Authors: Stephen King
“Even if you say I can’t try, I’m going to do it anyhow. So you might as well give me your permission.”
“Oh, that’s a wonderful deal. Especially since I don’t have any idea of what you’re talking about.”
“I think you do, though—I think you do have some idea, Mom. Because Dad would have known exactly what I’m talking about.”
Her cheeks reddened; her mouth thinned into a line. “That’s so unfair it’s despicable, Jacky. You can’t use what Philip might have known as a weapon against me.”
“What he did know, not what he might have known.”
“You’re talking total horseshit, sonny boy.”
The waitress, setting a plate of scrambled eggs, home fries, and sausages before Jack, audibly inhaled.
After the waitress had paraded off, his mother shrugged. “I don’t seem able to find the right
tone
with the help around here. But horseshit is still horseshit is still horseshit, to quote Gertrude Stein.”
“I’m going to save your life, Mom,” he repeated. “And I have to go a long way away and bring something back to do it. And so that’s what I’m going to do.”
“I wish I knew what you were talking about.”
Just an ordinary conversation, Jack told himself: as ordinary as asking permission to spend a couple of nights at a friend’s house. He cut a sausage in half and popped one of the pieces in his mouth. She was watching him carefully. Sausage chewed and swallowed, Jack inserted a forkful of egg into his mouth. Speedy’s bottle lumped like a rock against his backside.
“I also wish you’d act as though you could hear the little remarks I send your way, as obtuse as they may be.”
Jack stolidly swallowed the eggs and inserted a salty wad of the crisp potatoes into his mouth.
Lily put her hands in her lap. The longer he said nothing, the more she would listen when he did talk. He pretended to concentrate on his breakfast, eggs sausage potatoes, sausage potatoes eggs, potatoes eggs sausage, until he sensed that she was near to shouting at him.
My father called me Travelling Jack,
he thought to himself.
This is right; this is as right as I’ll ever get.
“Jack—”
“Mom,” he said, “sometimes didn’t Dad call you up from a long way away, and you knew he was supposed to be in town?”
She raised her eyebrows.
“And sometimes didn’t you, ah, walk into a room because you thought he was there, maybe even
knew
he was there—but he wasn’t?”
Let her chew on that.
“No,” she said.
Both of them let the denial fade away.
“Almost never.”
“Mom, it even happened to
me
,” Jack said.
“There was always an explanation, you know there was.”
“My father—this is what
you
know—was never too bad at explaining things. Especially the stuff that really couldn’t be explained. He was very good at that. That’s part of the reason he was such a good agent.”
Now she was silent again.
“Well, I know where he went,” Jack said. “I’ve been there already. I was there this morning. And if I go there again, I can try to save your life.”
“My life doesn’t need you to save it, it doesn’t need anyone to save it,”
his mother hissed. Jack looked down at his devastated plate and muttered something. “What was that?” she drilled at him.
“I think it does, I said.” He met her eyes with his own.
“Suppose I ask how you propose to go about saving my life, as you put it.”
“I can’t answer. Because I don’t really understand it yet. Mom, I’m not in school, anyhow . . . give me a chance. I might only be gone a week or so.”
She raised her eyebrows.
“It could be longer,” he admitted.
“I think you’re nuts,” she said. But he saw that part of her wanted to believe him, and her next words proved it. “If—
if
—I were mad enough to allow you to go off on this mysterious errand, I’d have to be sure that you wouldn’t be in any danger.”
“Dad always came back,” Jack pointed out.
“I’d rather risk my life than yours,” she said, and this truth, too, lay hugely between them for a long moment.
“I’ll call when I can. But don’t get too worried if a couple of weeks go by without my calling. I’ll come back, too, just like Dad always did.”
“This whole thing is nuts,” she said. “Me included. How are you going to get to this place you have to go to? And where is it? Do you have enough money?”
“I have everything I need,” he said, hoping that she would not press him on the first two questions. The silence stretched out and out, and finally he said, “I guess I’ll mainly walk. I can’t talk about it much, Mom.”
“Travelling Jack,” she said. “I can almost believe . . .”
“Yes,” Jack said. “
Yes
.” He was nodding.
And maybe
, he thought,
you know some of what
she
knows, the real Queen, and that’s why you are letting go this easily
. “That’s right. I can believe, too. That’s what makes it right.”
“Well . . . since you say you’ll go no matter what I say . . .”
“I will, too.”
“. . . then I guess it doesn’t matter what I say.” She looked at him bravely. “It does matter, though. I know. I want you to get back here as quick as you can, sonny boy. You’re not going right away, are you?”
“I have to.” He inhaled deeply. “Yes. I am going right away. As soon as I leave you.”
“I could almost believe in this rigamarole. You’re Phil Sawyer’s son, all right. You haven’t found a girl somewhere in this place, have you . . . ?” She looked at him very sharply. “No. No girl. Okay. Save my life. Off with you.” She shook her head, and he thought he saw an extra brightness in her eyes. “If you’re going to leave, get out of here, Jacky. Call me tomorrow.”
“If I can.” He stood up.
“If you can. Of course. Forgive me.” She looked down at nothing, and he saw that her eyes were unfocused. Red dots burned in the middle of her cheeks.
Jack leaned over and kissed her, but she just waved him away. The waitress stared at the two of them as if they were performing a play. Despite what his mother had just said, Jack thought that he had brought the level of her disbelief down to something like fifty percent; which meant that she no longer knew
what
to believe.
She focused on him for a moment, and he saw that hectic brightness blazing in her eyes again. Anger; tears? “Take care,” she said, and signalled the waitress.
“I love you,” Jack said.
“Never get off on a line like that.” Now she was almost smiling. “Get travelling, Jack. Get going before I realize how crazy this is.”
“I’m gone,” he said, and turned away and marched out of the restaurant. His head felt tight, as if the bones in his skull had just grown too large for their covering of flesh. The empty yellow sunlight attacked his eyes. Jack heard the door of the Arcadia Tea and Jam Shoppe banging shut an instant after the little bell had sounded. He blinked; ran across Boardwalk Avenue without looking for cars. When he reached the pavement on the other side, he realized that he would have to go back to their suite for some clothes. His mother had still not emerged from the tea shop by the time Jack was pulling open the hotel’s great front door.
The desk clerk stepped backward and sullenly stared. Jack felt some sort of emotion steaming off the man, but for a second could not remember why the clerk should react so strongly to the sight of him. The conversation with his mother—actually much shorter than he had imagined it would be—seemed to have lasted for days. On the other side of the vast gulf of time he’d spent in the Tea and Jam Shoppe, he had called the clerk a creep. Should he apologize? He no longer actually remembered what had caused him to flare up at the clerk. . . .
His mother had agreed to his going—she had given him permission to take his journey, and as he walked through the crossfire of the deskman’s glare he finally understood why. He had not mentioned the Talisman, not explicitly, but even if he had—if he had spoken of the most lunatic aspect of his mission—she would have accepted that too. And if he’d said that he was going to bring back a foot-long butterfly and roast it in the oven, she’d have agreed to eat roast butterfly. It would have been an ironic, but a real, agreement. In part this showed the depth of her fear, that she would grasp at such straws.
But she would grasp because at some level she knew that these were bricks, not straws. His mother had given him permission to go because somewhere inside her she, too, knew about the Territories.
Did she ever wake up in the night with that name,
Laura DeLoessian
, sounding in her mind?
Up in 407 and 408, he tossed clothes into his knapsack almost randomly: if his fingers found it in a drawer and it was not too large, in it went. Shirts, socks, a sweater, Jockey shorts. Jack tightly rolled up a pair of tan jeans and forced them in, too; then he realized that the pack had become uncomfortably heavy, and pulled out most of the shirts and socks. The sweater, too, came out. At the last minute he remembered his toothbrush. Then he slid the straps over his shoulders and felt the pull of the weight on his back—not too heavy. He could walk all day, carrying only these few pounds. Jack simply stood quiet in the suite’s living room a moment, feeling—unexpectedly powerfully—the absence of any person or thing to whom he could say goodbye. His mother would not return to the suite until she could be sure he was gone: if she saw him now, she’d order him to stay. He could not say goodbye to these three rooms as he could to a house he had loved: hotel rooms accepted departures emotionlessly. In the end he went to the telephone pad printed with a drawing of the hotel on eggshell-thin paper, and with the Alhambra’s blunt narrow pencil wrote the three lines that were most of what he had to say:
Thanks
I love you
and will be back
4
Jack moved down Boardwalk Avenue in the thin northern sun, wondering where he should . . . flip. That was the word for it. And should he see Speedy once more before he “flipped” into the Territories? He almost
had
to talk to Speedy once more, because he knew so little about where he was going, whom he might meet, what he was looking for. . . .
she look just like a crystal ball
. Was that all the instruction Speedy intended to give him about the Talisman? That, and the warning not to drop it? Jack felt almost sick with lack of preparation—as if he had to take a final exam in a course he’d never attended.
He also felt that he could flip right where he stood, he was that impatient to begin, to get started, to move.
He had to be in the Territories again
, he suddenly understood; in the welter of his emotions and longings, that thread brightly shone. He wanted to breathe that air; he hungered for it. The Territories, the long plains and ranges of low mountains, called him, the fields of tall grass and the streams that flashed through them. Jack’s entire body yearned for that landscape. And he might have taken the bottle out of his pocket and forced a mouthful of the awful juice down his throat on the spot if he had not just then seen the bottle’s former owner tucked up against a tree, butt on heels and hands laced across his knees. A brown grocery bag lay beside him, and atop the bag was an enormous sandwich of what looked like liver sausage and onion.
“You’re movin now,” Speedy said, smiling up at him. “You’re on your way, I see. Say your goodbyes? Your momma know you won’t be home for a while?”
Jack nodded, and Speedy held up the sandwich. “You hungry? This one, it’s too much for me.”
“I had something to eat,” the boy said. “I’m glad I can say goodbye to you.”
“Ole Jack on fire, he rarin to go,” Speedy said, cocking his long head sideways. “Boy gonna move.”
“Speedy?”
“But don’t take off without a few little things I brought for you. I got em here in this bag, you wanna see?”
“Speedy?”
The man squinted up at Jack from the base of the tree.
“Did you know that my father used to call me Travelling Jack?”
“Oh, I probably heard that somewhere,” Speedy said, grinning at him. “Come over here and see what I brought you. Plus, I have to tell you where to go first, don’t I?”
Relieved, Jack walked across the sidewalk to Speedy’s tree. The old man set his sandwich in his lap and fished the bag closer to him. “Merry Christmas,” Speedy said, and brought forth a tall, battered old paperback book. It was, Jack saw, an old Rand McNally road atlas.
“Thanks,” Jack said, taking the book from Speedy’s outstretched hand.
“Ain’t no maps over there, so you stick as much as you can to the roads in ole Rand McNally. That way you’ll get where you’re goin.”
“Okay,” Jack said, and slipped out of the knapsack so that he could slide the big book down inside it.
“The next thing don’t have to go in that fancy rig you carryin on your back,” Speedy said. He put the sandwich on the flat paper bag and stood up all in one long smooth motion. “No, you can carry this right in your pocket.” He dipped his fingers into the left pocket of his workshirt. What emerged, clamped between his second and third fingers like one of Lily’s Tarrytoons, was a white triangular object it took the boy a moment to recognize as a guitar-pick. “You take this and keep it. You’ll want to show it to a man. He’ll help you.”
Jack turned the pick over in his fingers. He had never seen one like it—of ivory, with scrimshaw filigrees and patterns winding around it in slanted lines like some kind of unearthly writing. Beautiful in the abstract, it was almost too heavy to be a useful fingerpick.
“Who’s the man?” Jack asked. He slipped the pick into one of his pants pockets.
“Big scar on his face—you’ll see him pretty soon after you land in the Territories. He’s a guard. Fact is, he’s a Captain of the Outer Guards, and he’ll take you to a place where you can see a lady you has to see. Well, a lady you ought to see. So you know the other reason you’re puttin your neck on the line. My friend over there, he’ll understand what you’re doin and he’ll figure out a way to get you to the lady.”
“This lady . . .” Jack began.
“Yep,” Speedy said. “You got it.”