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Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 2

Page 65

by Ray Bradbury

He shoved Booth. Booth ran, fell, picked himself up, and lunged toward a theater door which, on the instant, from outside, was shaken, pounded, riven.

  Phipps was there, calling in the darkness.

  ‘The other door,’ said Bayes.

  He pointed and Booth wheeled to stumble in a new direction to stand swaying by yet another door, putting one hand out—

  ‘Wait,’ said Bayes.

  He walked across the theater and when he reached Booth raised his flat hand up and hit Booth once, hard, a slapping strike across the face. Sweat flew in a rain upon the air.

  ‘I,’ said Bayes, ‘I just had to do that. Just once.’

  He looked at his hand, then turned to open the door.

  They both looked out into a world of night and cool stars and no mob.

  Booth pulled back, his great dark liquid eyes the eyes of an eternally wounded and surprised child, with the look of the self-shot deer that would go on wounding, being shot by itself forever.

  ‘Get,’ said Bayes.

  Booth darted. The door slammed shut. Bayes fell against it, breathing hard.

  Far across the arena at another locked door, the hammering, pounding, the crying out began again. Bayes stared at that shuddering but remote door. Phipps. But Phipps would have to wait. Now …

  The theater was as vast and empty as Gettysburg in the late day with the crowd gone home and the sun set. Where the crowd had been and was no more, where the Father had lifted the Boy high on his shoulders and where the Boy had spoken and said the words, but the words now, also, gone …

  On the stage, after a long moment, he reached out. His fingers brushed Lincoln’s shoulder.

  Fool, he thought standing there in the dusk. Don’t. Now, don’t. Stop it. Why are you doing this? Silly. Stop. Stop.

  And what he had come to find he found. What he needed to do he did.

  For tears were running down his face.

  He wept. Sobs choked his mouth. He could not stop them. They would not cease.

  Mr Lincoln was dead. Mr Lincoln was dead!

  And he had let his murderer go.

  Time in Thy Flight

  A wind blew the long years away past their hot faces.

  The Time Machine stopped.

  ‘Nineteen hundred and twenty-eight,’ said Janet. The two boys looked past her.

  Mr Fields stirred. ‘Remember, you’re here to observe the behavior of those ancient people. Be inquisitive, be intelligent, observe.’

  ‘Yes,’ said the girl and the two boys in crisp khaki uniforms. They wore identical haircuts, had identical wristwatches, sandals, and coloring of hair, eyes, teeth, and skin, though they were not related.

  ‘Shh!’ said Mr Fields.

  They looked out at a little Illinois town in the spring of the year. A cool mist lay on the early morning streets.

  Far down the street a small boy came running in the last light of the marble-cream moon. Somewhere a great clock struck 5 A.M. far away. Leaving tennis-shoe prints softly in the quiet lawns, the boy stepped near the invisible Time Machine and cried up to a high dark house window.

  The house window opened. Another boy crept down the roof to the ground. The two boys ran off with banana-filled mouths into the dark cold morning.

  ‘Follow them,’ whispered Mr Fields. ‘Study their life patterns. Quick!’

  Janet and William and Robert ran on the cold pavements of spring, visible now, through the slumbering town, through a park. All about, lights flickered, doors clicked, and other children rushed alone or in gasping pairs down a hill to some gleaming blue tracks.

  ‘Here it comes!’ The children milled about before dawn. Far down the shining tracks a small light grew seconds later into steaming thunder.

  ‘What is it?’ screamed Janet.

  ‘A train, silly, you’ve seen pictures of them!’ shouted Robert.

  And as the Time Children watched, from the train stepped gigantic gray elephants, steaming the pavements with their mighty waters, lifting question-mark nozzles to the cold morning sky. Cumbrous wagons rolled from the long freight flats, red and gold. Lions roared and paced in boxed darkness.

  ‘Why – this must be a – circus!’ Janet trembled.

  ‘You think so? Whatever happened to them?’

  ‘Like Christmas, I guess. Just vanished, long ago.’

  Janet looked around. ‘Oh, it’s awful, isn’t it.’

  The boys stood numbed. ‘It sure is.’

  Men shouted in the first faint gleam of dawn. Sleeping cars drew up, dazed faces blinked out at the children. Horses clattered like a great fall of stones on the pavement.

  Mr Fields was suddenly behind the children. ‘Disgusting, barbaric, keeping animals in cages. If I’d known this was here, I’d never let you come see. This is a terrible ritual.’

  ‘Oh, yes.’ But Janet’s eyes were puzzled. ‘And yet, you know, it’s like a nest of maggots. I want to study it.’

  ‘I don’t know,’ said Robert, his eyes darting, his fingers trembling. ‘It’s pretty crazy. We might try writing a thesis on it if Mr Fields says it’s all right …’

  Mr Fields nodded. ‘I’m glad you’re digging in here, finding motives, studying this horror. All right – we’ll see the circus this afternoon.’

  ‘I think I’m going to be sick,’ said Janet.

  The Time Machine hummed.

  ‘So that was a circus,’ said Janet, solemnly.

  The trombone circus died in their ears. The last thing they saw was candy-pink trapeze people whirling while baking powder clowns shrieked and bounded.

  ‘You must admit psychovision’s better,’ said Robert slowly.

  ‘All those nasty animal smells, the excitement.’ Janet blinked. ‘That’s bad for children, isn’t it? And those older people seated with the children. Mothers, fathers, they called them. Oh, that was strange.’

  Mr Fields put some marks in his class grading book.

  Janet shook her head numbly. ‘I want to see it all again. I’ve missed the motives somewhere. I want to make that run across town again in the early morning. The cold air on my face – the sidewalk under my feet – the circus train coming in. Was it the air and the early hour that made the children get up and run to see the train come in? I want to retrace the entire pattern. Why should they be excited? I feel I’ve missed out on the answer.’

  ‘They all smiled so much,’ said William.

  ‘Manic-depressives,’ said Robert.

  ‘What are summer vacations? I heard them talk about it.’ Janet looked at Mr Fields.

  ‘They spent their summers racing about like idiots, beating each other up,’ replied Mr Fields seriously.

  ‘I’ll take our State Engineered summers of work for children anytime,’ said Robert, looking at nothing, his voice faint.

  The Time Machine stopped again.

  ‘The Fourth of July,’ announced Mr Fields. ‘Nineteen hundred and twenty-eight. An ancient holiday when people blew each other’s fingers off.’

  They stood before the same house on the same street but on a soft summer evening. Fire wheels hissed, on front porches laughing children tossed things out that went bang!

  ‘Don’t run!’ cried Mr Fields. ‘It’s not war, don’t be afraid!’

  But Janet’s and Robert’s and William’s faces were pink, now blue, now white with fountains of soft fire.

  ‘We’re all right,’ said Janet, standing very still.

  ‘Happily,’ announced Mr Fields, ‘they prohibited fireworks a century ago, did away with the whole messy explosion.’

  Children did fairy dances, weaving their names and destinies on the dark summer air with white sparklers.

  ‘I’d like to do that,’ said Janet, softly. ‘Write my name on the air. See? I’d like that.’

  ‘What?’ Mr Fields hadn’t been listening.

  ‘Nothing,’ said Janet.

  ‘Bang!’ whispered William and Robert, standing under the soft summer trees, in shadow, watching, watching the red, white, and gree
n fires on the beautiful summer night lawns. ‘Bang!’

  October.

  The Time Machine paused for the last time, an hour later in the month of burning leaves. People bustled into dim houses carrying pumpkins and corn shocks. Skeletons danced, bats flew, candles flamed, apples swung in empty doorways.

  ‘Halloween,’ said Mr Fields. ‘The acme of horror. This was the age of superstition, you know. Later they banned the Grimm Brothers, ghosts, skeletons, and all that claptrap. You children, thank God, were raised in an antiseptic world of no shadows or ghosts. You had decent holidays like William C. Chatterton’s Birthday, Work Day, and Machine Day.’

  They walked by the same house in the empty October night, peering in at the triangle-eyed pumpkins, the masks leering in black attics and damp cellars. Now, inside the house, some party children squatted telling stories, laughing!

  ‘I want to be inside with them,’ said Janet at last.

  ‘Sociologically, of course,’ said the boys.

  ‘No,’ she said.

  ‘What?’ asked Mr Fields.

  ‘No, I just want to be inside, I just want to stay here, I want to see it all and be here and never be anywhere else, I want firecrackers and pumpkins and circuses, I want Christmases and Valentines and Fourths, like we’ve seen.’

  ‘This is getting out of hand …’ Mr Fields started to say.

  But suddenly Janet was gone. ‘Robert, William, come on!’ She ran. The boys leaped after her.

  ‘Hold on!’ shouted Mr Fields. ‘Robert! William, I’ve got you!’ He seized the last boy, but the other escaped. ‘Janet, Robert – come back here! You’ll never pass into the seventh grade! You’ll fail, Janet, Bob – Bob!’

  An October wind blew wildly down the street, vanishing with the children off among moaning trees.

  William twisted and kicked.

  ‘No, not you, too, William, you’re coming home with me. We’ll teach those other two a lesson they won’t forget. So they want to stay in the past, do they?’ Mr Fields shouted so everyone could hear. ‘All right, Janet, Bob, stay in this horror, in this chaos! In a few weeks you’ll come sniveling back here to me. But I’ll be gone! I’m leaving you here to go mad in this world!’

  He hurried William to the Time Machine. The boy was sobbing. ‘Don’t make me come back here on any more Field Excursions ever again, please, Mr Fields, please—’

  ‘Shut up!’

  Almost instantly the Time Machine whisked away toward the future, toward the underground hive cities, the metal buildings, the metal flowers, the metal lawns.

  ‘Good-bye, Janet, Bob!’

  A great cold October wind blew through the town like water. And when it had ceased blowing it had carried all the children, whether invited or uninvited, masked or unmasked, to the doors of houses which closed upon them. There was not a running child anywhere in the night. The wind whined away in the bare treetops.

  And inside the big house, in the candlelight, someone was pouring cold apple cider all around, to everyone, no matter who they were.

  Changeling

  By eight o’clock she had placed the long cigarettes and the wine crystals and the silver bucket of thin shaved ice packed around the green bottle. She stood looking at the room, each picture neat, ashtrays conveniently disposed. She plumped a lounge pillow and stepped back, her eyes squinting. Then she hurried into the bathroom and returned with the strychnine bottle, which she laid under a magazine on an end table. She had already hidden a hammer and an ice pick.

  She was ready.

  Seeming to know this, the phone rang. When she answered, a voice said:

  ‘I’m coming up.’

  He was in the elevator now, floating silently up the iron throat of the house, fingering his accurate little mustache, adjusting his white summer evening coat and black tie. He would be smoothing his gray-blond hair, that handsome man of fifty still able to visit handsome women of thirty three, fresh, convivial, ready for the wine and the rest of it.

  ‘You’re a faker!’ she whispered to the closed door a moment before he rapped.

  ‘Good evening, Martha,’ he said. ‘Are you just going to stand there, looking?’ She kissed him quietly. ‘Was that a kiss?’ he wondered, his blue eyes warmly amused. ‘Here.’ He gave her a better one.

  Her eyes closed, she thought, is this different from last week, last month, last year? What makes me suspicious? Some little thing. Something she couldn’t even tell, it was so minor. He had changed subtly and drastically. So drastically in fact, so completely that she had begun to stay awake nights two months ago. She had taken to riding the helicopters at three in the morning out to the beach and back to see all-night films projected on the clouds near The Point, films that had been made way back in 1955, huge memories in the ocean mist over the dark waters, with the voices drifting in like gods’ voices with the tide. She was constantly tired.

  ‘Not much response.’ He held her away and surveyed her critically. ‘Is anything wrong, Martha?’

  ‘Nothing,’ she said. Everything she thought. You, she thought. Where are you tonight, Leonard? Who are you dancing with far away, or drinking with in an apartment on the other side of town, who are you being lovably polite with? For you most certainly are not here in this room, and I intend to prove it.

  ‘What’s this?’ he said, looking down. ‘A hammer? Have you been hanging pictures, Martha?’

  ‘No, I’m going to hit you with it,’ she said, and laughed.

  ‘Of course,’ he said, smiling. ‘Well, perhaps this will make you change your mind.’ He drew forth a plush case, inside which was a pearl necklace.

  ‘Oh, Leonard!’ She put it on with trembling fingers and turned to him, excited. ‘You are good to me.’

  ‘It’s nothing at all,’ he said.

  At these times, she almost forgot her suspicions. She had everything with him, didn’t she? There was no sign of his losing interest, was there? Certainly not. He was just as kind and gentle and generous. He never came without something for her wrist or her finger. Why did she feel so lonely with him then? Why didn’t she feel with him? Perhaps it had started with that picture in the paper two months ago. A picture of him and Alice Summers in The Club on the night of April 17th. She hadn’t seen the picture until a month later and then she had spoken of it to him:

  ‘Leonard, you didn’t tell me you took Alice Summers to The Club on the night of April seventeenth.’

  ‘Didn’t I, Martha? Well, I did.’

  ‘But wasn’t that one of the nights you were here with me?’

  ‘I don’t see how it could have been. We have supper and play symphonies and drink wine until early morning.’

  ‘I’m sure you were here with me April seventeenth, Leonard.’

  ‘You’re a little drunk, my dear. Do you keep a diary?’

  ‘I’m not a child.’

  ‘There you are then. No diary, no record. I was here the night before or the night after. Come on now, Martha, drink up.’

  But that hadn’t settled it. She had not gone to sleep that night with thinking and being positive he had been with her on April 17th. It was impossible, of course. He couldn’t be in two places.

  They both stood looking down at the hammer on the floor. She picked it up and put it on a table. ‘Kiss me,’ she said, quite suddenly, for she wanted now, more than ever, to be certain of this thing. He evaded her and said, ‘First, the wine.’ ‘No,’ she insisted, and kissed him.

  There it was. The difference. The little change. There was no way to tell anyone, or even describe it. It would be like trying to describe a rainbow to a blind man. But there was a subtle chemical difference to his kiss. It was no longer the kiss of Mr Leonard Hill. It approximated the kiss of Leonard Hill but was sufficiently different to set a subconscious wheel rolling in her. What would an analysis of the faint moisture on his lips reveal? Some bacterial lack? And as for the lips themselves, were or were they not harder, or softer, than before? Some small difference.

  ‘A
ll right, now the wine,’ she said, and opened it. She poured his glass full. ‘Oh, will you get some mats from the kitchen to set them on?’ While he was gone she poured the strychnine in his glass. He returned with the mats to set the glasses on and picked up his drink.

  ‘To us,’ he said.

  Good Lord, she thought, what if I’m wrong? What if this is really him? What if I’m just some wild paranoid sort of creature, really insane and not aware of it?

  ‘To us.’ She raised her glass.

  He drained his at a gulp, as always. ‘My God,’ he said, wincing. ‘That’s horrible stuff. Where did you get it?’

  ‘At Modesti’s.’

  ‘Well, don’t get any more. Here, I’d better ring for more.’

  ‘Never mind, I have more in the refrigerator.’

  When she brought the new bottle in, he was sitting there, clever and alive and fresh. ‘You look wonderful,’ she said.

  ‘Feel fine. You’re beautiful. I think I love you more tonight than ever.’

  She waited for him to fall sidewise and stare the stare of the dead. ‘Here we go,’ he said, opening the second bottle.

  When the second bottle was empty, an hour had passed. He was telling witty little stories and holding her hand and kissing her gently now and again. At last he turned to her and said, ‘You seem quiet tonight, Martha? Anything wrong?’

  ‘No,’ she said.

  She had seen the news item last week, the item that had finally set her worrying and planning, that had explained her loneliness in his presence. About the Marionettes. Marionettes, Incorporated. Not that they really existed, surely not. But there was a rumor. Police were investigating.

  Life-size marionettes, mechanical, stringless, secretive, duplicates of real people. One might buy them for ten thousand dollars on some distant black market. One could be measured for a replica of one’s self. If one grew weary of social functions, one could send the replica out to wine, to dine, to shake hands, to trade gossip with Mrs Rinehart on your left, Mr Simmons on your right, Miss Glenner across the table.

  Think of the political tirades one might miss! Think of the bad shows one need never see. Think of the dull people one could snub without actually snubbing. And, last of all, think of the jeweled loved ones you could ignore, yet not ignore. What would a good slogan be? She Need Never Know? Don’t Tell Your Best Friends? It Walks, It Talks, It Sneezes, It Says ‘Mama’?

 

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