Ben coughed again, weakly, and Juliet dabbed thin reddish foam off his mouth. Elias backed away, his dark eyes frightened-the, horror was very close to the surface now. "Hey, Julie. I think I ought to call an ambulance ..."
"But, man-" Elias paced alongside the car, gesturing. "I just don't get it, man! What you wanta try pullin' a heist without your little brother?" The unceasing beat of the rock music gave a ghastly mock party effect to the scene.
Ben smiled faintly. "We did it ... though." His eyes shifted to Juliet's, and, realizing he couldn't feel her holding his hand, she caressed the side of his face. "The truck . . ." He coughed. "Truck ... got away?"
She nodded emphatically. "Yes, Ben. It's safe." "But look at you, man!" Elias's voice broke. "You a wreck, man!"
"Is ... Papa ... home?" Ben's voice was very weak. Juliet was about to tell Elias to turn down the radio, then heard the sound in Ben's throat ... she held him, awkwardly, through the final spasms as Elias paced up and down, talking, talking-never looking at them.
"Ben, you listen here. Do I try doctoring? Course not. An' the next time you got to boost some stuff, you gonna come to me, you got that, Bro? Elias will show you how to do it right. You dig? Like liftin' these eggs this mornin' . . . shoot. Never broke a one, that's how you gotta do it. Smooth, you see. Shoot. [ sound like Papa, don't I?"
Juliet lifted her tearstained face, then, very carefully, lowered Ben's head so it rested against the seat again. Automatically she closed the staring dark eyes. "Elias," she said quietly, but Ben's brother was pacing even faster, in rhythm to the music, never lifting his eyes from the ground.
He paced, every stride like a piston striking, his voice rising into one hoarse prolonged cry: "We'll show 'em, won't we, Ben? And they'll say `Woooo! What blew through here?' An' we say, the Taylor brothers! Yeah! The doctor and ... the other one ... the other one ... whatshisname..."
"No!" Whirling, Elias smashed the radio across the garage. Suddenly all was silent. "The `other one' . . . can die ... but not the doctor. Doctor can't die ... not Ben ... make it be the other ... but not ... not Ben . . ." He was sobbing now, the painful, chest-tearing sobs of one who never weeps aloud. "No ... no. Dammit, Ben!"
He embraced his brother's body frantically, rocking back and forth. Juliet reached through the haze of her own tears to take his hand. His returning grasp at her fingers was the grip of a man who has lost everything else to cling to ...
ABRAHAM AND RUBY WERE WALKING SLOWLY TOWARD THE SHOPping center when they saw the children grouped by the Visitor propaganda posters. One of the boys held a large can of red spray paint, and was busily drawing a moustache and beard on the aggressively handsome features of the VisitorAbraham thought distractedly that the posters looked as though Brian, Daniel's friend, had posed for them. The gang giggled, and one of them said, "Do it again, Kenny! Those creeps look better that way!"
Abraham summoned words. "If you are going to defy them, then do it right. You need a symbol ... we all need one. We used to use this one." Carefully he sprayed a large red "V" over the poster. "Only we did it with our fingers ... a long time ago. For Victory-you understand?"
Nodding to Ruby, Abraham turned away. Hearing the hiss of the spray paint behind him, he turned, saw another dripping "V" spread across a smiling Visitor. Smiling for the first time in a long while, Abraham and Ruby walked on.
MIKE DONOVAN DROVE THE SMALL YELLOW SPORTS MODEL quickly, efficiently, swinging off the freeway into a lesser highway, then, after several miles, onto a two-lane street that led into San Pedro, where Sean lived. He drove automatically, mechanically, his mind busy trying to figure his next move. He'd get the key from Sean, try to talk Margie into loaning him a few bucks fat chance, he thought cynically-then try again with Tony at the Italian restaurant ...
He slowed the car down, really looking at the street for the first time, then stopped with a jerk, staring. Smashed windows marred the storefronts of the ice cream parlor and hairdresser's shop ... A pickup truck and a sedan were overturned, partially blocking the street ... The row of houses on the right had suffered damage that looked like burns-even the grass underfoot extending onward to the park where Sean played was singed and blackened.
Silence. Utter and total. It was an ugly sound, Donovan discovered. He forced himself to listen until he was sure there was nobody in the immediate area but himself. The alien rifle propped beside him, he drove slowly toward Margie's house. He parked, got out, rifle held ready (he'd practiced using it out in the fields-it was a snap to aim and fire), then began to walk toward the house. "Sean? Marjorie! Sean? Hello, anybody!"
Mike stood up to see Josh Brooks, Sean's thirteen-year-old friend, peering around the side of the house. The boy walked toward him, and Donovan could see that his clothes were rumpled and dirty, his face tearstained. His eyes were glassy with shock-Mike had seen eyes like that on children in Laos, Nam, and Beirut ...
"Three days." "You've been all alone in this town for three days?" Josh nodded, trembling.
Josh looked down at the ground, then his legs seemed to give out, and he sat down on the curb. Donovan sat beside him, still keeping his arm around him. "Lots of people were getting tired of what the Visitors were doing. So Sunday a bunch of ranch hands in the area-you know the kind of guys-they drove into town and threw a homemade bomb right underneath a squad vehicle. Blew it up. The local supervisor guy was inside."
Donovan glanced at the charred ground inquiringly. Josh nodded confirmation. "Then a lot of folks started shouting, stuff about this was America, and we weren't gonna put up with these goddamn Visitors anymore-" He blushed, looked up. "My Mom doesn't let me say things like that, but I'm just telling you what they said, you understand ..."
"Sure," said Mike reassuringly. "Go on, Josh." "Then everyone was clapping and cheering. Suddenly the lights went out. All at once. Then everyone got scared, and ran." He shuddered again. "Then there were lights in the sky, so bright you couldn't see where you were going. Roaring toward us. They were troop transports, I recognized 'em when they landed. People screamed and ran. Some shot guns at the Visitors-but the shots didn't seem to hurt 'em much. I lost my Mom and Dad. Then your wife ..." He hesitated. "Sean's mom, she grabbed me and Sean and pulled us into her house. She slammed the door, but they were everywhere-the lights came through the windows-"
He nearly gagged. "I backed up, toward the kitchenthen somebody grabbed at me from behind, and I turned. I could see a shock trooper in the lights, but his helmet shield was up and I could see his eyes" He covered his own eyes at the memory. "It was awful! Those awful eyes! They were like-"
"Easy, Josh. I know what they look like. You're all right now. Then what happened?" "I twisted loose and ran. Just then the front door broke down and they came in and took 'em."
Donovan jerked as though he'd been hit, then, pulling Josh up beside him, walked across the street and into the house. As the boy had said, the front door was a battered wreck. The inside of the house had obviously been the scene of a violent struggle. Donovan walked over to the shattered remains of a vase and picked Sean's Dodger cap out of the middle of it, remembering with a tightness in his throat how his son was forever hanging his cap on Marjorie's best vase-much to her displeasure. Josh's voice came from the doorway, choked with sobs. "He fought real hard and kicked at them to leave his mom alone. He fought and fought-told 'em his dad would come and get 'em."
Mike folded the small cap and thrust it into his pocket, not looking up. "He was really brave, Mr. Donovan. But me. . ." He choked again. "I just ... I ... I'm a ... I hid. In the back of the closet. I was scared, Mr. Donovan. I'm sorry. I should of helped ... I'm a ... chick-"
"No, you're not!" Donovan shook his head fiercely. "Don't beat yourself up about this, Josh! There was nothing you could have done. Those guys are tough bastards. I'm not looking forward to tangling with 'em again. Finish telling me what happened."
Josh stopped, drained, and wiped at his nose with the back of his sleeve. Donovan sighed and said, " `... I only have escaped alone to tell thee ..."'
Mike's throat tightened again, then he looked squarely at the boy. "You bet. If I have anything to say about it." He thought suddenly of his original purpose for the visit. "Josh, the last time I came here, I brought Sean something-do you know where he kept it?"
Josh nodded and went over to the mantel. A picture of Donovan and Sean, glass now cracked, lay on its side atop it. Josh reached behind it, then pulled the golden key out of the small crack between the mantel and the wall. "Here it is. What is it, sir?"
"A key," Donovan said, hefting it and staring at it thoughtfully. "To get into where?"
THE CORK SLID FROM THE CHAMPAGNE BOTTLE WITH A SATISFYING pop. Daniel Bernstein smiled. The young man continued to grin as he poured the foaming wine into Lynn's, Stanley's, and Abraham's glasses, then into his own. "Pretty classy, eh? Champagne for breakfast?"
"What?" Lynn said blankly. "To whom?" Daniel grinned crookedly. "To Robin Maxwell."
Daniel smiled winningly. "Oh ... not that far away, hm- mmm?" They glanced at each other again. "How does Robin feel about this, Daniel?" Stanley asked.
His son's fatuous grin widened. "She doesn't know about it. But I want her ... so I'll get her. Just the way I wanted this champagne ... and I got it." He sipped his wine. "Or else I'll turn her whole damn family in."
He set his empty glass down, smiling brightly at his family. Slowly his grandfather raised his glass, his dark eyes holding Daniel's eyes, so like his own ... then the old man threw the wine directly into his grandson's face. Daniel choked and sputtered furiously, momentarily blinded. Abraham got up and left the room, heading for the pool house.
They rounded the corner to the pool house to see Daniel, his hand clamped brutally around Robin's wrist, dragging her out of the pool house. His face was twisted into that of a stranger. "Come on, you dumb little bitch! I'll teach you what Brian couldn't do on a bet!"
He continued to pull her along as her father and mother stormed out of the pool house. There was blood in Robert's eyes. As much to save his son as Robin, Stanley grabbed Daniel, spinning him around, then pushed him into the swimming pool. "Cool off, you idiot!" he shouted.
He hesitated, then the muzzle of the gun dropped. Furiously Daniel sloshed out of the pool, heading inside. They all stood frozen, until Kathleen Maxwell's voice broke their paralysis. "We've got to get out of here, Bob. He'll call his friends."