The dirty sunglasses inclined down toward him.
Jack felt a deep, shuddery relief. He saw, all right. The
blind man was talking about hard choices. He was suggesting that maybe there was a difference between hard choices and
criminal behavior. And that maybe the criminal wasn’t here.
The criminal might have been the guy who had told him
five minutes ago to get his ass home.
“Could even be,” the blind man remarked, hitting a dark
D-minor chord on his box, “that all things soive the Lord, just like my momma tole me and your momma might have tole
you, if she was a Christian lady. Could be we think we doin one thing but are really doin another. Good Book says all
things, even those that seem evil, soive the Lord. What you think, boy?”
“I don’t know,” Jack said honestly. He was all mixed up.
He only had to close his eyes and he could see the telephone tearing off the wall, hanging from its wires like a weird pup-pet.
“Well, it smells like you lettin it drive you to drink.”
“What?” Jack asked, astonished. Then he thought, I
thought that Speedy looked like Mississippi John Hurt, and this guy started playing a John Hurt blues . . . and now he’s talking about the magic juice. He’s being careful, but I swear that’s what he’s talking about—it’s got to be!
“You’re a mind-reader,” Jack said in a low voice. “Aren’t
you? Did you learn it in the Territories, Speedy?”
“Don’t know nothin bout readin minds,” the blind man
said, “but my lamps have been out forty-two year come No-
vember, and in forty-two year your nose and ears take up
some of the slack. I can smell cheap wine on you, son. Smell it all over you. It’s almost like you washed yo hair widdit!”
Jack felt an odd, dreamy guilt—it was the way he always
felt when accused of doing something wrong when he was in
fact innocent—mostly innocent, anyway. He had done no
more than touch the almost-empty bottle since flipping back into this world. Just touching it filled him with dread—he had
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come to feel about it the way a fourteenth-century European peasant might have felt about a splinter of the One True Cross or the fingerbone of a saint. It was magic, all right. Powerful magic. And sometimes it got people killed.
“I haven’t been drinking it, honest,” he finally managed.
“What I started with is almost gone. It . . . I . . . man, I don’t even like it!” His stomach had begun to clench nervously; just thinking about the magic juice was making him feel nauseated. “But I need to get some more. Just in case.”
“More Poiple Jesus? Boy your age?” The blind man
laughed and made a shooing gesture with one hand. “Hell,
you don’t need dat. No boy needs dat poison to travel with.”
“But—”
“Here. I’ll sing you a song to cheer you up. Sounds like
you could use it.”
He began to sing, and his singing voice was nothing at all
like his speaking voice. It was deep and powerful and
thrilling, without the Nigger Jim “My-Huck-dat-sure-is- gay! ”
cadences of his talk. It was, Jack thought, awed, almost the trained, cultured voice of an opera singer, now amusing itself with a little piece of popular fluff. Jack felt goosebumps rise on his arms and back at that rich, full voice. Along the sidewalk which ran along the dull, ochre flank of the mall, heads turned.
“When the red, red robin goes bob-bob-bobbin along,
ALONG, there’ll be no more sobbin when he starts throbbin his old . . . sweet SONG—”
Jack was struck by a sweet and terrible familiarity, a sense that he had heard this before, or something very like it, and as the blind man bridged, grinning his crooked, yellowing smile, Jack realized where the feeling was coming from. He knew
what had made all those heads turn, as they would have
turned if a unicorn had gone galloping across the mall’s parking lot. There was a beautiful, alien clarity in the man’s voice.
It was the clarity of, say, air so pure that you could smell a radish when a man pulled one out of the ground half a mile
away. It was a good old Tin Pan Alley song . . . but the voice was pure Territories.
“Get up . . . get up, you sleepyhead . . . get out . . . get out, get outta bed . . . live, love, laugh and be ha—”
Both guitar and voice came to a sudden halt. Jack, who
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THE TALISMAN
had been concentrating fiercely on the blind man’s face (trying subconsciously to peer right through those dark glasses, perhaps, and see if Speedy Parker’s eyes were behind them), now widened his focus and saw two cops standing beside the
blind man.
“You know, I don’t hear nothin,” the blind guitarist said, almost coyly, “but I b’lieve I smell somethin blue.”
“Goddammit, Snowball, you know you’re not supposed to
work the mall!” one of the cops cried. “What did Judge Hal-
las tell you the last time he had you in chambers? Downtown between Center Street and Mural Street. No place else.
Damn, boy, how senile have you got? Your pecker rotted off
yet from that whatall your woman gave you before she took
off ? Christ, I just don’t—”
His partner put a hand on his arm and nodded toward Jack
in a little-pitchers-have-big-ears gesture.
“Go tell your mother she wants you, kid,” the first cop said curtly.
Jack started walking down the sidewalk. He couldn’t stay.
Even if there was something he could do, he couldn’t stay. He was lucky the cops’ attention had been taken up by the man
they called Snowball. If they had given him a second glance, Jack had no doubt he would have been asked to produce his
bona fides. New sneakers or not, the rest of him looked used and battered. It doesn’t take cops long to get good at spotting road-kids, and Jack was a boy on the road if there ever had been one.
He imagined being tossed into the Zanesville pokey while
the Zanesville cops, fine upstanding boys in blue who listened to Paul Harvey every day and supported President Reagan,
tried to find out whose little boy he was.
No, he didn’t want the Zanesville cops giving him more
than the one passing glance.
A motor, throbbing smoothly, coming up behind him.
Jack hunched his pack a little higher on his back and
looked down at his new sneakers as if they interested him
tremendously. From the corners of his eyes he saw the police cruiser slide slowly by.
The blind man was in the back seat, the neck of his guitar
poking up beside him.
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As the cruiser swung into one of the outbound lanes, the
blind man abruptly turned his head and looked out the back
window, looked directly at Jack . . .
. . . and although Jack could not see through the dirty dark glasses, he knew perfectly well that Lester “Speedy” Parker had winked at him.
2
Jack managed to keep further thought at bay until he reached the turnpike ramps again. He stood looking at the signs,
which seemed the only clear-cut things left in a world
(worlds?)
where all else was a maddening gray swirl. He felt a dark
depression swirling all around him, sinking into him, trying to destroy his resolve. He recognized that homesickness
played a part in this depression, but this feeling made his former homesickness seem boyish and callow indeed. He felt ut-
terly adrift, without a single firm thing to hold on to.
Standing by the signs, watching the traffic on the turnpike, Jack realized he felt damn near suicidal. For quite a while he had been able to keep himself going with the thought that he would see Richard Sloat soon (and, although he had hardly
admitted the thought to himself, the idea that Richard might head west with him had done more than cross Jack’s mind—
after all, it would not be the first time that a Sawyer and a Sloat had made strange journeys together, would it?), but the hard work at the Palamountain farm and the peculiar happen-ings at the Buckeye Mall had given even that the false glitter of fool’s gold.
Go home, Jacky, you’re beaten, a voice whispered. If you keep on, you’re going to end up getting the living shit kicked out of you . . . and next time it may be fifty people that die. Or five hundred.
I-70 East.
I-70 West.
Abruptly he fished in his pocket for the coin—the coin that was a silver dollar in this world. Let whatever gods there were decide this, once and for all. He was too beaten to do it for himself. His back still smarted where Mr. All-America had