He swayed forward.
“Two . . .”
He swayed back.
“Three!”
Luke jumped. He started running in midair, but hit the cinders beside the track with his
body going at train speed, which was still a bit faster than his legs could carry him. His upper
body
tilted forward, and with his arms extended behind him in an effort to maintain his
balance, he looked like a speed-skater approaching the finish line.
Just as he began to think he might catch up with himself before he went sprawling, someone
shouted
“Hey, look out!”
He snapped his head up and saw a man on a forklift halfway between the warehouses and
the depot. Another man was rising from a rocker in the shade of the station’s roof, the magazine
he’d been reading still in his hand. This one shouted
“Ware that post!”
Luke saw the second signal-post,
this one flashing red, too late to slow down. He
instinctively turned his head and tried to raise his arm, but hit the steel post at full running
speed before he could get it all the way up. The right side of his face collided with the post, his
bad ear taking the brunt of the blow. He rebounded, hit the cinders, and rolled away from the
tracks. He didn’t lose consciousness, but he lost the
immediacy
of
consciousness as the sky
swung away, swung back, then swung away again. He felt warmth cascading down his cheek
and knew his ear had opened up again—his poor abused ear. An interior voice was screaming at
him to get up, to beat feet into the woods, but hearing and heeding were two different things.
When he tried scrambling to his feet, it didn’t work.
My scrambler’s broke, he thought. Shit. What a fuckup.
Then the man from the forklift was standing over him. From where Luke lay, he looked
about sixteen feet tall. The lenses of his glasses caught the sun, making it impossible to see his
eyes. “Jesus, kid, what in the hell did you think you were doing?”
“Trying to get away.” Luke wasn’t sure he was actually speaking, but thought he probably
was. “I can’t let them get me, please don’t let them get me.”
The man bent down. “Stop trying to talk, I can’t understand you anyway. You took a hell of
a whack on that post, and you’re bleeding like a stuck pig. Move your legs for me.”
Luke did.
“Now move your arms.”
Luke held them up.
Rocking Chair Man joined Forklift Man. Luke tried to use his newly acquired TP to read
one or both of them, find out what they knew. He got nothing;
when it came to thought-
reading, the tide was currently out. For all he knew, the whack he’d taken had knocked the TP
clean out of his head.
“He all right, Tim?”
“I think so. I hope so. First aid protocol says not to move a head injury, but I’m going to take
a chance.”
“Which of you is supposed to be my uncle?” Luke asked. “Or is it both of you?”
Rocking Chair Man frowned. “Can you understand what he’s saying?”
“No. I’m going to put him in Mr. Jackson’s back room.”
“I’ll take his legs.”
Luke was coming back now. His ear was actually helping in that regard. It felt as if it wanted
to drill right into his head. And maybe hide there.
“No, I got him,” Forklift Man said. “He’s not heavy. I want you to call Doc Roper, and ask
him to make a house call.”
“More of a
ware
house call,” Rocking Chair Man said, and laughed, exposing the yellowed
pegs of his teeth.
“Whatever. Go and do it. Use the station phone.”
“Yessir.” Rocking Chair Man gave Forklift Man a half-assed salute, and set off. Forklift Man
picked Luke up.
“Put me down,” Luke said. “I can walk.”
“You think so? Let’s see you do it.”
Luke swayed on his feet for a moment, then steadied.
“What’s your name, son?”
Luke considered, not sure he wanted to give it when he didn’t know if this man was an
uncle. He looked okay . . . but then, so did Zeke back at the Institute, when he was in one of his
rare good moods.
“What’s yours?” he countered.
“Tim Jamieson. Come on, let’s at least get you out of the sun.”
1
Tim
led the bloodied-up kid, obviously still dazed but walking on his own, through Craig
Jackson’s office. The owner of DuPray Storage & Warehousing
lived in the nearby town of
Dunning, but had been divorced for five years, and the spacious, air-conditioned room behind
the office served him as auxiliary living quarters. Jackson wasn’t there now, which was no
surprise to Tim; on days when ’56 stopped rather than barreling straight on through, Craig had
a tendency to make himself scarce.
Past the little kitchenette with its microwave, hotplate, and tiny sink was a living area that
consisted of an easy chair planted in front of an HD television set. Beyond that, old centerfolds
from
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