it would be more like Fellini than Woody Alien, if you get what I
mean.”
You’ll be all right?Roland asked.
Yeah, fine. TCB, man.
I don’t understand.
Go take care of business.
Oh. All right. I’ll not be long.
And suddenly that other had been gone. Simply gone. Like a wisp of smoke so thin that the
slightest vagary of wind could blow it away. Eddie looked around again, saw nothingbut
drilled white panels, no door, no ocean, no weird mon- strosities, and he felt his gut begin to
tighten. There was no question of believing it had all been a hallucination after all; the dope
was gone, and that was all the proof Eddie needed. But Roland had … helped, somehow.
Made it easier.
“You want me to hang a picture there?” one of the Cus- toms guys asked.
“No,” Eddie said, and blew out a sigh. “I want you to let me out of here.”
“Soon as you tell us what you did with the skag,” another said, “or was it coke?” And so it started again: round and round she goes and where she stops nobody knows.
Ten minutes later—ten very long minutes—Roland was suddenly back in his mind. One
second gone, next second there. Eddie sensed he was deeply exhausted.
Taken care of?he asked.
Yes. I’m sorry it took so long.A pause. Ihad to crawl.
Eddie looked around again. The doorway had returned, but now it offered a slightly
different view of that world, and he realized that, as it moved with him here, it moved with
Roland there. The thought made him shiver a little. It was like being tied to this other by
some weird umbilicus. The gunslinger’s body lay collapsed in front of it as before, but now
he was looking down a long stretch of beach to the braided high-tide line where the