Brett stooped quickly. "I"m sorry," he cried. He looked around. "Help!
This man ..."
n.o.body was watching. The next man, a few feet away, stood close against his neighbor, hatless, his jaw moving.
"This man"s sick," said Brett, tugging at the man"s arm. "He fell."
The man"s eyes moved reluctantly to Brett. "None of my business," he muttered.
"Won"t anybody give me a hand?"
"Probably a drunk."
Behind Brett a voice called in a penetrating whisper: "Quick! You! Get into the alley...!"
He turned. A gaunt man of about thirty with spa.r.s.e reddish hair, perspiration glistening on his upper lip, stood at the mouth of a narrow way like the one Brett had come through. He wore a grimy pale yellow shirt with a wide-flaring collar, limp and sweat-stained, dark green knee-breeches, soft leather boots, scuffed and dirty, with limp tops that drooped over his ankles. He gestured, drew back into the alley. "In here."
Brett went toward him. "This man ..."
"Come on, you fool!" The man took Brett"s arm, pulled him deeper into the dark pa.s.sage. Brett resisted. "Wait a minute. That fellow ..." He tried to point.
"Don"t you know yet?" The red-head spoke with a strange accent. "Golems ... You got to get out of sight before the--"
The man froze, flattened himself against the wall. Automatically Brett moved to a place beside him. The man"s head was twisted toward the alley mouth. The tendons in his weathered neck stood out. He had a three-day stubble of beard. Brett could smell him, standing this close. He edged away. "What--"
"Don"t make a sound! Don"t move, you idiot!" His voice was a thin hiss.
Brett followed the other"s eyes toward the sunny street. The fallen man lay on the pavement, moving feebly, eyes open. Something moved up to him, a translucent brownish shape, like muddy water. It hovered for a moment, then dropped on the man like a breaking wave, flowed around him.
The body shifted, rotating stiffly, then tilted upright. The sun struck through the fluid shape that flowed down now, amber highlights twinkling, to form itself into the crested wave, flow away.
"What the h.e.l.l...!"
"Come on!" The red-head turned, trotted silently toward the shadowy bend under the high grey walls. He looked back, beckoned impatiently, pa.s.sed out of sight around the turn--
Brett came up behind him, saw a wide avenue, tall trees with chartreuse springtime leaves, a wrought-iron fence, and beyond it, rolling green lawns. There were no people in sight.
"Wait a minute! What is this place?!"
His companion turned red-rimmed eyes on Brett. "How long have you been here?" he asked. "How did you get in?"
"I came through a gate. Just about an hour ago."
"I knew you were a man as soon as I saw you talking to the golem," said the red-head. "I"ve been here two months; maybe more. We"ve got to get out of sight. You want food? There"s a place ..." He jerked his thumb.
"Come on. Time to talk later."
Brett followed him. They turned down a side street, pushed through the door of a dingy cafe. It banged behind them. There were tables, stools at a bar, a dusty juke box. They took seats at a table. The red-head groped under the table, pulled off a shoe, hammered it against the wall.
He c.o.c.ked his head, listening. The silence was absolute. He hammered again. There was a clash of crockery from beyond the kitchen door. "Now don"t say anything," the red-head said. He eyed the door behind the counter expectantly. It flew open. A girl with red cheeks and untidy hair, dressed in a green waitress" uniform appeared, swept up to the table, pad and pencil in hand.
"Coffee and a ham sandwich," said the red-head. Brett said nothing. The girl glanced at him briefly, jotted hastily, whisked away.
"I saw them here the first day," the red-head said. "It was a piece of luck. I saw how the Gels started it up. They were big ones--not like the tidiers-up. As soon as they were finished, I came in and tried the same thing. It worked. I used the golem"s lines--"
"I don"t know what you"re talking about," Brett said. "I"m going to ask that girl--"
"Don"t say anything to her; it might spoil everything. The whole sequence might collapse; or it might call the Gels. I"m not sure. You can have the food when it comes back with it."
"Why do you say "when "it" comes back"?"
"Ah." He looked at Brett strangely. "I"ll show you."
Brett could smell food now. His mouth watered. He hadn"t eaten for twenty-four hours.
"Care, that"s the thing," the red-head said. "Move quiet, and stay out of sight, and you can live like a County Duke. Food"s the hardest, but here--"
The red-cheeked girl reappeared, a tray balanced on one arm, a heavy cup and saucer in the other hand. She clattered them down on the table.
"Took you long enough," the red-head said. The girl sniffed, opened her mouth to speak--and the red-head darted out a stiff finger, jabbed her under the ribs. She stood, mouth open, frozen.
Brett half rose. "He"s crazy, miss," he said. "Please accept--"
"Don"t waste your breath." Brett"s host was looking at him triumphantly.
"Why do I call it "it"?" He stood up, reached out and undid the top b.u.t.tons of the green uniform. The waitress stood, leaning slightly forward, unmoving. The blouse fell open, exposing round white b.r.e.a.s.t.s--unadorned, blind.
"A doll," said the red-head. "A puppet; a golem."
Brett stared at her, the damp curls at her temple, the tip of her tongue behind her teeth, the tiny red veins in her round cheeks, and the white skin curving ...
"That"s a quick way to tell "em," said the red-head. "The teat is smooth." He reb.u.t.toned the uniform, then jabbed again at the girl"s ribs. She straightened, patted her hair.
"No doubt a gentleman like you is used to better," she said carelessly.
She went away.
"I"m Awalawon Dhuva," the red-head said.
"My name"s Brett Hale." Brett took a bite of the sandwich.
"Those clothes," Dhuva said. "And you have a strange way of talking.
What county are you from?"
"Jefferson."
"Never heard of it. I"m from Wavly. What brought you here?"
"I was on a train. The tracks came to an end out in the middle of nowhere. I walked ... and here I am. What is this place?"