fired again. Claudio Andolini was propelled backwards in a cloud of his own blood. The
auto- matics flew from his hands and slid across Balazar’s desk. They thumped to the carpet
amid a flutter of playing cards. Most of Claudio’s guts hit the wall a second before Claudio
caught up with them.
“Get him!”Balazar was shrieking. “Get the spook! The kid ain’t dangerous! He’s nothing but a bare-ass junkie! Get the spook! Blow him away!”
He pulled the trigger on the .357 twice. The Magnum was almost as loud as Roland’s
revolver. It did not make neat holes in the wall against which Roland crouched; the slugs
smashed gaping wounds in the fake wood to either side of Roland’s head. White light from
the bathroom shone through the holes in ragged rays.
Roland pulled the trigger of his revolver.
Only a dry click.
Misfire.
“Eddie!”the gunslinger yelled, and Eddie raised his own gun and pulled the trigger.
The crash was so loud that for a moment he thought the gun had blown up in his hand, as
Jack’s had done. The recoil did not drive him back through the wall, but it did snap his arm
up in a savage arc that jerked all the tendons under his arm.
He saw part of Balazar’s shoulder disintegrate into red spray, heard Balazar screech like a
wounded cat, and yelled, “The junkie ain’t dangerous, was that what you said? Was that it, you numb fuck? You want to mess with me and my brother? I’ll show you who’s dangerous!
I’ll sh—”
There was a boom like a grenade as the guy from the storage room fired the sawed-off.
Eddie rolled as the blast tore a hundred tiny holes in the walls and bathroom door. His
naked skin was seared by shot in several places, and Eddie understood that if the guy had
been closer, where the thing’s pattern was tight, he would have been vaporized.
Hell, I’m dead anyway,he thought, watching as the guy from the storage room worked the
Remington’s jack, pump- ing in fresh cartridges, then laying it over his forearm. He was
grinning. His teeth were very yellow—Eddie didn’t think they had been acquainted with a
toothbrush in quite some time.
Christ, I’m going to get killed by some fuckhead with yellow teeth and I don’t even know
his name,Eddie thought dimly. A t least I put one in Balazar. A t least I did that much. He wondered if Roland had another shot. He couldn’t remember.
“I got him!” Tricks Postino yelled cheerfully. “Gimme a clear field, Dario!” And before the man named Dario could give him a clear field or anything else, Tricks opened up with
The Wonderful Rambo Machine. The heavy thunder of machine-gun fire filled Balazar’s
office. The first result of this barrage was to save Eddie Dean’s life. Dario had drawn a bead
on him with the sawed-off, but before he could pull its double triggers, Tricks cut him in
half.
“Stop it, you idiot!”Balazar screamed.
But Tricks either didn’t hear, couldn’t stop, or wouldn’t stop. Lips pulled back from his
teeth so that his spit-shining teeth were bared in a huge shark’s grin, he raked the room from
one end to the other, blowing two of the wall panels to dust, turning framed photographs
into clouds of flying glass frag- ments, hammering the bathroom door off its hinges. The
frosted glass of Balazar’s shower stall exploded. The March of Dimes trophy Balazar had
gotten the year before bonged like a bell as a slug drove through it.
In the movies, people actually kill other people with hand-held rapid-fire weapons. In real
life, this rarely happens. If it does, it happens with the first four or five slugs fired (as the unfortunate Dario could have testified, if he had ever been capable of testifying to anything
again). After the first four or five, two things happen to a man—even a powerful one—
trying to control such a weapon. The muzzle begins to rise, and the shooter himself begins
to turn either right or left, depending on which unfortunate shoulder he has decided to
bludgeon with the weapon’s recoil. In short, only a moron or a movie star would attempt the
use of such a gun; it was like trying to shoot someone with a pneumatic drill.
For a moment Eddie was incapable of any action more constructive than staring at this
perfect marvel of idiocy. Then he saw other men crowding through the door behind Tricks,
and raised Roland’s revolver.
“Got him!”Tricks was screaming with the joyous hyste- ria of a man who has seen too
many movies to be able to distinguish between what the script in his head says should be
happening and what really is. “Got him! I got him! I g—”
Eddie pulled the trigger and vaporized Tricks from the eyebrows up. Judging from the
man’s behavior, that was not a great deal.
Jesus Christ, when these thingsdo shoot, they really blow holes in things, he thought.
There was a loud KA-BLAM from Eddie’s left. Something tore a hot gouge in his
underdeveloped left bicep. He saw Balazar pointing the Mag at him from behind the corner
of his card-littered desk. His shoulder was a dripping red mass. Eddie ducked as the
Magnum crashed again.
23
Roland managed to get into a crouch, aimed at the first of the new men coming in through the door, and squeezed the trigger. He had rolled the cylinder, dumped the used loads and
the duds onto the carpet, and had loaded this one fresh shell. He had done it with his teeth.
Balazar had pinned Eddie down; Ifthis one’s a dud, I think we’re both gone.
It wasn’t. The gun roared, recoiled in his hand, and Jimmy Haspio spun aside, the .45 he
had been holding falling from his dying fingers.
Roland saw the other man duck back and then he was crawling through the splinters of
wood and glass that littered the floor. He dropped his revolver back into its holster. The
idea of reloading again with two of his right fingers missing was a joke.
Eddie was doing well. The gunslinger measured just how well by the fact that he was
fighting naked. That was hard for a man. Sometimes impossible.
The gunslinger grabbed one of the automatic pistols Claudio Andolini had dropped.
“What are the rest of you guys waiting for?”Balazar screamed. “Jesus! Eat these guys!”
Big George Biondi and the other man from the supply room charged in through the door.
The man from the supply room was bawling something in Italian.
Roland crawled to the corner of the desk. Eddie rose, aiming toward the door and the
charging men. He knows Balazar’s there, waiting, but he thinks he’s the only one of us with
a gun now, Roland thought. Here is another one ready to die for you, Roland. What great wrong did you ever do that you should inspire such terrible loyalty in so many?
Balazar rose, not seeing the gunslinger was now on his flank. Balazar was thinking of only
one thing: finally putting an end to the goddam junkie who had brought this ruin down on
his head.
“No,” the gunslinger said, and Balazar looked around at him, surprise stamped on his
features.
“Fuck y—” Balazar began, bringing the Magnum around. The gunslinger shot him four
times with Claudio’s automatic. It was a cheap little thing, not much better than a toy, and
touching it made his hand feel dirty, but it was perhaps fitting to kill a despicable man with
a despicable weapon.
Enrico Balazar died with an expression of terminal sur- prise on what remained of his face.
“Hi, George!” Eddie said, and pulled the trigger of the gunslinger’s revolver. That
satisfying crash came again. No duds in this baby, Eddie thought crazily. Iguess I must have
gotten the good one. George got off one shot before Eddie’s bullet drove him back into the screaming man, bowling him over like a ninepin, but it went wild. An irrational but utterly
persuasive feeling had come over him: a feeling that Roland’s gun held some magical,
talismanic power of protection. As long as he held it, he couldn’t be hurt.
Silence fell then, a silence in which Eddie could hear only the man under Big George
moaning (when George landed on Rudy Vechhio, which was this unfortunate fellow’s
name, he had fractured three of Vechhio’s ribs) and the high ringing in his own ears. He
wondered if he would ever hear right again. The shooting spree which now seemed to be
over made the loudest rock concert Eddie had ever been to sound like a radio playing two
blocks over by comparison.
Balazar’s office was no longer recognizable as a room of any kind. Its previous function
had ceased to matter. Eddie looked around with the wide, wondering eyes of a very young
man seeing something like this for the first time, but Roland knew the look, and the look