somewhat restricted in my ability to be rude, since you are only a machine . .. what Eddie
calls a ‘gadget.'”
“I AM A GREAT DEAL MORE THAN JUST—”
“I cannot call you a sucker of cocks, for instance, because you have no mouth and no cock.
I cannot say you are viler than the vilest beggar who ever crawled the gutters of the lowest
street in creation, because even such a creature is better than you; you have no knees on
which to crawl, and would not fall upon them even if you did, for you have no conception
of such a human flaw as mercy. I cannot even say you fucked your mother, because you
had none.”
Roland paused for breath. His three companions were holding theirs. All around them,
suffocating, was Blaine the Mono’s thunderstruck silence.
“I can call you a faithless creature who let your only companion kill herself, a coward who has delighted in the torture of the foolish and the slaughter of the innocent, a lost and
bleating mechanical goblin who—”
“I COMMAND YOU TO STOP IT OR I’LL KILL YOU ALL RIGHT HERE!”
Roland’s eyes blazed with such wild blue fire that Eddie shrank away from him. Dimly, he heard Jake and Susannah gasp.
“Kill if you will, but command me nothing!” the gunslinger roared. “You have forgotten the faces of those who made you! Now either kill us or be silent and listen to me, Roland of
Gilead, son of Steven, gunslinger, and lord of the ancient lands! I have not come across all
the miles and all the years to listen to your childish prating! Do you understand? Now you
will listen to ME!”
There was a moment of shocked silence. No one breathed. Roland stared sternly forward,
his head high, his hand on the butt of his gun.
Susannah Dean raised her hand to her mouth and felt the small smile there as a woman
might feel some strange new article of clothing— a hat, perhaps—to make sure it is still on
straight. She was afraid that this was the end of her life, but the feeling which dominated
her heart at that moment was not fear but pride. She glanced to her left and saw Eddie
regarding Roland with an amazed grin. Jake’s expression was even simpler: it was
adoration, pure and simple.
“Tell him!” Jake breathed. “Walk it to him! Right!”
“You better pay attention,” Eddie agreed. “He really doesn’t give much of a rat’s ass, Blaine. They didn’t call him The Mad Dog of Gilead for nothing.”
After a long, long moment, Blaine asked: “DID THEY CALL YOU SO, ROLAND SON
OF STEVEN?”
“It may have been so,” Roland agreed, standing calmly on thin air above the sterile
foothills.
“WHAT GOOD ARE YOU TO ME IF YOU WON’T TELL ME RIDDLES?” Blaine
asked. Now he sounded like a grumbling, sulky child who has been allowed to stay up too
long past his usual bedtime.
“I didn’t say we wouldn’t,” Roland said,
“NO?” Blaine sounded bewildered. “I DO NOT UNDERSTAND, YET VOICE-PRINT
ANALYSIS INDICATES RATIONAL DIS- COURSE. PLEASE EXPLAIN.”
“You said you wanted them right now,” the gunslinger replied. “That was what I was refusing. Your eagerness has made you unseemly.”
“I DON’T UNDERSTAND.”
“It has made you rude. Do you understand that?”
There was a long, thoughtful silence. Then: “IF WHAT I SAID STRUCK YOU AS
RUDE, I APOLOGIZE.”
“It is accepted, Blaine. But there is a larger problem.”
“EXPLAIN.”
Blaine now sounded a bit unsure of himself, and Roland was not entirely surprised. It had
been a long time since the computer had experi- enced any human responses other than
ignorance, neglect, and supersti- tious subservience. If it had ever been exposed to simple
human courage, it had been a long time ago.
“Close the carriage again and I will.” Roland sat down as if further argument—and the
prospect of immediate death—was now unthinkable.
Blaine did as he was asked. The walls filled with color and the nightmare landscape below
was once more blotted out. The blip on the route-map was now blinking close to the dot
which marked Candleton.
“All right,” Roland said. “Rudeness is forgivable, Blaine; so I was taught in my youth, and the clay has dried in the shapes left by the artist’s hand. But I was also taught that stupidity is not.”
“HOW HAVE I BEEN STUPID, ROLAND OF GILEAD?” Blaine’s voice was soft and
ominous. Susannah suddenly thought of a cat crouched outside a mouse-hole, tail swishing
back and forth, green eyes shining.
“We have something that you want,” Roland said, “but the only reward you offer if we give it to you is death. That’s very stupid.”
There was a long, long pause as Blaine thought this over. Then: “WHAT YOU SAY IS
TRUE, ROLAND OF GILEAD, BUT THE QUALITY OF YOUR RIDDLES IS NOT
PROVEN. I WILL NOT REWARD YOU WITH YOUR LIVES FOR BAD RIDDLES.”
Roland nodded. “I understand, Blaine. Listen, now, and take under- standing from me. I
have told some of this to my friends already. When I was a boy in the Barony of Gilead,
there were seven Fair-Days each year—Winter, Wide Earth, Sowing, Mid-Summer, Full
Earth, Reaping, and Year’s End. Riddling was an important part of every Fair-Day, but it
was the most important event of the Fair of Wide Earth and that of Full Earth, for the
riddles told were supposed to augur well or ill for the success of the crops.”
“THAT IS SUPERSTITION WITH NO BASIS AT ALL IN FACT,” Blaine said. “I FIND
IT ANNOYING AND UPSETTING.”
“Of course it’s superstition,” Roland agreed, “but you might be sur- prised at how well the riddles foresaw the crops. For instance, riddle me this, Blaine: What is the difference
between a grandmother and a granary?”
“THAT IS VERY OLD AND NOT VERY INTERESTING,” Blaine said, but he sounded
happy to have something to solve just the same. “ONE IS ONE’S BORN KIN; THE
OTHER IS ONE’S CORN-BIN. A RIDDLE BASED ON PHONETIC COINCIDENCE.
ANOTHER OF THIS TYPE, ONE TOLD ON THE LEVEL WHICH CONTAINS THE
BARONY OF NEW YORK, GOES LIKE THIS: WHAT IS THE DIF- FERENCE
BETWEEN A CAT AND A COMPLEX SENTENCE?”
Jake spoke up. “Our English teacher told us that one just this year. A cat has claws at the end of its paws, and a complex sentence has a pause at the end of its clause.”
“YES,” Blaine agreed. “A VERY SILLY OLD RIDDLE.”
“For once I agree with you, Blaine old buddy,” Eddie said.
“I WOULD HEAR MORE OF FAIR-DAY RIDDLING IN GILEAD, ROLAND, SON
OF STEVEN. I FIND IT QUITE INTERESTING.”
“At noon on Wide Earth and Full Earth, somewhere between sixteen and thirty riddlers
would gather in The Hall of the Grandfathers, which was opened for the event. Those were
the only times of year when the common fold—merchants and farmers and ranchers and
such—were allowed into The Hall of the Grandfathers, and on that day they all crowded
in.”
The gunslinger’s eyes were far away and dreamy; it was the expres- sion Jake had seen on
his face in that misty other life, when Roland had told him of how he and his friends,
Cuthbert and Jamie, had once sneaked into the balcony of that same Hall to watch some
sort of ritual dance. Jake and Roland had been climbing into the mountains when Roland
had told him of that time, close on the trail of Walter.
Marten sat next to my mother and father, Roland had said. I knew them even from so high
above—and once she and Marten danced, slowly and revolvingly, and the others cleared
the floor for them and clapped when it was over. But the gunslingers did not clap …
Jake looked curiously at Roland, wondering again where this strange, distant man had
come from . . . and why.
“A great barrel was placed in the center of the floor,” Roland went on, “and into this each riddler would toss a handful of bark scrolls with riddles writ upon them. Many were old,
riddles they had gotten from the elders—even from books, in some cases—but many others
were new—made up for the occasion. Three judges, one always a gunslinger, would pass
on these when they were told aloud, and they were accepted only if the judges deemed
them fair.”
“YES, RIDDLES MUST BE FAIR,” Blame agreed.
“So they riddled,” the gunslinger said. A faint smile touched his mouth as he thought of those days, days when he had been the age of the bruised boy sitting across from him with
a billy-bumbler in his lap. “For hours on end they riddled. A line was formed down the
center of The Hall of the Grandfathers. One’s position in this line was determined by lot,
and since it was much better to be at the end of the line than at its head, everyone hoped for
a high number, although the winner had to answer at least one riddle correctly.”